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Sro7p, a Saccharomyces cerevisiae Counterpart of the Tumor Suppressor l(2)gl Protein, Is Related to Myosins in Function
Mitsuhiro Kagamia, Akio Toh-ea, and Yasushi Matsuiaa Department of Biological Sciences, Graduate School of Science, University of Tokyo, Tokyo 113, Japan
Corresponding author: Yasushi Matsui, Department of Biological Sciences, Graduate School of Science, University of Tokyo, 7-3-1, Hongo, Tokyo 113, Japan., matsui{at}biol.s.u-tokyo.ac.jp (E-mail).
Communicating editor: F. WINSTON
| ABSTRACT |
|---|
Yeast SRO7 was identified as a multicopy suppressor of a defect in Rho3p, a small GTPase that maintains cell polarity. Sro7p and Sro77p, a homologue of Sro7p, possess domains homologous to the protein that are encoded by the Drosophila tumor suppressor gene lethal (2) giant larvae [l(2)gl]. sro7
sro77
mutants showed a partial defect of organization of the polarized actin cytoskeleton and a cold-sensitive growth phenotype. A human counterpart of l(2)gl could suppress the sro7
sro77
defect. Similar to the l(2)gl protein, Sro7p formed a complex with Myo1p, a type II myosin. These results indicate that Sro7p and Sro77p are the yeast counterparts of the l(2)gl protein. Our genetic analysis revealed that deletion of SRO7 and SRO77 showed reciprocal suppression with deletion of MYO1 (i.e., the sro7
sro77
defect was suppressed by myo1
and vice versa). In addition, SRO7 showed genetic interactions with MYO2, encoding an essential type V myosin: Overexpression of SRO7 suppressed a defect in MYO2 and, conversely, overexpression of MYO2 suppressed the cold-sensitive phenotype of sro7
sro77
mutants. These results indicate that Sro7 function is closely related to both Myo1p and Myo2p. We propose a model in which Sro7 function is involved in the targeting of the myosin proteins to their intrinsic pathways.
THE Drosophila tumor suppressor gene lethal (2) giant larvae [l(2)gl] was discovered in 1930 by BRIDGES. Inactivation of l(2)gl results in overgrowth of the imaginal discs and the optic lobes in the larval brain, and produces cells that lose their apical-basal cell polarity and are unable to differentiate (![]()
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Rho3p is a rho-type small GTPase of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae (![]()
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cells when overexpressed (![]()
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(![]()
In this article, we have characterized Sro7p and Sro77p, a functionally redundant homologue of Sro7p. Both Sro7p and Sro77p possess domains homologous to the l(2)gl protein. We found that Sro7p and Sro77p are yeast counterparts of the l(2)gl protein and have genetically characterized the function of Sro7p and Sro77p. These results have demonstrated a strong relationship between Sro7 function and the myosin pathways.
| MATERIALS and METHODS |
|---|
Microbiological techniques:
Yeast transformations were performed by the method of ![]()
![]()
Strains and plasmids:
The yeast strains used are listed in Table 1. All strains in this study were constructed using the wild-type strains YPH499 and YPH501 (![]()
[supE44
lacU169 (
80 lacZ
M15) hsdR17 recA1 endA1 gyrA96 thi-1 relA1]. Plasmid DNA was prepared as described by ![]()
![]()
|
The DNA sequence of SRO7 on the original clone was determined and was identical to the YPR032w sequence in Saccharomyces Genomic Database. SRO7 was disrupted by replacing a 2.6-kb BglII-XhoI fragment (corresponding to the amino acid residues 118989) in the SRO7 open reading frame with a 1.1-kb fragment that contains the URA3 gene. To construct sro7
::HIS3, we disrupted the URA3 marker in the sro7
allele with HIS3 using a ura3-disruption plasmid (![]()
![]()
![]()
. The KpnI-SacI fragment of pRS303-SRO77
was inserted between the KpnI and SacI sites of pRS304 (![]()
. pSRO77
was digested with ClaI and used for replacement transformation. Using pSRO77
, SRO77 was disrupted by replacing the complete open reading frame with the TRP1 marker (sro77
::TRP1).
