1 Department of Biology, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC 27599, USA
2 Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC 27599, USA
3 Program in Molecular Biology and Biotechnology, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC 27599, USA
4 Curriculum in Genetics and Molecular Biology, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC 27599, USA
*Author for correspondence (e-mail: duronio{at}med.unc.edu)
Accepted September 24, 2001
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SUMMARY |
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Key words: E2F2, E2F, Drosophila, Oogenesis, ORC, Cell cycle, Replication
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INTRODUCTION |
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Mouse knockout experiments have provided some evidence for this hypothesis in mammals (Bruce et al., 2000; Field et al., 1996; Gaubatz et al., 2000; Humbert et al., 2000a; Humbert et al., 2000b; Lindeman et al., 1998; Pan et al., 1998; Rempel et al., 2000; Tsai et al., 1998; Yamasaki et al., 1998; Yamasaki et al., 1996; Ziebold et al., 2001). However, much of this evidence comes from the analysis of embryonic fibroblasts in culture, and less is known about how the E2F family affects cell cycle progression in various tissues in the intact animal. Drosophila provides a simpler genetic system to examine the contribution of E2F function to cell cycle control directly in a developing animal. The Drosophila genome contains two E2F (E2f and E2f2), a single Dp and two pRB (Rbf and Rbf2) genes (Du et al., 1996; Dynlacht et al., 1994; Frolov et al., 2001; Hao et al., 1995; Ohtani and Nevins, 1994; Sawado et al., 1998). E2f, Dp and Rbf are each essential (Du and Dyson, 1999; Duronio et al., 1998; Duronio et al., 1995; Royzman et al., 1997). Loss of either E2f or Dp function abrogates the expression of replication genes, and compromises DNA synthesis and cell proliferation in several different developmental contexts, suggesting that E2F/DP action stimulates progression through the cell cycle (Brook et al., 1996; Duronio et al., 1998; Duronio et al., 1995; Neufeld et al., 1998; Royzman et al., 1997). By contrast, there is no evidence that E2F plays a negative role in either transcription or cell cycle progression. However, there is evidence that DP acts to repress transcription of at least one gene (i.e. Mcm3) in the embryonic CNS (Duronio et al., 1998). Moreover, loss of RBF function in embryos causes transcriptional de-repression of E2F targets and allows cells to inappropriately transit from G1 into S phase (Du and Dyson, 1999). One hypothesis is that E2F2, and not E2F, acts as part of transcriptional repressor complex containing DP and RBF that actively inhibits cell cycle progression. In order to test this, we engineered null mutations of E2f2. Our phenotypic analyses of these mutants indicate that E2F2 is not essential for fly development, but is necessary for fertility of females where it plays a role in controlling DNA replication in follicle cells during oogenesis.
A Drosophila ovary contains 14-16 ovarioles, which are egg assembly lines consisting of a series of connected egg chambers at successive stages of oogenesis (Spradling, 1993). Each egg chamber contains a cyst of 16 germ cells descended from a single founding stem cell. One of these cells becomes the oocyte, while the remaining 15 differentiate into polyploid nurse cells that support oocyte growth. The germ cell cyst is encapsulated within a single epithelial layer of somatic follicle cells. The follicle cells arise from two stem cells within the germarium, a specialized structure at the anterior end of each ovariole where egg chambers are first formed. After an early period of cell proliferation, follicle cells switch to endoreduplication or endocycles, through which most cells achieve a 16C DNA content by stage 10 of oogenesis. At this stage, the follicle cells make another developmental switch and begin to amplify synchronously and selectively a small number of distinct loci, the two most prominent of which contain clusters of chorion genes that encode the eggshell proteins (Calvi and Spradling, 1999; Orr-Weaver, 1991). This process occurs by repeated firing of one or more replication origins located within the gene clusters. DNA sequences that define replicator and origin elements required for high level chorion gene amplification (e.g. 60fold) have been defined molecularly (Austin et al., 1999; Lu et al., 2001).
