Department of Molecular Biology, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey 08544-1014
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Abstract |
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FUS7 was previously identified by a mutation that causes a defect in cell fusion in a screen for bilateral mating defects. Here we show that FUS7 is allelic to RVS161/END6, a gene implicated in a variety of processes including viability after starvation, endocytosis, and actin cytoskeletal organization. Two lines of evidence indicate that RVS161/END6's endocytic function is not required for cell fusion. First, several other endocytic mutants showed no cell fusion defects. Second, we isolated five function-specific alleles of RVS161/FUS7 that were defective for endocytosis, but not mating, and three alleles that were defective for cell fusion but not endocytosis. The organization of the actin cytoskeleton was normal in the cell fusion mutants, indicating that Rvs161p's function in cell fusion is independent of actin organization. The three to fourfold induction of RVS161 by mating pheromone and the localization of Rvs161p-GFP to the cell fusion zone suggested that Rvs161p plays a direct role in cell fusion. The phenotypes of double mutants, the coprecipitation of Rvs161p and Fus2p, and the fact that the stability of Fus2p was strongly dependent on Rvs161p's mating function lead to the conclusion that Rvs161p is required to interact with Fus2p for efficient cell fusion.
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Introduction |
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CELL fusion is the process by which the plasma membranes of two cells fuse to establish cytoplasmic
continuity. The fusion of egg and sperm to form a
zygote and the fusion of muscle cell precursors to generate
multinucleate syncytia of muscle fibers are two examples
wherein cell fusion is a key process. The mating pathway
in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae is an excellent system in which to study cell fusion (for reviews see Konopka and Fields, 1992; Sprague and Thorner, 1992
; Herskowitz,
1995
; Marsh and Rose, 1997
). Each haploid cell produces a
mating type-specific pheromone (a-factor or
-factor) and
expresses a surface receptor that is able to bind the pheromone secreted by the opposite cell type. Binding of the
pheromone to the receptor activates a mitogen-activated
protein (MAP)1 kinase signal transduction pathway leading to G1 cell cycle arrest and to the transcriptional induction of several genes required for efficient mating (e.g.,
STE2, STE3, MFA1, MFA2, STE6, FUS1, FUS2, KAR3,
KAR4 and CIK1). Cells initiate directional cell growth toward the mating partner, resulting in development of a
mating projection sometimes called a shmoo. After contact between the partner cells is achieved, cell fusion occurs between them, establishing cytoplasmic continuity.
Finally, the nuclei are brought together via microtubule-dependent movement, and the nuclear membranes fuse at
the spindle pole body to form a single diploid nucleus (Rose, 1991
; Rose, 1996
; Marsh and Rose, 1997
).
In contrast to our general understanding of the early
steps leading to cell-cell contact and the late steps of nuclear fusion, little is known about the mechanism and regulation of cell fusion. To fuse, the partner cells must establish cell-cell contact, seal the junction area, remove the
intervening cell wall, and finally fuse the two plasma membranes. Initial cell contact between mating partners is mediated by the cell surface agglutinins (Lipke and Kurjan,
1992), followed by irreversible attachment of cell walls and
formation of a seal resistant to osmotic pressure at the periphery of cell contact. Electron microscopy showed that
soon after cell contact is established, removal of the intervening cell wall starts with a thinning of the cell walls in
the middle point of the contact region and proceeds gradually toward the edges (Osumi et al., 1974
; Gammie et al.,
1998
). In addition, we also observed the presence of vesicles tightly aligned with respect to each other on either
side of the cell fusion zone (Gammie et al., 1998
). However, the molecular mechanism by which the intervening
cell wall is removed as well as the fusion machinery that
mediates the plasma membrane fusion process still remains largely unknown. It seems likely that localized release of cell wall-degrading enzymes at the site of cell contact contributes to removal of the intervening cell wall. In
addition, portions of the cell wall material could be removed by endocytosis. Given the likely changes that occur
to the cell wall during fusion, it is reasonable to think that
inappropriate activation of the cell fusion machinery could
be hazardous for the cells. Therefore, it is likely that a
mechanism must exist to regulate the onset of cell fusion
during mating. However, the nature of this regulation is
not fully understood.
Several cell fusion mutants have been identified in
which zygote formation is blocked after cell-cell contact,
but before removal of the intervening cell wall. The characterization of one group of mutants (including, fus3, fus5/
AXL1, fus8/RAM1, cef1/STE6, and fps1) has given some
clues regarding the signal and/or regulation for cell fusion
(Elion et al., 1990; Brizzio et al., 1996
; Elia and Marsh,
1996
; Philips and Herskowitz, 1997
). Based on the study of
FUS5/AXL1 and FUS8/RAM1, two genes involved in processing a-factor, we proposed that high levels of pheromone are required to promote cell fusion (Brizzio et al., 1996
). Interestingly, mutations in FUS3, a MAP kinase
with several functions in the pheromone response pathway, also result in cell fusion defects. These results suggest
direct involvement of the MAP kinase pathway in regulating cell fusion (Elion et al., 1990
; Elion et al., 1993
). However, even in the presence of excess amounts of mating
pheromone, cells do not become osmotically sensitive. Therefore, some aspect of cell fusion seems to be triggered
by the presence of the partner cell once contact between
the two mating cells is achieved. Philips and Herskowitz
(1997)
proposed the existence of a checkpoint for cell fusion mediated by the protein kinase C (PKC) pathway
based on the study of cells defective in the glycerol transporter FPS1 (Philips and Herskowitz, 1997
). In this model,
activation of the PKC pathway inhibits cell wall degradation of pheromone-stimulated cells until cell-cell contact is achieved (Philips and Herskowitz, 1997
).
Mutations in several genes involved in cell polarity and/
or actin cytoskeleton reorganization also lead to cell fusion defects (TMP1, BNI1, PEA2, and SPA2). These results suggest that cell fusion depends on the cells' ability to
polarize efficiently (Liu and Bretscher, 1992; Dorer et al.,
1997
; Gammie et al., 1998
). In addition, mutations in
CHS5 required to target the catalytic subunit of chitin synthase III to sites of polarized growth were also shown to
result in cell fusion defects (Dorer et al., 1997
; Santos et al.,
1997
). Finally, mutations in FUS1 and FUS2 result in zygotes with a strong defect in cell fusion (McCaffrey et al., 1987
; Truehart et al., 1987; Berlin et al., 1991
). In contrast to the rest of the genes mentioned here, FUS1 and FUS2
seem to be specifically required for cell fusion. Both genes
are strongly induced by pheromone, and mutations in
these genes do not cause mutant phenotypes other than
prezygote accumulation. Fus1p is an O-glycosylated type I
membrane protein that localizes to the shmoo projection
(Truehart and Fink, 1989). Fus2p is also tightly associated
with membranes or insoluble particles, and localizes to
punctate structures under the surface of the shmoo projection (Elion et al., 1995
). Both proteins localize to the cell
fusion zone, suggesting a direct role in cell fusion (Truehart and Fink, 1989; Elion et al., 1995
). Fus1p and Fus2p
may function in parallel pathways since fus1
fus2
double mutant strains are more defective for cell fusion than
either single mutant alone (Truehart et al., 1987). However, overexpression of either gene can partially compensate for the absence of the other (Truehart et al., 1987). Interactions between Fus1p and Fus2p and other cell fusion
genes have not been described, and the exact role of these
proteins in cell fusion is not known.
In this paper, we show that FUS7 is identical to RVS161, a gene previously implicated in endocytosis, organization of the actin cytoskeleton, and a variety of other cellular functions. However, we found that RVS161 is likely to play a direct role in cell fusion that it is different from both its role in endocytosis and in actin organization. We also found that Rvs161p is induced by mating pheromone and localized to the cell fusion zone. Genetically, Rvs161p and Fus2p appear to act in the same pathway. Rvs161p and Fus2p are components of the same complex, and Rvs161p is required for Fus2p's stability. This is the first example of a physical interaction between two components of the cell fusion pathway.
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Materials and Methods |
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Microbial Techniques, General Methods, and Strains
Yeast media and genetic techniques were as described previously (Rose et al.,
1990). Yeast and Escherichia coli plasmid DNA minipreps were performed as described elsewhere (Rose et al., 1990
). Yeast transformations
were done by the lithium acetate method (Ito et al., 1993).
Limited plate matings were performed as described previously (Brizzio
et al., 1996). In brief, patches of cells were replica-printed onto prewarmed yeast extract/peptone/dextrose (YEPD) plates containing lawns
of the opposite mating type. The mating plates were incubated at 30°C for
2.5-3 h, followed by replica printing to appropriate media to select for diploids. Filter matings for the microscopic analysis of zygotes were performed essentially as described previously (Brizzio et al., 1996
). 1 ml of
each of the MATa and MAT
strain in the early exponential phase of
growth was filtered together onto 0.45-µm nitrocellulose filter discs (Millipore Corp., Bedford, MA). The filters were placed cell-side up onto a
YEPD plate and incubated at 30°C for 2.5-3 h. The mating mixtures were
fixed in methanol/acetic acid (3:1) for 60 min on ice, and then washed several times in PBS. The cells were stained with DAPI (4', 6'-diamidino-2-phenylindole; 1 mg/ml in PBS) for 5 min and washed once with PBS. The mating mixtures were then examined by differential interference contrast (DIC) and fluorescence microscopy using an Axiophot microscope (Carl
Zeiss Inc., Thornwood, NY).
Isolation of yeast RNA for Northern analysis was done as described
previously (Kurihara et al., 1996). Northern blots were performed as described elsewhere (Rose et al., 1990
). We used a 878-bp SalI/SacII restriction fragment from pMR3151 to detect RVS161 mRNA and a 280-bp HindIII/EcoRI fragment to detect ACT1 mRNA.
