* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Role of the non-respiratory pathways in the utilization of molecular
Silencer (genetics) wikipedia , lookup
Amino acid synthesis wikipedia , lookup
Fatty acid metabolism wikipedia , lookup
Basal metabolic rate wikipedia , lookup
Electron transport chain wikipedia , lookup
Endogenous retrovirus wikipedia , lookup
Gene regulatory network wikipedia , lookup
Microbial metabolism wikipedia , lookup
Biochemical cascade wikipedia , lookup
Metalloprotein wikipedia , lookup
Oxidative phosphorylation wikipedia , lookup
Artificial gene synthesis wikipedia , lookup
Biochemistry wikipedia , lookup
Evolution of metal ions in biological systems wikipedia , lookup
Yeast Yeast 2003; 20: 1115–1144. Published online in Wiley InterScience (www.interscience.wiley.com). DOI: 10.1002/yea.1026 Review Role of the non-respiratory pathways in the utilization of molecular oxygen by Saccharomyces cerevisiae Eric Rosenfeld1 * and Bertrand Beauvoit2 1 Laboratoire de Génie Protéique et Cellulaire, Bâtiment Marie Curie, Pôle Sciences et Technologies, Université de La Rochelle, Avenue Michel Crépeau, 17042 La Rochelle Cedex 1, France 2 Institut de Biochimie et Génétique cellulaires du CNRS, Université Victor Segalen, Bordeaux II, 1 Rue Camille Saint-Saëns, 33077 Bordeaux Cedex, France *Correspondence to: Eric Rosenfeld, Laboratoire de Génie Protéique et Cellulaire, Bâtiment Marie Curie, Pôle Sciences et Technologies, Université de La Rochelle, Avenue Michel Crépeau, 17042 La Rochelle Cedex 1, France. E-mail: [email protected] Received: 24 January 2003 Accepted: 10 June 2003 Abstract Saccharomyces cerevisiae is a facultative anaerobe devoid of mitochondrial alternative oxidase. In this yeast, the structure and biogenesis of the respiratory chain, on the one hand, and the functional interactions of oxidative phosphorylation with the cellular energetic metabolism, on the other, are well documented. However, to our knowledge, the molecular aspects and the physiological roles of the non-respiratory pathways that utilize molecular oxygen have not yet been reviewed. In this paper, we review the various non-respiratory pathways in a global context of utilization of molecular oxygen in S. cerevisiae. The roles of these pathways are examined as a function of environmental conditions, using either physiological, biochemical or molecular data. Special attention is paid to the characterization of the so-called ‘cyanide-resistant respiration’ that is induced by respiratory deficiency, catabolic repression and oxygen limitation during growth. Finally, several aspects of oxygen sensing are discussed. Copyright 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Keywords: yeast; Saccharomyces cerevisiae; oxygen; aerobiosis; anaerobiosis; cyanide-resistant respiration; oxygen sensing Contents Introduction Overall oxygen fluxes in S. cerevisiae Structural oxygen requirements of S. cerevisiae Characterization and physiological role of so-called ‘cyanide-resistant respiration’ Oxygen sensing in S. cerevisiae: current knowledge and perspectives Conclusion References Introduction Oxygen utilization by eukaryotic cells Since the increase in atmospheric oxygenation over the past 3.5 billion years, prokaryotes and then Copyright 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. eukaryotes have developed multiple processes to optimize the utilization of oxygen (O2 ). In eukaryotic cells, most of which are obligate aerobes or facultative anaerobes, oxygen is metabolized to fulfil both catabolic and anabolic functions. The classical mitochondrial respiratory chain is a part of a catabolic pathway involved in oxidative phosphorylation. Indeed, the oxidation of substrates, the transport of electrons by respiratory complexes (I, II, III) and the terminal oxygen reduction into water by cytochrome c oxidase (complex IV) result in the synthesis of ATP through a chemo-osmotic coupling.136 On the other hand, oxygen can be consumed by other mitochondrial pathways. First, electron leakage from the respiratory chain during oxidative metabolism can partially reduce molecular oxygen into reactive oxygen species (ROS; e.g. hydrogen peroxide and the superoxide anion) at the level of flavoproteins and/or the ubiquinol 1116 pool.33,67,137 According to Cadenas,32 this oxygen reduction mechanism represents 1–2% of the total respiratory oxygen flux in mammals. However, this value may be artificially increased in the presence of antimycin A, a specific mitochondrial inhibitor of complex III that blocks electron flow through the ubiquinone–cytochrome b cycle.137,143 Besides the classical antimycin A- and cyanidesensitive respiratory chain, other types of mitochondrial respiratory pathways have been reported in numerous eukaryotic cells. In plants, fungi and protozoans, the alternative respiration pathway is antimycin A-resistant and is generally caused by a single cyanide-resistant and salicyl hydroxamate (SHAM)-sensitive alternative ubiquinol oxidase (AOX), located on the matrix side of the inner mitochondrial membrane and encoded by a member of the AOX gene family.179 The constitutive or inducible AOX bypasses the cytochrome chain by directly transferring electrons from ubiquinol to oxygen. The alternative respiration is also called ‘ubiquinol pathway’. It may have several physiological roles: (a) to regenerate reducing equivalents for the glycolysis and the tricarboxylic acid cycle when the cytochrome pathway activity is limited; (b) to prevent the generation of ROS by limiting the auto-oxidation of ubiquinol; and (c) to produce heat (e.g. in Aracea plants).91,179 The existence of these processes, and the fact that numerous plants and fungi possess mitochondrial alternative (rotenone insensitive) NADH dehydrogenases not coupled to proton translocation, support the idea that alternative pathways are invariably nonphosphorylating in plants and fungi.91 However, it was recently shown in yeasts and fungi that whenever cyanide-resistant AOX is present, complex I is also present.91,200 – 202 Hence, the organization of alternative components within the electron transfer chain ensures that the transfer of electrons from NADH to molecular oxygen is generally coupled to proton translocation through at least one site.91 Moreover, cyanide-resistant respiratory activity is stimulated by purine nucleotides (e.g. ATP in plants; AMP, ADP, dAMP and GMP in yeasts and fungi).91,201 For these organisms this phenomenon, whose mechanism of action is yet to be determined, may constitute a means to adapt the overall efficiency of the respiratory chain as a function of cellular energy state. Other types of alternative respiratory pathways have also been reported in other organisms, e.g. the Copyright 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. E. Rosenfeld and B. Beauvoit obligate aerobe yeast Candida parapsilosis contains both the classical respiratory chain, an alternative ubiquinol oxidase and a parallel respiratory chain containing an alternative cytochrome c oxidase.34,71,133 On the other hand, the residual molecular oxygen that is not reduced by the mitochondrial (classical or alternative) respiration is used by numerous anabolic pathways. Indeed, lipid, amino acid, vitamin, iron, haem and ubiquinone metabolisms involve oxygen-dependent steps. The corresponding reactions depend on flavoproteins, haemoproteins and other metalloproteins, and consequently are potential sources of ROS. However, the respective contribution of these pathways in the overall oxygen consumption or in ROS production is still poorly documented, owing to the very low oxygen quantities involved. Levels of oxygen and classification of yeast species Yeasts are routinely cultivated under three distinct levels of oxygen: (a) anaerobic conditions (anaerobiosis), for which virtually no oxygen is present, are commonly acquired by saturating the medium with argon or nitrogen gas; (b) oxygen-limited conditions (oxygen limitation), for which the growth rate is limited by oxygen concentration; (c) aerobic conditions (aerobiosis), for which oxygen is present in excess and the growth rate is not limited by oxygen concentration. The maximal specific rate of oxygen consumption is then reached (qO2 = qO2 max ) for a given strain and an experimental condition tested. On the basis of their metabolic behaviour, yeasts are classified as: (a) obligate aerobes (e.g. Trichosporon, Rhodotorula spp., Lipomyces, Cryptococcus), with exclusively oxidative metabolism (respiration); and (b) facultative anaerobes, which also display the ability to metabolize glucose in an oxido-reductive manner (fermentation).64,167 In this case, since both routes may function simultaneously, a mixed (respiro-fermentative) pattern of energy metabolism is observed.64 The facultative anaerobes group may be subdivided into two subgroups, depending on their ability to perform aerobic fermentation. Thus, the facultative anaerobe yeasts can be subdivided into ‘Crabtreenegative’ yeasts (e.g. most Candida and Pichia, Kluyveromyces), unable to ferment on glucose under strict aerobic conditions but which produce ethanol under oxygen-limited conditions, and Yeast 2003; 20: 1115–1144. Non-respiratory utilization of oxygen by S. cerevisiae ‘Crabtree-positive’ yeasts, which perform alcoholic fermentation on glucose under aerobic conditions (e.g. Saccharomyces, Schizosaccharomyces spp. and Brettanomyces).64,161,197,198 The diversity among facultatively fermentative yeasts with respect to the regulation of glucose fermentation by oxygen is illustrated by the phenomena called ‘Custers effect’ and ‘Pasteur effect’. These represent regulatory mechanisms that affect the balance between fermentation and respiration.64,161 The Custers effect is a characteristic of the yeast species of the genus Brettanomyces, which ferment glucose faster under aerobic conditions than in the absence of oxygen. The explanation advanced for this effect is that regeneration of NAD+ by glycerol-phosphate dehydrogenase is not fast enough under anaerobic conditions.64 The Pasteur effect (inhibition of glycolysis by oxidative phosphorylation or stimulation of glycolysis by anaerobiosis) is observed in all Crabtree-negative (facultatively fermentative) yeasts. It results from kinetic regulations along the glycolytic pathway and thermodynamic constraints due to the competition between glycolysis and oxidative phosphorylation for ADP and inorganic phosphate (Pi) and for reducing equivalents.21,64,161 Oxygen utilization by S. cerevisiae: characteristics The facultative anaerobe and Crabtree-positive yeast S. cerevisiae exhibits a relatively low Pasteur effect that is only evident at low glycolytic fluxes (e.g. in slowly growing cells).64,161 This phenomenon may play a crucial role in the balance between fermentation and respiration when cells are grown under oxygen-limited conditions. For S. cerevisiae, the critical oxygen concentration at which limited growth begins has been reported in the range 2–4 µM (approximately 0.8–1.6% of air saturation).13,76 In contrast to most of the obligate aerobes and to Crabtree-negative yeasts that harbour a typical cyanide-resistant respiration, S. cerevisiae is devoid of both rotenonesensitive NADH : coenzyme Q oxidoreductase (i.e. complex I) and alternative oxidase.201,202 When S. cerevisiae is grown under aerobic conditions, most of the oxygen is used by the classical respiratory chain. Because S. cerevisiae is a fermentative yeast, it does not require an alternative respiratory pathway for growth on sugars when the Copyright 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. 1117 classical respiratory chain is blocked by inhibitors or by genetic alterations (i.e. respiratory-deficient mutants such as PET, rho − and rho0 ). However, a so-called ‘cyanide-resistant respiration’ (CNR) has been identified in this species. As in many other yeasts, the cyanide-resistant respiration pathway is favoured when the activity of the classical respiratory chain is limited,3 e.g. CNR was easily elicited in anaerobically-grown glucose-repressed cells during the early stages of oxygen adaptation. Nevertheless, the corresponding oxygen consumption fluxes remain quite low in comparison to classical or alternative respiratory oxygen uptake. This is one reason why cyanide-resistant oxygen consumption capacity has not yet been well characterized in S. cerevisiae. Scope of this review The respiratory chain and its functional interaction with energetic and glucose metabolism, as well as with oxidative stress, have been extensively reviewed in S. cerevisiae.15,21,64,84,153,161,197 In contrast, to our knowledge, the respective contributions of the numerous non-respiratory pathways to the overall molecular oxygen consumption have not yet been reviewed. Moreover, the activity, regulation and physiological roles of non-respiratory oxygen utilization pathways remain often unclear. In this paper, we review the non-respiratory pathways that may contribute to the utilization of molecular oxygen in S. cerevisiae. Their respective roles are examined under several environmental conditions using either physiological, biochemical or molecular data. Special attention is paid to anaerobically grown cells in which ‘cyanide-resistant respiration’ is known to be induced. Finally, the oxygen signal transduction pathways that allow S. cerevisiae cells to shift their metabolism upon aerobic, oxygen-limited or anaerobic environments are discussed. Overall oxygen fluxes in S. cerevisiae The respiratory chain In S. cerevisiae, as in most eukaryotic cells, the mitochondrial respiratory chain (Figure 1) represents the main oxygen utilization pathway in aerobic cells. Only cytochrome c oxidase can act as mitochondrial terminal oxidase. Therefore, Yeast 2003; 20: 1115–1144. 1118 E. Rosenfeld and B. Beauvoit nH+ Glycerol-3-P NAD+ NADH External NADH dehydrogenase Lactate DHAP Glycerol-3P dehydrogenase FADH2 GUT2 2eFADH2 2e2e NDE1, 2 FADH2 Internal NADH dehydrogenase Complex III Q6 2e- Cyt b + c1 Pyruvate D, L-Lactate 1edehydrogenases (LDH) n’H+ Cyt c 1e- 1e- - FADH2 2e- FeS Com plex (cyt IV oxid c ase) Cu I; a ; a Cu II 3 Complex II : Succinate dehydrogenase (SDH) NDI1 Succinate NADH Fumarate NAD+ ½ O2 + 2H+ 2 H 2O Figure 1. The respiratory chain of S. cerevisiae. Only the inner mitochondrial membrane is represented. Cytochrome b, subunits I, II and III of cytochrome c oxidase are respiratory components encoded by mitochondrial genes (as are subunits VI, VIII and IX of Fo-ATPase, not represented here).69 The two types of D- and L-lactate dehydrogenases are not detailed.46 Q6, ubiquinone 6; Cyt, cytochrome S. cerevisiae differs from many eukaryotes (plants, fungi and other yeasts) whose mitochondrial alternative respiration has been quite well characterized (Table 1). Unlike plants and several fungi, S. cerevisiae mitochondria do not contain an NADPH : ubiquinone oxido-reductase (on the external face of the inner membrane). Moreover, in contrast to complex I-type NADH dehydrogenase, the internal NADH dehydrogenase is neither inhibited by rotenone nor coupled to the generation of proton-motive force. This contributes to the lower ATP yield of oxidative phosphorylation in S. cerevisiae as compared to other kinds of mitochondria.56,162 Like plants, but in contrast to mammalian mitochondria, yeast mitochondria possess external NADH : ubiquinone oxidoreductases (NDE1 and/or NDE2) localized in the inner mitochondrial membrane. These isozymes are rotenone-insensitive and do not pump proton. They are responsible for the direct oxidation of cytosolic NADH. This property gives one explanation for the low (or perhaps the absence of) activity of the malate–aspartate shuttle in S. cerevisiae.15 Alternatively, cytosolic NADH can be oxidized by the respiratory chain via the glycerol-3-phosphate shuttle, which consists of cytosolic NADH-linked glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase and a membrane-bound glycerol-3phosphate : ubiquinone oxido-reductase.150 FurtherCopyright 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. more, aerobic growth with D- and L-lactate as carbon source is also permitted via the inducible D,Llactate dehydrogenases localized on the external face of the inner mitochondrial membrane.46 Respiratory oxygen fluxes The potential cellular respiration rate (qO2 max ; equal to the actual respiration rate, qO2 , under aerobic conditions) is an effective indicator of mitochondrial respiratory development that may vary noticeably, depending on the growth conditions, the growth rate and the yeast strain used. Since all the respiratory complexes of S. cerevisiae are subjected to catabolic repression,63 qO2 max strongly depends on the carbon source used for growth. Indeed, qO2 max values of aerobic glucose-repressed wild-type cells are about 10-fold lower than those of fully derepressed cells (Table 2). In such cells, the considerable contribution made by respiration can be potentiated by the supplementation of either respiratory substrates or protonophoric uncouplers. In both aerobic cells and isolated mitochondria (coupled or uncoupled), inhibitors of complex III (antimycin A, myxothiazol) and/or inhibitors of cytochrome c oxidase [KCN, NaN3 (sodium azide) and CO] almost fully inhibit oxygen consumption. However, despite the detection constraints of