* Department of Physiology and Department of Biochemistry, School of Medicine, University of California San Francisco, San
Francisco, California 94143
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Abstract |
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The mitotic spindle is a complex and dynamic structure. Genetic analysis in budding yeast has
identified two sets of kinesin-like motors, Cin8p and
Kip1p, and Kar3p and Kip3p, that have overlapping functions in mitosis. We have studied the role of three
of these motors by video microscopy of motor mutants
whose microtubules and centromeres were marked
with green fluorescent protein. Despite their functional
overlap, each motor mutant has a specific defect in mitosis: cin8 mutants lack the rapid phase of anaphase
B, kip1
mutants show defects in the slow phase of
anaphase B, and kip3
mutants prolong the duration of
anaphase to the point at which the spindle becomes
longer than the cell. The kip3
and kip1
mutants affect the duration of anaphase, but cin8
does not.
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Introduction |
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THE mitotic spindle segregates the chromosomes into
the daughter cells during cell division. The dynamic
behavior of the spindle is controlled by motor proteins that move along microtubules and by the polymerization and depolymerization of microtubules. Motor proteins are required to assemble and maintain a bipolar
spindle, to regulate microtubule dynamics, and to orient
the spindle in the cell. After the spindle has formed, motor
proteins mediate spindle elongation and chromosome separation during anaphase (reviewed in McIntosh and Pfarr,
1991; Inoue and Salmon, 1995
; Vernos and Karsenti,
1996
).
In vertebrate cells, the roles of motor proteins have
been dissected by inactivating motors in living cells and
egg extracts (Rodionov et al., 1993; Vaisberg et al., 1993
;
Lombillo et al., 1995
; Walczak et al., 1996
; Heald et al.,
1997
). These approaches are powerful, but can produce
complex results because many motors have overlapping
functions and antibody inactivation or immunodepletion experiments can also affect proteins that interact with the
target motor protein. Budding yeast is an attractive alternative for studying the roles of specific motors in mitosis:
the genome sequence (Goffeau et al., 1996
) provides a
complete inventory of microtubule motors, yeast genetics
allows inactivation of individual motors, and marking centromeres and microtubules with green fluorescent protein
(GFP) makes it possible to study spindle and chromosome dynamics in living cells (Straight et al., 1997
). Yeast contain six kinesin related proteins (Cin8p, Kar3p, Kip1p,
Kip2p, Kip3p, and Smy1p) and a single dynein (Meluh and
Rose, 1990
; Hoyt et al., 1992
; Lillie and Brown, 1992
; Roof
et al., 1992
; Eshel et al., 1993
; Cottingham and Hoyt, 1997
;
DeZwaan et al., 1997
). This paper analyzes the mitotic
roles of three of the six kinesin motors: Cin8p, Kip1p and
Kip3p. We did not study Smy1p since it doesn't appear to
be involved in mitosis (Lillie and Brown, 1992
, 1994
) or
Kip2p because it primarily affects cytoplasmic microtubules rather than the intranuclear microtubules of the mitotic spindle (Huyett et al., 1998
). We were unable to study
kar3
mutants, because most cells arrest in mitosis under
the conditions required for microscopy.
Cin8p and Kip1p kinesins belong to the bimC/Cut7 class
of microtubule motors that have roles in spindle formation
and spindle elongation in other organisms (reviewed in
Kashina et al., 1997). Kip3p, is a novel kinesin that does
not easily fit into the known kinesin subfamilies but has
been shown to be important for spindle positioning (Cottingham and Hoyt, 1997
; DeZwaan et al., 1997
). The minus end-directed motor Kar3p antagonizes the activity of Cin8p/Kip1p to ensure proper spindle assembly and elongation (Saunders and Hoyt, 1992
; Saunders et al., 1997
)
and is also thought to participate in the positioning of the
spindle (Cottingham and Hoyt, 1997
; DeZwaan et al.,
1997
). In addition to the kinesin family of proteins, dynein
also has roles in spindle positioning, assembly and elongation (Li et al., 1993
; Vaisberg et al., 1993
; Saunders et al.,
1995
; Yeh et al., 1995
; Carminati and Stearns, 1997
; Heald
et al., 1997
; Shaw et al., 1997
).
