Correspondence to Mark Peifer: peifer{at}unc.edu; or Tony J.C. Harris: tonyh{at}email.unc.edu
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Introduction |
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An excellent model of polarity establishment emerged from studies of the partitioning defective (PAR) genes in Caenorhabditis elegans. Here, sperm entry likely creates the initial polarity landmark at the posterior of the one-cell embryo (Goldstein and Hird, 1996). Cytoskeletal flow then carries PAR-3 (homologue of fly Bazooka [Baz]), PAR-6, and atypical protein kinase C (aPKC) to the anterior cortex (Cheeks et al., 2004; Munro et al., 2004). These proteins develop mutual antagonism with posterior PAR-2 and the resulting polarity directs the partitioning of cell fate determinants. Remarkably, key elements of this polarity-generating system are highly conserved, acting in neuronal and epithelial polarity from flies to humans (Doe and Bowerman, 2001; Macara 2004).
Epithelia (the most common tissue architecture) are sheets of adherent cells that separate body compartments. Each epithelial cell is polarized with an apical domain facing either luminal space or the animal exterior, and a basolateral domain facing the extracellular matrix. This polarity is critical for epithelial structure and function, regulating, for example, nutrient uptake in the gut. Establishing and maintaining this polarity involves cell junctions, other cortical landmarks (including PAR proteins), cytoskeletal cues, and membrane trafficking.
Adherens junctions (AJs) are often considered the primary epithelial polarity landmark. AJs are adhesion complexes composed of cadherin receptors linked to cytoplasmic ß-catenin (Drosophila Armadillo [Arm]), -catenin, and actin (reviewed in Tepass et al., 2001). They assemble at the boundary of the apical and basolateral domains and are often required for epithelial polarity. However, other landmarks may act upstream or in parallel to AJs to establish epithelial polarity. For example, activation of LKB1 (PAR-4) can polarize single intestinal epithelial cells in the absence of AJs (Baas et al., 2004), and AJs act semiredundantly with apical and basal cues in Drosophila follicle cells (Tanentzapf et al., 2000).
We examined epithelial polarity as it is first established during Drosophila cellularization. Drosophila development begins in a syncytium. After 13 nuclear divisions, furrows form synchronously from the overlying plasma membrane compartmentalizing 6,000 nuclei into individual columnar cells (Nelson, 2003; see Fig. 1 A). Cellularization thus forms the first embryonic epithelium, which is then remodeled to drive gastrulation and further morphogenesis (see Fig. 1 A).
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The cues that position Baz must be polarized during cellularization. Obvious candidates emerged; the syncytial and cellularizing embryo has clear cytoskeletal polarity. Actin forms specific apical and basal networks and microtubules (MTs) nucleated from apical centrosomes form inverted baskets over each nucleus. We hypothesized that these cytoskeletal cues might position Baz.
Baz and AJs act with other cortical cues to elaborate downstream polarity. Baz can interact physically with PAR-6 and aPKC (Wodarz et al., 2000; Hutterer et al., 2004), and these proteins recruit other apical cues. Baz and PAR-6 recruit apical Crumbs (Crb) and Patj, respectively (Bilder et al., 2003; Hutterer et al., 2004), and aPKC stabilizes apical Crb (Sotillos et al., 2004). In turn, Crb stabilizes apical AJs and Baz (Grawe et al., 1996; Tepass, 1996; Harris and Peifer, 2004). Mutually antagonistic interactions between apical and basolateral cues further segregate the apical and basolateral domains (Bilder et al., 2003; Tanentzapf and Tepass, 2003; Benton and St Johnston, 2003a; Hutterer et al., 2004). These interactions are critical for establishing apicalbasal polarity, but many questions remain. We were interested in how the BazPAR-6aPKC complex is assembled and how these proteins interact with the cytoskeleton and other cortical complexes.
