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Mutational Analysis of the Caenorhabditis elegans Cell-Death Gene ced-3
Shai Shaham1,a, Peter W. Reddiena, Brian Davies2,a, and H. Robert Horvitzaa Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Department of Biology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139
Corresponding author: H. Robert Horvitz, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Department of Biology, Room 68-425, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 77 Massachusetts Ave., Cambridge, MA 02139.
Communicating editor: R. K. HERMAN
| ABSTRACT |
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Mutations in the gene ced-3, which encodes a protease similar to interleukin-1ß converting enzyme and related proteins termed caspases, prevent programmed cell death in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans. We used site-directed mutagenesis to demonstrate that both the presumptive active-site cysteine of the CED-3 protease and the aspartate residues at sites of processing of the CED-3 proprotein are required for programmed cell death in vivo. We characterized the phenotypes caused by and the molecular lesions of 52 ced-3 alleles. These alleles can be ordered in a graded phenotypic series. Of the 30 amino acid sites altered by ced-3 missense mutations, 29 are conserved with at least one other caspase, suggesting that these residues define sites important for the functions of all caspases. Animals homozygous for the ced-3(n2452) allele, which is deleted for the region of the ced-3 gene that encodes the protease domain, seemed to be incompletely blocked in programmed cell death, suggesting that some programmed cell death can occur independently of CED-3 protease activity.
THE gene ced-3 functions cell-autonomously to promote programmed cell death in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans (![]()
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ced-3 encodes a member of the CED-3/ICE (interleukin-1ß converting enzyme) family of cysteine proteases (![]()
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Several observations indicate roles for mammalian and fly caspases in apoptosis. First, some caspases are activated during apoptosis. For example, caspase-8 (MACH/FLICE) binds FADD, a Fas-associated protein, and is activated in cells undergoing apoptosis following Fas stimulation (![]()
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To define those regions of caspase proproteins required for protease activation and/or enzymatic activity and to understand better the function of caspases in programmed cell death, we have analyzed the effects of mutations in ced-3 on programmed cell death in vivo.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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General methods and strains:
The techniques used for culturing C. elegans were as described by ![]()
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- Linkage Group (LG) I: sem-4(n1378), ced-1(e1735)
- LGIII: ced-9(n1950 n2077, n1950 n2161), ced-11(n2744), ced-5(n2098)
- LGIV: ced-3(n717, n718, n1040, n1129, n1163, n1164, n1165, n1286, n1949, n2424, n2425, n2426, n2427, n2429, n2430, n2432, n2433, n2436, n2438, n2439, n2440, n2442, n2443, n2444, n2445, n2446, n2447, n2449, n2452, n2454, n2719, n2720, n2721, n2722, n2830, n2854, n2859, n2861, n2870, n2871, n2877, n2883, n2885, n2888, n2889, n2921, n2922, n2923, n2924, n2998, n3001, n3002), dpy-4(e1166), sDf21
- LGV: egl-1(n487).
Isolation and characterization of ced-3 mutants:
We isolated the ced-3 alleles n2859, n2861, n2870, n2877, n2883, n2885, n2888, n2889, n2921, n2922, n2923, n2924, n3001, and n3002 as suppressors of the maternal-effect lethality caused by the massive ectopic programmed cell death of embryos homozygous for the loss-of-function allele ced-9(n1950 n2161) (![]()
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To quantitate cell survival in ced-3 mutants we scored for the presence of extra cells in the anterior region of the pharynx (![]()
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Determination of allele sequences:
To characterize coding regions and exon/intron junctions from mutant strains, we amplified the ced-3 genomic coding region using the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and a set of four primer pairs. Specifically, primers SHA2 and PCR2 were used to amplify exons 13, primers PCR3 and PCR4 were used to amplify exon 4, primers PCR5 and 650 were used to amplify exons 57, and primers BD1 and 1200 were used to amplify exon 8. The sequences of these primers are shown in Table 1. DNA was amplified as follows. One to 10 worms were placed in 3 µl PCR lysis buffer (60 µg/ml proteinase K in 10 mM Tris pH 8.2, 50 mM KCl, 2.5 mM MgCl2, 0.45% Tween 20, and 0.05% gelatin) and frozen at -70° for 2030 min. Samples were allowed to incubate at 60° for 1 hr followed by a 15-min incubation at 95°. The entirety of each sample was then used as the DNA source in a standard PCR reaction using one of the primer pairs described above. Samples were run on a 1.4% agarose gel, purified using ß-agarase (New England Biolabs, Beverly, MA), and resuspended in 20 µl of TE buffer. Sample sequences were determined using the fmol sequencing kit (Promega, Madison, WI), following instructions of the manufacturer for 33P-labeling and using the primers listed in Table 1, except for primers PWR.30, PWR.32, and PWR.40. Samples were run on standard polyacrylamide sequencing gels (Life Technologies, Gaithersburg, MD). Gels were dried and exposed to X-ray film for 15 days. For each allele we determined the entire sequence of the ced-3 open reading frame as well as of all exon/intron junctions. Sequences of sites at which a potential mutation was identified were redetermined for both strands.
