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Vol. 14, Issue 3, 1058-1073, March 2003



*University of California, Berkeley, California 94720-3200;
Bayer Pharmaceutical Division, Berkeley,
California 94701-1986;
University of the Pacific
School of Pharmacy, Stockton, California 95211; and
§Ingenuity Inc., Mountain View, California
94043
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ABSTRACT |
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The striped bass has two retina-expressed class III myosin genes, each composed of a kinase, motor, and tail domain. We report the cloning, sequence analysis, and expression patterns of the long (Myo3A) and short (Myo3B) class III myosins, as well as cellular localization and biochemical characterization of the long isoform, Myo3A. Myo3A (209 kDa) is expressed in the retina, brain, testis, and sacculus, and Myo3B (155 kDa) is expressed in the retina, intestine, and testis. The tails of these two isoforms contain two highly conserved domains, 3THDI and 3THDII. Whereas Myo3B has three IQ motifs, Myo3A has nine IQ motifs, four in its neck and five in its tail domain. Myo3A localizes to actin filament bundles of photoreceptors and is concentrated in the calycal processes. An anti-Myo3A antibody decorates the actin cytoskeleton of rod inner/outer segments, and this labeling is reduced by the presence of ATP. The ATP-sensitive actin association is a feature characteristic of myosin motors. The numerous IQ motifs may play a structural or signaling role in the Myo3A, and its localization to calycal processes indicates that this myosin mediates a local function at this site in vertebrate photoreceptors.
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INTRODUCTION |
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The asymmetrical shapes of the rods and cones of
the vertebrate retina are specialized to mediate photon detection and
signal transmission. At the distal ends are the outer segments, which are composed of stacks of photopigment-bearing membranous disks surrounded by the plasma membrane. Progressively proximal to the outer
segment are the mitochondrion-packed ellipsoid, the endoplasmic reticulum- and Golgi-rich myoid, the perinuclear region, the axon, and
the synapse. The outer segment is connected to the rest of the cell by
the narrow connecting cilium, through which metabolic fuels and newly
synthesized proteins are transported. Although they maintain highly
specialized shapes, photoreceptors are not static. Elaborately
choreographed morphogenetic movements establish the specialized shapes
of photoreceptors during development. Once formed, photoreceptors
undergo outer segment turnover throughout life. This turnover is
mediated by the daily addition of new disks to the base of the outer
segment and the shedding of effete disks from the tip (Young, 1976
).
Disk addition requires transport of newly synthesized materials from
the perinuclear and myoid regions to and through the connecting cilium.
More dramatic photoreceptor motility occurs during retinomotor
movements of lower vertebrates; light onset induces cone myoids to
contract and rod myoids to elongate, whereas dark onset induces
opposite movements (Burnside, 1978
).
Several observations suggest that the actin cytoskeleton plays an
important role in photoreceptor motile processes. Photoreceptors are
richly endowed with actin filaments deployed in distinct populations and likely to reflect specialized functional roles. Filamentous actin
is concentrated in the distal connecting cilium of the outer segment
(Chaitin et al., 1984
; Wolfrum and Schmitt, 2000
) and throughout the length of the ellipsoid, where it is laterally associated into longitudinal bundles that extend into microvillus-like calycal processes (CPs) that cup the base of the outer segment (Nagle
et al., 1986
; Arikawa and Williams, 1991
). Disruption of actin filaments in Xenopus photoreceptors by cytochalasin
led to the production of oversized outer-segment disks several times the normal diameter, suggesting that actin filaments are required for
disk initiation but not for addition of new membrane to disks already
initiated (Williams et al., 1988
; Vaughan et al.,
1989
).
Actin-dependent motility may be generated by actin assembly or the
interaction of motor proteins with actin filaments. To date, all motor
proteins known to translocate along actin filaments are members of the
large myosin superfamily (for review, see Berg et al.,
2001
). They are composed of a conserved globular motor (or head) domain
containing the nucleotide- and actin-binding sites, a regulatory neck
domain containing binding sites for calmodulin or calmodulin-related
light chains (IQ motifs), and a highly variable subclass-specific
C-terminal tail domain thought to be responsible for cargo binding
and/or targeting of the molecule. The neck domain is considered to act
as a lever arm and is thought to be responsible for the primary
mechanical component of the power stroke of myosins (Rayment et
al., 1993
; Houdusse and Cohen, 1996
; Highsmith, 1999
).
The first myosin to be characterized was the bipolar filament-forming
class II myosins of muscle and nonmuscle cells. In contrast to these
filament-forming myosins, at least 16 more classes of myosins have been
reported from organisms ranging from Dictyostilium discoidium to humans (for recent reviews, see Barylko
et al., 2000
; Hodge and Cope, 2000
; Reck-Peterson et
al., 2000
; Sellers, 2000
). None of these "unconventional"
myosins appear to form bipolar filaments; thus, they are generally
thought to have structural or transport rather than contractile functions.
Class III myosins were the third myosin class discovered and are unique
among myosins in having an N-terminal kinase domain attached to the
myosin head. The original member of the class III myosins is NINAC of
D. melanogaster. NINAC is expressed exclusively in fly
photoreceptors and has been shown to play roles in photoreceptor maintenance and phototransduction (Porter and Montell, 1993
; Porter et al., 1993b
; Li et al., 1998
). NINAC also
associates with the signalplex, a supramolecular signaling complex
thought to facilitate the rapid phototransduction cascade in
Drosophila (Montell, 1998
).
A second class III member, MyoIIILim, isolated from the horseshoe crab
Limulus polyphemus, has also been shown to be expressed exclusively in photoreceptors (Battelle et al., 1998
). The
first vertebrate class III myosins were recently cloned in our
laboratory. We have reported the cloning of two human class III
myosins: MYO3A, cloned from the human retina and retinal pigment
epithelium (RPE) (Dosé and Burnside, 2000
), and MYO3B, cloned
from the human retina (Dosé and Burnside, 2000
; Berg et
al., 2001
). It was recently shown that human MYO3A is a target for
nonsyndromic progressive hearing loss (Walsh et al., 2002
).
