REVIEWS
Yeast viral killer toxins:
lethality and self-protection
Manfred J. Schmitt and Frank Breinig
Abstract | Since the discovery of toxin-secreting killer yeasts more than 40 years ago,
research into this phenomenon has provided insights into eukaryotic cell biology and
virus–host-cell interactions. This review focuses on the most recent advances in our
understanding of the basic biology of virus-carrying killer yeasts, in particular the
toxin-encoding killer viruses, and the intracellular processing, maturation and toxicity of
the viral protein toxins. The strategy of using eukaryotic viral toxins to effectively penetrate
and eventually kill a eukaryotic target cell will be discussed, and the cellular mechanisms of
self-defence and protective immunity will also be addressed.
Virus-like particles
Yeast and fungal viruses that
are transmitted in vivo by
cell-to-cell passage and lack a
natural extracellular route of
infection.
Heterokaryon
Coexistence of two or more
genetically different nuclei in a
common cytoplasm.
Ribosomal frameshift event
A process used by many viral
mRNAs that makes translating
ribosomes change their
reading frame by slipping one
base in either the 5′ or 3′
direction. The frequency of
ribosomal frameshift events is
crucial for virus propagation
and assembly, as it determines
the stoichiometry of viral
structural and enzymatic
proteins.
Applied Molecular Biology,
University of the Saarland,
D-66041 Saarbrücken,
Germany.
Correspondence to M.J.S.
e-mail:
mjs@microbiol.uni-sb.de
doi:10.1038/nrmicro1347
The discovery of toxin-secreting strains of the yeast
Saccharomyces cerevisiae, and their phenotypic association with the presence of cytoplasmically inherited
double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) viruses, marked the
beginning of research into yeast virology in the early
1970s1–3. At that time, it was shown that certain yeast
strains secrete protein toxins that are lethal to sensitive
strains. The toxin-secreting strains were designated
‘killer yeasts’, and the term ‘killer toxin’ was used to
describe the secreted proteins. Shortly after this discovery, it became evident that toxin-producing killer
strains have remarkable antimycotic activity and are
not restricted to S. cerevisiae but are frequently found
in other yeast and fungal species and genera4–6, including Zygosaccharomyces bailii, Hanseniaspora uvarum
and Ustilago maydis7–12. With the exception of toxinsecreting strains of Z. bailii, killer-toxin production in
yeast is usually associated with specific immunity to this
toxin (reviewed in REFS 13,14).
The killer phenotype is not exclusively associated
with dsRNA viruses and is also encoded by linear
dsDNA plasmids (in Kluyveromyces lactis and Pichia
acaciae)14 and chromosomally encoded (in Williopsis
californica and Pichia farinosa)15,16. This article will deal
only with the killer phenotype associated with dsRNA
viruses, with the emphasis on S. cerevisiae.
The virus genomes
In S. cerevisiae, the killer phenotype is caused by an
infection with cytoplasmic-persisting dsRNA viruses of
the Totiviridae family, a member of the constantly growing class of mycoviruses, which are widely distributed
among yeast and higher fungi17,18. So far, in S. cerevisiae
three major killer viruses have been discovered (ScV-M1,
ScV-M2 and ScV-M28), with each virus encoding a
specific killer toxin (K1, K2 and K28, respectively) and
a self-protective immunity component19–23. In each case,
the killer phenotype requires the presence of two different dsRNA viruses: an L-A helper virus and the toxincoding (M) killer virus. In vivo, both dsRNA genomes
are separately encapsidated into virus-like particles (VLPs)
that stably persist in the cytoplasm of the infected yeast
cell. The L-A virus alone does not confer a phenotype
upon its host nor does it lead to cell lysis or slow cell
growth. All known fungal viruses spread horizontally by
cell–cell mating or heterokaryon formation.
As summarized in TABLE 1, the linear dsRNA genome
of the L-A helper virus contains two open reading frames
(ORFs) on its positive strand: ORF1 encodes the major
capsid protein, Gag, which is necessary for encapsidation
and viral particle structure, and ORF2 encodes the RNAdependent RNA polymerase Pol, which is expressed as
a Gag–Pol fusion protein by a −1 ribosomal frameshift
event24–27. In contrast to L-A, each of the three known
S. cerevisiae M virus dsRNA genomes contains a single
ORF coding for a preprotoxin (pptox), the unprocessed
precursor of the mature secreted killer toxin, which also
confers functional immunity (TABLE 1). As each toxincoding M virus depends on the coexistence of an L-A
helper virus for stable maintenance and replication,
M viruses resemble classical satellite viruses of L-A. The
presence of all three killer virions in a single yeast cell
does not occur in vivo, as the toxin-coding M genomes
exclude each other at the replicative level; the underlying
mechanism of this exclusion is still unknown. However,
this limitation can be bypassed in vitro by introducing
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Table 1 | Viral dsRNA genomes in S. cerevisiae and Z. bailii killer strains
Virus
Virus function
dsRNA (kb) Encoded protein(s)
ScV-L-A
Helper virus
4.6
Gag, major capsid protein; Pol, RNA-dependent RNA
polymerase (expressed in vivo as Gag–Pol fusion protein)
24
ScV-M1
Satellite virus (‘killer’ virus)
1.6
K1 preprotoxin (unprocessed K1 toxin precursor and
immunity determinant)
19
ScV-M2
Satellite virus (‘killer’ virus)
1.5
K2 preprotoxin (unprocessed K2 toxin precursor and
immunity determinant)
20
ScV-M28 Satellite virus (‘killer’ virus)
1.8
K28 preprotoxin (unprocessed K28 toxin precursor and
immunity determinant)
40
ZbV-M
2.1
Zygocin preprotoxin (unprocessed toxin precursor)
76
Satellite virus (‘killer’ virus)
Ref.