Many of the molecules required for genomic DNA replication during a typical S phase also appear to control chorion gene amplification (Calvi and Spradling, 1999; Spradling, 1999). This includes members of the pre-replicative complex (pre-RC), such as the origin recognition complex (ORC), DUP/CDT1 and CDC45L, which may play a role in both initiation and elongation, and the S phase kinases Cyclin E/CDK2 and CDC7/DBF4 (Asano and Wharton, 1999; Austin et al., 1999; Calvi et al., 1998; Landis et al., 1997; Landis and Tower, 1999; Loebel et al., 2000; Whittaker et al., 2000). E2F complexes are also required for normal chorion gene amplification. Viable, hypomorphic alleles of E2f and Dp cause decreased chorion gene amplification, resulting in production of eggs with a thin shell (Royzman et al., 1999). Conversely, Rbf mutant follicle cells overamplify chorion genes (Bosco et al., 2001). Although it is well established in both flies and mammals that E2F can control the transcription of genes encoding components of the pre-RC, recent data suggest that E2F complexes may regulate chorion gene amplification more directly. E2F and RBF co-immunoprecipitate with ORC1 and ORC2 from ovary extracts, and chromatin immunoprecipitations show that this complex is present at the chorion locus in vivo (Bosco et al., 2001). These physical interactions raise the possibility that E2F/DP/RBF complexes regulate gene amplification directly at the replication origin, rather than, or in addition to, a mechanism involving changes in gene expression (Cayirlioglu and Duronio, 2001).
The developmental and cellular mechanisms by which follicle cells first change from mitotic cycles to endocycles, and then from endocycles to gene amplification, are not known. pRB-containing complexes appear to contribute to the latter transition. In a subset of follicle cells within individual egg chambers isolated from either Dp or Rbf female sterile mutants, replication is not restricted to sites of gene amplification, but rather occurs throughout the entire nucleus (Bosco et al., 2001; Royzman et al., 1999). One interpretation of these data is that follicle cells continue endocycles inappropriately, rather than switching to gene amplification. E2f female sterile mutants do not display this phenotype, suggesting the hypothesis that a E2F2/DP/RBF complex regulates the transition from endocycles to gene amplification in follicle cells. Our results indicate that deletion of E2f2 causes ectopic follicle cell genomic DNA replication at a stage when these cells should have terminated endocycles and begun gene amplification. As a consequence, gene amplification at the chorion loci is reduced, causing E2f2 mutant females to produce poorly viable eggs with a thin eggshell. However, in contrast to Rbf mutants, which fail to terminate endocycles and execute one additional endo S phase (Bosco et al., 2001), E2f2 mutant follicle cells exit the endocycle program on schedule and do not fully complete an additional endocycle S phase. This suggests that E2F2 acts during the gene amplification phase to restrict DNA synthesis to particular loci.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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E2F2 genetics and molecular biology
Df(2L)DS8 (Sinclair et al., 1980) was provided by Minx Fuller. Df(2L)TW161 (Wright et al., 1976) was provided by the BDGP. The Rbf alleles were provided by Terry Orr-Weaver (Bosco et al., 2001; Du and Dyson, 1999). The P-element insertion line l(2)16402 was obtained from the Szeged Drosophila melanogaster P Insertion Mutant Stock Centre. This line contained three P-element insertions, two on the second chromosome and one on the third chromosome. The insertion located just upstream of E2f2, designated l(2)16402a, was detected by PCR using primers from the E2f2 region and a primer, ITR, that hybridizes to P-element ends. A 600 bp fragment obtained from PCR using a E2f2 primer (BDO78, 5' TTCATGGCATGCGGACTA 3') and ITR (5' CGACGGGACCACCTTATGTTATT 3') was subcloned using the TOPOTM TA CLONING® KIT (Invitrogen) and sequenced. The other two P-element insertions in the original l(2)16402 line were separated from l(2)16402a by meiotic recombination.
