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J. Biol. Chem., Vol. 281, Issue 49, 37980-37992, December 8, 2006
Saccharomyces cerevisiae Sit4 Phosphatase Is Active Irrespective of the Nitrogen Source Provided, and Gln3 Phosphorylation Levels Become Nitrogen Source-responsive in a sit4-deleted Strain*
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| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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Two pivotal observations opened a new era of investigation into the mechanisms regulating Gln3 function. (i) During times of high NCR, GATA sequences (binding sites for Gln3 and Gat1/Nil1) in the promoter of an NCR-sensitive gene (CAN1) are unoccupied by Gln3 and Gat1, and thus available to serve as surrogate TATA-binding protein (TBP) binding sites (12). Gln3 and Gat1 occupancy of CAN1 GATA sequences correlates with Gln3 and Gat1 localization to the cytoplasm of cells in which NCR-sensitive transcription is low, and to their nuclei when expression is high (12, 13). (ii) Treating YPD-grown wildtype cells with rapamycin induces Gln3 dephosphorylation, Gln3 nuclear localization and high level NCR-sensitive transcription. In contrast, Gln3 is phosphorylated, localizes to the cytoplasm, and NCR-sensitive transcription is low in similarly grown, untreated cells (14-17).
The above correlations along with the protein-protein association and phosphorylation relationships between Tor1,2, Tap42, Tip41, Sit4, and Sit4-associated proteins (Saps), led to a proposal describing Tor1,2 regulation of Gln3 phosphorylation via control of the type 2A-related protein phosphatases, Sit4 and/or Pph3 (Fig. 1) (5, 14-22). In bare outline, the model posits that signals of nitrogen excess (glutamine or a metabolite of it) are sensed by Tor1,2, which become active and phosphorylate Tap42 and/or Tip41 (14, 17-22). The outcome of these phosphorylations is the association of Tap42 with Sit4, thereby inactivating the phosphatase (18-20). In this inactive form, Sit4 is unable to dephosphorylate Gln3, resulting in its sequestration in the cytoplasm as a Gln3·Ure2 complex (Fig. 1) (14, 17). When cells are treated with rapamycin, or the glutamine synthetase inhibitor, methionine sulfoximine (Msx), which inhibits the synthesis of glutamine, Tor1,2 are inhibited and cease phosphorylating Tap42. Dephosphorylated Tap42 dissociates from Sit4 thereby allowing Sit4 to be active and dephosphorylate Gln3, resulting in or permitting Gln3 to dissociate from Ure2 and enter the nucleus (14, 17).
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Although impressive progress has been made in identifying additional proteins involved in Tor1,2 global influence on cellular processes, several observations do not fit comfortably with expectations generated by the model (23). Among them are: (i) In genetic studies, Tap42 behaves more like a positive than a negative regulator of Sit4 (18). (ii) Sit4 association with Tap42 is required for Sit4 activity (18, 24, 25). (iii) Detectable Gln3-Myc13 phosphorylation and intracellular localization do not correlate with one another in good versus poor nitrogen sources, during nitrogen starvation, following Msx treatment, and beyond 30 min of rapamycin treatment (26). (iv) Msx increases Gln3-Myc13 phosphorylation whereas rapamycin decreases it even though both inhibitors elicit nuclear localization of Gln3-Myc13 (27).
As noted in Fig. 1, type 2A-related Sit4 (and Pph3) protein phosphatase activities have been proposed to directly regulate Gln3 phosphorylation and localization (14, 17, 22). The correlations upon which this conclusion rests are the failure of Gln3 dephosphorylation, nuclear localization, and NCR-sensitive transcription to occur in YPD-grown, rapamycin-treated sit4 cells. There are, however, several important gaps in our understanding of Sit4 participation in the Tor1,2 control pathway regulating Gln3: (i) Is Sit4 required for Gln3 dephosphorylation and/or nuclear accumulation of Gln3 when cells are provided with a poor nitrogen source or treated with Msx?, (ii) Is Sit4 inactive under conditions where Gln3 is restricted to the cytoplasm (i.e. nitrogen excess)? (iii) What are the relative requirements of Sit4 and Pph3 for Gln3 dephosphorylation and nuclear localization in response to growth with various nitrogen sources, rapamycin and Msx treatment? (iv) Does the Tap42-Sit4-requirement for Gln3 regulation found in some instances but not others reflect strain-specific differences when experiments are performed under identical conditions (14, 15)?
