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Vol. 13, Issue 12, 4355-4370, December 2002
and
Are Essential for
Spindle Formation and Nuclear Envelope Assembly in Living
Caenorhabditis elegans Embryos
European Molecular Biology Laboratory, 69117 Heidelberg, Germany
Submitted June 17, 2002; Revised August 20, 2002; Accepted August 23, 2002| |
ABSTRACT |
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The small GTPase Ran has been found to play pivotal roles in
several aspects of cell function. We have investigated the role of the
Ran GTPase cycle in spindle formation and nuclear envelope assembly in
dividing Caenorhabditis elegans embryos in real time. We
found that Ran and its cofactors RanBP2, RanGAP, and RCC1 are all
essential for reformation of the nuclear envelope after cell division.
Reducing the expression of any of these components of the Ran GTPase
cycle by RNAi leads to strong extranuclear clustering of integral
nuclear envelope proteins and nucleoporins. Ran, RanBP2, and RanGAP are
also required for building a mitotic spindle, whereas astral
microtubules are normal in the absence of these proteins. RCC1(RNAi)
embryos have similar abnormalities in the initial phase of spindle
formation but eventually recover to form a bipolar spindle. Irregular
chromatin structures and chromatin bridges due to spindle failure were
frequently observed in embryos where the Ran cycle was perturbed. In
addition, connection between the centrosomes and the male pronucleus,
and thus centrosome positioning, depends upon the Ran cycle components.
Finally, we have demonstrated that both IMA-2 and IMB-1, the homologues
of vertebrate importin
and
, are essential for both spindle
assembly and nuclear formation in early embryos.
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INTRODUCTION |
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The small GTPase Ran has been extensively studied due to its
central role in major cellular processes such as nucleocytoplasmic transport, spindle microtubule dynamics, and nuclear envelope (NE)
assembly (see recent reviews by Dasso, 2001
; Kuersten et al., 2001
; Macara, 2001
; Moore, 2001
; Vasu and Forbes, 2001
). Although very diverse, these processes seem to all depend on the GTP-
and GDP-bound forms of Ran interacting differentially with downstream
targets. When in the GTP conformation Ran binds to a class of importin
-like proteins and thereby regulates their affinity for various
interaction partners (Kuersten et al., 2001
). Ran on its own
has weak GTPase activity, which can be stimulated ~105-fold by the Ran GTPase-activating protein
RanGAP (Klebe at al., 1995
). However, in complex with importin
-like
proteins Ran is usually inaccessible to RanGAP. Proteins harboring a
certain type of Ran binding domain, such as Ran binding proteins
(RanBPs) 1 and 2, can overcome this inhibition, making RanGTP
accessible to RanGAP (Bischoff and Görlich, 1997
; Floer et
al., 1997
; Askjaer et al., 1999
). A single guanine
nucleotide exchange factor for Ran, termed RCC1, has been described
previously (Bischoff and Ponstingl, 1991
; Klebe et al.,
1995
). Ran is thought to be mainly soluble, although it binds to
mitotic chromatin, whereas RCC1 also binds to chromatin, and a
proportion of RanGAP and RanBP1/2 is tethered to the cytoplasmic
filaments of nuclear pore complexes (Kuersten et al., 2001
;
Macara, 2001
, Bilbao-Cortés et al., 2002
).
When cells enter mitosis, the stability of cytoplasmic microtubules is
dramatically reduced and spindle microtubules are nucleated by
centrosomes and chromatin (Compton, 2000
; Wittmann et al., 2001
). This process can be reproduced in meiotic Xenopus egg
extracts in the presence of an exogenous source of chromatin.
Strikingly, addition of RanGTP or mutant forms of Ran locked in a
GTP-like conformation to such extracts stimulates microtubule assembly and can even induce the formation of centrosome-independent bipolar spindles in the presence or absence of chromatin (Carazo-Salas et
al., 1999
; Kalab et al., 1999
; Ohba et al.,
1999
; Wilde and Zheng, 1999
; Zhang et al., 1999
). RCC1 also
stimulates spindle formation in experiments with wild-type Ran, whereas
a mutant form of Ran with low affinity for guanine nucleotides inhibits spindle formation, presumably by inhibiting RCC1 (Carazo-Salas et
al., 1999
; Kalab et al., 1999
). From these studies a
model emerged in which chromatin-bound RCC1 generates RanGTP in the vicinity of the chromosomes in mitosis. This high local concentration of RanGTP, which has been visualized experimentally (Kalab et al., 2002
), is then believed to stabilize mitotic microtubules that are assembled into a spindle structure by motor proteins (reviewed
by Dasso, 2001
; Moore, 2001
).
In yeast, the Ran system has also been proposed to regulate mitotic
spindle formation independently of nuclear transport (Ouspenski, 1998
;
Fleig et al., 2000
; Quimby et al., 2000
).
However, yeast have a closed mitosis where the spindle is formed within
the nucleus, suggesting the mechanisms underlying spindle assembly are
likely to differ from those proposed on the basis of the in vitro data described above (Dasso, 2001
). In mammalian cells, only the role of
RanBP1 in mitosis has been investigated. On overexpression of RanBP1,
~50% of mitotic cells had abnormal spindles, typically monopolar or
multipolar (Guarguaglini et al., 2000
). On the other hand,
reducing RanBP1 activity by microinjection of anti-RanBP1 antibodies
delayed progression through mitosis by slowing down metaphase and
anaphase (Guarguaglini et al., 2000
). Finally, a recent
report demonstrated that the Ran system is required for proper
positioning of chromosomes in Caenorhabditis elegans
embryos, presumably reflecting a role of Ran in spindle formation
(Bamba et al., 2002
). Two potential downstream targets for
Ran in spindle formation have been identified, namely, TPX2 (Gruss
et al., 2001
) and NuMA (Nachury et al., 2001
;
Wiese et al., 2001
). Interestingly, the effect of Ran on
spindle assembly via TPX2 and NuMA is mediated by regulating their
interaction with importin
and importin
, and is thus analogous
to how Ran controls nucleocytoplasmic transport.
An additional function of Ran has been reported. NE assembly can be
studied in vitro by adding chromatin to Xenopus egg extracts (Gant and Wilson, 1997
; Vasu and Forbes, 2001
). Membrane vesicles dock
to the chromatin and fuse to form a closed envelope. Nuclear pore
complexes form and are inserted into the NE. The reconstituted nucleus
starts to grow in a nuclear import-dependent manner. It was found that
either RanGTP or RanGDP together with RCC1 is necessary for early
membrane fusion steps in NE assembly (Hetzer et al., 2000
).
Similarly, beads coated with wild-type Ran formed pseudonuclei surrounded by an NE, whereas beads attached to mutant forms of Ran
incapable of cycling between GTP- and GDP-bound conformations failed to
do so (Zhang and Clarke, 2000
). In fission yeast, the RCC1 homologue
pim1p is required for maintenance of a normal NE after mitosis (Demeter
et al., 1995
). However, because the NE does not break down
during mitosis in yeast, it is difficult to rule out the possibility
that the observed fragmentation of the NE is not caused by a protein
import defect. More recently, it was reported that perturbing the Ran
system in C. elegans by double-stranded RNA-mediated
interference (RNAi) gives rise to embryos where the chromatin no longer
associated with nucleoporins, indicative either of a defect in NE
assembly or in nuclear pore complex assembly or insertion into
the NE (Bamba et al., 2002
). Importin
has recently been
proposed to be a downstream effector of Ran in NE assembly on the basis
of in vitro experiments, including the ability of importin
to
attract nuclear pore complex-containing membranes when attached to the
surface of inert beads (Zhang et al., 2002
).
We have analyzed the effects of perturbation of the Ran system in vivo
by using C. elegans embryos and time-lapse microscopy. C. elegans embryos can be efficiently depleted of single
proteins by RNAi. When combined with live cell imaging RNAi can provide detailed insight into the function of individual genes in morphogenetic processes. We demonstrate that Ran itself is absolutely required for
formation of a mitotic spindle but not for nucleation of astral microtubules. Depletion of RanBP2 or RanGAP gives a similar phenotype, demonstrating that the GTPase activity of Ran is also required for
spindle formation. Targeting RCC1 by RNAi results in a strong defect
early in spindle formation, however, this defect is temporary and a
spindle is eventually assembled. In contrast, we show that all
components of the Ran GTPase cycle are required for formation of a
closed NE after cell division and for centrosome-pronuclear attachment.
