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Vol. 10, Issue 3, 727-740, March 1999
Max-Planck-Unit for Structural Molecular Biology, D-22603 Hamburg, Germany
Submitted July 13, 1998; Accepted January 4, 1999| |
ABSTRACT |
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The differentiation of neurons and the outgrowth of neurites depends on microtubule-associated proteins such as tau protein. To study this process, we have used the model of Sf9 cells, which allows efficient transfection with microtubule-associated proteins (via baculovirus vectors) and observation of the resulting neurite-like extensions. We compared the phosphorylation of tau23 (the embryonic form of human tau) with mutants in which critical phosphorylation sites were deleted by mutating Ser or Thr residues into Ala. One can broadly distinguish two types of sites, the KXGS motifs in the repeats (which regulate the affinity of tau to microtubules) and the SP or TP motifs in the domains flanking the repeats (which contain epitopes for antibodies diagnostic of Alzheimer's disease). Here we report that both types of sites can be phosphorylated by endogenous kinases of Sf9 cells, and that the phosphorylation pattern of the transfected tau is very similar to that of neurons, showing that Sf9 cells can be regarded as an approximate model for the neuronal balance between kinases and phosphatases. We show that mutations in the repeat domain and in the flanking domains have opposite effects. Mutations of KXGS motifs in the repeats (Ser262, 324, and 356) strongly inhibit the outgrowth of cell extensions induced by tau, even though this type of phosphorylation accounts for only a minor fraction of the total phosphate. This argues that the temporary detachment of tau from microtubules (by phosphorylation at KXGS motifs) is a necessary condition for establishing cell polarity at a critical point in space or time. Conversely, the phosphorylation at SP or TP motifs represents the majority of phosphate (>80%); mutations in these motifs cause an increase in cell extensions, indicating that this type of phosphorylation retards the differentiation of the cells.
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INTRODUCTION |
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The formation and growth of neurites from a neuronal cell and the
differentiation into an axon and several dendrites depend on the
polymerization of microtubules and microtubule-dependent transport. The
growth and stability of microtubules is regulated by
microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs).1 A number of
MAPs have been characterized (for review, see Hirokawa, 1994
). Several
of them are prominent in neurons and tend to be compartmentalized; the
best known examples are MAP2 (largely dendritic) and tau protein
(largely axonal; Cleveland et al., 1977
; Binder et
al., 1985
; Drubin et al., 1985
; Drubin and Kirschner,
1986
). The formation of neuronal processes and the selective targeting of cytoskeletal components to their destinations is currently an area
of active research. Much of what we know today has been derived from
neuronal cells in culture in which individual components can be tracked
(e.g., by fluorescence methods) and manipulated, for example, increased
by transfection or microinjection or suppressed by antibodies or
antisense oligonucleotides (for review, see Mandell and Banker, 1995
;
Ludin and Matus, 1998
). However, neuronal cells can be transfected only
with low efficiency and yield protein quantities that are often below
the limit for biochemical analysis. This has led to the development
of cell models in which certain aspects of neuronal behavior can be
studied more directly and in molecular detail (Kanai et al.,
1989
; Caceres et al., 1990
, 1991
, 1992
; Chen et
al., 1992
; Barlow et al., 1994
). One such system is
that of the insect ovary cell line Sf9, which can be transfected by
baculovirus vectors. When transfected with tau or other MAPs, these
cells develop extensions analogous to those of differentiating neurons,
stabilized by bundles of parallel microtubules and their associated
proteins (Baas et al., 1991
; Knops et al., 1991
;
Frappier et al., 1994
; Kosik and McConlogue, 1994
). This
system is therefore suitable for studying biochemical and morphological
issues, such as the regulation of the microtubule cytoskeleton via the
phosphorylation of tau.
The phosphorylation of tau protein has received particular attention
because the protein precipitates in a highly phosphorylated form in
Alzheimer's disease, an age-related dementia. The physiological function of tau is not well understood, but gradients of
phosphorylation of tau or other MAPs suggest a role in the development
and maintenance of neuronal processes (Burack and Halpain, 1996
;
Mandell and Banker, 1996
). In Alzheimer's disease it is generally
thought that excess phosphorylation reflects an imbalance of cellular
signal transduction pathways and is a prelude to neuronal degeneration
(for review, see Trojanowski and Lee, 1995
; Mandelkow and Mandelkow,
1998
). This emphasizes the need for understanding the origin and
role of tau's phosphorylation and the kinases and phosphatases
controlling it. Tau can be phosphorylated at many different sites and
by a number of kinases. We broadly distinguish two types of
phosphorylation. The first comprises the phosphorylation in the
repeats, specifically at the KXGS motifs; their phosphorylation
(notably of Ser262) strongly inhibits tau-microtubule interactions.
These sites can be phosphorylated by MAP/microtubule
affinity-regulating kinase (MARK) and (with lower efficiency) by
cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) (Biernat et al., 1993
;
Brandt et al., 1994
; Drewes et al., 1995
). The
second type of phosphorylation occurs mostly in the domains flanking
the repeats, which contain a number of SP or TP motifs and can be
phosphorylated by several proline-directed kinases; these have only a
weak influence on tau-microtubule interactions (Drechsel et
al., 1992
; Biernat et al., 1993
). Both types of
phosphorylation sites are elevated in Alzheimer tau
(Morishima-Kawashima et al., 1995
), and the SP or TP
motifs are recognized by several phosphorylation-dependent antibodies,
which are diagnostic for the "Alzheimer-like" state of tau protein
(for review, see Goedert et al., 1994
). To analyze the roles
of these sites, we have therefore made mutants either in the repeat
domain or in the flanking domains, eliminating phosphorylation sites by
replacing Ser or Thr residues with Ala.
