Harnessing natural diversity to probe metabolic pathways.

Analyses of cellular processes in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae rely primarily upon a small number of highly domesticated laboratory strains, leaving the extensive natural genetic diversity of the model organism largely unexplored and unexploited. We asked if this diversity could be used to enr...

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Main Authors: Oliver R Homann, Houjian Cai, Jeffrey M Becker, Susan L Lindquist
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2005-12-01
Series:PLoS Genetics
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC1342634?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-952993eea05247be83d1dd16edae4cc82020-11-24T21:42:02ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Genetics1553-73901553-74042005-12-0116e8010.1371/journal.pgen.0010080Harnessing natural diversity to probe metabolic pathways.Oliver R HomannHoujian CaiJeffrey M BeckerSusan L LindquistAnalyses of cellular processes in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae rely primarily upon a small number of highly domesticated laboratory strains, leaving the extensive natural genetic diversity of the model organism largely unexplored and unexploited. We asked if this diversity could be used to enrich our understanding of basic biological processes. As a test case, we examined a simple trait: the utilization of di/tripeptides as nitrogen sources. The capacity to import small peptides is likely to be under opposing selective pressures (nutrient utilization versus toxin vulnerability) and may therefore be sculpted by diverse pathways and strategies. Hitherto, dipeptide utilization in S. cerevisiae was solely ascribed to the activity of a single protein, the Ptr2p transporter. Using high-throughput phenotyping and several genetically diverse strains, we identified previously unknown cellular activities that contribute to this trait. We find that the Dal5p allantoate/ureidosuccinate permease is also capable of facilitating di/tripeptide transport. Moreover, even in the absence of Dal5p and Ptr2p, an additional activity--almost certainly the periplasmic asparaginase II Asp3p--facilitates the utilization of dipeptides with C-terminal asparagine residues by a different strategy. Another, as-yet-unidentified activity enables the utilization of dipeptides with C-terminal arginine residues. The relative contributions of these activities to the utilization of di/tripeptides vary among the strains analyzed, as does the vulnerability of these strains to a toxic dipeptide. Only by sampling the genetic diversity of multiple strains were we able to uncover several previously unrecognized layers of complexity in this metabolic pathway. High-throughput phenotyping facilitates the rapid exploration of the molecular basis of biological complexity, allowing for future detailed investigation of the selective pressures that drive microbial evolution.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC1342634?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Oliver R Homann
Houjian Cai
Jeffrey M Becker
Susan L Lindquist
spellingShingle Oliver R Homann
Houjian Cai
Jeffrey M Becker
Susan L Lindquist
Harnessing natural diversity to probe metabolic pathways.
PLoS Genetics
author_facet Oliver R Homann
Houjian Cai
Jeffrey M Becker
Susan L Lindquist
author_sort Oliver R Homann
title Harnessing natural diversity to probe metabolic pathways.
title_short Harnessing natural diversity to probe metabolic pathways.
title_full Harnessing natural diversity to probe metabolic pathways.
title_fullStr Harnessing natural diversity to probe metabolic pathways.
title_full_unstemmed Harnessing natural diversity to probe metabolic pathways.
title_sort harnessing natural diversity to probe metabolic pathways.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS Genetics
issn 1553-7390
1553-7404
publishDate 2005-12-01
description Analyses of cellular processes in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae rely primarily upon a small number of highly domesticated laboratory strains, leaving the extensive natural genetic diversity of the model organism largely unexplored and unexploited. We asked if this diversity could be used to enrich our understanding of basic biological processes. As a test case, we examined a simple trait: the utilization of di/tripeptides as nitrogen sources. The capacity to import small peptides is likely to be under opposing selective pressures (nutrient utilization versus toxin vulnerability) and may therefore be sculpted by diverse pathways and strategies. Hitherto, dipeptide utilization in S. cerevisiae was solely ascribed to the activity of a single protein, the Ptr2p transporter. Using high-throughput phenotyping and several genetically diverse strains, we identified previously unknown cellular activities that contribute to this trait. We find that the Dal5p allantoate/ureidosuccinate permease is also capable of facilitating di/tripeptide transport. Moreover, even in the absence of Dal5p and Ptr2p, an additional activity--almost certainly the periplasmic asparaginase II Asp3p--facilitates the utilization of dipeptides with C-terminal asparagine residues by a different strategy. Another, as-yet-unidentified activity enables the utilization of dipeptides with C-terminal arginine residues. The relative contributions of these activities to the utilization of di/tripeptides vary among the strains analyzed, as does the vulnerability of these strains to a toxic dipeptide. Only by sampling the genetic diversity of multiple strains were we able to uncover several previously unrecognized layers of complexity in this metabolic pathway. High-throughput phenotyping facilitates the rapid exploration of the molecular basis of biological complexity, allowing for future detailed investigation of the selective pressures that drive microbial evolution.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC1342634?pdf=render
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