Here, we show that Baz and AJs colocalize and that AJ positioning is closely coupled to Baz. Surprisingly, we find that most Baz is positioned basal to its proposed binding partners aPKC and PAR-6. We next show that even though Baz and aPKC are both positioned apically early in cellularization, Baz acts upstream of aPKC. Baz itself is positioned by both an apical scaffold and by dynein-mediated basal-to-apical transport during cellularization. Distinct pathways position aPKC and PAR-6 apical to Baz and AJs, and specific mechanisms keep these proteins apart. These and other results reveal key mechanisms that establish a stratified apical domain during early epithelial development in Drosophila.
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Results |
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To address whether Baz remains segregated from aPKC and PAR-6 in later epithelia, we examined gastrulating (stages 7 and 8) embryos (Fig. 1 A, right). Baz continues to colocalize with DE-Cad in the epidermis (Harris and Peifer, 2004; Fig. 1 C, arrow) and in the posterior midgut invagination (PMGI; a body compartment formed by invaginating posterior cells; Fig. 1 J, arrow). aPKC remains apical to AJs in both tissues (Fig. 1, F and I, arrowheads; AJs marked by Arm) whereas PAR-6 becomes enriched above Baz (Fig. 1, G, H, and J, arrowheads), colocalizing with aPKC in the extreme apical domain (Fig. 1, H and I, arrowheads). Thus, most cortical Baz remains segregated from aPKC and PAR-6 during gastrulation, and retains close AJ association.
Baz was previously found to localize above AJs at stage 14 when the epithelium is fully polarized (Wodarz et al., 2000). To determine when Baz segregates from AJs, we examined embryos over development. We detected some segregation at stages 11 and 12 (unpublished data) that became more pronounced at stage 14 and later. At stage 14, segregation was most evident in the gut (Fig. 1 K) and in segmental furrows of the epidermis (Fig. 1 L). In each case, Baz appears to localize just apical to AJs. However, PAR-6 continues to localize just apical to Baz (Fig. 1, K and L). Thus, in late stage epithelia, the apical domain is stratified into three regions.
Baz acts upstream of aPKC as polarity is first established
Our previous work implicated Baz as a primary apical landmark during cellularization (Harris and Peifer, 2004). Considering both Baz and aPKC localize apically as polarity is established, we wondered whether one functions upstream to position the other. To address this, we first analyzed aPKC localization in cellularizing baz maternal/zygotic (m/z) mutants. In bazm/z mutants, aPKC is mislocalized along the full furrow length (Fig. 2 B, bracket), in contrast to its apical wild-type (WT) localization (Figs. 1 D and 2 A, arrow). Thus, Baz is required for aPKC positioning during cellularization. PAR-6 has a nonpolarized cytoplasmic and cortical distribution in bazm/z mutants (Fig. 2 B), as in WT (Fig. 1 E). As bazm/z mutants begin gastrulation, aPKC remains basally mislocalized (Fig. 2 C, bracket), but PAR-6 shows some apical enrichment (Fig. 2 C, arrows). Thus, although Baz is required for apical aPKC positioning, later PAR-6 positioning may be partially Baz independent.
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Baz localization and preexisting cytoskeletal cues
Baz is required for positioning AJs and aPKC as polarity is established during cellularization (Harris and Peifer, 2004; Fig. 2), but what upstream cues position Baz? Considering cellularization requires preexisting cytoskeletal polarity, we hypothesized that cytoskeletal cues might position apical Baz. To test this, we first examined Baz localization relative to actin and MTs during WT cellularization. Actin is enriched in furrow canals at the base of invaginating furrows (Fig. 3 A, yellow arrowhead), and in an apical meshwork (Fig. 3 A arrowhead; lower actin levels are along the full furrow length). Baz is not enriched at basal furrow canals, but does overlap with the apical actin meshwork, although only at its basal edge (Fig. 3 A, arrow).