P-element excision was begun by crossing yw67 l(2)16402a/CyO and yw67; Sco/CyO; 2,3 Sb/TM6 flies. Single progeny males of genotype l(2)16402a/CyO;
2,3 Sb/+ were crossed to yw67; Pin88k/CyO, and single, balanced w male progeny were backcrossed to yw67; Pin88k/CyO females to recover excision events. After mating, these same males were subjected to PCR using primers spanning the E2f2 locus. One excision line, Df(2L)E2f2329, produced a 650 nucleotide PCR product with PCB15 (5' GTTGCAGTGTAGCTATAGTCCTAA 3') and BDO78. This fragment was subcloned and sequenced to identify deletion breakpoints. Df(2L)1129 was generated by mobilizing P-element line l(2)07215 (Fig. 3). P-element mobilization events were generated as described above, with the exception that w+ individuals were selected instead of w. Df(2L)1129 was among 11 unidirectional deletions towards E2f2 that were identified as PCR negative with primers BDO95 (5' CAGTGAACAAGGTACATG 3') and ITR but PCR positive with BDO96 (5' TTAAGGTCCAGTAGCTTC 3') and ITR. BDO95 and BDO96 bind distal and proximal, respectively, to l(2)07215. Genomic DNA adjacent to the P-element was rescued from these 11 lines by inverse PCR and sequenced to identify deletion breakpoints.
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E2f2 null flies were of genotype yw67; Df(2L)E2f2329/Df(2L)E2f2329; P[E2f2; Mpp6+]/+. Rescued E2f2 null flies were generated similarly with the P[E2f2+; Mpp6+] transgene instead. Experiments involving the E2f21-188 allele used a recombinant chromosome containing Df(2L)DS8 and the transgene P[E2f21-188; Mpp-6+] in trans to either l(2)16402a or Df(2L)E2f2329.
Quantitative Southern hybridization
DNA isolated from 110 stage 13 egg chambers dissected from wild-type or E2f2 null females was digested with SalI and subjected to Southern blot analysis using a 3.8 kb SalI fragment from the third chromosome chorion gene cluster cloned into pT2 (kindly provided by Brian Calvi). An 8.3 kb HindIII genomic fragment containing the rosy gene (kindly provided by Jeff Sekelsky) was used as an unamplified control. Signal intensities were determined using a PhosphoImager. The relative intensity of the chorion locus signal between wild-type and mutant was compared by normalizing to the rosy signal.
BrdU labeling and antibody staining
Ovaries were dissected and labeled with BrdU as described previously (Lilly and Spradling, 1996). Anti-BrdU antibodies (Becton Dickinson) were detected in situ using Cy3- or rhodamine-conjugated goat anti-mouse secondary antibodies (Jackson). The DNA was stained with DAPI at a final concentration of 1µg/ml for 1 minute. For antibody staining, the ovaries were dissected in Schneiders medium, fixed in 6% formaldehyde (Sigma) for 15 minutes, washed twice with PBT and incubated with 10% normal goat serum in PBT for 30 minutes. Affinity-purified rabbit anti-ORC2 antibodies (kindly provided by Mike Botchan) (Pak et al., 1997), rabbit anti-ORC5 and anti-CDC45L serums (kindly provided by Sue Cotterill) (Loebel et al., 2000) were used at a dilution of 1:100. Rhodamine-conjugated goat anti-rabbit secondary antibodies (Jackson) were used to detect the primaries.
Nuclear isolation, flow cytometry and cell sorting
Ovarian nuclei were isolated from 40-50 females dissected in Schneiders medium as described previously (Lilly and Spradling, 1996), except that 100 ng/µl propidium iodide was used to detect DNA. Nuclei were stored on ice before analysis of ploidy using a Becton Dickinson FACScan. For analysis of intact follicle cells, 100 females/per experiment of genotype c323/+; Df(2L)E2f2329/E2f21-188; UAS-GFP/+ or c323/+; Df(2L)E2f2329/+; UAS-GFP/+ were dissected. Cell suspensions were prepared as described previously (Bryant et al., 1999), except that a 125 µm mesh was used to filter trypsinized tissue. Isolated follicle cells were stained with 2 µg/ml Hoechst 33342 for 45 minutes and stored on ice before FACS analysis and sorting using a MoFlo high-speed molecular flow cytometer. Ploidy was determined by excitation at 364 nm, and GFP-positive cells were sorted by excitation at 488 nm.
