The N-terminal half of Cdc25 is essential for processing glucose signaling in Saccharomyces cerevisiae (original) (raw)
Biochemistry, 1999
Abstract
Saccharomyces cerevisiae Cdc25 is the prototype Ras GDP/GTP exchange protein. Its C-terminal catalytic domain was found to be highly conserved in the homologues p140(ras-GRF) and Sos. The regulatory domains in each Ras exchanger mediate the signals arriving from upstream elements such as tyrosine kinases for Sos, or Ca2+ and G proteins for p140.(Ras-GRF) In this study, we show that the N-terminal half (NTH) of S. cerevisiae Cdc25, as well as the C-terminal 37 amino acids, is essential for processing the elevation of cAMP in response to glucose. The mammalian p140(ras-GRF) catalytic domain (CGRF) restores glucose signaling in S. cerevisiae only if tethered between the N-terminal half (NTH) of S. cerevisiae Cdc25 and the C-terminal 37 amino acids. The glucose-induced transient elevation in cAMP is nullified or severely hampered by the deletion of domains within the NTH of Cdc25. These deletions, however, do not modify the intrinsic GDP/GTP exchange activity of mutant proteins as compa...
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