Department of Cell Biology and Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut 06510
Amphiphysin (amphiphysin I), a dominant autoantigen in paraneoplastic Stiff-man syndrome, is a neuronal protein highly concentrated in nerve terminals, where it has a putative role in endocytosis. The yeast homologue of amphiphysin, Rvs167, has pleiotropic functions, including a role in endocytosis and in actin dynamics, suggesting that amphiphysin may also be implicated in the function of the presynaptic actin cytoskeleton. We report here the characterization of a second mammalian amphiphysin gene, amphiphysin II (SH3P9; BIN1), which encodes products primarily expressed in skeletal muscle and brain, as differentially spliced isoforms. In skeletal muscle, amphiphysin II is concentrated around T tubules, while in brain it is concentrated in the cytomatrix beneath the plasmamembrane of axon initial segments and nodes of Ranvier. In both these locations, amphiphysin II is colocalized with splice variants of ankyrin3 (ankyrinG), a component of the actin cytomatrix. In the same regions, the presence of clathrin has been reported. These findings support the hypothesis that, even in mammalian cells, amphiphysin/Rvs family members have a role both in endocytosis and in actin function and suggest that distinct amphiphysin isoforms contribute to define distinct domains of the cortical cytoplasm. Since amphiphysin II (BIN1) was reported to interact with Myc, it may also be implicated in a signaling pathway linking the cortical cytoplasm to nuclear function.
Amphiphysin I, a human autoantigen in Stiff-man syndrome associated with breast cancer (De Camilli
et al., 1993; Folli et al., 1993 Amphiphysin I shares substantial primary sequence similarity and a similar domain structure, with the yeast protein Rvs167. Furthermore, the NH2-terminal portion of
both proteins is similar to the yeast protein Rvs161 (Bauer
et al., 1993 Amphiphysin I is expressed at a high concentration in
brain and testis, at a lower concentration in neuroendocrine tissues (De Camilli et al., 1993; Folli et al., 1993 Antibodies
The following affinity purified rabbit polyclonal antibodies were generated in our laboratory. CD5 antibodies specific for amphiphysin I (raised
against a GST-fusion protein comprising the full length amphiphysin I protein [David et al., 1994 DNA Cloning
By searching the database for amphiphysin I homologues, a sequence of
289 bp was identified from a human muscle library with 76% identity to
the COOH-terminal region of human amphiphysin I. (These sequence
data are available from Genbank/EMBL/DDBJ under accession Z24784.)
A probe corresponding to the first 251 bp of this sequence was amplified
by PCR (forward primer 5
Northern Blot Analysis
Northern blot analysis of amphiphysin II expression was performed on a
human multiple tissue RNA filter (Clontech) containing 2 µg of Poly A+
RNA on each lane. The full length amphiphysin II cDNA (clone 17/12)
and an oligonucleotide of 120 bp corresponding to amino acid 351-390 of
the contiguous sequence shown in Fig. 1 A, were labeled by random priming (Boehringer Mannheim Corp.; 2 × 106 cpm/ml) and hybridized at 42°C
in 50% formamide, 6× SSC, 0.1% SDS, 2× Denhardt's, 100 µg/ml salmon
sperm DNA. An actin probe was used as a control to assess gel loading.
Filters were washed twice for 20 min at high stringent conditions in 0.2×
SSC, 0.1% SDS at 50°C.
Cell Transfection
COS-7 cells were transiently transfected with cDNAs corresponding to either clone 17/12 or clone 17/19 (see Fig. 1 C). The two cDNAs were subcloned in pcDNA3 (Invitrogen, San Diego, CA) and then purified with a
Maxiprep kit (Qiagen, Chatsworth, CA). COS-7 cells (American Type
Culture Collection, Rockville, MD) were transfected with lipofectamine
(GIBCO BRL, Gaithersburg, MD), according to standard procedures
(Chen and Okayama, 1987 Immunocytochemistry
Light microscopy.
Rat brains were fixed and frozen sectioned as described
(De Camilli et al., 1983). Small fragments of rat soleus skeletal muscle
were incubated in relaxing media (100 mM Hepes, 100 mM potassium propionate, 3 mM MgCl, 5 mM EGTA, 15 mM phosphocreatine, 2 mM NaATP;
Kaufman et al., 1990 Electron microscopy.
Small pieces of rat soleus skeletal muscle were
rapidly excised and fixed by immersion in 4% paraformaldehyde in 0.12 M
sodium phosphate buffer, pH 7.4. The samples were then infiltrated with polyvinylpyrrolidone/sucrose for 2 h. Ultrathin frozen sections were cut
onto an ultramicrotome (Reichert) with FCS attachment and immediately
processed for immunogold labeling (10-nm gold) as previously described
(Keller et al., 1984 Miscellaneous Procedures
SDS-PAGE and Western blotting were performed essentially as described by Laemmli (1970) Cloning of Amphiphysin II
Human adult skeletal muscle and brain cDNA libraries
were screened with probes corresponding to human partial cDNA sequences present in the database with significant homology to human amphiphysin I. Four clones identified by this screening (muscle clones 17-42 and 12-1A
and brain clones 11 and 19) and three human infant brain clones (clones 24660, 27466, and 30686) obtained from the
IMAGE Consortium were fully sequenced.
A comparative analysis of all these clones suggests that
they are derived by alternative splicing from a single gene.
