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Vol. 10, Issue 8, 2583-2594, August 1999
and
Departments of
Biochemistry and Molecular Biology and
*Molecular Genetics and Cell Biology, University of Chicago, Chicago,
Illinois 60637
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ABSTRACT |
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Attachment of ubiquitin to cellular proteins frequently targets
them to the 26S proteasome for degradation. In addition, ubiquitination of cell surface proteins stimulates their endocytosis and eventual degradation in the vacuole or lysosome. In the yeast
Saccharomyces cerevisiae, ubiquitin is a long-lived
protein, so it must be efficiently recycled from the proteolytic
intermediates to which it becomes linked. We identified previously a
yeast deubiquitinating enzyme, Doa4, that plays a central role in
ubiquitin-dependent proteolysis by the proteasome. Biochemical and
genetic data suggest that Doa4 action is closely linked to that of the
proteasome. Here we provide evidence that Doa4 is required for
recycling ubiquitin from ubiquitinated substrates targeted to the
proteasome and, surprisingly, to the vacuole as well. In the
doa4
mutant, ubiquitin is strongly depleted under
certain conditions, most notably as cells approach stationary phase.
Ubiquitin depletion precedes a striking loss of cell viability in
stationary phase doa4
cells. This loss of viability
and several other defects of doa4
cells are rescued
by provision of additional ubiquitin. Ubiquitin becomes depleted in the
mutant because it is degraded much more rapidly than in wild-type
cells. Aberrant ubiquitin degradation can be partially suppressed by
mutation of the proteasome or by inactivation of vacuolar proteolysis
or endocytosis. We propose that Doa4 helps recycle ubiquitin from both
proteasome-bound ubiquitinated intermediates and membrane proteins
destined for destruction in the vacuole.
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INTRODUCTION |
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Protein degradation by the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway is
required for altering levels of key regulatory proteins as well as for
clearing misfolded and damaged proteins from the cell. Substrates for
this pathway function in processes as diverse as cell cycle
progression, antigen presentation, cell fate specification, the stress
response, and DNA repair. Ubiquitin is ligated to proteins through an
isopeptide bond between the C-terminal Gly of ubiquitin and a
Lys side chain on the substrate (Hochstrasser, 1995
, 1996
; Pickart,
1997
; Hershko and Ciechanover, 1998
). Assembly of a polyubiquitin chain(s) on the substrate is generally necessary for targeting to the
26S proteasome. In addition to its well-established role in
proteasome-dependent degradation, protein ubiquitination has been shown
to stimulate the internalization of cell surface proteins (Kolling and Hollenberg, 1994
; Hein et al., 1995
;
Hicke and Riezman, 1996
). Rather than being degraded by the proteasome,
these ubiquitinated proteins are destroyed by vacuolar proteases.
Exactly how ubiquitin serves as an internalization signal is not known.
Ubiquitin can be recovered from ubiquitin-protein conjugates by
the action of members of a family of thiol proteases referred to as
deubiquitinating enzymes (Dubs) (Wilkinson and
Hochstrasser, 1998
). Dubs are also responsible for generating ubiquitin
from its C-terminally extended precursor forms. Dubs can be grouped into two distinct classes that share no obvious homology. The ubiquitin
C-terminal hydrolases are a set of generally small enzymes, most
of which are specialized for cleaving peptides and other small adducts
from the C terminus of ubiquitin (Larsen et al., 1998
).
Members of the second class of Dubs are referred to as ubiquitin-specific processing proteases. These enzymes vary in size
from ~40 to 300 kDa, and the only well-conserved regions common to
all of them are two short elements containing absolutely conserved Cys
and His residues, respectively, which probably constitute part of the
active site (Baker et al., 1992
; Papa and Hochstrasser, 1993
; Wilkinson and Hochstrasser, 1998
). Sequence analyses in Saccharomyces cerevisiae have revealed that this class of
enzymes is remarkably large, consisting of 16 members (Hochstrasser,
1996
). Although deubiquitinating activity for many of the Dubs has been demonstrated in vitro, their precise functions in ubiquitin-dependent processes are not well understood.
Some Dubs may negatively regulate protein degradation by removing
ubiquitin from substrates before the substrates can be targeted to or
destroyed by the proteasome (Huang et al., 1995
; Lam
et al., 1997
; Chung et al., 1998
). Other Dubs
positively regulate proteolysis. Yeast Ubp14 and its mammalian
homologue isopeptidase T stimulate substrate degradation by the 26S
proteasome both in vitro (Hadari et al., 1992
) and in vivo
(Amerik et al., 1997
). Ubp14 and its orthologs appear to
facilitate proteolysis by specifically disassembling unanchored
ubiquitin chains that accumulate in vivo and can bind to and inhibit
the 26S proteasome (Wilkinson et al., 1995
; Amerik et
al., 1997
; Piotrowski et al., 1997
).
