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SPO14 Separation-of-Function Mutations Define Unique Roles for Phospholipase D in Secretion and Cellular Differentiation in Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Simon A. Rudgea, Trevor R. Pettittb, Chun Zhoua, Michael J. O. Wakelamb, and JoAnne Engebrechtaa Department of Pharmacological Sciences, State University of New York, Stony Brook, New York 11794-8651
b CRC Institute for Cancer Studies, University of Birmingham, Birmingham B15 2TA, United Kingdom
Corresponding author: JoAnne Engebrecht, Department of Pharmacological Sciences, State University of New York, Stony Brook, NY 11794-8651., joanne{at}pharm.sunysb.edu (E-mail)
Communicating editor: F. WINSTON
| ABSTRACT |
|---|
In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, phospholipase D (PLD), encoded by the SPO14 gene, catalyzes the hydrolysis of phosphatidylcholine, producing choline and phosphatidic acid. SPO14 is essential for cellular differentiation during meiosis and is required for Golgi function when the normal secretory apparatus is perturbed (Sec14-independent secretion). We isolated specific alleles of SPO14 that support Sec14-independent secretion but not sporulation. Identification of these separation-of-function alleles indicates that the role of PLD in these two physiological processes is distinct. Analyses of the mutants reveal that the corresponding proteins are stable, phosphorylated, catalytically active in vitro, and can localize properly within the cell during meiosis. Surprisingly, the separation-of-function mutations map to the conserved catalytic region of the PLD protein. Choline and phosphatidic acid molecular species profiles during Sec14-independent secretion and meiosis reveal that while strains harboring one of these alleles, spo14S-11, hydrolyze phosphatidylcholine in Sec14-independent secretion, they fail to do so during sporulation or normal vegetative growth. These results demonstrate that Spo14 PLD catalytic activity and cellular function can be differentially regulated at the level of phosphatidylcholine hydrolysis.
PHOSPHOLIPASE D (PLD) catalyzes the hydrolysis of phospholipids and is believed to play important roles in signal transduction pathways and the regulation of membrane trafficking events (reviewed in ![]()
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The view that PLD plays a role in regulated membrane trafficking events, as opposed to constitutive vesicular transport, is supported by the analysis of PLD function in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. SPO14 encodes the major phosphatidylcholine (PC)-specific PLD in yeast (![]()
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In addition to its role in sporulation, PLD is required for survival under conditions of sec14 bypass (![]()
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Structure/function studies on PLD gene family members have delineated conserved regions of the protein that are important for catalytic activity (![]()
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In this study we show that single missense mutations can delineate PLD function in sporulation and Sec14-independent growth. Surprisingly, these separation-of-function mutations map to the catalytic core of the protein. We demonstrate that one of the separation-of-function proteins hydrolyzes PC only under conditions of sec14 inactivation but not during sporulation or normal vegetative growth. Our findings indicate that PLD plays distinct roles in secretion and cellular differentiation.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Yeast strains and media:
Routine growth and manipulation of S. cerevisiae strains were performed as described (![]()
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Mutagenesis strategy:
Random mutagenesis of complementing sequences was achieved by amplifying the SPO14 open reading frame (ORF) using PCR and in vivo recombination (![]()
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spo14/
spo14), CTY1128 (sec14-1ts pct1-2
spo14), and CTY1130 (sec14-1ts kes1-1
spo14). Of those, 10 conferred the mutant phenotype when a single plasmid was reintroduced into the yeast strains. The mutation responsible for the mutant phenotype was determined for five alleles by a combination of subclone and sequence analyses (spo14S-11, -18, -55, -29, and -41). The remaining five mutations (spo14S-8, -23, -26, -28, and -52) map outside the region determined for the first five; the specific lesions have not been determined.
