GRR1 was initially identified and named based upon the finding
that mutants in that gene interfere with glucose repression (
Glucose
Repression
Resistant)
(
Bailey and Woodward, 1984 
).
This study demonstrates that glucose acts via Grr1 to block the function of
Mth1 and, perhaps, Std1 as negative regulators of
HXT transcription,
thereby inducing Rgt1 phosphorylation and dissociation from
HXT
promoters. One of those proteins, Mth1, is regulated at the level of its
abundance via a mechanism involving Grr1.
We show herein that glucose regulates Rgt1 at the level of protein
phosphorylation and promoter binding. A similar observation was recently
reported (
Mosley et al, 2003 
).
Dissociation of Rgt1 from
HXT promoters is tightly correlated with
its hyperphosphorylation and with activation of the
HXT
transcription. Furthermore, glucose induction of
HXT transcripts is
unaffected in cells lacking Rgt1. This seems inconsistent with the proposal
that Rgt1 acts as a transactivator at
HXT promoters
(
Özcan et al.,
1996b 
). That model is based, in part, upon the observation that
Rgt1 can act as a transcriptional activator when tethered to a heterologous
promoter via LexA. Our data suggests instead that Rgt1 is absent from
transcriptionally active
HXT promoters arguing that if Rgt1 plays a
role in the activation of
HXT genes, it is indirect.
It was anticipated, based upon the role of Grr1 in the ubiquitin-proteasome
pathway, that Rgt1 would be a target for ubiquitin-mediated degradation.
Surprisingly, inactivation of Grr1 does not substantially affect the abundance
of Rgt1 nor is Rgt1 ubiquitinated in response to glucose. Instead, we find
that Rgt1 is phosphorylated in response to glucose in Grr1-dependent manner
consistent with the recent report by Özcan and colleagues
(
Mosley et al.,
2003 
). Furthermore, our genetic and biochemical analysis places
Mth1 and Std1 upstream of Rgt1 and downstream of Grr1. Consistent with its
role as a negative regulator of
HXT gene expression, we find that in
the absence of glucose Mth1 and, to a lesser extent, Std1 are required to
maintain Rgt1 in the hypophosphorylated state, and, consequently, for its
association with the
HXT promoters. Finally, a role for Grr1 in that
process is supported by the finding that inactivation of these genes relieves
the requirement for Grr1 for
HXT gene expression.
The rapid Grr1-dependent loss of Mth1 suggests it as a likely target for
ubiquitin-dependent degradation. Yet, there remains significant ambiguity both
in the literature and in our own analysis regarding a role for ubiquitination
in that context. Although Skp1 and Cdc53 are clearly important for
derepression induced by glucose (
Li and
Johnston, 1997 
), studies of thermosensitive mutants of Cdc34, the
E2 ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme responsible for all know ubiquitination
involving SCF
Grr1, suggest that it is not required
(
Li and Johnston, 1997 
; our
unpublished data). Another E2 enzyme, Ubc8, has been implicated in regulation
of fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase (Fbp1) stability by glucose
(
Schule et al.,
2000 
). Like
HXT gene expression, Fbp1 proteolysis depends
upon Grr1 (
Horak et al.,
2002 
). However, the two processes are distinguishable based upon
the strong dependence of Fbp1 proteolysis upon Reg1 and its lack of dependence
upon Rgt2 and Snf3. Although no role for Ubc8 in SCF-dependent ubiquitination
has been described, it remains a potential collaborator with
SCF
Grr1 in regulation of
HXT gene expression and Mth1
stability. However, it remains to be established that the role of Grr1 in
regulation of Mth1 abundance involves protein ubiquitination.
Std1 is both structurally and functionally related to Mth1
(
Hubbard et al.,
1994 
). Both proteins have been shown to associate with the
cytoplasmic domains of one or both hexose receptors, Rgt2 or Snf3, as well as
with Rgt1 (
Schmidt et al.,
1999 
;
Lafuente et
al., 2000 
). Although inactivation of Mth1 is sufficient to
derepress
HXT2, HXT3, and
HXT4, both Mth1 and Std1 must be
inactivated for full induction of Rgt1 hyperphoshorylation and
HXT
gene expression in the absence of glucose (Figures
and
;
Schmidt et al.,
1999 
). Furthermore, both genes must be eliminated to bypass the
requirement for Grr1 in those processes. Consequently, we can conclude that
Grr1 is somehow involved in the regulation of Std1. However, whereas the
behavior of Mth1 in response to glucose and in
grr1Δ mutants
argues in favor of a role for Grr1 in Mth1 turnover, Std1 is not similarly
regulated. Rather, the level of the Std1 protein seems to be unaffected by
glucose (;
Schmidt et al.,
1999 
). Unlike Mth1, both
STD1 RNA and protein seem to
decrease in
grr1 mutants. Finally, although inactivation of Grr1 has
little or no effect on Rgt1 modification or
HXT gene expression in
cells lacking Mth1, it has a dramatic effect on those phenotypes in cells
lacking Std1, suggesting that Grr1 is primarily involved in the regulation of
Mth1. Together, these results argue that Mth1 is the primary target of Grr1
for regulation of
HXT gene expression by glucose.
Std1 associates with Snf1, a protein kinase involved in global regulation
by glucose via a pathway independent of Snf3 and Rgt2
(
Hubbard et al.,
1994 
;
Tomas-Cobos and Sanz,
2002 
;
Kuchin et al.,
2003 
). Furthermore, Std1 seems to act as a positive regulator of
Snf1 (
Kuchin et al.,
2003 
). However, it is not clear whether this association is
relevant to the regulation of
HXT gene expression by glucose.
