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First published online 8 April 2008
doi: 10.1242/jcs.023812
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Research Article |
Instituto de Biología Molecular y Celular del Cáncer, CSIC/Universidad de Salamanca, Campus Miguel de Unamuno, 37007 Salamanca, Spain
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: smo{at}usal.es)
Accepted 4 February 2008
| Summary |
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Key words: Meiosis, Forespore membrane, Sporulation, SIN, Sid2, Slk1
| Introduction |
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The septation initiation network (SIN) is an SPB-associated signal-transduction pathway that regulates cytokinesis during the mitotic cell cycle. The SIN consists of the Spg1 GTPase; the downstream kinases Cdc7, Sid1 and Sid2; and the associated proteins Cdc14 (in complex with Sid1) and Mob1 (in complex with Sid2) (Fankhauser and Simanis, 1994
; Guertin et al., 2000
; Hou et al., 2000
; Salimova et al., 2000
; Schmidt et al., 1997
; Sparks et al., 1999
). Sid4 and Cdc11 form an assembly platform for the SIN components at the SPB (Chang and Gould, 2000
; Krapp et al., 2001
; Tomlin et al., 2002
). Activation of Sid2 is the key output of the SIN pathway that presumably transmits the signal from the SPBs to the medial ring, where it activates actomyosin-ring contraction and septation (Sparks et al., 1999
).
The role of the SIN in meiosis, in which the cell does not form a contractile ring or a division septum, has only been clarified recently (Krapp et al., 2006
). Most SIN genes, with the interesting exception of sid2, are highly transcribed during meiosis, peaking at meiosis II (Mata et al., 2002
). Mutants in SIN components can complete the meiotic nuclear divisions but cannot form spores. Therefore, the SIN pathway seems to be essential for proper forespore membrane formation around the haploid nuclei (Krapp et al., 2006
).
Here, we describe Slk1, which is a Sid2 paralogue that is only expressed in meiosis, in which it is required to couple the growth of the forespore membrane to the meiotic nuclear division. We propose that Slk1, together with Sid2, could be the main output of the SIN pathway in meiosis.
| Results |
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We studied the expression of slk1 in the diploid strain h–/h– pat1-114/pat1-114, containing a thermosensitive mutation for the pat1 gene. Exponentially growing cells (Fig. 2, exp) were pre-synchronized in G1 by nitrogen starvation at 25°C for 14 hours (Fig. 2, t=0 hours). Nitrogen was reintroduced and the cultures were incubated at 34°C to inactivate the Pat1 kinase (Bahler et al., 1991
). Under these conditions, the cells underwent a synchronous meiosis (Fig. 2C,D): slk1 mRNA was not transcribed in exponentially growing cells; it was expressed during prophase and peaked between meiosis I and meiosis II, according to the microarray expression data (Mata et al., 2002
) (Fig. 2A). To analyze Slk1 protein levels, we constructed the diploid strain h–/h– pat1-114/pat1-114 slk1-GFP/slk1-GFP. These cells contain a functional version of Slk1 tagged at the C-terminus with the green fluorescent protein (GFP). Slk1 protein levels followed those of the mRNA and remained high up to the second meiotic nuclear division (Fig. 2B). This experiment indicates that slk1 mRNA and protein are meiosis-specific.
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) showed no apparent growth or cell cycle defects (Fig. S1A,B in the supplementary material) and they were able to mate with the same efficiency as wild-type cells (data not shown), suggesting that slk1 has no obvious function in the mitotic cell cycle. This is consistent with the fact that slk1 is expressed only during meiosis.
To study the function of Slk1 in meiosis, homothallic h90 slk1
mutants were mated. In fission yeast, mating is followed by meiosis and sporulation. These cells were able to complete both meiotic nuclear divisions and showed four spores or less, which were smaller than those of the wild-type control (Fig. 3A). The spore viability of four-spore asci was analyzed by tetrad dissection, and no differences were observed between wild-type and slk1
cells (data not shown). To analyze meiotic cell cycle progression in the slk1 mutant, we induced synchronous meiosis in pat1-114 strains. As shown in Fig. 3B, slk1
cells proceed through meiotic divisions with kinetics identical to that of the wild type.