RT-PCR analysis
RNA was isolated from total follicle cell preparations using Trizol Reagent (GibcoBRL). For the detection of mRNA, equal amounts of total RNA were used in 50µl reverse transcription reactions using the Sigma Enhanced RT-PCR Kit, according to the manufacturers instructions. All PCR reactions took place over 40 cycles, except those for rp49 (RpL32 FlyBase) which lasted for 20 cycles. For quantification, a 10 µl sample was collected from each reaction at cycles 5, 10 and 15 for rp49 and at cycles 22, 25, and 30 for all other genes, and then subjected to electrophoresis through a 1.5% agarose gel. The following primers and annealing temperatures were used: ORC1 forward, 5' AAATTCACTTGGAGCAGCCGG 3' and ORC1 reverse, 5' TGGGTTCTTGTACGGCCTC 3' at 60°C; ORC2 forward, 5' TGGGCTCCAAGCACCAGCTG 3' and ORC2 reverse, 5' AGCAGCGAGTTCTCGAACGC 3' at 58°C; ORC5 forward, 5' TGGAACAGTTCGCCCAGG 3' and ORC5 reverse, 5' GTGCA-CTGCAGCCTAGCG 3' at 58°C; RNR2 (RNRS FlyBase) forward, 5' GTACCTGTTTAACGCTATCG 3' and RNR2 reverse, 5' AAACGGTCCGCTACGAAC 3' at 55°C; PCNA (MUS209 FlyBase) forward, 5' GGCATGAATCTGGGCAG 3' and PCNA reverse, 5' AGCGGAACATCTGCGCA 3' at 55°C; RP49 primers were purchased from OriGene Technologies and used at 55°C.
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RESULTS |
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In combination with the l(2)16402a and Df(2L)E2f2329 mutations, the genomic transgenes containing Mpp6 provided a way of engineering E2f2 mutant strains. Flies were generated that were homozygous for mutations of the E2f2 locus (e.g. Df(2L)E2f2329/Df(2L)E2f2329) and that also contained a transgene providing Mpp6 function. Two such transgenes were used for this purpose (Fig. 3A). The first, P[E2f2; Mpp6+], lacks E2f2 entirely and provided the null situation. This was confirmed by demonstrating that the single E2f2 mRNA species observed in wild-type ovary RNA preparations is not detected in the null mutant (Fig. 3B). The second transgene, P[E2f21-188; Mpp6+], contains a small internal deletion within exon 3 of the E2f2 gene that arose spontaneously during propagation of a plasmid in E. coli. This deletion causes a frameshift predicted to produce a truncated protein lacking the pRB binding domain located at the C terminus. As described above, E2F21-188 is capable of binding DP in a two hybrid assay (Fig. 1). However, the amount of mRNA expressed from E2f21-188 is substantially reduced relative to wild type (Fig. 3B). Together, these data suggest that E2f21-188 produces low levels of a protein capable of binding DP, but incapable of binding RBF.
Null mutants of E2f2 cause a severe reduction in female fertility
Flies that completely lack E2f2 or are hemizygous for the E2f21-188 allele eclose at near wild-type Mendelian frequency with no overt morphological defects, indicating that zygotic expression of E2f2 is not essential for development. While adult E2f2 mutant males are fully fertile, mutant females have significantly reduced fertility, suggesting that oogenesis is perturbed by loss of E2f2 function. The ovaries of E2f2 mutant females do not mature as rapidly as wild type after adult eclosion: late stage egg chambers are not visible in dissected mutant ovaries until 5 days after eclosion, compared with
1.5 days for wild type. After 6 days, the mutant females lay eggs at a rate similar to wild type. However, only 10% and 8% of eggs laid by Df(2L)E2f2329/Df(2L)E2f2329 and Df(2L)E2f2329/E2f21-188 females hatch, respectively. The latter phenotype is substantially rescued by a E2f2 transgene (Table 1). The eggs that do hatch are able to develop and produce viable adult flies. More than 90% of the eggs laid by E2f21-188/Df(2L)E2f2329 and Df(2L)E2f2329/Df(2L)E2f2329 females have a defective eggshell, or chorion (Fig. 4A-D; Table 2), and the null phenotype is rescued by a E2f2 transgene (Fig. 4E; Table 2). The mutant chorions appear far more translucent than the normally opaque wild-type chorion (Fig. 4A-D), which is indicative of a thin eggshell. The eggs are more fragile than wild type, and many appear collapsed.