Plasmids:
Plasmids KR325 and KR577 have been described (![]()
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Plasmid ME1451 is full-length SPO14 in pUN55, containing the S11 mutation (nucleotide 2267 G
A; amino acid 756 G
E). This was generated in two steps. First, a three-way ligation with the 2.3-kb HpaI-ClaI fragment from pME1403, harboring the original mutagenized plasmid, the 3.2-kb XbaI-HpaI fragment from pKR325, and the 6-kb XbaI-ClaI fragment of pUN55 was performed to create pME1444. Next, a three-way ligation with the 3.5-kb ClaI-DraI fragment from pME1444, the 2.1-kb XbaI-DraI fragment from pKR325, and the 6-kb XbaI-ClaI fragment of pUN55 was performed to generate pME1451. The 1.15-kb DraI-HpaI fragment derived from pME1403 was sequenced to determine the mutation responsible for the mutant phenotype. The 1.5-kb SacI fragment from pME940 (HA-SPO14; ![]()
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pME1568 is full-length HA-SPO14 in pUN55, containing the S18 mutation (nucleotide 3878 T
C; amino acid 1293 F
S). A three-way ligation with the 2.3-kb HpaI-ClaI fragment from pME1650, the original mutagenized plasmid, the 3.2-kb XbaI-HpaI fragment from pME986 (HA-SPO14), and the 6-kb XbaI-ClaI fragment of pUN55 was performed to create pME1568. The 2.3-kb HpaI-ClaI fragment derived from pME1650 was sequenced to determine the mutation responsible for the mutant phenotype. The GFP-tagged mutant protein was generated by insertion of the SphI GFP fragment from pME1086 into the SphI site of pME1568 to create pME1694. This fusion was subcloned into the XbaI and KpnI sites of the 2µ plasmid YEp352 on a 6-kb XbaI-KpnI fragment, generating pME1697. The TRP1 CEN4 plasmid was constructed by inserting the SpeI-ClaI fragment from pME1568 into the corresponding sites of pUN15 to generate pME1781.
Plasmids ME1646 (S29, nucleotide 2555 A
G; amino acid 853 H
R), ME1647 (S41, nucleotide 2555 A
G; amino acid 853 H
R), and ME1648 (S55, nucleotides 2260 A
G, 2545 G
A; amino acids 754 N
D, 849 A
T) were sequenced between the DraI and HpaI sites to determine the mutations responsible for the mutant phenotypes. Site-directed mutagenesis was performed to generate the single (S29/S41) and double mutations (S55) using the QuikChange site-directed mutagenesis kit (Stratagene, La Jolla, CA) as recommended. The primers used were: S29/S41 P126, 5'-CAG AAT TGC TGA TTT TCG TTT AGA TAA ACC ATT C, and P127, 5'-G AAT GGT TTA TCT AAA TCA CGA AAA TCA GCA ATT CTG; S55 (nucleotide 2260 A
G) P135, 5'-TTG TGA TTT ATA GGG ATG TGG GGA ATA TTG, and P136, 5'-CAA TAT TCC CCA CAT CCC TAT AAA TCA CAA; and S55 (nucleotide 2545 G
A) P132, 5'-TAT TCA AAT GCC AGA ATT ACT GAT TTT CAT GAT TTA G, and P133, 5'-C TAA ATC ATG AAA ATC AGT AAT TCT GGC ATT TGA ATA (the boldface nucleotides represent the introduced mutation). Plasmids ME986 and ME1095 were used as template for the mutagenesis. The resulting plasmids, pME1560 (HA-spo14S-41 URA3 CEN4), pME1561 (GFP-spo14S-41 URA3 2µ), pME1593 (HA-spo14S-55 URA3 CEN4), and pME1594 (GFP-spo14S-55 URA3 2µ) were sequenced to confirm that only the desired mutations were generated. The TRP1 CEN4 plasmids were constructed by inserting the SpeI-ClaI fragments from pME1560 and pME1593 into the corresponding sites of pUN15 to generate plasmids ME1784 and ME1779, respectively.