Finally, we demonstrate that IMA-2 and IMB-1, C. elegans homologues of importin
and
, are essential for both spindle formation and NE assembly.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Worm Strains
The C. elegans Bristol strain N2 was used for
analysis of RNAi effects on brood size and viability. Strain N2 was
also used to create transgenic nematodes by microinjection. DP38
unc-119(ed3) (Maduro and Pilgrim, 1995
) and AZ212 (Praitis
et al., 2001
) were provided by the Caenorhabditis
Genetic Center. A heterogeneous population containing nematodes
carrying the deletion allele ok256 of the ima-2
gene was obtained from The Caenorhabditis elegans Gene
Knockout Consortium. WH204, which expresses a green fluorescent protein
(GFP)::
-tubulin fusion protein in the germline, and
strains expressing GFP::histone H2B and
GFP::
-tubulin fusion proteins from extrachromosomal arrays
have been described previously (Oegema et al., 2001
; Strome
et al., 2001
).
Plasmid Constructs
Plasmid pJH4.52 contains the promoter and noncoding sequences
from the C. elegans pie-1 gene as well as the coding
sequence for GFP-tagged C. elegans histone H2B (Strome
et al., 2001
). To generate pPAG20 a multiple cloning
sequence was polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplified and used to
replace the histone H2B sequence of pJH4.52. Using sequence information
from ACeDB (http://www.wormbase.org), we PCR amplified the genomic
DNA sequence of the C. elegans emerin gene
(emr-1, M01D7.6) and the C. elegans RCC1 gene
(ran-3). The emr-1 PCR product was inserted
downstream of the gfp sequence in pPAG20 to generate plasmid
pPAG7, whereas the ran-3 PCR product was used to replace the
histone H2B sequence of pJH4.52, generating plasmid pPAG38.
For generation of RNAi constructs the following sequences were obtained
by either PCR or reverse-transcription (RT)-PCR: full length C. elegans Ran (ran-1, nucleotides [nt] 1-648 of
predicted open reading frame [ORF]); C. elegans RanGAP
(ran-2, nt 1789-2533 of predicted ORF); three different
C. elegans RCC1 fragments (ran-3, nt 1-732,
396-1013, and 1033-1600 of predicted ORF); C. elegans RanBP2/Nup358 (npp-10, nt 1555-2238 of predicted ORF);
three C. elegans importin
homologues (ima-1,
nt 364-1158 of predicted ORF; ima-2, nt 814-1389 of
predicted ORF; ima-3, nt 745-1542 of predicted ORF); and two
different C. elegans importin
fragments (imb-1, nt 916-1425 and 1659-2340 of predicted ORF). In
addition, fragments of three C. elegans genes (F07C3.4,
Y48G8AL.1, and W09G3.3) with similarity to human RCC1, but more
distantly related than ran-3, were cloned. In all cases
except for the 3' imb-1 fragment, only intron-less sequences
were amplified. The DNA fragments were inserted into either pPD129.36
L4440 (Timmons and Fire, 1998
) or pCRII TOPO (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA)
and then subcloned into pPD129.36. As negative control in RNAi
experiments, the empty pPD129.36 vector was used. Detailed cloning
information is available on request.
Generation of Transgenic Worms
To generate transgenic worms expressing GFP::emerin
fusion proteins, we initially performed microinjections into the gonads of wild-type adult hermaphrodites (Strome et al. 2001
).
Worms were injected with a mixture containing 50 µg/ml genomic DNA
(linearized with PvuII), 1 µg/ml pPAG7 (linearized with
SacII), and 1 µg/ml pRF4 rol-6(su1006)
(linearized with EcoRI). Several independent lines were
obtained of which two (XA3510 and XA3511) showed relatively stable
GFP::emerin expression over multiple generations. XA3510, N2
qaEx3510[rol-6(su1006)
pie-1::gfp::emr-1] was used in this study and maintained at ~24.5°C. Eventually, GFP::emerin
expression was silenced in XA3510 and XA3511. To overcome this problem
we exploited the gold particle bombardment method (Praitis et
al. 2001
). The rescuing gene (unc-119) and the
gfp-fusion gene were, however, on separate plasmids: a 1:1
mixture of plasmids pDP#MM051 (Maduro and Pilgrim, 1995
) and pPAG7 was
precipitated on 1.5- to 3-µm gold particles (Sigma-Aldrich). Roughly
10,000 DP38 unc119(ed3) worms were used per bombardment and
from six bombardments we obtained two independent transformed lines
with wild-type behavior. One line was positive for GFP expression,
giving rise to strain XA3504, unc-119(ed3)
qaEx3504[unc-119 (+)
pie-1::gfp::emr-1]. XA3504 is maintained at ~20°C and has so far been stable for >60
generations. Two independent strains expressing GFP::RCC1
(XA3515 and XA3516) were generated similarly to XA3504 by using plasmid
pPAG38. XA3515 showed germline expression for approximately eight
generations before being silenced, whereas XA3516 still is GFP
positive. To obtain a strain that expresses both GFP::histone
H2B and GFP::
-tubulin we crossed the strains AZ212 and
WH204, giving rise to strain XA3501.
From The Caenorhabditis elegans Gene Knockout Consortium we
obtained ima-2(ok256) worms carrying a ~1.8-kb deletion in
the 3' region of the ima-2 gene. To map precisely the
mutation we cloned and sequenced the ok256 allele. Sequence
information has been submitted to Wormbase. The ok256 allele
was kept in the population by PCR screening for heterozygous
individuals carrying the deletion: single worms were incubated in 2.5 µl of lysis buffer (10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.5, 50 mM KCl; 2.5 mM
MgCl2, 0.45% Nonidet-40, 0.45% Tween 20, 0.01%
gelatin, 0.2 mg/ml proteinase K) at
80°C for 15 min, and then at
60°C for 60 min and finally at 95°C for 15 min. Standard AmpliTaq
(22.5 µl; Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA) PCR mix containing
primers 5'-GAA GAG GGA AAG GAT GAG GG and 5'-GTT TGA TGT TTT CAC CGC CT
was added to the worm lysate followed by heating to 94°C for 3 min
before PCR for 35 cycles (94°C, 40 s; 58°C, 40 s; and
72°C, 90 s). After outcrossing ima-2(ok256) worms
with N2 wild-type males for seven generations, we named the strain XA3513 ima-2(ok256). Strain XA3503 was then created by
crossing XA3513 with WH204 followed by selecting worms heterozygous for the ima-2(ok256) allele and homozygous for
gfp::
-tubulin.
RNAi
RNA-mediated interference was performed by feeding the worms
with bacteria that express double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) (Fraser et
al., 2000
). RNAi plates were generated as follows:
Escherichia coli strain HT115(DE3) transformed with plasmid
pPD129.36 harboring the relevant RNAi fragment was grown for 8 h
at 37°C in the presence of ampicillin. Isopropyl
-D-thiogalactoside was added to a
concentration of 1 mM, and the bacteria were seeded onto NGM plates
containing 50 µg/ml ampicillin and 1 mM isopropyl
-D-thiogalactoside. Plates were left to dry at
room temperature over night and then used immediately or stored
at 16°C. To analyze the effect of RNAi on brood size and viability L3
larvae were incubated on the RNAi plates at 16°C for 70 h. Young
adults from these plates were then transferred to individual RNAi
plates and incubated at 20°C for 20 h. The adult hermaphrodites
were removed from the plates. After further incubation of the plates
the number of oocytes, embryos, and larvae on the plates was
determined. To obtain RNAi embryos for imaging, L3 and L4 larvae from
the GFP strains were incubated on the RNAi plates at 20°C or 25°C
for 16 to 48 h, depending on the gene.
