Department of Molecular Biology and Biochemistry, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, BC V5A 1S6, Canada
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: quarmby{at}sfu.ca)
Accepted 25 March 2005
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Summary |
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Key words: Axoneme, Cell cycle, Cilia, Nek
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Introduction |
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Cilia (also known as flagella) are assembled via a process called intraflagellar transport (IFT). IFT was discovered in Chlamydomonas (Kozminski et al., 1993) and involves the anterograde and retrograde movement of large protein complexes (IFT particles) to and from the distal tip of the flagella, driven by the microtubule-based motors kinesin-2 and cytoplasmic dynein, respectively (for reviews, see Rosenbaum and Witman, 2002
; Cole, 2003
). Flagellar components are constantly turning over at the distal tip: flagella are dynamic organelles (Marshall and Rosenbaum, 2001
). Retrograde IFT is required for the recycling of IFT particles, but may not be required for flagellar disassembly (Pazour et al., 1998
; Marshall and Rosenbaum, 2001
; Parker and Quarmby, 2003
).
A model for flagellar length control based on the steady-state balance of the kinetics of flagellar assembly and disassembly has emerged (Marshall and Rosenbaum, 2001; Marshall et al., 2005
). Flagella assemble with length-dependent decelerating kinetics (Rosenbaum et al., 1969
). The amount of IFT protein per flagellum is independent of length (Marshall and Rosenbaum, 2001
; Marshall et al., 2005
), suggesting that the length-dependence of assembly is due to increased travel time as the flagellum elongates (Marshall and Rosenbaum, 2001
; Marshall et al., 2005
). Flagellar disassembly, on the other hand, does not appear to be length-dependent (Marshall and Rosenbaum, 2001
). The rapid resorption of flagella prior to mitosis occurs at a constant rate (Marshall et al., 2005
). In addition, flagellar resorption rate is constant in temperature-sensitive Chlamydomonas fla10-1 cells, where anterograde IFT is halted at the restrictive temperature (Kozminski et al., 1995
; Marshall and Rosenbaum, 2001
; Parker and Quarmby, 2003
). These data have led to a kinetic model of length control in which flagella reach a steady-state length unique to the balance between the length-dependent rate of assembly and the constant rate of disassembly (Marshall and Rosenbaum, 2001
; Marshall et al., 2005
). Although kinetic regulation of length appears to play a central role in determining flagellar length, genetic data suggest that there may be additional mechanisms affecting length (reviewed by Marshall, 2004
).
Three groups of Chlamydomonas mutants have aberrant flagellar length: lf (long flagella), ulf (unequal length flagella) and shf (short flagella) (McVittie, 1972; Jarvik et al., 1984
; Barsel et al., 1988
; Asleson et al., 1998). None of the SHF genes have been cloned and we know little about them. Two ulf mutants, ulf1 and ulf3, are null alleles of the LF3 gene (Tam et al., 2003
). Point mutations in LF3, like mutations in LF1, LF2, and LF4 cause long flagella. The gene products of LF1, LF2 and LF3 do not localize to flagella and instead they may form a complex in the cell body (Tam et al., 2003
; Nguyen et al., 2005
). Intriguingly, LF4 encodes a flagellar protein related to mammalian MOK, a MAP kinase of unknown function (Berman et al., 2003
). Wilson and Lefebvre (Wilson and Lefebvre, 2004
) showed that another kinase, Chlamydomonas GSK3, partially localizes to flagella and contributes to flagellar length control.
We now report that Chlamydomonas NIMA-related kinase 2 (Cnk2p) influences both flagellar length and cell size. The first NIMA-related kinase discovered in Chlamydomonas was Fa2p (Mahjoub et al., 2002). fa2 mutants are slow to transit the cell cycle owing to a G2-M delay and do not sever the nine outer doublet microtubules of the axoneme in response to deflagellation stimuli (Finst et al., 1998
; Mahjoub et al., 2002
). During interphase, Fa2p localizes to the proximal end of the flagella, whereas during mitosis it is associated with the polar region of the mitotic spindle (Mahjoub et al., 2004
). This was the first report of a NIMA-related kinase with both cell cycle and ciliary functions; Cnk2p is the second.
