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Differential Regulation of Saccharomyces cerevisiae Phospholipase D in Sporulation and Sec14-Independent Secretion
Simon A. Rudge1,a, Chun Zhoua, and JoAnne Engebrechtaa Department of Pharmacological Sciences, State University of New York, Stony Brook, New York 11794-8651
Corresponding author: JoAnne Engebrecht, State University of New York, Stony Brook, NY 11794-8651., joanne{at}pharm.sunysb.edu (E-mail)
Communicating editor: A. P. MITCHELL
| ABSTRACT |
|---|
Saccharomyces cerevisiae Spo14, a phosphatidylcholine-specific, phosphatidylinositol (4,5) bisphosphate-activated phospholipase D (PLD), is essential for meiosis and spore formation. Spo14 is also required for secretion in the absence of the phosphatidylinositol/phosphatidylcholine transfer protein Sec14 (i.e., Sec14-independent secretion). In sporulating cells Spo14 is phosphorylated and relocalized within the cell. In contrast, Spo14 does not relocalize and is not phosphorylated in Sec14-independent secretion. Analysis of a partially phosphatidylinositol (4,5) bisphosphate-activated Spo14 mutant, spo14R894G, revealed that Spo14 function in Sec14-independent secretion, unlike the situation in meiosis, requires fully stimulated PLD activity. Consistent with the differential regulation of Spo14 function during sporulation and secretion, we isolated a mutant allele, spo14-S251P, the product of which is improperly phosphorylated and fails to relocalize and rescue the sporulation phenotype of homozygous spo14 diploids, but supports Sec14-independent secretion. Furthermore, we show that the N-terminal domain of Spo14 is both phosphorylated and sufficient for prospore membrane localization during sporulation. These data indicate that Spo14 phosphorylation and relocalization are essential for the process of sporulation, but dispensable for Sec14-independent secretion. Finally, we demonstrate that Spo14 phosphorylation and relocalization are initiated by nitrogen and glucose limitation and occur independently of the process of meiosis.
THE Saccharomyces cerevisiae SPO14 gene product encodes a phosphatidylinositol (4,5) bisphosphate [PtdIns(4,5)P2]-activated, phosphatidylcholine-specific phospholipase D (PLD) whose localized enzymatic activity is required for the successful completion of the meiotic divisions and is essential for spore formation (![]()
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Sec14, a phosphatidylinositol/phosphatidylcholine transfer protein, is required for Golgi secretory function (![]()
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During sporulation Spo14 function is dependent on cellular relocation. Failure of Spo14 to relocalize to the sites of prospore membrane formation, at the yeast spindle pole bodies, results in the complete absence of spores (![]()
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| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Strains, genetic manipulation, and media:
Genotypes of yeast strains are listed in Table 1. Yeast manipulations were performed and media were prepared using standard procedures (![]()
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Cells were initiated to sporulate in 2% potassium acetate after transfer from synthetic complete medium without uracil (SC-ura). Sporulation frequencies were determined after 48 hr by examining a minimum of 600 cells. Strains were grown in SD(-N) (0.17% yeast nitrogen base without ammonium sulfate or amino acids containing 2% glucose; ![]()
Plasmid construction:
spo14-S251P was generated by amplifying the nucleotide sequence corresponding to the phosphorylation domain of SPO14 open reading frame (![]()
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N centromere plasmid ME419 (![]()
The construction and characterization of fully functional triple hemagglutin (HA)-tagged and green fluorescent protein (GFP)-tagged Spo14 proteins have previously been described in full detail elsewhere (![]()
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Immunoprecipitation of HA-Spo14 and HA-spo14S251P:
HA-Spo14 proteins were immunoprecipitated using mAb 12CA5 (BabCO, Richmond, CA) as previously described in detail by ![]()
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Treatment of immunoprecipitated HA-Spo14 with shrimp alkaline phosphatase:
Immune complexes of HA-Spo14 and HA-spo14S251P subjected to treatment with shrimp alkaline phosphatase (SAP) were suspended in 15 µl phosphatase buffer (40 mM HEPES, pH 8.0, 10 mM magnesium chloride) and incubated for 30 min at 30° with 1.5 units of SAP (United States Biochemical, Cleveland) in the presence or absence of phosphatase inhibitors (10 mM sodium pyrophosphate, 5 mM EGTA, 5 mM EDTA; ![]()
Preparation of whole cell extracts:
Extracts of yeast proteins were prepared from frozen cell pellets by glass-bead homogenization (![]()
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Immunoblot analysis:
Immunoblot analysis was conducted essentially as described (![]()
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Cytology:
For the visualization of GFP-Spo14 and variants, yeast cells were fixed for 15 min at 25° with 3.7% formaldehyde as described (![]()
| RESULTS |
|---|
PLD-mediated Sec14-independent secretion is more sensitive to changes in the specific activity of Spo14:
To better understand the physiological roles of PLD in cells, we sought to differentiate the regulatory properties of Spo14 in yeast meiosis and Sec14-independent Golgi function. The demonstration that Spo14 drives Sec14-independent secretion (![]()
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To address whether changes in enzymatic activity contributed to activation in Sec14-independent secretion, we examined in more detail its regulation by PtdIns(4,5)P2. We previously demonstrated that PtdIns(4,5)P2-mediated activation of Spo14 is essential for both sporulation and Sec14-independent secretion (![]()
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The failure of spo14R894G to sustain Sec14-independent secretion at 33.5° and 37° (Fig 1) could simply reflect that this mutation rendered the protein temperature sensitive. However, spo14R894G retains its ability to partially rescue the sporulation defect of homozygous spo14 diploids at elevated temperatures of up to 35° (the maximal permissible temperature for sporulation in the SK-1 strain background). At 25° the sporulation frequencies were 90 ± 4% for SPO14 vs. 61 ± 5% for spo14-R894G, and at 35° the frequencies were 53 ± 6% for wild type vs. 34 ± 4% for spo14-R894G. Therefore, spo14R894G is not a temperature-sensitive protein.
