Hap4 System-Regulated Plasma Membrane Proton Fluxes are Crucial for Saccharomyces cerevisiae Adaptation to Varying pH, Oxygen, and Glucose Concentrations
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.46991/JISEES.2025.SI1.027Keywords:
Hap4 system, S. cerevisiae, Proton flux, DCCD-sensitive transport, Metabolic adaptation, Mitochondrial regulationAbstract
The heme-activated Hap4 complex is a transcriptional factor of respiration in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, which acts as a global regulator of TCA cycle, complexes III and IV of the electron transport chain, and mitochondrial biogenesis. This study aims to investigate the role of the Hap4 in yeast growth and proton flux regulation across the cell membrane depending on external pH (3.0 or 5.0), glucose concentrations (0.5% or 2%), and oxygen availability (aerobic or oxygen-limited conditions). Growth performance was evaluated using the specific growth rate (SGR), and proton flux across the whole-cell membrane was assessed using a potentiometric method. Results demonstrated that aerobic conditions and pH 5.0 supported the highest SGR (0.4 h⁻¹ in S. cerevisiae W303-1B and 0.2 h⁻¹ in Δhap4) during aerobic growth with 2% glucose. The Δhap4 strain exhibited significantly prolonged lag phase (~7 h compared to 2 h in W303-1B) and an 8-fold decrease in SGR compared to wild-type strain. The highest proton flux rate (4.5 mM H⁺ min⁻¹ CFU⁻¹) was observed in W303-1B strain during aerobic growth and had remained constant at pH 3.0 - 5.0, whereas Δhap4 displayed a 6-fold reduction of SGR in microaerophilic growth. Both strains exhibited a similar pattern of proton flux during aerobic growth at pH 3.0 -independent of glucose concentration—with a 3-fold inhibition of proton flux upon treatment with DCCD. This suggests that under aerobic conditions, DCCD-sensitive proton fluxes are not dependent on the Hap4 system, indicating a Hap4-independent mechanism of pH adaptation. In contrast, under microaerophilic conditions, the Δhap4 showed a complete absence of proton flux compared to the wild-type strain, indicating a critical role of Hap4 in pH adaptation under these conditions. The results obtained can be used in metabolic engineering strategies, to increase yeast robustness and industrial fermentation efficiency under varying environmental conditions.
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2025 Liana Anikyan, Anahit Shirvanyan, Karen Trchounian (Author)

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.
How to Cite
Most read articles by the same author(s)
- Silvard Tadevosyan, Anahit Shirvanyan, Karen Trchounian, Naira Sahakyan, Influence of Menthol on Ion Fluxes and ATPase Activity in Antibiotic-Resistant E. Coli Under Aerobic and Anaerobic Conditions , Journal of Innovative Solutions for Eco-Environmental Sustainability: 2025: Special Issue No. 1
- Liana Vanyan, Karen Trchounian, How fdhF Deletion Affects Ion Transport and ATPase Activity in E. coli? , Journal of Innovative Solutions for Eco-Environmental Sustainability: 2025: Special Issue No. 1
- Liza Jorkntsyan, Liana Vanyan, Antonio Valle, Jorge Bolivar, Karen Trchounian, Effects of Amino Acide Mutations in Escherichia coli DcuD Transporters in Proton Flux at pH 5.5 , Journal of Innovative Solutions for Eco-Environmental Sustainability: 2025: Special Issue No. 1
- Lusine Margaryan, Silvard Tadevosyan, Karen Trchounian, Naira Sahakyan, Influence of Tanacetum argyrophyllum Essential Oil on ATPase Activity and Proton Flux of E. coli K-12, Kanamycin-Resistant E. coli pARG-25 , Journal of Innovative Solutions for Eco-Environmental Sustainability: 2025: Special Issue No. 1
- Karen Trchounian, Role of Ion Gradients and Redox Potential During Anaerobic and Aerobic Conditions in E. Coli and S. Cerevisae , Journal of Innovative Solutions for Eco-Environmental Sustainability: 2025: Special Issue No. 1