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E2f2 mutants display inappropriate genomic replication in late stage follicle cells
The reduced chorion gene amplification in E2f2 mutant females suggests that E2F2 plays a role in the developmentally regulated cell cycle program in follicle cells. Moreover, female sterile alleles of Dp, E2f and Rbf, each cause follicle cell replication defects (Bosco et al., 2001; Royzman et al., 1999). DNA synthesis occurring during follicle cell endocycles and chorion gene amplification can be visualized in situ by BrdU pulse labeling of dissected ovaries (Calvi et al., 1998; Calvi and Spradling, 1999). By stage 10B of oogenesis in wild type (Fig. 5A,A'), all follicle cells have exited endoreduplication cycles and have begun chorion gene amplification. While follicle cell endocycles within each egg chamber are asynchronous, gene amplification occurs simultaneously throughout the epithelium (Calvi et al., 1998). Consequently, at stage 10B, BrdU incorporation is detected within every follicle cell in at least four subnuclear foci, the two largest of which correspond to the chorion gene clusters on chromosomes X and 3 (the others remain unidentified) (Calvi et al., 1998) (Fig. 5B). Gene amplification continues through stage 13 (7 hours older than stage 10B), at which point BrdU incorporation at the chromosome 3 chorion cluster predominates (Fig. 5B'). E2f2 mutant follicle cells have a very different profile of BrdU incorporation. In stage 10B and later Df(2L)E2f2329/Df(2L)E2f2329 or Df(2L)E2f2329/E2f21-188 egg chambers, BrdU incorporation was observed throughout the entire nucleus, rather than in the characteristic subnuclear foci (Fig. 5C,D, respectively). There was cell to cell variability in the intensity of ectopic genomic BrdU labeling at stage 10B, with some nuclei having quite little or no ectopic replication. This variability was slightly more pronounced in the E2f21-188 hemizygote nuclei compared with the Df(2L)E2f2329 deletion, suggesting that E2f21-188 is not null (compare Fig. 5C with 5D). By stage 13 every follicle cell nucleus in the null situation displayed intense genomic replication (Fig. 5C'). Similarly, the severity of the Df(2L)E2f2329/E2f21-188 phenotype increased by stage 13, but again there was more cell to cell variability in the intensity of labeling compared to E2f2 null cells (Fig. 5D'). Inclusion of a wild-type E2f2 transgene restores the aberrant BrdU incorporation pattern in Df(2L)E2f2329/Df(2L)E2f2329 egg chambers to normal (Fig. 5E,E'; Table 3). These data suggest that at the time DNA synthesis is normally restricted to chorion gene amplification, replication is instead occurring throughout the entire genome in the E2f2 mutant follicle cells.
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E2f2 mutant follicle cells do not complete an additional endo S phase
One possible cause of the ectopic genomic replication in stage 10B-13 E2f2 mutant egg chambers is that the cells inappropriately enter an additional endocycle in the later developmental stages. In this case, follicle cell ploidy should increase from 16C to 32C. This was observed in an Rbf female sterile mutant, which cytologically causes a similar BrdU incorporation phenotype to E2f2 mutants (Bosco et al., 2001) (Fig. 6E,F). FACS profiles of DAPI- or PI-stained nuclei isolated from whole ovaries have been previously used to determine follicle cell ploidy (Asano and Wharton, 1999; Bosco et al., 2001; Lilly and Spradling, 1996). Using this method, we were unable to distinguish a significant difference in the FACS profile between Df(2L)E2f2329/Df(2L)E2f2329 or Df(2L)E2f2329/E2f21-188 mutant nuclei and wild-type controls (Fig. 6A). Each profile contained four prominent peaks representing 2C-16C follicle cell nuclei (Lilly and Spradling, 1996). While a small 32C peak was occasionally observed in the mutants (Fig. 6B), it was not reproducible. Moreover, other cell types can lead to the appearance of a small 32C peak in some wild-type preparations (Fig. 6A). To circumvent these problems, we analyzed pure populations of follicle cells at stage 9 and beyond. This was achieved by FACS analysis of trypsin dissociated ovaries (Bryant et al., 1999) using a follicle cell-specific GAL4 driver (c323) (Manseau et al., 1997) to induce a UAS-GFP transgene. The driver is activated initially at stage 9 in wild-type egg chambers, and persists until the end of oogenesis (Calvi et al., 1998). Importantly, the expression of c323-induced GFP expression in E2f2 mutant egg chambers occurs during the same developmental stages as wild type (not shown). This indicates that mutation of E2f2 does not affect developmental control of the c323 driver, allowing us to compare directly ploidy values between the same population of wild-type and mutant follicle cells. Using this technique, wild-type 8C and 16C GFP-positive follicle cells were readily distinguished as a subset of the entire FACS profile obtained by staining the cells with the DNA binding dye Hoechst 33342 (Fig. 6C). Interestingly, in the Df(2L)E2f2329/E2f21-188 mutant profile there was no indication of a 32C cell population (Fig. 6D). By contrast, follicle cells isolated from Rbf120/Rbf14 mutant egg chambers clearly contain a 32C population that is not detected in wild type preparations (Fig. 6E,F). Taken together, these data indicate that the ectopic genomic BrdU incorporation seen in E2f2 mutant follicle cells does not result from an additional, complete endocycle S phase.