The products of this gene will be collectively referred to as
amphiphysin II, because of their strong sequence similarity to amphiphysin I. The contiguous amino acid sequence
derived from the analysis of the individual human clones is
shown in Fig. 1 A. Fig. 1 B is a schematic alignment of the
human clones with a mouse sequence (SH3P9) that represents the murine homologue of amphiphysin II and which
was obtained during a screen for SH3 domain-containing proteins (Sparks et al., 1996 The percentages of similarity and identity between the
contiguous sequence of human amphiphysin II (as defined
by Fig. 1 A) and human amphiphysin I (David et al., 1994 Note that alternatively spliced fragments I and II (Fig.
1 B) of amphiphysin II coincide with gaps in the amphiphysin I sequence, raising the possibility that even the amphiphysin I gene may undergo a similar alternative splicing in this region.
Amphiphysin II Is Primarily Expressed in Brain
and Muscle
Northern blot analysis of different tissues with the full
length amphiphysin II cDNA (clone 17/12) revealed that
skeletal muscle is, by far, the major site of expression of
this gene (Fig. 2 A). A major band centered at 2.2 kb was
present in this tissue. The same band was present at much
lower levels in brain and at an even lower concentration in
several other tissues (Fig. 2 A). Several minor transcripts
were also visible, including a band of 3 kb in brain. Since
the putative alternatively spliced sequence III was only detected in brain clones (Fig. 1 B), we probed a blot identical
to that of Fig. 2 A with constructs generated by PCR and
corresponding either to this entire sequence (Fig. 1 A, amino acids 350-472) or to its 5
To determine the electrophoretic mobility and the tissue
distribution of amphiphysin II, two rabbit antibodies (CD7
and CD8) were raised against the COOH-terminal 68 amino acids of amphiphysin II and tested by Western blotting against a variety of tissues (Fig. 3 A and data not
shown). These antibodies specifically recognized very
strongly a cluster of bands around 85 kD in brain and
around 60 kD in skeletal muscle (Fig. 3 A) and did not react with amphiphysin I. Bands of similar molecular weight
were seen in other tissues (primarily lung) only after very
prolonged autoradiographic exposures (not shown). In
these long exposures, the 85-kD band was also detectable
in skeletal muscle in agreement with the Northern blot data of Fig. 2 B. In addition, a prominent band of 35 kD
was visible in skeletal muscle (Fig. 3 A). As seen by a comparison of Figs. 2 and 3 A, there is a discrepancy between
overall levels of amphiphysin II proteins and amphiphysin
II mRNAs detected in muscle and brain. This discrepancy
may be partially explained by a less efficient extractability
of amphiphysin II from skeletal muscle. Alternatively, it
may be due to the occurrence of major differences in amphiphysin II mRNA translation efficiency and/or in protein turnover in the two tissues.
To corroborate the identification of the brain and muscle bands as amphiphysin II, a distinct antiserum (CD9)
was raised against a 15-mer peptide corresponding to
amino acids 26-40 of amphiphysin I, which is identical to
the corresponding region of amphiphysin II. This antibody
recognized both the 128-kD brain amphiphysin I band (as
the CD5 antibody does) and the bands immunoreactive with the amphiphysin II-specific antibody CD8 (Fig. 3 B).
The CD9 antibody also recognized a few other bands in
brain, suggesting the existence of additional amphiphysin
isoforms. The CD7/CD8-immunoreactive 35-kD protein
band of skeletal muscle was not recognized by the CD9
antibody and may therefore represent a variant of amphiphysin II that does not include its NH2-terminal domain.
(Henceforth, we will refer to the brain 85- and muscle 60kD bands as amphiphysin IIa and IIb, respectively.)
Both amphiphysin IIa and IIb were recognized by antibodies directed against either NH2-terminal (CD 9) or
COOH-terminal (CD7 and CD8) epitopes. Their different
mobility suggests therefore internal alternative splicing.
Most likely, this difference reflects the presence of splice
fragment III (127 amino acids) in amphiphysin IIa. This
hypothesis was supported by the transfection of COS-7 cells with clones 17/12 and 17/19. Amphiphysin II immunoreactivity induced by these transfections comigrated
with amphiphysin IIa and IIb, respectively (Fig. 4). The
difference of ~25 kD between amphiphysin IIa and IIb is
more than the difference expected by the inclusion of 127 amino acids. However, it was previously shown that amphiphysin I has an aberrant mobility in SDS-PAGE, migrating significantly slower (~128 kD) than predicted by its
amino acid sequence (76 kD; Lichte et al., 1992
To determine whether the SH3 domains of amphiphysin
I and II have similar properties, we carried out parallel
affinity-purification experiments of brain extracts on GST
fusion proteins comprising either one of the two SH3 domains. Both amphiphysin SH3 domains were equally effective in binding dynamin I, but the SH3 domain of amphiphysin II bound synaptojanin less effectively (not shown). Thus, amphiphysin I and amphiphysin II's SH3 domains
have similar but not identical binding properties.
Localization of Amphiphysin II in the Nervous System
Considering their significant primary sequence similarity,
amphiphysin I and II may have overlapping functions in
brain. Therefore, we investigated whether these two proteins have a similar subcellular distribution by double immunofluorescence of rat brain frozen sections. Fig. 5
shows a comparison of the localization of amphiphysin I
and II in three different gray matter regions of the brain: the cerebral cortex, the hippocampus, and the cerebellum.