Our laboratory has cloned two class III isoforms from retina of the
striped bass (Morone saxatilis): Myo3A and Myo3B. These were
reported previously in meeting abstracts (Hillman et al., 1996
; Wong et al., 1998
). Here, we present a more
detailed characterization of these two bass class III myosins. We
provide a sequence analysis of Myo3A and Myo3B, compare them with all
class III myosins cloned to date, and examine their tissue expression
patterns. We also examine the subcellular localization and the actin-
and calmodulin-binding properties of Myo3A.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Animals
Striped bass, Morone saxatilis, were purchased from Chico Game Fish Farm, Chico, CA, and were kept in circular constant-flow indoor tanks containing chloramine-free tapwater at a constant 14:10 light/dark cycle. At 1-2 h before handling, artificial sea salt was added to the tank at a 1:10 dilution, and 15-30 min before handling, bass were treated with 3-aminobenzoic acid ethyl ester (methanesulfonate salt, MS222; Sigma, St. Louis, MO) at 9.4 g/100 gal.
Tissue Dissections
Dark-adapted bass (1 h total darkness) were caught and killed in total darkness and immediately dissected under low light. Light-adapted bass were subjected to bright light (1 h), killed, and dissected in light. Eyes were enucleated, hemisected, and immersed in HBSS (Life Technologies/BRL, Gaithersburg, MD) supplemented with 1 µM calpeptin (Calbiochem-Novobiochem, La Jolla, CA). Similarly, the sacculus was dissected into HBSS/calpeptin. The retina, RPE (dark-adapted) or retina/RPE combined (light-adapted), and sacculus were removed and transferred into either RNA-STAT for preparation of RNA, homogenization buffer, or fresh HBSS/calpeptin for shake-off preparation.
RNA Isolation and cDNA synthesis
RNA was collected from retina and RPE of dark-adapted bass. Total RNA was extracted using RNA-STAT (TEL-TEST, Inc., Friendswood, TX), and m-RNA was purified using the PolyATract mRNA isolation system (Promega, Madison, WI). Rapid amplification of cDNA ends (RACE)-ready cDNA was synthesized from purified mRNA using the Advantage cDNA synthesis kit (Clontech, Palo Alto, CA).
Myo3A and 3B Cloning
A myosin PCR screen was performed on bass retina/RPE cDNA using
the degenerate myosin primers ATP-3 and EAF-A (Bement et
al., 1994
) to amplify the myosins expressed in these tissues.
The resultant ~150-base pair PCR products were subcloned, sequenced,
and analyzed against GenBank, EMBL, DDBJ, and PDB sequences using the
BLAST Network Service of the National Center for Biotechnology
Information. Two closely related clones displayed very little sequence
similarity to previously identified myosins. The first of these two
clones, now called Myo3A, was amplified as four RACE fragments using
nested primers designed to amplify in both the 5' and 3' directions
originating from within the initial 150 base pairs cloned (Hillman
et al., 1996
).
A 567-base pair fragment spanning the kinase/myosin junction of the
second clone, now called Myo3B, was amplified in a separate experiment
using two degenerate primers. The upstream primer was directed against
a conserved kinase motif GITAIE (GGNATHACNGCNATHGA), and the downstream
primer was directed against a conserved motor domain motif NPPHIFAV
(CNACNGCRAANAYRTGNGGNGGRTT). It was recognized by sequence comparison
as one of the novel clones seen in the original PCR screen described
above. Six RACE reactions (one in the 5' direction and five in the 3'
direction) were performed to clone the cDNA (abstract, Wong et
al., 1998
).
Northern Blot Analysis
To compare mRNA levels in retina and RPE, 1.7 µg each of RPE
polyA RNA and retina polyA RNA were electrophoresed in 1%
agarose/formaldehyde gels (Sambrook et al., 1989
).
Multitissue Northern blots were prepared with 4 µg of polyA RNA from
dark-adapted retina, light adapted retina/RPE, brain, heart, intestine,
kidney, liver, muscle, and testis. The polyA RNA was transferred to
Hybond-N (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech, Piscataway, NJ) by capillary
action, and the membrane was prehybridized in 50% formamide, 2×
Denhardt's solution, 5× SSC, and 0.1 mg/ml salmon sperm DNA overnight
at 42°C and hybridized in the same buffer with the
32P-labeled probes overnight at 42°C. Radioactive
labeling of probes was done using Prime-It RmT dCTP labeling reactions
(Stratagene, La Jolla, CA), and probes were added at 2 × 106 cpm/ml. Membranes were washed in 0.1% SDS/0.1× SSC at
42°C and autoradiographed using x-ray film with intensifying screens
at
80°C for up to 1 wk.
Tissue Homogenization and Sample Preparation
Dissected tissue was homogenized in a Teflon/glass motor-driven homogenizer (Eberbach Corp., Ann Arbor, MI) at 180-200 rpm, 40 strokes in one of several buffers: buffer A, 50 mM Mops, pH 7.2, 1 mM EDTA, 1 mM EGTA, 160 mM KCl; buffer B, buffer A + 1 mM dithiothreitol (DTT); buffer C, buffer A + 1 mM DTT and 10 mM ATP; and buffer D, buffer A + 10 mM ATP in the presence of a complex protease inhibitor cocktail (PI): 2 µg/µl aprotinin, 100 µM leupeptin, 1 µM pepstatin, 1 µM calpeptin, 5 µM calpain inhibitor III, 400 µM PMSF, 1 mM benzamidine, 2 mM phenanthroline, 10 µg/µl TAME, 200× protease and phosphatase inhibitor cocktail (P8340, Sigma). The homogenate was subjected to centrifugation (100,000 × g); the final supernatant is referred to as high-speed supernatant.
Shake-offs
Shake-offs (isolated photoreceptor inner/outer segments) were
prepared by agitating dissected retinas in HBS + calpeptin, breaking
off rods and cones at the myoid region. These photoreceptor inner/outer
segments are collected by a low-speed centrifugation (1000 × g, 20 min, 4°C) and can be either homogenized or
further purified on a Percoll step gradient as described (Pagh-Roehl
and Burnside, 1995
). All gradient purification steps were done in the
presence of the protease inhibitor cocktail described above.
