|
|
|
|
Vol. 10, Issue 10, 3263-3277, October 1999
Braun Laboratories, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California 91125
Submitted March 5, 1999; Accepted August 2, 1999| |
ABSTRACT |
|---|
|
|
|---|
The replication initiation protein Cdc6p forms a tight complex with Cdc28p, specifically with forms of the kinase that are competent to promote replication initiation. We now show that potential sites of Cdc28 phosphorylation in Cdc6p are required for the regulated destruction of Cdc6p that has been shown to occur during the Saccharomyces cerevisiae cell cycle. Analysis of Cdc6p phosphorylation site mutants and of the requirement for Cdc28p in an in vitro ubiquitination system suggests that targeting of Cdc6p for degradation is more complex than previously proposed. First, phosphorylation of N-terminal sites targets Cdc6p for polyubiquitination probably, as expected, through promoting interaction with Cdc4p, an F box protein involved in substrate recognition by the Skp1-Cdc53-F-box protein (SCF) ubiquitin ligase. However, in addition, mutation of a single, C-terminal site stabilizes Cdc6p in G2 phase cells without affecting substrate recognition by SCF in vitro, demonstrating a second and novel requirement for specific phosphorylation in degradation of Cdc6p. SCF-Cdc4p- and N-terminal phosphorylation site-dependent ubiquitination appears to be mediated preferentially by Clbp/Cdc28p complexes rather than by Clnp/Cdc28ps, suggesting a way in which phosphorylation of Cdc6p might control the timing of its degradation at then end of G1 phase of the cell cycle. The stable cdc6 mutants show no apparent replication defects in wild-type strains. However, stabilization through mutation of three N-terminal phosphorylation sites or of the single C-terminal phosphorylation site leads to dominant lethality when combined with certain mutations in the anaphase-promoting complex.
| |
INTRODUCTION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
A hallmark of eukaryotic DNA replication is that replication is
restricted to one phase of the cell cycle, S phase, and that this
replication is mediated by the coordinated firing of a multitude of
replication origins spread over many chromosomes. In
Saccharomyces cerevisiae, replication is initiated from
hundreds of origins, and initiation depends on the origin recognition
complex (ORC), which can be detected at origins by means of in vivo
footprinting and is present at origins throughout the cell cycle (Bell
and Stillman, 1992
; Bell et al., 1993
; Diffley and Cocker,
1992
; Rowley et al., 1995
). At the end of mitosis the origin
footprint expands, and genetic and molecular evidence suggest that the
six-subunit ORC, Cdc6p, the six Mcms, and Cdc45p assemble at origins to
form a prereplicative complex (preRC) at this time (Newlon, 1997
). Origins are then said to be licensed for replication (Blow and Laskey,
1988
). PreRCs are subsequently activated by two kinases, Clb5,6p/Cdc28p
and Dbf4p/Cdc7p. Activation coincides with the return of the origin
footprint to its unlicensed state.
To maintain genomic integrity, cells must coordinate DNA replication
such that every origin of replication fires only once per cell cycle.
In S. cerevisiae, the S phase cyclin/Cdc28ps, Clb5p/Cdc28p,
and Clb6p/Cdc28p promote the initiation of DNA replication and also
prevent aberrant reinitiation. The S phase cyclin/Cdc28 proteins appear
well before the G1-S transition but are inhibited by the presence of
Sic1p (Nasmyth, 1993
, 1996
; Schwob and Nasmyth, 1993
; Schwob et
al., 1994
; Surana et al., 1993
; Dahmann et
al., 1995
; Dirick et al., 1995
). Destruction of Sic1p
at the G1-S transition activates the S phase cyclin/Cdc28ps, and DNA
replication follows closely upon activation, occurring earlier in the
cell cycle if Sic1p is deleted and the S phase cyclin/Cdc28ps is
prematurely activated and occurring later in the presence of a
stabilized allele of Sic1p, which maintains the S phase cyclin/Cdc28ps
in an inactive state (Schwob et al., 1994
; Verma et
al., 1997a
). Additionally, in the absence of S phase cyclins, DNA
replication is delayed until activation of the mitotic cyclins
Clb1-Clb4. Thus, by all in vivo measures, initiation of DNA
replication is defined by the activation of the Clbp/Cdc28p kinases.
Phosphorylation of substrates may control origin firing in a number of
ways: phosphorylation may cause the import or export of DNA replication
proteins from the nucleus; phosphorylation may enhance or block the
assembly of replication proteins into replication complexes;
phosphorylation may trigger changes in conformation and activation or
inactivation of activities of initiation proteins; and phosphorylation
may target initiation proteins for degradation. To establish which mechanisms are at play requires identification of the substrates that
are phosphorylated at initiation. Although one candidate, Cdc45p, has
been suggested by recent experiments (Zou and Stillman, 1998
), and ORC,
Cdc6p, and the Mcms have consensus cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK)
phosphorylation sites, verification of the critical substrates has
proved difficult.
As just mentioned, firing of licensed preRCs depends on Clb/Cdc28
kinases, but formation of preRCs, by contrast, is inhibited in the
presence of Clb/Cdc28 complexes (Dahmann et al., 1995
). Thus, once activated by Clb kinases, origins of replication cannot refire until passage through mitosis inhibits Clb kinases. The substrates that are phosphorylated by Clbp/Cdc28p and thus prevent spurious replication are also unknown.
We are interested in characterizing the substrates of the
Clbp/Cdc28ps in the triggering of initiation and the prevention of
reinitiation. We have previously shown that Cdc6p both associates with
and is phosphorylated by Clbp/Cdc28p (Elsasser et al.,
1996
). The results presented here lead to the strong inference that
phosphorylation of N-terminal sequences in Cdc6p by Clbp/Cdc28p can
target Cdc6p for recognition by Skp1-Cdc53-F-box protein (SCF)-Cdc4p
and proteasomal degradation. It has been shown that S. cerevisiae arrested in S or G2 degrade bulk Cdc6p rapidly, but
that Cdc6p is stable as cells progress through G1 (Piatti et
al., 1995
; Drury et al., 1997
; Sanchez et
al., 1999
). The cell cycle-dependent instability of Cdc6p could
mean that Cdc6p is degraded in a Clbp/Cdc28-dependent manner. Cdc6p is
considerably more stable in cdc4/cdc34/cdc53 pathway mutants
than in wild-type cells (Piatti et al., 1995
; Drury et
al., 1997
; Sanchez et al., 1999
), suggesting a role for SCF-Cdc4p in Cdc6p turnover. Cdc6p is also stabilized by deleting the N
terminus, a region involved in Cdc28 binding, phosphorylation by Cdc28,
nuclear localization, restraint of aberrant mitosis, and Cdc4p binding
(Elsasser et al., 1996
; Jong et al., 1996
; Drury et al., 1997
; Weinreich et al., 1999
). As
expected from the stability in cdc4 mutants, Cdc6p is
ubiquitinated in vivo in a Cdc4-dependent manner (Sanchez et
al., 1999
). Using an in vitro ubiquitination system combined with
a collection of new cdc6 alleles, we set out to explore the
role of phosphorylation of Cdc6p in Cdc4p-dependent ubiquitination. We
have correlated these findings with the effects of the mutations on
Cdc6p stability in G2 phase. We confirm a role for the N terminus in
targeting Cdc6p for degradation by the SCF-Cdc4p-mediated
ubiquitination pathway and demonstrate a requirement for
phosphorylation by either Clnp or Clbp kinases. However, the behavior
of several of the cdc6 mutants suggests that the regulation
of Cdc6p turnover cannot be entirely accounted for by
SCF-Cdc4p-mediated ubiquitination, as had been suggested to date. This
may indicate either a direct or indirect role for the
anaphase-promoting complex (APC) (Peters, 1999
) as well as SCF in
regulation of Cdc6p function.