low oxygen fluxes, residual antimycin A- or cyanideresistant oxygen uptake has been elicited. It may Yeast 2003; 20: 1115–1144. Non-respiratory utilization of oxygen by S. cerevisiae 1119 Table 1. Characteristics of mitochondrial alternative respirations of some eukaryotes Organism Sensitivity toward Resistance toward References Plantsa Fungib SHAM SHAM KCN, anti A KCN, anti A [179] [91,179] Filamentous fungi (obligate aerobe)b Neurospora crassa Gaeumannomyces graminis Aspergillus niger NaN3 anti A, SHAM anti A, SHAM KCN, SHAM, anti A KCN KCN Yeasts (obligate aerobe)b Pichia membranifaciens Yarrowia lipolytica Cryptococcus albidus (several strains) SHAM SHAM SHAM KCN KCN KCN [200,202] [201] [201] Yeasts (Crabtree-negative)b Hansenula anomala (Pichia anomala) Candida parapsilosis Candida parapsilosis Candida albicans Debaryomyces hansenii Debaryomyces occidentalis (Schwanniomyces castellii) Debaryomyces occidentalis (Schwanniomyces castellii) SHAM (3 mM) SHAM SHAM, BHAM KCN (5–10 mM), SHAM, BHAM anti A, SHAM SHAM SHAM NaN3 KCN, anti A, NaN3 KCN, anti A anti A, KCN anti A KCN KCN, anti A NaN3 , anti A SHAM, anti A [66] [135] [71,133] [71,133] [79] [202] [157] [157] [51] [90] [98] SHAM, salicyl hydroxamate; BHAM, benzohydroxamate; anti A, antimycin A. a Respiration involving a homodimeric alternative terminal oxidase (AOX). b The monomeric or dimerization state of AOX is still questionable. represent from 0.1 to a few percent of the overall oxygen consumption.42,168,169,205,213 Electron leakage from the reduced ubiquinone pool to produce ROS may partially explain such oxygen fluxes.25 However, in view of the properties of myxothiazol, which blocks ubiquinone auto-oxidation at the bc1 level,207 this hypothesis seems unlikely, since no difference could be detected between antimycin Aand myxothiazol-resistant oxygen fluxes in either whole cells or isolated mitochondria.168,170 On the other hand, a significant ROS production from mitochondrial dehydrogenases cannot be excluded. Despite the discovery of ROS-sensitive probes to measure ROS, the in vivo quantification of mitochondrial ROS production is considerably complicated by: (a) the presence of H2 O2 and O2 ž− detoxifying enzymes (such as catalases, glutathione peroxidases and superoxide dismutases); (b) the eventual co-localization of such enzymes and the ROS production site; (c) the differential behaviour of cellular membranes towards H2 O2 and O2 ž− (permeability and impermeability, respectively); (d) the localization of the probes, which may differ from the ROS production site; and (e) the eventual redox recycling of the probes, which can perturb both the quantification and the biological oxygen reduction Copyright 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. mechanisms.119,186 For all these reasons, in vivo ROS production levels in aerobic S. cerevisiae cells (treated or not with antimycin A) have not yet been well quantified. Oxygen fluxes during fermentative metabolism Oxygen consumption capacities (qO2 max ) of S. cerevisiae cells are rather low (but not negligible) during strict fermentative metabolism (Table 2). In anaerobic wild-type cells, the presence of the respiratory chain has been investigated recently under enological conditions,68,170 and previously under classical laboratory conditions.40,42,165 In such cells, a cyanide-sensitive ‘respiratory’ pathway was identified but it was not related to the ubiquinone or cytochrome c oxidase content.94,126,205 Moreover, the inhibition extent of oxygen flux by cyanide was strictly similar for both anaerobic rho + and rho0 cells grown under classical laboratory or enological conditions.81,168,170 Thus, KCN has cellular targets other than cytochrome c oxidase (e.g. sterol synthesis; see section on Structural oxygen requirements). Taken together, these data indicate that a functional respiratory chain is not present in Yeast 2003; 20: 1115–1144. 1120 E. Rosenfeld and B. Beauvoit Table 2. Oxygen consumption capacities of wild-type and respiratory-deficient S. cerevisiae cells as a function of growth conditions Growth conditions Carbon source Strain qO2 max # References Aerobic Lactate Glycerol Glycerol + ethanol Galactose Glucose (derepression) Glucose (repression) Glucose (Enol cond, strong repression) Glucose (repression or derepression) Lab strains (WT) Ind strain (YF) Lab strain (WT) Lab strain (WT) Lab strain (WT) Lab strains (WT) Lab strains (WT) Lab strain (WT) Lab strains (rho− , rho0 mutants) 80–320 150 100 50 100–110 30–150 5–12 5–15 0.3–3.6 [45,151] [21] [168] [27] [62] [14,81,126,127,166,204,205] [1,27,165,168,213] [168] [66,81,183,213] Oxygen-limiteda Glucose (repression, DOT 0.05 µM) Glucose (repression, DOT 0.25 µM) Glucose (repression, DOT 0.5 µM) Glucose (derepression, DOT 0.5 µM) Glucose (repression, DOT 1 µM) Glucose (repression) Glucose (repression) Glucose (Enol cond, strong repression) Glucose (Enol cond, strong repression) Lab strain (WT) Lab strain (WT) Lab strain (WT) Lab strain (WT) Lab strain (WT) Lab strain (WT) Lab strain (rho− mutant) Lab strain (WT) Lab strain (rho0 mutant) 0.5 2–3 4–5 12–13 7–8 5–7 7–9 1–3 1–3 [166] [165] [165,166] [166] [165] [81] [81] [168] [168] Anaerobicb Glucose (‘derepression’) Glucose (repression) Glucose (repression) Glucose (Enol cond, strong repression) Glucose (Enol cond, strong repression) Lab strain (WT) Lab strain (WT) Ind strain (YF) Lab strain (WT) Lab strain (rho0 mutant) 6–10 0.5–4 2–4 1–3 1–3 [126,204,205] [81,165] [111] [168] [168] WT, wild-type; YF, yeast foam; Lab, laboratory; Ind, industrial; DOT, dissolved oxygen tension; Enol cond, enological conditions (which are normally anaerobic). # Expressed as nmol O2 /min/mg dry yeast mass. Oxygen consumption capacities (qO2 max ) were determined at saturating oxygen concentrations on growing or non-growing cells in the presence of the carbon source used for growth. a Under oxygen-limited conditions, the development of cellular respiration is very sensitive to DOT, and the actual respiration rate (qO ) 2 measured in situ can be significantly lower than qO2 max .166 b Some discrepancies were noted in the literature for qO max of anaerobic glucose-repressed wild-type cells, but values were systematically at 2 least four-fold lower than those of aerobic glucose-repressed cells. anaerobic cells, and that the term ‘cyanide-resistant respiration’ is thus no longer valid. In contrast, resistance to antimycin A and/or myxothiazol is very suitable for quantifying non-respiratory oxygen fluxes. Thus, the antimycin A-resistant oxygen flux (estimated under aerobiosis) of both wild-type and respiratory-deficient cells grown under classical laboratory and enological conditions depends on the oxygen tension during growth: the less oxygen available, the higher the antimycin A-resistant oxygen uptake.81,168 Among all the non-respiratory oxygen utilization pathways required for growth (see section on Structural oxygen requirements), only a few of them may significantly contribute to the oxygen consumption capacity retained by S. cerevisiae cells during fermentative metabolism (see section on ‘Cyanide-resistant respiration’). Copyright 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Structural oxygen requirements of S. cerevisiae Haem biosynthesis and haemoproteins Regulation of haem synthesis Haem (or haem b, protohaem (IX), Fe2+ -protoporphyrin IX), and haems a and c (both originating from protoporphyrin), are prosthetic groups of haemoproteins. Their biosynthesis requires molecular oxygen and involves several mitochondrial and cytosolic biochemical steps (Figure 2). The two oxygen-dependent steps involve the cytosolic coproporphrinogen III oxidase (encoded by the HEM13 gene) and protoporphyrinogen oxidase (encoded by the HEM14 gene). The oxygen availability also influences the regulation of the haem pathway. In anaerobic cells, all Yeast 2003; 20: 1115–1144. Non-respiratory utilization of oxygen by S. cerevisiae 1121 MITOCHONDRIA δ-ALA HEM2 δ-ALA HEM1 Krebs cycle PBG HEM 3 Glycine Preurogen SuccinylCoA MET1 Urogen III HEM12 +Fe++ Proto Heme-independent and oxygen-dependent pathways HEME HEM14 +Fe++ Apoproteins NUCLEAR GENE REGULATION HEM15 O2 Coprogen III O2 HEM13 Protogen IX Heme c, a Respiratory cytochromes Redox state ? Oxidative stress HEMOPROTEINS Lipid synthesis Iron uptake Other functions Figure 2. Biosynthesis and roles of haem in S. cerevisiae. Abbreviations: δ-ALA, 5-aminolevulenate; PBG, porphobilinogen; Preurogen, hydroxymethylbilane; Urogen, uroporphyrinogen; Coprogen, coproporphyrinogen; Protogen, protoporphyrinogen; Proto, protoporphyrin. Enzymes: HEM1, δ-ALA synthase; HEM2, PBG synthase or δ-ALA dehydratase; HEM3, PBG desaminase; MET1, urogen III synthase; HEM12, urogen decarboxylase; HEM13, coprogen III oxidase; HEM14, protogen oxidase; HEM15, ferrochelatase. References 6,27,103,109,159,171,206 enzymes of the haem pathway are present.109 Thus, enhancement of haem synthesis solely requires the addition of oxygen. In such cells, HEM13 is likely the controlling step of haem biosynthesis. Under aerobic conditions, regulation of haem synthesis is still poorly understood.109 However, a negative feed-back regulation by oxidized haem (i.e. hemin) has been hypothesized on the mitochondrial δ-5-aminolevulinate synthase (encoded by the HEM1 gene), the first step of the haem pathway.206 Alternatively, porphobilinogen synthase (the HEM2 gene product) has also been considered to be a controlling step, since δ-5-aminolevulinate accumulates in aerobic cells.109 On the other hand, the compartmented haem pathway has to be coordinated with mitochondrial membrane biogenesis and the Copyright 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. synthesis of respiratory cytochromes (encoded by nuclear or mitochondrial genes). Indeed, haem and lipid synthesis pathways interact with each other, especially via transcriptional regulations, e.g. HEM13 (and other haem-responsive genes) expression is increased when sterol synthesis is inhibited.16 Inversely, an increase in δ-5-aminolevulinate intracellular concentration derepresses the activity of 3-hydroxyl-3-methylglutaryl-CoA (HMG-CoA) reductase, a key step in sterol synthesis.124 Transport and degradation of haem Cellular haem contents are poorly documented in S. cerevisiae because the free haem pool is quite difficult to measure. However, data in Table 3 show that bound and free haem contents are Yeast 2003; 20: 1115–1144. 1122 E. Rosenfeld and B. Beauvoit Table 3. Haem and porphyrin contents in (wild-type) S. cerevisiae cells Growth conditions Carbon source Strain Bound and free haem (nmol/g dry yeast mass) Free porphyrins (nmol/g dry yeast mass) References Aerobic Ethanol Glycerol Glucose Lab and Ind strains Lab and Ind strains Lab and Ind strains 150–300 200–210 60–130 ND ND 4–8 [27,109] [27,109] [27,106,109] Anaerobic Glucose Lab and Ind strains 25–60 4 [27,106,109] Lab, laboratory; Ind, industrial; ND, no data. significantly affected by glucose repression and oxygen limitation. Interestingly, the haem content in anaerobically grown cells is not negligible, and free porphyrin (including haem) contents in glucose-repressed cells remain quite low upon oxygenation. This indicates that free haem and free porphyrin contents are considerably lower than the haemoprotein content in both aerobic and anaerobic cells. The mechanisms of haem translocation from mitochondria to the other cellular compartments, as well as the nature (free or bound) of the transported molecule, remain uncharacterized in S. cerevisiae. Haem degradation is generally thought to be absent in both aerobic and anaerobic S. cerevisiae cells. However, an aerobic gene (YLR205c)103,191 exhibits a quite strong similarity to the haem oxygenase of other eukaryotes.57 It has been shown that anaerobiosis leads to coproporphyrin(ogen) excretion into the culture medium and to the accumulation of haem precursors and derived compounds, such as protoporpho(di)methene (503 nm pigment; P503).106,107,110 Protoporphyrin and Zn-protoporphyrin also accumulate in anaerobic cells. Their detection has been explained by the presence of contaminating traces of oxygen in ‘anaerobic’ cultures, which are practically inevitable under the conditions used routinely in laboratories. However, it is rather difficult to understand how typical haemoproteins were more recently detected in anaerobic cells.27,109 It has been suggested that the haem released by the degradation of respiratory cytochromes may be recycled in the cytoplasm. Mdl1p, a putative mitochondrial haem carrier of the ABC class which is upregulated under anaerobic conditions, may transport haem from the mitochondrial matrix to the cytoplasm to synthesize haemoproteins (b-type cytochromes, globins, catalases) that remain under anaerobiosis.36,105 Copyright 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Haemoproteins of S. cerevisiae Haemoproteins of S. cerevisiae include cytochromes involved in respiration, lipid synthesis and iron uptake, on the one hand, and proteins involved in oxidative stress or still unknown functions, on the other (Figure 2). Both the HAP1 transcription factor and the proteins involved in the transformation or the insertion of haem into apoproteins bind haem and thus may be regarded as haemoproteins. However, we have only listed the haemoproteins involved in oxido-reduction reactions (Table 4). Haemoproteins of aerobic cells Mitochondrial respiratory cytochromes (a + a3, b(±b2), c and c1) are the major haemoproteins of wild-type yeast cells grown in the presence of oxygen. The synthesis of respiratory cytochromes is optimal under aerobic conditions, and becomes limited at oxygen concentrations below 2–4 µM.31,159,165 Interestingly, this is the range at which oxygen starts to limit growth.13,76 This suggests that the decrease in cytochrome synthesis (rather than the sole oxygen) can limit growth under oxygen-limited conditions. In aerobic wild-type cells, the abundance and spectral properties of mitochondrial respiratory cytochromes often complicate the detection of other haemoproteins. Such a detection can be performed in aerobic rho0 strains (devoid of respiratory cytochromes), but it is known that the nuclear gene expression pattern is modified when mitochondrial respiratory functions are impaired.53,121 Alternatively, their detection is made possible by changing the oxidizing or reducing agent used for spectral analysis. The presence of the cytosolic flavohaemoglobin (YHB1) in aerobic cells has been evidenced in this way.27 Moreover, in both wild-type and respiratory-deficient mutants, b5 (encoded by CYB5 ) and P450 (encoded by ERG5 or ERG11 ) cytochromes could also be detected in aerobic glucose-repressed cells.80,81,132,164 – 166 Yeast 2003; 20: 1115–1144. Non-respiratory utilization of oxygen by S. cerevisiae 1123 Table 4. Haemoproteins of S. cerevisiaea Haemoprotein Localization References Respiratory cytochromes Cytochrome a + a3 (COX1)b Cytochrome b (COB) Cytochrome b2 (CYB2) Cytochrome c (CYC1, CYC7) Cytochrome c1 (CYT1) Inner mitochondrial membrane Inner mitochondrial membrane Inner mitochondrial membrane (outer side) Inner mitochondrial membrane (outer side) Inner mitochondrial membrane [171] [171] [171] [171] [171] Non-respiratory cytochromes and other haemoproteins Cytochrome c peroxidase (CCP1) Catalase A (CTA1) Catalase T (CTT1) Cytochrome b5 (CYB5) Acyl-CoA desaturase (OLE1) Inositol-phosphorylceramide hydroxylase (SCS7) Cytochrome P450: C14-demethylase (ERG11 = CYP51) Cytochrome P450: C22-desaturas (ERG5 = CYP61) Cytochrome P450: N-formyl tyrosine oxidase (CYP56) Flavocytochrome b (FRE1)c Flavocytochrome b (FRE2)c Flavohaemoglobin (YHB1) YNL234w YML131w (leukotriene B4 12-hydroxydehydrogenase) Mitochondrial intermembrane space Peroxisome Cytosol, vacuole Endoplasmic reticulum Endoplasmic reticulum Endoplasmic reticulum Endoplasmic reticulum Endoplasmic reticulum ? Plasma membrane Plasma membrane Cytosol Cytosol (?) ? [156] [171] [171] [81] [138] [50] [195] [182] [26] [117] [54] [214] [175] [85] a The proteins involved in haem metabolism and the transcription factors (e.g. HAP1) that bind haem are not listed. The sirohaem-containing (oxygen-independent) cytosolic enzymes involved in sulphate assimilation (MET10, ECM17) are also not listed. b COX1, one of the 12 cytochrome c oxidase subunits, contains haem a, haem a3, and the CuB centre. c The five homologues to FRE1 and FRE2 in S. cerevisiae exhibit sequence similarity in the regions expected to bind FAD, NADPH and two haems. Haemoproteins of anaerobic cells The absence of functional cytochrome a + a3 in anaerobic cells is now widely admitted. In many studies, the low content of cytochrome a + a3 in anaerobic cells has been justified by the presence of contaminant traces of oxygen during growth or by an induction during cell harvest. Recently, Dagsgaard et al.42 detected almost all the cytochrome c oxidase subunits (except subunits IV and VIII) in the promitochondria of anaerobic cells. This result is quite surprising, since the authors used drastic anaerobic growth and harvesting conditions, but the absence of subunits IV and VIII is sufficient to explain the absence of assembled and active cytochrome c oxidase in anaerobic cells. In these cells, the presence of functional holocytochrome c is also a matter of discussion. The S. cerevisiae genome contains two genes encoding isoforms of cytochrome c (viz. CYC1 and CYC7 ) that are differentially regulated.49 Burke et al.31 have shown that CYC7 is a strict anaerobic gene, since it is repressed under both aerobic and strongly oxygen-limited conditions. Nevertheless, upon oxygenation, CYC7 is Copyright 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. transiently and strongly induced before the aerobic isoform, CYC1, reaches its steady-state level of expression.103 Hence, it has been postulated that Cyc7p plays a protective role during oxidative stress, because it may behave as an electron sink for the partially assembled complex III under conditions of low defence against ROS.29,36,105,160 However, because of the numerous constraints of Cyc7p detection, there is no conclusive evidence that functional Cyc7p is present in anaerobic cells. Historically, the so-called ‘cytochrome a1’ (thought to be responsible for the 580–590 nm α-band observed in reduced minus oxidized difference spectra of whole cells) had been regarded as a remnant terminal oxidase in anaerobic S. cerevisiae cells.52,120 Later, the 580–590 nm band was attributed to promitochondrial cytochrome c peroxidase,80 to Zn-protoporphyrin (583–585 nm α-band) and neutral porphyrins.80,106,108 However, more recently it turned out that there was probably some confusion between prophyrins and the flavohaemoglobin (encoded by YHB1) in both anaerobic and aerobic cells. Indeed, the absorption band Yeast 2003; 20: 1115–1144. 