We show here that the different types of phosphorylation have opposite
effects on process formation in Sf9 cells. The expression of wild-type
tau induces processes in ~60% of the cells. This critically requires
the phosphorylation in the repeats: if two or more KXGS motifs are
turned into KXGA (especially Ser262 and Ser356), process formation is
largely suppressed. This suggests that a detachment of tau from
microtubules and their destabilization is necessary for inducing cell
processes. At the same time the extent of phosphorylation at these
sites is remarkably low (~5% of all sites), indicating that the
detachment of tau may be needed only at a special place or time. On the
other hand, phosphorylation in the flanking domains (at SP or TP
motifs) inhibits process formation but only to a moderate extent
(~30%), despite the fact that these sites account for ~80% of the
total phosphorylation. Thus, if all SP or TP mutated into AP, process
frequency increases by ~30%. This argues that phosphorylation at SP
or TP sites plays a generalized but weak role. Overall, the
phosphorylation pattern of tau in transfected Sf9 cells is surprisingly
similar to that of neuronal cells or other cells transfected with tau
(Illenberger et al., 1998
). This shows that the balance
between kinases and phosphatases is comparable in different cell types
and suggests that the Sf9 cell is a good model for studying the role of
tau phosphorylation in neurite outgrowth.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Cells and Viruses
Sf9 cells were obtained from Invitrogen (San Diego, CA) and were grown at 27°C in monolayer culture Grace's medium (Life Technologies, Gaithersburg, MD) supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum, 50 µg/ml Gentamycin, and 2.5 µg/ml Amphotericin. BaculoGold was obtained from PharMingen (San Diego, CA); pVL1392 was from Invitrogen.
Tau Transfection and Mutations
All mutated tau genes used in this study were derived from
htau23, the shortest human tau isoform described by Goedert et al. (1989)
. Point mutants were made by PCR as described (Biernat et al., 1993
). The mutant tau23/AP is a derivative of htau23
with all 14 Ser-Pro and Thr-Pro sites mutated into Ala-Pro. KXGA/R1 (htau23/A262) is a derivative of htau23 with a Ser262-Ala
mutation, KXGA/R1/3/4, (htau23/A262/A324/A356) is htau23 containing
Ser262-Ala, Ser324-Ala, and Ser356-Ala mutations. The recombinant tau
genes were excised from the bacterial expression vector pNG2 (Biernat et al. 1993
) with XbaI and BamHI, and
inserted into the baculovirus transfer vector pVL1392 cut with the same
restriction endonucleases. For the construction of tau-containing
baculovirus vectors we used the BaculoGold system. The BaculoGold DNA
is a modified type of baculovirus containing a lethal deletion and does
not code for viable virus itself. Cotransfection of the BaculoGold DNA with a complementing baculovirus transfer vector rescued the lethal deletion of this virus DNA and reconstituted viable virus particles carrying the htau23 coding sequence. Plasmid DNA used for transfections was purified using Qiagen (Hilden, Germany) cartridges. Sf9 cells grown
in monolayers (2 × 106 cells in a 60-mm cell culture
dish) were cotransfected with baculovirus DNA (0.5 µg BaculoGold DNA)
and with vector derivatives of pVL1392 (2 µg) using a calcium
phosphate coprecipitation method. The following baculovirus strains
were obtained: BaculoGold-htau23, -tau23/AP, -KXGA/R1, -KXGA/R1/4,
-KXGA/R1/3/4, and -tau23/AP/R1/4. The presence of recombinant proteins
was examined in the infected Sf9 cells 5 d after infection by
SDS-PAGE and Western blotting.
Western Blotting
Sf9 cells were infected with either wild-type virus or
recombinant virus at a multiplicity of infection (MOI) of 1-5. Cell lysates were prepared either directly with hot (100°C) SDS sample buffer (Laemmli, 1970
) or in hypotonic lysis buffer (HLB; 50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.4, 120 mM NaCl, 10% glycerol, 1% Nonidet P-40, 5 mM
DTT, 1 mM EGTA, 20 mM NaF, 1 mM orthovanadate, 5 µM microcystin, 100 µg/ml protease inhibitors leupeptin, aprotinin, and pepstatin). The
cells lysed in HLB were centrifuged at 16,000 × g for
15 min, and the supernatant and pellet were separated. Proteins were
then electrophoresed by SDS-PAGE, transferred to a polyvinylidene
difluoride membrane, and blotted with the following mAbs:
AT-8 (1:2000), AT-180 (1:1000), AT-270 (1:4000), AT-100 (1:500) (AT
antibodies from Innogenetics, Ghent, Belgium), PHF-1 (1:600; a gift
from P. Davies, Albert Einstein College, Bronx, NY), 5E2 (1:500; a gift
from K. Kosik, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA), Tau-1 (1:500; a
gift from L. Binder, Northwestern University, Chicago, IL), 12E8
(1:5000; a gift from P. Seubert, Athena Neurosciences, South San
Francisco, CA) and SMI-34 (1:300; Sternberger Monoclonals, Baltimore,
MD). The immunostaining was visualized using the ECL chemiluminescence
system (Amersham, Braunschweig, Germany).
