Sm. Uptain et al., Strains of [PSI+] are distinguished by their efficiencies of prion-mediated conformational conversion, EMBO J, 20(22), 2001, pp. 6236-6245
Yeast prions are protein-based genetic elements that produce phenotypes thr
ough self-perpetuating changes in protein conformation. For the prion [PSI] this protein is Sup35, which is comprised of a prion-determining region (
NM) fused to a translational termination region. [PSI+] strains (variants)
with different heritable translational termination defects (weak or strong)
can exist in the same genetic background. [PSI+] variants are reminiscent
of mammalian prion strains, which can be passaged in the same mouse strain
yet have different disease latencies and brain pathologies. We found that [
PSI+] variants contain different ratios of Sup35 in the prion and non-prion
state that correlate with different translation termination efficiencies.
Indeed, the partially purified prion form of Sup35 from a strong [PSI+] var
iant converted purified NM much more efficiently than that of several weak
variants. However, this difference was lost in a second round of conversion
in vitro. Thus, [PSI+] variants result from differences in the efficiency
of prion-mediated conversion, and the maintenance of [PSI+] variants involv
es more than nucleated conformational conversion (templating) to NM alone.