dsRNA, double-stranded RNA; Sc, Saccharomyces cerevisiae; Zb, Zygosaccharomyces bailii.
cDNA copies of the K2 and K28 pptox genes into a natural K1 killer, resulting in stable ‘triple-killer’ strains that
produce three different killer toxins and simultaneously
express triple toxin immunity28–30.
Viral replication cycle
Intensive studies, mainly in the labs of Reed Wickner
and Jeremy Bruenn, have shown that L-A virions are
non-infectious icosahedral particles with a diameter of
39 nm that show many striking similarities to mammalian
reoviruses and rotaviruses31–34. Each L-A virion consists
of a single copy of the 4.6-kb L-A dsRNA genome, which
is encapsidated by 60 asymmetric dimers of the 76-kDa
coat protein Gag and two copies of the 171-kDa Gag–Pol
fusion protein. During the conservative replication cycle of
L-A, a single-stranded positive-strand RNA ((+)ssRNA)
is transcribed and subsequently extruded from the virion
into the yeast-cell cytoplasm35–37. On the one hand, this
(+)ssRNA serves as an mRNA for translation into the
viral proteins Gag and Gag–Pol; on the other hand, it
serves as an RNA template that is packaged into new viral
particles (FIG. 1). Once viral coat assembly is completed,
Gag–Pol functions as a replicase, synthesizing a new
negative strand and generating the dsRNA genome of the
mature virus, completing the viral replication cycle. The
replication cycle of the toxin-coding M viruses resembles
that of L-A, with the exception that each M virion can
accept two copies of the smaller M dsRNA genome before
the toxin-coding transcripts are extruded into the cytoplasm, a phenomenon that has been described as ‘headful
packaging’38,39 in analogy to some DNA bacteriophages.
Precursor processing and toxin secretion
In yeast harbouring a killer virus, the toxin-encoding
(+)ssRNA transcript is translated in the cytoplasm into
a pptox that subsequently enters the secretory pathway
for further processing, maturation and toxin secretion.
In a eukaryotic cell, the secretory pathway is an essential
pathway for newly synthesized proteins that are destined
for the extracellular space, the plasma membrane or
endocytic compartments including endosomes, vacuoles
and lysosomes. Entry into this pathway is mediated by
a hydrophobic signal sequence at the N terminus of the
protein that directs co- and/or post-translational import
into the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), where the environment is optimized for protein folding and maturation.
Pol
Gag
Toxin
e
f
L-A (+) ssRNA
Encapsidated viruses or viruslike particles composed of
structural and enzymatic
proteins that are encoded by a
helper virus.
d
Parental RNA strands remain
associated, and the codogenic
positive-strand RNA is made
first, followed by negativestrand synthesis on the
positive-strand RNA template.
Killer virus
b
c
Conservative replication
e
a
Helper virus
Satellite viruses
β
f
M (+) ssRNA
a
α
d
b
c
Figure 1 | Replication cycle of a toxin-encoding killer virus and its helper virus in the cytoplasm of a killer yeast.
The killer virus (M) and the helper virus (L-A) are both double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) viruses. They compete for the
L-A-encoded viral proteins Gag and Gag–Pol, which are essential for (a) single-stranded RNA (ssRNA) encapsidation,
(b) virion assembly, (c) negative-strand RNA synthesis (replication), (d) positive-strand RNA synthesis (transcription) and
extrusion from the particles into the cytosol, (e) ssRNA translation and (f) ssRNA binding.
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ER
M28 killer virus
Ssa1p–Ssa4p
pre
M (+) ssRNA
pro
γ
α
β
HDELR
pre
Sec61p
complex
Secretory vesicle
Kex1p
α
SP
pro
Pdi1p
Kar2p
Cne1p
α
γ
β
HDELR
α
γ
β
ss
β
pro
ss
HDELR
α
HDEL
ss
β
HDELR
Secretion
Late Golgi
Kex2p
α
pro
Preprotoxin folding
ss
γ
β
HDELR
Kex2p
Protoxin processing
α
Cell membrane
ss
β
HDEL
Mature toxin
Cell wall
Figure 2 | Preprotoxin processing and toxin secretion in the yeast secretory pathway. After in vivo translation of
the preprotoxin-coding killer virus transcript, the toxin precursor is post-translationally imported into the lumen of the
endoplasmic reticulum (ER) with the help of cytosolic chaperones (Ssa1p–Ssa4p). Following import into the ER through
the Sec61p pore complex, signal peptidase (SP) cleavage removes the N-terminal secretion signal (pre-region), and
protoxin folding is initiated and catalysed by the action of the Hsp70 chaperones BiP (Kar2p) and calnexin (Cne1p). The
intervening γ-sequence is core-N-glycosylated, and a single disulphide bond between α and β is generated by the action
of protein disulphide isomerase, Pdi1p. In a late-Golgi compartment, the Kex2p endopeptidase removes both the proregion and the intramolecular γ-sequence, whereas carboxypeptidase Kex1p cleavage trims the C termini of both
subunits, leading to the secretion of mature α/β toxin, the β-C-terminal HDEL motif of which is uncovered and, therefore,
accessible for interaction with the HDEL receptor of the target cell.