1124 near 575–577 nm, obtained with low temperature spectra of whole cells (reduced with endogenous substrates) and previously attributed to porphyrins and Zn-protoporphyrins, may be due in fact to the oxygenated form of Yhb1p.27 Both microsomal b5 (previously named ‘b1 ’) and P450 cytochromes are major haemoproteins of anaerobic cells. This is likely linked to microsomal proliferation under anaerobic conditions.22,132 In some instances, carbon monoxide difference spectra (reduced + CO minus reduced) performed for P450 detection have revealed the presence of ‘cytochrome P 420’ in both particulate and soluble fractions.80,148 Denaturation and further solubilization of P450 may be responsible for the γ -420 nm peak, but the native soluble hemichrome encoded by the anaerobic YNL234w gene may also account for this peak.175 Thus, the typical absorption bands (420, 542, 572 nm) of Ynl234wp were, together with P450, easily detected in stationaryphase cells grown under anaerobic enological conditions which favoured its induction.168 Besides YNL234w, only a few genes encoding haemoproteins (ERG11, CYC7, OLE1, and SCS7 ) were found to be upregulated under anaerobic batch culture conditions in galactose medium.105 In contrast, in glucose-limited chemostat cultures, such an anaerobic activation was not observed for CYC7, ERG11 and OLE1 genes.191 Sterol biosynthesis Sterol biosynthesis represents another crucial oxygen-dependent pathway in S. cerevisiae. Many aspects of its regulation are still unknown because of the large number of ERG genes and the crosstalk between different environmental signals. However, the following is widely admitted: (a) most of the ERG genes are regulated by oxygen; (b) endogenous or exogenous sterols are regulators of gene expression (including ERG genes) through still unknown molecular mechanisms; (c) some sterols can inhibit several enzymatic steps of the sterol pathway; and (d) the regulatory process may depend on the sterol requirement for growth and on the presence of other lipids. The roles and the intracellular traffic of sterols have been extensively discussed44,105,114,134,155,196,211 (for review, see ref. 43). Here, we focus mainly on the relationships between oxygen and sterol biosynthesis. Copyright 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. E. Rosenfeld and B. Beauvoit Aerobic sterol exclusion Exogenous sterols are required for anaerobic growth.4 On the other hand, ‘aerobic sterol exclusion’ obligates aerobic cells to synthesize endogenous sterols for growth.163 By studying hem mutants that can incorporate sterols aerobically, it has been suggested that haem-dependent sterol biosynthesis is the primary factor of sterol exclusion. First, some sterols were thought to inhibit sterol uptake.125,141 In addition, mutations affecting some putative transcription factors (e.g. SUT1,2, UPC2 or YLR228c) were shown to enable the sterol influx in haem-competent aerobic cells.24,41,142,178 Interestingly, both SUT1 and, to a lesser extent, UPC2 are upregulated under anaerobic conditions and contain a Rox1 binding site in their promotor region.24,105,142,191 This reinforces the hypothesis that aerobic sterol exclusion is due to the transcriptional inhibition of genes involved in sterol uptake. Recently, it has been suggested that two UPC2-responsive and anaerobic genes encoding ATP-binding transporters, AUS1 and PDR11, are required for anaerobic growth and sterol uptake.210 Oxygen-independent isoprenoid and squalene synthesis The initial steps of the sterol pathway (from acetylcoA to squalene) do not require oxygen [but require NAD(P)H and ATP] and are responsible for the accumulation of squalene under anaerobic conditions (for review, see ref. 43). The first step of the linear path of sterol synthesis is the microsomal squalene synthase (Erg9p) which catalyses the NADPH-dependent condensation of two farnesyl-pyrophosphates into squalene. Like HMG2 (the anaerobic counterpart of the two hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA reductase isoforms involved in mevalonate synthesis), ERG9 is positively regulated by fatty acids and is negatively regulated by oxygen, haem and sterols.97,105 However, ERG9 activity remains quite high in cells grown anaerobically with ergosterol and oleate in excess.128 Oxygen-dependent sterol synthesis Squalene conversion to ergosterol requires molecular oxygen at the level of six enzymatic steps catalysed by five enzymes: a non-P450 mono-oxygenase Yeast 2003; 20: 1115–1144. Non-respiratory utilization of oxygen by S. cerevisiae (ERG1), two di-ferric and non-heminic hydroxylases/desaturases (ERG25 and ERG3) and two cytochromes P450 (ERG11 and ERG5). In sum, 12 O2 molecules are required for the conversion of one squalene to ergosterol (Figure 3 and references therein). On the other hand, the oxido-reduction reactions also require NAD(P)H. However, the in vivo contribution of either NADPH or NADH as preferential electron donors for sterol synthesis 1125 is still hypothetical. It is admitted that the activity of both P450 cytochromes (ERG11 and ERG5) and ERG1 depends on the activity of the microsomal NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase (i.e. CPR1 or NCP1).43,190 In contrast, ERG25 and ERG3 are thought to depend on the microsomal NADH-cytochrome b5 reductase and cytochrome b5.18,149 In aerobic cpr1 mutant cells, it has been suggested that NADH-cytochrome b5 reductase SQUALENE NAD(P)H + 1 O2 ERG1 Allylamines SQUALENE EPOXIDE ERG7 LANOSTEROL 3 NAD(P)H + 3 O2 ERG11 Azoles 4,4-DIMETHYLCHOLESTA-8,14,24 TRIENOL ERG24 Morpholines NAD(P)H 4,4-DIMETHYLZYMOSTEROL ERG25, 26,27 KCN 3 NAD(P)H + 3 O2 4α-METHYLZYMOSTEROL 3 NAD(P)H + 3 O2 ERG25, 26,27 KCN ZYMOSTEROL S-adenosyl-L-methionine ERG6 FECOSTEROL ERG2 Morpholines EPISTEROL NAD(P)H + 1 O2 ERG3 KCN (not CO and azoles) ERGOSTA 5,7,24 (28) TRIENOL NAD(P)H + 1 O2 ERG5 Azoles, CO (not KCN and NaN3) ERGOSTA5,7,22,24 (28) TETRAENOL ERG4 Morpholines ERGOSTEROL AT ) AC E1,2 R (A er est yl lase r e Esterification St dro y and storage in lipid h Fatty acids particules Plasmalemma Inner mitochondrial membrane Secretory vesicles Figure 3. The oxygen-dependent steps of sterol synthesis in S. cerevisiae: intermediates, oxygen requirements and inhibitors. Enzymes: ERG1, squalene epoxidase; ERG7, lanosterol synthase; ERG11 (CYP51), lanosterol C-14 demethylase; ERG24, sterol C-14 reductase; ERG25, sterol C-4 methyloxydase; ERG26, sterol C-3 dehydrogenase (C4-decarboxylase); ERG27, sterol C-3 ketoreductase; ERG6, sterol C-24 methyltransferase; ERG2, sterol C-8 isomerase; ERG3, sterol C-5 desaturase; ERG5, sterol C-22 desaturase; ERG4, sterol C-24 reductase; ACAT (ARE1,2), acyl-CoA sterol acyl transferases. References 7–9,18,19,43,47,59,96,115,149,152,180,196; oxygen (and NADPH) stoichiometries of the reactions catalysed by ERG1,43 ERG11,7 ERG25,9,18,59,152 ERG3149 and ERG596 ; some alternative routes from lanosterol to sterols have been described in cells treated with inhibitors and in mutants60,152 Copyright 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Yeast 2003; 20: 1115–1144. 1126 can provide electrons (via cytochrome b5 ) to all oxygen-dependent steps of the sterol pathway.113 However, by using various physiological modulations of the cellular NADH level during transitions from anaerobic (classical laboratory and enological) to aerobic conditions, it has been shown that the oxygen uptake due to sterol synthesis (i.e. terbinafine- and fenpropimorph-sensitive O2 consumption) does not correlate with the cellular NADH redox state168 (Rosenfeld et al., unpublished data). Regulation of sterol synthesis by oxygen and glucose During batch cultivation on glucose medium, ERG1 is upregulated upon sterol limitation128,129 and is also activated by increasing oxygen availability.82,129 Conversely, ERG2 is activated under anaerobic conditions.184 Surprisingly, in glucoselimited chemostat cultures, none of the ERG genes were found to be upregulated under anaerobic conditions.191 On the other hand, during batch cultivation on galactose medium (growth phase), many ERG genes of the oxygen-dependent pathway of sterol synthesis (ERG3, ERG4, ERG6, ERG24, ERG25, ERG26, ERG11 ) were upregulated under anaerobic conditions.105 This was also the case for the ERG28 (YER044c) gene, which is required for normal sterol composition.77 These discrepancies suggest that the regulation of ERG genes by oxygen interacts with other factors, such as carbon source or cultivation mode. Accordingly, cytochrome P450 accumulates both in the presence of fermentable carbon sources, especially glucose, and when the oxidative metabolism is repressed.93,193 Translational and post-translational regulation by glucose have also been proposed.187 Among the three CYP genes encoding cytochrome P450 in S. cerevisiae [i.e. ERG11 (CYP51 ) and ERG5 (CYP61 ) genes involved in ergosterol synthesis; and DIT2 (CYP56 ), likely involved in spore wall assembly], only ERG11 is a typical anaerobic gene. Thus, Erg11p is likely the sole cytochrome P450 accumulated in anaerobic cells. Like cytochrome P450, NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase (CPR1), NADH-cytochrome b5 reductase (CBR1) and cytochrome b5 (CYB5) are also activated under anaerobic conditions and are repressed when respiratory functions are induced.22,23,80,81,120,132,187,195 Copyright 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. E. Rosenfeld and B. Beauvoit Quantitative data Sterol content contributes little (less than 1% w/w) to the cell dry mass. Only a small amount of ergosterol (about 5 mg/l) is required for optimal anaerobic growth under laboratory, brewing or enological conditions.10,11,169 Nevertheless, sterol (mainly ergosterol and squalene) contents strongly depend on the strains used, the lipidic composition of the culture medium, and the oxygen availability (Table 5). Aerobic S. cerevisiae cells contain significant amounts of ergosterol (75–90%), lanosterol (5–15%) and squalene (2–15%).44 The less oxygen available during growth, the lower the total sterol content and the degree of sterol esterification. However, squalene content increases under anaerobic conditions, especially in the absence of exogenous sterols (Table 5 and references therein). The main role of the anaerobically accumulated squalene is likely to optimize sterol synthesis when oxygen is provided. Accordingly, using different measurement methods (and different laboratory or enological conditions of cultivation), it has been shown that the sterol synthesis rate is higher upon oxygenation of anaerobic (growing or resting) cells than in aerobic growing cells (Klein et al., 1954, cited in ref. 152).112,168,169 Unsaturated fatty acid biosynthesis The Acyl-CoA desaturase (OLE1) S. cerevisiae cannot synthesize polyunsaturated fatty acids.176 However, mono-unsaturated fatty acids (UFAs) are required for growth. Their synthesis plays a critical role in maintaining a correct ratio of saturated to mono-unsaturated fatty acids in membranes.43 Since UFA synthesis is oxygendependent, Tween 80 (a source of oleate) is routinely added to the anaerobic culture media.5 Under aerobic conditions, biosynthesis of the UFAs, palmitoleate (C16 : 19 ) and/or oleate (C18 : 19 ) is catalysed by the unique microsomal acyl-CoA desaturase, OLE1. Synthesis of one UFA molecule requires one NAD(P)H as electron donor and one O2 as acceptor of two electron pairs (one from NAD(P)H and the other from the saturated fatty acyl molecule [palmitoyl(or steroyl)-CoA)]. OLE1 functionality does not require cytochrome b5 but its cytochrome b5 -like domain is involved in the desaturation reaction.138 In vivo, the nature of both the electron donor (NADH or NADPH) and the Yeast 2003; 20: 1115–1144. Non-respiratory utilization of oxygen by S. cerevisiae 1127 Table 5. Sterol contents of (wild-type) S. cerevisiae cells as a function of oxygen availability and lipid composition of the culture medium Growth conditions Carbon source Strain Total sterol# Aerobic −AFa Glucose Lab strains 11–25 Glucose Glucose Malt wort Malt wort Lab strain Lab strain Ind strain Ind strain 1.8 9–12 Oxygen-limited −AF −AF (DOT = 0.05 µM) −AF (DOT = 0.5 µM) Glucose Glucose Glucose Lab strain Lab strain Lab strain 0.5–1.0 0.5 4.2 Anaerobic −AF −AF −AF (Brewing)b −AF (Brewing) +AF +AF +AF Glucose Glucose Malt wort Malt wort Glucose Glucose Galactose Lab strain Lab strain Ind strain Ind strain Lab strain Lab strain Lab strain 0.4 −AF −AF −AF (Brewing)b −AF (Brewing) Ergosterol# Squalene# Reference 8–20 [30–80% esterified] 0.4–3.3 [44] 5.7–6.3 2.6 2–3 [75% esterified] 1–3 5.5 3–6 [83] [88] [146] [10] [83] [166] [166] 0.1 1.7 [20% esterified] 0.7 2.0 1.8–2.6 16–22 6.5 6.0 2–4 [83] [88] [146] [10] [88] [11] [88] AF, anaerobic growth factors [ergosterol and Tween 80 (as source of oleate)]; DOT, dissolved oxygen tension; Lab, laboratory; Ind, industrial. # Expressed as mg/g dry yeast mass. a Sterol composition was analysed in several wild-type strains. b Under classical brewing conditions, oxygen is available only during the early stage of growth. reductase (NAD(P)H-P450 reductase or NADH-b5 reductase) that transfers electrons to the b5 domain remains unclear. UFA synthesis depends on the supply of saturated fatty acids (FA). These may be either neo-synthesized from acetyl-CoA (an ATPrequiring process) or released (via the steryl ester hydrolase) from the steryl esters stored in lipid particles. As for the sterol pathway, interactions and contacts between the cellular compartments likely coordinate the biosynthesis and transformation processes of FA, UFA and Phospholipids. This coordination is required for a specific lipid homeostasis within cellular membranes.43 Regulation of OLE1 by oxygen and (U)FAs It has been shown that OLE1 expression depends on several cis regulatory sequences, such as STRE (stress response element), FAR (fatty acid response element) and LORE (low oxygen response element). OLE1 transcription is slightly activated in the presence of saturated fatty acids (FA) but strongly repressed by UFAs.35,58 It has also been Copyright 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. shown that the OLE1 ARNm half-life is affected by incorporated UFA but not by FA.68 Furthermore, OLE1 is induced by oxygen concentrations below 1 µM.103,159 Both FAR and LORE elements seem to respond to both oxygen and UFA. Hence, oxygen and UFA signal transduction pathways likely interact at the OLE1 gene level.140,199 The Mga2p–LORE interaction seems to play an important role in OLE1 expression under aerobic, oxygen-limited and anaerobic conditions, while Rox1p is likely not involved in its aerobic repression86,140 (see also section on Oxygen sensing). Free or esterified (Tween 80) oleate is required for anaerobic growth. Under such conditions, the OLE1 gene is both repressed by oleate and derepressed by the absence of oxygen. Repression by oleate is likely dominant, since OLE1 transcription is poorly activated under anaerobic conditions when UFAs are added.140 However, it should be kept in mind that UFAs may repress the anaerobiosis-induced complex formation with LORE box, and thus OLE1 expression, in a dosedependent manner.86 Yeast 2003; 20: 1115–1144. 