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Vol. 10, Issue 5, 1495-1510, May 1999
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Department of Biology, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario K7L 3N6, Canada
Submitted October 20, 1998; Accepted February 25, 1999| |
ABSTRACT |
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The ssp1 gene encodes a protein kinase involved in alteration of cell polarity in Schizosaccharomyces pombe. ssp1 deletion causes stress sensitivity, reminiscent of defects in the stress-activated MAP kinase, Spc1; however, the two protein kinases do not act through the same pathway. Ssp1 is localized mainly in the cytoplasm, but after a rise in external osmolarity it is rapidly recruited to the plasma membrane, preferentially to active growth zones and septa. Loss of Ssp1 function inhibits actin relocalization during osmotic stress, in cdc3 and cdc8 mutant backgrounds, and in the presence of latrunculin A, implicating Ssp1 in promotion of actin depolymerization. We propose a model in which Ssp1 can be activated independently of Spc1 and can partially compensate for its loss. The ssp1 deletion mutant exhibited monopolar actin distribution, but new end take-off (NETO) could be induced in these cells by exposure to KCl or to latrunculin A pulse treatment. This treatment induced NETO in cdc10 cells arrested in G1 but not in tea1 cells. This suggests that cells that contain intact cell end markers are competent to undergo NETO throughout interphase, and Ssp1 is involved in generating the NETO stimulus by enlarging the actin monomer pool.
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INTRODUCTION |
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In the fission yeast, Schizosaccharomyces pombe, the
stress-activated MAP kinase is Spc1 (synonymous with Sty1)
(Millar et al., 1995
; Shiozaki and Russell, 1995
). Spc1
kinase is activated by a variety of different environmental insults,
including high osmolarity, heat shock, oxidative and nutritional
stress, UV light, some DNA-damaging drugs, and protein synthesis
inhibitors. Regulation of Spc1 follows the generic MAP kinase cascade
pattern, i.e., Spc1 is activated by a MAP kinase kinase called Wis1,
which itself is activated by two MAP kinase kinase kinases, Win1 and
Wik1 (the latter also isolated as Wak1 and Wis4; reviewed in Banuett,
1998
). The two pathways converging on Wis1 appear to have different
ranges of sensitivities to different forms of stress. In addition,
activation of Spc1 independent of either of these two pathways has been
suggested. Wik1 and possibly Win1 receive signals from Mcs4, a response
regulator of the histidine kinase-containing two-component system,
which transduces environment-related signals from the plasma membrane (Banuett, 1998
). Activities of at least two transcription factors, Atf1
and Pap1, are dependent on Spc1. These proteins control expression of a
number of stress-related genes as well as genes involved in meiosis and
nutritional regulation (reviewed in Wilkinson and Millar, 1998
).
Stimulation of glycerol synthesis by Atf1-dependent induction of
glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase is the crucial event controlled by
the Spc1 pathway in response to osmotic stress (Aiba et al.,
1995
).
Two negative regulators of the Spc1 protein kinase have been
characterized, namely protein tyrosine phosphatases Pyp1 and Pyp2, that
remove the phosphate group from Spc1 Tyr173 (Millar et al.,
1995
; Shiozaki and Russell, 1995
). The tyrosine phosphatase activity is
necessary to down-regulate the Spc1 pathway, and the pyp1
pyp2 double deletion is lethal (Ottilie et al., 1992
).
Pyp2 is regulated by Atf1 at the gene expression level and contributes to down-regulation of Spc1 via a negative feedback loop (reviewed in
Banuett, 1998
).
In many cell types, adaptive remodeling of the actin cytoskeleton is a
vital component of the osmotic stress response. Mammalian cells, facing
mostly mild fluctuations in osmolarity of the media, developed
mechanisms allowing an increase or decrease in cell volume, leading to
a decrease or increase in intracellular osmolarity, respectively. The
early response is based on regulation of ion channels residing in the
plasma membrane. An important component of this regulation is
reversible reorganization of the cortical actin (Cantiello, 1997
).
Organisms exposed to wide swings in osmolarity in their natural
environments have developed potent mechanisms for protection from
osmotic damage. Cells of Dictyostelium discoideum reduce
cell size and stiffen their cortex in response to hyperosmotic shock.
During this process myosin II becomes phosphorylated in a
cGMP-dependent manner and relocalizes to the cell cortex (Kuwayama et al., 1996
). Also required is at least one of the two
major actin cross-linking proteins,
-actinin and ABP120 (Rivero
et al., 1996
).
Yeast morphology is dominated by a rigid cell wall. Yeast cells
maintain a substantial osmotic gradient across the plasma membrane that
allows them to expand the cell wall by internal turgor pressure
while new cell wall components are being incorporated (Mulholland et al., 1994
). During interphase, filamentous
actin in both budding and fission yeast appears in two morphologically distinct forms: discrete patches and continuous cables (reviewed in
Robinow and Hyams, 1989
; Botstein et al., 1997
). Actin
patches accumulate at the sites of cell wall growth and have been shown to associate directly with the plasma membrane (Mulholland et al., 1994
). When the osmolarity gradient is reversed by
hyperosmotic shock, actin is thought to support the cell surface, at
least during the period before cells can produce enough glycerol to reestablish a sufficient osmotic gradient and resume growth. This view
is supported by three types of arguments. First, during exposure to
hyperosmotic medium, actin patches in Saccharomyces
cerevisiae undergo profound but reversible redistribution from
growing buds (Chowdhury et al., 1992
). Second, many
conditional actin mutants and mutants in proteins involved in actin
organization in S. cerevisiae are osmosensitive (reviewed in
Botstein et al., 1997
). Third, mutants in three genes,
RAH1-3, have been isolated that specifically rescue
osmosensitivity in actin mutants (Chowdhury et al., 1992
).
Little is known about the signals responsible for actin reorganization
in yeasts following osmotic shock. The S. pombe gene ssp1 encodes a serine/threonine protein kinase previously
shown to be required for alteration of growth polarity and actin
localization at high temperature (Matsusaka et al., 1995
).