NIMA-related kinases are defined by sequence similarity to the kinase domain of the Aspergillus protein, NIMA (never in mitosis A), which is essential for mitotic progression (Osmani et al., 1991). Eukaryotes that lack cilia, such as fungi and higher plants, only have one or a few members of this family (Osmani et al., 1991
; Kambouris et al., 1993
; Krien et al., 1998
). Organisms with ciliated cells, such as Chlamydomonas and humans, have ten or eleven members (reviewed by O'Connell et al., 2003
; Bradley et al., 2004
) (our unpublished observations). This, in conjunction with the association Fa2p with cilia, raises the possibility that this gene family has cilia-related functions in addition to established cell cycle roles (reviewed by O'Connell et al., 2003
).
We have manipulated levels of Cnk2p in order to study its role in Chlamydomonas. Expression of HA epitope-tagged Cnk2p produces small cells with short flagella, whereas knockdown of endogenous CNK2 via RNAi produces large cells with long flagella. Analyses of parameters that affect cell size and flagellar length indicate that Cnk2p regulates flagellar length by promoting flagellar disassembly and regulates cell size by affecting the assessment of cell size prior to mitosis (commitment size).
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Materials and Methods |
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Expression constructs and nuclear transformation
The pCNK2-HA expression construct (Fig. 1A) is derived from pGenD kindly provided by J. Rochaix, University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland (Fischer and Rochaix, 2001). The ble coding sequence (start codon to stop codon) was removed from pGenD by digestion with NdeI and EcoRI (New England Biolabs, Beverly, MA; Invitrogen, Burlington, ON) to be replaced by the CNK2 coding sequence. The CNK2 coding sequence was amplified with Pfu Turbo polymerase (Stratagene, La Jolla, CA) from the cloned cDNA (Bradley et al., 2004
) using primers designed to include NdeI and EcoRI restriction sites at the start and just before the stop codons, respectively (forward, 5'-CGATCATATGGCGAAGGACGGGTCTAAGG-3' and reverse, 5'-CGATGAATTCCCACCCGCGCGCTGGCCGCGG-3'). The product was digested with NdeI and EcoRI, and ligated using T4 DNA ligase (Invitrogen) to the pGenD backbone. The 3XHA epitope tag (kindly provided by S. Dutcher, Washington University, St Louis, MO) was amplified with Taq polymerase (Qiagen, Mississauga, ON) using primers that incorporated EcoRI restriction sites and a stop codon (forward, 5'-CTGAGAATTCTACCCCTACGACGTGCCCGAC-3' and reverse, 5'-TGATATCGAATTCCTAGCCCGGGGGCCGGCG-3'). The product was digested with EcoRI and ligated into the unique EcoRI site at the 3' end of the CNK2 coding sequence (Fig. 1A). The selectable marker ble, providing resistance to Zeocin (Invitrogen) driven by the rubisco promoter and UTRs, was excised from pSP124S (kindly provided by S. Purton, University College London, London, UK) (Lumbreras et al., 1998
) using flanking HindIII restriction sites and ligated to pCNK2-HA at a unique HindIII site downstream of the PsaD 3' UTR (Fig. 1A).
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Cell fractionation and immunoblot analysis
Cell bodies, flagella, axonemes and membrane plus matrix fractions were isolated as previously described (Witman, 1986). Immunoblot analysis of cellular fractions was performed as previously described (Mahjoub et al., 2004
). Cell equivalents of each fraction were separated by SDS-PAGE (10%) and blotted to supported nitrocellulose (BioRad, Mississauga, ON). Blots were probed with rat monoclonal anti-HA (1:1000; clone 3f10; Roche Diagnostics, Basel, SUI), washed and then probed with horseradish peroxidase (HRP)-conjugated goat anti-rat IgG (1:2500; Amersham Biosciences, Baie d'Urfe, QC). Blots were stripped and reprobed with mouse monoclonal anti-
-tubulin (1:10,000; clone B-5-1-2; Sigma Aldrich). After washing, the blot was probed with HRP-conjugated horse anti-mouse IgG (1:10,000; Vector Laboratories, Burlingame, CA). The ECL chemiluminescent detection system (Amersham Biosciences) was used for visualization.