Immunofluorescence
Tau constructs were visualized with the rabbit polyclonal
anti-tau antibody K9JA (Dako, Hamburg, Germany), and microtubules were
visualized with monoclonal anti-
-tubulin antibody DM1A
(Sigma, Deisenhofen, Germany). The cells were fixed for 5 min in
20°C MeOH, washed with PBS, and extracted for 5 min with 0.1%
Triton X-100. Fixed cells were blocked by incubation in 10% FCS in
PBS, incubated in the primary antibody, washed three times with PBS, incubated with anti-rabbit TRITC- or anti-mouse FITC-conjugated antibody (Dianova, Hamburg, Germany), washed again, mounted in Permafluor (Immunotech, Marseilles, France), and visualized by fluorescence microscopy.
Quantitation of Process Morphology Induced by tau23 and Its Derivatives
The frequency of process formation was determined in the monolayer culture. Cells (3 × 106) were grown on a 60-mm Petri dish, infected with recombinant baculoviruses at an MOI of 1-5, and incubated at 27°C. The morphological analysis was performed on unfixed cells because the cells have the tendency to detach, and processes are lost during the fixation procedure. Process morphology was quantitated in three independent experiments, scoring 200 cells each. The number of cells bearing the processes was plotted against time and analyzed by linear regression. At the end of the experiment the cells were harvested, resuspended in equal volumes of HLB, and incubated 30 min on ice. After that the concentration of NaCl in HLB was adjusted to 500 mM, and tau protein was isolated, making use of its heat stability. After boiling for 15 min and centrifugation at 16,000 × g for 30 min at 4°C, the supernatants were analyzed by gel electrophoresis and Western blotting. The protein concentrations were determined by the bicinchoninic acid method (Sigma). For precise quantitation of tau in the boiled supernatants, equal volumes were electrophoresed on 10% SDS-polyacrylamide gels and quantitated by scanning and densitometry, and the small fraction of other heat-stable proteins in the supernatant was subtracted. Evaluation was done using the program TINA 2.0 (Raytest, Straubenhardt, Germany). For some tau constructs the cell morphology was also determined with Sf9 cells in suspension. In this case the cell density and total cell number can be determined using a hemocytometer. Cell processes grow in suspension but are more prone to breakage so that cells with stable processes become overrepresented. Although the quantitation of cell morphology from suspensions is less reliable than from the monolayer cultures, it is useful for assessing the relative mechanical strengths provided by the different tau constructs.
In Vivo Labeling of tau Derivatives in Sf9 Cells and Phosphopeptide Mapping
Metabolic labeling of Sf9 cells with 32P was
performed using 0.5 mCi 32Pi/ml TNM FH
cell medium lacking phosphate and supplemented with dialyzed fetal calf
serum. Sf9 cells were infected with recombinant baculovirus at an MOI
of 10. At 36 h after infection cells were supplemented with 0.5 mCi of 32Pi/ml medium and incubated for 3 h. After labeling cells were washed, resuspended in lysis-boiling
buffer, and immediately boiled. After centrifugation the supernatant
was subjected to SDS-PAGE, and radioactive tau bands were eluted and
precipitated by trichloroacetic acid. The radioactive tau derivatives
were further used for peptide mapping. Two-dimensional (2D)
phosphopeptide mapping (on thin-layer cellulose plates) was performed
according to the methods of Boyle et al. (1991)
and
Illenberger et al. (1998)
. For quantitation of radioactivity
the image plates were scanned with a BAS2000 phosphoimager (Raytest)
and processed using the TINA 2.0 software (Raytest). The
phosphorylation of tau construct K19 by MARK2 and PKA was carried out
at 37°C in 40 mM HEPES, pH 7.2, 3 mM MgCl2, 5 mM EGTA, 1 mM PMSF, 2 mM [
-32P]ATP (100-200 Ci/mol; Amersham)
and a mixture of protease inhibitors (leupeptin, aprotinin, and
pepstatin A at 10 µg/µl each and 1 mM PMSF) in the presence of
heparin for 16 h. Protein kinases were removed by boiling the
samples in 0.5 M NaCl and 5 mM DTT and centrifugation. Tau construct
K19 remains in the supernatant and was precipitated by 15%
trichloroacetic acid on ice. The precipitated K19 samples were digested
with trypsin and processed by 2D phosphopeptide mapping. PKA was
obtained from Promega (Madison, WI). Recombinant MARK2 (Drewes et
al.1997
) was prepared by G. Schmitt-Ulms (Max-Planck-Unit for
Structural Molecular Biology). Note that the absolute degree of
tau phosphorylation in Sf9 cells cannot be obtained from the radioactive labeling experiments, because the efficiency of conversion of 32P to [
-32P]ATP in the cells is not
known; however, it can be estimated from the Mr
shifts and the known specificities of the phosphorylation-sensitive antibodies.
