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Vol. 11, Issue 4, 1169-1181, April 2000
Section of Microbiology, University of California, Davis, California 95616
Submitted December 15, 1999; Revised January 27, 2000; Accepted January 31, 2000| |
ABSTRACT |
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In response to oxidative stress, eukaryotic cells induce
transcription of genes required for detoxification of oxidants. Here we
present evidence that oxidative stress stimuli are transmitted by a
multistep phosphorelay system to the Spc1/Sty1
stress-activated protein kinase in the fission yeast
Schizosaccharomyces pombe. The fission yeast
mpr1+ gene encodes a novel protein with a
histidine-containing phosphotransfer domain homologous to the budding
yeast Ypd1. Spc1 activation upon oxidative stress is severely impaired
in the
mpr1 mutant as well as in the
mpr1HQ strain, in which the putative phosphorylation site Mpr1-His221 is substituted with glutamine. In response to oxidative stress, Mpr1 binds to the Mcs4 response regulator that functions upstream of the Spc1 cascade, suggesting that Mcs4 is a
cognate response regulator for Mpr1. Unexpectedly, when exposed to
hydrogen peroxide,
mpr1 cells can induce the catalase
gene ctt1+, one of the transcriptional
targets of the Spc1 pathway, and survive oxidative stress in the
absence of significant Spc1 activation. We have found that Pap1, a bZIP
transcription factor homologous to human c-Jun, can mediate induction
of ctt1+ expression upon oxidative stress
independently of the Spc1 stress-activated protein kinase. These
studies show that oxidative stress stimuli are transmitted by multiple
pathways to induce specific gene expression.
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INTRODUCTION |
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Stress-activated protein kinases (SAPKs) form an evolutionarily
conserved subfamily of the MAPKs and are responsive to diverse environmental stress stimuli rather than growth factors and other mitogenic stimuli (Waskiewicz and Cooper, 1995
; Kyriakis and Avruch, 1996
; Ip and Davis, 1998
). The prototype of SAPKs, Hog1, was first identified in the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae
(Brewster et al., 1993
). In response to high-osmolarity
stress, Hog1 is activated by a MAPK kinase (MEK) homologue, Pbs2, which
is in turn activated by three redundant MEK kinase (MEKK) homologues, Ssk2, Ssk22, and Ste11 (Maeda et al., 1995
; Posas and Saito,
1997
). This Hog1 MAPK cascade is known to be regulated by a variation of the two-component system, multistep phosphorelay, which is composed
of the Sln1, Ypd1, and Ssk1 proteins (Posas et al., 1998
). Under low-osmolarity conditions, the "sensor kinase" Sln1
autophosphorylates a histidine residue within its kinase domain, and
this phosphoryl group is subsequently transferred to an aspartate
residue in the "receiver domain" of Sln1 (Maeda et al.,
1994
). Ypd1 acts as a phosphotransferase and transfers the phosphoryl
group from Sln1 to an aspartate residue in the receiver domain of Ssk1,
with a high-energy phosphohistidine intermediate at Ypd1-His64 (Posas et al., 1996
). Phosphorylation inhibits the Ssk1 "response
regulator" from activating the Ssk2 MEKK. Once cells are exposed to a
high-osmolarity environment, the Sln1 kinase is inactivated, and
binding of unphosphorylated Ssk1 to the N terminus of Ssk2 induces the
activation of Ssk2 (Posas and Saito, 1998
). Thus, the four-step
His-Asp-His-Asp phosphorelay in the Sln1-Ypd1-Ssk1 pathway negatively
regulates the Hog1 MAPK cascade. The two-component system is widespread
among prokaryotic signaling pathways to sense and respond to a variety
of environmental conditions, but it is less common among eukaryotic
species (Loomis et al., 1997
). Thus, regulation of the Hog1
MAPK cascade by a two-component system is an intriguing connection
between eukaryotic and prokaryotic signaling modules.
In contrast to Hog1, which is responsive only to osmolarity stress
(Schüller et al., 1994
), SAPKs in mammals and the
fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe are activated by
diverse forms of stress (reviewed by Banuett, 1998
). In S. pombe, a SAPK called Spc1 (also known as Sty1 or Phh1) is
activated by high osmolarity, oxidative stress, and heat shock, and
spc1 mutant cells rapidly lose viability under these
stress conditions (Millar et al., 1995
; Shiozaki and
Russell, 1995
; Kato et al., 1996
). Spc1 is activated through
phosphorylation of Thr-171 and Tyr-173, which is carried out by a MEK
homologue, Wis1. Wis1 is strongly activated in response to osmostress
and oxidative stress, whereas heat shock induces relatively weak and
transient Wis1 activation (Nguyen and Shiozaki, 1999
). However, heat
shock inhibits the Pyp1 and Pyp2 tyrosine phosphatases, negative
regulators of Spc1, which results in strong activation of Spc1 (Nguyen
and Shiozaki, 1999
). Thus, there are at least two independent pathways
that transmit different stress stimuli to Spc1: osmostress and
oxidative stress are transmitted by Wis1 activation, and heat shock is
mediated by inhibition of Pyp1/Pyp2.
It remains largely unknown how osmostress and oxidative stress are
sensed and transmitted to the Wis1 MEK. Activation of Wis1 requires
phosphorylation by a MEKK, and mutations of the MEKK phosphorylation
sites in Wis1 abolish Wis1 activation in response to stress (Shiozaki
et al., 1998
; Nguyen and Shiozaki, 1999
), implying that
stress signals are transmitted to Wis1 by MEKKs. Two MEKKs activating
Wis1 have been identified, Wis4 (also known as Wik1 and Wak1) (Samejima
et al., 1997
; Shieh et al., 1997
; Shiozaki
et al., 1997
) and Win1 (Samejima et al., 1998
).
