Defining the role of the polyasparagine repeat domain of the S. cerevisiae transcription factor Azf1p

Abstract

Across eukaryotes, homopolymeric repeats of amino acids are enriched in regulatory proteins such as transcription factors and chromatin remodelers. These domains play important roles in signaling, binding, prion formation, and functional phase separation. Azf1p is a prion-forming yeast transcription factor that contains two homorepeat domains, a polyglutamine and a polyasparagine domain. In this work, we report a new phenotype for Azf1p and identify a large set of genes that are regulated by Azf1p during growth in glucose. We show that the polyasparagine (polyN) domain plays a subtle role in transcription but is dispensable for Azf1p localization and prion formation. Genes upregulated upon deletion of the polyN domain are enriched in functions related to carbon metabolism and storage. This domain may therefore be a useful target for engineering yeast strains for fermentation applications and small molecule production. We also report that both the polyasparagine and polyglutamine domains vary in length across strains of S. cerevisiae and propose a model for how this variation may impact protein function.

Document Details

Document Type
Pub Defense Publication
Publication Date
May 21, 2021
Source ID
10.1371/journal.pone.0247285

Entities

People

  • Benjamin E. Wolfe
  • Stephen M. Fuchs
  • Taylor Stewart

Organizations

  • Army Research Office

Tags

Fields of Study

  • Biology

Readers

  • Electrochemical Surface Science
  • Molecular Genetics