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RESULTS |
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Process Formation Induced by tau Protein in Sf9 cells Is Enhanced or Suppressed by Different Phosphorylation Sites
Our aim in this study was to use the baculovirus-transfected Sf9
cell system to probe the role of tau phosphorylation in establishing cell polarity. Tau is a neuronal MAP that is involved in supporting the
outgrowth of axons and in stabilizing them (Drubin and Kirschner, 1986
;
Lee et al., 1988
; Barlow et al., 1994
;
Esmaeli-Azad et al., 1994
). Cell processes are also induced
when tau is transfected into nonneuronal cells, e.g., COS cells (Kanai
et al., 1989
) or Sf9 insect cells (Baas et al.,
1991
, 1994
; Knops et al., 1991
). The efficiency of the
baculovirus transfection system makes it an attractive model for
studying cellular reactions. The use of this system for studying MAPs
and their variants is well established (for review, see Kosik and
McConlogue, 1994
). However, to extend these studies into the area of
phosphorylation, we had to ascertain first that Sf9 cells contain
endogenous kinases capable of phosphorylating tau after transfection.
We chose several constructs of tau as probes that had been
characterized extensively in vitro, using several criteria such as
affinity for microtubules and capacity to nucleate or stabilize microtubules, to alter their dynamic instability, or to induce microtubule bundling (Butner and Kirschner, 1991
; Gustke et
al., 1994
; Panda et al., 1995
; Trinczek et
al., 1995
; Goode et al., 1997
). Tau has many
phosphorylation sites and can be phosphorylated by various kinases, but
there are two classes of phosphorylation sites that are particularly
interesting. One class comprises the SP and TP motifs, which are the
targets of several proline-directed kinases. This type of
phosphorylation is developmentally regulated; i.e., it is enhanced in
fetal tissue (Bramblett et al., 1993
), and it is prominent
in the pathological conditions of Alzheimer's disease (for review, see
Johnson and Jenkins, 1996
; Mandelkow and Mandelkow, 1998
). We therefore
made constructs in which some or all SP or TP sites were mutated into
AP and thus were no longer phosphorylatable. The smallest (fetal) human
tau isoform contains 14 such sites, all of which were turned into AP in
construct tau23/AP (Figure 1A). Some of
these SP and TP motifs can be monitored conveniently, because there are
a number of mAbs that recognize them in a phosphorylation-dependent manner (several of these antibodies were originally generated against
Alzheimer tau, e.g., AT-8 [Mercken et al., 1992
] and PHF-1 [Greenberg et al., 1992
; for review, see Friedhoff and
Mandelkow, 1999
]). Another class of phosphorylation sites comprises
the KXGS motifs in the repeat domain (X = I or C). The
phosphorylation of the first of these (at Ser262) has a pronounced
effect on the binding of tau to microtubules (Biernat et
al., 1993
) and is elevated in Alzheimer tau (Morishima-Kawashima
et al., 1995
; Seubert et al., 1995
). The KXGS
motifs are targets of the microtubule affinity-regulating kinase MARK
as well as PKA (Drewes et al., 1995
, 1997
;
Zheng-Fischhöfer et al., 1998
). We therefore made
constructs in which the KXGS motif in repeat 1 of tau23 was turned into
KXGA (construct KXGA/R1), in repeats 1 and 4 (KXGA/R1/4), or in all
three repeats, R1, R3, and R4, of tau23 (KXGA/R1/3/4; Figure 1A; note
that the nomenclature of repeats and the sequence numbering is derived
from the longest isoform, tau40).
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Cells were infected with tau-expressing baculovirus and observed in a
monolayer under the microscope. The cell bodies have a round shape with
a diameter of ~16-22 µm (determined in a hemocytometer; corresponding volume, ~2-4 pl), which remains roughly constant throughout their life time. Processes begin to appear after an incubation time of >30 h. Typically there is a single process per
cell, of uniform diameter (1-2 µm) and up to 100 µm long (Figure 2). The frequency of processes increases
linearly with time (Figure 3A), parallel
to the increase in tau protein concentration. However, the efficiency
of process induction varies considerably. The case of tau23 serves as a
standard; process formation starts at ~34 h and increases at a pace
of 1.4%/h, reaching a level of ~60% after 75 h. With construct
tau23/AP, in which the SP and TP motifs cannot be phosphorylated, the
efficiency is much higher (t0 = 32 h; slope, 1.9%/h;
final level, ~80%). Conversely, when two or three KXGS motifs in the
repeats of tau23 are nonphosphorylatable, as in KXGA/R1/4 or
KXGA/R1/3/4, the efficiency drops steeply (late onset, t0 = 38 h; and fivefold slower rise, 0.3%/h). These different behaviors are not related to protein expression, which reaches similar
levels in all cases (~45 µg/106 cells; Table
1). Thus the differences are due to the
nature of the transfected proteins.
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The strong suppression of processes described above was initially
observed when the three KXGS motifs were mutated to KXGA simultaneously. Because a single site (Ser262 in the first
repeat) had a predominant effect on tau's affinity for microtubules
(Biernat et al., 1993
), we asked whether this is also the
case in the assays used here. We find, however, that the single site
mutation to Ala262 (construct KXGA/R1) has no effect, whereas two such
mutations in repeats 1 and 4 (Ala262 and Ala356, construct KXGA/R1/4)
have the same inhibitory effect as mutations in all three motifs
(Ala262, Ala324, and Ala356, construct KXGA/R1/3/4; Figure 3A). We
conclude that the KXGA mutations in repeats 1 and 4 are necessary and
sufficient for the full inhibitory effect on process formation. These
sites coincide with the strongest phosphorylation sites for the kinase MARK (Ser262 and Ser356; Drewes et al., 1995
); they can be
phosphorylated by PKA as well and occur in Sf9 cells (see Figure 6, A
and D).