The Cin8p and Kip1p proteins are thought to be plus
end directed motors that have overlapping roles in pushing the spindle pole bodies apart. cin8 was isolated as a
mutant that exhibited elevated chromosome loss (Hoyt et al.,
1990). At 37°C cin8
mutants arrest in mitosis with duplicated spindle poles but fail to form a bipolar spindle. The
defect in cin8
mutants can be overcome by mild overexpression of Kip1p, suggesting that the two motors have redundant functions during mitosis (Hoyt et al., 1992
). Furthermore, cin8
kip1
double mutants are inviable and
fail to form a bipolar spindle (Hoyt et al., 1992
; Roof et al.,
1992
). Cin8 and Kip1 are required for both assembly and
maintenance of the bipolar spindle: bipolar spindles in
kip1
cells that carry a temperature sensitive allele of cin8
collapse when cells are shifted to the nonpermissive temperature. This collapse is partially rescued in cells lacking
Kar3p, suggesting that the length of the spindle is controlled by the balance between forces generated by Cin8p and Kip1p that push the spindle pole bodies apart and
those generated by Kar3p that pull them together (Saunders and Hoyt, 1992
).
Kip3p plays a role in the migration of the nucleus to the
neck between the mother and daughter cells and the
proper alignment of the mitotic spindle before anaphase
(Cottingham and Hoyt, 1997; DeZwaan et al., 1997
). One
explanation for these roles is that Kip3p, like certain other
motors (Endow et al., 1994
; Walczak et al., 1996
), can destabilize microtubules.
Since the spindle is a dynamic structure, we investigated its behavior by time lapse microscopy of wild-type and mutant cells whose centromeres and microtubules were marked with GFP. Kip1p and Cin8p have distinct roles during anaphase chromosome separation and spindle elongation. Although both motors are required for normal elongation of the spindle, Cin8p is most important early in anaphase when rapid separation of the chromosomes occurs, and Kip1p is required late in anaphase for robust elongation of the spindle. Analysis of Kip3p mutants shows that Kip3p does not play a role in the absolute rates of anaphase spindle elongation but is involved in the proper timing of spindle disassembly. Thus, despite the functional overlap between them, each of the three kinesin motors contributes to a particular event during anaphase.
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Materials and Methods |
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Strains and Media
Yeast were grown either in YPD (10 g/liter yeast extract, 20 g/liter Bacto-Peptone, 20 g/liter Dextrose) supplemented with 50 mg/liter adenine-HCl,
and 50 mg/liter L-tryptophan or in complete synthetic medium lacking histidine (CSM-HIS; Sherman et al., 1974) supplemented with 50 mg/liter adenine-HCl, 50 mg/liter L-tryptophan, and 6.5 g/liter NaCitrate. Yeast
strains are listed in Table I and are all isogenic to W303 (AFS34). Yeast
transformations were performed using the lithium acetate method (Ito et
al., 1983
). Plasmids were propagated in Escherichia coli strain TG1 (Sambrook et al., 1989
) in medium containing 100 µg/ml ampicillin except for
Lac operator repeat plasmids which were propagated in E. coli STBL2
(GIBCO BRL, Gaithersburg, MD). GFP-Lac repressor and GFP-Tubulin fusions were induced as described (Straight et al., 1996
, 1997
).
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Plasmids and DNA Manipulation
Construction of Motor Protein Deletions.
The cin8::LEU2 deletion plasmid was provided by Andrew Hoyt (Hoyt et al., 1992
). CIN8 was deleted
in strain AFS34, then the LEU2 marked CIN8 deletion was changed to
TRP1 by integrating the marker switching plasmid pLT7 from F. Cross
(Cross, 1997
).
Mutagenesis of GFP-LacI Fusions.
GFP was fused to the Lac repressor
as previously described (Straight et al., 1996). The Ser65
Thr mutant of
GFP (Heim and Tsien, 1996
) was linked with XhoI and HindIII sites by
PCR using the following oligonucleotide pair: 5'-CGCCTCGAGGAGATGAGTAAAGGAGAAGAACTT-3'; 5'-GGCATGGATGAACTATACAAATAAGCTTCGC-3'. The XhoI-HindIII-digested PCR
product was cloned into SalI-HindIII-digested pQE9 (QIAGEN, Inc.,
Chatsworth, CA) to generate a 6-histidine fusion to GFP (pAFS97). Mutant GFP molecules were generated by PCR shuffling (Stemmer, 1994
),
expressed in E. coli at 37°C then sorted by Fluorescence Activated Cell
Sorting to isolate cells that fluoresced strongly at 37°C. These mutant GFP
molecules were then screened for fluorescence intensity relative to the
Ser65
Thr mutant of GFP and the brightest molecule was sequenced.
