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BI
SKI1
O
ADEK1
1 Department of Genetics, Institute of Biochemistry and Biophysics, Polish Academy of Sciences (PAS) , 02-106 Warsaw, Poland
2 Laboratoire de Génétique Moléculaire de la Traduction, Institut de Génétique et Microbiologie, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS) UMR 8621, 91405 Orsay Cedex, France
3 Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Pennsylvania State University College of Medicine, Hershey, Pennsylvania 17033, USA
Reprint requests to: Teresa
o
dek, Department of Genetics, Institute of Biochemistry and Biophysics, PAS, Pawi
skiego 5A, 02-106 Warsaw, Poland; e-mail: teresa{at}ibb.waw.pl; fax: 4822-6584636.
| ABSTRACT |
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Keywords: yeast; Rsp5 ubiquitin ligase; translation; tRNA export
| INTRODUCTION |
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Distinct variants of ubiquitin chains regulate various processes: polyubiquitination involving ubiquitin lysines 48 and 29 directs short lived, damaged, misfolded, or misassembled proteins to the 26S proteasome for degradation (Hochstrasser 1996
; Hershko and Ciechanover 1998
). In contrast, polyubiquitination involving lysine 63 (K63) regulates post-replicative DNA repair, transcription, cell cycle transitions, and endocytosis of plasma membrane proteins; monoubiquitination affects endocytosis/lysosomal degradation, meiosis, and chromatin remodeling (for reviews, see Hicke 2001
; Weissman 2001
; Lindsten et al. 2002
).
Recent results indicate that ubiquitination also affects translation. Spence and colleagues (2000)
have shown that active ribosomes are multiubiquitinated and that the L28 protein, located in the peptidyltransferase center, is ubiquitinated by the K63 multiubiquitin chain when incorporated in the ribosome. Moreover, a mutant strain solely expressing UbK63R and unable to form these variant chains showed altered sensitivity to translational inhibitors and a reduced translational rate in vitro. Proteomic studies revealed that many other ribosomal proteins, of both the small and large subunits, as well as translation elongation factor eEF1A, are ubiquitinated (Hitchcock et al. 2003
; Peng et al. 2003
), indicating that the regulatory effect of ubiquitination on translation might be quite complex.
Rsp5p is an essential HECT domain containing ubiquitinprotein ligase in yeast. In addition to the catalytic HECT domain, Rsp5p possesses a C2 domain responsible for binding Ca2+, lipids, and proteins, and three WW domains that mediate proteinprotein interactions (Harvey and Kumar 1999
). Rsp5p interacts with itself in a two-hybrid system and, therefore, is likely to be a multimeric protein (Dunn and Hicke 2001a
). Rsp5p is localized in uniformly distributed punctate complexes in cells and cofractionates with a nonnuclear, nonmitochondrial, organellar subcellular fraction (Gajewska et al. 2001
).
Rsp5p forms mono- or multi-ubiquitin chains linked via K63 of ubiquitin. Rsp5p impacts a wide variety of physiological processes, including regulation of endocytosis and lysosomal degradation of plasma membrane permeases such as Fur4p (Galan et al. 1996
), Gap1p (Springael et al. 1999
), Tat2p (Beck et al. 1999
), and receptors such as Ste2p and Ste3p (Dunn and Hicke 2001b
). Rsp5p also ubiquitinates a component(s) of the endocytic machinery (Dunn and Hicke 2001a
; Gajewska et al. 2001
; Kami
ska et al. 2002
; Stamenova et al. 2004
). Moreover, Rsp5p-dependent ubiquitination is involved in sorting of amino acid permeases at the Golgi apparatus (Helliwell et al. 2001
) and in the multivesicular bodies (Katzmann et al. 2004
; Morvan et al. 2004
). Rsp5p plays less well-characterized roles in other processes, including transcription, mitochondrial inheritance, the mitochondrialcytoplasmic distribution of proteins, minichromosome maintenance, response to anesthetics, regulation of cellular pH, biosynthesis of unsaturated fatty acids, and nuclear export of RNA (Huibregtse et al. 1995
; de la Fuente et al. 1997
; Wang et al. 1999
; Wolfe et al. 1999
; Hoppe et al. 2000
; Kami
ska et al. 2000
; Neumann et al. 2003
; Rodriguez et al. 2003
; Shcherbik et al. 2003
, 2004
; Gwizdek et al. 2005
). The mechanisms by which Rsp5p affects these various processes remain to be elucidated.