Generation of Myosin IIIA Antibodies
Three antibodies were generated against bass Myo3A: a "head" antibody raised against the motor domain (aa 260-669), a "tail" antibody raised against the tail region beyond the last IQ motif (aa 1631-1832), and the "3THDII" (used throughout this study) antibody raised against the extreme C-terminal 22 amino acids. The head and tail domains were expressed as histidine-tagged fusion proteins and injected into rabbits for the production of polyclonal antisera (antibody production was performed at Office of Laboratory Animal Care, University of California, Berkeley). The tail-tip antibody was raised against and affinity-purified on the last 22 amino acids of the bass MYO3A (performed by Bethyl Laboratories, Inc., Montgomery, TX). The epitope chosen for antibody production is at the extreme C terminus (NPYDFRHLLRKTSQRRKLIKQY) in a region almost identical to the human MYO3A tail tip (see Figure 3 for sequence comparison). Currently, an antibody raised against Myo3B suggests that it is not expressed in the photoreceptors.
Western Blotting
Protein samples were subjected to electrophoresis on NuPAGE Tris
acetate gels (7%) (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA) and transferred to Hybond
N (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech) in NuPAGE transfer buffer + 10%
methanol and 0.05% SDS. The membrane was blocked with 5% milk in PBS
and incubated with 1:80,000
-3THDII O/N in 3% BSA in PBS at 4°C
or 1:5000 immunoaffinity-purified anti-tail antibody. Membrane was
washed for 1 h with six changes in PBS and incubated with goat
anti-rabbit antibody conjugated to horseradish peroxidase (Amersham
Pharmacia) for 1 h at room temperature in 3% BSA in PBS. The
membrane was washed again for 1 h with six changes of PBS and
developed using enhanced chemiluminescence (Amersham Pharmacia).
Immunocytochemistry
Photoreceptor inner/outer segments were allowed to settle for 5 min on poly-L-lysine-subbed slides and coverslips. They
were methanol-fixed in
20°C methanol for 2 min, or
paraformaldehyde-fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde/PBS and incubated 40 min
at room temperature. After fixation, the slides and coverslips were
rinsed twice in PBS. Before immunolocalization, paraformaldehyde-fixed
cells were treated with 2% glycine/PBS for 2 min, PBS twice for 2 min,
five changes of fresh 0.1 mg/ml sodium borohydride for 5 min, twice with PBS for 2 min, 0.1% Triton-X-100 for 3 min, and twice with PBS
for 5 min. Immunolocalization was carried out according to Hoang
et al. (1999)
. Secondary antibodies were Alexa 488 (Myo3A) and Cy3 (tubulin) (Molecular Probes, Eugene, Oregon).
Phalloidin staining was performed by adding a 1:50 dilution of Texas
Red or Alexa 488 phalloidin (Molecular Probes) to the secondary
antibody incubation.
Cells were observed with an inverted microscope (Carl Zeiss, Inc., Thornwood, NY) using a 63×/NA 1.4 objective. Images were acquired with a cooled CCD camera (Hamamatsu Corp., Bridgewater, NJ) controlled by Open Lab software (Improvision Inc., Lexington, MA). To obtain images of photoreceptor immunofluorescence and phalloidin staining, section series of 15-25 0.5-µm optical sections were taken. The section series was deconvolved with Open Lab software and merged. Stained photoreceptors were also visualized with a Zeiss 510 Confocal microscope. The Myo3A staining pattern was similar in both methanol- and paraformaldehyde-fixed cells; however, the phalloidin did not label actin filaments in methanol-fixed tissue.
Electron Microscopy
Grids were coated with a thin film of Formvar layered on water. Then, 12-15 coated grids were collected on a coverslip and allowed to air-dry. The grids were then coated with 0.01% poly-L-lysine for 5 min at room temperature and left to dry overnight at room temperature. Freshly prepared ice-cold photoreceptor inner/outer segments were allowed to settle on grids for 5-10 min. Cells were permeabilized for 5-10 min with PHEM buffer (6 mM PIPES, 25 mM HEPES, 8 mM EDTA, 2 mM MgCl2, 1 mM DTT, 20 µM taxol, 25 µg/ml phalloidin) containing 1% Triton X-100. Samples were incubated for 1 hr in blocking buffer: PHEM buffer with 2% BSA and 30% normal goat serum (NGS), followed by a 1-hr incubation in primary antibody diluted (1:200, Myo3A; 1:50, anti-actin) in working buffer (PHEM buffer supplemented with 2% BSA and 10% NGS). The grids were washed three times with working buffer and incubated for 30 min in 1:10 secondary goat anti-rabbit antibody conjugated to 18-mm gold spheres (Jackson Immuno Research, West Grove, PA). Finally, specimens were washed two times in working buffer and once in distilled water, allowed to air-dry, and negative-stained using 1% uranyl acetate.
Rod Inner/Outer Segment Cytoskeleton Extractions
Gradient-purified rod inner/outer segments (RIS/ROS) were collected by centrifugation at 1000 × g for 20 min at 4°C and resuspended in buffer B with 1% Triton-X-100 and either 1 mM MgCl2, 1 mM MgATP, or 10 mM MgATP. After 10-20 min on ice, the samples were centrifuged at 100,000 × g for 30 min at 4°C. The supernatant (cytosolic, peripheral, and membrane proteins) was collected, and the insoluble pellet (cytoskeleton and associated proteins) was resuspended in an equal volume of lithium dodecyl sulfate (LDS) sample buffer (Invitrogen). Samples were electrophoresed and analyzed by Western blotting as described above.