Live Embryo Imaging
Embryos were mounted in M9 buffer on 2% agarose pads and covered with a coverslip. Observation and recording of epifluorescence and transmitted light was with 1) Leica confocal microscope TCS SP2 with an HCX PL APO 100×/1.40-0.7 objective. Images were captured using integrated Leica software (Leica Microsystems, Wetzlar, Germany) and processed with NIH Image. 2) Nikon Eclipse TE200 (Nikon Instech, Kanagawa, Japan) with a Plan Fluor 100×/1.30 objective and a PerkinElmer Life Sciences Ultraview real-time confocal spinning disk unit (Perkin Elmer Life Sciences, Boston, MA). Data were processed with IDL (Research Systems, Boulder, CO) and NIH Image. 3) Zeiss Axioplan 2 Imaging (Carl Zeiss Microimaging, Thornwood, NY), with a Plan Apochromat 63×/1.40 objective equipped either with a Hamamatsu CA742-95 camera (Hamamatsu Photonics, Hamamatsu, Japan) or a Visitech International QLC100 spinning disk confocal (Visitech International, Sunderland, United Kingdom). MetaMorph software (Universal Imaging, West Chester, PA) was used to control hardware and acquire and process images. With all systems, laser intensities were adjusted so that no effect on development was seen. Depending on the system and on the GFP strain being analyzed images were collected at 6- to 20-s intervals for a total of 20-40 min.
Immunofluorescence
AZ212 worms from RNAi plates were dissected directly on
poly-L-lysine-coated glass slides. The eggshell was opened
by freeze cracking and the embryos were fixed in methanol for 20-30
min at
20°C. After rehydration in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) with 0.1% Tween 20 and blocking with 3% milk the embryos were incubated with either a 1:500 dilution of monoclonal antibody (mAb) 414 against nucleoporins (Jackson Immunoresearch Laboratories, West Grove,
PA), a 1:500 dilution of mAb DM1A against
-tubulin (Sigma-Aldrich,
St. Louis, MO), a 1:250 dilution of polyclonal antibodies against
phosho-histone H3 (Upstate Biotechnology, Lake Placid, NY), and/or a
1:100 dilution of polyclonal antibodies against EMR-1 (Gruenbaum
et al., 2002
). After incubation for 45-120 min at room
temperature embryos were washed for 5 min in PBS with 0.05% Tween 20 followed by 5 min in PBS or for 60 min in PBS with 0.1% Tween 20. Alexa Fluor 546 and Alexa Fluor 633 secondary antibodies (Molecular
Probes, Eugene, OR) were used at 1:2000 dilution in PBS for 45-120
min. The embryos were washed as described above and mounted. Confocal
images were obtained on a Leica TCS SP2 microscope as described above.
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RESULTS |
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Identification of Essential Ran and Ran-related Genes
To study the role of Ran in mitotic spindle formation and NE
assembly, we identified C. elegans homologues for Ran and
Ran cofactors (RanGAP, RanBP2, and RCC1) based on published data
(Gönczy et al., 2000
) and database searches (Table
1; Bamba et al., 2002
). Because importin
and
have been demonstrated to play critical roles in spindle formation and/or NE assembly in Xenopus
extracts (Gruss et al., 2001
; Nachury et al.,
2001
; Wiese et al., 2001
; Zhang et al., 2002
) we
included the C. elegans homologues in our studies. Geles and
Adam (2001)
have described three C. elegans homologues of
importin
, IMA-1, -2, and -3, whereas importin
is homologous to
C. elegans IMB-1 (Geles and Adam, 2001
; Table 1). Because
RNAi against IMA-1 gives no observable phenotype (Geles and Adam, 2001
;
our unpublished data) IMA-1 was not analyzed further.
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As an initial characterization of the seven genes (Table 1), we
evaluated the effect of RNAi on brood size and embryo viability. We
found that all seven genes are required for embryonic development because 91-100% of the embryos failed to hatch (Table 1). For some of
the genes this is in agreement with previous observations (IMA-2,
Fraser et al., 2000
; Ran, RanGAP, and RanBP2, Gönczy et al., 2000
; and IMA-3, Geles and Adam, 2001
), whereas
others had not been tested before. RNAi of Ran significantly reduced the brood size, indicating that Ran is also required at some step during oogenesis, whereas RNAi of any of the regulators of Ran's nucleotide state did not affect brood size (Table 1). Thus, it is
possible that Ran might have a function in oogenesis different from its
GTPase activity, although it is also possible that RNAi fails to
efficiently deplete Ran's regulators from the gonads.
Ran Is Required for Spindle Formation
Previous RNAi experiments have shown that Ran, RanGAP, and RanBP2
are involved in pronuclear and nuclear appearance and possibly also
spindle formation (Gönczy et al., 2000
). IMA-2 has
similarly been proposed to play a role in pronuclear formation
(Zipperlen et al., 2001
). However, differential interference
contrast (DIC) microscopy, the method of choice for those
high-throughput screens, does not give detailed insight to the
subcellular structures that are affected or the defects caused. We
therefore retested these genes, as well as RCC1, IMB-1, and IMA-3, with
a range of fluorescent markers and antibodies.
To investigate spindle formation in time-lapse microscopy we initially
used a strain expressing a fusion protein of GFP and
-tubulin
(Oegema et al., 2001
). In normal one-cell embryos the two
centrosomes are associated with the sperm pronucleus until pronuclear
meeting when the centrosomes border the junction between the two
pronuclei (Figure 1A,
3:51. Note that
in all time-lapse experiments time is indicated relative to anaphase
onset; Video 1). The pronuclei then migrate together to the center of
the embryo and the pronuclear envelopes break down as visualized by
entry of soluble GFP::tubulin into the nuclear space (Figure
1A,
1:52). A spindle is rapidly formed, followed soon by anaphase
(Figure 1A, 0:14), telophase, and cytokinesis (Figure 1A, 4:47). When Ran is depleted by RNAi (Figure 1C), several features are striking (4 of 5 embryos). First, the pronuclei are very small (Figure 1B,
5:29;
Video 2) as reported previously (Gönczy et al., 2000
). Second, the embryos fail to set up a spindle, although the centrosomes are still capable of nucleating astral microtubules (Figure 1B,
1:10-1:59). Third, from being closely associated with the male pronucleus the centrosomes immediately move far apart and after several
minutes undergo strong sideward movements, as in normal anaphase (Video
2). This process ("spindle rocking") together with cleavage furrow
ingression was used throughout this study to define anaphase in embryos
where no spindle was formed. Fourth, in some embryos, the centrosomes
are not properly positioned so that the first cleavage leads to an
abnormal bisection of the embryo as seen in Figure 1B (11:40) where the
posterior cell P1 is larger than the anterior AB. Taken together, these
data indicate that Ran is required for spindle formation, but not for
astral microtubule nucleation.
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GTPase Activity of Ran Is Essential for Assembly of Spindle Microtubules
Chromosomes are proposed to play an active and important role in
spindle formation (Compton, 2000
; Wittmann et al., 2001
). Depletion of Ran results in small pronuclei that are difficult to
follow in DIC or GFP::
-tubulin recordings. The lack of a
mitotic spindle in Ran(RNAi) embryos could therefore be a consequence of aberrant chromatin localization which in turn would cause a lack of
chromatin-mediated microtubule-nucleating activity between the two
centrosomes. To address this possibility, we created a transgenic
strain that expresses GFP::histone H2B and
GFP::
-tubulin by crossing the strains AZ212 (Praitis
et al., 2001
) and WH204 (Strome et al., 2001
).
This strain allowed us to precisely follow the localization and
morphology of the chromatin concomitantly with centrosome position and
microtubule dynamics. An example is shown in Figure
2A where three still pictures of a
time-lapse recording represent prometaphase (
1:45), metaphase
(
1:03), and anaphase (0:07) (Video 3).
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When we targeted Ran, RanGAP, or RanBP2 with RNAi (Figure 2, E-F),
joining of the two pronuclei was never observed, although oocyte
pronuclear migration still took place (10 of 10 embryos where both
pronuclei could be followed almost continuously; Videos 4-6). In
approximately half of the cases (6 of 10) one of the pronuclei was
eventually positioned in line between the two centrosomes, either in
the middle (Figure 2B, closed triangle) or toward one of the
centrosomes (Figure 2C, closed triangle). Most often (5 of 6) the
pronucleus found between the centrosomes was from the oocyte (Figure 2,
B-D, closed triangle), whereas the sperm pronucleus was more or less
closely attached to one centrosome (Figure 2, B and D, open triangle).