DNA flanking the ced-3(n2452) deletion site was isolated using the CLONTECH (Palo Alto, CA) Advantage cDNA PCR kit, using primers PWR.30 and PWR.32, and following the instructions of the manufacturer. Sequences of the resulting DNA were determined using primer PWR.40 and an ABI sequencer (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA).
Southern hybridization and RT-PCR experiments:
Southern analysis of ced-3(n2452) and wild-type genomic DNA was performed as described by ![]()
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Plasmid constructions:
Construct A was made by partially digesting the pJ40 plasmid containing ced-3 genomic sequences (![]()
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Germline transformation:
Our procedure for microinjection and germline transformation followed that of ![]()
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Splicing mutants of ced-3:
We examined in more detail three of the four ced-3 alleles (n2854, n717, n2440, and n3002) that are likely to affect splicing. The allele n2854 contains the sequence AGGCG|gattt in the donor region of intron 5 of ced-3 (Table 3) instead of the AGGCG|gttcg present in the wild type. To characterize the ced-3 transcripts made in animals carrying this ced-3 mutation, we isolated RNA from mutant animals (see above), prepared cDNAs from the RNA, and amplified this DNA using PCR and ced-3-specific primers. The sequence of the resulting band was then determined. Interestingly, the only product isolated from the ced-3(n2854) mutant was spliced at a position upstream of the normal splice site to give a deletion of 3 bp with respect to the wild-type message, resulting in the deletion of glycine 360 in the open reading frame of ced-3. Why this splicing pattern occurred is not understood. The ced-3(n717) mutation changes a conserved acceptor site G to an A in intron 7. To characterize the product(s) made in n717 animals, we isolated RNA from mutants and used this RNA for a Northern blot probed with a ced-3 cDNA. The size and level of the message were not discernibly different from those of the wild-type message (data not shown). We then prepared cDNAs from the ced-3(n717) RNA and amplified this DNA using PCR and ced-3-specific primers. Sequence determination of the resulting bands suggested that splicing occurred at positions -1, -2, -3, 0, +1, +2, and +3 (-, upstream; +, downstream) of the wild-type splice site (data not shown). The mutation in ced-3(n2440) changes the sequence CCGCAAGTT to CCGTAAGTT, altering codon 401 from a glutamine to an ochre stop codon. However, we noticed that this change also creates a potential splice-donor site (CC|gtaagtt), which might be used instead of the intron 6 splice donor immediately downstream of the mutation site. To determine if this splice-donor site is used, we determined the sequence of ced-3 cDNAs prepared from ced-3(n2440) mutant RNAs (see above). Only one class of RNAs was discernible and used the predicted new donor site. The product produced by this splice is out of frame and is predicted to form a truncated protein with 13 amino acids downstream of amino acid 400. Thus, the mutation in ced-3(n2440) is likely not to be a nonsense mutation.