In all regions, amphiphysin I immunoreactivity (Fig. 5, B,
D, and F) has the punctate distribution typical of nerve
terminal staining. In contrast, amphiphysin II immunoreactivity occurs in the shape of short segments emerging
from neuronal perikarya (Fig. 5, A, C, and E). In each region, the site of emergence of these processes and their
shape is consistent with their identification as axon initial
segments (Peters et al., 1991
The specific localization of amphiphysin II at axon initial segments is further demonstrated in the high power
views of cerebellar sections double stained for amphiphysin II and other protein markers (Fig. 6). Labeling for
MAP2, a marker of perikarya and dendrites (De Camilli
et al., 1984), demonstrates the origin of the amphiphysin II
positive process from a small indentation at the basal pole of the cell (Fig. 6, A and B). Staining for glutamic acid decarboxylase, a marker of basket cell nerve terminals (Mugnaini and Oertel, 1985
In addition to axon initial segments, amphiphysin II immunoreactivity was also observed in spots sparsely distributed in the gray matter (which contains axons as well as
neuronal perikarya and dendrites) and more densely
packed in the white matter (which contains axon tracts
only). These spots are illustrated in Fig. 7, A and B, which
show brain regions double stained for amphiphysin II and
myelin basic protein. At high power, these immunoreactive structures appear as bright rings overlapping with
axonal profiles (Fig. 7 C), very similar to the rings of amphiphysin II immunoreactivity visible at axon initial segments. The distribution of these structures and their fine
morphology allows their identification as nodes of Ranvier
(Peters et al., 1991
The presence of amphiphysin II in the cortical region of
both axon initial segments and nodes of Ranvier is consistent with the functional and structural similarity of these
two axonal portions (Waxman and Quick, 1978 Localization of Amphiphysin II in Skeletal Muscle
The light microscopic localization of amphiphysin II in
skeletal muscle is illustrated in Fig. 8. Amphiphysin II immunoreactivity appears as transverse striations along the
muscle fiber (Fig. 8 A). These striations are within the I
band, as shown by counterstaining of actin by fluorescent
phalloidin (Fig. 8, B and C), and they flank the Z line, as
shown by counterstaining for desmin (Fig. 8, D and E).
The amphiphysin II stripes are similar to the stripes of
ankyrin3 (ankyrinG) immunoreactivity (Fig. 8, F and G, as
shown by double staining of ankyrin3 and actin). Ankyrin3
was previously shown to be concentrated along plasmalemmal T tubules (Flucher et al., 1990
The localization of amphiphysin II was further investigated by immunogold labeling of ultrathin frozen sections
and found to be localized in correspondence with T tubules (Fig. 9, B and D). The specificity of this labeling was
confirmed by labeling similar sections for desmin. As expected, desmin immunoreactivity was concentrated along
the Z line and absent from the T system (Fig. 9, A and C).
Cytoplasmic Localization of Amphiphysin II in
Transfected Cells
Neither in brain nor in muscle (Figs. 5-8) was amphiphysin
II found to have a nuclear localization. This was in contrast to the nuclear localization of this protein (BIN1) reported by Sakamuro et al. (1996)
We report here the characterization of an amphiphysin
gene (amphiphysin II) that is primarily, but not exclusively, expressed in brain and skeletal muscle. The gene
undergoes extensive alternative splicing. Amphiphysin II
is substantially similar in amino acid sequence and domain
structure to amphiphysin I. The strongest similarity is
present in the A domain, which is predicted to form coiled
coil structures (Sivadon et al., 1995 In brain, amphiphysin I is concentrated in the cortical
cytoplasm of nerve terminals where it participates in synaptic vesicle endocytosis (David et al., 1996 A characteristic feature of the cortical cytoplasm at initial segments and nodes of Ranvier is the presence of a
dense matrix underlying the plasmalemma (Palay et al.,
1968 In skeletal muscle, amphiphysin II is concentrated
around the plasmalemma of T tubules, and even here, it
colocalizes with ankyrin3, previously shown to be a component of the submembranous cytoskeleton of T tubules
(Flucher et al., 1990 In yeast, mutations in either the Rvs161 and/or the
RVS167 genes produce both endocytosis defects and defects in the function of the peripheral actin cytoskeleton,
including abnormal polarity, uneven cell size and morphology, and delocalization of actin patches (Munn et al.,
1995 Our present demonstration that amphiphysin II is localized in the cortical cytomatrix of specialized regions of axons and muscle is consistent with the role of the RVS
genes in actin function. A dual role in endocytosis and in
the dynamics of the peripheral cytoskeleton may be a general characteristic of amphiphysin/Rvs family proteins.
The strong implication of amphiphysin I in synaptic vesicle
endocytosis may reflect the unique specialization of the presynaptic actin cytomatrix for this function.
