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Vol. 14, Issue 8, 3126-3143, August 2003
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Dipartimento di Biotecnologie e Bioscienze, Università di Milano-Bicocca, 20126 Milan, Italy
Submitted November 10, 2002;
Revised April 10, 2003;
Accepted April 15, 2003
Monitoring Editor: Douglas Koshland
| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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In most organisms, such as yeast and vertebrates, the ends of linear
chromosomes contain telomeric DNA repeats of 525 base pairs that vary
in sequence among species and terminate in a 3' single-stranded overhang
(Wellinger and Sen, 1997
),
which is likely important for both recruitment of the telomerase enzyme and
for efficient telomeric sequence addition. Telomeric DNA is usually maintained
by the action of telomerase, a specialized reverse transcriptase that uses its
RNA component as a template to elongate the TG-rich strand of telomeric DNA
(reviewed in Greider, 1996
;
Zakian, 1996
).
Telomerase-mediated lengthening of chromosomal ends in budding yeast involves
a number of factors. In fact, the action of the Est2 catalytic reverse
transcriptase protein subunit and of the TLC1 telomerase RNA is
modulated by both the TLC1-binding proteins Est1 and Est3 and the
single-stranded TG13 DNA binding protein Cdc13 (reviewed in
Evans et al., 1999
).
Moreover, once localized at telomeres, telomerase activity has to be regulated
to avoid unlimited addition of TG1-3 repeats. In budding yeast, the
Rap1 protein negatively regulates telomere length, and the Rap1-binding
proteins Rif1 and Rif2 are important for this negative regulation. In fact,
both RIF1 and RIF2 deletions cause telomere lengthening
(Hardy et al., 1992
;
Wotton and Shore, 1997
) in a
telomerase-dependent manner (Teng et
al., 2000
; Chan et
al., 2001
), and mutations in the Rif-interacting domain of
Rap1 increase telomere length and accelerate telomerase action
(Kyrion et al.,
1992
). It has been suggested that the Rap1/Rif complex may
modulate telomerase activity by acting in a length-sensing mechanism based on
the binding of one Rap1 protein per 1518 base pairs of TG repeats
(Conrad et al., 1990
;
Gilson et al., 1993
;
Marcand et al.,
1997
).
Despite the functional differences between telomeres and DSBs, a subset of
the proteins required for DSB repair also have distinct roles in telomere
maintenance. Among them, the RAD50, MRE11, and XRS2 gene
products form a highly conserved complex called MRX, which is involved in
recombinational DNA repair, DSB end resection, telomere function, and
checkpoint mechanisms in Saccharomyces cerevisiae (reviewed in
Haber, 1998
;
D'Amours and Jackson, 2002
). A
chromosome suffering a double-strand break can be repaired either through
homologous recombination or by nonhomologous end joining (NHEJ) (reviewed in
Paques and Haber, 1999
), and
the MRX complex controls both processes
(Haber, 1998
). Also the
DNA-dependent protein kinase DNA-PK (Wood
et al., 2001
), as well as DNA ligase IV and its
associated factors, XRCC4 in mammals, Lif1 and Lif2 in S. cerevisiae,
are essential for NHEJ (reviewed in Paques
and Haber, 1999
). In particular, the MRX complex interacts with
DNA ligase IV/Lif1, thereby promoting intermolecular DNA joining
(Chen et al.,
2001
).
Besides MRX, the Yku70/Yku80 protein complex is required for both NHEJ and
telomere maintenance (reviewed in
Lundblad, 2000
). This complex
is physically associated with yeast telomeres
(Gravel et al.,
1998
), and its lack results in a substantial reduction of telomere
length (Porter et al.,
1996
; Boulton and Jackson,
1996
,
1998
). Moreover, shift to
37°C causes yku
mutants to arrest cell cycle progression
and accumulate single-stranded DNA in subtelomeric Y' regions
(Maringele and Lydall, 2002
).
The mismatch repair-associated EXO1 gene is required for both
single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) generation and cell cycle arrest of yku70
mutants, suggesting that ssDNA is an important component of the arrest signal
in the absence of Yku (Maringele and
Lydall, 2002
).
Evolutionarily conserved protein kinases, such as S. cerevisiae
Mec1 and Tel1, Schizosaccharomyces pombe Rad3, and human ATM and ATR,
are also key players in both telomere maintenance and checkpoint networks
(reviewed in Abraham, 2001
;
Shiloh, 2001
). In budding
yeast, a Tel1-dependent checkpoint, which becomes apparent in the absence of
Mec1 and converges on Rad9 and Rad53 like the canonical Rad24-Mec1 pathway
(Usui et al., 2001
),
requires the MRX complex and responds to unprocessed DSBs
(D'Amours and Jackson, 2001
;
Grenon et al., 2001
;
Usui et al., 2001
).
