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Treusch S and Lindquist S  (2012) An intrinsically disordered yeast prion arrests the cell cycle by sequestering a spindle pole body component. J Cell Biol 197(3):369-79

Abstract: Intrinsically disordered proteins play causative roles in many human diseases. Their overexpression is toxic in many organisms, but the causes of toxicity are opaque. In this paper, we exploit yeast technologies to determine the root of toxicity for one such protein, the yeast prion Rnq1. This protein is profoundly toxic when overexpressed but only in cells carrying the endogenous Rnq1 protein in its [RNQ(+)] prion (amyloid) conformation. Surprisingly, toxicity was not caused by general proteotoxic stress. Rather, it involved a highly specific mitotic arrest mediated by the Mad2 cell cycle checkpoint. Monopolar spindles accumulated as a result of defective duplication of the yeast centrosome (spindle pole body [SPB]). This arose from selective Rnq1-mediated sequestration of the core SPB component Spc42 in the insoluble protein deposit (IPOD). Rnq1 does not normally participate in spindle pole dynamics, but it does assemble at the IPOD when aggregated. Our work illustrates how the promiscuous interactions of an intrinsically disordered protein can produce highly specific cellular toxicities through illicit, yet highly specific, interactions with the proteome.

Status: Published Type: Journal Article PubMed ID: 22529103

Topics addressed in this paper

Number of different genes curated to this paper: 21

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Topics Genes linked to topics (#1 - 10 )
BTN2 CNM67 GPG1 HRR25 HSP104 MAD2 MSA1 NSP1 NUD1 NVJ1
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Topics Genes linked to topics (#11 - 20 )
RAD9 RNQ1 SIS1 SPC110 SPC29 SPC42 SPC72 SPC97 SSA4 THI2
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Topics Genes linked to topics (#21 )
YNL208W
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