The ssp1 gene was obtained as a suppressor of the
ppe1 and sts5-7 mutant strains. The
ppe1 gene encodes a type 6 protein phosphatase (Shimanuki et al., 1993
). The exact function of the Sts5 protein is
unknown, but its mutation confers supersensitivity to the protein
kinase C inhibitor staurosporin (Toda et al., 1996
). Both
ppe1 and sts5 cells are characterized by
spherical cell shape and loss of actin polarity, at least under certain
conditions. ssp1 mutants are unable to undergo transition
from monopolar to bipolar growth (new end take-off [NETO]) and delay
cell cycle progression into mitosis (Matsusaka et al.,
1995
). Two conditions seem necessary for commitment of cells to NETO:
completion of DNA synthesis and critical cell length (Mitchison and
Nurse, 1985
). Thus, two opposing mechanisms, one stabilizing and the
other destabilizing cortical actin architecture, have been postulated
to regulate actin dynamics in a cell cycle-dependent manner (Matsusaka
et al., 1995
).
Here we show that the ssp1 mutant exhibits stress response phenotypes reminiscent of mutants in the Spc1 stress-activated MAP kinase pathway but that Ssp1 can act independently of Spc1. After a rise in external osmolarity, Ssp1 is recruited to the proximity of the plasma membrane and is involved in promoting actin reorganization. In addition, Ssp1 is involved in controlling the release of free actin monomers, and we propose a model in which Ssp1 can partially compensate for the loss of the Spc1 MAP kinase. Last, we demonstrate that release of free actin monomers is a sufficient stimulus to promote NETO in S. pombe cells regardless of their DNA content.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Strains and Media
All S. pombe strains used in this work (Table
1) were derived from wild-type strains
972 h
S or 975 h+N (Leupold, 1970
). Strains
were grown in yeast extract medium containing adenine (YEA complex
medium) or Edinburgh minimal medium (EMM) containing nutritional
supplements when necessary (Alfa et al., 1993
). Low pH media
were prepared as described in Saleki et al. (1997)
.
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Cloning of the ssp1 Gene
Standard molecular biological and genetic techniques were used
(Moreno et al., 1991
; Alfa et al., 1993
). To
clone the ssp1 gene, the strain carrying the mutant
ssp1 allele was transformed with a wild-type genomic library
in the pWH5 vector (P.G. Young and D. Beach, unpublished observations),
and transformants were selected on EMM plates, pH 3.5, at 35°C. The
locus was confirmed by integration mapping and a complementation test
against ssp1-11. Sequence data showed the gene to be
identical with ssp1 (Matsusaka et al., 1995
).
Construction of the ssp1
Allele
A 1.2-kb XhoI-NheI region in the ssp1 gene carrying plasmid was replaced with the 1.0-kb sup3-5 fragment. The resulting disruption plasmid contained only 15% of the ssp1 ORF and was not capable of rescuing the ssp1 point mutation. Stable integrants of this plasmid were selected and sporulated from an ade6-704 diploid strain and 2:2 cosegregation of the low pH sensitivity phenotype, and ade6-704 allele suppression was confirmed by tetrad analysis of the progeny. The existence of an ssp1 deletion in two haploid progeny was confirmed by Southern blot hybridization.
Overproduction of Ssp1 and Green Fluorescent Protein-Ssp1 Fusion Proteins
A DNA fragment containing the ssp1 ORF flanked by the
NdeI and XmaI restriction sites, which were added
by PCR, was inserted between the corresponding sites of the pREP1
expression vector. The pREP1 vector carries the thiamine-repressible
nmt1 promoter and the LEU2 selectable marker
(Maundrell, 1993
). The construct, designated pRO6-1, was transformed
into S. pombe strains carrying the leu1-32
auxotrophic marker, and positive transformants were selected on EMM
plates lacking leucine and containing 4 µM thiamine. The Ssp1
overproduction phenotype was assessed in cells growing overnight in EMM
lacking thiamine.
To construct the N-terminal Green Fluorescent Protein (GFP)-Ssp1
fusion, a DNA fragment containing the ssp1 gene flanked with SalI and XmaI restriction sites in the proper
reading frame was inserted into the pZA69 vector containing the
nmt1 promoter-controlled gene encoding the GFP S65T protein
(Helm et al., 1995
), followed by the multiple cloning site
and the LEU2 selection marker. The resulting construct was designated
pIR2-22. The assessment of the resulting phenotype in S. pombe cells was performed as above.
To verify that the location of the GFP tag does not affect Ssp1
function, the Ssp1-GFP C-terminal fusion was constructed as follows.
First, the NdeI restriction site residing in the GFP ORF was
removed by a silent mutation created by overlap extension PCR (Horton
et al., 1993
). The resulting fragment carrying the BamHI site at the 5'-terminus and the XmaI site
at the 3'-terminus in the proper reading frame, which were added by
PCR, was then inserted between the corresponding sites of the pREP1
vector. The resulting construct, pRUP5, was used to create the Ssp1-GFP fusion. The ssp1 ORF flanked by the NdeI and
SalI sites generated by PCR was inserted between the
corresponding sites of the pRUP5 vector. The final construct,
designated pIR8, was transformed into S. pombe, and the
overproduction phenotype was assessed as above. It was found that the
phenotypes and GFP fluorescence of both pIR2-22 and pIR8 harboring
wild-type and ssp1
cells were identical, and therefore
only the pIR2-22 construct was used for detailed analysis.
Treatment with Latrunculin A
The whole procedure was performed at a constant temperature. Cells were first grown in 20 ml YEA precultures. To minimize the impact of the transfer into fresh media, part of the preculture was collected by centrifugation, and the supernatant was saved, maintained at the same temperature, and used later as the preconditioned medium for the release from the drug. Latrunculin A (Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR) was added to 0.2-1 ml cultures, which were taken from the same precultures, to a final concentration of 10 or 20 µM from a 10 mM stock solution in DMSO. Cells were incubated with the drug for up to 2 h. To release cells from the drug, cells were washed once with 1 ml of the preconditioned medium and resuspended in the initial volume of the same medium. Aliquots (25 µl) were collected at desired timepoints, and cells were fixed and stained for actin as described below.