The strains used in this study are listed in Table I. Unless stated otherwise, all strains are isogenic to S288C.
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Strain Construction and Plasmids
To generate an rvs161 allele (rvs161-
1::LEU2), plasmid pMR3245 (Fig. 1)
was constructed by cloning a 270-bp HpaI/PstI and a 397-bp HindIII/HpaI
restriction fragment from pMR3234 and pMR3151, respectively, into the
pRS405 YIp-LEU2 vector (Sikorski and Hieter, 1989
) cut with PstI/HindIII. Plasmid pMR3245 was then linearized with HpaI before transformation of MY2792. This construct results in an 800-bp deletion that removes
the RVS161 promoter region and 207 amino acids of the RVS161 coding
region, leaving 58 COOH-terminal amino acids. Confirmation of the
rvs161
(MY3905) was done by PCR analysis using the following primers:
RVS161U: ATA TGT ACT GGC TCG TCC; RVS161D: GGC TGA
TTA CGG ATC ACG; and T3 and T7 from the pBluescript polylinker region. The MATa rvs161-
1::LEU2 (MY3909) was generated by crossing
strains MY3905 and MY2788. An analogous construct, pMR3234, designed to generate a rvs161
marked with URA3, rvs161-
2::URA3, was
made by subcloning the 270-bp HpaI/PstI and the 397-bp HindIII/HpaI
into pRS406 YIp-URA3 vector (Sikorski and Hieter, 1989
). Plasmid
pMR3234 was linearized with HpaI before transformation of JY428 and
JY424. Confirmation of the rvs161
was done by PCR as described above.
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The rvs167-1::HIS3 strains (MY4533 and MY4535) were generated by
PCR. Primers RVS167HISU: CTG ACT AAA TTA TCA ATC CGA
CCG ATG TTC GGA TGT TGC GCG TTT TAA GAG CTT GGT
GAG; and RVS167HISD: ATA GAA GGT AAT GAA TAC AGA
GGG ATG CAG GGG CCT CCT CAT CCG TCG AGT TCA AGA
GAA; having 40 bases of homology to 5' and 3' regions of RVS167, and 20 bp homologous to HIS3, were used to amplify the HIS3 gene from
pRS403 (Sikorski and Hieter, 1989
). This PCR fragment was then used to
transform MY4500 and MY4529 to create the rvs167-
1::HIS3 allele by
gene replacement. Confirmation of the rvs167
::HIS3 allele was done by
PCR using the following primers: RVS167U: TCC GAC GCT TGT ACT
GG; RVS167D: ACG GAA GGA CTG AGG AG; and HIS3D: GGC
AGT GAC TCC TAG CG.
Generation of fus1-1 in the rvs161
strains MY4905 and MY4907 was
done by two-step gene replacement (Scherer and Davis, 1979
). Plasmid
pSB281 (gift from G. Fink, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA) was linearized with KpnI and used to transform MY3909 and
MY4495. Confirmation of the fus1
was done by PCR as described (Gammie et al., 1998
).
The mutation end6-1 was recovered by gap repair (Rothstein, 1991).
Plasmid pMR3149 (Fig. 1) digested with SacII/Bsu36I was used to transform RH2079, and transformants were selected on synthetic complete media lacking uracil. Plasmids were recovered from several transformants
and introduced in Escherichia coli. Plasmid pMR3550 containing the
end6-1 mutation was then transformed into a rvs161
strain (MY3909).
The phenotype of end6-1 was checked by inability to grow on yeast extract/peptone/glycerol (YPG) and YEPD + NaCl (yeast extract/peptone/
dextrose containing 1 M NaCl).
Generation of pMR3510 (containing the RVS161-GFP fusion) was
done by cloning a 750-bp PCR fragment encoding GFP into the 3' region
of RVS161. Primer GFPAvaIU: GCG CTC GGG ATA AAA AAG ATG AGT AAA GGA GAA G; and primer GFPAvaID: CGC CCC GAG
TTA TTT GTA TAG TTC ATC CAT G; were used to amplify GFP. The
PCR product was cloned into the TA vector (Invitrogen Corp., San Diego, CA) cut with AvaI and subcloned into pMR3246 (pMR3234 with
KpnI/EcoRI deletion in the polylinker) linearized with AvaI to generate
an in-frame fusion of RVS161-GFP. The ability of pMR3510 to complement the rvs161 fusion defects was tested by microscopic analysis of zygotes from a filter mating of MY3909 and MY4495 transformed with
pMR3510, pRS416, or pMR3246. Mating MY3909 × MY4495, (where both mating partners contain pMR3510) yielded 41% wild-type, 38% partial Fus
, and 21% full Fus
zygotes. Mating where both strains contained
the negative control (pRS416) yielded 9% wild-type, 16% partial Fus
,
and 75% full Fus
zygotes. The mating with both mating partners containing wild-type RVS161 (pMR3246) showed 60% wild-type, 26% partial
Fus
, and 14% full Fus
zygotes.
Generation of pMR3462, a plasmid encoding a PGAL-GFP-RVS161 fusion, was done by cloning an 800-bp PCR fragment that contained the entire RVS161 sequence at the 3' of the GFP coding region. Primer RVS161XhoU: GTC TCG AGA ATG AGT TGG GAA GGT TTT AAG; and primer RVS161XhoD: CAC TCG AGT TAT TTT ATC CCG AGC GCA C; were used to amplify RVS161. The PCR product was digested with XhoI and cloned into a SalI-linearized LEU-CEN-PGAL-GFP plasmid pCD-GAL-GFP (gift from C. Davis and J. Broach, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ) to generate an in-frame fusion between GFP and RVS161.
Cloning of FUS7 by Complementation
Complementation of the mating defect of fus7-1811 was used to clone
FUS7. A yeast centromere-based (YCp50) genomic library (Rose et al.,
1987) was transformed into a mat
fus7-1811 strain (MS2746). 5,500 Ura+
transformants were screened for restoration of mating ability when mated
with a MAT
fus7-1811 strain (MS2745). Three candidate plasmids were
identified that suppressed the mating defect. After reisolation in E. coli,
the plasmids were all found to share DNA fragments in common (judged
by restriction enzyme analysis). Retransformation of MS2746 confirmed
that all of the plasmids complemented the mating defect. The sequence of
the ends of the insert in plasmid pMR3124 was determined using Sequenase (United States Biochemical Corp., Cleveland, OH) and YCp50 primers (gift from J. Broach, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ) following
the manufacturer's instructions. Examining the DNA sequence and consulting GeneBank showed that the complementing DNA contained a 17-kb
region to the right of CENIII. Deletion analysis and subcloning were used to identify the complementing gene (Fig. 1). Plasmids pMR3147, pMR3148, pMR3149, pMR3150, and pMR3151 were created by cutting the original genomic plasmid pMR3234 with EagI, NruI, SphI, BamHI, and BssHI, respectively (Fig. 1). Plasmid pMR3234 was constructed by
subcloning an EcoRI/SacII 1.7-kb fragment into the pRS416 YCp-URA3 vector (Sikorski and Hieter, 1989
). By these means, the complementing gene was identified as RVS161.
To confirm the identity of FUS7, linkage analysis among fus7-1181,
CENIII, and the MAT locus was performed by crossing MY3371 × MS2745. After tetrad dissection, the plasmid pB1311 containing the
MAT gene was segregated away by growing the spore colonies on 5-fluoro-orotic acid medium (5-FOA) media, which resulted in all four spore
colonies being phenotypically MATa. The mating phenotypes of the spore
colonies were then tested by mating to MS2745. 22 tetrads were analyzed,
indicating a FUS7-to-CEN distance of ~7 centiMorgans (cM), and a
FUS7-to-MAT distance of 22 cM, consistent with the identification of
FUS7 as RVS161. Finally, the identity of FUS7 as being RVS161 was confirmed by demonstrating that an rvs161
allele failed to complement the
mutant defect of fus7-1811. Strain MY3909 was mated with MS2745, and
plasmid pB1311 containing the MAT
gene was subsequently segregated
away by growing the diploid on 5-FOA media. The fus7-1181/rvs161
mating diploid was then tested for complementation by mating to MS2745 in limited plate mating assays.
In Vitro Mutagenesis of RVS161
Plasmid pMR3234 (RVS161-URA3-CEN) was mutagenized in vitro using
hydroxylamine basically as described in Rose et al. (1990). The mutagenized DNA was then used to transform a MATa rvs161
strain
(MY3909). 15,000 Ura+ transformants were replica-plated onto media
containing glycerol as a carbon source (YPG) onto rich media containing
1 M NaCl (YEPD + NaCl) and onto a lawn of MAT
fus1
fus2
(JY429)
for 4 h at 30°C to test for mating. We screened for colonies that were unable to grow on YPG or YEPD + NaCl, but that mated like wild-type. We
also screened for mutants that showed reduced mating efficiency, but
grew on YPG or YEPD + NaCl. Mutants defective for all three properties were discarded. Petite colonies (that would score as possible mutant
candidates on YPG) were identified by their small colony size on YEPD
after 2 d at 30°C. Plasmid linkage was tested by isolation of the plasmids
and retransformation into MY3909. The mutant plasmids were sequenced
using an automated sequencer at the Princeton University Sequencing Facility (Princeton, NJ) with the following primers: RVS161UB: CTG GAC
GAT CCA AAT GCG, RVS161XhoU (see below), and T3 from pBluescript
polylinker region. Subsequently, the EcoRI/SacII restriction fragments
isolated from the plasmids were subcloned into the pRS406 YIp-URA3
vector. Integration of the different alleles was achieved by transforming
MY3377 with the respective plasmids linearized with AflII or EspI. Transformants in which the plasmid had been lost by recombination were selected by growth on 5-FOA media. Several colonies were tested for
growth on YPG and YEPD + NaCl, and mating. Lucifer yellow assays
were done as described in Munn et al. (1995)
. Cell fusion was scored by
microscopic analysis of the zygotes from filter matings as described above.
