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Vol. 10, Issue 10, 3081-3096, October 1999
Department of Cellular Biology, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia 30602-2607
Submitted June 14, 1999; Accepted July 28, 1999| |
ABSTRACT |
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We cloned two genes, KIN1 and KIN2, encoding kinesin-II homologues from the ciliate Tetrahymena thermophila and constructed strains lacking either KIN1 or KIN2 or both genes. Cells with a single disruption of either gene showed partly overlapping sets of defects in cell growth, motility, ciliary assembly, and thermoresistance. Deletion of both genes resulted in loss of cilia and arrests in cytokinesis. Mutant cells were unable to assemble new cilia or to maintain preexisting cilia. Double knockout cells were not viable on a standard medium but could be grown on a modified medium on which growth does not depend on phagocytosis. Double knockout cells could be rescued by transformation with a gene encoding an epitope-tagged Kin1p. In growing cells, epitope-tagged Kin1p preferentially accumulated in cilia undergoing active assembly. Kin1p was also detected in the cell body but did not show any association with the cleavage furrow. The cell division arrests observed in kinesin-II knockout cells appear to be induced by the loss of cilia and resulting cell paralysis.
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INTRODUCTION |
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Kinesins-II are microtubule-dependent motors that exist as
heterotrimeric complexes in diverse organisms (Cole et al.,
1993
, 1998
; Yamazaki et al., 1995
). Members of the
kinesin-II family have been implicated in axonal transport, assembly of
cilia and flagella, and transport of pigment granules (Walther et
al., 1994
; Yamazaki et al., 1995
; Morris and Scholey,
1997
; Rogers et al., 1997
). Kinesin-II is essential for
assembly of cilia and flagella. A mutation in the
Chlamydomonas kinesin-II motor, FLA10, resulted in a loss of
flagella (Walther et al., 1994
). Injection of
anti-kinesin-II antibodies into blastula-stage sea urchin embryos
partially blocked assembly of cilia (Morris and Scholey, 1997
).
Furthermore, a knockout of essential murine kinesin-II genes leads to a
complete block in the assembly of monocilia on embryonic nodal cells
(Nonaka et al., 1998
; Marszalek et al., 1999
;
Takeda et al., 1999
). In Chlamydomonas,
video-enhanced microscopy showed bidirectional movement of particles
inside flagella. These membraneless particles, named rafts, were
proposed to be involved in delivery of flagellar subunits from the cell
body to the tips of growing flagella (Kozminski et al.,
1993
; Rosenbaum et al., 1999
). Importantly, FLA10 activity is required to maintain intraflagellar transport (Kozminski et al., 1995
). Kinesin-II motor subunits supported microtubule plus end-directed motility in vitro (Cole et al., 1993
; Kondo
et al., 1994
), and kinesin-II was found highly enriched in
cilia and flagella (Walther et al., 1994
; Cole et
al., 1998
; Nonaka et al., 1998
). Recently, a green
fluorescent protein (GFP)-tagged subunit of a kinesin-II complex was
observed to move inside the chemosensory cilia of living
Caenorhabditis elegans, primarily in the anterograde direction toward the distal tips of axonemes (Orozco et al.,
1999
). Because incorporation of new axonemal subunits is known to take place at the tips of assembling flagella, which correspond to the plus
ends of axonemal microtubules (Johnson and Rosenbaum, 1992
), kinesin-II
is a strong candidate for an anterograde motor transporting flagellar
components, possibly in association with rafts, from the cell body to
the tips of flagella. The retrograde flagellar movement appears to be
essential for flagellar assembly (Piperno et al., 1998
) and
is most likely powered by a cytoplasmic dynein complex (Pazour et
al., 1998
; Porter et al., 1999
).
In nerve cells kinesin-II is associated with membrane-bounded
organelles (Yamazaki et al., 1995
; Muresan et
al., 1998
; Yang and Goldstein, 1998
). Thus, it is most likely that
kinesin-II complexes transport different types of cellular cargo in
axons and flagella. Most kinesin-II motors exist as heterotrimeric
complexes containing two nonidentical motor subunits and a third
accessory nonmotor subunit. Because kinesin-II is the only
kinesin-related protein complex known to contain nonidentical motor
subunits, heterodimerization may be used to create combinatorial motors that have different cargo specificities. In mouse and rat, kinesin-II was found in two complexes containing one common motor subunit (KIF3A) and one of two variable motor subunits (KIF3B or KIF3C) (Muresan et al., 1998
; Yang and Goldstein, 1998
).
Furthermore, three isoforms of the kinesin-II-associated subunit KAP3
were identified in mouse (Yamazaki et al., 1995
, 1996
). In
C. elegans three kinesin-II motor subunits were identified,
which form at least one heterotrimeric complex and one dimeric complex
(Signor et al., 1999
). Combinatorial kinesin-II complexes
could be formed by mixing and matching of different motor and nonmotor
subunits that produce functionally distinct motors in different cells.
We and others have recently identified three kinesin-II homologous genes (KIN1, KIN2, and KIN5) in the unicellular organism the ciliate Tetrahymena thermophila (this study; Bernstein, personal communication). Thus, combinatorial interactions may be used to generate multiple, functionally distinct variants of kinesin-II within a single cell. Here we describe the cloning and functional analysis of two members of the kinesin-II family of T. thermophila, KIN1 and KIN2. Our analyses show that KIN1 and KIN2 genes have overlapping but nonidentical functions. Either KIN1 or KIN2 is required for assembly and maintenance of cilia, and kinesin-II encoded by the KIN1 gene preferentially accumulates in cilia that undergo active assembly. Surprisingly, the mutants lacking both KIN1 and KIN2 genes frequently fail to complete cytokinesis. Multiple lines of evidence indicate that the cytokinesis phenotype in kinesin-II mutants is induced by the loss of cilia and resulting cell paralysis.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Strains, Culture Growth, and Conjugation
Strains used are described in Table
1. Tetrahymena cell cultures
were grown in 50 ml of either SPP (1% proteose peptone, 0.2% glucose,
0.1% yeast extract, 0.003% EDTA·ferric sodium salt) (Gorovsky,
1973
) or MEPP medium (2% proteose peptone, 2 mM Na3 citrate·2 H2O, 1 mM ferric chloride, 12.5 µM cupric
sulfate, 1.7 µM folinic acid, Ca salt) (Orias and Rasmussen, 1976
)
supplemented with 100 U/ml penicillin, 100 µg/ml streptomycin, and
0.25 µg/ml amphotericin B in 250-ml Erlenmayer flasks with moderate
shaking at 30°C. To induce conjugation, two strains of different
mating types were grown to midlogarithmic phase, and 50 ml of each
strain were washed two times and left in the starvation medium (10 mM Tris-Cl, pH 7.5) in the original volume. After 16-20 h, equal numbers
of cells (1.5 × 107 cells of each strain)
were mixed in a total volume of 100 ml in a 2-l Erlenmeyer flask and
left unshaken at 30°C.