Calcofluor and Actin Staining
Cells were stained essentially as described (Rupe
et al., 1997
). Cells from 1 ml of liquid culture were
collected into 50 µl 0.6 M sorbitol and stained with an equal volume
of 5 mg/ml Calcofluor White M2R (Polysciences, Warrington, PA) for 5 min, washed with 0.6 M sorbitol, and observed under the microscope. During experiments using latrunculin A, cells were fixed with 7.4%
formaldehyde in PEM (Rupe
et al., 1997
) for 7 min,
washed once with PEM, permeabilized with Triton X-100, washed two times with PEM, and stained with TRITC-phalloidin as above. A Leica DMRB (Leica Microsystems, Nussloch, Germany) fluorescence microscope and a Meridian laser scanning confocal microscope (Genomic
Solutions, Ann Arbor, MI) equipped with the MCID (Imaging
Research, St. Catharines, Canada) image analysis software were used for observations.
Fluorescence-activated Cell Sorter Analysis
Fluorescence-activated cell sorter (FACS) analysis was performed
according to the protocol of Alfa et al. (1993)
using a
Coulter (Hialeah, FL) Epics Elite flow cytometer.
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RESULTS |
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Isolation and Identification of ssp1
S. pombe strains carrying ura4-D18 or
leu1-32 auxotrophic markers are nonviable at high external
pH (Saleki et al., 1997
; Karagiannis et al.,
1999
). In a search aimed primarily at identifying new elements involved
in transport across the plasma membrane and in pH homeostasis, mutants
rescuing this phenotype were obtained. One of these mutants displayed a
distinct temperature-sensitive cell division cycle defect when grown at
low pH (Saleki et al., 1997
). After outcrossing to the
wild-type background, mutant cells proliferated on minimal media at pH
3.5-6.5 at 25°C. On shifting to 35°C at pH 3.5, the cells were
unable to form colonies and arrested as single elongated cells. To test
whether the low pH sensitivity of this strain was due to intracellular
acidification, cells were acid-loaded by the addition of acetic acid to
medium with a final pH of 5.5. This medium caused cell cycle arrest in the mutant strain but not in the wild type, suggesting that the mutant
was indeed sensitive to intracellular acidification. The gene was
cloned by complementation of the low pH sensitivity phenotype, and
subsequent sequencing revealed its identity as ssp1, a gene encoding a protein kinase previously shown to be involved in alteration of growth polarity and actin localization (Matsusaka et al.
1995
).
ssp1
Has an Overlapping Phenotype with spc1
In accordance with previously published results (Matsusaka
et al. 1995
), we found that the ssp1 gene is
nonessential under normal growth conditions. The deletion (see
MATERIALS AND METHODS) caused cells to arrest at low pH and high
temperature (Figure 1A). The presence of
leu1
or ade6
did not
alter the phenotype. In the presence of the ura4-D18 mutation, ssp1
cells became less viable when exposed to
suboptimal conditions, and therefore ura4
strains were excluded from further analysis. To determine whether the
low pH sensitivity of the ssp1
cells may be a part of a
broader stress response deficiency, we tested the ssp1
cells in parallel to mutants carrying the spc1 gene deletion
(spc1
). Both ssp1
and spc1
cells proliferated well in complex media at 30°C. On temperature
shift from 30 to 35°C, the doubling period of the ssp1
cells was only 15% longer than that of the wild type. Both ssp1
and spc1
cells, however, delayed entry
into mitosis relative to wild type, as can be monitored by increased
cell length at septation (Figure 1B). In complex media, a temperature
shift-up caused a larger delay in ssp1
than in
spc1
. Minimal media prolonged the delay in both strains,
suggesting that ssp1
as well as spc1
(Shiozaki and Russell, 1995
) may be sensitive to nutritional
conditions. The effect of nutrient limitation was more obvious after
the cells were shifted to medium lacking a nitrogen source. On
depletion for nitrogen, wild-type cells transiently accelerate
their cell division rate and enter a stationary phase with reduced cell
size (Fantes, 1984
; Young and Fantes, 1987
). In contrast, under the same conditions both ssp1
and spc1
cells
remained distinctly elongated (our unpublished results).
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We tested whether spc1
was also sensitive to low external
pH. When the pH of minimal media was lowered, spc1
cells
became more elongated but were still able to proliferate; however, when plated on EMM at pH 3.5 and incubated at 35°C, their growth became severely impaired (Figure 1A), although they were still able to form
microcolonies of highly elongated cells (Figure 1B).
Mutants defective in the Spc1 protein kinase pathway are highly
sensitive to elevated concentrations of KCl (Millar et al., 1995
; Shiozaki and Russell, 1995
). ssp1
cells were unable
to proliferate on plates containing 1 M KCl at 35°C (Figure 1B), and
they did not adapt even if the exposure to KCl was preceded by
prolonged incubation at 35°C. When tested over a range of KCl concentrations, ssp1
had a less severe KCl sensitivity
than spc1
. The inhibitory effect of KCl on
ssp1
cells was temperature dependent and resulted in
complete failure to enter mitosis at 35°C; at lower temperatures
ssp1
cells were still distinctly elongated. In contrast,
the response of spc1
cells to increasing KCl
concentrations did not markedly change with temperature. We conclude
that although the degree of sensitivity varies under different
conditions, both ssp1- and spc1-deficient
cells respond to environmental challenges in a closely related manner
by delaying entry into mitosis or with complete G2/M arrest.
ssp1 and spc1 Respond to Stress through Different Pathways
To find out whether SspI may act through the Spc1 kinase pathway,
we constructed a double-deletion mutant, ssp1
spc1
.
When plated on YEA complex medium containing 0.6 M KCl and incubated at
30°C, i.e., conditions permissive for both single mutants, the
ssp1
and spc1
mutations exhibited profound
negative interaction. The double mutant was unable to proliferate and
arrested as single elongated cells (Figure
2A). Similar arrest was caused by
incubation on minimal media at pH 4.5 at 30°C, again conditions
permissive for both single mutants (our unpublished results).
