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Featured researches published by Humberto Martín.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2000

Regulatory Mechanisms for Modulation of Signaling through the Cell Integrity Slt2-mediated Pathway in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Humberto Martín; José M. Rodrı́guez-Pachón; Cristina Ruiz; César Nombela; María Molina

Signal transduction mediated by the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) Slt2 pathway is essential to maintain the cell wall integrity in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Stimulation of MAPK pathways results in activation by phosphorylation of conserved threonine and tyrosine residues of MAPKs. We have used an antibody that specifically recognizes dually phosphorylated Slt2 to gain insight into the activation and modulation of signaling through the cell integrity pathway. We show that caffeine and vanadate activate this pathway in the absence of osmotic stabilization. The lack of the putative cell surface sensor Mid2 prevents vanadate- but not caffeine-induced Slt2 phosphorylation. Disruption of the Rho1-GTPase-activating protein genes SAC7and BEM2 leads to constitutive Slt2 activation, indicating their involvement as negative regulators of the pathway. MAPK kinases also seem to participate in signaling regulation, Mkk1 playing a greater role than Mkk2 in signal transmission to Slt2. Additionally, one of the phosphatases involved in Slt2 dephosphorylation is likely to be the dual specificity phosphatase Msg5, since overexpression ofMSG5 in a sac7Δ mutant eliminates the high Slt2 phosphorylation, and disruption of MSG5 in wild type cells results in increased phospho-Slt2 levels. These data present the first evidence for a negative regulation of the cell integrity pathway.


Microbiology | 2000

Cell wall perturbation in yeast results in dual phosphorylation of the Slt2/Mpk1 MAP kinase and in an Slt2-mediated increase in FKS2-lacZ expression, glucanase resistance and thermotolerance

Hans de Nobel; Cristina Ruiz; Humberto Martín; Wayne Morris; Stanley Brul; María Molina; Frans M. Klis

The protein kinase C (PKC1) pathway is essential for maintaining cell integrity in yeast. Here it is shown that various forms of cell wall damage result in activation of the downstream MAP kinase Slt2/Mpk1. Several cell wall mutants displayed enhanced FKS2-lacZ expression, a known output of Slt2 activation. A similar response was obtained with wild-type cells grown in the presence of the cell wall perturbants Calcofluor white and Zymolyase. Upregulation of FKS2-lacZ in response to sublethal concentrations of these agents fully depended on the presence of Slt2. The same cell wall stress conditions resulted in dual threonine and tyrosine phosphorylation of Slt2. Both Slt2 phosphorylation and FKS2-lacZ induction could be largely prevented by providing osmotic support to the plasma membrane. Interestingly, Slt2 phosphorylation in response to cell wall damage required the putative plasma-membrane-located sensor Mid2 but not Hcs77/Wsc1. Finally, cell wall perturbation gave rise to cells with increased resistance to glucanase digestion and heat shock. These responses depended on the presence of Slt2. These results indicate that weakening of the cell wall activates the Slt2/Mpk1 MAP kinase pathway and results in compensatory changes in the cell wall.


Molecular Microbiology | 1991

A protein kinase gene complements the lytic phenotype of Saccharomyces cerevisiae lyt2 mutants.

L. Torres; Humberto Martín; M. I. García-Saez; Javier Arroyo; María Molina; Miguel Sánchez; César Nombela

By genetic analysis of a thermosensitive autolytic mutant whose phenotype was complemented by osmotic stabilization with sorbitol, we identified gene LYT2 of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, which is probably involved in cell wall formation. A yeast gene complementing lyt2 strains was cloned and shown to carry an open reading frame coding for a 484‐amino‐acid protein exhibiting all the characteristic domains of serine/threonine protein kinases and highly homologous to other yeast protein kinases involved in control of the mitotic cycle. Mutants disrupted in the cloned gene also displayed an autolytic phenotype complemented by osmotic stabilization with sorbitol. However, genetic comparison of lyt2 mutants and disruptants of the protein kinase gene revealed that the cloned gene is not the structural gene LVT2 but a suppressor of the lytic phenotype, named gene SLT2, that was mapped to chromosome V. The product of gene SLT2 is the first protein kinase to be described in relation to the yeast cell‐wall functions.