Because the mutations at SP or TP sites have the opposite effect to the KXGA mutants, we also asked which of these mutations dominate when they are mixed. In one mutant, all SP or TP sites were mutated into AP, plus the KXGA sites in repeats 1 and 4 (construct tau23/AP/R1/4). Process formation was as strongly suppressed as in construct KXGA/R1/4 (Figure 3A). This shows that the KXGA mutations in the repeats dominate over the AP mutations in the flanking regions.
When the cell processes are determined from suspensions, one obtains a qualitatively similar picture, except that the differences between the tau constructs become much more pronounced (Figure 3B). For example, at 70 h after infection, ~3% of the cells transfected with tau23 develop processes. For cells with the mutant tau23/AP the frequency is fivefold higher (~15%), whereas cells with the mutant KXGA/R1/3/4 have almost none. Because the processes in suspension are subject to shear forces, which tend to break them, these data argue that constructs that generate processes more efficiently (in terms of early onset and rapid increase) also make them mechanically more stable.
Phosphorylation of tau in Sf9 Cells
The interpretation that process formation is influenced by tau
phosphorylation depends on which sites are actually targeted by the
endogenous kinases of Sf9 cells. This issue was determined by several
methods: gel shift, antibody reactions, and phosphopeptide analysis
(Figures 4-6). An approximate survey can
be obtained from the upward shift of tau in the SDS gel, which can
reach an apparent increase of
5 kDa, depending on the phosphorylation
site (Biernat et al., 1993
). This shift is also
characteristic of Alzheimer tau (A68 protein, Lee et al.,
1991
). Figure 4 shows that tau from transfected Sf9 cells also displays
a pronounced shift (distributed over several bands), indicating that
tau is phosphorylated by endogenous kinases in Sf9 cells. The shift is
visible with wild-type tau23, with the "repeat" mutants KXGA/R1 and
KXGA/R1/3/4 but not with the "flank" mutant tau23/AP (which runs as
a homogeneous band, essentially as unphosphorylated, bacterially
expressed tau). This confirms our previous observations that SP and TP
sites are mainly involved in the shift and shows that endogenous,
proline-directed kinases are active in Sf9 cells.
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A number of phosphorylation-sensitive antibodies against tau are
available, which can be used as diagnostic tools (Figure 1B). As a
reference, the cell extracts of transfected Sf9 cells were
immunoblotted with the phosphorylation-independent antibody 5E2 (Kosik et al., 1988
), which indicates the total amount
of tau. As seen in the Western blots (Figure
5), Tau-1 recognizes weakly all tau23
derivatives expressed in Sf9 cells, indicating that a small fraction is
not phosphorylated around residue 200. The complementary antibody AT-8
reveals a strong signal by htau23, KXGA/R1, and KXGA/R1/3/4. These
repeat mutants are also clearly recognized by other antibodies
sensitive to proline-directed phosphorylation (AT-270, AT-180, SMI-34,
and PHF-1), indicating phosphorylation at Thr181, Thr231, Ser235,
Ser396, and Ser404 (Figure 1B). A particularly interesting example is
that of the antibody AT-100, which is uniquely specific for Alzheimer
tau (Matsuo et al., 1994
). The epitope is formed by
sequential phosphorylation first of Thr212 by GSK-3 and then of
Ser214 by PKA and requires a PHF-like conformation induced by
polyanions (Zheng-Fischhöfer et al., 1998
). This
epitope is present on tau in the transfected Sf9 cells (Figure 5).
Similarly, Ser262/Ser356 is clearly phosphorylated, as seen from the
reaction with antibody 12E8. The phosphorylation at the epitopes of
AT-100 and 12E8 is particularly sensitive to phosphatases because they disappear rapidly during the initial steps of preparation.
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Metabolic Labeling of tau and Analysis of Phosphopeptides
The detection of phosphorylation sites by antibodies suffers from
two drawbacks: 1) there may be sites for which there are no antibodies,
and 2) the antibody staining is not a reliable indicator of the extent
of the phosphorylation (because the antibody affinities are variable
and often unknown). For further characterization of phosphorylation
sites of htau23 and its derivatives, we performed metabolic labeling of
Sf9 cells using [32P]orthophosphoric acid. The labeled
tau protein was isolated, digested with trypsin, and then processed for
2D peptide analysis (Boyle et al., 1991
). To identify the
peptides, tau expressed in Escherichia coli was
phosphorylated radioactively using different kinases in vitro and
digested with trypsin, and the peptides were purified by HPLC and
identified by matrix-assisted laser desorption and ionization,
phosphopeptide sequencing, and phosphopeptide mapping (for details, see
Drewes et al., 1995
; Illenberger et al., 1998
;
Zheng-Fischhöfer et al., 1998
). Figure
6A shows the phosphopeptide map found
with tau23 phosphorylated in Sf9 cells, in which the main spots are
identified by their phosphorylation site (for details on the
identification, see Illenberger et al., 1998
). The
experiments with the mutants enabled us to define the phosphorylation
sites by exclusion of the corresponding spots from the 2D map (Figure
6, B and C). The majority of spots represent SP or TP sites, containing
~80% of the total radioactivity. These spots disappear in the case
of the tau23/AP mutant, in which only the non-SP or TP sites remain,
among them S214, S262, S320, S356, and two unidentified spots
(Figure 6B). It is remarkable that the distribution and intensity of
phosphorylation sites of tau23 is quite similar to that of other
cultured cells during interphase, including neuronal ones (Illenberger
et al., 1998
). This shows that the balance of kinases and
phosphatases is similar in these cells, and it provides an additional
rationale for using baculovirus-transfected Sf9 cells as a model
system.