Indirect immunofluorescence imaging
Indirect immunofluorescence was conducted as described (Mahjoub et al., 2004), using a DeltaVision imaging station (Applied Precision, Issaquah, WA). Primary antibodies used in this study are as follows: rat monoclonal anti-HA (1:200; clone 3f10; Roche Diagnostics), mouse monoclonal anti-centrin (1:400; clone 20h5; kindly provided by J. Salisbury, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN), and mouse monoclonal anti-
-tubulin (1:500; clone B-5-1-2; Sigma Aldrich). Secondary antibodies used are as follows: Texas Red-conjugated goat anti-rat IgG (1:200; for Cnk2p-HA), Alexa 350-conjugated goat anti-mouse IgG2b (1:200; for centrin) and Alexa 488-conjugated goat anti-mouse IgG1 (1:200; for
-tubulin). All secondary antibodies were obtained from Molecular Probes (Eugene, OR).
Flagellar length and cell size measurements
Flagellar length, cell width and cell length were measured by DIC microscopy using the measurement tools provided with the Softworx (v. 3.22) software package. Cell volumes were calculated based on the ellipsoid shape of Chlamydomonas cells using the formula 4/3[L/2][W/2]2 (Umen and Goodenough, 2001
), where L is cell length and W is cell width. Only flagellated cells were measured for volume estimates.
Protein content per cell was calculated from cells harvested growing in TAP media under continuous light. Cell density was determined using a hemacytometer, following autolysin treatment of all three cultures to release cells from mother cell walls. 1x106 cells were pelleted, resuspended in 50 µl of 0.5x SDS sample buffer and boiled for 5 minutes. 5 µl lysate was used to determine protein concentration using the Advanced Protein Assay Reagent (Cytoskeleton, Denver, CO) with BSA (BioRad) as a standard. Cell counts and protein determinations were done blind and in triplicate for all three cultures.
Cell synchrony experiments
For mitotic index experiments, cultures were grown in minimal media at 22°C with bubbling (5% CO2) for 3 days on a 14 hour light/10 hour dark regime. On the fourth day, cultures were left in the light and were sampled over the next 24 hours. Mitotic index was determined by microscopic examination for the presence of cleavage furrows; in Chlamydomonas, incipient cleavage furrows form at preprophase and are visible throughout mitosis and cytokinesis (Kirk, 1998).
To determine the number of times each cell divided, we used cultures that were grown in TAP media for several days in constant light. Aliquots of the culture were plated on minimal media and placed in the dark for 24 hours (Umen and Goodenough, 2001). The plates were then examined using a dissecting microscope and scored for the number of cells per microcolony. The number of cells observed was used to calculate the number of division cycles the founder cell underwent. To determine commitment size and growth rate, cultures were grown in minimal media for several days in constant light and shifted to the dark for 24 hours (Umen and Goodenough, 2001
). Samples were taken immediately after the shift to light (for commitment size determination) and every 2 hours thereafter (for growth rate determination).