For the act1-1 unlinked noncomplementation analysis, wild-type
(MY3377), rvs161-1::LEU2 (MY3909), rvs161-R35C (MY5301), rvs161-R59K (MY4682), rvs161-R113K (MY5303), rvs161-P158S (MY5322),
rvs161-A175P (MY5227), and rvs161-P203Q (MY5224) were mated to
act1-1 (RH2151) and to wild-type (RH2635). The diploid strains together
with an act1-1/act1-1 strain (MY4663 × MY4664) were streaked onto
YEPD and YEPD + NaCl and incubated at 30°C. The act1-1/act1-1 diploid strain grew very poorly on YEPD + NaCl at 30°C. Likewise, all the
diploids containing the End
Fus+ alleles grew poorly on YEPD + NaCl
(rvs161-R35C/RVS161 ACT1/act1-1, rvs161-R59K/RVS161 ACT1/act1-1,
rvs161-R113K/RVS161 ACT1/act1-1 and rvs161-P158S/RVS161 ACT1/
act1-1). In contrast, the diploids containing the End+Fus
alleles grew like
wild-type on YEPD + NaCl (rvs161-A175P/RVS161 ACT1/act1-1 and
rvs161-P203Q/RVS161 ACT1/act1-1). All the control strains were able to
grow well on YEPD + NaCl (RVS161/RVS161 ACT1/act1-1, rvs161-
1::
LEU2/RVS161 ACT1/act1-1, rvs161-R35C/RVS161 ACT1/ACT1, rvs161-R59K/RVS161 ACT1/ACT1, rvs161-R113K/RVS161 ACT1/ACT1, rvs161-P158S/RVS161 ACT1/ACT1, rvs161-A175P/RVS161 ACT1/ACT1, and
rvs161-P203Q/RVS161 ACT1/ACT1).
Anti-Rvs161p Antibody Production and Purification
Plasmid pMR3548 coding for a His6x-Rvs161p fusion was created by cloning an 800-bp PCR fragment containing the entire RVS161 coding sequence into an XhoI-linearized pET-30c (+) bacterial expression vector (Novagen, Madison, WI). Primers RVS161XhoU and RVS161XhoD (described above) were used to amplify RVS161 from pMR3234. The His6x- Rvs161p fusion protein was purified from 1 l culture of the BL21(DE) bacterial strain containing pMR3548. Preparation and purification of His6x-Rvs161p was carried out as suggested in the pET System Manual (Novagen) with some modifications. Protein induction was done with 1 mM IPTG for 3 h at 37°C. 100 µg/ml lysozyme and 0.1% Triton X-100 were added to the cells resupended in 80 ml of binding buffer (5 mM imidazole, 500 mM NaCl, 20 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.9), and the cells were incubated at 30°C for 15 min before sonication. The inclusion bodies were solubilized in 10 ml of binding buffer containing 8 M urea. Activated Ni-NTA resin (QIAGEN Inc., Chastworth, CA) was used to affinity-purify His6x- Rvs161p by chromatography. Elution was carried out using a linear 0-500-mM immidazole elution gradient. Finally, the eluted protein was dialyzed into PBS. Antisera were generated in two females New Zealand white rabbits at the Princeton University Animal Facility (Princeton, NJ).
Affinity purification of anti-Rvs161p was carried out using nitrocellulose blots as described previously (Pringle et al., 1991) with some modifications. 100 µg of purified His6x-Rvs161p were electrophoretically separated by SDS-PAGE and transferred to nitrocellulose. The membrane
was blocked twice with 5% nonfat dry milk and 0.05% Tween-20 in PBS
for 15 min, and was then washed twice with binding solution (3% BSA,
0.05% Tween-20 in PBS and 0.02%NaN3). 1 ml of crude rabbit anti-Rvs161p serum was diluted 1:2 with binding solution and incubated for 2 h
at room temperature. The membrane was then washed four times with
PBS, 0.1% Tween-20, and one time with 50 mM Tris-Cl pH 7.5 for 5 min.
0.5 ml of 200 mM glycine-Cl pH 2.2 was used to elute the antibodies. Two
250-µl rinses of the membrane with 100 mM Tris-Cl pH 8 were pooled
with the elution. Finally, the eluted antibody solution was neutralized with
25 µl of a 2 M Tris base solution.
Immunological Techniques
Actin staining was performed by indirect immunofluorescence using polyclonal affinity-purified antiactin antibodies kindly provided by Tongtong
Wang and Anthony Bretscher (Cornell University, Ithaca, NY). Cells
grown in YEPD at 30°C were treated with or without -factor at 6 µM for
90 min, were fixed by adding formaldehyde to 4%, and were incubated for
1 h at 30°C. The cells were then permeabilized by incubation with 25 µg/ml
Zymolyase 100,000 (ICN Immunobiologicals, Lisle, IL) in 1.2 M sorbitol,
0.1 M potassium phosphate, pH 7.5, and 25 mM
-mercaptoethanol for 30 min at 30°C. Staining of the cells was done as described previously (Kilmartin and Adams, 1984
). Antiactin antibodies were used at a 1:50 dilution, and fluorescein-conjugated goat anti-rabbit antiserum (Boehringer Mannheim, Indianapolis, IN) at a 1:25 dilution was used as secondary antibody.
Total protein extracts were prepared as described previously (Ohashi
et al., 1982). Typically 10 ml of early exponential cultures (5 × 106-1.5 × 107 cells/ml) in YEPD low pH (pH 3.5) media were treated or not with
-factor. For Western blotting, the proteins were electrophoretically separated in 10% or 7.5% SDS-PAGE gels and transferred to a nitrocellulose membrane. A 6.5
7.5% SDS-PAGE gel was more suitable to distinguish the multiple forms of Fus2p. All the steps for Western blotting were carried out at room temperature. Blocking of the membranes was done for 1 h
with 5% nonfat dry milk in buffer A (10 mM Tris-HCl pH 7.4, 150 mM
NaCl, and 0.02% Tween-20). Incubations with primary and secondary antibody were done for 1 h in buffer A. Membranes were washed three
times after primary and secondary antibody incubations with Buffer A for
15 min. Affinity-purified anti-Rvs161p was used at 1:500. Crude rabbit
anti-Fus2p antibody, a gift from E. Elion (Harvard University, Cambridge, MA), was affinity-purified using the nitrocellulose method described above. Plasmid pMR3680 encoding His6x fused to 387 amino acids of Fus2p was created by subcloning a 1162-bp HindIII/HindIII
restriction fragment into pET-30b (+). To isolate His6x-Fus2 antigen,
part of the insoluble fraction of a 100-ml IPTG-induced culture of bacterial strain MR3683 (pMR3680 in BL21 DE with argU+-CamR-TetS) was
electrophoretically separated by SDS-PAGE and transferred to a nitrocellulose membrane. Affinity-purified anti-Fus2p was used at 1:2,000. In
addition, preabsortion of the affinity-purified anti-Fus2p onto a nitrocellulose membrane containing fus2
protein extracts for 1 h was needed to reduce background binding to nitrocellulose. Crude rabbit anti-Fus1p antibody was used at 1:1,000 (Gift from J. Trueheart, Cadus Pharmaceuticals,
Tarrytown, NY). Rabbit anti-glutathione-S-transferase (GST) antibody
(Sigma Chemical Co., St. Louis, MO) was used at 1:1,000. HRP-conjugated goat anti-rabbit secondary antibody was used at a 1:2,500 dilution
(Amersham Corp., Arlington Heights, IL). Proteins were visualized by
ECL chemiluminescent system (Amersham Corp.).
Cell extracts for immunoprecipitation experiments were prepared from
100 ml of early exponential cultures (5 × 106-1.5 × 107 cells/ml). MY3371,
MY4858, MY3909 transformed with pMR3397 (2 µ RVS161 URA3), and
MY3909 transformed with pRS426 (Sikorski and Hieter, 1989) were induced with
-factor for 120 min at 30°C. Cells were collected, washed once
with 20 ml of cold breaking buffer (50 mM Tris pH 7.4, 50 mM NaCl, 0.5%
Triton X-100) and resuspended in 1 ml of breaking buffer containing protease inhibitors (5 µg/ml chymostatin, 5 µg/ml leupeptin, 5 µg/ml aprotinin, 5 µg/ml pepstatin, and 1 mM PMSF). The cells were transferred to microfuge tubes containing 0.8 g of acid-washed glass beads and agitated
by 2 pulses of 3 min in a minibead beater (Biospec Products, Inc., Bartlesville, OK). The extracts were then centrifuged twice for 5 min at 14 K rpm
at 4°C. The supernatant was transferred to a new tube between centrifugations. 10 µl of affinity-purified anti-Fus2p or 15 µl of affinity-purified anti-Rvs161p was added to half of the extract. The volume was brought to 1 ml
with breaking buffer, and NaCl was added to 100 mM. The extracts were
incubated for 1 h at 4°C with constant agitation. The extracts were centrifuged for 10 min at 14 K rpm, and the supernatant was transferred to a
new tube containing 100 µl of 50% Protein A-sepharose beads in PBS
(Pharmacia LKB Biotechnology, Inc., Piscataway, NJ). The extracts were
then incubated at 4°C for 1 h with constant agitation, and were then centrifuged for 20 s at 14 K rpm. The beads were washed 5× with 1 ml of
breaking buffer containing protease inhibitors and resuspended in 30 µl of
sample buffer (80 mM, Tris pH 6.8, 10% SDS, 12.5% glycerol, 4%
-mercaptoethanol, 0.1% bromphenol blue). Samples were electrophoretically
separated in SDS-PAGE, transferred to nitrocellulose membranes, and
incubated with either anti-Rvs161p or anti-Fus2p antibodies as described
above. To estimate the amount of Fus2p and Rvs161p precipitated, 30-µl
aliquots (~3%) of total extract were analyzed together with the precipitate samples. To quantify the percentage of precipitated protein, the intensity of the corresponding bands (measured by densitometry) for precipitates and total extracts were compared. These values were normalized to the total volumes of the samples, and the ratio between the precipitate
and the total extract was calculated.