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Baz positioning requires a saturable apical scaffold
To assess how Baz is positioned during cellularization, we first performed time lapse imaging of embryos expressing UAS-driven BazGFP under the control of a maternal GAL4 driver. BazGFP is functional as it rescues baz mutant follicle cells and embryos (Benton and St Johnston, 2003a). We imaged the apicalbasal axis of the epithelium in embryo cross sections. At early cellularization, BazGFP shows low level, even accumulation on nascent furrows (Fig. 4 A, B, 0:00, arrows). BazGFP then coalesces into punctate accumulations (Fig. 4 A, 0:11, arrow), closely resembling endogenous Baz (Harris and Peifer, 2004). This confirms that Baz is recruited apically during the earliest stages of polarity establishment.
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We hypothesized that the apical Baz-binding scaffold might require actin. To test this, we exposed WT embryos to cytochalasin D (CD) for 30 min to disrupt actin and fixed them immediately to assess Baz. In treated embryos, endogenous Baz becomes basally mislocalized all along the lateral membrane (Fig. 4 E, bracket; the DMSO carrier had no effect [not depicted]). Although some Baz dissociates from the cortex, most remains cortical, as marked by DE-Cad (Fig. 4 E, bracket) or Discs Large (Dlg; unpublished data). This is true in embryos with minimal disruption of cell arrangement (Fig. 4 E), and in embryos with more extreme phenotypes (Fig. 4 F, brackets). Many ectopic Baz puncta colocalize with DE-Cad (Fig. 4, E [arrowhead] and F), but Baz also localizes to other cortical sites. We noted that residual actin remains after the CD treatment, but it is not enriched at sites of Baz accumulation (often it shows depletion from these sites; Fig. 4 G). These data suggest that actin is involved in directly or indirectly positioning apical Baz but it may not be essential for Baz cortical association. Baz also mislocalizes basally after MT disruption with colchicine (Fig. 4 H). Thus, apical Baz positioning involves both the actin and MT cytoskeletons.
Baz positioning also requires dynein-mediated basal-to-apical transport
A later Baz-positioning mechanism was revealed when we analyzed the ectopic BazGFP puncta at the end of cellularization. In 14/16 embryos with ectopic BazGFP puncta during cellularization (Fig. 4 B, 0:14 and 0:23, arrowheads), the basal BazGFP was cleared by gastrulation onset, restoring nearly normal localization (Fig. 4 B, 0:31, arrow). Moreover, 70% of BazGFP embryos complete embryogenesis and the 30% that die have head holes but an otherwise normal embryonic cuticle, indicative of normal epithelial polarity (unpublished data). By examining cellularizing embryos, we observed basal BazGFP puncta undergoing basal-to-apical translocations as the furrows pass the base of the nucleus (Fig. 5 A, arrows; Video S3 available at http://www.jcb.org/cgi/content/full/jcb.200505127/DC1). Particles move at 183 ± 60 nm/s (n = 42; Fig. 5 A), progressively clearing ectopic BazGFP from basal regions. Thus, endogenous Baz positioning may also involve basal-to-apical transport.
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If dynein plays an important role in Baz positioning, mutants affecting dynein motor function might enhance the severity of the baz zygotic mutant phenotype. baz zygotic mutants have maternal but no zygotic Baz, and should be sensitive to reduced function of their limited Baz pool. Thus, we tested the effects reducing the level of dynein heavy chain 64C (Dhc64C). dhc64C6-6/dhc64C6-8 trans-heterozygous mutants are adult viable (Robinson et al., 1999), whereas bazXi106/Y zygotic mutants (baz is X-linked) die as embryos, typically with one hole in the embryonic cuticle, due to epithelial polarity defects (Wieschaus et al., 1984; Fig. 5 C, far left, arrow). When we reduced the maternal and zygotic dose of dhc64C, the baz cuticle phenotype was enhanced, exhibiting two large holes or one expansive hole deleting much of the cuticle (Fig. 5 C, moving right, arrows mark holes; cuticles outlined). The large fraction of embryos with an enhancement suggested that reducing maternal dhc64C might alone have effects. Indeed, crossing females heterozygous for bazXi106 and either dhc64C allele to WT males also enhances the baz phenotype, although to a lesser extent (Fig. 5 C). These genetic interactions suggest that Baz and dynein may act in the same epithelial polarity pathway.
