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The Drosophila melanogaster Suppressor of deltex Gene, a Regulator of the Notch Receptor Signaling Pathway, Is an E3 Class Ubiquitin Ligase
M. Cornell1,a, D. A. P. Evans1,a, R. Mannb, M. Fostiera, M. Flaszaa, M. Monthatonga, S. Artavanis-Tsakonas2,b, and M. Baronaa University of Manchester, School of Biological Sciences, Manchester M13 9PT, United Kingdom
b Yale University Medical School, Boyer Center for Molecular Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut 06536
Corresponding author: M. Baron, University of Manchester, School of Biological Sciences, Oxford Rd., Manchester M13 9PT, United Kingdom., mbaron{at}man.ac.uk (E-mail)
Communicating editor: K. ANDERSON
| ABSTRACT |
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During development, the Notch receptor regulates many cell fate decisions by a signaling pathway that has been conserved during evolution. One positive regulator of Notch is Deltex, a cytoplasmic, zinc finger domain protein, which binds to the intracellular domain of Notch. Phenotypes resulting from mutations in deltex resemble loss-of-function Notch phenotypes and are suppressed by the mutation Suppressor of deltex [Su(dx)]. Homozygous Su(dx) mutations result in wing-vein phenotypes and interact genetically with Notch pathway genes. We have previously defined Su(dx) genetically as a negative regulator of Notch signaling. Here we present the molecular identification of the Su(dx) gene product. Su(dx) belongs to a family of E3 ubiquitin ligase proteins containing membrane-targeting C2 domains and WW domains that mediate protein-protein interactions through recognition of proline-rich peptide sequences. We have identified a seven-codon deletion in a Su(dx) mutant allele and we show that expression of Su(dx) cDNA rescues Su(dx) mutant phenotypes. Overexpression of Su(dx) also results in ectopic vein differentiation, wing margin loss, and wing growth phenotypes and enhances the phenotypes of loss-of-function mutations in Notch, evidence that supports the conclusion that Su(dx) has a role in the downregulation of Notch signaling.
DURING development, the regulation and integration of cell-to-cell signaling pathways coordinate the program of events that specifies different cell types. Notch is a transmembrane receptor protein that controls the timing and outcome of cell differentiation decisions (![]()
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The Su(dx) mutation was originally identified in Drosophila melanogaster as a second chromosome, dominant suppressor of deltex (![]()
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| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Mutant stocks:
The Su(dx)32 allele was generated in a screen for rescue of the lethality of nd dx/Y ; Su(dx)sp/+ flies [protocol as described in ![]()
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Cloning of Suppressor of deltex:
Genomic Southern blots were performed on wild-type or mutant DNA, extracted, and blotted using standard methodologies. Clones 2b1a, 31a, and 10a1a were obtained following screening of 500,000 clones from a random primed
-Gt10 Drosophila imaginal disc library (provided by Tian Xu, Yale University) with a genomic fragment PA1 derived from P1 clone 42-59 [Berkeley Drosophila Genome Project (BDGP resource)]. Clone 15-2a was obtained by screening an oligo(dT)-primed Drosophila larval cDNA library (provided by Nick Brown, University of Cambridge). Twenty-seven pools, each containing ~40,000 clones, were digested with HindIII, separated by electrophoresis, blotted, and probed with 32P-labeled 2b1a. A pool containing the longest clone was further screened to obtain clone 15-2a. Homologous cDNA sequences were identified by screening the Swissprot and GenBank databases using Blastx. Sequences were aligned using ClustalW (EBI homepage). The Su(dx)sp mutant gene was amplified in overlapping segments by PCR of genomic DNA and the products were directly sequenced. All sequencing was performed using an Applied Biosciences (Foster City, CA) automated sequencer.