Calmodulin Affinity Column
Cell extract was prepared from homogenized whole retinas as
described above. The high-speed supernatant containing the soluble fraction from homogenized retinas was diluted to twice its original volume in HBSS/PI and subjected to centrifugation in a Centricon YM-30
(Millipore Corp., Bedford, MA.) with a 30,000 MW cutoff (as described
by Battelle et al., 1998
) Once the retinal extract had
been reduced to its original volume, it was incubated for 1 h with
gentle rocking at 4°C with calmodulin-Sepharose 4B previously washed
three times in buffer D/PI (with or without Ca2+). The
calcium-containing buffer was generated by adding 2 mM CaCl2 to achieve a calculated free Ca2+
concentration of 17 µM (Bers et al., 1994
). After the
binding step, beads were washed three times in buffer D/PI and
incubated with buffer D/PI (with or without Ca2+) for 1-4
h. The bead supernatant was removed, and electrophoresis sample buffer
was added directly to the beads to remove any bound Myo3A. The beads
were sonicated and pelleted by centrifugation, and the solubilized
sample was examined by SDS-PAGE. As a negative control, the same
incubations were done with Sepharose beads alone.
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RESULTS |
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Cloning and Characterization of Myo3A and Myo3B
We have previously reported in abstracts that two bass class III
myosin isoforms, Myo3A and Myo3B (Figure
1), had been identified during a
PCR-based myosin screen performed on the retina and RPE of striped bass
(Morone saxatilis) (Hillman et al., 1996
; Wong et al., 1998
). The two myosins were cloned using RACE and
identified as class III myosins by virtue of their N-terminal kinase
domains. They are a long (Myo3A, 209 kDa) and a short (Myo3B, 155 kDa) isoform with kinase domains that are 66% identical (78% similar), motor domains that are 62% identical (75% similar), and tail domains that are 33% identical (51% similar).
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Figure 2 is an unrooted phylogenetic tree
of all current myosin classes I-XVIII. All six members of the
class III myosins, bass Myo3A and Myo3B, human MYO3A (Dosé and
Burnside, 2000
) and MYO3B (Dosé and Burnside, 2002
),
Drosophila NINAC (Montell and Rubin, 1988
), and
Limulus MyoIIILIM (Battelle et
al., 1998
) are compared with one to three representative members
of all other myosin classes. The comparison spans the motor domain
region corresponding to amino acids 88-780 of chicken muscle myosin
(Gg II) (Maita et al., 1991
), similar to previously
published myosin trees (Cope et al., 1996
; Hodge and Cope,
2000
).
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A clustal W alignment was performed (Figure
3) comparing the predicted amino acid
sequence of the bass, human, fruit fly, and horseshoe crab class III
myosins used in the tree above. The alignment shows that amino acid
sequence similarities lie primarily in the kinase and motor domains and
that the tails of these class III myosins are quite divergent. Two
isoforms from the same species, bass Myo3A and Myo3B, exhibit a 61%
overall identity (75% conserved) to each other in the kinase/motor
domain and only 11% identity (16% conserved) in their neck and tail
domains.
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In the overall alignment of all the class III myosins, the kinase and
head domains considered together are 16% identical (31% conserved).
The more closely related vertebrate class III myosins are 57%
identical (69% similar) in the kinase/motor domains. Insertions occurring in the kinase domains at amino acids 63-69 (in Myo3B) and
amino acids 331-346 (in Myo3A) are unique to the bass class III
myosins. The two bass class III kinases are 55% identical (66%
similar) to MINK, but only in the ~300 amino acids that constitute the kinase catalytic core domain. Near the carboxy-terminal end of the
motor domains (945-959 of the consensus sequence), the bass myosin
IIIs have insertions of different lengths: 15 amino acids in Myo3A and
8 amino acids in Myo3B relative to the human myosin IIIs. Another
insertion at position 1150-1178 of bass Myo3A effectively splits and
duplicates an IQ motif, introducing another IQ motif to the neck of
Myo3A compared with Myo3B. Both Myo3A and Myo3B have a glutamic acid at
the TEDS site (Bement and Mooseker, 1995
), suggesting they may
be an active motor, unlike NINAC, which breaks the TEDS rule.
Bass Myo3A has nine IQ motifs (putative
calmodulin-binding domains) distributed not only within the neck
(four), where IQ motifs are found in most myosins, but also throughout
the tail (five). Nine IQ motifs is more than have been reported for any other myosin to date. The bass Myo3B has only three IQ motifs; however,
this is still more than other shorter class III myosins, such as the
short splice variant of NINAC (p132) (Montell and Rubin, 1988
),
MyoIIILIM (Battelle et al., 1998
), and the human MYO3B
(Dosé and Burnside, 2002
), which each have one or two IQ motifs.
The first four Myo3A IQ motifs and the three Myo3B IQ motifs are evenly
spaced, with a periodicity of 26 amino acids between the first amino
acids of the IQ motifs, except for the aberrant 28 amino acids between
IQ motifs 2 and 3 of Myo3A. Such regularly spaced IQ motifs are a
characteristic of the neck domains of all known myosins (Houdusse
et al., 1996
). Unlike the first four IQ motifs of Myo3A, the
next five are scattered throughout the rest of the tail domain. We
therefore categorize myosin III IQ motifs as either neck or
tail IQ motifs. The only other known myosin with IQ motifs
within its tail domain is the human class III myosin MYO3A (Dosé
and Burnside, 2000
).
Sequence analysis suggests that the class III myosin tails are
not related to other proteins in the database, but the tail and fourth
neck IQ motifs are homologous with the previously described GAP-43
module (Neel and Young, 1994
). Also, a higher than usual degree of
sequence identity (~80%) is shared by the IQ motifs of the tail. The
central region in particular is almost perfectly conserved and contains
an invariant serine after the glutamine. It is not known whether this
site is phosphorylated, but in all five tail IQ motifs, it is within
the context predicted to be a serine phosphorylation site by NetPhos
2.0 (http://www.cbs.dtu.dk/services/NetPhos/). It is also interesting
that although acidic amino acid residues are rarely found in IQ motifs,
an acidic residue occurs in all the tail IQ motifs after the FRGHK sequence.
An extensive search using the coils program
(http://www.ch.embnet.org/software/COILS_form.html) under stringent
conditions identified a 36-amino acid region of Myo3A from 1540-1574
(between IQ motifs 8 and 9) predicted to have a >80% probability of
forming a coiled-coil (Lupas, 1996
). The predictive scans were made
using both the MTK matrix (derived from the sequences of myosins,
tropomyosins, and keratins, intermediate filaments type I and II) and
the MTIDK matrix (derived from myosins, paramyosins, tropomyosins,
intermediate filaments types I-V, desmosomal proteins, and kinesins).