The Tel1-dependent checkpoint is also triggered by the loss of Sae2, a 345
amino acid protein, whose lack seems to cause accumulation of unprocessed DSBs
(McKee and Kleckner, 1997
;
Rattray et al., 2001
;
Usui et al., 2001
).
The phenotype of sae2
mutants is very similar to that of
nonnull rad50 and mre11 mutants. In fact, they accumulate
meiotic unresected DSBs, in which 5'-3' resection is blocked by
the presence of the topoisomerase II-like protein Spo11 at DNA ends
(McKee and Kleckner, 1997
;
Rattray et al.,
2001
). Thus, Sae2 deficiency may cause accumulation of DNA
alterations that are specifically sensed by the Tel1-dependent checkpoint.
Both the lack of any of the three MRX proteins and TEL1 deletion
cause marked telomere shortening
(Greenwell et al.,
1995
; Morrow et al.,
1995
; Nugent et al.,
1998
; Tsukamoto et
al., 2001
), and the phenotypes of tel1
cells
are not exacerbated by the lack of MRX proteins. This suggests that Tel1 and
MRX act in the same pathway (Ritchie and
Petes, 2000
). The ATR-like protein Mec1, which has a central role
in the major DNA damage checkpoint pathway, also contributes to telomere
length maintenance, but independently of Tel1/MRX. In fact, mec1 tel1
cells, as well as mec1 cells lacking any of the MRX proteins, show
more dramatic telomere shortening than each single mutant, similar to that
seen in cells lacking active telomerase
(Ritchie et al.,
1999
; Ritchie and Petes,
2000
). Thus, Tel1/MRX and Mec1 are both required for
telomerase-mediated replication of telomeric DNA. The absence of Tel1 and MRX
proteins does not affect either telomerase catalytic activity or Cdc13 binding
to telomeric DNA (Chan et al.,
2001
; Tsukamoto et
al., 2001
). However, when telomerase is artificially targeted
to telomeres, their lengthening is at least as effective in mec1 mrx
and mec1 tel1 as in wild-type cells
(Tsukamoto et al.,
2001
), suggesting that Mec1, Tel1, and MRX may act by recruiting
to telomeres either telomerase or telomerase-activating factors.
We have recently shown that yeast strains expressing a galactose-inducible
GAL1-TEL1 fusion as the sole Tel1 source undergo a transient G2/M
cell cycle arrest in the absence of exogenous DNA damage
(Clerici et al.,
2001
). This arrest seems to be due to checkpoint activation,
because it requires both the Rad53 and Chk1 kinases
(Clerici et al.,
2001
), known to cooperate in the G2/M DNA damage checkpoint
(Sanchez et al.,
1999
), and Rad9, whose phosphorylation and interaction with Rad53
leads to Rad53 activation (Gilbert et
al., 2001
). Conversely, it does not seem to involve Ddc1, a
protein presumably acting in the DNA damage-sensing steps of the canonical
Mec1 pathway (Clerici et al.,
2001
).
Herein, we show that overexpression of TEL1 in cells with short
telomeres causes telomere lengthening and the activation of a Rad53-dependent
checkpoint response. Sudden telomere elongation and checkpoint-mediated cell
cycle arrest are also triggered in wild-type cells by overproducing a protein
fusion between the telomeric binding protein Cdc13 and the
telomerase-associated protein Est1. Both TEL1
overexpression-dependent telomere elongation and checkpoint activation can be
partially suppressed by preventing telomerase action. Moreover, accelerating
rebalancing of telomeric ends also accelerates checkpoint inactivation. Thus,
as proposed for telomere shortening
(Enomoto et al.,
2002
; Ijpma and Greider,
2003
), also sudden telomere lengthening by telomerase seems to
trigger a DNA damage checkpoint response.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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To obtain plasmid pML415, containing the RIF2 open reading frame flanked by 521 base pairs upstream of the start codon and 383 base pairs downstream of the stop codon, a 2092-base pair RIF2 fragment was amplified by PCR with yeast genomic DNA as template, the oligonucleotides PRP324 (5'-CGG AAT TCC CGA AGC TAC TTA TGC CAG AA-3') and PRP325 (5'-CGG AAT TCA GTG CGT GCA AAA CCT AGA AG-3') as primers, and Pfu polymerase (Stratagene). The PCR amplification product was then cloned into the EcoRI-EcoRI sites of plasmid YEplac195.