Sporulation in S. pombe requires the de novo synthesis of plasma membrane within the mother-cell cytoplasm. This process is initiated during meiosis II, at the metaphase-to-anaphase transition, from the cytoplasmic face of the SPBs by the formation of a double-layered membrane, termed the forespore membrane (Shimoda, 2004
; Shimoda and Nakamura, 2004
). Psy1 is a t-SNARE syntaxin 1A that localizes to the plasma membrane in vegetative cells and that, in meiosis, relocalizes to the nascent forespore membrane (Nakamura et al., 2001
), where presumably it is required for vesicle fusion. The forespore membrane can be visualized by using the fusion protein Psy1-GFP. In metaphase II, Psy-GFP staining is shaped as an arc that then develops into a cup-like structure by extension of the membrane, which eventually closes to form a double-layered membrane containing one haploid nucleus generated during meiosis II and a small amount of cytoplasm. We decided to examine the phenotype of slk1
mutant spores in greater detail by expressing Psy1-GFP and staining the nuclei with Hoechst (Fig. 4A). As shown in Fig. 4B, 60% of the asci showed four nuclei surrounded by the forespore membrane; the rest contained three, two, one or no nuclei encapsulated by the forespore membrane, suggesting a role of Slk1 in the growth of the forespore membrane and engulfment of the nuclei. In the slk1 mutant, the forespore membrane initiated growth around the four nuclei but in some cases failed to engulf one or more nuclei (Fig. 4C, arrow). A closer examination of forespore membrane formation in wild-type and slk1
cells by video microscopy revealed that the initial stages – the formation of the two pairs of bright arcs near the SPBs at metaphase II – took place normally in both the wild type and in the slk1
mutant (Fig. 5A, t=0-22 minutes; see Movies 1,2 in the supplementary material). However, growth of the forespore membrane after anaphase II decelerated in the slk1
mutant (Fig. 5A,B, t=24-40 minutes), indicating that the expansion of the forespore membrane after anaphase II does not take place in the absence of Slk1 and, as a consequence, that the forespore membrane closes with a smaller size, resulting in small spores.
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Slk1 is localized at the spindle pole body and the forespore membrane
In order to examine the role of Slk1 in the formation of the forespore membrane, we looked for genetic interactions with Spo3, a membrane component required for the assembly of the forespore membrane. Cells deleted for spo3 completely fail to form the forespore membrane (Nakamura et al., 2001
). However, the spo3-S3 mutant formed small spores, similar to the slk1
mutant (Fig. 6A). Interestingly, the growth of the forespore membrane in spo3-S3 mutant cells is also severely impaired after anaphase II (Taro Nakamura, personal communication). We constructed a spo3-S3 slk1
double mutant and found that these cells were unable to form spores (Fig. 6A,B). However, they were able to form forespore membranes that failed to encapsulate the haploid nuclei (Fig. 6C). Similar phenotypes were found in the double mutant spo3-GFP slk1 deletion, in which the Spo3 function was slightly compromised (Fig. 6A,B,D). These results indicate a genetic interaction between spo3 and slk1.