ced-3 reporter constructs and expression patterns:
The construction of reporter transgenes is described above. All lacZ and GFP reporter transgenes we examined were expressed in many cells throughout the animal primarily during embryogenesis, starting at about the 200-cell stage, and during the first larval period (L1; data not shown). Very weak expression was seen in a small number of cells after the L1 stage (data not shown). Expression was detected both in cells that normally die and in those that normally live (data not shown), consistent with previous experiments suggesting that ced-3 activity is present both in cells that do and in cells that do not die (![]()
| RESULTS |
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Cys-358, asp-221, and asp-374 are important for CED-3-induced cell death:
To determine whether CED-3 protease activity is required for programmed cell death, we used site-directed mutagenesis to generate mutant ced-3 cDNAs that should lack either CED-3 protease activity or the CED-3 precursor cleavage sites. We expressed these cDNAs in the ALM neurons using the promoter of the gene mec-7 (Pmec-7; ![]()
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Most missense alleles of ced-3 affect residues conserved with other caspases:
To define additional residues important for ced-3 function, we isolated 14 new ced-3 alleles. We then characterized the phenotypes caused by and the molecular lesions of these alleles and of 38 previously existing ced-3 alleles induced in vivo. One of the 52 alleles we examined, n1949, was isolated as an inhibitor of normal programmed cell death; 4 alleles (n1163, n1164, n1165, and n1286) were isolated in noncomplementation screens for suppression of the ectopic cell death of the HSN neurons in egl-1 mutant animals; 10 alleles (n717, n718, n1040, n1129, n2719, n2720, n2721, n2722, n2830, and n2998) were isolated as suppressors of mutations causing defects in either the engulfment or morphology of cell corpses; and 37 alleles (n2424, n2425, n2426, n2427, n2429, n2430, n2432, n2433, n2436, n2438, n2439, n2440, n2442, n2443, n2444, n2445, n2446, n2447, n2449, n2452, n2454, n2854, n2859, n2861, n2870, n2871, n2877, n2883, n2885, n2888, n2889, n2921, n2922, n2923, n2924, n3001, and n3002) were isolated as suppressors of the lethality conferred by the weak loss-of-function mutation ced-9(n1950 n2161) (see MATERIALS AND METHODS).
To quantify the severity of the defects in programmed cell death of different ced-3 mutants, we counted the number of extra surviving cells present in the anterior region of the pharynx, as has been previously described (![]()
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All 52 alleles analyzed were isolated in mutant screens that used EMS as a mutagen. Of these alleles, 44 contained a single GC
AT transition, the mutation induced most often by EMS (![]()
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TA transversion, one allele (n2883) contained a single AT
GC transition, one allele (n2446) contained a single GC
TA transversion, three alleles (n2424, n2830, and n2854) contained several altered nucleotides, and one allele (n2452) contained a deletion of 17,229 bp (see below). Of the alleles containing single point mutations, 38 had missense mutations, 6 had nonsense mutations, and 4, including the n2440 allele, probably affected splicing. [Although n2440 converts a glutamine codon to an ochre stop codon, our studies of this allele identified a single class of ced-3(n2440) RNA generated by a new splice-donor site located just upstream of the n2440 mutation; this RNA presumably encodes an altered protein unaffected by the stop codon described above; see MATERIALS AND METHODS.]
Of the 30 distinct sites affected by these missense mutations, 29 are conserved with at least one other non-nematode caspase, even though CED-3 is no more than 34% identical to any of these caspases (Figure 2). The nonconserved serine-rich region of the CED-3 protein (amino acids 93205; ![]()
Some of the missense mutations we studied could be assigned to residues that have been implicated in a specific caspase function based on the caspase-1 and caspase-3 X-ray structures. These residues seem likely to have a similar role in CED-3 function. Specifically, the alleles n2427, n2438, and n2830 (G474R) alter a glycine residue of CED-3 that, on the basis of its corresponding site in caspase-1, is probably located on the heterodimer-heterodimer interface (![]()
The allele n2871(R359Q) encodes a protein with a QACQG pentapeptide containing the active site cysteine. This sequence is present in at least five other caspases that possess proteolytic activity. Interestingly, we found that the CED-3(n2871) protein expressed in Escherichia coli lacked proteolytic activity (data not shown), suggesting that the QACQG sequence is functional only in specific sequence contexts. Similarly, a number of other mutations also introduce into the CED-3 protein amino acids normally found in other caspases: n1040(L27F), n2439(L30F), n3001(R242C), n2425-(G277D), n2889(E318K), n2924(E318K), n2923(A347V), n2870(R429K), and n1163(S486F).