The SRO77 gene was amplified using the primers 5'-GGGGGATCGATATGTGGCATGTTCAAAACCA and 5'-GGGGGATCGATATTGCGTAAACTCCTTCAAG, and the amplified fragments were digested with ClaI and introduced into ClaI sites of pYO324, a high-copy-number plasmid (![]()
defect. Assays for the activity to suppress the rho3
defect were as described in MATSUI and TOH-E (1992b).
The coding region of LLGL was amplified from a plasmid containing LLGL cDNA (![]()
![]()
The MYO1 gene was amplified using the primers 5'-CAAGGTCATGGCTTTTAAACAAAGCGT and 5'-GGGGGCTCGAGTACTGAAAATTTTACTCTGTG. The amplified fragment was digested with PstI and XhoI, and was introduced between the PstI and XhoI sites of pBluescript KS+ (Stratagene, La Jolla, CA) to create KSMYO1. A DNA fragment that encodes three copies of the hemagglutinin (HA) epitope, tandemly connected, and a stop codon was inserted into the XhoI site of KSMYO1 to create KSMYO1HA. In KSMYO1HA, the HA sequence is placed in frame, immediately downstream of the last codon of MYO1. The 6.5-kb PstI-SalI fragment of KSMYO1HA was inserted between the PstI and SalI site of YEplac195, a high-copy-number plasmid (![]()
The construction of pKT10NmycSRO7 for production of Sro7-mycN was as follows. A 3.1-kb DNA fragment encoding the entire Sro7p was amplified by PCR using the primers 5'-GGGGGGGATCCAATGTTCGGTAGCAAACGTC and 5'-GGGGGGGATCCTTAAAAACCAAGGGCACCTT. The amplified fragment was digested with BamHI and inserted into the BglII site of pKT10mycN, which is a high-copy-number plasmid carrying the TDH3 promoter for production of Myc epitopetagged protein (![]()
defect, and both Sro7-myc and Sro7-mycN suppressed the sro7
sro77
defect (data not shown).
The construction of YEpUMYO2HA, a high-copy-number plasmid producing an HA-tagged Myo2p, was as follows. The 3' half of MYO2 gene was amplified using the primers 5'-GATGTAATGGGAGGCGGTGC and 5'-GGGGGCTCGAGAGTGGCCGTCTTGAACGACT, and was digested with EcoRI and XhoI. To construct pMYO2HA3, the resulting DNA fragment was inserted between the EcoRI and SalI sites of the plasmid that is based on YEplac195 and carries the DNA fragment encoding three copies of the HA epitope. In pMYO2HA3, the sequence for the HA epitope was inserted just upstream of the stop codon of MYO2 in frame. The 4.0-kb EcoRI-EcoRI DNA fragment containing the 5' half of MYO2 gene from pJP10-2B (![]()
Morphological observations:
Cells, grown in liquid culture (<5 x 106 cells/ml), were harvested and stained with rhodamine-phalloidin (to reveal actin filaments), 4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI; to reveal DNA), anti-Myc antibodies (to reveal Sro7-mycN), or anti-HA antibodies (to reveal Myo1-HA) as described (![]()
Measurement of latrunculin-A sensitivity:
Halo assays of latrunculin-A (LA; Wako, Tokyo, Japan) were as described in ![]()
Immunoprecipitation:
About 5 x 107 cells were disrupted with glass beads in PBS containing 1% Triton X-100 and protease inhibitors (10 mM PMSF, 1 µg/ml aprotinin, 1 µg/ml antipain, 1 µg/ml leupeptin, and 1 µg/ml pepstatin A; Sigma, St. Louis, MO), and they were diluted with the same buffer to the final concentration of ~4 mg total protein/ml. Samples (250 µl) were mixed with 10 µg of anti-myc antibodies or 12.5 µg of anti-HA antibodies, and the mixture was incubated at 4° for 5 hr. A total of 60 µl of protein A-Sepharose beads (Pharmacia, Uppsala, Sweden) was added, incubated at 4° overnight, and washed five times with PBS containing 1% Triton X-100. The beads were boiled with the sample buffer for SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis for 5 min, and the resulting supernatant was subjected to immunoblot analysis.
