W. Yu et al., IDENTIFICATION OF SLF1 AS A NEW COPPER HOMEOSTASIS GENE INVOLVED IN COPPER SULFIDE MINERALIZATION IN SACCHAROMYCES-CEREVISIAE, Molecular and cellular biology, 16(5), 1996, pp. 2464-2472
In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, at least 12 genes are important for cells
to propagate in medium containing elevated concentrations of copper s
alts (J, Welch, S, Fogel, C, Buchman, and M, Karin, EMBO J, 8:255-260,
1989), Complementation studies were carried out on a copper-sensitive
mutation (cup14) from this group, A new yeast gene, designated SLF1,
was identified as a multicopy suppressor of the cup14 mutation, Slf1 i
s important for the physiological process of copper sulfide (CuS) mine
ralization on the surface of cells cultured in medium containing coppe
r salts, CuS mineralization causes the cells to turn brown, Disruption
of SLF1, which is located close to the telomere region of chromosome
IV, leads to limited copper sensitivity, and the resulting cells lack
the normal brownish coloration when grown in CuSO4-containing medium,
Overproduction of Slf1 in wild-type cells confers superresistance to C
uSO4 and enhances the coloration of cells cultured in the presence of
CuSO4, Upon addition of KCN to Cu-grown cells, the brownish coloration
was bleached instantly, and copper ions were solubilized, These data
are consistent with Slf1-dependent accumulation of CuS complexes on th
e cell surface, Disruption of SLF1 also results in loss of the ability
of yeast cells to deplete Cu but not Cd ions from the growth medium,
whereas overexpression enhances Cu depletion ability and the resulting
deposition of CuS particles, It is proposed that Slf1 participates in
a copper homeostasis pathway, distinct from the Cup1 detoxification s
ystem, that leads to sulfide generation and CuS biomineralization on t
he cell surface, This process may coordinate with the Cup1 pathway at
different copper concentrations to prevent copper-induced toxicity.