Phylogenetic analysis was performed using the PHYLIP program package (![]()
In situ hybridization:
In situ hybridization was performed on pupal wing discs staged at 29°, 24 hr after puparium formation. Pupal cases were opened at the anterior and posterior side and fixed with 4% formaldehyde (FA; Polysciences, Warrington, PA) in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) overnight at 4°. The cuticle was then dissected from the wings and the pupae were stored in methanol at -20° until use. Before hybridization, pupae were rehydrated in methanol/PBS 70%/30% and 30%/70% and transferred to PBS, fixed in 4% FA/PBS for 10 min at room temperature (RT), washed in PBT (PBS, 0.1% Tween) three times for 10 min, washed in 50% hybridization solution (HS; 50% formamide, 5x SSC, 0.1% Tween, 0.1 mg/ml tRNA, 50 µg/ml heparin adjusted to pH 4.5 with 1 M citric acid) in PBT for 10 min at RT, washed in HS for 10 min at RT, and prehybridized in HS for 1 hr at 70°. Pupae were hybridized overnight at 70° with a digoxigenin-labeled (Boehringer Mannheim, Mannheim, Germany) 2b1a antisense probe and then washed two times (20 min in HS at 70°, 20 min in 50% HS in PBT at 70°) and three times for 20 min in PBT at RT on a rotating wheel. Next the pupae were incubated with an alkaline phosphatase-conjugated anti-digoxigenin antibody (Boehringer Mannheim) at 1:2000 dilution in PBT/1% normal goat serum (Sigma, St. Louis), for 1 hr 30 min at RT and washed three times for 20 min at RT on a rotating wheel. The antibody conjugate was detected using the substrate NBT/BCIP (Boehringer Mannheim).
| RESULTS |
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Cloning of Su(dx):
Previously we have described a genetic assay for Su(dx) alleles based on the rescue of the lethality caused by the combination of notchoid and deltex mutations (![]()
Gt10 imaginal disc library (Figure 3). A further overlapping clone (15-2a) was obtained by screening an oligo(dT) primed Drosophila larval cDNA library, and this clone contained a poly(A) tailed 3' end. A Drosophila expressed sequence tag, LD32282 (BDGP) that extended the 5' end of the cDNA by a further 80 bases was also identified. The five overlapping cDNA clones encode a 949-amino-acid open reading frame (Figure 2) within a 4.4-kb transcript, in agreement with a transcript observed on Northern blots (data not shown). The expression pattern of the cDNA was analyzed at different stages of Drosophila development; however, a specific expression pattern was detected only following in situ hybridization on pupal wings. An increased staining along the boundary between the vein and intervein territories was observed (Figure 3). This expression pattern in the pupal wing is similar to that previously observed for Notch (![]()
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The cDNA of the candidate gene detected in Southern blots the rearrangement previously observed in Su(dx)32 mutant flies (Figure 3). However, we have been unable to detect any rearrangements in genomic DNA from the Su(dx)sp allele. The Su(dx)sp mutant gene was therefore amplified in overlapping segments by PCR of genomic DNA, and the products were directly sequenced. Using this approach, we identified a seven-codon deletion within the protein coding sequence. This small deletion preserved the reading frame and left the remainder of the protein intact (Figure 2).
Rescue of Su(dx) mutant phenotypes:
To obtain further confirmation of the identity of the gene, we have constructed a UAS-Sudx transgenic Drosophila line to express the Su(dx) cDNA under the control of the Gal4 responsive promoter and to enable the rescue of Su(dx) mutant phenotypes. Injection of Drosophila embryos was performed with the pUAST plasmid (![]()
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Sequence analysis of the Su(dx) gene product:
Data-base searching identified three different classes of motifs within the Su(dx) open reading frame (Figure 2). At the N terminus there is a C2 domain (![]()
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The combination of C2, WW, and HECT domains places Su(dx) within the Nedd4 family (![]()
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Phenotypes resulting from ectopic expression of Su(dx):
We have examined the phenotypes resulting from the overexpression of the Su(dx) cDNA in the developing wing. When the expression of Su(dx) was driven along the anterior-posterior compartment boundary of the wing, under the control of the PatchedGal4 (PtcGal4) line, ectopic wing vein formation and wing-margin-loss phenotypes were observed (Figure 5), as would be expected from a downregulation of the Notch pathway. Expression of Su(dx) throughout the developing wing using the MS1096Gal4 line (![]()
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If Su(dx) were downregulating the Notch signal, then a further decrease of the signal should enhance the ectopic expression phenotypes. Using the MS1096Gal4 line, we expressed Su(dx) in a Notch mutant background that removes one copy of the Notch gene. This resulted in enhancement of the vein-thickening phenotype of Notch (Figure 6F). Similarly this Su(dx) gain of function resulted in enhancement of the vein-broadening phenotype of Delta, a mutation of the Notch ligand (Figure 6G). We also tested the consequence of expression of Su(dx) on the phenotype of the hypomorphic notchoid allele of Notch. This resulted in a strong genetic interaction with enhanced wing margin loss and considerably broadened vein territories, the latter encompassing approximately half of the wing surface (Figure 6H). The wing size was also much reduced, similar to other mutations in Notch pathway genes that enhance the notchoid phenotype.
