|
|
|
|
Vol. 12, Issue 5, 1481-1498, May 2001

§#
¶#

and
*Light Microscopy Group and
Cell Biology and
Biophysics Programme, European Molecular Biology Laboratory, D-69117
Heidelberg, Germany;
Max Planck Institute for Molecular
Cell Biology and Genetics, D-01307 Dresden, Germany
| |
ABSTRACT |
|---|
|
|
|---|
To quantitatively investigate the trafficking of the
transmembrane lectin VIP36 and its relation to cargo-containing
transport carriers (TCs), we analyzed a C-terminal fluorescent-protein
(FP) fusion, VIP36-SP-FP. When expressed at moderate levels,
VIP36-SP-FP localized to the endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi apparatus,
and intermediate transport structures, and colocalized with
epitope-tagged VIP36. Temperature shift and pharmacological experiments
indicated VIP36-SP-FP recycled in the early secretory pathway,
exhibiting trafficking representative of a class of transmembrane cargo
receptors, including the closely related lectin ERGIC53. VIP36-SP-FP
trafficking structures comprised tubules and globular elements, which
translocated in a saltatory manner. Simultaneous visualization of
anterograde secretory cargo and VIP36-SP-FP indicated that the globular
structures were pre-Golgi carriers, and that VIP36-SP-FP segregated
from cargo within the Golgi and was not included in post-Golgi TCs. Organelle-specific bleach experiments directly measured the exchange of
VIP36-SP-FP between the Golgi and endoplasmic reticulum (ER). Fitting a
two-compartment model to the recovery data predicted first order rate
constants of 1.22 ± 0.44%/min for ER
Golgi, and 7.68 ± 1.94%/min for Golgi
ER transport, revealing a half-time of
113 ± 70 min for leaving the ER and 1.67 ± 0.45 min for
leaving the Golgi, and accounting for the measured steady-state
distribution of VIP36-SP-FP (13% Golgi/87% ER). Perturbing transport
with AlF4
treatment altered VIP36-SP-GFP
distribution and changed the rate constants. The parameters of the
model suggest that relatively small differences in the first order rate
constants, perhaps manifested in subtle differences in the tendency to
enter distinct TCs, result in large differences in the steady-state
localization of secretory components.
| |
INTRODUCTION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
The integral membrane lectin VIP36 belongs to a family
of lectins, conserved from yeast to mammals, trafficking in the
secretory pathway (Fiedler and Simons, 1994
). The closely related
lectin ERGIC-53 acts as a cargo receptor, facilitating endoplasmic
reticulum (ER) to Golgi transport of certain glycoproteins (Nichols
et al., 1998
; Vollenweider et al., 1998
;
Appenzeller et al., 1999
), but a function for VIP36 in
intracellular transport is yet to be demonstrated. VIP36 was originally
identified as a component of apical post-Golgi vesicles in virally
infected, polarized Madin-Darby canine kidney cells
(Wandinger-Ness et al., 1990
; Fiedler et al.,
1994
). Localization of overexpressed VIP36 to the plasma membrane,
endosomes, and Golgi structures, together with evidence for lectin
activity (Fiedler and Simons, 1996
; Hara-Kuge et al., 1999
)
lead to the hypothesis that it functioned to segregate apical cargo
into distinct vesicles within the trans-Golgi network by
binding specific N-glycans (Fiedler and Simons, 1995
). This
hypothesis was strengthened by the finding that N-glycans
can act as apical sorting signals for some proteins (Scheiffele
et al., 1995
; Gut et al., 1998
). However, recent
work provides substantial evidence that endogenous VIP36 is present in
the early secretory pathway in a variety of cell types, including Madin-Darby canine kidney cells (Füllekrug et al.,
1999a
), suggesting that it was a contaminant in the
trans-Golgi network-derived vesicle preparations, and
implying that it functions in early secretory events. The different
findings for VIP36 localization (Fiedler et al., 1994
;
Füllekrug et al., 1999a
), together with its lectin activity (Fiedler and Simons, 1996
; Hara-Kuge et al., 1999
),
could be explained by positing that VIP36 acts as a trafficking
chaperone or cargo receptor, which associates with glycosylated
secretory cargo early in the secretory pathway, and then accompanies it to a later site, where post-Golgi transport carriers (TCs) are formed,
leading to the speculation that VIP36 may be transiently redistributed
by high levels of secretory cargo. Because the localization of VIP36
determines its site of function, and it is related to a demonstrated
cargo receptor (Nichols et al., 1998
; Vollenweider et
al., 1998
; Appenzeller et al., 1999
), it is critical to
determine precisely where along the secretory pathway VIP36 associates
with cargo-containing transport structures, and at what point cargo and
VIP36 separate.
Generally, transmembrane cargo receptors (TCRs) are maintained in the
secretory pathway by rapid recycling. TCRs in the early secretory
pathway of mammalian cells include ERGIC-53 (Schweizer et
al., 1990
; Lahtinen et al., 1992
), the KDEL-receptor
(KDELR; Lewis et al., 1990
; Semenza et al., 1990
;
Pelham, 1991
), and the p24 family of proteins (Stamnes et
al., 1995
; Sohn et al., 1996
; Nickel et al.,
1997
; Füllekrug et al., 1999b
; Gommel et
al., 1999
). Localization studies in fixed cells indicates
endogenous VIP36 should also be included in this class, but recycling
of VIP36 has not been directly demonstrated. Cargo receptors organize certain cargo proteins into distinct anterograde or retrograde transport carriers, and either facilitate (ERGIC-53 and p24/Emp24p; Nichols et al., 1998
; Vollenweider et al., 1998
;
Appenzeller et al., 1999
; Muniz et al., 2000
) or
initiate (KDELR; Aoe et al., 1997
, 1998
) transport when
loaded with cargo. Because they only accompany cargo in one direction,
either anterograde or retrograde, the rapid recycling of TCRs is
critical for their function (Vollenweider et al., 1998
).