Protein ubiquitination marks a substrate for eventual degradation
by the 26S proteasome, but it is unclear how ubiquitin itself escapes
proteolysis. That ubiquitin can be recycled is suggested by in vitro
degradation assays using 125I-labeled ubiquitin-lysozyme
conjugates (Hough and Rechsteiner, 1986
). A Dub that associates with
the 26S proteasome would be uniquely suited to prevent ubiquitin
degradation by releasing the polyubiquitin chain either just before or
at some point during substrate proteolysis. Previous work suggested
that Doa4 removes ubiquitin from proteasome-targeted proteolytic
intermediates (Papa and Hochstrasser, 1993
). More recently, we have
shown that a fraction of Doa4 copurifies with the 26S proteasome (Papa
et al., 1999
). Doa4 was identified in a genetic screen for
mutants that stabilize Deg1-
-galactosidase
(Deg1-
gal), a fusion protein containing the
Deg1 degradation signal from the short-lived MAT
2
transcriptional repressor (Hochstrasser and Varshavsky, 1990
). Deletion
of the DOA4 gene leads to multiple defects including the
inhibition of degradation of all tested ubiquitin-proteasome pathway
substrates (Papa and Hochstrasser, 1993
). In addition, anti-ubiquitin
immunoblot analysis of extracts from doa4
cells in logarithmic growth revealed a striking accumulation of low
molecular mass ubiquitin-containing species that cluster most
prominently above free ubiquitin and diubiquitin. These ubiquitinated
species in doa4
cells are believed to be ubiquitinated
peptide remnants of proteasome substrates that can bind to and inhibit
degradation by 26S proteasomes (Papa and Hochstrasser, 1993
).
Here, we show that cells lacking the Doa4 enzyme are
significantly depleted for ubiquitin, particularly as they enter
stationary phase, and a number of defects of the doa4
mutant can be rescued by restoring wild-type ubiquitin levels. Whereas
ubiquitin is a long-lived protein in wild-type yeast, it is degraded
relatively rapidly in doa4
cells, leading to ubiquitin
depletion. Ubiquitin degradation in the mutant is dependent on the 26S
proteasome and, surprisingly, vacuolar proteases. Additionally, we find
that mutations that suppress endocytosis raise ubiquitin levels in the
doa4
mutant. These findings suggest that Doa4 recycles
ubiquitin from ubiquitinated substrates destined for either the 26S
proteasome or the vacuole and thereby spares ubiquitin from degradation
by the two major cellular proteolytic systems.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Media
Yeast rich and minimal media were prepared as described, and
standard genetic procedures were followed (Ausubel et al.,
1989
).
Yeast Strain Construction
All strains used in this study are congenic with MHY501 unless
otherwise noted. The doa4-
1::LEU2 null allele
(MHY623) was described previously (Papa and Hochstrasser, 1993
).
MHY1063 was made by crossing MHY622 to MHY792. MHY1232 and MHY1269,
strains bearing the vps24
::HIS3 and
vps27
::LEU2 alleles, respectively, were
generated as described (Amerik, Nowak, Swaminathan, and
Hochstrasser, unpublished data). MHY1251 and MHY1275 were
derived from crosses between MHY623 and MHY1233 and MHY1270,
respectively (Amerik et al., unpublished
data). To generate MHY1475 (end3-1) and MHY1479 (end3-1 doa4-
1::LEU2), we crossed MHY623 to
LHY500 (end3-1) (Raths et al., 1993
). Spores
corresponding to an end3-1 single mutant or an end3-1
doa4-
1::LEU2 double mutant were isolated after tetrad dissection of the resultant diploid. The end3-1
single-mutant spore was identified by an inability to grow at 37°C.
end3-1 doa4-
1::LEU2 double mutants were
identified by following segregation of the LEU2 marker and
by heat sensitivity at 37°C (the doa4
single mutant
still grows at near wild-type rates at this temperature). Several
double-mutant segregants were analyzed to minimize differences caused
by differences in strain backgrounds. To construct MHY1046, we first
mated MHY623 to the congenic BBY61 strain (Bartel et al.,
1990
), and a doa4-
1::LEU2 pep4::HIS3
spore was isolated. A PCR-based strategy was used to disrupt the gene
encoding PRB1 with the kanMX module (Wach et al.,
1994
) in the doa4-
1::LEU2 pep4::HIS3
to create the final strain MHY1046. MHY1061 was isolated from a cross
between MHY1046 and MHY500. MHY1528 (doa4
doa3-1 pep4
prb1
) was made by crossing MHY784 to MHY1045, identifying the
quadruple chromosomal null mutant by marker analysis, and then
replacing the wild-type DOA3 plasmid with YCplac22doa3-1.
Pulse-Chase and Immunoblot Analysis
Pulse-chase assays to determine degradation rates were performed
as described previously (Chen et al., 1993
).
Immunoprecipitations were performed with antibodies against
2
(Hochstrasser and Varshavsky, 1990
) or Escherichia
coli
-galactosidase (Cappel, West Chester, PA).
To induce high levels of ubiquitin expression from the CUP1 promoter, we treated cells with 100 µM CuSO4 (J.T. Baker,
Phillipsburg, NJ) for ~3 h (Ellison and Hochstrasser, 1991
).
For measuring rates of ubiquitin synthesis, cells grown in minimal
medium to an OD600 of ~1.5 were labeled for 30 min at
30°C using 300 µCi of 35S-Translabel (ICN
Pharmaceuticals, Costa Mesa, CA). Radiolabeled yeast cells were
lysed by mixing with an equal aliquot of 2% SDS, 90 mM HEPES, pH 7.5, and 30 mM DTT and boiling for 5 min. Ubiquitin was immunoprecipitated
using a rabbit antiserum that we raised against ubiquitin by methods
described previously (Haas and Bright, 1985
).