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double mutant (Fig. 6A,C). We also looked for genetic interactions between sid2 and slk1 during meiosis. The temperature-sensitive sid2-250 mutant was able to carry out meiosis and sporulation at 25°C and 34°C, whereas the double mutant sid2-250 slk1
was completely unable to sporulate, even at 25°C (Fig. 8A,B). A similar genetic interaction was found between cdc7-24 and slk1
(Fig. 8A,B), indicating that Slk1 is absolutely required for spore formation when the SIN pathway is slightly compromised by a temperature-sensitive mutation. In addition, we observed that, in some sid2-250 slk1
cells, the forespore membrane cut the nucleus, resulting in several masses of DNA (Fig. 8C,D, arrows). Interestingly, the SIN pathway activated normally in the slk1
mutant, because Sid1 and Cdc7 recruitment to the SPBs, which signals SIN activation, occurs at meiosis II in slk1
as in the wild type (Krapp et al., 2006
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Sid2 overexpression rescues the phenotype of the slk1
mutant
Sid2 and Slk1 are highly related protein kinases that might perform redundant functions in meiosis. To test whether they were functional paralogues, we overexpressed the sid2 gene under the control of the nmt1 promoter (P41nmt1 version) under repressed (+thiamine) or derepressed (–thiamine) conditions; sid2 overexpression was able to fully rescue the slk1
phenotype (Fig. 9). This result indicates that Sid2 and Slk1 are functionally redundant in meiosis. Interestingly, when a weaker version of the nmt1 promoter was used (P81nmt1), nearly no asci were formed under repressed conditions, resembling the phenotype of the slk1
sid2-250 double mutant (data not shown). Expression of slk1 in the mitotic cell cycle was unable to rescue the cytokinesis defect of the sid2-250 mutant (Fig. S3 in the supplementary material). Similarly, slk1 expression was unable to rescue the morphogenesis defects of the orb6-25 mutant, which is defective in the Sid2-related kinase Orb6 (Fig. 1B,C and Fig. S3 in the supplementary material). Additionally, according to the meiosis-specific pattern of expression of slk1 (Fig. 2A,B), no apparent additive defects were observed in the double mutants slk1
sid2-250 and slk1
orb6-25 in cytokinesis or in the control of cell polarity, respectively (Fig. S1 in the supplementary material). These results indicate that, in spite of the high homology between members of the Ndr group of kinases (Fig. 1B,C), Slk1 is unable to perform the functions of related kinases when it is ectopically expressed, suggesting that the function of Slk1 is highly meiosis-specific.
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| Discussion |
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mutant forms small spores owing to a defect in the degree of extension of the forespore membrane. A similar phenotype has been described for mutants defective in components of the machinery of membrane trafficking and vesicle fusion (Nakamura-Kubo et al., 2003
How does the SIN-MEN pathway regulate membrane trafficking during septation and sporulation? Much research has been directed towards uncovering the substrates of the most downstream kinases of the SIN-MEN pathway (i.e. Sid2-Mob1 in fission yeast, and Dbf2-Mob1 in budding yeast). Interestingly, protein analyses aimed at identifying in vitro substrates of Dbf2-Mob1 yielded, among others, a protein involved in the endocytic pathway (Vps27/Sst4), suggesting that Dbf2 might phosphorylate proteins involved in endocytosis and protein sorting (Mah et al., 2005
). This could be the case for Slk1 during sporulation. Alternatively, Slk1 could phosphorylate meiosis-specific proteins involved in forespore membrane growth, such as Spo3, or proteins at the leading edge of the forespore membrane, such as Meu14 (Okuzaki et al., 2003
). Although Meu14 was recruited to the leading edge of the forespore membrane in the slk1
mutant as in the wild type (data not shown), the leading-edge complex plays an important role in the growth and shaping of the prospore membrane in S. cerevisiae and, therefore, its defective regulation might be behind the abnormal growth of spores in the slk1
mutant (Moreno-Borchart et al., 2001
; Neiman, 2005
). These analyses will be addressed in future studies and could shed light on targets of the SIN pathway during sporulation and septation in fission yeast, as well as on the process of abscission in higher eukaryotes.
Another possibility is that slk1
could be defective in coordinating the exit from meiosis II with sporulation. This is the case of the budding yeast CDC15 (homologous to cdc7 in fission yeast), mutants of which result in defects in the disassembly of anaphase II spindles and of the meiotic outer plaque of SPBs, leading to a sporulation defect similar to that described in SIN mutants; that is, the inability of forespore membranes to properly engulf haploid nuclei (Pablo-Hernando et al., 2007
). Interestingly, the function of Cdc15 in sporulation seems to be independent of MEN and Cdc14 functions in meiotic divisions. In fission yeast, slk1
, similar to other SIN mutants, is not defective in meiotic divisions nor in the assembly and disassembly of the meiotic spindles (Krapp et al., 2006
) (Fig. S4 in the supplementary material). However, because a certain redundancy exists between Sid2 and Slk1 in sporulation (see below), spindle and SPB dynamics should be analyzed in double mutants in order to avoid any compensation effects. It is also interesting to note that the severe segregation defects observed in slk1
sid2-250 and slk1
cdc7-24 mutants, in which about 50% of the asci contained more than four DAPI-stained bodies (Fig. 8C,D, and L.P.-H. and S.M., unpublished observations), seem to be due to the aberrant dynamics of forespore membrane biosynthesis. In some cases, uncoordinated growth and closure of the forespore membrane resulted in a meiotic `cut' phenotype (Fig. 4C, Fig. 8C,D). `Cut' nuclei were less frequent in the double mutant slk1
spo3-S3, which does not form spores, suggesting that, in double mutants slk1
sid2-250 and slk1
cdc7-24, forespore membrane defects are more severe.