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DISCUSSION |
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Chorion gene amplification is characterized by the repeated firing of an origin of DNA replication within the chorion locus. The mechanisms by which chorion replication origins are repeatedly used while other origins are not, is unclear. Two general possibilities exist: either the assembly of the pre-RC required for initiating DNA synthesis is confined to sites of gene amplification, or pre-RC assembly occurs throughout the genome and initiation is confined to amplification sites. Two distinct phases of follicle cell gene amplification have been detected. The first phase occurs during endocycles, where at least the third chromosome chorion locus amplifies to low levels during each endo S phase (Calvi et al., 1998; Royzman et al., 1999). The second phase occurs synchronously during stage 10B at several loci, including both of the two chorion gene clusters, after the termination of endocycles (Calvi et al., 1998). E2f2 mutant egg chambers display defects in this second phase, failing to restrict DNA synthesis to amplification foci. This cellular phenotype is associated with an approximate halving in chorion gene copy number and production of eggs with a thin chorion. However, this apparent amplification defect is much less severe than other mutations (e.g. Orc2 and chiffon/dbf4), which virtually eliminate chorion gene amplification and cause a thin eggshell phenotype (Landis et al., 1997; Landis and Tower, 1999). Consequently, while a small reduction in chorion gene copy number caused by mutation of E2f2 could contribute somewhat to defective chorion biosynthesis, this may not be the sole cause of the observed chorion defects. Similarly, the reduced fertility of E2f2 mutant females may not result entirely from desiccation caused by a thin eggshell, owing to follicle cell defects. Although it is highly likely that the follicle cell replication defects are an indication that E2f2 activity is required in this cell type, E2f2 may play additional roles in the germline. Indeed, Dp mutants have germline defects that disrupt oogenesis (Myster et al., 2000; Royzman et al., 1999). Thus, determining the cellular basis for the reduced fertility of E2f2 mutant females will require an analysis of genetically mosaic ovaries.
Possible interpretations of the DNA synthesis phenotype depend on when during follicle cell development E2f2 primarily functions. If, for example, E2f2 acts during the endocycles, which in wild type generate cells with a 16C DNA content, then the ectopic replication in E2f2 mutants could represent the inappropriate continuation of endocycle S phase into late stages of oogenesis. Our data do not support this model, as we were unable to observe a mutant follicle cell population with a 32C or greater DNA content. In addition, the number and pattern of BrdU-positive nuclei in pre-stage 10B egg chambers is the same in mutant and wild type, including a cessation of endocycles just before the onset of gene amplification. This suggests that the early program of endocycles terminates on schedule in the E2f2 mutants. An alternative explanation for the E2f2 mutant phenotype is that endocycles are actually delayed relative to egg chamber stage. In this scenario, genomic DNA synthesis occurring at stages 10B and later would represent an endo S phase of cells with less than a 16C DNA content. Consequently, if genomic replication was delayed relative to morphological development, then when compared with wild type, a larger fraction of the GFP-positive cell population in E2f2 mutants should contain cells with less than a 16C DNA content, possibly including 4C cells. This is true because only those cells within stage 9 and older egg chambers in both mutant and wild type are GFP positive. We could find no evidence by FACS analysis of a GFP-positive 4C follicle cell population in E2f2 mutants, nor a reproducible increase in the number of cells with less than 16C DNA content compared with wild type. While we cannot rule out a minor delay in late endocycles, we currently favor the interpretation that the consequences of E2F2 function are manifested specifically during the synchronous phase of gene amplification either to prevent pre-RC assembly at ectopic locations or to confine firing to sites of amplification.