| |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Media
The following abbreviations are used for yeast media: YPD (1% Bacto-yeast extract, 2% Bacto-peptone, 2% dextrose), YPR (1% Bacto-yeast extract, 2% Bacto-peptone, 2% raffinose), YPG (1% Bacto-yeast extract, 2% Bacto-peptone, 2% galactose), SD minus uracil (2% dextrose, 7.5% yeast nitrogen base, 0.5% casamino acids, 20 mg/l adenine sulfate, 20 mg/l tryptophan), SR minus uracil (2% raffinose, 7.5% yeast nitrogen base, 0.5% casamino acids, 20 mg/l adenine sulfate, 20 mg/l tryptophan), and SD minus leucine (2% dextrose, 7.5% yeast nitrogen base, 0.6 g/l CSM-his-leu-trp-ura [Bio101, Vista, CA], 20 mg/l histidine, 20 mg/l tryptophan, 20 mg/l uracil).
Strains
The strains used in this work include BJ2168 (a
prc1-407 prb1-1122 pep4-3 leu2 trp1 ura3-52), BJ5459 (a
ura3-52 trp1 lys2-801 leu2
1 his3
200
pep4::HIS3 prb1
1.6R can1 GAL) (Yeast
Genetic Stock Center, Berkeley, CA), RJD635 (a ura3 leu2
trp1 pep4::TRP1 cdc28::CDC28-HA::TRP1
bar1::LEU2) (Elsasser et al., 1996
), RJD885 (
ura3 leu2 trp1 cln1::URA3 cln2::LEU2
cln3::URA3 leu2::GAL-CLN3::LEU2 pep4::TRP1 cdc28::CDC28-HA::HIS3)
(Verma et al., 1997b
), RJD893 (a cdc4 ura3 leu2 trp1
cln1::URA3 cln2::LEU2 cln3::URA3
leu2::GAL-CLN3::LEU2 pep4::TRP1
cdc28::CDC28-HA::HIS3), L40 (a
his3
200 trp1-901 leu2-3112 ade2 lys2-801
URA3::(lexA OP)8-LacZ
LYS2::(lexA OP)4-HIS3), and
JLC1402 (cdc16-26/cdc16-264 ura3/ura3 leu2/leu2
trp1/trp1) (from K. Heichman, Myriad Genetics, Salt Lake City, UT).
Plasmids
Preparation of Vectors with the GAL1,10 Promoter
(All Constructs with GAL Promoter).
Yeast and Bluescript
(Stratagene, La Jolla, CA) plasmids bearing the GAL promoter
flanked by SacI and BamHI sites were prepared as
follows. pBM150 (Johnston and Davis, 1984
) was cut with
EcoRI, and an oligonucleotide cassette composed of SE25 and
SE26 (Table 1) was cloned in. This
oligocassette has ends that anneal to the EcoRI ends but are
designed such that the EcoRI sites are not regenerated, and
the double-stranded region of the cassette contains a SacI
site. The GAL promoter was excised with SacI and BamHI and cloned into the same sites in pBluescript SK(
),
resulting in pELS42, and into the same sites in the yeast-integrating
vector with a URA3-selectable marker, pRS306 (Sikorski and
Hieter, 1989
), resulting in pELS89.
|
Introduction of a Multiple myc Tag at the C Terminus of
CDC6.
A Bluescript-based vector containing the coding region for a
multiple myc epitope tag was generated by ligation of a cassette composed of oligonucleotides SE53 and SE54 (Table 1) and cloning these
ladders into the SpeI site of pBluescript SK(
). A construct containing seven head-to-tail myc tags, pELS47, was selected for preparation of poly-myc-tagged CDC6. A fragment encoding
residues 392-513 of CDC6 (from the StyI site to
the last residue) fused to a multiple myc tag was generated by
recombinant PCR using oligonucleotides SE61 through SE64 and
templates pELS47 and pELS20 (Elsasser et al., 1996
). The
resulting PCR product was cloned into the SacI and SpeI
sites of pBluescript SK(
), generating pELS55. Sequencing of the PCR
product revealed that two extra myc tags had been created during the
course of the PCR reaction.
Preparation of Yeast Vectors Expressing Small N-terminal
Deletions of CDC6 (Figure 1).
pRS315-based vectors
(ARS1, CEN4, and LEU2) (Sikorski and Hieter,
1989
) for the expression of CDC6 alleles with small
deletions in the N terminus were assembled from three fragments: the
GAL promoter, N-terminal fragments (from residue 1 to 48)
bearing various mutations, and a fragment (from residue 47 to 513)
bearing the C terminus of CDC6 fused the Myc9 epitope tag.
Mutagenesis of the N terminus of CDC6 was accomplished as
follows. The region of CDC6 encoding the first 48 residues
of the protein was excised from pKTU6 (Elsasser et al.,
1996
) with BamHI and PstI and cloned into the
same sites in pBluescript SK(
), generating pELS12. (The sequence near
the start of the open reading frame (ORF) is GGATCCCATATG, where the start codon is underlined.) pELS12 was transformed into CJ236
(dut
ung
), and single-stranded DNA was prepared
from this strain. Deletions within the C-terminal 46 amino acids were
prepared with the oligonucleotide primers indicated in Table
2 using the Muta-Gene mutagenesis kit
(Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA) yielding pELS32 (
3-16), pELS33 (
13-26), pELS34 (
23-26), and pELS52 (
33-46). The GAL promoter
was cloned in front of the mutated N termini by inserting the
SacI-BamHI fragment derived from pELS42 (above),
generating plasmids pELS64 (wild type), pELS68 (
3-16), pELS65
(
13-26), pELS69 (
23-26), and pELS66 (
33-46). A
Bluescript-based construct bearing the CDC6 ORF from
residues 47 to 513 fused in frame with the Myc9 tag was generated by
excising the natural C terminus with StyI and
SpeI from pELS51, a bacterial vector bearing the
CDC6 ORF from residues 47 to 513 followed by 300 bases of
the natural 3' untranslated region (UTR), and cloning in the
epitope-tagged C-terminus from pELS55, resulting in pELS60. pELS60 was
cut with PstI and HindIII, excising a fragment
containing residues 47-513 of CDC6 fused to the Myc9 tag,
followed by the natural 3' UTR and cloned into pRS315, resulting in
pELS63. Fragments bearing the GAL promoter followed by the
N-terminal amino acids (from pELS64 through pELS69, described above)
were cloned into pELS63, generating pELS71 (wild type), pELS72
(
3-16), pELS73 (
13-26), pELS74 (
23-26), and pELS75 (
33-46).
|
Preparation of Vectors Containing the Entire CDC6 ORF and C-terminal Myc9 Epitope Tag. Bluescript-based constructs bearing the entire CDC6 ORF were generated by cloning the PstI-HindIII fragment from pELS60 (containing the CDC6 ORF from residue 47 to 513 fused to the Myc9 tag, followed by the natural 3' UTR) into the vectors containing the wild-type and mutant N termini of CDC6 (pELS12, pELS32, pELS33, pELS34, pELS52, and pELS86), resulting in plasmids pELS91, pELS92, pELS93, pELS94, and pELS95, respectively.