The N terminus of Spo14 is phosphorylated during meiosis and is sufficient to localize PLD protein to the prospore membrane:
Fungal members of the PLD gene family are unique in that they have an extended N terminus (![]()
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Wild-type diploid cells containing HA-spo14-313 on a high-copy vector were grown vegetatively and induced to sporulate. Protein extracts were made, and the mobility of HA-spo14313 was determined by SDS-PAGE. The immunoblot shown in Fig 2A reveals that additional slower-migrating species of HA-spo14313 were detected only in samples prepared from sporulating cells. This result suggests that HA-spo14313 is phosphorylated during meiosis and reaffirms our previous data that demonstrated that the N terminus of Spo14 is the major site of phosphorylation (![]()
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To investigate whether the N terminus of Spo14 is sufficient to localize Spo14 to the prospore membrane, GFP-spo14-313 on a high-copy vector was introduced into wild-type diploid cells. Using confocal microscopy, the cellular localization of GFP-spo14313 was determined in formaldehyde-fixed sporulating cells. Fig 2B shows that, in common with GFP-Spo14 (Fig 5C and ![]()
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Spo14 phosphorylation and relocalization are essential for sporulation, but dispensable for Sec14-independent secretion:
The essential role for Spo14 in Sec14-independent secretion is dependent on both PLD catalytic activity and the extended N-terminal domain (![]()
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At the permissive temperature (25°) spo14S251P expressed from a low-copy (CEN) yeast plasmid allowed homozygous spo14 diploids to sporulate at near wild-type frequency (spo14-S251P 50 ± 4% vs. SPO14 62 ± 3%). However, at the restrictive temperature (33.5°) no spores were formed in spo14-S251P mutants (<0.1%). In contrast, homozygous spo14 mutants containing SPO14 sporulated at reasonable efficiency at 33.5° (28 ± 2%). Elevated temperatures are known to impede the process of meiosis and sporulation (![]()
Although Sec14-independent secretion is normally assayed by examining growth at 37°, the report that sec14-1 kes1 spo14 mutants are unable to grow at 33.5° (![]()
To examine protein phosphorylation and localization of spo14S251P at the permissive and restrictive temperatures, HA- and GFP-tagged derivatives were constructed and introduced into yeast cells. SAP treatment of immunoprecipitated HA-Spo14 results in the removal of phosphate groups from Spo14 and a decrease in the apparent molecular weight of the protein on SDS-PAGE (![]()
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One possible explanation for this data is that the serine-to-proline mutation perturbs the folding of the N terminus such that the SDS-PAGE mobility of spo14S251P is altered independently of protein phosphorylation. To test this, the electrophoretic mobility of HA-spo14S251P isolated from mitotically dividing cells was determined. During vegetative growth Spo14 is not phosphorylated to the extent to which the protein is phosphorylated during sporulation (![]()
When expressed from a high-copy yeast (2µ) plasmid, GFP-spo14S251P remains incapable of rescuing the sporulation phenotype of homozygous spo14 diploids at 33.5° (<0.1% sporulation vs. 30% ± 4% for SPO14). Thus, we examined the intracellular localization of GFP-spo14S251P 2µ within sporulating spo14 and SPO14 diploids. In spo14 cells propagated at the permissive temperature, GFP-spo14S251P localized to the prospore membrane (Fig 5A); however, at the restrictive temperature GFP-spo14S251P was unable to localize to sites of prospore membrane synthesis (Fig 5B). GFP-Spo14 staining looked normal at 33.5° in this strain background (Fig 5C), indicating that the temperature did not affect GFP-Spo14 localization and subsequent PLD-mediated prospore membrane synthesis and spore formation. Furthermore, in SPO14 cells where the prospore membrane is formed, GFP-spo14S251P failed to localize (Fig 5D). These results demonstrate that spo14S251P perturbs both phosphorylation and relocalization of the enzyme to sites of prospore membrane assembly during sporulation.