Flagellar regeneration and resorption experiments
For flagellar regeneration experiments, 5 ml of each overnight culture grown in TAP media was transferred into 15 ml centrifuge tubes. A 100 µl sample, defined as the pre-deflagellation time point, was fixed in 2% glutaraldehyde. To induce deflagellation, 5 ml of 40 mM sodium acetate, 1 mM CaCl2, pH 4.5, with or without 10 µg/ml cycloheximide was added to the cultures, which were mixed by inversion. Cells were pelleted by centrifugation at 1000 g for 1 minute and resuspended in 5 ml TAP media with or without 10 µg/ml cycloheximide. A 100 µl sample, defined as the zero time point, was fixed, and the cultures were placed at 22°C in constant light with shaking. 100 µl samples were fixed every 15 minutes thereafter. For flagellar disassembly experiments, 2-day-old cultures on TAP plates were flooded with 10 mM HEPES-KOH (pH 7.2) and the cultures were left unagitated for 2 hours at 22°C to obtain flagellated cells. Cells were pipetted into 15 ml centrifuge tubes and pelleted by centrifugation at 1000 g for 3 minutes. Then the cells were resuspended in 10 mM HEPES-KOH (pH 7.2) prewarmed to 33°C. A 100 µl sample, defined as the zero time-point, was fixed and the cultures were placed in a 33°C incubator with constant light. 100 µl samples were taken every hour. All samples were fixed in 2% glutaraldehyde.
Northern analysis
Northern analysis was performed as described previously (Mahjoub et al., 2002) with the following modifications:
0.5 kb probes for CNK2 (basepairs 107-767 of the cDNA) and ß-tubulin (basepairs 963-1546 of the genomic sequence) were generated using [
-32P]dCTP (3000 Ci/mmol) with the Prime-it II random primer labeling kit (Stratagene). Probes were purified using a PCR purification kit (Qiagen) and hybridized to blots at 106 cpm/ml at 70°C overnight and washed as described (Virca et al., 1990
); blots were visualized using a Storm phosphoimager (Molecular Dynamics, Sunnyvale, CA). Before reprobing, blots were stripped by washing three times in 0.1 M NaOH for 30 seconds.
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Results |
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Subcellular fractionation of cells expressing Cnk2p-HA revealed that Cnk2p-HA is targeted to the flagella (Fig. 1B). The small amount of Cnk2p-HA detected in the cell body fraction may either be due to flagellar contamination or Cnk2p-HA associated with basal bodies (see below). Detergent extraction of the flagellar fraction reveals that Cnk2p-HA is a component of the axoneme and is not associated with the membrane plus matrix fraction (Fig. 1B). This result is consistent with data from the flagellar proteome project, which found endogenous Cnk2p in the axonemal fraction (Greg Pazour and George Witman, University of Massachusetts, Worcester, MA, personal communication).
To refine the localization of Cnk2p-HA we performed indirect immunofluorescence using anti-HA antibodies (Fig. 1C). We triple-stained wild-type cells and those expressing Cnk2p-HA with anti--tubulin to reveal the flagella and cortical array of microtubules (Doonan and Grief, 1987
), anti-centrin to label the distal striated fibers connecting the basal bodies at the base of the flagella, as well as the nucleus-basal body connectors (Salisbury et al., 1988
; Sanders and Salisbury, 1989
), and anti-HA to localize Cnk2p-HA. The Cnk2p-HA signal is observed in puncta along the length of the flagella as well as at the basal bodies (Fig. 1C). Two examples of Cnk2p-HA expressing cells are shown, one with basal body staining (middle panels) and another that lacks basal body staining (right-hand panels in Fig. 1C).
To determine which structures within the axoneme Cnk2p-HA might be associated with, genetic crosses were performed with Cnk2p-HA cells and various flagellar mutants. Indirect immunofluorescence was used to determine whether Cnk2p-HA was mislocalized in mutants lacking the dynein regulatory complex (pf3), inner dynein arms (pf9), radial spokes (pf14), central pair microtubules (pf18) or outer dynein arms (oda9) (reviewed by Porter and Sale, 2000). Cnk2p-HA localization was undisturbed in all of these mutant backgrounds (Fig. 2) suggesting that Cnk2p-HA is associated with the outer doublet microtubules.