The brightest GFP (GFP12) was mutated at codon 163 from GTT to GCT
changing Val163 to Ala163. This change resulted in the same amino acid
change described by Siemering et al. (1996)
for the GFP-B mutant but
used a different codon. Based on the work of Siemering et. al we then
combined our GFP12 mutant with the Ser175
Gly mutation to give
GFP13 (S65T, V163A, and S175G).
Time-Lapse Microscopy and Image Analysis
Images were acquired as described (Straight et al., 1997) except that the
actual length of spindles in kip3
cells was calculated by tracing fluorescence intensities in three-dimensional image stacks using the program 3D
Model that had been customized for length measurement (Chen et al.,
1996
). The data for wild-type spindle elongation is previously published
(Straight et al., 1997
) and used only for comparison to the motor mutant data.
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Results |
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Positioning, assembly and elongation of the yeast spindle
during mitosis requires microtubule motor proteins. Anaphase has two components: anaphase A, the movement of
the chromosomes towards the spindle poles and anaphase
B, the separation of the spindle poles. In budding yeast,
anaphase B has two phases, a rapid initial elongation of
the spindle that is followed by a period of slower elongation (Kahana et al., 1995; Yeh et al., 1995
; Straight et al.,
1997
). To study the contributions of individual motor proteins to anaphase, we performed time lapse video microscopy on yeast cells individually deleted in three kinesin
motors, Cin8p, Kip1p, or Kip3p. We visualized the mitotic
spindle using a GFP fusion to the major
-tubulin (TUB1)
and the centromere using a GFP-Lac repressor fusion
bound to a tandem array of Lac operators integrated near
the centromere of chromosome III (Straight et al., 1997
). We measured the separation between the ends of the spindle and between the sister centromeres as cells went from
metaphase to anaphase. These distances allow us to quantify chromosome to pole movement during anaphase A
and the increase in the separation between the poles during anaphase B.
Cin8 Is Required for the Rapid Phase of Mitotic Spindle Elongation
Fig. 1 shows records of mitosis in cin8 mutants. During
metaphase, cin8
cells had shorter spindles (1-1.5 µm)
than wild-type cells (1.5-2 µm; Figs. 1 A and 4). The suggestion that Cin8p is required for the full separation of the
spindle pole bodies during metaphase is consistent with
the role for Cin8p in spindle assembly described by Saunders and Hoyt (Saunders and Hoyt, 1992
).
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During anaphase, cin8 cells exhibited a defect in the
rapid phase of spindle elongation. In wild-type cells the
initial rapid separation of the spindle pole bodies (0.54 µm/min) was followed by a slower phase (0.21 µm/min;
Table II; Straight et al., 1997
). cin8
cells showed a uniformly slow spindle elongation whose rate (0.19 µm/min)
was statistically indistinguishable from the slow phase of
anaphase B in wild-type cells (Table II; Fig. 1 A). This defect suggests that Cin8p has a specific role in the initial rapid separation of the spindle poles but that other activities drive the slower phase of mitotic spindle elongation.
The rapid initial separation of the centromeres in wild-type cells was not affected in the cin8
mutant (Fig. 1 B)
suggesting that other factors are responsible for the initial
separation. These could include the activity of other motors or the release of tension when the linkage between
the sister chromatids dissolves.
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Although cin8 cells are defective for the rapid phase of
anaphase B, the longer slow phase of anaphase B allows
them to complete mitosis. cin8
spindles disassemble at
the same time after anaphase initiation as do wild-type cells
(Table II; Fig. 2) but with a shorter length (7.0 ± 0.7 µm)
than that of wild-type cells (9.5 ± 0.5 µm). Much of this
length difference can be accounted for by the slower elongation of cin8
spindles during the 5 min when wild-type
cells are elongating their spindle rapidly ([0.55 µm/min {WT}
0.2 µm/min {cin8
}] × 5 min = 1.8 µm).