In vitro binding assay:
Production and purification of the glutathione S-transferase (GST)-fused protein were performed as described previously (![]()
![]()
Measurement of cell separation defect:
Cells from the log-phase culture were harvested, washed with PBS, and sonicated for 5 min (model B1260; Bransonics Corp., Danbury, CT). From more than 300 budded cells, we counted how many cells harbored more than one attached daughter cell.
| RESULTS |
|---|
Mapping of SRO7:
The original SRO7 clone, pSRO7, was isolated from a yeast genomic library cloned in the vector YEp24 as a multicopy suppressor of rho3
; i.e., rho3
cells (strain YMR505) carrying pSRO7 grew as well as wild-type cells (![]()
defect. The temperature sensitivity of rho3 Ts- mutant cells (strain YMR3732-2B) was suppressed by expression of YPR032w under the control of the GAL7 promoter (data not shown). We therefore conclude that SRO7 is YPR032w, encoding a protein of 1033 amino acids (Figure 1A). A homology search against the yeast genomic DNA sequence and GenBank revealed that yeast possesses a homologous gene (YBL106c on chromosome II), encoding a protein of 1010 amino acids (55% amino acid identity with Sro7p, Figure 1A), and that both SRO7 and YBL106c encode proteins with domains homologous to the l(2)gl protein (Figure 1B). Introduction of YBL106c on pYO324, a high-copy-number plasmid, enabled rho3
cells (strain YMR505) to grow slightly better than the rho3
cells with pYO324 alone (data not shown), indicating that YBL106c can serve as a weak multicopy suppressor of rho3
. We designated YBL106c as SRO77.
|
Phenotypes of sro7
sro77
cells:
Deletion of either SRO7 or SRO77 did not affect cell growth at 15°, 20°, 25°, 30°, and 37°, but sro7
sro77
double mutants did not grow at temperatures <20° (Figure 2A). This synthetic defect of sro7
with sro77
, along with the structural similarity between Sro7p and Sro77p, indicates that Sro7p and Sro77p are functionally redundant.
|
Eighteen hours after the shift to 20°, the growth of sro7
sro77
cells was arrested randomly, and the cells became slightly rounded. In wild-type cells, cortical actin patches are localized mostly to the bud, and actin cables are observed clearly (Figure 2B, panel a). In sro7
sro77
cells, however, actin patches were dispersed, and only short actin cables were observed (Figure 2B, panel b). These results indicate that organization of the polarized actin cytoskeleton is partly disrupted in the sro7
sro77
mutants.
LA is a drug that sequesters G-actin and then inhibits the formation of F-actin in cells. Several mutants carrying defects in actin cytoskeleton show significantly increased sensitivity to LA (![]()
sro77
cells may suggest that Sro7p and Sro77p play a positive role in actin organization. To address this hypothesis, we examined the sensitivity of sro7
sro77
cells to LA using halo assays. Cell growth was inhibited in a circle ~22 mm in diameter around the spot where 10 µl of 0.5 mM LA was placed in a lawn of wild-type, sro7
, or sro77
cells. In contrast, the circle was ~27 mm in diameter around the spot of 10 µl of 0.5 mM LA in a lawn of sro7
sro77
cells, suggesting that sro7
sro77
cells are hypersensitive to LA. When LA was added to the culture medium at final concentration of 0.5 mM, the growth of sro7
sro77
cells was inhibited (Figure 2C). In contrast, 0.5 mM LA had no effect on the growth of wild-type, sro7
, and sro77
cells (Figure 2C). These indicate that simultaneous disruption of SRO7 and SRO77 results in hypersensitivity to LA.