An additional phenotype produced by mutations in the
RVS genes is reduced viability upon starvation, a phenotype displayed by an inability of the cell to enter in stationary phase under these conditions (Crouzet et al., 1991 While this study was in progress, sequences of amphiphysin II isoforms were independently published in the
context of two studies. A first study reported the identification of mouse muscle amphiphysin II during a search
for novel SH3-containing proteins (Sparks et al., 1996 In conclusion, we suggest that amphiphysin/Rvs proteins
may play a general role in the physiology of the peripheral
cytoskeleton which underlies the plasmalemma. Different
isoforms, generated either by distinct genes or by alternative splicing of the same genes, may serve to adapt this
general role to specific functions of specialized cell surface
domains. Given the central importance of the subplasmalemmal cytomatrix in a variety of cellular processes, including vesicular trafficking to and from the plasmalemma,
generation of regional heterogeneity of plasmalemma, signal transduction, and regulation of cell-cell interaction,
the components of this matrix are likely to have pleiotropic functions. Further studies of amphiphysin family members may not only reveal new aspects of the function of the
peripheral cytoskeleton and endocytosis, but also help elucidate a novel signaling pathway from the cell surface to
the nucleus. The reported connection between amphiphysin I autoimmunity and cancer (Folli et al., 1993), is a neuronal protein
highly concentrated in the cortical cytomatrix of nerve terminals where it has a putative role in synaptic vesicle endocytosis (Lichte et al., 1992
; David et al., 1994
, 1996; Shupliakov et al., 1997
). It comprises an NH2-terminal region,
which is predicted to form coiled coil structures, a COOHterminal SH3 domain, and a proline-rich linker region between these two domains that is poorly conserved evolutionarily (David et al., 1994
). Biochemical studies, complemented by colocalization and coimmunoprecipitation
experiments, have strongly suggested that the two main
physiological ligands for the SH3 domain of amphiphysin I
are the GTPase dynamin I (David et al., 1996
; Grabs et al., 1997
) and the inositol-5-phosphatase synaptojanin (McPherson et al., 1996
). Dynamin I participates in synaptic vesicle
recycling via its critical role in the fission of clathrincoated vesicles from the nerve terminal plasmalemma
(Kosaka and Ikeda, 1983
; Koenig and Ikeda, 1989
; Shpetner and Vallee, 1989
; Takei et al., 1995
), and synaptojanin
is thought to function in a closely related step (McPherson
et al., 1996
). In addition, amphiphysin I interacts in vitro,
via a region distinct from its SH3 domain, with the appendage domain of the
subunit of the clathrin adaptor
AP2 (Wang et al., 1995
; David et al., 1996
). It has, therefore, been suggested that one of the functions of amphiphysin I is to recruit dynamin I and synaptojanin at the
clathrin coat of synaptic vesicles (David et al., 1996
).
Consistent with this hypothesis, disruption of amphiphysin
SH3 domain interactions in living nerve terminals produces a potent block of synaptic vesicle endocytosis at the stage of deeply invaginated clathrin coated pits (Shupliakov et al., 1997
).
; David et al., 1994
; Sivadon et al., 1995
). Mutations
in either RVS161 or RVS167 block receptor-mediated and
fluid phase endocytosis in yeast, strongly supporting a role
of the Amphiphysin/Rvs family in endocytic processes
(Munn et al., 1995
). In addition, RVS161 and RVS167 mutants also exhibit defects in the function of the actin cytoskeleton, in agreement with the general link between actin and endocytosis that has emerged from yeast studies
(Munn et al., 1995
; Sivadon et al., 1995
). A corresponding
link between amphiphysin I and the function of the actin
cytoskeleton has been suggested by studies in cultured
hippocampal neurons (Mundigl O., C. Ochoa, C. David, A.K. Kabanov, and P. De Camilli. Mol. Biol. Cell (Suppl.).
7:84a.). Finally, rvs mutants impair the ability of yeast cells
to enter stationary phase upon exposure to nutrient starvation (reduced viability upon starvation) suggesting an
indirect role of the RVS genes in controlling cell proliferation (Crouzet et al., 1991
; David et al., 1994
).
;
Lichte et al., 1992
), and at only much lower levels in most
other tissues (Butler, M.H., S. Floyd, and P. De Camilli,
unpublished results). We have characterized here the
product of a second amphiphysin gene, which we refer to
as amphiphysin II. Amphiphysin II is localized primarily in specialized regions of the cortical cytoplasm of axons and
muscle cells. These observations add further evidence for
a general connection between proteins of the amphiphysin/Rvs family and the function of the cortical cell cytoskeleton.
Materials and Methods
]); CD7 and CD8 antibodies specific for amphiphysin II (raised against a GST-fusion protein comprising the last 68 amino acids of amphiphysin II; in this region, the amino acid identity between amphiphysin I and II is 55%); CD9 antibodies directed against both
amphiphysin I and II (raised against a synthetic peptide corresponding to amino acids 26 to 40 of amphiphysin I, which is 100% conserved in amphiphysin II). A mouse polyclonal serum specific for amphiphysin I was
raised against the polyhistidine-tagged full length amphiphysin I protein
(David et al., 1996
). Rabbit polyclonal antibodies directed against synaptojanin were previously described (McPherson et al., 1996
). DG1 antibodies specific for dynamin I were generated against a dynamin I GST-fusion
protein lacking the proline-rich domain. Antibodies directed against
desmin, MAP2, and myelin basic protein (MBP) were purchased from Immunon (Pittsburgh, PA), Boehringer Mannheim Corp. (Indianapolis, IN),
and Sternberger Monoclonals (Baltimore, MD), respectively. Polyclonal
anti-ankyrin3 antibodies and anti-glut4 antibodies were kind gifts of J. Morrow (Yale University, New Haven, CT; Devarajan et al., 1996
) and D. James (University of Queensland, Australia), respectively. A monoclonal
anti-clathrin antibody (X22) was a kind gift of F. Brodsky (University of
California, San Francisco, CA; Brodsky, 1985
). A mouse monoclonal antibody (GAD6) against glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD) was a kind gift of D. Gottlieb (Washington University, St. Louis, MO; Chang and Gottlieb, 1988
).