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Wee1 and Cdc25 are the key negative and positive mitotic regulators,
respectively, that affect the level of Tyr15 phosphorylation on Cdc2
protein kinase (MacNeill and Nurse, 1997
).
spc1
reverts the suppression of the
conditional thermosensitive (ts) cdc25-22
phenotype by wee1-50ts (Shiozaki and Russell,
1995
). In contrast, the presence of ssp1
in the
wee1-50ts cdc25-22ts genetic
background did not cause substantial mitotic delay, although some cells
were longer than the wee1-50ts
cdc25-22ts double mutant (Figure 2B). Consistent with this
result, wee1-50ts rescues the cell cycle delay
in the ssp1
mutant but not its stress sensitivity (our
unpublished results). These data strongly suggest that Ssp1 and Spc1
protein kinases do not impinge on mitotic control through the same pathway.
Actin patches in the ssp1
cells grown in complex media at
35°C appeared consistently brighter and more concentrated at the growing tips relative to wild type (Figure 2C). By contrast, actin patches were more dispersed outside the polar zones in the
spc1
cells compared with wild type. In the double mutant,
cells were largely monopolar with actin patches highly concentrated at
the poles as in the ssp1
single mutant, although visually
the distribution appeared to be slightly more relaxed (Figure 2C). On
the basis of these data, we propose that Ssp1 and Spc1 can respond to
stress through different pathways.
Localization of Ssp1 in Cells
The native level of ssp1 expression is too low to allow
its localization to be detected by fluorescence microscopy (Matsusaka et al., 1995
). Wild-type cells were therefore transformed
with an expression vector carrying the ssp1 gene placed
under the control of the thiamine-repressible nmt1 promoter
(see MATERIALS AND METHODS). In the absence of thiamine, cells grown on
plates became shorter and more rounded and had actin patches noticeably
less polarized to the tips than control cells harboring the vector
alone (Matsusaka et al., 1995
; our unpublished results). To
monitor the localization of Ssp1 in cells, we constructed a GFP-Ssp1
fusion under the control of the nmt1 promoter. When
expressed, the resulting phenotype matched that of cells overproducing
the untagged version of Ssp1. Also, the presence of the GFP-Ssp1 fusion
protein was able to rescue the NETO defect, cell elongation phenotype,
and the KCl sensitivity of the ssp1
mutant at 35°C (our
unpublished results). These results indicate that the GFP-tagged
version of Ssp1 remained functional.
GFP-Ssp1 overproduction generated a heterogenous population of cells. A
small fraction of cells grown in liquid culture (~5%) had an
extremely bright fluorescent signal localized to the cytoplasm and a
rim of fluorescence along the cell surface, suggesting that a fraction
of the Ssp1 protein localizes to or near the plasma membrane during
strong GFP-Ssp1 overexpression. These cells were oval or spherical and
contained depolarized actin patches. The majority of cells, however,
fluoresced only moderately and retained their normal or near-normal
rod-like shape. Confocal microscopy showed that GFP-Ssp1 was
distributed throughout the cytoplasm, excluded from the nucleus and
vacuolar compartments, and with a faint signal at the plasma membrane,
mostly and in some cells exclusively at polar zones (Figure
3A). During cell division, a strong
GFP-Ssp1 signal was associated with both forming and completed septa.
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When cells were exposed to 1 M KCl, GFP-Ssp1 protein became largely associated with the plasma membrane, primarily at the polar zones (Figure 3A, right panel). In addition, many cells exhibited multiple foci of increased fluorescence under the cell surface near the poles. The GFP-Ssp1 localization at the plasma membrane was apparent as early as 1 min after the shift to KCl and persisted for at least 1 h with slowly diminishing intensity. After 1 h of exposure to KCl the plasma membrane localization of GFP-Ssp1 lost its preference for the poles, and after 2.5 h it completely relocalized back to the cytoplasm (Figure 3, B and C). A similar transient relocalization of the GFP-Ssp1 protein was triggered by the shift of cells into media containing 1.2 M sorbitol, confirming that the change was caused by the increase in external osmolarity (our unpublished results). A striking temporal correlation was revealed by comparing changes in GFP-Ssp1 localization to reorganization of the actin cytoskeleton. After exposure to KCl, actin patches started to disappear gradually from cell poles and septal zones until after 1 h they became virtually randomly distributed along the cell surface. At the time when the GFP-Ssp1 signal disappeared from the plasma membrane (2.5 h), actin patches accumulated back at the poles, although now they were not as tightly packed as in untreated cells (Figure 3, B and C). This distribution remained unchanged for at least another 2.5 h of incubation. This experiment was reproduced at 30°C as well as 35°C with similar results. The correlation between the changes in GFP-Ssp1 and actin relocalization was also confirmed by double fluorescence. We observed, however, that the addition of formaldehyde immediately triggered the stress-related GFP-Ssp1 shift to the membrane, and therefore only the GFP-Ssp1 signal in living cells is presented.
The cdc10-129ts mutant arrests at START before
DNA synthesis but continues extension growth in a monopolar manner. In
contrast, the cdc25-22ts mutant arrests in G2
and grows at both ends (Marks et al., 1986
). If the sites of
Ssp1 stress-induced localization represent the sites of extension
growth, the prediction would be that Ssp1 will localize preferentially
at one end in cdc10-129ts and at both ends in
cdc25-22ts cells. Overproduction of the
GFP-Ssp1 protein in these cells, however, had an effect on the normal
progression through NETO. In most of the
cdc25-22ts cells arrested in G2, only an
abnormally small contribution to the total cell length was made by
extension at the new end, suggesting that NETO was delayed in these
cells (Figure 4A). On the other hand, the
majority of the cdc10-129ts cells did progress
through NETO, despite their cell cycle arrest. In both strains Ssp1 was
preferentially localized to both cell ends. Another mutant normally
unable to initiate growth at the new end is tea1
(Mata
and Nurse, 1997
). Overexpression of GFP-Ssp1 protein did not promote
NETO in these cells, and the fluorescence signal at the plasma membrane
was associated mainly, although not exclusively, with the single
growing end (Figure 4A).