The nuclear localization site mutation was generated by mutating pELS12 with oligonucleotide SE72, resulting in pELS86. The PstI-HindIII fragment from pELS60 was cloned into the same sites in pELS86, generating pELS105.Additional Mutagenesis of CDC6.
Mutation of the CDK
consensus phosphorylation sites in CDC6 was accomplished by
transforming pELS91 into strain CJ236, producing single-stranded DNA,
and generating mutations using the Muta-Gene mutagenesis kit and the
primers shown in Tables 1 and 2. For alleles with mutations at several
sites, multiple oligonucleotides were used in a single reaction.
Mutagenesis using several oligonucleotides at once produced anywhere
from 10 to 90% desired products. The complete set of mutants is listed
in Table 3.
|
Plasmids with N-terminal Glutathione S-Transferase (GST)
Tags.
For the experiment shown in Figure 8, the plasmids YGpKTU6
(bearing wild-type Cdc6p) and YGpME6 (bearing Cdc6p mutated at lysine
114 to glutamate) were used (Elsasser et al., 1996
).
Preparation of Integrating Yeast Vectors Used for the Stability Assays in Figures 2 and 3. BamHI-HindIII fragments from the Bluescript-based vectors containing the entire CDC6 ORF, the C-terminal Myc9 tag, and the natural 3'UTR (the same set that was used for the in vitro ubiquitination experiments) were cloned into pELS89 (pRS306 with the GAL promoter). For integration, vectors were linearized at the EcoRV site within theURA3 marker.
Preparation of Vectors Used in the Two-Hybrid Assays.
Vectors with the wild-type and mutant CDC6 ORFs fused at the
C terminus of the LexA DNA binding domain were prepared by amplifying sequences from the Bluescript constructs bearing the complete ORF (see
Table 3) with 5' oligonucleotides SE128, SE129, SE130, and SE131 and 3'
oligonucleotides SE132 and SE133 (see Table
4) and cloning into BTM116. The
assortment of oligonucleotides used at the 5' end was required to
amplify mutants with engineered sequence differences at the N terminus.
Inserts generated with SE132 were subcloned much more efficiently than
inserts generated with SE133. The two oligonucleotides are exactly the
same at the 3' end, which anneals to the last nine natural codons of
CDC6. Following this, SE132 encodes a BamHI site,
and SE133 encodes a SalI site. BTM116 possesses a
BamHI site followed directly by a SalI site in
the polylinker between the LexA coding region and the transcriptional
termination signals. In the cases in which SE132 was used to generate
inserts, the BamHI site is maintained after the stop codons.
In the cases in which SE133 was used, this site is removed.
|
Cdc28p Binding
Strain BJ2168 was transformed with pELS71 through pELS75. Two
hundred-milliliter cultures were grown to midlog phase in SR-ura (2%
raffinose, 0.5% casamino acids, 1.5% yeast nitrogen base, and 20 mg/l
each adenine and tryptophan). Expression of wild-type and mutant
CDC6 was induced by adding solid galactose to 2%. Cells were harvested after 4 h, washed, resuspended in high-salt buffer (Elsasser et al., 1996
) at a concentration of 300 mg of wet
cells/ml, and lysed by bead beating (Biospec, Bartlesville, OK;
Mini Beadbeater, type BX-4), four times at 5000 rpm for 50 s each time, in the presence of 0.5 mm Zir/Silica beads (product number
11079105Z). The resulting extracts were diluted to 20 mg/ml, and small
aliquots were removed and mixed with equal volumes of 4× SDS-PAGE
loading buffer. Four milligrams of the remaining extract were mixed
with 2 µg of 9E10 antibody and 40 µl of 100 µg/ml protein
A-Sepharose slurry and incubated with mixing at 4°C for 90 min.
Immunoprecipitated protein was recovered, and beads were washed
thoroughly. Twenty microliters of 4× SDS-PAGE loading buffer were
added to the immunoprecipitates.
Stability Assay
Degradation in Synchronized Cells.
The following experiment
was carried out at 30°C. Ten-milliliter cultures were grown overnight
to early log phase (~2 × 106 cells/ml) in YPR.
Galactose was added at a final concentration of 2% to induce
CDC6 transcription, and cells were incubated for 2 h.
This induction protocol produced even expression levels of wild-type
and mutant alleles of Cdc6. We observed that although overnight
induction produced higher expression levels of stabilized Cdc6 alleles,
the half-lives of various alleles were unaffected by the long
induction, indicating that the destruction pathway is difficult ot
saturate. Nocodazole was then added to a final concentration of 15 µg/ml, and cells were incubated for an additional 3 h.
CDC6 transcription was repressed by the addition of glucose to 2%. Samples (0.75 ml) of cells were removed at various times after
the addition of glucose and added to an equal volume of ice-cold 2×
yeast stop mix (300 mM NaCl, 100 mM NaF, 2 mM
NaN3, 20 mM EDTA). Cells were recovered by two
centrifugations and resuspended in 200 µl of lysis Buffer (50 mM
NaOH, 2% SDS, 5%
-mercaptoethanol, 10% glycerol). After
vortexing, samples were boiled for 5 min and titrated with 1N HCl to a
pH of 7. Debris was removed by centrifugation at 14,000 rpm for 5 min.
The concentration of the resulting extract was ~4 mg/ml as determined
by A280 and
A260 readings. One hundred fifty
microliters of the clear supernatants were transferred to clean tubes
and mixed with 1 µl of bromphenol blue. Ten microliters of cleared
extract were electrophoresed on 7.5% SDS-PAGE gels and blotted to
Hybond nitrocellulose membranes (Amersham, Arlington Heights, IL).
Blots were stained with Ponceau-S to ensure that lanes were loaded
evenly. Blots were incubated with a 1:1000 dilution of 9E10 ascites
(Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Santa Cruz, CA) and a 1:2000 dilution of
goat anti-mouse HRP conjugate (Bio-Rad) and developed with ECL reagents (Amersham).
Degradation in Asynchronous Cells. The procedure was the same as for synchronous cells, but cells were grown exponentially to a density of 1 × 107 cells/ml before induction.
In Vitro Transcription and Translation
DNA templates for transcription of Myc9-tagged alleles of Cdc6p
were prepared by PCR amplification of CDC6 sequences from Bluescript-based plasmids listed in Table 3. The 5' primers were designed to introduce the T7 promoter upstream of the CDC6
coding region (SE108, SE134, SE135, and SE136), and the 3' primer SE37 corresponds to a sequence from the CDC6 3' UTR. These
primers are listed in Tables 1 and 2. In all cases the 5' primers
anneal to the first 27 nucleotides of CDC6, which are the
same as wild type in most cases but different for the alleles with a
mutation at the first CDK consensus site (threonine 7
alanine) and
for the deletions
3-16 and
8-46. Amplification was carried out
using 1 ng of plasmid DNA and 0.2 µM primers. DNA concentrations were determined by densitometry using an Alpha Innotech (San Leandro, CA) gel documentation system. A DNA template for the transcription of
SIC1 was prepared as described (Verma et al.,
1997b
). A DNA template for the transcription of untagged
CDC6 was produced by amplifying the ORF from the plasmids
listed in Table 3 with primers SE102 and SE103. PCR products were
purified using the Qiagen (Hilden, Germany) PCR purification kit.
