Article |
Address correspondence to Graham Warren, Dept. of Cell Biology, Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research, Yale University School of Medicine, 333 Cedar St., P.O. Box 208002, New Haven, CT 06520-8002. Tel.: (203) 785-5058. Fax: (203) 785-4301. email: graham.warren{at}yale.edu
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Abstract |
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Key Words: ER export site; fluorescence recovery after photobleaching; GRASP; organelle biogenesis; basal body
Abbreviation used in this paper: CGN, cis Golgi network.
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Introduction |
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The unique architecture of the Golgi apparatus raises the question of its biogenesis. How is this complex structure duplicated, and then partitioned during mitosis and cell division? Partitioning has been most studied and is aided by dispersal of Golgi components. In many plants and fungi, Golgi stacks are dispersed throughout the cell cycle (Drionich and Stachelin, 1997; Rossanese et al., 1999), but in interphase animal cells, several hundred stacks are linked together in a ribbonlike structure near to the nucleus and often the centrosomes (Rambourg et al., 1987). Dispersal is a necessary prelude to partitioning, but the mechanism is still being debated (Zaal et al., 1999; Jesch et al., 2001; Jokitalo et al., 2001; Shorter and Warren, 2002; Axelsson and Warren, 2004; Pecot and Malhotra, 2004).
Golgi duplication is less well understood though several models have been put forward (Munro, 2002). The first model is templated biogenesis, in which the old Golgi is thought to act as a scaffold for the new. This model has its origins in EM images that appear to show elongated Golgi stacks dividing into two (Domozych et al., 1981; Benchimol et al., 2001). Though static images cannot indicate the direction of events, we have recently been able to confirm this sequence by exploiting the simplicity of the protozoan parasite Toxoplasma gondii and its amenability to genetic manipulation. The single Golgi apparatus in these organisms was tagged using GFP variants and the elongation and medial fission followed by video microscopy. The structural intermediates of the dividing Golgi were corroborated by three-dimensional EM reconstructions (Pelletier et al., 2002).
The other model is de novo biogenesis, in which new Golgi appear at new ER export sites. This model has been nicely demonstrated in Pichia pastoris, a budding yeast with stacked Golgi cisternae located next to ER export sites (Bevis et al., 2002). There are sufficiently few Golgi to make it possible to visualize the process of new Golgi synthesis. The results clearly show that new Golgi appear at new ER export sites. They do not appear as outgrowths of preexisting Golgi. The new Golgi can also appear in the daughter cell, suggesting that duplication and partitioning can be coupled processes.
An implied feature of de novo biogenesis is that the new Golgi components are funneled through the new ER export site. However, there is no evidence for this finding. Some or even all of the components could be funneled through the old Golgi using the new ER export site as a positional marker.
This possibility was raised by the studies reported here on another protozoan parasite, Trypanosoma brucei, the causative agent of sleeping sickness in man and Nagana in ruminants. This parasite also has a single Golgi that is duplicated during the cell cycle, and examination of fixed images had suggested that duplication might be a templated process (Duszenko et al., 1988; Field et al., 2000). Using video microscopy, we show that the new Golgi appears de novo next to the new ER export site. Nevertheless, photobleaching studies show that the old Golgi plays an important role, supplying some components to the new, suggesting that the two models for duplication are more similar than initial inspection might suggest.
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Results |
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Antibodies raised to Tb-GRASP identified a single protein of 55 kD in immunoblots of whole cell lysates (Fig. 1, lane 1) and labeled, by immunofluorescence microscopy, one or a few structures near the kinetoplast, the single mass of mitochondrial DNA, in the posterior region of the cell (Fig. 2 A). These structures were shown to be Golgi by immuno-EM (Fig. 2 B), and quantitation showed that the density of labeling over the Golgi stacks was >3.5-fold than that of the rest of the cell (Table I).
