Molecular Cell
Volume 27, Issue 6, 21 September 2007, Pages 1005-1013
Journal home page for Molecular Cell

Short Article
Positive Feedback Regulates Switching of Phosphate Transporters in S. cerevisiae

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.molcel.2007.07.022Get rights and content
Under an Elsevier user license
open archive

Summary

The regulation of transporters by nutrient-responsive signaling pathways allows cells to tailor nutrient uptake to environmental conditions. We investigated the role of feedback generated by transporter regulation in the budding yeast phosphate-responsive signal transduction (PHO) pathway. Cells starved for phosphate activate feedback loops that regulate high- and low-affinity phosphate transport. We determined that positive feedback is generated by PHO pathway-dependent upregulation of Spl2, a negative regulator of low-affinity phosphate uptake. The interplay of positive and negative feedback loops leads to bistability in phosphate transporter usage—individual cells express predominantly either low- or high-affinity transporters, both of which can yield similar phosphate uptake capacity. Cells lacking the high-affinity transporter, and associated negative feedback, exhibit phenotypes that arise from hysteresis due to unopposed positive feedback. In wild-type cells, population heterogeneity generated by feedback loops may provide a strategy for anticipating changes in environmental phosphate levels.

SIGNALING
SYSBIO

Cited by (0)

4

Present address: Department of Biology, Villanova University, 800 Lancaster Avenue, Villanova, PA 19085, USA.