Fluid-phase endocytosis
A receptor-independent
process by which eukaryotic
cells internalize portions of
their cell surface to remove
cargo such as proteins, lipids or
solutes from the external
environment. In yeast,
accumulation of Lucifer yellow
in the vacuole is used as a
marker for fluid-phase
endocytosis.
In the case of a yeast killer toxin, the unprocessed
toxin precursor consists of an N-terminal signal
sequence, which is necessary for pptox import into the
lumen of the ER, followed by the α- and β-subunits of
the mature toxin separated from each other by a potentially N-glycosylated γ-sequence (FIG. 2). During passage
through the yeast secretory pathway, the toxin precursor
is enzymatically processed to the biologically active α/β
heterodimer in a way that is homologous to prohormone
conversion in mammalian cells40,41. In a late-Golgi compartment, the N-glycosylated γ-sequence is removed
by the action of the furin-like endopeptidase Kex2p
(REF. 42), the C terminus of the β-subunit is trimmed by
the carboxypeptidase Kex1p, and the biologically active
protein is secreted into the culture medium as an α/β
heterodimer in which the subunits are covalently linked
by one or more disulphide bonds (FIG. 2). In the case of
the K28 toxin precursor, the C terminus of the β-subunit
contains a four-amino-acid epitope that represents a classical ER-retention signal (HDELR), which is normally
found on soluble proteins resident in the ER lumen.
As this signal is initially masked by a carboxy-terminal
arginine residue, ER retention of the toxin precursor is
effectively prevented until the protoxin enters the lateGolgi compartment and Kex1p cleavage uncovers the
retention signal43.
Uptake of K28 toxin and retrograde transport
To date, the yeast K28 toxin is the sole example of a killer
toxin that is taken up by endocytosis after binding to
the surface of a sensitive cell44. Yeast mutants that are
blocked in the early steps of both fluid-phase endocytosis
and receptor-mediated endocytosis are toxin resistant, as
the toxin cannot enter the cell and reach its final target
compartment. Although the K28 membrane receptor has
not yet been identified, there is growing evidence that
it might be the cellular HDEL receptor Erd2p, which
co-localizes — in low copy number — to the cytoplasmic membrane (J. Spindler, S. Heiligenstein and M.J.S.,
unpublished data). In accordance with this assumption,
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β
Kar2p
ATP
ER lumen
α
Cue1p
Sec62p
Sec63p Der1p Sec61p
complex
Der3p/
Hrd1p
Cytosol
Ubc7p Ubc6p
β
Ubx
β
α
26S
proteasome
Nucleus
α
Cell cycle
Figure 3 | Endoplasmic-reticulum-to-cytosol retrotranslocation of the
heterodimeric K28 toxin and lethal effect in the yeast nucleus. After endocytotic
uptake and retrograde transport through the Golgi and endoplasmic reticulum (ER),
the toxin is gated through the major export channel (Sec61p) with the help of the
lumenal ER chaperone Kar2p. In the cytosol, the β-subunit is ubiquitinated and
proteasomally degraded, whereas the α-subunit enters the nucleus. Through the
toxin’s interaction with essential cellular proteins that are normally involved in
eukaryotic cell-cycle control, the toxin kills the host cell by irreversibly blocking DNA
synthesis. Cellular components of the ER quality-control pathway ERAD (such as
Cue1p, Ubc7p, Der3p/Hrd1p, Ubc6p and Der1p) are not involved in ER-to-cytosol
export of the toxin (ERAD components are shown in grey).
Coat proteins
Molecules that form a
proteinaceous coating around
vesicles that are involved in
endoplasmic-reticulum and
Golgi trafficking.
ER-associated degradation
A cellular quality-control
system that ensures removal of
misfolded and/or unassembled
proteins from the endoplasmicreticulum lumen and their
subsequent elimination by the
cytoplasmic ubiquitin–
proteasome system.
K28-toxin-treated cells that lack the HDEL receptor
are K28 resistant, accumulate the toxin at the plasma
membrane and are incapable of internalizing the toxin44.
Interestingly, this phenotype is reflected in a mutated K28
derivative that lacks the β-C-terminal HDEL sequence;
this toxin is inactive and unable to enter cells43.
Once the toxin has been internalized and targeted to
an early endosomal compartment, it travels the secretion
pathway in reverse and enters the yeast-cell cytoplasm.