To fill in some of the gaps in our understanding of type 2A-related phosphatases and their relationship to Gln3 regulation, we performed a systematic analysis of Gln3 phosphorylation and intracellular localization, comparing these parameters in wild type, single and double sit4 and pph3 mutant cells. Our data demonstrate that: (i) Sit4 is active with respect to Gln3-Myc13 phosphorylation levels under conditions of excess nitrogen in which Tor1,2 are active, (ii) Gln3-Myc13 phosphorylation is nitrogen source-dependent in a sit4
, indicating that Sit4 activity is unlikely to be the major determinant responsible for nitrogen-dependent changes in Gln3-Myc13 phosphorylation, (iii) rapamycin-induced alteration of Gln3-Myc13 phosphorylation levels requires Sit4, whereas alterations elicited by Msx or the nitrogen source do not, (iv) the extent of the Sit4 requirement for Msx- and rapamycin-induced nuclear localization of Gln3-Myc13 is nitrogen source-dependent, (v) the Sit4 requirement for nuclear Gln3-Myc13 localization is strain dependent, and (vi) demonstrable Pph3 influence on Gln3 regulation was minimal compared with that of Sit4.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Northern Blot AnalysisTotal RNA was extracted as described earlier (34) and purified using the RNeasy kit (Qiagen). Northern blot analysis was performed as described by Foury and Talibi (35). DIG-DNA probes of about 500 bp were generated by PCR, using primers: 5'-CATAACCAGTTGGTGAGCCC-3' and 5'-ACCCCCGTTACTGTATGTGG-3' for SIT4, 5'-TGGGCGATTTTGTGGATAGG-3' and 5'-CTGTCACTAATCCACCGTCG-3' for PPH3, 5'-AAACAGCAAGAAAGTCCACTGG-3' and 5'-ACCTCTTAATCTTCTAGCCAAC-3' for HHT1, and labeled using a PCR DIG (digoxigenin) probe synthesis kit (Roche Applied Science). Hybridizations were carried out according to standard procedures (36). Detection of DIG-labeled nucleic acids was performed by enzyme immunoassay with luminescence following the suppliers procedure (Roche Applied Science). The Hybond-N+ nylon membranes were exposed 120 min and analyzed with a chemiluminescence camera (Chemi-Smart from Vilbert-Lourmat).
Western Blot AnalysisCells were harvested by the filtration method of Tate et al. (27), and crude cell extracts prepared as described by Cox et al. (26). As noted earlier (27), we prefer to assess the relative amounts of various Gln3-Myc13 species within a particular lane and then compare the pattern of Gln3-Myc13 distribution with that observed in another lane, rather than quantitatively comparing the amounts of particular Gln3-Myc13 species observed in one lane with those in another. Further, although we occasionally compared the overall patterns of data observed in one Western blot to that of another, detailed comparisons were restricted to lane profiles contained within a single Western blot membrane unless specifically indicated otherwise.
Indirect Immunofluorescence MicroscopyCell preparation and assay of Gln3-Myc13 by indirect immunofluorescence was initially performed as described earlier (31, 37). Although this method (used in Fig. 2 of this text and Fig. S1 of the supplemental materials) performs well for wild-type strains, it was inadequate for analysis of Gln3-Myc13 intracellular distribution in phosphatase mutants. sit4
, and to a lesser extent pph3
, mutants possess characteristics that, if not circumvented, seriously compromise analysis of Gln3-Myc13 intracellular distribution. Gln3-Myc13 and DAPI stained material (DNA) were asymmetrically distributed to the daughters and mothers, respectively, of sit4
cells with small to medium sized buds (Fig. 2). The frequency of this morphology was increased by rapamycin treatment. This phenomenon and data suggesting that it derives from differential sensitivity of mother and daughter cells walls to zymolyase digestion as well as differential affinity for lysine-coated slides are described under supplemental materials. Therefore, we used a modified form of another method (38) in all but Fig. 2. The modifications were: (i) fixation in the growth medium for 60 min, (ii) addition of
-mercaptoethanol (20 mM final concentration) to the zymolyase digestion mixture, and (iii) increased digestion of mutant cells (34-37 min) and decreased digestion (15-17 min) for the wild type. Digesting wild type cells for the same length of time as the sit4
resulted in significant degradation of cell integrity.
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| RESULTS |
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cultures were grown in YNB-glutamine medium in the presence and absence of rapamycin. As expected, and previously shown by multiple laboratories, rapamycin treatment elicited Gln3-Myc13 dephosphorylation in wild-type cells (Fig. 3A, lanes A versus D). In sit4
cultures, two unexpected results were observed: (i) Sit4 was clearly active in cells provided with a good nitrogen source, because deleting SIT4 increased Gln3-Myc13 phosphorylation relative to wild type (Fig. 3A, lanes A versus B). (ii) Rapamycin induced partial Gln3-Myc13 dephosphorylation in a sit4
(Fig. 3A, lanes B versus C), indicating that more than Sit4 alone was responsible for rapamycin-induced dephosphorylation. Together, these data indicated that type 2A phosphatase participation in the regulation of Gln3 phosphorylation was likely more complicated or different than previously reported and motivated a more thorough investigation. Most importantly, these data showed that Sit4 is active in glutamine-grown cells in which Tor1,2 were posited to actively phosphorylate Tap42 (and/or Tip41), thereby bringing about inhibition of Sit4 protein phosphatase.