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Kip1 Affects the Slow Phase of Mitotic Spindle Elongation
Cin8p and Kip1p have overlapping roles during spindle assembly and elongation (Roof et al., 1992; Saunders et al.,
1997
; Saunders and Hoyt, 1992
). We examined kip1
cells
during mitosis to determine whether differences exist between the two motors. Consistent with prior measurements in cells arrested in S phase (Saunders et al., 1997
),
and like cin8
cells (1.2 µm), kip1
cells (1.2 µm) had shorter metaphase spindles than wild-type cells (1.8 µm;
see Fig. 4). This result supports the idea that Cin8p and
Kip1p work together to maintain the mitotic spindle at its
proper metaphase length (Saunders and Hoyt, 1992
). The
distances we have measured are slightly larger than the
distances measured in hydroxyurea arrested cells for wild-type, cin8
and kip1
(Saunders et al., 1997
). Our measurements of metaphase spindle length were made using
video records of the 20-30 min preceding sister chromatid
separation. The differences between hydroxyurea arrested
and G2/M cells may reflect a difference between cells arrested by the DNA replication checkpoint and mitotic
cells, a difference between cells with unreplicated centromeres and replicated centromeres, or differences between measurements made on live and fixed samples.
During anaphase, kip1 cells exhibited a normal rapid
elongation phase (0.51 µm/min; Fig. 3 A; Table II) in contrast to cin8
cells, whose spindles elongate slowly. However, during the slow phase of spindle elongation in
anaphase B, the spindles of kip1
cells (0.12 µm/min) elongated more slowly than wild-type spindles (0.2 µm/min;
Fig. 3 A; Table II). This suggests that Kip1p and Cin8p
have distinct roles in anaphase B: Cin8p is required for rapid
elongation at the beginning of mitosis and Kip1p is more important during the slower phase of spindle elongation.
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The period from the onset of anaphase to spindle breakdown was ~15 min longer in kip1 cells than it was in
wild-type or cin8
cells. The longer duration of anaphase
compensated for the slower rate of spindle elongation with
the result that kip1
cells elongated their spindles to the
same final length as wild-type cells (9.5-10 µm; Figs. 3 A
and 6; Table II). We could not tell whether the loss of
Cin8p or Kip1p affected chromosome to pole movement
(anaphase A) because the shorter metaphase spindle in
cin8
and kip1
cells made it impossible to measure this
movement.
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Kip3 Affects Microtubule Length and Spindle Breakdown in Mitosis
Deletion of KIP3 increases the metaphase spindle length
compared with wild-type cells. Metaphase spindles in
kip3 cells were on average 0.4 µm longer than those in
wild-type cells (Figs. 4 and 5 A). This increase is similar to
that seen in the comparison between fixed kip3
and wild-type cells arrested in S phase (Cottingham and Hoyt,
1997
). Unlike Cin8p and Kip1p, Kip3p opposes extension of the metaphase spindle, either by exerting an inward directed force or by reducing the length of spindle microtubules. Because kip3
cells have longer astral microtubules
and their spindles are resistant to depolymerization with
the drug benomyl (Cottingham and Hoyt, 1997
; DeZwaan
et al., 1997
), destabilization of the central spindle microtubules by Kip3p is the more likely mechanism for regulating spindle length.
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Examining kip3 cells during anaphase revealed a specific role for Kip3 in regulating spindle breakdown. Initial
anaphase spindle elongation occurred normally in kip3
cells, consistent with measurements of spindle pole separation in fixed samples (DeZwaan et al., 1997
). The rates of
the rapid (0.56 µm/min) and slow phases (0.17 µm/min) of
spindle elongation in kip3
cells were statistically indistinguishable from those of wild-type cells (Fig. 5 A; Table II).
Although the rates of spindle elongation in wild-type and
kip3
are similar, kip3
cells broke down their spindles 12 min later than wild-type cells (Fig. 2; Table II). This observation contrasts with earlier measurements on populations of fixed kip3
cells, that showed that the distance between
fluorescently labeled spindle pole bodies stopped increasing at the same time in wild-type and kip3
cells (DeZwaan et al., 1997
). However, in all but one of our sequences (n = 7), spindles persisted in kip3
cells after the
time at which the spindle in wild-type cells broke down.
This difference is probably explained because previous work assumed that spindle breakdown occurred at the
time when the distance between the spindle poles stopped
increasing.