Functional complementation by a human counterpart of l(2)gl:
We introduced a plasmid expressing LLGL, a human counterpart of l(2)gl (![]()
sro77
cells to examine whether the l(2)gl protein is functionally similar to Sro7p. sro7
sro77
cells carrying the LLGL-expressing plasmid grew as well as wild-type cells at 20°, but sro7
sro77
cells carrying a control plasmid did not (Figure 3). This result demonstrates that LLGL can complement sro7
sro77
.
|
Physical interaction of Sro7p and Myo1p:
The l(2)gl protein interacts with the nonmuscle myosin type II (![]()
![]()
|
Subcellular localization of Sro7p and Myo1p:
We determined the localization of Myo1p and Sro7p in wild-type cells by using Myo1-HA and Sro7p with a Myc-epitope at the N terminus (Sro7-mycN). Myo1-HA was localized exclusively to the bud neck (Figure 5, left). Sro7-mycN was detected over most of the cell surface (Figure 5, right). We detected Sro7-mycN in both the supernatant and pellet, which were prepared by disruption of cells with PBS and centrifugation at 10,000 g for 10 min of the cell extract (data not shown). This result suggests that Sro7p may also localize in the cytosol fraction.
|
Genetic interactions between SRO7/SRO77 and MYO1:
To assess the functional relationship between Sro7p and Myo1p, we tested for genetic interactions between them. Disruption of MYO1 resulted in slow growth, a defect in cell separation [a portion of the myo1
cells do not separate from each other, as reported in ![]()
![]()
spores, we crossed myo1
cells with sro7
sro77
cells, sporulated the resulting diploid cells, and performed tetrad analysis. Only 6 of 22 (27%) myo1
spores formed a visible colony. In contrast, 15 of 25 (60%) sro7
myo1
spores, 13 of 31 (42%) sro77
myo1
spores, and 21 of 34 (62%) sro7
sro77
myo1
spores formed a visible colony, indicating that loss of Sro7p and Sro77p suppresses the myo1
defect in colony formation. Concerning the myo1
defect in cell separation, among the budded cells in a culture of myo1
cells, 42% of myo1
cells had more than one daughter cell attached, indicating a cell separation defect. In contrast to this, only 19% of sro7
myo1
cells, 32% of sro77
myo1
cells, and 11% of sro7
sro77
myo1
cells among the budded cells in the cultures showed the cell separation defect, indicating that the deletion of SRO7 and SRO77 suppresses the myo1
defect in cell separation. Furthermore, sro7
sro77
myo1
colonies were almost the same size as colonies of wild-type cells and were larger than colonies of myo1
cells (Figure 6), indicating that the slow growth phenotype of myo1
cells is suppressed by sro7
sro77
. These results, therefore, indicate that loss of Sro7p, and Sro77p suppresses the myo1
defects.
|
sro7
sro77
myo1
cells grew as well as wild-type cells at 20°, at which sro7
sro77
cells could not (Figure 6), indicating that disruption of MYO1 suppresses the cold-sensitive phenotype of sro7
sro77
cells. This reciprocal suppression involving sro7
sro77
and myo1
suggests that the function of Sro7p and Sro77p (Sro7 function) is closely related to that of Myo1p.
Morphology of sro7
sro77
myo1
cells:
Judging from the size of colonies, sro7
sro77
myo1
cells can grow as well as wild-type cells. However, DAPI staining of these cells revealed that the morphology of sro7
sro77
myo1
cells was very abnormal (Figure 7C) when compared with that of either sro7
sro77
cells or myo1
cells (Figure 7, a and b). Either mother or daughter nuclei were frequently observed with a filamentous shape between the mother and daughter cells (indicated by arrowheads in Figure 7C). The abnormal morphology of sro7
sro77
myo1
cells may suggest a defect in nuclear migration and/or in chromosome segregation. A defect in nuclear migration of myo1
cells has been reported (![]()
cells did not show a defect in nuclear migration (![]()
SRO7 SRO77 cells an apparent defect in nuclear migration or the defect similar to that observed in sro7
sro77
myo1
cells (Figure 7B). Therefore, the defect observed in sro7
sro77
myo1
cells is specific for the cells lacking both Sro7 function and Myo1p.
|
Interactions between SRO7 and MYO2:
Deducing from the phenotypes of myo1
cells, Myo1p does not contribute significantly to bud growth. However, SRO7 can serve as a multicopy suppressor of the rho3
defect, suggesting that Sro7p acts positively in bud growth in addition to its function related to Myo1p. Therefore, it might be possible that Sro7p interacts with the pathways of other motility factors that contribute to bud growth. Thus, we tested for genetic interactions between SRO7 and MYO2. MYO2 encodes the type V myosin that is essential for polarized secretion (![]()
sro77
cells with a high-copy-number plasmid carrying MYO2 could grow at 20° as well as wild-type cells (Figure 8B), indicating that MYO2 can serve as a multicopy suppressor of sro7
sro77
.