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Duplication of Golgi and ER export sites
Video fluorescence microscopy was used to follow the Golgi during one cell cycle, which lasts 78 h. During G1, each cell contained a single Golgi structure, as shown in the still images in Fig. 3 A and Video 1 (available at http://www.jcb.org/cgi/content/full/jcb.200311076/DC1). Then, a small structure appeared de novo, which grew over the next 2 h until it was about the same size as the old Golgi. Later on, toward the end of the cell cycle, more Golgi appeared, near to the preexisting Golgi. Most of these Golgi disappeared just before the mother cell underwent cytokinesis. The function of these additional Golgi is unclear. A similar excess of Golgi has been observed before in the bloodstream form of T. brucei (Field et al., 2000) and was also observed near the end of the cell cycle in T. gondii (Pelletier et al., 2002).
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Photobleaching experiments
The role played by the old Golgi in the synthesis of the new was tested by photobleaching experiments. Tb-GRASP-GFP could not be used because it was found to exchange rapidly through the cytoplasm. Similar observations have been made for the GFP-tagged versions of mammalian GRASP65 (Ward et al., 2001). Instead, a membrane spanning protein was used, a putative Golgi enzyme (GntB), identified by its similarity to a UDP-GlcNAc:Thr/Ser mucin-type polypeptide -GlcNAcTransferase from Dictyostelium discoideum (Wang et al., 2003; West, 2003; West et al., 2004). A fusion of the NH2-terminal retention domain to YFP (GntB-YFP) was shown to localize specifically to the Golgi by both immunofluorescence microscopy (Fig. 2 E) and immuno-EM (Fig. 2 F). The Golgi labeling density was >7-fold than that of the rest of the cell (Table I). GntB-YFP colocalized with Tb-GRASP at all stages of the cell cycle (Fig. 2 E and not depicted). Antibodies to GFP recognized a single protein of
45 kD in immunoblots of whole cell lysates from parasites expressing GntB-YFP (Fig. 1, lane 5).
Photobleaching was performed when the new Golgi was 5080% of the size of the old and recovery occurred within 2025 min (Fig. 4 A, top). Recovery was quantitated at each time point by measuring the fluorescence in the new Golgi and expressing it as a fraction of the total fluorescence (in the new and old Golgi). This approach corrected for the gradual diminution in fluorescence, which varied from 5 to 30% during the 30-min observation period. Expressing this fraction as a percentage of the prebleach value allowed data from different cells to be averaged so as to derive statistically meaningful results. Fig. 5 A (blue diamonds) shows the recovery curve for the new Golgi after photobleaching. Cycloheximide experiments show that some of the fluorescence during recovery derives from new synthesis, whereas the rest derives from newly synthesized GntB-YFP in the process of folding up in the ER (unpublished data). The important question was the route being taken. Was the newly assembled protein moving directly from the ER to the new Golgi, or was it moving via the old Golgi?
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Importantly, the position of the photobleaching bar was crucial. When moved to the other side of the new Golgi (but at the same distance from it), there was no effect on the recovery of the new Golgi (Fig. 5 A, yellow triangles). There was also no effect when the bar was placed on the other side of the old Golgi and over other parts of the cytoplasm (unpublished data). There remained the possibility that the ER was mediating this transfer of material between the two Golgi and that the photobleaching bar was interrupting this flow. Because the ER in this parasite pervades the entire cell cytoplasm (Bangs et al., 1993; Fig. 4 B using an antibody to the ER chaperone, BiP), we reasoned that a longer photobleaching bar transecting the cell should have a greater inhibitory effect than the shorter bar. As shown in Fig. 5 C, a threefold increase in the length (and hence intensity) of the photobleaching bar had no additional inhibitory effect on the recovery of the new Golgi. Together, these data suggest a direct, focused flow of material between the two Golgi that does not involve the ER.
Photobleaching the old Golgi led to recovery that was not affected by the photobleaching bar (Fig. 5 D), showing that the net flow was from old to new. This flow stopped once the new Golgi reached the same size as the old because the photobleaching bar then had no effect on the recovery of the new Golgi (Fig. 5 E). To further show that the old Golgi was indeed the source of material needed for recovery of the new Golgi after bleaching, the recovery of the new Golgi was monitored while the old Golgi was repetitively photobleached, and vice versa. Recovery of the new Golgi was inhibited by repetitive photobleaching of the old (Fig. 5 G), whereas recovery of the old Golgi was not affected by photobleaching of the new (Fig. 5 H). Note that the lower percentage recoveries were the consequence of not being able to correct for the gradual diminution in fluorescence during the course of these experiments (see Materials and methods). Together these data suggest a net flow from the old to the new Golgi, but only during the growth phase.