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Gene Cloning and Sequence Analysis
PCR was used to amplify kinesin-related protein (KRP) sequences
of T. thermophila. Total genomic DNA isolated using the fast urea extraction method (Gaertig et al., 1994b
) was used as a
template. Three types of degenerate primers were used to amplify
sequences encoding the most conserved peptides of motor domains present in other KRPs. Primer A,
5'-AT(T/C)TT(T/C)GC(T/C)TA(T/C)GG(T/A)(T/C)A(A/G)AC-3', encodes a sense
strand of IFAYGQT. Primer B,
5'-G(A/T)(A/T)CC(A/G)GC(T/A)A(A/G)(A/G)TC(A/G)AC-3', encodes an
antisense sequence of LVDLAGSE. Primer C,
5'-CTTAGA(G/A)T(T/C)TCT(G/A)(T/A)A(G/A)GG(A/G)AT(G/A)TG-3', encodes an
antisense sequence of the peptide HIP(Y/F)RDSK. Total genomic DNA was
amplified using primers A and C and amplified again with primers A and
B. Final products of ~400 bp were cloned. To clone genomic fragments
of KIN1 and KIN2, total T. thermophila DNA was digested with restriction endonucleases and used to prepare a
Southern blot. The PCR-generated KIN1 and KIN2
fragments were labeled with [
32P]dATP using
random hexamer primers and used as probes. The KIN1 gene was
cloned as a 3.5-kb HindIII fragment and a partially
overlapping 2.5-kb EcoRI-XbaI fragment. The
majority of KIN2 was cloned as partly overlapping 2.5-kb
HindIII and 2-kb Csp45 I-BglII restriction fragments. The 3' end of the KIN2 gene was cloned using
rapid amplification of cDNA ends (Frohman, 1990
). Protein secondary structure was predicted using NNPREDICT (Kneller et al.,
1990
). The probability of coiled coil formation was calculated using COILS (Lupas et al., 1991
). Sequence homology searches were
done using BLAST from the National Center for Biotechnology
Information (Bethesda, MD; Altschul et al., 1990
).
Protein sequence comparison was done using BESTFIT, COMPARE, and
DOTPLOT programs of the University of Wisconsin Genetics Computer Group
(UWGCG; Madison, WI) Wisconsin Package. Alignments of multiple
sequences were prepared using PILEUP; evolutionary distances between
sequences were calculated using DISTANCES; and an evolutionary tree was
made using GROWTREE of the UWGCG package (Devereux et al.,
1984
).
Germ Line and Somatic Gene Knockouts
To construct a targeting fragment for disruption of the
KIN1 gene, plasmid pKIN17-7 containing the 3.5-kb
HindIII fragment of KIN1 was linearized at its
single BglII site within the region encoding a motor domain.
The protruding BglII ends were filled in using T4 DNA
polymerase. The neo2 disruption cassette (Gaertig et
al., 1994a
) was inserted into the BglII site of
pKIN17-7 to give pKIN17-7neo. To construct a gene disruption fragment
for KIN2, plasmid pCS4, containing a 5-kb fragment of
KIN2, was linearized at the Csp45 I site present in the
coding region. The bsr1 gene cassette was inserted into the
Csp45 I site. This cassette is a derivative of the neo2 gene
cassette in which a blasticidin S (bs) resistance gene (Sutoh, 1993
) is
inserted between the Tetrahymena histone HHF1
promoter and the BTU2 transcription terminator (Gaertig et al., 1994a
). To disrupt either the KIN1 or
KIN2 gene in the germline micronucleus (MIC) we introduced
transforming DNA into early mating cells using the biolistic gun
(Cassidy-Hanley et al., 1997
). For disruption of
KIN1, 4 µg of pKIN17-7neo DNA that had been digested with
HindIII were used to coat 1 mg of tungsten M10 (Bio-Rad,
Hercules, CA) particles (Sanford et al., 1991
). For
disruption of KIN2, 4 µg of pCS4bsr1 plasmid DNA that had been linearized with KpnI and SacI were used to
coat gold particles (1 µm, Bio-Rad). Strains CU428.1 and B2086.1 were
allowed to conjugate for 2.5-3.5 h before bombardment. For
KIN1 disruption, bombarded cells were incubated in SPP for
12 h at room temperature, and transformants were selected in SPP
with 120 µg/ml paromomycin. For KIN2 disruption, bombarded
cells were incubated for 7 h at 30°C in SPP, left for 14-16 h
at room temperature, and selected in SPP with 60 µg/ml bs.
Transformants heterozygous for KIN1/kin1::neo2 or
KIN2/kin2::bsr1 were identified and brought to
homozygosity in the MIC as described (Cassidy-Hanley et al.,
1997
). To construct strains lacking all copies of both KIN1
and KIN2 in their MICs, we crossed a strain homozygous for
the kin1::neo2 gene to a strain homozygous for the
kin2::bsr1 gene and selected double heterozygotes resistant to both paromomycin and bs. These were crossed to the B*VII strain (Orias and Bruns, 1976
) to generate micronuclear homozygotes, and the exconjugants from this cross were reisolated, grown, and crossed to a CU427.3 strain. Double knockout heterokaryons strains were identified (UG13 and UG14) that have different mating types.
Phenotypic Analyses
Growth rates were measured in SPP medium without shaking by counting cells periodically using a Coulter Electronics (Hialeah, FL) model ZF counter. Dead cells were identified by trypan blue exclusion test by adding 30 µl of 0.4% trypan blue (Sigma, St. Louis, MO) to 70 µl of cells in culture medium.