This retrograde transport is mediated by the coat protein
COPI and the HDEL ER-targeting motif at the C terminus of the β-subunit, which is exposed after Kex1p cleavage, as discussed above. In yeast and higher eukaryotes,
H/KDEL-carrying proteins resemble resident proteins
of the ER lumen that are recognized and subsequently
recycled from an early Golgi compartment back to the
ER by an ER-membrane-bound H/KDEL receptor45,46.
In the case of the K28 virus toxin, this sequence allows
retrograde transport through the Golgi and ER, and
ensures that the toxin can enter the cytoplasm and subsequently transduce its lethal signal into the nucleus. The
disulphide bond that covalently links the two subunits
of the heterodimeric toxin is believed to be important in
ensuring accessibility of the β-C-terminal ER-targeting
signal to the HDEL target-cell receptor43.
The strategy of using endocytosis and retrograde
transport is a common phenomenon for many bacterial protein toxins 47. Pseudomonas exotoxin A, for
instance, has also been shown to be internalized by
receptor mediated endocytosis, followed by reverse
secretion through the Golgi and ER. As many other
microbial A/B toxins, such as the Escherichia coli toxins
heat-labile enterotoxin and Shiga toxin, contain putative ER-retention signals at their C termini, H/KDELdependent mechanisms seem to have general importance
for toxin entry into eukaryotic target cells48–50. In this
respect, the main difference between the virally encoded
K28 killer toxin and most bacterial A/B toxins is that K28
itself is produced and secreted by a eukaryotic cell, and
therefore the ER-targeting signal at the β-C-terminus
is initially masked by a terminal arginine residue. This
strategy ensures that the viral toxin can successfully pass
through the early secretory pathway. Once it has reached
a late Golgi compartment, the terminal arginine residue
is no longer needed for intracellular toxin transport
and is cleaved by Kex1p. Consequently, expression of a
truncated pptox in which the carboxy-terminal arginine
has been deleted results in a loss of toxicity as the toxin
is retained in the ER43,44.
Retrotranslocation of K28 from the ER. Once the toxin
has reached the ER, it is retrotranslocated to the cytosol,
from where it transduces the toxic signal into the nucleus
(FIG. 3). ER-to-cytosol export of K28 is mediated by the
Sec61p complex (termed the translocon), a major transport channel in the ER membrane of yeast and higher
eukaryotes44,51. In yeast, each translocon contains a core
heterotrimeric complex consisting of the transmembrane
protein Sec61p and two smaller subunits, Sbh1p and
Sss1p (REF. 52). In addition to being the main channel
for co-translational and post-translational protein
import into the ER, Sec61p is also involved in the export
and removal of misfolded proteins from the secretory
pathway and their subsequent proteasomal degradation in the cytosol53–55. This mechanism is an important
quality-control system in the ER of eukaryotes which
ensures that only correctly folded proteins reach their
final destination. Native proteins that successfully passed
this ‘proof-reading’ checkpoint are further transported
through the secretory pathway, whereas non-native proteins and incompletely assembled conformers are eventually sorted for ER export and proteasomal degradation
in a process called ER-associated degradation (ERAD)56.
Sec61p as a central component of ER export and ERAD
has been shown to be responsible for ER retrotranslocation of plant and microbial A/B toxins such as ricin57,
cholera toxin58 and Pseudomonas exotoxin A59, as well
as the yeast K28 virus toxin44. However, in contrast to
most H/KDEL-carrying microbial toxins, ER-to-cytosol
translocation of K28 does not depend on ERAD and,
consequently, yeast mutants defective in ‘classical’ ERAD
components show wild-type sensitivity6.
Yeast cells carrying a mutated Sec61p translocon, and
yeast sec63 mutants, are toxin resistant owing to a block
in toxin retrotranslocation to the cytosol44. Recently, it
was shown that this Sec61p/Sec63p-mediated ER-tocytosol export depends on the action of the lumenal ER
chaperone Kar2p (binding protein or BiP), to ensure that
the heterodimeric toxin is competent for translocation44.
However, neither well-known ERAD components nor
components of the ubiquitin/proteasome degradation
machinery are involved in K28 translocation to the
cytosol6,60 (FIG. 3). So far, the component(s) near the
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ER membrane that are required, or sufficient, for toxin
exit through the Sec61p complex are still unknown,
and it is not known whether toxin ubiquitination and
proteasomal degradation generates the driving force for
retrograde transport through the ER membrane. In this
respect, it is interesting to note that a pptox variant that
lacks all internal lysine residues is still processed in vivo
to a biologically active α/β toxin, indicating that toxin
retrotranslocation from the ER might be independent of
ubiquitination (F.B. et al., unpublished data). Once in the
cytosol (at the cytosolic face of the ER), the β-subunit is
subsequently ubiquitinated and targeted for proteasomal
degradation, whereas the α-subunit enters the nucleus
and causes cell death (see below).
