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Vol. 14, Issue 4, 1727-1743, April 2003
Section of Cell and Developmental Biology, Division of Biological Sciences and Center for Molecular Genetics, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla California 92093-0634
Submitted September 3, 2002; Revised November 6, 2002; Accepted November 27, 2002| |
ABSTRACT |
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We have identified a gene encoding RGS domain-containing protein
kinase (RCK1), a novel regulator of G protein signaling
domain-containing protein kinase. RCK1 mutant strains exhibit strong
aggregation and chemotaxis defects. rck1 null cells
chemotax ~50% faster than wild-type cells, suggesting RCK1 plays a
negative regulatory role in chemotaxis. Consistent with this finding,
overexpression of wild-type RCK1 reduces chemotaxis speed by ~40%.
On cAMP stimulation, RCK1 transiently translocates to the
membrane/cortex region with membrane localization peaking at ~10 s,
similar to the kinetics of membrane localization of the pleckstrin
homology domain-containing proteins CRAC, Akt/PKB, and PhdA. RCK1
kinase activity also increases dramatically. The RCK1 kinase activity
does not rapidly adapt, but decreases after the cAMP stimulus is
removed. This is particularly novel considering that most other
chemoattractant-activated kinases (e.g., Akt/PKB, ERK1, ERK2, and PAKa)
rapidly adapt after activation. Using site-directed mutagenesis, we
further show that both the RGS and kinase domains are required for RCK1
function and that RCK1 kinase activity is required for the
delocalization of RCK1 from the plasma membrane. Genetic evidence
suggests RCK1 function lies downstream from G
2, the heterotrimeric G
protein that couples to the cAMP chemoattractant receptors. We suggest
that RCK1 might be part of an adaptation pathway that regulates aspects
of chemotaxis in Dictyostelium.
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INTRODUCTION |
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G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) mediate the signal
transduction of diverse extracellular stimuli, including hormones, chemokines, neurotransmitters, light, and odorants (Carman and Benovic,
1998
; Marinissen and Gutkind, 2001
). Binding of an agonist to its GPCR
results in the dissociation of a heterotrimeric G protein into the G
and G
subunits, which in turn regulate downstream effector
molecules (Hamm, 1998
). The GPCR-mediated signaling then rapidly
adapts. This adaptation is achieved at the level of GPCR by receptor
desensitization, at the level of the G protein by its inactivation, or
through the independent adaptation of the downstream effector pathways.
Regulators of G protein signaling (RGS) proteins bind to the GTP form
of the G
subunit of heterotrimeric G proteins and can act as G
subunit GTPase-activating proteins (GAPs), in which case they increase
the intrinsic G
subunit GTPase activity, thus attenuating signaling
(Hepler, 1999
; Sierra et al., 2000
). Although most of the
RGS proteins tested are GAPs for G
proteins, in some cases RGS
proteins carry other effector domains (Zhong and Neubig, 2001
) that
provide additional functions. In such proteins, the RGS domain can
serve as a G
recognition domain with or without GAP activity. For
example, the RGS domains in p115-Rho-GEF and Axin play active roles in
transmitting receptor signals to downstream effectors (Kozasa et
al., 1998
; Spink et al., 2000
).
D-AKAP2, a protein kinase A (PKA)-anchoring
protein containing a putative RGS domain, may provide a link between
PKA and the plasma membrane signaling machinery (Huang et
al., 1997
). Seven G protein receptor kinase (GRK) family members
contain an N-terminal atypical RGS domain (Siderovski et
al., 1996
; Penn et al., 2000
). Although very little is
known about the function of the RGS domain in most of these proteins,
it has been shown that the RGS domain of GRK2 binds to
G
q/11 and inhibits
G
q-mediated activation of phospholipase C-
(Carman et al., 1999
).
In Dictyostelium, the transition from vegetative growth to
multicellular development is triggered by starvation and subsequent production of the chemoattractant and morphogen extracellular cAMP
(Aubry and Firtel, 1999
). cAMP binds to and activates the G
protein-coupled serpentine receptors (cARs) that initiate a series of
integrated G protein-dependent and -independent signal transduction
events that control developmental responses, including chemotaxis of
cells toward the chemoattractant cAMP (Chen et al., 1996
;
Parent and Devreotes, 1996
; Aubry and Firtel, 1999
; Chung and Firtel,
1999
). cAR1 is the major cAR that mediates chemotaxis to cAMP and the
activation of adenylyl cyclase during aggregation and is coupled to the
heterotrimeric G protein containing the G
protein subunit G
2.
Our understanding of chemotaxis in Dictyostelium derives
from careful genetic and biochemical analysis of signaling components regulating this pathway combined with the ability to perform
single-cell chemotaxis assays. Recent studies have focused on
phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) and its downstream
effector pathways that are required for regulating cell polarity and
motility (Parent and Devreotes, 1999
; Firtel and Chung, 2000
; Chung
et al., 2001a
; Comer and Parent, 2002
; Funamoto et
al., 2002
; Iijima et al., 2002
; Iijima and Devreotes,
2002
). Through the use of gene knockouts and green fluorescent protein
(GFP) fusions, the function and changes in the subcellular localization
have provided key insights into the pathways controlling chemotaxis. In
addition to PI3K and its effectors, other pathways important for
chemotaxis include the mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase
1/extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1 (ERK1)
mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase cascade and interacting
proteins; Ras; PAKa; and myosin heavy chain kinases that regulate
myosin II assembly; the PKA regulatory pathway; guanylyl cyclase; Rac
family GTPases; and the actin polymerization machinery and actin
binding proteins (Parent and Devreotes, 1999
; van Es and Devreotes,
1999
; Firtel and Chung, 2000
; Chung et al., 2001a
). In
addition to the pathways controlling chemotaxis,
Dictyostelium cells must integrate other
chemoattractant-mediated pathways such as those controlling the
activation of adenylyl cyclase.
