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The Dominant Temperature-Sensitive Lethal DTS7 of Drosophila melanogaster Encodes an Altered 20S Proteasome ß-Type Subunit
Kerrie A. Smyth1,a and John M. Beloteaa Department of Biology, Syracuse University, Syracuse, New York 13244
Corresponding author: John M. Belote, Department of Biology, Syracuse University, 130 College Place, Syracuse, NY 13244., jbelote{at}mailbox.syr.edu (E-mail)
Communicating editor: L. L. SEARLES
| ABSTRACT |
|---|
Proteasomes are multicatalytic complexes that function as the major proteolytic machinery in regulated protein degradation. The eukaryotic 20S proteasome proteolytic core structure comprises 14 different subunits: 7
-type and 7 ß-type. DTS7 is a dominant temperature-sensitive (DTS) lethal mutation at 29° that also acts as a recessive lethal at ambient temperatures. DTS7 maps to cytological position 71AB. Molecular characterization of DTS7 reveals that this is caused by a missense mutation in a ß-type subunit gene, ß2. A previously characterized DTS mutant, l(3)73Ai1, results from a missense mutation in another ß-type subunit gene, ß6. These two mutants share a very similar phenotype, show a strong allele-specific genetic interaction, and are rescued by the same extragenic suppressor, Su(DTS)-1. We propose that these mutants might act as "poison subunits," disrupting proteasome function in a dosage-dependent manner, and suggest how they may interact on the basis of the structure of the yeast 20S proteasome.
REGULATED protein degradation is important for normal cell function, playing key roles in such diverse processes as growth control, metabolic regulation, embryonic development, cell cycle progression, and programmed cell death (see ![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
-like and seven distinct ß-like subunits, in an (
1-
7) (ß1-ß7) (ß1-ß7) (
1-
7) arrangement (![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
Although numerous studies have revealed much about the physical and biochemical properties of proteasomes, many aspects of their biological function remain obscure. We are interested in the roles of proteasome-mediated protein degradation during metazoan development and have initiated a molecular and genetic study of Drosophila melanogaster proteasomes as an approach to address this topic. One part of that study is to obtain proteasome subunit conditional mutants that can be used to manipulate the function of proteasomes in vivo, so that the role of the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway in specific processes can be assessed. The first such mutant to be identified in Drosophila was the l(3)73Ai1 allele (![]()
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| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
|---|
Fly culture:
Flies were cultured on standard Drosophila media at 25°, unless otherwise noted. Genetic variants of D. melanogaster are described in ![]()
![]()
Cytological localization of DTS7:
The DTS7 mutant was mapped relative to the P{PZ}dev[00208] transposon inserted at 70D2 by crossing females of genotype ru h DTS7 st tra in pp
ry506 to ry506 males and culturing the offspring at 29°. The rare rosy-eyed survivors (i.e., DTS7+ry) represent crossovers between the DTS7 gene and the ry+ gene associated with the transposon. The recombinants were then tested for the presence or absence of the h and st markers that flank DTS7 and P{ry + t7.2 = PZ}dev[00208] by individually crossing the ry survivors to ru h th st cu str es Pri ca/TM6B, Hu Tb e ca mates. In this experiment, of 811 survivors, 5 were rosy eyed. All 5 of these DTS7+ ry recombinant chromosomes carried the h and st+ flanking markers, indicating that the DTS7 gene lies to the right of the P{PZ}dev[00208] transposon, ~0.6 map units away.
Two different mutagenesis experiments were carried out to generate deficiencies around the 70D2 region. In the first experiment, male adults of genotype DTS7 st tra in pp/TM3, Sb Ser were exposed to 5000 rad of
-rays from a 60Co source or were fed 0.007 mM diepoxybutane and then mated to DTS7 st tra in pp/TM3, Sb Ser females. After 2 days, the cultures were placed at 29° and then cleared of parents at day seven. The rare survivors potentially represent DTS7- "knockout" mutants that no longer exhibit the DTS lethal phenotype. The mutagenized chromosomes were balanced over TM3, Sb Ser and then the stocks were retested at 29° to confirm that they no longer carried a DTS lethal mutation. The mutagenized chromosomes were subsequently tested to see if they no longer exhibited a dominant synthetic lethal interaction with l(3)73Ai1 and to determine if there was a recessive lethal mutation uncovered by the deficiency Df(3L)fz-M21.