In other cases (4 of 10), neither of the pronuclei aligned between the
centrosomes (our unpublished data). Importantly, spindles were
never assembled in embryos where Ran, RanGAP, or RanBP2 was depleted,
regardless of chromatin position. Analysis of fixed embryos was also
carried out because the combination of live cell imaging and
immunofluorescence provides resolution in time together with high
sensitivity. Staining of microtubules with anti-
-tubulin antibodies
confirmed our live cell recordings because we could not detect spindles
in embryos depleted of Ran, RanGAP, or RanBP2, even in cases where
mitotic chromatin was positioned between two centrosomes (Figure
3, A-C, F and G; 28 of 28 embryos). Immunofluorescence with antibody against phosphorylated histone H3 was
used to confirm that the embryos were in prometaphase or metaphase.
Thus, our data strongly indicate that the GTPase activity of Ran is
essential for the assembly of microtubules that connect chromatin to
the centrosomes.
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RNAi of RCC1 Causes DNA Segregation Defects
Inhibition of RCC1 activity by the Ran mutant T24N has been
shown to interfere with spindle microtubule assembly in
Xenopus egg extracts (Carazo-Salas et al., 1999
;
Kalab et al., 1999
). Based on this and on our observation
that Ran GTPase activity is necessary for spindle formation we
predicted that inhibiting RCC1 expression would also block spindle
formation by preventing formation of RanGTP. As with Ran depletions
RCC1(RNAi) embryos are generally reduced in size (~15% shorter than
wild type) and have smaller pronuclei (Figure
4; our unpublished data). However, in contrast to the RNAi experiments described above the centrosomes in
RCC1(RNAi) embryos stay associated with the sperm pronucleus. Instead
of migrating to join the oocyte pronucleus at the normal position
approximately one-third of the embryo length from the posterior pole
the sperm pronucleus either remains at the cortex or moves only
slightly away from it (14 of 14 embryos; our unpublished data).
On joining, the two pronuclei migrate together toward the center of the
embryo (Figure 4,
4:00; Video 7). Note that diffuse nucleoplasmic
GFP::histone H2B staining is seen around the condensed chromatin before NE breakdown in wild-type embryos (Figure 4A,
3:12)
but not in RNAi embryos (Figure 4B,
4:00; see Video 7 for earlier
time points), suggestive of a defect in retention of
GFP::histone H2B in the pronuclei. At this stage the
centrosomes in the RCC1(RNAi) embryos moved away from the pronuclei
(Figure 4, compare A and B at
1:48), creating a situation similar to Ran(RNAi) embryos in terms of distance between the centrosomes and the
chromatin (Figure 2B). However, in the RCC1(RNAi) embryos this
situation is rescued, giving rise to spindles that are
indistinguishable from those in wild-type embryos (Figure 4, compare A
and B at
0:12). Although the chromosomes are aligned between spindle
microtubules in a seemingly normal metaphase (Figure 4B,
0:12) they
clearly fail to segregate properly in anaphase (Figure 4B, 0:48). At
later time points chromatin bridges are still observed across the
cleavage furrow whereas wild-type embryos have completed cytokinesis
and formed growing, spherical nuclei (Figure 4, A and B, 3:12).
Consistent with the normal appearance of the mitotic spindle most (18 of 21) embryos divided into a larger AB and a smaller P1 daughter cell
(Figure 4B).
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Immunofluorescence analysis of RCC1(RNAi) embryos confirmed that DNA segregation is affected, yet mitotic spindles can assemble in embryos depleted of RCC1 (Figure 3H, compare missegregation of chromatin at the division of AB on the left with spindle formation in P1 on the right).
The observed pattern of an early spindle defect and later rescue could have been due to inefficient depletion of RCC1. To address this several approaches were taken: 1) In addition to RNAi-by-feeding we also tried to prevent RCC1 expression by injection of dsRNA into the gonads. 2) We targeted the RCC1 mRNA with three different dsRNAs covering in total the whole open reading frame. 3) Incubations on RNAi bacteria plates were prolonged up to 48 h. 4) RNAi was performed at either 20 or 25°C. None of these measures led to more severe effects on the spindle (our unpublished data). 5) Finally, we quantified the efficiency of RNAi by targeting RCC1 in a transgenic strain that expresses GFP::RCC1 in the germline. RCC1(RNAi) embryos from this strain had <5% GFP::RCC1 signal left when quantified by confocal microscopy (Figure 4C).
Centrosome Position Is Regulated by Ran System via Spindle Formation
To have another and more quantitative way of analyzing spindle formation, we measured the distance between the centrosomes relative to the total length of the embryo in time-lapse experiments. Aligning the data from nine different wild-type embryos relative to anaphase showed a very reproducible pattern (Figure 4D, Wild-type). Joining of the two pronuclei and setting up the spindle at NE breakdown do not change the distance between the centrosomes dramatically. Approximately 60 s before DNA segregation the spindle poles start to move apart, first slowly and later with higher velocity until maximum distance is reached and the embryo divides.
Although no spindle is formed in RanGAP(RNAi) embryos the centrosomes
still rock from side to side, which was used as an anaphase indicator
in aligning the curves from five independent embryos [Figure 4D,
RanGAP(RNAi)]. The two centrosomes move rapidly apart ~3 min before
mitosis to a final separation (Figure 4D) and position (Figure 2C)
identical to normal embryos. Ran(RNAi) embryos followed a pattern very
similar to RanGAP depletions (3 of 3 embryos). Due to the more dramatic
movements of centrosomes and pronuclei seen when targeting Ran several
frames in the time-lapse recordings were out of focus with respect to
the centrosomes, making averaging more difficult. Instead, a
representative example of a single Ran(RNAi) embryo is presented in
Figure 4D, showing a similar pattern as RanGAP depletions. As described
above, RCC1(RNAi) embryos also show premature separation of the
centrosomes but are able to reverse this and build a functional
spindle. When averaging 10 independent embryos the phenotype seems
highly reproducible [Figure 4D, RCC1(RNAi)]. Initially, the
centrosomes are associated with the sperm pronucleus but as
microtubules connecting chromatin with the centrosomes appear, the
centrosomes start to move prematurely apart to a maximum separation
comparable with Ran(RNAi) and RanGAP(RNAi) embryos (Figure 4D,
approximately
180 s; Figure 4B,
1:48). Later, the centrosomes move
closer to each other again and reach an almost normal distance at
metaphase (Figure 4D, approximately
30-0 s; Figure 4B,
0:18).
During anaphase and telophase the centrosomes in RCC1(RNAi) embryos
behave as in wild-type embryos (Figure 4D, 0-240 s), although
chromatin segregation is clearly affected (Figure 4B, 0:48-3:12).
In summary, these data demonstrate that although spindle assembly is defective in the absence of Ran or RanGTP hydrolysis, the cues that control final centrosome position are functional. We suggest that the premature centrosome separation may be caused by a lack of Ran-dependent attachment of the centrosomes to the pronuclei.
IMA-2 and IMB-1, Homologues of Vertebrate Importin
and
, Are Essential for Spindle Formation
We initially analyzed IMA-2 and IMA-3 requirement by RNAi in
embryos expressing GFP::histone H2B. ima-3(RNAi)
embryos were significantly reduced in size (our unpublished
data) in agreement with a role of IMA-3 in oogenesis (Geles and
Adam, 2001
; Table 1). However, spindle formation seemed relative normal
as judged from the presence of a metaphase plate and DIC images (our
unpublished data) and IMA-3 was therefore not studied further.
ima-2(RNAi) embryos, on the other hand, had clear spindle
defects (Figure 3D) and were examined more closely.
An ima-2 deletion allele was generated and isolated by the
C. elegans Gene Knockout Consortium. We obtained the
ima-2(ok256) allele and sequenced it to characterize the
deletion. The ima-2(ok256) allele lacks 1782 base pairs,
from nt 325 downstream of the start codon to nt 283 downstream of the
stop codon. This leads to a shortening of the protein from 532 to
76 amino acid residues from IMA-2 plus another 36 unrelated
amino acid residues encoded by sequences downstream of the deletion. We
therefore expect ima-2(ok256) to be a null allele. In the
wild-type genome the distance from the ima-2 stop codon to
the start codon of the downstream gene F26B1.2 is only 647 base pairs.