Cells lacking Kip3p elongate their spindles beyond the
length of wild-type cells. Although the pole to pole distance in kip3 stops increasing at ~10 µm (Fig. 5 A), the
spindles keep elongating, making them bend before they
break down (Fig. 5 D). To confirm this interpretation, we
measured the length of the bent kip3
spindles in three-
dimensional space. Although the spindle pole bodies were
only separated by 10 µm, the actual spindle length increased to more than 12 µm (Figs. 5 C and 6; Table II).
Kip3p may therefore be involved in destabilizing microtubules at the end of mitosis so that the spindle can disassemble at the proper time and at the proper length. Bowed
spindles have also been observed in wild-type fission yeast,
although in this organism the spindle poles do not have to
reach the ends of the cell for bending to occur (Hagan and
Hyams, 1996
).
Motor Mutants Delay the Onset of Anaphase
We investigated the effect of motor mutations on the
interval between spindle assembly and the onset of anaphase. Wild-type, cin8, kip1
, and kip3
mutants that
contained GFP-marked tubulin and CENIII were arrested
in G1 by treatment with the yeast mating pheromone
-factor. The cells were released from this arrest and population samples were removed at intervals and scored for
spindle elongation and sister chromatid separation. Cells
deleted for Kip1p or Kip3p initiated anaphase at the same
time as wild-type cells and progressed through anaphase
with similar kinetics (Fig. 7). Cells lacking Cin8p showed a
dramatic delay in the initiation of anaphase. 90 min after
release from
-factor, >30% of wild-type, kip1
, and
kip3
cells had initiated anaphase compared with only 4%
of cin8
cells. When >80% of wild-type, kip1
and kip3
cells had initiated anaphase (t = 120), <25% of cin8
cells
had separated their sister chromatids (Fig. 7). We have
also observed delays in the onset of anaphase in cells lacking Kar3p (data not shown). The prolonged metaphase of
motor mutants is probably due to the action of the spindle
checkpoint (reviewed in Nicklas, 1997
; Rudner and Murray, 1996
), which delays anaphase until all chromosomes are correctly aligned on a bipolar spindle. Inactivation of
the checkpoint allows cells with spindle defects to exit
from mitosis and kills kar3
and cin8
mutants, which
have the most profound delays in mitosis (Roof et al.,
1991
; Geiser et al., 1997
).
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Discussion |
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We performed video microscopy on microtubule motor mutants whose microtubules and a centromere had been marked with GFP. Our analysis reveals that each motor mutant has distinct defects in anaphase spindle elongation.
Separate Roles for Motors during Anaphase
Our results show that Cin8p and Kip1p have distinct roles
during anaphase. Previous studies on fixed cells showed
that Cin8p and Kip1p have partially redundant roles in
pushing the spindle poles apart (Hoyt et al., 1992, 1993
;
Roof et al., 1992
; Saunders and Hoyt, 1992
; Saunders et al.,
1997
) and analysis of living cells showed that Cin8p,
Kip1p, and dynein cooperate to give robust DNA separation during mitosis (Saunders et al., 1995
). These observations did not reveal that Cin8p and Kip1p are important
for different phases of anaphase. We have shown that
Cin8p functions early in the separation of the spindle pole
bodies and is required for the rapid phase of anaphase
spindle elongation. Unlike Cin8p, Kip1p plays no role in
controlling the rapid phase of spindle elongation. Cells deleted for Kip1p perform the initial phase of anaphase normally but are then compromised in the slower phase of
spindle elongation.
The difference between the rates of the two phases of
anaphase B in wild-type cells could be explained in many
ways. One explanation is that the rate of the rapid phase is
set by the rate at which motors slide the microtubules from
opposite poles of the spindle past each other and that the
rate of the slow phase is set by the rate of the microtubule
growth required to maintain an overlap zone as the spindle extends. In the rapid phase, Cin8p would move microtubules past each other more rapidly than Kip1p. During
the slow phase, the deletion of KIP1 would affect the rate
of microtubule growth, but the deletion of CIN8, would
not. Cut7p, a fission yeast homologue of Cin8p and Kip1p,
localizes to the midzone of the spindle during anaphase B
(Hagan and Yanagida, 1992). Experiments in isolated diatom spindles suggest that the rate of spindle elongation is
strongly influenced by factors that control the speed at
which microtubules grow (Masuda and Cande, 1987
). Another possibility is that both rates of anaphase B are set by
the speed of microtubule sliding and that Cin8p is a faster
motor that is only active during early anaphase B, whereas
Kip1p is a slower motor active throughout anaphase B.
