Science | 2021
Decoupling transcription factor expression and activity enables dimmer switch gene regulation
Abstract
Circuit design for control of metabolism A transcriptional control mechanism in yeast that allows cells to respond to changes in nutrient concentrations works very much like a household light-dimmer switch. That is, the system separately controls whether gene expression is “on” or “off” and the extent of gene expression. The galactose-responsive pathway is activated when yeast need to switch from metabolizing glucose to metabolizing galactose. Ricci-Tam et al. found that, rather than using two separate elements for the switch and dimmer controls, yeast use a single transcription factor, Gal4p, separately regulating its abundance (through transcriptional regulation) and its catalytic activity (through interaction with a protein-binding partner). Such regulation may be common and can allow responses to the environment on physiological and evolutionary time scales. Science, this issue p. 292 Yeast control galactose metabolism via the hierarchical regulation of the expression and activity of a single transcription factor. Gene-regulatory networks achieve complex mappings of inputs to outputs through mechanisms that are poorly understood. We found that in the galactose-responsive pathway in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the decision to activate the transcription of genes encoding pathway components is controlled independently from the expression level, resulting in behavior resembling that of a mechanical dimmer switch. This was not a direct result of chromatin regulation or combinatorial control at galactose-responsive promoters; rather, this behavior was achieved by hierarchical regulation of the expression and activity of a single transcription factor. Hierarchical regulation is ubiquitous, and thus dimmer switch regulation is likely a key feature of many biological systems. Dimmer switch gene regulation may allow cells to fine-tune their responses to multi-input environments on both physiological and evolutionary time scales.