Scans were performed with weighted and unweighted matrices. In all
cases, the differences in the probability of forming a coiled-coil were <20%, and the predictions were made using a 28-residue window. The
prediction of a coiled-coil domain in the tail of Myo3A remains tentative. Although all criteria for coiled-coil structure are met as
specified by the COILS program, the length of 36 residues is only one
amino acid above the nominal cutoff for false-positives. Therefore, it
remains to be empirically determined whether this region indeed forms a
coiled-coil that allows dimerization.
The least conserved regions in the class III myosins are the tail
domains; however, among the vertebrate class III tails, there are some
striking similarities near their C-termini. There is a 58-amino-acid
region that is 43% identical (57% similar) among the vertebrate
myosins. We have designated this region the class III tail homology
domain I (3THDI). An INTERPRO search (Apweiler et al., 2000
)
indicates that this region does not resemble any domain or motif
currently in the database. At the extreme C-terminus of the bass and
the human class IIIA myosins, there is another highly conserved domain
that is 77% identical (91% conserved). We have designated this region
the class IIIA tail homology domain II (3THDII).
Multiple PEST sequences in Myo3A suggest that this class III
myosin may have a short half-life in vivo (Rogers et al.,
1986
). The PESTfind website at
http://www.at.embnet.org/embnet/tools/bio/PESTfind/identified six
potential PEST sequences in Myo3A, one at the kinase myosin junction aa
347-372 and five (amino acids 714-723, 1207-1226, 1403-1423,
1482-1521, 1744-1763) near the C terminus (in the tail domain),
C-terminal positioning being typical for PEST sequences (Barnes and
Gomes, 1995
). Such regions contain at least one P, one E or D, and one
S or T. They are flanked by lysine (K), arginine (R), or histidine (H)
residues, but positively charged residues are disallowed within the
PEST sequence. The pest scores range from 8 to 24; the program
designates scores of 5 to 50 as strong. Aside from the six strong PEST
sequences identified, the program also identified seven weak PEST
sequences with scores from
5 to 5. In contrast, the shorter Myo3B
contains no strong PEST sequences and only three weak ones. The human
IIIA is predicted to have two strong PEST sequences (amino acids
1170-1184 and 1334-1348), which also occur in the tail domain, and
three weak sites, and the human IIIB has four weak PEST sequences.
Northern Blot Analysis of Myo3A and 3B
Northern blot analysis was used to examine the expression of Myo3A
and 3B in bass retina, RPE, brain, heart, intestine, kidney, liver,
muscle, and testis (Figure 4)
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Myo3A. Using a motor/tail domain probe (spanning aa 934-1203) (Figure 1), an ~7-kb transcript is labeled in bass retina, brain, and testis (Figure 4). No message was detected in RPE. The level of transcription in the retina is at least 10-50 times higher than that seen in brain and testis.
Myo3B. Using a kinase/myosin junction probe (spanning aa 243-407) (Figure 1), an ~4-kb transcript is labeled in bass retina, intestine, and testis (Figure 4). The transcription levels of Myo3B among tissues tested differ from those seen for 3A in that the 3B levels in retina are similar to the levels in testis and approximately twice that seen in intestine.
Western Blot Analysis of Myo3A
Western blot analysis shows that antibodies to Myo3A label a
single band in homogenates of retina, RPE, detached photoreceptor inner-outer segments, and the sacculus of the inner ear (Figure 5). An antibody raised against the highly
conserved extreme C-terminal 22 amino acids of Myo3A (which exhibits
77% identity to the human MYO3A) was used to label
immunoblotted protein samples from the dark-adapted bass
eyes. When isolated, dark-adapted bass retinas are agitated in HBSS,
both rods and cones break off at the constricted myoid region, thus
generating a suspension of photoreceptor inner/outer segments. The
antibody labels a single band at ~210 kDa in the RPE, the retina, the
suspension of photoreceptor inner/outer segments, and the sacculus
(Figure 5, left). The size of the immunolabeled band is in consistent
agreement with the predicted molecular weight of 209 kDa for bass
Myo3A. The results show that the level of Myo3A is ~10-fold higher in
retina (Figure 5, lane 2) than in RPE (Figure 5, lane 1) or the
sacculus (Figure 5, lane 5) and is also enriched at least twofold in a
crude shake-off preparation of photoreceptor inner/outer segments
(Figure 5, lane 3). In addition, a secondary antibody raised against a
his-tagged tail fusion protein expressing amino acids 1612-1832 of
Myo3A also labeled a single 210-kDa band (Figure 5, lane 6). A third
antibody generated against the entire motor domain also labeled a
210-kDa band but also labeled multiple other bands in the same sample,
suggesting cross-reactivity with other myosins.
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Immunolocalization of Myo3A in Retinal Sections
The localization of Myo3A in bass retina was determined from 8- to
10-µm cryosections of dark-adapted bass retina fixed in methanol and
immunolabeled with the Myo3A tail-tip antibody (Figure 6). Myo3A labeling of photoreceptors is
concentrated in the distal ends of both rod ellipsoids (Figure 6a,
arrows) and cone ellipsoids (ce) (red). The specificity of the Myo3A
antibody is confirmed by the elimination of epitope recognition in the
presence of excess peptide (Figure 6b).
|
Colocalization of Myo3A and Actin Filaments in Cone Photoreceptors
Isolated inner-outer segments of photoreceptors were labeled with
both phalloidin and the anti-Myo3A THDII antibody to ascertain the
location of Myo3A in both rods and cones. Figure
7 shows cone inner/outer segments
isolated from dark-adapted bass retinas and double-labeled with the
Myo3A antibody (Figure 7a, red) and phalloidin (Figure 7b, green); the
superimposed image is shown in Figure 7c. Phalloidin (Figure 7, b and
c, green) labels actin filament bundles extending the entire length of
the ellipsoid and into the CPs at the inner-segment/outer-segment
junction (white arrow). Myo3A labeling (Figure 7a, red; Figure 7c,
yellow) colocalizes with the actin bundles in the CPs and the distal
end of the ellipsoid but does not colocalize with actin bundles in the
proximal ellipsoid. Thus, Myo3A is not generally colocalizing with
actin but is specifically localized to bundles in the CPs and the
distal ellipsoid.
|
Localization of Myo3A and Tubulin in Rod Photoreceptors
Myo3A also localizes to the CPs and distal ellipsoid in rod
photoreceptors. Figure 8 shows isolated
RIS/ROS double-labeled with anti-Myo3A 3THDII antibody (Texas Red
secondary) and a monoclonal
-tubulin antibody (Alexa 488 secondary).
