1 The Wellcome Trust Centre for Cell Biology, Institute of Cell Biology, School of Biological Sciences, The University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, EH9 3JR, UK
2 The Howard Hughes Medical Institute and Department of Cellular and Molecular Pharmacology, University of California, San Francisco, CA 94143, USA
Author for correspondence (e-mail: h.ohkura{at}ed.ac.uk)
Accepted 9 May 2005
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Summary |
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Key words: CLIP-170, Microtubule, Kinetochore, Dynein, EB1, Drosophila
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Introduction |
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In the last decade or so, a new special group of MAPs has emerged as crucial regulators of microtubule plus-ends. These MAPs were collectively called microtubule plus-end-tracking proteins, based on their preferential localisation to growing microtubule plus-ends (Schuyler and Pellman, 2001). CLIP-170 was the first MAP to be described with this property (Perez et al., 1999
) and is well conserved among yeast and animals (Pierre et al., 1992
; Lantz and Miller, 1998
; Brunner and Nurse, 2000
). Consistent with its localisation, CLIP-170 is implicated in binding endocytic vesicles to microtubules (Pierre et al., 1992
), regulating microtubule dynamics (Brunner and Nurse, 2000
; Komarova et al., 2002
), kinetochore function (Dujardin et al., 1998
; Lin et al., 2001
; Coquelle et al., 2002
; Tai et al., 2002
), and the linkage between microtubules and the cell cortex (Brunner and Nurse, 2000
; Akhmanova et al., 2001
; Fukata et al., 2002
). More families of microtubule-tracking proteins have now been reported, most notably EB1 that has no sequence similarity to CLIP-170 (Mimori-Kiyosue et al., 2000
).
Plus-end-tracking by specific MAPs is thought to derive from a higher affinity for growing plus-ends relative to the microtubule lattice (Carvalho et al., 2003; Galjart and Perez, 2003
). Recent studies in yeast homologues have suggested an alternative but not exclusive mechanism, which utilises a plus-end directed microtubule motor (Browning et al., 2003
; Busch et al., 2004
; Carvalho et al., 2004
). In fission yeast, the EB1 homologue is involved in plus-end localisation of the CLIP-170 homologue (Busch and Brunner, 2004
). In higher eukaryotes the involvement of similar mechanisms has not been demonstrated.
Kinetochore localisation of CLIP-170 in mitosis has been shown in higher eukaryotes (Dujardin et al., 1998; Maiato et al., 2002
) and in budding yeast (Lin et al., 2001
). Involvement of dynein-dynactin and Lis1 in this localisation was demonstrated using overexpression of dominant negative proteins (Dujardin et al., 1998
; Coquelle et al., 2002
; Tai et al., 2002
). These studies revealed a direct interaction between Lis1 and CLIP-170, and a dependency of CLIP-170 kinetochore localisation on Lis1 and the dynein-dynactin complex, but not vice versa. Interestingly, all these molecules have also been shown to be involved in microtubulecell-cortex interactions (Dujardin and Vallee, 2002
) and even to cooperate in this process (Sheeman et al., 2003
).
The Drosophila genome contains only one CLIP-170 homologue, Drosophila CLIP-190 (D-CLIP-190) (Lantz and Miller, 1998). This is in contrast to mammalian genomes, which contain multiple paralogues of CLIP-170. Therefore, Drosophila is a good system to study the role and regulation of the CLIP family of proteins. CLIP-190 was originally identified as a protein that binds to myosin VI (Lantz and Miller, 1998
), and was later shown to localise to kinetochores (Maiato et al., 2002
). Here, we focus on the cell-cycle regulation of CLIP-190 in Drosophila cell culture and show that it localises to microtubule plus-ends in interphase and unattached kinetochores in mitosis. Systematic RNAi depletion of potential regulators uncovered distinct mechanisms governing cell-cycle-regulated localisation of CLIP-190.
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Materials and Methods |
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An antibody against GST-CLIP-190-cc was raised in sheep, and one against GST-CLIP-190-C in rabbit by Diagnostics Scotland (Midlothian, UK). Affinity purification was performed by incubation with the respective antigen bound to nitrocellulose membrane (Smith and Fisher, 1984).