Transcription was carried out in a volume of 100 µl by incubating 1 µg of DNA in the presence of 1 mM NTPs, 100 U of RNase inhibitor
(Boehringer Mannheim, Indianapolis, IN; product 799025; 1 U inhibits
50% of 5 ng of RNase A), 2 U of T7 RNA polymerase, and accompanying
buffer (Boehringer Mannheim) for 75 min at 37°C. Three microliters of
RNA were used directly in 20 µl of wheat germ in vitro translation
reactions (Promega, Madison, WI) as per the manufacturer's instructions.
Preparation of Fractionated Extracts for Ubiquitination
Preparation of DEAE-fractionated cell extracts was carried out
as previously described (Verma et al., 1997b
). Strain RJD885 was used for wild-type cell extract, and strain RJD893 was used for
cdc4 extracts.
Purification of Cdc34p
Cdc34p was purified as previously described (Banerjee et
al., 1993
). For the experiments in Figure 4 and Figure 5, Cdc34p purified to homogeneity was used. For the experiment in Figure 6,
Cdc34p purified through the DEAE step (25% pure) was used.
Expression of Proteins in Insect Cells
Baculoviruses used for the expression of proteins in insect
cells were as follows: vectors for the expression of GST-Cdc28-HAp, Cln2p, Clb5p, and Cdc4p were the same as those previously described (Feldman et al., 1997
). For the production of insect cell
lysates containing Cln2p/Cdc28p and Clb5p/Cdc28p, SF9 insect cells were coinfected with the relevant viruses at a multiplicity of
infection of 10. At 42 h after infection, cells were
recovered by centrifugation and resuspended 0.1 vol in ice-cold insect
cell lysis buffer (20 mM HEPES, pH 7.4, 100 mM NaCl, 0.1% Triton-X100,
5 mM MgCl2, 5 mM EDTA, 2 mM DTT, 1 mM PMSF, 1 µg/ml leupeptin and pepstatin, 50 mM NaF, 50 mM
-glycerophosphate). Cells were briefly sonicated to ensure lysis.
The lysate was cleared by centrifugation for 15 min at 13,000 × g, brought to a glycerol concentration of 10%, and frozen
in aliquots in liquid nitrogen.
Phosphorylation Assays
Untagged CDC6 was amplified, and 35S-labeled Cdc6p was produced by in vitro translation as described above. Two microliters of translation product were mixed with 4 µl of insect cell lysate containing GST-Cdc28-HAp and Clb5p, 2 µl of 10× reaction salts and protease inhibitors (50 mM magnesium acetate, 10 mM DTT, 5 mM PMSF, 100 µg/ml each leupeptin and pepstatin), 2 µl of an ATP-regenerating system (10 mM ATP, 350 mM creatine phosphate, 20 mM HEPES, pH 7.2, 10 mM magnesium acetate, 0.5 mg/ml creatine kinase), and 10 µl of distilled water. Half of the reaction was quenched immediately with SDS-PAGE loading buffer, and the other half of the reaction was incubated for 60 min at 25°C. The reaction was stopped by the addition of SDS-PAGE loading buffer.
Ubiquitination Assays
Ubiquitination reactions were carried out by combining 1 µl of
in vitro translation mix containing substrate (Cdc6-Myc9p, 35S-labeled Cdc6p, or
35S-labeled Sic1p), 1 µl of insect cell lysate
containing kinase, 4 µl of DEAE-fractionated yeast extract (as
described above), 0.2 µg of Cdc34p (as described), 1 µl of
ATP-regenerating system, 1 µl of 10× reaction salts and protease
inhibitors (50 mM magnesium acetate, 10 mM DTT, 5 mM PMSF, and µg/ml
each leupeptin and pepstatin), and 0.5 µl of 20 mg/ml bovine
ubiquitin (Sigma, St. Louis, MO). Reactions were brought to a volume of
10 µl with 20 mM HEPES, pH 7.2, 100 mM potassium acetate. Reactions
were mixed and incubated at 25°C for 1 h. Translation produced
some high-molecular-weight products, which have been previously
observed (Verma et al., 1997b
) and are thought to be
protein-RNA adducts resulting from inefficient translation
termination. Where indicated, translation products were treated with 20 µg/ml RNase A at 37°C for 15 min, which served to remove a small
amount of high-molecular-weight background and improved the sensitivity
of the ubiquitination assay.
Two-Hybrid Assay
Strains for the two-hybrid assay were created by transforming
L40 with pairs of plasmids. All strains contained the pACT-CDC4 plasmid
(bearing CDC4 fused to the activation domain of
GAL4; Drury et al., 1997
) and one of the
following: BTM116, which carries the LexA DNA binding domain, pBTM-CDC6
(Drury et al., 1997
), and the plasmids shown in Table 4.
The two-hybrid assay was carried out essentially as described in the
Clontech (Palo Alto, CA) manual: saturated cultures of cells were
plated onto solid selective medium and incubated for 24 h at
30°C. Seventy-five-millimeter paper filters (VWR; product number 28321-055) were used to lift cells from the plates. Filters were
frozen for 10 s in liquid nitrogen, colony side up, and then thawed at room temperature. Two clean filters were placed in a Petri
dish saturated with Z buffer. Thawed filters were placed on top of
filters saturated with Z buffer (100 mM sodium phosphate pH 7.0, 10 mM
KCl, 10 mM MgSO4, 40 mM
-mercaptoethanol, 0.3 mg/ml 5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl-
-D-galactopyranoside),
and incubated at 30°C until a blue color developed in the positive
control (~75 min). Filters were then dried with a heat gun, which
served to stop the reaction.
| |
RESULTS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
The N Terminus of Cdc6p Contains Signals Important for Regulated Destruction of Cdc6p
The interaction of Cdc6p with Cdc28p might serve to target the
kinase to its substrates in the replication apparatus, to ensure efficient phosphorylation of Cdc6p, or both. To investigate the outcomes of the Cdc6p-Cdc28p interaction, we have carried out deletion
mutagenesis within the Cdc28p binding region of Cdc6p and have changed
the serines or threonines in the six putative CDK phosphorylation sites
in Cdc6p, singly and in combination, to nonphosphorylatable alanines
(Figure 1; Proteome
[http://www.proteome.com/databases/YPD/YPDspreadsheet.html]; Holmes
and Solomon, 1996
). Genes containing these mutations were tagged at the
C termini with nine copies of the Myc epitope. The CDC6-Myc9
fusion as well as all of the mutant cdc6-Myc9 constructs complement a cdc6 null.
Cdc6p, unlike most other DNA replication proteins, is unstable in vivo
after the G1-S transition (Piatti et al., 1995
; Drury et al., 1997
). Because phosphorylation regulates destruction
of other proteins at G1-S, for example Sic1p, we asked whether the cdc6 mutations affected the degradation of Cdc6p.