The phenotypic characterizations of and the sequence alterations caused by the 52 ced-3 alleles are presented in Table 3 and described below.
ced-3 alleles define a graded series of function:
As shown in Table 3, the ced-3 alleles we analyzed define a graded series based on the number of extra cells present in the anterior pharynx. To determine if this assay was consistent with other measurements of ced-3 killing activity, we compared our results from Table 3 to results from two other tests of ced-3 activity.
First, we examined the ability of eight different ced-3 alleles to suppress the maternal-effect lethality of animals homozygous for the strong ced-9(n1950 n2077) loss-of-function allele, which contains a nonsense mutation at codon 160 of the 280-codon ced-9 open reading frame (![]()
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Using a second assay of ced-3 activity, we observed that ced-9(n1950 n2077); ced-3(n2447 or n2443) animals were severely egg-laying defective, presumably as a consequence of the deaths of the HSN neurons required for egg laying (data not shown; ![]()
Taken together, our observations support the hypothesis that the 52 ced-3 alleles we examined define a graded series of ced-3 activities as listed in Table 3.
ced-3(n2452) animals lack the protease region of CED-3:
The n2452 allele is deleted for the region of the ced-3 gene that encodes the p17 and p15 subunits, which form the CED-3 protease (Figure 1). As shown in Figure 3, Southern blots of ced-3(n2452) genomic DNA digested with XhoI or HindIII and probed with a full-length ced-3 cDNA revealed the absence of fragments present in wild-type genomic DNA. Specifically, as shown in Figure 3A, both a 1.7-kb XhoI fragment internal to the ced-3 gene and an adjacent 20.2-kb XhoI fragment present in wild-type animals were absent in ced-3(n2452) animals, whereas a 2.6-kb XhoI fragment containing the ced-3 promoter and first three exons remained intact in the mutant. Furthermore, a novel 4.7-kb XhoI fragment appeared in ced-3(n2452) animals. Similarly, as shown in Figure 3B, both a 4.8-kb and a 3.7-kb HindIII fragment present in wild-type animals were missing in ced-3 (n2452) animals, and a novel 4.9-kb band appeared in the mutant. Similar results were observed using other enzymes (data not shown). On the basis of these results we propose that ced-3(n2452) is a deletion that removes all coding sequences downstream of intron 3 of ced-3 (see Figure 1 Figure 2 Figure 3).
In support of this interpretation, we were able to amplify a wild-type-sized DNA fragment from ced-3(n2452) animals using PCR and primers located upstream of exon 1 and at the 5' end of intron 3 (primers SHA2 and PCR2, Table 1; data not shown). However, we could not amplify any DNA fragments from ced-3(n2452) animals using PCR and primer pairs located at the 3' end of intron 3 and in intron 4 (primers PCR3 and PCR4, Table 1), in introns 4 and 7 (primers PCR5 and 650, Table 1), or in intron 7 and downstream of the ced-3 stop codon (primers BD1 and 1200, Table 1; data not shown). Furthermore, we were able to amplify a 3.2-kb genomic fragment of DNA from ced-3(n2452) animals using primers PWR.30 and PWR.32 located 59 nucleotides upstream of the ced-3 intron 3 splice-donor site and 20.3-kb downstream of the ced-3 intron 3 splice-donor site, respectively. Partial sequence of this 3.2-kb DNA fragment was determined using the primer PWR.40. The resulting sequence was consistent with a deletion of 17,229 bp downstream of position 4008 in the ced-3 genomic sequence (![]()
Programmed cell death may occur in the absence of CED-3 protease function:
ced-3(n2452) animals had 9.5 ± 1.5 extra cells in the anterior pharynx (Table 3). By contrast, numerous other ced-3 mutants contained significantly more extra cells in the anterior pharynx than did ced-3(n2452) animals. For example, ced-3 (n2433) animals contained 12.4 ± 1.0 extra cells in the anterior pharynx (P < 0.001 by the unpaired Student's t-test). Mutant animals carrying a number of ced-4 mutations or the gain-of-function ced-9(n1950) allele similarly contained significantly more extra cells in the anterior pharynx than did ced-3(n2452) animals. ced-4(n1162) animals, for example, had 11.9 ± 1.1 extra cells and ced-9(1950) animals had 12.5 ± 0.8 extra cells. These observations suggest that some cells die by programmed cell death in ced-3(n2452) animals. If so, the protease activity of CED-3 might not be necessary to cause all programmed cell deaths in C. elegans.
