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Vol. 10, Issue 11, 3849-3862, November 1999
Departments of Cell Biology and Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut 06536
Submitted June 9,1999; Accepted August 24, 1999| |
ABSTRACT |
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We have characterized two Saccharomyces cerevisiae proteins, Sro9p and Slf1p, which contain a highly conserved motif found in all known La proteins. Originally described as an autoantigen in patients with rheumatic disease, the La protein binds to newly synthesized RNA polymerase III transcripts. In yeast, the La protein homologue Lhp1p is required for the normal pathway of tRNA maturation and also stabilizes newly synthesized U6 RNA. We show that deletions in both SRO9 and SLF1 are not synthetically lethal with a deletion in LHP1, indicating that the three proteins do not function in a single essential process. Indirect immunofluorescence microscopy reveals that although Lhp1p is primarily localized to the nucleus, Sro9p is cytoplasmic. We demonstrate that Sro9p and Slf1p are RNA-binding proteins that associate preferentially with translating ribosomes. Consistent with a role in translation, strains lacking either Sro9p or Slf1p are less sensitive than wild-type strains to certain protein synthesis inhibitors. Thus, Sro9p and Slf1p define a new and possibly evolutionarily conserved class of La motif-containing proteins that may function in the cytoplasm to modulate mRNA translation.
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INTRODUCTION |
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The La protein is an RNA-binding protein that was originally
identified as an autoantigen in patients with rheumatic diseases. The
La protein has been identified in eukaryotes from yeast to humans
(Chambers et al., 1988
; Yoo and Wolin, 1994
; Lin-Marq and Clarkson, 1995
; Van Horn et al., 1997
), where it binds
nascent RNA polymerase III transcripts, including pre-tRNAs, pre-5S
rRNAs, and pre-U6 RNA (Rinke and Steitz, 1982
, 1985
). Part of the
binding site for the La protein on these RNAs is the sequence
UUUOH, which is at the 3' end of all newly
synthesized RNA polymerase III transcripts (Stefano, 1984
). Experiments
performed in vitro have implicated the vertebrate La protein in various
processes, including RNA polymerase III transcription (Gottlieb and
Steitz, 1989
; Maraia, 1996
), stabilization of histone mRNAs from
degradation (McLaren et al., 1997
) and cap-independent mRNA
translation (Meerovitch et al., 1993
). Whether the La
protein functions in all of these processes in vivo is uncertain.
In the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, genetic and
biochemical analyses have revealed that the La protein Lhp1p is necessary for the normal maturation of pre-tRNAs (Yoo and Wolin, 1997
).
Binding by Lhp1p also stabilizes newly synthesized, unassembled U6 RNA
from degradation (Pannone et al., 1998
). These studies suggest that the La protein may function as a molecular chaperone to
facilitate the correct fate of newly synthesized RNA polymerase III
transcripts (Pannone et al., 1998
).
Interestingly, two S. cerevisiae proteins, Sro9p and Slf1p,
share a highly conserved motif with all La proteins (Yoo and Wolin, 1994
; Yu et al., 1996
; Kagami et al., 1997
).
Although these proteins are otherwise unrelated to La proteins, Sro9p
and Slf1p exhibit similarity throughout their length (29.8% identity)
and may result from an ancient gene duplication (Wolfe and Shields,
1997
). Genetic experiments have implicated both Sro9p and Slf1p in
several processes. High-copy SRO9 (also called
SYS2) suppresses the secretory pathway mutants
sec7-1 and ypt6
(Tsukada and Gallwitz, 1996
).
Sec7p is a constituent of the secretory vesicle coat that functions in endoplasmic reticulum to Golgi vesicle transport (Kaiser et
al., 1997
), whereas Ypt6p, a homologue of the mammalian small
GTPase Rab6, functions in transport from the Golgi apparatus (Tsukada et al., 1999
). High-copy SRO9 also suppresses the
slow growth phenotypes of the following mutants: a deletion of the
nonessential gene RHO3, which functions in bud formation
(Imai et al., 1996
), act1-1, an actin
mutant (Kagami et al., 1997
), and a partial deletion of the
cytoskeletal protein tropomyosin (Kagami et al., 1997
). In
addition, a deletion in SRO9 exacerbates the slow growth of act1-1 and rho3-1 mutants and exhibits
synthetic lethality with a partial deletion in tropomyosin (Kagami
et al., 1997
). SLF1 was first identified as a
high-copy suppressor of a mutation that renders yeast cells sensitive
to high CuSO4-containing media (Yu et
al., 1996
). Nevertheless, like SRO9, high-copy
SLF1 suppresses a partial deletion of tropomyosin (Kagami
et al., 1997
).
Overexpression of SRO9 also suppresses mutations in processes that are unrelated to intracellular transport and the actin cytoskeleton. High-copy SRO9 suppresses the cold sensitivity of several mutations that affect pre-mRNA splicing (M. Inada, J. P. Staley, and C. Guthrie, personal communication).
Because SRO9 and SLF1 are high-copy
suppressors of mutations in several processes, the actual function of
these proteins is unclear. As the motif that these proteins share with
authentic La proteins is important for RNA binding by La proteins
(Pruijn et al., 1991
), Slf1p and Sro9p may also be
RNA-binding proteins. Although this motif [previously called the La
domain (Van Horn et al., 1997
)] does not by itself bind
RNA, small deletions within the motif dramatically affect RNA binding
by the La protein (Goodier et al., 1997
).
To understand the function of Sro9p and Slf1p, as well as to elucidate the relationship between these proteins and authentic La proteins, we have taken a molecular genetic and biochemical approach. We demonstrate that Sro9p and Slf1p are not functionally redundant with the authentic La protein Lhp1p. Instead, Sro9p and Slf1p are RNA-binding proteins that associate with translating ribosomes. Consistent with a role in mRNA translation, strains lacking either Sro9p or Slf1p exhibit decreased sensitivity to a subset of protein synthesis inhibitors. Thus, these two proteins constitute a second branch of the La family of proteins that may function in mRNA translation.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Yeast Strains, Media, and Molecular Genetic Techniques
Yeast strains are listed in Table
1. YSS strains and CY strains were
derived from the strain YNN216, which is congenic with S288C (Sikorski
and Hieter, 1989
), with the exception of YSS302, YSS305, and YSS308,
which are transformants of NY13 (a gift of P. Novick, Yale University,
New Haven, CT). Genetic manipulations and growth media were as
described in Sherman et al. (1986)
.