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Next, we wondered whether the presence of cortical actin patches is
required for Ssp1 localization in stressed cells. Latrunculin A is a
potent inhibitor of actin polymerization in yeast (Ayscough et
al., 1997
). Cells were first treated with latrunculin A for 10 min
to allow all actin patches to disappear (Figure 4B, left panel). When
these cells were subsequently stressed with KCl, still in the presence
of latrunculin A, Ssp1 localized to the cell surface proximal to the
poles (Figure 4B, middle panel). This suggests that the presence of
actin at growth sites is not absolutely required for normal
localization of Ssp1; however, when cells were treated with latrunculin
A for 2 h and then exposed to KCl, Ssp1 localized almost evenly
along the cell surface (Figure 4B, right panel). This indicates that an
actin-dependent process or structure is important for Ssp1
localization. The simplest explanation of these data is that the Ssp1
protein kinase responds to osmotic stress by relocalization to the
plasma membrane, preferentially to or near active growth zones, where
it takes part in the reorganization of actin cytoskeleton.
Ssp1 Is Involved in Actin Depolymerization
To obtain further evidence supporting a causal relationship
between Ssp1 function and actin reorganization, we examined the effect
of ssp1 deletion on actin reorganization during osmotic stress. We induced stress-related actin movements in cells that were
grown in YEA complex medium at 35°C for 4 h and subsequently stressed by addition of KCl to a final concentration of 0.6 M (Figure
5, A and B). In the ssp1
strain, the initial incubation at 35°C generated a monopolar
population of cells. After the addition of KCl, actin patches were
partially released from the poles, but after 30 min they started
gradually to relocalize at the poles again. Throughout the duration of
the experiment, the distribution of actin patches maintained a
noticeable bias toward the poles in the majority of the
ssp1
cells. Wild-type cells, on the other hand, reached
more or less random distribution of actin patches at 1 h in the
presence of KCl and only then started to repolarize. When the
experiment was repeated with the concentration of KCl raised to 1 M,
depolarized actin patches appeared in ssp1
cells within
5 h after the shift, along with a number of dead or dying cells,
whereas wild-type cells recovered similarly as at the lower KCl
concentration. These data suggest that Ssp1 is required to allow
relocalization of actin at high temperature.
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If SspI acts on actin, directly or indirectly, loss of
SspI function should also inhibit actin relocalization
caused by factors other than stress. cdc3-6ts
is an allele of a gene encoding S. pombe profilin, a protein believed to be primarily involved in stimulating actin polymerization (Balasubramanian et al., 1994
; Ayscough, 1998
). At the
restrictive temperature, cdc3-6ts cells become
swollen at the poles and arrest at cytokinesis, unable to form the
actin contractile ring and having actin patches more or less evenly
scattered along the cell surface. Deletion of the ssp1 gene
did not restore viability of the cdc3-6ts cells
at 35°C, but actin patches remained largely bound to the polar zones
even after 5 h of incubation (Figure 5C, two left panels).
cdc8-27ts is an allele of a gene coding for
S. pombe tropomyosin, a protein implicated in stabilization
of actin filaments (Balasubramanian et al. 1992
; Ayscough,
1998
). At the restrictive temperature, cdc8-27ts causes a lethal defect similar to
that caused by cdc3-6ts. Again,
ssp1
did not rescue lethality caused by the
cdc8-27ts mutation but confined actin patches
to the polar zones in these cells (Figure 5C, two right panels). In
both cases actin patches were large and bright in the
ssp1
background, whereas the cdc3 and
cdc8 single mutants contained mostly faint dots lining the cell surface.
Finally, we asked whether the ssp1 gene deletion can
specifically prevent complete actin depolymerization in S. pombe cells. The inhibitory effect of latrunculin A is mediated by
its efficient binding to actin monomers, thus preventing their
reassembly while allowing disassembly (Coué et al.,
1987
). Because of its actin sequestering properties, the rate of
disappearance of actin filaments in cells in the presence of
latrunculin A provides a reliable measure of net actin depolymerization
in vivo (Ayscough et al., 1997
). Wild-type and
ssp1
cells were first grown at 35°C for 4 h to
allow monopolar extension growth to be established in
ssp1
cells. When the wild-type cells were treated with 10 µM latrunculin A, they lost actin cables in <2 min and the majority
of actin patches within 5 min of the treatment. In striking contrast,
some ssp1
cells displayed nearly normal accumulation of
actin patches at the poles and septa even after 15 min in the presence
of the drug, although actin cables were lost as rapidly as in wild type (Figure 6, A and B). We also repeated
this experiment with cells cultured at 25°C. We found that the actin
depolymerization rate was again significantly lower in
ssp1
cells compared with wild type, although the defect
does not cause completely penetrant cell morphology and stress
sensitivity phenotype at this temperature. Taken together these data
strongly suggest that the Ssp1 protein kinase is involved in
stimulation of actin depolymerization and thus promotion of actin
turnover in S. pombe.
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Relationship between Ssp1 and Spc1 during Adaptation to Stress
Actin reorganization is required for adaptation to osmotic stress
in budding yeast (Chowdhury et al., 1992
; Botstein et
al., 1997
). Therefore it is conceivable that the Ssp1-mediated
stimulation of actin turnover may be required to allow rapid
reinforcement of the cell surface exposed to the changed outer
environment. The Spc1 pathway and its stimulation of the synthesis of
osmolyte molecules such as glycerol (Degols et al., 1996
)
could then be viewed as the second line of defense against unfavorable
osmotic conditions. If this view is correct then one would expect Ssp1 to be constitutively hyperactivated in cells lacking a functional Spc1
MAP kinase pathway, as the means by which a cell can partially compensate for the loss. The GFP-Ssp1 construct was expressed in
spc1
cells, and its localization was monitored under the
fluorescence microscope. Indeed, distinct localization of GFP-Ssp1 to
the plasma membrane in nearly all cells was noted even when cells were
grown in EMM either at 30 or 35°C. The presence of GFP-Ssp1 at the
plasma membrane in these cells was dramatically enhanced by the shift to 1 M KCl, and no relocalization back to the cytoplasm occurred within
2.5 h after the shift (Figure 7, A
and B). Identical results were obtained in the spc1
pyp1
background, ruling out the possibility that Pyp1
independent of the Spc1 pathway is required for the Ssp1 localization.