Cell culture and RNA interference
Drosophila Schneider S2 cells were cultured and RNA interference (RNAi) was performed according to published methods (Clemens et al., 2000; Rogers et al., 2002
). Double-stranded RNAs (dsRNAs) for RNAi were produced by in vitro transcription using the Megascript-T7 kit (Ambion). Templates were made in two rounds of PCR as follows: about 600 bp within an exon of the target gene was first amplified from genomic DNA or cDNA using gene specific primers with 5'-overhangs of the last 18 nucleotides from the minimum T7 promoter sequence (27 bp), and then further amplified using a primer comprising the full T7 promotor sequence (see supplementary material Fig. S1). dsRNA corresponding to 780 bp of the ß-lactamase gene was used as a control RNAi. Primer sequences are shown in supplementary material Fig. S1. Colchicine (6 µg/ml final concentration; Sigma) or sodium ortho-vanadate (100 µM; final concentration; Sigma) was added to the culture medium and cells were incubated overnight or for 4 hours, respectively, prior to fixation.
Immunofluorescence microscopy
For immunostaining, S2 cells were cultured on a concanavalin A (conA)-coated coverslip for a minimum of 2 hours with the appropriate drug (see above) and fixed with 90% methanol, 3% formaldehyde, 5 mM NaHCO3 pH 9 at 80°C as described (Rogers et al., 2002). Antibodies against
-tubulin (DM1A, 1:200, Sigma), Drosophila EB1 (Elliott et al., 2005
), Dic (MAB1618, Chemicon; 1:50), Rod (BE40, a kind gift from R. Karess, CNRS, Paris (Scaerou et al., 1999
) and BubR1 (a kind gift from C. Sunkel, University of Porto, Porto) (Logarinho et al., 2004
) were used as primary antibodies. Rabbit anti-histone-H3-phosphate (06-570, Upstate; 1:500) and affinity purified sheep-anti-CLIP-190cc (this study; 1:50) were also used as primary antibodies. Secondary antibodies, conjugated with Alexa Flour488, Cy3 or Cy5 (Molecular Probes or Jackson Lab) and DAPI (Sigma) were used in 1:200, 1:1000 and 1:200 dilution, respectively. DAPI (Sigma) was used at 0.4 µg/µl. Images were taken with an Axioplan 2 microscope (Zeiss) attached to a CCD camera (Hamamatsu) controlled by OpenLab 2.2.1 software (Improvision) and were processed with Photoshop (Adobe). The relative plus-end signal for EB1 and CLIP-190 was calculated using the formula (SB)÷B, where S is the average pixel intensity for a particular plus-end signal and B is the average pixel intensity of the local background. Since the shape of EB1 comets was variable, we hand-drew the area, tightly surrounding each comet. The local background was also measured by hand-drawn areas on both sides of each comet. The formula (SB)÷B was used to compensate for differences in exposure and variations in brightness. A minimum of ten plus-end signals were measured in at least three separate cells for each cell-cycle stage. Measurements were made using OpenLab 2.2.1 (Improvision).
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Results |
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After growing on a conA-coated surface, S2 cells spread and flatten, with interphase or astral microtubules extending towards the cell periphery. During interphase, CLIP-190 mainly accumulated at microtubule plus-ends but also localised weakly along microtubules (Fig. 1A,B). Accumulation of CLIP-190 at the microtubule plus-ends was variable both in intensity and length, which may reflect a difference in microtubule dynamics. The results indicate that CLIP-190, like all CLIP-170 homologues, is a microtubule plus-end-binding protein during interphase.
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In summary, CLIP-190 shows cell-cycle-dependent localisation to microtubule plus-ends in interphase and kinetochores in early mitosis. We describe the molecular mechanisms involved in localising CLIP-190 in mitosis and interphase below.