How might loss of E2f2 cause this? One possibility is that E2F2 is part of a transcription repressor complex, and that loss of E2f2 function leads to an increase in the expression of genes encoding limiting replication components. An increase in the level of Orc2 and Orc5 mRNA was detected by RT-PCR, suggesting that inappropriate DNA synthesis could be triggered by increased accumulation of pre-RC components. Consistent with this hypothesis, a two- to threefold increase in the expression of ORC1 using a heat shock promoter stimulates an ectopic genomic replication phenotype in follicle cells similar to that caused by mutation of E2f2 (Asano and Wharton, 1999). How an increased abundance of ORC proteins could trigger ectopic replication is not clear, but the observation fits a model in which limited assembly of pre-RC helps confine DNA synthesis to sites of gene amplification. Alternatively, E2f2 could positively regulate the expression of a specificity factor that acts to confine replication to sites of gene amplification. These questions could be addressed through comprehensive analyses of mRNA abundance between mutant and wild-type follicle cells.
There are alternatives to gene expression based models for modulation of DNA synthesis in follicle cells. E2F/DP/RBF complexes control the extent of chorion gene amplification (Bosco et al., 2001; Royzman et al., 1999), and may do so via a direct interaction with the pre-RC. E2F, DP and RBF co-immunoprecipitate with ORC2 (Bosco et al., 2001), and both E2F and ORC2 associate with chorion DNA in chromatin IP assays (Austin et al., 1999; Bosco et al., 2001). In addition, direct regulation of replication origins by chromatin bound pRB/E2F complexes may be conserved: in cultured primary mammalian cells, pRB, p107 and p130 are localized to sites of DNA synthesis early in S phase and may help control the nuclear organization of replication (Kennedy et al., 2000). Perhaps DNA-bound E2F2 controls the localization and/or assembly of replication factors at origins throughout the genome. Indeed, E2f2 is required for the proper localization of ORC2, ORC5 and CDC45L to amplification foci. However, it is difficult to distinguish whether mislocalization of replication factors is the cause, or simply a consequence, of the ectopic genomic replication seen in E2f2 mutant follicle cells. More definitive answers to these questions await the characterization of the location of the E2F2 protein within follicle cells, and whether it directly associates with replication factors.
Two pieces of evidence suggest that disruption of E2F2/DP/RBF complexes contributes to the phenotypes we report. First, E2f21-188 appears to be a loss of function allele, as it causes a phenotype very similar to complete deletion of E2f2. E2f21-188 produces a truncated protein capable of binding DP (Fig. 1) but lacking the RBF interaction domain, suggesting the possibility that much of the functions of E2F2 require association with an pRb family member. Second, Dp and Rbf female sterile alleles each cause a similar cytological phenotype in BrdU-labeled follicle cells to that seen by mutation of E2f2 (Bosco et al., 2001; Royzman et al., 1999). In each case ,genomic replication was observed at a stage when only gene amplification should be occurring. There are, however, notable differences between the E2f2, Rbf and Dp mutant phenotypes. The E2f2 null phenotype is 100% penetrant, whereas the Rbf and Dp follicle cell replication phenotypes are not fully penetrant (Bosco et al., 2001; Royzman et al., 1999). The difference in penetrance could be explained by partial loss of Dp and RBF function, as the Dp and Rbf alleles used in these experiments are hypomorphic (null alleles are zygotically lethal). But more significantly, the E2f2 and Rbf mutant FACS profiles are different. Bosco et al. (Bosco et al., 2001) detected a 32C population in nuclear preparations from Rbf mutant ovaries, which we have confirmed using analyses of isolated, intact follicle cells. We could not detect a 32C population of similar size relative to wild type in either nuclear or intact follicle cell preparations of E2f2 mutant ovaries. These data suggest that the BrdU labeling observed cytologically in E2f2 mutants does not represent an additional endocycle S phase, which is expected to generate a 32C peak. It is possible that the ectopic replication in the E2f2 mutants is actually much less than in the Rbf mutants, such that by the completion of oogenesis and egg laying a 32C ploidy value is never reached. As RBF can bind either E2F2 or E2F (Bosco et al., 2001; Du et al., 1996; Frolov et al., 2001), mutation of Rbf and E2f2 could have overlapping but distinct phenotypes, perhaps because each mutation would affect the distribution of cellular pRB/E2F complexes differently.
