Lithium toxicity in yeast is due to the inhibition of RNA processing enzymes


Autoria(s): Dichtl, Bernhard; Stevens, Audrey; Tollervey, David
Data(s)

01/12/1997

Resumo

Hal2p is an enzyme that converts pAp (adenosine 3',5' bisphosphate), a product of sulfate assimilation, into 5' AMP and Pi. Overexpression of Hal2p confers lithium resistance in yeast, and its activity is inhibited by submillimolar amounts of Li+in vitro. Here we report that pAp accumulation in HAL2 mutants inhibits the 5'3' exoribonucleases Xrn1p and Rat1p. Li+ treatment of a wild-type yeast strain also inhibits the exonucleases, as a result of pAp accumulation due to inhibition of Hal2p; 5' processing of the 5.8S rRNA and snoRNAs, degradation of pre-rRNA spacer fragments and mRNA turnover are inhibited. Lithium also inhibits the activity of RNase MRP by a mechanism which is not mediated by pAp. A mutation in the RNase MRP RNA confers Li+ hypersensitivity and is synthetically lethal with mutations in either HAL2 or XRN1. We propose that Li+ toxicity in yeast is due to synthetic lethality evoked between Xrn1p and RNase MRP. Similar mechanisms may contribute to the effects of Li+ on development and in human neurobiology.<br />

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30039328

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Nature Publishing Group

Relação

http://dro.deakin.edu.au/eserv/DU:30039328/dichtl-lithiumtoxicity-1997.pdf

http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/emboj/16.23.7184

Direitos

1997, Nature Publishing Group

Palavras-Chave #exonucleases #lithium #RNA processing #RNase MRP #sulfate assimilation
Tipo

Journal Article