CLIP-190 is localised to unattached kinetochores
To further study kinetochore localisation of CLIP-190, we examined mitotic cells that only had some chromosomes aligned at the metaphase plate. CLIP-190 localised to kinetochores of unaligned chromosomes, but was generally absent from aligned chromosomes (Fig. 2A,C). In many cases, CLIP-190 localised only to one sister kinetochore facing away from the poles, suggesting that microtubule attachment, not tension, is crucial for the loss of CLIP-190 (Fig. 2C). To examine the microtubule requirement for kinetochore localisation, S2 cells were incubated with the microtubule-depolymerising drug colchicine. Complete depolymerisation of microtubules resulted in the accumulation of S2 cells in mitosis. In these mitotically arrested cells, all kinetochores accumulated CLIP-190 signals (Fig. 2B), indicating that CLIP-190 localisation to unattached kinetochores is microtubule independent. Close inspection of the images indicated that CLIP-190 is localised outside BubR1 on unattached kinetochores, both in colchicines-treated and non-treated cells (Fig. 2A,B).
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To investigate the molecular requirements for the kinetochore localisation of CLIP-190, various kinetochore proteins were depleted by RNAi and the CLIP-190 localisation was examined in colchicine-arrested mitotic cells. We found that the localisation to kinetochores was abolished or greatly reduced, without altering the level of CLIP-190 protein, by depletion of Rough deal (Rod) (a subunit of the Rod-ZW10-Zwilch checkpoint complex), dynein heavy chain (Dhc), dynein intermediate chain (Dic), p150Glued (a dynactin subunit) or Lis1 (Fig. 3C,D) Depletion of CENP-meta (the CENP-E homologue) had no effect on CLIP-190 localisation (Fig. 3D). Since the kinetochore proteins required for localisation of CLIP-190 are components of the dynein-dynactin complex or associated proteins, we examined the requirement of other putative dynein interactors: the NudE homologue (CG8104), NudC (CG9710) and a protein sharing sequence similarity to NudC that we here call NudC-like (CG31251). Depletions of these three proteins by RNAi did not affect kinetochore localisation of CLIP-190 (Fig. 3D).
In all the above depletion experiments, CLIP-190 localisation to microtubule plus-ends of cells not treated with colchicine was not affected (data not shown), indicating that distinct mechanisms are involved in localising CLIP-190 either to kinetochores or to microtubule plus-ends.
Hierarchical relationships among proteins localising to unattached kinetochores
Our results show that CLIP-190 localisation to kinetochores requires dynein-dynactin, Lis1 and Rod. Among these proteins, some physical and dependency relationships were reported by several studies using overexpression of dominant negative proteins or mutational analysis in Drosophila (Dujardin et al., 1998; Starr et al., 1998
; Coquelle et al., 2002
). To clarify the relationship among these proteins, we depleted Rod, p150Glued, Dic, Dhc, Lis1 or CLIP-190 by RNAi, and immunostained with Rod, Dic and CLIP-190 antibodies (Fig. 3E). In each case, depletion did not affect the amount of the other proteins (data not shown).
Rod depletion abolished localisation of all other proteins, but Rod localisation itself was independent of the presence of all other proteins. Localisation of CLIP-190 to kinetochores depended on all proteins tested, whereas localisation of any of the other proteins was not affected by CLIP-190 depletion. On the other hand, depletion of Dhc, Dic, p150Glued and Lis1 abolished kinetochore localisation of Dic and CLIP-190, but not that of Rod protein, indicating that the dynein-dynactin complex and Lis1 link Rod and CLIP-190. Interestingly, we found that Lis1 depletion abolished localisation of dynein (Dic) to kinetochores. A requirement for Lis1 in dynein kinetochore localisation has so far not been shown in any system. Since Lis1 kinetochore localisation depends on dynein in mammalian cells (Coquelle et al., 2002), Lis1 and dynein may be mutually dependent on each other for their localisation.
In conclusion, our RNAi analysis revealed co-dependency of recruitment to kinetochores, with Rod protein first, followed by dynein-dynactin and Lis1, and then CLIP-190. Our results also indicate for the first time that Lis1 is essential for dynein localisation to kinetochores.