To measure the rate of cell movement, 40 µl of cells from a growing
culture were placed on a slide and analyzed in a hanging drop, using an
Olympus Optical (Tokyo, Japan) inverted microscope and 4×
phase-contrast objective. Images of moving cells were recorded using a
video camera and image capture software. Distances traveled by moving
cells were measured using NIH Image version 1.62. To analyze the
rate of ciliary regeneration, cells were grown to a density of 3 × 105 cells/ml, starved for 24 h in 10 mM
Tris-HCl, pH 7.5, and deciliated (Calzone and Gorovsky, 1982
). Cilia
regeneration was monitored by determining the fraction of motile cells.
To bring the double knockout phenotype to expression, heterokaryon strains UG13 and UG14 were crossed to each other. Nine to 10 h after mixing, individual pairs were isolated into drops of SPP or MEPP medium and left for 13-15 h at room temperature. As controls, wild-type exconjugants or parental cells were isolated. The cell number in each drop was determined by counting live cells under an inverted microscope. Observations of live dividing cells were done on the Zeiss (Thornwood, NY) Axioscope microscope using differential interference contrast optics with the Plan-NeoFluar 40× (numerical aperture, 0.75) lens. The images were recorded on the DAGE-MTI (Michigan City, IN) DC330 charge-coupled device camera. The s-video output of the camera was fed directly into the Macintosh G3/AV All-in-one computer using the Apple (Cupertino, CA) Video Player software.
Immunocytochemistry and Electron Microscopy
For staining double knockout cells, ~500-1000 cells were
isolated into 30 µl of 10 mM Tris, pH 7.5, on a coverslip. An equal volume of 2% paraformaldehyde, 0.5% Triton X-100, and 1 µM
paclitaxel in PHEM (60 mM PIPES, pH 6.9, 25 mM HEPES, 10 mM
EGTA, 2 mM MgCl2) was added, and samples were air dried at
30°C. Coverslips were processed for immunofluorescent labeling as
described (Gaertig et al., 1995
), using rabbit polyclonal
SG serum raised against Tetrahymena total tubulin
(Guttman and Gorovsky, 1979
) at 1:100 dilution. Cells expressing the
epitope-tagged Kin1p were double labeled using the TAP952 mouse
monoclonal antibodies directed against the monoglycylated isoforms of
tubulins (Callen et al., 1994
) and the anti-GFP rabbit
polyclonal antibodies (Clontech, Palo Alto, CA) at 1:100 and 1:400
dilution, respectively. Secondary antibodies were goat anti-mouse FITC
(Sigma), goat anti-rabbit-Cy3, and goat-anti-rabbit-FITC (Zymed, San
Francisco, CA) conjugates, and all were used at 1:100 dilution. Cells
were viewed using a Bio-Rad MRC 600 confocal microscope. The length of
axonemes either on cells or isolated was determined on confocal
sections using NIH Image software version 1.62. To increase the
consistency of analysis of ciliary axoneme lengths on whole cells, for
each cell analyzed a single confocal section was chosen, which included the widest cross-section of the macronucleus that could be found in
that z-series.
For electron microscopy, Cells were washed with 10 mM Tris, pH 7.5, and fixed in 2% glutaraldehyde in 100 mM cacodylate buffer at 4°C for 1 h, incubated in 2.5% sucrose in 100 mM cacodylate for 20 min, and postfixed in 1% osmium tetroxide in 100 mM cacodylate for 1.5 h at 4°C. Cells were embedded in Epon after dehydration in graded steps from 30 to 100% ethanol. Sections were stained with uranyl acetate and lead citrate and were visualized on a JEOL (Tokyo, Japan) 100CXII transmission electron microscope.
Construction of Epitope-tagged Targeting Fragments and Rescue Transformation
The Muta-Gene phagemid in vitro mutagenesis kit (Bio-Rad) was
used to create MluI (5') and NcoI (3') sites near
the N terminus of the KIN1 coding sequence on the plasmid
pKIN17-7 to construct pKIN17NM. The sequence of the mutagenic
oligonucleotide, KINL-MC, is 5'-TTT ACT ATT TTT TTC CAT GGC TTC TAC GCG
TTT GCT CAT TAT ACT T-3'. The 5xMyc insert was prepared by amplifying
the plasmid pJR1265 (kindly provided by Dr. K. Kozminski, University of
California, Berkeley, CA) with the primers MYC-ML, 5'-GGA CGC GTC TTT
AAA GCT ATG GAG CAA AAG-3', and SK, 5'-TCT AGA ACT AGT TGG ATC-3'. After digesting with MluI and NcoI it was
inserted into the corresponding sites of pKIN17NM to construct
pKIN17myc-6. To prepare a GFP-tagged Kin1 gene, the GFP sequence was
amplified from pH4.GFP1 plasmid (kindly provided by Dr. A. Turkewitz,
University of Chicago, Chicago, IL; Haddad and Turkewitz, 1997
) using
primers GFP5'Ml, 5'-GACGCGTAATGAGTAAAGGAGAAGAAC-3', and GFP3'Bsp,
5'-GTCATGATTTTGTATAGTTCATCCATGC. The PCR product was digested with
MluI and BspHI and subcloned between the
MluI and NcoI sites of the pKIN17myc-6 in place
of the Myc epitope tag to give pKIN17gfp plasmid. For preparation of
rescuing DNA, pKIN17-7, pKIN17myc-6, and pKIN17gfp were digested with
HindIII, and pCS4 was digested with SacI and
KpnI. Double knockout heterokaryon strains UG13 and UG14
were starved, mixed, and transformed by biolistic bombardment at
10 h after mating. Rescued conjugation progeny were selected with
15 µg/ml 6-methylpurine.