The adaptation of signaling pathways plays an equally essential role in
the regulation of cellular responses. All of the previously examined
cAR1/G
-mediated pathways rapidly adapt, often with very different
kinetics. For example, chemoattractant-stimulated adenylyl cyclase
activity peaks at 60-90 s, whereas the first peak of actin polymerization is at ~5 s; ERK1 activation is at ~15 s; ERK2
activation is at ~50 s; PI3K-dependent pleckstrin homology (PH)
domain localization and cGMP accumulation are maximal at ~8 and
10 s, respectively; and Akt/PKB and PAKa activities are maximal at
15 and 30 s after stimulation, respectively (van Es and Devreotes,
1999
; Firtel and Chung, 2000
). Except for the role of the
phosphatidylinositol 3' lipid phosphatase PTEN, which is
required for the adaptation of the chemoattractant-mediated PI3K
pathways, little is known about the adaptation pathways for any of the
responses (Funamoto et al., 2002
; Iijima and Devreotes,
2002
). As in other systems, the C-terminal tail of the G
protein-coupled receptor cAR1 is phosphorylated; however, this seems to
have little impact on the overall adaptation of cAR1-mediated pathways
(Caterina et al., 1995
). Cells expressing a cAR1 receptor
lacking the tail phosphorylation sites do not exhibit a ligand-mediated
reduction in ligand affinity and are partially defective in the
activation of STATa, but show a normal adaptation of adenylyl and
guanylyl cyclase (Vaughan and Devreotes, 1988
; Caterina et
al., 1995
; Kim et al., 1997
).
Herein, we describe RGS domain-containing protein kinase (RCK1), a novel kinase containing an RGS domain. We demonstrate that rck1 null cells chemotax more rapidly than wild-type cells, whereas overexpression of RCK1 leads to reduced chemotaxis, suggesting that RCK1 plays a negative regulatory role in controlling chemotaxis. Furthermore, we show that RCK1 kinase activity is stimulated in response to cAMP. Unlike other kinases and signaling pathways activated by chemoattractant stimulation, RCK1 activity remains elevated unless the stimulus is removed. These findings suggest that RCK1 might be a candidate for controlling the adaptation of some chemoattractant-mediated pathways.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Materials
The cAR1 antibody was a gift from the Devreotes laboratory (John
Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD). Sodium orthovanadate,
-glycerophosphate, aprotinin, and leupeptin were purchased from Sigma-Aldrich (St. Louis, MO). Histone H2B and myelin basic protein (MBP) were purchased from Roche Diagnostics (Indianapolis, IN). [32P]
-ATP was from ICN
Pharmaceuticals (Costa Mesa, CA). Protein A-Sepharose CL-4B was
from Amersham Biosciences (Piscataway, NJ. Protein G plus agarose was
from Santa Cruz Biotechnology (Santa Cruz, CA).
Cell Culture and Development of Dictyostelium Cells
Wild-type Dictyostelium strain Kax-3 was used to
generate various mutant strains. Cells were grown in nutrient medium
(Watts and Ashworth, 1970
) at 23°C either in shaking culture or on a Petri dish. For the developmental study, cells were washed twice in 12 mM Na+/K+ phosphate buffer
and plated at various densities on agar plates.
Library Construction and Screening
The C-terminal half of RCK1 was obtained by screening a 12- to
16-h developmental
ZAP library using a cDNA fragment corresponding to the kinase domain of a putative Dictyostelium kinase as a
probe (Dictyostelium database sequence IICCP2E13713). To
obtain the N terminus of RCK1, a mini-genomic library was constructed.
Briefly, the genomic DNA from Kax-3 cells was digested with
HindIII, which cuts upstream of RCK1, and SpeI,
which cuts immediately after the RGS domain. The DNA was size
fractionated on an agarose gel. DNA fragments of the right size were
recovered, ligated into a vector, and transformed into
Escherichia coli. All library screenings were done using
standard protocols (Sambrook et al., 1989
) with slight
modifications that reduced the stringency by lowering the concentration
of formamide to 40% and by performing the hybridizations at 37°C.
Generation of rck1 Null Cells and Cells Expressing Wild-Type and Mutant RCK1s
The rck1 null mutant was obtained by a gene
replacement technique based on that of Manstein et al.
(1989)
but with a blasticidin resistance cassette (Sutoh, 1993
). The
targeting construct was made by inserting a Bsr cassette in the second
BglII site of RCK1.
To make wild-type RCK1 expression constructs, RCK1 was tagged at the N
terminus with either the myc epitope or the myristoylation signal of
chicken c-Src. Myristoylation-site-tagged RCK1 was made by cloning the
RCK1 coding region in-frame downstream of the myristoylation signal in
premade vectors containing this tag (Meili et al., 1999
). The myc-tagged RCK1 was made similarly except that a myc tag instead of
myristoylation-site tag was incorporated in the linker. The primers
used to amplify the RCK1 coding region are
5'-GTTTTTGATATCTGAAATGAAAACATCAAAGGATAGT and 5'-GTTTTCTCGAGTATTAT
TATTTATTTTTTGGCTGTGC. For making RCK1 mutations, site-directed
mutagenesis was done by a two-step polymerase chain reaction approach
by using overlapping primers containing the desired mutations (Li and
Wilkinson, 1997
). The DNA fragments containing mutations were used to
replace the corresponding fragments in the wild-type RCK1 constructs.
All constructs were sequenced and subcloned into Exp4 (+) expression
vectors and transformed KAx-3 or rck1 null cells.
All transformations were done as described previously (Nellen et
al., 1987
). Transformants were selected with 10-20 µg/ml G418,
and clones were isolated by plating cells on DM agar (12 mM
Na+/K+ phosphate buffer pH
6.1, 1% Bacto peptone, 0.2% D-glucose, 1.5% agar) containing 40 µg/ml G418. In the case of making rck1
null cells, cells were selected with 7.5 µg/ml blasticidin.
Chemotaxis Assay
Aggregation-competent cells were made by pulsing cells with cAMP
as described previously (Meili et al., 1999
) except that cells were pulsed at 6-min intervals. Pulsed cells of 4 × 105cells/ml were plated onto a small dish with a
hole covered by a 0.17-mm glass coverslip at 40 µl/dish and allowed
to adhere for 15 min. A micropipette filled with 150 µM cAMP was
positioned close to cells by using a micromanipulator (Eppendorf
Patchman, Fisher Scientific, Pittsburgh, PA), and the response
of cells was recorded at 6-s intervals with a time-lapse video recorder and NIH Image software. Cell movement was analyzed using the DIAS program (Wessels et al., 1998
).