The CKI1 gene (pDO254) on a yeast-replicating vector was obtained from Dr. G. Carman. The XbaI-HindIII CKI1 fragment from pDO254 was inserted into the corresponding sites of SK+ (Stratagene) to generate pME1824. The HpaI-BamHI LEU2 fragment from YEp351 (![]()
Analysis of meiosis and sporulation:
Cells were grown in YPAcetate medium and sporulated as previously described (![]()
Invertase assays:
Invertase secretion was assayed essentially as described (![]()
Immunoblot analysis:
Cell extracts were prepared by vortexing cells at 4° in lysis buffer (10 mM triethanolamine, 300 mM sorbitol, 2 mM EDTA, 50 mM sodium fluoride, 40 mM ß-glycerophosphate, 1 mM DTT, 2 mM PMSF, 2 mM benzamidine, 0.057 units/ml aprotinin) with glass beads and removing the resulting supernatant after centrifugation at 16,000 x g for 10 min. A total of 10 µg of the resulting protein extracts was subjected to SDS-PAGE on 5% SDS-polyacrylamide gels. Proteins were electrophoretically transferred onto nitrocellulose membranes (pore size, 0.45 mm; Bio-Rad Laboratories, Hercules, CA) for 12 hr. Antibody detection was performed as previously described (![]()
PLD assays of immunopurified HA-Spo14:
Immunoprecipitation of HA-Spo14 and mutant variants was performed as previously described using the 12CA5 monoclonal antibody (![]()
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In vivo BODIPY-PC analysis:
BODIPY-PC (in ethanol) was added directly (4 µM final concentration) to cultures inactivated for SEC14 or induced to sporulate. After 3 hr at the semipermissive temperature of 33.5° for Sec14-independent growth or midway through the sporulation program (at the time of the meiotic divisions) cells were harvested. Phospholipids were extracted from frozen cell pellets by vigorous mixing with methanol (2 ml) followed by chloroform (4 ml). After standing for 15 min, phases were split by addition of 2 ml 0.1 M HCl in 0.88% KCl and the upper aqueous phase was discarded. The lower organic phase was washed with 2 ml methanol/0.1 M HCl in 0.88% KCl (1:1 v/v) and then dried under a stream of nitrogen before resuspending in a small volume of chloroform/methanol (2:1 v/v). Lipids were analyzed by thin-layer chromatography (TLC) as described (![]()
All assays were performed in triplicate. The percentage conversion of intracellular BODIPY-PC to BODIPY-PA was determined from arbitrary fluorescent units obtained from TLC plates using a FluorImager 595 (Molecular Dynamics, Sunnyvale, CA) operating at excitation and emission wavelengths of 488 and 530 nm, respectively. Data values of BODIPY-PC and BODIPY-PA were recorded using ImageQuant 5.1 software (Molecular Dynamics). The amount of BODIPY-PA measured was an underestimation, since PLD-derived BODIPY-PA was further metabolized to lyso-BODIPY-PA (by deacylation) and BODIPY-diacylglycerol (by dephosphorylation).
Quantification of choline release:
Choline was chemically measured in samples from medium obtained from the appropriate yeast strains essentially as described (![]()
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HPLC analysis:
Total lipid extracts, prepared as described above for the in vivo BODIPY-PC analysis, were separated and characterized by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS; QP8000alpha; Shimadzu, Tokyo) using a Luna silica column (3 µm, 2.0 x 150 mm; Phenomenex, UK) with a solvent gradient of chloroform/methanol/water/ammonia (90:9.5:0.5:0.32 by volume) changing to chloroform/ methanol/water/ammonia (50:48:2:0.32 by volume) over 40 min at 0.35 ml/min. Detection in negative electro spray ionization mode allowed characterization of PA, phosphatidylethanol (PEtOH), phosphatidylethanolamine (PE), phosphatidylinositol (PI), and phosphatidylserine (PS) while detection in positive electro spray ionization mode allowed characterization of PC. No exogenous ethanol was added to the cultures for the measurement of PEtOH as yeast generate ethanol as a consequence of fermentation of intracellular glucose and hence naturally produce low levels of PetOH, which could be analyzed by LC-MS. The retention times of the acidic phospholipids, particularly PA, were very dependent on the ammonia concentration. Zwitterionic lipids such as PC and PE were largely unaffected by the ammonia concentration. A total of 0.32% ammonium solution (60 mM) proved optimum for the Luna silica column used, with most phospholipid classes resolving essentially to baseline.
| RESULTS |
|---|
Sporulation and secretion are differentially sensitive to PLD levels:
SPO14 encodes the major PC-PLD in yeast (![]()
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spo14). Vegetative growth (but not sporulation) does occur in
spo14 strains provided SEC14 is fully functional. These results suggest that PLD activity is limiting for Sec14-independent growth but not for sporulation.
