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Mating yeast cells use an intrinsic polarity site to assemble a pheromone-gradient tracking machine

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posted on 2021-06-09, 17:12 authored by X Wang, W Tian, BT Banh, BM Statler, Jie LiangJie Liang, David StoneDavid Stone
The mating of budding yeast depends on chemotropism, a fundamental cellular process. The two yeast mating types secrete peptide pheromones that bind to GPCRs on cells of the opposite type. Cells find and contact a partner by determining the direction of the pheromone source and polarizing their growth toward it. Actin-directed secretion to the chemotropic growth site (CS) generates a mating projection. When pheromone-stimulated cells are unable to sense a gradient, they form mating projections where they would have budded in the next cell cycle, at a position called the default polarity site (DS). Numerous models have been proposed to explain yeast gradient sensing, but none address how cells reliably switch from the intrinsically determined DS to the gradient-aligned CS, despite a weak spatial signal. Here we demonstrate that, in mating cells, the initially uniform receptor and G protein first polarize to the DS, then redistribute along the plasma membrane until they reach the CS. Our data indicate that signaling, polarity, and trafficking proteins localize to the DS during assembly of what we call the gradient tracking machine (GTM). Differential activation of the receptor triggers feedback mechanisms that bias exocytosis upgradient and endocytosis downgradient, thus enabling redistribution of the GTM toward the pheromone source. The GTM stabilizes when the receptor peak centers at the CS and the endocytic machinery surrounds it. A computational model simulates GTM tracking and stabilization and correctly predicts that its assembly at a single site contributes to mating fidelity.

Funding

Using Empirical and Mathematical Approaches to Model Yeast Gradient Sensing | Funder: National Science Foundation | Grant ID: MCB-1415589

Database and Tools for Functional Inference and Mechanistic Insight into Somatic Cancer Mutations | Funder: National Institutes of Health (National Cancer Institute) | Grant ID: R01CA204962

Constructing Ensembles of 3D Structures of Igh Locus and Predicting Novel Chromosomal Interactions | Funder: National Institutes of Health (National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases) | Grant ID: R21AI126308

Models and Algorrithms for Biological Polymers and Networks: Beta Barrel Membrane Proteins, Chromatin Ensembles, and Stochastic | Funder: National Institutes of Health (National Institute of General Medical Sciences) | Grant ID: R35GM127084

How yeast sense direction in shallow pheromone gradients | Funder: National Science Foundation | Grant ID: MCB-1818067

History

Citation

Wang, X., Tian, W., Banh, B. T., Statler, B. M., Liang, J.Stone, D. E. (2019). Mating yeast cells use an intrinsic polarity site to assemble a pheromone-gradient tracking machine. Journal of Cell Biology, 218(11), 3730-3752. https://doi.org/10.1083/JCB.201901155

Publisher

Rockefeller University Press

Language

  • en

issn

0021-9525

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