Article

  • The EMBO Journal (1997) 16, 7008 - 7018
  • doi:10.1093/emboj/16.23.7008

Yeast pseudohyphal growth is regulated by GPA2, a G protein alpha homolog

Michael C. Lorenz1 and Joseph Heitman1

  1. Departments of Genetics and Pharmacology and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC 27710, USA

Correspondence to:

Joseph Heitman, E-mail: heitm001@mc.duke.edu

Received 6 May 1997; Revised 4 August 1997


Pseudohyphal differentiation, a filamentous growth form of the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, is induced by nitrogen starvation. The mechanisms by which nitrogen limitation regulates this process are currently unknown. We have found that GPA2, one of the two heterotrimeric G protein alpha subunit homologs in yeast, regulates pseudohyphal differentiation. Deltagpa2/Deltagpa2 mutant strains have a defect in pseudohyphal growth. In contrast, a constitutively active allele of GPA2 stimulates filamentation, even on nitrogen-rich media. Moreover, a dominant negative GPA2 allele inhibits filamentation of wild-type strains. Several findings, including epistasis analysis and reporter gene studies, indicate that GPA2 does not regulate the MAP kinase cascade known to regulate filamentous growth. Previous studies have implicated GPA2 in the control of intracellular cAMP levels; we find that expression of the dominant RAS2Gly19Val mutant or exogenous cAMP suppresses the Deltagpa2 pseudohyphal defect. cAMP also stimulates filamentation in strains lacking the cAMP phosphodiesterase PDE2, even in the absence of nitrogen starvation. Our findings suggest that GPA2 is an element of the nitrogen sensing machinery that regulates pseudohyphal differentiation by modulating cAMP levels.

  • Keywords:

    • cAMP,
    • dimorphism,
    • G proteins,
    • pseudohyphal differentiation,
    • yeast