-cccaagcacgactacacggc-3
; reverse primer 5
ggaggaggtgttcttcacacgc-3
) from a human skeletal muscle cDNA library
constructed in
ZAPII phage (Stratagene, La Jolla, CA). The probe was
then radioactively labeled by primer-direct labeling (Bogue et al., 1994
)
and used to screen 2 × 106 plaques of the same library. The two longest
clones isolated by the screen (clones 17-42 and 12-1A) were partially characterized by restriction mapping and found to overlap extensively. Both clones were fully sequenced, and clone 17-42 was found to encode a nearly
full length protein, missing only three amino acids at its COOH-terminal
end. Subsequent searches of the database revealed additional expressed
sequence tag (EST) sequences from a human infant brain library that
were identical to portions of our clone 17-42. Clones 24660, 30686, and
27466 (Genbank/EMBL/DDBJ T80281, R18250 and R12992, respectively)
were obtained through the IMAGE Consortium (Research Genetics Inc.,
Huntsville, AL) and fully sequenced. A human brain cDNA library constructed in
gt11 (Clontech, Palo Alto, CA) was then screened with a 220bp probe amplified by PCR (forward primer 5
-cttggggagggtggccccg-3
;
reverse primer 5
-agcaagctcaaccagaacc-3
) and labeled by primer-direct
labeling. 26 positive plaques out of 1 × 106 were identified, and the two
longest clones (clone 11 and clone 19) were fully sequenced. These clones
were identical to the IMAGE cDNA clones mentioned above, except for
some additional alternative splicings (see Fig. 1 B). Since none of the
clones isolated encoded an entire reading frame, the full length clones
were assembled as follows starting from the two longest clones. Clone 17/12
(see Fig. 1 C) was assembled from clone 17-42 by replacing its COOH terminus with that of clone 12-1A using the SapI restriction site. Clone 17/19
(see Fig. 1 C) was assembled from clone 19 (Genbank/EMBL/DDBJ U87558) by replacing its NH2-terminal region with that of clone 17-42 at
the unique restriction site BsaAI. Nucleotide sequences were analyzed by
Blast and Fasta and aligned by Bestfit and Pileup (Genetics Computer
Group, Madison, WI). Chromatograms from sequencing analysis were assembled by Seqman (DNASTAR, Inc., Madison, WI). Coiled coil structure identification was performed using Coils 2.2 (Lupas, 1996
).
Fig. 1.
(A) Human amphiphysin II contiguous sequence obtained from a
Pileup analysis of the human
clones shown in B. Alternatively spliced regions are depicted by shaded amino acid
residues. (B) Schematic representation of the human
amphiphysin II clones analyzed in this study and of the
mouse homologue of amphiphysin II previously reported (Sparks et al., 1996).
The calibration bar (top)
indicates number of amino
acid residues. Alternatively
spliced regions are indicated
by roman numerals (I-IV).
(C) Schematic representation of full length amphiphysin II clones assembled
from clones 17-42 and 12-1A
and from clones 19 and 1742, respectively. Clone 17/12 is identical to the recently reported BIN1 clone with the
exception of a K
E difference at position 434 of BIN1
and the corresponding position 591 of the contiguous sequence shown in Fig. 1 A
(Sakamuro et al., 1996
). (D)
Domain diagram of human
amphiphysins I and II showing the homology between
the two genes. The boundaries of the A-D domains are
delineated by amino acid
numbers. A-D domains were
previously defined as follows
based on comparisons among human and chicken amphiphysin I and yeast Rvs proteins (David et al., 1994
). The
A, B, and D domains are the
regions most highly conserved between chicken and
human amphiphysin, while
the C domain is poorly conserved. The A domain,
within the A and B region, is
defined by the yeast proteins
Rvs161, which comprises
this domain only. The percent similarity and identity
(in parenthesis) for each domain is given. The shaded areas in the amphiphysin II
gene represent the alternatively spliced regions outlined in Fig. 1 B.
[View Larger Versions of these Images (50 + 21 + 10K GIF file)]
). Triton X-100 extracts of transfected cells and
untransfected COS-7 cells were harvested after 24 h and analyzed by SDSPAGE and Western blotting.
) at room temperature for 10 min. Muscles were then
stretched, fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde/0.1 M phosphate buffer, pH 7.4, and semithin sectioned (0.5 mm) on an ultramicrotome (Ultracut FCS;
Reichert, Vienna, Austria). Rat muscle and brain sections were stained
for indirect immunofluorescence according to De Camilli et al. (1983).
Pictures were recorded on black and white films (T-MAX 100; Kodak,
Rochester, NY) with a microscope (Axiophot; Zeiss Inc., Thornwood,
NY) equipped for epifluorescence microscopy.
; Tokuyasu et al., 1989).
and Towbin et al. (1979)
, respectively. Immunoreactive bands were detected by either alkaline phosphatase conjugated
secondary antibodies (Bio Rad, Hercules, CA) or 125I-protein A (105 cpm/
ml; Dupont/NEN, Boston, MA).