Furthermore, their characteristic trafficking has been used to dissect
the signals and molecular interactions that drive transport (Hsu
et al., 1992
; Lewis and Pelham, 1992
; Fiedler et
al., 1996
; Campbell and Schekman, 1997
; Aoe et al.,
1997
; Aoe et al., 1998
; Dominguez et al., 1998
;
Majoul et al., 1998
; Bremser et al., 1999
;
Jackson et al., 1999
) and generate restricted localization (Schindler et al., 1993
; Townsley et al., 1993
;
Itin et al., 1995
; Fiedler and Rothman, 1997
; Kappeler
et al., 1997
) along the secretory pathway. Despite the
importance of trafficking for the function of this class of proteins,
their dynamics has been examined thoroughly in only one case (Blum
et al., 1999
), and the kinetic rates of their recycling have
not been quantitated in live cells.
To examine the trafficking of VIP36, and its possibly transient
association with cargo-containing TCs along the secretory pathway, we
generated fusions of VIP36 and different colors of fluorescent protein
(FP), allowing us to monitor VIP36 trafficking simultaneously with
fluorescent secretory cargo and fluorescent recycling TCRs in live
cells. Our results indicate quantitatively that VIP36 traffics with
cargo only early in the secretory pathway, separating at the level of
the Golgi. At moderate expression levels, the dynamics of VIP36 are
consistent with recycling between the Golgi and ER, and we show
recycling directly using organelle-specific photobleaching experiments,
thus indicating that VIP36 traffics similarly to other TCRs.
Quantitation of photobleaching recovery rates allowed us to measure
directly the separate rates for Golgi
ER and ER
Golgi transport
steps. A kinetic model, shown to be successful in describing
intercompartmental transport events within the secretory pathway
(Hirschberg et al., 1998
; Zaal et al., 1999
),
allowed us to derive kinetic transport parameters from for separate
VIP36 ER
Golgi and Golgi
ER transport steps. Our results
provide the first direct measurements of the transport of one of the
rapidly recycling components of the early secretory pathway. Altering
the parameters of the model, supported by comparison with previously
published kinetic constants for secretory pathway components
(Hirschberg et al., 1998
; Zaal et al., 1999
), and
by experiments in which transport was pharmacologically perturbed to
change the kinetic parameters, leads to the hypothesis that apparently
large differences in steady-state intracellular distribution may be
generated by relatively subtle differences in the rate-limiting steps
for transport of resident proteins.
| |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
DNA Constructs
Cyan, green, and yellow fluorescent proteins are spectral
variants based on the 10C (yellow), S65T (green), and W7 (cyan) mutants
(Heim et al., 1994
, 1995
; Heim and Tsien, 1996
), with humanized codon usage and mutations to increase fluorescence at 37°C
(Cormack et al., 1996
; Ormo et al., 1996
;
Siemering et al., 1996
; Yang et al., 1996
). The
parent vectors for all constructs were pEGFP-N1 (GenBank accession
number U55762; Clontech Laboratories, Palo Alto, CA). Cyan and yellow
versions of these vectors were generated as described (White et
al., 1999
).
VIP36-SP-GFP comprises canine VIP36 (GenBank accession X76392) fused to
a 16 amino acid spacer followed by green fluorescent protein (GFP). A
fragment containing the VIP36 cDNA as an
EcoRI-BamHI fragment was generated by polymerase
chain reaction (PCR) with the following oligos: 5' CGC GAA TTC ACC GCC
ATG GCG GCG GAA GGC TGG 3' (forward primer) and 5' TCC GGA TCC CCG TAG
AAA CGC TTG TTC CG 3'. This fragment was inserted into the vector
backbone of pKDELR-SP-GFP (below) cut with
EcoRI-BamHI, which removes the insert encoding
KDELR. Cyan and yellow versions were constructed by swapping the FP
coding regions from pEYFP-N1 and pECFP-N1 as AgeI-BsrGI fragments
(White et al., 1999
).
KDELR-SP-GFP comprises human KDEL-receptor (Erd2.1) fused to a 16 amino
acid spacer followed by GFP. PCR was used to generate a fragment that
contained the erd2.1 sequence (GenBank accession X55885)
with an EcoRI site and Kozak consensus at the 5' end, and a
sequence replacing the stop codon of KDELR with a BamHI site, followed by a sequence encoding the spacer (K)DLPAEQKLISEEDL(D) (replacing the erd2.1 stop codon) and by a BglII
site at the 3' end. The primers used were 5' TTC CGA ATT CAC CGC CAT
GAA TCT CTT CCG ATT CCT GGG AGA C 3' (forward primer) and 5' GAT CTA
GAT CTA GGT CTT CTT CGG AGA TGA GTT TCT GTT CGG CGG GGA GTG GAT CCG CTG
CCG GCA AAC TCA A 3'. The resulting fragment was inserted into
EcoRI-BamHI cut pEGFP-N1 to yield pKDELR-SP-GFP.
Cyan and yellow versions were constructed by swapping the FP coding
regions from pEYFP-N1 and pECFP-N1 as AgeI-BsrGI fragments (White
et al., 1999
).
Construction of the plasmids encoding VSVG3-GFP and T2-GFP have been
described (Storrie et al., 1998
; Toomre et al.,
1999
). Yellow and cyan derivatives of these were constructed by
subcloning EcoRI-BamHI inserts into pEYFP-N1 and
pECFP-N1, to generate pVSVG3-YFP, pVSVG3-CFP, pT2-YFP, and pT2-CFP.