Pulse-chase experiments were performed as described previously
(Gammie et al., 1995) with some modifications. In brief, MY3371, MY4858, and MY3909 cells were grown to OD600 0.2-0.3 (1-1.5 × 107
cells/ml) in synthetic complete media and induced with
-factor for 35 min
at 30°C. Cultures were washed, resuspended at 2 OD/ml in synthetic media lacking cysteine, and methionine in the presence of
-factor. Cells
were incubated for 30 min at 30°C. 200 µCi/OD of 35S-TranslabelTM (ICN
Biomedicals Inc., Irvine, CA) were added, and the cells were incubated
for 7.5 min at 30°C. The chase was performed by adding 10× chase solution to achieve a final concentration of 0.1% cysteine, 0.1% methionine,
and 0.1 M (NH4)2 S04. At 0, 5, 10, 20, 60, and 120 min, 1-ml aliquots were
transferred to microfuge tubes containing 500 µl of 40 µM cold NaN3 and
placed on ice for 15 min to stop the reaction. Cell lysis, immunoprecipitations, and autoradiography were done as described previously (Scidmore, 1993
). 5 and 4 µl of the affinity-purified anti-Rvs161p and anti-Fus2p were
used for each sample, respectively.
GST-Fus2p Coprecipitation Experiments
To create a GST-FUS2 in-frame fusion, a 2.2-kb FUS2 fragment was first
amplified by PCR using primer FUS2GSTU: GGA CTA GTG ATG TTT
AAG ACT TCA; and primer FUS2GSTD: CCC TCG AGA TAG CGT CAA CCA TC; and subsequently cloned into a TA vector (Invitrogen Corp.). A SpeI/AvaI fragment was then subcloned into pEG-KT (2 µ URA leu2d PGAL-GST), linearized with XbaI/SalI at the multiple cloning
site 3' of GST (Mitchell et al., 1993). The function of the fusion protein
was tested by transforming this plasmid into JY424 and examining the
complementation of the fus2
when mated to JY429 in a limited plate
mating analysis.
To prepare cell extracts for GST-glutathione bead precipitation, 100 ml
of early exponential phase cultures (5 × 106-1.5 × 107 cells/ml) of
MY5299 and MY5297 in synthetic complete media lacking uracil with 2%
raffinose were induced by adding 3% galactose for 1 h at 30°C. -factor
was then added to 6 µM, and the cultures were incubated for another 2 h
at 30°C. Cell extracts were prepared as described for immunoprecipitation
experiments described above. Before adding glutathione-sepharose
beads, NaCl was added to 200 mM, and the extracts were mixed for 1 h at
4°C with constant agitation. The extracts were then centrifuged for 10 min
at 14 K rpm, and the supernatants were transferred to a new tube containing 100 µl of 50% gluthathione-sepharose beads (Pharmacia LKB Biotechnology, Inc.) in PBS. The extracts were incubated for 1 h at 4°C. The beads were washed five times with breaking buffer containing protease inhibitors, and were finally resuspended in sample buffer. Samples were
electrophoretically separated in SDS-PAGE and transferred to nitrocellulose membranes. The membranes were incubated with anti-GSTp, anti-Fus2p, or anti-Rvs161p antibodies as described above. The primary antibodies were visualized using ECL chemiluminescent system (Amersham
Corp., Arlington Heights, IL) after incubations with HRP-conjugated
goat anti-rabbit secondary antibody (Amersham Corp.). Quantification
of the amount of precipitated protein was done as described in the Fus2p
and Rvs161p immunoprecipitation experiments.
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Results |
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FUS7 is Allelic to RVS161
The fus7-1811 mutation was identified in a screen for bilateral karyogamy and cell fusion mating mutants (Kurihara
et al., 1994). Diploid formation in matings between MATa
and MAT
fus7 mutant parents is reduced 50-fold compared with wild-type matings (Kurihara et al., 1994
). In
contrast to wild-type zygotes (Fig. 2, A and B), fus7 zygotes showed a pronounced septum between the two partner cells (Fig. 2, C-F), suggestive of the presence of residual cell walls. Two types of Fus
zygotes were observed.
One type called full Fus
showed a complete septum and
two unfused nuclei (Fig. 2, E and F). The second type,
called partial Fus
, showed a partial septum that would allow for cytoplasmic mixing and nuclear fusion (Fig. 2, C
and D). The morphology of fus7 zygotes was very similar
to that described for other previously identified cell fusion
mutants. Table II presents a quantitative analysis of the
cell fusion phenotype analyzed by microscopic examination of the zygotes. As expected, a wild-type mating (i.e.,
wild-type × wild-type) resulted in the great majority of zygotes with wild-type morphology (94%; Table II). In contrast, the fus7-1181 × wild-type mating showed a significant number of zygotes with partial Fus
(36%) and full
Fus
(22%) morphology (Table II). The cell fusion defect
of fus7-1181 was more severe when both mating partners
were mutant (Table II). In the fus7-1181 × fus7-1181 mating, most of the zygotes showed the full Fus
morphology
(72%). Many fewer showed partial Fus
(23%) and wild-type morphology (5%). Therefore, fus7-1181 caused a significant cell fusion defect when only one of the mating
partners has the mutation. However, fus7-1181 was strongly
bilateral because the phenotype was much more severe
when both mating partners were mutant. In addition, fus7-1181 showed no cell type specificity.
|
|
The FUS7 gene was cloned by complementation of the
mating defect (see Materials and Methods). Three candidate plasmids were isolated, of which the smallest contained a 17-kb region immediately adjacent to CENIII
(Fig. 1). Deletion and subcloning analysis showed that a
plasmid (pMR3234) containing the previously identified gene RVS161 was able to complement the mating defect
(see Fig. 1). Linkage analysis showed that the FUS7 gene
mapped ~7 and 22 cM from the CEN and MAT loci, respectively (see Materials and Methods), consistent with
the possibility that FUS7 could be allelic to RVS161. We
generated MATa and MAT rvs161
strains, and found
that they exhibited a cell fusion defect identical to that of
fus7-1811 (Table II). Furthermore, the rvs161
allele failed to complement fus7-1811's mating defect (see Materials and Methods). Therefore, we concluded, that FUS7 is
identical to RVS161.
RVS161 was originally identified by a mutation that
causes reduced viability upon starvation (Crouzet et al.,
1991). Although mutations in RVS161 are highly pleiotropic, RVS161 is not essential for viability (Crouzet et al.,
1991
; Desfarges et al., 1993
). Mutations in RVS161 result
in a delocalization of the actin cytoskeleton (Sivadon et al.,
1995
), high salt sensitivity (Crouzet et al., 1991
), random
budding pattern in diploid cells (Durrens et al., 1995
), and
defects in endocytosis (Munn et al., 1995
). The end6-1 allele of RVS161 was isolated in a screen for mutants defective in endocytosis, and was shown to affect the internalization step of endocytosis (Munn et al., 1995
). Rvs161p
belongs to a family of proteins that includes another yeast
protein, Rvs167p, and a group of proteins called amphiphysins (Lichte et al., 1992
; Bauer et al., 1993
; Butler et al.,
1997
). They all share homology in one domain, called Rvs,
defined by the entire Rvs161p (David et al., 1994
; Sivadon
et al., 1995
). In addition, Rvs167p and the amphiphysins
also share a glycine-proline-alanine (GPA)-rich domain
and an SH3 domain (David et al., 1994
; Sivadon et al., 1995
). RVS167 has been reported to have the same functions as RVS161 since mutations in either gene result in
the same phenotypes (Bauer et al., 1993
; Sivadon et al.,
1995
). Human amphiphysin has been implicated in endocytosis due to its interaction with dynamin and its homology to RVS161 and RVS167. It is thought to be important in recycling the plasma membrane at the synaptic terminals (Lichte et al., 1992
; David et al., 1996
; Grabs et al., 1997
; Shupliakov et al., 1997
).
Defects in Endocytosis Do Not Generally Lead to Defects in Cell Fusion
Given the previously characterized role of RVS161/END6
in endocytosis, we wanted to address whether endocytosis
played a role in cell fusion. Fig. 3 A shows the analysis of
mating mixtures using wild-type, rvs161, and various mutants defective for endocytosis (Raths et al., 1993
; Munn
et al., 1995
). Matings where both the MATa and MAT
parents were mutant were performed, and the zygotes
were analyzed by microscopy. Less than 25% of the
rvs161
zygotes were either wild-type or partial Fus
(Fig.