Results
). The partial clones depicted
in Fig. 1 B were used to assemble the full length clones 17/12
and 17/19, as shown in Fig. 1 C (see Materials and Methods). These full length clones correspond to two alternative
splicing variants of amphiphysin II. Clone 17/12 is identical
to BIN1 (with the exception of a single amino acid; see Fig.
1 C, legend), a protein recently identified in a two hybrid
screen for MYC-interacting proteins (Sakamuro et al.,
1996
).
)
are 71 and 55%, respectively. Fig. 1 D shows a schematic
alignment of the two sequences, as well as the boundaries
of the A-D domains as defined previously on the basis of
blocks of similarity between the Rvs yeast proteins and
human and chicken amphiphysins (David et al., 1994
; Fig.
1, legend).
portion (Fig. 1 A, amino
acids 350-390). Both probes produced an identical pattern
(Fig. 2 B and data not shown) and labeled bands with similar mobility as those labeled by the full length probe
(clone 17/12) but with different relative intensities. The
most striking difference is a strong labeling of the 3-kb
band in brain and the weaker labeling of transcripts migrating at the 2.2-kb region. These observations confirm
the preferential inclusion of splice segment III in brain amphiphysin II. No cross-reactivity with amphiphysin I
mRNA (major transcript at 4.5 kb [David et al., 1994
]) was
observed in the high stringency conditions at which the
Northern blot analysis was performed.
Fig. 2.
Northern blot analysis of human tissues demonstrating patterns of expression of amphiphysin II
mRNAs. Two identical blots containing Poly(A+) RNA
from a variety of tissues were
probed with clone 17/12 (A)
and a probe corresponding to
alternatively spliced segment III (B). Note the different labeling patterns produced by the two probes.
Amphiphysin II is expressed
primarily in skeletal muscle
and brain. Numbers at left indicate molecular weights (kb).
[View Larger Version of this Image (62K GIF file)]
Fig. 3.
(A) Tissue distribution of amphiphysin II as demonstrated by Western blotting. Amphiphysin II is expressed primarily in brain and skeletal muscle. Equal protein amounts of post
nuclear supernatants prepared from rat tissues were loaded in
each lane and probed with the CD8 polyclonal rabbit serum specific for amphiphysin II. Bound antibodies were detected by 125Iprotein A. (B) Comparison of amphiphysin I and amphiphysin II expression in rat brain, skeletal muscle, and lung. Extracts of the
three tissues were probed with an antibody specific for amphiphysin I (CD5), for amphiphysin II (CD8), and with an antibody
that recognizes both amphiphysin I and II (CD9). Bound antibodies were detected by 125I-protein A. The low molecular weight
bands labeled by the CD8 antibody are not visible in the brain
and lung lanes of Fig. 3 A because they had migrated at the gel
front. Numbers at left indicate molecular weights (kD).
[View Larger Versions of these Images (53 + 39K GIF file)]
; David et
al., 1994
). This aberrant mobility is primarily due to a region (David et al., 1994
) that strikingly corresponds to the
alternatively spliced region III in amphiphysin II.
Fig. 4.
Comparison of the
electrophoretic mobility of
amphiphysin II expressed in
COS-7 cells with the electrophoretic mobilities of muscle
and brain amphiphysin II.
Triton X-100 extracts of tissues and COS-7 cells were
probed by Western blotting
with the amphiphysin II specific antibody, CD7. Lanes
are as follows: 1, control untransfected COS-7 cells; 2, rat brain;
3, COS-7 cells transfected with clone 17/19; 4, COS-7 cells transfected with clone 17/12; 5, skeletal muscle. Immunoreactive
bands were detected by using alkaline phosphatase-conjugated anti-rabbit IgG. Numbers at left indicate molecular weights
(kD).
[View Larger Version of this Image (63K GIF file)]
). High magnification views indicate that amphiphysin II is strictly confined to the cortical cytoplasm (Fig. 5 A, insets).
Fig. 5.
Comparison of the localization of amphiphysin I
(mouse polyclonal serum) and amphiphysin II (rabbit antibody
CD8) in rat brain. Double immunofluorescence micrographs. In
all fields, amphiphysin I immunoreactivity (B, D, and F) has a
typical nerve terminal pattern represented by small puncta
throughout the gray matter. Amphiphysin II (A, C, and E) is primarily localized at initial axon segments. (A and B) cerebral cortex. The inset of A shows high power views of two longitudinal
sections and one transverse section of initial axon segments. Note
the concentration of immunoreactivity in the cortical region of
the cytoplasm. (C and D) CA1 region of the hippocampus demonstrating in C the initial axon segments of pyramidal neurons
visible in D as negative images. (E and F) Cerebellar cortex. Arrows point to the amphiphysin II positive initial segment of a
Purkinje cell axon, which is surrounded by amphiphysin I positive
nerve terminals of basket cells. Arrowheads in E point to initial
axon segments of stellate cells. Bar, 63 µm; inset, 126 µm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (73K GIF file)]
), shows that the amphiphysin IIpositive region of the axon coincides with its unmyelinated
portion innervated by basket cells (Fig. 6, C and D). Labeling for myelin basic protein illustrates the sharp boundary between the amphiphysin II-positive portion of the
axon and its myelinated portion (Fig. 6, E and F).
Fig. 6.