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Phylogenetic Analysis
The Caenorhabditis elegans and Homo sapiens La motif-containing protein sequences (genes R144.7 (U23515), T12F5.5 (AF039718), C44E4.4 (AF003140), KIAA0731 (AB018247)) and Mus musculus expressed sequence tags (AA823891, AA396971, AA530305, AA823920, AA681670, AA474319, AA681353, AA510776, and AA413852) were obtained by a BLAST search of the GenBank database using as a query protein either Sro9p or the H. sapiens La protein. The M. musculus expressed sequence tags were assembled into a contiguous sequence (contig) using the CuraTools Robot sequence assembly program (CuraGen Corp, New Haven, CT). La motifs were aligned by MegAlign using the CLUSTAL method with PAM250 residue weight table, and default parameters (DNASTAR, Madison, WI). La motifs were aligned for the dendrogram by PileUp (Genetics Computer Group, Madison, WI). Dendrograms were generated with the maximum parsimony criterion; bootstrap analysis was performed with a heuristic search, and the maximum parsimony criterion, with 1000 bootstrap replicates by PAUPSearch (Genetics Computer Group). Pairwise alignments were performed by the BCM-launcher pairwise comparison (Human Genome Center, Baylor College of Medicine).
Deletion of SRO9 and SLF1
The sro9::URA3 allele of YSS203
(Table 1) was generated by PCR amplification of the SRO9
gene using the primers 5'-GATCTGGACTCTCGAGCAAG-3' and
5'-TATGATGATAATGTACAATGAATTC-3'. This fragment was digested with
HaeII, filled in and BamHI-digested, and ligated
to HincII/BamHI-digested pBluescriptII-KS
(Stratagene, La Jolla, CA). This clone
was digested with PstI and PflMI, filled in, and ligated to
a 1.5-kb filled-in ClaI/BamHI fragment containing
URA3. This plasmid was
XhoI/XbaI-digested and used to transform YSS328.
In this allele 46% of SRO9 was deleted; the La motif was
entirely deleted. YSS203 (sro9::URA3/
SRO9) was sporulated, and tetrads were dissected. The growth
of haploids bearing this allele was identical to that of haploids
containing a complete deletion of SRO9, as well as a partial
deletion of the upstream gene YCL36c (our unpublished results).
An slf1::HIS3 allele was generated by
amplification of HIS3 from pRS313 (Sikorski and Hieter,
1989
) using oligos SGS1
(5'-AAACGAGAGAGCCCAAAAATATAACCAAGATAAAGAAAATCAA-TCATAAAGTGAATTCAAAGCGCGCCTCGTTCAGAATG-3') and SGS2
(5'-TTATGTTATATTTTTAGAGAGAATCTGCTATTACTTT-ATACATGTTAACTATATACATAATACTCTTGGCCTCCTCTAGTA-3'). The PCR product was transformed into YSS328, resulting in an allele in
which SLF1 and 2 bp of upstream and 29 bp of downstream
sequence were deleted. Transformants were sporulated, and tetrads were dissected. The tetrads analyzed were as follows: 22 tetrads (YSS203), 18 tetrads (YSS233), 14 tetrads (YSS220), 23 tetrads (YSS222), and 38 tetrads (YSS227/YSS228).
Antibody Generation, Immunoblotting, and Immunofluorescence
A fusion of Slf1p to polyhistidine was constructed using oligos SGS15 (5'-ATTAGGATCCTCATCGCAAAACCTCAATGATAAT-CCAAAA-3') and SGS16 (5'-ATTAGGTACCTTAATCATTTATTTGTAAGTTTTGTTCAAACTG-3') to amplify the SLF1 coding sequence. The amplified DNA was digested with BamHI and KpnI and ligated to these sites in pTrcHisA (Invitrogen, San Diego, CA). Fusion protein was induced as described by the manufacturer, purified from the lysate using a HiTrap chelating column (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech, Arlington Heights, IL), and used to inject rabbits. The Sro9p-6-histidine fusion construct was made by amplifying SRO9 with oligonucleotides 5'-GCCGGCCTCGAGATGAAGATCTTTTGGGATCC-3' and 5'-GCCGGCGAATTCTGCAAGTGTGAGAGGCC-3'. This fragment was EcoRI/XhoI-digested and ligated to EcoRI/XhoI-digested pTrcHisA.
The rabbit anti-Lhp1p polyclonal antibody has been described (Yoo and
Wolin, 1994
). Affinity-purified rabbit anti-Sbh1p was a gift of T. Rapoport (Harvard University, Cambridge, MA). The rabbit anti-Rpl5p
antibody was a gift of J. Woolford (Carnegie Mellon University,
Pittsburgh, PA). Actin was detected by mouse monoclonal antibody clone
C4 (Boehringer Mannheim, Indianapolis, IN). Primary signals were
visualized by incubation of immunoblots with either
horseradish peroxidase-conjugated donkey anti-rabbit Ig or sheep
anti-mouse Ig (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech) and enhanced chemiluminescence.
Immunofluorescence was performed largely as described (Pringle et
al., 1991
). Cells were grown in YPD, harvested at
OD600 = 0.4-0.7, and fixed in 3.7% formaldehyde
at 25°C for 1 h. Cells were then spheroplasted for ~40 min at
37°C with 5 µg/ml zymolyase 100T (ICN Immunobiologicals, Costa
Mesa, CA) and 0.02% glusulase (DuPont NEN, Wilmington, DE). After
absorption to an lhp1::LEU2 strain, anti-Lhp1p was
used at 1:500 dilution. Anti-Sro9p was used at 1:100 after absorption
to an sro9
slf1
strain. Antigens were visualized by
CY3-conjugated goat anti-rabbit IgG (Jackson ImmunoResearch, West
Grove, PA). Cell outlines were visualized by differential interference
contrast optics. In these experiments, CY1 was the wild-type strain,
CY2 was the lhp1::LEU2 strain, and YSS212 was the sro9::URA3 strain.