To obtain plasmid pML460, carrying the GAL1-CDC13 EST1 fusion, a 1357-base pair CDC13 fragment was amplified by PCR with plasmid PVL1091, kindly provided by V. Lundblad (Houston, TX), as template, the oligonucleotides PRP505 (5'-CGC GGA TCC ATA TGG ATA CCT TAG AAG AGC CTG AG-3') and PRP508 (5'-TTG TAC ATG ATG GCT TTG AAG CC-3') as primers, and Pfu as polymerase. The amplification products was then cloned into the BamH1-BamH1 sites of plasmid PVL1091, in which a 931-base pair SpeI-BamH1 fragment carrying the GAL1 promoter was inserted into the XbaI-BamH1 sites.
Yeast Strains and Media
The genotypes of all the yeast strains used in this study are listed in
Table 1. All yeast strains were
derivatives of W303 (MATa or MAT
, ade2-1, can1-100,
his3-11,15, leu2-3,112, trp1-1, ura3).
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Strain DMP3539/10D, carrying one copy of the GAL1-TEL1 fusion
disrupting the TEL1 chromosomal gene, was obtained as described
previously (Clerici et al.,
2001
). Strain DMP3469/1A was a meiotic segregant from a cross
between strains DMP3539/10D and K700. Strain YLL1133, carrying the
TEL1 gene integrated at the URA3 locus, was obtained by
transforming strain DMP3539/10D with an NcoI-digested pSP21 (kindly
provided by T. Petes, Chapel Hill, NC) derivative plasmid, in which the
AatII-AatII fragment, carrying the ADE3 gene and
the 2 µ origin of replication, had been deleted.
To generate the YKU70 chromosomal deletion, a
yku70
::HIS3 cassette was constructed by PCR with
pFA6a-HIS3 plasmid (Wach et
al., 1994
) as template, and oligonucleotides PRP171
(5'-CAA TAG TGG AGA ACT TAA CGA TCA AGT GGA TGA AAC AGG TTA TAC GTA CGC
TGC AGG TCG AC-3') and PRP172 (5'-ATT TAG CCT TTG GAT GAT TGG ATC
TTC TGA CTT CTC AGA TTC TAA TCG ATG AAT TCG AGC TCG-3') as primers,
followed by transformation of strains K699 and YLL1133 with the PCR product,
giving rise to strains YLL941 and YLL1230, respectively, where 1587 base pairs
of the YKU70 coding region were replaced by the Kluyveromyces
lactis HIS3 gene.
To generate the RAD51 chromosomal deletion, a
rad51
::HIS3 cassette was constructed by PCR with
pFA6a-HIS3 plasmid (Wach et
al., 1994
) as template, and oligonucleotides PRP410
(5'-AGG CCT ACT AAT TTG TTA TCG TCA TAT GTC TCA AGT TCA AGA ACA CGT ACG
CTG CAG GTC GAC-3') and PRP411 (5'-AAT AGA GAC AAG AGA CCA AAT ACC
TAC TCG TCT TCT TCT CTG GGG ATC GAT GAA TTC GAG CTC G-3') as primers,
followed by transformation of strains K699 and DMP3539/10D with the PCR
product, giving rise to strains YLL1169 and YLL1171, respectively, where 1161
base pairs of the RAD51 coding region were replaced by the
Kluyveromyces lactis HIS3 gene.
To generate the EST2 chromosomal deletion, an
est2
::KANMX4 cassette was constructed by PCR with
pFA6a-KANMX4 plasmid as template, and oligonucleotides PRP406
(5'-GAT TTA TAC TCA TGA AAA TCT TAT TCG AGT TCA TTC AAG ACA AGC CGT ACG
CTG CAG GTC GAC-3') and PRP407 (5'-TAT ATA TGC TTG CAA GTG TTG AAT
TTC CTT TCT CAA AAG AAT GAT ATC GAT GAA TTC GAG CTC G-3') as primers,
followed by transformation of strains K699 and DMP3539/10D with the PCR
product, giving rise to strains YLL1156 and YLL1157, respectively, where 2549
base pairs of the EST2 coding region were replaced by the
KANMX4 gene. After transformation, clones were picked directly from
the G418-selective plates (
25 generations) to perform the experiment
described in Figure 3, B and C,
and to verify concomitantly the accuracy of the disruption (see below).