Spo14 phosphorylation does not influence in vitro PLD activity:
spo14S251P is capable of supporting at least one process absolutely dependent on Spo14 PLD activity (i.e., Sec14-independent secretion; ![]()
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Spo14 is phosphorylated independently of meiosis in response to nitrogen and carbon starvation:
As a first step toward identifying the kinase(s) responsible for Spo14 phosphorylation during sporulation, the external and genetic requirements for Spo14 phosphorylation were examined. Since catalytically deficient mutants of Spo14 are phosphorylated even when meiosis and sporulation are impaired (![]()
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The immunoblot displayed in Fig 6A shows the apparent molecular weight of immunoprecipitated HA-Spo14 proteins extracted from yeast cell cultures grown in either sporulation medium (2% potassium acetate) or SD(-N). SD(-N) does not contain a nitrogen source; however, the presence of glucose in the medium prevents the initiation of sporulation in diploid yeast (![]()
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Only diploids of opposite mating types (a/
) are capable of sporulating, while diploids of the same mating type (a/a or
/
) are incapable of initiating the meiotic program (![]()
diploid cells exposed to the same medium (Fig 6B). The only noticeable difference between the two diploid strains was a decrease in the total levels of HA-Spo14 detected in the a/a diploids. This most probably reflects the fact that diploids homozygous at the MAT locus are unable to initiate meiosis and sporulation and SPO14 is not transcriptionally induced (![]()
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| DISCUSSION |
|---|
Spo14 regulation in Sec14-independent secretion:
Spo14 function during spore formation and Sec14-independent secretion are absolutely dependent on PtdIns(4,5)P2 activation of PLD catalytic activity (![]()
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Further characterization of a partially PtdIns(4,5)P2-responsive allele of SPO14, spo14-R894G (![]()
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The role of the N-terminal extension in PLD function:
Analysis of spo14S251P indicates that phosphorylation and relocalization are essential for PLD function in meiosis. These events are tightly coupled, raising the possibility that phosphorylation triggers relocalization of the enzyme as has been demonstrated for protein kinase C translocation (![]()
The finding that spo14S251P but not spo14
N, which harbors a deletion encompassing S251 (![]()
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33.5°. We believe this is a relatively specific effect on phosphorylation and relocalization as the enzyme functions in Sec14-independent secretion and displays wild-type PLD activity. However, we cannot eliminate the possibility that introduction of a proline leads to gross alteration in the secondary structure of the protein and perturbs additional properties of the enzyme.
Alignment of the three fungal PLDs sequenced to dateSpo14, CaPLD (Candida albicans PLD; ![]()
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Spo14 kinases:
Phosphorylation appears essential for Spo14 function during meiosis and sporulation. Here we report that the kinase(s) responsible for Spo14 phosphorylation are responsive to both nitrogen and glucose limitation. Since it is the absence of extracellular nitrogen and the presence of a nonfermentable carbon source that provokes S. cerevisiae to form spores, budding yeast appear to have harnessed a nutritional cue to activate a kinase (or kinases) responsible for regulating the localization of a PLD activity essential for meiosis and sporulation. The identity of the intracellular signaling pathways that respond to nitrogen and carbon source availability and the kinases responsible for phosphorylating Spo14 merit further study.
We have previously noted that overexpression of Spo14 during sporulation does not result in a concurrent increase in the number of asci formed (![]()
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In summary, Spo14 is differentially regulated during sporulation and Sec14-independent secretion. This result is in keeping with our recent work demonstrating that the function of Spo14 is different during sporulation and secretion (![]()
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| FOOTNOTES |
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1 Present address: Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093-0668. ![]()
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
We thank Dr. Vytas Bankaitis (State University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill) for sec14 strains. We acknowledge Drs. Vicki Sciorra (University of California, San Diego), Aaron Neiman, and James Trimmer (State University of New York at Stony Brook) for helpful comments during the writing of this article. Michelle Iwamoto is also gratefully acknowledged for facilitating the completion of this work. This work was supported by an American Cancer Society grant (99-122-01-MBCecht.
Manuscript received November 8, 2001; Accepted for publication January 15, 2002.
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