VSVG3-SP-GFP is a derivative of VSVG3-GFP containing a spacer sequence
between the C terminus of the VSVG ts045 protein and the N terminus of
GFP (Keller et al., 2000
). Complementary oligos 5' G GAT CTC
CCC GCC GAA CAG AAA CGC ATC TCC GAA GAA GAC CTG 3' (top) and 5' G ATC
CAG GTC TTC TTC GGA GAT GAG TTT CTG TTC GGC GGG GA 3' (bottom) were
designed encoding the amino acids (K)DLPAEQKLISEEDL(D) with
BamHI sticky ends. The top and bottom oligos were annealed by incubating 1.5 nmol of each 5 min at 95°C and cooling slowly to
room temperature, and then phosphorylated and ligated into BamHI-cut pVSVG3-GFP. The inserted oligo destroys the
BamHI site nearest to the VSVG coding region, leaving a
unique BamHI site. Orientation was verified by PCR. The
spacer is enough to change the distribution of anterograde cargo from
predominantly apical (VSVG3-FP) to predominantly basolateral
(VSVG3-SP-FP; Keller et al., 2000
). Cyan and yellow versions
were constructed by swapping the FP coding regions as AgeI-BsrGI fragments.
Tissue Culture, Transfections, and Immunofluorescence
COS cells (ATCC no. CRL-1650) and HeLa cells (ATCC no. CCL 185)
were cultured in DMEM supplemented with 5% fetal calf serum, 2 mM
L-glutamine, penicillin (100 U/ml), and streptomycin (100 µg/ml). PtK2 cells (ATCC no. CCL 56) and Vero
cells (ATCC no. CCL-81.1) were cultured in minimum essential medium
(MEM) supplemented with 5% fetal calf serum, 2 mM
L-glutamine, penicillin (100 U/ml), streptomycin (100 µg/ml), and 1× nonessential amino acids (Life Technologies,
Eggestein, Germany). All transfections used a calcium phosphate
protocol as described (Pääbo et al., 1986
).
For imaging lysosomal structures, Lysotracker (Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR) was added at 50 nM in MEM to PtK2 cells transiently transfected with VIP36-SP-GFP. Cells were incubated 20 min in the presence of the dye, transferred to fresh, CO2-equilibrated MEM without phenol red, and imaged at 37°C.
For live cell double-labeling experiments with fluorescent protein spectral variants, cells were transiently cotransfected with CFP and YFP-fusion protein expression constructs mixed in equal amounts by weight before transfection. Cotransfected cells expressing approximately equal levels of CFP and YFP-fusion proteins (based on relative fluorescent intensity) were imaged 18 to 36 h after removal of the transfection precipitate.
For immunofluorescence cells were fixed in 3.0% paraformaldehyde in
phosphate-buffered saline (PBS). After quenching aldehyde groups with
10 mM NH4Cl in PBS, cells were permeabilized with 0.1% saponin as described (Füllekrug et al., 1999a
).
The 9E10 monoclonal antibodies against the myc epitope were used
undiluted as in Füllekrug et al., (1999a)
, described
in Evan et al., (1985)
. Secondary antibody was Cy3-coupled
donkey anti-mouse (Dianova, Hamburg, Germany) diluted 1:1000.
Coverslips were mounted in Moviol/glycerol (Merck, Darmstadt, Germany).
To immobilize moving TCs for high-resolution imaging, cells coexpressing CFP and YFP fusions were fixed in cold methanol 2 min, washed three times in PBS, and then imaged unmounted in PBS.
Live Cell Imaging, Temperature Shifts, and Drug Treatments
Cells were imaged live on the compact confocal camera (CCC)
using the equipment and conditions described previously (Storrie et al., 1998
; White and Stelzer, 1999
). For experiments with
VSVG ts045-derived cargo, cells on 15-mm glass coverslips were
transfected as described above for 6-12 h at 37°C in a
CO2 incubator (in the presence of calcium
phosphate-DNA precipitate), washed three times in PBS, transferred to
fresh medium, and incubated at 40°C in a CO2
incubator an additional 8 to 16 h. Cargo was pulsed into the
secretory pathway by transferring the coverslip to medium preequilibrated at 32°C, and then flipping the coverslip onto a slide
chamber and transferring to the microscope as quickly as possible
(generally 1-2 min). The recorded time at 32°C began as soon as the
coverslip was removed from 40°C medium. VIP36-SP-FP localization and
trafficking were not detectably affected by incubation at 40 and
32°C.
To block cargo in early secretory structures at 15°C, coverslips were transferred from 40°C to medium preequilibrated at 15°C, and then held at 15°C for 2 h, followed by live imaging or fixation in cold methanol 2 min (as above). To block VIP36-SP-FP transfected alone or with KDELR-SP-FP, cells incubated for 12-24 h at 37°C (after washing transfection precipitate) were shifted to 15°C for 2 h, and then fixed in cold methanol or imaged live.
Brefeldin A was added at 5 µg/ml for 30 min at 37°C where
indicated. Nocodazole was added at 20 µM at 37°C for various times as indicated. Cells were treated with
AlF4
by diluting fresh
aliquots of aqueous 5 mM
NH4AlSO4 and 500 mM aqueous
KF 1:100 in MEM tissue culture medium for a final concentration of 50 µm AlF4
in the presence of
excess F
. In organelle-specific bleaching
experiments, the bleaching protocol was started within 5 min of adding
AlF4
, and recovery monitored
for no more than ~70 min of treatment.
Image Processing and Quantitation of VIP36-SP-FP Trafficking Elements
All image processing was performed on a Macintosh computer by using the public domain NIH Image program version 1.62 (developed at the U.S. National Institutes of Health and available on the Internet at http://rsb.info.nih.gov/nih-image/). Sequential 8-bit images from the CCC were combined into stacks and animated to produce greyscale movies after subtracting the background signal from a nonfluorescent area of the image (the first 15-18 intensity values were background at the detector settings routinely used). Movies were displayed with nonlinear lookup tables (gamma-corrected), adjusted as necessary for variations between display monitors and ambient light conditions. Movies are sometimes displayed as two- or three-frame running averages (mean pixel value); we consider this valid when the movies are played at a rate at which the eye cannot distinguish single frames (>15 frames/s). Running averages were always compared with unprocessed movies to avoid displaying averaging artifacts (readily distinguishable "trailing" of a moving structure). Eight-bit movies from two channels were saved in QuickTime format and overlaid to produce 16- or 24-bit color movies in Adobe Premier. All image-processing steps were performed on uncompressed data. Movies were compressed for final display by using the QuickTime video codec. NIH Image macros used for data processing are available upon request. Adobe Photoshop 5.02 and Illustrator 8.01 were used to prepare final figures.