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Figure 6C shows the phosphopeptide map for the mutant KXGA/R/1/3/4, where the three sites S262, S324, and S356 had been replaced by Ala and therefore no longer appear on the map (these spots are normally weak compared with the SP and TP sites and visible only at longer exposures; cf. Figure 6A). We confirmed the phosphorylation at the sites in the repeats by mixing the phosphopeptides from metabolically labeled tau23 in Sf9 cells with phosphopeptides from construct K19 (three repeats only) phosphorylated in vitro with MARK or PKA, which resulted in the overlapping of spots representing the repeat phosphorylation sites (S262, S324, and S356 plus S320; Figure 6, D and E).
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DISCUSSION |
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Sf9 Cells Represent a model for Process Outgrowth Induced by tau and Phosphorylate tau at Similar Sites as Neurons
Several previous studies have established the model of
baculovirus-transfected insect cells as a suitable system to study the
development of cell processes (for review, see Kosik and McConlogue, 1994
). The interplay between cytoskeletal fibers (microtubules or
microfilaments) and the dependence on different MAPs during process
formation are remarkably similar to those of neurite outgrowth from
neurons (Mandell and Banker, 1995
), even though the neuronal signaling
machinery is absent. The major additional advantage of
Sf9 insect cells is the high efficiency of baculovirus-mediated transfection, which makes it possible to analyze them biochemically. Thus we have been able to take the earlier studies one step further and
ask how the process formation induced by tau depends on the phosphorylation by endogenous kinases. We have transfected Sf9 cells
with different tau isoforms or mutants, quantitated their development
of processes, and correlated this with the phosphorylation of tau as
determined by gel shift, antibody reactions, and phosphopeptide analysis after metabolic labeling.
The choice of mutations was made on the basis of earlier results on the
role of phosphorylation sites. We broadly distinguish two types of
phosphorylation sites, in the repeat domain (Figure 1, numbered boxes)
and in the domains flanking the repeats (Figure 1, hatched boxes). The
phosphorylation of the repeats, especially at KXGS motifs, strongly
reduces tau's affinity for microtubules so that tau detaches and
microtubules become unstable in vitro (Biernat et al.,
1993
); the same holds for other related MAPs (MAP2 and MAP4;
Illenberger et al., 1996
). The repeats are phosphorylated most efficiently by the kinase MARK (Drewes et al., 1995
,
1997
) but can be phosphorylated by other kinases as well, especially when activated with heparin (notably PKA; Scott et al.,
1993
; Drewes et al., 1995
; Zheng-Fischhöfer et
al., 1998
). Particularly, Ser262 in the first KXGS motif shows
higher phosphorylation in Alzheimer's disease tau (Morishima-Kawashima
et al., 1995
), suggesting that the detachment of tau from
microtubules after phosphorylation is an important step in the
formation of Alzheimer PHFs. The phosphorylation at SP and TP motifs in
the flanking domains is a target of several proline-directed kinases
(e.g., MAP kinase, GSK-3, and cdk5). Phosphorylation at these sites
also tends to diminish the interaction with microtubules, but the
effect is much less pronounced than for the repeats (Drechsel et
al., 1992
; Trinczek et al., 1995
). This phosphorylation
is strongly enhanced in Alzheimer tau, and a number of diagnostic
antibodies react with SP and TP motifs in a phosphorylation-dependent
manner (for review, see Friedhoff and Mandelkow, 1999
). In the
"jaws" model of tau-microtubule interactions, the flanking domains
act as "targeting domains" for positioning tau on the microtubule
surface, whereas the repeats act as a "catalytic domain" for
enhancing microtubule assembly (Gustke et al., 1994
). One
would therefore expect that the domains would respond differently to
phosphorylation in a cellular context, and this is indeed borne out by
the experiments presented here.
The first question to be answered was whether the insect cells
contained a similar pool of kinases and phosphatases as neurons or
other cells. As shown previously, the phosphorylation pattern of tau in
neuronal or other cell types is remarkably similar, as judged from
metabolic labeling and phosphopeptide analysis (Illenberger et
al., 1998
). The same is the case for the Sf9 cells (Figure 6),
showing that we can indeed take these cells as a model for the
"neuron-like" phosphorylation of tau. The majority of the
phosphorylation sites (~80%) are distributed over the SP and TP
motifs, mostly in the flanking regions, whereas a minor fraction was in the repeats, mostly in KXGS motifs and Ser320. The occurrence of
multiple phosphorylation sites, especially at SP and TP motifs, can be
visualized by antibody labeling, using the same
phosphorylation-dependent antibodies that have been developed for
diagnosing Alzheimer PHFs (Figure 5). As a consequence of this
phosphorylation, the tau bands are shifted upward in the SDS gel, in a
manner reminiscent of Alzheimer tau. This shift depends mostly on
proline-directed phosphorylation and is abolished when SP and TP motifs
are mutated into AP (Figures 4 and 5). Thus, all Alzheimer-diagnostic
antibodies against SP or TP motifs, as well against Ser262 (e.g.,
12E8), recognize tau in Sf9 cells. The overall degree of
phosphorylation is estimated at ~3-4 Pi per tau, judging
from the five or more shift stages and their antibody reactivities,
each of which corresponds to one or two phosphates incorporated (see
Figure 5; Lichtenberg-Kraag et al., 1992
).
