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High-energy guanine nucleotides as a signal capable of linking growth to cellular energy status via the control of gene transcription.

Andrew HeskethStephen G Oliver
Published in: Current genetics (2019)
This mini-review considers the idea that guanylate nucleotide energy charge acts as an integrative signal for the regulation of gene expression in eukaryotic cells and discusses possible routes for that signal's transduction. Gene expression is intimately linked with cell nutrition and diverse signaling systems serve to coordinate the synthesis of proteins required for growth and proliferation with the prevailing cellular nutritional status. Using short pathways for the inducible and futile consumption of ATP or GTP in engineered cells of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, we have recently shown that GTP levels can also play a role in determining how genes act to respond to changes in cellular energy supply. This review aims to interpret the importance of GTP as an integrative signal in the context of an increasing body of evidence indicating the spatio-temporal complexity of cellular de novo purine nucleotide biosynthesis.
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