We previously identified rsp5 mutations in a genetic selection for alterations in nonsense suppression, which indicated that Rsp5p might affect translation (
o
dek et al. 1995
). In the present study we assessed the role of Rsp5p in this process. We showed that the rsp513 mutation alters cell sensitivity to antibiotics that act on translation and that it also affects the fidelity of translation. Additional copies of UBI1 encoding ubiquitin reverse the effect of the rsp513 mutation on translation. Moreover, we show that an additional copy of TEF2, encoding eEF1A, suppresses the rsp513 growth defects and translational phenotypes. Defects in fidelity of translation could be explained, at least in part, by tRNA nuclear accumulation displayed by cells with the rsp513 allele.
| RESULTS |
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o
dek et al. 1997
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Readthrough of stop codons is reduced in the rsp513 strain and is restored by overexpression of UBI1
To test whether defects in Rsp5p-dependent ubiquitination influence the fidelity of translation, readthrough of stop codons and frameshifting were measured in the rsp513 mutant and in the wild-type strains using a dual-gene reporter system. This system consists of vectors containing readthrough or frameshift-promoting signals inserted between the lacZ and luc sequences, encoding ß-galactosidase and luciferase, respectively (Stahl et al. 1995
). Luciferase activity reflects the read-through or frameshifting efficiency, while ß-galactosidase activity serves as a general control of expression level, integrating a number of possible sources of variability (plasmid copy number, transcriptional activity, mRNA stability, and translation rate). Our results showed that the Rsp5p defect has no effect on the frequency of 1 and +1 frameshift events (data not presented). However, the rsp513 mutant showed an almost twofold lower level of UAA (p-value = 0.00001), UGA (p-value = 0.00217), and UAG (p-value = 0.0002) stop codon readthrough than the parental strain (Fig. 3A
).
|
o
dek et al. 1997
We monitored translational readthrough for rsp513 [UBI1]N and wild-type [UBI1]N transformants expressing ubiquitin from a multicopy plasmid. Only a small difference in readthrough between the wild type and the rsp513 mutant overexpressing ubiquitin was detected (Fig. 3A,B
), indicating that an excess of ubiquitin produced from UBI1 gene partially suppresses the rsp513 effect on readthrough of stop codons. Neither overexpression of ubiquitin nor empty vector (not shown) has an effect on readthrough in the wild-type strain. An additional copy of the RSP5 gene or its overexpression from a multicopy plasmid had no effect on readthrough of the wild-type strain (data not shown). Our data support the notion that both Rsp5p ubiquitin ligase and an active ubiquitination pathway are necessary for the maintenance of normal fidelity of translation.