Proceeding farther upstream, Mcs4, a homologue of the Ssk1 response
regulator, is believed to regulate the Wis4 MEKK (Cottarel, 1997
; Shieh
et al., 1997
; Shiozaki et al., 1997
).
Stress-induced activation of Spc1 is partially impaired in strains
lacking functional Mcs4, suggesting that Mcs4 positively regulates the
Spc1 MAPK cascade. High sequence homology between Mcs4 and budding
yeast Ssk1 implies that fission yeast also has a two-component
signaling system upstream of the SAPK pathway.
The outcome of Spc1 activation in response to stress is induction of
various stress-response genes, such as
gpd1+ and ctt1+
(Degols et al., 1996
; Wilkinson et al., 1996
;
Degols and Russell, 1997
). gpd1+ encodes
glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (Pidoux et al., 1990
), a
key enzyme in glycerol synthesis that is important to increase intracellular osmolarity in a high-osmolarity environment (Ohmiya et al., 1995
). Cytoplasmic catalase encoded by
ctt1+ decomposes hydrogen peroxide
(H2O2) and protects cells
from oxidative stress (Nakagawa et al., 1995
). Transcription
of these stress-response genes is under the regulation of a bZIP
transcription factor, Atf1 (also known as Gad7) (Takeda et
al., 1995
; Kanoh et al., 1996
). Both
spc1
and
atf1 mutants are defective in stress-induced expression of the same set of genes and are sensitive to various stress
treatments (Shiozaki and Russell, 1996
; Wilkinson et al., 1996
). Moreover, Atf1 is phosphorylated by Spc1 both in vivo and in
vitro (Shiozaki and Russell, 1996
). These results strongly suggest that
Atf1 is a downstream target of Spc1. Atf1 is most homologous to ATF-2,
a key substrate of the human SAPKs, p38 and c-Jun N-terminal kinases
(Gupta et al., 1995
; Livingstone et al., 1995
;
van Dam et al., 1995
; Raingeaud et al., 1996
),
underscoring the high conservation between the S. pombe and
human SAPK pathways. Recently, Toone et al. (1998)
proposed
that the Pap1 transcription factor, which has significant homology and
similar DNA-binding specificity to mammalian c-Jun (Toda et
al., 1991
, 1992
), is a target transcription factor for the Spc1
MAPK under oxidative stress conditions (reviewed by Wilkinson and
Millar, 1998
). Pap1 is required for induction of
ctt1+ and other genes in response to
oxidative stress. In addition, oxidative stress brings about nuclear
accumulation of Pap1 in a spc1+-dependent
manner (Toone et al., 1998
). It should be noted, however, that Pap1 is not a substrate of the Spc1 MAPK (Wilkinson et
al., 1996
), and accumulation of Pap1 in the nucleus is much slower than rapid induction of gene expression after oxidative stress (Toone
et al., 1998
). Thus, the physiological meaning of Pap1 regulation by Spc1 is not well understood.
In this report, we have characterized the fission yeast Mpr1, which is
highly homologous to the Ypd1 response regulator phosphotransferase in
budding yeast.
mpr1 cells are defective in Spc1
activation by oxidative stress but not other forms of stress. In
addition, the conserved phosphorylation site, His-221, is essential for Mpr1 function, and Mpr1 binds to the Mcs4 response regulator in response to oxidative stress. These results strongly suggest that Mpr1
and Mcs4 are part of a multistep phosphorelay that transmits oxidative
stress signals to the Spc1 MAPK cascade. Unexpectedly,
mpr1 cells are not sensitive to oxidative stress or
defective in induced expression of ctt1+
after oxidative stress. Our data strongly suggest that the Pap1 transcription factor can mediate oxidative stress-induced
ctt1+ expression independently of Spc1
activation. We propose that multiple independent pathways mediate
oxidative stress signals to ctt1+
expression, which may be important to sensing and responding to
different forms of oxidative stress.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Yeast Strains and General Techniques
S. pombe strains used in this study are listed in
Table 1. They are derivatives of
972 h
and 975 h+ (Mitchison, 1970
). Growth media as well as
basic genetic and biochemical techniques for S. pombe have
been described (Moreno et al., 1991
; Alfa et al.,
1993
). S. pombe cells were grown in yeast extract medium YES
and synthetic minimal medium EMM2.
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Gene Disruption of mpr1+
Using S. pombe genomic DNA as a template, we
amplified a 1.4-kilobase (kb) DNA fragment that contains the entire
mpr1+ ORF by PCR with a pair of primers,
EcNd-mpr1 (5'-CC GGA ATT CAT ATG AGT GTA TAT CGT GAT AAC
ATG-3'; EcoRI restriction site is underlined) and mpr1-3Kp
(5'-CCG GGG TAC CAT GCC ACG ACC GTA AGA ACG-3';
KpnI restriction site is underlined). After digesting with
EcoRI and KpnI, this fragment was cloned into
pBluescript (Stratagene, La Jolla, CA). The resultant plasmid
(pBS-mpr1+) was digested with
HindIII and XhoI, to which a 1.9-kb
XbaI-SmaI fragment of
his7+ (Apolinario et al., 1993
)
was ligated. The mpr1::his7+
construct was released by restriction digestion with EcoRI
and KpnI and used to transform a diploid strain constructed
by mating CHP429 and KS1575. Stable His+
transformants were selected, and disruption of one of the
mpr1+ loci in the diploid was confirmed by
Southern hybridization. Sporulation and tetrad dissection generated
viable haploid segregants of
mpr1::his7+
spc1::ura4+ and
mpr1::his7+
spc1+, which indicated that
mpr1+ is not essential for cellular viability.