Construction of High-Copy SRO9 and SLF1 Plasmids
For overexpression studies, an SRO9-containing 1.9-kb
XhoI/EcoRI fragment was digested from a genomic
clone (a gift of P. Brennwald, Cornell University Medical College, New
York, NY) and ligated to XhoI/EcoRI-digested
pRS316 (Sikorski and Hieter, 1989
). The SRO9 gene was then
removed as a 2.1-kb PvuII/SmaI fragment and
ligated to PvuII-digested YEP24 (Carlson and Botstein,
1982
). To overexpress SLF1, the SpeI/SacI
fragment was excised from cosmid 9787 (American Type Culture
Collection) and ligated to SpeI/SacI-digested pRS316. The
SLF1 gene was excised via SpeI/MspI digestion,
filled in with Klenow, and blunt-ligated to
NheI/SmaI-digested YEP24 that had also been
filled in.
Differential Centrifugation and Polyribosome Analysis
For cell fractionation experiments, the pep4::URA3 strain NY579 was used. Cells were grown in YPD at 30°C, harvested in log phase (OD600 = 0.6-1.0) by centrifugation at 3000 × g for 5 min in an SS34 Sorvall rotor (DuPont), washed once in lysis buffer S (LBS) [40 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.5, 50 mM NaCl, 1× protease inhibitor cocktail tablets, EDTA free (Boehringer Mannheim), 1 µm pepstatin], and lysed by vortexing with glass beads (425-600 µM). Unbroken cells and large debris were removed by centrifugation at 800 × g for 10 min. The cleared lysate was sedimented at 10,000 × g for 10 min, and the resulting supernatant was sedimented in a Beckman TLA100 rotor at 100,000 × g for 1 h. Pellets were resuspended in a volume of LBS equivalent to the corresponding supernatant. All steps were performed at 4°C. Triton X-100 (0.2, 0.65, and 0.87%) and NaCl (100, 150, 200, and 350 mM), when included, were added after glass bead lysis.
For polyribosome analysis, lysates were prepared as described above
using LBS + 2 mM MgCl2 in the presence of
protease inhibitors. Where indicated, 100 µg/ml cycloheximide (Sigma,
St. Louis, MO) was added to cells immediately before harvesting.
Homogenates were sedimented at 800 × g for 10 min, and
the cleared lysate was sedimented at 10,000 × g for 15 min. When micrococcal nuclease or EDTA were included, the 10,000 × g supernatants were incubated at 4°C with either 20 mM
EDTA (for 15 min) or 5 U/µl micrococcal nuclease (for 30 min in the
presence of 3 mM CaCl2). Control lysates were
incubated under identical conditions, but without EDTA or nuclease.
Supernatant (100 OD260 units of 10,000 × g) was layered onto 12 ml of 20-47% sucrose gradients in
LBS + 2 mM MgCl2, which were sedimented for
3.75 h in an SW40 Beckman rotor at 39,000 rpm (Nelson et
al., 1992
). Gradients were collected with an ISCO (Lincoln,
NE) Model 185 density gradient fractionator.
In Vitro Translation and RNA Homopolymer Binding
The T7 promoter was introduced upstream of SRO9 by PCR amplification using oligos SGS44 (5'-TTATACCCTCTGAAATGTGTTAATACGACTCACTATAGCTGGTAGGTCAAGAACAAAGAAAG-3') and SGS45 (5'-GTTTTTTGTGTAAAATGCAATGAACG-3'). The fragment was subcloned into pCR-Blunt (Invitrogen), and the T7-SRO9 fragment was released by digestion with EcoRI. The T7-LHP1 construct was constructed analogously, but using oligos SGS46 (5'-TTATACCCTCTGAAATGTGTTAATACGACTCACT-ATAGGGGTTCTATTTGGTTCTACTGGAAC-3') and SGS47 (5'-GCTATGATAATGAGATACGAGAACC-3'). After sequencing, the T7-LHP1 fragment was excised using EcoRI. T7-SLF1 was constructed by amplification of the N terminus of SLF1 using oligos SGS57 (5'-AATACTCGAGGTGAATTCAAAAATGTCA-TCGCAAAA-3') and SGS58 (5'-GGAAGGAGATGGCATTATTAGC-3'); this fragment was XhoI/NcoI-digested. A 2.1-kb NcoI/SacI fragment containing the remainder of SLF1 was ligated with the T7-SLF1 XhoI/NcoI fragment and XhoI/SacI-digested Bluescript SK+ (Stratagene). This plasmid was used undigested for production of Slf1p. The T7-CAK1 plasmid was a gift of M. Solomon (Yale University, New Haven, CT).
The homopolymer-binding assay was performed as described (Siomi
et al., 1993
). 35S-labeled Sro9p,
Slf1p, Lhp1p, and Cak1p were generated by an in vitro-coupled
transcription/translation kit (Promega, Madison, WI) using
[35S]methionine (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech).
Each reaction was performed individually. The reactions were then
combined and incubated with the indicated homopolymer (40 µg)
immobilized on agarose beads [poly(A), poly(C), poly(G) (Sigma), or
poly(U) (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech)] or calf thymus single-stranded
DNA (ssDNA; 40 µg) immobilized on cellulose beads (Sigma) in binding
buffer (10 mM Tris-HCl pH 7.4, 2.5 mM MgCl2,
0.5% Triton X-100) with the stated concentration of NaCl for 30 min at
4°C. The supernatant was removed, and the beads were washed four
times with binding buffer. Protein was eluted by boiling the beads in
SDS-PAGE sample buffer.
Drug Sensitivity Tests
Drug sensitivity assays were performed as described by Cui
et al. (1995)
. After growing cells to saturation in YPD, the
cultures were diluted to OD600 = 0.4, and
300-µl aliquots were plated on YPD agar. A 0.25-inch sterile filter
disk was placed in the center of each plate, and 10 µl of
cycloheximide (0.25 µg/µl), paromomycine sulfate (250 µg/µl),
anisomycin (10 µg/µl), or hygromycin B (20 µg/µl) were applied
to each disk. The plates were incubated at 24.5°C for 2 d. All
antibiotics were purchased from Sigma.