Experiments were also performed using cells stably expressing both Tb-Sec13p-CFP and GntB-YFP. This procedure allowed the ER export sites to be monitored during repetitive photobleaching and to show that they were not being targeted. This experiment eliminated the possibility that the slower recovery in Fig. 5 A was the consequence of inadvertent repetitive bleaching of the new ER export site (not depicted). Conversely, when cells expressing only Tb-Sec13p-YFP were used to photobleach the new ER export site and monitor recovery in the absence or presence of repetitive photobleaching, no difference was observed (Fig. 5 F). This finding argues strongly that the route taken to assemble new ER export sites is not the same as that for new Golgi, at least for the proteins being studied.
Role of the basal bodies
Earlier work suggested a relationship between the Golgi and the basal bodies, the centrosomes in these parasites (Field et al., 2000). Basal bodies nucleate the flagella that originate in the flagellar pocket and run the length of the organism (Gull, 1999). They are also tightly associated with the kinetoplast and drive its segregation during mitosis (Robinson and Gull, 1991; Fig. 6 A). Duplication of the basal bodies was closely followed by the appearance of a new Golgi near to the new basal body, and this relationship was maintained through the rest of the cell cycle (Fig. 6 A). Measurements showed that the growing new Golgi was 1.40 ± 0.36 µm (n = 53) from the old Golgi and always situated toward the more posterior end of the mother cell.
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Discussion |
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Golgi enzymes are poorly conserved across species, but comparison with D. discoideum revealed a putative GlcNAcTransferase that was termed GntB (Wang et al., 2003; West, 2003; West et al., 2004). These proteins are 32% identical and 56% similar over a stretch of 280 amino acids that constitutes the catalytic domain, based on comparison with the distantly related animal polypeptide
-GalNAcTransferases. A UDP-GlcNAc:Thr polypeptide GlcNAcTransferase-like activity has been detected in extracts of T. brucei (Dieckmann-Schuppert et al., 1994). GntB has the same domain structure as all other Golgi enzymes: an NH2-terminal membrane-spanning domain that should act as a retention signal, followed by a lumenal catalytic domain (Munro, 1998). When attached to variants of GFP, the NH2-terminal domain did indeed act as a retention domain, localizing the fusion protein to the Golgi apparatus and validating its use as a membrane marker of the T. brucei Golgi.
The results are clearly consistent with de novo biogenesis. The new Golgi appears near to the old Golgi and grows until it is the same size. The same pattern was observed for both Tb-GRASP and GntB. There was no evidence for templated biogenesis. From the earliest time at which the new Golgi could be discerned (1% of the size of the old Golgi), it appeared to be separate from the old. There was also no evidence that the old Golgi grew and then "shed" a new Golgi, though a sufficiently small Golgi might be below the resolution of the methods used.
The de novo appearance of the new Golgi raised the question as to the source of its membrane components. The most obvious possibility was the new ER export site because in P. pastoris, there is evidence that new ER export sites appear just before the new Golgi (Bevis et al., 2002). This possibility was tested in T. brucei using the homologue of the Sec13p COPII coat component tagged with GFP variants. Immuno-EM localized this construct to the region between the ER and the Golgi, which is consistent with labeling of ER export sites. Coexpression of tagged Tb-Sec13p with either tagged Tb-GRASP or GntB showed close association at all stages of the cell cycle. Even time intervals of 1 min were not sufficient to resolve any difference in the appearance of the new Golgi and ER export site.
Another possible source was the old Golgi. In some experiments, there did appear to be movement of fluorescent material from the old to the new Golgi, but the observations were not consistent and the material could not be resolved using the available methods. Therefore, an indirect approach was taken, using a photobleaching bar to interrupt any transfer that might be occurring, or directly bleaching the old Golgi to deplete the source of material. Tagged GntB was used because it can only move from one Golgi to the other via membranes. Tagged GRASP proteins can move through the cytoplasm. Photobleaching the new Golgi led to rapid recovery that was slowed by repetitively photobleaching the old Golgi or the region between the old Golgi and the new. Photobleaching the old Golgi led to recovery that was not affected by the photobleaching bar or repetitive photobleaching of the new Golgi, showing that the net movement was from old to new. Timing was important. Inhibition of recovery was observed when the new Golgi was growing, but once it had reached full size, the photobleaching bar had no effect. The position of the photobleaching bar was also critical. When placed on the other side of the new Golgi, but at the same distance from it, no inhibition was observed. Nor was any inhibition observed when the bar was placed over other regions of the cytoplasm.
