A. Vincent et al., THE YEAST TRANSLATIONAL ALLOSUPPRESSOR, SAL6 - A NEW MEMBER OF THE PP1-LIKE PHOSPHATASE FAMILY WITH A LONG SERINE-RICH N-TERMINAL EXTENSION, Genetics, 138(3), 1994, pp. 597-608
The allosuppressor mutation, sal6-1, enhances the efficiency of all te
sted translational suppressors, including codon-specific tRNA suppress
ors as well as codon-nonspecific omnipotent suppressors. The SAL6 gene
has now been cloned by complementation of the increased suppression e
fficiency and cold sensitivity caused by sal6-1 in the presence of the
omnipotent suppressor sup45. Physical analysis maps SAL6 to chromosom
e XVI between TPK2 and spt14. The SAL6 gene encodes avery basic 549-am
ino acid protein whose C-terminal catalytic region of 265 residues is
63% identical to serine/threonine PP1 phosphatases, and 66% identical
to yeast PPZ1 and PPZ2 phosphatases. The unusual 235 residue N-termina
l extension found in SAL6, like those in the PPZ proteins, is serine-r
ich. The salb-1 mutation is a frameshift at amino acid position 271 wh
ich destroys the presumed phosphatase catalytic domain of the protein.
Disruptions of the entire SAL6 gene are viable, cause a slight growth
defect on glycerol medium, and produce allosuppressor phenotypes in s
uppressor strain backgrounds. The role of the serine-rich N terminus i
s unclear, since sal6 phenotypes are fully complemented by a SAL6 alle
le that contains an in-frame deletion of most of this region. High cop
y number plasmids containing wild-type SAL6 cause antisuppresser pheno
types in suppressor strains. These results suggest that the accuracy o
f protein synthesis is affected by the levels of phosphorylation of th
e target(s) of SAL6.