Influence of Sit4 and Pph3 Phosphatase on Steady State Levels of SIT4 and PPH3 mRNAPrevious reports of both Pph3 and Sit4 functioning in rapamycin-induced Gln3 dephosphorylation and localization (14, 17, 22), prompted us to query whether the expression of their cognate genes was subject to Tor1,2 or NCR-sensitive regulation. Therefore, we assayed SIT4 and PPH3 expression in wild type, sit4
, and pph3
strains cultured under multiple conditions: the presence and absence of rapamycin (in glutamine medium) or Msx (in ammonia medium), and following transfer from glutamine to proline or nitrogen-free medium. As shown in Fig. 3B, neither SIT4 nor PPH3 expression appeared to exhibit a response to the nitrogen source provided. As expected, there was no expression when the genes themselves were deleted (Fig. 3B).
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mutants did not significantly differ from that in wild type (Fig. 4, column pph3
). In contrast, Gln3-Myc13 was predominantly cytoplasmic in sit4
cells treated with rapamycin, transferred from glutamine to proline- or nitrogen-free medium, and grown with proline as sole nitrogen source (Fig. 4, column sit4
). Results obtained with the sit4
pph3
double mutant were similar to those observed with sit4
alone (data not shown). These data, at face value, supported the earlier contention that Sit4 was required for nuclear accumulation of Gln3-Myc13 when nitrogen was limiting or cells were treated with rapamycin. Contrasting Phosphatase Requirements for Nuclear Localization of Gln3-Myc13 in Response to Rapamycin and Msx TreatmentCareful inspection of many images such as those in Fig. 4 suggested the method of classification we had been using might be too crude to describe fully what occurred in response to various experimental perturbations. There were times when Gln3-Myc13 was neither completely nuclear nor cytoplasmic, i.e. one could see Gln3-Myc13 fluorescence in both cellular compartments. Therefore, we increased the resolution of our measurements by introducing a third scoring category, nuclear-cytoplasmic localization. Criteria used to place cells in each of the three categories were as follows: (i) cells in which Gln3-Myc13 could only be detected in the cytoplasm were scored cytoplasmic, (ii) those in which only nuclear localization was detected were scored nuclear, and (iii) those in which staining could be clearly detected in both compartments were scored nuclear-cytoplasmic. The third category was clearly subjective. However, this potential for subjectivity did not prove to be problematic as shown by evaluation of the assay under "Materials and Methods." Success and reliability of the assay most required consistency in scoring since it was the accurate and reproducible detection of changes in the patterns of Gln3-Myc13 distribution among the cellular compartments that is most critical.
Using these scoring criteria, we assayed Gln3-Myc13 intracellular localization in wild type and three isogenic phosphatase defective mutants. Gln3-Myc13 was cytoplasmic in all glutamine-grown wild-type cells (Fig. 5A, red bar, W.T.). Following rapamycin treatment, Gln3-Myc13 became nuclear-cytoplasmic (yellow bar) in about 80% of the cells. In the remaining cells, Gln3-Myc13 was about equally distributed between the nuclear (green bar) and cytoplasmic (red bar) compartments (Fig. 5A, W.T.). The distribution shifted toward a greater nuclear localization of Gln3-Myc13 when glutamine-grown cultures were transferred to minimal-proline or nitrogen-free medium (Fig. 5A, W.T.). However, Gln3-Myc13 was still cytoplasmic in about 20% of the cells following nitrogen starvation, which may have resulted from insufficient time being allowed for the nitrogen reserves of these cells to be completely exhausted before they were harvested.
