github link
Accession IconSRP077940

A metabolic function for phospholipid and histone methylation

Organism Icon Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Sample Icon 12 Downloadable Samples
Technology Badge IconIllumina HiSeq 2500

Submitter Supplied Information

Description
S-adenosylmethionine (SAM) is the methyl donor for biological methylation modifications that regulate protein and nucleic acid functions. Here we show that methylation of a phospholipid, phosphatidylethanolamine (PE), is the major consumer of SAM in budding yeast. The induction of phospholipid biosynthetic genes is accompanied by induction of the enzyme that hydrolyzes S-adenosylhomocysteine (SAH), a product and inhibitor of methyltransferases. Beyond its function for the synthesis of phosphatidylcholine (PC), the methylation of PE facilitates the turnover of SAM for the synthesis of cysteine and glutathione. Strikingly, cells that lack PE methylation accumulate SAM, which leads to hypermethylation of histones and the major phosphatase PP2A, dependency on cysteine, and sensitivity to oxidative stress. Without PE methylation, particular sites on histones then become methyl sinks to enable the turnover of SAM. These findings reveal an unforeseen metabolic function for phospholipid and histone methylation intrinsic to the life of a cell. Overall design: Two biological replicates of wild type and cho2? cells in YPL media, in SL media after 1 hour and in SL media after 3 hour were collected for sequencing.
PubMed ID
Total Samples
12
Submitter’s Institution
No associated institution
Alternate Accession IDs

Samples

Show of 0 Total Samples
Filter
Add/Remove
Accession Code
Title
Cell line
Subject
Time
Processing Information
Additional Metadata
No rows found
Loading...