Quantitation of VIP36-SP-GFP Trafficking Elements and Coincidence with Cargo
To quantitate trafficking elements in movies of VIP36-SP-GFP dynamics (Figure 4), 266 separate elements in 18 independent cells) were identified by eye, categorized as either a blob or a tubule, and followed frame by frame for as many frames as possible. If a blob extended into a tubular structure, it was still categorized as a blob. An edge detection filter was sometimes used to facilitate identification of discreet elements. Tracking was facilitated by an NIH Image macro, which calculated the distance and speed the element moved between frames. The average speed of an element displayed in Figure 4 was calculated from the frame-by-frame data.
VIP36-SP-FP coincidence with secretory cargo in TCs was quantitated blind as follows. First, a number of two-color movies of cells coexpressing cargo and VIP36-SP-FP were taken by one experimenter starting at various times after shift from 40°C, or after first incubating at 15°C for 2 h. The movies were presented to the scorer, who was not told which channel corresponded to which protein. TCs in the movies were identified by eye and scored for the presence of only CFP signal, only YFP signal, or both. Both CFP/YFP combinations were used, VIP36-SP-CFP with YFP-labeled cargo and VIP36-SP-YFP with CFP-labeled cargo, and movies were presented to the scorer randomly. After scoring, the CFP or YFP signal was assigned to the protein, either VIP36-SP-FP, or to cargo.
Kinetic Model
To model the transport processes of recycling between the Golgi
and ER, we assumed the simplest case of a two-compartment system with
constant fractional transfer coefficients (Jacquez, 1972
). The ER and
Golgi are assumed to be homogeneous and well mixed, reasonable
assumptions because transmembrane proteins diffuse rapidly within these
organelles (Cole et al., 1996
; Ellenberg et al.,
1997
; Sciaky et al., 1997
; Rolls et al., 1999
).
It is also assumed that the system is closed, that is, no material is added or removed from the system during the course of the experiment. To ensure this assumption was valid, cycloheximide was added to inhibit
new protein synthesis, and we monitored degradation in the absence of
new protein synthesis in separate control experiments (online data).
Because bleaching is restricted to local changes in the fluorophore
(Tsien and Waggoner, 1995
), not the overall conformation of the fusion
protein, we assume that the transport properties of bleached
VIP36-SP-FP are the same as unbleached. Transfer between the ER and
Golgi is represented by the fractional transfer coefficient
k, defined as the fraction of the material (VIP36-SP-GFP)
originating from the compartment transferred per unit time (Jacquez,
1972
).
|
(1) |
G)
and k(G
ER) represent the fraction
of VIP36-SP-FP transported between the ER and Golgi per unit time, and
may encompass a number of molecular and cellular events. Both transport
steps are modeled as first order processes. If
xER(t) and
xG(t) denote the fraction
of VIP36-SP-FP in the ER and Golgi at time t, then the rate
of change of VIP36-SP-FP in the ER is the sum of material lost from ER
Golgi transport and gained from Golgi
ER transport,
|
(2) |
G) and
k(G
ER) as
kER and
kG, respectively. Equation 2 describes
a linear first order process and is the same rate equation that, for
example, governs a first order chemical reaction. Because the system is closed, the total amount of VIP36-SP-FP in the system is fixed at all
times, thus
|
(3) |
|
(4) |
|
(5) |
|
(6) |
Golgi flux and Golgi
ER flux are
the same
|
(7) |
|
(8) |
|
(9) |
t1/2 and Exchange Times
A theoretical transport half-time,
t1/2,ER, can be defined by assuming
full recovery from a complete bleach. In the case of t1/2,ER, the bleach would remove all
Golgi fluorescence. In this case, the initial prebleach value is zero
|
(10) |
|
(11) |
|
(12) |
Organelle-Specific Bleaching Experiments and Bleach Recovery Quantitation
A volume encompassing either the Golgi or ER was defined
using the irregular region functions on the CCC. The region was set in
a plane of focus where the Golgi was clearly defined, the upper and
lower Z-limits were then set, and a Z-series was taken at 1-µm
intervals to define the volume. At least one and often three prebleach
Z-series were taken at imaging power (~10-40 µW) and pixel dwell times (10-20 µs) to allow quantitation of
prebleach steady-state distributions. The volume was then bleached by
scanning through the Z-series at 100% power and longer pixel dwell
times (up to 50 µs). Typically, six to eight sections were required to bleach the Golgi, and two to three for the ER. Illumination was
reset to the prebleach imaging intensity and recovery monitored by
imaging the volume of the cell every 10 to 20 s for 30 to 40 min.
The CCC was programmed to automatically execute the
prebleach-bleach-recovery protocol for controlled, reproducible timing.
The effectiveness of the bleaching protocol was verified and
quantitated with control experiments on fixed cells (online data). Only
cells expressing moderate levels of VIP36-SP-FP that had a compact,
well-defined Golgi morphology were used in organelle bleaching
experiments. Bleach experiments were carried out in the presence of 100 µg/ml cycloheximide to ensure that no fluorescence was preferentially gained by the ER compartment during the experiment due to new protein
synthesis.
|
Series of Z sections were quantitated with NIH Image by defining Golgi and ER regions in a single section (bounded by the bleach region), adding all pixel intensities within the regions, and subtracting background fluorescence (the total intensity from a region of equal area outside of the cell). The background-subtracted values for all sections were added to yield the total fluorescence intensities for the ER, Golgi, and cell volumes. The Golgi and ER intensities were normalized to total cell fluorescence to give a partial organelle fraction (xER or xG). Expressing Golgi and ER values as partial organelle fractions eliminates possible effects due to bleaching caused by imaging over long recovery periods, and effects due to slight changes in focus or variability in imaging from stack to stack (due, for example, to slight fluctuations in laser power caused by temperature changes in the room). Background subtraction is essential when expressing Golgi and ER content as partial fractions. The partial organelle fractions from the prebleach stacks gave the steady-state ER-Golgi distribution of VIP36-SP-FP (Table 1).