3 A). In contrast, the wild-type mating produced >91%
wild-type and very few Fus
zygotes (Fig. 3 A). Most of
the end mutants including end3-1, end4-1, end6-1, and
end7-1 behaved like the wild-type (Fig. 3 A). end5-1, however, did show considerably fewer wild-type and more
Fus
zygotes than did the wild-type mating (Fig. 3 A). Because the overall mating efficiency of end5-1 was greatly
reduced (i.e., end5-1 formed very few mating pairs), we
believed that the apparent cell fusion defect observed is a
consequence of an underlying growth defect. From these
results we concluded that defects in endocytosis do not
generally lead to defects in cell fusion.
|
Interestingly, deletion of RVS167 also did not show a
cell fusion defect (Fig. 3 A). Furthermore, the rvs161
rvs167
double mutant was identical to rvs161
(Fig. 3 A).
Therefore, we concluded that RVS161 is required for cell
fusion whereas RVS167 is not.
Surprisingly, we also found that the end6-1 allele of
RVS161 behaved like wild-type for cell fusion (Fig. 3 A).
To rule out differences in strain background, the end6-1 allele was recovered by gap repair on a CEN plasmid, introduced into the rvs161, and checked for its ability to rescue the rvs161
cell fusion defect. Fig. 3 B shows that
rvs161
containing pCENend6-1 is indistinguishable from
wild-type when mated with a rvs161
strain. Because
end6-1 was able to restore rvs161
's cell fusion ability, we
concluded that end6-1 does not result in a cell fusion defect.
The Role of RVS161 in Cell Fusion is Separable From Its Role in Endocytosis
To see if we could further separate the role of RVS161 in
endocytosis from its role in mating, we performed in vitro
mutagenesis of RVS161 and screened for alleles that only
affected one or the other of the two functions. Both
rvs161 and end6-1 are unable to grow on nonfermentable
carbon sources such as glycerol (YPG; Crouzet et al., 1991
;
Munn et al., 1995
). Other end mutants (including end3,
end4, end5, act1, and rvs167
) do not grow well under
these conditions (Bauer et al., 1993
; and our unpublished
observations), suggesting a strong correlation between defects in endocytosis and the inability to grow on YPG. In
addition, rvs161
and end6-1 as well as other mutants defective for endocytosis (act1, sac6, sla2/end4, and end3) are
unable to grow under hypertonic conditions such as 1 M
NaCl (Desfarges et al., 1993
; Munn et al., 1995
; J. O'Dell
and A. Adams, personal communication). Therefore, there is also a strong correlation between defects in endocytosis
and the inability to grow under hypertonic conditions. We
used the failure to grow on YPG or on media containing
1 M NaCl (YEPD + NaCl) to screen for mutant alleles of
RVS161 that affect endocytosis. A CEN-URA3-RVS161
plasmid was mutagenized with hydroxylamine and introduced into a rvs161
strain. We screened for colonies that were unable to grow on YPG or on YEPD + NaCl, but
mated like wild-type. We also screened for mutants that
showed reduced mating efficiency but did grow on YPG or
YEPD + NaCl. Mutants defective for all three properties
were discarded, as there were likely to be null alleles. We
found a good correlation between reduced growth on YPG and inability to grow on YEPD+NaCl. In general,
we found that the mutants grew worse on YEPD + NaCl
than on YPG. We isolated five mutants that were defective for growth on YPG and YEPD + NaCl, but not for
mating (YPG/YEPD+NaCl
Mating+). We also isolated
three mutants that were defective for mating, but did not
show any growth defects on YPG and YEPD + NaCl
(YPG/YEPD+NaCl+ Mating
). All but two of the various
alleles were integrated into the genome.
Fig. 4, A-C shows a summary of the endocytic and cell
fusion phenotypes of the different rvs161 alleles isolated.
Fluid phase endocytosis was measured using Lucifer yellow (LY) uptake. Internalized LY is transported to the
vacuole where it accumulates. Cells defective in endocytosis do not internalize LY, and therefore show no vacuolar fluorescence (Dulic et al., 1991; Munn and Riezman,
1994
). The cell fusion phenotype was measured by microscopic analysis of matings to a rvs161
strain. Wild-type
cells showed the typical vacuolar staining in the endocytosis assay, and gave mostly wild-type (40%) or partial Fus
zygotes (47%; Fig. 4, A-C). In contrast, the null strain
showed no vacuolar staining, and the majority of the zygotes were full Fus
(73%). The mutants selected on the
basis of their YPG/YEPD + NaCl
phenotypes did not
accumulate LY in the vacuole (rvs161-R35C, rvs161-R59K, rvs161-R113K, and rvs161-P158S), consistent with a
defect in endocytosis (Fig. 4 A). However, these mutants
behaved like the wild-type control for cell fusion because
they showed mostly wild-type (42-51%) or partial Fus
(36-46%) zygotes (Fig. 4 C). In contrast, two mutants selected to be YPG/YEPD + NaCl+ Mating
(rvs161-A175P
and rvs161-P203Q) showed a cell fusion defect comparable to that of the null mutant (59-65% full Fus
zygotes), but
did not display an endocytosis defect (Fig. 4 C). We concluded from these results that RVS161's role in endocytosis is separate from its role in cell fusion during mating.
|
Fig. 4 D shows the location and the specific changes of
the different mutations in RVS161. The 5 YPG/YEPD + NaCl mating+ alleles, now called End-Fus+, mapped
within the NH2-terminal 65% of RVS161. The three YPG/ YEPD+NaCl+ mating
alleles, designated End+Fus
,
mapped within the COOH-terminal 35% of RVS161 (Fig.
4 D). Two of the cell fusion mutants affected the same residue; in one case proline 203 was changed to tyrosine, and
in the other case to glutamine (Fig. 4 D). Sequencing the
end6-1 allele recovered by gap repair showed that it corresponded to one of the End
Fus+ rvs161 alleles that we had
isolated, rvs161-R59K. Based on the location of the End
Fus+ and End+Fus
rvs161 alleles, we propose that RVS161
has two domains: an NH2-terminal involved in endocytosis, and a COOH-terminal involved in cell fusion.
The rvs161 End Mutants Exhibited Defects in Actin
Organization While the Fus
Mutants Were Normal
Mutations in RVS161 (rvs161 and end6-1) have been
shown to cause defects in the organization of the actin cytoskeleton (Munn et al., 1995
; Sivadon et al., 1995
). We
wanted to test if defects in the actin cytoskeleton were correlated with the rvs161 alleles defective for endocytosis,
cell fusion, or both. Therefore, we examined the effects of
the various rvs161 alleles in vegetative and in pheromone-induced cells on actin localization. In yeast, the actin cytoskeleton is organized in cortical patches and a network
of cytoplasmic cables (Adams and Pringle, 1984
). The distribution of the actin cytoskeleton changes throughout the
cell cycle (Kilmartin and Adams, 1984
). During bud emergence and growth, cortical actin patches concentrate in the
bud, with cables in the mother oriented along the mother-
daughter cell axis (Adams and Pringle, 1984
; Kilmartin
and Adams, 1984
). During development of the shmoo projection, cortical actin patches concentrate at the shmoo tip
with cables running towards the tip (Ford and Pringle,
1986
; Hasek et al., 1987
; Read et al., 1992
). At cytokinesis,
cortical actin patches are distributed over the surface of
mother and daughter cells, and cables are no longer visible, but a ring of filamentous actin forms between the two
cells where the septum forms (Kilmartin and Adams, 1984
).
Fig. 5, A-H shows examples of actin localization in wild-type and in rvs161 cells. A quantitative analysis of the localization of cortical actin patches in small-budded cells
and in shmoos is presented in Table III. As expected, most
of the wild-type cells (94%) showed actin patches concentrated at the growing bud (Fig. 5 A and Table III) or at the
tip of the shmoo in pheromone-induced cells (97%; Fig. 5 E
and Table III). In contrast, only a minor fraction of the
rvs161 cells showed a wild-type concentration of cortical
patches in the bud or shmoo tip. The majority of the cells
showed actin patches that were more randomly distributed over the mother cell and the bud (41%) or heavily concentrated at the mother-bud neck (41%; Fig. 5 B and Table
III). In addition, 72% of the rvs161
shmoos showed
many actin patches that were not concentrated at the tip of
the shmoo (Fig. 5 F and Table III). All of the End
Fus+
mutants showed some defects in actin localization (i.e.,
small-budded cells and shmoos that failed to concentrate
actin patches at the zone of polarized growth) although
none of the alleles was as strong as rvs161
(Fig. 5, C and
G, and Table III). Furthermore, there was a correlation
between the strength of the growth defect on YPG or YEPD + NaCl and the severity of the actin delocalization phenotype. The rvs161-R35C and rvs161-R59K mutants, which
were the most impaired for growth on YPG/YEPD + NaCl, also showed the strongest defect in actin organization. The rvs161-R113K and rvs161-P158S mutants, which
were the weakest, were most like wild-type, but still
showed some actin defects. In contrast, the End+Fus
mutants showed no observable defects in the organization of
actin patches (Fig. 5, D and H, and Table III).
|
|
Table IV presents a quantitative analysis of the percentage of cells with and without actin cables. While the majority of wild-type cells showed actin cables running along the
mother-daughter or mating projection axes, most of the
rvs161 cells did not show actin cables. The End
Fus+
mutants showed a significant reduction in the number of
cells with actin cables, particularly the rvs161-R35C and
rvs161-R59K alleles. In contrast, the End+Fus
mutants
behaved like wild-type. Based on these results, we concluded that the degree of defects in endocytosis of the
End
Fus+ mutants (as measured by poor growth on YPG
and YEPD + NaCl) was correlated with the severity of
defects in the actin cytoskeleton. We also concluded that
Rvs161p's function in cell fusion is likely to be independent of its role in the organization of the actin cytoskeleton.
|
To further investigate the relationship between the two
roles of Rvs161p and actin organization, we performed genetic analyses of the interaction between the function-specific alleles of RVS161 and act1-1. Munn et al. (1995) reported that end6-1, but not rvs161
, showed unlinked
noncomplementation with act1-1 for growth at 37°C. That
is, diploids of the form end6-1/RVS161 ACT1/act1-1 were
temperature-sensitive, even though both mutations were
recessive. We tested if any other rvs161 allele besides
end6-1 also showed unlinked noncomplementation with
act1-1. Like the End
Fus+ mutants, the act1-1 and act1-1/
act1-1 strains were unable to grow on YEPD + NaCl at
30°C (data not shown). Fig. 5, I and J shows that the heterozygous diploids containing the End
Fus+ alleles and
act1-1 (i.e., rvs161-R35C, rvs161-R59K, rvs161-R113K, and
rvs161-P158S) grew well on YEPD, but very poorly on
YEPD + NaCl. Therefore, we concluded that, like end6-1,
the End
Fus+ alleles showed unlinked noncomplementation with act1-1. Furthermore, the severity of growth defects of each of the double heterozygotes was correlated
with the severity of the respective haploid growth defects.