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We observed that Cnk2p-HA cells have short flagella and CNK2-RNAi cells have long flagella (Table 1; Fig. 4A). We also noticed cell size effects: Cnk2p-HA cells are smaller than wild-type cells and CNK2-RNAi cells are larger than the wild type (Table 1; Fig. 4B). The altered cell volumes reflect a change in biomass: in one experiment done in triplicate, total protein/cell was 27.7±0.6 pg/cell (wild type), 18.0±0.2 pg/cell (Cnk2p-HA) and 34.8±1.3 pg/cell (CNK2-RNAi). In order to test whether flagellar length is a consequence of cell size we examined a number of mutant strains (Table 1). Mutant fa2-1 cells, which are similar in size to the CNK2-RNAi cells, have flagella of wild-type length; mat3-4 cells, which are similar in size to the Cnk2p-HA cells (when both are grown in TAP media) have wild-type length flagella; conversely, flagellar length mutants, shf1 and lf3-2, have normal cell sizes (Table 1). We conclude that flagellar length phenotypes are not a trivial consequence of changes in cell size.
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To examine the net flagellar assembly rate we measured flagellar regeneration post-deflagellation (Fig. 5A, closed symbols). Wild-type, Cnk2p-HA and CNK2-RNAi cultures were induced to deflagellate by a brief pH shock. All strains were observed to regenerate flagella with similar kinetics, but the CNK2-RNAi cells initiated regeneration sooner (compare 15 minute time-points) and the Cnk2p-HA flagella stopped growing at a shorter length.
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When deflagellated in the presence of 10 µg/ml cycloheximide, protein synthesis is halted, yet cells regenerate short flagella, indicating the presence of a cytoplasmic pool of flagellar precursors (Rosenbaum et al., 1969). In order to assess whether the precursor pools were of similar size in our strains we repeated the flagellar regeneration time course in the presence of 10 µg/ml cycloheximide (Fig. 5A, open symbols). Both the Cnk2p-HA and the CNK2-RNAi strains were capable of regenerating flagella similar in length to those of the wild-type strain, suggesting that precursor pool size is similar to that in the wild type in our strains.
To assess relative rates of flagellar disassembly, Cnk2p-HA and CNK2-RNAi strains were crossed into a fla10-1 mutant background; fla10-1 is a temperature-sensitive mutant carrying a point mutation in a subunit of the heterotrimeric kinesin-2 anterograde IFT motor (Walther et al., 1994). At the permissive temperature (20°C) fla10-1 cells have wild-type length flagella, but at the restrictive temperature (33°C), in the absence of added calcium, cells resorb their flagella, presumably owing to continued disassembly in the absence of anterograde IFT (Adams et al., 1982
; Marshall and Rosenbaum, 2001
; Parker and Quarmby, 2003
). To determine whether Cnk2p levels affect resorption rate, fla10-1 cells and cells expressing Cnk2p-HA or CNK2-RNAi in a fla10-1 background, were allowed to assemble flagella at the permissive temperature and were then shifted to the restrictive temperature (Fig. 5B). We observed that fla10-1 and fla10-1:CNK2-RNAi cells resorb flagella at the same overall rate (
1.4 µm/hour), whereas the fla10-1:Cnk2p-HA expressing cells resorb their flagella more quickly (Fig. 5B). Importantly, the fla10-1:Cnk2p-HA cells displayed a lag period followed by rapid resorption; the rate of resorption, once it gets started, is more than twice as fast as the other strains (3.4 µm/hour).
We also examined the localization of Cnk2p-HA during flagellar assembly and resorption (Fig. 5C). During both flagellar assembly post-deflagellation (Fig. 5C, upper row) and flagellar disassembly prior to mitosis (Fig. 5C, lower row), Cnk2p-HA accumulates at the basal bodies, but is also present in puncta along the flagella. We were unable to detect Cnk2p-HA during mitosis by indirect immunofluorescence of synchronized cultures (data not shown).