Construction of the mpr1:HA6H and mpr1HQ:HA6H Alleles
The mpr1HQ mutant gene, which has the His-221
Gln
substitution, was created by the overlap extension method with the use
of PCR (Higuchi et al., 1988
; Ho et al., 1989
).
Two separate amplification reactions were performed with
pBS-mpr1+ as the template with the use of a
first pair of primers, EcNd-mpr1 and MPR3HQ (5'-CC TTT AAG GAA
TTG CCC CAA CG-3'; the codon corresponding to the
substitution from His to Gln is in boldface), and a second pair of
primers, MPR5HQ (5'-CG TTG GGG CAA TTC CTT AAA GG-3') and
mpr1-3Kp. These PCR products were purified by agarose gel
electrophoresis, mixed at a 1:1 ratio, and then subjected to another
PCR with the use of the primers PS288-MPR (5'-T GCA CTG CAG
GCT GCT AAT GAG ACG GCT GGC GC-3'; PstI restriction site is
underlined) and MPR-NT2 (5'-GT TTA GCG GCC GCC TGT AGA AGA
ATT TTT TTC ATA AAA GTC AAG-3'; NotI restriction site is
underlined). The same pair of primers was also used to amplify the
wild-type mpr1+ sequence with the use of
the pBS-mpr1+ plasmid as a template. The
0.6-kb PstI-NotI fragments of these PCR products
were cloned in pUra4-HA6H to add a C-terminal tag of two copies of
hemagglutinin (HA) epitope and six consecutive histidine residues
(Shiozaki and Russell, 1997
). The resultant pUra4-mpr1-HA6H and
pUra4-mpr1HQ-HA6H plasmids were used to transform wild-type strain
PR109 after being linearized at the BclI site in the
mpr1 ORF. Stable Ura+ transformants
were selected, and integration of the plasmids at the
mpr1+ locus was confirmed by Southern
hybridization. Furthermore, the mpr1 sequence was amplified
by PCR with the use of the genomic DNA from the transformants, and the
introduced mutation was confirmed by DNA sequencing. In these strains,
the mpr1:HA6H and mpr1HQ:HA6H constructs are
expressed from the chromosomal mpr1+ promoter.
Purification and Detection of the Spc1, Mpr1, and Mpr1HQ Proteins with the HA6H Tag
The HA6H sequence encoding two copies of the HA epitope and six
consecutive histidine residues (Shiozaki and Russell, 1995
, 1997
) was
used to tag the chromosomal spc1+,
mpr1+, and mpr1HQ genes. Cells
were grown to midlog phase in liquid YES medium at 30°C and subjected
to stress treatments with 0.6 M KCl, 0.3 mM
H2O2, or heat shock at
48°C, as described previously (Shiozaki et al., 1997
).
Cells were harvested by rapid filtration (Shiozaki and Russell, 1997
),
and HA6H-tagged proteins were purified on Ni-nitrilotriacetic acid
(NTA)-agarose beads under denaturing conditions, followed by
immunoblotting with anti-HA (12CA5; Boehringer Mannheim, Indianapolis, IN) and anti-phospho-p38 MAPK (New England Biolabs, Beverly, MA) antibodies (Shiozaki and Russell, 1997
). HRP-conjugated secondary antibodies (Promega, Madison, WI) and ECL Plus
Reagent (Amersham Pharmacia, Arlington Heights, IL) were used for
detection and quantification with the Storm System (Molecular Dynamics,
Sunnyvale, CA).
H2O2 Sensitivity Assay and RNA Analysis
S. pombe cells were grown in YES medium to midlog
phase at 30°C. Aliquots of the culture were incubated for 1 h in
the presence of 0, 1, 2, 4, and 8 mM
H2O2. Cells were washed,
diluted, and plated on YES agar (Degols et al., 1996
).
Percent viability was determined after 3 d of incubation at
30°C. Survival curves in Figures 6 and 8 represent the mean values of
three independent experiments. Northern hybridization analyses of
ctt1+ and leu1 have been
described by Degols and Russell (1997)
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Detection of Mpr1-Mcs4 Association In Vivo
The pREP1-KZ-mpr1 and pREP1-KZ-mpr1HQ plasmids were
constructed by cloning of the wild-type
mpr1+ and mutant mpr1HQ genes in
pREP1-KZ vector (Shiozaki and Russell, 1997
); they express GST-Mpr1 or
GST-Mpr1HQ fusion proteins, respectively, under the regulation of the
thiamine-repressible nmt1 promoter (Maundrell, 1990
). The
pREP1-KZ-mpr1 plasmid can complement the
mpr1 defect in
Spc1 activation upon oxidative stress, indicating that the GST tag does
not disturb the Mpr1 function. CA337 (
mpr1 mcs4:myc)
cells were transformed with the plasmids pREP1-KZ-mpr1 and
pREP1-KZ-mpr1HQ, and transformants were grown at 30°C for 23 h
in EMM2 medium supplemented with 0.03 µM thiamine to induce expression of the GST fusion proteins at a low level. After stress treatments, cells were harvested by rapid filtration and disrupted in
lysis buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, 5 mM EDTA, 100 mM NaCl, 1 mM
2-mercaptoethanol, 10% glycerol, 0.1 mM
Na3VO4). The protein concentration of each lysate was normalized with the use of a Bio-Rad
(Richmond, CA) protein assay before immunoblot analysis of
Mcs4 (see Figure 4A, bottom panel) and incubation with 10 µl (bed
volume) of glutathione (GSH)-Sepharose beads (Amersham Pharmacia). After extensive washes with lysis buffer containing 0.7% Triton X-100,
proteins bound to the beads were analyzed by
immunoblotting with anti-GST and anti-myc (BabCO,
Richmond, CA) antibodies (Shiozaki and Russell, 1997
).