In the second mutagenesis experiment, males of genotype DTS7 st tra in pp/TM3, Sb Ser were irradiated with 3000 rad of X rays and crossed to females of genotype l(3)73Ai1/TM3, Sb Ser and the progeny raised at 25°. Phenotypically wild-type (i.e., non-Stubble, non-Serrate) survivors represented putative DTS7- "pseudorevertants" in which the DTS7-bearing chromosome no longer exhibited a dominant synthetic lethal interaction with l(3)73Ai1. The mutagenized chromosomes were maintained over balancers and tested at 29° to confirm that they no longer acted as DTS lethals.
For each screen, the new mutants were examined for visible chromosome aberrations by crossing mutant-bearing males to wild-type females (Oregon R) and preparing salivary gland chromosome squashes from late third instar larvae. Orcein-stained chromosomes were examined under phase contrast optics with a Zeiss Axioplan microscope.
Polytene chromosome in situ hybridization:
Biotinylated DNA in situ hybridization to larval salivary gland polytene chromosomes was performed as described in ![]()
General molecular procedures:
All standard techniques (e.g., DNA extraction, restriction digestion, plasmid and phage DNA isolation, Southern blots, Northern blots, etc.) were done as described in ![]()
, respectively. The plasmid vector pGEM-4 blue (Promega, Madison, WI) was used for subcloning, unless otherwise noted.
Recombinant P1 phage characterization:
Recombinant P1 bacteriophage were obtained from the Berkeley Drosophila Genome Project (BDGP). The Drosophila genomic DNA inserts of phage DS00138 and DS07775 were subcloned by ligating size-fractionated phage DNA that had been partially digested with Sau3A into the BamHI site of the
DASH vector (Stratagene). The ligation products were packaged using the Gigapack Gold III Bacteriophage
Packaging Kit (Stratagene) according to the supplier's protocol. The resulting recombinant
phage clones were replica plated and filter lifts hybridized to random-primed labeled DS00138 and DS07775 DNA to determine which clones contained DNA from the region unique to DS00138, unique to DS07775, or common to both. Clones containing P1 phage vector sequences were identified by hybridization to unrelated P1 phage clones (DS06476 and DS03264 from region 70C). Representative
phage were further characterized by restriction mapping, cross-hybridization, and in situ hybridization to deficiency chromosomes to generate a set of contiguous overlapping phage spanning the DTS7 region.
DNA sequencing:
The ß2 cDNA and genomic clones were sequenced by the chain termination method of ![]()
Polymerase chain reaction:
The ß2 genomic sequence was PCR amplified from a 5.5-kb EcoRI fragment of the
Dm13 phage clone using the following primers: ß2/5' = 5'-ATGGATTTGGATAACGCACGCGAACTGCCC-3' and ß2/3' = 5'-TAATAAATGTACGAAAAGGGTAGAAAGGGG-3'. The same primers were also used for the PCR amplification of ß2 sequences from genomic DNA extracted from individual DTS7/Df(3L)fz-M21 larvae or Samarkand adults using the method of ![]()
![]()
![]()
P-element-mediated germline transformation:
Microinjection of Drosophila embryos was done using standard methods (![]()
![]()
Dm13, containing the ß2 transcription unit and no other identified gene, was inserted into the pW8 transformation vector (![]()
2-3 wc (100 µg/ml) was injected into preblastoderm embryos of a w host strain. G0 survivors were singly crossed to w; TM6B, Hu Tb/TM3, Sb Ser mates and transformed progeny identified by their pigmented eyes. Transformants were individually crossed with w; T(2;3)apXa/CyO; TM3, Sb mates and the appropriate offspring from subsequent generations were used to establish homozygous, or balanced heterozygous, transformed lines for testing. For each line, the chromosome containing the transgene was determined by linkage analysis of the w+ gene associated with the pW8 transposon.