Importantly, the heterozygous diploids containing the End+Fus
alleles and act1-1 (rvs161-A175P and rvs161-P203Q) grew like the wild-type control (Fig. 5 J). Likewise, the heterozygous diploid containing rvs161
and
act1-1 grew like the wild- type (Fig. 5 J). In all cases, the
diploids obtained by mating the rvs161 mutants strains and
act1-1 with wild-type did not show any growth defects (see
Materials and Methods).
In summary, the localization data and the genetic analysis showed a strong correlation between Rvs161p's role in endocytosis and actin organization. In contrast, Rvs161p's role in cell fusion is separated and independent of its role in both endocytosis and actin organization.
RVS161 Expression is Pheromone-induced
One of the hallmarks of a gene that is specifically required
during mating is its transcriptional induction by the mating pheromones. We therefore wanted to investigate if RVS161
was induced by pheromone. Northern blot analysis showed
that RVS161 produced two mRNA transcripts (Fig. 6 A).
These two transcripts were not present in rvs161, proving
that they both corresponded to RVS161 (data not shown).
RVS161 was induced between three to fourfold higher levels by
-factor within 90 min of treatment (Fig. 6 A). Transcription of RVS161 was not induced in cdc28-4 G1 arrested cells at 37°C in the absence of pheromone (Fig. 6
A). Therefore, RVS161 transcriptional induction is specific
to pheromone, and it is not a consequence of the G1 cell
cycle arrest that occurs when the cells respond to pheromone. Actin mRNA levels used as a control were not significantly changed regardless of the experimental conditions (Fig. 6 A).
|
Western analysis of total yeast proteins using anti-Rvs161p polyclonal antibodies is shown in Fig. 6 B. The
antibodies recognized a single 31-kD band that was absent
in the rvs161 control strain. The levels of Rvs161p were
increased in pheromone treated cells (Fig. 6 B), consistent
with the increased transcription in the presence of
-factor
observed by Northern blots.
Rvs161p Localizes to the Region of Cell Fusion in Prezygotes
To determine the localization of Rvs161p in vegetative, pheromone-induced, and mating cells, we used a Rvs161-GFP fusion protein. In this construct GFP is fused to the 3' region of RVS161, and the gene is expressed under RVS161 promoter regulation. The fusion protein was able to complement the mating defects of rvs161 mutants as analyzed by microscopic examination of zygotes (see Materials and Methods). We found that Rvs161-GFP concentrates at distinct and precise locations in vegetative, pheromone-induced, and mating cells. During vegetative growth, unbudded cells showed cytoplasmic fluorescence with some dots distributed randomly within the cell (14% of the cells). In small budded cells, Rvs161-GFP concentrated mainly at the mother-bud neck (58% of the cells) with some punctate fluorescence also present in the bud (27% of the cells; Fig. 7, A-D). In contrast, large budded cells showed mostly diffuse fluorescence (68% of the cells) with some punctate fluorescence at the neck (32% of the cells; Fig. 7, E and F). In pheromone-induced cells, Rvs161-GFP concentrated at the tip of the shmoo (84% of the shmoos; Fig. 7, G and H). More importantly, in mating cells we found that Rvs161-GFP localized mainly to the cell fusion zone in early zygotes (92% of early zygotes; Fig. 7, I and J). Interestingly, Rvs161-GFP was no longer concentrated at the former cell fusion zone in mature zygotes (98% of mature zygotes). These results suggest that once cell fusion occurs, Rvs161p no longer localizes to the intersection between mating cells (Fig. 7, M and N). We found the same pattern of localization using an NH2-terminal GFP fusion under the regulation of the GAL10 promoter, suggesting that this localization truly reflects the localization of Rvs161p, and does not depend on the location of GFP in the protein (Fig. 7, K and L). Taking these results together, we concluded that the spatial and temporal localization of Rvs161p is consistent with a direct role of Rvs161p in cell fusion.
|
rvs161 is Synthetically Sterile with fus1
, but Not
With fus2
To investigate further the role of RVS161 in cell fusion, we
analyzed genetic interactions with two other genes involved in cell fusion. Like rvs161, mutations in FUS1 or
in FUS2 show no cell-type specificity, and the mutant phenotype is stronger when both partner cells are mutant
(Trueheart et al., 1987
). The fus1
fus2
double mutant
shows a more drastic cell fusion phenotype than either single mutant (Trueheart et al., 1987
). From this result, it was
proposed that FUS1 and FUS2 might act in partially redundant parallel pathways. Therefore, we analyzed genetic interactions among rvs161
, fus1
, and fus2
to determine if RVS161 may act in either pathway. Fig. 8 shows
pictures of plate-mating assays of rvs161
in combination
with fus1
(Fig. 8 B) and fus2
(Fig. 8 C). As a control, we
also included the analysis of the fus1
fus2
double mutant (Fig. 8 A). We found that, like fus1
fus2
, the fus1
rvs161
double mutant has a more severe defect than either single mutant alone (Fig. 8 B). First, unlike the single mutants, the fus1
rvs161
double mutant has a visible
mating defect when mated with the wild-type (Fig. 8 B).
Second, the fus1
rvs161
double mutant defect is much
worse than either single mutant defect (Fig. 8 B). Finally,
the fus1
rvs161
double mutants mated together gave
the most severe mating defect. Even after 19 h of mating
there was no diploid formation (data not shown). Therefore, in an analogous manner to FUS1 and FUS2, we propose that FUS1 and RVS161 might also act in parallel
pathways. In contrast, we found that the fus2
rvs161
double mutant mated no worse than either single mutant
alone (Fig. 8 C). In fact, the fus2
rvs161
strain behaved
in all the crosses exactly like fus2
or rvs161
single mutants. We reasoned that once either protein is defective, the pathway is inactive and further mutation does not lead
to a greater defect. Therefore, in this context we concluded that FUS2 and RVS161 most likely act in the same
pathway.
|
Rvs161p Coprecipitates with Fus2p
The genetic evidence that Fus2p and Rvs161p act in the
same pathway suggested that these two proteins might
physically interact. To determine if Rvs161p and Fus2p
show any direct or indirect physical interaction, we tested
Rvs161p's ability to coprecipitate with Fus2p and vice-versa (Fig. 9). First, we tested if Rvs161p coprecipitates
with Fus2p using a GST-Fus2p fusion. We created a functional GST-Fus2p fusion under the regulation of the
GAL10 promoter that fully complemented the mating defect of a fus2 strain (data not shown). As a control, a
strain that expressed GST alone was used. Proteins were
probed with specific antibodies to identify GST, GST-Fus2p, and Rvs161p (Fig. 9 A). The first two lanes in Fig. 9
A show the proteins that bound to glutathione-sepharose beads. The third and fourth lanes are samples of total protein extracts from strains expressing GST or GST-Fus2p.
Both GST and GST-Fus2p were able to bind to glutathione-sepharose beads (Fig. 9 A). Approximately 10%
of total GST-Fus2p precipitated under the conditions
used. We found that a fraction of Rvs161p (~3% of total
Rvs161p) was able to coprecipitate specifically with GST-Fus2p, but not with the GST control alone (Fig. 9 A).
Therefore, as much as 30% of Rvs161p was bound to
GST-Fus2p. The fourth panel in Fig. 9 A shows that
Rvs161p was nevertheless present in both GST and GST-Fus2p extracts.
|
Second, we tested whether Rvs161p coprecipitated with
Fus2p in immunoprecipitation experiments using polyclonal anti-Fus2p antibodies. The immunoprecipitates were
then probed with anti-Fus2p antibodies and anti-Rvs161p
antibodies to detect coprecipitation. The first two lanes in
Fig. 9 B show immunoprecipitates from a wild-type or a
fus2 control strain, using anti-Fus2p antibodies. The third
and fourth lanes are samples of total protein extracts (Fig.
9 B). As shown in Fig. 9 B, a fraction of Rvs161p did coprecipitate with Fus2p by this method. No Rvs161p was
detected in the immunoprecipitate from the control fus2
strain, even though Rvs161p was present at comparable
levels in both wild-type and fus2
strains (Fig. 9 B, lanes 3 and 4). Finally, we tested whether Fus2p would coprecipitate with Rvs161p using polyclonal anti-Rvs161p as the
first antibody. Fig. 9 B shows that a fraction of Fus2p did
coprecipitate with Rvs161p in immunoprecipitation using
anti-Rvs161p antibodies. In this experiment, ~9% of total
Rvs161p precipitated. We found that ~1.5% of the total
Fus2p coprecipitated with Rvs161p, suggesting that ~17%
of the Fus2p was bound to Rvs161p. Similar amounts were precipitated using an rvs161
strain transformed with either a 2 µ RVS161 plasmid or a CEN-RVS161 plasmid,
but not when using a rvs161
strain transformed with the
vector (Fig. 9 B and data not shown). Taking these results
together, we concluded that Rvs161p and Fus2p interact as
part of a protein complex. Combining the genetic and the
biochemical data, we concluded that Rvs161p and Fus2p
might act in the same pathway to promote cell fusion, as part of the same protein complex.