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RESULTS |
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Mpr1 Is Homologous to Ypd1, a Response Regulator Phosphotransferase in Budding Yeast
Previous studies identified Mcs4 as a regulator of the Spc1
MAPK cascade. Mcs4 is most homologous to the Ssk1 response regulator in
budding yeast (Shieh et al., 1997
; Shiozaki et
al., 1997
). To examine whether the Spc1 cascade is regulated by a
multistep phosphorelay similar to the budding yeast Sln1-Ypd1-Ssk1
pathway, we performed a computer search for Ypd1 homologues in the
S. pombe genome sequences submitted to GenBank by the Sanger
Center. An 888-base pair uninterrupted ORF (SPBC725.02) in chromosome
II was found to encode a protein of 295 amino acid residues with a
significant homology to Ypd1 (Figure 1A).
This putative 32.5-kDa protein is significantly larger than Ypd1, at
165 amino acid residues; however, its C-terminal region of 130 residues
is 43% identical to the Ypd1 sequence. Notably, residues 62-71 of
Ypd1, containing the histidine phosphorylation site, are completely
conserved in this fission yeast gene, which was therefore named
mpr1+ (multistep
phosphorelay). On the other hand, no apparent
homology to any known proteins was found in the N-terminal 160 residues of Mpr1.
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Mpr1 Is Important for Oxidative Stress Signaling to SAPK
To study the cellular function of Mpr1, gene disruption of
mpr1+ was performed. In. S. cerevisiae, mutational inactivation of YPD1 brings
about lethal hyperactivation of the Hog1 MAPK, which can be suppressed
by the hog1
mutation (Posas et al., 1996
). Therefore, a
spc1::ura4+/spc1+
heterozygous diploid strain, which has one of the spc1 loci
disrupted with the ura4+ gene, was
transformed with the mpr1::his7+
plasmid construct (Figure 1B). Integration of this plasmid to one of
the mpr1+ loci replaced the Mpr1 sequence
homologous to Ypd1 with the his7+ marker
gene, which was confirmed by Southern hybridization. The resultant
diploid
mpr1::his7+/mpr1+
spc1::ura4+/spc1+
strain was sporulated and subjected to tetrad analysis. All of the
dissected tetrads gave rise to four viable spores with 2:2 segregation
of His+ and His
phenotypes regardless of the uracil auxotrophy, indicating that mpr1+ is not essential for viability in
both spc1+ and
spc1
backgrounds. A haploid strain with
the disrupted mpr1+ gene
(
mpr1), however, showed ~12% longer doubling time than that of wild-type cells under the standard growth condition (in YES
medium at 30°C).
mpr1 cells also grew and formed
colonies on YES agar plates containing 1 M KCl (our unpublished
results), suggesting that mpr1+ is not
essential for cellular survival of high-osmolarity conditions.
We next examined whether, like Ypd1, Mpr1 is involved in stress
signaling to the SAPK cascade in fission yeast. Activation of Spc1 in
response to stress treatments was compared between wild-type and
mpr1 cells with the use of strains in which chromosomal spc1+ is tagged with the HA6H sequence
encoding the HA epitope and six consecutive histidine residues
(Shiozaki and Russell, 1995
). Anti-phospho-p38 antibodies were used in
immunoblotting to detect the active form of Spc1
phosphorylated on both Thr-171 and Tyr-173 (Shiozaki and Russell, 1997
;
Nguyen and Shiozaki, 1999
). Under normal growth conditions, the level
of active Spc1 in
mpr1 cells is 60-70% higher than that
in wild-type cells (Figure 2, lanes 0),
whereas no apparent difference was observed in the amount of the Spc1
protein detected by anti-HA antibodies. High-osmolarity stress induced
by 0.6 M KCl (Figure 2A) and oxidative stress induced by 0.3 mM H2O2 (Figure 2B)
increased active Spc1 four- to fivefold in wild-type cells. On the
other hand, oxidative stress-induced activation of Spc1 in
mpr1 cells was only 60% of that in wild-type cells
(Figure 2B), although no apparent difference was detected between the
two strains in the level of Spc1 activation after osmostress (Figure
2A). We also observed that heat shock-induced activation of Spc1 in
the
mpr1 strain was comparable to that in the wild-type
strain (our unpublished results). Thus, Spc1 activation in response to
oxidative stress, but not other forms of stress, is defective in the
mpr1 mutant. These results implicate Mpr1 in oxidative
stress signaling to the Spc1 SAPK cascade, which contrasts with the
function of Ypd1 in osmostress signaling of budding yeast (Posas
et al., 1996
).
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The Putative Histidine Phosphorylation Site of Mpr1 Is Crucial for Oxidative Stress Signaling
Sequence conservation of the histidine phosphorylation site
between Mpr1 and Ypd1 (Figure 1A) prompted us to test whether phosphorylation of His-221 in Mpr1 is required for oxidative stress signaling. Site-directed mutagenesis was used to construct the mpr1HQ mutant gene, in which His-221 was substituted with an
unphosphorylatable residue, glutamine. The chromosomal
mpr1+ locus was replaced with the
mpr1HQ gene, which was tagged with the HA6H sequence for
purification by Ni-NTA chromatography and detection by anti-HA
antibodies. Phenotypes of the control strain expressing wild-type Mpr1
tagged with the HA6H sequence were indistinguishable from those of
cells expressing untagged Mpr1; strong activation of Spc1 was observed
in response to osmostress and oxidative stress (Figure
3, mpr1:HA). In contrast,
oxidative stress-induced Spc1 activation was significantly reduced in
the mpr1HQ mutant strain, whereas high osmolarity activated
Spc1 in mpr1HQ cells to a level comparable to that in the
control strain (Figure 3). Thus, like
mpr1 cells, the
mpr1HQ mutant is defective in oxidative stress-induced activation of Spc1, although anti-HA immunoblotting
detected both the Mpr1 and Mpr1HQ proteins at similar levels (Figure 3,
lower panel). These results indicate that the putative phosphorylation site, His-221, is required for the Mpr1 function in oxidative stress
signaling to Spc1.