|
Motivated by the genetic interactions between SRO7 and MYO2, we tested for protein-protein interactions between Sro7p and Myo2p. We carried out similar experiments to those of Myo1p, shown in Figure 4, using an HA epitope-tagged Myo2p (Myo2-HA). Beginning with extracts from cells producing both Sro7-myc and Myo2-HA, Sro7-myc was immunoprecipitated with anti-Myc antibodies. However, we did not detect any Myo2-HA in the Sro7-myc immunoprecipitate (data not shown). Moreover, there was no interaction between Myo2-HA and GST-Sro7 (data not shown). Using immunoblot analysis, we could detect Myo2-HA in whole-cell lysates with an intensity similar to that of Myo1-HA. Therefore, if Sro7p interacts with Myo2p, it most likely does so at a much lower affinity than when it interacts with Myo1p.
| DISCUSSION |
|---|
SRO7 and SRO77 are the yeast counterparts of l(2)gl:
We have found several similarities between Sro7p/Sro77p of S. cerevisiae and the l(2)gl protein of D. melanogaster. First, both Sro7p and Sro77p possess domains homologous to the l(2)gl protein (Figure 1). Second, similar to the fact that inactivation of l(2)gl produces cells that have lost their apical-basal cell polarity (![]()
![]()
![]()
Interactions of Myo1p and Sro7p:
Myo1p was localized exclusively to the bud neck (Figure 5, left; ![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
sro77
cells was still localized at the bud neck and the localization of Sro7-mycN in myo1
cells was indistinguishable from that in wild-type cells (data not shown).
Although Myo1p colocalizes with actin ring at the bud neck during anaphase and the ring seems contractile during cytokinesis (![]()
cells have aberrant septa, indicating that Myo1p is required for the construction of the cell wall between mother cell and daughter cell and the aberrant septa may cause the cell separation defect (![]()
defect, including the cell separation defect, is suppressed by the disruption of SRO7 and SRO77. This indicates that yeast cells can separate independently of Myo1p when Sro7 function is missing and that the presence of Sro7 function represses Myo1p-independent cell separation. In the absence of Sro7 function, perhaps other motile factors can substitute for Myo1 function to induce the Myo1p-independent cell separation. Among the myosins in yeast, Myo2p is observed at the mother bud neck just before cell separation (![]()
![]()
sro7
sro77
myo1
cells grew as well as wild-type cells at low temperatures, indicating that the cold sensitivity of sro7
sro77
cells is Myo1p dependent (Figure 6). Considering that Myo1p can form a complex with Sro7p, this result suggests that Myo1p may inhibit cell growth when it fails to form a complex involving Sro7p or Sro77p. Consistently, overexpression of Myo1p reduced the growth rate of both sro7
sro77
cells and wild-type cells (data not shown). The cold sensitivity of sro7
sro77
cells was suppressed by increased dosage of Myo2p (Figure 8B), leading to the possibility that the Myo2 pathway is perturbed in the absence of Sro7 function. Therefore, it is highly likely that Sro7 function restricts Myo1p to specialize in the process of cell separation and not to affect cellular processes involving Myo2p.
Sro7p plays a positive role in organization of actin cytoskeleton:
Rho3p is required to maintain cell polarity for bud growth (![]()
![]()
sro77
mutants consistently show partial disruption of the organization of the polarized actin cytoskeleton (Figure 2B, panel b). In addition, sro7
sro77
cells are hypersensitive to LA (Figure 2C). Yeast cells with a defect in the factor that plays a positive role in organization of actin cytoskeleton, such as Srv2, Cap2, Tpm1, Sac6, or Sla2, are hypersensitive to this drug (![]()
sro77
cells, partial disruption of the polarized actin cytoskeleton and hypersensitivity to LA, suggest that Sro7p and Sro77p play a positive role in organization of the polarized actin cytoskeleton.