Double immunofluorescence micrographs demonstrating the selective localization of amphiphysin II at axon initial segments. (A and B) Amphiphysin II-MAP2 immunostaining demonstrating the emergence of the amphiphysin II positive segment from the
Purkinje cell body. (C and D) Amphiphysin II-GAD immunostaining demonstrating that the immunoreactive region of the axon corresponds to its region enclosed by the GABAnergic nerve terminals (arrows) of basket cells. (E and F) Amphiphysin II-myelin basic protein immunostaining demonstrating that amphiphysin II immunostaining terminates abruptly (arrowhead) at the site where the myelin
sheath begins. Bar, 126 µm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (56K GIF file)]
).
Fig. 7.
Localization of amphiphysin II at nodes of Ranvier. (A
and B) Double immunofluorescence for amphiphysin II and myelin basic protein. Field shown is from the forebrain including two
longitudinally sectioned white matter tracts. (A) Amphiphysin II
positive axon initial segments are visible in the gray matter (GM).
Small spots of amphiphysin II immunoreactivity visible on white
matter tracts (WM) represent nodes of Ranvier. (C) White matter region in the brain stem demonstrating front (double arrows)
and side (single arrows) views of nodes of Ranvier. The inset
shows at high power a bundle of cross-sectioned axons demonstrating the localization of amphiphysin II in the cortical cytoplasm of nodes of Ranvier. Bar: (A and B) 27 µm; inset, 135 µm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (126K GIF file)]
). An identical localization at both sites was previously reported for a
neuron-specific isoform of ankyrin3 (ankryinG; Kapfhamer
et al., 1995
; Kordeli et al., 1995
).
). Accordingly, the localization of amphiphysin II was also very similar to that
of triadin, a marker of T tubules (Guo et al., 1994
; data not
shown). Immunoreactivity for clathrin heavy chain (monoclonal antibody X22), which was previously shown to be
concentrated in muscle at I bands (Muñoz et al., 1995a
,b), formed stripes comprised between the amphiphysin II striations and the Z line, as shown by double staining of amphiphysin II and clathrin (Fig. 8, H and I). The glucose
transporter, glut4, a protein that is internalized at least
partially via clathrin coated vesicles (Garippa et al., 1996
;
Robinson et al., 1996
), is also localized in proximity of T
tubules (Muñoz et al., 1995a
). Glut4 immunoreactivity is
centered around the M line, as shown by double labeling
with anti-glut4 and anti-clathrin antibodies (Fig. 8, J and K).
Fig. 8.
Immunofluorescence localization of amphiphysin II and other proteins
of the sarcomere in skeletal
muscle. Immunofluorescence of semithin frozen sections.
Amphiphysin II immunoreactivity (A, B, D, and H)
forms transverse bands that
flank the Z line. B-K show
pairs of double-fluorescence
micrographs. (B and C) Amphiphysin II and actin (phalloidin staining); (D and E)
amphiphysin II and desmin, a
marker of the Z line; (F and
G) ankyrin (ankyrin3) and actin; (H and I) amphiphysin
II and clathrin heavy chain
(antibody X22); (J and K)
glut4 and clathrin. Arrows
equal Z and M lines, as indicated. Bar, 7.9 µm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (187K GIF file)]
Fig. 9.
Comparison of the localizations of desmin and amphiphysin II in skeletal muscle by electron microscopy immunocytochemistry. Ultrathin frozen sections were labeled by immunogold for desmin (A and C) and amphiphysin II (B, D and E). Desmin immunoreactivity is localized on a network of filamentous structures that are in register with Z lines. Amphiphysin is selectively localized at the T
system and is present on T tubules (E). Z, Z lines; T, T tubules; PM, plasmalemma. Bar: (A, B, and E) 300 nm; (C and D) 378 nm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (148K GIF file)]
in transfected HepG2
cells. We examined, therefore, the localization of amphiphysin IIa and IIb in transfected COS-7 cells as well as in
HepG2 cells transfected with the same clone (17/12, and
under the same experimental conditions) used by Sakamuro et al. (1996)
. In all cases the protein was primarily localized in the cytosol (Fig. 10 and data not shown).
Fig. 10.
Immunofluorescence localization of amphiphysin II in transfected cells.
(A) COS-7 cells transfected
with clone 17-12 and examined by conventional epifluorescence light microscopy. (B
and C) HepG2 cells transfected with clone 17/12 and
examined by confocal microscopy. The slight fluorescence visible in A over the
nuclei is out of the nuclei focal plane. Bar, (A) 12.6 µm;
(B and C) 9.0 µm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (47K GIF file)]
Discussion
), and in the D domain, which contains the SH3 domain (David et al., 1994
). Domain A is characteristic of all proteins of the amphiphysin/
Rvs family identified so far, including the yeast protein
Rvs161, which is composed of the A domain only (David
et al., 1994
; Sivadon et al., 1995
). Due to these similarities,
the two amphiphysins are likely to have homologous functions. However, their different cellular and subcellular localizations clearly indicate that their functions are not
overlapping.
; Shupliakov et al.,
1997
). In contrast, amphiphysin II is concentrated in axon
initial segments and nodes of Ranvier. The occurrence of
clathrin coated pits and clathrin coated invaginations has
been reported to occur more frequently at initial segments
and nodes of Ranvier than at other locations along the axonal surface, with the exception of nerve terminals (Karlsson, 1967
; Campos-Ortega et al., 1968
; Conradi, 1969
). Thus,
an involvement of amphiphysin II in endocytosis is plausible. However, it is unlikely that the high and specific concentration of amphiphysin II present at these sites may be simply related to endocytosis.