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RESULTS |
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Sro9p and Slf1p Belong to a Novel Class of La Motif-containing Proteins
Although both Sro9p and Slf1p share a motif with all known La
proteins, both the overall structure of these proteins and the position
of the La motif within these proteins differ from bona fide
La proteins. As described previously (Yoo and Wolin, 1994
; Van Horn
et al., 1997
), authentic La proteins contain a highly conserved amino-terminal La motif, a less well conserved
RNP-type RNA-recognition motif (RRM) (Query et al.,
1989
), and a highly charged C terminus (Figure
1A). In contrast, the La motif is located toward the C terminus of both Sro9p and Slf1p (Figure 1A). Furthermore, although Sro9p and Slf1p are related to each other throughout their
length, they do not resemble authentic La proteins outside the La motif
(Kagami et al., 1997
) (Figure 1A).
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To determine whether Sro9p and Slf1p are members of a conserved
family of La motif-containing proteins that are distinct from authentic
La proteins, we performed sequence analyses. Using BLAST with Sro9p as
a query sequence, we found several other ORFs in GenBank that also
contained the La motif but were not authentic La proteins. Sequences
from C. elegans (R144.7) and H. sapiens (KIAA0731), as well as an M. musculus sequence assembled
from expressed sequence tags (see MATERIALS AND METHODS), were detected that possessed greater similarity to Sro9p and/or Slf1p than to any
known La protein (Figure 1 and our unpublished results). The C. elegans sequence R144.7 was annotated in the database as having weak similarity to La proteins (Wilson et al., 1994
).
Each of these proteins (C. elegans R144.7, H. sapiens KIAA0731, and S. cerevisiae Sro9p and Slf1p) are distinct from authentic La proteins by several criteria. First, the La motif is located either centrally or at the C terminus rather than at the amino terminus, as is characteristic of authentic La proteins (Figure 1A). (Because the mouse sequence is a partial sequence, the position of the La motif cannot be determined.) Second, the La motif of these proteins is phylogenetically divergent from that of authentic La proteins (Figure 1, B and C). Last, these proteins lack homology to La proteins outside the La motif (our unpublished results).
Although these La motif-containing proteins do not display sequence
identity to authentic La proteins outside the motif, they do exhibit
some homology within the group. Sro9p and Slf1p display some sequence
identity throughout their length (Kagami et al., 1997
); the
C. elegans R144.7 and the H. sapiens KIAA0731
exhibit 23.6% identity overall and 38.8% identity in a C-terminal
region downstream of the La motif, a region unique to these two
proteins (Figure 1A). Finally, the La motifs of Sro9p, Slf1p, C. elegans R144.7, H. sapiens KIAA0731, and the M. musculus contig are more related to each other than to those of
authentic La proteins (Figure 1C). Note that the La motifs of these
nonauthentic La proteins fall into a single node confirmed by
statistical analysis (1000 bootstrap replicates), indicating greater
similarity among this group. By these criteria there are at least two
La motif-containing protein families: the authentic La proteins and at
least one other class of La motif-containing proteins.
We also scanned the recently completed C. elegans genome for
La motif-containing proteins. This revealed that, in addition to
R144.7, C. elegans contains two additional proteins. One of these, C44E4.4, is homologous to authentic La proteins throughout its
length and is thus likely to be the C. elegans homologue of the La protein. The C. elegans C44E4.4 is 32.5% identical
with the H. sapiens La protein and 28.1% identical to the
Drosophila melanogaster La protein [for comparison, there
is 27% identity between the H. sapiens and D. melanogaster La proteins (Yoo and Wolin, 1994
)]. The other
sequence, T12F5.5, contains a La motif located at the amino terminus of
the protein. Although the placement of this motif is similar to that of
authentic La proteins, the protein is otherwise unrelated in sequence.
Furthermore, the La motif of T12F5.5 is more similar to that of R144.7
than to authentic La proteins (Figure 1, B and C). Thus, the protein
encoded by this sequence may constitute a third branch of the La
motif-containing protein family.
Disruptions of SRO9, SLF1, and LHP1 Are Not Synthetically Lethal
It has been reported that yeast lacking LHP1,
SRO9, or SLF1 are viable and have no discernible
growth defects (Yoo and Wolin, 1994
; Yu et al., 1996
; Kagami
et al., 1997
). To determine if the proteins encoded by the
three genes function in a single essential process, we analyzed whether
the absence of two or more of these genes would result in either
synthetic lethality or a synthetic slow-growth phenotype.
First, SRO9 and SLF1 were each deleted in
wild-type diploids, tetrads were dissected, and the phenotypes were
analyzed. Tetrad analysis of
slf1::HIS3/SLF1
transformants confirmed that the
slf1::HIS3 mutation yields no growth
phenotype on YPD (Yu et al., 1996
). Tetrad analysis of an
sro9::URA3/SRO9 transformant indicated that deletion of the SRO9 gene yields a slight slow-growth
phenotype (Figure 2A) that segregated
with the URA3 marker. This is in contrast to a report that
the growth rate of an sro9 deletion strain was indistinguishable from that of the wild-type strain (Kagami et al., 1997
). Next, slf1::HIS3,
sro9::URA3, and lhp1::LEU2
segregants were mated to generate combinations of each of these
mutations (strains YSS220, YSS222, YSS227/YSS228). Tetrad analysis of
YSS222 (slf1::HIS3/SLF1,
lhp1::LEU2/LHP1) yielded uniformly sized segregants, revealing that cells lacking both SLF1 and LHP1 grow
normally (Figure 2B). Dissection of YSS220
(slf1::HIS3/SLF1, sro9::URA3/SRO9) (our
unpublished results) and YSS227/YSS228
(slf1::HIS3/slf1::HIS3, sro9::URA3/SRO9, lhp1::LEU2/LHP1) yielded the
same results as YSS203 (sro9::URA3/SRO9) (two
large/two small) (Figure 2, compare A and C), indicating that cells
lacking all three genes grow indistinguishably from cells lacking only
SRO9. Thus Sro9p, Slf1p, and Lhp1p do not function in a
single essential process.