Myo1p has an inhibitory effect on organizing the actin cytoskeleton because we detected only faint actin cables in cells carrying MYO1 on a high-copy-number plasmid (data not shown). It might be possible that the positive role of Sro7p in actin organization is to repress the inhibitory activity of Myo1p on it by complex formation. Whereas the growth of sro7
sro77
cells was rescued by myo1
, however, the polarized actin cytoskeleton was still disrupted in sro7
sro77
myo1
cells and in sro7
sro77
cells (data not shown). Concerning the LA sensitivity, sro7
sro77
myo1
cells were more hypersensitive to LA than sro7
sro77
cells (data not shown). These results indicate that Sro7p plays a positive role in the actin cytoskeleton that is independent of Myo1p. The reduced activity of Myo2p in the myo2-66 cells is rescued by a high dose of Sro7p, and cells require an elevated amount of Myo2p in the absence of Sro7 function (Figure 8). These genetic interactions between SRO7 and MYO2 suggest that Sro7p plays a positive role in the Myo2 pathway. Myo2p is concentrated in the bud during bud growth, and it is critical for polarized cell growth and for vectorial transport of secretory vesicles to the bud (![]()
![]()
Model of Sro7 function:
Cell separation and bud growth both require transport of the materials used to construct cell walls and membranes. Based on mutant phenotypes, Myo1p and Myo2p are believed to be the motile factors that are responsible for transport in cell separation and bud growth, respectively. Based on all the genetic interactions described in this article, we propose a model in which Sro7p is involved in targeting and sorting different myosins to their intrinsic destination (Figure 9), i.e., Myo1p exclusively for cell separation and Myo2p for bud growth.
|
Sro7p was detected over most of the cell surface. This suggests that Sro7p is not restricted to function only in a complex with Myo1p. Concerning Myo2p, genetic analysis suggests that Sro7 function plays a positive role in the Myo2 pathway for bud growth. On the other hand, at the bud neck, Sro7p inhibits a Myo1p-independent cell separation that is most likely promoted by Myo2p, suggesting that Sro7p takes inhibitory action against Myo2p. We assume that Sro7p covers the cell membrane to prevent the myosin pathways from having random access to the membrane. That is, depending on a signal that localizes Myo1p to the bud neck, Myo1p can have access to the bud neck and the Myo1p-Sro7p complex acts positively on the access. At the same time, the motile factor for the Myo1p-independent cell separation is inhibited by Sro7p covering the bud neck. For targeting the Myo2 pathway to the bud tip that is covered by Sro7p, we assume the existence of another regulatory factor that permits Myo2p to the bud tip. By this model, the genetic interactions between SRO7 and MYO2 (Figure 8) are interpreted as follows: The overproduction of Sro7p excludes Myo2p activity strictly from the cell surface, except for wherever the access of Myo2p is permitted and results in increased Myo2p activity at the bud tip to promote cell growth. In contrast, lack of Sro7 function disperses Myo2p activity at the bud tip and causes a growth defect that is suppressed by increased dosage of Myo2p.
Rho3p is likely to be involved in targeting the exocytosis machinery to the site for surface extension, because in cells that produce constitutively active mutant Rho3p, we found that Sec8, a component of the exocytosis machinery (![]()
![]()
The characterization of the yeast counterpart of l(2)gl will undoubtedly be of much interest to future research on the molecular mechanism of the regulation of motile factors in targeting the machinery of exocytosis, which governs cell differentiation and malignant transformation.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
We thank Dr. G. C. JOHNSTON for the myo2-66 strain and MYO2 plasmid, Dr. K. KOYAMA and Dr. Y. NAKAMURA for the cDNA clone of LLGL, Dr. S. TSUKAMOTO for the information on LA, Dr. I. HERSKOWITZ and Dr. R. P. JANSEN for helpful discussions, Dr. P. BRENNWALD for communicating their results before publication, and R. MATSUI for technical assistance. Part of this work was supported by a grant for scientific work from Monbusho; M.K. is a recipient of the Fellowship of Japan Society for the Promotion of Science for Japanese Junior Scientists.
Manuscript received December 22, 1997; Accepted for publication May 12, 1998.
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