1128 E. Rosenfeld and B. Beauvoit Quantitative data In S. cerevisiae, the acyl chain composition of lipids is quite simple but depends on the presence of contaminant lipids in the culture medium. Under classical aerobic conditions (no lipid supplementation), the major fatty acids are stearate, oleate (both represent 60–80% of the total fatty acids), palmitate (15%) and palmitoleate (5%). Some traces of very long chain fatty acids (C26) have also been detected.37,44 Total fatty acid content is much (five- to 10-fold) higher than sterol content, and UFA content is generally three- to four-fold higher than ergosterol content (Tables 5, 6). However, ergosterol : UFA, sterol : phospholipid and phospholipid : protein ratios in the sub-cellular compartments depend on growth conditions.61,176 As shown in Table 6, fatty acid contents are greatly influenced by changes in oxygenation conditions. In the absence of exogenous lipids, the strong increase in fatty acid contents upon oxygenation is mainly explained by UFA biosynthesis.166 In cells grown under anaerobic enological conditions in the presence of excess oleate (0.5 ml/l Tween 80) and ergosterol, only traces of palmitoleate were detected.168 The relatively high UFA : FA ratio (about 1.25) was due to oleate incorporation from Tween 80 (which contains 71% moles of oleic acid88 ). Instead of using Tween 80, the maximal anaerobic growth under laboratory or enological conditions may be obtained by adding about 15–30 mg/l free oleate.17,169,203 Other hydroxylase/desaturases involved in lipid synthesis In addition to ERG25, ERG3 and OLE1, the S. cerevisiae genome contains two other oxo- diferric hydroxylase/desaturases, SUR2 and SCS7. These catalyse NADPH- and oxygen-dependent hydroxylation reactions and are involved in sphingolipid and phytoceramide metabolisms, respectively.43,50,72 Interestingly, both SUR2 and SCS7 genes are upregulated under anaerobic conditions.105 Moreover, it has been shown that SUR2 is repressed when sterol synthesis is impaired. Thus, this evidences functional relationships between these oxygen-dependent lipid synthesis pathways.16 Another hydroxylase that has been recently identified in S. cerevisiae is the YNL045w gene. It encodes a leukotriene A4 hydroxylase which is a zinc metalloenzyme like its mammalian counterpart.101 Daum et al.44 have shown that the YNL045w mutation affects cellular sterol contents. However, the role of YNL045w in the absence of added leukotriene remains unclear. The peroxisomal acyl-CoA oxidase (POX1) In contrast to mammals, fatty acid β-oxidation in S. cerevisiae does not occur in mitochondria. It involves several peroxisomal enzymes that have been detected in cells grown aerobically with oleate as carbon source.43,102,130 The first (limiting) step of the β-oxidation cycle is catalysed by the acyl-CoA oxidase (POX1) that forms trans-2,3-dehydroacyl-CoA in the presence of oxygen. During this FAD-dependent reaction, electrons are directly transferred to molecular oxygen to produce H2 O2 , which is further detoxified by the catalase CTA1. Despite the low flux of peroxisomal β-oxidation, it allows aerobic growth on oleate.43 Moreover, the ORE (oleate responsive element)-dependent transcription of the Table 6. Fatty acid contents of (wild-type) S. cerevisiae cells as a function of oxygen availability and lipid composition of the culture medium Growth conditions Carbon source Strain Fatty acids Content# References Aerobic −AF Glucose Lab strains Phospholipids 25–30 [44] Glucose Lab strain Phospholipids 10 [11] Glucose Glucose Glucose Glucose Lab strain Lab strain Lab strain Lab strain Total fatty acids Unsaturated fatty acids Total fatty acids Unsaturated fatty acids 35 9 108 83 [166] [166] [166] [166] Anaerobic +AF Oxygen-limited −AF (DOT = 0.05 µM) −AF (DOT = 0.05 µM) −AF (DOT = 0.5 µM) −AF (DOT = 0.5 µM) AF, anaerobic growth factors; Lab, laboratory; DOT, dissolved oxygen tension. # Expressed as mg/g dry yeast mass. Copyright 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Yeast 2003; 20: 1115–1144. Non-respiratory utilization of oxygen by S. cerevisiae genes involved in fatty β-oxidation (including POX1 ) is repressed by glucose, even in the presence of both oleate and oxygen.20 This suggests that the oxygen-dependent fatty acid catabolism has a low activity during glucose repression. Nicotinic acid biosynthesis Two nicotinic acid biosynthesic pathways have been reported in S. cerevisiae. The one deriving from aspartate is oxygen-independent, whereas the other, from tryptophan, is oxygen-dependent. Since the oxygen-independent pathway does not fulfil nicotinic acid requirements, nicotinic acid supplementation is required for anaerobic growth.75 Two gene products catalysing oxygen-dependent steps potentially involved in nicotinic acid synthesis were identified: BNA1(HAD1) (3-hydroxyanthranilate-3,4-dioxygenase) and YBL098w [kynurenine3-hydroxylase (NADPH-dependent flavin monoxygenase)].65,171 To our knowledge, none of these genes are typical oxygen-responsive genes.105,191 Ubiquinone synthesis Ubiquinone is an important component of the respiratory chain and serves as a lipid-soluble antioxidant and as a regenerator of cellular antioxidants. In S. cerevisiae, ubiquinone-6 (Q6, isoprenylated benzoquinone) is also found in the plasma membrane.55,173,174 Q6 synthesis is oxygen-dependent but the pathway shares common oxygenindependent steps with sterol synthesis (for review, see ref. 131). Two related proteins are needed to fulfil the oxygen-dependent steps of Q6 synthesis. The COQ7 gene is required for the last monooxygenase step in Q6 biosynthesis, but the amino acid sequence does not share similarity to any known mono-oxygenase or hydroxylase proteins.89 In contrast, Coq6p is a flavin-dependent monooxygenase involved in Q6 synthesis.158 While it is known that high concentrations of glucose repress Q6 biosynthesis,126,181 little is known about the possible accumulation of Q6 precursors in anaerobic cells and Q6 synthesis rates upon oxygenation of such cells. However, it has been shown that anaerobic cells contain trace amounts of ubiquinone (<15 µg/g dry weight),126,165 and that the ubiquinone content of cells shows a linear response to oxygen tension similar to that of cytochrome c.165 Moreover, the ubiquinone content of aerobic glucose-repressed and derepressed Copyright 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. 1129 cells does not exceed 100 and 200 µg/g dry weight, respectively.126 Therefore, as for the haem pathway, low oxygen quantities are likely to be required for optimal Q6 synthesis. Plasma membrane oxidases The ferrireductase system In S. cerevisiae, the multicomponent ferrireductase system of the plasma membrane, which is responsible for the high-affinity uptake of external Fe3+ , constitutes an additional site of oxygen consumption. It mainly comprises a metalloreductase (mainly FRE1 and FRE2), a multi-copper ferroxidase, and a metal permease (FTR1). The ferric reductase FRE1 is a b558-type cytochrome showing similarity with the human neutrophile gp91phox NADPH oxidase.177 In gp91phox and to a lower extent in FRE1, molecular oxygen can be used as opportunist electron acceptor to produce O2 ž− .117 Alternatively, ROS (O2 ž− and/or H2 O2 ) may be released from the reduced NADPH-P450 reductase (CPR1) which provides electrons to the ferrireductase system.116,123,194 On the other hand, an obligate oxygen-dependent step is required for iron (or copper) translocation. It is catalysed by the ferroxidase FET3 that forms Fe3+ according to the following reaction: 4Fe2+ + O2 + 4H+ → 4Fe3+ + 2H2 O. The oxidized iron is further incorporated into cells via the permease.73 FET3 has a high affinity for oxygen (1–3 µM) and is almost fully inhibited (75–80%) by sodium azide.74 Like some other genes directly involved in oxygen utilization, the FET3 aerobic gene has an anaerobic counterpart, FET4, a multisubstrate metal ion transporter. Derepression of FET4 may allow metal uptake under anaerobic conditions.209 However, under these conditions, no ferrireductase activity and no high-affinity iron uptake have ever been measured. Upon oxygenation, iron uptake was obtained through rapid (5 min) FET3 induction. Hence, molecular oxygen may directly or indirectly regulate the Fe3+ : Fe2+ ratio, either as a modulator of gene transcription or as a substrate of the ferroxidase reaction.73 Other plasma membrane oxidases Plasma membranes of S. cerevisiae catalyse NADH oxidation using a variety of artificial electron acceptors such as ferricyanide, cytochrome c and Yeast 2003; 20: 1115–1144. 1130 ascorbate free radical.173,174 Reduction of ascorbate free radical at the plasma membrane is comprised of two independent electron transport chains. The first probably involves the NADH-b5 reductase responsible for the reduction of ubiquinone-6 pool, while the second is the ferrireductase system. Concerning the latter, several data suggest that both the NADH-ferricyanide reductase38 and the NADHQ6-iron-dependent ascorbate reductase (described by Santos-Ocana et al.173,174 ) are potential sites of oxygen consumption and ROS production. Potential soluble oxidases Yeast haemoglobins Two cytosolic flavohaemoglobin-like proteins, YHB1 and YNL234w, have been identified in S. cerevisiae (Table 5). They may be involved in transport, storage, facilitated diffusion and release of oxygen at low oxygen tensions, and may act as oxygen sensors and/or as terminal oxidases. In contrast to bacterial Hb genes, it is widely acknowledged that YHB1 is an aerobic gene. It is repressed by either anaerobiosis or haem deficiency.39,213 Nevertheless, Yhb1p could also be detected in anaerobic cells27 and, surprisingly, the YHB1 gene was found to be slightly downregulated in aerobic glucose-limited chemostat cultures.191 Whereas YHB1 binds molecular oxygen reversibly, it probably has no oxidase activity in vivo. Indeed, the ‘cyanide-resistant respiration’ of aerobic rho + and rho0 cells was not affected by the deletion or the overexpression of the YHB1 gene.27,213 Whereas YBH1 is likely not implicated in oxygen sensing (see section on Oxygen sensing), it might be involved in the response to oxidative stress27,213 and in the protection of NO-induced nitrosylations under both aerobic and anaerobic conditions.122 However, it cannot be definitely excluded that YHB1 plays a role in the facilitated diffusion of oxygen in anaerobic or oxygen-limited cells in the absence of NO. Little is known about the haemoglobin YNL234w or its function. Moreover, the overall structural organization of Ynl234wp makes this protein unique among the known haemoglobins. While not essential for growth, it is induced by anaerobiosis, glucose repression, nitrogen starvation and osmotic stress.175 Copyright 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. E. Rosenfeld and B. Beauvoit Old yellow enzymes (OYE2,3) The S. cerevisiae genome contains two genes (OYE2, OYE3) encoding old yellow enzymes (NADPH oxido-reductase, EC 1.6.99.1). The OYE3/OYE2 pair constitutes one aerobic–anaerobic gene pair among those that have been identified to date.105 Both genes are probably involved in sterol metabolism188 NADPH is the electron donor to OYEs but the physiological electron acceptors are still unknown. It has been suggested that OYE3 forms H2 O2 in the presence of oxygen and NADPH,144 and that at least one of the two OYEs may contribute to the oxygen consumption observed in the cytosolic fraction.87,94 However, oxygen is now considered to be an opportunist electron acceptor, as are ferricyanide and methylene blue. Indeed, the physiological electron acceptor (that prevents oxygen reduction) of OYE may be an intermediate sterol with an α,β-unsaturated carbonyl residue.188 In vivo, the OYEs may bind β-oestradiol, and the reaction be involved in the control of the cell cycle (see ref. 144 and discussion therein). Other oxygen-dependent pathways Other oxidases Among the additional oxygen-dependent enzymes identified in the S. cerevisiae genome, some of them involve oxidases. One is the mitochondrial L-proline oxidase (PUT1) that catalyses the O2 -dependent transformation of L-proline to 1-pyrroline 5-carboxylase and to glutamate 5semialdehyde. PUT1 is induced by L-proline and is strongly downregulated under anaerobic conditions.191,208 However, during anaerobic enological fermentation (strong glucose repression), it has been shown that L-proline is rapidly metabolized after moderate oxygen addition at the end of the growth phase.172 This practice is of great biotechnological importance, since natural musts often contain limiting amounts of potentially assimilated nitrogen, and since L-proline is one of the more abundant amino acids in these media. In rich medium, it cannot be ruled out that promitochondrial PUT1 contributes to the oxygen consumption capacities retained by anaerobically grown cells. Another mitochondrial oxidase, D-arabino-1,4lactone oxidase (ALO1), which catalyses the final oxygen-dependent desaturation step of D-erythroascorbate synthesis has also been identified.78 Yeast 2003; 20: 1115–1144. Non-respiratory utilization of oxygen by S. cerevisiae This enzyme may also catalyse the formation of 185 L-ascorbate from L-galactono-1,4-lactone. Very low contents of ascorbate-erythroascorbarte have been reported (about 50–150 µg/g dry weight in aerobic cells) and the form that predominates is still under controversy (see ref. 185 and references therein). Moreover, the corresponding biosynthetic pathways are still poorly characterized in S. cerevisiae. Nevertheless, if ALO1 operates as its mammalian counterpart (the L-gulono-1,4lactone oxidase), it potentially constitutes an additional H2 O2 production site. Other mono-oxygenases and dioxygenases In addition to the known or putative monooxygenases previously described (ERG1, P450 cytochromes, YBL098w, COQ6), the genome of S. cerevisiae also contains the so-called ‘yeast flavin-dependent mono-oxygenase’ yFMO (YHR176w). This NADPH- and oxygen-dependent enzyme contributes to the reduction of thiols and, together with reduced glutathione, plays a crucial role in the intracellular redox balance.189 However, it is easily conceivable that yFMO likely makes a very poor contribution to the overall non-respiratory oxygen consumption capacities. On the other hand, two additional genes, YJR149w and YLL057c, encoding the putative dioxygenases, 2-nitropropane dioxygenase and α-ketoglutaratedependent sulphonate dioxygenase, respectively, were identified in the S. cerevisiae genome.65,171 Characterization and physiological roles of so-called ‘cyanide-resistant respiration’ Many of the oxygen-dependent biochemical pathways previously listed (see section on Structural oxygen requirements) likely contribute to the ‘cyanide-resistant respiration’ (CNR) of S. cerevisiae. However, only a few studies (Table 7) have been devoted to the characterization of the molecular protagonists of ‘CNR’. As in many of these studies, we focus here on anaerobic cells in which ‘CNR’ is known to be favoured. In fact, the term ‘non-respiratory (antimycin Aresistant) oxygen consumption’ (NOC) would be more appropriate,168 since cyanide [like NaN3 , TTFA (thenoyltrifluoroacetone) and SHAM] can inhibit the oxygen uptake measured in the presence of antimycin A.8,81,149,168 Copyright 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. 1131 Contribution of haem, sterol and unsaturated fatty acid synthesis Both molecular and biochemical data (see section on Structural oxygen requirements) suggest that haem, sterol and unsaturated fatty acid de novo synthesis contribute to the CNR capacity that preexists in anaerobic rho + cells. Haem and lipids are required for de novo mitochondrial biogenesis upon oxygenation of such cells. However, the contribution made by the haem pathway to oxygen consumption is likely minor. Indeed, yeast requires small amounts of haem or porphyrin (Table 3) and only 2.5 oxygen molecules are required for the synthesis of 1 haem molecule.109 Moreover, haem oxygenase activity is classically thought to be absent in S. cerevisiae (see section on Transport and degradation of haem). Nevertheless, the actual oxygen uptake linked to the haem pathway could not be checked in hem − mutants due to the pleiotropic effects of the hem mutations.124,141,163 On the other hand, several data point to the strong contribution of de novo lipid synthesis to the CNR capacity of anaerobic cells. In such cells, the accumulation of both b5 and P450 cytochromes led some authors to conclude that sterol and unsaturated fatty acid (UFA) synthesis are the major CNR systems, but this could not be demonstrated.81,165 In lipid-depleted media, it was further shown that 30–100% of the oxygen required for fermentative growth under brewing and enological conditions accounted for concomitant UFA and sterol synthesis.99,100,145,146,169 Interestingly, the anaerobic cells in lipid-depleted synthetic musts exhibit the highest CNR capacity168,169 (also, Rosenfeld et al., unpublished data). In contrast, in synthetic musts containing excess oleate and ergosterol (both classically added to allow anaerobic growth), the impairment of the desaturase activity (i.e. ole1 mutant) does not affect the CNR capacity. Under these conditions, only the inhibition of the sterol pathway (e.g. in the presence of terbinafine and cyanide) significantly decreases the CNR (about a 25% decrease). This contribution of the sterol pathway in the CNR became almost undetectable when cells were oxygenated for several hours.168 It has also been shown that the stimulation of enological fermentation that is usually observed after an oxygen pulse is abolished when the de novo sterol synthesis is impaired (i.e. erg1 mutant). This particular role of newly synthesized sterol on fermentation Yeast 2003; 20: 1115–1144. 