GAL-CDC6-Myc9 wild-type and mutant strains were grown in
galactose, synchronized in G2 by the addition of nocodazole, and then
shifted to glucose medium to repress expression of Cdc6p. The level of
Cdc6p remaining during subsequent incubation in glucose medium was
followed by protein blotting. This strategy has been shown to
accurately reflect events that occur when Cdc6p is expressed from its
own promoter (Drury et al., 1997
). Cdc6
8-46p, lacking
the entire Cdc28p binding domain, was stabilized relative to wild type
(Figures 1 and
2), in agreement with recent results of
others (Drury et al., 1997
). In addition, in comparing four
smaller deletions across the N-terminal 46 amino acids, we found that
only deletion of amino acids 23-36 causes significant stabilization
(Figure 2).
|
|
Mutation of the Nuclear Localization Signal Leads to Decreased Turnover of Cdc6p
Amino acids 23-36 contain a conserved nuclear localization signal
(NLS), 27PLKRKKL33, that
has been shown to be sufficient for the localization of a
PLKRKKL-
-galactosidase fusion protein to the yeast nucleus. Mutation of K29 renders the NLS nonfunctional in this context (Jong
et al., 1996
). We investigated the role of the NLS on Cdc6p stability by changing amino acids
29KRKK32 to AAAA and
evaluated stability in the assay already described. We found that this
allele is stabilized, and the effect is similar to that generated by
deleting residues 23-36. This suggests that the nuclear localization
signal is the key, nonredundant motif in this region contributing to
the stability of Cdc6p. Using fusions to green fluorescent protein, we
have verified that the KRKK-to-AAAA mutant protein is found throughout
the cell, in contrast to wild-type GFP-Cdc6p, which is found only in
the nucleus (Luo, Elsasser, and Campbell, unpublished data). These
results indicate that Cdc6p must enter the nucleus to become
susceptible to degradation, although they do not eliminate the
possibility that Cdc6p must then subsequently be exported from the
nucleus for interaction with the proteasome.
Specific Phosphorylation Sites Are Required for Cdc6p Turnover In Vivo
We next determined the stability of Cdc6 proteins containing
mutations at the six putative Cdc28 phosphrylation sites. Serines and
threonines at T7TPK,
T23PPR, S43PEK,
T134PR, S354PTR, and
S372PVK (Figure 1) were changed to alanine,
singly and in combination. These sites are hereafter referred to as
sites A to F. The stability of the mutant proteins was analyzed in
cells arrested in G2 with nocodazole as described in Figure 2. Mutation
of the individual A, B, C, and E sites caused no change in stability
compared with wild type (Figure 3A).
Mutation of site D led to moderately increased half-life, and mutation
of site F led to significant stabilization. The effect of changing
C-terminal site F was interesting and unanticipated for two reasons.
First, previous deletion analysis had suggested that the signals
controlling degradation were localized in the N-terminal domain (Figure
2) (Drury et al., 1997
). Second, site F lies in a region
that is dispensable for the tight binding to Clbp/Cdc28p. The
C-terminal portion of Cdc6p does appear to be phosphorylated by
Clb5p/Cdc28p in vitro, because phosphorylation by Cdc28p causes reduced
mobility in SDS gels only for mutants containing phosphorylatable E and
F sites (Figure 3B). Interestingly, phosphorylation of sites A-C does
not contribute to the detected electrophoretic mobility shift. Although
we cannot be sure that the shift is due to phosphorylation, this is a
likely interpretation. We have shown that a cdc6A-F mutant
is efficiently localized (Luo, Elsasser, and Campbell, unpublished
data), indicating that the stability of cdc6-F does not
derive from failure to enter the nucleus.
|
We also tested the stability of alleles bearing multiple
mutations in the putative Cdc28 phosphorylation sites in the Cdc6p N-terminal Cdc28p-binding domain (Elsasser et al., 1996
).
The A-C triple mutant was strongly stabilized (Figure 3A),
demonstrating the importance of phosphorylation, as opposed simply to
binding of Cdc28p, in Cdc6p degradation. The A + C double mutant was as stable as the triple mutant, whereas sites B + C showed a modest increase in stability, and A + B showed no difference from wild type.
Thus, phosphorylation of multiple sites in the N terminus, as well as
in the C terminus, contributes to the regulation of Cdc6p stability.
Although the stabilization of alleles mutated at the putative Cdc28
sites only suggests an involvement of the kinase, below we show a
direct requirement for Cdc28p using an in vitro ubiquitination system.
Roles of Phosphorylation in Degradation of Cdc6p
Several different models might explain the apparent requirement
for phosphorylation in the degradation of Cdc6p. Because mutations in
the nuclear localization site and the phosphorylation sites each
generate stable alleles of CDC6, mutation of the
phosphorylation sites could cause a localization defect and
consequently stability. Alternatively, phosphorylation of Cdc6p might
allow recognition of Cdc6p by SCF-Cdc4p, ubiquitination, and targeting
to the 26S proteasome (Drury et al., 1997
; Sanchez et
al., 1999
). To distinguish between these models, we analyzed
ubiquitination of Cdc6p in an in vitro reaction that has been shown to
faithfully mimic in vivo events (Feldman et al., 1997
;
Skowyra et al., 1997
; Verma et al., 1997c
).
Ubiquitination of substrates in vitro generally requires the presence
of ubiquitin, ubiquitin-activating enzyme (E1), ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme (E2), and ubiquitin ligase (E3), the last of which is typically substrate specific. Cdc34p, an E2, and SCF-Cdc4p, an E3 comprising Cdc4p, Cdc53p, Skp1p, and probably Rbx1p, target the Cdc28p inhibitor Sic1p for degradation at the G1-S phase transition (Schwob et al., 1994
; Bai et al., 1996
; Patton et al.,
1998
; Kamura et al., 1999
; Skowyra et al., 1999
).
This reaction has recently been recapitulated in vitro (Feldman
et al., 1997
; Skowyra et al., 1997
; Verma
et al., 1997c
; Skowyra et al., 1999
), and we have
adapted this system to the study of Cdc6p. Because there is strong
evidence that Cdc6p is degraded at the G1-S transition, we used
fractionated extracts prepared from cells arrested in G1 by suppressing
Cln expression (Deshaies et al., 1995
). These extracts are
devoid of all Cdc28 kinase activity, thus allowing us to test for a
Cdc28p requirement in the ubiquitination of Cdc6p. In addition, the
DEAE fraction recovered from these extracts contains SCF-Cdc4p (E3) but
is devoid of Cdc34p (E2), allowing us to ask whether Cdc34p is required for Cdc6p ubiquitination (Verma et al., 1997c
; Skowyra
et al., 1999
).