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Immunolocalization of Sro9p and Lhp1p
Because the authentic La protein predominantly localizes to the
nucleus in higher eukaryotes (Hendrick et al., 1981
; Yoo and Wolin, 1994
), we compared the subcellular distribution of Sro9p and
Slf1p with that of Lhp1p. Rabbit antibodies were raised against recombinant proteins containing Sro9p and Slf1p linked to
polyhistidine. Immunoblots of yeast extracts were probed
with these antibodies to determine their specificity for their
corresponding antigens. The anti-Sro9p antibody detected an ~60-kDa
protein that is absent in the sro9::URA3 strain
and thus corresponds to Sro9p (Figure 3A,
lanes 1-3). The anti-Slf1p antibody recognized two bands: an ~57-kDa
protein that corresponds to Slf1p because it is absent in the
slf1::HIS3 strain, and a nonspecific band that
comigrates with Sro9p but is unrelated to Sro9p because it is present
in the sro9::URA3 strain (Figure 3A, lanes 4-6).
Because SRO9 and SLF1 are predicted to encode 52- and 51-kDa proteins, respectively, these proteins have a slightly
higher mobility on SDS-polyacrylamide gels than expected.
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To determine the subcellular location of Sro9p, wild-type and
sro9::URA3 yeast cells were stained with
anti-Sro9p antibodies. These experiments confirmed that Sro9p is
cytoplasmic [as was reported by Kagami et al. (1997)
].
Furthermore, Sro9p is present in dot-like structures of nonuniform size
(Figure 4A). Because there was no
antibody staining in the strain lacking Sro9p, the staining pattern was
specific for Sro9p. In contrast, Lhp1p localizes to the yeast nucleus
of wild-type cells (Figure 4B), indicating that the localization of
wild-type Lhp1p is similar to the localization reported for Lhp1p fused
to protein A (Rosenblum et al., 1997
). Because there was no
staining in cells lacking Lhp1p, the signal was specific for Lhp1p. In
contrast, immunofluorescence microscopy using anti-Slf1p antibodies did
not yield a signal greater than background staining, indicating that
these antibodies were not useful for immunolocalization experiments
(our unpublished results).
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Sro9p Levels Are Decreased in Yeast Strains Overexpressing Slf1p
Because deletions in SRO9 and SLF1 did not result in synthetic growth defects, it was unclear whether these proteins were functional homologues. We therefore determined whether overexpression of one affected the expression of the other. Slf1p and Sro9p were each overexpressed, and the relative amounts of Slf1p and Sro9p in each strain were assayed by immunoblot. In strains bearing an SLF1 high-copy plasmid, the amount of Sro9p was reduced approximately fivefold relative to a strain containing the plasmid alone (Figure 3B, lanes 2 and 3). In contrast, the amount of Slf1p did not change when SRO9 was overexpressed (lanes 1 and 3). Neither the levels of the La protein Lhp1p nor a control ribosomal protein (Rpl5p) was affected by overexpression of Sro9p or Slf1p (Figure 3B). It should be noted that although both Sro9p and Slf1p are overexpressed via a 2-µ plasmid, Slf1p is overexpressed to a greater extent. The decrease in Sro9p in the presence of excess Slf1p could be due to a specific feedback mechanism that limits the total amount of the two proteins, consistent with these proteins being functional homologues. Alternatively, the two genes could share a specific transcription factor that is no longer in excess when SLF1 is present in multiple copies. Either possibility is consistent with a functional redundancy of the two proteins.
Sro9p and Slf1p Each Sediment as Part of a Large Complex
To determine whether the punctate structures observed by
immunofluorescence with anti-Sro9p antibodies corresponded to heavy particles, we performed differential centrifugation and analyzed the
distribution of Sro9p and Slf1p. Cells were lysed with glass beads, and
unbroken cells and large debris were removed by low-speed centrifugation. The postnuclear supernatant (Figure
5, PNS) was sedimented at 10,000 × g for 10 min (P2, S2), and the subsequent supernatant was
sedimented at 100,000 × g for 1 h (P3, S3).
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Immunoblot analysis revealed that Sro9p and Slf1p remained
in the supernatant after the 10,000 × g sedimentation
but pelleted after the 100,000 × g centrifugation. As
a control, the blot was reprobed to detect Sbh1p, a membrane protein of
the endoplasmic reticulum (Panzner et al., 1995
). As
expected, Sbh1p was found in the 10,000 × g pellet
(Walworth et al., 1989
). These results differ from a report
that a substantial portion of Sro9p remains in the 100,000 × g supernatant (Kagami et al., 1997
). This
discrepancy may result from differences in the cell lysis procedures.
We prepared lysates by rapid homogenization of intact yeast cells (see
MATERIALS AND METHODS), whereas Kagami et al. (1997)
lysed
spheroplasts, a longer procedure that could result in dissociation of a
complex during spheroplasting. Our data indicate that Sro9p and Slf1p are each components of a large complex. Their sedimentation is unaffected by varying NaCl concentrations (50, 100, 150, and 200 mM);
at 350 mM NaCl only trace amounts of Sro9p and Slf1p are released from
the 100,000 × g pellet (our unpublished results). In
addition, these proteins are unlikely to be contained within membrane-bound vesicles, because the sedimentation was unaffected by
addition of Triton X-100 (0.87%) to the lysate (our unpublished results). Finally, the sedimentation of Sro9p and Slf1p was independent of the actin cytoskeleton because actin remained in the supernatants (S2 and S3) (our unpublished results) and was therefore likely to be monomeric.