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The above-mentioned est2
::KANMX4 cassette was also
used to transform a TEL1/GAL1-TEL1 diploid strain, where one
TEL1 copy was substituted with the GAL1-TEL1 fusion. The
resulting diploid strain TEL1/GAL1-TEL1
EST2/est2
(DMP4086) was allowed to sporulate and tetrads
were dissected on YEPD plates. Forty-eight hours after tetrad dissection (25
generations), segregant clones were used for the experiments described in
Figures 3A and
4, C and D, and concomitantly
analyzed for the presence of the est2
and GAL1-TEL1
markers.
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Strains YLL848 and YLL932, carrying the TEL1-HA3 and
GAL1-TEL1-HA3 alleles at the TEL1 chromosomal locus were
constructed as described previously
(Clerici et al.,
2001
).
Wild-type, GAL1-TEL1, tel1
and rad51
strains carrying either the 2 µ vector, or 2 µ RIF2 or 2 µ
SAE2 plasmids were constructed by transforming strains K699,
DMP3539/10D, Y300 and YLL1169 with plasmids YEplac195 (2 µ URA3),
pML415 (2 µ RIF2 URA3) and pML411 (2 µ SAE2 URA3),
respectively. Wild-type strains carrying either the empty vector or a
derivative plasmid with the GAL1-CDC13-EST1 fusion were constructed
by transforming strain K699 with plasmids YCplac111 (ARS1 CEN4 LEU2)
and pML460 (ARS1 CEN4 LEU2 GAL1-CDC13-EST1), respectively.
The accuracy of all gene replacements and integrations was verified by
Southern blot analysis or PCR. Standard yeast genetic techniques and media
were according to Rose et al.
(1990
). Cells were grown in
YEP medium (1% yeast extract, 2% bactopeptone, 50 mg/l adenine) supplemented
with 2% glucose (YEPD) or 2% raffinose (YEP + raf) or 2% raffinose and 1%
galactose (YEP + raf + gal). Transformants carrying the KANMX4
cassette were selected on YEPD plates containing 400 µg/ml G418 (US
Biochemical Corp., Cleveland, OH).
Search for High Copy Number Suppressors
To search for multicopy suppressors of the hydroxyurea (HU)-sensitivity
caused by GAL1-TEL1 overexpression, the GAL1-TEL1 strain
DMP3539/10D was transformed with a S. cerevisiae genomic library
based on the multicopy 2 µ vector YEp24
(Carlson and Botstein, 1982
).
Ura+ transformants were tested for their ability to grow at
25°C on YEP + raf + gal plates in the presence of 150 mM HU, which
inhibits the untransformed strain. Plasmids from transformants showing
cosegregation of HU-resistance with the URA3 vector marker were
recovered and introduced again into the DMP3539/10D strain, to confirm their
ability to suppress GAL1-TEL1 HU-hypersensitivity. Restriction
analysis allowed us to identify several classes of plasmids containing
different yeast genomic fragments (to be published elsewhere). The nucleotide
sequences of both ends of the smallest DNA insert of each plasmid class were
determined and compared with the whole S. cerevisiae genomic sequence
in the Saccharomyces Genome Database. Because most inserts contained
several open reading frames, the suppressor genes were identified by cloning
subfragments of the inserts into the 2 µ plasmid YEplac195 and testing the
derivative plasmids for their ability to suppress the HU-hypersensitivity of
the galactose-induced GAL1-TEL1 strain.
Southern Blot Analysis of Telomere Length
Yeast DNA was prepared according to standard methods and digested with the
XhoI enzyme. The resulting DNA fragments were separated by gel
electrophoresis in 0.8% agarose gel and transferred to a GeneScreen nylon
membrane (PerkinElmer Life Sciences, Boston, MA), followed by hybridization
with a 32P-labeled poly(GT) probe and exposure to
x-raysensitive films. Standard hybridization conditions were used.
Other Techniques
Synchronization experiments, total protein extract preparation, and Western
blot analysis were performed as described in
Paciotti et al.,
2000
.