Slk1: a meiotic Sid2 paralogue
Slk1 and Sid2 perform redundant functions in sporulation, as shown by the fact that the thermosensitive allele of sid2, sid2-250, increases the sporulation defect of slk1
even at the permissive temperature. Conversely, increased expression of sid2 in meiosis suppresses the sporulation defect of slk1
. The role of Sid2 in sporulation has not been shown until now because available sid2 mutants do not have apparent sporulation defects. The existence of a meiosis-specific Sid2-like kinase in fission yeast explains the lack of sporulation phenotype of sid2 alleles. In budding yeast, a function of the MEN downstream kinases Dbf2 and Dbf20 in sporulation has not been reported. Blast searches failed to reveal the existence of a meiosis-specific homologue. However, a role for Dbf2 and/or Dbf20 in sporulation cannot be ruled out, because some MEN components have been shown to play a role in spore morphogenesis (Gordon et al., 2006
; Kamieniecki et al., 2005
; Pablo-Hernando et al., 2007
). Dbf20 expression peaks later than Dbf2 during meiosis, suggesting that Dbf20 could be a better candidate to perform a role in sporulation than Dbf2 (Chu et al., 1998
).
Two additional intriguing aspects connect Slk1 with Sid2 and the SIN pathway. First, during the mitotic cycle, Sid2 initially localizes to the SPBs and moves to the medial ring upon SIN activation. Similarly, Slk1 first localizes to the SPBs and then moves to the forespore membrane. It remains to be tested what the signals are that regulate this translocation. Second, in the slk1
mutant, the forespore membrane growth decelerates concurrently with the onset of anaphase B and Cdc2 inactivation (Fig. 5), coinciding in time with SIN activation in meiosis (Krapp et al., 2006
). Given the conservation of the Sid2 family of protein kinases in mammalian cells, it will be worth studying the function of these proteins in cytokinesis and membrane biosynthesis at the end of mitosis and meiosis.
| Materials and Methods |
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Diploid pat1-114 strains were generated by protoplast fusion (Sipiczki and Ferenczy, 1977
). Meiotic time-course experiments were done as described previously (Blanco et al., 2001
). Briefly, pat1-114 diploid cells were grown in YES until the exponential phase and then transferred to EMM supplemented with leucine at 100 µg/ml. At late exponential phase, cells were washed and transferred to EMM-N (+leucine at 50 µg/ml). After 14 hours, cells were induced to enter meiosis by shifting the temperature to 34°C. Nitrogen was reintroduced (0.5 g/l of NH4Cl) and an additional supplement of leucine was added (50 µg/ml).
Slk1 GFP-tagging and P41nmt-sid2 construction
Slk1 was C-terminally tagged with the GFP epitope using the PCR-based method described previously (Bahler et al., 1998
). Oligonucleotides with 80 bases of homology to regions flanking the slk1 stop codon were used to amplify the GFP and kanMX6 sequence from plasmid pFA6a-GFP-kanMX6. This PCR product was used to transform fission yeast cells. Transformation was performed following the lithium acetate protocol. Correct GFP integration was checked by PCR. A similar protocol was followed to insert the P41nmt1 promoter at the sid2 locus, in this case with oligonucleotides with homology to regions around the sid2 initiation codon.