Extracts for anti-ubiquitin immunoblot analysis were made
from cells grown at 30°C in minimal media except where noted. Cells were resuspended in Laemmli SDS gel-loading buffer, boiled for 10 min,
and centrifuged at 14,000 × g for 5 min to remove cell debris. Extracts from 0.25 OD600 units of cells were loaded
onto 16% Tricine gels (Schägger and von Jagow, 1987
) and
transferred to Immobilon-P membranes (Millipore, Bedford, MA). Blots
were boiled in water for 30 min before incubating with a 1:500 dilution of affinity-purified anti-ubiquitin antibodies in TBST buffer (Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, 150 mM NaCl, 0.1% Tween-20) containing 1% nonfat dry milk. Anti-ubiquitin antibodies were affinity-purified against denatured ubiquitin as described previously (Haas and Bright, 1985
).
Antibody binding was detected using ECL reagents from Amersham (Arlington Heights, IL). For quantitative immunoblot
analysis, [125I]protein A (New England Nuclear, Boston,
MA) was used for detecting the anti-ubiquitin primary antibody. The
linearity of [125I]protein A binding was determined using
serial dilutions of yeast cell extracts. To follow 3-phosphoglycerate
kinase (Pgk1), anti-ubiquitin immunoblots were
stripped by heating for 30 min at 50°C in stripping solution (100 mM
-mercaptoethanol, 2% SDS, 62.5 mM Tris-HCl, pH 6.7). A mouse
monoclonal antibody against Pgk1 (Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR) was
used at a dilution of 1:500. A rabbit anti-mouse IgG antibody (Cappel)
at a dilution of 1:1000 was used as a "sandwich antibody" before
incubating with [125I]protein A. All antibody incubations
were performed in 1% nonfat dry milk in TBST for 1 h. Blots were
washed twice for 10 min in TBST between antibody incubations. The data
were quantitated using a PhosphorImager (Molecular Dynamics, Sunnyvale, CA).
Measurements of Ubiquitin Half-Life
To measure the rate of disappearance of cellular ubiquitin, we added cycloheximide to a final concentration of 50 µg/ml to cells grown in minimal medium to an OD600 of ~1.5. At the desired time points, extracts from equal aliquots of cells were removed and heated for 10 min at 100°C in lysis buffer (0.0625 M Tris-HCl, pH 6.8, 2% SDS, 10% glycerol). Proteins were electrophoresed through 16% Tricine gels and processed for anti-ubiquitin immunoblot analysis as described above. The amount of protein loaded in each lane was normalized after measurements of protein concentration with the bicinchoninic acid reagent (Pierce Chemical, Rockford, IL). Affinity-purified anti-ubiquitin antibody provided by C. Pickart (Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD) was used at a dilution of 1:6000 in TBST with 1% nonfat dry milk, and membranes were incubated for 1 h at room temperature. Antibody binding was detected with [125I]protein A (1 µCi in 10 ml of TBST) after a 1 h incubation at room temperature. Ubiquitin degradation rates were derived from quantitation of these blots using a PhosphorImager and linear least-squares curve fitting of the data. The membranes were subsequently stripped and probed with an anti-Pgk1 antibody as described above. Cell viability was determined by plating appropriate culture dilutions from the 0 and 120 min time points onto minimal medium. Viability was found to decrease by 25-30% after 2 h in cycloheximide for all the strains examined (see Figure 7).
Analysis of doa4
Defects in the Presence of Augmented Ubiquitin
Expression
Cells were transformed with the control vector (pES12) or
plasmids carrying genes under the control of the CUP1
promoter that encoded ubiquitin (YEp96 [Ellison and Hochstrasser,
1991
]), ubiquitin-K48R (YEp110 [Hochstrasser et al.,
1991
]), or ubiquitin-K63R (pTER103 [Arnason and Ellison, 1994
]). The
strains were grown to midlogarithmic phase in Trp-dropout medium that
selected for plasmid retention. Tenfold serial dilutions of cells were
spotted on selective plates supplemented with CdCl2 (30 µM) or canavanine sulfate (0.8 µg/ml). Plates were incubated at
30°C for 3 d. For assessing temperature sensitivity, plates were
placed at 38°C for 3-5 d.
To follow viability of doa4
cells entering stationary
phase, we diluted saturated yeast cultures into selective medium and grew the cultures overnight at 30°C. Viability measurements were begun when cells reached an OD600 of ~0.5. Cell death was
followed by uptake of the fluorescent DNA dye propidium iodide (50 µg/µl; Molecular Probes). Propidium iodide-stained cells were
counted using a hemocytometer (Fisher Scientific, Pittsburgh, PA). In separate experiments, cell viability was also determined by plating cells onto solid medium and counting colonies. The results from the
propidium iodide uptake and cell-plating assays were in close agreement.
Northern RNA Hybridization Analysis
Total RNA was purified from yeast cells, and Northern RNA
hybridization analysis was performed as described (Ausubel et
al., 1989
). Ten micrograms of RNA from each sample were used for
each lane. To detect UBI4 mRNA, a 1.3-kb
BstXI-BclI fragment from UBI4 (Finley
et al., 1987
) was radiolabeled with
[
-32P]dATP using a random-primed DNA-labeling kit
(Boehringer Mannheim, Indianapolis, IN). The actin probe was a
radiolabeled 560-bp ClaI fragment from the yeast
ACT1 gene.