Although Snf1 may be responsible for a portion of the regulation of Rgt1, it
is not essential for glucose-inducible phosphorylation of Rgt1 (our
unpublished results) nor for induction of
HXT gene expression by
glucose (
Özcan and Johnston,
1995 
). Consequently, it seems likely that there are multiple
signal transduction pathways involved in glucose regulation of the
HXT genes that are, at least in part, independently regulated. The
distinction between these pathways may account, in part, for the differences
in the behavior of the
HXT genes in response to different levels of
glucose.
Based upon our analysis of the role of Grr1 in the regulation of
HXT gene expression and observations of others, we propose the model
presented in . We
suggest that repression of
HXT gene expression occurs via Rgt1
binding to
HXT gene promoters. However, maintenance of repression
depends upon Mth1 and Std1 perhaps via a direct interaction, consistent with
the observed interaction between Std1 and Rgt1
(
Tomas-Cobos and Sanz, 2002 
).
The extent to which these regulators affect expression varies between the
different
HXT genes, Std1 having its predominant effect on
HXT1 and Mth1 having a more pronounced effect on
HXT3 and
HXT4 (and probably
HXT2). On exposure to glucose multiple
signaling pathways are activated, a primary pathway for
HXT
regulation involving the glucose receptors, Rgt2 and Snf3, and a second, as
yet undefined, pathway. Our data suggest that Rgt2/Snf3 signaling occurs
primarily by elimination of the Mth1 protein via a Grr1-dependent mechanism.
Unlike Mth1, inactivation of Std1 seems to be largely Grr1-independent. That
pathway may involve Snf1, a global regulator of glucose repression, consistent
with the capacity of those proteins to form a complex
(
Hubbard et al.,
1994 
;
Tomas-Cobos and Sanz,
2002 
;
Kuchin et al.,
2003 
). Inactivation of Mth1 and Std1 may occur as a consequence of
their retention in the cytoplasm by the Rgt2/Snf3 receptor proteins. Both
proteins have been reported to interact with the cytoplasmic tails of these
transmembrane receptors via two-hybrid analysis
(
Schmidt et al.,
1999 
;
Lafuente et
al., 2000 
), although the specific conditions under which
those interactions occur is not known. This would require cycling of these
proteins between the nucleus and the cytoplasm. Finally, we propose that the
inactivation of Mth1 and Std1 leads to the phosphorylation of Rgt1 by an as
yet unidentified protein kinase. Phosphorylation leads to dissociation of Rgt1
from
HXT promoters, thereby activating
HXT gene expression.
Clearly, many of the details of this model remain to be established.
Grr1 plays an important, but as yet undescribed role in a number of
nutrient-regulated transcription systems. The targets of the SPS signaling
system required for the response of cells to extracellular amino acids
(
Forsberg and Ljungdahl, 2001 
)
and the Rgt1/Snf3 sensor system for regulation of hexose permeases are among
the best studied. There are similarities between these signal transduction
systems in addition to the involvement of Grr1. Notably, both use members of a
family of membrane-bound sensors related to the permeases that they regulate
(
Van Belle and André,
2001 
) and both exert transcriptional repression via the Ssn6/Tup1
transcriptional corepressor (
Özcan
and Johnston, 1999 
;
Andrèasson and Ljungdahl,
2002 
). Like
HXT gene regulation, activation of the
targets of SPS (
Ssy1-
Ptr3-
Ssy5) signaling
seems to involve SCF components (
Iraqui
et al., 1999 
) but is unaffected by mutations that affect
binding of targets for phosphorylation-dependent ubiquitination
(
Hsiung et al.,
2001 
). However, beyond Grr1 the analogy between elements of the
signal transduction systems conveying signals to the nucleus from the cell
membrane remains unclear. Strikingly, the transcriptional activation in the
SPS system involves proteolytic processing of two transcriptional regulators,
Stp1 and Stp2 (
Andrèasson and
Ljungdahl, 2002 
). However, processing of those proteins does not
seem to involve Grr1 nor have regulators analogous to Mth1 and Std1 been
identified in that system (
Özcan and
Johnston, 1999 
). Consequently, it is difficult, based upon analogy
to the
HXT system, to predict the role of Grr1 in SPS signaling.
However, it remains possible that the mechanism by which Grr1 regulates Mth1
is conserved between these pathways or that a single process mediated by Grr1
leads to the inactivation of Mth1 along with elements of those other
pathways.
The diverse roles of F-box proteins in cellular regulation are only
beginning to be fully appreciated. Activation of the transcriptional regulator
nuclear factor-κB, which has been known to involve ubiquitination target
for many years, is now known to occur via SCF-mediated
phosphorylation-dependent ubiquitination
(
Brivanlou and Darnell, 2002 
).
Over the past several years, a number of other ubiquitin-dependent mechanisms
for gene-specific, as well as general, transcriptional regulation have begun
to be elucidated (
Hoppe et al.,
2001 
;
Brivanlou and Darnell,
2002 
). More sophisticated understanding of these regulatory
networks will undoubtedly reveal a tightly regulated and highly integrated
system of ubiquitination-dependent events. Grr1, as an F-box protein involved
in a broad range of cellular processes including cell cycle regulation,
morphogenesis, and transcriptional control provides an excellent subject for
such studies.