Molecular Microbiology | 2005

Protein phosphatases in MAPK signalling: we keep learning from yeast

Humberto Martín; Marta Flández; César Nombela; María Molina

Because of their key role in cell signalling, a rigorous regulation of mitogen‐activated protein kinases (MAPKs) is essential in eukaryotic physiology. Whereas the use of binding motifs and scaffold proteins guarantees the selective activation of a specific MAPK pathway, activating kinases and downregulating phosphatases control the appropriate intensity and timing of MAPK activation. Tyrosine, serine/threonine and dual‐specificity phosphatases co‐ordinately dephosphorylate and thereby inactivate MAPKs. In budding yeast, enzymes that belong to these three types of phosphatases have been shown to counteract the MAPKs that govern the cellular response to varied extracellular stimuli. Studies carried out with these yeast phosphatases have expanded our knowledge of essential key aspects of the biology of these negative regulators, such as their function, the mechanisms that operate in their modulation by MAPK pathways and their binding to MAPK substrates. Furthermore, yeast MAPK phosphatases have been shown to play additional and essential roles in MAPK‐mediated signalling, controlling MAPK localization or cross‐talk among pathways. This review stresses the importance of these negative regulators in eukaryotic signalling by discussing the recent developments and perspectives in the study of yeast MAPK phosphatases.


Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 1993

Activity of the yeast MAP kinase homologue Slt2 is critically required for cell integrity at 37° C

Humberto Martín; Javier Arroyo; Miguel Sánchez; María Molina; César Nombela

Deletion of the SLT2 gene of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, which codes for a homologue of MAP (mitogen-activated) protein kinases, causes an autolytic lethal phenotype in cells grown at 37° C. The gene encodes domains characteristic of protein kinases, which include a lysine (at position 54) that lies 19 residues from a glycine-rich cluster, considered to be the putative ATP binding site. The ability of three mutant alleles of SLT2 generated by site-directed mutagenesis, namely E54 (glutamic acid), R54 (arginine) and F54 (phenylalanine), to complement slt2 mutants was tested. All three failed to complement the autolytic phenotype and were unable to restore growth and viability of cells. A strain obtained by transplacement of slt2-F54 also behaved as a thermosensitive autolytic mutant. By immunoprecipitation with polyclonal antibodies raised against Slt2 protein expressed in Escherichia coli, it was possible to confirm that alteration of the lysine-54 residue did not affect the stability of the protein, thus allowing us to conclude that activity of the Slt2 protein kinase is critically required for growth and morphogenesis of S. cerevisiae at 37° C. A significant fraction of the mutant cell population lysed at 24° C and the cells displayed a characteristic alteration of the surface consisting of a typical depression in an area of the cell wall. At 37° C, the cell surface was clearly disorganized.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

Signaling Alkaline pH Stress in the Yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae through the Wsc1 Cell Surface Sensor and the Slt2 MAPK Pathway

