Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"Brett CL" Authored Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Sphingolipids containing very long-chain fatty acids regulate Ypt7 function during the tethering stage of vacuole fusion Zhang C; Calderin JD; Hurst LR; Gokbayrak ZD; Hrabak MR; Balutowski A; Rivera-Kohr DA; Kazmirchuk TDD; Brett CL; Fratti RA; 39307308
BIOLOGY
2 Thermotolerance in S. cerevisiae as a model to study extracellular vesicle biology Logan CJ; Staton CC; Oliver JT; Bouffard J; Kazmirchuk TDD; Magi M; Brett CL; 38711329
BIOLOGY
3 A two-tiered system for selective receptor and transporter protein degradation Golden CK; Kazmirchuk TDD; McNally EK; El Eissawi M; Gokbayrak ZD; Richard JD; Brett CL; 36215320
BIOLOGY
4 Acetate and hypertonic stress stimulate vacuole membrane fission using distinct mechanisms Gokbayrak ZD; Patel D; Brett CL; 35834522
BIOLOGY
5 Distinct features of multivesicular body-lysosome fusion revealed by a new cell-free content-mixing assay. Karim MA, Samyn DR, Mattie S, Brett CL 29135058
BIOLOGY
6 The Na+(K+)/H+ exchanger Nhx1 controls multivesicular body-vacuolar lysosome fusion. Karim MA, Brett CL 29212874
BIOLOGY
7 Rab-Effector-Kinase Interplay Modulates Intralumenal Fragment Formation during Vacuole Fusion. Karim MA, McNally EK, Samyn DR, Mattie S, Brett CL 30269949
BIOLOGY
8 A Cell-Free Content Mixing Assay for SNARE-Mediated Multivesicular Body-Vacuole Membrane Fusion. Karim MA, Samyn DR, Brett CL 30317513
BIOLOGY
9 Visualization of SNARE-Mediated Organelle Membrane Hemifusion by Electron Microscopy. Mattie S, Kazmirchuk T, Mui J, Vali H, Brett CL 30317518
BIOLOGY
10 The intralumenal fragment pathway mediates ESCRT-independent surface transporter down-regulation. McNally EK, Brett CL 30560896
BIOLOGY

 

Title:Acetate and hypertonic stress stimulate vacuole membrane fission using distinct mechanisms
Authors:Gokbayrak ZDPatel DBrett CL
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35834522/
DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0271199
Publication:PloS one
Keywords:
PMID:35834522 Category: Date Added:2022-07-14
Dept Affiliation: BIOLOGY
1 Department of Biology, Concordia University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.

Description:

Vacuoles in plants and fungi play critical roles in cell metabolism and osmoregulation. To support these functions, vacuoles change their morphology, e.g. they fragment when these organisms are challenged with draught, high salinity or metabolic stress (e.g. acetate accumulation). In turn, morphology reflects an equilibrium between membrane fusion and fission that determines size, shape and copy number. By studying Saccharomyces cerevisiae and its vacuole as models, conserved molecular mechanisms responsible for fusion have been revealed. However, a detailed understanding of vacuole fission and how these opposing processes respond to metabolism or osmoregulation remain elusive. Herein we describe a new fluorometric assay to measure yeast vacuole fission in vitro. For proof-of-concept, we use this assay to confirm that acetate, a metabolic stressor, triggers vacuole fission and show it blocks homotypic vacuole fusion in vitro. Similarly, hypertonic stress induced by sorbitol or glucose caused robust vacuole fission in vitro whilst inhibiting fusion. Using wortmannin to inhibit phosphatidylinositol (PI) -kinases or rGyp1-46 to inactivate Rab-GTPases, we show that acetate stress likely targets PI signaling, whereas osmotic stress affects Rab signaling on vacuole membranes to stimulate fission. This study sets the stage for further investigation into the mechanisms that change vacuole morphology to support cell metabolism and osmoregulation.





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