To confirm that cells can undergo programmed death in ced-3(n2452) animals we examined the number of cell corpses present in the heads of ced-3(n2452) L1 animals. To facilitate our analysis, animals were scored in a ced-1(e1735) background, which results in the persistence of cell corpses. As shown in Table 5, half of the ced-1(e1735); ced-3(n2452) animals we examined contained at least one cell corpse. These results support the notion that programmed cell death can still occur in the absence of CED-3 protease activity. Interestingly, even animals harboring stronger ced-3 alleles such as ced-3(n717) or ced-3(n718) contained some corpses.
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It is conceivable that the ced-3(n2452) strain we studied contains a second mutation that bypasses a need for CED-3 protease activity to induce programmed cell death. To explore this possibility, we backcrossed the ced-3(n2452) strain to the wild-type N2 strain four times. Also, we generated strains in which the backcrossed ced-3(n2452) chromosome IV had undergone recombination with a non-ced-3(n2452) chromosome IV on either side of the ced-3 gene (see MATERIALS AND METHODS). Four-times backcrossed ced-3(n2452) animals had 9.5 ± 1.5 (n = 15) extra cells; ced-3(n2452) dpy-4(e1166) animals in which the right arm of the original ced-3(n2452) chromosome IV was replaced with an arm from a dpy-4(e1166) strain by recombination had 9.7 ± 1.4 (n = 18) extra cells; and unc-32(e189) ced-3(n2452) in which the left arm of the original ced-3(n2452) chromosome IV was replaced with an arm from an unc-32(e189) strain by recombination had 9.3 ± 2.0 (n = 15) extra cells. These results indicate that if a modifier mutation exists in the original ced-3(n2452) strain, it is likely to be located within four map units to the right of ced-3 and two map units to the left of ced-3. It remains possible that the disruption of C48D1.1, F58D2.2, or F58D2.1 in the ced-3(n2452) strain bypasses a need for CED-3 protease activity, although none of these genes has a sequence suggesting a direct or indirect role in programmed cell death (our unpublished observations).
The N-terminal nonprotease prodomain of CED-3 might be important for programmed cell death:
Whether the phenotype of ced-3(n2452) animals represents the phenotype caused by a true ced-3 null allele is unclear (see DISCUSSION). For example, it is possible that the prodomain of the CED-3 protein, which might be functional in ced-3(n2452) animals, could affect programmed cell death.
We have obtained data that suggest that the prodomain of CED-3 can prevent programmed cell death when fused to a heterologous protein. Specifically, while examining the expression patterns of translational fusions of ced-3 to either lacZ or GFP reporter genes containing nuclear localization signals (NLS), we observed that wild-type animals expressing transgenes encoding the prodomain of CED-3 displayed extra cells in the anterior pharynx. (We have not characterized the expression patterns of these transgenes in detail; see MATERIALS AND METHODS.) First, we expressed genomic regions of ced-3 containing sequences 2.5 kb upstream of the start codon (Pced-3) and terminating at different locations within the ced-3 coding region, fused to lacZ (Figure 4, transgenes BD). Second, we expressed a C. elegans heat-shock promoter fused to a truncated ced-3 cDNA fused, in turn, to lacZ (Figure 4, transgenes E and F).
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Transgenes C and D partially inhibited programmed cell death (Figure 4). For example, two lines of animals transgenic for transgene C had on average 1.5 or 2.4 extra cells in the anterior pharynx. Extra cells were also seen in animals carrying transgene F, indicating that ced-3 promoter sequences are not required to generate extra cells. The presence of extra cells also was not dependent on the lacZ moiety, because transgenes containing fusions to GFP also caused extra cells to be present (Figure 4, transgenes G and H). Finally, we demonstrated that reporter transgenes equivalent to transgenes C and D but lacking a NLS could also promote the presence of extra cells (data not shown), suggesting that the NLS is not required for this phenotype. In short, the expression of CED-3 residues 1151 resulted in extra cells.