Immunofluorescence Microscopy
Pulsed cells were allowed to settle onto glass coverslips for 30 min and stimulated for different time periods by submerging the
coverslips into 20 µM cAMP solution. Cells were quickly fixed and
permeabilized in 100% cold methanol for 20 min at
20°C. Cells were
then washed and incubated with 0.5 µg/ml anti-myc monoclonal antibody
(Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA) in phosphate-buffered saline containing
0.5% bovine serum albumin and 0.05% Tween 20 for 1 h. Cells were
incubated with fluorescein isothiocyanate-labeled anti-mouse IgG
antibody for 1 h, washed, and mounted for observation with a 60×
oil immersion lens on a Microphot-FX microscope (Nikon, Tokyo, Japan).
Kinase Assay
Log phase cells were pulsed as usual. After pulsing, cells were
collected by centrifugation and resuspended at a density of 2-3 × 107cells/ml. Cells were resensitized by
bubbling air through the cell suspension for 10 min (Devreotes et
al., 1987
; Ma et al., 1997
). The kinase assay was
performed similarly to the assay for chemoattractant-stimulated Akt/PKB
activity described previously (Meili et al., 1999
). Cells
were then stimulated with 100 µl of cAMP and 500 µl of cells were
taken at each time point and lysed immediately by mixing with an equal
volume of 2× lysis buffer containing 50 mM Tris, pH 7.6, 200 mM NaCl,
20 mM NaF, 2 mM vanadate, 50 mM
-glycerophosphate, 6 mM sodium
pyrophosphate, 2 mM EDTA, 2 mM EGTA, 4 µg/ml leupeptin, 4 µg/ml
aprotinin, 2% NP-40, 20% glycerol, and 2 mM dithiothreitol. The
lysate was precleared by centrifugation. One microliter of antibody (1 µg/µl) was added and incubated with agitation in a cold room for
1 h. The formed immune complexes were collected with 50 µl of a
1:1 slurry of either protein A or protein G beads in lysis buffer by
incubation under agitation for 1 h at 4°C. The beads were washed
twice with lysis buffer and twice with kinase buffer (25 mM MOPS pH 7.4 at room temperature, 25 mM glycerophosphate, 20 mM magnesium chloride, and 1 mM dithiothreitol). The kinase activity was measured using either
MBP or Histone H2B protein as substrate in a reaction in 60 µl
of kinase buffer containing 5 µCi of
[32P]
-ATP, 5 µM cold ATP, and 5 µg of
MBP. The reactions were stopped by adding 20 µl of 4× SDS buffer and
boiling for 5 min. Samples were then resolved by SDS-PAGE (12.5%),
blotted onto polyvinylidene difluoride membrane (Millipore, Bedford,
MA), and exposed to film.
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RESULTS |
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Identification of RCK1
RCK1 was identified by a low-stringency hybridization screen as
described in MATERIALS AND METHODS. The RCK1 open reading frame encodes
a protein of 1123 amino acids (Figure 1A;
GenBank accession no. AY163574). Structure analysis using SMART
predicted an RGS domain in the middle of the open reading frame and a
dual-specificity kinase at the C terminus of the protein (Figure 1B).
The long N-terminal domain does not show homology to any other proteins in the databases. The RGS domain of the Dictyostelium RCK1
exhibits a moderate homology of ~40-50% to known RGS domains, with
highest homology to that of Xenopus RGS4 (25% identity and
49% homology; Figure 2A). The RCK1
kinase domain exhibits considerable homology to a family of
mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase kinases that includes
MAP3K
-1, murine Raf-1, and Arabidopsis CTR1 (Figure 2B).
Some GRKs, which are important players in receptor desensitization and
adaptation (Ferguson and Caron, 1998
; Penn et al., 2000
), contain an RGS domain in addition to the receptor kinase domain; however, these kinase domains are not homologous to that of RCK1.
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To examine the timing of RCK1 expression during the Dictyostelium developmental cycle, we performed RNA blot analysis. As depicted in Figure 1C, RCK1 shows a very low level of mRNA expression in vegetative cells, which increases dramatically at 4 h after starvation and then rapidly falls to very low levels throughout the remainder of development.
Analysis of the Phenotype of rck1 Null Cells
rck1 null strains were generated by gene disruption via homologous recombination as described in MATERIALS AND METHODS and confirmed by Southern blot analysis (our unpublished data). Northern blot analysis of rck1null cells revealed no detectable RCK1 mRNA (our unpublished data). Seven independent rck1 null strains were identified, and initial studies indicated that all strains had an indistinguishable developmental phenotype. A single clone was selected for subsequent analysis.
Compared with wild-type cells, rck1 null cells formed multicellular aggregates slightly faster when the cells were plated on a nonnutrient agar surface. In addition, the mounds were larger than those of wild-type cells at a number of plating densities (Figure 4A; other densities not shown). By 5 h after starvation, rck1 null cells had already formed loose mounds; however, the development of rck1 null cells was significantly delayed after mound formation and slugs were identified only at ~24 h. Normally shaped fruiting bodies formed at ~30 h. Expression of RCK1 from the constitutive Actin 15 promoter in wild-type cells resulted in significantly delayed development. Aggregation and mound formation occurred more slowly than in wild-type cells, and slugs were not formed until ~24 h in development. Normally shaped fruiting bodies developed at 30-36 h. Expression of this construct in rck1null cells resulted in a similar although slightly less severe phenotype. Because Dictyostelium transformants obtained using G418 selection have a high copy number of the vector, levels of expression of the exogenous protein from the Actin 15 promoter are usually higher than those of the endogenous protein. This probably accounts for the similarity of the phenotypes of rck1 null and wild-type strains expressing exogenous RCK1. We cannot rule out the possibility that differences in the temporal pattern of expression of exogenous RCK1 from the constitutive Actin 15 promoter compared with the highly regulated developmental pattern of expression of endogenous RCK1, rather than the expression level of the protein, account for the observed developmental defect of RCK1OE cells. We also cannot discount that the myc tag may result in abnormal protein function, although we expect that it is unlikely that the myc tag is responsible for the defects, as the kinase activity of myc-RCK1 is rigorously activated in response to cAMP stimulation (see below). These analyses indicated that both the lack of expression and the overexpression of RCK1 lead to developmental defects.