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and pph3
single and sit4
pph3
double mutants were subjected to the same perturbations as the wild type, quite unambiguous phenotypes were observed. The distribution of Gln3-Myc13 in a pph3
was nearly indistinguishable from wild type irrespective of the condition tested (Fig. 5A). In contrast, Gln3-Myc13 was restricted to the cytoplasm of both sit4
and sit4
pph3
cells cultured under comparable conditions. This suggested, in agreement with other reports, that Sit4 was required for nuclear localization of Gln3-Myc13 in cells exposed to these three conditions. However, the Sit4 requirement was nearly absent when analogous experiments were performed with the metabolic inhibitor, Msx. As shown in Fig. 5B, Gln3-Myc13 was largely cytoplasmic in ammoniagrown cultures, but was nuclear and/or nuclear-cytoplasmic in all but a few sit4
or sit4
pph3
mutant cells following Msx treatment. Again, as seen in Fig. 5A, the Gln3-Myc13 intracellular distribution profile in a pph3
was indistinguishable from that of wild type (Fig. 5B). These data demonstrated that, although treating cells with rapamycin or Msx had been reported to have similar inhibitory effects on Tor1,2 activity (22, 27), nuclear localization of Gln3-Myc13 did not possess a Sit4 or Pph3 requirement following Msx treatment clearly distinguishing it from the response to rapamycin.
Sit4 Requirement of Gln3-Myc13 Localization Is Nitrogen SourcedependentThe Gln3-Myc13 distribution data above were difficult to rectify with the idea that Sit4, performed the requisite dephosphorylation of Gln3 in preparation for its transport into the nucleus. Therefore, we approached the putative Sit4 requirement from a different direction. If Sit4 functioned downstream of the nitrogen supply signal in the Gln3 regulatory pathway, then the response to both rapamycin and Msx treatment in sit4 mutants should be independent of the nitrogen source provided. If, on the other hand, the nitrogen supply signal was situated downstream of Sit4, or in another regulatory pathway, then the nitrogen source provided to the cells would be expected to influence Gln3 localization in wild-type and sit4
cells.
To investigate these possibilities, we determined Gln3-Myc13 localization, following rapamycin or Msx treatment in cultures provided with nitrogen sources ranging from good to poor: glutamine, YPD, ammonia, and proline (Fig. 6, A-D). Gln3-Myc13 was completely cytoplasmic in glutamine medium and this distribution was altered only by rapamycin treatment which elicited Sit4-dependent, nuclear-cytoplasmic localization in most cells (Fig. 6A). Msx treatment failed to elicit a response in glutamine-grown cells concurring with earlier reports (21, 27). Our experiments do not distinguish whether this result occurred because (i) providing glutamine as the nitrogen source eliminates the need for Msx-inhibited glutamine synthetase, and/or (ii) glutamine provided in the medium inhibits Msx uptake.
In contrast, Gln3-Myc13 localization successively shifted in Msx-treated cells from cytoplasmic to nuclear-cytoplasmic to nuclear first in the wild type and then in the sit4
as the nitrogen source changed from glutamine (Fig. 6A) to YPD (Fig. 6B) to ammonia (Fig. 6C) to proline (Fig. 6D). Note that a similar but less pronounced shift occurred after rapamycin treatment in ammonia-versus proline-grown cells (Fig. 6, C and D). The same results were observed in the sit4
pph3
double mutant (Fig. 6E). These data suggested that Msx and rapamycin-induced Gln3-Myc13 nuclear localization exhibited a nitrogen source-dependent Sit4 requirement, which paralleled that of NCR, i.e. the more severe the NCR, the greater the Sit4-requirement. However, even in proline-grown cells, a limited Sit4-requirement remained (Fig. 6D, Gln3-Myc13 was cytoplasmic in
37% of the rapamycin-treated cells), which decreased further if pph3 was also deleted (Fig. 6E, Gln3-Myc13 was cytoplasmic in
26% of the rapamycin-treated cells).
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strains were independent of the genetic background (Fig. 7A). In YNB-ammonia medium, Gln3-Myc13 localization shifted from the cytoplasm to the nuclei of Msx-treated cells in both genetic backgrounds (Fig. 7B). Additionally, Gln3-Myc13 was more nuclear-cytoplasmic in untreated ammonia-grown BY4709-derived than TB123-derived cells. An even more striking difference occurred when cells were grown in YNB-proline medium (Fig. 7C). In a TB123 genetic background, Gln3-Myc13 localization in proline medium required Sit4, whereas in a BY4709 background no such requirement was observed.
A clear difference between the TB123 and BY4709 genetic backgrounds is an rme1 mutation present in the former strain but not in the latter. To determine whether this mutation accounted for the two strains strikingly different Sit4 requirements with proline as nitrogen source, we transformed TB123 and sit4
pph3
(FV4) strains with CEN-plasmid yCplac22-RME1. Untransformed strains and corresponding transformants were grown in glutamine, glutamine + rapamycin, and proline media and Gln3-Myc13 localization measured. Gln3-Myc13 localization in the transformants was not detectably different from that observed in the untransformed recipients (data not shown). These observations argued that the rme1 mutation did not account for differing Gln3-Myc13 distributions observed in the two genetic backgrounds.