Effects of Cnk2p levels on cell cycle parameters
We previously reported that another Chlamydomonas mutant, fa2, has large cells due at least in part to a G2-M delay (Mahjoub et al., 2002). To determine whether the cell size phenotypes of Cnk2p-HA and CNK2-RNAi are also due to effects on cell cycle progression, we looked at the timing of mitotic entry by examining synchronized cultures for the presence of cleavage furrows. The smaller Cnk2p-HA cells enter mitosis sooner than the wild type whereas the larger CNK2-RNAi cells enter mitosis later than the wild type and slightly ahead of fa2-1 cells (Fig. 6A). In order to determine whether the cell cycle progression and mean cell size differences were due to effects on growth rate, we assessed the growth of wild-type, Cnk2p-HA and CNK2-RNAi strains. Cells of all three strains grow at similar rates (Fig. 6B).
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To test whether the number of rounds of division post commitment was altered in Cnk2p-HA and CNK2-RNAi strains, we grew cultures in rich (TAP) media for several days in constant light and plated the cultures on minimal media in the dark for 24 hours. Under these conditions the cells have no energy source and thus stop growing, but any cells larger than the commitment size are expected to divide, and the divisions observed will be from one round of rapid S and M phase cycling. We did not observe a change in the number of rounds of division post commitment (Fig. 6C). Because we do not observe a change in growth rate or in the number of divisions post-commitment, we hypothesized that a change in the commitment threshold would generate both the cell size and mitotic entry phenotypes that we see in our strains.
To test this hypothesis we held cultures in minimal media in the dark for 24 hours, during which time cells larger than the commitment size are expected to divide (Umen and Goodenough, 2001). Thus, the largest cells in the population after 24 hours in the dark should be at or near the commitment size threshold. From this experiment, we estimate the commitment size for the wild type to be 182 µm3, which is similar to previously reported values (Fig. 6D) (Umen and Goodenough, 2001
; Mahjoub et al., 2002
). Importantly, the commitment size for Cnk2p-HA and CNK2-RNAi was different from the wild type: the Cnk2p-HA strain had a commitment threshold of 137 µm3 whereas the CNK2-RNAi strain committed to divide at or above 257 µm3 (Fig. 6D). These commitment size estimates can be used to predict the fraction of cells in a culture that will divide when plated on minimal media and kept in the dark. In one experiment we used our commitment size estimates to predict that 33% of the wild-type, Cnk2p-HA and Cnk2p-RNAi cells would go on to divide on minimal media in the dark. We observed 37%, 28% and 33% of cells divided at least once during the 24 hour dark period for wild-type, Cnk2p-HA and Cnk2p-RNAi cells respectively, thus confirming that the effects of Cnk2p expression on commitment size is at least as large as estimated. We conclude that Cnk2p levels affect commitment size.
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Discussion |
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Cnk2p appears to play a role in flagellar length control. Expression of Cnk2p-HA produces short flagella comparable in length to those of shf1 mutants (Table 1). Conversely, knockdown of Cnk2p expression produces flagella longer than the wild type, but not as long as lf mutants, which can have flagella three to four times the wild-type length (Table 1) (Barsel et al., 1988). Our data indicate that when protein synthesis is inhibited during flagellar regeneration, wild-type, Cnk2p-HA and CNK2-RNAi cells grow flagella of similar length (Fig. 5A). This is not surprising as all three strains have similar levels of Cnk2p post deflagellation, i.e. very little, because virtually all of the Cnk2p is shed with the flagella. It does however suggest that the axonemal precursor pool is the same size in all three strains, indicating that the length phenotypes are not due to a change in the availability of precursors. We found that the rate of flagellar assembly following deflagellation was similar to the wild type in both HA and RNAi strains (Fig. 5A). However, it is important to note that CNK2-RNAi cells initiate assembly sooner. This may reflect regulation of a gating mechanism/check point at the base of the flagellum that controls access of IFT particles and flagellar precursors to the elongating flagellum (Kirk, 1989; Rosenbaum and Witman, 2002
; Beech, 2003
) or a change in the rate of recovery from the pH shock (Quarmby, 1996
). We found that fla10-1:CNK2-RNAi cells disassemble flagella at the same rate as fla10-1 cells, but expression of Cnk2p-HA caused more rapid loss of flagella (Fig. 5B). Thus an increase in the amount of Cnk2p caused increased rates of disassembly, while retaining net assembly rates similar to the wild type, until the flagella approached their steady-state length (Fig. 5A). We propose that disassembly is inhibited during the initial stages of flagellar assembly as previously proposed (Parker and Quarmby, 2003
) and suggest a model wherein Cnk2p is active during the initiation of flagellar assembly and at steady state.