To better understand the temporal delay exhibited by rck1
null cells, we examined the expression of a series of developmental markers that are expressed during the aggregation and multicellular stages in development. Figure 3A shows
the expression of the cAR1 protein. The protein is visibly induced by
4 h of development and is maximal at 6-8 h. In rck1
null cells, cAR1 expression is similar to that in the wild-type cells.
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We also examined cell-type-specific markers, including the prespore-specific gene SP60/CotC, the spore-specific gene SpiA, and two prestalk-specific genes, ecmA and ecmB (Figure 3B). SP60/CotC exhibits a delay of induction of expression by ~4 h in rck1 null cells compared with the time of expression in wild-type cells. In rck1null cells, SP60/CotC RNA levels do not decrease rapidly at 16 h, as they do in wild-type cells, but remain at high levels through 28 h in development. The prestalk-specific genes ecmA and ecmB also have delayed developmental expression. This delay is also exhibited by SpiA, a spore-specific marker. These findings are consistent with the observed delays in the morphogenesis of this strain.
Effect of Point Mutations within RGS and Kinase Domains on Morphogenesis
To better understand the potential role of the subdomains of RCK1
in regulating RCK1 function, we made a series of amino acid substitutions in the RGS domain in residues known to interact with G
subunits in RGS family members and the kinase domain. The mutant
proteins were expressed as myc-tagged proteins in both wild-type and
rck1 null cells and the effects on RCK1 translocation to the
plasma membrane, RCK1 kinase activity, chemotaxis, and multicellular
development were measured. Western blot analysis of clones showed that
all expressed similar levels of RCK1 protein (our unpublished
data; Figure 7). Expression of kinase-dead RCK1 (RCK1K867A) in wild-type cells resulted in a
phenotype that was very similar to that of rck1 null cells.
Aggregation occurred slightly more rapidly than in wild-type cells, but
the cells arrested temporarily at the mound stage, with fruiting bodies
appearing at ~30 h (Figure 4A, 30-h
time point is not shown). Expression of the kinase-dead RCK1 in
rck1 null cells produced an even more severe phenotype than
that of rck1 null cell (Figure 4A). Cells formed aggregates more slowly than wild-type cells and remained arrested at the mound
stage with no formation of slugs and fruiting bodies within the time
course of the experiments. Our results suggest that
RCK1K867A functions as a dominant interfering
(negative) protein. The stronger phenotype observed from the expression
of RCK1K867A in rck1 null cells
suggests that the kinase-dead RCK1 may interfere with a binding
partner. The results also indicate that the RCK1 kinase domain is
essential for RCK1 function.
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To obtain insight into the role of the RGS domain, we made mutations of
residues previously demonstrated to play a central role in the
interactions of other RGS domains with G
subunits and/or RGS GAP
activity. The crystal structure of the
RGS4-G
i1 complex shows that
Glu87, Asn88, and
Asn128 in RGS4 are involved in the interaction
with G
i1 (Tesmer et al., 1997
).
Cysteine 551 (Cys551) is present in a highly
conserved domain and corresponds in position to a conserved Asn/Ser
residue in mammalian RGS proteins (Asn128 in RGS4
and Asn130 in RGS16). Mutation of this residue in RGS4 and RGS16
significantly reduces RGS GAP activity and G
binding (Posner
et al., 1999
; Wieland et al., 2000
). Residue
Glu89 in RGS16 (corresponding to
Glu87 in RGS4) interacts with
Lys210 in G
i1. Mutation
of Glu89 to Lys does not affect GAP activity but
reduces affinity of RGS16 to G
i1 by
~100-fold, whereas mutating Asn90 to Glu in
RGS16 (corresponding to Asn88 in RGS4) strongly
attenuates RGS16's GAP activity (Wieland et al., 2000
). A
separate study showed that a double mutation in RGS16 (E89G and N90A)
eliminates RGS16 binding to several G
protein subunits (Chen
et al., 1997
).
To examine the role of the RGS domain, we made the corresponding substitutions in RCK1 and examined the effects of expressing the mutant proteins in wild-type and rck1 null cells on development. Western blot analysis shows that the RCK1 constructs are expressed at similar levels (our unpublished data; see below). Wild-type cells expressing RCK1E510G or RCK1E510G,N511A (corresponding to RGS16E89G andRGS16N90A) exhibited normal kinetics of aggregation, but the cells arrested for a period of time at the mound stage and were at the slug or early culminant stage by 24 h, similar to the phenotype of wild-type cells overexpressing wild-type RCK1 (Figure 4B). A similar effect was observed for RCK1C551A. Expression of RCK1E510G in rck1 null cells seemed to complement, at least at the morphological level, normal Dictyostelium morphogenesis. The cells aggregated with approximately the same kinetics as wild-type cells and showed only a minimal delay after mound formation. Slugs were present at 16 h and culminants were present at 24 h, although these were slightly delayed compared with wild-type cells developed in parallel on the same plates. The observation that RCK1E510G expression in rck1 null cells resulted in an almost wild-type phenotype, which was not seen for wild-type RCK1 expressed at the same level, suggests that the RCK1E510G mutation might have reduced RCK1 activity. Neither RCK1E510G,N511A nor RCK1C551Acomplemented the rck1 null phenotype; however, because both mutant proteins exhibited nearly wild-type activation of kinase activity on cAMP stimulation (see below), we expect that the phenotypes of these strains are due to overexpression of a functional RCK1 protein, similar to observations of the overexpression of wild-type RCK1.
