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Merck

A common bacterial metabolite elicits prion-based bypass of glucose repression.

eLife (2016-12-03)
David M Garcia, David Dietrich, Jon Clardy, Daniel F Jarosz
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Robust preference for fermentative glucose metabolism has motivated domestication of the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. This program can be circumvented by a protein-based genetic element, the [GAR+] prion, permitting simultaneous metabolism of glucose and other carbon sources. Diverse bacteria can elicit yeast cells to acquire [GAR+], although the molecular details of this interaction remain unknown. Here we identify the common bacterial metabolite lactic acid as a strong [GAR+] inducer. Transient exposure to lactic acid caused yeast cells to heritably circumvent glucose repression. This trait had the defining genetic properties of [GAR+], and did not require utilization of lactic acid as a carbon source. Lactic acid also induced [GAR+]-like epigenetic states in fungi that diverged from S. cerevisiae ~200 million years ago, and in which glucose repression evolved independently. To our knowledge, this is the first study to uncover a bacterial metabolite with the capacity to potently induce a prion.

MATERIALS
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Sigma-Aldrich
Sodium L-lactate, ~98%
Sigma-Aldrich
L-(+)-Lactic acid, BioXtra, โ‰ฅ98% (titration)