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Mpr1 Interacts with the Mcs4 Response Regulator
The results described above suggest that, like Ypd1, Mpr1 may
mediate stress signals by transferring a phosphoryl group from its
histidine residue to a response regulator. Because a response regulator
homologue, Mcs4, regulates the Spc1 MAPK cascade (Cottarel, 1997
; Shieh
et al., 1997
; Shiozaki et al., 1997
), it is
likely that Mpr1 functions as a phosphotransferase for Mcs4. To explore this possibility, physical interaction between Mpr1 and Mcs4 in vivo
was examined. We constructed a strain in which chromosomal mcs4+ was tagged with the sequence encoding
the myc epitope for detection. Phenotypes of this mcs4:myc
strain were indistinguishable from those of strains expressing untagged
Mcs4 (our unpublished results), indicating that the Mcs4 function was
not disturbed by the myc epitope. The mcs4:myc strain was
transformed with pREP1-KZ-mpr1 and pREP1-KZ-mpr1HQ, which express
wild-type Mpr1 and the His-221
Gln mutant (Mpr1HQ), respectively, as
fusion with GST. Expression of GST-Mpr1 and GST-Mpr1HQ was induced at a
relatively low level from the thiamine-repressible nmt1
promoter of the pREP1 vector (Maundrell, 1990
) in the growth medium
containing 0.03 µM thiamine. Isolation of the GST-Mpr1 protein on
GSH-Sepharose beads resulted in copurification of Mcs4, whereas little
Mcs4 was recovered with the mutant GST-Mpr1HQ protein (Figure
4A). Moreover, the amount of Mcs4
coprecipitated with GST-Mpr1 increased significantly during the
experiment after cells were exposed to oxidative stress induced by
H2O2. In contrast,
osmostress did not affect the interaction between GST-Mpr1 and Mcs4
(Figure 4A, right panels), indicating that the induced interaction
between Mpr1 and Mcs4 is specific to oxidative stress.
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We next examined the phenotype of the
mcs4
mpr1
double mutant in Spc1 activation upon oxidative stress. Compared with
wild-type cells, exposure to
H2O2 brought about a
reduced level of Spc1 activation in
mcs4 cells (Figure
4B), indicating that Mcs4 positively regulates Spc1 activation (Shieh
et al., 1997
; Shiozaki et al., 1997
). In
mpr1 cells, the level of active Spc1 before stress was
somewhat higher than in wild-type cells, but only slight activation of
Spc1 was induced by oxidative stress. We found that the pattern of Spc1
activation before and after oxidative stress in the
mcs4
mpr1 double mutant was indistinguishable from that in the
mcs4 strain (Figure 4B); therefore,
mcs4
appears to be epistatic to mpr1+. This
observation is consistent with the idea that Mpr1 transmits oxidative
stress signals to the Spc1 cascade through the Mcs4 response regulator
and that Mpr1 cannot affect Spc1 activity in the absence of Mcs4.
However,
mpr1 and
mcs4 cells showed
significantly different phenotypes under osmostress conditions (Figure
4C); only weak activation of Spc1 was observed in
mcs4
cells exposed to high osmolarity, whereas Spc1 activation in
mpr1 cells was comparable to that in wild-type cells
under the same conditions.
In the
mcs4 and
mcs4
mpr1 strains,
weak activation of Spc1 was induced in response to oxidative stress
(Figure 4B), indicating that oxidative stress stimuli can be
transmitted to Spc1 independently of Mpr1 and Mcs4. Recently, the
prr1+ gene encoding a novel response
regulator was reported, which is important for cellular resistance
against oxidative stress in S. pombe (Ohmiya et
al., 1999
). To test whether the Prr1 response regulator is
involved in oxidative stress signaling to Spc1,
H2O2-induced activation of
Spc1 in prr1 null mutant (
prr1) cells was
examined. The
prr1 mutation showed no apparent defect in
Spc1 activation before or after oxidative stress in either the
mcs4+ (Figure
5, top) or the
mcs4 (Figure
5, bottom) background, suggesting that Prr1 is not important for
oxidative stress signaling to Spc1.
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Mpr1 Is Not Essential for Cellular Resistance against Oxidative Stress
Because spc1 mutants are supersensitive to
H2O2 (Degols et
al., 1996
; Toone et al., 1998
), we also examined the
H2O2 sensitivity of the
mpr1 mutant, which is defective in Spc1 activation upon oxidative stress. Wild-type,
spc1, and
mpr1
cells were incubated for 1 h with 1 and 2 mM
H2O2 in the growth medium,
and the survival of each strain was evaluated in terms of their
colony-forming ability after plating. As shown in Figure
6A,
mpr1 cells showed H2O2 resistance similar to
that of wild-type cells, whereas significantly higher loss of viability
was observed with
spc1 cells under the same conditions.