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Identification of separation-of-function alleles of SPO14:
To investigate the molecular basis for this differential PLD requirement in Sec14-independent growth and sporulation, we undertook a genetic screen to identify mutant PLDs that support Sec14-independent secretion but not sporulation. We constructed a diploid yeast strain (Y1649) homozygous for
spo14, sec14ts, and kes1. This strain fails to grow at temperatures above 35° where Sec14 is inactivated and cannot sporulate at any temperature because of the absence of Spo14. Introduction of SPO14 on a centromere plasmid rescued both growth above 35° and sporulation. We introduced mutated SPO14 sequences and a gapped plasmid into this strain (see MATERIALS AND METHODS). In vivo recombination (![]()
The ability of the four mutant alleles to support growth and secretion during sec14 bypass was determined. Strains harboring these spo14 alleles combined with sec14 bypass mutations obtained either through inactivation of a proposed phosphoinositide binding protein (Fig 2A, kes1; ![]()
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spo14 sec14ts kes1 strains is greater than that of
spo14 sec14ts pct1 strains (![]()
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Separation-of-function alleles produce stable proteins that are phosphorylated during meiosis, catalytically active, and properly localized:
We previously showed that both catalytic activity and relocalization of Spo14 were essential for PLD function in meiosis and that phosphorylation of the enzyme correlated with protein movement (![]()
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Spo14 is modified by phosphorylation during meiosis. This is easily monitored by its retarded migration relative to the nonphosphorylated protein on SDS-PAGE (![]()
PLD activity was measured using immunoprecipitates isolated from cells harboring the different Spo14 proteins induced to undergo meiosis. The immunoprecipitates were examined by immunoblot analysis (data not shown) and assayed for PLD activity. As shown in Table 3, each of the mutant proteins had significant PLD specific activity ranging from 35 to 100% of that obtained with the wild-type enzyme.
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To determine if the failure of these mutant proteins to support sporulation was a result of reduced PLD activity, we expressed each spo14S gene from either a 2µ plasmid, which is retained at high copy number within yeast cells (for review, see ![]()
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Spo14 relocalizes to the developing membrane during meiosis and this relocalization is essential for membrane formation (![]()
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Separation-of-function mutations map to the catalytic domain of PLD:
Sequence analyses of the mutant alleles showed that, in all but one case (spo14S-55), a single amino acid change was responsible for the mutant phenotype (Fig 4). Both of the point mutations identified in spo14S-55 were required to obtain the mutant phenotype (data not shown). Surprisingly, all but one of the mutations (spo14S-18) map to the catalytic core of the enzyme. These mutations flank the first HKD motif that, in conjunction with the second HKD motif in domain IV, has been shown to be essential for catalytic activity (![]()
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In vivo PLD activity of the separation-of-function mutants:
The finding that all but one of the separation-of-function alleles mapped to the catalytic core of the enzyme, yet were competent to cleave PC in vitro, prompted us to examine their activities in vivo. To achieve this aim, we took advantage of the finding that yeast cells readily internalize fluorescent derivatives of PC (![]()
spo14 strains did not generate any appreciable levels of BODIPY-PA or other products (Fig 5). We observed the same pattern and extent of hydrolysis for wild type and spo14S-11, -41, and -55 during both Sec14-independent secretion (Table 5) and sporulation (Fig 5; Table 5). However, spo14S-18 exhibited an approximately twofold decrease in BODIPY-PA formation under both conditions (Table 5). These results indicated that, consistent with the in vitro results, exogenous substrate was also cleaved in vivo by the separation-of-function PLD enzymes.