To directly test whether dynein functions in positioning Baz, we analyzed the Baz distribution in cellularizing dhc64Cm/z mutants. These mutants have defects in syncytial nuclear divisions (Robinson et al., 1999), but many undergo partial cellularization and initiate morphogenesis. In the mutants, centrosomes are positioned apically during cellularization (unpublished data), suggesting that basic MT polarity is retained. Baz and DE-Cad are recruited to early cellularization furrows in the dhc64Cm/z mutants (unpublished data), but during later cellularization, both are mislocalized basally along the full furrow length (Fig. 6 A, bracket; compare with WT, arrow). Baz and DE-Cad colocalize in many of the mislocalized puncta (Fig. 6 A, arrowhead). Thus, dynein functions to correctly position Baz and DE-Cad during cellularization; this could involve relatively direct dynein interactions or more indirect mechanisms. To our surprise, however, both Baz and DE-Cad become apically enriched as dhc64Cm/z mutants gastrulate (Fig. 6 D, arrows). Moreover, the dhc64Cm/z mutants produce large sheets of embryonic cuticle, indicative of relatively normal epithelial polarity (unpublished data; neighboring regions of missing cuticle are likely due to early syncytial defects). Thus, three mechanisms appear to position Baz during early development: an apical scaffold, dynein-mediated basal-to-apical transport and a third postcellularization activity.
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We next assessed how dynein affects further polarization, examining gastrulating dhc64Cm/z mutants. At this stage, dhc64Cm/z mutants maintain apical aPKC (Fig. 6 E, arrow), and accumulate apical PAR-6 (Fig. 6 F, arrow) and Crb (Fig. 6 G, arrow). As described above, Baz and DE-Cad also accumulate apically at this stage. Apical aPKC and PAR-6 localize above DE-Cad and Baz in dhc64Cm/z mutants (shown in the PMGI; Fig. 6, H and I), as in WT (Fig. 1, I and J). Moreover, Dlg segregates basally, below DE-Cad and Baz (Fig. 6, H and I), as in WT (Harris and Peifer, 2004). Because dhc64Cm/z mutants develop many aspects of apicalbasal polarity during gastrulation, dynein appears to play a specific role in positioning Baz and AJs during cellularization, whereas distinct mechanisms position aPKC and PAR-6.
DE-Cad, aPKC, and PAR-6 are recruited to sites of ectopic BazGFP
As Baz can directly bind aPKC and PAR-6 (Wodarz et al., 2000; Hutterer et al., 2004), we wondered what mechanisms keep the bulk of Baz segregated from aPKC and PAR-6 during cellularization and subsequent development. First, we tested whether Baz also forms complexes with DE-Cad by using Baz antibodies in immunoprecipitations (IPs) from 2 to 4 h BazGFP embryos. Both DE-Cad and aPKC coIP with Baz and BazGFP from these embryos (Fig. 7 A). GFP antibodies also coIP DE-Cad and aPKC from BazGFP embryos but not from control embryos, and reciprocally, DE-Cad and aPKC antibodies coIP BazGFP (unpublished data). Next, we used Baz antibodies in IPs from 2 to 4 h WT embryos (Fig. 7 A). DE-Cad and aPKC both coIP with endogenous Baz but at lower levels than with BazGFP overexpression. Thus, Baz can form a direct or indirect complex with DE-Cad, as it does with aPKC, and in each case Baz overexpression enhances the interactions.