rsp513 defect of readthrough is suppressed by an additional copy of TEF2
The elongation factor eEF1A, which delivers tRNAs to the A-site of the ribosome, is encoded by two nearly identical genes, TEF1 and TEF2, and mutations in these genes affect fidelity of translation (Song et al. 1989
; Dinman and Kinzy 1997
; Carr-Schmid et al. 1999
). To investigate a possible functional interaction between eEF1A and Rsp5p, TEF2 was expressed from a centromere containing plasmid (maintenance in about 1 copy/cell) in wild-type and rsp513 mutant strains and the level of readthrough was measured. The difference between these strains was smaller than that between the wild-type and rsp513 strains lacking YCp-TEF2. This indicates that TEF2 functions as a partial suppressor of the read-through defect in rsp513 cells (Fig. 3C
). Expression of an additional copy of the TEF2 gene had no effect on read-through in the wild-type strain (Fig. 3
, cf. C and A). As anticipated from these results, an additional copy of the TEF2 gene also corrected the thermosensitive growth of rsp513 cells, since the rsp513 [TEF2] transformants grew on YPD and minimal medium at 34°C better than rsp513 transformed with the vector alone (Fig. 4
). Moreover, the additional copy of the TEF2 gene enabled the rsp513 mutant to grow better in the presence of cycloheximide. However, there was little effect of TEF2 additional copy expression on growth on anisomycin and G418-containing medium (Fig. 4
). The genetic interactions suggest that the rsp513 mutation may affect translation at the elongation step. However, we did not detect differences in polysome profiles in the rsp513 mutant compared to wild type, perhaps because polysome analysis is not sensitive enough to detect the changes uncovered by the drugs and readthrough assay.
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We analyzed the subcellular distribution of tRNA by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH). The rsp513 mutant cells, in contrast to the wild-type strain, accumulate large amounts of nuclear tRNAs. Nuclear accumulation of tRNA in rsp513 mutant cells was observed after 3.5 h of incubation at 37°C or 33.5°C using digoxigenin (DIG)-labeled probes specific for tRNATyr, encoded by intron-containing genes, or tRNAMet, encoded by intronless genes (Fig. 5A
and see 5C). These findings are in agreement with previous observations showing Rsp5p involvement in nuclear export of tRNA (Neumann et al. 2003
). In agreement with other published data (Rodriguez et al. 2003
), poly(A)-containing RNA was also found to accumulate in the nucleus of rsp513 cells at the nonpermissive temperature (Fig. 5A
).
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An additional copy of TEF2 suppresses the defect in the translational readthrough level provoked by rsp513 mutation and improves thermosensitive growth of mutant strain; thus we checked whether the tRNA nuclear accumulation is ameliorated in rsp513 cells overexpressing the TEF2 gene. Wild type with vector alone [], rsp513 [], and rsp513 [TEF2] strains were pregrown in SD + casamino acids medium, grown in YPD at 23°C overnight, and shifted to 33.5°C for 3.5 h. FISH was performed using a probe hybridizing to intron-containing pre-tRNATyr and processed tRNATyr. In contrast to rsp513 [], no nuclear accumulation of tRNA was observed in rsp513 [TEF2] (Fig. 5C
). The data indicate that overproduced eEF1A suppresses the rsp513 defect in subcellular distribution of tRNA as well as translational readthrough and growth defects in the absence and presence of antibiotics.
| DISCUSSION |
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The rsp513 mutant cells exhibit a broad spectrum of sensitivity to translational inhibitors, but are particularly resistant to paromomycin, which strongly stabilizes the A-site binding of near-cognate peptidyl-tRNAs and increases misreading (Ogle et al. 2001
; Vicens and Westhof 2001
). This correlates with an almost twofold decrease of readthrough at all three stop codons in rsp513 mutant cells compared to wild-type cells.
There is no effect of ubiquitin levels on nonsense suppression in the wild-type cells (Chernova et al. 2003
; see Results). However, in the presence of the prion form of the translational termination complex component, Sup35p [PSI+], changes in the free ubiquitin pool affect suppression efficiency. Moreover, the ubiquitin pool also affects cellular responses to drugs that influence translation. For example, ubp6
mutant cells, lacking the de-ubiquitinating enzyme, have a lowered ubiquitin pool and are hypersensitive to cycloheximide and anisomycin, drugs affecting translation (Keeven et al. 2002
; Chernova et al. 2003
; Hanna et al. 2003
). Thus, ubp6
resembles the rsp513 mutant in this respect. However, the altered antibiotic sensitivity of ubiquitin pathway mutants may reflect effects on various pathways, not only translation. Recently, it was demonstrated that the pool of ubiquitinated proteins and free ubiquitin levels are highly reduced in the rsp51 (L733S) mutant, especially at elevated temperature (Krsmanovic and Kolling 2004
). Accordingly, the low readthrough levels in rsp513 cells might be related to a diminished ubiquitin pool that appears to be about 75% of wild-type levels (M. Kwapisz, J.-P. Rousset, and T.