Together, data presented above demonstrate the extent to which Sit4 is required for inhibitor-induced nuclear localization of Gln3-Myc13 qualitatively correlates with the degree of NCR elicited by the nitrogen source provided to the cells. The Sit4 requirement was greater with repressive nitrogen sources than with those that were non-repressive. This also occurs for rapamycin-induced Gln3-Myc13 nuclear localization. At face value, the data are more consistent with the suggestion that the cellular signal generated in response to its nitrogen supply is situated at or below the level of Sit4 function because a poor nitrogen source, such as proline, decreased and completely bypassed the requirement for Sit4 in the TB123 and BY4709 genetic backgrounds, respectively. Alternatively, Sit4 and the nitrogen signal that influenced Gln3 localization derived from separate branches of the regulatory pathway.
Gln3-Myc13 Phosphorylation/Dephosphorylation in Wild Type and Type 2A-related Phosphatase-defective StrainsData in Fig. 3 demonstrated that Sit4 is clearly active and influences Gln3-Myc13 dephosphorylation levels even in cultures growing with a good nitrogen source, glutamine. We reasoned that deleting the cognate gene of an enzyme whose activity was reported to be inactivated in the model describing Tor1,2 regulation of Gln3 would not be expected, in the most straightforward case, to detectably affect Gln3-Myc13 phosphorylation levels. This reasoning and the Gln3-Myc13 nitrogen source-dependent distribution data described above prompted us to determine the relationship between Gln3-Myc13 localization, Gln3-Myc13 phosphorylation, and the nitrogen source provided to wild-type and mutant cells.
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(TB123 genetic background) irrespective of the nitrogen source provided (Fig. 8A). Only in proline medium was Gln3-Myc13 minimally (
10%) nuclear-cytoplasmic. In contrast, Gln3-Myc13 phosphorylation varied greatly in the sit4
(Fig. 8B). It was lowest in ammonia-(lane C) or proline-(lane B) grown sit4
cells and reached its highest levels with glutamine (lane D) or YPD (lane E) as nitrogen source (Fig. 8B). The relationship was just opposite that observed when a parallel experiment was performed several years ago using wild-type cells (26). In that case, Gln3-Myc13 intracellular localization ranged from completely cytoplasmic with glutamine to nuclear with proline, while Gln3-Myc13 was almost uniformly phosphorylated (Fig. 3 and Ref. 26). Although Gln3-Myc13 phosphorylation changed with the nitrogen source in a sit4
, these changes did not correlate with whether the nitrogen source was a good or poor one. If it had, then the Gln3-Myc13 phosphorylation profile observed with ammonia as nitrogen source should have been more similar to that observed with glutamine than with proline (Fig. 8B).
The above data convincingly demonstrated Gln3-Myc13 was phosphorylated to different extents in sit4
cells provided with various nitrogen sources, but did not distinguish whether it was sit4
or the nitrogen source that altered Gln3-Myc13 phosphorylation. Therefore, we compared Gln3-Myc13 phosphorylation in wild-type and sit4
cells cultured under various conditions. Deletion of SIT4 increased Gln3-Myc13 phosphorylation irrespective of the nitrogen source provided (Fig. 9, A-D, lanes A and B, note the black dots between lanes A and B). These effects appeared in one or both of two ways: (i) disappearance of a faster migrating species and/or appearance of a slower migrating Gln3-Myc13 species (Fig. 9, A, B, and D, lanes A and B), or (ii) a shift in the relative amounts of Gln3-Myc13 species, with a slower mobility species increasing and the faster migrating species decreasing (Fig. 9, A, B, and D).
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. If both Msx and rapamycin act at or above the level of Tor1,2 in the regulatory pathway (22), and hence above the level of Sit4 dephosphorylation of Gln3-Myc13 (14) then the loss of Sit4 should eliminate responses to the inhibitor-generated signals in parallel and irrespective of the nitrogen source provided. On the other hand, if this is not the case, loss of Sit4 would not be expected to cause such uniform changes in Gln3-Myc13 phosphorylation levels. Treating a sit4
with Msx increased Gln3-Myc13 phosphorylation in both ammonia- and proline-grown cells (Fig. 9, A and B, lanes B and C). Increased Gln3-Myc13 phosphorylation was not observed with YPD- or glutamine-grown sit4
cells (Fig. 9, C and D, lanes B and C). When evaluating these results, however, it is important to keep two things in mind: (i) Msx is reported (and we have confirmed) to be ineffective in wild type, glutamine-grown cells (22, 27). On the other hand, the inhibitor shifted Gln3-Myc13 localization from cytoplasmic to nuclearcytoplasmic and nuclear in wild type YPD-grown cells indicating that it did function in this medium. (ii) Gln3-Myc13 was already highly phosphorylated in glutamine and YPD grown cells. Such high levels of Gln3-Myc13 phosphorylation at the outset may have masked whatever effects that might have occurred when the ability to dephosphorylate Gln3-Myc13 was lost in the sit4
. In sum, the level of Gln3-Myc13 phosphorylation either remained the same or increased following Msx treatment of a sit4
. This compares with increased Gln3-Myc13 phosphorylation observed upon Msx treatment of wild-type cells regardless of the nitrogen source.