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Although Baz overexpression can recruit aPKC and PAR-6 during cellularization, they do not normally colocalize during embryogenesis (Fig. 1). We hypothesized that other mechanisms might segregate these proteins as polarity is elaborated. Thus, we tested whether overexpressed BazGFP continues to recruit apical cues during gastrulation. In WT embryos, Crb accumulates at gastrulation, localizing with PAR-6 in the apical domain of the epidermis (Fig. 7 F, arrowheads) and PMGI (Fig. 7 I, arrowheads), above endogenous Baz (Fig. 7, F and I, arrows). In embryos overexpressing BazGFP, both PAR-6 and Crb are recruited to apical BazGFP (Fig. 7 E, arrows). However, at the same stage in the PMGI, Crb and PAR-6 begin to segregate (Fig. 7 G, arrowheads), localizing above BazGFP (Fig. 7 G, arrows). By stage 10, Crb and PAR-6 fully segregate from BazGFP (e.g., gut epithelium; Fig. 7 H). aPKC also segregates above BazGFP (unpublished data). Thus, Baz may be actively segregated from aPKC and PAR-6 after cellularization. Note, however, that we overexpressed BazGFP maternally and its levels decrease with development, so some segregation may occur due to lower BazGFP levels.
Crb is required to segregate Baz and AJs from aPKC and PAR-6
Crb plays a key role in maintaining the integrity of AJs and the apical domain after cellularization (Grawe et al., 1996; Tepass, 1996). We thus hypothesized that as Crb accumulates during gastrulation it may act to segregate Baz and AJs from aPKC and PAR-6. To test this, we analyzed the distribution of apical cues in crb2 mutants. In stages 9 and 10 of crb2 zygotic mutants, AJs fragment and become randomly positioned around the cell cortex and along the basolateral membrane as epidermal cells dissociate. We previously found that Baz colocalizes with AJ fragments (Harris and Peifer, 2004). Now we asked whether aPKC and PAR-6 localize at these fragments in the absence of Crb. Indeed, both aPKC and PAR-6 are recruited to fragmented AJs in the epidermis of crb2 mutants (aPKC shows greater enrichment at these sites; Fig. 8 A, B, arrows). We next analyzed the gut epithelium of crb2 mutants, which, in contrast to the epidermis, maintains basic epithelial structure at stage 10. Here, Arm, aPKC, and PAR-6 are extensively intermixed in the apical domain and colocalize in lateral puncta (Fig. 8 C, arrows), in contrast to their segregation in the WT gut (Fig. 8 C, inset). These data suggest that Baz, AJs, aPKC, and PAR-6 have direct or indirect affinities for one another, and that Crb helps segregate Baz and AJs from aPKC and PAR-6 after cellularization.
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Discussion |
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Our data indicate that Baz is initially positioned by cytoskeletal cues that support an apical Baz-binding scaffold and mediate basal-to-apical Baz transport. The apical scaffold is saturable. Its function requires actin, as Baz becomes basally mislocalized after actin disruption. However, as Baz only overlaps the basal reaches of the apical actin network, it is unlikely that Baz simply binds actin. Interestingly, Baz remains largely membrane associated when actin is disrupted. One caveat is that there is some residual actin. However, the same treatment dissociates APC2 from the cortex (Townsley and Bienz, 2000; unpublished data). Actin is also required for PAR-3 cortical association in C. elegans one-cell embryos (Severson and Bowerman, 2003). During Drosophila cellularization, we speculate Baz may have other cortical anchors and that actin may control their distribution; of course actin is critical for many cellular processes and could play other roles in positioning Baz. It will be important to identify the apical scaffold for Baz.
Baz positioning also requires the minus-enddirected MT motor dynein. Our live imaging of BazGFP revealed basal-to-apical translocation of BazGFP puncta during cellularization. Baz-GFP that diffuses to ectopic basal positions appears to engage a preexisting, dynein-based, basal-to-apical transport system. Such a system was recently shown to transport Golgi vesicles apically during cellularization (Papoulas et al., 2005). Baz-dynein associations appear to cease once dynein brings Baz to the apical region, where Baz presumably docks with its apical scaffold. Although BazGFP puncta move slower than in vitro dynein velocity measurements (for review see King, 2000), dynein-mediated lipid droplet movements have similar speeds during Drosophila cellularization (Gross et al., 2000). In vivo, BazGFP puncta may be slowed because they form large cortical complexes. Indeed, DE-Cad, aPKC, and PAR-6 associate with these puncta and Baz oligomerization may promote complex assembly (Benton and St Johnston, 2003b). Further supporting a role for dynein, endogenous Baz is positioned near MT minus ends in WT embryos, but mislocalizes basally in dhc64Cm/z mutants. dhc64C mutations also enhance the baz mutant embryonic phenotype. To our knowledge this is the first report of dynein positioning Baz or its homologues.
