From the Combined Program in Pediatric
Gastroenterology and Nutrition, Massachusetts General Hospital East,
Charlestown, Masschusetts 02129 and the Programs in
§ Immunology and
Biological and Biomedical
Sciences, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115
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ABSTRACT |
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ADP-ribosylation factors (ARFs) constitute a
family of small monomeric GTPases. ARFs 1 and 3 function in the
recruitment of coat proteins to membranes of the Golgi apparatus,
whereas ARF6 is localized to the plasma membrane, where it appears to
modulate both the assembly of the actin cytoskeleton and endocytosis.
Like other GTPases, ARF activation is facilitated by specific guanine nucleotide exchange factors (GEFs). ARNO (ARF nucleotide-binding site
opener) is a member of a growing family of ARF-GEFs that share a
common, tripartite structure consisting of an N-terminal coiled-coil
domain, a central domain with homology to the yeast protein Sec7p, and
a C-terminal pleckstrin homology domain. Recently, ARNO and its close
homologue cytohesin-1 were found to catalyze in vitro
nucleotide exchange on ARF1 and ARF3, respectively, raising the
possibility that these GEFs function in the Golgi. However, the actual
function of these proteins may be determined in part by their ability
to interact with specific ARFs and in part by their subcellular
localization. We report here that in vitro ARNO can
stimulate nucleotide exchange on both ARF1 and ARF6. Furthermore, based
on subcellular fractionation and immunolocalization experiments, we
find that ARNO is localized to the plasma membrane in mammalian cells
rather than the Golgi. It is therefore likely that ARNO functions in
plasma membrane events by modulating the activity of ARF6 in
vivo. These findings are consistent with the previous observation
that cytohesin-1 regulates the adhesiveness of L
2 integrins at the plasma membrane of lymphocytes.
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INTRODUCTION |
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ADP-ribosylation factors (ARFs)1 are members of the Ras superfamily of small GTPases and key regulators of vesicle traffic in eukaryotic cells (1). ARF1, which is the best understood of the mammalian ARFs, functions in the recruitment of coat proteins to membranes of the Golgi apparatus, whereas ARF6, which is less well characterized, has been localized to the plasma membrane and endosomes where it may modulate some aspects of endocytosis (2-4), the actin cytoskeleton (5), or both.
Like other GTPases, ARFs cycle between inactive GDP- and active GTP-bound conformations. At physiological concentrations of Mg2+ ARF has little detectable GTPase activity and exchanges bound nucleotide very slowly. Completion of the GTPase cycle therefore requires interaction with GTPase-activating proteins and guanine-nucleotide exchange factors (GEFs). The identification of ARF1 GEFs was facilitated by the discovery that the fungal metabolite brefeldin A (BFA) disrupted Golgi trafficking by inhibiting a Golgi-associated ARF1 exchange factor (6, 7). Interestingly, whereas BFA caused a dramatic redistribution of intracellular ARF1 (8), it had no effect on ARF6 localization (2, 4), indicating that the GEFs responsible for the activation of these two ARFs were different. Several groups have now isolated BFA-sensitive exchange factors. These include a putative mammalian homologue of yeast Sec7p (9), a protein required for ER to Golgi and intra-Golgi transport, and the yeast proteins Gea1p and Gea2p (10). Consistent with their role in ARF1 activation, Gea1p and Gea2p regulate the movement of vesicles between ER and Golgi compartments (10).
In contrast to these BFA-sensitive GEFs, another family of mammalian
proteins with BFA-insensitive catalytic activity has recently been
identified. Cytohesin-1, first characterized as a regulatory factor for
L
2 integrin in lymphocytes (11), has subsequently
been shown to catalyze nucleotide exchange on ARF3 and to promote its
recruitment to Golgi membranes in vitro (12). ARNO (ARF
nucleotide-binding site opener), is 83% homologous to cytohesin-1 and
efficiently catalyzes exchange on ARF1 (13). Although cytohesin-1
expression appears to be limited to hematopoietic cells, ARNO is more
ubiquitously expressed (11).2
Additional ARNO/cytohesin-1 family members have been described including the phosphoinositide-binding protein, GRP-1 (14), and the
Caenorhabditis elegans open reading frame, KO6H7 (15); however, the ability of these related proteins to stimulate ARF nucleotide exchange has not been evaluated. This family is
characterized by a unique domain structure that consists of an
N-terminal coiled-coil domain, a central domain with homology to yeast
Sec7p, and a C-terminal pleckstrin homology (PH) domain. The catalytic
activity of ARNO has been localized to the region of Sec7 homology
(referred to as the Sec7 domain) and appears to be positively regulated
by interaction of the PH domain with inositol phospholipids (13). Based
on this combination of BFA insensitivity and the reported effects of
cytohesin-1 on cell adhesion, we hypothesized that the ARNO/cytohesin-1
family of proteins would function in vivo in the activation
of ARF6 rather than ARF1. However, neither the subcellular localization
nor the interaction of these proteins with ARF6 has been analyzed. In
this report, we demonstrate that ARNO does not associate with the Golgi
apparatus but localizes instead to the plasma membrane. Moreover, we
show that the distribution of ARNO overlaps with that of ARF6 in
vivo and that ARNO catalyzes GTP loading of ARF6 in
vitro. These data are consistent with a role for ARNO in the
BFA-resistant activation of ARF6 at the plasma membrane.