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Conversely, hyperactivation of the Spc1 pathway should lessen the
burden laid on the actin-dependent maintenance of the cell surface and
that should result in a lesser requirement for Ssp1 function. In
pyp1 deletion strains, Spc1 remains hyperactivated even
under nonstress conditions (Shiozaki and Russell, 1995
). pyp1
cells overproducing GFP-Ssp1 were oval, pear-shaped,
or spherical and exhibited markedly retarded growth (Figure 7A). No
localization of GFP-Ssp1 to the plasma membrane was seen in these cells
when they were cultured in minimal media either at 30 or 35°C, and
the relocalization was not promoted even in the presence of 1 M KCl
(Figure 7, A and B). Thus, these data support the model that Ssp1 can
partially compensate for the loss of the Spc1 MAP kinase, giving a
basis for understanding the profound synthetic interaction seen after
exposure of the ssp1
spc1
double mutant to moderate
stress conditions.
The Role of Ssp1 in NETO
If Ssp1 is involved in promoting actin depolymerization, then
ssp1
cells should still retain some potential for the
bipolar switch. If so, then it should be possible to promote NETO in
these cells after a sufficient pool of actin monomers becomes
available. The first clue relevant to this prediction originated from
the experiments that demonstrated the transient redistribution of actin
patches after KCl stress. When ssp1
cells were maintained at 35°C and stressed with 0.6 M KCl, they reconstituted normal polarized distribution of actin patches within ~2.5 h (Figure 5A);
however, we noticed that many of these cells now had actin patches
localized symmetrically at both poles. Quantitation of actin polarity
in interphase ssp1
cells during undisturbed growth and in
cells that have reconstituted actin polarity in the presence of KCl is
shown in Figure 8A. It is clear that the
ratio of monopolar to bipolar cells is fully reversed in KCl-stressed
cells, suggesting that these cells have passed through NETO.
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To verify that NETO in ssp1
cells specifically follows
the increase of the free actin monomer pool, we repeated this
experiment using latrunculin A. In the presence of the drug, actin
monomers are sequestered by the drug, but after the drug is removed
they become available for reassembly. Cells were grown for 4 h and then treated with 10 µM latrunculin A for 2 min. As shown in Figure 6A, this treatment does not cause complete disappearance of actin patches but visibly interferes with the integrity of actin cables. After wash-out the cells were left to recover from the treatment for
1 h, and the polarity of actin distribution was then monitored. The whole experiment was performed at 35°C to ensure that the cells
would not leak through the NETO block because of a drop in temperature.
The quantitation [Figure 8B(i)] confirms the results of the previous
experiment. Calcofluor staining of the cell wall revealed that an
increased portion of these cells effectively passed through NETO (45%
of latrunculin A pulse-treated cells versus 25% of untreated
ssp1
cells had visible cell wall extension at the new
end; the value for untreated wild type was 35%). This demonstrates
that increasing the concentration of free actin monomers is sufficient
to bypass the NETO block in ssp1
cells.
On the basis of these observations, we asked whether the release of free actin monomers may be generally a sufficient stimulus for cells to undergo NETO. We have seen earlier that the population of temperature-arrested cdc10-129ts cells overexpressing Ssp1 contained many bipolar cells. To investigate this phenomenon further, cdc10-129ts cells were arrested in G1 by incubation at 36°C and subsequently treated with latrunculin A, released from the drug, and left to recover for an additional hour at 36°C. After this treatment, bipolar distribution of actin patches was seen in a great majority of cells [Figure 8B(i, ii)]. These cells initiated cell wall growth at the new end, as could be visualized by Calcofluor staining, but they did not enter mitosis [Figure 8B(ii)]. Continuing arrest in G1 was also confirmed by FACS analysis [Figure 8B(iii)]. These data suggest that these cells passed through NETO even without previous initiation of DNA synthesis. Taken together, these results demonstrate that the release of a sufficient number of actin monomers, which is prevented in cells lacking Ssp1 function, can serve as a stimulus for cells to undergo NETO regardless of the DNA content.
The above data suggest that the positional signal required to mark the
new end as a potential site of extension growth must be in place far
ahead of the actual NETO event. In this case cells lacking such a
signal should be unable to undergo NETO even with an excess of free
actin monomers. The Tea1 protein is known to mark the cell ends
throughout the cell cycle, regardless of whether the ends are actively
growing or not (Mata and Nurse, 1997
). As predicted, the latrunculin A
pulse treatment did not promote bipolarity in these cells [Figure
8B(i)]. Thus, the latrunculin A pulse treatment distinguishes between
two major events in NETO regulation: the first is establishment and
maintenance of the polarity signal, which appears to be independent of
cell cycle phase, and the second is the timely signal that involves
release of actin monomers.
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DISCUSSION |
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The Ssp1 protein kinase plays an important role in stimulating reorganization of the actin cytoskeleton after osmotic stress as well as during the normal cell division cycle. Our major conclusions can be summarized as follows: 1) the Ssp1 protein kinase stimulates actin depolymerization and thus actin turnover in S. pombe cells; 2) during hyperosmotic stress, Ssp1 rapidly translocates to the sites of active growth and promotes actin redistribution; 3) Ssp1 function is important for osmotic stress adaptation and can be regulated independently of the Spc1 MAP kinase pathway; and 4) induced actin depolymerization facilitates NETO regardless of the cell cycle phase.