Sro9p and Slf1p Are Associated with Polyribosomes
Since Sro9p and Slf1p each associate with a heavy complex and
share a domain with a known RNA-binding protein, we hypothesized that
these proteins might associate with ribosomes. We therefore fractionated cell extracts on sucrose gradients and compared the distribution of Sro9p and Slf1p with that of polyribosomes. To preserve
polyribosomes, the translation elongation inhibitor cycloheximide, which freezes translating ribosomes on the mRNA (Wettstein et al., 1964
), was added to half the cells before harvesting. In the
absence of cycloheximide, most ribosomes were in the 80S monosome peak,
although some polyribosomes remained (Figure
6A). Under these conditions, both Sro9p
and Slf1p sedimented with the 80S ribosome (Figure 6A, fractions
11-14) as well as the polysomes (Figure 6A, lanes 15-26).
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In the presence of cycloheximide, there was a significant decrease in
the amount of 80S monosomes and a corresponding increase in
polyribosomes (Figure 6B). As would be expected if Sro9p and Slf1p were
polysome-associated, cycloheximide also altered the sedimentation of
Sro9p and Slf1p. In the presence of cycloheximide, Sro9p and Slf1p
sedimented mainly with polysomes (Figure 6B, fractions 14-26). As a
control, the sedimentation of the ribosomal protein Rpl5p (Deshmukh
et al., 1993
) was monitored. Although Rpl5p was present in
both the 80S monosome and polysome fractions, Sro9p and Slf1p
sedimented almost exclusively with polysomes (Figure 6B). Furthermore,
Sro9p and Slf1p sedimented with polysomes even when most of the
ribosomes were in the monosome form (Figure 6A, lanes 11-26). These
data suggest that Sro9p and Slf1p associate preferentially with
polysomes rather than with monosomes or ribosomal subunits.
Polysome-disrupting Conditions Alter the Sedimentation of Sro9p and Slf1p
To further test our hypothesis that Sro9p and Slf1p associate with
translating ribosomes, we analyzed the sedimentation of these proteins
under conditions that disrupt polysomes. First, we used micrococcal
nuclease to degrade portions of mRNAs that are not protected by
ribosomes (Wolin and Walter, 1988
). When micrococcal nuclease was added
to an extract from cycloheximide-treated cells, the polysomes were
digested to monosomes (Figure 7B).
Similarly, the majority of Sro9p and Slf1p now migrated with the 80S
monosome peak (Figure 7, compare A and B). Interestingly, although
Sro9p and Slf1p are putative functional homologues, the sedimentation of these proteins was distinct in the nuclease-treated extracts. Although both Sro9p and Slf1p remained at least ~50% associated with
the 80S peak, some Sro9p was released to the top of the gradient. In
contrast, some Slf1p cosedimented with the 40S peak and almost no Slf1p
was released to the top of the gradient (Figure 7B). Thus, although
Sro9p and Slf1p are both polyribosome-associated, their functions
and/or binding properties could be slightly different.
|
Finally, we examined the distribution of Sro9p and Slf1p in the
presence of EDTA, which dissociates ribosomes into 40S and 60S subunits
(Figure 7, C and D). When cell extracts from cycloheximide-treated cells were incubated with EDTA, both Sro9p and Slf1p shifted upward in
the gradient; however, both Sro9p and Slf1p migrated further into the
gradient after EDTA treatment than Rpl5p, which is released during EDTA
treatment as a complex with 5S rRNA (Blobel, 1971
). Thus, upon EDTA
treatment, both Sro9p and Slf1p remain associated with other proteins
or RNA species, or both.
Because the human La protein has been reported to sediment with 40S
subunits (Peek et al., 1996
), we also examined the
distribution of Lhp1p on sucrose gradients. In contrast to Sro9p and
Slf1p, Lhp1p was found at the top of the gradient (Figure 7C). On long exposures of the blot, a very small fraction of Lhp1p was detected that
may comigrate with the 40S subunit (Figure 7C, fraction 6). Nonetheless, the vast majority of Lhp1p in yeast cells does not sediment with either ribosomal subunits or ribosomes.
In summary, because three different conditions that alter polyribosome profiles (cycloheximide, micrococcal nuclease, and EDTA) resulted in corresponding shifts in the sedimentation of both Sro9p and Slf1p, we conclude that these proteins are associated with translating ribosomes.
Cells Lacking Sro9p or Slf1p Are Less Sensitive to Certain Inhibitors of Translation
Since Sro9p and Slf1p associate with polyribosomes, we
examined the sensitivity of strains lacking these proteins to several protein synthesis inhibitors. Wild-type strains and strains lacking these proteins were incubated on rich media plates in the presence of
filter discs containing paromomycin, cycloheximide, hygromycin B, or
anisomycin. By comparing the zone of growth inhibition around the disk,
we assessed the relative antibiotic sensitivity of the strains. Strains
lacking Slf1p or Sro9p or both proteins were less sensitive than
isogenic wild-type strains to the aminoglycoside antibiotic paromomycin
(Figure 8A), which decreases
translational fidelity during elongation (Singh et al.,
1979
). Interestingly, strains lacking Slf1p were reproducibly less
sensitive to paromomycin than strains lacking Sro9p or strains lacking
both proteins (Figure 8A). Strains lacking Sro9p, but not strains
lacking only Slf1p, were also less sensitive to the elongation
inhibitor cycloheximide (Figure 8B); however, these strains, as well as
strains lacking both proteins, were similar to wild-type strains in
their sensitivities to hygromycin B (Figure 8C), which like paromomycin
decreases translational fidelity (Singh et al., 1979
). They
were also similar in their sensitivity to anisomycin (Figure 8D), which
inhibits the peptidyl transferase reaction (Cundliffe, 1990
).
The differential sensitivity of strains lacking Sro9p or Slf1p to
specific translation inhibitors argues against the possibility that
these strains are generally less sensitive to inhibitors than wild-type
strains. Instead, together with the association of these proteins with polysomes, our results argue that Sro9p and Slf1p, either directly or
indirectly, affect ribosome structure and/or function.
|
Because strains lacking Sro9p or Slf1p displayed decreased sensitivity to certain protein synthesis inhibitors, we determined whether polysome profiles were altered in the strains. To this end, cell extracts from strains lacking either Sro9p or both proteins were fractionated on sucrose gradients. This revealed no significant differences in the polysome profiles between wild-type strains and strains lacking these proteins (our unpublished results).