1132 E. Rosenfeld and B. Beauvoit Table 7. Related characteristics of non-respiratory oxygen consumption of wild-type and respiratory-deficient S. cerevisiae cells Growth conditions Carbon source Strain Localization Sensitivity toward Resistance toward Aerobic Glucose Glucose Glucose Glucose Lab strain (WT) Lab strain (rho0 mutant) Lab strain (rho− mutant) Lab strain (rho− mutant) Cellular membranes ? Light-microsomes Mitochondria NaN3 a CO SHAM KCNb KCN, SHAM, anti Aa KCNa KCNa [1] [66] [12] [12] Glucose Cellular membranes CO, PIC anti A [94] Glucose Glucose Lab strains (rho− , rho0 mutants) Ind strain (Baker’s yeast) Lab strain (WT) Membranes + cytosol PCMB Microsomes anti A KCNa [212] [165] Glucose Glucose Ind strain Lab strain (WT) Cytosol Cellular membranes Glucose Glucose Glucose Glucose (Enol cond) Glucose (Enol cond) Glucose Lab strain (WT) Lab strain (WT) Lab strain (WT) Lab strain (WT) Oxygenlimited Anaerobic Reference Cellular membranes Cellular membranes Microsomes Microsomes KCN SHAM, KCN, amytal, anti A, NaN3 , Cu2+ chelators CO, rotenone, dicoumarol KCN, anti A KCNa KCNb KCN KCNa anti A, myxothiazolb DPI, Ketob [87] [2] [81] [1] [95] [168] Lab strain (rho0 mutant) Microsomes DPI, Ketob anti A, myxothiazolb [168] Lab strain (WT) Microsomes KCNa [165] WT, wild-type; Lab, laboratory; Ind, industrial; Enol cond, enological conditions; SHAM, salicyl hydroxamate; anti A, antimycin A; PIC, phenyl isocyanate; PCMB, p-chloromercuribenzoate; DPI, diphenylene iodonium; Keto, ketoconazole. In most cases, poison effects were determined on subcellular fractions. a Effect determined on whole cells. b Effect was simultaneously determined on whole cells and subcellular fractions. In all cases, inhibitory effects were not complete. KCN and SHAM were classically employed at 0.25–1 mM and 0.1–3 mM, respectively. In references81,94,165,212 the involvement of microsomal P450 systems (that comprise CPR1 and/or NADH-b5 reductase, and b5 and P450 cytochromes) in high-affinity oxygen uptake was suggested but was not quantified in vivo. capacity undergoes positive effects on cell viability when ethanol accumulates.169 Contribution of other NAD(P)H-dependent pathways Stored carbohydrates and exogenous hexoses seem to be the sole oxidizable carbon substrates for the CNR systems that pre-exist in anaerobic cells grown under laboratory or enological conditions.81,168,183 Neither monocarboxylic acids nor fermentation end-products activate CNR. It has been hypothesized that both NADH and NADPH are potential electron donors of oxygen-consuming systems.2,94,212 However, it was recently shown (in cells grown under anaerobic enological conditions shifted to aerobic conditions) that CNR systems (including sterol synthesis) are, both in vivo and in vitro, more dependent on NADPH than on NADH.168 The metabolic pathway that Copyright 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. provides NADPH to the CNR systems is still not characterized. Most of the numerous NAD(P)H-dependent oxygen utilization pathways previously listed (see section on Structural oxygen requirements) may participate in the respiratory adaptation phenomena. Many genes involved in oxygen-dependent steps are upregulated under anaerobic conditions or, in contrast, can be rapidly induced upon oxygenation. However, many of these pathways require small amounts of oxygen. These include the oxygen-dependent steps of sphingolipid and phytoceramide metabolism, and those of nicotinic acid, ubiquinone and (erythro)ascorbate biosynthesis. The contribution of proline oxidase (a potential source of H2 O2 ) and other promitochondrial pathways is also likely low because: (a) CNR are not affected by the absence of proline in the medium (Table 7 and references therein); and (b) promitochondria account for less Yeast 2003; 20: 1115–1144. Non-respiratory utilization of oxygen by S. cerevisiae than 1% of the CNR capacities of anaerobically grown cells.170,204,205 However, uncertainty still remains about the contribution of the potential NADPH-dependent soluble oxidases, OYE2, OYE3, YHB1 and YNL234w. Indeed, anaerobic cell fractionation experiments (under classical laboratory or enological conditions) elicited high NADPH-dependent oxygen consumption activity in the cytosolic fractions, whose activity might rather be due to chemical oxygen reduction.87,94,168 Moreover, as previously discussed (see section on Yeast haemoglobins), it has been demonstrated that YHB1 is not involved in CNR.27,213 Nevertheless, the potential contribution (even low) of OYE(s) and haemoglobins to CNR after a transition from anaerobic to aerobic conditions remains to be examined in detail. Also unclear is the contribution of plasma membrane oxidases listed in the section on Structural oxygen requirements. While many authors have concluded that CNR is mainly localized in the microsomes (Table 7), some have suggested that CNR is localized in the plasmalemma.1 However, it was recently shown under enological conditions that the inhibition extent of cellular CNR by capsaı̈cine (250 µM) and chloroquine (1 mM), two specific inhibitors of NAD(P)H oxidases,139,173,174 is quite low.168 Taken together, these observations suggest that both the NADPH-dependent ferrireductase system and NADH oxidases of the plasmalemma contribute little to CNR. The contribution of the peroxisomal acyl-CoA oxidase (POX1) is also likely to be small, since the growth conditions that favour CNR (i.e. anaerobiosis and glucose repression) are those that repress POX1. The major contribution of uncoupled P450 systems In mammals, it is well known that NADPH-P450 reductase and cytochrome P450 reduce O2 to produce ROS (H2 O2 , O2 ž− ) and ROS plus H2 O, respectively.70,92,154 This electron leakage is generally high in the microsomes, even when P450 systems are partially coupled to monooxygenations of lipidic substrates. The contribution of uncoupled microsomal P450 systems to the CNR capacity of anaerobic S. cerevisiae cells has been hypothesized by some authors but has not been quantified (Table 7 and references therein). Several reports raise the question of the fate of molecular oxygen during non-respiratory oxygen reduction. These Copyright 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. 1133 studies were based on in vitro determinations of the stoichiometry between NADPH oxidation and oxygen consumption (i.e. the NAD(P)H : O2 ratio). An NADPH : O2 ratio tending towards 2 was obtained by Kawaguchi et al.,94 suggesting a massive O2 reduction into H2 O. This ratio was estimated at 1 by other authors,2 suggesting that O2 reduction leads either to a massive H2 O2 production or to a concomitant ROS (H2 O2 , O2 ž− ) and H2 O (or hydroxylated compounds) production. More recently, parallel measurements of NADPH, O2 and ROS showed that the NAD(P)H : O2 ratio of 1 was rather due to the concomitant production of ROS (mainly O2 ž− ) and H2 O. For instance, in subcellular fractions isolated from anaerobic cells grown under enological conditions, the total ROS production reached about half of the total oxygen reduced by NADPH (e.g. about 4–20% becoming H2 O2 and 17–38% becoming O2 ž− for erg1 mutant).168 However, the respective contribution of CPR1 and cytochrome P450 (likely ERG11) in H2 O2 and O2 ž− production is still unknown. Interestingly, the fact that CNR systems could be a source of ROS in vitro raises the question of the physiological role of the ROS-detoxifying enzymes (e.g. catalase, superoxide dismutase, glutathione peroxidase) that are present in anaerobic cells.36,147 Indeed, the basal level of such enzymes in anaerobic cells may minimize the oxidative damage caused by CNR systems upon oxygenation. Moreover, the relative level of CPR1, NADH-b5 reductase and cytochrome b5, as well as interactions between these redox partners, may strongly influence the extent of electron leakage, e.g. cytochrome b5, via a redox effect, may increase the coupling level at the expense of H2 O2 production.154 Since different CPR1 : b5 : P450 ratio values have been reported in anaerobic S. cerevisiae cells grown under classical laboratory or enological conditions,80,81,87,168,187,212 the contribution of uncoupled P450 systems might strongly depend on the yeast strain and on the anaerobic growth conditions used. In sum, the major enzymatic systems responsible for the non-respiratory oxygen uptake capacity of anaerobically grown cells are: (a) the oxygenutilizing step of the de novo sterol biosynthetic pathway; and (b) electron leakage due to P450 system uncoupling. In cells grown under aerobic or oxygen-limited conditions, the contribution of uncoupled P450 systems to the oxygen Yeast 2003; 20: 1115–1144. 1134 uptake capacity have not yet been quantified. However, several data may suggest their involvement in glucose-grown respiratory-deficient cells,12,66,94 and in strongly glucose-repressed wild-type cells (harbouring a low but not negligible respiratory activity under aerobic conditions).1,165,168,170,212 Future in vitro and in vivo studies of null mutants affected in the P450 systems (e.g. CPR1, ERG5, ERG11) will certainly reveal other unknown protagonists of non-respiratory oxygen uptake in S. cerevisiae. Oxygen sensing in S. cerevisiae: current knowledge and perspectives Expression pattern of aerobic and anaerobic (‘hypoxic’) genes In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, it is widely documented that the genes that are only expressed under aerobic conditions and are repressed under low oxygen tension include the nuclear and mitochondrial genes encoding for proteins involved in mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation (e.g. cytochromes, subunits of respiratory chain complexes) and in protection against oxidative damage (e.g. catalases, superoxide dismutases). Conversely, there are genes (frequently termed ‘hypoxic’ genes) that are expressed at low levels aerobically and are induced by anaerobiosis, encoding proteins involved in haem, sterol and unsaturated fatty acid synthesis (i.e. ERG11 and CPR1, OLE1 and HEM13 ; extensive reviews are available28,103,159,216 ). Moreover, DNA array analysis has recently shown that nearly one-sixth of the genome is differentially expressed with respect to oxygen tension, the majority of these genes (i.e. more than 65%) being downregulated under anaerobiosis.105 These authors classified the anaerobically induced genes (i.e. 346 genes) into four major functional categories: (a) cell wall-related, 42 genes; (b) cell stress, 35 genes; (c) carbohydrate metabolism, 31 genes; and (d) lipid, fatty acid and isoprenoid metabolism, 28 genes. For the yeast strain and under the growth conditions used by the authors, the latter class contains half of the haem-biosynthetic genes and nearly all of the genes involved in the sterol biosynthetic pathway downstream from farnesylpyrophosphate.105 In addition, there are several homologous gene pairs in which one is expressed aerobically and the Copyright 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. E. Rosenfeld and B. Beauvoit other under anaerobic conditions. These include isoenzymes of the sterol biosynthetic enzyme 3-hydroxy-3-methyl-glutaryl-CoA reductase (i.e. HMG1 and its anaerobic counterpart HMG2), those of the subunit V of cytochrome oxidase (i.e. COX5a and COX5b) and those of the ADP/ATP translocator (i.e. AAC2 and AAC3103,159 ; see ref. 105 for the identification of more gene pairs). Some of the enzymes of the sterol, haem and unsaturated fatty acid synthesis that are induced upon oxygen limitation require oxygen as a substrate. The increase in their levels may presumably maintain the flux of product formation in their respective pathways. However, under anaerobic conditions, the increased expression of these genes has no metabolic purpose, so cell growth under anaerobiosis requires the addition of anaerobic factors in the culture medium. Nevertheless, it has been postulated that the induction of oxygen-dependent enzymes under anaerobic conditions could be an adaptation of anaerobic cells upon subsequent oxygenation of the culture medium. Indeed, the anabolic capacity of anaerobic cells may somehow trigger oxygen sensing during a pulse of oxygen or a prolonged aerobic exposure. However, the amplitude and duration of the ‘signal’ generated by the anabolic reactions upon oxygen addition is likely to depend on both the pool size of the intermediary metabolites of each pathway, as well as on the affinity to oxygen of the respective oxygen-utilizing enzymes. In this respect, the oxygen affinity of purified enzymes has been shown to vary from about 0.1 µM [i.e. coproprophyrinogen III oxidase (Hem13p) and protoporphyrin IX oxidase (Hem14p109 )] to about 4 µM [i.e. squalene epoxidase (Erg1p)82 ]. By extrapolating these in vitro data to in vivo situations, it may be concluded that the haem- and the sterol-biosynthetic pathways differentially respond to an increase in oxygen tension. However, the apparent oxygen affinity of CNR of anaerobic cells grown under classical laboratory or enological conditions was recently measured and no significant difference was detected between wild-type and various mutants (e.g. erg1, ole1, rho0 ).168 Role of haem concentration in oxygen sensing Several features of the haem biosynthetic pathway indicate why haem is an ideal effector molecule to sense oxygen. First, in contrast to prokaryotic cells, Yeast 2003; 20: 1115–1144. Non-respiratory utilization of oxygen by S. cerevisiae haem synthesis in eukaryotic cells has an absolute requirement for oxygen for its biosynthesis. Molecular oxygen serves as an electron acceptor in two steps (see section on Haem biosynthesis and haemoproteins). Second, all the enzymes of the pathway are present in anaerobic cells. Third, the coproporphyrinogen III oxidase is considered as the rate-limiting step of the pathway with a high affinity for oxygen.109 Fourth, in mutants with a defect in their haem synthesis, the haem deficiency mimics the effects of oxygen deprivation on the gene transcription, i.e. anaerobic genes are upregulated and aerobic genes downregulated. Fifth, addition of exogenous haem to anaerobic culture reverses the effect of low oxygen tension on both aerobic and anaerobic genes (see ref. 159 and references therein). Consequently, a simplistic model of haemdependent regulation of aerobic genes has been established on the assumption that haem levels may increase during oxygenation of anaerobic cultures and decrease as oxygen becomes limiting.216 The molecular basis of this regulation model has been strengthened by the discovery of transcription factors whose activity and expression are dependent on the intracellular level of haem. Five genes, HAP1–HAP5, have been found to encode proteins required for activation of aerobic gene expression in response to haem. HAP1 encodes a transcriptional activator that plays a central role in haem sensing. The regulatory complex consists of a homodimer of Hap1p that contains haem-binding and DNA-binding domains. Binding of haem on Hap1 allows transcriptional activation of specific aerobic target genes that contain upstream activation sites specific for Hap1 binding. HAP2, HAP3, HAP4 and HAP5 encode proteins that function as a heterotetrameric transcriptional complex to activate the transcription of aerobic genes containing a specific upstream sequence, in the presence of haem. The mechanisms of Hap-mediated activation of aerobic genes, as well as the genes regulated by these regulatory complexes, have been extensively detailed.28,103,159,192,216 At least one additional transcriptional factor, HDS-binding factor, regulates expression of aerobic genes of yeast in a haem-dependent fashion.159 Another gene, ROX1, has been described to be involved in the repression of anaerobic genes under aerobic conditions. ROX1 encodes a repressor protein that binds to a specific sequence of the anaerobic genes and represses transcription. It should be pointed out that Copyright 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. 1135 ROX1 is an oxygen- and haem-dependent gene, since its expression is under the control of the Hap1 transcriptional factor. Thus, the regulation of aerobic and anaerobic genes by haem content can be described simplistically through the activity of these two regulatory proteins: when oxygen is available and haem is synthesized, it binds to Hap1, thus inducing aerobic genes, including ROX1, whose product represses anaerobic genes. When oxygen becomes limiting, haem levels decrease, and Hap1 activation of aerobic genes, including ROX1, decreases, thus permitting the expression of anaerobic genes. However, such a regulatory scheme requires the cellular levels of Rox1p to be strictly controlled. This is achieved by another regulatory loop that is a repression by Rox1p of its own synthesis. Moreover, a feedback regulation strictly based on the Hap1p/Rox1p balance has to take into account the fact that haem, sterol and fatty acid synthesis are required under aerobic conditions. Therefore, some anaerobic genes, such as HEM13, ERG11, CPR1, HMG1-2 and OLE1, whose functions are required under aerobic conditions, are only partially repressed by Rox1p in the presence of oxygen. Moreover, DNA array analysis of rox1 null mutant showed that only one-third of the anaerobically induced genes are regulated by Rox1p. On the other hand, some genes containing putative ROX1-binding sites in their promoters are not always upregulated in rox1 mutants, depending on the experimental design, strain and culture medium used.105 Therefore, this differential regulation of anaerobic genes requires a further complex regulatory circuit with additional elements. This is in agreement with the finding that the repression by Rox1p is in fact mediated through a general repression complex formed by other regulatory proteins (e.g. Tup1, Ssn6) whose complex may modulate the affinity of Rox1 for its binding site on target genes.215 In addition, promoter searches have shown that nearly one-third of the anaerobically induced genes contain a consensus binding site for the Ucp2 transcription factor.105 Role of haemoproteins during aerobic–anaerobic transitions Several reports suggest that the haem intracellular level per se is not the only signal involved in the regulation of gene expression by oxygen. First, despite the difficulties in measuring its free Yeast 2003; 20: 1115–1144. 