Mode of killer-toxin action
Viral killer toxins kill sensitive yeast in a receptor-mediated
process by interacting with receptors in the yeast cell wall
and cytoplasmic membrane. The initial step involves fast,
energy-independent binding to a primary toxin receptor,
R1, in the mannoprotein or β-1,6-glucan fraction of the
cell wall61,62. It has been speculated that toxin binding to
R1 either concentrates the toxin at the level of the cell wall
or mediates close contact between the toxin and the target cell membrane. Susceptible strains can become toxin
resistant by chromosomal mutations in a set of genes that
encode proteins involved in the structure and assembly
of the yeast cell wall63. The second, energy-dependent
step involves toxin translocation to the cytoplasmic
membrane and interaction with a secondary membrane
receptor, R2. To date, only the membrane receptor for
toxin K1 has been identified — Kre1p, an O-glycosylated
yeast cell-surface protein which is initially anchored
to the plasma membrane through a glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) anchor and is involved in both β-1,6-glucan
biosynthesis and assembly of the K1 cell-wall receptor64,65.
After reaching the plasma membrane, ionophoric virus
toxins such as K1 and zygocin (the latter toxin is produced
by Z. bailii) disrupt cytoplasmic membrane function by
forming cation-selective ion channels, whereas K28 toxins
block DNA synthesis and arrest cells in early S phase of
the cell cycle, creating a medium-sized bud and a single,
pre-replicated nucleus in the mother cell66–68. Both of these
mechanisms are discussed in more detail below.
Patch clamping
Technique whereby a small
electrode tip is sealed onto a
patch of cell membrane,
making it possible to record
the flow of current through
individual ion channels or
pores in the patch.
Spheroplasts
Yeast cells the cell wall of which
has been enzymatically
removed to increase the
efficiencies of DNA
transformation or virus-likeparticle transfection.
Ionophoric virus toxins
K1 toxin. K1-toxin-induced ion-channel formation in
yeast membranes was initially reported using patchclamping techniques, and was thought to be a result of
direct toxin action68. However, this observation is inconsistent with the resistance found in immune spheroplasts,
and no receptor-independent channels were observed in
a recent study in which it was shown that K1 activates
Tok1p potassium channels in yeast membranes as well as
in Tok1p-expressing Xenopus oocytes69. These channels
were postulated to be required for the lethal interaction
of K1 with the plasma membrane and, furthermore, to
be potential K1 membrane receptors. It was assumed that
exposure of Tok1p channels to K1 at the cytosolic face of
the plasma membrane would prevent channel activation
from the external face, and this was postulated to be the
mechanism of K1 toxin immunity70. However, several
studies have subsequently shown that Tok1p channels are
neither the K1 membrane receptor nor the primary toxin
target, nor are they responsible for K1 immunity64,71,72.
Any effect on Tok1p channels is, therefore, likely to be a
late secondary event and is probably not the physiologically relevant lethal mechanism of the K1 virus toxin. So,
the primary target of K1 and its molecular mode of cell
killing remain obscure.
Zygocin. Zygocin is a monomeric antifungal protein
toxin that is secreted by virus-infected strains of the
osmotolerant yeast Z. bailii. Its broad killing spectrum
encompasses phytopathogenic and human-pathogenic
yeast and fungi, including Candida albicans, Candida
glabrata, Candida tropicalis, Sporothrix schenckii
and the filamentous fungi Fusarium oxysporum and
Colletotrichum graminicola73. Similar to the ionophoric
activity of K1, zygocin negatively affects plasmamembrane permeability in vivo, although the kinetics of zygocin-mediated membrane permeabilization
are much faster, and equivalent molar amounts of K1
require a significantly prolonged time span to achieve
a comparable reduction in cell viability68,73. The ionophoric mode of zygocin action is reinforced by in silico
sequence analysis74, which shows the presence of a
stretch of potential α-helical conformation that forms
an amphipathic structure characteristic of various
membrane-disturbing antimicrobial peptides such as
alamethicin, melittin and dermaseptin. Zygocin also
contains a transmembrane helix at the C terminus
that is predicted to favour a membrane-permeabilizing
potential, not by activating native ion channels but
instead by establishing pores itself after toxin oligomerization (FIG. 4). It has been postulated, therefore, that the
hydrophobic region in the amphipathic α-helix of
zygocin is responsible for toxin binding to the yeast-cell
surface. Initial toxin adsorption would only be limited by
the toxin’s ability to overcome the cell-wall barrier or
by additional physicochemical factors that affect
zygocin’s hydrophilic–hydrophobic transition from the
aqueous medium to the cytoplasmic membrane. Therefore,
the postulated model of zygocin action (FIG. 4) resembles
the mechanism of toxicity of certain α-defensins of
human origin75. Although non-specific toxin binding
seems to be essential, it is not sufficient to initiate cell
killing, as zygocin-producing cells can bind toxin at
the plasma-membrane level without being sensitive to
the toxin76. In analogy to alamethicin, the toxic effect of
zygocin could be mediated by incorporation of its transmembrane helix into the plasma membrane, a process
solely driven by the natural transmembrane potential of
the energized yeast plasma membrane77,78.
