Plant Physiol, November 2002, Vol. 130, pp. 1121-1131
Function of a Plant Stress-Induced Gene, HVA22.
Synthetic Enhancement Screen with Its Yeast Homolog Reveals Its Role in
Vesicular Traffic1
Alex
Brands and
Tuan-hua David
Ho*
Department of Biology, Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri
63130
Expression of the barley (Hordeum vulgare)
HVA22 gene is induced by environmental stresses, such as
dehydration, salinity, and extreme temperatures, and by a plant stress
hormone, abscisic acid. Genes sharing high level of sequence
similarities with HVA22 exist in diverse
eukaryotic organisms, including animals, plants, and fungi, but not in
any prokaryotic organisms. The yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) HVA22 homolog, Yop1p, has been shown to interact
with the GTPase-interacting protein, Yip1p. Deletion of
YOP1 led to only a modest reduction of the stationary
phase titer at 37C. A synthetic enhancement mutant screen was performed
in the yop1 deletion background to identify genes
interacting with YOP1. The open reading frame
YOR165W (renamed SEY1 for synthetic enhancement of
YOP1) was identified as a YOP1-dependent
complementation gene. The yeast SEY1 is a homolog of the
Arabidopsis RHD3 gene whose mutations cause the
accumulation of transport vesicles near the tips of defective root
hairs. The yeast double mutant of yop1 and
sey1 is defective in vesicular traffic as evidenced by
the accumulation of transport vesicles and the decrease in invertase secretion. Based on these observations, we suggest that Yop1p/HVA22 regulates vesicular traffic in stressed cells either to facilitate membrane turnover, or to decrease unnecessary secretion.
1
This work was supported by the U.S. Department
of Agriculture and by the Monsanto Company (St. Louis).
*
Corresponding author; e-mail ho{at}biology2.wustl.edu; fax
314-935-4432.
© 2002 American Society of Plant Biologists