Cell Fractionation and Western Blotting
Cells were grown to 4 × 105/ml at 30°C in 300 ml of SPP, washed once with 10 mM Tris, pH 7.5, and suspended in 15 ml of 10 mM Tris, pH 7.5, containing protease inhibitors (1 mM PMSF, 1 µg/ml pepstatin A, 1 µg/ml leupeptin, 10 µg/ml chymostatin, 10 µg/ml antipain, 5 µg/ml E-64; all inhibitors from Sigma). Dibucaine (Sigma) was added at a final concentration of 3 mM. When most cells had stopped moving (~2 min), 5 vol of ice-cold 10 mM Tris, pH 7.5, were added. All subsequent procedures were performed at 4°C. Cell bodies were sedimented by centrifugation at 1100 × g for 5 min. The supernatant was collected, and the centrifugation was repeated. Cilia were collected by centrifugation at 14,000 × g for 20 min, washed once in wash buffer (10 mM HEPES, pH 7.4, 100 mM NaCl, 4 mM MgCl2, 0.1 mM EGTA) containing protease inhibitors, and recentrifuged at 14,000 × g. Cell bodies were washed once in 10 mM Tris, pH 7.5, and recentrifuged at 1100 × g. Pellets containing cell bodies or cilia were weighed and resuspended at 100 mg of wet pellet/ml in either 10 mM Tris, pH 7.5, plus protease inhibitors (cell bodies) or wash buffer plus protease inhibitors (cilia). To obtain axonemes, 10 mg of cilia were extracted with wash buffer containing 0.5% NP-40 on ice for 10 min and centrifuged at 14,000 × g. The supernatant, containing membranes, was retained. The axonemal fraction was resuspended in the original volume of wash buffer plus protease inhibitors. Either 500 µg of cilia or axonemes or NP-40-soluble fraction (each obtained from 500 µg of cilia) were subjected to 8% SDS-PAGE and transferred onto a 0.45-µm Trans-Blot nitrocellulose membrane (Bio-Rad) by semidry electroblotting using the Trans-Blot SD cell (Bio-Rad) at 20 V for 2 h. Filters were blocked in 5% dry milk, 0.1% Tween 20, and 1× PBS for 1.5 h and incubated overnight at 4°C in reaction buffer (1% dry milk, 0.1% Tween 20 in 1× PBS) with anti-Myc hybridoma supernatant (clone 9E10; American Type Culture Collection, Manassas, VA) at 1:2.5 dilution, rabbit anti-histone hv1 serum at 1:10,000 dilution, or mouse AXO49 antibodies at 1:3000 dilution. Membranes were washed in PBST (1× PBS, 0.1% Tween 20) at room temperature, incubated in reaction buffer with 1:1500 dilution of either anti-mouse immunoglobulin G or anti rabbit immunoglobulin HRP-linked goat antibodies (Amersham, Arlington Heights, IL) for 1.5 h, and washed once for 15 min, two times for 5 min each in PBST, and then three times for 5 min each in 1× PBS. Blots were developed using the ECL Western blotting analysis system (Amersham).
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RESULTS |
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Cloning of KIN1 and KIN2, Members of the Kinesin-II Family, in T. thermophila
We identified fragments of four putative KRP genes
(KIN1-KIN4) using PCR of total genomic DNA of T. thermophila. We cloned genomic restriction fragments of
KIN1 and KIN2, and sequence analysis revealed
open reading frames encoding proteins of 735 and 697 amino acids,
respectively, that were most similar to kinesin-II. The predicted
KIN1-encoded protein (Kin1p) has a calculated molecular mass of 85.04 kDa and a pI of 7.61, whereas Kin2p has a
calculated molecular mass of 82 kDa and a pI of 6.88. By comparing
genomic sequences with the corresponding cDNAs, we identified three
small introns in each gene. Two of the three introns of KIN1
and KIN2 are located at the same positions within the coding
sequences (Figure 1A). The two genes are
genetically linked in the micronuclear genome (our unpublished
results). Both predicted proteins have an expected structure of a
kinesin-II heavy chain, with a central region of
-helical coiled
coil flanked by globular N- and C-terminal motor and tail regions,
respectively (Figure 1A). By comparing the Kin1p and Kin2p sequences
with kinesin heavy chain of Drosophila melanogaster (Yang
et al., 1989
), we identified a kinesin motor domain within the N-terminal globular domains of both proteins. Phylogenetic analysis showed that the motor domains of Kin1p and Kin2p
are more related to each other (67% identical) than to any other known
kinesin-II (60-63%) (Figure 1B). KIN1 and KIN2
also showed significant homology (54%) between their rod domains and lower levels of homology with the rod domains of other kinesins-II (Figure 1C). The tails of KIN1 and KIN2 are very
basic but showed only weak homology to each other (32% sequence
identity).
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Cells Lacking Either KIN1 or KIN2 Show Deficiencies in Cell Growth, Motility, Ciliary Assembly, and Thermoresistance
Tetrahymena cells, like most other ciliates have two
nuclei, the germ line, transcriptionally silent MIC and the somatic, transcriptionally active macronucleus (MAC). To disrupt KIN1
in both the MIC and MAC, we used a fragment in which the
neo2 gene was inserted into the motor domain. We
biolistically transformed the MICs of early conjugating cells (Figure
2A; see MATERIALS AND METHODS). Southern
blotting showed that one transformant contained a disrupted
KIN1 gene (Figure 2B), whereas in the second transformant, the kin1::neo2 fragment integrated into the 3'
flanking region of KIN1. Homozygotes for the disrupted
allele in the MIC and MAC were constructed using two rounds of
"genomic exclusion" (Figure 2A; see MATERIALS AND METHODS). We used
essentially the same strategy to disrupt KIN2, except that
we used the bsr1 gene as a disruption cassette instead of
neo2 (Figure 2C).
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Strains lacking either KIN1 or KIN2 were viable,
morphologically normal, and motile but multiplied more slowly than
wild-type (WT) strains, with the doubling times that were 23 and 86%
longer than WT, respectively (Table 2).
Furthermore, single knockout strains showed decreased survival rate
when exposed to higher temperatures. After 45-47 h of incubation at
39-40°C,
KIN1 and
KIN2 cells had viabilities that were 50 and
73% of WT viabilities, respectively (Table 2).
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KIN1 cells swim more slowly than control WT cells (Table 2). When
grown for 1 d before measurement at 30°C, the average speed of
KIN1 was 67% of WT.
KIN2 cells did not show any defect in
motility rate (Table 2). At 30°C,
KIN1 cells showed a nearly normal rate of cilia formation after deciliation (Table 2). However, at
38-40°C,
KIN1 cells regenerated cilia with a half-time of recovery almost twice that of WT cells.
KIN2 showed no difference from WT at 30 or 39°C.