Chlamydomonas cells undergo rapid flagellar resorption prior to mitosis. Owing to the effects of Cnk2p on both flagellar resorption and cell cycle progression, Cnk2p might serve to promote pre-mitotic flagellar resorption. One possibility is that Cnk2p functions as part of a Chlamydomonas RB pathway. Mutants in mat3, which are defective in Chlamydomonas RB, have a smaller commitment threshold than the wild type (Umen and Goodenough, 2001), and although vegetative mat3 cells have flagella of wild-type length (Table 1), mat3 gametes have short flagella (Armbrust et al., 1995
). A dominant allele of MAT3 and extragenic suppressors of mat3-4 have been isolated and shown to cause a large cell phenotype (Umen et al., 2003
), it will be of interest to determine whether these cells also have flagella of comparable length to CNK2-RNAi cells.
In order to determine how Cnk2p might regulate cell size, we studied the effects of expression level on various cell cycle parameters. Expression of Cnk2p-HA produces small cells, whereas knockdown of CNK2 expression produces large cells (Fig. 4B; Table 1). These cell size defects are due to alterations in the mitotic commitment size threshold (Fig. 6D). Cnk2p-HA cells enter mitosis sooner than the wild type (Fig. 6A) because, with wild-type rates of cell growth (Fig. 6B), they pass the smaller commitment size threshold sooner. Because the number of rounds of division following commitment is similar to the wild type (Fig. 6C), the resulting daughter cells are small, and again because growth rate is similar to the wild type, the cell size distribution of the population is shifted towards small cells (Fig. 4B). The same logic explains the size phenotype of CNK2-RNAi cells.
Another axonemal protein might also regulate commitment size: phototropin, a blue-light receptor in Chlamydomonas, has been localized to the axoneme and, like Cnk2p-HA, this localization is not disturbed in mutants lacking accessory axonemal structures (Huang et al., 2004). Blue light treatment increases the size threshold for commitment (Oldenhof et al., 2004
). Although it is not known whether phototropin is the receptor responsible for the effect on commitment size, the presence of a C-terminal serine/threonine kinase domain in phototropin suggests that this receptor may be part of a signaling pathway that alters commitment. It will be interesting to determine whether Cnk2p and phototropin are participating in the same pathway.
Cnk2p is the second NIMA-related kinase found to be axonemal. Fa2p has recently been reported to localize to the proximal end of the axoneme in Chlamydomonas at a site known as the SOFA (site of flagellar autotomy) (Mahjoub et al., 2004), a site to which these authors also find that exogenously expressed Fa2p-EGFP in ciliated mouse kidney cells localizes. The conservation of Fa2p localization suggests that one or more mammalian NIMA-related kinases may be axonemal. We have previously noted that expansion of the NIMA-related family of proteins correlates with the presence of ciliated cells in the lineage (Bradley et al., 2004
). Of the ten known NIMA-related kinase genes in Chlamydomonas, only two have been studied to date (FA2 and CNK2) and both affect ciliary disassembly and the cell cycle. Further correlation of cilia with NIMA-related kinases derives from the association of Neks with ciliopathies. Mutations in murine Nek1 or Nek8 produce cystic kidneys similar to those found in patients with polycystic kidney diseases (Upadhya et al., 2000
; Liu et al., 2002
). The genesis of kidney cysts is not completely understood, but there is a convergence of diverse data indicating that defective signaling from the primary cilia is the proximal cause of aberrant cell proliferation leading to cystic kidneys (reviewed by Pazour, 2004
). We speculate that members of the NIMA-related kinase family play important roles in the coordinated regulation of cilia and the cell cycle in other organisms or cell types with cilia.
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Acknowledgments |
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References |
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