To test the hypothesis that the extra cells we observed resulted from an inhibition of programmed cell death, we introduced transgene D into animals homozygous for the ced-9(lf) alleles n1950, n2161, or n2812. Transgene D suppressed the lethality of both strains, further showing that this transgene can inhibit programmed cell death. These observations indicate that the expression of CED-3 prodomain fusion constructs can interfere with programmed cell death and raise the possibility that this region of the CED-3 proprotein might normally interact with components of the cell-death machinery. It has been suggested that CED-3 activation is mediated by binding of CED-4 to the CED-3 prodomain (![]()
Transgenes B and E, which encode residues 171 and 194 of CED-3, respectively, did not inhibit programmed cell death (Figure 4). This observation suggests that the region between residues 94151 is important for protection. Interestingly, transgenes B and E both interrupt a region (caspase recruitment domain, amino acids 186) postulated to be required for interaction with the CED-4 protein, and it is possible that our CED-3 prodomain fusions interact with CED-4. That transgene A, containing identical N-terminal-encoding ced-3 sequences as transgene C but without a reporter fusion, was unable to protect against programmed cell death suggests that this region on its own might produce an unstable protein or require fusion to a heterologous protein to prevent cell death. Alternatively, this transgene might not have been expressed at adequate levels to prevent cell death.
Interestingly, ced-3(n2452) animals harboring transgene D (Figure 4) contained significantly more surviving cells in the anterior pharynx (11.7 ± 1.2, P < 0.001) than ced-3(n2452) animals alone (9.5 ± 1.5), suggesting that transgene D might affect a CED-3 protease-independent mode of programmed cell death.
Mutations in the conserved QACRG active-site pentapeptide of CED-3 are weakly dominant-negative:
While examining cell survival in animals heterozygous for the 52 EMS-induced ced-3 alleles, we noticed that 4 of these alleles (n2871, n2433, n2440, and n2430) were weakly semidominant (Table 3). Animals heterozygous for these alleles showed weak cell survival (02 extra cells per animal with more than half of the animals having at least one extra cell). These values are statistically different from those of wild-type animals (unpaired Student's t-test: P < 0.004 for n2440 and n2433, P < 0.001 for n2430 and n2871). To test for another semidominant effect of the ced-3(n2871) allele, we examined the viability of animals homozygous for the weak ced-9 allele n1950 n2161 and heterozygous for ced-3(n2871). unc-69(e587) ced-9(n1950 n2161) animals do not produce viable progeny (![]()
To test whether the semidominant phenotype conferred by these alleles was caused by a haplo-insufficiency of the ced-3 locus, we examined animals either heterozygous for the deficiency sDf21, which spans ced-3, or heterozygous for the ced-3(n2452) deletion allele. As shown in Table 3, neither sDf21/+ animals nor ced-3(n2452)/+ animals showed significant extra cell survival in the anterior pharynx, suggesting that the semidominant phenotype conferred by the ced-3(n2871, n2433, n2440, n2430) alleles was caused not by haplo-insufficiency but rather by a dominant-negative interaction.
Two of the four ced-3 alleles with semidominant effects, ced-3(n2871) and ced-3(n2433), alter the arginine (R359) and glycine (G360) residues, respectively, in the highly conserved pentapeptide QACRG, which surrounds the active site of CED-3 and is characteristic of most caspases (Table 3, Figure 2; ![]()
| DISCUSSION |
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The C. elegans CED-3 proprotein consists of an N-terminal prodomain with no known catalytic function and central and C-terminal regions that are cleaved from the proprotein and associate to form an active protease (![]()
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The protease activity of CED-3 and the processing of the CED-3 proprotein are important for programmed cell death in C. elegans:
In this article we demonstrate that a mutation in the presumptive active-site cysteine 358 of CED-3, previously shown to perturb CED-3 protease activity in vitro (![]()
Our data also indicate that processing of the CED-3 proprotein is important for programmed cell death, because site-directed mutations in two residues at which the CED-3 proprotein is processed in vitro (aspartate 221 and aspartate 374; ![]()
CED-3 protease activity might not be essential for all programmed cell deaths in C. elegans:
The ced-3 allele n2452 eliminates CED-3 protease function, because ced-3(n2452) animals contain a deletion that removes all sequences present in the mature protease (Figure 1 Figure 2 Figure 3; ![]()
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We cannot preclude the possibility that simply eliminating CED-3 protease activity would result in the absence of all programmed cell deaths and that in ced-3(n2452) animals there is loss of a death-protective function in addition to the loss of CED-3 protease activity. Such a death-protective function could be provided by the CED-3 protein, by an alternative product of the ced-3 gene, or by the product of a gene closely linked to ced-3 and also disrupted in the ced-3(n2452) strain (see RESULTS). In each of these cases, cell death would occur in the absence of CED-3 protease activity, again suggesting that this activity is not absolutely essential for all programmed cell deaths.
