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Review Articles

Transcription factors and transporters in zinc homeostasis: lessons learned from fungi

Pages 88-110 | Received 24 Jan 2020, Accepted 10 Mar 2020, Published online: 19 Mar 2020
 

Abstract

Zinc is an essential nutrient for all organisms because this metal serves as a critical structural or catalytic cofactor for many proteins. These zinc-dependent proteins are abundant in the cytosol as well as within organelles of eukaryotic cells such as the nucleus, mitochondria, endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi, and storage compartments such as the fungal vacuole. Therefore, cells need zinc transporters so that they can efficiently take up the metal and move it around within cells. In addition, because zinc levels in the environment can vary drastically, the activity of many of these transporters and other components of zinc homeostasis is regulated at the level of transcription by zinc-responsive transcription factors. Mechanisms of post-transcriptional control are also important for zinc homeostasis. In this review, the focus will be on our current knowledge of zinc transporters and their regulation by zinc-responsive transcription factors and other mechanisms in fungi because these organisms have served as useful paradigms of zinc homeostasis in all organisms. With this foundation, extension to other organisms will be made where warranted.

Acknowledgements

The author thanks the many student’s, postdoc’s, and staff who have contributed to his lab’s work on zinc homeostasis over the past 25 years. He also thanks the many collaborators and colleagues in the zinc field for making research in the area so exciting and rewarding.

Disclosure statement

The author has no conflict of interest to declare related to this work.

Additional information

Funding

Work in the author’s lab was supported by the National Institute of Health, primarily by grant R01-GM56285.

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