The responses of Gln3-Myc13 phosphorylation in rapamycin-treated, sit4
cells did not parallel the effects described above. First, in the sit4
, rapamycin did not elicit as extensive dephosphorylation of Gln3-Myc13 as in wild-type cells, where treating cells with rapamycin or cell extracts with calf intestinal alkaline phosphatase yield similarly dephosphorylated Gln3-Myc13 species (Fig. 4A of Ref. 26). This is easily observed comparing the wild type and sit4
Gln3-Myc13 profiles (Fig. 9, B-D, lanes D and E). On the other hand, rapamycin clearly caused some Gln3-Myc13 dephosphorylation in YPD- and glutaminegrown sit4
cells (Fig. 9, C and D, lanes B and D). Rapamycin-induced Gln3-Myc13 dephosphorylation was not apparent in an ammonia-grown sit4
(Fig. 9B, lanes B and D), and Gln3-Myc13 phosphorylation actually increased in proline-grown sit4
as previously observed in wild-type cells (Fig. 9A, lanes B and D and in Fig. 4D of Ref. 27). In sum, Gln3-Myc13 phosphorylation following rapamycin treatment decreased, remained unchanged, or increased depending upon the nitrogen source used.
It was not difficult to envision that Gln3-Myc13 dephosphorylation noted above in a sit4
might derive from the closely related Pph3 phosphatase. To evaluate this possibility we assayed Gln3-Myc13 phosphorylation in pph3
single and sit4
pph3
double mutants. As shown in Fig. 10A, the Gln3-Myc13 phosphorylation profiles in untreated as well as rapamycin- and Msx-treated pph3
cells were indistinguishable from wild type. This parallels the results observed with Gln3-Myc13 intracellular localization (Fig. 5). In addition, the sit4
pph3
double mutant possessed a phenotype that was indistinguishable from that of a sit4
both with respect to the effects elicited by nitrogen source and the two inhibitors (Fig. 10B).
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cells prompted us to ascertain whether these differences correlated with parallel variations in Gln3-Myc13 phosphorylation. The overall Gln3-Myc13 phosphorylation profiles were similar, though not identical in wild-type cells from a TB123 versus BY4709 genetic background (Fig. 10C). There was overall greater Gln3-Myc13 phosphorylation in the BY4709 background. This is observed as: (i) a slight increase in the upper-most and decrease in the lower-most Gln3-Myc13 species in ammonia-grown FV017 (BY4709) cells (Fig. 10C, lanes E versus F), or (ii) the appearance of a slower migrating species (Fig. 10C, lanes A versus B), and a decrease in the fastest migrating species in glutamine-grown BY4709 cells (lanes A and B) relative to results in the TB123 background. Similarly, rapamycin induced Gln3-Myc13 dephosphorylation in FV017 (BY4709), but not to the level observed earlier for TB123. Compare the relative positions of Gln3-Myc13 species in Fig. 9D, lanes E and F with those in Fig. 10C, lanes A and C, i.e. the positions in TB123 + rapamycin (Fig. 9) and FV017 + rapamycin (Fig. 10) relative to the positions in untreated TB123. The increased percentage of untreated, ammonia-grown FV017 (BY4709) cells containing nuclear-cytoplasmic Gln3-Myc13 relative to TB123 (Fig. 7B) was not paralleled by decreased Gln3-Myc13 phosphorylation as would be expected from the current model describing Tor1,2 regulation of Gln3. If anything, Gln3-Myc13 phosphorylation remained the same or increased modestly in the BY4709 background (Fig 10C, lanes A and B and E and F).
Changes in Gln3-Myc13 phosphorylation resulting from the deletion of SIT4 in the BY4709 genetic background were the same as those in the TB123 background. However, this experiment again emphasized another difference in the behavior of Gln3-Myc13 in the two genetic backgrounds, i.e. a significant decrease in the amount of detectable Gln3-Myc13 observed in ammonia-grown BY4709 wild-type and sit4
cells. This necessitated the use of longer exposures during development of the Western blot depicted in Fig. 10D (lanes D-F) even though all six lanes were derived from a single membrane. A similarly diminished Gln3-Myc13 signal also occurred in Fig. 10C, lanes D and E.