Tubulin staining (green) is abundant in the myoid and peripheral
ellipsoid and in the delicate axoneme of the outer segment. Consistent
with the known absence of microtubules from the CPs, the bright tubulin
inner segment staining stops short of the inner-segment/outer-segment
junction (Figure 8, a and b). Myo3A antibody labels the inner segment
distal to the microtubule staining. Superimposition of the
double-labeled image over the DIC image of the RIS/ROS shows that the
Myo3A labeling is at the inner-segment/outer-segment junction,
indicating that in rods, as in cones, Myo3A is selectively localized in
the CPs and the distal ellipsoid.
|
Myo3A Is Associated with the Cytoskeleton in an ATP-Dependent Manner
The actin-binding domain of the myosin head binds to actin in an
ATP-dependent manner. To investigate whether Myo3A associates with the
ellipsoid actin bundles by this mechanism, we examined the partitioning
behavior of Myo3A with regard to a purified cytoskeletal fraction of
RIS/ROS. We prepared RIS/ROS cytoskeletons by purifying the RIS/ROS on
discontinuous-density gradients and extracting them with Triton-X-100
to remove all detergent-soluble components (Pagh-Roehl et
al., 1995
). The Tx-100 insoluble cytoskeleton was collected by
centrifugation in the presence and absence of ATP and probed for with
the antibody against Myo3A. In the absence of ATP, the Myo3A is
associated with the pelleted cytoskeleton (Figure
9, lanes 1 and 2); in the presence of 1 mM MgATP, however, much of the Myo3A is released from the pellet and is
seen in the soluble extraction supernatant (Figure 9, lanes 5 and 6).
Increasing the MgATP concentration to 10 mM enhances this release
effect (Figure 9, lanes 7 and 8). As a control, 1 mM
Mg2+ was also tested and did not affect the
localization of Myo3A with the cytoskeletal fraction (Figure 9, lanes 3 and 4).
|
We also examined ATP-dependent association of Myo3A with the RIS/ROS
actin cytoskeleton using immunoelectron microscopy (Figure 10). Triton X-100 extraction of
isolated RIS/ROS in the presence of the cytoskeletal
filament-stabilizing agents phalloidin and taxol leaves behind the
intact cytoskeletal "cage" of actin filament bundles and
cytoplasmic microtubules. These isolated cytoskeletons retain the shape
of the inner segment ellipsoid and myoid as well as preserving the
ciliary axoneme and basal bodies (Pagh-Roehl et al., 1992
).
|
An anti-Myo3A antibody labels specifically the distal ends of the actin filament bundles; it does not label the actin-rich myoid region or the microtubules of the inner segment or axoneme (Figure 10A). When 10 mM ATP is present during the Triton X-100 extraction, anti-Myo3A labeling of the resultant cytoskeletons is substantially reduced; the number of gold particles associated with the actin filaments is reduced by 85% (eight cytoskeletons examined) (Figure 10B). Gold labeling in the absence of primary antibody is low (Figure 10C). Anti-actin antibodies also specifically label the actin filament bundles in rod cytoskeletons (Dosé, A.C., and Parker, E., data not shown). This control indicated that unlike the Myo3A antibodies, actin antibodies label all parts of the actin cytoskeleton, including the myoid region.
Calmodulin-Binding Properties of Myo3A
Myo3A contains nine IQ motifs. Because the IQ motifs of other
myosins have been shown to bind calmodulin in the absence of Ca2+, we sought to characterize the
calmodulin-binding properties of Myo3A from retinal extracts in the
presence and absence of Ca2+. Retina/RPE extracts
were prepared in the presence of ATP and therefore contain soluble
Myo3A (Figure 11, left, lane 1). Our results show that Myo3A can bind to calmodulin in the presence and
absence of Ca2+. After a 1-hour incubation with
calmodulin-Sepharose beads, Myo3A binds to the beads in the absence
(Figure 11, left, lane 3) and presence (Figure 11, left, lane 5) of 17 µM free Ca2+. Lanes 2 (
Ca2+) and 4 (+Ca2+) are
the unbound fractions containing Myo3A. More Myo3A is present in the
unbound fraction when calcium is present, and these observations are
reproducible, suggesting that Myo3A has a higher affinity for
calmodulin in the absence of Ca2+. As a negative
control, Myo3A was also incubated with Sepharose beads without
calmodulin, and the majority of the Myo3a remained in solution (Figure
11, lanes 6 and 7).
|
| |
DISCUSSION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
To examine the role of class III myosins in photoreceptors, we cloned several class III myosins and used sequence comparisons to identify conserved domains that might have functional significance. We also sought functional clues by examining tissue expression patterns, subcellular location, and actin- and calmodulin-binding properties.
Class III Myosins
Class III myosins are widely expressed in vertebrates and
invertebrates. Short and long forms are expressed in all species so far
examined except Limulus. In Drosophila, short and
long forms are generated by alternative splicing of a single gene, whereas different genes code the two forms of vertebrates. Long and
short isoforms of class III myosins have been cloned from bass (meeting
abstracts: Hillman et al., 1996
; Wong et al.,
1998
), human (Dosé and Burnside, 2000
, 2002
; Berg et
al., 2001
), and zebrafish (L. Sohlberg, unpublished results). A
clustal W phylogenetic tree places all known class III myosins on their
own branch, but the vertebrate class III myosins are more closely
related to each other than either of the invertebrate class III myosins.
