The freeze-thaw stress response of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae is growth phase specific and is controlled by nutritional state via the RAS-cyclic AMP signal

被引:98
作者
Park, JI
Grant, CM
Attfield, PV
Dawes, IW
机构
[1] UNIV NEW S WALES,SCH BIOCHEM & MOL GENET,SYDNEY,NSW 2052,AUSTRALIA
[2] UNIV NEW S WALES,COOPERAT RES CTR FOOD IND INNOVAT,SYDNEY,NSW 2052,AUSTRALIA
[3] BURNS PHILP R&D PTY LTD,SYDNEY,NSW 2113,AUSTRALIA
关键词
D O I
10.1128/AEM.63.10.3818-3824.1997
中图分类号
Q81 [生物工程学(生物技术)]; Q93 [微生物学];
学科分类号
071005 ; 0836 ; 090102 ; 100705 ;
摘要
The ability of cells to survive freezing and thawing is expected to depend on the physiological conditions experienced prior to freezing, We examined factors affecting yeast cell survival during freeze-thaw stress, including those associated with growth phase, requirement for mitochondrial functions, acid prior stress treatment(s), and the role played by relevant signal transduction pathways, The yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae was frozen at -20 degrees C for 2 h (cooling rate, less than 4 degrees C min(-1)) and thawed on ice for 40 min, Supercooling occurred without reducing cell survival and was followed by freezing, Loss of viability was proportional to the freezing duration, indicating that freezing is the main determinant of freeze-thaw damage, Regardless of the carbon source used, the wild type strain and an isogenic petite mutant ([rho(0)]) showed the same pattern of freeze-thaw tolerance throughout growth, i.e., high resistance during lag phase and low resistance during log phase, indicating that the response to freeze-thaw stress is growth phase specific and not controlled by glucose repression, In addition, respiratory ability and functional mitochondria are necessary to confer full resistance to freeze-thaw stress, Both nitrogen and carbon source starvation led to freeze-thaw tolerance, The use of strains affected in the RAS-cyclic AMP (RAS-cAMP) pathway or supplementation of an real mutant (defective in the cAMP phosphodiesterase gene) with cAMP showed that the freeze-thaw response of yeast is under the control of the RAS-cAMP pathway, Yeast did not adapt to freeze-thaw stress following repeated freeze-thaw treatment with or without a recovery period between freeze-thaw cycles, nor could it adapt following pretreatment by cold shock However, freeze-thaw tolerance of yeast cells was induced during fermentative and respiratory growth by pretreatment with H2O2, cycloheximide, mild heat shock, or NaCl, indicating that cross protection between freeze-thaw stress and a limited number of other types of stress exists.
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页码:3818 / 3824
页数:7
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