RNAi against F26B1.2 produced no detectable effects arguing against any
role of F26B1.2 in our study (Fraser et al., 2000
).
By outcrossing the ima-2(ok256) worms for several
generations we obtained strain XA3513. Analysis of XA3513 by single
worm PCR showed that ima-2(ok256) homozygotes are viable but
produce only inviable embryos. This demonstrates that IMA-2 is required either for proper oogenesis or early embryogenesis or both, consistent with its expression pattern (Geles and Adam, 2001
).
To study microtubule dynamics in the context of the
ima-2(ok256) allele we crossed XA3513 with WH204 (Strome
et al., 2001
), giving rise to strain XA3503. Observation of
embryos from ima-2(ok256) worms revealed that the
centrosomes initially stay relatively close to the sperm pronucleus and
that pronuclear migration was normal (compare Figure
5B, first panel and Video 8 with Figure 5A and Video 1). However, the centrosomes then move apart to an intermediate degree of separation (Figure 5C, which displays the average of 5 embryos). The centrosomes remain separated, but no mitotic
spindle was assembled and eventually the embryos enter mitosis as
visualized by further centrosome separation, "spindle" rocking, and
cytokinesis (Figure 5, B, 0:48-9:28, and C). In addition to the
failure of spindle formation, the timing from pronuclear joining to
rocking of the centrosomes was abnormally long in embryos from
ima-2(ok256) worms (504 ± 36 s [n = 5]
compared with 332 ± 45 s in wild-type embryos [n = 3]). This suggests that IMA-2 could be involved in determining the
onset or timing of mitosis.
|
Depletion of IMB-1 from embryos by RNAi give rise to a strong spindle
defect like those seen in embryos from ima-2(ok256) worms
and in Ran(RNAi) embryos. The centrosomes lose their association with
the sperm pronucleus early (Figure 5D,
6:40; 3 of 3 embryos) and move
far apart (Figure 5D,
3:20). The pronuclei never meet. The oocyte
pronucleus partly aligns between the centrosomes but spindle assembly
does not occur (Figure 5D,
3:20-0:40; see also Figure 3E and Video 15).
Disrupting the Ran Cycle Leads to Aneuploidy and Abnormal Chromatin Morphology
Following embryos that express GFP::histone H2B beyond
the first division allowed us to investigate the fate of chromatin when
the Ran cycle is abrogated. Measured from the completion of P0
division, AB in RNAi embryos divides at the same time as AB in control
embryos. In contrast, P1 division in RNAi embryos is significantly
delayed compared with wild-type embryos, resulting in prolonged
three-cell embryo stages (Figure 6;
Videos 9-11; n > 50). Consistent with the finding that a
functional Ran system as well as IMA-2 and IMB-1 are necessary for
proper spindle function the DNA content of the cells is not equally
distributed between the daughter cells and chromatin is often seen
trapped at cell junctions (Figure 6, arrows). When any of the
Ran-related genes was targeted by RNAi highly unstructured chromatin
was present after the first division and throughout the next cell cycle
(Figure 6; our unpublished data; >90% for each gene),
suggesting severe defects in NE reformation and perhaps DNA
decondensation. In some cases, we observed that the chromatin
eventually had time to round up in P1 as a consequence of the delayed
division (Figure 6, E and F).
|
NE Formation Is Dependent on RanGTP Production and Hydrolysis
Although RNAi against any component of the Ran cycle affected
spindle formation, the embryos always went through several rounds of
cytokinesis. This allowed us to investigate the role of the Ran GTPase
cycle in NE formation after mitosis. Initially, we examined the
distribution of nucleoporins by immunofluorescence with mAb414 (Davis
and Blobel, 1987
). In wild-type embryos a bright and continuous mAb414
signal surrounds each nucleus (Lee et al., 2000
; Figure
7A). In contrast, when we disrupted the
Ran system by targeting any of its components mAb414 stained
aggregates, many of which were not associated with chromatin. In cases
where association was detected the mAb414 signal was not uniform. We observed both situations within the same embryo for each of the genes
analyzed (Ran, RanGAP, RanBP2, and RCC1, n > 10 for each gene). A
single example for each gene is depicted in Figure 7, B-E. Similar
results on depletion of Ran were reported by Bamba et al.
(2002)
.
|
Because NEs can assemble in the absence of nuclear pore complex
insertion (Macaulay and Forbes, 1996
), we wished to determine whether
the disrupted nucleoporin localization was a consequence of a lack of
NE assembly. For this purpose, transgenic strains that express GFP
fused to the inner nuclear membrane protein emerin (EMR-1; Lee et
al., 2000
) were generated. GFP::EMR-1 can be used as
marker for the NE. Embryos from these strains show a distinct NE signal
as well as cytoplasmic staining like that seen with endoplasmic
reticulum proteins (Figure 8A, Video 12).
In older embryos the ratio of NE to total signal increases (our
unpublished data), suggesting that early embryos may store EMR-1
protein in the endoplasmic reticulum for later use. Antibodies raised
against EMR-1 give rise to similar staining (see below).
|
In embryos depleted of Ran or any of its cofactors, RanBP2, RanGAP, or RCC1, no NE-like GFP::EMR-1 signal was detected after the first cell division in the majority of cases (67%) (Figure 8, B and D-F, Video 13). In other embryos, presumably where the RNAi had been less efficient, aberrant nuclei with a strong aggregation of GFP::EMR-1 next to the NE became apparent after a prolonged time (Figure 8C). Thus, the distribution of GFP::EMR-1 in RNAi embryos was similar to the mislocalization of nucleoporins described above. When endogenous EMR-1 was visualized by immunofluorescence with polyclonal antibodies (a gift of Y. Gruenbaum and K. Wilson), identical results were obtained (supplementary Figure 1).
As a further proof that a closed NE is not assembled after mitosis when
the Ran cycle is inactivated, we determined whether soluble
GFP::
-tubulin was uniformly distributed in the embryos. In
normal embryos tubulin is excluded from the pronuclei and the nuclei
and can therefore be used as marker for NE breakdown and reformation
(Figure 5A and 9). In contrast, Ran(RNAi)
embryos never showed such exclusion after mitosis (Figure 9B; see also Figure 1, 4 of 4 embryos) and targeting the Ran cofactors also produced
uniform GFP::
-tubulin staining (Figure 9, C and D, 5 of 6 embryos). We conclude that not only Ran but also its ability to cycle
between RanGDP and RanGTP under the influence of RanGAP, RanBP2, and
RCC1, is essential for an early step of NE assembly in vivo in these
embryos.
|
Depletion of IMA-2 or IMB-1 Affects NE Formation
We next wished to investigate whether IMA-2 and IMB-1 also play a
role in regeneration of the NE after mitosis in vivo. Interestingly, multiple small structures surrounded by GFP::EMR-1 were
detectable in ima-2(RNAi) embryos early (~1 min) after
anaphase onset, when nuclei are formed in wild-type embryos (3 of 3 embryos, compare Videos 12 and 14). However, in ima-2(RNAi)
embryos (Figure 2F) these structures grew only slowly in size and a
significant amount of GFP::EMR-1 accumulated at the
centrosomes (Figure 8, compare A and G). Presumably the appearance of
multiple micronuclei after division is a consequence of the lack of
spindle formation described above. The fact that the structures only
grow slowly in size combined with the observation that
ima-2(ok256) embryos do not show nuclear exclusion of
soluble GFP::
-tubulin even late after mitosis (compare last panels in Figure 5, A and B, 4 of 4 embryos) suggests that IMA-2
is required either for fusion of nuclear membranes or for assembly of
nuclear pore complexes.