Our last objective was to compare the phosphorylation profiles of proline-grown sit4
cells in the TB123 and BY4709 genetic backgrounds, because nuclear localization of Gln3-Myc13 was Sit4-dependent in the former and Sit4-independent in the latter (Fig. 7C). To this end, we repeated the experiment described in Fig. 9A using wild-type (FV017) and sit4
(FV1) strains. Unfortunately, the Gln3-Myc13 signals were so diminished and of such poor quality that our observations can be considered only tentative at best. That said, we were unable to detect a difference between the phosphorylation of Gln3-Myc13 in the proline-grown wild type (FV017) and sit4
(FV1) strains. We could, however, detect modestly increased Gln3-Myc13 phosphorylation upon addition of rapamycin to the sit4
culture similar to that observed in the TB123 genetic background in Fig. 9A, lanes B and D (data not shown). In sum, although there were modest differences in the phosphorylation profiles observed in the TB123 and BY4709 genetic backgrounds, none of them appeared as drastic as the differences observed in intracellular Gln3-Myc13 distribution in the two strains.
| DISCUSSION |
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were greatest with good nitrogen sources such as glutamine or in YPD medium, conditions where Sit4 would have been expected to be least active and therefore a sit4
to have the least effect. These results are just opposite of predictions emanating from the idea that Tor1,2, Tap42, and/or Tip41 control Gln3 phosphorylation and localization by regulating Sit4 activity (14, 20).
A second experimental finding, which pointed to a less direct role for Sit4 in Gln3 regulation, was its declining requirement for rapamycin- and Msx-induced nuclear Gln3 localization in response to the quality of the nitrogen source, i.e. good versus poor (Fig. 6). Under the current view of Tor1,2 control, Sit4 is posited to be most active following loss of the positive nitrogen signal activating Tor1,2. The positive signal (glutamine or one of its metabolites) is lost when cells are provided with a poor nitrogen source, treating them with Msx, or inhibiting Tor1,2 itself with rapamycin. Therefore, Sit4 activity, and hence its requirement for nuclear Gln3-Myc13 localization, should increase as the quality of available nitrogen decreases. In contrast to these predictions, the Sit4 requirement for Msx-induced nuclear localization of Gln3 disappears as one moves from YPD to ammonia or proline media. Analogously, the Sit4-requirement is significantly reduced for rapamycin-induced nuclear Gln3 localization in proline-grown cells, i.e. Gln3 is nuclear-cytoplasmic or nuclear in the majority of rapamycin-treated sit4
(
60%) or sit4
pph3
(
75%) cells (Fig. 6, D and E). In other words, the poorer the nitrogen source the less Sit4 is required for nuclear Gln3-Myc13 localization.
Our data, describing a relationship between nitrogen source, strain background, and Sit4 requirement for Gln3-Myc13 localization, are consistent with some studies finding a Tap42-Sit4 requirement for Gln3 control (14), whereas others do not (15). We observed, for example, that Sit4 is necessary for Gln3 to accumulate in the nuclei of proline-grown cells in the TB123 genetic background, but not for BY4709-derived cells (Fig. 7C). Correlating with this loss of requirement, BY4709-derived FV017 is less NCR-sensitive than TB123 with at least ammonia as nitrogen source. Whether this correlation derives from a cause-effect relationship between the strains and nitrogen source provided or alternatively from an unrelated event, cannot be ascertained at present. Further, existing data do not permit us to evaluate whether the lack of difference in Gln3-Myc13 phosphorylation profiles observed for the two strains derives from phosphorylation/dephosphorylation events that might exist, but are not detected in a total phosphorylation profile.
The decreasing Sit4 requirement in glutamine versus ammonia versus proline medium adds to a growing list of situations in which the effects of the nitrogen source and NCR control appear to feed into the regulation of Gln3 downstream of Tor1,2 and its inhibition by rapamycin. This relation of the nitrogen signal to Tor1,2 is also consistent with the observations that Sit4 is not required for Msx-induced nuclear localization of Gln3-Myc13. They join the earlier observation that Tor1,2 control of retrograde gene expression is also nitrogen source-dependent in that the ability of rapamycin to induce retrograde gene expression (CIT2 is the reporter) occurs with glutamine as nitrogen source, but not proline (28, 40). The separability of retrograde regulation from Tor1,2 activity has been recently confirmed by Giannattasio et al. (39). It is important to note, however, that while these observations support the contention of a nitrogen source-derived signal feeding into the Gln3 regulatory pathway downstream of the rapamycin-inhibited step, they do not exclude a more complicated possibility hypothesizing the existence of two nitrogen signals, one impinging on regulation above the rapamycin-inhibited step and the other below it.
