Yeast Thigmotropism Controlled by a Cell-Surface Mucin and a MAP-Kinase Pathway
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ABSTRACT: Budding yeast can switch from growth as ovoid cells to growth in an adhesive and invasive filamentous form. Limiting availability of reduced nitrogen is thought to be the signal that induces filamentous growth. In contrast, we find that filamentation is a thigmotropic response. In the absence of repressive agents, growth on a surface is necessary and sufficient to induce filamentation, whereas nitrogen limitation is neither sufficient nor necessary. The thigmostimulus is transmitted to the genome via a MAP-kinase pathway that has been linked to filamentation. The FLO11 gene, encoding a cell-surface mucin protein, maps genetically at the top and at the bottom of this thigmotropism MAP-kinase pathway. These results suggest that yeast differentiation to the filamentous form is primarily a response to surface contact for the purposes of colonization and invasion, rather than foraging for nutrients.
ORGANISM(S): Saccharomyces cerevisiae Schizosaccharomyces pombe
PROVIDER: GSE17295 | GEO | 2024/12/01
REPOSITORIES: GEO
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