Fus2p's Stability Depends on RVS161p's Mating Function
To investigate if the cell fusion defect of rvs161 was due
to reduced levels of Fus2p or vice versa, we examined the
levels of the two proteins in the mutant strains. We performed Western blot analysis of wild-type, fus2
, and
rvs161
protein extracts, using anti-Fus2p and anti-Rvs161p (Fig. 10 A). We found that the levels of Fus2p in
rvs161
were greatly reduced compared with wild-type
(Fig. 10 A). The reduction of Fus2p levels in rvs161
was
specific for Fus2p since Fus1p levels were normal compared with wild type (Fig. 10 A). In addition, Rvs161p and
Fus1p levels in fus2
were the same as wild type (Fig. 10 A).
|
To analyze if the reduction in Fus2p levels in rvs161
was due to instability of Fus2p rather than a reduction in
the levels of FUS2 induction, we performed a pulse-chase
analysis of Fus2p (Fig. 10, B and C). In a wild-type strain,
Fus2p was a fairly stable protein having a half-life of ~120
min (Fig. 10, B and C). In contrast, the stability of Fus2p in
rvs161
was greatly reduced to a half-life of 15 min (Fig.
10, B and C). From these results we concluded that the stability of Fus2p is dependent on Rvs161p.
To test if Fus2p's stability depends on Rvs161p's mating
function, we analyzed the levels of Fus2p in several of the
rvs161 function-specific alleles. We found that Fus2p levels
were reduced specifically in the rvs161 End+ Fus mutants,
but not in the End
Fus+ mutants (Fig. 10 D). These results
demonstrate that Fus2p's stability depends on Rvs161p's
mating function, and suggests that the cell fusion defect in
these mutants could be due to reduced Fus2p levels.
To investigate whether the defect in Fus2p stability
might be due to reduced interaction with the mutant forms
of Rvs161p, we immunoprecipitated Fus2p and analyzed
Rvs161p's ability to coprecipitate (Fig. 10 E). Extracts
were prepared from wild-type, two End+Fus, and two
End
Fus+ mutants. To compensate for the reduced levels
of Fus2p in the End+Fus
mutants, we loaded six times as
much of the immunoprecipitate (Fig. 10 E) such that levels
of Fus2p comparable to those of the wild-type were observed. Similar amounts of Rvs161p coprecipitated from
the wild-type, and the two End
Fus+ mutants (data for
rvs161-R35C not shown). In contrast, we found that only a
barely detectable amount of Rvs161p coprecipitated from
the End+Fus
mutants. Therefore, we conclude that these
mutations severely impair the interaction between Rvs161p
and Fus2p.
Interestingly, in the Western and pulse-chase analyses of
Fus2p, we noticed the presence of two or more bands corresponding to Fus2p, which were particularly evident in a
low percentage of polyacrylamide gels (Fig. 10, A and B).
In rvs161 the higher molecular weight bands of Fus2p
were absent (Fig. 10, A and B), suggesting that these forms
of Fus2p also depend on the mating function of Rvs161p.
In the pulse-chase analysis the higher molecular weight
forms of Fus2p appeared 10 min after the chase, and after ~1 h of pheromone induction (Fig. 10 B). This result
shows that Fus2p is modified posttranslationally, and suggests that the modification is a rather late event in the
pheromone induction of the cells.
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Discussion |
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Conjugation in Saccharomyces cerevisiae involves fusing
two cells of opposite mating type. Conjugation is thought
to require a complex interplay of pheromone response,
spatial organization, and alteration of the cell wall and
plasma membrane. In this paper we describe the characterization of a cell fusion mutant, fus7-1811, that blocks
cell fusion. We identified FUS7 as being allelic to RVS161,
a gene previously implicated in viability upon starvation, actin organization, and endocytosis (Crouzet et al., 1991;
Durrens et al., 1995
; Munn et al., 1995
; Sivadon et al.,
1995
). We tested whether endocytosis per se plays a role in
cell fusion, and found that most of the endocytic mutants
examined, including end3-1, end4-1, end6-1 (an allele of
RVS161), end7-1, and rvs167
, showed no defect in cell fusion. Using in vitro mutagenesis, we isolated mutant alleles of RVS161/FUS7 that separate the endocytic function from the mating function. Mapping of the function-specific
alleles defined an NH2-terminal region required for endocytosis and a COOH-terminal region required for cell
fusion. Therefore, we propose that RVS161 is a bifunctional gene with a role in endocytosis that is different from
its role in cell fusion during mating. Interestingly, we
found that in contrast to the alleles that affect endocytosis,
the cell fusion-defective alleles showed no defects in the
actin cytoskeletal organization. We conclude that Rvs161p's role in cell fusion is likely to be independent of its role in actin organization.
Like other genes required for cell fusion (e.g., FUS1 and
FUS2), we found that RVS161 was induced by mating
pheromone. Using a functional Rvs161-GFP hybrid protein, we found that Rvs161p concentrated at the region of
cell fusion, consistent with a role in cell fusion. Analysis of
double mutants indicated that rvs161 behaved like fus2
genetically (i.e., rvs161
fus1
is more severe than either
fus1
or rvs161
single mutant alone). Furthermore, the
rvs161
fus2
double mutant showed the same phenotype
as either single mutant. Therefore, we propose that
Rvs161p and Fus2p might act in the same pathway for cell
fusion. In agreement with this hypothesis, we showed that
Rvs161p coprecipitates with Fus2p, and that the stability
of Fus2p depends on Rvs161p's mating function in the cell.
Therefore, we concluded that Rvs161p interacts with Fus2p
to promote cell fusion.
Endocytosis Does Not Play a Direct Role in Cell Fusion
After initial cell-cell contact, partner cells remodel their
cell wall to achieve cell fusion. Because mating can occur
in hypo-osmotic media, it seems likely that the cells make
a seal to ensure their integrity as the cells fuse. During fusion, the cells must remove the intervening cell wall at the
point of cell contact. After cell wall removal the cells must
then fuse their plasma membranes. The mechanisms responsible for removing the intervening cell wall and for
fusing the plasma membranes are not known. During vegetative growth, yeast cells constantly remodel their cell
wall to accommodate bud growth. This process requires delivery of glucanases and glucan-synthases through the
secretory pathway to the growing site in the bud. The net
result of the action of these enzymes in this case is the new
addition of cell wall material. It seems likely that the removal of the intervening cell wall is accomplished through
the localized delivery of glucanases to the cell fusion zone.
EM analysis of mating cells showed clusters of vesicles at
either side of the cell fusion zone in cells that are about to
fuse (Gammie et al., 1998). The origin of the vesicles is not
known, but it is tempting to speculate that these are secretory vesicles that carry hydrolytic enzymes required to remove the intervening cell wall. Alternatively, cell wall removal could be achieved by an endocytic mechanism or by
a combination of both secretion and endocytosis.
Several mutants that affect endocytosis have been identified in yeast (Riezman et al., 1996). Several of the mutants (including end3-1, end4-1, end5-1, end6-1, end7-1,
and rvs167
) that affect endocytosis at the internalization
step also exhibit defects in actin organization (Raths et al.,
1993
; Benedetti et al., 12994; Munn et al., 1995
). Cloning
and identification of these genes showed that they all affect some aspect of actin cytoskeleton organization. END3
is a 40-kD protein with putative Ca2+ and PIP2 binding
sites and a region of homology to the mammalian epidermal growth factor receptor tyrosine kinase substrate
Eps15 (EH domain; Benedetti et al., 1994
; Fang et al.,
1997). END4 is allelic to SLA2, a 109-kD protein with homology to talin, a mammalian focal adhesion protein
(Holtzman et al., 1993
). END5 is allelic to VPR1, which
encodes verprolin, a gene required for proper organization of the actin cytoskeleton, and for the proper mitochondrial/cytoplasmic protein distribution (Donnelly et al.,
1993
; Munn et al., 1995
; Zoladek et al., 1995
). Finally,
end7-1 was found to be an allele of ACT1 (Munn et al.,
1995
). Given that this group of end mutants did not exhibit
defects in cell fusion, we conclude that endocytosis, in general, is not required for cell fusion.
We were surprised to find that rvs167 did not result in
any cell fusion defects. The Rvs domain of Rvs161p is also
present in Rvs167p. Several lines of evidence have suggested that Rvs161p and Rvs167p are involved in the same
cellular process. First, before this work, mutations in either gene had been shown to result in the same phenotypes (Bauer et al., 1993
; Sivadon et al., 1995
). Second, alleles from each gene have common suppressors (Desfarges et al., 1993
; Revardel et al., 1995
; Sivadon et al., 1997b
).
Third, Rvs167p and Rvs161p were shown to interact physically (Sivadon et al., 1997a
). However, in spite of this evidence and the sequence homology between Rvs161p and
Rvs167p, it seems that each of these proteins has a distinct
role in a common cellular process. The Rvs domain of
both Rvs161p and Rvs167p cannot be functionally exchanged with each other (Sivadon et al., 1997a
), and
RVS161 and RVS167 in high copy number plasmids were
not able to suppress each other's mutations (Bauer et al.,
1993
). Not only do Rvs161p and Rvs167p have distinct
roles in endocytosis, but we have found that Rvs167p is
not required for cell fusion. This is the first time that a cellular function is attributed to just one of the two Rvs proteins. Thus, it is possible that Rvs161p interacts with
Rvs167p to fulfill vegetative functions (i.e., endocytosis/actin organization) and with other proteins during mating.