Role of Ssp1 in Actin Depolymerization
The Ssp1 protein kinase has been implicated in destabilizing the
actin cytoskeleton (Matsusaka et al., 1995
). The actin
cytoskeleton can be destabilized by several mechanisms. Destabilization
factors may interfere with cross-linking or bundling of actin
filaments, induce their fragmentation, inhibit their polymerization, or
promote their depolymerization. Our data show that Ssp1 promotes actin depolymerization in vivo and thus represents a novel element involved in the control of actin cytoskeleton. By the structure of its catalytic
domain, Ssp1 is related to the ELM family of protein kinases in
S. cerevisiae (Matsusaka et al., 1995
; Hunter and
Plowman, 1997
). At present, the functional relationship between Ssp1
and most of the members of this group remains unclear; however, mutants in the prototype representative of this group, Elm1, are unable to
switch from polar to the isotropic phase of bud growth and constitutively execute the pseudohyphal growth mode (Blacketer et
al., 1993
). This suggests that Elm1 may represent a functional homologue of Ssp1 in S. cerevisiae, although there is little
sequence homology outside the kinase domain.
One major question that arises from our findings is by
what mechanism Ssp1 promotes actin depolymerization. Organization of the actin cytoskeleton is regulated at multiple levels, and indeed, conserved members of the major families of actin-binding proteins have
been identified in S. cerevisiae and some of them also in S. pombe (reviewed in Ayscough, 1998
). Thus, profilin is
believed to promote actin filament formation by its interaction with
the formin homology domain-containing proteins such as the S. cerevisiae Bni1 and Bnr1, the targets of the Rho family of small
GTPases (Evangelista et al., 1997
; Imamura et
al., 1997
), which also have their homologues in S. pombe (Chang et al., 1997
; Petersen et al.,
1998
). Our data show that ssp1 gene deletion prevents actin depolarization in the S. pombe profilin mutant
cdc3ts, although it does not restore cell
viability. This indicates that the rates of actin polymerization and
depolymerization tend to be balanced in the ssp1
cdc3ts double mutant, but the fine local orchestration
of these events is lost, possibly as a consequence of the regulatory
pathways converging on these elements having been destroyed.
Stabilization of actin filaments by tropomyosin is as important for
S. pombe cell viability as the presence of functional
profilin. Again, our data show that the apparent actin stabilization
that occurs in the ssp1
mutant cannot compensate for
tropomyosin loss, but it does inhibit actin redistribution along the
cell cortex in tropomysin-deficient cells.
The sole factor identified in yeast that is directly responsible for
stimulation of actin depolymerization in vivo as well as in vitro is
cofilin, encoded by COF1 (Lappalainen and Drubin, 1997
).
Phenotypically, ssp1
cells are reminiscent of the
conditional thermosensitive cof1 mutants of S. cerevisiae in that ssp1
also delays actin
disassembly in the presence of latrunculin A (this study). Cofilin
homologues are ubiquitous proteins. In many vertebrate cells cofilin is
regulated by inhibitory phosphorylation on the serine residue near the
N-terminus, but the regulation of its yeast homologue remains unclear
(Lappalainen et al., 1997
). A putative cofilin homolog (60%
identity to Cof1) is present in the S. pombe genome (Sanger
Center genome database). Thus, cofilin becomes an attractive, if
indirect, candidate downstream effector of the Ssp1-mediated signaling.
Ssp1 function is required only at high temperature. At present we do
not understand the reason for the thermosensitivity of the
ssp1 deletion. Presumably, Ssp1 is not the only factor
regulating actin depolymerization in S. pombe. High
temperature may be sensed by cells as a mild stress, and indeed heat
shock is one of the stimuli that activates the Spc1 pathway (Degols
et al., 1996
). This might suggest that thermosensitivity is
merely another manifestation of the mutant's stress response
deficiency. The defect, however, persists throughout the exposure to
high temperature and does not tend to be alleviated by later
physiological adaptations. Therefore it is also likely that the
thermosensitivity reflects some intrinsic temperature-dependent
property of the actin system kinetics. Deletion of the Ppe1 protein
phosphatase, an activity thought to be opposing that of Ssp1 (Matsusaka
et al., 1995
), causes a cold-sensitive phenotype
characterized by short, rounded cells (Shimanuki et al.,
1993
), which supports this argument.
Relationship between Ssp1 Localization and Its Function
One striking feature of the Ssp1 protein kinase is its
translocation to the plasma membrane, promoted primarily by osmotic stress. It is important to remember that our data are based on detection of the overproduced version of the Ssp1 protein, and therefore they may not reflect precisely the native Ssp1 localization. Also, we do not know at this time whether the translocation is directly
associated with activation of the kinase. Despite this, however, our
results strongly support the notion that Ssp1 translocation is linked
to cortical actin redistribution. First, a timing correlation exists
between transient localization of Ssp1 to the growth zones and gradual
disappearance of actin patches from these sites after an increase in
osmolarity. Second, stress-induced actin redistribution is incomplete
in cells lacking the ssp1 gene. Third, a small fraction of
Ssp1 associated with sites of active growth is detectable even in
nonstressed cells. The most prominent example is the association with
the septum, arguing for the role of Ssp1 in stimulation of actin
turnover during septation. The ssp1
mutant is not visibly affected in septation even at high temperature, and therefore it is
likely that another activity stimulating actin depolymerization can
compensate for the loss of ssp1 during septation. The
association of Ssp1 with the plasma membrane, whether direct or
indirect at the molecular level, provides an explanation for the
seeming contradiction that appeared in the earlier report (Matsusaka
et al., 1995
). In accordance with our results, the authors
reported Ssp1 as being localized throughout the cytoplasm during normal
growth. Cell fractionation, however, revealed that ~50% of the
protein was associated with the insoluble fraction. Given the
capability of the Ssp1 protein to rapidly translocate to the plasma
membrane, it is possible that the preparation of cells for extraction
may have been a cause of stress severe enough to trigger translocation of the protein to the membrane. Consistent with this, our experiments showed that centrifugation alone is sufficient to increase the Ssp1
presence at the plasma membrane (Rupe
, unpublished results). Others have shown that centrifugation stress causes activation of the
Spc1 kinase (Shiozaki et al., 1998
).