Together, these data argue that membrane components are moved from the old to the new Golgi, starting about two hours into the cell cycle and cease about two hours later, once the new Golgi has grown to the same size as the old. The route taken is presently unclear. It seems unlikely that transfer occurs via the ER because increasing the length of the photobleaching bar had no additional inhibitory effect on the recovery of the new Golgi. This finding occurred despite the fact that the bar transected the cell, so that it could now interrupt more of the potential flow of material from old to new Golgi mediated by the ER. In addition, photobleaching the new ER export site led to recovery that was not affected by the photobleaching bar, showing that the route taken, at least by the TbSec13p, is different from that taken by GntB. Together, these data suggest that transfer is not mediated via the ER but directly between the two Golgi. One attractive possibility is that transfer is mediated by elements of the cytoskeleton, especially because the basal bodies play a role in determining the site of the new Golgi and ER export site. Experiments are currently underway to examine the possibility that either microtubules or actin filaments might mediate the transfer. It is particularly striking that the movement of membrane components from the old to the new Golgi is reminiscent of the biogenesis of vacuoles in budding yeast (Tang et al., 2003). In this organism, tubules and vesicles move from the mother vacuole to the daughter vacuole in the bud in a process that depends on actin filaments and a myosin V-type motor.
The nature of the transfer carriers that mediate new Golgi growth is presently unknown. One attractive idea is that they are COPI vesicles because these can carry Golgi enzymes in mammalian cells (Lanoix et al., 2001; Martinez-Menarguez et al., 2001). Furthermore, in the cisternal maturation model for Golgi transport, retrograde moving COPI vesicles carrying enzymes remodel cisternae so that they mature (Glick and Malhotra, 1998). At the earliest step, COPII vesicles from the ER fuse with retrograde COPI vesicles to form the first cisterna. It is easy to imagine that these same vesicles could be transferred to the new ER export site, to meet outgoing COPII vesicles, and form the first new cisterna that then matures. Future work needs to focus on the precise components that the old Golgi and the new ER export site supply to the new Golgi, and on the signals that initiate and terminate the duplication process.
There is also a need to rationalize these data with those obtained in other organisms. For P. pastoris, one would simply need to postulate that the new Golgi that appear near to the new ER export sites are supplied, in part or in whole, by preexisting Golgi. This possibility was raised by the authors and is apparent in some of the presented figures and videos (Bevis et al., 2002). For T. gondii, it is more difficult, but there are similarities because in templated biogenesis the old Golgi supplies the new, just as we now suggest it does for de novo biogenesis. The main difference is that the new Golgi appears initially to be an extension of the old rather than an independent entity. This finding in turn leads to a requirement for a fission mechanism to divide the elongated Golgi into two. Only further work will determine whether or not this fission mechanism uniquely defines another mode of Golgi duplication.
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Materials and methods |
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DNA constructs
T. brucei GRASP (TRYP11.0.004609_3) and Sec13p (TRYP10.0.001920_17) were obtained from the Sanger Institute website at http://www.sanger.ac.uk/Projects/T_brucei/. Sequencing of the T. brucei genome was accomplished as part of the Trypanosoma Genome Network with support by the Wellcome Trust. The coding sequences were fused to the NH2 terminus of GFP by cloning the full-length coding sequence into the pXSGFPM3FUS vector (Bangs et al., 1996; Marchetti et al., 2000). The NH2-terminal 100 amino acids of GntB (GenBank/EMBL/DDBJ accession no. AY304297) that contains the spanning domain and flanking regions necessary and sufficient for Golgi targeting were cloned into the same GFP expression vector. YFP and CFP fusions to these proteins were made by replacing GFP with EYFP or ECFP (CLONTECH Laboratories, Inc.) in the same expression vectors.