Phosphorylation in the Repeats and in the Flanking Domains Has Opposite Effects on Process Outgrowth
It is generally assumed that one of the major physiological
functions of tau phosphorylation is to regulate its affinity with microtubules and, hence, microtubule stability (Butler and Shelanski, 1986
; Drubin and Kirschner, 1986
). Indeed, the phosphorylation states
of tau studied so far all show a reduced affinity for microtubules, although the magnitude of the effect varies (strong inhibition for
phosphorylation in the repeats, weak for the flanking domains). We
would therefore have expected that in Sf9 cells the effects of repeat
and flank phosphorylation would go in the same direction, possibly
differing in magnitude. Surprisingly this was not the case: suppression
of repeat phosphorylation (at KXGS motifs) nearly abrogated tau's
ability to induce processes; suppression of flank phosphorylation (at
SP and TP sites) enhanced process formation (Figure 3). This
evidence clearly shows that the phosphorylation in these two domains
has very different physiological roles, although both reduce the
tau-microtubule interaction in vitro. It appears that the
phosphorylation at the KXGS motifs in the repeats is necessary for some
crucial step in process formation (stimulatory), whereas
proline-directed phosphorylation of the flanking domains is moderately
inhibitory (~30%).
The opposing effects become even more puzzling when one correlates them with the extent of tau phosphorylation. Despite the strong dependence of process formation on phosphorylation at KXGS motifs in the repeats, these motifs carry only a minor fraction of the total sites (~5%). In contrast, the inhibition of process formation by phosphorylation at SP or TP sites is only moderate despite the fact that it accounts for ~80% of the phosphate on tau. These data argue that the phosphorylation at KXGS motifs has some important catalytic role, whereas the regulating effects of phosphorylation at SP and TP sites are more subtle. We note, however, that overall extent of phosphorylation is only ~3-4 Pi per tau molecule, most of which is on SP and TP motifs. Thus most tau molecules carry three or four sites whose combination is not clear at present, but in general they are distributed over >11 sites. To understand the inhibition of process outgrowth by SP or TP phosphorylation, we would have to assume that the different observed sites have roughly similar effects. Viewed in this light, the strong dependence on a minute fraction of KXGS phosphorylation sites in the repeat becomes even more remarkable; it can be rationalized only if we assume that the effect takes place in a small compartment or in a short period. An obvious candidate would be the immediate vicinity of the point where a process emerges.
Crosstalk between Phosphorylation Sites of tau Influences Process Outgrowth
We can carry this analysis one step further by considering certain
phosphorylation sites in detail. To observe the inhibitory effect of
mutated KXGS sites, we need two of them acting in concert, the motifs
in repeats 1 and 4 (Ser262 and Ser356). One of them alone will not
suffice, so that a mutation at Ser262 behaves like wild-type tau23. We
had shown previously that phosphorylation at Ser262 alone can detach
tau from microtubules in vitro (Biernat et al., 1993
).
Therefore, it appears that cellular effects depend on a more strictly
regulated interaction between different sites. We note in this context
that Ser262 and Ser356 are also the preferred targets of the kinase
MARK (Drewes et al., 1995
). Because kinases related to MARK
are involved in the establishment of cellular polarity (e.g., par-1 in
Caenorhabditis elegans; Guo and Kemphues 1995
, Drewes
et al., 1997
), one can speculate that a similar MARK-like kinase operates in insect ovary cells during process formation.
The opposite effects of the two types of phosphorylation sites (repeats vs. flanking domains) are not additive. In general, mutations at KXGS motifs override those at SP and TP motifs. This means that when all sites are phosphorylatable in wild-type tau, the phosphorylation at SP and TP motifs (which is general and moderately inhibitory) does not matter vis-a-vis the specific phosphorylation at KXGS motifs, which strongly promotes processes.
One of the most interesting phosphorylation sites is Ser214. This is a
non-SP site in the flanking domain that is embedded in a neighborhood
of SP and TP motifs, which are epitopes of antibodies diagnostic of
Alzheimer PHFs. In vitro, Ser214 can be phosphorylated by PKA. Next to
the Ser262 site in the repeats, Ser214 is the second-most efficient
site that can detach tau from microtubules (Brandt et al.,
1994
; Illenberger et al., 1998
). This site shows strong
phosphorylation in the phosphopeptide maps (Table
2). Phosphorylation at Ser214 is
selectively enhanced in Chinese hamster ovary cells transfected with
tau when they enter mitosis, resulting in a detachment of tau from
microtubules (Illenberger et al., 1998
). Most significantly,
tau in Sf9 cells shows a reaction with antibody AT-100, one of the most
specific antibodies against Alzheimer PHFs known to date. This is in
contrast to Chinese hamster ovary or N2a cell models, in which reaction
with other Alzheimer-diagnostic antibodies can be induced (Preuss
et al., 1995
). AT-100 requires the sequential
phosphorylation of Thr212 by GSK-3 and of Ser214 by PKA
(Zheng-Fischhöfer et al., 1998
). However, testing the function of Ser214 with the single-site mutation tau23/S214A did not
show a significant change in process formation. It is possible that
phosphorylation at this site cooperates with the KXGS to influence
process formation.