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EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES |
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cDNA Cloning of ARNO
Poly(A)+ RNA isolated from CaCo-2 cells was reverse transcribed, and degenerate oligonucleotide mixtures corresponding to regions of identity among previously reported Sec7 domains were then used to amplify sequences encoding this domain. Two products were identified that encoded Sec7 domains, one corresponding to the previously reported cDNA B2-1 (16) (later renamed cytohesin-1; Ref. 11) and the other encoding a novel sequence. This second product was used as a probe to screen a human fetal brain cDNA library (Uni-ZAP XR, Stratagene, La Jolla, CA). Five positive clones were isolated, the longest of which encoded a protein with 83% sequence identity to cytohesin-1. This sequence was submitted to GenBankTM under the name cytohesin-2 (accession number U70728) and was subsequently found to be identical to that reported for ARNO (13).
Antibodies and Reagents
Rabbit polyclonal anti-ARNO antisera were produced in New Zealand White rabbits by the Pocono Rabbit Farm and Laboratory (Canadensis, PA). Antisera were affinity purified by passage over a GST-ARNO affinity column.
Polyclonal anti-ARF6 antibody was kindly provided by Victor Hsu (Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, MA), and anti-ARF1 antibody was provided by Paul Melançon (University of Alberta). The monoclonal antibody 9E10 was used to detect myc-tagged ARNO in all immunofluorescence experiments. Bacteria expressing GST-cytohesin-1 were obtained from Stephen Deitz and Alex Franzusoff (University of Colorado, Denver, CO). Recombinant, myristoylated ARFs were provided by Jennifer Liang and Stuart Kornfeld (Washington University, St. Louis, MO), and recombinant ras, rhoA, and rac were provided by Jeff Settleman (Massachusetts General Hospital Cancer Center).
Cell Culture and Transient Transfection
BHK-21, NRK, CaCo-2, and HEp-2 cells were grown in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium supplemented with 10% fetal calf serum and antibiotics. HeLa cells were grown in the same medium supplemented with 2 mM L-glutamine.
For transient transfection, BHK cells in 6-well plates (1-2 × 105 cells/well) were transfected with 2 µg of plasmid using Lipofectase reagent (Life Technologies, Inc.). HeLa cells were transfected using the calcium phosphate method.
Subcellular Fractionation and Marker Enzyme Analysis
Analysis of Cytosol and Total Membranes-- Separation of cells into membrane and cytosolic fractions was performed essentially as described by Hansen and Casanova (17), and ARNO was immunoprecipitated from detergent-solubilized fractions using anti-ARNO antiserum covalently coupled to protein A-Sepharose. Samples were resolved by 10% SDS-PAGE, transferred to nitrocellulose, and probed with affinity purified anti-ARNO antibody.
Analysis of Linear Density Gradients-- Density gradient centrifugation of BHK cell membranes was performed essentially as described (18). Briefly, cells from 10 subconfluent 100-mm plastic dishes were homogenized, and the membrane fraction was layered on top of continuous iodixanol density gradients (2.5-25% w/v OptiPrepTM; Life Technologies, Inc.). Gradients (35 ml) were centrifuged for 3 h at rmax 130,000 × g (27K in SW28 rotor) and fractionated into 2-ml samples, starting from the top. For Western blotting, gradient fractions were first concentrated by trichloroacetic acid precipitation, with 25 µg/ml bovine serum albumin added as carrier. Samples were resolved by 10% SDS-PAGE and immunoblotted using ARNO antiserum (1:500), rabbit anti-Na+,K+-ATPase (1:1000; gift of Dr. Guido Guidotti, Harvard University), or monoclonal anti-EEA1 (1:2000; Transduction Laboratories, Lexington, KY). Marker enzyme assays were performed essentially as described (18) using 4-methylumbelliferone-conjugated substrates (Sigma).