o
dek, unpubl. results), although the pool of ubiquitinated proteins is similar in rsp513 and in wild type (data not shown). Supporting the role of the ubiquitin pool is our data showing that the nonsense codon readthrough phenotype of rsp513 cells is suppressed by overexpressed ubiquitin.
At least two mechanisms may account for the effect of free ubiquitin and the rsp513 mutation on stop codon readthrough. (1) Ubiquitination may directly affect an element of the translational apparatus functioning in the termination process. Indeed, several such factors have been found to be ubiquitinated (Hitchcock et al. 2003
; Peng et al. 2003
). However, we were unable to demonstrate ubiquitination of eRF3/Sup35p and the cellular level of this factor was similar in wild-type and rsp513 strains (our unpubl. observations). (2) Alternatively, and the model we favor, changes in other processes requiring ubiquitination may indirectly affect stop codon recognition.
There are previous reports documenting that translation rate and/or nonsense codon suppression can be affected indirectly via alterations in tRNA distribution, accessibility, and properties, by altered tRNA modification, and/or by factors regulating tRNA levels (Dihanich et al. 1987
; Hurt et al. 1987
; Beier and Grimm 2001
; Kwapisz et al. 2002
; Lecointe et al. 2002
). For example, the yeast Los1p was first identified by its loss of nonsense suppression phenotype (Hopper et al. 1980
). Los1p functions as a nuclear exportin for tRNA, providing one of two or more pathways to deliver tRNA from the nucleus to the cytosol (Hurt et al. 1987
; Hellmuth et al. 1998
; Sarkar and Hopper 1998
; for reviews, see Grosshans et al. 2000b
; Hopper and Phizycky 2003). Thus, the altered nucleus/cytosol distribution of tRNA evidenced by the rsp513 mutant cell (shown previously for rsp53 by Neumann et al. 2003
) might be the cause of its defects in translation efficiency and fidelity. If this is the case, then suppression of rsp513 by additional eEF1A might result either from more efficient utilization of the residual cytoplasmic pool of tRNA or by a role of eEF1A in tRNA nuclear export, as has been previously proposed (Grosshans et al. 2000a
). Neumann et al. (2003)
reported also that rsp5 mutants show defects in pre-rRNA processing, and this may possibly contribute to the changes in translation rate and fidelity we observe.
Why does mutation of RSP5 cause altered distribution of tRNA between the nucleus and the cytoplasm? Direct modification by Rsp5p of Los1p and/or other components of the machinery governing RNA nuclear transport could provide one such mechanism. Indeed, a genome-wide study identified Los1p as an ubiquitinated protein (Peng et al. 2003
). Alternatively, Rsp5p may be involved in a nutrient-dependent signaling process that affects the distribution of tRNA between the nucleus and the cytoplasm. Retrograde tRNA movement of tRNA has been demonstrated (Shaheen and Hopper 2005
; Takano et al. 2005
) and has been shown to be responsive to nutrient deprivation (Shaheen and Hopper 2005
). Moreover, as shown by Grosshans and colleagues (2000a)
, amino acid deprivation results in tRNA nuclear accumulation. Although Rsp5p alters cellular amino acid permease sorting (Hein et al. 1995
; Galan et al. 1996
; Gajewska et al. 2001
), others have shown that such inappropriate permease sorting need not dramatically alter internal amino acids pools (Crespo et al. 2004
). Thus, Rsp5p unlikely affects tRNA distribution via altered cellular amino acid pools. Since Rsp5p functions in regulation of the transcription factors, Spt23p, Mga2p, and Gln3p (Hoppe et al. 2000
; Shcherbik et al. 2003
; Crespo et al. 2004
), tRNA nuclear accumulation in rsp513 cells, only when grown in media with high amino acids concentrations, could be rather a response to an altered transcriptional program or a result of direct involvement of Rsp5p in amino acid signaling.