| RESULTS |
|---|
Genetic relationship between the l(3)73Ai1 and DTS7 mutants:
Individuals heterozygous for the l(3)73Ai1 mutant allele develop normally when reared at 25° but die during the late pupal stage when raised at 29° (![]()
![]()
25°, although at 18° viable, but sterile, adults are observed (![]()
The DTS7 mutant phenotype is similar to that seen with l(3)73Ai1, although certain aspects are more severe. Heterozygotes show no apparent phenotypic effects when raised at 25°, but at 29°, DTS7/+ larvae develop slowly, and at pupariation many of them fail to shorten, resulting in elongated, and sometimes curved, pupae. Metamorphosis is abnormal with grossly underdeveloped imaginal disc derivatives and a complete lack of adult abdomen structures. The recessive phenotype of DTS7 is larval lethality at all temperatures tested (1829°). DTS7 hemizygotes usually die soon after hatching, although at 18° some survive to the late larval or early pupal stage. Loss-of-function alleles of the DTS7 locus (e.g., DTS7-rv3D, see below) are similar in phenotype to loss-of-function alleles of l(3)73Ai; they are recessive, early larval lethals.
While the similarity in mutant phenotypes is suggestive of a relationship between l(3)73Ai1 and DTS7, more compelling is the strong synthetic lethal genetic interaction shown by the two mutants. Specifically, l(3)73Ai1 and DTS7, when in trans-heterozygous condition, are lethal even at normally permissive temperatures (![]()
![]()
One other genetic observation supports the notion that the l(3)73Ai1 and DTS7 mutants are functionally related. In a screen for extragenic dominant suppressors of the DTS lethal phenotype of l(3)73Ai1, a mutant was found that rescues l(3)73Ai1 heterozygotes from the 29° lethality (![]()
![]()
The observations that (1) DTS7 and l(3)73Ai1 have similar lethal phenotypes, (2) DTS7 and l(3)73Ai1 exhibit a strong, allele-specific genetic interaction, and (3) the DTS lethal phenotypes of both DTS7 and l(3)73Ai1 are rescued by the same extragenic suppressor mutant provide strong evidence that these genes are functionally related. Because l(3)73Ai is known to be a proteasome subunit gene, it is reasonable to posit that the DTS7 locus either encodes another proteasome subunit or has some role related to proteasome function. We therefore sought to clone the DTS7 locus so that its relationship to proteasomes could be determined.
Cytological mapping of the DTS7 locus:
We established the cytological location of the DTS7 gene as the first step toward its isolation. Meiotic recombination experiments by ![]()
In addition to its DTS lethal phenotype, the DTS7 mutant also acts as a homozygous lethal at ambient temperatures (![]()
-rays, or diepoxybutane) and looked at subsequent generations for the loss of the DTS lethal phenotype associated with DTS7. We also tested these "pseudorevertants" for the loss of the dominant synthetic lethal interaction with the l(3)73Ai1 mutant. In these experiments 16 such mutants were recovered, and the DTS7-bearing chromosomes were examined for detectable aberrations (Table 1, Figure 1). Six of the pseudorevertant chromosomes were cytologically normal, 9 were deficiencies, and 1 was a translocation (also associated with a small deletion). Because all of the rearranged chromosomes were deleted for, or broken within, region 71A2-71B4, the DTS7 gene must lie in this chromosomal interval. The most informative rearrangements obtained from the screen are Df(3L)DTS7-rv16X and Df(3L)DTS7-rv24X, which define the distal and proximal boundaries of the DTS7 region (Figure 2).
|
|
|
Positional cloning of the DTS7 locus:
Having localized the DTS7 gene to the 71A2-B4 interval, we next obtained a set of recombinant P1 phage containing large DNA inserts from this region (i.e., DS00061, DS00138, DS04560, and DS07775) from the BDGP. These recombinant P1 phage were used as probes for in situ hybridization to salivary gland chromosomes of larvae heterozygous for Df(3L)DTS7-rv16X or Df(3L)DTS7-rv24X to identify those that span the defining breakpoints of the DTS7 region. Two of these P1 phage (DS00138 and DS07775) were found to contain DNA crossing both breakpoints (Figure 2), because the probes showed detectable hybridization to both wild-type and deficiency chromosomes, with less signal associated with the deficiency chromosomes. To better define the relevant region within the recombinant phage, the inserts from both DS00138 and DS07775 were subcloned into the
DASH vector, which accommodates inserts of ~1520 kb. The subclones were ordered into a contiguous set of overlapping clones by restriction mapping and cross-hybridization experiments. Representative phage were then tested by hybridizing them in situ to Df(3L)DTS7-rv16X and Df(3L)DTS7-rv24X polytene chromosomes to determine their relationship to the defining breakpoints of the DTS7 interval. Two clones,
Dm10 and
Dm13, cross the distal and proximal defining breakpoints, respectively. We expected the DTS7 locus to be contained on one or both of these recombinant phage, because these two phage overlap one another (Figure 2).