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| DISCUSSION |
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Su(dx) was originally discovered as a dominant suppressor of the deltex phenotype. We have shown previously that Su(dx) mutants interact with Notch pathway genes and we have genetically characterized Su(dx) as a negative regulator of Notch signaling (![]()
Su(dx) belongs to a family of E3 class ubiquitin ligase proteins:
Two lines of evidence have enabled us to conclude that we have identified the product of the Su(dx) gene. First, we have identified mutations that disrupt the open reading frame of the Su(dx) gene in different Su(dx) alleles, and, second, we have rescued Su(dx) mutant phenotypes by expressing the cDNA in the developing Drosophila wing. Sequence database searching placed Su(dx) within a family of E3 class ubiquitin ligases that are related to the Nedd4 protein. Nedd4 was originally identified as a protein whose expression was downregulated following differentiation of neural precursor cells (![]()
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The middle portion of Nedd4 family proteins contains three or four WW modules and there are four of these domains in Su(dx), arranged as two pairs. WW modules have been previously reported to mediate specific protein-protein interactions (![]()
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Extent of Su(dx) function in Notch pathway regulation:
Previously we have reported the isolation of deficiency mutations of Su(dx). Heteroallelic combinations of Su(dx)sp/Su(dx)32 and Su(dx)sp/df(2L)Su(dx)7 have very similar phenotypes and show similar strengths of interactions with Notch mutations such as notchoid and Abruptex. It is therefore likely that Su(dx)32 is a null or nearly null mutation. This correlates with the molecular data, which show that there is a DNA rearrangement within the middle of the open reading frame. While this chromosome is recessive lethal at 29°, it is viable at this temperature over the deficiency with a wing-vein gap phenotype. The lethality therefore presumably corresponds to a second mutation on this chromosome not covered by the deficiency. At 25° homozygous Su(dx)32 flies display the forked cross-vein phenotype that we have previously observed in combinations of Su(dx) alleles. It is possible that Su(dx) function is restricted to the wing veins; however, our previous characterization of Su(dx) phenotypes has suggested a wider role (![]()
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Su(dx) downregulates Notch receptor signaling:
Using the temperature-sensitive Su(dx)sp allele, we have previously identified a role for Su(dx) in vein cell differentiation during a period of 2028 hr after puparium formation, at a time when Notch signaling is involved in refining the wing-vein territories (![]()
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Ectopic expression of Su(dx) regulates wing growth:
In addition to wing margin loss and ectopic vein differentiation, ectopic expression of Su(dx) in a wild-type background resulted in broadening of the wing through increased cell number. It has previously been shown that accelerating the cell cycle by ectopic expression of the transcriptional regulator dE2F leads to an increase in cell number but not to growth of the wing. This is because there is a compensation of cell growth to maintain the normal wing size (![]()
Su(dx) contains four WW modules that have previously been shown to mediate protein-protein interactions through binding to specific proline-rich sequences. Because individual WW domains alone are capable of specific binding, it is possible that the wing growth and cell differentiation phenotypes reflect the selection of different protein targets. A growing number of signal transduction pathways have now been shown to be regulated by ubiquitin-dependent proteolysis, including NF-
B (![]()
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| FOOTNOTES |
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1 These authors contributed equally to this work. ![]()
2 Present address: Department of Cell Biology, Massachusetts General Hospital Cancer Center, 149-7309 Harvard Medical School, 13th St., Charlestown, MA 02129-2060. ![]()
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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We thank Jose de Celis for helpful discussion and for help with in situ hybridization methodology. Nick Brown and Tian Xu provided us with cDNA libraries. Luke Alphey helped with injection of embryos and Jenny Gleason provided valuable advice regarding the phylogenetic analysis. We thank Guy Tear for discussion of unpublished data. The PHYLIP programs are freely available from Dr. J. Felsenstein, University of Washington. We thank Lawrence Hall for assistance with automated DNA sequencing. The MS1096Gal4 line was provided to us by Matthew Freeman. We also acknowledge the Berkeley Drosophila Genome Project for P1 phage genomic clones and the internet resources of FLYBASE. We acknowledge the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council Commitment and Determination Initiative, the Medical Research Council, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, the Royal Society, and Zeneca Pharmaceuticals for financial support.
Manuscript received November 30, 1998; Accepted for publication March 1, 1999.
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