Sro9p and Slf1p Bind RNA In Vitro
Because Sro9p and Slf1p share a domain with a known RNA-binding
protein, we tested whether these proteins exhibited RNA-binding activity in vitro. 35S-labeled Sro9p was produced
by in vitro translation and mixed with one of four RNA homopolymers
immobilized on agarose beads. As a control, we examined the binding of
Sro9p to ssDNA. We compared the RNA-binding activity of Sro9p with that
of Lhp1p and, as a negative control, the protein kinase Cak1p (Kaldis
et al., 1996
) (Figure 9). This
revealed that 35S-labeled Sro9p bound poly(U),
poly(G), ssDNA, and to a lesser extent poly(A), but did not detectably
bind poly(C) (Figure 9A). Experiments in which the RNA-binding activity
of Slf1p was assayed revealed that this protein bound a similar
spectrum of homopolymers (our unpublished results). Lhp1p displayed
nearly the same homopolymer preferences as Sro9p (Figure 9A) and Slf1p
(our unpublished results), which is consistent with the specificity of
the human La protein for homopolymers (Stefano, 1984
).
|
To determine the specificity and strength of the homopolymer binding,
the experiment was repeated in the presence of increasing concentrations of NaCl (Siomi et al., 1993
). Although Sro9p
binding to poly(A) and ssDNA was diminished by higher salt (Figure 9B, lanes 1-8), binding to poly(U) and poly(G) was less affected by the
NaCl concentration. Sro9p remained bound to poly(U) in 300 mM NaCl and
remained bound to poly(G) even in 500 mM NaCl (lanes 15 and 11). Some
Sro9p remained bound to poly(U) at the highest concentrations of NaCl
(500 and 700 mM), and Sro9p binding to poly(G) was unaffected until the
highest salt concentration (700 mM). A similar experiment in which
Slf1p binding to homopolymers was assayed as a function of NaCl
concentration revealed that Slf1p was indistinguishable from Sro9p in
its homopolymer binding specificity (our unpublished results).
Interestingly, both Sro9p and Slf1p could be distinguished from Lhp1p
in their preference for homopolymers. Although Sro9p, Slf1p, and Lhp1p
all exhibited strong binding to poly(G) and poly(U), Lhp1p bound
poly(G) and poly(U) with equal strength at 500 mM NaCl, whereas Sro9p
exhibits stronger binding to poly(G) at this salt concentration.
Neither protein bound ssDNA at 500 mM NaCl. Thus, both Sro9p and Slf1p are RNA-binding proteins in vitro, and their specificity for RNA is
distinct from that of Lhp1p.
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DISCUSSION |
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|
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We have used a combination of genetics and biochemistry to dissect
the functions of two yeast proteins, Sro9p and Slf1p, that share a
highly conserved motif with the La proteins. Because strains lacking
Sro9p, Slf1p, and the La protein Lhp1p grow indistinguishably from
cells lacking only Sro9p, the three proteins do not function redundantly in a single essential process. In agreement with others (Kagami et al., 1997
; Rosenblum et al., 1997
), we
found that although Lhp1p is nuclear, Sro9p is predominantly
cytoplasmic. Cell fractionation revealed that Sro9p and Slf1p associate
with polyribosomes. Consistent with a role in translation, strains
lacking either Sro9p or Slf1p have reduced sensitivity to a subset of
protein synthesis inhibitors. Both Sro9p and Slf1p bind RNA in vitro
and thus may bind RNA in vivo. These observations suggest that these
two La motif-containing proteins may function in the cytoplasm to
modulate mRNA translation.
A New Class of La Motif-containing Proteins
Our experiments have revealed that yeast contains two functional
classes of La motif-containing proteins. One class consists of Lhp1p,
the yeast homologue of the human La autoantigen. Lhp1p and other La
proteins are nuclear phosphoproteins that bind nascent RNA polymerase
III transcripts (Rinke and Steitz, 1982
; Yoo and Wolin, 1994
; Van Horn
et al., 1997
). A second class of La motif-containing proteins, consisting of Sro9p and Slf1p, associates with polyribosomes. Because Sro9p and Slf1p have similar RNA homopolymer binding
characteristics in vitro and are both ribosome-associated, they may
have related functions. Consistent with this idea, Sro9p is
down-regulated when Slf1p is overexpressed, and strains lacking either
protein have reduced sensitivity to paromomycin; however, because cells lacking Sro9p, but not cells lacking Slf1p, are also less sensitive to
cycloheximide, their functions may not be completely overlapping. Because deletion of SRO9, but not SLF1, results
in slow growth, Sro9p may be more important to normal log-phase growth
than Slf1p. Furthermore, SRO9 has a relatively high codon
bias (0.38), whereas SLF1 has a low codon bias (0.06)
(Hodges et al., 1999
), suggesting that Sro9p is expressed at
a higher level than Slf1p. Interestingly, in a genome-wide experiment,
it was found that Sro9p is down-regulated as the cell approaches
stationary phase, whereas Slf1p is up-regulated (DeRisi et
al., 1997
). Thus these proteins may have evolved toward specialization for different phases of cell growth.
H. sapiens, M. musculus, and C. elegans all have La motif-containing proteins that are distinct from the bona fide La protein in each organism. Because the La motifs of these proteins are more similar to Sro9p and Slf1p than to the La motifs of authentic La proteins, these proteins, along with Sro9p and Slf1p, may constitute a new functional class of proteins. Whether all of these higher eukaryotic La motif-containing proteins are cytoplasmic and function in mRNA translation is not known. Nonetheless, our phylogenetic analysis suggests that the functions of these proteins will be distinct from that of authentic La proteins. Furthermore, these proteins may function in processes that involve RNA binding.