For our experiments, Sic1p was used as a positive control substrate for
the ubiquitination reactions. Ubiquitination of Sic1p was first shown
to require ubiquitin, the DEAE fraction containing Uba1p (E1) and
SCF-Cdc4p (E3), Cdc34p (E2), and Cln2p/Cdc28p kinase (Verma et
al., 1997c
). When in vitro-translated
35S-Sic1p and Cdc6-Myc9p are added to this
reconstituted system, Cdc6-Myc9p, like Sic1p, is converted to more
slowly migrating conjugates (Figure 4,
lanes 2 and 6), indicating that Cdc6p is ubiquitinated in this
reconstituted system. Although we have not strictly demonstrated that
the modification of Cdc6p is due to ubiquitin, this is the most likely
explanation of these results, because 1) modification of substrate by
ubiquitin-like proteins has not been shown to lead to substrate
degradation; and (2) no other modifications leading to such large
shifts in mobility and dependent on Cdc34p and/or Cdc4p (see Figures 4
and 5) have been described.
|
Importantly, neither Sic1p nor Cdc6p is ubiquitinated in the absence of
added Cdc28 kinase (Figure 4, lanes 1 and 4). However, there is a
significant difference between the kinases required for the two
different substrates. As reported previously, Sic1p ubiquitination is
preferentially stimulated by Cln2p/Cdc28p (Figure 4, compare lanes 2 and 3) (Verma et al., 1997c
), even when sufficient Clb5/Cdc28 activity is present to generate a quantitative
electrophoretic shift of Sic1p (Figure 4, lane 3; Feldman et
al., 1997
). In contrast, Cdc6p ubiquitination is stimulated
preferentially by Clb5p/Cdc28p rather than by Cln2p/Cdc28p (Figure 4,
compare lanes 5 and 6). (We cannot resolve phosphorylated and
unphosphorylated forms of Cdc6p tagged with the Myc9 epitope.) Although
it is difficult to compare the specific activity of the two kinase
preparations, the same amounts of kinase were added to both the Sic1p
and Cdc6p reactions, and thus the reversal of efficiency represents an
accurate qualitative measure of the relative efficiency of the
respective kinase on each substrate. We conclude that although Sic1p
ubiquitination is preferentially mediated by Cln2/Cdc28p, Cdc6p
ubiquitination is preferentially mediated by Clb5/Cdc28p. This
difference in cyclin dependence is entirely consistent with the
observations that Cdc6p is degraded during S phase when Clb5p/Cdc28p is
active and is also consistent with our observation that Cdc6p interacts preferentially with Clbp/Cdc28ps compared with Clnp/Cdc28ps (Elsasser et al., 1996
). We do observe that Cln2p/Cdc28p can support
ubiquitination to some degree in vitro, which was unexpected because
Cdc6p is stable during most of G1. This suggests that high levels of
Cln2p/Cdc28p may support in vivo degradation of Cdc6p. We propose that
phosphorylation of Cdc6p, primarily by a cyclinB/Cdc28 kinase, although
perhaps also in part by Cln/Cdc28 kinases, stimulates targeting of
Cdc6p to the ubiquitination apparatus.
CDC4 and CDC34 Are Required for Phosphorylation-dependent Ubiquitination of Cdc6p In Vitro
Recent demonstration that Cdc6p is stabilized in a
cdc4sic1
strain suggested that SCF-Cdc4p targets
phosphorylated Cdc6p for ubiquitination rather than acting indirectly
by degrading Sic1p and thus activating Clb/Cdc28 kinase. Our results
confirm the direct targeting of Cdc6p by SCF-Cdc4p action. As shown in Figure 4, lanes 7 and 8, formation of high-molecular-weight conjugates of Cdc6p is dependent on Cdc34p. To compare Cdc6p ubiquitination in the
presence and absence of Cdc4p, fractionated extracts were prepared from
both wild-type and cdc4 cells, and the fate of Cdc6p was
followed by labeling with 35S in the in vitro
translation reaction. As in Figure 4, the appearance of Cdc6 conjugates
depends on addition of Cdc34p (compare lanes 4 and 5). Furthermore,
Cdc6 conjugates were not obtained when using fractionated
cdc4 extracts (Figure 5,
compare lanes 5 and 10), but if insect cell lysate containing
recombinant Cdc4p was added, ubiquitination of Cdc6p was restored
(Figure 5, compare lanes 10 and 12). Naturally, Cdc6p modification
still required addition of Cdc34p (Figure 5, compare lanes 11 and 12).
We conclude that the slowly migrating species are ubiquitinated Cdc6p,
because their appearance depends on Cdc34p and Cdc4p. Although a
requirement for Cdc34p and Cdc4p in this reaction could derive from a
requirement to degrade Sic1p, we have determined that the Clb5/Cdc28
kinase added to these reactions is in considerable excess over Sic1p. We therefore propose that Cdc34p and Cdc4p are directly required for
Cdc6p destruction and that Cdc4p is required for the recognition of
Cdc6p as a substrate for ubiquitination. This model is consistent with
the observations that Cdc6p and Cdc4p interact in a two-hybrid system
(Drury et al., 1997
) and that Cdc6p is stable in G2 phase cells in a cdc4sic1
strain (Sanchez et al.,
1999
).
|
Mapping of the Determinants in Cdc6p Required for Ubiquitination In Vitro
Having demonstrated that Cdc6p could be ubiquitinated in the
Clb5p/Cdc28p-, Cdc34p-, and Cdc4p-dependent in vitro reaction, we used
this assay to evaluate whether the stability of our cdc6 mutants was anticorrelated with ability to be ubiquitinated in vitro.
In each ubiquitination reaction, participation of SCF-Cdc4p was
controlled for by demonstrating dependence on Cdc34p (Figure 6). The Cdc6
8-46p, which is stable in
vivo (Figure 2; Drury et al., 1997
), was not ubiquitinated,
confirming that there are determinants in the N terminus required for
in vitro ubiquitination. Deletion of amino acids 3-16 or 13-26 did
not appear to reduce ubiquitination relative to wild type, and the
mutants show rapid turnover (Figure 2). Deletion of amino acids 23-36,
which deletes the NLS and one consensus CDK site and stabilizes Cdc6p,
consistently reduced but did not abolish ubiquitination. However, the
stabilized NLS (KRKK) mutant was efficiently ubiquitinated in vitro
(Figure 6, lanes labeled NLS). This supports our proposition that the
NLS allele is stable in vivo because of improper localization and argues against a role for any of the lysines in constituting a ubiquitin acceptor site. Surprisingly, we found that deletion of amino
acids 33-46 significantly and reproducibly lowered but did not abolish
ubiquitination. This was unanticipated because this mutant is as
rapidly degraded as wild-type Cdc6p (Figure 2) and suggests that there
may be at least one additional, Cdc4p independent turnover pathway
(also see Figure 7).
|
|
We also tested the putative phosphorylation site mutants for ubiquitination. As shown in Figure 6, mutations in individual CDK sites did not abolish ubiquitination of Cdc6p. (Normal ubiquitination of the cdc6-A mutant was observed in other experiments, and the weak signal here derives from an inefficient in vitro translation reaction [our unpublished results].) Because the cdc6-D and cdc6-F mutants were stabilized (Figure 3) and localize to the nucleus (Luo, Elsasser, and Campbell, unpublished data), it was surprising that they were ubiquitinated in vitro. In vivo, the mutant proteins may be protected from ubiquitination or protected from degradation at a step downstream of SCF-Cdc4p mediated ubiquitination, such as export from the nucleus. In addition, either of these sites may target Cdc6p for degradation by a different pathway (see Figure 9).