Either KIN1 or KIN2 Is Required for Assembly of Cilia and Normal Cytokinesis
To test for synthetic interactions between KIN1 and
KIN2, we created double knockout heterokaryons lacking
KIN1 and KIN2 in their MICs and having WT alleles
in their MACs. To bring the double knockout (
KIN1
KIN2) phenotype
to expression in the MACs, we crossed heterokaryon strains to each
other. As a control, we also mated cells having only WT copies.
KIN1
KIN2 pairs separated at the proper time, indicating that
zygotic expression of neither Kin1p nor Kin2p is required for the
completion of conjugation. When refed
KIN1
KIN2 cells multiplied
more slowly than WT controls. By 36 h after pair isolation, the
average number of cells per drop (cells derived from a single mating
pair) was 27.9 ± 32.0 and 91.6 ± 25.0 for
KIN1
KIN2
and WT cells, respectively (n = 41 and 47, respectively). On a
standard culture medium (SPP), WT cells continued to grow to maximal
density, whereas after 84 h, all
KIN1
KIN2 cells failed to
multiple further and died out within a few days.
The most striking difference in the
KIN1
KIN2 cells compared with
single knockouts was their progressive loss of motility. By 36 and
84 h after pair isolation, 71.4 and 100% of
KIN1
KIN2 drops
(n = 41) contained no motile cells, respectively, compared with
only 2% of control isolates at 84 h (n = 47). Confocal
analysis revealed that
KIN1
KIN2 cells contained fewer
normal-length ciliary axonemes (Figure
3), with most of the decrease occurring
between 12 and 36 h (Figure 4E).
During the Tetrahymena cell cycle, locomotory cilia are not
resorbed before cell division. Instead, full-length cilia are retained,
whereas new cilia are assembled from new basal bodies that appear near
the existing basal bodies (Dippell, 1968
). At 22 h after pair
isolation we observed
KIN1
KIN2 cells with axonemes that were
highly heterogeneous in length (Figure 3D). Further axoneme shortening
occurred between 22 and 84 h, leading to axonemes with a mean
length of 7.7% of the length in WT (Figures 3, E-H, and 4E). By
29 h most cells have undergone only zero to four cell divisions
and therefore would normally contain 100-6.25% of the preexisting
cilia transmitted from the exconjugants. However, at 29 h, many
cells already completely lacked cilia of normal length (Figure 3, E and
F). Thus, kinesin-II is required for both assembly of new cilia and
maintenance of preexisting cilia. Transmission electron micrographs
revealed that at 84 h most cilia contained only extremely short
remnants of outer doublets and were covered by a small bulge of the
plasma membrane (Figure 4, A and B). Cross-sections, in contrast,
showed normal structure of basal bodies in mutants (Figure 4, C and D).
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Surprisingly, many
KIN1
KIN2 cells grew large in size and had
increased numbers of nuclei. A WT cell undergoing cytokinesis is shown
in Figure 3A. Many
KIN1
KIN2 cells contained multiple "subcells" and multiple nuclei, indicating that they failed to complete cytokinesis after nuclear division (Figure 3, F-H). At 60 h in the standard SPP medium 58.5% of
KIN1
KIN2 cells had more than one subcell, compared with 3% of WT cells (Figure
5A). Along with the increase in the
number of subcells, we observed an increase in the number of nuclei in
KIN1
KIN2 cells (Figure 5, B and C). Importantly, the two major
phenotypic traits of
KIN1
KIN2 mutants, cell paralysis and arrest
in cytokinesis, have different times of onset. Specifically, the cell
paralysis appears to occur before the cytokinesis arrests. For example,
at 22 h, the majority of double knockout isolates already
contained paralyzed cells, whereas only a few percent of cells
contained multiple subunits or nuclei (Figure 5D). Furthermore,
virtually all live multinucleated "monsters" that we observed were
completely paralyzed. These observations raise the intriguing
possibility that the observed cytokinesis defects are caused by the
loss of cilia or simply by the loss of cell motility.
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Double Knockout Cells Can Be Rescued by Reintroduction of a Wild-Type KIN1 or KIN2 Gene
If the absence of both KIN1 and KIN2 is the
cause of the phenotypes of
KIN1
KIN2 cells, reintroduction of
either WT KIN1 or KIN2 should rescue the mutant
cells. We mated cells that were not only double knockout heterokaryons
but that also have the mpr1-1 gene in their MICs and not
their MACs. The mpr1-1 gene confers resistance to
6-methylpurine (mp). Because the drug resistance allele is in the MIC
and not in the MAC, only conjugation progeny cells can survive in the
presence of mp, whereas all nonmating cells as well as cells that abort
mating without developing a new MAC are killed (Orias and Bruns, 1976
).
When these were crossed and plated on SPP medium containing mp, no
surviving cells were recovered in multiple experiments despite using
large numbers of mating cells (1 × 107
cells per experiment; n = 4). In contrast, viable and motile clones were recovered (at a frequency of 1-50 per experiment) when
KIN1
KIN2 heterokaryons were bombarded with particles coated by
either KIN1 or KIN2 fragments.
Epitope-tagged Kin1p Preferentially Accumulates in Cilia That Undergo Active Assembly
We subsequently rescued mating
KIN1
KIN2 heterokaryons using
a genomic fragment of KIN1 modified by addition of a 5xMyc
epitope tag to the N terminus of predicted Kin1p. The mechanism of
rescue is based on replacement of the disrupted macronuclear copies of the target gene by the rescuing fragment, mediated by homologous recombination (Hai and Gorovsky, 1997
). Thus, using the heterokaryon rescue approach, the epitope-tagged Kin1p is expressed at its normal locus using its own promoter. Using anti-Myc antibodies we
detected a protein of the expected molecular mass of ~100 kDa in
cells rescued by a gene encoding 5xMyc-Kin1p but not in cells rescued
by a WT KIN1 gene (Figure 6A).