Indirect Immunofluorescence
30-36 h after transfection, cells on glass coverslips were fixed with 2% paraformaldehyde, permeabilized with cold methanol, and preincubated in blocking buffer (phosphate-buffered saline/10% normal goat serum/0.2% saponin). Coverslips were then incubated with primary antibody diluted in blocking buffer for 30 min, followed by the appropriate secondary antibody for 30 min.
GEF Assays
Nucleotide exchange assays were performed essentially as
described by Chardin et al. (13). Briefly, recombinant,
myristoylated ARF was diluted to a final concentration of 1 µM into reaction buffer containing 50 mM
Hepes, pH 7.5, 1 mM MgCl2, 100 mM
KCl, 1 mM dithiothreitol, 4 µM
[35S]GTPS (~3 × 106 cpm), and 1.5 mg/ml azolectin vesicles as a source of lipid. Reactions were initiated
by addition of 50 nM His6-ARNO and continued for 3 min at 37 °C. Reactions containing ARF1 (20% myristoylated) and ARF6 (50% myristoylated) were normalized to contain 1 µM myristoylated ARF. Control experiments with
nonmyristoylated ARFs demonstrated that the nonmyristoylated fraction
bound negligible amounts of [35S]GTP
S over the time
course of the assay.
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RESULTS |
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Preparation and Characterization of Anti-ARNO Antisera-- To facilitate the analysis of endogenous ARNO in mammalian cells, polyclonal antisera were raised in rabbits. His6-tagged recombinant human ARNO was used as antigen, and antisera were subsequently affinity purified by adsorption to a GST-ARNO fusion. The specificity of affinity purified antibody was tested by Western blot analysis using GST-ARNO and GST-cytohesin-1. Surprisingly, although ARNO and cytohesin-1 share 83% sequence identity, affinity purified anti-ARNO antibody recognized GST-ARNO but did not react with GST-cytohesin-1 (Fig. 1a). The same antibody detected a single polypeptide species of 47 kDa in a total lysate of the human cell line Hep2 (not shown), precisely the size predicted by the ARNO coding sequence. The lack of cross-reactivity with cytohesin-1 indicates that this band represents the product of the ARNO gene. It should be noted that the level of endogenous ARNO expression is very low in all cell lines tested.
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ARNO Exists in Both Cytoplasmic and Membrane-bound Pools-- To determine the subcellular distribution of endogenous ARNO, homogenates of several cell lines (HEp2, BHK-21, HeLa, NRK, and CaCo-2) were separated into membrane and cytosolic fractions by centrifugation at 100,000 × g. Each sample was then immunoprecipitated with anti-ARNO antiserum to concentrate the antigen, resolved by SDS-PAGE, and then immunoblotted using affinity purified ARNO antibody. As shown in Fig. 1b, endogenous ARNO can be identified in both cytosolic and membrane fractions in each cell line tested, suggesting that it may cycle on and off the appropriate membrane in response to cellular signals. However, the membrane-bound fraction varied among cell lines from 10% in HeLa to ~50% in the human epithelial line CaCo-2.
Endogenous ARNO Does Not Cofractionate with Golgi Membranes by
Density Gradient Centrifugation--
To further define the subcellular
distribution of endogenous ARNO, a postnuclear membrane pellet from
BHK-21 cells was resolved by centrifugation through continuous
Iodixanol gradients (2.5-25% OptiPrepTM). Gradients were
fractionated from the top, and samples were taken for marker enzyme
analysis or Western blotting using the markers described below. As
shown in Fig. 2a, Golgi
membranes (as defined by mannosidase II activity) were recovered in
fractions 6-11, peaking at fraction 9, whereas ER membranes (as
defined by -glucosidase activity) peaked at fractions 12-14.
Surprisingly, endogenous ARNO did not cofractionate with Golgi
membranes but was instead recovered in the lighter membrane fractions
2-8 (Fig. 2b, fraction 1 is the load zone). This
distribution overlaps with that of the plasma membrane marker
Na+,K+-ATPase but extends deeper into the
gradient. This more diffuse distribution may reflect the association of
ARNO with membranes other than those derived from the plasma membrane,
although the morphological data described below suggest that this is
not the case. Alternatively, Na+,K+-ATPase may
be localized to a distinct subset of plasma membrane-derived vesicles,
whereas ARNO is less restricted in its distribution. Clearly, however,
ARNO does not associate with Golgi membranes, as would be expected for
an ARF1-GEF. Neither does it appear to associate with early endosomal
membranes (defined by EEA-1 staining), which have also been reported to
contain coatomer components (19). These data combine to suggest that
ARNO may actually function at the plasma membrane as an exchange factor
for ARF6 rather than ARF1.