Lucifer Yellow Uptake Assays
Yeast overnight cultures grown in minimal medium were rediluted
into fresh medium and harvested at an OD600 of ~0.5. One
OD600 unit of cells was collected by centrifugation,
resuspended in 90 µl of fresh medium, and incubated with 4 mg/ml
Lucifer yellow (Sigma, St. Louis, MO) at 30°C for 2 h (Raths
et al., 1993
). At the end of the incubation period, cells
were washed three to four times with ice-cold 50 mM sodium succinate,
pH 5, and 10 mM sodium azide buffer to remove excess Lucifer yellow.
Cells were viewed using epifluorescence optics on a Zeiss Axioskop
microscope (Thornwood, NY).
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RESULTS |
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Reduced Ubiquitin Levels and Increased Cell Death in Stationary
Phase doa4
Cells
Logarithmic phase doa4
cells accumulate small
ubiquitinated species (Papa and Hochstrasser, 1993
) (Figure
1A, lane 7). During logarithmic growth,
the mutant cells also show an approximately threefold decrease in free
ubiquitin levels relative to that in wild-type cells based on
quantitative anti-ubiquitin immunoblotting (see Figure
1A). Mutant doa4
cells from a culture in early stationary phase/diauxic shift (OD600 ~ 2.5) had more severely
reduced free ubiquitin, having 10-fold less ubiquitin than wild-type
cells at the same stage in the growth cycle (Figure 1A, lane 2 vs. lane 8). Compared with cells in logarithmic growth, early stationary phase
wild-type cells had at most a slight decrease in free ubiquitin (Figure
1A, lane 1 vs. lane 2). For normalization, levels of the glycolytic
enzyme Pgk1 were followed by quantitative
immunoblotting and were found to vary by <50% in
either wild-type or mutant cells (Figure 1A).
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Because doa4
cells are considerably depleted for
ubiquitin in stationary phase, we asked whether the mutant cells could
maintain viability. Survival of doa4
cells in logarithmic
growth was indistinguishable from that of wild-type cells (Figure 1B).
However, mutant cells in stationary phase experienced a striking loss
of viability, with cell survival falling to ~5% by 26 h (Figure
1B). The decrease in ubiquitin levels in doa4
cells
occurred well before the increase in cell death. By 6 h, mutant
cells exhibited a pronounced depletion of free ubiquitin, whereas cell
viability remained close to that of wild-type (Figure 1).
We then determined whether providing mutant cells with additional
ubiquitin would enhance their survival in stationary phase. Ubiquitin
was expressed from a high-copy allele under the control of the
copper-inducible CUP1 promoter (YEp96 [Ellison and
Hochstrasser, 1991
]). Without addition of copper, the YEp96 plasmid
allowed sufficient expression to restore ubiquitin to wild-type levels (see Figure 5), so copper was not added to the medium in these experiments. Under these conditions, doa4
cell viability
was restored to ~50% of that noted with wild-type cells (Figure 1B), suggesting that ubiquitin depletion could account for most but not all
of the decreased survival of stationary phase mutant cells. Provision
of ubiquitin to stationary phase doa4
cells restored free
ubiquitin levels; however, the small ubiquitinated species that are
characteristic of exponentially growing doa4
cells
accumulated only to low levels (Figure 1A, lanes 11 and 12), suggesting
that reduction of these species in stationary phase mutant cells is not
simply a consequence of reduced ubiquitin levels. One possible explanation is that these ubiquitinated species are rapidly turned over
in stationary phase doa4
cells, thus preventing
accumulation to high levels.
To establish that decreased ubiquitin levels in doa4
cells were caused by loss of the deubiquitinating activity of Doa4, we
examined ubiquitin levels in mutant cells expressing hemagglutinin (HA) epitope-tagged doa4C571S, a protein that has no
deubiquitinating activity in vitro (Papa and Hochstrasser, 1993
).
HA-doa4C571S levels were similar to those of wild-type
HA-Doa4 by anti-HA immunoblot analysis. Expression of the
active site mutant failed to restore ubiquitin in stationary phase
doa4
cells to wild-type levels (Figure
2, lane 5 vs. lane 6). From these data,
we conclude that doa4
cells are unable to maintain normal
ubiquitin levels and that the deubiquitinating activity of Doa4 is
necessary for intracellular ubiquitin homeostasis.
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Effect of Ubiquitin Supplementation on the doa4
Stress and
Proteolytic Defects
Mutations in genes encoding proteins that function in
ubiquitin-dependent proteolysis often cause cells to become sensitive to various stress conditions (Jungmann et al., 1993
; Chen
and Hochstrasser, 1995
; Amerik et al., 1997
). Deletion of
the DOA4 gene leads to multiple phenotypic abnormalities
such as sensitivity to heat, the amino acid analogue canavanine, or the
heavy metal cadmium (Papa and Hochstrasser, 1993
). Provision of
additional ubiquitin to doa4
cells (YEp96, no copper
addition) completely rescued the stress sensitivities of these cells
(Figure 3), suggesting that limited
ubiquitin pools account for these particular defects of the mutant.
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Of the seven Lys residues in ubiquitin, Lys-48, Lys-63, and Lys-29 can
function in yeast as ubiquitin addition sites during the formation of
polyubiquitin chains (Arnason and Ellison, 1994
; Spence et
al., 1995
). Mutation of Lys-48 to Arg is lethal; the Lys-29 and
Lys-63 mutations are not. There are no known phenotypic defects
associated with the ubiquitin-K29R mutation, but K63-linked ubiquitin
polymers have been implicated in tolerance to stress and DNA damage
(Arnason and Ellison, 1994
; Spence et al., 1995
). In
agreement with previous evidence, the ubiquitin-K63R mutant failed to
suppress the stress sensitivity of doa4
cells (Figure 3).
