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Zinc-dependent regulation of the Adh1 antisense transcript in fission yeast.

The Journal of biological chemistry (2012-12-12)
Kate M Ehrensberger, Carter Mason, Mark E Corkins, Cole Anderson, Natalie Dutrow, Bradley R Cairns, Brian Dalley, Brett Milash, Amanda J Bird
RÉSUMÉ

In yeast, Adh1 (alcohol dehydrogenase 1) is an abundant zinc-binding protein that is required for the conversion of acetaldehyde to ethanol. Through transcriptome profiling of the Schizosaccharomyces pombe genome, we identified a natural antisense transcript at the adh1 locus that is induced in response to zinc limitation. This antisense transcript (adh1AS) shows a reciprocal expression pattern to that of the adh1 mRNA partner. In this study, we show that increased expression of the adh1AS transcript in zinc-limited cells is necessary for the repression of adh1 gene expression and that the increased level of the adh1AS transcript in zinc-limited cells is a result of two mechanisms. At the transcriptional level, the adh1AS transcript is expressed at a high level in zinc-limited cells. In addition to this transcriptional control, adh1AS transcripts preferentially accumulate in zinc-limited cells when the adh1AS transcript is expressed from a constitutive promoter. This secondary mechanism requires the simultaneous expression of adh1. Our studies reveal how multiple mechanisms can synergistically control the ratio of sense to antisense transcripts and highlight a novel mechanism by which adh1 gene expression can be controlled by cellular zinc availability.

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Sigma-Aldrich
Alcohol Dehydrogenase from Saccharomyces cerevisiae, ≥300 units/mg protein, lyophilized powder (contains buffer salts), Mw 141-151 kDa
Sigma-Aldrich
Alcohol Dehydrogenase from Saccharomyces cerevisiae, powder, ≥300 units/mg protein, mol wt ~141,000 (four subunits)
Sigma-Aldrich
Alcohol Dehydrogenase from Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Sigma-Aldrich
Alcohol Dehydrogenase equine, recombinant, expressed in E. coli, ≥0.5 U/mg