This mode of action, along with its rapid energydependent toxicity, shows striking similarities to
membrane-disturbing peptides produced by virtually
all higher eukaryotes79,80. There are few mechanisms of
resistance against antimicrobial peptides, and these are
mostly limited to changes in the composition of the cytoplasmic membrane. In contrast to higher eukaryotic cells,
the outer leaflet of microbial membranes is enriched in
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Ergosterol
The main sterol in the cell
membranes of yeast that is
responsible, and essential, for
structural and regulatory
membrane features such as
fluidity and permeability
(equivalent to cholesterol in
mammalian cells).
Nuclear-localization
sequence
A short sequence in a protein,
rich in basic residues, which
acts as a signal for localization
of the protein in the nucleus.
Importins
A family of proteins that
transport macromolecules into
the nucleus.
K28 toxin. As the cytotoxic α-subunit of K28 is only
10.5 kDa, it can enter the nucleus by passive diffusion
without the need for an active nuclear import machinery67. However, if the α-subunit is additionally modified
and extended by a classical nuclear-localization sequence
(NLS), the in vivo toxicity is significantly enhanced
owing to faster and more efficient nuclear import mediated by α/β importins in the host cell (F. Reiter and M.J.S.,
unpublished data). Once in the nucleus, K28-α specifically interacts with host proteins that are essential in
eukaryotic cell-cycle control and progression as well as
in initiating DNA synthesis in early S phase. Therefore,
a
Polar
+–+–+–
D3
Non-polar
D2
D1
Cell wall
R1
Cell membrane
b
D1
R1
D3
D2
+–+–+–
c
D1
R1
D2
D3
negatively charged lipids. Owing to the cationic net charge
of antimicrobial peptides (including zygocin), there might
be an affinity for these lipids, facilitating toxin adsorption
to the target membrane. So it was rather surprising when
species of Morganella and Serratia were discovered that
showed a resistant phenotype to antimicrobial peptides
that was triggered by a reduction in negatively charged
lipids in the plasma membrane81. In agreement with this
observation, mutants of Staphylococcus aureus that have
a more negatively charged membrane than the wild-type
are more susceptible to antimicrobial peptides, reflecting significantly improved membrane binding of cationic
antimicrobial peptides82.
The recent finding that deletions in the chromosomal
yeast genes PDR16 and PDR17 cause a dramatic decrease
in zygocin sensitivity at the plasma-membrane level will
be extremely valuable in further elucidating its molecular mode of action (F. Weiler and M.J.S., unpublished
data). The corresponding gene products affect plasmamembrane lipid composition which, in turn, causes a
significant decrease in the sensitivity of yeast ∆pdr16 and
∆pdr17 mutants to various toxic substances83. Owing to
a dramatic reduction in membrane sterol concentration,
yeast pdr16 mutants are significantly more sensitive to
azole antimycotics, which interfere with ergosterol biosynthesis84. However, whereas the proportion of negatively charged lipids is severely decreased in a ∆pdr16
knock-out mutant, the opposite effect can be seen in a
yeast ∆pdr17 mutant83. As the same studies indicated
that Pdr16p/Pdr17p activity is limited to the composition of the cytoplasmic membrane, it can be assumed
that changes in plasma-membrane lipid composition
are exclusively responsible for the reduced zygocin
sensitivity of yeast pdr16/pdr17 mutants. In contrast to
K1, a zygocin-specific membrane receptor has not yet
been identified, and the effect of a pdr16/pdr17 mutation cannot be attributed to the absence of a particular
membrane lipid or a single membrane-docking protein.
However, membrane-permeabilizing proteins do not
necessarily require a specific secondary membrane
receptor or docking protein, as has recently been shown
for the antimicrobial polypeptide DmAMP1 produced by
Dahlia merckii. The cytocidal effect of this antimicrobial
protein, which belongs to the diverse group of defensins,
depends on sphingolipid-containing membranes85.
Therefore, knowledge of the molecular structure of the
zygocin protein is required to gain deeper insight into its
native conformation and in vivo toxicity.
d
Figure 4 | Model of zygocin–membrane interaction.
This model is based on experimental data, in silico structure
prediction and analogy to antimicrobial peptides of higher
eukaryotes. (a) Shows the domain structure of zygocin;
(b), unspecific adsorption of the non-polar side of the
α-helix (D2) after overcoming the cell-wall barrier by
binding to the cell-wall mannoprotein R1 receptor (through
domain D1) and recognition of a putative membrane
receptor or docking protein; (c), membrane insertion of
domain D3 driven by the transmembrane potential of the
target cell and formation of a transmembrane helix;
(d), toxin oligomerization by self-assembly and subsequent
plasma-membrane permeabilization.
because K28 targets essential and evolutionarily conserved host proteins with basic cellular functions,
resistance mechanisms based on mutations in essential
chromosomal genes rarely occur in vivo, and so the K28
virus toxin has developed an ‘intelligent’ strategy to
effectively penetrate and kill its target cell.