Endocytosis/Actin Organization and Cell Fusion: Two Genetically Separable Functions of Rvs161p
Based on our findings that the end6-1 allele of RVS161 did not exhibit a cell fusion defect, we hypothesized that the role of RVS161 in cell fusion must be separate from its role in endocytosis. In support of this hypothesis, we isolated alleles of RVS161 that affected cell fusion without showing endocytic defects. We also isolated several more alleles that were like end6-1 in that they affected endocytosis without affecting cell fusion. Therefore, RVS161 has two genetically separate cellular functions; endocytosis and cell fusion, which map to two separate domains: an NH2-terminal domain required for endocytosis and a COOH-terminal domain required for cell fusion. One plausible model to explain the bifunctional characteristic of Rvs161p is that it interacts with proteins involved in endocytosis through the NH2-terminal domain and with cell fusion proteins through the COOH-terminal domain.
Given the previously reported observation that mutations in RVS161 result in a disorganized actin cytoskeleton
(Munn et al., 1995; Sivadon et al., 1995
), we analyzed the
actin organization in various rvs161 alleles isolated in this
study. Interestingly, we found that only the alleles that affect endocytosis had defects in the organization of the actin cytoskeleton. Our findings support the suggestion of a
tight link between actin and endocytosis (Munn et al.,
1995
; Riezman et al., 1996
).
A connection between Rvs161p and actin has also been
shown genetically. Munn et al. (1995) discovered that the
end6-1 mutation of RVS161, but not rvs161
, exhibits unlinked noncomplementation with act1-1. This result indicates that the protein encoded by the end6-1 allele of
RVS161 has a detrimental effect in the double heterozygous diploid, and suggests that Rvs161p and actin interact in vivo (Munn et al., 1995
). We found that all the rvs161
End
-specific alleles showed some degree of unlinked
noncomplementation with act1-1. In contrast, the double-heterozygous diploids containing rvs161
or any of the
Fus
specific alleles did not show any growth defects.
From this result and the observation that the rvs161 cell fusion alleles showed a normal morphology of the actin cytoskeleton, we concluded that Rvs161p's role in cell fusion
does not affect the organization of the actin cytoskeleton.
Rvs161p Might be Directly Involved in Cell Fusion
Two other genes required for cell fusion, FUS1 and FUS2,
are highly pheromone-induced and encode proteins that
localize to the region of cell fusion (Trueheart et al., 1987;
Elion et al., 1995
). We found that RVS161 was also induced by mating pheromone to three to fourfold higher
levels. In addition, RVS161 was recently identified in a
screen for pheromone-induced genes (Erdman et al.,
1998
). Consistent with being a gene induced by mating
pheromone, the DNA sequence upstream of RVS161 contains two putative pheromone-response elements that differ from the consensus sequence by 1 bp. The relatively
high levels of RVS161 basal expression probably reflect the fact that this gene has a vegetative function.
During vegetative growth, Rvs161p localized mostly to
the bud neck and bud in small-budded cells, consistent
with the actin interaction. In pheromone-induced cells, we
found that Rvs161-GFP localized at the tip of the shmoo.
In spite of the fact that Rvs161p and Fus2p interact (see
below), these proteins have apparently different localization patterns in shmoos. Elion et al. (1995) reported that
Fus2p primarily localizes to punctate structures under the
surface of the shmoo projection. One possible explanation for the apparent discrepancy is that different methods for
localization were used. Elion et al. (1995)
used immunofluorescence techniques with strains containing either a
Fus2-lacZ fusion (which stabilizes Fus2p) or a high-copy
FUS2 plasmid. Alternatively, a failure to colocalize completely might not be surprising considering that only a
fraction of these two proteins interact by coprecipitation experiments (see below).
In zygotes, Rvs161p concentrated at the zone of cell fusion in cells that are about to or in the process of fusing
(early zygotes). Early zygotes can be distinguished from
mature zygotes because they have a small zone of cell fusion (Gammie et al., 1998). As mating proceeds and the
zygote reenters the mitotic cycle, the waist of the zygote
widens. We found that in later zygotes (i.e., zygotes with a
wide zone of cell fusion or budding zygotes) Rvs161-GFP
was no longer concentrated in the former region of cell fusion. Similarly, in mating cells that are about to fuse, Fus2p
was present mainly at the cell fusion zone and in early zygotes, and was no longer detected in cells that had undergone nuclear fusion (Elion et al., 1995
). In contrast to the
apparent discrepancy between the Rvs161p and Fus2p localization in shmoos, these two proteins showed the same
localization pattern in zygotes.
Taken together, Rvs161p's regulation and localization are consistent with it playing a direct role in cell fusion. It is likely that when cells are stimulated to undergo mating, regulatory signals dictate Rvs161p's relocalization to the cell fusion zone. This relocalization could be achieved by interactions with mating specific proteins that localize at the cell fusion zone.
Rvs161p Interacts with Fus2p to Promote Cell Fusion
FUS2 encodes a novel 677-amino acid protein with some
homology to myosin-related proteins including the yeast
Mlp1 (Elion et al., 1995). Although not predicted to be a
membrane protein, Fus2p was shown to be tightly associated with an insoluble fraction in cell fractionation experiments. Based on this result and the punctate localization
of Fus2p, it was proposed that Fus2p is associated with a
novel vesicle or cytoskeletal structure that plays a specific
role in cell fusion (Elion et al., 1995
). However, Fus2p's
role in cell fusion and the proteins that interact with Fus2p
were not identified. Several lines of evidence suggest that Rvs161p interacts with Fus2p to promote cell fusion. First,
rvs161
fus2
double mutant was not more defective than
either single mutant, indicating that Rvs161p and Fus2p
act in the same cell fusion pathway. Second, Rvs161p coprecipitated with Fus2p, suggesting that they are components of a common complex. Third, we found that the stability of Fus2p was dependent upon the presence of Rvs161p. Furthermore, Fus2p levels were specifically reduced in the cell fusion-defective alleles of RVS161. The
allele specificity of the stability of Fus2p suggests that the
rvs161
cell fusion defect is due, at least in part, to reduction in the level of Fus2p.
How does Rvs161p stabilize Fus2p and what is the relevance of the Rvs161-Fus2p interaction? One possibility is that Rvs161p directly interacts with Fus2p to prevent its degradation. In fact, we found that the cell fusion-defective rvs161 mutants showed not only a reduction in Fus2p levels but also a reduction in the ability of the mutant proteins to interact with Fus2p. However, even in wild-type, only a small fraction of Fus2p coprecipitates with Rvs161p. Therefore, the Rvs161p-Fus2p interaction might not be stable under these conditions, or the interaction might be transient. One possibility is that Rvs161p is necessary to deliver Fus2p to other components of the cell fusion machinery. In this model, in the absence of Rvs161p, Fus2p would fail to localize to the correct place and therefore be more susceptible to degradation.
Alternatively, Rvs161p could bind Fus2p to allow for a
modification that would stabilize and/or activate Fus2p.
Indeed, both by Western blot and in pulse-chase experiments, we observed two or sometimes three bands corresponding to Fus2p, indicating that Fus2p is modified posttranslationally. In the pulse-chase analysis, the higher
molecular band only appeared upon longer incubations with -factor. Significantly, the higher molecular band was
absent in rvs161
, suggesting that the Fus2p modification
is dependent on Rvs161p. However, it is also possible that
the modification does not occur because of the shorter
half-life of Fus2p in this strain.
Is Rvs161p's sole function in cell fusion to stabilize
Fus2p? In other experiments we have shown that FUS2
can suppress the cell fusion defect of rvs161 strain when
present in a high copy plasmid (Gammie et al., 1998
).
However, the suppression was only partial, even though
the levels of Fus2p in the rvs161
strain containing FUS2
on a high copy plasmid were higher than in wild-type (V. Brizzio and M. Rose, unpublished data). These results suggest that the Rvs161p-dependent modification of Fus2p
might be crucial for its role in cell fusion. Alternatively,
Rvs161p might have other functions independent of
Fus2p. One intriguing possibility is that several proteins
required for cell fusion interact with Rvs161p and Fus2p,
and that all of them are destabilized in rvs161
. Consistent
with both of these possibilities, we found that high copy
RVS161 did not suppress the fus2
cell fusion defect
(Gammie et al., 1998
). Further analysis of the Fus2p/
Rvs161p complex should elucidate the nature of the
rvs161
defect.
![]() |
Footnotes |
---|
Received for publication 26 January 1998 and in revised form 17 March 1998.
This research was supported by the National Institutes of Health grant to M.D. Rose (GM37739). V. Brizzio was supported by an institutional National Institutes of Health training Grant on genetics, Cell, and Molecular Biology. A.E. Gammie was partially supported by a Fellowship from the Jane Coffin Child Memorial Fund for Cancer Research.We thank the members of this laboratory for helpful discussions. We are also grateful to Andreas Wesp, Howard Riezman, Gerry Fink, Joshua Trueheart, Elaine Elion, Tongtong Wang, Anthony Bretscher, Corey Davis and Jim Broach for providing us with strains, antibodies and reagents.
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Abbreviations used in this paper |
---|
5-FOA, 5-fluoro-orotic acid medium; DIC, differential interference contrast; cM, centiMorgans; GST, glutathione-S-transferase; LY, Lucifer yellow; MAP, mitogen-activated protein; YEPD, yeast extract/peptone/dextrose; YPG, yeast extract/peptone/ glycerol.
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