During the cell life translation maintains a balance between speed and accuracy (Kurland 1992
) and cell may gain in fitness if translational accuracy varies in response to growth conditions and nutrient accessibility. The translational accuracy is sensitive to tRNA accessibility and its distribution in the cell. The role of Rsp5p-dependent ubiquitination could be general and complex, and would facilitate the traffic of RNA and various proteins in the cell in the response to changing physiological conditions, especially amino acid accessibility. It is likely that several Rsp5p substrates are involved in the regulation of nuclear export systems, but that remains to be determined.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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his3-
200 leu23,112 ura352 lys2801 trp11 (Chen et al. 1993
F' (F' supE44 lacU169 [80 lacZM15] hsdR17 recA1 endA1 gyrA96 thi-1 relA1) was used for cloning and plasmid propagation. For replacement of the RSP5 gene, integration plasmids YIpHA-RSP5/rsp513 bearing the RSP5 or rsp513 mutant version and the triple hemagglutinin (HA)-epitope tag (see below; Gajewska et al. 2001
E. coli cells were grown in LB medium supplemented with appropriate antibiotics to maintain the plasmids. The following media were used for yeast growth: YPD (2% glucose, 1% peptone, 1% yeast extract), SD (2% glucose, 0.67% yeast nitrogen base without amino acids), SD + casamino acid (SD supplemented with 1% casamino acids and 20 mg/L tryptophan) used for FISH experiments, SD + CSM (SD supplemented with 0.57% complete synthetic media lacking leucine or lacking leucine and uracil or lacking leucine and tryptophan, from ICN) used for fidelity of translation measurements, and SC-ura (SD supplemented with all amino acids and adenine 40 mg/L but lacking uracil, according to Sherman 2002
), used for FISH experiments and strain construction. Solid media contained 2% agar. The amounts of drugs used were as follows: 0.22% 5' FOA, 0.1 µg/mL cycloheximide, 1.0 mg/mL paromomycin, 10 µg/mL anisomycin, 50 µg/mL G418, 10 µg/mL gentamicin. Paromomycin- and gentamicin-containing plates were buffered with 100 mM potassium phosphate buffer (pH 7.58.0). In all cases, growth of wild-type cells was not inhibited at the drug concentrations used.
Suppression of both the temperature-sensitive phenotype and antibiotics sensitivity was monitored by a drop test. An appropriate strain was suspended in water and serial 10-fold dilutions of cells were spotted onto solid media and incubated for 26 d at indicated temperatures. The growth rate in liquid cultures was monitored by A600 measurements. Standard yeast genetic methods were employed (Sherman 2002
). Cells were transformed by the lithium acetate method (Chen et al. 1992
). The CUP1 promoter was induced with 0.1 mM CuSO4.
Plasmids and plasmid construction
The plasmids used are: YIpHA-RSP5 (this work), YIpHA-rsp513 (this work), YCp33HA-RSP5 (Gajewska et al. 2001
), YEp-NPI1/RSP5 (from B. Andre, Universite Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium), YCp-TEF2/JWB2828 (from T. Kinzy, University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, Piscataway), YEp96 (Ecker et al. 1987
), pACTQ, pAC1789, pACTy, pACTMV (Stahl et al. 1995
), pACTAA, and pACTGA (Bidou et al. 2000
). The YIpHA-RSP5 plasmid used for integration into the MHY501 strain was constructed by cloning the EcoRISphI DNA fragment obtained by digestion of YCp33HA-RSP5 (Gajewska et al. 2001
) into vector YIplac211 (Gietz and Sugino 1988
). The YIpHA-rsp513 was obtained by substituting the AgeIMunI fragment in YIpHA-RSP5 with the DNA fragment, synthesized in a PCR reaction using specific primers and genomic DNA from TZ23 rsp513 strain as the template (
o
dek et al. 1997
) and digested by AgeI and MunI enzymes.