The kinase moieties of the class III myosins are members of the
germinal center kinase subfamily of the Ste20 group kinases (Sells and
Chernoff, 1997
; Dan et al., 2000
). These kinase/myosin chimeras now constitute their own germinal center kinase subfamily VII
(Dan et al., 2000
). The kinase domains of Myo3A and 3B most closely resemble Misshapen/NIKs-related kinase (MINK), which has been
shown to activate the cJun N-terminal kinase and p38 pathways (Dan
et al., 2000
). NINAC has been shown to be a functional
serine/threonine kinase (Ng et al., 1996
).
Among myosins, the motor domain is the most highly conserved region,
presumably constrained by the requirements for binding to actin
filaments and translocating in an ATP-dependent manner. Motor activity
has not been demonstrated for NINAC, with a somewhat divergent P-loop
sequence (Montell and Rubin, 1988
), giving rise to the question of
whether it is a functional motor. The vertebrate class III myosins have
more canonical P-loop sequences (seen in the alignment of the NBC-1 in
Figure 2), consistent with their being functional motors.
Both vertebrate and Drosophila class III myosins bind to
F-actin in an ATP-sensitive manner (Hicks and Williams, 1994
). Our biochemical and electron microscope studies reported here showed that
the amount of bass Myo3A associated with isolated photoreceptor inner-segment cytoskeletons was reduced by incubation with ATP. A low
affinity for actin in the presence of MgATP has been considered a
defining characteristic for myosins, but higher affinities have been
associated with processive motors (Mehta et al., 1999
).
The neck domain is traditionally defined as the
-helical region that
binds essential and regulatory light chains, including calmodulin. Bass
Myo3A has four IQ motifs in its neck domain and is unusual in having
five additional IQ motifs in its tail domain. The sequence of the last
six Myo3A IQ motifs more closely resemble those of GAP-43
(neuromodulin) than the first three myosin neck IQ motifs. GAP-43
(neuromodulin) is a leading candidate for a calmodulin "storage"
protein (Toutenhoofd and Strehler, 2000
) that may be pertinent to the
function of Myo3A.
Like other unconventional myosins, Myo3A binds calmodulin in the
absence of calcium. Addition of calcium did not release Myo3A from
calmodulin-Sepharose, but the presence of calcium during the incubation
reduced the amount of Myo3A bound to calmodulin. Similar studies of
myosin I and myosin V have shown that elevated Ca2+ results in partial loss of calmodulin
binding (Collins et al., 1990
; Nascimento et al.,
1996
); in addition, calmodulin was not dissociated from myosin VI at
high Ca2+ (Yoshimura et al., 2001
). It
should be pointed out that binding to calmodulin on a column does not
necessarily identify calmodulin as the relevant light chain for Myo3A
in vivo. However, in a yeast two-hybrid experiment, the tail of Myo3A
used as bait identified only calmodulin as an interactor from a bass
retinal cDNA library (Erickson, F.L., unpublished results).
Among the class III myosins, the most divergent regions are the tails;
however, two conserved domains were identified in vertebrate class III
tails. The 3THDI occurs in all vertebrate class III myosins sequenced
thus far, and the 3THDII is a domain seen only in the longer class IIIA
myosins. An antibody raised against 3THDII cross-reacts with many
species, including chick, rabbit, and rat (Dosé, A.C.,
unpublished results). The tail of the Drosophila class III
myosin NINAC interacts with INAD to make it part of the signalplex
involved in termination of the phototransduction cascade (Wes et
al., 1999
).
Expression Patterns and Cellular Localization
Myo3A and Myo3B are expressed in retina, Myo3A at almost 10 times
its expression level in brain and testis and Myo3B at twofold to
fourfold higher levels than in the testis and intestine. The invertebrate class III myosins NINAC and
MYOIIILim are each expressed specifically in
retinal photoreceptors (Montell and Rubin, 1988
; Battelle et
al., 1998
). Retina-enhanced expression was also seen for human
MYO3A (Dosé and Burnside, 2000
) and MYO3B (Dosé and Burnside, 2002
).
The Myo3A transcript was below detectable levels in RPE on Northern
blots. Although Myo3A was detected in Western blots of bass RPE, the
finding is inconclusive, because dark-adapted RPE is often contaminated
with attached photoreceptor inner/outer segments. Preparations enriched
for photoreceptor inner/outer segments (shake-offs) were twofold
enriched for Myo3A over retina, consistent with the immunohistochemical
observation that retinal Myo3A is localized almost exclusively to
photoreceptor inner segments. Myo3A was also detected in the bass
sacculus on Western blots, confirming in situ hybridization results in
fetal mouse cochlea (Walsh et al., 2002
). We have also used
RT-PCR to amplify MYO3A from a human fetal cochlear library
(Dosé, A.C., unpublished results).
Isolated photoreceptor inner/outer segments double-labeled with Myo3A antibody and phalloidin showed Myo3A colocalizing with the distal portions of ellipsoid actin filament bundles. This polarized localization suggests that the actin interaction is not mediated solely by actin binding. A similar labeling pattern was seen in isolated inner segment cytoskeletons, suggesting relatively robust Myo3A association with the actin bundles. Some but not all of this labeling was lost when cytoskeletons were incubated with ATP, suggesting that binding via the ATP-sensitive actin binding site in the myosin motor domain accounts for some of the binding.
Possible Roles for Myo3A in Photoreceptors
The specific localization of Myo3A to the distal inner segment and
CPs suggests that its role may involve CP function. Although CPs were
first described almost 40 years ago, their function in vertebrate
photoreceptors is still unknown (Brown et al., 1963
; Cohen,
1963
). Found in almost all vertebrate photoreceptors, CPs are
microvillus-like extensions of the inner segment (Borwein, 1981
). The
core actin filaments of the CPs, with their plus ends distal (Burnside,
1978
), originate in the ellipsoid, where they course through the
peripheral cytoplasm (Borwein, 1983
; Del Priore et al.,
1987
). The localization of these actin filament bundles suggests that
they have a structural role in the inner segment or a role in transport
through the inner segment.