Partial organelle fractions were plotted against time of recovery
(Figure 7, right) in Kaleidagraph 3.0.5. Equation 9 or the equivalent
equation for Golgi recovery was fit to the recovery data. Considering
an ER bleach as an example, the model was simultaneously fit for the
initial prebleach value, xER(0), the
partial fraction of the ER (source compartment),
XER, the first order ER
Golgi rate
constant, kG, and time, t,
by using reasonable experimental values as initial parameters for an
iterative, least-squares fit. Regression coefficients (r)
for the fits were typically >0.9.
| |
RESULTS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
VIP36-SP-FP Localization and Behavior in the Early Secretory Pathway
To visualize the intracellular trafficking and dynamics of VIP36,
we fused an FP (green fluorescent protein or its cyan or yellow
variants, CFP and YFP) to the C terminus of VIP36 (Figure 1A). Because VIP36 contains putative
trafficking signals in its cytosolic tail (see DISCUSSION), we included
a 15 amino acid spacer (SP) between VIP36 and the FP to relieve
possible steric constraints, yielding VIP36-SP-FP (Figure 1A). When
transiently expressed at moderate levels (judging by relative
fluorescence intensity) in COS, PtK2, HeLa, and
Vero cells, VIP36-SP-FP localized to Golgi and ER structures and small
punctate structures in the cell periphery associated with the ER.
Figure 1B shows a typical distribution in a COS cell. At high
expression levels, we also observed VIP36-SP-FP at the plasma membrane
(our unpublished results), consistent with previous results (Fiedler
et al., 1994
). Coexpression of VIP36-YFP with the
fluorescent Golgi protein T2-CFP (Storrie et al., 1998
) (online data) and secretory cargo (see Figure 5) indicates that the
compact structures next to the nucleus are Golgi membranes. VIP36-SP-FP
failed to show colocalization with the lysosomal dye Lysotracker in
live cells, indicating the fusion protein was not transported to this
compartment for degradation (our unpublished results). Thus, at
moderate expression levels VIP36-SP-FP localizes to structures early in
the secretory pathway.
|
To rule out that the SP-FP sequences altered the localization and
trafficking of VIP36, we compared VIP36-SP-GFP and VIP36 tagged at its
N terminus with the myc epitope (Fiedler et al., 1994
).
Because VIP36-SP-FP contains the full VIP36 sequence, antibodies against native VIP36 may recognize VIP36-SP-FP, precluding unambiguous, separate detection. Myc-tagged VIP36 allowed us to reliably detect each
protein separately. The small myc epitope does not observably alter the
trafficking behavior or localization of VIP36 by immunofluorescence (our unpublished results; Füllekrug et al., 1999a
). In
cells that express both proteins at moderate levels, VIP36-SP-GFP
colocalized with myc-VIP36 (Figure 1C). The degree of colocalization
observed between VIP36-SP-GFP and myc-VIP36 is comparable to the
colocalization of two proteins differing only in the color of their FP
tag, under identical imaging conditions (VIP36-SP-CFP and VIP36-SP-YFP;
online data). Colocalization of VIP36-SP-GFP and myc-VIP36 does not
appear to depend on the coexpression of the proteins, because their
distribution is not detectably altered compared with singly transfected
cells (for example, compare Figure 1, B and C). Thus, VIP36-SP-FP
localized identically to myc-VIP36 in the early secretory pathway,
indicating that the addition of the SP-FP sequences did not alter the
localization of VIP36.
Endogenous VIP36 exhibits characteristic behavior of TCRs rapidly
recycling between the ER and Golgi: colocalization with other cycling
proteins, and accumulation in punctate peripheral structures after
incubation at 15°C and after treatment with the drug brefeldin A
(BFA; Füllekrug et al., 1999a
). We tested whether VIP36-SP-FP possesses these same properties. The KDELR recycles between
the Golgi and ER to retrieve ER resident proteins that have leaked to
the Golgi (Lewis et al., 1990
; Semenza et al., 1990
), and thus serves as a well-characterized marker of ER
Golgi
recycling. VIP36-SP-FP colocalizes with an FP fusion to the
KDEL-receptor, KDELR-SP-FP (White et al., 1999
; White and Stelzer, 1999
) in live and fixed cells (Figure
2A; online data), including small
punctate structures in the periphery that are closely associated with
the ER (Figure 2A, insets). The observed colocalization is comparable
to the colocalization of coexpressed VIP36-SP-CFP and VIP36-SP-YFP
(online data). Proteins that rapidly recycle between the ER and early
Golgi, such as KDELR and ERGIC-53 (Hauri et al., 2000
; Itin
et al., 1995
; Tang et al., 1995
), redistribute to
punctate structures in the cell periphery upon incubation at 15°C.
After 2 h at 15°C, VIP36-SP-FP accumulates in such punctate structures in the cell periphery (Figure 2B) together with KDELR-SP-FP (Figure 2C). Rapidly recycling TCRs also redistribute to peripheral punctate structures upon treatment with BFA (Lippincott-Schwartz et al., 1990
; Saraste and Svensson, 1991
; Tang et
al., 1995
; Füllekrug et al., 1999b
), Figure 2D
demonstrates that VIP36-SP-FP shows this behavior as well. Because
VIP36-SP-FP exhibits features characteristic of other recycling
proteins, we conclude that VIP36-SP-FP most likely recycles between the
Golgi and ER.
