A putative glucose repressor MIG1-homologue (SoMIG1) was isolated from the amylolytic yeast Schwanniomyces occidentalis. Degenerate primers were designed from the conserved zinc finger regions of Mig1 and CreA proteins from different organisms. PCR using these primers and S. occidentalis genomic DNA as template yielded a single 128 bp product. This fragment was used as a DNA probe to screen a S. occidentalis genomic library. Analysis of the positive clones led to the isolation by PCR of a DNA fragment, which contained an open reading frame (ORF) that would encode a 458 amino acid polypeptide. The DNA binding and effector domains of this putative protein showed an identity of 71% and 15%, respectively, to those of the Mig1 protein from Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The SoMIG1 gene complemented a mig1 mutant of this yeast, which suggests that in S. occidentalis SoMIG1 is a glucose repressor.
The effect of different carbon sources on the expression in Saccharomyces cerevisiae of the SWA2 alpha-amylase gene from Schwanniomyces occidentalis was studied from constructs containing its 5' region (-223 to +15), which were fused in-frame to the lacZ gene coding sequence. Maximal expression was achieved with the non-fermentable substrates ethanol and/or glycerol, whereas lower levels were found with maltose or galactose. In contrast, glucose repressed it, even in the presence of any of these other carbon sources. Deletion analyses of the -233 to -85 SWA2 promoter region permitted the identification of two fragments involved in both glucose repression and ethanol activation. A possible region required for cAMP regulation was localised. The SWA2 promoter contains a MIG1-binding GC box whose deletion caused a five-fold increase in the glucose-repressed reporter expression. Despite this, expression of the SWA2 promoter was not MIG1-dependent.
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