| RESULTS |
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We further studied this phenomenon by asking whether checkpoint activation
in galactose-induced GAL1-TEL1 cells might be related to alterations
in telomere metabolism. In fact, the lack of Tel1 results in short but stable
telomeres (Greenwell et al.,
1995
; Morrow et al.,
1995
). Because Tel1 levels in the GAL1-TEL1 strain depend
on the expression of the GAL1-TEL1 fusion, this might in turn
influence telomere length in uninduced versus galactose-induced conditions. As
shown in Figure 1B, lane 0,
telomeres of GAL1-TEL1 cells exponentially growing in raffinose
(GAL1 promoter off) were shorter than those of wild-type cells and
only slightly longer than those of tel1
cells. Thus, the
amount of Tel1 protein resulting from GAL1-TEL1 basal expression,
which is lower than that produced by endogenous TEL1 under the same
conditions (Figure 1D, lane 0),
is insufficient to maintain wild-type telomere length. However, although
telomere length was affected, the checkpoint was not activated under these
conditions. In fact, neither tel1
nor GAL1-TEL1 cells
grown in raffinose contained phosphorylated Rad53
(Figure 1B bottom, lane 0),
which normally occurs upon activation of the known DNA damage checkpoint
pathways and is detectable as changes of Rad53 electrophoretic mobility
(Sanchez et al.,
1996
). Moreover, telomere length did not change in wild-type and
tel1
cells shifted to galactose
(Figure 1B, top, lanes 6 and
12), which normally progressed through cell cycle (our unpublished data).
Conversely, GAL1-TEL1 cells shifted to galactose arrested with 2C DNA
content (Figure 1C) and
phosphorylated Rad53 (Figure
1B, bottom), while gradually lengthened telomeres
(Figure 1B, top). This telomere
lengthening paralleled cell cycle arrest and checkpoint activation. In fact,
at the same time telomere length reached a new equilibrium (10/12 h after the
shift) (Figure 1B, top),
GAL1-TEL1 cells divided, as indicated by the appearance of cells with
1C DNA content (Figure 1C).
Accordingly, the amount of phosphorylated Rad53 started to decrease
(Figure 1B, bottom), although
Tel1 levels remained high throughout the experiment
(Figure 1D). Therefore,
activation of the Rad53-dependent checkpoint by ectopic Tel1 overexpression
correlates with changes in telomere length.
Telomere Lengthening and Checkpoint Activation Is Triggered by TEL1
Overexpression Only in Cells with Short Telomeres
We next asked whether GAL1-TEL1 overexpression might activate the
Rad53-dependent response also in the presence of wild-type TEL1. To
this end, we integrated a fully functional TEL1 gene at the
URA3 locus in the GAL1-TEL1 strain. The derivative
TEL1::URA3 tel1::GAL1-TEL1 strain (from now ahead simply indicated as
TEL1 GAL1-TEL1) did not show any growth defect, was as sensitive as
wild type to HU and methyl methanesulfenate (MMS)
(Figure 1A) and did not undergo
any cell cycle arrest after shift to galactose-containing medium
(Figure 2A). Moreover, Rad53
phosphorylation was not detectable by Western blot analysis of
galactose-induced TEL1 GAL1-TEL1 cell extracts
(Figure 2B, bottom). Finally,
telomere length in TEL1 GAL1-TEL1 cells did not change after shift to
galactose and was similar to that of wild-type cells
(Figure 2B, top, lanes 6 and
12). Thus, increasing Tel1 levels in TEL1 cells with normal telomere
length neither causes telomere lengthening nor activates the checkpoint. On
the other hand, both telomere elongation and checkpoint activation are
triggered by Tel1 overproduction in GAL1-TEL1 cells with short
telomeres. Thus, it is possible that TEL1 overexpression may elicit
these responses only when it is induced in cells with short telomeres that
might be more accessible to telomerase action. If these were the case,
GAL1-TEL1 induction might cause telomere lengthening and activate the
checkpoint also in TEL1 cells whose telomeres are short due to
deletion of the YKU70 gene. As shown in
Figure 2B, lane 0, telomeres of
both yku70
and TEL1 GAL1-TEL1 yku70
cells
exponentially growing at 23°C in raffinose were shorter than those of
TEL1 GAL1-TEL1 cells under the same conditions. After shift to
galactose, TEL1 GAL1-TEL1 yku70
cells gradually lengthened
telomeres (Figure 2B, top) and
arrested with 2C DNA content (Figure
2A), undivided nuclei (our unpublished data), and high levels of
phosphorylated Rad53 (Figure
2B, bottom), until telomeres reached a new equilibrium length
(10/12 h). At this time, cells started also to resume cell cycle progression
and the amount of phosphorylated Rad53 began to decrease. Conversely, telomere
length did not change in galactose-induced TEL1 GAL1-TEL1 and
yku70
cells (Figure
2B, top), which progressed through the cell cycle
(Figure 2A; our unpublished
data), although the lack of Yku70 caused some Rad53 phosphorylation
(Figure 2B, bottom). Therefore,
TEL1 overexpression seems to trigger telomere elongation and
Rad53-dependent checkpoint activation even in the presence of endogenously
expressed TEL1, as far as it is turned on in cells with short
telomeres.