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To examine in vivo PLD activity from endogenous substrate we took advantage of the choline excretion phenotype that has been described for sec14ts strains carrying CDP-choline pathway mutations when elevated to the sec14ts restrictive temperature. The excretion of choline results from accelerated turnover of PC under circumstances where choline reutilization is blocked (i.e., in the presence of a CDP-choline pathway mutation; ![]()
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spo14 cells (0.3 µmol/OD600). In cells harboring spo14S-11 there was a smaller, although still significant, increase in choline release (approximately fourfold). During meiosis (Table 6), there was a higher, PLD-independent, basal release of choline (2.0 µmol/OD600;
spo14) and the increase over this level to
4.5 µmol/OD600 was similar for wild-type, spo14S-18, -41, and -55 mutants. However, under these conditions the spo14S-11 mutants showed little increase in choline release.
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The apparent disparity between the ability of spo14S-11 to hydrolyze BODIPY-PC but not endogenous PC during sporulation suggested that while spo14S-11 was catalytically competent, it was incapable of metabolizing the endogenous substrate in vivo. To confirm the choline data, we used LC-MS techniques to examine changes in phospholipid composition and molecular species profiles during Sec14-independent secretion (kes1 sec14), sporulation, and vegetative growth. A particular lipid molecular species is defined by its head group and its precise acyl chain substituents. After 3 hr of growth under sec14 bypass, the PA profile was examined for cells expressing wild-type PLD (SPO14), cells deleted for PLD (
spo14), and cells expressing the spo14S-11 separation-of-function allele. While SPO14 and spo14S-11 strains showed essentially the same PA profile,
spo14 cells contained significantly lower proportions of 30:1 PA (12:0/18:1 + 14:0/16:1 PA), 32:1 PA (14:0/18:1 + 16:0/16:1 PA), and, in particular, 32:2 PA (14:1/18:1 + 16:1/16:1 PA; Fig 6A), suggesting that these species are specifically generated by Spo14. The other PA species such as 34:1 PA (16:0/18:1 + 18:0/16:1 PA) and 34:2 PA (16:1/18:1 PA) found as major components in the
spo14 strain were probably generated through alternative pathways such as sequential acylation of glycerol-3-phosphate (reviewed in ![]()
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Confirmation that 30:1, 32:1, and 32:2 PA were indeed primarily products of Spo14 came from analysis of PEtOH. PEtOH is the product of the PLD transphosphatidylation reaction when ethanol is used as a nucleophile instead of water (![]()
spo14 strain, whereas the SPO14 and spo14S-11 strains both contained particularly high levels of 32:2 PEtOH (
60 mol%), with lower proportions of 30:1 and 32:1 PEtOH.
We also examined PA profiles in meiotic (Fig 6B) and vegetative cells that were otherwise wild type (Sec14 proficient; Fig 6C). The PA profiles differed between the meiotic and vegetative cells, with the former having greater proportions of 34:1 PA species in all three strains. However, consistent with the choline measurements, 32:2 PA, the major product of PLD hydrolysis, was approximately twofold lower in the
spo14 and spo14S-11 strains. PEtOH (32:2) was formed only in the wild-type cells, indicating that this molecular species most likely reflects in vivo PLD activity. Taken together, these results show that, although spo14S-11 behaves similarly to the wild-type enzyme under sec14 bypass conditions in its ability to hydrolyze PC, it is unable to do so during meiosis and vegetative growth where it behaves like the PLD deletion (
spo14) mutant. We interpret these results to imply that PLD hydrolysis occurs differently during Sec14-independent secretion and meiosis. Furthermore, the defect in spo14S-11 blocks the ability of the enzyme to cleave endogenous PC during meiosis and vegetative growth when Sec14 is present. As the PLD-dependent PEtOH profile was the same under all conditions, the same PC species are cleaved during Sec14-dependent and -independent growth and in meiosis. These results also indicate that substrate specificity is unaltered in spo14S-11. PC species profiles were very similar under sporulating or normal vegetative conditions: 610 mol% 32:2 PC in all cultures. Furthermore, no obvious differences between the three PLD strains under these conditions were noted for PE, PI, or PS species profiles (data not shown). However, under sec14 bypass
18 mol% was 32:2 PC and the
spo14 strain had reduced proportions of 32:2 PC (4 mol%) as well as 34:2 PC, 32:2 PI, and 34:2 PI and greatly increased proportions of 34:2 PS (data not shown). The total mass of PI and PS also increased substantially in this strain; however, all these changes may be related to cell death since in the absence of Spo14 the temperature shift to inactivate Sec14 for sec14 bypass is ultimately fatal.
| DISCUSSION |
|---|
In this article we have identified separation-of-function alleles of SPO14 that support growth and secretion in the absence of Sec14 but that fail to function in meiosis. The identification of such alleles indicates that PLD function in these two physiological processes is distinct. The defect of one of these alleles, spo14S-11, perturbs the ability of the enzyme to cleave PC under one condition (meiosis) but not the other (Sec14-independent secretion), indicating that PLD hydrolysis of PC occurs differently during meiosis and Sec14-independent secretion.
