Microbial Cell (Sep 2018)

Conventional and emerging roles of the energy sensor Snf1/AMPK in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

  • Paola Coccetti,
  • Raffaele Nicastro,
  • Farida Tripodi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.15698/mic2018.11.655
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 11
pp. 482 – 494

Abstract

Read online

All proliferating cells need to match metabolism, growth and cell cycle progression with nutrient availability to guarantee cell viability in spite of a changing environment. In yeast, a signaling pathway centered on the effector kinase Snf1 is required to adapt to nutrient limitation and to utilize alternative carbon sources, such as sucrose and ethanol. Snf1 shares evolutionary conserved functions with the AMP-activated Kinase (AMPK) in higher eukaryotes which, activated by energy depletion, stimulates catabolic processes and, at the same time, inhibits anabolism. Although the yeast Snf1 is best known for its role in responding to a number of stress factors, in addition to glucose limitation, new unconventional roles of Snf1 have recently emerged, even in glucose repressing and unstressed conditions. Here, we review and integrate available data on conventional and non-conventional functions of Snf1 to better understand the complexity of cellular physiology which controls energy homeostasis.

Keywords