Although the La motif has not been identified as containing a
recognizable RNA-binding motif in any published compilation of such
motifs (Birney et al., 1993
; Burd and Dreyfuss, 1994
), it
has been modeled to resemble an RRM (Kenan, 1995
) and has thus been
referred to as an RRM in some publications (Goodier et al., 1997
); however, an independent modeling of the La motif failed to
support the assignment as a canonical RRM (Y. Shamoo, personal communication). Furthermore, although the residues that make up the RRM
are highly degenerate, the La motifs of Sro9p, Slf1p, Lhp1p, and the
other La motif-containing proteins are highly related at the amino acid
level (Figure 1B). Although certain families of proteins, such as the
SR family of splicing factors and the ELAV family of proteins, each
have highly related RRMs (Birney et al., 1993
), the
homologies within these protein families are not restricted to the RRM
but extend throughout the proteins. The La motif appears to be unique
in that it is found, essentially intact, in otherwise unrelated
proteins. Thus, until the structure of the La protein has been
determined, the assignment of the La motif as an RRM remains uncertain.
At least for the human La protein, the isolated La motif is not
sufficient for RNA binding (Goodier et al., 1997
).
Similarly, we found that a fragment of Sro9p containing the isolated La
motif failed to bind RNA homopolymers (our unpublished data). Because several well characterized RNA-binding motifs require sequences flanking the motifs for RNA-binding activity (reviewed by Birney et al., 1993
), the failure of the isolated motif to bind RNA
does not rule out a role for the La motif in RNA binding. In fact, even
small deletions within the La motif of the human La protein dramatically affect RNA binding as well as protein function in vitro
(Chang et al., 1994
; Goodier et al., 1997
).
Whether the La motifs in Sro9p and Slf1p are major contributors to
specific RNA recognition by these proteins is not yet known. Future
experiments, in which we identify the RNA targets of these proteins and
dissect the requirements for RNA binding, will be required to answer
this question.
Possible Roles for Sro9p and Slf1p
Our data that Sro9p and Slf1p are polysome-associated, coupled
with the decreased sensitivity of strains lacking these proteins to
specific protein synthesis inhibitors, suggest roles for these proteins
in mRNA translation; however, the preferential association of Sro9p and
Slf1p with polysomes rather than 80S monosomes or ribosomal subunits
makes it unlikely that these proteins are structural components of
ribosomes. Furthermore, because yeast lacking both Sro9p and Slf1p are
viable, these proteins cannot be required for the translation of any
essential proteins. Instead, Sro9p and Slf1p could modulate mRNA
translation, either for all mRNAs or for a specific subset. Because
strains lacking either Sro9p or Slf1p are less sensitive to
paromomycin, which acts on the 40S ribosomal subunit to increase the
translational error rate (Cundliffe, 1990
), Sro9p and Slf1p could
function, either directly or indirectly, to modulate translational
accuracy. Such a role would be consistent with the fact that cells
lacking these proteins do not display significant changes in polysome
profiles, because several other mutations that affect translational
fidelity do not result in detectable polysome defects (Atkin et
al., 1997
; Cui et al., 1998
). Furthermore,
because mRNA degradation is closely linked to translation and often
requires that the mRNA be polysome-associated (reviewed by Jacobson and
Peltz, 1996
), it is possible that these proteins also function in some
aspect of mRNA stability or decay.
Although the human La protein has been reported to interact with 40S ribosomal subunits and to facilitate cap-independent translation, it is unlikely that Sro9p and Slf1p function to promote translation initiation. First, neither Sro9p nor Slf1p interacts with free 40S subunits when cell extracts are fractionated on sucrose gradients under normal conditions (Figures 6 and 7, A and C). Second, the preferential association of Sro9p and Slf1p with polysomes is more consistent with a role in either elongation or termination than in translation initiation. Last, because paromomycin and cycloheximide both act on elongating ribosomes, the decreased sensitivities to these antibiotics that we observed in strains lacking Sro9p or Slf1p are most compatible with a role for these proteins in elongation.
Because SRO9 exhibits genetic interactions with
RHO3 and tropomyosin, it was proposed that Sro9p stabilizes
actin filaments (Kagami et al., 1997
). Sro9p did not
sediment, however, with actin filaments, and there is no evidence for a
physical interaction of Sro9p with actin (Kagami et al.,
1997
). We also found that Sro9p and Slf1p sediment independently of
actin. Furthermore, overexpression of either Sro9p or Slf1p had no
effect on actin levels in either wild-type or act1-3
strains (our unpublished data). Because SRO9 exhibits
wide-ranging genetic interactions (see INTRODUCTION), a genetic
argument for an interaction with actin is not strong. In addition,
genetic results can be misleading when evaluating a protein like Sro9p
that may have global effects on cells. For example, a component of both
the SWI/SNF complex and the TFIIF and TFIID transcription
complexes was originally identified as having an actin cytoskeletal
function (Welch and Drubin, 1994
; Cairns et al., 1996
).
Similarly, a subtle defect in protein synthesis could exacerbate
mutations in other pathways, possibly explaining several observations
of synthetic lethality; however, it remains possible that Sro9p and
Slf1p function in some way to facilitate the specific expression of
actin and the other genes with which they exhibit genetic interactions.
Given that Sro9p and Slf1p exhibit homology to La proteins, perhaps they, like the La proteins, are molecular chaperones. Binding by Sro9p and Slf1p could stabilize mRNAs in the correct conformation for translation, modulate tRNA codon/anticodon interactions, or even facilitate rRNA rearrangements that are necessary for optimal translation. If the La motif constitutes part of a specific RNA-binding motif, perhaps Sro9p and Slf1p bind substrate(s) that in some way resembles the RNAs bound by the La protein. An understanding of the precise function of these two La motif-containing proteins will require the identification of their RNA targets, as well as the determination of how these novel RNA-binding proteins interact with ribosomes during the process of mRNA translation.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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We thank P. Brennwald, T. Rapoport, J. Woolford, and M. Solomon for plasmids and antibodies. We also thank C. Yoo for preparation of the anti-Sro9p antibody, D. Van Horn for the SRO9 deletion strain, A. Quinn for assistance with the phylogenetic analysis, Y. Shamoo and D. Kenan for discussions of the La motif, and S. Peltz for advice on drug sensitivity tests. We thank S. Baserga, D. Lewin, and K. Tycowski for critical reading of this manuscript. This work was supported by grant R01-GM48410 from National Institutes of Health. S.L.W. is an Associate Investigator of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.
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FOOTNOTES |
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* Corresponding author. E-mail address: sandra.wolin{at}yale.edu.
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REFERENCES |
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