In contrast, the ubiquitin-K48R derivative supported nearly wild-type
growth of mutant cells exposed to high temperature, cadmium, or canavanine.
The observation that many of the cellular defects of the
doa4
mutant can be at least partially suppressed by
restoration of normal ubiquitin levels led us to examine in more detail
whether a reduced ubiquitin pool may contribute to the proteolytic
defects in doa4
cells. In wild-type cells,
polyubiquitinated forms of the Ub-Pro-
gal test substrate
accumulated transiently and subsequently disappeared (Bachmair et
al., 1986
) (Figure 4A, open
bracket). As shown previously, these species were greatly diminished in doa4
cells, and Ub-Pro-
gal was a long-lived protein
(Papa and Hochstrasser, 1993
). Providing additional ubiquitin well in
excess of wild-type levels (YEp96 + copper) enhanced the
polyubiquitinated forms of Ub-Pro-
gal, suggesting that ubiquitin
levels were limiting for modification of Ub-Pro-
gal in
doa4
cells (Figure 4A). Nevertheless, Ub-Pro-
gal
continued to be long-lived both in the presence and absence of added
copper. Similarly, only very weak suppression of the degradation defect
of Leu-
gal, a substrate for the N-end rule pathway (Bachmair
et al., 1986
), was observed in doa4
cells under the same conditions (after a 45-min chase, the amount of Leu-
gal remaining was reduced by <30%).
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The yeast
2 repressor is destroyed in wild-type cells with a
half-life of ~5 min, and deleting DOA4 extends the
half-life of
2 at least fourfold (Papa and Hochstrasser, 1993
).
Restoration of wild-type ubiquitin levels (YEp96, no copper) partially
rescued the
2 degradation defect in doa4
cells (Figure
4, B and D). Induction of high levels of ubiquitin expression with 100 µM copper resulted in complete rescue of the
2 degradation defect
in the mutant (Figure 4, C and E). Under the same conditions, the
kinetics of
2 turnover in wild-type cells was unchanged relative to
that of the vector control (Hochstrasser et al., 1991
).
Similarly, degradation of Deg1-Ura3 (Figure 4, B and C) and
Deg1-
gal, substrates containing the Deg1
degradation signal of
2, was restored upon ubiquitin overproduction
(YEp96 + copper) in the mutant.
These experiments establish that the degradation of substrates such as
Ub-Pro-
gal, Leu-
gal, and to some extent
2 is inhibited in
doa4
cells even with normal amounts of free ubiquitin
(Figure 5). Thus, the degradation defect
of proteasome-dependent substrates in doa4
cells cannot
be explained by ubiquitin depletion alone, suggesting an additional
block to proteolysis in doa4
cells.
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Ubiquitin Synthesis Is Not Reduced in doa4
Cells
Because the yeast polyubiquitin gene UBI4 is
specifically induced in stationary phase cells (Finley et
al., 1987
), it was possible that ubiquitin depletion in stationary
phase doa4
cells resulted from an inability to accumulate
UBI4 transcripts. However, as demonstrated in Figure
6A, UBI4 was expressed even
earlier in doa4
than in wild-type cells, being easily
detectable in cells that were still in exponential growth (t = 0 h; OD600 ~ 0.5). By 8 h
(OD600 ~ 2.5), when ubiquitin protein levels had
already declined in doa4
cells, UBI4
transcripts accumulated to a level fourfold higher than that observed
in wild-type cells and remained elevated as the culture approached
stationary phase.
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To ascertain whether reduced ubiquitin levels in the
doa4
mutant were caused by a decline in synthesis from
the remaining ubiquitin genes UBI1-3, we estimated overall
rates of ubiquitin protein synthesis in wild-type and mutant cells.
Immunoprecipitation of pulse-labeled ubiquitin suggested that synthesis
of ubiquitin was similar in wild-type and doa4
cells
(Figure 6B). Hence, the reduced ubiquitin levels in doa4
cells cannot be explained by an inhibition of ubiquitin protein synthesis.
Aberrant Ubiquitin Degradation in doa4
Cells
We then investigated the possibility that ubiquitin was
being degraded at abnormally high rates in the doa4
mutant during progression into stationary phase. To follow the entire
cellular pool of conjugated and unconjugated ubiquitin, we added
cycloheximide to yeast cultures to block protein synthesis and assayed
extracts made at various times thereafter by quantitative
anti-ubiquitin immunoblotting. Ubiquitin was very
long-lived in wild-type cells, showing little or no degradation during
a 2 h chase (Figure 7, A and E). By
contrast, ubiquitin disappeared in doa4
cells with a
half-life of ~45-60 min (Figure 7, B and E).
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Because of the evidence linking Doa4 and the 26S proteasome (Papa
et al., 1999
), the proteasome was an obvious candidate for a
protease that degrades ubiquitin in doa4
cells. Failure
to release ubiquitin efficiently from a ubiquitinated substrate
targeted to the proteasome might cause the entire conjugate to get
degraded. Indeed, introduction into doa4
cells of the
doa3-1 mutation, which affects a catalytic subunit of the
proteasome (Chen and Hochstrasser, 1995
), extended the half-life of
ubiquitin by ~80% (Figure 7, C and E). The doa3-1 allele
results in only a partial loss of function, so complete inactivation of
the protease might be expected to have a further stabilizing effect.