E2F, DP and RBF also play a role in establishing the extent of chorion gene amplification. Viable, hypomorphic mutations of E2f and Dp that encode proteins predicted to bind DNA poorly result in a decreased level of chorion gene amplification. By contrast, both a viable, hypomorphic allele of Rbf and the E2fi2 nonsense allele, which produces a truncated protein lacking the RBF-binding domain, cause an increase in chorion gene amplification (Bosco et al., 2001). These data suggest that E2F/DP stimulates gene amplification, whereas the E2F/DP/RBF complex attenuates it. Both E2f2 null and E2f21-188 (lacking the RBF binding domain) alleles cause similar phenotypes, including reduced chorion gene amplification. This could be because E2F2 function is mediated mostly, or even exclusively, via complexes with a pRb protein, in contrast to E2F. Moreover, the opposite amplification phenotypes caused by E2fi2 and E2f21-188 suggest a different role in amplification for the two wild-type proteins. One possibility is that loss of E2f2 indirectly affects gene amplification, perhaps because a limiting replication factor is used at multiple, ectopic replication origins, thereby reducing its availability for use at the chorion loci and interfering with efficient gene amplification. Alternatively, the lack of E2F2 could make more RBF available to bind E2F, thus driving the formation of excess E2F/DP/RBF complexes, which would limit the extent of gene amplification (Bosco et al., 2001).
Irrespective of the mechanism by which E2F2 regulates DNA replication in follicle cells, E2f2 is not absolutely required for much of Drosophila development. This is despite prominent E2f2 gene expression beginning at embryonic stages in cycling cells (both dividing and endocycling) and continuing throughout development (Sawado et al., 1998). E2f2 and E2f are the only two E2F-like genes in Drosophila (Adams et al., 2000), and the lack of an obvious phenotype in E2f2 single mutants is not due to redundancy with E2f. E2f is an essential gene (Duronio et al., 1995), with homozygous embryos hatching into slow growing larvae that die before pupation (Du, 2000; Royzman et al., 1997). The E2f lethal phase is due at least in part to E2F2 activity, as E2f E2f2 double mutant progeny grow at a normal rate and survive until mid- to late-pupal development (Frolov et al., 2001). This indicates that E2F and E2F2 perform opposing roles during development, and suggests that E2F2 acts to inhibit growth and cell cycle progression, but only when E2F is limiting or absent. Nevertheless, the ability of E2F2 to antagonize E2F is not absolutely essential. While E2F2 does in fact inhibit replication and cell cycle progression in other contexts, this function would be nonessential if it is redundant with other mechanisms that inhibit cell cycle progression during Drosophila development, such as the activation of CDK inhibitors (de Nooij et al., 1996; Foley and Sprenger, 2001; Lane et al., 1996; Sprenger et al., 1997; Thomas et al., 1994; Thomas et al., 1997), transcriptional downregulation (Du and Dyson, 1999; Li and Vaessin, 2000) or an increased rate of protein degradation (Reed and Orr-Weaver, 1997; Sigrist and Lehner, 1997). It follows from this model that the follicle cells specifically rely more heavily on E2F2 than other mechanisms to inhibit genomic DNA replication.
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