|
A Model Relating tau Phosphorylation to Process Formation
For a cell process to become visible it must be born and
maintained. In both cases, microtubules and tau are involved. Once a
process is born the cell tends to block others, so that most cells
contain a single process. This is reminiscent of axonogenesis (Mandell
and Banker, 1995
), and it is characteristic of tau, in contrast to
other MAPs such as MAP2, which tends to support several processes of
somewhat different morphology (Leclerc et al., 1993
, 1996
;
Leger et al., 1994
). The birth of a process is preceded by
subcellular changes at the appropriate location and at the right time
(e.g., accumulation of material and softening of actin cortex; Knowles
et al., 1994
; Bradke and Dotti, 1997
). The distinction among
birth, life, and eventually death of a process is conceptually convenient, because it would explain why some phosphorylation sites
that have apparently substoichiometric occupancies (when averaged over
the whole cell population) could still play decisive roles at
particular time points. Moreover, previous studies have shown that in
neurons the generation or degeneration of neurites is accompanied by
changes in tau phosphorylation (Sadot et al., 1995
; Mandell
and Banker, 1996
).
In this framework the phosphorylation at KXGS sites in the repeat
domain of tau would play a role during the prenucleation or budding
events of a process. This would be consistent with their strong effect
on promoting process outgrowth and on their substoichiometric average
extent of phosphorylation. Thus the concerted action of phosphorylation
events at two or more KXGS motifs (e.g., Ser262 and Ser356) would occur
only in a small fraction of tau molecules (presumably at the budding
extension) and during a short period. This type of phosphorylation
weakens the tau-microtubule interaction and makes microtubules more
labile; thus one could conclude that dynamic microtubules (rather than
stable ones) matter for the onset of process extension. This would be
roughly comparable to the temporary increase in the dynamic instability
of microtubules at the onset of mitosis (Belmont et al.,
1990
; Hyman and Karsenti, 1996
). Because the KXGS sites are
phosphorylated by MARK, and because MARK-like kinases are involved in
establishing and maintaining cell polarity (Drewes et al.,
1998
), it is likely that the polarity-defining events at the onset of
process budding require a local destabilization of microtubules, as
diagrammed in Figure 7A. Conversely, when the KXGS motifs are not phosphorylatable, tau superstabilizes microtubules so that cell processes are not observed either (Figure 7C).
|
A different scenario is envisaged for the role of the SP and TP motifs
in the flanking domains. Here the extent of phosphorylation is higher
so that we can assume a more general occurrence, not just at restricted
points. Fluctuations in this type of phosphorylation are suggested by
observations that dividing cells, fetal tissue, cells stimulated by
external signaling, or degenerating cells often show enhanced
phosphorylation at SP and TP sites, detectable by diagnostic antibodies
(e.g., Bramblett et al., 1993
; Braak et al.,
1994
; Preuss et al., 1995
; Burack and Halpain, 1996
; Sadot et al., 1996
). Although this type of phosphorylation has
been considered to regulate tau's interaction with microtubules, the limited extent of the effect in vitro (Biernat et al., 1993
)
and observed here (Figure 3) begs the question of other possible roles. Besides microtubule dynamics, MAPs are known to regulate the spacing between microtubules or their stiffness (Chen et al., 1992
;
Dye et al., 1993
; Frappier et al., 1994
; Matus,
1994
; Felgner et al., 1997
) and interactions with enzymes or
cytoskeletal elements (Obar et al., 1989
; Sontag et
al., 1995
). All of these are important in process formation and
could conceivably be affected by phosphorylation at SP and TP sites,
resulting in the observed inhibition of process outgrowth. Conversely,
when the SP and TP motifs are nonphosphorylatable, the inhibition is
relieved, resulting in longer and more numerous cell processes (Figure
7B).
Finally, an emerging role of tau and other MAPs, distinct from
microtubule stabilization, is the regulation of vesicle and organelle
transport. There is increasing evidence that MAPs retard the movement
of vesicles (Hamm-Alvarez et al., 1993
; Bulinski et
al., 1997
), and tau inhibits particularly the kinesin-dependent and plus end-directed transport, which would be required for moving material down a growing cell process (Ebneth et al., 1998
).
Vesicle transport is in turn facilitated by enhanced phosphorylation
(Lopez and Sheetz, 1995
; Sato-Harada et al., 1996
). This
would be consistent with a view that MAPs obstruct the path of vesicles
but can be moved out of the way by phosphorylation. In the case of tau,
this could be achieved by the local phosphorylation at KXGS motifs by
kinases such as MARK.
| |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
We thank Heike Niebuhr and Katja Alm for excellent technical assistance, P. Friedhoff for help with statistical evaluation, R. Godemann for help with some phosphopeptide maps, and E. Mandelkow for stimulating discussions. Antibodies were generously provided by P. Davies (PHF-1), E. van Mechelen and A. van de Voorde (AT series), K. Kosik (5E2), P. Seubert (12E8), and L. Binder (Tau-1). This research was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft.
| |
FOOTNOTES |
|---|
* Corresponding author. E-mail address: mand{at}mpasmb.desy.de.
| |
ABBREVIATIONS |
|---|
Abbreviations used: GSK-3, glycogen-synthase-kinase-3; HLB, hypotonic lysis buffer; MAP, microtubule-associated protein; MARK, MAP/microtubule affinity-regulating kinase; MOI, multiplicity of infection; PHF, paired helical filament; PKA, cAMP-dependent protein kinase; 2D, two-dimensional.
| |
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