Our analysis of dynein mutants also revealed a third mechanism that can reposition Baz apically during gastrulation. Perhaps the apical Baz-binding scaffold is strengthened during this stage. Alternatively, a distinct polarizing mechanism may be activated, or, as we discuss below, aPKC and PAR-6 may be involved. Having three Baz positioning mechanisms may ensure proper Baz localization for regulating downstream polarity.
AJ positioning is coupled to Baz positioning
Baz acts upstream of AJs as epithelial polarity is first established in Drosophila (Harris and Peifer, 2004). We propose the following model in which AJ assembly may be coupled to Baz positioning. During cellularization, AJ proteins accumulate in both apical and basal junctions. Basal junctions form transiently near the base of each invaginating furrow. Baz is not required for basal junctions, but is required for recruiting AJ proteins into apical junctions (Harris and Peifer, 2004). Apical Baz may provide a landmark for apical AJ assembly.
Our data also suggest that Baz may be involved in ferrying DE-Cad to the apical domain via dynein-mediated transport. Dynein is required for correct apical positioning of both Baz and DE-Cad, and their colocalization in ectopic basal complexes in dhc64Cm/z mutants suggests they may normally be transported to the apical domain together. Indeed, Baz can form complexes with DE-Cad (Fig. 7 A) and Arm (Wei et al., 2005). Although most endogenous Baz is apical during WT cellularization, its basal mislocalization in dhc64Cm/z mutants suggests that some Baz may normally move basally. In fact, excess BazGFP displaced from the apical domain preferentially accumulates at basal junctions. We hypothesize that some Baz may normally interact transiently with basal junctions. From there, it may help ferry AJ proteins apically via dynein-mediated transport. MT motors have been previously implicated in AJ assembly. For example, dynein interacts with ß-catenin and may tether MTs to AJs assembling between PtK2 cells (Ligon et al., 2001). Kinesin transports AJ proteins to nascent AJs in cell culture (Mary et al., 2002; Chen et al., 2003), and the mitotic kinesin-like protein 1 is required for apical targeting of AJs and other cues in C. elegans epithelia (Portereiko et al., 2004). It will be important to see if these targeting mechanisms have commonalities with AJ positioning in Drosophila, and if Baz homologues are involved.
Finally, we hypothesize that the third BazAJ positioning mechanism revealed in dhc64Cm/z mutants might be related to the normal maturation/stabilization of AJs at gastrulation. At this stage, precursory spot AJs fuse into continuous belt junctions around the top of each cell (Tepass et al., 2001). In mammalian cell culture, aPKC is required for such AJ maturation (Suzuki et al., 2002). Similarly, we find that aPKC is required for proper AJ and Baz positioning during Drosophila gastrulation, as previously shown for PAR-6 (Hutterer et al., 2004). Considering aPKC and PAR-6 are positioned apically as dhc64Cm/z mutants gastrulate, they might recruit Baz and AJs apically in this context as well.