Antibody production
Full-length Tb-GRASP was fused to GST and fusion protein expressed and purified according to manufacturer's instructions (Amersham Biosciences). Purified protein was used to immunize rabbits and to affinity purify the serum.
Immunofluorescence assays
T. brucei cells were fixed and permeabilized with cold methanol at 20°C and blocked with 3% BSA before antibody staining. YL1/2 antibody (abcam) was used at 1:500 to stain the basal bodies. A monoclonal anti-PAR antibody (Ismach et al., 1989) was used at 1:10,000 to stain the flagellum. The antiTb-GRASP was used at 1:1,000 to stain the Golgi. To stain the ER, cells were fixed and permeabilized using 4% PFA followed by 0.25% Triton X-100 at RT, and then quenched and stained with a polyclonal anti-BiP antibody (Bangs et al., 1993) at a 1:1,000 dilution. Fixed cells were observed using an upright microscope (model Axioplan2; Carl Zeiss MicroImaging, Inc.) equipped with a CCD camera (model Orca-II; Hamamat 7 7su) and a Plan-Apochromat 100x 1.4-NA DIC objective. Images were acquired and processed using Openlab software (Improvision). To image the flagellum, serial optical sections 0.3 µm apart were acquired, deconvolved, and superimposed for a two-dimensional presentation.
Live cell imaging
T. brucei cells were plated on the surface of agarose gels prepared in cultivation medium and air dried briefly to limit cell motility. The gel was placed in an imaging dish (MatTek) with the cell side facing the coverslip. Cells were imaged at 28°C in a CO2 perfusion chamber using an inverted microscope (model Axiovert 100M; Carl Zeiss MicroImaging, Inc.) equipped with a CCD camera (model Orca-100; Hamamatsu) and a Plan-Apochromat Ph3 100x 1.4-NA objective. For simultaneous imaging of CFP and YFP, we used an inverted microscope (model IX-70; Olympus) equipped with a TILL Imago QE cooled CCD camera and a 60x 1.45-NA Plan-Apochromat objective. Images were acquired and processed using TILL image software.
Immunoelectron microscopy
YTat1.1 cells and those stably expressing Tb-GRASP-GFP, GntB-YFP, or Tb-Sec13p-YFP were fixed with 4% PFA and 0.1% glutaraldehyde and further processed for cryosectioning. Sections were probed with anti-GRASP or an affinity-purified polyclonal antibody against GFP (Seedorf et al., 1999), followed by protein Agold and quantified using standard stereological methods.
FRAP analysis
FRAP analysis was performed using a confocal microscope (model LSM510; Carl Zeiss MicroImaging, Inc.) equipped with a C-Apochromat 40 x 1.2-NA objective and a Tempcontrol 372 digital system for temperature control. YFP-expressing cells were photobleached using a 514-nm laser at full power output (30 mW) for 50 repeats (10 s). Fluorescence intensity was measured using the histogram function available in the LSM510 software, and all fluorescence readings were adjusted by subtracting the background fluorescence. In Fig. 5 (AF), the fluorescence recovery was calculated for each time point by measuring the fluorescence in either the new or old Golgi and expressing the result as a fraction of the total fluorescence (in the new and old Golgi). This number was then expressed as a percentage of the prebleach value, and the results from five experiments were combined to obtain the mean ± SD. In Fig. 5 (G and H), where both the old and the new Golgi were bleached, the fraction could not be calculated, so the fluorescence at each time point was expressed as a percentage of the prebleach value for the Golgi being monitored. The results from three experiments were used to obtain the mean ± SD.
SDS-PAGE and Western blotting
Protein gel electrophoresis was performed using 12% SDS-PAGE gels. For Western blotting, proteins were transferred onto nitrocellulose membranes, and antigens were detected using the ECL system (Amersham Biosciences).
Online supplemental material
Two videos are provided as online supplemental material. Online supplemental material is available at http://www.jcb.org/cgi/content/full/jcb.200311076/DC1.
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Acknowledgments |
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This work was funded by the National Institutes of Health and the Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research. C.Y. He was supported by the Alexander Brown Coxe Memorial Fellowship.
Submitted: 14 November 2003
Accepted: 2 April 2004
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