The MAPK homolog, Smk1, promotes assembly of the glucan layer of the spore wall in S. cerevisiae.
IF 2.2 4区 生物学Q4 BIOCHEMISTRY & MOLECULAR BIOLOGYYeastPub Date : 2024-07-01Epub Date: 2024-06-14DOI:10.1002/yea.3967
Julia Y Lee-Soety, Gwendolyn Resch, Abhimannyu Rimal, Erica S Johnson, Jonathan Benway, Edward Winter
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Smk1 is a MAPK homolog in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae that controls the postmeiotic program of spore wall assembly. During this program, haploid cells are surrounded by a layer of mannan and then a layer of glucan. These inner layers of the spore wall resemble the vegetative cell wall. Next, the outer layers consisting of chitin/chitosan and then dityrosine are assembled. The outer layers are spore-specific and provide protection against environmental stressors. Smk1 is required for the proper assembly of spore walls. However, the protective properties of the outer layers have limited our understanding of how Smk1 controls this morphogenetic program. Mutants lacking the chitin deacetylases, Cda1 and Cda2, form spores that lack the outer layers of the spore wall. In this study, cda1,2∆ cells were used to demonstrate that Smk1 promotes deposition of the glucan layer of the spore wall through the partially redundant glucan synthases Gsc2 and Fks3. Although Gsc2 is localized to sites of spore wall assembly in the wild type, it is mislocalized in the mother cell cytoplasm in the smk1∆ mutant. These findings suggest that Smk1 controls assembly of the spore wall by regulating the localization of Gsc2 during sporogenesis.
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