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Est2 Is Required for the Tel1-induced Cell Cycle Arrest and Telomere
Elongation
Based on the above-mentioned data, checkpoint activation by TEL1
overexpression might be due to ongoing telomere lengthening and, in this case,
it should likely be suppressed by preventing telomere elongation. We therefore
analyzed the kinetics of cell cycle progression and telomere elongation of
galactose-induced GAL1-TEL1 cells lacking the RAD51 gene,
which is necessary for recombinational repair and telomere elongation in the
absence of telomerase (Le et al.,
1999
), or the EST2 gene, which encodes the catalytic
subunit of telomerase (Lingner et
al., 1997
). In addition, we analyzed the ability of the same
strains to form colonies on YEP + raf + gal plates in the absence or in the
presence of HU and MMS. In fact, GAL1-TEL1 induction also causes
growth defects and hypersensitivity to genotoxic drugs, the latter likely due
to additive effects on checkpoint activation of TEL1 overexpression
and DNA damage caused by the drugs (Figure
1A; Clerici et al.,
2001
).
As shown in Figure 3,
deletion of RAD51 did not suppress the effects of GAL1-TEL1
induction. In fact, GAL1-TEL1 rad51
cells showed more severe
growth defects compared with GAL1-TEL1 cells, as well as higher
hypersensitivity to HU and MMS than both GAL1-TEL1 and
rad51
cells on galactose-containing plates
(Figure 3A). Moreover, both
GAL1-TEL1 rad51
and GAL1-TEL1 cells released from the
G1 block in galactose-containing medium remained arrested with undivided
nuclei until the end of the experiment
(Figure 3, B and C). Finally,
when GAL1-TEL1 rad51
cells exponentially growing in raffinose
were shifted to galactose, their kinetics of telomere lengthening and
reequilibration (Figure 4A,
top), Rad53 phosphorylation (Figure
4A, bottom), and cell cycle arrest
(Figure 4B) were comparable
with those observed in similarly treated GAL1-TEL1 cell cultures
(Figure 1 and
4). Some Rad53 phosphorylation
was detected in rad51
cells in all the analyzed conditions
(Figure 4A, bottom), suggesting
that the lack of recombinational repair might cause accumulation of unrepaired
DNA lesions, which might activate the checkpoint even without external DNA
damage.
On the contrary, all the effects of GAL1-TEL1 expression were
partially counteracted by deletion of EST2. In fact, all the analyzed
GAL1-TEL1 est2
meiotic segregants from a
GAL1-TEL1/TEL1 est2
/EST2 heterozygous strain
showed higher ability than GAL1-TEL1 cells to form colonies on
galactose-containing plates and behaved similarly to est2
segregants both in the presence and in the absence of genotoxic drugs
(Figure 3A). Moreover, when
GAL1-TEL1 est2
cell cultures were released from
-factor
G1 arrest into galactose-containing medium, they began to divide nuclei
(Figure 3C) and to undergo cell
division (Figure 3B) 105 and
120 min after release, respectively, whereas similarly treated
GAL1-TEL1 cells remained arrested with 2C DNA contents and undivided
nuclei throughout the experiment (Figure 3,
B and C). It is worth noting that the suppression of the G2/M cell
cycle arrest caused by deletion of EST2 was apparent despite entry
into S phase and nuclear division were slower in est2
cells
than in wild-type (Figure 3, B and
C).
These results prompted us to verify whether telomere elongation was
abrogated in galactose-induced GAL1-TEL1 est2
cells. Indeed,
shift to galactose of GAL1-TEL1 est2
cells did not cause any
change in their telomere length, which was similar to that of
est2
mutants (Figure
4C, top). Moreover, galactose-induced GAL1-TEL1
est2
cells did not arrest cell cycle progression
(Figure 4D) and showed a
reduction of Rad53 phosphorylation compared with similarly treated
GAL1-TEL1 cells (Figure
4C, bottom). Interestingly, est2
cells showed some
Rad53 phosphorylation (Figure
4C, bottom) that might depend on unprotected telomeric ends due to
telomere erosion.
Thus, both the G2/M cell cycle arrest and Rad53 phosphorylation caused by
GAL1-TEL1 overexpression are at least partially dependent on
telomerase action, whereas they do not require Rad51-dependent homologous
recombination. Moreover, the reduced checkpoint activation in
galactose-induced GAL1-TEL1 est2
cells correlates with their
inability to elongate telomeres.