To test the specificity of 26S proteasome involvement in ubiquitin
degradation, we inactivated the vacuolar proteolytic system in
doa4
cells by disruption of PEP4 and
PRB1. These genes encode vacuolar proteases that are
required for maturation and activation of most or all vacuolar
hydrolases (Zubenko et al., 1982
). Unexpectedly, ubiquitin
degradation was significantly suppressed in doa4
pep4 prb1
triple-mutant cells. The half-life of ubiquitin was ~2.5 h in these cells (Figure 7, D and E). The control Pgk1 protein was
similarly long-lived in wild-type, doa4
, doa4
doa3-1, and doa4
pep4 prb1
strains (Figure 7F).
Inactivation of proteolysis by the 26S proteasome or the vacuole also
reduced levels of the ubiquitinated species characteristic of
doa4
cells, suggesting that both proteolytic pathways,
either directly or indirectly, contribute to the formation of these
species. This observation suggests a correlation between generation of
the low molecular mass ubiquitinated species and ubiquitin degradation
in the mutant.
The doa3-1 and pep4 prb1
mutations led to an
approximate two- and sixfold increase in ubiquitin levels,
respectively, in stationary phase doa4
cells. The partial
restoration of ubiquitin levels may result from an incomplete
stabilization of ubiquitin by mutation of only one of these proteolytic
pathways. Indeed, a quadruple mutant, doa4
doa3-1 pep4
prb1
, which is defective for both proteasomal and vacuolar
degradation had wild-type levels of ubiquitin in stationary phase,
consistent with distinct contributions of both proteolytic pathways to
ubiquitin turnover.
Genetic Interactions between doa4
and Components of the
Endocytic Pathway
Ubiquitination of cell surface proteins is known to
promote their endocytosis and eventual degradation in the vacuole or
lysosome (Kolling and Hollenberg, 1994
; Hein et al.,
1995
; Hicke and Riezman, 1996
; Govers et al., 1999
). Due to
the low levels of ubiquitin in doa4
cells,
internalization of a number of endocytic pathway substrates is
inhibited (Galan and Haguenauer-Tsapis, 1997
; Terrell et
al., 1998
), although some membrane proteins are still internalized normally (Loayza and Michaelis, 1998
). Because ubiquitin is a metabolically stable protein in wild-type yeast (Figure 7), ubiquitin must also be released before vacuolar degradation of the endocytosed proteins. Vacuolar proteolysis of ubiquitinated membrane proteins that
failed to be deubiquitinated in the doa4
mutant could
explain the participation of vacuolar proteases in ubiquitin
degradation. To test this idea, we assessed the effects of blocking
endocytosis in the doa4
mutant by introducing
end3-1, a temperature-sensitive allele of END3
that specifically inhibits the internalization step of endocytosis
(Raths et al., 1993
). Analysis of the endocytic block using
a fluorescent fluid phase marker, Lucifer yellow, indicated that at
30°C, the end3-1 allele in our strain background was
primarily but not completely defective for endocytosis, with ~10% of
the cells still showing Lucifer yellow staining in the vacuole compared
with nearly 100% of wild-type cells. In logarithmic phase end3-1
doa4
cells, the ubiquitinated species characteristic of
doa4
cells were substantially suppressed (Figure
8A), and in saturated cultures, ubiquitin
levels were partially restored (Figure 8B), reflecting a reduction in
the rate of ubiquitin degradation relative to that in
doa4
cells based on cycloheximide-chase experiments. Similar results were found with a second end3-1 doa4
mutant derived from the same cross.
|
We also analyzed the effects of interfering with a later step in the
endocytic pathway. A recent suppressor screen for mutations that
restored Deg1-
gal degradation in doa4 mutant
cells identified mutations in several vacuolar protein-sorting
(VPS) genes, including VPS24 and VPS27
(Amerik, Nowak, Swaminathan, and Hochstrasser, unpublished
data). Vps24 and Vps27 regulate membrane traffic from the late endosome
to the vacuole (Piper et al., 1995
; Babst et al.,
1998
). In accordance with our findings with the end3-1
doa4
double mutant, deletion of either VPS24 or
VPS27 suppressed the accumulation of the low molecular mass
ubiquitinated species in logarithmic phase doa4
cells
(Figure 8C) as well as the depletion of ubiquitin levels (Figure 8B)
and abnormal ubiquitin degradation in stationary phase cells. Several
related mechanisms for the targeting of cytoplasmic proteins to the
vacuole are also known. The autophagy pathway takes up a random portion
of cytosol for delivery to the vacuole, whereas the
cytoplasm-to-vacuole (Cvt) pathway is more substrate selective (Bryant
and Stevens, 1998
). The endocytic, Cvt, and autophagy pathways all
appear to converge at the late endosome (Scott et al.,
1997
), so the latter two pathways may also contribute to aberrant
ubiquitin metabolism in the doa4
mutant. However, we
found that mutations in the autophagy and Cvt pathways did not suppress
formation of the low molecular mass ubiquitinated species in
doa4
cells (our unpublished data).