We looked for transcribed sequences within the cloned interval to identify the DTS7 gene. The inserts from both
Dm10 and
Dm13 were digested with EcoRI, subcloned into plasmid vectors, and then used as probes against Northern blots of poly(A)+ RNA isolated from all stages of development. A single transcript, ~1.0 kb in size, was detected with these probes, and it was present at all stages (data not shown). The 5.5-kb EcoRI fragment of
Dm13 that hybridized to this RNA was then used as a probe to screen an embryonic cDNA library and two clones of similar structure were isolated and sequenced. A genomic clone of the corresponding region was also isolated and sequenced, revealing the presence of two introns and an ORF of 272 amino acids (Figure 3). A search of the available databases showed that this ORF encodes a protein with high-amino-acid identity to the yeast (54% identical) and human (72% identical) ß2 proteasome subunits (also known as PUP1 and Z, respectively).
|
Given that (1) the l(3)73Ai gene encodes a ß-type proteasome subunit, (2) the DTS7 mutant shows a strong genetic interaction with the l(3)73Ai1 mutant, and (3) the only identified transcription unit within the DTS7 region encodes a ß-type proteasome subunit, it seemed highly probable that DTS7 and the ß2 subunit gene correspond to the same locus.
Sequence analysis of the ß2 gene from a DTS7 mutant strain:
The DTS mutant l(3)73Ai1 is known to encode an aberrant ß-type subunit in which there is a substitution of a highly conserved amino acid, T18I [this mutation is also referred to as T47I when the prosequence is included in the amino acid numbering system (see DISCUSSION)]. Given the similarities in the genetic properties of l(3)73Ai1 and DTS7, it is reasonable to suppose that the latter mutant is also a missense mutation involving a conserved amino acid.
To test the hypothesis that DTS7 encodes an altered ß2 proteasome subunit, we sequenced the gene encoding the ß2 subunit from individuals hemizygous for the DTS7 mutation. Dying non-Tubby larvae were selected from a cross of DTS7/TM6B, Hu Tb females and Df(3l)fz-M21/TM6B, Hu Tb males, and the ß2 coding region of these individuals was PCR amplified and sequenced. The ß2 gene was also amplified and sequenced from flies of the Samarkand wild-type strain from which the DTS7 mutant was derived. To confirm that any observed differences were not due to PCR or cloning artifacts, multiple independent PCR products were analyzed. Sequence analyses of these reveal that there is a single amino acid difference between the DTS7 and wild-type ß2 subunits (a G170R missense mutation; Figure 3). This glycine is absolutely conserved among ß2 subunit genes from all species examined to date, from archaebacteria to humans, suggesting that it is functionally important and strengthening the view that this amino acid change in ß2 corresponds to the DTS7 mutation (Figure 4).
|
Rescue of the DTS7 mutant phenotype by a ß2 transgene:
The DTS lethal phenotype of l(3)73Ai1 is rescued by an extra copy of the wild-type gene, supplied as either a transgene or as a conventional chromosome region duplication (![]()
To test whether the P[w+, ß2] transgene is also able to rescue the recessive lethal phenotype characteristic of DTS7- loss-of-function alleles, males of genotype w/Y; P[w+, ß2]/+ ; DTS7-rv3D/TM3, Sb were crossed to w; +/+; Df(3L)fz-M21/TM6, Ubx females. If the P[w+, ß2] transgene is able to rescue the lethality of DTS7-rv3D hemizygotes, then some non-Stubble, non-Ubx flies (i.e., DTS7-rv3D/Df(3L)fz-M21) should survive, and they should all have pigmented eyes (i.e., they should carry the transgene). Of the 624 progeny scored, 115 were non-Stubble, non-Ubx, and all of these were red eyed. Similar results were seen with three other loss-of-function alleles, all cytologically normal revertants isolated in the above screen (DTS7-rv3
, DTS7-rv11
, and DTS7-rv12
). The transgene was not able to rescue the recessive lethal phenotype of DTS7-rv19X, suggesting that this strain may carry a small deletion or other mutation in the 71A-B region that we were unable to visualize.