1136 intracellular level, it has been suggested that the induction of HEM13 gene by oxygen limitation results in significant haem accumulation, even at low oxygen tensions.159,165 Second, several genes are still modulated by oxygen tension in the culture medium at oxygen concentrations well above the apparent affinity of oxygen-utilizing enzymes. The data obtained for cytochrome c and COX genes show that aerobic genes and two anaerobic isoform genes (i.e. COX5b, CYC7 ) are not regulated collectively at a single oxygen concentration but that they have different thresholds for activation30,31 (for review, see ref. 159). This pattern of gene expression led the authors to hypothesize that the haem-redox state, in addition to its absolute intracellular content, could modulate the expression of oxygen-sensitive genes. Thus, in yeast, haem may also function as a redoxsensitive component of a haemoprotein oxygen sensor. This hypothesis was recently supported by the finding that carbon monoxide and transition metals, which compromise the ability of haemoproteins to bind O2 , block the induction of a subset of anaerobic genes. For instance, CO blocks the anaerobic induction of three anaerobic genes (e.g. CYC7, OLE1 and to some extent COX5b) but not all of them (e.g. not HEM13, HMG1, HMG2, CPR1, ERG11 or AAC3 ). Similar results were found for OLE1 and CYC7 genes by adding transition metals such as cobalt or nickel.104 More recently, another report showed that transition metals block the repression of OLE1 under aerobiosis, which led to the identification of a regulatory sequence involved in the response to anaerobiosis and cobalt.199 The yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae has three major CO binding proteins: cytochrome oxidase, flavohaemoglobin and cytochrome P450. The use of respiratory chain inhibitors (e.g. antimycin A, cyanide) or mutations (e.g. cytochrome b mutant, Rho◦ strain) showed that functionality of respiratory chain is required for the anaerobic induction of OLE1 and CYC7. In contrast, neither inhibitors nor mutations blocked the anaerobic induction of anaerobic genes that are unaffected by CO (e.g. HEM13, HMG1-2, ERG11, CPR1 ). Finally, the anaerobic induction of all anaerobic genes was unchanged in a flavohaemoglobin-deficient mutant.104 Taken together, these data support the hypothesis that the Copyright 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. E. Rosenfeld and B. Beauvoit CO-binding haemoprotein involved in gene regulation during the transition from aerobiosis to anaerobiosis is cytochrome oxidase and not flavohaemoglobin. It is worth noting that the oxygen threshold for the expression of anaerobic genes is in the range of the apparent Km of the yeast cytochrome oxidase for oxygen (about 0.25 µM).30,31 Cytochrome oxidase also seems to be involved in the regulation of anaerobic-hypoxic genes in a number of mammalian cells, but it is not clear how cytochrome oxidase ‘senses’ oxygen, as aerobic cells are shifted to oxygen-limited or anaerobic conditions, and what signal is transduced from mitochondria into an effect on nuclear gene expression (see ref. 159 and references therein). Recent studies with mammalian cells raised the possibility that ROS are involved in anaerobichypoxic gene regulation. More recently, it has been shown in S. cerevisiae that the transition of aerobic cells to anaerobic conditions induces transient oxidative stress that is considerably diminished in respiratory-deficient cells. It was suggested that ROS produced by the respiratory chain and their action on macromolecules (oxidative damage on mitochondrial DNA and carbonylations of cytosolic and mitochondrial proteins) would initiate a signalling pathway required for the induction of some anaerobic nuclear genes (see ref. 48 and references therein). To our knowledge, the involvement of the third major CO-binding haemoprotein, cytochrome P450, in oxygen sensing has never been examined in S. cerevisiae. Interestingly, P450s have apparent Km values for oxygen in the same range as cytochrome c oxidase.92,118 Hence, the involvement of both ERG11 (during anaerobic–aerobic transitions) and ERG5 (during aerobic–anaerobic transitions) in gene regulation is not excluded, since these P450 enzymes are differentially expressed in anaerobiosis vs. aerobiosis. Role of neo-synthesized sterols and unsaturated fatty acid during anaerobic–aerobic transitions Recently, the adaptation to oxygen of null mutant cells, erg1 (whose growth requires ergosterol and the absence of oxygen) and ole1, grown under anaerobic enological conditions, was analysed. In contrast to the wild-type and ole1 mutant, a strong decrease in erg1 cell viability was observed upon oxygenation (as for the rho0 strain) and no respiratory chain induction (measured by means of the Yeast 2003; 20: 1115–1144. Non-respiratory utilization of oxygen by S. cerevisiae antimycin A sensitivity of oxygen uptake) could be detected in the remaining viable cells168 (unpublished data). This was observed in the presence or not of oleate and ergosterol in the incubation medium. Therefore, de novo sterol synthesis is required for respiratory chain induction, whereas de novo UFA synthesis is not. This also suggests that ergosteryl esters cannot replace de novo sterol synthesis for this purpose, while stored UFA (from triacylglycerols or steryl esters) may be used for mitochondrial biogenesis. Under such conditions, the primary role of the de novo sterol synthesis is unclear. It may be hypothesized that the neosynthesized sterols play a role, (a) in the assembly of respiratory complexes, and/or (b) in the regulation of the expression of oxygen-responsive genes. Since squalene epoxidase has a high affinity for oxygen,82 sterol synthesis occurs at very low oxygen tension,83,165,166 so neosynthesized sterols can be considered as putative oxygen-sensing transducers. To our knowledge, such an aspect of oxygen sensing had never been analysed, although effects of sterols on the ERG gene expression, the cell cycle and the oxidative metabolism have already been described.44 Conclusion The thrust of this paper has been the role of the non-respiratory pathways on the utilization of molecular oxygen by the yeast S. cerevisiae, a facultative anaerobe devoid of mitochondrial alternative oxidase but possessing a still uncharacterized ‘cyanide-resistant respiration’. In this yeast species, non-respiratory oxygen consumption is favoured when respiratory functions are impaired or absent. Moreover, the systems involved are upregulated in anaerobic cells. Several reports have shown that upon oxygenation of such cells, there is a major contribution of sterol synthesis (unlike haem, ubiquinone and UFA synthesis) and uncoupled P450 systems in the overall oxygen uptake. However, uncertainties still remain about the involvement of other NAD(P)H-dependent microsomal pathways, and of the O2 -dependent pathways of plasmalemma and cytosol. Upon transient oxygenation and prior to respiratory chain induction, it is likely that most of the oxygen is dissipated into ROS and H2 O, while a minor part is Copyright 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. 1137 used for anabolic purposes. This has to be confirmed in the future by in vivo and in vitro analysis of oxygen fluxes in null mutants affected in P450 systems and in other (NADPH-) oxygendependent pathways. On the other hand, little is known about the non-respiratory oxygen uptake of aerobic cells. The use of respiratory-deficient cells may be a useful means to quantitate the oxygen utilization by the respective anabolic pathways. However, this technical advantage vanishes if one takes into account the fact that the impairment of respiratory functions, either by genetic alterations or by respiratory inhibitors, has been shown to exert a retrograde regulation on nuclear gene expression.53 Despite the tremendous progress made during the past decade in understanding oxygen-regulated gene expression, further investigations by DNA arrays and/or 2-D gels are needed to clarify the regulation of all the genes involved in molecular oxygen utilization. Several anabolic pathways (including haem and sterol synthesis) might be involved in signal transduction during either anaerobic–aerobic or aerobic–anaerobic transitions. Analysis of the genome-wide responses in the corresponding null mutants on the one hand, and in wild-type cells treated with specific inhibitors on the other, would be helpful to elucidate the mechanisms of oxygen sensing. Several data (obtained from aerobic–anaerobic transition experiments) argue for the involvement of cytochrome c oxidase and ROS produced by the respiratory chain in a signalling pathway required for the induction of some anaerobic genes.48,104,159 Interestingly, a possible haemoprotein sensor different from cytochrome c oxidase has been identified in mammals. This is a multisubunit plasma membrane-bound cytochrome b NAD(P)H oxidase, capable of reducing oxygen to ROS, that has been proposed to be a component of a signal transduction pathway (see ref. 159 and references therein). Since yeast cells exhibit high apparent affinity for O2 regardless of the functionality or not of the respiratory chain or of the sterol biosynthetic pathway168 (unpublished data), it cannot be ruled out that uncoupled P450 systems and other uncharacterized membrane-bound NADPH-oxidases also participate in a specific signal transduction pathway in S. cerevisiae. This oxygen-sensing mechanism based on non-respiratory ROS production has not yet been investigated in S. cerevisiae. Yeast 2003; 20: 1115–1144. 1138 E. Rosenfeld and B. Beauvoit Acknowledgements The authors thank Dr R. Cooke for his contribution to editing the manuscript. 16. References 17. 1. Ainsworth PJ, Ball AJS, Tustanoff ER. 1980. Cyanideresistant respiration in yeast. I. Isolation of a cyanideinsensitive NAD(P)H oxidoreductase. Arch Biochem Biophys 202: 172–186. 2. Ainsworth PJ, Ball AJS, Tustanoff ER. 1980. Cyanideresistant respiration in yeast. II. Characterization of a cyanide-insensitive NAD(P)H oxidoreductase. Arch Biochem Biophys 202: 187–200. 3. Alexander MA, Jeffries TW. 1990. Respiratory efficiency and metabolite partitioning as regulatory phenomena in yeasts. Enzyme Microbiol Biotechnol 12: 2–19. 4. Andreasen AA, Stier TJB. 1953. Anaerobic nutrition of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. I. Ergosterol requirement for growth in defined medium. J Cell Comp Physiol 41: 23–36. 5. Andreasen AA, Stier TJB. 1954. Anaerobic nutrition of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. II. Unsaturated fatty acid requirement for growth in defined medium. J Cell Comp Physiol 43: 271–281. 6. Ansell R, Granath K, Hohmann S, Thevelein JM, Adler L. 1997. The two isoenzymes for yeast NAD+ -dependent glycerol 3-phosphate dehydrogenase encoded by GPD1 and GPD2 have distinct roles in osmoadaptation and redox regulation. EMBO J 16: 2179–2187. 7. Aoyama Y, Yoshida Y, Sato R. 1984. Yeast cytochrome P450 catalysing lanosterol 14α-demethylation. II. Lanosterol metabolism by purified P-45014DM and by intact microsomes. J Biol Chem 259: 1661–1666. 8. Aoyama Y, Yoshida Y, Sato R, Susani M, Ruis H. 1981. Involvement of cytochrome b5 and a cyanide-sensitive mono-oxygenase in the 4-demethylation of 4,4-dimethylzymosterol by yeast microsomes. Biochim Biophys Acta 663: 194–202. 9. Aoyama Y, Yoshida Y, Sonoda Y, Sato Y. 1989. Role of the 8-double bond of lanosterol in the enzyme-substrate interaction of cytochrome P-450(14DM) (lanosterol 14 αdemethylase). Biochim Biophys Acta 1001: 196–200. 10. Aries V, Kirsop BH. 1978. Sterol biosynthesis by strains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae in the presence and absence of dissolved oxygen. J Inst Brew 84: 118–121. 11. Arneborg N, Hoy CE, Jorgensen OB. 1995. The effect of ethanol and specific growth rate on the lipid content and composition of Saccharomyces cerevisiae grown anaerobically in a chemostat. Yeast 11: 953–959. 12. Arrabaça JD, Loureiro-Dias MC. 1982. Cyanide-resistant respiration in a respiration-deficient mutant of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Z Allg Mikrobiol 22: 437–442. 13. Atkinson B, Mavituna F. 1987. Biochemical Engineering and Biotechnology Handbook. M. Stockton Press: New York 14. Bakker BM, Bro C, Kotter P, et al. 2000. The mitochondrial alcohol dehydrogenase Adh3p is involved in a redox shuttle in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. J Bacteriol 182: 4730–4737. 15. Bakker BM, Overkamp KM, van Maris AJ, et al. 2001. Stoichiometry and compartmentation of NADH metabolism Copyright 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. FEMS Microbiol Rev 25: 15–37. Bammert GF, Fostel JM. 2000. Genome-wide expression patterns in Saccharomyces cerevisiae: comparison of drug treatments and genetic alterations affecting biosynthesis of ergosterol. Antimicrob Agents Chemother 44: 1255–1265. Barber ED, Lands WEM. 1973. Quantitative measurement of the effectiveness of unsaturated fatty acids required of the growth of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. J Bacteriol 115: 543–551. Bard M, Bruner DA, Pierson ND, Less Biermann B. 1996. Cloning and characterization of ERG25, the Saccharomyces cerevisiae gene encoding C-4 sterol methyl oxidase. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 93: 186–190. Barrett-Bee K, Dixon G. 1995. Ergosterol biosynthesis inhibition: a target for antifungal agents. Acta Biochim Pol 42: 465–479. Baumgartner U, Hamilton B, Piskacek M, Ruis H, Rottensteiner H. 1999. Functional analysis of the Zn(2)Cys(6) transcription factors Oaf1p and Pip2p. Different roles in fatty acid induction of β-oxidation in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. J Biol Chem 274: 22 208–22 216. Beauvoit B, Rigoulet M, Bunoust O, et al. 1993. Interactions between glucose metabolism and oxidative phosphorylations on respiratory-competent Saccharomyces cerevisiae cells. Eur J Biochem 214: 163–172. Bertrand JC, Mattei G, Parra C, Giordani R, Gilewicz M. 1984. Influence of oxygen on the microsomal electron transport system in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Biochimie 66: 583–588. Blatiak A, King DJ, Wiseman A, Salihon J, Winkler MA. 1985. Enzyme induction by oxygen in the accumulation of cytochrome P-450 during batch fermentations in 20% D-glucose with Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Enzyme Microb Technol 7: 553–556. Bourot S, Karst F. 1995. Isolation and characterisation of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae SUT1 gene involved in sterol uptake. Gene 165: 97–102. Boveris A, Oshino N, Chance B. 1972. The cellular production of hydrogen peroxide. Biochem J 128: 617–630. Briza P, Ellinger A, Winkler G, Breitenbach M. 1990. Characterization of a D,L-dityrosine-containing macromolecule from yeast ascospore walls. J Biol Chem 265: 15 118–15 123. Buisson N, Labbe-Bois R. 1998. Flavohaemoglobin expression and function in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. No relationship with respiration and complex response to oxidative stress. J Biol Chem 273: 9527–9533. Bunn HF, Poyton RO. 1996. Oxygen sensing and molecular adaptation to hypoxia. Physiol Rev 76: 839–885. Burke PV, Kwast KE. 2000. Oxygen dependence of expression of cytochrome c and cytochrome c oxidase genes in S. cerevisiae. Adv Exp Med Biol 475: 197–208. Burke PA, Poyton RO. 1998. Structure/function of oxygenregulated isoforms in cytochrome c oxidase. J Exp Biol 201: 1163–1175. Burke PV, Raitt DC, Allen LA, Kellog EA, Poyton RO. 1997. Effect of oxygen concentration on the expression of cytochrome c and cytochrome c oxidase genes in yeast. J Biol Chem 272: 14 705–14 712. Cadenas E. 1989. Biochemistry of oxygen toxicity. Ann Rev Biochem 58: 79–110. Yeast 2003; 20: 1115–1144. Non-respiratory utilization of oxygen by S. cerevisiae 33. Cadenas E, Boveris A, Ragan CI, Stoppani AO. 1977. Production of superoxide radicals and hydrogen peroxide by NADH-ubiquinone reductase and ubiquinol-cytochrome c reductase from beef-heart mitochondria. Arch Biochem Biophys 180: 248–257. 34. Camougrand N, Velours J, Denis M, Guerin M. 1993. Isolation, characterization and function of the two cytochromes c of the yeast Candida parapsilosis. Biochim Biophys Acta 1143: 135–141. 35. Choi JY, Stukey J, Hwang SY, Martin CE. 1996. Regulatory elements that control transcription activation and unsaturated fatty acid-mediated repression of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae OLE1 gene. J Biol Chem 271: 3581–3589. 