Although mutation of individual CDK sites did not affect in vitro ubiquitination, strong effects were seen in multiple mutants. Mutation of all three N-terminal CDK sites, A-C, which generated a highly stabilized allele, also abolished ubiquitination completely. The stabilized double mutants A + C and B + C were also significantly impaired for ubiquitination in vitro (Figures 6 and 3). Simultaneous mutation of the C-terminal sites E and F (Figure 6) did not reduce ubiquitination, although the latter mutation stabilized Cdc6p in vivo (Figure 3). In summary, there is a correlation among phosphorylation of N-terminal sites, in vitro ubiquitination, and rapid degradation in G2 phase. In contrast, although C-terminal CDK sites are important for in vivo degradation, phosphorylation of C-terminal sites is not important for ubiquitination by the SCF-Cdc4p in vitro system.
Two-Hybrid Analysis of the Interaction of Cdc6p with Cdc4p
Because phosphorylation of Sic1p is required for recognition by
Cdc4p in SCF-Cdc4p (Feldman et al., 1997
; Skowyra et
al., 1997
), we wanted to test whether the observed failure in
ubiquitination of CDC6 alleles bearing mutations in the
Cdc28 consensus sites was a result of a failure in recognition of Cdc6p
by Cdc4p. To evaluate the interaction of mutant Cdc6 proteins with
Cdc4p, we used the two-hybrid system, in which the interaction of Cdc6p and Cdc4p was initially discovered (Drury et al., 1997
). In
summary, only mutants that bind Cdc4p in the two hybrid assay are
ubiquitinated in vitro (Figures 6 and 7). This suggests that the
physical interaction of Cdc6p with Cdc4p is essential for modification
by this pathway. However, interaction of Cdc6p with Cdc4p is not
sufficient, because mutant A + C interacts with Cdc4p in the two-hybrid
assay but fails in ubiquitination in vitro (Figure 7). In addition, in
vivo degradation is not strictly dependent on a tight Cdc4p
interaction, because mutant
33-46 interacts weakly with Cdc4p in
the two-hybrid assay and is poorly ubiquitinated in vitro but is
degraded as efficiently as wild type in vivo. The role of Cdc6 amino
acids 33-46 in Cdc4p binding is not clear, but it is clear that serine 43 (CDK site C) is not required for the interaction (see Figure 7). The
degradation of mutant
33-46 may be rationalized if Cdc4p-mediated ubiquitination is more robust in vivo than in vitro. Alternately, a
Cdc4-independent targeting system may be at work in vivo.
The C-terminal sites again fall into a separate class from the
N-terminal sites. Mutation of sites D and F does not affect Cdc4p
binding (Figure 7; our unpublished data) or ubiquitination (Figure 6), yet the mutants D and F are stabilized (Figure 3). The
ability of these mutants to bind Cdc4p strengthens the conclusion that
phosphorylation of the C-terminal sites regulates a different part of
the destruction pathway than phosphorylation of the N-terminal sequences, or that C-terminal phosphorylation of Cdc6p regulates a
different degradation pathway entirely. In Schizosaccharomyces pombe, two different F box proteins similar to Cdc4p are critical for maintaining cdc18+ at the proper
physiological levels, but whether their interaction with
cdc18+ is regulated by differential
phosphorylation has not been studied (Jallepalli et al.,
1997
; Jallepalli et al., 1998
).
Tight Binding of Cdc6p to Cdc28p Is Not Required for Rapid Degradation
The results of our earlier studies and those presented here
suggest that there may be two modes of interaction of Cdc6p with Cdc28p: on the one hand, Cdc6p binds tightly to Cdc28p, and on the
other, Cdc6p is a substrate of Cdc28p. These two modes of interaction
may have different consequences in vivo. To investigate whether tight
binding of Cdc6p to Cdc28p as well as phosphorylation of Cdc6p by
Cdc28p is required for rapid degradation of Cdc6p, we have analyzed the
interaction of Cdc6
8-46p, Cdc6
3-16p, Cdc6
13-26p, Cdc6
23-36p, and Cdc6
33-46p with Clbp/Cdc28p, using the
Myc-tagged alleles described in Figure 1. Extracts of cells
constitutively expressing the tagged mutant genes were
immunoprecipitated with anti-myc 9E10 monoclonal antibody, and the
immunoprecipitates were probed for the presence of Cdc28p by Western
blotting. As shown in Figure 8, Cdc28p
was present only in wild-type Cdc6-Myc9p immunoprecipitates. Failure of
the deletion mutants to interact could be due either to altered
structure of the deleted proteins or to deletion of signals important
for interaction. We prefer the latter interpretation, because all
mutants support growth in the absence of wild type Cdc6p (see below),
showing that at least the portion of the protein required for
replication is correctly folded. Thus, although phosphorylation by
Cdc28p is required for degradation, tight binding of Cdc28p by Cdc6p is
not required for targeting to the ubiquitination machinery.
|
Another Degradation Pathway?
At least two results presented here do not fit the model that
SCF-Cdc4p accounts for all Cdc6p turnover. First, cdc6
33-46p is
unstable even when it is highly overproduced, but it does not bind
Cdc4p. Second, mutants D and F are stable but are ubiquitinated in
vitro and bind Cdc4p efficiently. We wished to use a simple genetic
test for the involvement of degradation pathways other than the Cdc4
pathway in Cdc6p turnover. Constitutive expression of Cdc6p in
cdc4-1 cells, as well as constitutive expression of Sic1p in
cdc4 cells has been shown to be lethal, suggesting that the
degradation pathway is saturated and that degradation of Cdc6p and
Sic1p is blocked (Bai et al., 1996
; Sanchez et
al., 1999
). We used a similar strategy to test whether the APC,
the other known ubiquitin ligase that targets cell cycle proteins
(Peters, 1999
), is involved in Cdc6p degradation. In choosing an allele for study, we considered the report that S. cerevisiae
cdc16-264 mutants (but not all cdc16 mutants)
overreplicate. This controversial result suggests that the
cdc16-264 allele affects DNA replication (Heichman and
Roberts, 1996
, 1998
; Pichler et al., 1997
). Unlike the case
of cdc4-1 mutants, overexpression of wild-type Cdc6p did not
reduce the ability of the cdc16 mutant to form colonies. However, Cdc28 consensus site mutants cdc6A-C and
cdc6A-F mutants showed a dosage-dependent dominant lethal
effect when introduced into the cdc16 mutant. Analysis of
the individual putative CDK site mutants revealed the surprising result
that mutation of the C-terminal site F was sufficient to cause the
dominant lethal phenotype, whereas none of the other single site
mutants gave this effect (Figure 9).
These results might suggest that enhanced levels of Cdc6 are sufficient
to saturate the Cdc16 pathway. However, the stable Cdc6-
8-46
protein did not give a dominant negative effect (our unpublished
observations). The stabilized alleles that appear to interact with the
Cdc16 pathway belong to two classes of stabilized mutants, those that
are ubiquitinated in vitro and those that are not, suggesting that
interaction of Cdc6 with the Cdc4 pathway is not required to interact
with the Cdc16 pathway. These data may indicate that the APC may
play a role in the regulation of Cdc6p levels and phosphorylation may
govern the interaction. However, they would also be explained if Cdc6p
participates in the same process as the APC and if overproduction of
these Cdc6 mutants inhibited that process.
|
| |
DISCUSSION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
The rapid degradation of yeast Cdc6p at G1-S is conserved for
homologues in other eukaryotes, although not in all, suggesting that
periodic degradation of Cdc6p is important for regulation of cell cycle
progression (Drury et al., 1997
; Williams et al., 1997
; Hua and Newport, 1998
; Saha et al., 1998
). In this
work we have explored the role of phosphorylation of Cdc6p in its
regulated destruction during the yeast cell cycle. By using an in vitro system prepared from cells arrested at the G1-S boundary, and thus
avoiding multiple ambiguities introduced by evaluating the degradation
of Cdc6p in vivo, we have demonstrated that Cdc6p is ubiquitinated and
that Cdc34p and Cdc4p, which also participate in Cdc6p degradation in
vivo, are directly involved in ubiquitination of Cdc6p. Integrity of
the three N-terminal CDK phosphorylation sites appears to be required
for Cdc4p binding and for ubiquitination, suggesting that
phosphorylation is required for targeting Cdc6p to the ubiquitination
machinery. We have also found that Clbp/Cdc28ps are more effective at
targeting Cdc6p for ubiquitination than are Clnp/Cdc28ps, but that
Clnp/Cdc28p can target ubiquitination. Thus, at a point at which
Cln/Cdc28 complexes are present at high concentration they could
contribute to Cdc6p turnover.