|
Typically, punctate structures that form after incubation at 15°C are
enlarged pre-Golgi carriers responsible for the transport of newly
synthesized anterograde secretory cargo from the ER to the Golgi
(Presley et al., 1997
; Scales et al., 1997
). To
verify that the punctate structures in which VIP36-SP-FP accumulated were indeed enlarged pre-Golgi carriers, we examined cells coexpressing VIP36-SP-FP and anterograde secretory cargo, either VSVG3-FP or VSVG3-SP-FP. FP fusions to the VSVG ts045 protein accumulate in the ER
at 40°C due to a temperature-sensitive folding defect (Gallione and
Rose, 1985
; Presley et al., 1997
; Scales et al.,
1997
; Toomre et al., 1999
). Shifting from 40 to 15°C
arrests cargo in pre-Golgi carriers coated with COPI coatomer complex
(Presley et al., 1997
; Scales et al., 1997
)
together with recycling proteins such as KDELR (Tang et al.,
1995
), ERGIC-53 (Saraste and Svensson, 1991
; Tang et al.,
1995
), p24 family members (Blum et al., 1999
;
Füllekrug et al., 1999b
; Gommel et al.,
1999
), and endogenous VIP36 (Füllekrug et al., 1999a
).
We incubated COS cells coexpressing VIP36-SP-FP and VSVG3-SP-FP at
40°C, shifted them to 15°C for 2 h, and then fixed them for
high-resolution confocal imaging. Both proteins accumulated in punctate
structures that were closely associated with the ER network (Figure
3). This result provides evidence that
VIP36-SP-FP traffics in pre-Golgi anterograde transport carriers that
become enlarged at 15°C. Colocalization of VIP36-SP-FP with cargo
blocked in the early secretory pathway is entirely consistent with both
endogenous and myc-tagged VIP36, providing further evidence that the
SP-FP tag does not affect trafficking or localization, and indicating
that VIP36-SP-FP traffics in the early secretory pathway.
|
Dynamics of VIP36-SP-FP in Live Cells
VIP36-SP-FP recycling between the Golgi and ER is most likely
mediated by TCs trafficking between the two organelles. To identify potential TCs mediating VIP36-SP-FP recycling, we examined the dynamics
of VIP36-SP-GFP trafficking in live HeLa, PtK2,
and COS cells. Movies of confocal images over time reveal at least two distinct types of VIP36-SP-GFP trafficking elements: globular elements
(blobs) and tubules (Figure 4; online
data). Blobs coalesced in the cell periphery and tended to move inward
toward the Golgi region, although blobs also moved circumferentially
about the cell periphery (Figure 4). The tendency to move inward is
visually apparent in movies played at higher frame rates (online data). Blobs occasionally extended into elongated tubular elements as they
translocated inwards. Tubules tended to extend from the Golgi and
translocate outward toward the cell periphery, but they also translocated about the periphery and sometimes moved inward (online data). We identified VIP36-SP-FP trafficking elements in 18 independent cells, classified them as blobs or tubules, tracked them as in Figure
4B, and calculated their rate of movement. Overall, blobs were more
abundant than tubules (204 blobs, 62 tubules), and on average moved
more slowly (0.1-0.5 µm/s). However, blob movement was saltatory
(movies, online data) so this average most likely reflects less
frequent movement at higher speeds. Additionally, the apparent lower
frequency of tubules and their higher speed may reflect difficulty in
identifying slowly translocating tubules against the tubular ER
network; only rapidly moving tubules were easily identified by eye. We
also observed variability in the ratio of blobs to tubules from cell to
cell; multiple movies in the online data reflect this variability.
Although the extent of directed movement is variable, the flux of
tubular trafficking structures toward the periphery is consistent with
a role in Golgi-to-ER transport, and the peripheral inward movement of
blobs consistent with a role in ER-to-Golgi transport. The
morphological similarity of the blobs to the punctate structures seen
in fixed cells, which become enlarged at 15°C, accumulate anterograde
secretory cargo (Figures 2 and 3), and have been shown to act as
ER-to-Golgi TCs (Presley et al., 1997
; Scales et
al., 1997
), strongly suggests that they are the TC for ER-to-Golgi
transport of VIP36-SP-FP.
|
VIP36-SP-FP Traffics with Anterograde Secretory Cargo from ER to Golgi, but not Beyond
Colocalization of VIP36-SP-FP with anterograde cargo in punctate
structures at 15°C indicates that it is present in ER-to-Golgi transport carriers. To determine when VIP36-SP-FP first enters cargo-containing TCs, and how far beyond early secretory structures VIP36-SP-FP traffics with cargo, we coexpressed VIP36-SP-FP together with fluorescent anterograde secretory cargo, either VSVG3-FP or
VSVG3-SP-FP (Figure 1A). After accumulation in the ER at 40°C, shifting from 40 to 32°C releases a synchronous pulse of fluorescent cargo into the secretory pathway, allowing transient intermediates to
be sequentially visualized (Presley et al., 1997
; Scales
et al., 1997
; Hirschberg et al., 1998
; Toomre
et al., 1999
).
We first examined anterograde transport at different times in fixed
cells at high spatial resolution: we incubated cells coexpressing VIP36-SP-FP and VSVG3-SP-FP at 40°C, shifted to 32°C for various intervals in the presence of cycloheximide, and fixed the cells to
freeze transient intermediates (Figure 5,
online data show comparisons of VIP36-SP-FP and cargo channels). Fixing
directly at 40°C revealed that cargo was in the ER, and that
VIP36-SP-FP was localized comparably to singly transfected cells: to
the ER, Golgi, and punctate elements in the cell periphery. After 10 min at 32°C, VIP36-SP-FP tended to colocalize with cargo in punctate peripheral structures, mostly likely the pre-Golgi TCs,
which become enlarged at 15°C (Figure 3; Presley
et al., 1997
; Scales et al., 1997
). The level of
VIP36-SP-FP in the ER appeared reduced, and the VIP36-SP-FP
localization in peripheral structures was most apparent at this time,
indicating a change in VIP36-SP-FP distribution (Figure 5, 10-min
images and comparison in online data). After 15 min at 32°C, cargo
and VIP36-SP-FP colocalized tightly in the Golgi apparatus, with few
peripheral structures. At later times, after 20 min, VIP36-SP-FP and
cargo localized to separate peripheral punctate structures (our
unpublished results; live cell movies below; online data). After 60 min
at 32°C, cargo localized to the plasma membrane, and VIP36-SP-FP
localized to the ER and Golgi, again a comparable localization to
singly transfected cells (Figure 5A, 60 min). We often observed
residual cargo in earlier structures even after longer times in the
presence of cycloheximide; this pool of cargo cleared early structures
slowly in our experiments, and may represent protein slowly entering the secretory pathway due to severe misfolding. Because VIP36-SP-FP distribution appeared different during ER
Golgi transport, but not
at other times (compare Figure 5A, 0, 15, and 60 min), a synchronous pulse of transport may alter VIP36-SP-FP distribution. Regardless of
subtle changes in VIP36-SP-FP distribution, these observations show
clearly that VIP36-SP-FP colocalized with cargo from ER exit until the
cargo began to leave the Golgi apparatus.