Unlike the situation in Sec14-independent secretion (![]()
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spo14, and spo14S-11 mutants was also detected in vegetative cells that were proficient for Sec14 (compare Fig 6B and Fig 6C). However, while inactivation of SPO14 has no effect on vegetative growth and secretion in an otherwise wild-type strain, it is absolutely essential for meiosis. Thus, the small change in 32:2 PA observed in meiosis must have a profound effect on the ability of the cell to mediate the developmentally regulated trafficking events that occur during sporulation (![]()
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Analysis of PA molecular species indicates that Spo14, like its mammalian counterpart, PLD1 (![]()
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S. cerevisiae readily internalize PC molecules labeled on one acyl chain with a fluorescent moiety (![]()
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spo14 mutants fail to generate BODIPY-PA despite internalizing the fluorescent substrate. Within the cell, BODIPY-PC and its metabolites are transported by endocytosis to the vacuole during vegetative growth and to the prospore membrane in wild-type sporulating cells (S. RUDGE and J. ENGEBRECHT, unpublished data). These results demonstrate that at least a pool of Spo14 is localized within endosome membranes of vegetative cells and are in good agreement with previous reports of GFP-Spo14 residing in the endosome (![]()
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All separation-of-function alleles of Spo14 have the capacity to hydrolyze internalized BODIPY-PC. This suggests that the separation-of-function alleles are active in vivo. Furthermore, TLC analysis of the PLD-dependent metabolites of BODIPY-PC revealed no difference in the profile of fluorescent lipids generated by the catalytic activity of wild-type or separation-of-function proteins. This demonstrates that the metabolism of PLD-derived PA is unhindered in the separation-of-function mutants.
Yeast cells have a second PLD activity, ScPLD2, which preferentially hydrolyzes PE (![]()
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The identification of separation-of-function alleles indicates that PLD function in Sec14-independent secretion and meiosis is distinct. Furthermore, the finding that the mutants do not have identical phenotypes suggests that multiple mechanisms exist to differentiate PLD function in these two physiological processes. One possible explanation for the differential requirement of PLD in these two physiological settings is that sporulation requires a higher threshold of PLD activity than Sec14-independent growth. However, we do not favor this hypothesis for the following reasons: (1) Sec14-independent growth, but not sporulation, is improved when more PLD activity is supplied to the cell (Fig 1); (2) bulk changes in PA can be measured in Sec14-independent growth but not during sporulation (![]()
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Taken together, our findings suggest that PA is the biologically active product of PLD hydrolysis. What then is PA doing? PA is either a specific activator of membrane regulators and/or its production in a localized region of the cell contributes to the biophysical properties of the membrane for vesicle formation or fusion. Both of these are hypothesized to occur in mammalian cells; however, the precise role of PLD-generated PA in membrane trafficking has been controversial. The importance of PA in membrane structure has been illustrated by the finding that conversion of lysophosphatidic acid to PA is important for membrane curvature during synaptic vesicle endocytosis, although in this case PA is produced via the action of endophilin, a lysophosphatidic acid acyl transferase (![]()
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| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
We thank G. Carman for providing us with a CKI1 plasmid, V. Bankaitis for plasmids and technical advice about invertase and choline assays, and C. Machamer for lipid standards. We also thank V. Sciorra and J. Trimmer for comments on the manuscript. This work was supported by an American Cancer Society grant (RPG-99-122-01-MBC) to J. Engebrecht and a grant from the Wellcome Trust to M.J.O. Wakelam.
Manuscript received March 13, 2001; Accepted for publication May 11, 2001.
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