Overexpression of RIF2 or SAE2 Can Suppress G2/M Cell Cycle Arrest
and Accelerate Telomere Length Reequilibration in Galactose-induced GAL1-TEL1
Cells
To better understand the molecular mechanisms underlying GAL1-TEL1
effects, we searched for multicopy suppressors of the HU hypersensitivity of
galactose-induced GAL1-TEL1 cells, which correlates with checkpoint
activation. Among the several plasmids identified in a S. cerevisiae
genomic library in the multicopy 2 µ vector YEp24 (see MATERIALS AND
METHODS), 14 plasmids carried the SAE2 gene and 2 plasmids carried
the RIF2 gene. As shown in Figure
5A, both SAE2 and RIF2 on 2 µ plasmids were
able to suppress the hypersensitivity to genotoxic agents of galactose-induced
GAL1-TEL1 cells. We decided to analyze in more detail the basis of
suppression, because both genes are functionally related to TEL1,
although in different ways. In fact, the Rif2 protein, together with Rif1 and
Rap1, is required to avoid unlimited addition of TG13
repeats by telomerase, possibly acting as a negative regulator of telomerase
activity (Wotton and Shore,
1997
; Teng et al.,
2000
; Chan et al.,
2001
). On the other hand, the lack of SAE2, which is
likely involved in processing of DSBs, triggers the activation of the
Tel1-dependent checkpoint (Usui et
al., 2001
).
|
Further analysis clearly showed that, although to different extents, high
copy number SAE2 and RIF2 suppress the G2/M cell cycle
arrest of galactose-induced GAL1-TEL1 cells. In fact, when cells were
released from a G1 arrest in galactose-containing medium, GAL1-TEL1
cells containing SAE2 or RIF2 on 2 µ plasmids initiated
nuclear division at 120 and 90 min after release from
-factor,
respectively (Figure 5, B and
C). These cells also showed a reduction in the amount of Rad53
phosphorylation, compared with GAL1-TEL1 cells carrying the empty 2
µ vector (Figure 5D), which
remained arrested with 2C DNA contents and undivided nuclei until the end of
the experiment (Figure 5, B and
C).
In agreement with previous data (Wotton
and Shore, 1997
) and with its role in negative regulation of
telomerase, the RIF2 gene on a 2 µ plasmid caused telomere
shortening (Figure 6A). Conversely, high levels of Rif2 did not cause any detectable alteration of
telomere length in tel1
or GAL1-TEL1 cells grown in
raffinose (Figure 6A),
suggesting that either telomeres in these cells are already too short to be
targeted by Rif2, or Tel1 is required for Rif2-dependent inhibition of
telomerase. On the other hand, an excess of Rif2 partially counteracted the
Tel1-dependent telomere elongation in galactose-induced GAL1-TEL1
cells (Figure 6A). In fact,
telomeres of galactose-induced GAL1-TEL1 cells carrying the
RIF2 gene on 2 µ plasmids were shorter than those of
galactose-induced GAL1-TEL1 cells. GAL1-TEL1 [2 µ
RIF2] telomeres were slightly longer than those of the same cells
under uninduced conditions, likely due to minimal perturbation of the balance
between Tel1-dependent elongation and Rif2-dependent shortening. Thus, Rif2
might suppress TEL1 overexpression-dependent checkpoint activation by
counteracting Tel1 access to telomeric ends and/or its functions in promoting
telomere elongation. Consistent with a role of Rif2 in negatively regulating
telomerase activity (Teng et al.,
2000
; Chan et al.,
2001
), these Rif2-dependent suppression events do not require
Rad51, which collaborates in maintaining telomere ends in the absence of
telomerase independently of RAD50
(Le et al., 1999
). In
fact, an excess of Rif2 similarly promoted telomere lengthening
(Figure 6A) and was able to
suppress the hypersensitivity to genotoxic agents
(Figure 6B) of
galactose-induced GAL1-TEL1 cells both in the absence and in the
presence of RAD51.
|
In contrast to what was observed with multicopy RIF2, 2 µ
plasmids carrying the SAE2 gene caused a slight telomere elongation
in wild-type cells both in raffinose and in galactose, as well as in
galactose-induced GAL1-TEL1 cells
(Figure 6A). Tel1 was likely
required for Sae2-induced telomere lengthening, because telomere length was
not influenced by multicopy SAE2 in tel1
cells or in
GAL1-TEL1 cells grown in raffinose
(Figure 6A). The effects of
Sae2 high levels on telomere length (Figure
6A), hypersensitivity to DNA-damaging agents and growth rate
(Figure 6B) were not abrogated
in GAL1-TEL1 rad51
cells, indicating that Rad51-dependent
homologous recombination was not required.