|
To determine how VIP36-SP-FP entered cargo-containing structures, and to determine precisely where and how VIP36-SP-FP separated from cargo, we observed fluorescent cargo and VIP36-SP-FP together in live cells. Due to the rate of FP bleaching in moderately expressing cells (cells that showed a normal distribution of VIP36-SP-FP), we were not able to continuously image a single cell long enough to observe a complete sequence of transport from the ER to the plasma membrane, so we began movies at different times after shifting from 40 to 32°C and imaged for short, continuous periods. These movies revealed that VIP36-SP-FP and cargo coincided in ER-associated, tubular structures that coalesced into punctate pre-Golgi TCs (online data, 16-min closeup, element in lower left quadrant). These results indicate that VIP36-SP-FP coalesced into pre-Golgi TCs together with cargo, during ER exit, rather than being recruited to preexisting TCs, and thus associated with cargo-containing structures very early in the secretory pathway. These movies also showed that the punctate structures containing VIP36-SP-FP and cargo moved toward the Golgi apparatus (Figure 5B and supplementary material, 11 min), providing strong evidence that the VIP36-SP-FP blobs are pre-Golgi anterograde TCs.
At later times after shift to 32°C, either directly from 40°C or after accumulation in pre-Golgi structures at 15°C, movies revealed that VIP36-SP-FP and cargo do not coincide in dynamic TCs (Figure 5B and supplementary material, 42 min and later). At times after 30 min at 32°C, we observed anterograde TCs leaving the Golgi, but these post-Golgi TCs did not accumulate VIP36-SP-FP, although both proteins were present at high levels in Golgi structures (online data, movies starting at 42, 56, and 65 min). The movie starting at 50 min after shift to 32°C from a 15°C block shows two TCs exiting from a Golgi element. The element itself contains high levels of both cargo and VIP36-SP-FP, but after exit the TCs do not contain detectable VIP36-SP-FP (online data). Thus, subjective observations from a number of movies indicated that VIP36-SP-FP trafficked together with cargo early in the secretory pathway and then separated within the Golgi, so that post-Golgi carriers did not contain VIP36-SP-FP.
To quantitate these observations, 218 TCs in 38 cells were scored
blindly for the presence of only VIP36-SP-FP, only cargo, or both
(Figure 6). In our experiments, by 20 min
at 32°C most cargo had emptied from the ER and accumulated to high
levels in the Golgi, but had not yet begun to exit the Golgi in
post-Golgi carriers. Thus, movies before 20 min most likely represent
pre-Golgi transport, and after 20 min most likely represent post-Golgi
transport. Before 20 min, 52% (43 of 82) of TCs contained both
proteins, but in movies taken after 20 min only 4% (6 of 136) of TCs
contained both proteins. There was a greater proportion of TCs
containing VIP36-SP-FP (both with and without cargo) at early times of
transport: before 20 min, 86% (71 of 82) of the TCs counted contained
VIP36-SP-FP, but after 20 min, only 40% (55 of 136) of the TCs
contained VIP36-SP-FP. The correlation between increased number of
VIP36-SP-FP TCs and cargo-containing TCs, together with the increased
frequency of colocalization during ER
Golgi transport suggests that
VIP36-SP-FP may be recruited to pre-Golgi carriers. Together, these
quantitative results verify our subjective observations and show that
VIP36-SP-FP and cargo traffic together in pre-Golgi carriers, but
post-Golgi carriers do not contain detectable VIP36-SP-FP.
|
Kinetics of VIP36-SP-FP Exchange between Golgi and ER Quantitated with Organelle-Specific Photobleaching
The pattern of VIP36-SP-FP localization under different conditions
(Figures 2 and 3), is consistent with the behavior of endogenous VIP36
(Füllekrug et al., 1999a
), and support the idea that
it recycles between the ER and Golgi, but does not show recycling directly. To demonstrate VIP36-SP-FP recycling in live cells we performed organelle-specific photobleaching experiments. Using the
region functions on our confocal microscope, we photobleached a volume
encompassing either the Golgi (Figure 7A)
or the ER (Figure 7B), through the entire depth of the organelle
(online data). Fluorescence recovered into the bleached volume over
time (Figure 7, recovery panels), indicating transport from the
unbleached to the bleached organelle.
|
We quantitated the fluorescence recovery into the bleached volume
(Figure 7, right) and derived kinetic rate constants based on a linear,
first order model for transport between two compartments in a closed
system (see MATERIALS AND METHODS; Jacquez, 1972
),
|
ER recycling of Golgi resident proteins (Zaal et al.,
1999The linear, first order kinetic model fits the measured recovery data well (Figure 7, right). Regression coefficients (r) were typically >0.9. At steady state before the bleach, the ER contained 87.3 ± 1.7% and the Golgi 12.7 ± 1.7% of the total cellular fluorescence. The fit to the recovery data indicates that the ER and Golgi reestablish this steady state ratio following the bleach, and the same steady-state ratio is reestablished regardless of which organelle was bleached (Table 1). Although most of the VIP36-SP-FP is present in the ER, the fluorescence is distributed over a much greater area, so VIP36-SP-FP in the ER appears less prominent visually. These data show that there is ongoing transport of VIP36-SP-FP from Golgi to ER, and ER to Golgi, thus demonstrating recycling of VIP36-SP-FP directly in live cells.