Western blotting analysis showed the presence of 5xMyc-Kin1p in the
ciliary fraction, but no signal was detected in the equivalent amount
of the cell bodies (Figure 6A). Purity of cell fractions was verified
using anti-macronuclear histone, hv1 antibodies (Stargell et
al., 1993
), and AXO49 antibodies directed against hyperglycylated
tubulin isoforms known to be specific to cilia (Bre et al.,
1996
). On Western blots, the anti-hv1 histone antibodies detected a
single band of expected size in the cell body fraction but not in the
ciliary fraction (Figure 6B), whereas the AXO49 cross-reacted only with
the ciliary fraction (Figure 6C). Extraction of cilia with NP-40 showed
that approximately half of 5xMyc-Kin1p was present in the membrane plus
soluble matrix fraction, and half was in the insoluble axonemal
fraction (Figure 6A). When fixed and permeabilized cells expressing
5xMyc-Kin1p were processed for immunofluorescence with anti-Myc
antibodies, we repeatedly failed to detect any signal above the
background observed in control cells.
|
In an attempt to increase the sensitivity of detection of Kin1p, we
rescued
KIN1
KIN2 cells with a gene encoding Kin1p fused to GFP.
The GFP-Kin1p transformants grew well and were motile. Although we
could not detect any GFP autofluorescence in live transformant cells,
we detected the GFP-Kin1p signal in fixed cells by immunofluorescence
using polyclonal anti-GFP antibodies. In WT nondividing (Figure
7A) and dividing cells (Figure 7M), anti-GFP antibodies produced only a weak background staining in the
cell body, whereas cilia were not stained. In cells rescued by a
GFP-KIN1 fragment, a weak GFP signal was detected in cilia, and there
was an increase of signal in the cell body relative to negative control
cells (Figure 7G). Most locomotory cilia were weakly labeled, except a
few cilia, which were labeled more strongly and were generally shorter
and therefore could be immature cilia in the process of their assembly
(Figure 7, G and H boxed areas). Strong GFP labeling was observed in
oral cilia in the developing oral apparatus in dividing cells (Figure
7O, arrows), and only weak labeling was detected in mature oral cilia
of nondividing cells (Figure 7G, arrows). Thus, it appears that Kin1p
preferentially accumulates in locomotory and oral cilia, which undergo
active assembly. To test this hypothesis, we analyzed the localization of GFP-Kin1p in nongrowing cells (incubated in a starvation medium overnight), which were deciliated and allowed to regenerated cilia. These cells were double labeled using anti-GFP antibodies and the
TAP952 monoclonal antibodies, which recognize monoglycylated tubulins
(Bre et al., 1996
).
|
In starved cells before deciliation, the TAP952 antibody primarily
labeled the tips of cilia (Figure 8, B).
However, in regenerating cells, newly assembled cilia were labeled more
uniformly by TAP952 (Figure 8, D and F). Thus, the uniform labeling
with the TAP952 antibody can be used as a marker for newly assembled
cilia. In starved cells before deciliation, the pattern of distribution of GFP-Kin1p was similar to the pattern seen in vegetatively growing cells, with most of the GFP signal present in cilia and some staining of the cell body (Figure 8A). Twenty minutes after deciliation, short
cilia were already present, and virtually all cilia were labeled
heavily by anti-GFP and uniformly by TAP952 antibodies (Figure 8, C and
D). At 45 min most cilia were also stained brightly by anti-GFP
antibodies and uniformly by the TAP952 antibodies (Figure 8, E and F).
Negative control cells did not show any ciliary labeling by anti-GFP
antibodies at 45 min (our unpublished results). By 180 min, most cilia
in cells expressing GFP-Kin1p were already fully assembled, as
indicated by the pattern of labeling of TAP952 (mainly tips of cilia),
and there was a dramatic decrease in the staining intensity of cilia by
anti-GFP antibodies (Figure 8, G and H). Thus, in cilia regenerating
starved cells, Kin1p preferentially accumulates in cilia that actively
assemble, and its abundance decreases dramatically after ciliary
assembly is completed.
|
Strikingly, in vegetatively growing cells individual locomotory cilia, which were labeled strongly with anti-GFP, antibodies were also labeled uniformly by the TAP952. In most cases, scattered single growing cilia (more uniform TAP952 labeling) were strongly labeled by anti-GFP antibodies and were immediately adjacent to mature cilia (tip labeling by TAP952), which were only very weakly labeled by anti-GFP antibodies (Figure 7, I-L). Negative control cells lacking GFP-Kin1p showed no anti-GFP labeling in both mature and growing cilia (Figure 7, C-F). Newly developed oral cilia, which were labeled heavily by anti-GFP antibodies, were also uniformly labeled by TAP952 antibodies (Figure 7, O and P). Thus, Kin1p is preferentially targeted to a subset of cilia that undergo active assembly in both vegetatively growing and cilia regenerating cells. The targeting mechanism appears to operate at the resolution level of a single cilium.
Loss of Viability of Double Knockout Cells Is Caused by Inability to Phagocytose
In Tetrahymena cells a subset of specialized cilia is
organized into four oral membranelles that surround the oral cavity. Coordinated beating of oral cilia is required for directing food particles into the phagocytic vacuoles formed at the bottom of the oral
cavity. At 41-60 h, (Figure 3, G and H) most
KIN1
KIN2 cells
appeared to lack any oral membranelles, which were easily identified in
WT cells (Figure 3A) or in
KIN1
KIN2 cells at earlier time points
(Figure 3, C-F). Microscopic observations of live
KIN1
KIN2 cells
showed absence of any food vacuoles inside the cell body. Thus, the
KIN1
KIN2 cells lose their ability to phagocytose, likely because
they lack oral cilia. This observation raises the possibility that
KIN1
KIN2 cells die on the standard medium (SPP) because they are
unable to feed. Although Tetrahymena cells require phagocytosis to grow on the SPP medium used so far in this study, mutants of Tetrahymena that lack a functional oral
apparatus, can be grown in a modified medium (MEPP). Presumably, this
medium stimulates alternative routes for nutrient uptake, such as
micropinocytosis (Orias and Rasmussen, 1976
). Strikingly, unlike in SPP
medium, in MEPP most
KIN1
KIN2 cells remained viable and divided
with a doubling time of ~8.5 h. Thus, the cause of lethality of
double knockout cells in SPP is the inability to perform phagocytosis, resulting from the loss of oral cilia. Although
KIN1
KIN2 cells continued to grow and divide in the MEPP medium, they remained completely paralyzed, and many remained multinucleated (Figures 3I and
5).
