Stress‐activated signalling pathways in yeast
- 1 August 1998
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wiley in Genes to Cells
- Vol. 3 (8), 485-498
- https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2443.1998.00211.x
Abstract
Eukaryotic cells have developed response mechanisms to combat the harmful effects of a variety of stress conditions. In the majority of cases, such responses involve changes in the gene expression pattern of the cell, leading to increased levels and activities of proteins that have stress-protective functions. Over the last few years, considerable progress has been made in understanding how stress-dependent transcriptional changes are brought about, and it transpires that the underlying mechanisms are highly conserved, being similar in organisms ranging from yeast to man. Many of the stress signals derive from the extracellular environment and accordingly these signals require transduction from the cell surface to the nucleus. This is accomplished through stress-activated signalling pathways, key amongst which are the highly conserved stress-activated MAP kinase pathways. Stimulation of these pathways leads to the increased activity of specific transcription factors and consequently the increased expression of certain stress-related genes. In this review, we focus on the progress that has been made in understanding these stress responses in yeast.Keywords
This publication has 97 references indexed in Scilit:
- Activation of the yeast SSK2 MAP kinase kinase kinase by the SSK1 two-component response regulatorThe EMBO Journal, 1998
- The search for physiological substrates of MAP and SAP kinases in mammalian cellsTrends in Cell Biology, 1997
- Stress signal, mediated by a Hogl‐like MAP kinase, controls sexual development in fission yeastFEBS Letters, 1996
- Cell-cycle control linked to extracellular environment by MAP kinase pathway in fission yeastNature, 1995
- Characterization of a Novel Schizosaccharomyces pombe Multidrug Resistance Transporter Conferring Brefeldin A ResistanceBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1995
- A MAP Kinase Targeted by Endotoxin and Hyperosmolarity in Mammalian CellsScience, 1994
- A two-component system that regulates an osmosensing MAP kinase cascade in yeastNature, 1994
- The stress-activated protein kinase subfamily of c-Jun kinasesNature, 1994
- An Osmosensing Signal Transduction Pathway in YeastScience, 1993
- Fission yeast genes that confer resistance to staurosporine encode an AP-1-like transcription factor and a protein kinase related to the mammalian ERK1/MAP2 and budding yeast FUS3 and KSS1 kinases.Genes & Development, 1991