It is possible that Myo3A plays a structural role in the CPs, as
proposed for brush border myosin-I (Myo1A), which is arranged in spiral
tethers that link the microvillar plasma membrane to the actin core
filaments (for review, see Mooseker et al., 1991
; Coluccio,
1997
). There are notable characteristics in common between CPs and the
microvilli of intestinal epithelial cells. Both microvilli and CPs
contain actin filament bundles with their plus ends distal (Mooseker,
1985
; Troutt and Burnside, 1988
), and both contain the actin-associated
protein fimbrin (Höfer and Drenckhahn, 1993
). In the brush border
membrane, fimbrin is linked to the lateral plasma membrane by myosin I,
which is not present in the CPs (Höfer and Drenckhahn, 1993
), and
it is possible that myosin III plays a role similar to that of myosin I
in cross-linking in photoreceptor CPs.
If myosin III plays a structural role linking the actin bundles to the
CP membrane, then some sort of interaction between the III tail and the
membrane must exist. Evidence exists for both a microvillar
"docking" protein for myosin I and direct interaction of myosin I
with phospholipids (for review, see Mooseker et al., 1991
).
The existence of two highly conserved domains in the tails of class III
myosins suggests some sort of binding domain, and studies are under way
in our laboratory to identify such interactors. The tail of NINAC binds
to the PDZ protein INAD (part of the signalplex), and the tail was
sufficient for rhabdomeral localization when fused to
-galactosidase
(Wes et al., 1999
). The highly conserved regions in the
vertebrate tail suggest that they may be critical to their function.
The long NINAC isoform (p174) is expressed in the rhabdomeres, which
are functionally analogous to vertebrate outer segments, and the
vertebrate myosin III is expressed in the inner segment (CPs).
Rhabdomeres, however, are composed of microvilli like the CPs in which
Myo3A is localized, and the functions of these two myosins in these
similar structures could be the same. The shorter isoform, p132, which
localizes to the photoreceptor cell body is not critical, because its
deletion did not have an electrophysiological effect or cause retinal
degeneration (Porter et al., 1992
).
The orientation of the actin filament bundles suggests that Myo3A is a
plus-end-directed motor that transports its kinase activity and
numerous calmodulins to the CPs. A similar calmodulin transporter role
has been suggested for NINAC (Porter et al., 1993a
). Myo3A
may create a local store of calmodulin that is released in response to
changes in calcium concentration or to other signals, such as
phosphorylation. A localized calmodulin release would facilitate its
diffusion to the outer segment on release, where it has been shown to
play an important role in the modulation of the plasma membrane
cGMP-gated channel (Hsu and Molday, 1993
). It is also possible that
Myo3A is not a functional motor but binds and releases actin in an
ATP-sensitive manner, or it could localize to the CPs by diffusion,
directed there by its tail domain (as seen for myosin I; Tyska and
Mooseker, 2002
), and once bound, it could exert tension on the CP actin
core. Other proteins have been shown to localize to the CPs and may be
transported there by Myo3A. Arrestin and the calcium
chelation-sensitive ankle-link antigen were localized to the CPs
(Mangini and Pepperberg, 1988
; Goodyear and Richardson, 1998
), and
there is brief mention of Na+,K+-ATPase localization
in CPs (Spencer et al., 1988
) and a cGMP binding site
(Caretta and Saibil, 1989
). The cytoskeletal-associated protein Rab8
has also been shown to localize to CPs (Deretic et al.,
1995
), and a similar labeling pattern was seen for vitronectin receptor
(Anderson et al., 1995
). The actin-filament cross-linking protein fimbrin is associated with the actin filament bundles of CPs
and the ellipsoid (Höfer and Drenckhahn, 1993
).
Once at the tip of CPs, a plus-end-directed motor would have no
obvious exit. Myo3A could possibly move down the CPs passively with
retrograde flow of actin bundles, as has been proposed for the
translocation of myosin X on the actin filament bundles of filopodia
(Berg and Cheney, 2002
). Myo3A may ultimately be degraded in the CPs,
as suggested by the high number of PEST sequences, a characteristic of
proteins with short half-lives of <5 h (Rechsteiner, 1989
). This
scenario is consistent with the robust mRNA levels of Myo3A but low
protein levels in retina. That the protein is easily degraded is
further suggested by the extensive protease inhibitor cocktail
necessary to purify it intact.
The expression of Myo3A in the inner ear is not surprising, because
many other myosins are expressed in these highly specialized actin-rich
organs (Hasson et al., 1997
; Redowicz, 1999
). Mutations in
MYO3A cause a nonsyndromic hearing loss without affecting vision (Walsh
et al., 2002
); however, it is possible that other mutations in the gene may cause both hearing loss and vision defects analogous to
the defects seen in patients with different mutations in myosin VII
(Petit, 2001
).
The specific subcellular localization of Myo3A suggests that it plays some local role in the CPs; however, the function of CPs is not currently understood. The ATP-sensitive association of Myo3A with the photoreceptor actin cytoskeleton and its localization to the plus ends of inner segment actin bundles suggest that it is a functional motor that contributes to its own subcellular localization by walking along the ellipsoid bundles toward the CPs. By this translocation, it simultaneously delivers its own kinase and up to nine calmodulins to the CPs. Other cargoes may also be transported by associating with the Myo3A tail domain. It is not yet clear whether the role of Myo3A is primarily in transport, structural reinforcement, signaling, or some combination of these functions.
| |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
The authors thank Ed Parker, Kerri Schwartz, and Angie Zeng, University of California, Berkeley, for technical assistance. This work was supported by National Research Service Award grant EY-06788 to A.C.D. and National Institutes of Health grant EY-03575 and Foundation Fighting Blindness grant to B.B. GenBank accession numbers: for Myo3A, AF003249; for Myo3B, AF512506.
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FOOTNOTES |
|---|
Corresponding author. E-mail address:
acdose{at}socrates.berkeley.edu.
Article published online ahead of print. Mol. Biol. Cell 10.1091/mbc.E02-06-0317. Article and publication date are at www.molbiolcell.org/cgi/doi/10.1091/mbc.E02-06-0317.
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REFERENCES |
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an integrated documentation resource for protein families, domains, and functional sites.
Bioinformatics
16, 1145-1150