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In response to oxidative stress, Spc1 activation brings about
induced expression of the ctt1+ gene
encoding cytosolic catalase (Wilkinson et al., 1996
; Degols and Russell, 1997
), which decomposes
H2O2 to protect cells from oxidative damage (Nakagawa et al., 1995
). Northern blot
experiments demonstrated that, in
mpr1 cells,
ctt1+ expression was higher than in
wild-type cells in the absence of stress, and
ctt1+ was further induced upon exposure to
H2O2 (Figure 6B). On the other hand, ctt1+ mRNA was hardly detected
in
spc1 cells before or after oxidative stress. Although
Mpr1 plays an important role in the activation of Spc1 in response to
oxidative stress, these data indicate that Mpr1 is not essential for
the induction of ctt1+ expression and other
cellular responses to protect cells from oxidative stress.
Oxidative Stress Can Induce ctt1+ Expression Independently of Spc1 Activation
The results described above indicate that in
mpr1
cells, expression of ctt1+ is strongly
induced in the absence of a significant increase in cellular Spc1
activity. However,
spc1 mutants are totally defective in
ctt1+ expression upon oxidative stress
(Degols and Russell, 1997
) (Figure 6B), suggesting that Spc1 activity
is essential for induction of ctt1+
expression. One hypothesis to explain both of these observations is
that ctt1+ expression has an absolute
requirement for a certain level of Spc1 activity, but oxidative stress
stimuli can trigger induction of ctt1+ in
the absence of any increase in Spc1 activity. To test this hypothesis,
we examined ctt1+ expression in the
wis1DD mutant strain, which expresses a mutant form of the
Wis1 MEK that is constitutively active because of aspartic acid
substitutions at the MEKK phosphorylation sites (Shiozaki et
al., 1998
; Nguyen and Shiozaki, 1999
). In contrast to wild-type
cells, the activation level of Spc1 in wis1DD cells was not
affected by osmostress and oxidative stress (Figure
7A). As shown in Figure 7B,
ctt1+ expression was strongly induced by
oxidative stress in wis1DD cells, which suggests that
induction of ctt1+ upon oxidative stress
does not require an increase in Spc1 activity. In contrast,
ctt1+ induction by high-osmolarity stress
appeared to be mediated by Spc1 activation (Figure 7C). The level of
ctt1+ mRNA was constant both before and
after osmostress in wis1DD cells, whereas strong induction
of ctt1+ was observed in wild-type cells.
As in the
spc1 cells, ctt1+
expression was not detectable in the
wis1 cells.
Thus, Spc1 activity is necessary for
ctt1+ expression, but oxidative stress can
induce ctt1+ expression independently of
stress-induced activation of Spc1. In contrast, induction of
ctt1+ upon osmostress is dependent on an
increase in Spc1 activity.
|
Both the Atf1 and Pap1 Transcription Factors Regulate ctt1+ Expression in Response to Oxidative Stress
Two transcription factors, Atf1 and Pap1, are implicated in
expression of the ctt1+ gene (Wilkinson
et al., 1996
; Degols and Russell, 1997
; Toone et
al., 1998
). Toone et al. (1998)
recently proposed that
ctt1+ expression in response to high
osmolarity is induced by the Spc1-Atf1 pathway, but oxidative
stress-induced expression of ctt1+ is
wholly dependent on the Spc1-Pap1 pathway. In contrast to this model,
we found that Atf1 is also important in induced expression of
ctt1+ after oxidative stress. Expression of
ctt1+ in
atf1,
pap1, and
atf1
pap1 mutants was examined
by Northern hybridization (Figure 8A).
Compared with wild-type cells, expression of
ctt1+ upon
H2O2 treatments was
dramatically reduced in both
atf1 and
pap1
strains, and ctt1+ mRNA was undetectable in
atf1
pap1 double mutant cells. These data clearly
indicate that both Atf1 and Pap1 are required for the full expression
of ctt1+ upon oxidative stress. In
addition, the defective phenotypes of
atf1 and
pap1 in ctt1+ expression
appear to be additive, suggesting that Atf1 and Pap1 can independently
regulate transcription of ctt1+.
|
Consistent with these observations, we found that
atf1
mutant cells are more sensitive to
H2O2 than wild-type cells
(Figure 8B), although it was previously reported that
atf1 cells did not show increased sensitivity to
oxidative stress (Toone et al., 1998
). Only a slight
difference was observed between wild-type cells and
atf1
cells when treated with 1 mM
H2O2; however, only 1% of
atf1 cells survived exposure to 2 mM
H2O2, compared with 60%
survival of the same treatment with the wild-type strain. In addition,
the
atf1
pap1 double mutant showed more severe sensitivity to H2O2 than
the
atf1 single mutant (Figure 8B), indicating that both
Atf1 and Pap1 are involved in the cellular response to oxidative
stress. With a higher concentration of
H2O2, the
pap1 single mutant also showed increased sensitivity;
when exposed to 4 mM H2O2,
the viability of
pap1 and
atf1 cells
decreased to 1 and 0.01% of that of wild-type cells, respectively.