RNAi against IMA-3 was clearly effective as judged from embryonic
lethality (Table 1) and alterations in embryo size and organization
(our unpublished data). Despite this, nuclei were formed in
ima-3(RNAi) embryos upon cell division and grew to nearly normal size (our unpublished data), illustrating that IMA-3 is not required for nuclear formation in early embryos. Embryos depleted of IMB-1 showed a strong defect in GFP::EMR-1 recruitment to
the NE-like structures after mitosis (Figure 7H and Video16, 3 of 3 embryos). As with embryos where Ran or its cofactors had been targeted,
imb-1(RNAi) embryos instead showed clustering of
GFP::EMR-1 at the centrosomes. In addition, nuclear exclusion
of soluble GFP::
-tubulin was not observed in embryos
depleted of IMB-1 (our unpublished data; 3 of 3 embryos).
Furthermore, immunofluorescence analysis demonstrated that chromatin in
ima-2(RNAi) and imb-1(RNAi) embryos is most often
not surrounded by a smooth and continuous nucleoporin staining (Figure
7, compare F and G with A; >80% for each gene).
| |
DISCUSSION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
RanGTP production in the vicinity of chromosomes has recently been
shown to mediate chromosomal nucleation of spindle microtubules in
vitro (see INTRODUCTION). In this article, we describe the first use of
live cell imaging to investigate the function of Ran and its regulators
in mitotic spindle assembly and NE formation in vivo. In agreement with
biochemical data, largely obtained using extracts of Xenopus
eggs and with suggestive genetic evidence from yeasts (see INTRODUCTION
and below), we provide evidence that the Ran system is essential for
both spindle and NE assembly in C. elegans embryos. We have,
however, found unexpected differences in the requirement for Ran
cofactors compared with those predicted from in vitro studies. In
addition, a role for the importin
and
homologues IMA-2 and
IMB-1 in spindle and NE formation was demonstrated. Finally, the
components of the Ran system are shown to be required for normal
comigration of centrosomes with the male pronucleus.
In Vivo, Ran Is Essential for Spindle Formation ...
When Ran was depleted from C. elegans embryos before
the first zygotic mitosis, the centrosomes did not remain associated with the sperm pronucleus as in wild-type embryos but instead moved far
apart early in mitosis. The mechanism by which centrosomes are anchored
to the (pro-)nuclear membrane in interphase and prophase is largely
unknown. However, because NE formation is dependent on Ran (see below)
a likely explanation for the premature release of the centrosomes from
the sperm pronucleus is the lack of a membrane-associated anchoring
protein. The association of centrosomal microtubules with the NE has
recently been shown to accelerate the process of NE breakdown in
vertebrate cells (Beaudouin et al., 2002
; Salina et
al., 2002
) and this requires an as yet undefined connection
between the NE and microtubules. This connection could be related to
the C. elegans Ran-dependent centrosome-anchoring activity.
A few microtubules were often seen to connect the centrosomes and the
pronuclei at this stage even in Ran(RNAi) embryos. We believe these are
astral microtubules from the centrosomes that inefficiently associate
with the pronuclei, because the capacity of centrosomes to nucleate
microtubules seemed unaffected in these embryos. In strong contrast, no
spindle microtubules were seen between centrosomes and chromatin.
Neither could we detect bipolar spindles in embryos where one of the
pronuclei was aligned between the two centrosomes nor half-spindles
between single centrosomes and isolated pronuclei. This is not because
a haploid DNA complement provides insufficient stimulus to induce
spindle formation because when oocytes are fertilized with anucleate
sperm, they develop into embryos with normal spindles (Sadler and
Shakes, 2000
). Thus, we conclude that the ability of embryonic
chromatin to stimulate the nucleation of spindle microtubules is
dependent on Ran.
Our data show in addition that the cues for positioning of the
centrosomes along the anterior-posterior axis are independent of
spindle formation or of attachment of the centrosomes to the pronuclei.
In some cases, meiotic defects can affect downstream mitotic division
(Oegema et al., 2001
). However, polar bodies were always
produced in Ran(RNAi) embryos and we did not detect abnormal chromatin
content in the oocyte pronucleus as measured by GFP::histone
H2B levels. This suggests that the meiotic spindle in C. elegans may be formed by an alternative, Ran-independent mechanism.
Recently, RNAi-mediated depletions of Ran from C. elegans
embryos were reported to cause chromosome positioning and segregation defects (Bamba et al., 2002
; discussed further below). A
role for Ran in mitotic spindle formation has also been demonstrated in
fission yeast where a point mutation in the Ran gene (spi1) caused the appearance of monopolar and tiny spindles in a significant proportion of the cells (Fleig et al., 2000
). In addition,
the yeast mutant showed altered interphase microtubule arrays in the cytoskeleton, implying that Ran in this organism may be generally involved in chromatin-independent microtubule nucleation (Fleig et al., 2000
).
... and for Nuclear Envelope Formation
Recently, it has been demonstrated that GTP hydrolysis by Ran is
essential for membrane fusion events early during NE assembly in vitro
(Hetzer et al., 2000
; Zhang and Clarke, 2000
; see
INTRODUCTION). Our results extend this demonstration in vivo. In
contrast to the smooth NE staining of the inner nuclear membrane
protein EMR-1 in wild-type embryos (Lee et al., 2000
) we
observed that EMR-1 in Ran(RNAi) embryos was found in large clusters
that most likely represent membrane aggregates. These structures were
often not associated with chromatin, suggesting that aggregation was
caused by a block to reassociation of NE membrane material with
chromatin after mitosis. In some embryos, chromatin was actually
surrounded by EMR-1. However, strong perinuclear aggregation was always
seen in these embryos. This is most easily explained as the result of
lower RNAi efficiency in these embryos that would allow some reassociation of EMR-1-containing membranes with chromatin but not
allow NE assembly to proceed to completion.
Importantly, we observed very similar defects in NE assembly upon Ran
depletion when we compared living embryos expressing GFP::EMR-1 with immunostaining of endogenous EMR-1. The two
methods also provide reciprocal assurance against fixation artifacts or GFP::EMR-1 overexpression and/or mislocalization behavior.
Localization of nucleoporins confirmed the results of Bamba et
al. (2002)
and showed that the observed defects were not
restricted to proteins of the inner nuclear membrane. Consistent with
the absence of a NE, Ran(RNAi) embryos failed to establish nuclei that
could exclude cytoplasmic GFP::
-tubulin. Finally, it
should be noted that the defects in NE assembly are most likely not
attributable to spindle failure. When ICP-1 is targeted by RNAi,
spindle formation and DNA segregation are affected without preventing
subsequent NE formation (Galy, Askjaer, and Mattaj, unpublished
observations). Our data therefore leads us to conclude that Ran is
essential for an early step in NE reassembly after mitosis.
A recent study came to the same conclusion based on the use of a
nucleoporin antibody and fixed specimens (Bamba et al.,
2002
). For dynamic cellular processes, especially in fast dividing
embryos, time-lapse analysis provide much more information because it
enables a detailed kinetic description (see next section). Second,
because NE assembly can take place without detectable nucleoporin
insertion (Macaulay and Forbes, 1996
), analysis of a marker of the
inner nuclear membrane is a significantly more informative and reliable method of evaluation of the presence or absence of a NE.
Differential Requirement for RanBP2, RanGAP, and RCC1 in Mitosis
When we depleted embryos of the Ran regulators RanBP2, RanGAP, and
RCC1, defects in NE formation were observed that were very similar to
the defects seen in Ran(RNAi) embryos. Thus, we can conclude that a
functional Ran cycle, including GTP hydrolysis, is a necessity for NE
assembly after mitosis in living cells, as in vitro (Hetzer et
al., 2000
; Zhang and Clarke, 2000
).
The effects of targeting RanBP2 and RanGAP were also very similar to
the Ran RNAi phenotype in spindle formation, indicating either that
hydrolysis of GTP by Ran is essential for spindle formation or that
RanGTP concentrations need to be kept low away from the chromatin. In
mammalian cells, RanBP1 has been implicated in regulation of the
mitotic spindle since injection of antibodies against RanBP1 leads to
mitosis defects, including delayed metaphase and cytokinesis failure
(Guarguaglini et al., 2000
). Also in budding yeast RanBP1
has been suggested to be required for proper spindle formation
(Ouspenski, 1998
). However, in this case the activity of RanBP1 is
independent of RanGAP, suggesting that the effects observed in this
organism, where spindle formation takes place within a closed NE, may
have a different basis from those observed in C. elegans.