rck1 Null and RCK1 Overexpressing (RCK1OE) Cells Exhibit Chemotaxis Defects
One possible explanation for the developmental defects exhibited
by the RCK1 mutant strains is defects in the ability to chemotax and/or
undergo morphogenesis. We therefore examined the ability of wild-type
and RCK1 mutant strains to chemotax toward a micropipette containing
cAMP. Using DIAS computer software, we analyzed the cells' rate of
movement, directional change, and roundness (Soll and Voss, 1998
;
Wessels et al., 1998
). One way of visualizing these data is
to examine overlapping images of cells that have moved over an interval
of time (Figure 5). A change in the speed of movement toward the chemoattractant source can be readily observed by the increase in the distance between images taken at 1-min intervals
and those seen in wild-type cells. The shape of the cell provides an
indication of lateral pseudopodia and/or loss of cell polarity. As
shown in Figure 5, wild-type cells move in an essentially straight line
toward the chemoattractant source with a speed of ~8.6 µm/min (as
measured by the rate of movement of the cell's centroid over time).
rck1 null cells exhibit an increased rate of movement to
~12.6 µm/min, whereas RCK1-overexpressing cells have a significant
decrease in speed (5.3 µm/min). These cell movement defects are
interesting, considering rck1 null and RCK1OE cells displayed similar developmental
defects. Overexpression of RCK1 carrying the point
mutations in the RGS domain in wild-type cells led to a loss in
chemotaxis speed, although the decrease in speed was not as great as
that caused by the overexpression of wild-type RCK1, suggesting that
the RGS1 point mutants have decreased activity compared with the
wild-type protein. As expected from the developmental phenotype,
overexpression of the kinase-dead RCK1
(RCK1K867A) resulted in reduced speed. It is
possible that like RCK1K867A, RCK1 proteins
carrying point mutations within the RGS domain may exhibit similar
dominant negative phenotypes. Overexpression of RCK1 may also inhibit
chemotaxis by affecting the activation of other downstream pathways
through the RGS domain acting as a GAP for a G
protein subunit
required during aggregation. Interestingly, expression of the mutant
RCK1 proteins had little effect on directional change, in contrast to
many known signaling proteins that affect chemotaxis and often cause a
decrease in the efficiency (chemotaxis index) with which cells move
toward the needle (Kitayama et al., 1998
; Peracino et
al., 1998
; Firtel and Chung, 2000
; Wessels et al.,
2000
). There is some increase in roundness of the mutant strains
compared with the wild type, suggesting some decrease in cell polarity.
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RCK1 Translocates to Plasma Membrane in Response to Chemoattractant Stimulation
Due to the presence of an RGS domain, it is possible that RCK1
interacts with a G
heterotrimeric G protein subunit. Because many
G
protein subunits are modified by fatty acid residues in a variety
of systems (Wedegaertner, 1998
) and are localized at the plasma
membrane, we wanted to know the subcellular localization of RCK1 and
whether this changes in response to chemoattractant stimulation. To
study RCK1's subcellular localization, we made two types of
RCK1-tagged fusions. In the first, RCK1 was fused to GFP at either the
N or C terminus of the protein. When we examined the localization of
RCK1-GFP in unstimulated and stimulated cells, the majority of the
protein was nuclear (our unpublished data). As this was
unexpected, we wanted to further examine RCK1 localization by using a
myc-tagged RCK1 by examining immunostained cells before or after cAMP
stimulation by indirect immunofluorescence. Figure 6 shows that myc-RCK1 is cytosolic in
unstimulated cells and rapidly translocates to the plasma membrane,
with membrane localization peaking at ~10 s. myc-RCK1 then
delocalizes from the plasma membrane by 30 s. These observations
are similar to previous findings for PI3K and PH domain-containing
proteins such as CRAC, Akt/PKB, and PhdA, which localized to the plasma
membrane in response to the production of PI3K-dependent lipid binding
sites (Parent et al., 1998
; Meili et al., 1999
;
Funamoto et al., 2001
, 2002
). However, unlike these
proteins, which localize to the leading edge in chemotaxing cells, we
did not observe polarized localization of RCK1 in aggregating cells
(our unpublished data).
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To investigate which domains of RCK1 might be involved in chemoattractant-mediated RCK1 subcellular localization, we expressed myc fusions of the region N-terminal to the RGS domain, the RGS domain, and the kinase domain. All of these proteins were stably expressed and were cytosolic before or after stimulation, suggesting the entire protein is required for localization and/or the fusion proteins do not fold properly. To further investigate the role of the RGS domain, we examined the subcellular localization of myc-RCK1C551A, myc-RCK1E510G, and myc-RCK1E510G,N511A. As shown in Figure 6, myc-RCK1E510G,N511A and myc-RCK1E510G displayed kinetics of localization and delocalization from the plasma membrane similar to those of wild-type RCK1. In contrast, RCK1C551A showed a very weak membrane localization after cAMP stimulation. The observation that RCK1C551A translocates very weakly suggests the RGS domain may play a key role in RCK1's change in subcellular localization.
We also examined the subcellular localization of the kinase-dead
RCK1K867A. Although this protein localized to the
plasma membrane with the same kinetics as wild-type RCK1, the protein
remained associated with the plasma membrane for up to 5 min after
chemoattractant stimulation (Figure 6B). The inability of the
kinase-dead mutation to delocalize suggests that the kinase function of
RCK1 is directly involved in delocalizing RCK1 from the plasma
membrane, possibly by affecting its interaction with a G
protein subunit.
Because RCK1 is targeted to the plasma membrane, we tested the developmental consequences of expressing a myristylated-tagged RCK1 (myrRCK1) from the Actin 15 promoter in wild-type cells. These cells exhibited a developmental phenotype similar to that of RCK1OE but with even more delayed development and ~50% of the aggregates arrested at the mound stage at 24 h of development (Figure 4A). Wild-type cells expressing myrRCK1 also exhibited chemotaxis defects with a decrease in speed similar to RCK1OE cells (Figure 5).