We previously showed that the ectopic overexpression of ced-4 can induce programmed cell death to a limited extent in animals homozygous for the strong ced-3 (n2433) mutation, which substitutes a serine for glycine at codon 360 (![]()
How might some ced-3 alleles prevent programmed cell death more than the protease deletion mutant ced-3(n2452)?
First, as noted above, it is possible that the CED-3 protein contains a nonprotease killing activity that is not disrupted in the ced-3(n2452) mutant. In this case, the ced-3(n2452) mutation would not be a ced-3 null allele, and stronger, null, ced-3 alleles would disrupt both the protease and the nonprotease CED-3 killing activities. Second, if ced-3(n2452) is a null allele, two possibilities seem plausible. On the one hand, ced-3(n2452) might eliminate not only a ced-3 killing function but also a ced-3 protective function; both ced-4 (![]()
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The null phenotype of ced-3:
The issues discussed above highlight the importance of unambiguously establishing the phenotype caused by a complete absence of ced-3 function. It seems likely that a mutant completely lacking ced-3 function is viable and deficient in programmed cell death, as are the large number of ced-3 mutants we have characterized. In support of this hypothesis, four ced-3 alleles (n1163, n1164, n1165, and n1286) were isolated in noncomplementation screenswhich could have identified lethal ced-3 allelesand all four when homozygous result in animals that are viable and deficient in programmed cell deaths. Furthermore, when ced-3 function is inhibited using the method of RNA-mediated interference (![]()
However, 50 of the 52 ced-3 alleles we studied contain mutations that could retain some ced-3 function: missense mutation, nonsense mutations that could potentially allow synthesis of a fragment of the CED-3 protein, or splicing mutations. Furthermore, we examined ced-3 mRNA size and level in 11 of these 50 ced-3 mutants (n717, n718, n1040, n1129, n1163, n1165, n1286, n1949, n2426, n2430, and n2433) and found that all 11 produced ced-3 mRNA of roughly the same size and abundance as in the wild type (data not shown). By contrast, nonsense, missense, and splicing mutants defective in other C. elegans genes often contain little or no RNA (![]()
Nonetheless, two ced-3 alleles (n2452 and n2888) do seem like good candidates for being null alleles, based upon their molecular lesions. As discussed above, ced-3(n2452) animals are deleted for the entire C-terminal region of the 503-amino-acid CED-3 protein beyond amino acid 180. ced-3(n2888) animals have an arginine-to-opal nonsense mutation at codon 154, presumably resulting in a truncated CED-3 protein lacking the regions necessary for protease activity. Thus, assuming that CED-3 protease activity is essential for all ced-3 function, ced-3(n2452) and ced-3(n2888) are both most likely null alleles. Isolation of complete deletions of the ced-3 locus should help resolve this issue.
Whatever the ced-3 null phenotype, it is clear from our studies that semidominant mutations in ced-3 can prevent programmed cell death. It is therefore possible that similar mutations in human caspases also result in cell survival. Such cell survival, as in the case of bcl-2, could promote tumor formation. Thus, not only recessive mutations, but also dominant mutations in human caspase genes might predispose carriers to the development of cancer.
| FOOTNOTES |
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1 Present address: Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics, University of California, San Francisco, CA 94143-0448. ![]()
2 Present address: Department of Biochemistry, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, Texas 75235-9038. ![]()
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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We thank Linda Huang and members of the Horvitz laboratory for helpful comments about the manuscript and Gillian Stanfield and Michael Hengartner for isolating some of the ced-3 alleles we studied. S.S. was supported by a William Keck Foundation fellowship and a fellowship from the Glaxo Research Institute. B.D. was supported by the MIT Undergraduate Research Opportunity Program (UROP) and by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. P.W.R. was supported by a National Science Foundation fellowship and a National Institutes of Health training grant. H.R.H. is an Investigator of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.
Manuscript received June 16, 1999; Accepted for publication August 27, 1999.
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