; Conradi, 1969
; Waxman and Quick, 1978
). This submembranous cytoskeleton may participate in mediating
the local enrichment of special adhesion molecules (members of the neurofascin/L1 family; Shiga and Oppenheim,
1991
) and of proteins required for the generation and
propagation of action potentials, such as Na+ channels (Srinivasan et al., 1988
; Waxman and Ritchie, 1993
), Na+/K+ ATPase (Nelson and Veshnock, 1987
; Waxman and Ritchie,
1993
), and Na+/Ca2+ exchangers (Waxman and Ritchie, 1993
).
The only unique component of this specialized cortical cytomatrix identified so far is a neuron-specific isoform of
ankyrin3 (ankyrinG; Kordeli et al., 1995
). Neuronal amphiphysin II may be a second component of this matrix. As in the
case of amphiphysin II, the isoform of ankyrin expressed
at axon initial segments and nodes of Ranvier is generated by alternative splicing of a gene (ankyrin3) that is widely
expressed outside the nervous system, and at particularly
high concentrations in skeletal muscle (Kordeli et al., 1995
).
). Like axon initial segments and
nodes of Ranvier, T tubules are enriched in proteins responsible for controlling ion permeability and transport
(Lau et al., 1979
; Flucher et al., 1990
) and a specialized cytomatrix around the T tubules, including both amphiphysin
II and ankyrin3, may help to define the composition and
function of these plasmalemmal domains (Flucher et al.,
1990
). T tubules are not typically regarded as sites specialized for endocytosis. However, there is evidence that
clathrin-mediated endocytosis may occur at this region.
First, clathrin immunoreactivity (detected by monoclonal
antibody X22) is present in proximity of T tubules as previously reported (Kaufman et al., 1990
) and further confirmed by this study. This clathrin heavy chain is likely to
correspond to the skeletal muscle specific clathrin recently
described by several groups (Gong et al., 1996
; Kedra et
al., 1996
; Lindsay et al., 1996
; Sirotkin et al., 1996
). Second,
the glut4 transporter, which undergoes regulated surface exposure in response to insulin (Wang et al., 1996
) and is
internalized at least in part via clathrin coated vesicles
(Garippa et al., 1996
; Robinson et al., 1996
), is concentrated along the T system and surrounding vesicles (Slot
et al., 1991
; Muñoz et al., 1995a
,b).
; Sivadon et al., 1995
). The COOH-terminal region of
Rvs167 was identified in a two hybrid screen for actin
binding proteins (Amberg et al., 1995
). More generally,
yeast studies have demonstrated an important role of the
actin cytoskeleton in endocytosis, thus raising the possibility that effects of RVS mutations on endocytosis and the
peripheral cytoskeleton may be interrelated (Munn and
Riezman, 1994
; Amberg et al., 1995
; Munn et al., 1995
).
;
Bauer et al., 1993
). Since amphiphysin I was shown to be
an autoantigen in breast cancer (De Camilli et al., 1993;
David et al., 1994
, 1996), it was speculated (David et al.,
1994
) that proteins of the amphiphysin/Rvs family, like
other proteins of the cortical cell cytomatrix that can act as
tumor suppressors (Rubinfeld et al., 1993
; Tsukita et al., 1993
), may be directly implicated in cancer.
).
This protein (SH3P9) was not further characterized. A
second study identified a fragment of murine amphiphysin
II in a yeast two hybrid screen for MYC binding proteins
(Sakamuro et al., 1996
). The authors of this study went on
to isolate a human amphiphysin II isoform, BIN1, which is
identical to our clone 17/12, and to demonstrate that this
protein is localized in the nucleus and has the properties of
a tumor suppressor gene. These findings are consistent
with the presence of a nuclear localization sequence in
BIN1 (Sakamuro et al., 1996
), which we show here to be
encoded by splice fragment II (Fig. 1 B). In our study,
however, we do not have any evidence for a nuclear localization of amphiphysin II in adult muscle or brain. Our results, therefore, argue for a primary function of amphiphysin II in the cytoplasm, although they clearly do not
exclude that amphiphysin II may shuttle from the cytoplasm to the nucleus and that it may function in a signaling pathway from the cell periphery to the nucleus. It was
shown previously that proteins of the submembranous cytoskeleton (e.g., the tight junction protein ZO1 [Gottardi
et al., 1996
]) have a nuclear localization under certain conditions. Thus, the possibility that amphiphysin II may participate in nuclear events and even be concentrated in the
nucleus under certain functional states cannot be ruled out.
; De
Camilli et al., 1993) suggests that these studies may be of
relevance to the biology of at least some forms of human
cancer.
Received for publication 9 December 1996 and in revised form 21 April 1997.
M.H. Butler and C. David contributed equally to this work.We thank Corinne Leprince for discussing unpublished data.
This study was supported by grants from the Donaghue Foundation, the Human Frontier Science Program Organization, and the National Institutes of Health (CA46128) to P. De Camilli. D. Grabs was a recipient of a Deutscher Akademischer Austauschdienst fellowship, C. David of a United States Army Medical Research and Development Command fellowship, and O. Cremona of Telethon and Human Frontier Science Program Organization long-term fellowships.
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