Raquel Serrano; Humberto Martín; Antonio Casamayor; Joaquín Ariño

Alkalinization of the external environment represents a stress situation for Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Adaptation to this circumstance involves the activation of diverse response mechanisms, the components of which are still largely unknown. We show here that mutation of members of the cell integrity Pkc1/Slt2 MAPK module, as well as upstream and downstream elements of the system, confers sensitivity to alkali. Alkalinization resulted in fast and transient activation of the Slt2 MAPK, which depended on the integrity of the kinase module and was largely abolished by sorbitol. Lack of Wsc1, removal of specific extracellular and intracellular domains, or substitution of Tyr303 in this putative membrane stress sensor rendered cells sensitive to alkali and considerably decreased alkali-induced Slt2 activation. In contrast, constitutive activation of Slt2 by the bck1-20 allele increased pH tolerance in the wsc1 mutant. DNA microarray analysis revealed that several genes encoding cell wall proteins, such as GSC2/FKS2, DFG5, SKT5, and CRH1, were induced, at least in part, by high pH in an Slt2-dependent manner. We observed that dfg5, skt5, and particularly dfg5 skt5 cells were alkali-sensitive. Therefore, our results show that an alkaline environment imposes a stress condition on the yeast cell wall. We propose that the Slt2-mediated MAPK pathway plays an important role in the adaptive response to this insult and that Wsc1 participates as an essential cell-surface pH sensor. Moreover, these results provide a new example of the complexity of the response of budding yeast to the alkalinization of the environment.


The EMBO Journal | 1999

SIN1: AN EVOLUTIONARILY CONSERVED COMPONENT OF THE EUKARYOTIC SAPK PATHWAY

Marc G. Wilkinson; Teresa Soto Pino; Sylvie Tournier; Vicky Buck; Humberto Martín; Jeffrey H. Christiansen; David G. Wilkinson; Jonathan B.A. Millar

The fission yeast Sty1/Spc1 mitogen‐activated protein (MAP) kinase is a member of the eukaryotic stress‐activated MAP kinase (SAPK) family. We have identified a protein, Sin1, that interacts with Sty1/Spc1 which is a member of a new evolutionarily conserved gene family. Cells lacking Sin1 display many, but not all, of the phenotypes of cells lacking the Sty1/Spc1 MAP kinase including sterility, multiple stress sensitivity and a cell‐cycle delay. Sin1 is phosphorylated after stress but this is not Sty1/Spc1‐dependent. Importantly, Sin1 is not required for activation of Sty1/Spc1 but is required for stress‐dependent transcription via its substrate, Atf1. We find that in the absence of Sin1, Sty1/Spc1 appears to translocate to the nucleus but Atf1 is not fully phosphorylated and becomes unstable in response to environmental stress. Sin1 is also required for effective transcription via the AP‐1 factor Pap1 but does not prevent its nuclear translocation. Remarkably chimaeric fusions of sin1 with chicken sin1 sequences rescue loss of sin1 function. We conclude that Sin1 is a novel component of the eukaryotic SAPK pathway.


Molecular Microbiology | 1997

Characterization of SKM1, a Saccharomyces cerevisiae gene encoding a novel Ste20/PAK‐like protein kinase

Humberto Martín; Alfonso Mendoza; José M. Rodrı́guez-Pachón; María Molina; César Nombela

Ste20/PAK serine/threonine protein kinases have been suggested as playing essential roles in cell signalling and morphogenesis as potential targets of Cdc42 and Rac GTPases. We have isolated and characterized the Saccharomyces cerevisiaeSKM1 gene, which codes for a novel member of this family of protein kinases. The amino acid sequence analysis of Skm1p revealed the presence of a PH domain and a putative p21‐binding domain near its amino terminus, suggesting its involvement in cellular signalling or cytoskeletal functions. However, deletion of SKM1 produced no detectable phenotype under standard laboratory conditions. Moreover, disruption of each of the two other S. cerevisiae Ste20/PAK‐like kinase‐encoding genes, STE20 and CLA4, in skm1 backgrounds, showed that Skm1p is not redundant with Ste20p or Cla4p. Interestingly, overexpression of SKM1 led to morphological alterations, indicating a possible role for this protein in morphogenetic control. Furthermore, overproduction of Skm1p lacking its N‐terminus caused growth arrest. This effect was also seen when similarly truncated versions of Ste20p or Cla4p were overexpressed. We further observed that overproduction of this C‐terminal fragment of Skm1p complements the mating defect of a ste20 mutant strain. These results suggest that the N‐terminal domains of S. cerevisiae Ste20/PAK‐like protein kinases share a negative regulatory function and play a role in substrate specificity.