Construction of slk1-containing plasmids
The slk1+ cDNA was amplified by PCR using cDNA obtained from a 4-hour pat1 meiotic culture with primers slk1-N 5'-TTTTCTCGAGGATCCCATGGACCTACTGGGCCTTAAAG-3' (BamHI site, underlined; XhoI site, italicized) and slk1-C 5'-TTTTCCCGGGTTAGAGCAAAAATTCATACAGGTC-3' (SmaI site, underlined; an added stop codon, italicized). This PCR product was digested with XhoI and SmaI and cloned into a similarly digested pREP3X vector (Forsburg, 1993
), producing plasmid pREP3X-slk1+, which contains slk1+ cDNA under the nmt1(3X) promoter. Plasmid pREP41-N-EGFP-slk1+, which expresses slk1+ N-terminally tagged with EGFP from the nmt1(41) promoter, was constructed by cloning the BamHI-SmaI fragment from pREP3X-slk1+, containing slk1+, into the same sites of pREP41-N-EGFP (Craven et al., 1998
). The PstI-EcoRI fragment from pREP41-N-EGFP-slk1+, containing nmt1(41)-EGFP-slk1+, was cloned into the same sites of the integrative vector pJK148, generating plasmid pJK148-P41nmt1-EGFP-slk1+ (Keeney and Boeke, 1994
).
To generate strain S1931, carrying an integrated version of GFP-slk1 under the nmt1(41) promoter, plasmid pJK148-P41nmt1-EGFP-slk1+ was linearized with NruI and integrated into the S. pombe leu1 locus by homologous recombination. Correct integration was checked by Southern blot analysis.
RNA and protein methods
RNA was extracted by the phenol-chloroform method (Moreno et al., 1991
). 8 µg of total RNA were run on agarose gels in the presence of formaldehyde. RNA was blotted onto GeneScreen Plus membranes (NEN, Dupont) and hybridized with a radioactively labelled probe covering the entire open reading frame (ORF) of the slk1 cDNA.
Total protein extracts were made using the trichloroacetic acid (TCA) extraction protocol (Foiani et al., 1994
). Protein extracts were run on 8% SDS-PAGE gels and transferred to nitrocellulose membranes (Amersham). For Slk1-GFP detection, mouse monoclonal anti-GFP (Living Colors, Clontech) was used as the primary antibody (1:1000 dilution). Tubulin was detected using mouse monoclonal anti-TAT1 antibodies (1:3000 dilution). Goat anti-mouse conjugated to horseradish peroxidase (Amersham) was used as the secondary antibody at 1:2500 dilution. Membranes were developed with Supersignal (Pierce) or ECL western blotting reagents (Amersham).
Flow cytometry
Ethanol-fixed cells were stained with propidium iodine as described previously (Moreno et al., 1991
; Sazer and Sherwood, 1990
). Samples were analyzed using a Becton-Dickinson FACScan flow cytometer equipped with CellQuest software.
Microscopy
For DAPI staining of nuclei, cells were fixed with 70% ethanol, washed in PBS and resuspended in PBS plus 1 µg/ml DAPI. Nucleus staining of live cells was performed with Hoechst at 1-2 µg/ml in EMM or PBS. For calcofluor staining, ethanol-fixed cells were washed in PBS and resuspended in PBS with calcofluor at a final concentration of 50 µg/ml.
Time-lapse experiments shown in Fig. 5 and supplementary material Fig. S4 were performed using a Deltavision RT deconvolution microscope system (Applied Precision, Issaquah, WA) equipped with an Olympus IX71 microscope and a CoolSNAP HQ camera (Photometrics). Time-lapse experiments shown in Fig. 4C and Fig. 8D were performed with a Nikon Eclipse E2000 fluorescence microscope coupled to a Hamamatsu camera, and equipped with MetaMorph software. Other images were acquired with a Leica or a Zeiss Axioplan2 microscope coupled to Hamamatsu cameras and equipped with Openlab software (Improvision), or with a Nikon Eclipse E2000 fluorescence microscope using Metamorph software. Images were processed and assembled with Adobe Photoshop and ImageJ software.
| Acknowledgments |
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| Footnotes |
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