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Vol. 16, Issue 8, 3727-3739, August 2005
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Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, The Milton S. Hershey Medical Center, The Pennsylvania State University, Hershey, PA 17033-2390
Submitted February 15, 2005;
Revised May 20, 2005;
Accepted May 24, 2005
Monitoring Editor: Randy Schekman
Volatile anesthetics including isoflurane affect all cells examined, but their mechanisms of action remain unknown. To investigate the cellular basis of anesthetic action, we are studying Saccharomyces cerevisiae mutants altered in their response to anesthetics. The zzz3-1 mutation renders yeast isoflurane resistant and is an allele of GCN3. Gcn3p functions in the evolutionarily conserved general amino acid control (GCN) pathway that regulates protein synthesis and gene expression in response to nutrient availability through phosphorylation of the
subunit of eukaryotic initiation factor 2 (eIF2
). Hyperphosphorylation of eIF2
inhibits translation initiation during amino acid starvation. Isoflurane rapidly (in <15 min) inhibits yeast cell division and amino acid uptake. Unexpectedly, phosphorylation of eIF2
decreased dramatically upon initial exposure although hyperphosphorylation occurred later. Translation initiation was inhibited by isoflurane even when eIF2
phosphorylation decreased and this inhibition was GCN-independent. Maintenance of inhibition required GCN-dependent hyperphosphorylation of eIF2
. Thus, two nutrient-sensitive stages displaying unique features promote isoflurane-induced inhibition of translation initiation. The rapid phase is GCN-independent and apparently has not been recognized previously. The maintenance phase is GCN-dependent and requires inhibition of general translation imparted by enhanced eIF2
phosphorylation. Surprisingly, as shown here, the transcription activator Gcn4p does not affect anesthetic response.
* Present address: Division of Mathematics and Natural Sciences, The Pennsylvania State University, Altoona Campus, Altoona, PA 16601
Present address: Department of Molecular Genetics and Biochemistry, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA 15261.
Address correspondence to: Ralph L. Keil (rkeil{at}psu.edu).
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