Involvement of dynein ATPase activity in the removal of CLIP-190 from attached kinetochores
Next, we examined how CLIP-190 is removed from kinetochores upon microtubule attachment. It has been proposed that dynein motor activity is responsible for removing some kinetochore proteins, such as Rod and CENP-E, from attached kinetochores by transporting them along microtubules (Howell et al., 2001). Although a physical interaction between dynein-dynactin and CLIP-170 has been reported (Komarova et al., 2002
; Lansbergen et al., 2004
), the removal of CLIP-190 or other homologues from attached kinetochores by dynein has not been investigated.
To test this possibility, we used sodium ortho-vanadate to inhibit the motor activity of dynein, as depletion of dynein abolishes CLIP-190 localisation in the first place (Fig. 3F). S2 cells were treated with 100 µM vanadate for 4 hours and immunostained with dynein and CLIP-190 antibodies. As we expected, vanadate treatment did not prevent dynein localisation to kinetochores, but resulted in an abnormal accumulation of dynein on kinetochores of aligned chromosomes. In addition, dynein was found to accumulate along spindle microtubules and especially at the spindle poles. In vanadate treated cells, CLIP-190 exactly colocalised with dynein at the kinetochores of aligned chromosomes as well as along spindle microtubules and the poles. Although the effect of vanadate on dynein localisation was not completely penetrant and vanadate probably has multiple targets, CLIP-190 mislocalisation was tightly correlated to that of dynein. This suggests that inhibition of dynein motor activity is the primary cause for the failure of CLIP-190 removal from attached kinetochores.
EB1 and CLIP-190 show overlapping localisation to microtubule plus-ends
Depletion of proteins required for kinetochore localisation of CLIP-190 did not affect the localisation of CLIP-190 to microtubule plus-ends in interphase, indicating the involvement of distinct mechanisms. To understand how CLIP-190 localises to microtubule plus-ends, we first examined the spatial relationship of CLIP-190 with EB1, another microtubule plus-end-tracking protein. Although these proteins represent two major families of microtubule plus-end-tracking proteins, their exact localisation relative to each other has not been examined. For this purpose, we raised an anti-CLIP-190 antibody in sheep to allow simultaneous staining with a rabbit anti-EB1 antibody. We found that the localisation of the two proteins to microtubule plus-ends substantially overlapped, although not completely (Fig. 4A). Compared to EB1, which stained as a comet, CLIP-190 gave more punctate staining and appeared to have a longer tail. By contrast, there was distinct localisation of the proteins during mitosis (Fig. 4B). EB1 mainly localised to spindle and astral microtubules with no accumulation at kinetochores, whereas CLIP-190 localised to spindle microtubules only weakly and showed strong kinetochore accumulation.
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The CAP-Gly domain of CLIP-190 directly interacts with EB1
Since CLIP-190 and EB1 show overlapping localisation to microtubule plus-ends, and we have previously shown that CLIP-190 from S2 cell extracts can bind to EB1 (Rogers et al., 2004), we tested for direct physical interaction by expressing these two proteins in bacteria. CLIP-190 and its mammalian homologues have three separate domains (Fig. 4C): the N-terminal region consisting of two CAP-Gly domains (the microtubule-binding domain), the C-terminal region containing zinc finger motifs (the putative cargo binding domain), and the long coiled-coil region which connects these two domains (the linker domain). The N-terminal domain (CLIP-190-N), C-terminal domain (CLIP-190-C) and part of the coiled-coil region (CLIP-190-cc) were expressed in bacteria as proteins fused with GST (glutathione-S transferase). After purification, each GST fusion and also GST alone was incubated with bacterially produced EB1 fused with MBP (maltose-binding protein) or MBP alone. MBP-EB1 and MBP bands were weakly present in all pull-down assays but a large amount of MBP-EB1 was pulled down only by GST-CLIP-190-N (Fig. 4D). These results demonstrate that the CAP-Gly domain of CLIP-190 directly interacts with EB1.