Cells lacking Kip3p delay spindle breakdown and their final spindles are so long that they become physically deformed when they run into the ends of the cell. Previous studies suggested that Kip3p may regulate the stability of
microtubules (Cottingham and Hoyt, 1997). In our experiments, metaphase kip3
spindles were longer than those of
wild-type cells in agreement with spindle length measurements in hydroxyurea arrested cells (Cottingham and Hoyt,
1997
). Once anaphase began, kip3
cells behaved exactly like wild-type cells until the time of spindle breakdown: when wild-type spindles broke down, kip3
spindles remained intact and continued to elongate. The ability of the spindle to
elongate beyond the cell length has implications for the
mechanism of spindle elongation. The buckling of the spindle
in kip3
indicates that some or all of the force elongating the
spindle must be generated within the spindle, pushing the
poles apart. If spindle elongation was driven by a pulling
force generated by interactions of astral microtubules with
the cortex at the ends of the cell, the length of the spindle
could not exceed that of the cell. In the phytopathogenic fungus Nectria haematococca and in rat kangaroo kidney epithelial cells (PtK2 cells), severing the central spindle during
anaphase increased the rate of spindle pole separation suggesting that interactions in the central spindle were limiting
the rate of spindle elongation and that astral pulling forces
can drive spindle elongation (Aist et al., 1991
, 1993
). We do
not know if the apparent discrepancy between these observations and our own is due to different factors regulating the extent versus the speed of anaphase B, or differences between
the mechanism of spindle elongation in different organisms.
Regulation of Spindle Breakdown
In most organisms, the position of the metaphase spindle
dictates the plane of cell division (Rappaport, 1996), ensuring that each daughter cell receives one set of chromosomes. In budding yeast, cell division occurs at the neck
that separates mother and bud and this site is defined before spindle formation. As a result, cells must ensure that
the anaphase spindle passes through the neck so that the
mother receives one set of chromosomes and the bud the
other. Studies of dynein mutants reveal a mechanism to
achieve this: the anaphase spindle does not break down
until one of its poles and the associated set of chromosomes has entered the bud (Yeh et al., 1995
).
Our analysis of kinesin mutants suggests that the regulation
of spindle breakdown is complex. Compared with wild-type
cells, the spindles of cin8 break down at the same time after
the onset of anaphase and at shorter final lengths, those of
kip1
break down later but at the same final length and those
of kip3
cells break down later and at a greater final length.
One explanation of these differences is that compression of the spindle as it contacts the ends of the cell at the
end of anaphase promotes spindle disassembly by promoting the action of microtubule-destabilizing factors. This
idea is supported by the observation that microtubules assembled from pure tubulin can be extensively bent in vitro
without causing them to break. In contrast, bent microtubules of lower radius of curvature are observed to break
more frequently than straight microtubules in the cytoplasm of vertebrate cells. This higher susceptibility of bent
microtubules to breakage in the cytoplasm is thought to reflect enhanced action of microtubule-destabilizing factors at sites weakened by bending (Odde, D., personal
communication). The increased length of astral microtubules in kip3 cells and the resistance of kip3
cells to
benomyl suggest that Kip3p acts directly or indirectly as a
microtubule-destabilizing factor. Thus, the spindle in
kip3
cells would be more resistant to compression-triggered disassembly at the end of anaphase and the spindle
would bend as observed. In kip1
cells, spindle breakdown would still be triggered by the collision of the spindle poles with the ends of the cell, but, because spindle
elongation is slower, spindle breakdown would occur later
than in wild-type cells. In cin8
cells, the spindle may exhibit increased susceptibility to compression. Thus, the
weaker compressive forces resulting from the deformation of the nuclear envelope as the spindle elongates would be
sufficient to trigger spindle breakdown.
