Richard F. Gaber
Northwestern University
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Featured researches published by Richard F. Gaber.
Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1991
Marc Vidal; Richard F. Gaber
In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, TRK1 and TRK2 encode the high- and low-affinity K+ transporters, respectively. In cells containing a deletion of TRK1, transcription levels of TRK2 are extremely low and are limiting for growth in media containing low levels of K+ (Trk- phenotype). Recessive mutations in RPD1 and RPD3 suppress the TRK2, conferring an approximately fourfold increase in transcription. rpd3 mutations confer pleiotropic phenotypes, including (i) mating defects, (ii) hypersensitivity to cycloheximide, (iii) inability to sporulate as homozygous diploids, and (iv) constitutive derepression of acid phosphatase. RPD3 was cloned and is predicted to encode a 48-kDa protein with no extensive similarity to proteins contained in current data bases. Deletion of RPD3 is not lethal but confers phenotypes identical to those caused by spontaneous mutations. RPD3 is required for both full repression and full activation of transcription of target genes including PHO5, STE6, and TY2. RPD3 is the second gene required for this function, since RPD1 is also required. The effects of mutations in RPD1 and RPD3 are not additive, suggesting that these genes are involved in the same transcriptional regulatory function or pathway.
The EMBO Journal | 2003
Daniel L. Riggs; Patricia J. Roberts; Samantha C. Chirillo; Joyce Cheung-Flynn; Viravan Prapapanich; Thomas Ratajczak; Richard F. Gaber; Didier Picard; David F. Smith
Hsp90 is required for the normal activity of steroid receptors, and in steroid receptor complexes it is typically bound to one of the immunophilin‐related co‐chaperones: the peptidylprolyl isomerases FKBP51, FKBP52 or CyP40, or the protein phosphatase PP5. The physiological roles of the immunophilins in regulating steroid receptor function have not been well defined, and so we examined in vivo the influences of immunophilins on hormone‐dependent gene activation in the Saccharomyces cerevisiae model for glucocorticoid receptor (GR) function. FKBP52 selectively potentiates hormone‐dependent reporter gene activation by as much as 20‐fold at limiting hormone concentrations, and this potentiation is readily blocked by co‐expression of the closely related FKBP51. The mechanism for potentiation is an increase in GR hormone‐binding affinity that requires both the Hsp90‐binding ability and the prolyl isomerase activity of FKBP52.
Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1991
Christopher H. Ko; Richard F. Gaber
We describe the cloning and molecular analysis of TRK2, the gene likely to encode the low-affinity K+ transporter in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. TRK2 encodes a protein of 889 amino acids containing 12 putative membrane-spanning domains (M1 through M12), with a large hydrophilic region between M3 and M4. These structural features closely resemble those contained in TRK1, the high-affinity K+ transporter. TRK2 shares 55% amino acid sequence identity with TRK1. The putative membrane-spanning domains of TRK1 and TRK2 share the highest sequence conservation, while the large hydrophilic regions between M3 and M4 exhibit the greatest divergence. The different affinities of TRK1 trk2 delta cells and trk1 delta TRK2 cells for K+ underscore the functional independence of the high- and low-affinity transporters. TRK2 is nonessential in TRK1 or trk1 delta haploid cells. The viability of cells containing null mutations in both TRK1 and TRK2 reveals the existence of an additional, functionally independent potassium transporter(s). Cells deleted for both TRK1 and TRK2 are hypersensitive to low pH; they are severely limited in their ability to take up K+, particularly when faced with a large inward-facing H+ gradient, indicating that the K+ transporter(s) that remains in trk1 delta trk2 delta cells functions differently than those of the TRK class.
Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1988
Richard F. Gaber; C A Styles; Gerald R. Fink
We identified a 180-kilodalton plasma membrane protein in Saccharomyces cerevisiae required for high-affinity transport (uptake) of potassium. The gene that encodes this putative potassium transporter (TRK1) was cloned by its ability to relieve the potassium transport defect in trk1 cells. TRK1 encodes a protein 1,235 amino acids long that contains 12 potential membrane-spanning domains. Our results demonstrate the physical and functional independence of the yeast potassium and proton transport systems. TRK1 is nonessential in S. cerevisiae and maps to a locus unlinked to PMA1, the gene that encodes the plasma membrane ATPase. Haploid cells that contain a null allele of TRK1 (trk1 delta) rely on a low-affinity transporter for potassium uptake and, under certain conditions, exhibit energy-dependent loss of potassium, directly exposing the activity of a transporter responsible for the efflux of this ion.
Science | 1996
Andrea A. Duina; Hui Chen Jane Chang; James A. Marsh; Susan Lindquist; Richard F. Gaber
Cpr6 and Cpr7, the Saccharomyces cerevisiae homologs of cyclophilin-40 (CyP-40), were shown to form complexes with Hsp90, a protein chaperone that functions in several signal transduction pathways. Deletion of CPR7 caused severe growth defects when combined with mutations that decrease the amount of Hsp90 or Sti1, another component of the Hsp90 chaperone machinery. The activities of two heterologous Hsp90-dependent signal transducers expressed in yeast, glucocorticoid receptor and pp60v−src kinase, were adversely affected by cpr7 null mutations. These results suggest that CyP-40 cyclophilins play a general role in Hsp90-dependent signal transduction pathways under normal growth conditions.
Plant Physiology | 1995
Robert L. Nakamura; William L. McKendree; Rebecca E. Hirsch; John C. Sedbrook; Richard F. Gaber; Michael R. Sussman
The Arabidopsis thaliana KAT1 cDNA encodes a voltage-gated inward-rectifying K+ channel. A KAT1 genomic DNA clone was isolated and sequenced, and a 5[prime] promoter and coding sequences containing eight introns were identified. Reporter gene analysis of transgenic plants containing the KAT1 promoter fused to bacterial [beta]-glucuronidase showed robust [beta]-glucuronidase activity primarily in guard cells.
Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1989
Richard F. Gaber; D M Copple; Brian K. Kennedy; Marc Vidal; M Bard
In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, methylation of the principal membrane sterol at C-24 produces the C-28 methyl group specific to ergosterol and represents one of the few structural differences between ergosterol and cholesterol. C-28 in S. cerevisiae has been suggested to be essential for the sparking function (W. J. Pinto and W. R. Nes, J. Biol. Chem. 258:4472-4476, 1983), a cell cycle event that may be required to enter G1 (C. Dahl, H.-P. Biemann, and J. Dahl, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 84:4012-4016, 1987). The sterol biosynthetic pathway in S. cerevisiae was genetically altered to assess the functional role of the C-28 methyl group of ergosterol. ERG6, the putative structural gene for S-adenosylmethionine: delta 24-methyltransferase, which catalyzes C-24 methylation, was cloned, and haploid strains containing erg6 null alleles (erg6 delta 1 and erg6 delta ::LEU2) were generated. Although erg6 delta cells are unable to methylate ergosterol precursors at C-24, they exhibit normal vegatative growth, suggesting that C-28 sterols are not essential in S. cerevisiae. However, erg6 delta cells exhibit pleiotropic phenotypes that include defective conjugation, hypersensitivity to cycloheximide, resistance to nystatin, a severely diminished capacity for genetic transformation, and defective tryptophan uptake. These phenotypes reflect the role of ergosterol as a regulator of membrane permeability and fluidity. Genetic mapping experiments revealed that ERG6 is located on chromosome XIII, tightly linked to sec59.
Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1991
Marc Vidal; Randy Strich; Rochelle Easton Esposito; Richard F. Gaber
We show that the extent of transcriptional regulation of many, apparently unrelated, genes in Saccharomyces cerevisiae is dependent on RPD1 (and RPD3 [M. Vidal and R. F. Gaber, Mol. Cell. Biol. 11:6317-6327, 1991]). Genes regulated by stimuli as diverse as external signals (PHO5), cell differentiation processes (SPO11 and SPO13), cell type (RME1, FUS1, HO, TY2, STE6, STE3, and BAR1), and genes whose regulatory signals remain unknown (TRK2) depend on RPD1 to achieve maximal states of transcriptional regulation. RPD1 enhances both positive and negative regulation of these genes: in rpd1 delta mutants, higher levels of expression are observed under repression conditions and lower levels are observed under activation conditions. We show that several independent genetic screens, designed to identify yeast transcriptional regulators, have detected the RPD1 locus (also known as SIN3, SD11, and UME4). The inferred RPD1 protein contains four regions predicted to take on helix-loop-helix-like secondary structures and three regions (acidic, glutamine rich, and proline rich) reminiscent of the activating domains of transcriptional activators.
Plant Physiology | 1995
Yongwei Cao; John M. Ward; Walter B. Kelly; Audrey M. Ichida; Richard F. Gaber; Julie A. Anderson; Nobuyuki Uozumi; Julian I. Schroeder; Nigel M. Crawford
K+ channels play diverse roles in mediating K+ transport and in modulating the membrane potential in higher plant cells during growth and development. Some of the diversity in K+ channel functions may arise from the regulated expression of multiple genes encoding different K+ channel polypeptides. Here we report the isolation of a novel Arabidopsis thaliana cDNA (AKT2) that is highly homologous to the two previously identified K+ channel genes, KAT1 and AKT1. This cDNA mapped to the center of chromosome 4 by restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis and was highly expressed in leaves, whereas AKT1 was mainly expressed in roots. In addition, we show that diversity in K+ channel function may be attributable to differences in expression levels. Increasing KAT1 expression in Xenopus oocytes by polyadenylation of the KAT1 mRNA increased the current amplitude and led to higher levels of KAT1 protein, as assayed in western blots. The increase in KAT1 expression in oocytes produced shifts in the threshold potential for activation to more positive membrane potentials and decreased half-activation times. These results suggest that different levels of expression and tissue-specific expression of different K+ channel isoforms can contribute to the functional diversity of plant K+ channels. The identification of a highly expressed, leaf-specific K+ channel homolog in plants should allow further molecular characterization of K+ channel functions for physiological K+ transport processes in leaves.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1998
Andrea A. Duina; Helen M. Kalton; Richard F. Gaber
The heat shock response is a highly conserved mechanism that allows cells to withstand a variety of stress conditions. Activation of this response is characterized by increased synthesis of heat shock proteins (HSPs), which protect cellular proteins from stress-induced denaturation. Heat shock transcription factors (HSFs) are required for increased expression of HSPs during stress conditions and can be found in complexes containing components of the Hsp90 molecular chaperone machinery, raising the possibility that Hsp90 is involved in regulation of the heat shock response. To test this, we have assessed the effects of mutations that impair activity of the Hsp90 machinery on heat shock related events inSaccharomyces cerevisiae. Mutations that either reduce the level of Hsp90 protein or eliminate Cpr7, a CyP-40-type cyclophilin required for full Hsp90 function, resulted in increased HSF-dependent activities. Genetic tests also revealed that Hsp90 and Cpr7 function synergistically to repress gene expression from HSF-dependent promoters. Conditional loss of Hsp90 activity resulted in both increased HSF-dependent gene expression and acquisition of a thermotolerant phenotype. Our results reveal that Hsp90 and Cpr7 are required for negative regulation of the heat shock response under both stress and nonstress conditions and establish a specific endogenous role for the Hsp90 machinery in S. cerevisiae.