Parenthetically, it is interesting to note that although many metazoans
have both RanBP1 and RanBP2 genes, C. elegans does not
encode a RanBP1 homologue. Our data strongly suggest that RanBP2 takes
over all of RanBP1's functions in the nematode.
Because Ran mutants locked in the GTP conformation stimulate
delocalized microtubule nucleation in vitro (Carazo-Salas et al., 1999
; Kalab et al., 1999
; Wilde and Zheng, 1999
),
we expected that an accumulation of cytoplasmic RanGTP in RanGAP(RNAi)
and RanBP2(RNAi) embryos would lead to an increase in microtubule formation. We did not detect such an increase, perhaps because delocalized RanGTP only gives rise to short or unstable microtubules in
the embryos that would be indistinguishable from the soluble tubulin
staining. Regardless, our data suggest that both spindle and NE
formation in vivo requires that RanGTP can be reconverted to RanGDP.
In contrast to embryos from which other components of the RanGTPase cycle are depleted the centrosomes in RCC1(RNAi) embryos stay associated with the sperm pronucleus. This suggests that anchoring of the centrosomes to the sperm pronucleus could be RanGDP dependent. The centrosomes then separate prematurely and at the same time microtubules are seen connecting the centrosomes to the chromatin. Later, the centrosomes move closer again and a seemingly normal spindle is assembled that however fails to segregate the chromatin properly to the two daughter cells. We can envisage several different explanations for the specific lack of effect of RCC1 depletion on spindle formation compared with the requirement for Ran, RanGAP, and RanBP2 in this process and for all four proteins in NE assembly.
A formal possibility is that RanGDP rather than RanGTP is required for
spindle formation in C. elegans. This must be considered unlikely, because all known functions of Ran studied to date, including
spindle formation in vitro, require RanGTP. Alternatively, it might be
that the reduction of RCC1 in RNAi animals is incomplete, and leaves
sufficient activity to support spindle formation. Both RT-PCR analysis
of RCC1 mRNA and quantitation of the reduction of GFP::RCC1
fusion expression in embryos from dsRNA-treated worms suggest that RCC1
expression is reduced to <5% of wild-type. Furthermore, the degree of
embryonic lethality in these animals (>90%) is similar to that
achieved for the other genes studied here. Analysis of vertebrate
systems shows that different processes require different levels of RCC1
activity. For example, tsBN2 cells, which are temperature sensitive for
RCC1 activity, support both spindle formation (Nishitani et
al., 1991
; Compton and Cleveland, 1993
) and RanGTP-dependent nuclear export (Richards et al., 1997
) but not nuclear
import (Tachibana et al., 1994
; Richards et al.,
1997
). Spindle formation and NE assembly in Xenopus extracts
are differentially sensitive to the RCC1 inhibitor RanT24N
(Carazo-Salas et al., 1999
; Hetzer et al., 2000
),
with spindle formation being more sensitive than NE assembly. It is
therefore possible, but in our view unlikely, that residual RCC1
provides the explanation for our observations. Finally, it is possible
that there is an activity in C. elegans that is redundant
with RCC1 for nucleotide exchange on Ran and that functions in spindle,
but not NE, assembly. Although combined RNAi against RCC1 and the three
genes most closely related in sequence to RCC1 in the C. elegans genome did not block spindle formation (our unpublished
data), it is difficult to definitively rule out either this
explanation, or the others listed above.
It has been reported by others that targeting either Ran, RanGAP, or
RCC1 expression in C. elegans embryos by RNAi gives similar spindle assembly defects (Bamba et al., 2002
). However, the
penetrance of RNAi against RCC1 in that study was reported to be low
(~15% of embryos), whereas we consistently see the phenotype
described above in >80% of the embryos and RNAi against RCC1 resulted
in >90% lethality in our hands (Table 1). Because Bamba et
al. (2002)
analyzed fixed embryos we believe that the defect they
reported most likely reflects the temporary delay that we observed in
the initial phase of spindle formation, which was subsequently rescued as mitosis progressed.
IMA-2 and IMB-1 Are Required for Spindle Assembly and NE Formation in Embryonic Cells
We have characterized a deletion allele of ima-2 and
found that embryos produced by ima-2(ok256) homozygous worms
as well as imb-1(RNAi) embryos fail to assemble spindles
while their centrosomes nucleate normal levels of astral microtubules.
As in the case of RNAi against RanGAP and RanBP2, these results would
not be predicted by simple application of the model for Ran function on
spindle assembly derived from experiments in Xenopus egg
extracts. There, importin
and
have been shown to act as
inhibitors of microtubule nucleation by sequestering TPX2 or NuMA
(Gruss et al., 2001
; Nachury et al., 2001
; Wiese
et al., 2001
), and one might therefore expect to see an
increase in microtubule abundance upon depletion of IMA-2 or IMB-1.
Moreover, injection into mammalian cells of an importin
fragment,
which cannot interact with Ran, has a dominant negative effect on
spindle formation (Nachury et al., 2001
). There is no
obvious C. elegans homologue of TPX2. This could imply that
IMA-2/IMB-1 and importin
/
function differently in spindle
formation. However, more data on downstream mediators of the IMA-2 and
IMB-1 effect is required before strong conclusions can be reached.
The chromatin in ima-2(RNAi) and imb-1(RNAi)
embryos was often fragmented as a consequence of spindle failure but
was nevertheless associated with EMR-1 early after division. The
micronuclei seen at this stage did not fuse or grow normally,
suggesting either that a closed, functional NE was not formed or that
protein import was defective. Because no nuclear exclusion of soluble
GFP::
-tubulin was observed in ima-2(ok256)
embryos or imb-1(RNAi) embryos we favor the former
possibility, implying a role for IMA-2 and IMB-1 in NE assembly before
its function in nuclear protein import.
In summary, our data demonstrates that spindle assembly and NE formation in C. elegans embryos depend on the Ran GTPase cycle functioning, at least in part, via IMA-2 and IMB-1. However, there are aspects of our data that are unexpected in the light of the models derived from previous in vitro studies. These suggest either that the detailed mechanisms by which Ran affects mitotic events in the nematode and in vertebrates may be significantly different or that our incomplete understanding of both systems masks their intrinsic similarity. Further analysis of these processes in C. elegans and other in vivo systems is required to provide the answer.
| |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
We are grateful to A. Desai, M. Kirkham, and T. Zimmermann for practical assistance and especially to A.A. Hyman for sharing unpublished data and materials. We thank J. Ahringer, J. Austin, D. Bilbao-Cortés, Y. Gruenbaum, C. Malone, R. Saffrich, G. Seydoux, J. White, and K. Wilson for providing materials and technical advice. W. Antonin, A. Becskei, D. Bilbao-Cortés, C. Franz, V. Hachet, M. Hetzer, A.A. Hyman, A. Segref, C.A. Schatz, and T.C. Walther are acknowledged for discussions and critical reading of the manuscript. Some strains used in this work were provided by the Caenorhabditis Genetic Center, which is funded by the National Institutes of Health National Center for Research Resources. This work was supported by the Louis-Jeantet Foundation. P.A. and V.G. were funded by The Carlsberg Foundation and European Molecular Biology Oraganization, respectively.
| |
FOOTNOTES |
|---|
* Present address: Max Planck Institute of Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics, 01307 Dresden, Germany.
Online version of this
article contains video material for some figures. Online version
available at www.molbiolcell.org.
Corresponding author. E-mail address:
mattaj{at}embl-heidelberg.de.