Kinetic rate constants can be derived from the fit to the data. They
characterize the efficiency of VIP36-SP-FP transport at each step,
which reflects multiple molecular and cellular events. Table 2 shows
the transport rate constants derived for ER
Golgi (kER) and Golgi
ER
(kG) transport steps. For a given
experiment (ER bleach or Golgi bleach), we derived a rate constant in
one direction (the forward transport step) directly from the fitted curve (Table 2; see MATERIALS AND METHODS). Because the ratio of the
forward and reverse transport constants is related to the steady-state
ratio of VIP36-SP-FP in each compartment (see MATERIALS AND METHODS,
eq. 8), we calculated the reverse transport rate constant from the
forward value and the fitted steady-state fraction of VIP36-SP-GFP in
the ER and Golgi (Table 2). Values for
kER and
kG calculated in this manner,
independently for ER bleaching and Golgi bleaching experiments, agree
well, thus supporting the idea that we are measuring the reciprocal
transport processes predicted by the model.
The rate constant of Golgi
ER transport was approximately sixfold
greater than the ER
Golgi constant (Table 2). Accordingly, a single
VIP36-SP-GFP protein spends a much longer time in the ER than in the
Golgi. This time is reflected in two values,
t1/2 and the exchange time (Table 2).
The t1/2 value assumes the
hypothetical case where one compartment is completely bleached, and it
represents the time it takes for recovery to proceed halfway to
completion (see MATERIALS AND METHODS), It is often reported to
characterize first order process (Jacquez, 1972
). Previously published
studies report an exchange time (Hirschberg et al., 1998
;
Zaal et al., 1999
), simply the inverse of the rate constant,
which represents the time it takes for all of the fluorescent material
in a compartment to be transported (see MATERIALS AND METHODS). Because
recovery is nonlinear (Figure 7), t1/2
and the exchange time together provide a more complete picture of the
recovery process, so we report both for VIP36-SP-FP ER
Golgi
recycling (Table 2). The exchange times indicate it take 8.5 times as
long for all VIP36-SP-FP to exchange out of the ER than out of the
Golgi, or 62 times as long for VIP36-SP-FP to recovery to completion in
the Golgi than in the ER. Altogether, our modelling and analysis of
organelle-specific photobleaching recovery provides direct evidence for
ER
Golgi recycling of VIP36-SP-FP, and shows that a relatively
simple model accounts for both its steady-state distribution and its
transport characteristics.
Perturbing VIP36-SP-GFP Transport Alters Its Distribution and Kinetic Rate Constants
The model predicts that change in the distribution of VIP36-SP-GFP
should be accompanied by a corresponding change in the ratio of the rate constants. To change the distribution of
VIP36-SP-GFP, we treated cells with drugs known to perturb transport.
Initially, we considered cells treated with BFA and nocodazole. BFA
treatment results in the explosive redistribution of the Golgi pool of
VIP36-SP-GFP to the ER and punctate peripheral sites (Figure 2).
Nocodazole treatment also redistributes the Golgi pool of VIP36-SP-GFP
to peripheral punctate structures, with dynamics similar to the
redistribution of Golgi enzymes (Storrie et al., 1998
), but
more rapidly (within 30 min; our unpublished results). Both these
treatments completely disassemble the Golgi structures and thus are
equivalent to setting the ER
Golgi rate constant in the model to
zero (in this case defining "Golgi" as compact structures next to
the nucleus). Because they completely alter the perinuclear Golgi
structure, we could not perform organelle-specific bleaching
experiments to test for changes in the rate constants.
|
Treatment with 50 µM aluminum fluoride changed the distribution of
VIP36-SP-GFP more subtly. Within 1 h of treatment, the ER:Golgi
ratio changed to 66:34 ± 4% (n = 10). We avoided
experiments after long periods of treatment to avoid possible toxic
effects of AlF4
. Because
AlF4
treatment blocks Golgi
exit of anterograde cargo and inhibits diffusion of proteins within the
Golgi (Cole et al., 1996
), we expected (Blum et
al., 1999
) the drug to generally inhibit ER
Golgi transport,
resulting in smaller rate constants for both steps, so any change in
the relative ER-Golgi distribution would be due to differential
reduction of the rate constants. However, Golgi bleaching experiments
indicated that the ER
Golgi rate constant increased to 5.53 ± 1.10%/min (n = 10), requiring a Golgi
ER constant of
12.0 ± 3.4%/min to account for the new distribution, assuming
the system reaches steady state within an hour. It seems likely that
cells reach a new steady state because the recovery levels off
asymptotically after 60 min. Additionally, we monitored the response of
unbleached cells in the same field of view during the
AlF4
bleach experiments. In
most cells (4 of 5) the VIP36-SP-GFP distribution was altered within
the time it takes to add the drug and resume imaging (~3-5 min), and
fluctuated by approximately ±15% about the new distribution. In one
of five experiments, we saw a smooth monotonic change in the
distribution, which leveled off asymptotically by 60 min. In the
bleached cells, the prebleach ratios are already shifted from the 87:13
ratio of untreated cells, consistent with a rapid effect of the drug.
Regardless, because the assumption of steady state is invoked only in
calculating the opposing rate constant, that is, the Golgi
ER
constant for a Golgi bleach, the fit to the Golgi-bleach recovery data
indicates that perturbing transport indeed alters
kER
G.
| |
DISCUSSION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
To examine the dynamics of VIP36 trafficking and determine precisely where VIP36 separates from cargo along the secretory pathway in live cells, we established VIP36-SP-FP as an accurate marker for VIP36 in live cells. VIP36-SP-FP colocalizes with myc-VIP36 (Figure 1) and exhibits trafficking behavior characteristic of TCRs recycling in the early secretory pathway (Figures 2