Toxin-induced apoptosis
In yeast, apoptotic markers such as DNA fragmentation, chromatin condensation, exposure of phosphatidylserine on the outer surface of the plasma
membrane, accumulation of reactive oxygen species
(ROS) and phenotypic changes can be induced by
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REVIEWS
α-factor
One of two peptide hormones
in Saccharomyces cerevisiae
that are responsible for
synchronized mating between
yeast cells of opposite mating
type.
various factors such as H2O2, cell ageing, acetic acid
and α-factor pheromone treatment86–89. Interestingly,
active cell death can also be induced by treating yeast
with low doses of viral killer toxins, whereas high toxin
concentrations prevent apoptosis and cause necrotic
cell killing90. Phenotypic analysis of the pronounced
toxin hypersensitivity in glutathione-deficient yeast
mutants further confirmed that ROS accumulation is
the actual trigger of apoptosis in toxin-treated yeast, as
it is known that glutathione acts as a redox buffer that
protects cells from damage by reducing the amount
of ROS91. Although apoptosis is clearly not the primary lethal effect of viral killer toxins, a chromosomal
deletion in the yeast caspase 1 gene YCA1 — which
encodes a protein that is required for apoptotic hostcell responses92 — results in markedly reduced toxin
sensitivity; therefore, mutations in YCA1 can rescue
cells from K28-mediated toxicity. Based on all these
observations, it can be concluded that in the natural
environment of killer yeast, where the toxin concentration is usually low, the induction of apoptosis has a
crucial, if not essential, role in efficient toxin-mediated
cell killing90.
the K1 protoxin during secretion, leading to diversion
of the receptor–protoxin complex to the vacuole95. This
model was further strengthened by phenotypic analyses
of various mutant pptox derivatives, which clearly indicated that the α-toxin was the lethal component and that
its secretion in the mature form caused severe growth
inhibition, whereas secretion of the α-toxin fused to an
N-terminal fragment of the γ-subunit was sufficient to
confer immunity98. The dependence of immunity on
diversion of the putative membrane receptor to the vacuole is consistent with the defect in immunity observed
in many vps mutants, which are known to be blocked in
various steps of vacuolar protein sorting99.
The membrane receptor for K1 has been identified
as Kre1p, a cell-surface protein involved in the synthesis
of the cell-wall component β-1,6-glucan64. Immunity
apparently does not involve loss of the membrane receptor but affects a step downstream of binding to Kre1p.
Given that the recently proposed immunity mechanism in which K1 leads to an internal blockage of the
potassium channel Tok1p (REF. 70) is unlikely to be of
physiological relevance, the precise mechanism of K1
immunity still remains obscure.
Toxin immunity
In addition to the fact that the primary toxin target has
yet to be identified, the question of how immunity is
realized in vivo has still to be answered and remains
the most intriguing aspect of the killer phenomenon.
In killer yeast, functional immunity is essential for cell
survival, as the toxins exclusively target and inhibit
eukaryotic cell functions. This is in contrast to bacterial protein toxins such as cholera toxin and Shiga
toxin, which selectively kill eukaryotes, therefore
making immunity and self-defence in a prokaryotic
host dispensable.
Immunity to K28. The terminal phenotype of K28treated cells (inhibition of DNA synthesis and cellcycle arrest) indicates that the lethal effect begins in
the nucleus. Nevertheless, toxin-producing cells are
effectively protected against the toxin. Recently, the
mechanism of K28 immunity has been elucidated at
the molecular level100. Taking into account the fact that
toxicity involves endocytotic uptake and retrograde
toxin transport, K28 immunity could involve interaction of external, internalized toxin with toxin that is
being secreted to the cell surface at the same time in
the secretory pathway of an immune cell. This is not
the case, however, as immune cells can still take up
external toxin and translocate it back to the cytosol,
indicating that immunity manifests in the cytosol. The
simultaneous presence of both the re-internalized α/β
toxin and its pptox precursor in the cytosol of a killer
yeast indicates that an interaction between K28 and
pptox might be the key step in toxin immunity. In fact,
such a complex has recently been purified in vivo100.
According to the model postulated for K28 immunity
(FIG. 5), the K28 pptox is initially translated from the
killer-virus transcript on free ribosomes. Thereafter,
it is post-translationally translocated into the secretory pathway, where it is processed into the α/β
heterodimeric toxin, which is secreted into the culture
medium. Consistent with the important role of posttranslational pptox import into the ER, K28 immunity
is negatively affected and severely impaired when the
natural ER-import signal in K28 pptox is replaced by
the co-translational signal sequence of K1 pptox100.
In addition to pptox import into the secretory pathway and K28 toxin secretion, the killer cell can also take
up external toxin (either self-produced or produced by
other K28 killer cells) and transport it in a retrograde
fashion from the Golgi to the ER. After reaching the ER,
the toxin translocates to the cytosol and rapidly forms a
Immunity to K1. It has been speculated that K1-toxin
immunity might be conferred by the toxin precursor itself
acting as a competitive inhibitor of the mature toxin by
saturating or eliminating the plasma-membrane receptor that normally mediates toxicity. It was also shown
that in vivo expression of a toxin-coding cDNA in a
∆kex2 null mutant that is deficient in pptox processing
and, therefore, unable to release the α- and β-subunits
from the intervening γ-sequence results in immune
non-killers93–96. Based on these observations, a model
for K1 immunity was proposed in which either loss or
modification of the toxin’s secondary plasma-membrane
receptor causes immunity. When it was shown that the
expression of a cDNA copy of the pptox was sufficient to
confer immunity, it was postulated that the γ-component
of the toxin precursor might not only act as an intramolecular chaperone, ensuring proper pptox processing
in the secretory pathway, but might also provide some
sort of ‘masking’ function by protecting membranes of
toxin-producing cells against damage by the hydrophobic
α-subunit97.