Building a stratified apical domain
Based on their shared roles in polarity in C. elegans, characterized physical interactions, and colocalization in mammalian cells, Baz, aPKC, and PAR-6 are thought to function, at least in some cases, as an obligate tripartite complex (Ohno, 2001; Macara, 2004). Our data suggest that the bulk of cortical Baz and aPKC/PAR-6 do not form obligate complexes during epithelial development in Drosophila. Instead, aPKC and PAR-6 localize to an apical region above Baz and AJs, and are positioned there by distinct mechanisms. Baz/PAR-3 also segregates from aPKC and PAR-6 in other cell types. In C. elegans one-cell embryos, PAR-3, aPKC, and PAR-6 each localize in clusters on the anterior cortex, but these different clusters have limited colocalization (6085% fail to colocalize; Tabuse et al., 1998; Hung and Kemphues, 1999). aPKC and PAR-6 colocalize without PAR-3 at the leading edge of migrating mammalian astrocytes (Etienne-Manneville and Hall, 2001). In Drosophila photoreceptors, Baz colocalizes with AJs below aPKC, PAR-6, and Crb (Nam and Choi, 2003). Even in polarized MDCK cells, aPKC and PAR-6 show some segregation above PAR-3, and although they mainly colocalize at tight junctions (Vogelmann and Nelson, 2005), mammalian PAR-3 can regulate tight junction assembly independently of aPKC and PAR-6 (Chen and Macara, 2005). Thus, in many contexts interactions between Baz/PAR-3, aPKC, and PAR-6 are dynamic and/or regulated.
Baz (PAR-3), aPKC, and PAR-6 often recruit each other to the cortex, but the assembly pathways vary. In C. elegans, one-cell embryos, PAR-3, aPKC, and PAR-6 are mutually dependent for their cortical recruitment (Ohno, 2001). However, in Drosophila neuroblasts, Baz can be positioned without aPKC and PAR-6 (Rolls et al., 2003). Similarly, apical Baz is positioned without aPKC and PAR-6 during Drosophila cellularization. In contrast, apical aPKC recruitment requires Baz, whereas PAR-6 is largely nonpolarized at this stage. Given the lack of extensive colocalization of Baz and aPKC in WT embryos, Baz may control aPKC positioning indirectly, perhaps regulating binding to a separate apical scaffold. Alternately, cortical recruitment might involve cytoplasmic BazaPKC complexes. Apical PAR-6 accumulates at gastrulation, and this appears partially Baz independent. Indeed, cdc42 recruits PAR-6 at this stage (Hutterer et al., 2004), and at the same time aPKC and PAR-6 become required for maintaining apical Baz (Fig. 2; Hutterer et al., 2004). Thus, although Baz is first positioned independently of aPKC and PAR-6, these cues soon develop complex interdependencies.
Although Baz can directly bind both aPKC and PAR-6 (Wodarz et al., 2000; Hutterer et al., 2004), at least two mechanisms keep them apart. During cellularization, Baz colocalizes with aPKC and PAR-6 when overexpressed, but normally it localizes with AJs below aPKC and PAR-6. This normal segregation may thus involve competition with other binding partners. After cellularization, Crb also becomes important for segregating Baz and AJs from aPKC and PAR-6. These segregation mechanisms help form a stratified apical domain from the earliest stages of epithelial development.
A stratified apical domain may strengthen the boundary between the apical and basolateral domains. This boundary forms via reciprocal antagonism between polarity cues. For example, aPKC phosphorylates and excludes Lethal giant larvae (Lgl) from the apical domain in Drosophila epithelia and Lgl appears to repel PAR-6 from the basolateral domain (Hutterer et al., 2004). The Crb and Dlg complexes also have mutual antagonism (Bilder et al., 2003; Tanentzapf and Tepass, 2003). We propose that the subapical BazAJ region may insulate the apical and basolateral domains. For example, it may inhibit active aPKC from moving basally. Indeed, PAR-3 binding can block mammalian aPKC kinase activity (Lin et al., 2000). The BazAJ subapical region could also block basolateral cues, as AJs are required to segregate Dlg (Harris and Peifer, 2004). In this way, the BazAJ subapical region could help define a distinct apicalbasolateral boundary.
To conclude, Baz appears to be a primary epithelial polarity landmark in Drosophila. It is positioned by multiple mechanisms, including an apical scaffold and dynein-mediated transport, and organizes a stratified apical domain, in which it colocalizes with AJs below its typical partners aPKC and PAR-6.