An alternative hypothesis to explain our results is that
the timing of spindle breakdown in the different motor
mutants is influenced by both the state of the cell cycle
machinery and the effects of microtubule motors on microtubule dynamics. In this hypothesis, changes in the cell
cycle machinery would destabilize nuclear microtubules
leading to spindle breakdown. Possible changes include
the inactivation of Cdc28 and the APC-mediated destruction of Ase1p. Ase1p has been shown to regulate spindle
breakdown: Ase1p localizes to the spindle midzone, ase1
mutants have unstable spindles in late anaphase, and indestructible Ase1p results in a delay in spindle breakdown
producing a phenotype similar to kip3
(Pellman et al.,
1995
; Juang et al., 1997
). In cin8
mutants, the cell cycle-
induced destabilization would occur normally so that spindles break down at the same time as they do in wild-type. In contrast, Kip1p and Kip3p may be required to induce
the microtubule depolymerization that destroys the spindle. In the absence of either of these kinesins, although the
change in the cell cycle machinery would occur normally,
it would take longer for this change to induce spindle
breakdown. The difference in the final lengths of the
kip1
and kip3
spindles would simply reflect the different rates of spindle elongation in these mutants.
It is likely that the fidelity of anaphase results from the regulation of multiple independent properties including cell cycle timing of spindle elongation, absolute spindle length, spindle microtubule dynamics, and motor protein activity. Determining how these properties are built into the chemistry of motor proteins and how they are regulated by the cell should be informative in understanding the regulation of anaphase.
Genetic Redundancy and Functional Overlap
The distinct phenotypes of cin8 and kip1
cells have implications for the concepts of genetic redundancy and functional overlap between related genes. Groups of two or
more genes are said to be redundant if deletion of a single
member of the family produces little or no phenotype, but
deletion of all members of the group is lethal. KIP1 and
CIN8 are partially redundant since kip1
mutants have
very mild phenotypes and mild overexpression of Kip1p
suppresses the phenotype of cin8
(Hoyt et al., 1992
; Roof
et al., 1992
). One interpretation of these observations is that
the two motors perform essentially identical functions and
differ only in their level of expression. If this were so, the
phenotypes of kip1
and cin8
might differ quantitatively
but not qualitatively. Our observation that two mutants
have distinct effects on different aspects of anaphase argues
that the motors have distinct functions, but that these functions have overlapping roles in producing spindle elongation. We believe that careful study of genes that appear to
be redundant will reveal that in most cases their functions are qualitatively as well as quantitatively different.
The phenotypes of motor mutants highlight the distinction between minimal and full systems for performing
complex cellular tasks like chromosome segregation. A
minimal system suffices to perform a task at a level that allows cells to reproduce indefinitely under optimal conditions. Cells with two functional motors can function at this
level (Hoyt, A., personal communication). A full system
performs a task with high fidelity in the face of environmental, physiological, and genetic perturbations. For mitosis one criterion of the full system is a very low rate of errors in chromosome segregation. Lack of Cin8p disrupts
the full system, since cin8 mutants were first found because they lead to errors in chromosome segregation
(Hoyt et al., 1990). A more general criterion for including
a function in the full system is that it makes cells more susceptible to genetic perturbations. Mutations in any one of
the mitotic motors (Cin8p, Kip1p, Kip3p, Kar3p, and dynein) make at least one of the remaining mitoic motors essential for cell proliferation (Hoyt et al., 1992
; Roof et al.,
1992
; Cottingham and Hoyt, 1997
; DeZwaan et al., 1997
).
Different organisms may use different additional functions
to convert a minimal system into a full one. Thus fission
yeast appear to possess a single motor, Cut7, of the BimC
class, whereas budding yeast possess two, Cin8 and Kip1.
This difference may reflect the historical accidents of evolution, or the more critical role of spindle elongation in
budding yeast, where one of the daughter nuclei must be
transported through the bud neck to produce two viable
and genetically identical progeny. Detailed analysis of the
requirements for mitosis in budding yeast and other organisms should illuminate how minimal systems for chromosome segregation arose and were then evolved into the
highly efficient and regulated machines found today.
![]() |
Footnotes |
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Received for publication 7 July 1998 and in revised form 24 July 1998.
Address all correspondence to Dr. Aaron F. Straight at his present address Department of Cell Biology, Harvard Medical School, 240 Longwood Ave., Boston, MA 02115. Tel.: (617) 432-3728. Fax: (617) 432-3702. E-mail: aaron_straight{at}hms.harvard.edu
We thank David Odde and Andy Hoyt for communicating their unpublished results; members of the Murray laboratory, A. Desai, T.J. Mitchison, and J.M. Scholey for critical review of the manuscript; and Diana Diggs for customization of image processing software during data analysis.
This work was supported by grants from National Institutes of Health and the Packard Foundation.
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References |
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