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Localization of ARNO in Transfected Cells-- To confirm the association of ARNO with the plasma membrane, indirect immunofluorescence microscopy was used to localize the protein in intact cells. However, initial attempts to detect the endogenous protein in a variety of cell lines were unsuccessful due to the low level of expression. Therefore ARNO was transiently expressed in either BHK or HeLa cells using the pCB7 vector, which utilizes a cytomegalovirus promoter (20). To facilitate double-labeling studies, this construct was modified with a c-myc epitope tag at the N terminus. In agreement with the fractionation studies described above, immunostaining of cells expressing myc-tagged ARNO revealed a primarily cytosolic distribution (Fig. 3a, HeLa cells, and Fig. 3b, BHK cells). However, membrane staining was clearly observed at the extreme periphery of most cells, particularly in lamellar extensions and protrusive structures (arrowheads). No concentration of ARNO was observed in the perinuclear region, suggesting that even when overexpressed little of the protein associates with Golgi membranes in intact cells.
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ARNO Catalyzes Nucleotide Exchange on Both ARF1 and ARF6 in
Vitro--
ARNO has previously been shown to catalyze guanine
nucleotide exchange on ARF1 in vitro. To determine if ARF6
is also a substrate for this enzyme, binding of
[35S]GTPS was assayed in the presence of 50 nM recombinant His6-tagged ARNO. Reaction
conditions were similar to those described by Chardin et al.
(13) and are described under "Experimental Procedures." Recombinant, myristoylated ARF1 (20% myristoylated) and ARF6 (50% myristoylated) were used at a final concentration of 1 µM
myristoylated ARF.
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DISCUSSION |
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ARNO has been shown by Chardin et al. to function as a guanine nucleotide exchange factor for ARF1 in vitro (13). These authors also localized the catalytic activity of the protein to the Sec7 domain and demonstrated that the C-terminal PH domain positively regulates nucleotide exchange in response to binding of inositol polyphosphates. However, no other ARFs were tested as potential substrates, and the subcellular localization of ARNO was not examined.
In this study we provide several lines of evidence supporting a role for ARNO as a GEF for ARF6 rather than ARF1 in vivo. First, endogenous ARNO does not cofractionate with Golgi markers by density gradient centrifugation but instead associates with light membrane fractions enriched in plasma membrane. Second, ARNO is readily observed at plasma membrane sites by immunofluorescence microscopy but does not appear to concentrate in the Golgi region of transfected cells. Moreover, ARNO and ARF6 appear to colocalize in doubly transfected BHK cells. Third, we found that ARNO was capable of catalyzing nucleotide exchange on ARF6 in the presence of acidic phospholipids. In contrast, ARNO did not detectably enhance nucleotide exchange on ras, rac, or rhoA (data not shown). Combined with previous findings that the ARF-related GTPase ARL3 is also not a substrate (13), these data indicate that ARNO is highly specific for members of the ARF family. We have subsequently found that the ARNO homologue, cytohesin-1, shows in vitro substrate specificity that is identical to that of ARNO (not shown).
Several other ARF-GEFs have recently been identified, each of which contains a Sec7 domain. In yeast, genetic screens have identified two large (160 kDa), closely related proteins named Gea1p and Gea2p (10), which were shown to catalyze nucleotide exchange on ARF1 in vitro. Importantly, mutant gea1 yeast strains exhibit temperature-sensitive defects in ER to Golgi transport, indicating that Gea1p functions in the Golgi in vivo. Moreover, the catalytic activity of Gea1p is sensitive to BFA, suggesting that it may be a yeast homologue of a mammalian BFA-sensitive, Golgi-associated ARF-GEF. Such a protein has recently been identified and shares significant sequence homology with both Gea1p and Gea2p.3 Yeast Sec7p is also necessary for ER to Golgi and intra-Golgi transport and has been found to exhibit genetic interactions with ARF (22-25). Although the catalytic activity of yeast Sec7p has yet to be tested directly, a putative 200-kDa bovine Sec7p homologue has been isolated and partially characterized (9). This protein is BFA-sensitive and can apparently utilize ARF1 and ARF3 but not ARF5 as substrates for nucleotide exchange. Except for the ~200-amino acid Sec7 domain, Sec7p (which is 230 kDa) shares little additional homology with Gea1p or Gea2p. In addition, Gea1p expression is unable to suppress the sec7 growth defect, nor can SEC7 rescue gea1 mutant growth (10). Therefore, despite the fact that these proteins share a common ARF-GEF catalytic domain, they have distinct and nonoverlapping functions in vivo that are presumably dictated by sequences outside the Sec7 domain.
