posted on 2019-11-19, 22:43authored byAditi Prabhakar, Nadia Vadaie, Thomas Krzystek, Paul J. Cullen
Transmembrane mucin-type glycoproteins can regulate signal
transduction
pathways. In yeast, signaling mucins regulate mitogen-activated protein
kinase (MAPK) pathways that induce cell differentiation to filamentous
growth (fMAPK pathway) and the response to osmotic stress (HOG pathway).
To explore regulatory aspects of signaling mucin function, protein
microarrays were used to identify proteins that interact with the
cytoplasmic domain of the mucin-like glycoprotein Msb2p. Eighteen
proteins were identified that comprised functional categories of metabolism,
actin filament capping and depolymerization, aerobic and anaerobic
growth, chromatin organization and bud growth, sporulation, ribosome
biogenesis, protein modification by iron–sulfur clusters, RNA
catabolism, and DNA replication and DNA repair. A subunit of actin
capping protein, Cap2p, interacted with the cytoplasmic domain of
Msb2p. Cells lacking Cap2p showed altered localization of Msb2p and
increased levels of shedding of Msb2p’s N-terminal glycosylated
domain. Consistent with its role in regulating the actin cytoskeleton,
Cap2p was required for enhanced cell polarization during filamentous
growth. Our study identifies proteins that connect a signaling mucin
to diverse cellular processes and may provide insight into new aspects
of mucin function.