DNA restriction and electrophoresis were carried out according to standard procedures (Sambrook and Russell 2001
). PCR reactions and sequencing were performed on double-stranded DNA, and sequencing was carrying out using an automatic sequencer ABI310 Perkin Elmer in the DNA Sequencing and Oligonucleotide Synthesis Laboratory, Institute of Biochemistry and Biophysics, Polish Academy of Sciences. Oligonucleotides used were synthesized at the above laboratory and their sequences are available upon request.
Readthrough frequency analysis
The reporter plasmids, pACTy (+1 frameshifting), pAC1789 (1 frameshifting), pACTMV (UAG readthrough), pACTGA (UGA readthrough), pACTAA (UAA readthrough), and pACTQ (in frame control), were transformed into yeast strains (Stahl et al. 1995
; Bidou et al. 2000
). At least two transformants, cultivated at 30°C in SD + CSM, were assayed in a given experiment. Cells were harvested at an OD600 of 1.53 and disrupted using glass beads. Luciferase and ß-galactosidase activities were assayed as described (Stahl et al. 1995
). The recoding efficiency, expressed in percentages, was calculated by dividing the luciferase/ß-galactosidase ratio obtained using each test plasmid by the same ratio obtained with the in-frame control plasmid (Bidou et al. 2000
). Results are the mean of at least five independent experiments and were tested by a MannWhitney u-test (Lowry 2000
).
Fluorescence in situ hybridization
For FISH, published procedures and oligonucleotides were employed (Sarkar and Hopper 1998
; Sarkar et al. 1999
; Feng and Hopper, 2002
). Strains were grown at 23°C to log phase in YPD or selective media SC-ura or SD + casamino acids and subsequently shifted to 37°C for the 3.5 h. For the TEF2 suppression experiment strains were grown at 23°C to log phase and subsequently shifted to 33.5°C for the 3.5 h. Digoxigenin-labeled oligonucleotide probes specific for intronless tRNA (tRNAMet) or recognizing intron-containing pre-tRNA and processed tRNA (tRNATyr) were used. Fluorescence images were observed by using a Nikon Microphot-FX microscope, captured with a SenSys charge-coupled device camera (Photometrics) with QED software (QED Imaging) and assembled with Adobe Photoshop 5.0.
In vivo [35S]-methionine incorporation
An overnight YPD culture at OD600 0.81.1 was spun down, suspended in P buffer (40 mM potassium phosphate buffer at pH 7.4, 0.45% glucose, 0.0077% SD + CSM-methionine), and incubated with shaking at 30°C for 30 min. Forty microcuries of [35S]-methionine were added and samples were withdrawn at the time points indicated. Incorporation of labeled methionine was stopped by adding 1/10 volume of 0.2 M unlabeled methionine. Cells were filtered under vacuum onto GF/A glass microfiber filters (Whatman), washed with 10% TCA, 95% ethanol, and acetone, and dried. Radioactivity was measured in a scintillation counter (Ciechanover et al. 1984
, with modifications).
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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o
dek, J. P.Rousset, M. Boguta, and A.K. Hoppers laboratories for help and numerous scientific interactions. This work was supported by the State Committee for Scientific Research of Poland grant 3P04B01624 to T.Z.; travel grant from PNCMB UNESCO/PAS and thesis grant from Franco-Polonais Réseau de Formation-Recherches (Ministe re de lEducation Nationale, de lEnseignement Supérieur et de la Recherche) to M.K.; Association pour la Recherche sur le Cancer (contract 4699) and Association Franc aise contre les Myopathies for J.-P.R.; and a grant from the National Institutes of Health (GM27930) to A.K.H. | Footnotes |
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Received June 3, 2005; accepted August 12, 2005.
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