In contrast to these large Golgi GEFs, our data indicate that the ARNO/cytohesin-1 family is likely to function in the activation of ARF6 rather than ARF1. The precise function of ARF6 at the plasma membrane is as yet unclear; however, pronounced effects of ARF6 activation on the cortical actin cytoskeleton have been observed (5, 26). Overexpression of constitutively active ARF6 (ARF6Q67L) results in rounding of the cells and the formation of deep invaginations of the plasma membrane (2). In addition, Donaldson and colleagues have shown that acute treatment of ARF6-expressing cells with aluminum fluoride (which is thought to inhibit the activity of one or more ARF-GTPase-activating proteins) leads to the assembly of actin into protrusive membrane structures (5). These authors have also found that treatment of cells with the actin-depolymerizing drug cytochalasin D results in redistribution of ARF6 from the plasma membrane to novel endosomal structures (27). Taken together, these data suggest that ARF6 may regulate the assembly of cortical actin in a manner similar to the rhoA family GTPases rhoA, rac, and cdc42 (28). In fact, recent evidence suggests that ARF6 and rac1 share at least one common downstream effector, POR1. Expression of POR1 mutants inhibits the cytoskeletal rearrangements induced by either activated rac1 or ARF6 (26).
As described above, members of the ARNO/cytohesin-1 family contain a C-terminal PH domain, which appears to be a common feature of GEFs. Exchange factors specific for ras (sos), rac (tiam-1), rhoA (dbl), and cdc42 (cdc24), to name a few, all contain PH domains that are apparently required for their activity (29). The PH domain of ARNO has been shown to mediate the enhancement of GEF activity in the presence of polyphosphoinositides (13). Inclusion of PtdIns-4,5-P2 in phospholipid vesicles both increased the binding of ARNO to the vesicles and significantly stimulated nucleotide exchange activity. Whether this is simply a mechanism for bringing ARNO into close proximity to membrane-bound ARF6 or induces a conformational change resulting in enhanced catalysis remains to be determined. Recently, both cytohesin-1 and GRP-1 have been found to bind PtdIns-3,4,5-P3 in preference to PtdIns-4,5-P2 in vitro (14), and because the PH domain of ARNO is nearly identical in sequence to those of cytohesin-1 and GRP-1, it is likely that all three proteins share the same lipid specificity. PtdIns-3,4,5-P3, which is normally present at low levels in resting cells, is produced acutely in response to receptor-activated PI 3-kinases, raising the intriguing possibility that ARNO/cytohesin/GRP1 (and subsequently ARF6) may be subject to regulation by extracellular signals.
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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We thank Victor Hsu and Paul Melançon for antibodies, Alex Franzusoff and Jeff Settleman for recombinant proteins, and Jenny Liang and Stuart Kornfeld for myristoylated ARFs. We also thank Drs. Bobby Cherayil and Lorraine Santy for careful reading of the manuscript and Dr. Dennis Brown for the use of the imaging facilities of the morphology core of the Massachusetts General Hospital Center for the Study of Imflammatory Disease.
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FOOTNOTES |
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* The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
The nucleotide sequence(s) reported in this paper has been submitted to the GenBankTM/EMBL Data Bank with accession number(s) U70728.
¶ Supported by a predoctoral training grant to the Harvard University Program in Immunology.
** Supported by National Institutes of Health Grants AI32991 and DK33506 and a gift from the Good Samaritan Foundation. To whom correspondence should be addressed: Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition, Massachusetts General Hospital East, 149 13th St., Charlestown, MA 02129. Tel.: 617-726-4173; Fax: 617-726-4172.
1
The abbreviations used are: ARF,
ADP-ribosylation factor; GEF, guanine nucleotide exchange factor; PH,
pleckstrin homology; GST, glutathione S-transferase;
GTPS, guanosine 5
-(
-thio)triphosphate; PtdIns-4,5-P2, phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate;
PtdIns-3,4,5-P2, phosphatidylinositol 3,4,5-trisphosphate;
BFA, brefeldin A; ER, endoplasmic reticulum; PAGE, polyacrylamide gel
electrophoresis; BHK, baby hamster kidney.
2 S. Frank, unpublished data.
3 P. Melançon, personal communication.
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REFERENCES |
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