Cell Division Phenotype in Double Knockout Cells Is Most Likely Induced by Cell Paralysis
To assess how the absence of Kin1p and Kin2p affects the course of
cytokinesis, we analyzed live WT and
KIN1
KIN2 cells during cell
division using video microscopy. In T. thermophila,
initially the cleavage furrow is formed asymmetrically on one side of
the cell. We isolated early dividers having a unilateral cleavage furrow from WT and
KIN1
KIN2 populations and analyzed the course of cytokinesis (Figure 9). It took ~20
min for WT cells to complete cell division starting from the unilateral
cleavage stage (Figure 9, A-F). Mutant cells showed a nearly normal
cleavage furrow ingression (Figure 9, G-K), but many failed to
separate at the final stage of cytokinesis. Figure 9 shows a
KIN1
KIN2 cell that had almost a complete cleavage furrow
ingression at 25 min (Figure 9K) but failed to separate completely and
after 6 h showed signs of cortical integration, with the
cytoplasmic content of the posterior cell being absorbed by the
anterior cell (Figure 9L).
|
As already mentioned, the temporal analysis of phenotypic traits
indicated that the cell division arrests occur after cells become
paralyzed. Furthermore, we did not see any Kin1p in association with
the cleavage furrow (Figure 7O). All these observations taken raised a
possibility that the arrests at cytokinesis in
KIN1
KIN2 cells are
caused by lack of ciliary motility. Thus, Tetrahymena cells
may require cell locomotion to complete cytokinesis. Dividing WT cells
are generally less motile compared with nondividing cells and tend to
sit at the bottom of a culture dish. However, a video analysis of a
number of WT cells revealed that within ~2 min before cell separation
the posterior daughter cell often rotates along its longitudinal axis,
and virtually all daughter cells briefly pull apart immediately before
their final separation (our unpublished results). It is likely that the
rotations create a strain within the membranous channel connecting the
daughter cells, which facilitate its breakage when the cells pull
apart. The detailed analysis of the motile activity of dividing cells
will be published elsewhere (Brown, Hardin, and Gaertig, unpublished
data). The dividing double knockout cells remain completely
paralyzed in the course of cell division. Thus, it appears that the
arrests in cytokinesis frequently seen in
KIN1
KIN2 cells are
induced by cell paralysis.
| |
DISCUSSION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
To investigate the function of kinesin-II in vivo, we constructed strains of T. thermophila, which lack the kinesin-II-encoding genes KIN1 and KIN2. Cells lacking either KIN1 or KIN2 exhibited several subtle phenotypes. Some of these, such as slow growth and temperature sensitivity were observed in cells lacking either of the two genes. However, only cells lacking KIN1 showed reduced cell motility and impaired assembly of cilia. The reduction in growth rate was more severe in the KIN2 null cells. Thus, although the phenotypes caused by deletion of either gene partly overlap, KIN1 appears to be more important for ciliary functions, whereas KIN2 is more important for cell multiplication.
Three lines of evidence indicate that KIN1 and
KIN2 arose relatively recently as a result of the
duplication of a common ancestor kinesin-II gene: 1) sequences of
KIN1 and KIN2 are more similar to each other than
to any other known kinesins-II; 2) positions of two of three introns
are conserved; and 3) the two genes are genetically linked and thus are
located not far from each other on the same micronuclear chromosome. To
address the possibility of overlapping functions between
KIN1 and KIN2, we created cells lacking all
copies of both genes, using a novel approach based on construction of
heterokaryon strains lacking specific genes in the germ line
micronucleus and having normal gene copies in the somatic macronucleus
(Hai and Gorovsky, 1997
). The heterokaryons are phenotypically normal,
because only the macronuclear genes are expressed during the vegetative
life of Tetrahymena. However, when two heterokaryons mate,
they form new MACs from the micronuclei, which lack all functional
copies of the targeted genes. This approach effectively produces an
inducible gene knockout. Double knockout cells showed two major
defects: 1) extreme shortening of locomotory and oral cilia and 2)
frequent failure in cytokinesis. Double knockout cells were not viable
on a standard medium but could grow on a modified medium on which
Tetrahymena cells do not require phagocytosis for their
survival (Orias and Rasmussen, 1976
). Thus, the lethality observed on
the standard medium is most likely caused by the loss of oral cilia,
which are essential for phagocytosis in Tetrahymena.
Consequently, Tetrahymena cells do not require KIN1 and KIN2 for their survival under conditions
in which cells are not dependent on phagocytosis.
The most dramatic phenotypic change in double knockout
Tetrahymena cells is the almost complete loss of cilia.
Similarly, mutation of the Chlamydomonas kinesin-II
FLA10 leads to complete resorbtion of existing flagella (Lux
and Dutcher, 1991
; Walther et al., 1994
). Knockout of the
kinesin-II gene in mouse, KIF3B, caused death of embryos before
midgestation. However, the nodal cells in the KIF3B-deficient embryos
completely failed to assemble cilia (Nonaka et al., 1998
).
This phenotype is essentially identical to the phenotype caused by
elimination of both Kin1p and Kin2p in Tetrahymena. Thus,
kinesin-II genes function universally in ciliary assembly.
We show that in addition to its role in the assembly of new cilia,
kinesin-II is also essential for ciliary maintenance. In wild-type
Tetrahymena, most if not all locomotory cilia are never resorbed during the vegetative life cycle. Strikingly, we found that
after induction of the knockout phenotype, mutant cells not only failed
to assemble new cilia but also resorbed all of their preexisting cilia.
Moreover, an epitope-tagged Kin1p was found along the full length of
cilia in nongrowing (starved) cells, consistent with the involvement of
kinesin-II in ciliary maintenance. These data are consistent with a
high level of turnover of axonemal subunits reported for morphostatic
cilia and flagella (Rosenbaum and Child, 1967
; Nelsen, 1975
; Stephens,
1997
) and suggest that the subunit turnover is driven by kinesin-II and
possibly other molecular motors.
Although kinesin-II is required for both assembly and maintenance of
cilia, we found that epitope-tagged motor proteins preferentially accumulate in cilia that undergo assembly. This phenomenon was observed
in regenerating cilia and in a subset of oral and locomotory cilia that
assemble in vegetative cells. Tetrahymena cells appear to
use a mechanism that preferentially directs kinesin-II to the newly
assembled cilia or causes its preferential retention by assembling
cilia. Because in Tetrahymena new cilia are formed immediately adjacent to the preexisting cilia, the proposed targeting and retention mechanism must operate at the resolution level of a
single cilium. Interestingly, immunofluorescence studies in Chlamydomonas showed that the kinesin-II epitopes were more
concentrated near the basal bodies and in the proximal part of the
axoneme (Vashishtha et al., 1996
; Cole et al.,
1998
). Thus, initially, kinesin-II may be targeted to the basal bodies
and later to move to the adjacent axoneme.