Characterization of Sic1p ubiquitination in vitro generated a model of
protein degradation in which phosphorylation of a substrate by a cell
cycle kinase triggered ubiquitination of the substrate and consequent
degradation by the proteasome (Bai et al., 1996
; Feldman
et al., 1997
). Here we demonstrate that ubiquitination of
Cdc6p is carried out in a similar manner, in that we have generated a
class of mutants that are stabilized during G2 in vivo and defective in
Cdc4-mediated ubiquitination in vitro. However, the regulation of Cdc6p
turnover appears to be more complex than that of Sic1p. In addition to
the class of mutants in which SCF-Cdc4p targeting defects and
stabilization in G2 in vivo are correlated, we also discovered a second
class of mutants in which SCF-Cdc4p targeting was intact and yet the
proteins were stable (NLS, cdc6-D, and cdc6-F), as well as a third class of mutants in which
SCF-Cdc4p targeting was defective but mutants were still
unstable (cdc6
33-46). The stability of the
NLS mutant likely derives from a failure to concentrate in the nucleus.
This suggests that in vivo at least one component of the destruction
apparatus may be active only on Cdc6p once it is in the nucleus. This
component could be merely the putative essential kinase and therefore
does not rule out the possibility that the phosphorylated Cdc6 protein
is normally exported to the cytoplasm for degradation by the proteasome.
Failure of nuclear localization does not account for the stability of the C-terminal cdc6-D and cdc6-F, however (Luo, Elsasser, and Campbell, unpublished results). The synergistic growth defect achieved by overproducing cdc6-F in a cdc16 mutant (Figure 9) that is defective in the APC-directed destruction apparatus may indicate that the APC also contributes to regulation of Cdc6p levels in the cell. Two pathways for Cdc6p degradation could be reconciled if there are two populations of Cdc6p (perhaps bound to chromatin and unbound) each sensitive to different destruction mechanisms; or two pathways might act on the same population but at different points in the cell cycle. A second possibility is that the APC might just be needed to degrade some other replication protein whose accumulation kills the cells in the presence of excess Cdc6p. A third alternative is that the cdc6-F mutant has a dominant negative effect on a step in mitosis that also requires full function of the APC, either the metaphase-to-anaphase transition or mitotic exit.
The third class of mutant fails to interact with SCF-Cdc4p but is
nevertheless unstable: cdc6
33-48. The instability could be mediated by another degradation pathway that degrades Cdc6p that is
not associated with Cdc28p, or the residual ubiquitination may be
sufficient to target this mutant for degradation in vivo.
Several other proteins involved in G1-S control have been shown to be
targeted for degradation by phosphorylation: Sic1p, Far1p, and the G1
cyclins (Willems et al., 1996
; Henchoz et al., 1997
; Verma et al., 1997a
). For these G1 substrates of the
26S proteasome, phosphorylation at multiple sites is required for degradation, and this is also true for the S phase substrate Cdc6p. As
with Sic1p, only a subset of the CDK sites on Cdc6p is required for
ubiquitination, and no single site is sufficient. As observed for Sic1p
and Far1p but not the G1 cyclins, phosphorylation of three N-terminal
Cdc6p sites seems to be essential specifically for binding of Cdc4p,
because there is a correlation between Cdc6p phosphorylation site
mutants that cannot be phosphorylated and those that fail to bind
Cdc4p. That is, SCF-Cdc4p targets N-terminally phosphorylated Cdc6p for
destruction. The involvement of the same SCF complex in the destruction
of Sic1p and Cdc6p suggests that the coordinate control of these
processes was a design of evolution. However, there is a significant
difference between the kinases involved in the targeting of Sic1p,
Far1p, and Cdc6p for destruction. Sic1p and Far1p are preferentially
targeted to SCF-Cdc4p by Cln2p/Cdc28p, whereas Cdc6p is preferentially
targeted by Clb5p/Cdc28p, at least in vitro. The sequential activation
of the Clns and Clbs might allow for staggering of the degradation of
Sic1p and Cdc6p. Thus, Cdc6p would not be degraded (and the
prereplicative complex thereby inactivated) until Sic1p is removed and
the Clb/kinases are able to execute initiation of replication. It is
important to note that although Cdc6p is stable in elutriated G1 cells,
and thus in the presence of active Cln2p/Cdc28p, Cdc6p is unstable in
cells exposed to mating pheromone, which causes inactivation of the G1
cyclins and exit from the cell cycle (Drury et al., 1997
;
Jeoung et al., 1999
). Destruction of Cdc6p in cells
preparing to mate could be phosphorylation independent, or degradation
may be mediated by the MAP kinases that are induced by the stimulation
of the pheromone receptor.
Studies of the putative fission yeast Cdc6p homologue
cdc18+ have shown that phosphorylation regulates
cdc18+, and that high-molecular-weight conjugates
of cdc18+ can form in proteasome mutants, but
there is some uncertainty as to which ubiquitin ligase mediates this
process in vivo, because both pop1+ (a Cdc4p
homologue) and sud1+ have been implicated
(Jallepalli et al., 1997
, 1998
; Kominami and Toda, 1997
).
Stabilizing cdc18+ was found to cause unscheduled
initiation of DNA replication (Jallepalli et al., 1998
).
However, stabilizing Cdc6p does not cause the same phenomenon in
S. cerevisiae, pointing up a substantial difference in the
regulation. Therefore, degradation of Cdc6p cannot be the sole factor
that restrains replication initiation to once per cell cycle. For such
a key process as high-fidelity replication of the chromosome, it is not
unexpected that there would be redundancy in the mechanism that
prevents rereplication, and arguably the fact that the overproduction
of the Cdc6p homologue in S. pombe causes overreplication is
more surprising than the converse (Jallepalli and Kelly, 1996
;
Jallepalli et al., 1998
). In S. cerevisiae, other
candidates for proteins that may regulate rereplication are the Mcms,
which have been demonstrated to be compartmentalized over the course of
the cell cycle, and Dbf4p, which is unstable after the G1-S transition
(Dixon, Yang, and Campbell, unpublished data). Assuming that
rereplication is blocked by the destruction of multiple targets, more
than one pathway may act on these targets. If it proves to be true that
DNA overreplicates in some cdc16 mutants (Heichman and
Roberts, 1996
, 1998
; Pichler et al., 1997