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Krasley E, et al.  (2006) Regulation of the Oxidative Stress Response Through Slt2p-Dependent Destruction of Cyclin C in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Genetics 172(3):1477-86

Abstract: The S. cerevisiae C-type cyclin and its cyclin dependent kinase (Cdk8p) repress the transcription of several stress response genes. To relieve this repression, cyclin C is destroyed in cells exposed to reactive oxygen species (ROS). This report describes the requirement of cyclin C destruction for the cellular response to ROS. Compared to wild type, deleting cyclin C makes cells more resistant to ROS while its stabilization reduces viability. The Slt2p MAP kinase cascade mediates cyclin C destruction in response to ROS treatment but not heat shock. This destruction pathway is important as deleting cyclin C suppresses the hypersensitivity of slt2 mutants to oxidative damage. The ROS hypersensitivity of an slt2 mutant correlates with elevated programmed cell death as determined by TUNEL assays. Consistent with the viability studies, the elevated TUNEL signal is reversed in cyclin C mutants. Finally, two results suggest that cyclin C regulates programmed cell death independent of its function as a transcriptional repressor. First, deleting its co-repressor CDK8 does not suppress the slt2 hypersensitivity phenotype. Second, the human cyclin C, which does not repress transcription in yeast, does regulate ROS sensitivity. These findings demonstrate a new role for the Slt2p MAP kinase cascade in protecting the cell from programmed cell death through cyclin C destruction.

Status: Published Type: Journal Article PubMed ID: 16387872

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Topics Genes linked to topics
BCK1 MCA1 MKK1 MKK2 SLT2 SSN3 SSN8
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