RCK1 Kinase Activity Is Activated in Response to Chemoattractant Stimulation
We examined whether RCK1 kinase activity changes in response to
chemoattractant stimulation. Cells expressing wild-type myc-tagged RCK1
were lysed before and at specific times after chemoattractant stimulation. myc-RCK1 was immunoprecipitated and the immune precipitate assayed using MBP as a substrate as described previously (Meili et al., 1999
). As depicted in Figure
7A, chemoattractant stimulation leads to
rapid activation of RCK1 kinase activity. In contrast to many pathways
that are stimulated in response to chemoattractants in
Dictyostelium, RCK1 activity remains elevated throughout the time course of the experiment (5 min; see DISCUSSION). RCK1 activity only decreased on removal of chemoattractant stimulation. A control experiment using myc-tagged kinase-dead RCK1
(RCK1K867A) showed no activity, suggesting that
the kinase activity in the immunoprecipitate from wild-type-stimulated
cell extracts is not due to a coimmunoprecipitation of another kinase.
|
In addition to the band of phosphorylated MBP, we observed a phosphorylated band corresponding to the size of RCK1 (~130 kDa) and at the same mobility as myc-RCK1 on the Western blot. As with MBP, the phosphorylation of this protein increased upon chemoattractant stimulation. Additional support for the proposition that the labeled ~130-kDa band is due to RCK1 autophosphorylation comes from the observation that this band is absent in the kinase-dead RCK1 control experiments. We cannot completely exclude the possibility that a kinase associated only with wild-type RCK1 is responsible for this phosphorylation. As with MBP, RCK1 phosphorylation remains elevated throughout the time course of the experiment and rapidly decreases upon removal of cAMP.
To examine the effect of mutations in the RGS domain on activation of RCK1 kinase activity, myc-tagged RCK1C55A and RCK1E510G,N511A were also assayed. All proteins exhibited a similar increase in the phosphorylation of kinase activity against MBP in response to chemoattractant stimulation, with the level of activity of the kinases appearing to be proportional to the level of expression of the protein, as determined by Western blot analysis. The results with RCK1C551A suggest that membrane localization of RCK1 is not essential for RCK1 kinase activation or that the weak membrane localization that is observed is sufficient for activation.
Effect of RCK1 Mutations on Aggregation-stage Signaling Pathways
We investigated the effect of RCK1 mutations on several signal
transduction pathways known to be important for signal perception, adaptation, and chemotaxis. PI3K and its downstream effector Akt/PKB are important for cell polarization and directional movement (Meili et al., 1999
; Chung et al., 2001b
; Funamoto
et al., 2001
, 2002
; Iijima and Devreotes, 2002
). To
investigate whether PI3K lies upstream from the activation of the RCK1
kinase, RCK1 was expressed in pi3k1/pi3k2 double knockout
cells and we examined the RCK1 activity. As shown in Figure
8A, RCK1 kinase activity was
indistinguishable from RCK1 activity expressed in rck1 null
cells. Similarly, the activation of Akt/PKB in rck1 null and
RCK1 overexpressing cells was very similar to that of wild-type cells
(Figure 8B). Cells expressing the dominant negative, kinase-dead RCK1
exhibit a slightly elevated level of PKB activation compared with the
other cell types. Overall, the results suggest that RCK1 does not
directly interact with the PI3K pathways.
|
The cAR1 is a receptor for the chemoattractant cAMP and plays a major
part in controlling aggregation responses in Dictyostelium, including chemotaxis toward cAMP. cAR1 is phosphorylated in response to
cAMP stimulation, which is detected by a mobility shift change on
SDS-PAGE (Vaughan and Devreotes, 1988
). This phosphorylation has been
linked to a decrease in affinity of the receptor for cAMP (Caterina
et al., 1995
). Although the RCK1 kinase domain does not
exhibit high homology to the receptor kinase of the
RGS-domain-containing receptor kinases, we wanted to examine whether
RCK1 might be responsible for cAR1 phosphorylation and/or have an
effect on the kinetics or level of cAR1 phosphorylation. The results
shown in Figure 8A indicate that cAR1 is phosphorylated in
rck1 null cells, although the kinetics of phosphorylation is
slightly delayed compared with those of cAR1 in wild-type cells.
Possible Genetic Interactions of RCK1 with G
Subunits
We imagine that the RCK1 RGS domain interacts with one or more
G
subunits. To examine this possibility, we determined whether RCK1
membrane localization and activation in response to chemoattractant stimulation were altered after cAMP stimulation in various G
mutant
backgrounds. G
2 is the G
subunit that interacts with cARs to
mediate G protein-dependent, cAMP-stimulated pathways (Parent and
Devreotes, 1996
; Aubry and Firtel, 1999
). As shown in Figure
9A, myc-RCK1 does not translocate to the
membrane in g
2 null cells expressing exogenous cAR1.
(Because endogenous cAR1 expression is dependent upon G
2 function,
cells are cotransformed with a cAR1 expression vector to provide
necessary receptor levels.) We also examined RCK1 subcellular
localization in g
2 null and wild-type cells expressing
constitutively active G
2Q208L. Wild-type cells
expressing G
2Q208L exhibited weaker RCK1
translocation, whereas g
2 null cells expressing G
2Q208L showed no translocation. G
5 is also
potentially involved in the chemoattractant-mediated signaling pathway,
because it affects the developmental timing of morphogenesis. In
contrast to observations in g
2null cells, RCK1
translocated normally in g
5 null cells.
|
RCK1 kinase activation was also examined in several G
mutant
strains. As shown in Figure 9, B and C, RCK1 kinase activation was
normal in g
5 cells but was not activated in
g
2 null cells expressing exogenous cAR1. In contrast,
RCK1 kinase activity exhibited a very high basal activity (activity in
the absence of cAMP stimulation) in KAx-3 cells expressing
G
2Q208L. Activity increased an additional
twofold in response to cAMP stimulation in contrast to the 6- to
10-fold activation in KAx-3 expressing wild-type G
2 from the
exogenous Actin 15 promoter. g
2 null cells expressing
G
2Q208L exhibited the high basal activity, but
the activity did not increase upon cAMP stimulation, suggesting the
increase observed in wild-type cells expressing
G
2Q208L may be due to the activation of the
endogenous G
protein. Our results with g
2 null cells
and wild-type and g
2 null cells expressing G
2Q208L suggest that G
2 may interact
directly with RCK1 and regulate its function.
