ZOUHAR, Jan, Glenn R HICKS and Natasha V RAIKHEL. Sorting inhibitors (Sortins): Chemical compounds to study vacuolar sorting in Arabidopsis. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the U.S.A. 2004, vol. 101, No 25, p. 9497-9501. ISSN 0337543100.
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Basic information
Original name Sorting inhibitors (Sortins): Chemical compounds to study vacuolar sorting in Arabidopsis
Authors ZOUHAR, Jan, Glenn R HICKS and Natasha V RAIKHEL.
Edition Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the U.S.A. 2004, 0337543100.
Other information
Original language English
Type of outcome Article in a journal
Field of Study 10600 1.6 Biological sciences
Confidentiality degree is not subject to a state or trade secret
WWW URL
Organization unit Faculty of Science
UT WoS 000222278600060
Keywords in English chemical genomics; vacuole; yeast; Arabidopsis
Tags Arabidopsis, chemical genomics, Vacuole, Yeast
Changed by Changed by: doc. Mgr. Jan Zouhar, Ph.D., učo 23572. Changed: 24/6/2004 00:38.
Abstract
Chemical genomics is an interdisciplinary approach that unites the power of chemical screens and genomics strategies to dissect biological processes such as endomembrane trafficking. We have taken advantage of the evolutionary conservation between plants and Saccharomyces cerevisiae to identify such chemicals. Using S. cerevisiae, we screened a library of diverse chemical structures for compounds that induce the secretion of carboxypeptidase Y, which is normally targeted to the vacuole. Among 4,800 chemicals screened, 14 compounds, termed sorting inhibitors (Sortins), were identified that stimulated secretion in yeast. In Arabidopsis seedlings, application of Sortin1 and -2 led to reversible defects in vacuole biogenesis and root development. Sortin1 was found to redirect the vacuolar destination of plant carboxypeptidase Y and other proteins in Arabidopsis suspension cells and cause these proteins to be secreted. Sortin1 treatment of whole Arabidopsis seedlings also resulted in carboxypeptidase Y secretion, indicating that the drug has a similar mode of action in cells and intact plants. We have demonstrated that screening of a simple eukaryote, in which vacuolar biogenesis is not essential, can be a powerful tool to find chemicals that interfere with vacuolar delivery of proteins in plants, where vacuole biogenesis is essential. Our studies were done by using a sublethal dose of Sortin1, demonstrating the powerful ability of the chemical to control the induced phenotype in a manner that would be difficult to achieve using conventional genetics.
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