In summary, mutations that impeded delivery of ubiquitinated
proteins from the cell surface to the vacuole suppressed aberrant ubiquitin proteolysis in doa4
cells. These findings
suggest that in wild-type cells, but not in the doa4
mutant, ubiquitinated endocytosed substrates are normally
deubiquitinated before their destruction by vacuolar proteases. In
agreement with these findings, levels of high molecular mass
ubiquitinated proteins were elevated in purified vacuolar fractions
from doa4
pep4 prb1
cells relative to the
doa4
or pep4 prb1
mutants; however, we were
unable to detect free ubiquitin or the low molecular mass ubiquitin
conjugates in the same preparations (our unpublished data).
| |
DISCUSSION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
In this study, we show that the yeast deubiquitinating enzyme Doa4
is required to regulate ubiquitin levels in vivo. Cells deleted for
DOA4 are unable to maintain normal amounts of ubiquitin, and
this defect is responsible for the impairment of a subset of
ubiquitin-dependent processes in the mutant. Ubiquitin depletion results from aberrant ubiquitin degradation, which depends on a
functional proteasome, an observation consistent with the previously characterized role for Doa4 in proteasome-dependent proteolysis. However, the present work has also uncovered an unexpected contribution by vacuolar proteases to aberrant ubiquitin degradation in
doa4
cells. As discussed below, these findings have
implications for cellular ubiquitin homeostasis and point to a central
role for Doa4 in recycling ubiquitin from proteins destined for
degradation by the 26S proteasome or by the vacuole.
Ubiquitin Levels and the Proteolytic Defect in doa4
Cells
Mutant doa4
cells are compromised for degradation of
all tested substrates of the 26S proteasome. Substrates such as
Ub-Pro-
gal show reduced ubiquitination in the doa4
mutant, and provision of additional ubiquitin enhances Ub-Pro-
gal
ubiquitination. Mutant doa4
cells have reduced levels of
ubiquitin, but even with normal or strongly elevated ubiquitin levels,
degradation of substrates such as Ub-Pro-
gal or the N-end rule
Leu-
gal substrate is not restored, indicating that the
doa4
mutant is also defective for a postubiquitination
step in the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway, presumably proteolysis by
the 26S proteasome (Papa et al., 1999
).
The reduced ubiquitin levels in doa4
cells do limit
degradation of other tested proteasomal substrates. Raising ubiquitin to wild-type levels in the doa4
mutant partially restores
the degradation of Deg1-Ura3, Deg1-
gal, and
2, suggesting that the mutant is defective for ubiquitination of
these substrates. Strong ubiquitin overproduction in the mutant almost
completely suppresses the defective degradation of these proteins.
Levels of ubiquitinated
2 are known to increase significantly in
wild-type cells under these conditions (Hochstrasser et al.,
1991
); such enhanced ubiquitination might make
2 a more effective
substrate for a compromised 26S proteasome in doa4
cells,
thereby restoring wild-type degradation kinetics. Together, the data
with the different substrates indicate that the doa4
degradation defect is due to reduced ubiquitination of substrates
because of ubiquitin depletion and/or to inhibition of a
postubiquitination event. The extent to which the impairment of one or
the other of these two processes affects proteolysis in the mutant
cells is substrate dependent.
Provision of additional ubiquitin also rescues the cellular growth
defects of doa4
cells to varying degrees. Whereas
providing these cells with ubiquitin only partially suppresses the
reduced viability in stationary phase, the other stress abnormalities are almost completely suppressed. Although the mechanistic basis for
the stress sensitivities exhibited by mutants in the
ubiquitin-proteasome pathway is not well understood, a generally
accepted notion is that exposure of cells to agents such as heat,
cadmium, or canavanine leads to the accumulation of damaged and
aberrantly folded proteins that must be degraded. Tolerance of
canavanine or cadmium may also depend on downregulation of certain cell
surface proteins by ubiquitin-dependent internalization. For example,
canavanine and cadmium treatment may lead to ubiquitination and
endocytosis of the Arg permease and transporters for divalent cations,
respectively. Ubiquitin-dependent internalization is strongly inhibited
in the doa4
mutant, and for a number of proteins, the
endocytic defect is a consequence of reduced ubiquitin levels (Galan
and Haguenauer-Tsapis, 1997
; Medintz et al., 1998
; Terrell
et al., 1998
). Restoring ubiquitin levels may reduce
canavanine and cadmium sensitivity by suppressing the endocytic defect
in doa4
cells.
Ubiquitin Homeostasis in doa4
Cells
Under conditions where ubiquitin levels have already declined,
doa4
mutant cells accumulate UBI4 transcripts
and display no reduction in the synthesis of ubiquitin protein relative
to that in wild-type cells. Extraction of doa4
cells
under conditions that efficiently extract large ubiquitin-protein
conjugates revealed a strong reduction in these species as well. These
experiments indicate that in stationary phase there is neither a strong
reduction in ubiquitin synthesis rates nor a redistribution of
ubiquitin into high molecular mass conjugates in doa4
cells relative to wild-type cells. On the basis of these results, we
conclude that proteolysis of ubiquitin is the major reason for
ubiquitin depletion in stationary phase doa4
strains. For
the logarithmically growing mutant, the rate of ubiquitin degradation
has been more difficult to assess. Degradation may be somewhat slower
than in stationary phase, although the rate measurements are
potentially complicated by deconjugation of the low molecular mass
ubiquitinated species, which are present at higher concentrations in
these cells than in late logarithmic and early stationary phase cells.
A greater depletion of ubiquitin in stationary phase doa4
cells relative to logarithmic phase cells may result from a normal
reduction in ubiquitin expression because of the reduced expression of
the UBI1-3 ubiquitin genes (Özkaynak et
al., 1987
).