| |
DISCUSSION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
RCK1 Is Required for Chemotaxis and Morphogenesis
We have identified a novel kinase, RCK1, that contains an RGS and
a kinase domain. RCK1 is preferentially expressed during the
aggregation stage in development and our analyses of the
rck1 null strain demonstrated that RCK1 plays a critical
role controlling chemotaxis and morphogenesis. rck1 null
cells exhibit an ~50% increase in the speed of directional movement
during chemotaxis, whereas RCK1-overexpressing
(RCK1OE) cells show an ~40% decrease in the
speed of cell movement. This finding is particularly novel because
other chemotaxis/motility null mutants described in the literature for
Dictyostelium exhibit a decrease in chemotaxis. The
observations of an increase in the speed of chemotaxis of the
rck1 null strain combined with a decrease in the speed of
chemotaxis in the RCK1OE strain suggest that RCK1
plays a negative role in controlling chemotaxis and/or motility. We
also found that expression of RCK1 in rck1 null cells leads
to a phenotype similar to that observed for
RCK1OE cells. However, this observation was not
unexpected, considering RCK1OE cells are presumed
to have an elevated level of expression of RCK1 compared with wild-type
cells because of higher levels of RCK1 RNA transcripts. Although we
think it is unlikely, we cannot exclude the possibility that the
temporally altered expression of RCK1 from the Actin 15 promoter may
account for the RCK1OE phenotypes. We found that
the rck1 null and RCK1OE strains
exhibit a similar multicellular morphogenesis defect after the
formation of the multicellular aggregate. The rck1 null strains exhibited slightly faster aggregation and produced larger amounts, but had a significant delay of development with a prolonged mound stage. Time-lapse video analysis of the rck1 null cell
development revealed normal cAMP wave patterns compared with those of
wild-type cells (our unpublished observation), suggesting that the
production and propagation of cAMP is probably not affected in this
strain. Because morphogenesis is partially mediated by the differential sorting of prestalk cells within the multicellular aggregate to apical
cAMP signals (Weijer, 1999
; Clow et al., 2000
), we expect that the observed chemotaxis defects of the
RCK1OE and rck1 null strains are the
basis of the inability of these cells to properly undergo
morphogenesis. It is unexpected that cells exhibiting a faster than
wild-type speed of chemotaxis experience a delay in morphogenesis. It
is possible that the morphogenesis defect is due to an effect of RCK1
on cytoskeletal processes distinct from those controlling leading edge responses.
Cells expressing myrRCK1 exhibited a similar developmental phenotype to RCK1OE cells but with an even longer delay. The chemotaxis analysis showed that these two types of cells showed very similar chemotaxis defects with the only noticeable difference being that myrRCK1 cells exhibit a greater directional change (33.08 ± 10.39 vs. 25.08 ± 5.45). It is possible that the difference in direction change may be due to the constitutive localization of myrRCK1 on the plasma membrane and that this difference may account for the difference in developmental phenotype between these two cell lines.
The strongest morphogenesis defects are exhibited by expressing the
kinase-dead RCK1 (RCK1K867A) in an
rck1 null background. We expect these defects are due to a
dominant negative effect of expressing a protein that may interact with
some effectors through its RGS or kinase domain but is unable to
properly phosphorylate its substrates. Because RCK1 kinase activity is
necessary for the release of RCK1 from the plasma membrane/cortex, we
propose that this inability to delocalize from the plasma membrane may
lead to the strong chemotaxis and morphogenesis phenotypes in this
strain. We expect that the RGS domain interacts with one or more of the
G
protein subunits found in Dictyostelium and that the
kinase-dead protein may continue to interact with a particular
subunit and either block other effectors or rapidly down-regulate G
protein function by acting as a GTPase-activating enzyme.
RCK1 Translocates to Plasma Membrane in Response to Chemoattractant Stimulation
We demonstrate that RCK1 rapidly and transiently translocates to
the plasma membrane in response to chemoattractant stimulation. We show
that this translocation does not require a functional kinase domain,
but seems to require a functional RGS domain. We tested several RGS
domain mutants that had been previously demonstrated in other systems
to affect RGS protein function. One of these mutants,
RCK1C551A, shows a significant reduction in
chemoattractant-mediated membrane translocation. Because a mutation of
a conserved Asn/Ser residue in another RGS domain, which corresponds to
C551 in the RGS domain of RCK1, affects the interaction of the RGS
domain with G
protein subunits, we suggest that RGS domain
interaction with a G
protein mediates RCK1 membrane translocation.
We tested the ability of the various subdomains of RCK1, including the
RGS domain, to translocate to the plasma membrane in response to
chemoattractant stimulation. All of these constructs remain cytosolic.
We cannot distinguish between the RGS domain alone being insufficient
for the translocation and potential problems with the folding of the
deleted protein.
G
2 is known to mediate G protein-dependent functions downstream from
the cAMP receptors. RCK1 does not translocate in g
2 null
cells, suggesting that RCK1 translocation may be mediated through
RCK1's binding to G
2GTP, although we do not
have any direct evidence that RCK1 binds to
G
2GTP. cAMP-mediated chemotaxis requires the
expression of a variety of gene products whose expression is dependent
on cAMP signaling and G
2 function. Although we use a
g
2 null strain coexpressing exogenous cAR1 (Insall
et al., 1994
), it is possible that this strain may not be
fully competent to respond to cAR1-mediated pathways even if they are
G
2 dependent. Thus, the absence of RCK1 translocation to the plasma
membrane in this strain may be due to secondary effects. These data
suggest involvement of G
2 in mediating RCK1 function, but we do not
have any data indicating whether the RCK1 RGS domain has any GAP
activity against G
2GTP or another G
subunit.
Previous studies revealed that a variety of signaling molecules,
including PH domain-containing proteins that bind to the PI3K products
phosphatidylinositol 3,4,5-triphosphate and phosphatidylinositol 4,5-triphosphate as well as PI3K1 and PI3K2, also localize to the plasma membrane in response to global stimulation (Parent et
al., 1998
; Meili et al., 1999
; Funamoto et
al., 2001
, 2002
; Iijima and Devreotes, 2002
). In contrast to these
proteins, RCK1 does not localize to the leading edge in chemotaxing
cells (cells responding to a directional chemoattractant gradient) but
is found more uniformly distributed along the plasma membrane.