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Cell-cycle regulation of CLIP-190 localisation
Simultaneous visualisation of CLIP-190 and EB1 allowed us to examine the cell-cycle regulation of CLIP-190 localisation to microtubule plus-ends. We noticed that CLIP-190 localisation to microtubule plus-ends is greatly attenuated during mitosis (cells on the left in Fig. 5A; Fig. 5B lower panels) compared with interphase (cells on the right in Fig. 5A; Fig. 5B upper panel). By contrast, EB1 localisation to microtubule plus-ends during mitosis was comparable to that observed in interphase (Fig. 5A). For further analysis, we quantified the intensity of the signals on microtubule plus-ends at each cell-cycle stage (Fig. 5C). The graph shows that CLIP-190 levels at plus-ends decreased dramatically at the beginning of mitosis but started to recover during telophase. By contrast, EB1 levels remained unchanged during the cell cycle. Therefore, the association of CLIP-190 to microtubule plus-ends appears to be cell-cycle-regulated.
However, this cell-cycle-dependent localisation might be mediated simply by sequestration of CLIP-190 by kinetochores during mitosis. The two following experimental results excluded this possibility. First, CLIP-190 localisation to microtubule plus-ends was not recovered until telophase, although CLIP-190 kinetochore localisation was lost at metaphase (Fig. 5C). Secondly, the depletion of dynein-dynactin, Rod or Lis1 abolished CLIP-190 localisation to kinetochores, but did not restore CLIP-190 localisation to plus-ends of astral microtubules during mitosis (Fig. 5D). EB1 localisation to the plus-ends of astral microtubules was not affected by depletion of these proteins. We therefore conclude that CLIP-190 association to microtubule plus-ends is cell-cycle-regulated.
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Discussion |
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CLIP-190 localisation to microtubule plus-ends in interphase
CLIP and EB1 proteins are two major families of microtubule plus-end-tracking proteins. This study is the first demonstration of both a physical interaction and localisation-dependency between CLIP and EB1 proteins in higher eukaryotes. We show that CLIP-190 requires EB1 to localise to microtubule plus-ends, and that it directly interacts with EB1 through its CAP-Gly domain, which also binds to microtubules (Pierre et al., 1992). Considering that this has previously been reported for fission yeast homologues (Busch and Brunner, 2004
), our findings demonstrate that this interaction and dependency are conserved among eukaryotes. The most obvious interpretation would be that EB1 simply bridges microtubule plus-ends and CLIP-190. However, we think this may not be the case. First, CLIP-170 has been shown to bind directly to microtubule plus-ends in vitro (Diamantopoulos et al., 1999
). Secondly, our localisation studies show incomplete overlapping of the two proteins on microtubule plus-ends. Also, other EB1 interacting proteins, such as RhoGEF2 and the spectraplakin Short stop, which both require EB1 for their localisation to microtubule plus-ends (Rogers et al., 2004
; Slep et al., 2005
), show distinct localisation from that of EB1. Therefore, it is more likely that EB1 acts as a loading factor for these proteins, rather than a simple bridge. In addition, it seems that multiple microtubule plus-end-binding proteins, such as CLIPs, CLASPs, p150Glued, EB1, Lis1, Dynein, Short stop, APC and RhoGEF2, directly interact with each other and with microtubules (Su et al., 1995
; Akhmanova et al., 2001
; Coquelle et al., 2002
; Tai et al., 2002
; Ligon et al., 2003
; Subramanian et al., 2003
; Lansbergen et al., 2004
; Rogers et al., 2004
; Mimori-Kiyosue et al., 2005
). It is an exciting challenge to understand the regulatory network acting on microtubule plus-ends.