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Materials and methods |
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Embryo staining and treatments
For tubulin and -tubulin, embryos were fixed in 10:9:1 heptane/37% formaldehyde/0.5 M EGTA for 10 min. For other staining, embryos were fixed for 20 min in 1:1 3.7% formaldehyde in PBS/heptane. After methanol devitellinization, blocking, and staining was in PBS/1% goat serum/0.1% Triton X-100. Antibodies were: mouse mAbs against Arm (1:500), Crb (1:500; Developmental Studies Hybridoma Bank [DSHB]), DIC (1:500; Covance), Dlg (1:100; DSHB),
-tubulin (1:500; Sigma-Aldrich), tubulin (1:100; DSHB); rabbit pAbs against Baz (1:2,000; A. Wodarz) and
PKC (1:2,000; Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Inc.); and rat mAbs against DE-Cad (1:100; T. Uemura, Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan) and PAR-6 (1:100; C. Doe, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR).
Drug treatments were performed as in Townsley and Bienz (2000). For CD treatments, dechorionated embryos were rinsed twice with 0.9% NaCl and incubated in 1:1 octane/10 µg/ml CD (Sigma-Aldrich) in 0.9% NaCl for 30 min at RT with rocking. After removing both phases, embryos were rinsed twice with heptane and fixed immediately. The working solution of CD was prepared from a 1 mg/ml solution in DMSO. For controls, the embryos were treated with the DMSO carrier alone. For colchicine treatment, colchicine (Sigma-Aldrich) was used in the same way at 100 µg/ml from a 10 mg/ml solution in ethanol. For controls, the embryos were treated with the ethanol carrier alone.
Image acquisition and manipulation
Fixed embryos were mounted in Aqua Polymount (Polysciences, Inc.) and imaged at RT with a 510 confocal microscope (Carl Zeiss MicroImaging, Inc.) with both 40x (Plan-NeoFluor; NA 1.3) and 63x (Plan-Apochromat; NA 1.4) objectives and LSM 510 AIM software. Secondary Abs were Alexa 488, 546, and 647 (Molecular Probes). Unless otherwise noted, Adobe Photoshop 6.0 was used to adjust input levels so the main range of signals spanned the entire output grayscale and was used to adjust brightness and contrast. We used bicubic interpolation for image resizing, but observed no changes to the data at normal viewing magnifications. Image deconvolution was performed on confocal stacks using a softWoRx Imaging Workstation (Applied Precision).
Time-lapse microscopy
Dechorionated, WT, homozygous Baz-GFP embryos were mounted in halocarbon oil (series 700; Halocarbon Products Corporation) on a gas-permeable membrane (petriPERM; Sartorius Corp.). Images were captured every 4 s with a Wallac Ultraview Confocal Imaging System (PerkinElmer) at RT with a 40x objective (Nikon Pan Fluor; N.A. 1.30), an ORCA-ER digital camera (Hamamatsu), and Metamorph software (Universal Imaging Corp.).
Immunoprecipitations
Dechorionated embryos were homogenized in extraction buffer (50 mM Tris, pH 7.5, 1% NP-40, 0.5 mM sodium vanadate, 3 mM hydrogen peroxide, Complete EDTA-free protease inhibitor cocktail [Roche]), and centrifuged to remove particulates. Samples were incubated with antibodies 1 h at 4°C. 10 µl packed protein A Sepharose (Sigma-Aldrich) was added per 100 µl sample for an additional 1.5 h at 4°C. After washing with extraction buffer, samples were separated by 8% SDS-PAGE, and immunoblotted.
Online supplemental material
Online supplemental material is available at http://www.jcb.org/cgi/content/full/jcb.200505127/DC1.
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Acknowledgments |
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This work was funded by the National Institutes of Health R01 GM47857 to M. Peifer. T.J.C. Harris was funded by Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada and Canadian Institutes of Health Research Postdoctoral Fellowships.
Submitted: 20 May 2005
Accepted: 20 July 2005
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References |
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