Article published online ahead of print. Mol. Biol. Cell 10.1091/mbc.E02-06-0346. Article and publication date are at www.molbiolcell.org/cgi/doi/10.1091/mbc.E02-06-0346.
| |
ABBREVIATIONS |
|---|
Abbreviations used: DIC, differential interference contrast; dsRNA, double-stranded RNA; GFP, green fluorescent protein; NE, nuclear envelope; ORF, open reading frame; RNAi, dsRNA-mediated interference.
| |
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J. Tegha-Dunghu, B. Neumann, S. Reber, R. Krause, H. Erfle, T. Walter, M. Held, P. Rogers, K. Hupfeld, T. Ruppert, et al. EML3 is a nuclear microtubule-binding protein required for the correct alignment of chromosomes in metaphase J. Cell Sci., May 15, 2008; 121(10): 1718 - 1726. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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S. A. Adam, K. Sengupta, and R. D. Goldman Regulation of Nuclear Lamin Polymerization by Importin {alpha} J. Biol. Chem., March 28, 2008; 283(13): 8462 - 8468. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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V. Galy, W. Antonin, A. Jaedicke, M. Sachse, R. Santarella, U. Haselmann, and I. Mattaj A role for gp210 in mitotic nuclear-envelope breakdown J. Cell Sci., February 1, 2008; 121(3): 317 - 328. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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D. J. Anderson and M. W. Hetzer Shaping the endoplasmic reticulum into the nuclear envelope J. Cell Sci., January 15, 2008; 121(2): 137 - 142. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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A. Tedeschi, M. Ciciarello, R. Mangiacasale, E. Roscioli, W. M. Rensen, and P. Lavia RANBP1 localizes a subset of mitotic regulatory factors on spindle microtubules and regulates chromosome segregation in human cells J. Cell Sci., November 1, 2007; 120(21): 3748 - 3761. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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C. A. Kemp, M. H. Song, M. K. Addepalli, G. Hunter, and K. O'Connell Suppressors of zyg-1 Define Regulators of Centrosome Duplication and Nuclear Association in Caenorhabditis elegans Genetics, May 1, 2007; 176(1): 95 - 113. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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Y. Ma, S. Cai, Q. Lv, Q. Jiang, Q. Zhang, Sodmergen, Z. Zhai, and C. Zhang Lamin B receptor plays a role in stimulating nuclear envelope production and targeting membrane vesicles to chromatin during nuclear envelope assembly through direct interaction with importin beta J. Cell Sci., February 1, 2007; 120(3): 520 - 530. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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J. Dumont, S. Petri, F. Pellegrin, M.-E. Terret, M. T. Bohnsack, P. Rassinier, V. Georget, P. Kalab, O. J. Gruss, and M.-H. Verlhac A centriole- and RanGTP-independent spindle assembly pathway in meiosis I of vertebrate oocytes J. Cell Biol., January 29, 2007; 176(3): 295 - 305. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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A. V. Orjalo, A. Arnaoutov, Z. Shen, Y. Boyarchuk, S. G. Zeitlin, B. Fontoura, S. Briggs, M. Dasso, and D. J. Forbes The Nup107-160 Nucleoporin Complex Is Required for Correct Bipolar Spindle Assembly Mol. Biol. Cell, September 1, 2006; 17(9): 3806 - 3818. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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L. L. O'Brien and C. Wiese TPX2 is required for postmitotic nuclear assembly in cell-free Xenopus laevis egg extracts J. Cell Biol., June 5, 2006; 173(5): 685 - 694. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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R. V. Silverman-Gavrila and A. Wilde Ran Is Required before Metaphase for Spindle Assembly and Chromosome Alignment and after Metaphase for Chromosome Segregation and Spindle Midbody Organization Mol. Biol. Cell, April 1, 2006; 17(4): 2069 - 2080. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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Y.-K. Cao, Z.-S. Zhong, D.-Y. Chen, G.-X. Zhang, H. Schatten, and Q.-Y. Sun Cell cycle-dependent localization and possible roles of the small GTPase Ran in mouse oocyte maturation, fertilization and early cleavage Reproduction, October 1, 2005; 130(4): 431 - 440. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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N. R. Forsthoefel, K. Cutler, M. D. Port, T. Yamamoto, and D. M. Vernon PIRLs: A Novel Class of Plant Intracellular Leucine-rich Repeat Proteins Plant Cell Physiol., June 1, 2005; 46(6): 913 - 922. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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D. Poteryaev, J. M. Squirrell, J. M. Campbell, J. G. White, and A. Spang Involvement of the Actin Cytoskeleton and Homotypic Membrane Fusion in ER Dynamics in Caenorhabditis elegans Mol. Biol. Cell, May 1, 2005; 16(5): 2139 - 2153. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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M. M. Bhatti and W. J. Sullivan Jr. Histone Acetylase GCN5 Enters the Nucleus via Importin-{alpha} in Protozoan Parasite Toxoplasma gondii J. Biol. Chem., February 18, 2005; 280(7): 5902 - 5908. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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M. Ciciarello, R. Mangiacasale, C. Thibier, G. Guarguaglini, E. Marchetti, B. Di Fiore, and P. Lavia Importin {beta} is transported to spindle poles during mitosis and regulates Ran-dependent spindle assembly factors in mammalian cells J. Cell Sci., December 15, 2004; 117(26): 6511 - 6522. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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C. Quensel, B. Friedrich, T. Sommer, E. Hartmann, and M. Kohler In Vivo Analysis of Importin {alpha} Proteins Reveals Cellular Proliferation Inhibition and Substrate Specificity Mol. Cell. Biol., December 1, 2004; 24(23): 10246 - 10255. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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J. R. Davies, A. H. Osmani, C. P. C. De Souza, C. Bachewich, and S. A. Osmani Potential Link between the NIMA Mitotic Kinase and Nuclear Membrane Fission during Mitotic Exit in Aspergillus nidulans Eukaryot. Cell, December 1, 2004; 3(6): 1433 - 1444. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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O. J. Gruss and I. Vernos The mechanism of spindle assembly: functions of Ran and its target TPX2 J. Cell Biol., September 27, 2004; 166(7): 949 - 955. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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I. Loiodice, A. Alves, G. Rabut, M. van Overbeek, J. Ellenberg, J.-B. Sibarita, and V. Doye The Entire Nup107-160 Complex, Including Three New Members, Is Targeted as One Entity to Kinetochores in Mitosis Mol. Biol. Cell, July 1, 2004; 15(7): 3333 - 3344. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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Y. Du, S. Ferro-Novick, and P. Novick Dynamics and inheritance of the endoplasmic reticulum J. Cell Sci., June 15, 2004; 117(14): 2871 - 2878. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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S. C. Ems-McClung, Y. Zheng, and C. E. Walczak Importin {alpha}/{beta} and Ran-GTP Regulate XCTK2 Microtubule Binding through a Bipartite Nuclear Localization Signal Mol. Biol. Cell, January 1, 2004; 15(1): 46 - 57. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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D. A. Mason, E. Mathe, R. J. Fleming, and D. S. Goldfarb The Drosophila melanogaster importin {alpha}3 Locus Encodes an Essential Gene Required for the Development of Both Larval and Adult Tissues Genetics, December 1, 2003; 165(4): 1943 - 1958. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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V. Galy, I. W. Mattaj, and P. Askjaer Caenorhabditis elegans Nucleoporins Nup93 and Nup205 Determine the Limit of Nuclear Pore Complex Size Exclusion In Vivo Mol. Biol. Cell, December 1, 2003; 14(12): 5104 - 5115. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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C. Segbert, R. Barkus, J. Powers, S. Strome, W. M. Saxton, and O. Bossinger KLP-18, a Klp2 Kinesin, Is Required for Assembly of Acentrosomal Meiotic Spindles in Caenorhabditis elegans Mol. Biol. Cell, November 1, 2003; 14(11): 4458 - 4469. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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A. Harel, R. C. Chan, A. Lachish-Zalait, E. Zimmerman, M. Elbaum, and D. J. Forbes Importin {beta} Negatively Regulates Nuclear Membrane Fusion and Nuclear Pore Complex Assembly Mol. Biol. Cell, November 1, 2003; 14(11): 4387 - 4396. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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D. Salina, P. Enarson, J.B. Rattner, and B. Burke Nup358 integrates nuclear envelope breakdown with kinetochore assembly J. Cell Biol., September 15, 2003; 162(6): 991 - 1001. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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I. Le Masson, D. Y. Yu, K. Jensen, A. Chevalier, R. Courbeyrette, Y. Boulard, M. M. Smith, and C. Mann Yaf9, a Novel NuA4 Histone Acetyltransferase Subunit, Is Required for the Cellular Response to Spindle Stress in Yeast Mol. Cell. Biol., September 1, 2003; 23(17): 6086 - 6102. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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