36. Clarkson SP, Large PJ, Boulton CA, Bamforth CW. 1991. Synthesis of superoxide dismutase, catalase and other enzymes and oxygen and superoxide toxicity during changes in oxygen concentration in cultures of brewing yeast. Yeast 7: 91–103. 37. Cottrell M, Viljoen BC, Kock JLF, Lategan PM. 1986. The long chain fatty acid compositions of species representing the genera Saccharomyces, Schwanniomyces and Lipomyces. J Gen Microbiol 132: 2401–2412. 38. Crane FL, Crane HE, Sun IL, et al. 1982. Insulin control of a transplasma membrane NADH dehydrogenase in erythrocyte membranes. J Bioenerg Biomembr 14: 425–433. 39. Crawford MJ, Sherman DR, Goldberg DE. 1995. Regulation of Saccharomyces cerevisiae flavohaemoglobin gene expression. J Biol Chem 270: 6991–6996. 40. Criddle RS, Schatz G. 1969. Promitochondria of anaerobically grown yeast. I. Isolation and biochemical properties. Biochemistry 8: 322–334. 41. Crowley JH, Leak FW, Shianna KV, Tove S, Parks LW. 1998. A mutation in a purported regulatory gene affects control of sterol uptake in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. J Bacteriol 180: 4177–4183. 42. Dagsgaard C, Taylor LE, O’Brien KM, Poyton RO. 2001. Effects of anoxia and the mitochondrion on expression of aerobic nuclear COX genes in yeast: evidence for a signalling pathway from the mitochondrial genome to the nucleus. J Biol Chem 276: 7593–7601. 43. Daum G, Lees ND, Bard M, Dickson R. 1998. Biochemistry, cell biology and molecular biology of lipids of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Yeast 14: 1471–1510. 44. Daum G, Tuller G, Nemec T, Hrastnik C, Balliano G. 1999. Systematic analysis of yeast strains with possible defect in lipid metabolism. Yeast 15: 601–614. 45. Dejean L, Beauvoit B, Guerin B, Rigoulet M. 2000. Growth of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae on a non-fermentable substrate: control of energetic yield by the amount of mitochondria. Biochim Biophys Acta 1457: 45–56. 46. De Vries S, Marres CAM. 1987. The mitochondrial respiratory chain of yeast. Structure and biosynthesis and the role in cellular metabolism. Biochim Biophys Acta 895: 205–239. 47. Dimster-Denk D, Rine J. 1996. Transcriptional regulation of a sterol-biosynthetic enzyme by sterol levels in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Mol Cell Biol 16: 3981–3989. 48. Dirmeier R, O’Brien KM, Engle M, et al. 2002. Exposure of yeast cells to anoxia induces transient oxidative stress. Implications for the induction of hypoxic genes. J Biol Chem 277: 34 773–34 784. Copyright 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. 1139 49. Dumont MD, Mathews AJ, Nall BT, et al. 1990. Differential stability of two apo-isocytochromes c in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. J Biol Chem 265: 2733–2739. 50. Dunn TM, Haak D, Monaghan E, Beeler TJ. 1998. Synthesis of monohydroxylated inositolphosphorylceramide (IPC-C) in Saccharomyces cerevisiae requires Scs7p, a protein with both a cytochrome b5 -like domain and a hydroxylase/desaturase domain. Yeast 14: 311–321. 51. Edwards DL, Unger BW. 1978. Cyanide- and hydroxamateresistant respiration in Neurospora crassa. J Bacteriol 133: 1130–1134. 52. Ephrussi B, Slonimski P. 1950. La synthèse adaptative des cytochromes chez la levure de boulangerie. Biochim Biophys Acta 6: 256–267. 53. Epstein CB, Waddle JA, Hale W IV, et al. 2001. Genomewide responses to mitochondrial dysfunction. Mol Biol Cell 12: 297–308. 54. Finegold AA, Shatwell KP, Segal AW, Klausner RD, Dancis A. 1996. Intramembrane bis-heme motif for transmembrane electron transport conserved in a yeast iron reductase and the human NADPH oxidase. J Biol Chem 271: 31 021–31 024. 55. Fiori A, Bianchi MM, Fabiani L, et al. 2000. Disruption of six novel genes from chromosome VII of Saccharomyces cerevisiae reveals one essential gene and one gene which affects the growth rate. Yeast 16: 377–386. 56. Fitton V, Rigoulet M, Ouhabi R, Guerin B. 1994. Mechanistic stoichiometry of yeast mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation. Biochemistry 33: 9692–9698. 57. Foury F, Talibi D. 2001. Mitochondrial control of iron homeostasis. A genome wide analysis of gene expression in a yeast frataxin-deficient strain. J Biol Chem 276: 7762–7768. 58. Fujiwara D, Yoshimoto H, Sone H, Harashima S, Tamai Y. 1998. Transcriptional co-regulation of Saccharomyces cerevisiae alcohol acetyltransferase gene, ATF1 and -9 fatty acid desaturase OLE1 by unsaturated fatty acids. Yeast 14: 711–721. 59. Gachotte D, Barbuch R, Gaylor J, Nickel E, Bard M. 1998. Characterization of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae ERG26 gene encoding theC-3 sterol dehydrogenase (C-4 decarboxylase) involved in the sterol biosynthesis. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 95: 13 794–13 799. 60. Gachotte D, Pierson CA, Lees ND, et al. 1997. A yeast sterol auxotroph (erg25) is rescued by addition of azole antifungals and reduced levels of heme. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 94: 11 173–11 178. 61. Gaigg B, Simbeni R, Hrastnik C, Paltauf F, Daum G. 1995. Characterization of a microsomal sub-fraction associated with mitochondria of the yeast, Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Involvement in synthesis and import of phospholipids into mitochondria. Biochim Biophys Acta 1234: 214–220. 62. Galkin AV, Makhlis TA, Zubatov AS, Luzikov VN. 1975. Lack of positive correlation between cell respiration and cytochrome content in galactose-grown Saccharomyces cerevisiae. FEBS Lett 55: 42–45. 63. Gancedo JM. 1998. Yeast carbon catabolite repression. Microbiol Mol Biol Rev 62: 334–361. 64. Gancedo C, Serrano R. 1989. Energy-yielding metabolism. In The Yeast, vol 3, Rose AH, Harridon JS (eds). Academic Press: London; 205–259. 65. GenomeNet. http://www.genome.ad.jp/. 2002. Yeast 2003; 20: 1115–1144. 1140 66. Goffeau A, Crosby B. 1978. A new type of cyanideinsensitive respiration in the yeasts Schizosaccharomyces pombe and Saccharomyces cerevisiae, In Biochemistry and Genetics of Yeasts — Pure and Applied Aspects, Bacila M, Horecker BL, Stoppani AOM (eds). Academic Press: New York; 81–86. 67. Gonzalez-Flecha B, Boveris A. 1995. Mitochondrial sites of hydrogen peroxide production in reperfused rat kidney cortex. Biochim Biophys Acta 1243: 361–366. 68. Gonzalez CI, Martin CE. 1996. Fatty acid-responsive control of mRNA stability. Unsaturated fatty acid-induced degradation of the Saccharomyces OLE1 transcript. J Biol Chem 271: 25 801–25 809. 69. Grivell LA. 1989. Nucleo-mitochondrial interactions in yeast mitochondrial biogenesis. Eur J Biochem 182: 477–493. 70. Guengerich FP, Johnson WW. 1997. Kinetics of ferric cytochrome P450 reduction by NADPH-cythochrome P450 reductase: rapid reduction in the absence of substrate and variations among cytochrome P450 systems. Biochemistry 36: 14 741–14 750. 71. Guerin MG, Camougrand NM. 1994. Partitioning of electron flux between the respiratory chains of the yeast Candida parapsilosis: parallel working of the two chains. Biochim Biophys Acta 1184: 111–117. 72. Haak D, Gable K, Beeler T, Dunn T. 1997. Hydroxylation of Saccharomyces cerevisiae ceramides requires Sur2p and Scs7p. J Biol Chem 272: 29 704–29 710. 73. Hassett RF, Romeo AM, Kosman DJ. 1998. Regulation of high affinity iron uptake in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Role of dioxygen and Fe. J Biol Chem 273: 7628–7636. 74. Hassett RF, Yuan DS, Kosman DJ. 1998. Spectral and kinetic properties of the Fet3 protein from Saccharomyces cerevisiae, a multinuclear copper ferroxidase enzyme. J Biol Chem 273: 23 274–23 282. 75. Heilmann HD, Lingens F. 1968. On the regulation of nicotinic acid biosynthesis in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Hoppe Seylers Z Physiol Chem 349: 231–236. 76. Hixson AW, Gaden EL Jr. 1950. Oxygen transfer in submerged fermentation. Ind Eng Chem 42: 1792–1801. 77. Hughes TR, Marton MJ, Jones AR, et al. 2000. Functional discovery via a compendium of expression profiles. Cell 102: 109–126. 78. Huh WK, Lee BH, Kim ST, et al. 1998. D-Erythroascorbic acid is an important antioxidant molecule in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Mol Microbiol 30: 895–903. 79. Huh WK, Kang SO. 2001. Characterization of the gene family encoding alternative oxidase from Candida albicans. Biochem J 356: 595–604. 80. Ishidate K, Kawaguchi K, Tagawa K, Hagihara B. 1969. Haemoproteins in anaerobically grown yeast cells. J Biochem 65: 375–383. 81. Ishidate K, Kawaguchi K, Tagawa K. 1969. Change in P-450 content accompanying aerobic formation of mitochondria in yeast. J Biochem 65: 385–392. 82. Jahnke L, Klein HP. 1983. Oxygen requirements for formation and activity of the squalene epoxidase in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. J Bacteriol 155: 488–492. 83. Jahnke L, Klein HP. 1979. Oxygen as a factor in eukaryote evolution: some effects of low levels of oxygen on Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Orig Life 9: 329–334. Copyright 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. E. Rosenfeld and B. Beauvoit 84. Jamieson DJ. 1998. Oxidative stress responses of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Yeast 14: 1511–1527. 85. Jelinsky SA, Samson LD. 1999. Global response of Saccharomyces cerevisiae to an alkylating agent. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 96: 1486–1491. 86. Jiang Y, Vasconcelles MJ, Wretzel S, et al. 2002. Mga2p processing by hypoxia and unsaturated fatty acids in Saccharomyces cerevisiae: impact on LORE-dependent gene expression. Eukaryot Cell 1: 481–490. 87. Johnson MS, Kuby SA. 1985. Studies on NADH(NADPH)cytochrome c reductase (FMN-containing) from yeast. J Biol Chem 260: 12 341–12 350. 88. Jollow D, Kellerman GM, Linnane AW. 1968. The biogenesis of mitochondria. III. The lipid composition of aerobically and anaerobically grown Saccharomyces cerevisiae as related to the membrane systems of the cells. J Cell Biol 37: 221–230. 89. Jonassen T, Proft M, Randez-Gil F. 1998. Yeast Clk-1 homologue (Coq7/Cat5) is a mitochondrial protein in coenzyme Q synthesis. J Biol Chem 273: 3351–3357. 90. Joseph-Horne T, Wood PM, Wood CK, et al. 1998. Characterization of a split respiratory pathway in the wheat ‘take-all’ fungus, Gaeumannomyces graminis var. tritici. J Biol Chem 273: 11 127–11 133. 91. Joseph-Horne T, Hollomon DW, Wood PM. 2001. Fungal respiration: a fusion of standard and alternative components. Biochim Biophys Acta 1504: 179–195. 92. Kappus H. 1993. Metabolic reactions: role of cytochrome P450 in the formation of reactive oxygen species. In Handbook of Experimental Pharmacology, vol 105, Cytochrome P450, Schenkman JB, Greim H (eds). SpringerVerlag: Berlin, Heidelberg; 145–154. 93. Karenlampi SO, Marin E, Hanninen OO. 1981. Effect of carbon source on the accumulation of cytochrome P-450 in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Biochem J 194: 407–413. 94. Kawaguchi K, Ishidate K, Tagawa K. 1973. Non-mitochondrial electron transfer system in anaerobically grown yeast cells. J Biochem 74: 817–826. 95. Kawaguchi K, Ishidate K, Tagawa K. 1969. Localization of cytochrome c peroxidase in anaerobically grown yeast cells. J Biochem 66: 21–28. 96. Kelly SL, Lamb DC, Baldwin BC, Corran AJ, Diane EK. 1997. Characterization of Saccharomyces cerevisiae CYP61, sterol 22 -desaturase, and inhibition by azole antifungal agents. J Biol Chem 272: 9986–9988. 97. Kennedy MA, Barbuch R, Bard M. 1999. Transcriptional regulation of the squalene synthase gene (ERG9) in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Biochim Biophys Acta 1445: 110–122. 98. Kirimura K, Matsui T, Sugano S, Usami S. 1996. Enhancement and repression of cyanide-insensitive respiration in Aspergillus niger. FEMS Microbiol Lett 141: 251–254. 99. Kirsop BH. 1982. Developments in beer fermentation. Top Enzyme Ferment Biotechnol 6: 79–131. 100. Kirsop BH. 1974. Oxygen in brewery fermentation. J Inst Brew 80: 252–259. 101. Kull F, Ohlson E, Lind B, Haeggstrom JZ. 2001. Saccharomyces cerevisiae leukotriene A4 hydrolase: formation of leukotriene B4 and identification of catalytic residues. Biochemistry 40: 12 695–12 703. Yeast 2003; 20: 1115–1144. Non-respiratory utilization of oxygen by S. cerevisiae 102. Kunau WH, Buhne S, de la Garza M, et al. 1988. Comparative enzymology of β-oxidation. Biochem Soc Trans 16: 418–420. 103. Kwast KE, Burke PV, Poyton RO. 1998. Oxygen sensing and the transcriptional regulation of oxygen-responsive genes in yeast. J Exp Biol 20: 1177–1195. 104. Kwast KE, Burke PV, Staahl BT, Poyton RO. 1999. Oxygen sensing in yeast: evidence for the involvement of the respiratory chain in regulating the transcription of a subset of hypoxic genes. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 96: 5446–5451. 105. Kwast KE, Lai LC, Menda N, et al. 2002. Genoomic analyses of anaerobically induced genes in Saccharomyces cerevisiae: functional roles of Rox1 and other factors in mediating the anoxic response. J Bacteriol 184: 250–265. 106. Labbe P. 1972. Synthèse du protohème par la levure Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Thèse de doctorat d’état, Université de Paris VI. 107. Labbe P. 1971. Synthèse du protohème par la levure Saccharomyces cerevisiae. I. Mise en évidence de différentes etapes de la synthèse du protohème chez la levure cultivée en anaérobiose. Influence des conditions de culture sur cette synthèse. Biochimie 53: 1001–1014. 108. Labbe P. 1963. Purification partielle du cytochrome b1 de la levure cultivée en anaérobiose. Identification en conditions de biosynthèse d’une protoporphyrine-zinc. Thèse de 3éme cycle, Université de Paris. 109. Labbe-Bois R, Labbe P. 1990. Tetrapyrrole and heme biosynthesis in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. In Biosynthesis of Heme and Chlorophylls, Dailey AH (ed.). McGraw-Hill: New York; 235–285. 110. Labbe-Bois R, Labbe P. 1978. Protoheme synthesis in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. In Biochemistry and Genetics of Yeasts — Pure and Applied Aspects, Bacila M, Horecker BL, Stoppani AOM (eds). Academic Press: New York; 97–117. 111. Labbe-Bois R, Volland C. 1977. Changes in the activities of the protoheme-synthesizing system during the growth of yeast under different conditions. Arch Biochem Biophys 179: 565–577. 112. Ladevèze V, Marcireau C, Delourme D, Karst F. 1993. General resistance to sterol biosynthesis inhibitors in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Lipids 28: 907–912. 113. Lamb DC, Kelly DE, Manning NJ, Kaderbhai MA, Kelly SL. 1999. Biodiversity of the P450 catalytic cycle: yeast cytochrome b5 /NADH cytochrome b5 reductase complex efficiently drives the entire sterol 14-demethylation (CYP51) reaction. FEBS Lett 462: 283–288. 114. Leber R, Zenz R, Schrottner K, et al. 2001. A novel sequence element is involved in the transcriptional regulation of expression of the ERG1 (squalene epoxidase) gene in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Eur J Biochem 268: 914–924. 115. Lees ND, Skaggs B, Kirsch DR, Bard M. 1995. Cloning of the late genes in the ergosterol biosynthetic pathway of Saccharomyces cerevisiae: a review. Lipids 30: 221–226. 116. Lesuisse E, Casteras-Simon M, Labbe P. 1997. Cytochrome P-450 reductase is responsible for the ferrireductase activity associated with isolated plasma membranes of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. FEMS Microbiol Lett 156: 147–152. 117. Lesuisse E, Casteras-Simon M, Labbe P. 1996. Evidence for the Saccharomyces cerevisiae ferrireductase system being a Copyright 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. 118. 119. 120. 121. 122. 123. 124. 125. 126. 127. 128. 129. 130. 131. 132. 133. 134. 1141 multicomponent electron transport chain. J Biol Chem 271: 13 578–13 583. Lewis DFV, Sheridan G. 2001. Cytochromes P450, oxygen, and evolution. Scient World 1: 151–167. Li Y, Zhu H, Kuppusamy P, et al. 1998. Validation of lucigenin (bis-N-methylacridinium) as a chemilumigenic probe for detecting superoxide anion radical production by enzymatic and cellular systems. J Biol Chem 273: 2015–2023. Lindenmayer A, Smith L. 1964. Cytochromes and other pigments of baker’s yeast grown aerobically and anaerobically. Biochim Biophys Acta 93: 445–461. Liu Z, Butow RA. 1999. A transcriptional switch in the expression of yeast tricarboxylic acid cycle genes in response to a reduction or loss of respiratory function. Mol Cell Biol 19: 6720–6728. Liu L, Zeng M, Hausladen A, Heitman J, Stamler JS. 2000. Protection from nitrosative stress by yeast flavohaemoglobin. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 97: 4672–4676. Loeper J, Louerat-Oriou B, Duport C, Pompon D. 1998. Yeast expressed cytochrome P450 2D6 (CYP2D6) exposed on the external face of plasma membrane is functionally competent. Mol Pharmacol 54: 8–13. Lorenz RT, Casey WM, Parks LW. 1989. Structural discrimination in the sparking function of sterols in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. J Bacteriol 171: 6169–6173. Lorenz RT, Rodriguez RJ, Lewis TA, Parks LW. 1986. Characteristics of sterol uptake in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. J Bacteriol 167: 981–985. Lowdon MJ, Gordon PA, Stewart PR. 1972. Regulation of the synthesis of mitochondrial enzymes and cytochromes. Distinction between catabolite repression and anaerobiosis in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Arch Mikrobiol 85: 355–361. Luttik MA, Overkamp KM, Kotter P, et al. 1998. The Saccharomyces cerevisiae NDE1 and NDE2 genes encode separate mitochondrial NADH dehydrogenases catalysing the oxidation of cytosolic NADH. J Biol Chem 273: 24 529–24 534. M’Baya B, Fegueur M, Servouse M, Karst F. 1989. Regulation of squalene synthetase and squalene epoxidase activities in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Lipids 24: 1020–1023. M’Baya B, Karst F. 1987. In vitro assay of squalene epoxidase of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Biochim Biophys Res Commun 147: 556–564. McCammon MT, Veenhuis M, Trapp SB, Goodman JM. 1990. Association of glyoxylate and β-oxidation enzymes with peroxisomes of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. J Bacteriol 172: 5816–5827. Meganathan R. 2001. Ubiquinone biosynthesis in microorganisms. FEMS Microbiol Lett 203: 131–139. Meussdoerffer F, Fiechter A. 1986. Effect of mitochondrial cytochromes and haem content on cytochrome P450 in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. J Gen Microbiol 132: 2187–2193. Milani G, Jarmuszkiewicz W, Sluse-Goffart CM, et al. 2001. Respiratory chain network in mitochondria of Candida parapsilosis: ADP/O appraisal of the multiple electron pathways. FEBS Lett 508: 231–235. Milla P, Athenstaedt K, Viola F, et al. 2002. Yeast oxidosqualene cyclase (Erg7p) is a major component of lipid particles. J Biol Chem 277: 2406–2412. Yeast 2003; 20: 1115–1144. 1142 135. Minagawa N, Yoshimoto A. 1987. The induction of cyanideresistant respiration in Hansenula anomala. J Biochem 101: 1141–1146. 136. Mitchell P. 1961. Coupling of phosphorylation to electron and hydrogen transfer by a chemi-osmotic type of mechanism. Nature 191: 144–148. 137. Mitchell P. 1976. Vectorial chemistry and the molecular mechanics of chemiosmotic coupling: power transmission by proticity. Biochem Soc Trans 4: 399–430. 138. Mitchell AG, Martin CE. 1995. A novel cytochrome b5 like domain is linked to the carboxyl terminus of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae -9 fatty acid desaturase. J Biol Chem 270: 29 766–29 772. 139. Morre DJ, Sun E, Geilen C, et al. 1996. Capsaicin inhibits plasma membrane NADH oxidase and growth of human and mouse melanoma lines. Eur J Cancer 32: 1995–2003. 140. Nakagawa Y, Sugioka S, Kaneko Y, Harashima S. 2001. O2R, a novel regulatory element mediating Rox1pindependent O2 and unsaturated fatty acid repression of OLE1 in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. J Bacteriol 183: 745–751. 141. Ness F, Achstetter T, Duport C, Karst F, Spagnoli R. 1998. Sterol uptake in Saccharomyces cerevisiae heme auxotrophic mutants is affected by ergosterol and oleate but not by palmitoleate or sterol esterification. J Bacteriol 180: 1913–1919. 142. Ness F, Bourot S, Regnacq M, et al. 2001. SUT1 is a putative Zn[II]2Cys6-transcription factor whose upregulation enhances both sterol uptake and synthesis in aerobically growing Saccharomyces cerevisiae cells. Eur J Biochem 268: 1585–1595. 143. Nieboer P, Berden JA. 1992. Triple inhibitor titrations support the functionality of the dimeric character of mitochondrial ubiquinol–cytochrome c oxidoreductase. Biochim Biophys Acta 1101: 90–96. 144. Niino YS, Chakraborty S, Brown BJ, Massey V. 1995. A new old yellow enzyme of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. J Biol Chem 270: 1983–1991. 145. O’Connor-Cox ESC, Lodolo EJ, Axcell BC. 1996. Mitochondrial relevance to yeast fermentative performance: a review. J Inst Brew 102: 19–25. 146. O’Connor-Cox ESC, Lodolo EJ, Axcell BC. 1993. Role of oxygen in high-gravity fermentations in the absence of unsaturated lipid biosynthesis. J Am Soc Brew Chem 51: 97–107. 147. Ohmori S, Nawata Y, Kiyono K, et al. 1999. Saccharomyces cerevisiae cultured under aerobic and anaerobic conditions: air-level oxygen stress and protection against stress. Biochim Biophys Acta 1472: 587–594. 148. Omura T, Sato R. 1964. The carbon monoxide-binding pigment of liver microsomes. I. Evidence for its haemoprotein nature. J Biol Chem 239: 2370–2378. 149. Osumi T, Nishino T, Katsuki H. 1979. Studies on the 5desaturation in ergosterol biosynthesis in yeast. J Biochem 85: 819–826. 150. Pahlman IL, Larsson C, Averet N, et al. 2002. Kinetic regulation of the mitochondrial glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase by the external NADH dehydrogenase in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. J Biol Chem 277: 27 991–27 995. Copyright 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. E. Rosenfeld and B. Beauvoit 151. Pajot P, Claisse ML. 1974. Utilization by yeast of D-lactate and L-lactate as sources of energy in the presence of antimycin A. Eur J Biochem 49: 275–285. 152. Parks LW. 1978. Metabolism of sterols in yeast. CRC Crit Rev Microbiol 6: 301–341. 153. Penninckx M. 2000. A short review on the role of glutathione in the response of yeasts to nutritional, environmental, and oxidative stresses. Enzyme Microbiol Technol 26: 737–742. 154. Perret A, Pompon D. 1998. Electron shuttle between membrane-bound cytochromes P450 3A4 and b5 rules uncoupling mechanisms. Biochemistry 37: 11 412–11 424. 155. Pichler H, Gaigg B, Hrastnik C, et al. 2001. A subfraction of the yeast endoplasmic reticulum associates with the plasma membrane and has a high capacity to synthesize lipids. Eur J Biochem 268: 2351–2361. 156. Pielak GJ, Wang X. 2001. Interactions between yeast iso-1cytochrome c and its peroxidase. Biochemistry 40: 422–428. 157. Poinsot C, Boze H, Moulin G, Galzy P. 1986. Respiratory pathways in Schwanniomyces castellii . Biol Cell 58: 65–70. 158. Poon WW, Do TQ, Marbois BN, Clarke CF. 1997. Sensitivity to treatment with polyunsaturated fatty acids is a general characteristic of the ubiquinone-deficient yeast coq mutants. Mol Aspects Med 18: 121–127. 159. Poyton RO. 1999. Models for oxygen sensing in yeast: implications for oxygen-regulated gene expression in higher eukaryotes. Respir Physiol 115: 119–133. 160. Prezant T, Pfeifer K, Guarente L. 1987. Organization of the regulatory region of the yeast CYC7 gene: multiple factors are involved in regulation. Mol Cell Biol 7: 3252–3259. 161. Pronk JT, Yde Steensma H, Van Dijken JP. 1996. Pyruvate metabolism in Saccharomyces cerevisiae Review. Yeast 12: 1607–1633. 162. Rigoulet M, Fitton V, Ouhabi R, Guerin B. 1993. Kinetic constraints and oxidative phosphorylation yield in yeast mitochondria. Biochem Soc Trans 21: 773–777. 163. Rodriguez R, Low C, Bottema C, Parks L. 1985. Multiple functions for sterols in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Biochim Biophys Acta 837: 336–343. 164. Rogers PJ, Stewart PR. 1973. Mitochondrial and peroxisomal contributions to the energy metabolism of Saccharomyces cerevisiae in continuous culture. J Gen Microbiol 79: 205–217. 165. Rogers PJ, Stewart PR. 1973. Respiratory development in Saccharomyces cerevisiae grown at controlled oxygen tension. J Bacteriol 115: 88–97. 166. Rogers PJ, Yue SB, Stewart PR. 1974. Effects of oxygen tension and glucose repression on mitochondrial protein synthesis in continuous cultures of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. J Bacteriol 118: 523–533. 167. Rose AH. 1987. Responses to the chemical environment. In The Yeasts, vol 2, Rose AH, Harridon JS (eds). Academic Press: London; 5–40. 168. Rosenfeld E, Beauvoit B, Rigoulet M, Salmon JM. 2002. Non-respiratory oxygen consumption pathways in anaerobically-grown Saccharomyces cerevisiae: evidence and partial characterization. Yeast 19: 1299–1321. 169. Rosenfeld E, Beauvoit B, Blondin B, Salmon JM. 2003. Oxygen consumption by anaerobic Saccharomyces cerevisiae under enological conditions: effect on fermentation kinetics. Appl Environ Microbiol 69: 113–121. Yeast 2003; 20: 1115–1144. Non-respiratory utilization of oxygen by S. cerevisiae 170. Rosenfeld E, Schaeffer J, Beauvoit B, Salmon JM. 2003. Isolation and properties of promitochondria from anaerobic stationary-phase yeast cells. Ant van Leeuw Int J G (in press). 171. Saccharomyces Genome Database. http://genome-www. stanford.edu/Saccharomyces/. 2002. 172. Salmon JM, Barre P. 1998. Improvement of nitrogen assimilation and fermentation kinetics in enological conditions by derepression of alternative nitrogen-assimilatory pathways in an industrial Saccharomyces cerevisiae strain. Appl Environ Microbiol 64: 3831–3837. 173. Santos-Ocaña C, Cordoba F, Crane FL, Clarke CF, Navas P. 1998. Coenzyme Q6 and iron reduction are responsible for the extracellular ascorbate stabilization at the plasma membrane of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. J Biol Chem 273: 8099–8105. 174. Santos-Ocaña C, Villalba JM, Cordoba F, Padilla S, Crane FL. 1998. Genetic evidence for coenzyme Q requirement in plasma membrane electron transport. J Bioenerg Biomembr 30: 465–475. 175. Sartori G, Aldegheri L, Mazzotta G, Lanfranchi G, Tournu H. 1999. Characterization of a new haemoprotein in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. J Biol Chem 274: 5032–5037. 176. Schneiter R, Brügger B, Sandhoff R, Zellning G, Leber A. 1999. Electrospray ionization tandem mass spectrometry (ESI-MS/MS) analysis of the lipid molecular species composition of yeast subcellular membranes reveals acyl chain-based sorting/remodeling of distinct molecular species en route to the plasma membrane. J Cell Biol 146: 741–754. 177. Shatwell KP, Dancis A, Cross AR, Klausner RD, Segal AW. 1996. The FRE1 ferric reductase of Saccharomyces cerevisiae is a cytochrome b similar to that of NADPH oxidase. J Biol Chem 271: 14 240–14 244. 178. Shianna KV, Dotson WD, Tove S, Parks LW. 2001. Identification of a UPC2 homolog in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and its involvement in aerobic sterol uptake. J Bacteriol 183: 830–834. 179. Siedow JN, Umbach AL. 2000. The mitochondrial cyanideresistant oxidase: structural conservation amid regulatory diversity. Biochim Biophys Acta 1459: 432–439. 180. Silve S, Leplatois P, Josse A, et al. 1996. The immunosuppressant SR 31747 blocks cell proliferation by inhibiting a steroid isomerase in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Mol Cell Biol 16: 2719–2727. 181. Sippel CJ, Goewert RR, Slachman FN, Olson RE. 1983. The regulation of ubiquinone-6 biosynthesis by Saccharomyces cerevisiae. J Biol Chem 258: 1057–1061. 182. Skaggs BA, Alexander JF, Pierson CA, et al. 1996. Cloning and characterization of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae C-22 sterol desaturase gene, encoding a second cytochrome P-450 involved in ergosterol biosynthesis. Gene 169: 105–109. 183. Slonimski P. 1953. La formation des enzymes respiratoires chez la levure. Thèse, Masson, Paris. 184. Soustre I, Dupuy PH, Silve S, Karst F, Loison G. 2000. Sterol metabolism and ERG2 gene regulation in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. FEBS Lett 470: 102–106. 185. Spickett CM, Smirnoff N, Pitt AR. 2000. The biosynthesis of erythroascorbate in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and its role as an antioxidant. Free Radic Biol Med 28: 183–192. 186. Staniek K, Nohl H. 1999. H2 O2 detection from intact mitochondria as a measure for one-electron reduction of Copyright 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. 187. 188. 189. 190. 191. 192. 193. 194. 195. 196. 197. 198. 199. 200. 201. 202. 203. 1143 dioxygen requires a non-invasive assay system. Biochim Biophys Acta 1413: 70–80. Stansfield I, Cliffe KR, Kelly SL. 1991. Chemostat studies of microsomal enzyme induction in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Yeast 7: 147–156. Stott K, Saito K, Thiele DJ, Massey V. 1993. Old yellow enzyme: the discovery of multiple isozymes and a family of related proteins. J Biol Chem 268: 6097–6106. Suh JK, Poulsen LL, Ziegler DM, Robertus JD. 2000. Redox regulation of yeast flavin-containing mono-oxygenase. Arch Biochem Biophys 381: 317–322. Sutter TR, Loper JC. 1989. Disruption of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae gene for NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase causes increased sensitivity to ketoconazole. Biochem Biophys Res Commun 160: 1257–1266. Ter Linde JJM, Liang H, Davis RW, et al. 1999. Genomewide transcriptional analysis of aerobic and anaerobic chemostat cultures of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. J Bacteriol 181: 7409–7413. Ter Linde JJ, Steensma HY. 2002. A microarray-assisted screen for potential Hap1 and Rox1 target genes in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Yeast 19: 825–840. Trinn M, Käppeli O, Fiechter A. 1982. Occurrence of cytochrome P450 in continuous cultures of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Eur J Appl Microbiol Biotechnol 15: 64–68. Tryon E, Kuby SA. 1984. Studies on NADPH-cytochrome c reductase. II. Steady-state kinetic properties of the crystalline enzyme from ale yeast. Enzyme 31: 197–208. Turi TG, Loper JC. 1992. Multiple regulatory elements control expression of the gene encoding the Saccharomyces cerevisiae cytochrome P450, lanosterol 14 α-demethylase (ERG11). J Biol Chem 267: 2046–2056. Valachovic M, Hronska L, Hapala I. 2001. Anaerobiosis induces complex changes in sterol esterification pattern in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. FEMS Microbiol Lett 197: 41–45. Van Dijken JP, Scheffers WA. 1986. Redox balances in the metabolism of sugars by yeasts. FEMS Microbiol Rev 32: 199–224. Van Urk H, Postma E, Scheffers WA, van Dijken JP. 1989. Glucose transport in Crabtree-positive and Crabtree-negative yeasts. J Gen Microbiol 135: 2399–2406. Vasconcelles MJ, Jiang Y, McDaid K, et al. 2001. Identification and characterization of a low oxygen response element involved in the hypoxic induction of a family of Saccharomyces cerevisiae genes. Implications for the conservation of oxygen sensing in eukaryotes. J Biol Chem 276: 14 374–14 384. Veiga A, Arrabaca JD, Loureiro-Dias MC. 2000. Cyanideresistant respiration is frequent, but confined to yeasts incapable of aerobic fermentation. FEMS Microbiol Lett 190: 93–97. Veiga A, Arrabaca JD, Loureiro-Dias MC. 2003. Cyanideresistant respiration, a very frequent metabolic pathway in yeasts. FEMS Yeast Res 3: 239–245. Veiga A, Arrabaca JD, Sansonetty F, et al. 2003. Energy conversion coupled to cyanide-resistant respiration in the yeasts Pichia membranifaciens and Debaryomyces hansenii . FEMS Yeast Res 3: 141–148. Verduyn C, Postma E, Scheffers WA, van Dijken JP. 1990. Physiology of Saccharomyces cerevisiae in anaerobic Yeast 2003; 20: 1115–1144. 1144 204. 205. 206. 207. 208. 209. 210. glucose-limited chemostat cultures. J Gen Microbiol 136: 395–403. Visser W, van der Baan AA, Batenburg-van der Vegte W, et al. 1994. Involvement of mitochondria in the assimilatory metabolism of anaerobic Saccharomyces cerevisiae cultures. Microbiology 140: 3039–3046. Visser W, von Spronsen EA, Nanninga N, et al. 1995. Effects of growth conditions on mitochondrial morphology in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Ant van Leeuw Int J G 67: 243–253. Volland C, Felix F. 1984. Isolation and properties of 5aminolevulinate synthase from the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Eur J Biochem 142: 551–557. Von Jagow G, Ljungdahl PO, Graf P, Ohnishi T, Trumpower BL. 1984. An inhibitor of mitochondrial respiration which binds to cytochrome b and displaces quinone from the iron–sulfur protein of the cytochrome bc1 complex. J Biol Chem 259: 6318–6326. Wang SS, Brandriss MC. 1987. Proline utilization in Saccharomyces cerevisiae: sequence, regulation, and mitochondrial localization of the PUT1 gene product. Mol Cell Biol 7: 4431–4440. Waters BM, Eide DJ. 2002. Combinatorial control of yeast FET4 gene expression by iron, zinc, and oxygen. J Biol Chem 277: 33 749–33 757. Wilcox LJ, Balderes DA, Wharton B, et al. 2002. Transcriptional profiling identifies two members of the ATP-binding Copyright 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. E. Rosenfeld and B. Beauvoit 211. 212. 213. 214. 215. 216. cassette transporter superfamily required for sterol uptake in yeast. J Biol Chem 277: 32 466–32 472. Yang H, Cromley D, Wang H, Billheimer JT, Sturley SL. 1997. Functional expression of a cDNA to human acylcoenzyme A: cholesterol acyltransferase in yeast. Speciesdependent substrate specificity and inhibitor sensitivity. J Biol Chem 272: 3980–3985. Yoshida Y, Kumaoka H, Sato R. 1974. Studies on the microsomal electron-transport system of anaerobically grown yeast. I. Intracellular localization and characterization. J Biochem 75: 1201–1210. Zhao XJ, Raitt D, Burke PV, Clewell AS, Kwast KE. 1996. Function and expression of flavohaemoglobin in Saccharomyces cerevisiae: evidence for a role in the oxidative stress response. J Biol Chem 271: 25 131–25 138. Zhu H, Riggs AF. 1992. Yeast flavohaemoglobin is an ancient protein related to globins and a reductase family. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 89: 5015–5019. Zitomer RS, Limbach MP, Rodriguez-Torres AM, et al. 1997. Approaches to the study of Rox1 repression of the hypoxic genes in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Methods 11: 279–288. Zitomer RS, Lowry CV. 1992. Regulation of gene expression by oxygen in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Microbiol Rev 56: 1–11. Yeast 2003; 20: 1115–1144.