Our investigations identify an interesting set of relationships that offer insights into the nitrogen-responsive control pathway. Earlier studies reported the only time that demonstrable dephosphorylation of Gln3-Myc13 correlated with its nuclear localization was shortly after treating cells with rapamycin (26). In ammonia- or glutamine-grown wild-type cells, Gln3-Myc13 was cytoplasmic and in proline-grown cells it was nuclear. Yet Gln3-Myc13 was almost uniformly phosphorylated; Gln3-Myc13 was slightly more phosphorylated with proline than with ammonia or glutamine as nitrogen source (26, 27). In present studies, just the opposite occurred, i.e. Gln3-Myc13 was cytoplasmic in the sit4 mutant regardless of whether the nitrogen source was good or poor (Fig. 8). However, Gln3-Myc13 phosphorylation levels responded markedly to the nitrogen source provided. In other words, deleting SIT4 unmasked the response of Gln3-Myc13 phosphorylation to the nitrogen source. This is the first time Gln3 phosphorylation has been shown to be associated with a nitrogen source provided to the cells. If Sit4 was the molecule responsible for dephosphorylating Gln3-Myc13 in response to nitrogen source, then the nitrogen source-dependent signal would a priori have been expected to be lost when SIT4 was deleted. This suggests that the nitrogen source specificity of NCR control is probably more directly connected to the response of one or more protein kinases responsible for Gln3-Myc13 phosphorylation than to the type 2A-related protein phosphatases (Sit4 and Pph3).
By this reasoning, Gln3 phosphorylation would occur in the presence of nitrogen source-independent Sit4 phosphatase activity, the latter buffering or masking the effects of nitrogen source-responsive phosphorylation from being observed. Here, type 2A-related phosphatases rather than generating the signal that results in Gln3-Myc13 accumulating in the nucleus, would serve a stabilizing role to reset the system in preparation to receive such signals. In this model, the observed Gln3-Myc13 phosphorylation would derive from the ratio of kinase to phosphatase activities acting on Gln3, the former being the one predominantly modulated by the nitrogen source provided.
Although the above ideas would explain Gln3 phosphorylation and localization in the sit4
, present data are insufficient to provide details of the precise link(s) between the nitrogen source, observable Gln3 phosphorylation levels and NCR-sensitive transcription. For example, they do not exclude the possibility that a nitrogen source may regulate NCR-sensitive transcription via influencing Gln3 binding to the DNA in addition to controlling its intracellular localization. Further, they do not identify the physiological advantage gained when functional Sit4 brings Gln3-Myc13 phosphorylation to the same level irrespective of the nitrogen source provided and the intracellular localization of Gln3-Myc13. And finally, they are also insufficient to distinguish the possibility that Gln3-Myc13 phosphorylation increases in a sit4
because Sit4 phosphatase is no longer dephosphorylating Gln3-Myc13 from the alternative that loss of Sit4 activity increases protein kinase activity which in turn increases Gln3-Myc13 phosphorylation.
Data presented in Fig. 9 also indicate that loss of Sit4 and Pph3 activities are not sufficient to abrogate the influence of Tor1,2 on Gln3-Myc13 phosphorylation level. Addition of rapamycin to YPD-glutamine- or ammonia-grown sit4
cells clearly decreases Gln3-Myc13 phosphorylation. The most likely candidates to mediate this dephosphorylation are Pph21 and Pph22 (19, 26, 39). Although we have not yet investigated the roles of Pph21 and Pph22 in the regulation of Gln3 because of technical difficulties derived from the severe growth defect and other difficult phenotypes of the pph21,22 mutations, the relationships are unlikely to be straightforward. One expression of this expectation is the fact that although rapamycin induced dephosphorylation of Gln3-Myc13 in the sit4
, i.e. a strain in which Pph3, Pph21 and Pph22 are all functional, it did not induce its nuclear localization with any of the good nitrogen sources. Further, treating cells with Msx increases Gln3-Myc13 phosphorylation and yet results in nuclear localization of Gln3-Myc13 (27).
| FOOTNOTES |
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The on-line version of this article (available at http://www.jbc.org) contains supplemental Fig. S1. ![]()
1 To whom correspondence should be addressed: Dept. of Molecular Sciences, University of Tennessee, Memphis, TN 38163. Tel.: 901-448-6179; Fax: 901-448-8462; E-mail: tcooper{at}utmem.edu.
2 The abbreviations used are: NCR, nitrogen catabolite repression; Msx, L-methionine sulfoximine; DAPI, 4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole. ![]()
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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