Current Genetics | 1996

Molecular and functional characterization of a mutant allele of the mitogen-activated protein-kinase geneSLT2(MPK1) rescued from yeast autolytic mutants

Humberto Martín; M. C. Castellanos; Rosa Cenamor; Miguel Sánchez; María Molina; César Nombela

We have further characterized the functionality of theSaccharomyces cerevisiae geneSLT2(MPK1), coding for a MAP-kinase homolog essential for cell integrity, which is involved in the Pkc1p signalling pathway. This gene was isolated on the basis of its capacity to complement the thermosensitive-autolytic, osmotic-remediable phenotype oflyt2 mutants. Bothslt2A andlyt2 mutants displayed a caffeine-sensitive phenotype consisting of cell lysis that was not dependent on temperature. Caffeine concentrations affecting the growth of these mutant strains were dependent on the genetic background, theSSD1 allele being very significant in this regard. TheSLT2 allele of severallyt2 strains was both rescued and amplified by PCR. The recovered allele was shown to be non-functional as it could not complement the lytic phenotype of both deletion (slt2Δ) andlyt2 strains. After nucleotide sequencing of the recovered allele, we found that the defect oflyt2 mutants consists in a substitution of an aspartic acid for a glycine at position 35 of the amino-acid sequence of Slt2p. Gly35 is the third glycine of a glycine cluster (Gly-X-Gly-X-X-Gly), a conserved region in protein kinases and other nucleotide-binding proteins.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2013

Phosphoproteomic Analysis of Protein Kinase C Signaling in Saccharomyces cerevisiae Reveals Slt2 Mitogen-activated Protein Kinase (MAPK)-dependent Phosphorylation of Eisosome Core Components

Victoria Mascaraque; María Luisa Hernáez; María Jiménez-Sánchez; Rasmus Hansen; Concha Gil; Humberto Martín; Víctor J. Cid; María Molina

The cell wall integrity (CWI) pathway of the model organism Saccharomyces cerevisiae has been thoroughly studied as a paradigm of the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway. It consists of a classic MAPK module comprising the Bck1 MAPK kinase kinase, two redundant MAPK kinases (Mkk1 and Mkk2), and the Slt2 MAPK. This module is activated under a variety of stimuli related to cell wall homeostasis by Pkc1, the only member of the protein kinase C family in budding yeast. Quantitative phosphoproteomics based on stable isotope labeling of amino acids in cell culture is a powerful tool for globally studying protein phosphorylation. Here we report an analysis of the yeast phosphoproteome upon overexpression of a PKC1 hyperactive allele that specifically activates CWI MAPK signaling in the absence of external stimuli. We found 82 phosphopeptides originating from 43 proteins that showed enhanced phosphorylation in these conditions. The MAPK S/T-P target motif was significantly overrepresented in these phosphopeptides. Hyperphosphorylated proteins provide putative novel targets of the Pkc1–cell wall integrity pathway involved in diverse functions such as the control of gene expression, protein synthesis, cytoskeleton maintenance, DNA repair, and metabolism. Remarkably, five components of the plasma-membrane-associated protein complex known as eisosomes were found among the up-regulated proteins. We show here that Pkc1-induced phosphorylation of the eisosome core components Pil1 and Lsp1 was not exerted directly by Pkc1, but involved signaling through the Slt2 MAPK module.

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María Molina

Complutense University of Madrid

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César Nombela

Complutense University of Madrid

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Miguel Sánchez

Complutense University of Madrid

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Pablo Fernandez-Piñar

Complutense University of Madrid

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Víctor J. Cid

Complutense University of Madrid

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Javier Arroyo

Complutense University of Madrid

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Marta Flández

Complutense University of Madrid

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Rasmus Hansen

Complutense University of Madrid

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