Role of Ssp1 in Stress Response
The role of Ssp1 in stimulation of actin depolymerization, along
with the fact that the ssp1 gene is nonessential under
normal growth conditions, provides an intriguing opportunity for
insight into the control of actin organization in response to
environmental stress. An important finding in this context is that Ssp1
can act independently of Spc1. The significance of an independent pathway stands out clearly if one considers the timely relationship between the responses of these two elements. In this regard, response to a sudden jump in osmolarity turns out to be particularly
enlightening because it represents an immediate challenge for the
integrity of the cell surface structures, especially the plasma
membrane (Chowdhury et al., 1992
; Mulholland et
al., 1994
). Translocation of Ssp1 to the plasma membrane occurs
within <1 min and is thus, along with the production of
phosphatidylinositol-3,5-bisphosphate (Dove et al.,
1997
), among the earliest cell responses to high osmolarity. Visible
redistribution of actin patches occurs only minutes later, but one must
be aware that we are not able to observe acute changes in the
architecture of the actin cytoskeleton at the local level. If the view
is correct that cell wall extension occurs at invaginations of the
plasma membrane and actin is required to support weakened bonds between
cell wall and the plasma membrane at these sites (Mulholland et
al., 1994
), then these sites may be especially vulnerable to
osmotic challenge and will become primary targets for reinforcement by
the network of cortical actin filaments. In contrast, full activation
of the Spc1 protein kinase occurs only after 5-10 min of exposure to
KCl (Gaits et al., 1998
), and the accumulation of the
gpd1 message, whose expression is controlled by Spc1 and
whose product is involved in glycerol synthesis, does not peak until
~30-60 min later (Degols et al., 1996
; Shieh et
al., 1997
). Therefore S. pombe cells can spend a
considerable period of time in the hyperosmotic environment without
sufficient osmolyte protection. Thus it would make physiological sense
if an early response of cells to hyperosmotic shock included
reorganization of actin and reinforcing the cell cortex in order to
prevent immediate effects caused by the reversal of the osmotic
gradient and initial water efflux. The time profile of the levels of
gpd1 expression (Degols et al., 1996
; Shieh
et al., 1997
) provides another notable parallel, because the
expression peaks at the time after which, according to our data, actin
begins to relocalize back to the cell poles. Thus it seems that the
transient dispersal of actin patches spans the period that cells spend
with no protection by the osmolyte and is ended when cells generate
sufficient osmotic potential to be able to resume polar growth. The
model of parallel involvement of the Ssp1 and Spc1 protein kinases in
response to osmotic stress is summarized in Figure
9.
|
One prediction of this model is that Ssp1 should remain hyperactivated
in the absence of functional Spc1 kinase. Indeed, our data suggest that
in the spc1
strain, Ssp1 is present at the plasma
membrane throughout incubation even under nonstress conditions. Conversely, if Spc1 is constitutively hyperactivated because of the
pyp1 deletion, the Ssp1 localization to the membrane is
barely detectable even in the hyperosmotic environment. Thus, although we cannot rule out partial involvement of Spc1 in Ssp1 regulation, our
data strongly suggest that the major component of Ssp1 activation is
not directly dependent on the Spc1 activity. Ssp1 overproduction in the
pyp1
background results in the spherical cell morphology, indicating increased interference with actin polarity. It seems, therefore, that actin can be affected by changes in the Spc1 activity, although the precise mechanism remains to be seen. Consistent with
this, the spherical cell shape of the sts5-7 mutant can be suppressed by both ssp1
and wis1
mutations, the latter resulting in constitutive inactivation of the
Spc1 kinase (Matsusaka et al., 1995
; Toda et al.,
1996
). Thus SspI and the Spc1 pathway, at least under
certain conditions, may both act synergistically to influence actin organization.
Role of Ssp1 in NETO
The transition from monopolar to bipolar growth is presumably
controlled at multiple levels. The phenotypes of representative mutants
defective in NETO control other than ssp1, such as
tea1, ban2, orb2/pak1, or
pom1 (Verde et al., 1995
, 1998
; Bähler and Pringle, 1998
), include relaxed control of the growth direction, depolarized growth resulting in spherical cell shape, and random initiation of growth at the old or new end. So far, there is no simple
model of the relationship among these components. Theoretically, NETO
might occur because of a positive signal at the new end or a loss of a
negative signal preventing growth at the new end or both occurring in a
timely orchestrated manner. The role of Ssp1 provides some insight into
one essential component of NETO regulation. Our data show for the first
time that the availability of free actin monomers is an important
factor in this process. Surprisingly, artificial increase in the actin
monomer concentration by latrunculin A pulse treatment is sufficient to
trigger NETO even in cdc10 cells arrested in G1. This
finding has an important implication. It shows that the potential for
NETO is an intrinsic property of interphase cells and does not
absolutely depend on the completion of DNA synthesis, as previously
thought (Mitchison and Nurse, 1985
). So, is the positive localization
signal required for NETO? When the actin monomer pool in the
tea1
cells is raised by latrunculin A pulse treatment,
the cells continue to grow in the monopolar mode (this report). Thus
the absence of the cell end marker (Mata and Nurse, 1997
) cannot be
overriden by making more free actin available. Tea1 can therefore be
viewed as a part of a system maintaining competence for bipolarity that
is kept in place throughout interphase. The Pom1 protein kinase is
required, among other things, to determine that the old end of a
newborn cell will become the primary growth pole and appears to be
partially involved in mediating the positional signal from Tea1 to the
growth machinery (Bähler and Pringle, 1998
). It is possible that
after polar growth has been established at one end, actin becomes bound
at this end and requires additional stimulus to be released and newly
organized at the opposite end. Our data show that the promotion of
actin disassembly by Ssp1 plays an important part in delivering such a
stimulus, at least at high temperature.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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We thank Paul Russell, Takashi Toda, Sabine Ottilie, and Juan Mata for providing strains and Mike Moser for the pZA69 plasmid. We thank Nancy Russell for technical support and the members of the lab for useful discussions. This work was supported by research grants from the Natural Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada and The National Cancer Institute of Canada to P.G.Y., and a group infrastructure support grant for FACS and confocal microscopy from the Medical Research Council of Canada.
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FOOTNOTES |
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Corresponding author. E-mail address:
youngpg{at}biology.queensu.ca.
* Present address: HSC Research Institute, The Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, ON M5G 1X8, Canada.
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REFERENCES |
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