Analysis of ubiquitin and ubiquitin-conjugate profiles in a variety of
yeast proteasome pathway mutants suggests the existence of a
homeostatic mechanism that maintains free ubiquitin levels within a
certain range. An increase in ubiquitin-conjugate species without a
corresponding decrease in free ubiquitin is seen in many of these
mutants. For example, ubp14
cells accumulate unanchored polyubiquitin chains, and doa3-1 mutants amass
ubiquitin-protein conjugates (Chen and Hochstrasser, 1995
; Amerik
et al., 1997
). These mutants are presumably able to maintain
wild-type levels of free ubiquitin by increasing rates of ubiquitin
synthesis. Higher ubiquitin levels may enhance substrate
ubiquitination, thereby facilitating degradation by a crippled 26S
proteasome. The exact mechanism(s) leading to ubiquitin induction is
unknown. Inhibition of proteasome function has been reported to
increase expression of cellular chaperones and induce thermotolerance
in yeast (Bush et al., 1997
; Mathew et al.,
1998
). Activation of a general stress response pathway in cells
inhibited for proteasome-mediated proteolysis may increase ubiquitin
expression. In doa4
cells, the feedback mechanism that
augments ubiquitin synthesis may be defective, and/or the rate of
ubiquitin degradation may exceed the capacity of this compensatory mechanism.
Mechanism of Ubiquitin Degradation
As noted above, previous work indicated that Doa4 action is
closely linked to the 26S proteasome. Failure to remove ubiquitin from
proteasome-bound intermediates may result in the ubiquitin portion of
these proteolytic intermediates being unfolded and translocated into
the catalytic chamber of the proteasome along with the substrate
moiety. Consistent with this hypothesis, we find that ubiquitin is
relatively short-lived in doa4
cells and that mutation of
a catalytic subunit of the proteasome in the doa4
background not only reduces levels of the putative ubiquitin-peptide species, as seen previously (Papa et al., 1999
), but also
partially stabilizes ubiquitin.
Our studies have also revealed an unexpected role for vacuolar
proteolysis in the formation of the doa4
cell-specific
ubiquitin-linked species and in ubiquitin turnover. An
end3-1 mutation, which inhibits cell membrane endocytosis,
partially inhibits accumulation of these ubiquitin conjugates as well
and causes an elevation of ubiquitin levels in doa4
cells. These results suggest that a fraction of the small ubiquitinated
species in doa4
cells are derived from ubiquitinated cell
surface proteins, which are subsequently proteolyzed by vacuolar
proteases. Perturbation of either endocytosis or endosome-to-vacuole
trafficking blocks the delivery of these substrates to the site of
degradation (i.e., the vacuole) and may thereby stabilize ubiquitin and
suppress its depletion in the doa4
mutant.
Direct participation of Doa4 in releasing ubiquitin from proteasome
substrates is suggested by the association of this enzyme with the 26S
proteasome (Papa et al., 1999
). The genetic interactions between doa4
and vps24
, vps27
and end3-1 described in this study cannot distinguish
between a direct or indirect role for Doa4 in cleaving ubiquitinated,
endocytosed proteins. It is also not clear whether destruction of
ubiquitin by the proteasome and by the vacuole in doa4
cells always occurs via independent mechanisms or whether the two
proteolytic pathways sometimes converge. The proteasome may also
contribute to the degradation of ubiquitin conjugated to membrane
proteins that are targeted to the vacuole. Degradation of Ste6, the
a-factor transporter, has been reported to depend on both the
proteasome and vacuolar proteases (Loayza and Michaelis, 1998
). Given
that Ste6 localizes to the vacuolar membrane in a doa4
mutant (Loayza and Michaelis, 1998
), the ubiquitinated cytosolic domain
of Ste6 would remain accessible to degradation by proteasomes.
Destruction of ubiquitin attached to such substrates may require an
interdependence between lumenal vacuolar proteases and the cytosolic
proteasome, whereas ubiquitin on membrane proteins that localize to the
vacuole interior in doa4
cells should be degraded in a
proteasome-independent manner. The experiments comparing ubiquitin
depletion in stationary phase doa4
cells impaired for vacuolar proteolysis, proteasomal proteolysis, or both indicate that
the two proteolytic pathways define two distinguishable mechanisms for
ubiquitin degradation.
Analysis of the Dub family of enzymes suggests that these enzymes can
be highly substrate specific. For example mammalian isopeptidase T and
yeast Ubp14 selectively release ubiquitin from unanchored polyubiquitin
chains (Wilkinson et al., 1995
; Amerik et al.,
1997
). From the present work, Doa4 appears to act in both the
proteasome and vacuolar proteolytic pathways, suggesting that this
enzyme should be able to deubiquitinate a wide spectrum of substrates.
Because the yeast genome encodes 16 additional Dubs, it is surprising
that Doa4 should have a central function in such disparate pathways.
Identification and characterization of the low molecular mass
ubiquitinated species that accumulate in the doa4
mutant
should clarify whether Doa4 works directly in both pathways and might
shed light on other cellular processes that depend on Doa4.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
We thank C. Pickart for the anti-ubiquitin antibody, L. Hicke for the end3-1 strain, and J. Laney for comments on the manuscript. This work was supported by National Institutes of Health grant GM-53756 to M.H.
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FOOTNOTES |
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Corresponding author. E-mail
address: hoc1{at}midway.uchicago.edu.
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