Spc1-independent Induction of ctt1+ upon Oxidative Stress Is Mediated by Pap1
Having established that both Atf1 and Pap1 are involved in the
expression of ctt1+ upon oxidative stress,
we next examined which factor, Atf1 or Pap1, is responsible for
oxidative stress-induced ctt1+ expression
in the presence of constitutive Spc1 activity (Figure 7). Even in the
absence of stress, activation of Spc1 by Wis1 overexpression induces
the expression of various stress-response genes that are regulated by
the Spc1 pathway (Degols et al., 1996
). We found that
ctt1+ expression was also induced by Wis1
overexpression in wild-type and
pap1 cells but not in
atf1 cells (our unpublished results), which indicates
that activated Spc1 induces ctt1+
expression through Atf1 rather than Pap1. Therefore, we tested whether
Pap1 is involved in the Spc1-independent induction of ctt1+ in wis1DD cells upon
oxidative stress. As shown in Figure 9A, the
pap1 mutation largely impaired the induction of
ctt1+ after oxidative stress in
wis1DD cells, and the level of
ctt1+ mRNA in the wis1DD
pap1
strain showed little change before and after
H2O2 treatments. Thus, Pap1
has an essential role in inducing ctt1+
expression upon oxidative stress when cells have constitutive Spc1
activity. In other words, in the
pap1 background,
induction of ctt1+ expression is mediated
by oxidative stress-induced activation of Spc1, presumably through
Atf1.
|
A simple model to explain the data described above is that two
independent inputs regulate ctt1+
expression in response to oxidative stress. One input is the Spc1-Atf1
pathway in which stress-activated Spc1 induces
ctt1+ transcription through Atf1. The other
input is mediated by the Pap1 transcription factor that can induce
ctt1+ expression upon oxidative stress
independently of Spc1 activation. A prediction from this model is that
in the
atf1 mutant, induction of
ctt1+ by oxidative stress is dependent on
Pap1 but not Spc1. As expected, the experiments shown in Figure 9B
demonstrated that after oxidative stress, the pattern of
ctt1+ expression in
atf1
spc1 double mutant cells was indistinguishable from that in
atf1 cells, whereas ctt1+
mRNA was not detectable in
atf1
pap1 cells.
Collectively, these results strongly suggest that Pap1 can regulate
ctt1+ transcription in response to
oxidative stress independently of the Spc1 MAPK.
| |
DISCUSSION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Reactive oxygen species (ROS) generated as by-products of aerobic
metabolism or by environmental chemicals cause damage to DNA, proteins,
and cellular structures. Yeast has been used as a model system to study
cellular oxidative stress responses in eukaryotes, and a set of genes
required for detoxification of ROS has been identified
(Moradas-Ferreira et al., 1996
). However, little is known
about the mechanism whereby eukaryotic cells detect ROS and modulate
expression of the antioxidant defense genes. The data presented in this
paper strongly suggest that, in fission yeast, proteins homologous to
members of two-component systems are involved in oxidative stress
signaling to a MAPK cascade that regulates transcription of
stress-response genes.
Mpr1 is most homologous to the budding yeast Ypd1 protein, which
transfers a phosphoryl group from the receiver domain of Sln1 to the
Ssk1 response regulator in osmostress signaling to the Hog1 MAPK
cascade. Phosphorylation of Ypd1-His64 is an intermediate in the
Sln1-Ypd1-Ssk1 phosphorelay, and substitution of His-64 with glutamine
abolishes the Ypd1 function (Posas et al., 1996
). We found
that the sequence encompassing His-64 of Ypd1 is completely conserved
in Mpr1 and that the mutant Mpr1 protein with glutamine substitution of
the putative phosphorylation site, His-221, is not functional.
Furthermore, physical interaction between Mpr1 and the Mcs4 response
regulator was observed. These data suggest that, like Ypd1, Mpr1 also
functions as a response regulator phosphotransferase.
Considering the highly conserved architecture of the Mpr1-Mcs4 pathway
and the budding yeast Ypd1-Ssk1 pathway, it is surprising that Mpr1 and
Mcs4 are involved in transmitting oxidative stress rather than
osmostress signals to a SAPK cascade. Under low-osmolarity conditions,
phosphotransfer from Ypd1 to the Ssk1 response regulator inhibits Ssk1
from activating the Ssk2 MEKK in budding yeast, and the ypd1
null mutation causes hyperactivation of Hog1 (Posas et al.,
1996
).
mpr1 cells have a higher basal level of Spc1
activity, which is suppressed in the
mcs4
mpr1 double
mutant, implying that, like Ypd1, Mpr1 also suppresses the Mcs4
response regulator from activating the Spc1 MAPK cascade under normal
growth conditions. However, when cells are exposed to oxidative stress,
the Mpr1 function is required for induction of Spc1 activation; Spc1
activation in response to oxidative stress is significantly impaired in
mpr1 mutants. Thus, under oxidative stress conditions, Mpr1
may positively regulate Mcs4 to activate the downstream MEKKs.
Importantly, significant activation of Spc1 was observed upon oxidative
stress even in the
mcs4 and
mcs4
mpr1
mutants, indicating that oxidative stress stimuli can be transmitted to
the Spc1 cascade independently of the Mpr1-Mcs4 pathway (Figure
10). Therefore, it is also possible that the Mpr1 function may be required for coordinated action of the
two pathways transmitting oxidative stress signals to the MEKKs. In
mpr1 mutants, deregulated Mcs4 might hamper the other pathway in activation of the MEKKs.
|
It is very likely that Mpr1-Mcs4 forms part of a multistep phosphorelay
similar to the Sln1-Ypd1-Ssk1 in budding yeast. The S. pombe
genome-sequencing project has identified two ORFs (SPAC27E2.09 and
SPCC74.06) encoding "sensor kinases" similar to Sln1. Both of these
proteins have C-terminal receiver domains as well as histidine kinase
domains and, therefore, can form His-Asp-His-Asp phosphorelays with
Mpr1 and Mcs4. Interestingly, the sensor kinase encoded by SPCC74.06 is
a transmembrane protein with a PAS domain that is common among the
sensor proteins in bacterial two-component systems responsive to redox
or related stimuli (reviewed by Zhulin et al., 1997
).
Therefore, SPCC74.06 may be a good candidate as an oxidative stress sensor.
