Study of Saccharomyces cerevisiae killer toxin-sensitive strains with the deltakre2 phenotype (resistant to toxin K1, sensitive to toxin K2) showed that the phenotype is complemented by the KRE2 gene not only in intact cells but also in spheroplasts, and resistance to K1 thus resides very probably in the plasma membrane. deltakre1 deletant displays a faulty interaction with both K1 and K2 toxin. Hence, Kre1p probably serves as plasma membrane receptor for both toxins. Deletants in seven other genes (GDA1, SAC1, LUV1, KRE23, SAC2, KRE21, ERG4) exhibit different degrees of the deltakre2-like resistance pattern, but the phenotype in deltagda1 and deltasac1 is not connected with a defect in K1 toxin interaction with the plasma membrane, similarly as in deltakre6 and deltakre11 strains with a higher resistance to K2 toxin. Differences between the K1 and K2 killer toxin thus occur on the level of both the plasma membrane and the cell wall.
A triple mutant strain of Saccharomyces cerevisiae lacking its own Na+-ATPases and Na+/H+ antiporters (enal-4delta nha1delta nhx1delta) was used for the expression of the Oryza sativa NHX1 gene encoding a putative vacuolar Na+/H+ exchanger. Upon expression in yeast cells, the OsNhx 1p is not a transport system specific only for sodium cations but it has a broad substrate specificity for at least four alkali metal cations (Na+, Li+, K+ and Rb+) and is able to substitute for the endogenous yeast ScNhx1 antiporter. Its activity contributes to sequestration of alkali metal cations in intracellular vesicles.
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