Later, a more plausible model was proposed, in which
it was speculated that immunity in a K1 killer cell results
from an interaction of the toxin R2 receptor (Kre1p) with
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© 2006 Nature Publishing Group
REVIEWS
α
ss
β
HDEL
Golgi
α
ss
β
HDEL
ER
Sec61p
α
β
HDEL
Secretion
α
pre
pro
α
γ
pre
β
pro
γ
α
β
β
HDEL
Ub
M28 killer virus
α
β
pre
pro
HDEL
α
α
β
γ
β
HDEL
Proteasome
Degradation and
functional immunity
Figure 5 | Model of protective immunity in a K28-toxin-secreting killer yeast. In the cytosol of a K28-producing
killer yeast, the unprocessed preprotoxin — encoded by the M28 double-stranded RNA killer virus — complexes with the
mature α/β toxin that has been re-internalized and transported in a retrograde manner through the secretory pathway.
In the in vivo generated complex of the toxin precursor and the mature α/β toxin, the β-subunits in the complex are
(poly)ubiquitinated (Ubx) and rapidly degraded by the proteasome. Part of the toxin precursor escapes from being
ubiquitinated and degraded, and can therefore serve either as template for preprotoxin import into the endoplasmic
reticulum (ER) and toxin secretion or as an immunity component to form a complex with the re-internalized α/β toxin.
complex with pptox molecules that have not yet been
imported into the ER. In this complex, the K28 heterodimer is selectively ubiquitinated and proteasomally
degraded. In this way, at least part of the pptox moiety
of the complex is released and can either be imported
into the ER or complexed with a newly internalized
K28 heterodimer. Interestingly, selective blockage of
proteasomal degradation causes a dramatic decrease in
toxin secretion, as effective degradation of the generated
K28–pptox complex is prevented, less pptox is available
for ER import, and the remaining pptox is unable to fully
complex internalized, heterodimeric toxin. Therefore,
proteasomal mutants become partially sensitive to K28.
Interestingly, the amount of cytosolic ubiquitin has a crucial role in toxin immunity, and increasing free ubiquitin
(by overexpression of mutated ubiquitin unable to form
polyubiquitin chains) results in a significant decrease
in toxin secretion. Under such conditions, cytosolic
pptox is primarily monoubiquitinated and incompetent
for either ER import or complex formation with the
re-internalized heterodimeric toxin100. Such a scenario
generates a killer yeast that is no longer protected against
its own toxin. Vice versa, decreasing cytosolic ubiquitin
by blocking protein deubiquitination (as in a ∆doa4
mutant) causes an increase in toxin secretion and immunity is not impaired, as sufficient pptox is available for
K28 complex formation. This simple mechanism ensures
that a toxin-producing killer yeast is effectively protected
against the lethal action of its own toxin.
Concluding remarks
Over the years, much has been learned about eukaryotic cell biology by studying virus-infected killer yeasts
and dissecting toxin maturation and secretion. In the
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REVIEWS
case of the K28 virus toxin, various important cellular processes have been studied in detail — including
retrograde protein transport and retrotranslocation,
ubiquitination and proteasomal degradation, and even
apoptotic host-cell responses — that not only are fundamental to eukaryotic cell biology but also relevant to
human disease. However, there are still many open and
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Acknowledgements
The authors thank all past and present members of the
Schmitt laboratory for the many contributions over the years,
and apologize to authors whose work could not be cited owing
to space limitations. Work in the authors’ laboratory that contributed to this review was continuously supported by various
grants from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft.
Competing interests statement
The authors declare no competing financial interests.
DATABASES
The following terms in this article are linked online to:
Entrez Genome: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.
fcgi?db=genome
ScV-M1
Entrez Genome Project: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/
entrez/query.fcgi?db=genomeprj
Candida albicans | Candida glabrata | Candida tropicalis |
Escherichia coli | Kluyveromyces lactis | Pichia farinosa |
Saccharomyces cerevisiae | Staphylococcus aureus | Ustilago
maydis
UniProtKB: http://ca.expasy.org/sprot
heat-labile enterotoxin | K1 | K2 | K28 | Kar2p | Kex1p | Kex2p |
Kre1p | Pdi1p | Pseudomonas exotoxin A | Sbh1p | Scj1p |
Sec61p | Sec63p | Sss1p | Tok1p | zygocin
FURTHER INFORMATION
Manfred J. Schmitt’s homepage:
http://www.uni-saarland.de/fak8/schmitt
Access to this interactive links box is free online.
VOLUME 4 | MARCH 2006 | 221
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