Interestingly, oxidative stress induces association between Mpr1 and
the Mcs4 response regulator. We are not aware of any known example of
stimuli-induced complex formation between phosphotransferase and
response regulator proteins in two-component systems. The His-221
Gln
mutation in Mpr1 abolishes interaction with Mcs4, implying that
phosphorylation of Mpr1 modulates interaction with Mcs4. It is
conceivable that signaling to the Spc1 MAPK cascade may involve not
only phosphotransfer from Mpr1 to Mcs4 but also complex formation
between these proteins, which is currently under investigation.
When
mpr1 cells are exposed to oxidative stress, only a
minor increase of Spc1 activity is detectable; however, the catalase gene ctt1+ is strongly induced and
mpr1 cells show
H2O2 resistance comparable to that of wild-type cells. This is an unexpected result, because ctt1+ expression is known to be under the
regulation of the Spc1 pathway; ctt1+
expression is undetectable in
spc1 and
wis1
cells, and these mutants are hypersensitive to oxidative stress (Degols
et al., 1996
; Wilkinson et al., 1996
; Degols and
Russell, 1997
). We found that oxidative stress, but not osmostress, can
induce ctt1+ expression in
wis1DD cells, which have constitutive Spc1 activity, suggesting that ctt1+ expression requires a
certain level of Spc1 activity, but oxidative stress can induce
ctt1+ independently of an increase in Spc1 activity.
Spc1 regulates a number of stress-response genes through the Atf1
transcription factor (Shiozaki and Russell, 1996
; Wilkinson et
al., 1996
), and induction of ctt1+
upon osmostress (Wilkinson et al., 1996
) and UV irradiation
(Degols and Russell, 1997
) is impaired in
atf1 mutants.
Recently, Toone et al. (1998)
reported that the
pap1 mutant, but not the
atf1 mutant, is
defective in H2O2-induced
expression of ctt1+ and is sensitive to
oxidative stress, phenotypes similar to those of
spc1
mutants. These observations led to the model that Spc1 regulates Pap1
under oxidative stress but regulates Atf1 in response to other forms of
stress (Toone et al., 1998
; reviewed by Wilkinson and
Millar, 1998
). However, this model raises perplexing questions. How
does activated Spc1 choose either Atf1 or Pap1, depending on the stress
that activates Spc1? Why is Spc1 unable to regulate Atf1 only when
activated by oxidative stress? The data presented in this paper draw a
rather different picture. First, oxidative stress-induced expression
of ctt1+ is partially impaired in both
atf1 and
pap1, and
ctt1+ mRNA is undetectable in the
atf1
pap1 double mutant, indicating that both Atf1 and
Pap1 are involved in ctt1+ expression upon
oxidative stress. Consistently,
atf1 cells lose viability
rapidly in liquid medium with
H2O2, although the
H2O2 sensitivity of
atf1 cells was not apparent when grown on agar medium
containing H2O2 in the
previous study (Toone et al., 1998
). Second, induced
ctt1+ expression upon oxidative stress is
dependent on Pap1 in the wis1DD strain, which has
constitutive Spc1 activity, suggesting that Pap1 can mediate
ctt1+ expression independently of
stress-induced activation of Spc1. Third, in
atf1 cells,
ctt1+ induction in response to oxidative
stress is dependent on Pap1 but not Spc1. It was previously reported
that in
spc1 cells, unphosphorylated Atf1 represses
ctt1+ expression both before and after
stress (Degols and Russell, 1997
). However, in the absence of Atf1,
induction of ctt1+ by oxidative stress is
detectable and appears to be mediated by Pap1 independently of Spc1. A
simple model to explain these data is that
ctt1+ expression upon oxidative stress is
regulated by two independent pathways, the Spc1-Atf1 pathway and Pap1
(Figure 10). Regardless of the form of stress, activated Spc1
phosphorylates Atf1 to induce ctt1+
expression. Under oxidative stress conditions, Pap1 can also induce
ctt1+ expression independently of Spc1.
Pap1 has a NES sequence sensitive to oxidative stress; the Pap1 NES
contains cysteine residues essential for its function, and the thiol
group of these residues might serve as a redox sensor (Kudo
et al., 1999
). However, our data do not exclude the
possibility that Pap1 is also subjected to auxiliary regulation by
oxidative stress-activated Spc1. It should be noted that
ctt1+ is inducible by oxidative stress in
the
atf1
spc1 double mutant but not in the
spc1 single mutant, suggesting that Pap1 cannot induce
ctt1+ under transcriptional repression by
unphosphorylated Atf1.
In summary, the data presented here suggest that fission yeast has at
least three pathways sensing oxidative stress stimuli to induce the
catalase gene ctt1+ (Figure 10). In
addition to the phosphorelay system with Mpr1-Mcs4, an Mcs4-independent
pathway transmits oxidative stress signals to the Spc1 MAPK cascade,
which regulates ctt1+ through Atf1.
Oxidative stress can also induce ctt1+
through the Pap1 transcription factor independently of the Spc1 pathway. Studies in budding yeast also suggest that cellular defense against oxidative stress is complex and may involve multiple signaling pathways (Moradas-Ferreira et al., 1996
). It is possible
that different sensory mechanisms with partly overlapping specificities contribute to the detection of various ROS and prooxidants to minimize
damage to the cell.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
We thank Mitsue Shiozaki for technical assistance, Paul Russell and Valley Stewart for helpful discussion, and Jonathan Millar and Takashi Toda for strains. A.N.N. was supported by the National Institutes of Health Molecular and Cellular Biology Training Program at the University of California-Davis (T32 GM07377). This research was supported by National Institutes of Health grant GM59788 and American Cancer Society grant IRG-95-125-04 awarded to K.S.
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FOOTNOTES |
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* Corresponding author. E-mail address: kshiozaki{at}ucdavis.edu.
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REFERENCES |
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