Presently, the mechanism by which PI3K1 and PI3K2 localize to the
leading edge in chemotaxing cells is unknown. We know, however, that
PI3K is uniformly localized along the plasma membrane. Through the use
of a myristoylation membrane-targeting sequence and through the
analysis of pten null cells in Dictyostelium, it
was discovered PI3K function is activated along the lateral sides as
well as the leading edge, indicating that chemoattractant-mediated
pathways can be activated along the lateral sides as well as the
leading edge of cells (Funamoto et al., 2002
; Iijima and
Devreotes, 2002
). The presence of RCK1 along the perimeter of
chemotaxing cells suggests that the signaling pathway that mediates
RCK1 membrane localization, possibly the activation of G
2, is
activated along the entire perimeter of cells in a chemoattractant gradient.
RCK1 Is Activated in Response to Chemoattractant Stimulation
RCK1 kinase activity is also rapidly activated in response to
chemoattractant stimulation, with activity levels plateauing by 10 s. This kinetics is very similar to that of the activation of Akt/PKB
and guanylyl cyclase. However, in contrast to these pathways and all
other previously examined chemoattractant-mediated pathways in
Dictyostelium, RCK1 activity does not rapidly adapt, but
remains high throughout the time course of the experiment and only
decreases after the removal of cAMP (Parent and Devreotes, 1996
; Aubry
and Firtel, 1999
). The cAR1 receptor is phosphorylated in response to
cAMP stimulation and, like RCK1 kinase activity, remains phosphorylated
as long as the ligand is present. In this regard, the continued
elevated RCK1 kinase activity is similar to the levels of the
phosphorylated form of the cAR1 receptor.
Interestingly, RCK1 kinase activity may not require continuous
localization of RCK1 on the plasma membrane. In fact, RCK1 kinase
activity is required for the delocalization of RCK1 from the membrane.
Studies with RCK1C551A, which localizes poorly to
the plasma membrane in response to global stimulation, result in the
same level of "autophosphorylation" and kinase activity against MBP
obtained with wild-type protein expressed at the same level. This
finding suggests that either membrane localization of RCK1 is not
required for its activation or the low level of association observed in
our studies is sufficient to mediate the activation response. If
RCK1's translocation were required for kinase activation, we would
have expected this mutant to exhibit some decrease in the level of
kinase activity. It is possible that the membrane localization targets
RCK1 to its putative substrate. Furthermore, we expect that the rapid
delocalization of the RCK1 protein from the plasma membrane, possibly
due to its interaction with a G
protein effector, may be critical in controlling RGS1 function.
Regulation of RCK1
The heterotrimeric G protein containing the G
2 subunit couples
to the cAMP chemoattractant subunits and controls all known cAMP-mediated, G protein-dependent signaling pathways. We found that
RCK1 neither is activated nor translocated to the plasma membrane in
g
2 null cells. Because RCK1 translocation seems to be
dependent on the RGS domain (with the caveats discussed above), these
data suggest that G
2GTP may interact with the
RGS domain, although we have no evidence from binding studies to
support this suggestion. We found that RCK1 cells expressing
constitutively active G
2, which should be in the GTP-bound state,
have a very elevated basal kinase activity as determined by the kinase
assay using MBP as a substrate and RCK1 autophosphorylation activity
(in the absence of chemoattractant stimulation). However, we do not
observe constitutive localization of RCK1 to the plasma membrane.
Rather, the translocation of RCK1 was reduced in wild-type cells
expressing constitutively active G
2 and absent in rck1
null cells expressing constitutively active G
2. This might be
expected, considering our data suggest that RCK1 kinase activity
mediates or is required for the delocalization of RCK1 from the
membrane. Previous studies showed that many cAMP-stimulated pathways
are constitutively adapted in cells expressing
G
2Q208L and cannot be further stimulated by
cAMP, and these cells are unable to aggregate (Okaichi et
al., 1992
). Similarly, activation of pathways ranging from
guanylyl and adenylyl cyclase to Akt/PKB all rapidly adapt when cells
are stimulated by cAMP, even in the continued presence of ligand
(Parent and Devreotes, 1996
; Firtel and Chung, 2000
). However, in
wild-type cells expressing constitutively active G
2
(G
2Q208L), which also express endogenous
G
2, cAMP stimulation results in an additional increase in RCK1
kinase activity. This is not observed in g
2 null cells
expressing constitutively active G
2 (G
2Q208L), possibly because these cells are
generally not very responsive. We suggest that
G
2Q208L leads to the constitutive stimulation
of RCK1 kinase activity and this pathway does not adapt, consistent
with our observation that RCK1 kinase activity remains elevated as long
as the cells are being stimulated by a chemoattractant. In contrast,
RCK1 protein translocation may be constitutively adapted, as are some
other signaling pathways. We also examined another G
subunit, G
5. We observed no effect on RCK1 membrane localization or kinase activity.
Our results indicate that RCK1 plays a key role in controlling
cAMP-mediated chemotaxis. RCK1 may function as a "governor," controlling the rate of chemotaxis or acting as part of the adaptation pathway. The idea of a possible function of RCK1 in adaptation is
consistent with some of our observations. First, rck1 null cells chemotax faster than wild-type cells. This could be the due to
extended signaling if RCK1 is involved in adaptation. Second, RCK1
activation does not adapt in the presence of a continuous signal. The
kinase activity of RCK1 peaks after 10 s and only decreases when
cAMP is removed. The continuous stimulated RCK1 kinase activity might
be the signal to block stimulation of some cAMP-induced pathways. RCK1
might function with or in parallel with G
9, which was recently
demonstrated to be important for regulating adaptation of some
signaling pathways during aggregation (Brzostowski et al.,
2002
). Although individual rck1 null cells seem to chemotax
more efficiently in a micropipette chemotaxis assay, the cells exhibit
aggregation defects, suggesting that RCK1 plays an important part in
controlling a physiological response that is more closely related to
the natural biology of the organism. We have examined a number of
chemoattractant-mediated signaling pathways, but none of these were
detectably affected in our assays. The identification of the RCK1
substrates should elucidate the pathway by which RCK1 functions.
| |
FOOTNOTES |
|---|
* Corresponding author. E-mail address: rafirtel{at}ucsd.edu.
Article published online ahead of print. Mol. Biol. Cell 10.1091/mbc.E02-08-0550. Article and publication date are at www.molbiolcell.org/cgi/doi/10.1091/mbc.E02-08-0550.
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