| DISCUSSION |
|---|
The identification of DTS7 as a gene encoding the 20S proteasome ß2 subunit is supported by three lines of evidence: (1) the only transcription unit detected within the DTS7 region, as defined by overlapping deficiencies, is the ß2 gene; (2) sequencing of the ß2 genes of the DTS7 mutant strain, and the Samarkand wild-type strain from which it was derived, shows that the DTS7 ß2 gene encodes an altered 20S subunit, involving the substitution of a highly conserved residue; and (3) a transgenic DNA fragment containing the ß2 transcription unit and no other identified gene is able to rescue both the dominant temperature-sensitive lethal phenotype of DTS7 and the recessive lethal phenotype of DTS7- mutant alleles. Taken together, these results provide compelling evidence that the DTS7 gene and the ß2 gene are one and the same.
The DTS7 mutant behaves genetically as an antimorphic, or dominant negative, mutation. Such an allele is characterized by the property that its dominant mutant phenotype is ameliorated by increasing, and exacerbated by decreasing, the dosage of the wild-type gene (![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
Given our results with DTS7 and l(3)73Ai1, it is reasonable to expect that certain mutations in other ß-type proteasome subunit genes might also exhibit dominant temperature-sensitive phenotypes. However, none of the other DTS mutants characterized by ![]()
The structure of the 20S proteasome may help explain how the l(3)73Ai1 and DTS7 mutant subunits act as poison subunits. Although the exact structure of the fly 20S proteasome is not known, the yeast particle has been solved by X-ray crystallography (![]()
-helix4 and ß-sheet9. Thus, each mutant is altered near the ß2-ß6 interfacing regions (Figure 5). It is possible that the physical proximity of the two mutational lesions plays a role in the strong genetic interaction seen in the double-mutant heterozygote.
|
These insights into proteasome structure shed light on the possible ways in which the ß2 mutation affects proteasome function. For example, in the DTS7 mutation G170R, the substitution of an arginine, a large basic amino acid, for a glycine, small and uncharged, may interrupt the folding of the ß2 protein between
-helix4 and ß-sheet9 and structurally alter the proteasome or cause it to fail to assemble correctly at the elevated temperature. Proteasome assembly is a two-step process where an
-ring is initially bound to a ß-ring and two ß-rings are subsequently joined to form the four-ringed 20S proteasome (![]()
![]()
The availability of two separate conditional lethal proteasome mutants should provide a useful tool for assessing the role of the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway in Drosophila development. For example, temperature-sensitive mutants of two cyclosome components, cdc23 and cdc27, have been used to study the roles of the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway in the regulation of cyclin proteolysis and cell cycle control in yeast (![]()
![]()
![]()
Finally, one question of future investigation concerns the molecular identity of the extragenic suppressor mutant, Su(DTS)-1, which is able to rescue both ß subunit DTS alleles, l(3)73Ai1 and DTS7. One obvious possibility is that the suppressor might encode a variant of one of the other ß-type subunits that is able to interact directly with both ß2 and ß6 and somehow compensate for the changes in the DTS mutant subunits. Another explanation is suggested by recent work in mammalian cells, where it was found that under the continuous presence of potent proteasome inhibitors, another proteolytic system is apparently able to compensate for the loss of proteasome function in some cells and allow their proliferation (![]()
| FOOTNOTES |
|---|
1 Present address: Department of Zoology, The University of Texas at Austin, MBB 2500 Speedway, Austin, TX 78712-1095. ![]()
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
We are indebted to Michael Cosgrove for his assistance in generating the ribbon drawings of the 20S proteasomes. We also thank Dr. Adelaide Carpenter for the Df (3L)D-1rv16 and Df(3L)D-5rv6 stocks. The work presented was supported by the National Science Foundation under grant no. MCB-9506885.
Manuscript received June 23, 1998; Accepted for publication September 22, 1998.
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A transition resulting in the G170R substitution.