In addition, we found that the association of CLIP-190 to microtubule plus-ends is greatly reduced during mitosis. This is in contrast to EB1, which is associated with plus-ends throughout the cell cycle. This cell-cycle-regulation has not been described in other systems, possibly because of a lack of co-examination with EB1, allowing us to conclude that it is not the consequence of a change in microtubule dynamics. It might be possible that CLIP-190 is modified during the cell cycle. Since EB1 is essential for CLIP-190 localisation to microtubule ends, EB1 activity or interaction between EB1 and CLIP-190 might also be regulated. Alternatively, other inhibitory proteins might be activated during mitosis to attenuate CLIP-190 association with microtubule ends. Phosphorylation of the EB1 homologue mal3p and its inhibitory effects on the interaction with the CLIP-190 homologue tip1p have been shown in fission yeast (Busch and Brunner, 2004). It remains to be examined whether this phosphorylation is cell-cycle-regulated. Cell-cycle regulation might be important for releasing CLIP-190 for kinetochore function or preventing the plus-end-binding activity from interfering with CLIP-190 function at kinetochores. This report is the first to describe the cell-cycle regulation of the plus-end-binding of CLIP proteins. Elucidation of the precise mechanism and significance of this regulation may lead to further understanding of the temporal and spatial regulation of microtubules in cells.
CLIP-190 localisation to unattached kinetochores
CLIP-190 localises to unattached kinetochores in mitosis. The localisation of CLIP proteins to kinetochores has been shown in mammalian, Drosophila and budding-yeast cells (Dujardin et al., 1998; Lin et al., 2001
; Maiato et al., 2002
). Studies of CLIP-170 localisation to kinetochores in mammalian cells suggest an intricate physical and functional relationship with the dynein-dynactin complex. CLIP-170 binds directly to and requires Lis1 for kinetochore localisation. In turn, Lis1 interacts with multiple subunits of dynein-dynactin and is displaced from kinetochores when the motor complex is disrupted (Coquelle et al., 2002
; Tai et al., 2002
). Most of these studies relied on the overexpression of dominant-negative proteins.
RNAi in Drosophila culture cells has been demonstrated to be very efficient and robust (Clemens et al., 2000). In our and others' experiences, RNAi has been shown to knock down target protein expression in all cases where depletion was checked. In most experiments of this study, we confirmed effective depletion by immunoblotting or through the induction of specific cellular defects (see supplementary material Fig. S2). Therefore, we are confident of efficient depletion by RNAi in most, if not all, of our cases. The ease of RNAi enabled us to study the requirement for CLIP-190 localisation in a more systematic manner. Reassuringly, our results using RNAi generally confirmed the previous observations deduced from overexpression of dominant-negative proteins.
However, we found a previously unreported dependency, namely the requirement of Lis1 for dynein localisation to kinetochores. In mammalian cells, dynein is required for Lis1 localisation, whereas the overexpression of full-length or truncated Lis1 does not prevent dynein localisation to kinetochores (Tai et al., 2002). These results lead to the idea that Lis1 might be an auxiliary protein that bridges the dynein complex to cargo proteins. Our RNAi results clearly indicate that Lis1 is required for dynein localisation to kinetochores. Combined with previous results, Lis1 and dynein seem to depend on each other for their localisation. This is the first report of such dependency in any eukaryote, and it gives the Lis1 protein a more integral part in dynein function.
Our results also suggest that microtubule attachment directly removes CLIP-190 from kinetochores rather than through spindle-checkpoint signalling. Dynein seems to be responsible for the removal of CLIP-190 from kinetochores in addition to its role in localising CLIP-190 to kinetochores. It has been shown that dynein removes several kinetochore proteins along microtubules upon the attachment of microtubules (Howell et al., 2001; Wojcik et al., 2001
). Our study provides the first evidence that a member of the CLIP family also utilises dynein-motor-activity to leave attached kinetochores. Interestingly, we found that unlike in interphase, EB1 is not required for the mitotic localisation of CLIP-190 to unattached kinetochores. This is intriguing in the light of recent evidence that EB1 associates with attached kinetochores when the kinetochore microtubules are polymerizing (Tirnauer et al., 2002
).
In conclusion, our results indicate that CLIP-190 localisation is regulated during the cell cycle and requires distinct mechanisms in mitosis and interphase (Fig. 5E). Spatial and temporal regulation of CLIP-190 localisation probably play crucial roles in the regulation of microtubule dynamics and their interaction with other cellular structures.
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Acknowledgments |
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Footnotes |
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* Present address: Department of Biology & Carolina Center for Genome Sciences, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Campus Box 3280, 241 Coker Hall, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-3280, USA
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