The molecular nature of kinesin-II involvement in ciliogenesis and
ciliary maintenance is not well understood. In
Chlamydomonas, FLA10 activity is required to maintain
intraflagellar transport, the motility of raft particles detected
beneath the flagellar membrane (Kozminski et al., 1995
).
Induction of the fla10 mutant phenotype caused loss of rafts
and the loss of two types of 16S protein complexes from flagella,
suggesting that 16S complexes are both components of rafts and the
FLA10 cargo (Piperno and Mead, 1997
; Cole et al., 1998
). One
of the components of the 16S complex in Chlamydomonas is a
protein homologous to the OSM-6 protein of C. elegans, which
plays an essential role in the function of chemosensory ciliary neurons
(Cole et al., 1998
; Collet et al., 1998
).
Recently, fluorescent OSM-6-GFP protein was observed to move inside the
chemosensory cilia of living C. elegans worms at the same
rate as the rate of movement of the KAP subunit of the kinesin-II
complex (Orozco et al., 1999
). The 16S complexes are most
likely components of rafts seen in live cells by differential interference contrast microscopy and are proposed to function in
transport of flagellar subunits (Rosenbaum et al., 1999
).
Consistent with this hypothesis, induction of the fla10
phenotype blocked transport of an inner dynein arm polypeptide but
allowed for transport of an outer dynein arm component (Piperno
et al., 1996
), suggesting that the inner but not outer arm
components are one of the cargoes of kinesin-II. It seems unlikely,
however, that a failure to transport inner dynein arm components by
kinesin-II would result in a complete block in axonemal assembly,
because numerous mutants lacking specific axonemal components (dynein
arms and radial spokes) have been described that still assemble
axonemes (Dutcher, 1995
). It is likely that kinesin-II in addition to
its role in the transport of dynein arm components is also involved in
the transport of some structural components required for the initial
elongation of the axoneme such as microtubule subunits or ciliary
membranes. Interestingly, longitudinal sections of basal bodies on
KIN1
KIN2 cells showed that many of the very short axonemal
fragments are covered by a bulge of ciliary membrane, suggesting that
membranes are properly delivered to the growing axoneme. It appears
that kinesin-II is involved in the delivery of a basic structural
component of cilia that is essential for elongation of axonemal
microtubules, such as tubulin dimers or oligomers.
The most unexpected result of our study was the frequent failure of
double knockout cells to complete cytokinesis. Some previous studies
suggested that kinesin-II plays a direct role in cell division.
Immunofluorescent studies in sea urchin embryos showed an accumulation
of kinesin-II proteins in the interzone of the mitotic spindle during
anaphase before the formation of the cleavage furrow (Henson et
al., 1995
). Also, the fla10 mutation results in
synthetic defects in the cell cycle when combined with another mutation
(Lux and Dutcher, 1991
), and FLA10 protein transiently associates with
the centrioles in Chlamydomonas (Vashishtha et al., 1996
). However, despite dramatic cytokinesis defects in our kinesin-II mutants, we did not find any evidence that would support direct involvement of kinesin-II in cytokinesis. First,
immunolocalization studies showed that epitope-tagged Kin1p is highly
concentrated in cilia. Although some Kin1p was detected in the cell
body by immunofluorescence, this pool did not show any clear
association with the cleavage furrow or changes in the distribution
during the cell cycle. More likely, the cell body pool of Kin1p
represents the newly synthesized motor subunits before their delivery
to cilia. Furthermore, the double KIN mutants appear not to be affected in the initiation and ingression of the cleavage furrow until the final
stage of cytokinesis when the daughter cells break the cytoplasmic
connection. At that time in wild-type cells we found that the posterior
daughter cells often rotate along their longitudinal axis, and both
daughters pull apart. These observations suggest that
Tetrahymena cells use mechanical force generated by ciliary beating to culminate cytokinesis. This hypothesis is consistent with
the earlier onset of the cell paralysis phenotype compared with the
cell division arrest phenotype (Figure 6D). Although cell locomotion is
not absolutely required for cell division, it appears to be an
evolutionary adaptation to support the unusually high rate of culture
growth of Tetrahymena.
| |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
We are grateful to Dr. Donna Cassidy-Hanley for assistance with the use of the biolistic gun. We are most grateful to University of Georgia Athens undergraduates Curtis McNiff, Brett Margolias, Wood Pope, and Clyde Hardin for contribution in analyses of knockout phenotypes and Naishaj Shah for construction of the GFP-KIN1 plasmid. We thank Dr. Mark Farmer (Center for Advanced Ultrastructural Research, University of Georgia) for help with the use of the video imaging system and for suggestions regarding capture of DAPI images on the confocal microscope. We thank Jian Zhao Shen for assistance in preparation of thin sections for electron microscopy and Yan Gao for assistance with Western blots. We also thank Dr. Mitchell Bernstein (Albert Einstein College of Medicine) for providing the sequence of the cloned KIN5 gene fragment, Dr. Nicolette Levilliers (University Paris-Sud, Paris, France) for providing the TAP952 and AXO49 antibodies, Dr. Marty Gorovsky (University of Rochester, Rochester, NY) for the SG antibody, Dr. David Allis (University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA) for the anti-histone hv1 antibodies, Dr. Karl Saxe (Emory University, Atlanta, GA) for providing the bsr plasmid, Dr. Keith Kozminski for providing the Myc construct, and Dr. Aaron Turkewitz for the GFP construct. We also thank Dr. Marty Gorovsky and Dr. Joseph Frankel (University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA) for reading the manuscript and for helpful suggestions. The biolistic bombardment experiment for the disruption of the KIN1 gene was performed at the biolistic facility of the Plant Science Center at Cornell University. This work was supported by US Public Health Service grant GM-54017 from the National Institutes of Health to J.G.
| |
FOOTNOTES |
|---|
Online version of this article contains video material
for Figure 9. Online version available at www.molbiolcell.org.
* Corresponding author. E-mail address: jgaertig{at}cb.uga.edu.
| |
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