Thus, high levels of Sae2 and Rif2 have opposite effects on steady-state telomere length of galactose-induced GAL1-TEL1 cells despite they both suppress the Tel1-dependent cell cycle arrest. This suggests that the suppression mechanism might involve changes in the kinetics of the Tel1-induced telomere lengthening. Indeed, as shown in Figure 7, shift to galactose caused telomere elongation in both GAL1-TEL1 [2 µ SAE2] and GAL1-TEL1 [2 µ RIF2] cells, but a stable length was reached in these cells within 2 h, whereas GAL1-TEL1 cells carrying the empty vector were still elongating telomeres 8 h after the shift. Telomere ends in galactose-induced cells resuming cell cycle progression were stable but shorter in GAL1-TEL1 [2 µ RIF2] cells compared with GAL1-TEL1 [2 µ vector] cells, which in turn showed slightly shorter telomeres than GAL1-TEL1 [2 µ SAE2] cells under the same conditions. Although the shift to galactose activated the checkpoint in both GAL1-TEL1 [2 µ SAE2] and GAL1-TEL1 [2 µ RIF2] cells, the faster telomere length equilibration induced by Sae2 and Rif2 overexpression paralleled both faster checkpoint inactivation and resumption of cell cycle progression, compared with GAL1-TEL1 cells containing the empty 2 µ vector. In fact, Rad53 was phosphorylated immediately after shift to galactose in GAL1-TEL1 [2 µ SAE2] and GAL1-TEL1 [2 µ RIF2] cells, but the amount of phosphorylated Rad53 started to decrease (Figure 7A, bottom) and cells reentered cell cycle (Figure 7B) concomitantly with telomere length reaching a steady state.
|
Thus, reentry into the cell cycle of GAL1-TEL1 cells overexpressing SAE2 and RIF2 coincides with telomere length reequilibration.
Overexpression of a CDC13-EST1 Fusion Causes Telomere Lengthening and
a Checkpoint-induced Cell Cycle Arrest
Based on the data described above, we hypothesized that sudden increase in
telomere length might cause checkpoint-mediated cell cycle arrest. To gain
independent supports to this hypothesis, we asked whether other conditions,
besides GAL1-TEL1 overexpression in cells with short telomeres, could
cause telomere lengthening and concomitant activation of a checkpoint
response. Because it was shown that overexpression of EST2 and
EST3 has no effect on telomere length, whereas high levels of the
telomerase-associated Est1 protein caused slight telomere elongation after 75
generations (Friedman et al.,
2003
; Seto et al.,
2003
), we first analyzed galactose-induced GAL1-EST1
cells. These cells did not show any change in telomere length and did not
arrest cell cycle progression within 36 h after shift to galactose (our
unpublished data), suggesting that other telomeric proteins may be rate
limiting for telomere elongation under these conditions. Because telomere
length homeostasis can be maintained by restricting access of telomerase to
chromosomal termini, this situation might be overcome by directly tethering
telomerase to the ends. In S. cerevisiae, recruitment of telomerase
to the chromosome termini depends on the telomere-binding protein Cdc13
(Nugent et al., 1996
;
Evans and Lundblad, 1999
). It
has been shown that fusing Cdc13 directly to the Est1 protein results in
greatly elongated telomeres, consistent with a role for Est1 in mediating
telomerase access to telomeres (Evans and
Lundblad, 1999
). We therefore analyzed the effects of
overexpressing a GAL1-CDC13-EST1 fusion in otherwise wild-type cells.
As shown in Figure 8, when
cultures of these cells exponentially growing in raffinose were shifted to
galactose-containing medium, most cells arrested with 2C DNA content
(Figure 8A) and undivided
nuclei (our unpublished data). This cell cycle arrest paralleled telomere
lengthening (Figure 8B, top)
and Rad53 phosphorylation (Figure
8B, bottom), indicating that the checkpoint was activated under
these conditions. Thus, overexpression of CDC13-EST1 causes both
telomere lengthening and activation of a Rad53-dependent checkpoint when
induced in cells with full-length telomeres. Importantly,
GAL1-CDC13-EST1 cells could not form colonies on galactose-containing
plates (Figure 8C) and were
still elongating telomeres and arrested with high levels of phosphorylated
Rad53 even 30 h after galactose addition. This indicates that checkpoint
activation persisted much longer in these cells than in GAL1-TEL1
overexpressing cells and may be due to the more direct effects of the
Cdc13-Est1 fusion protein on telomerase activity compared with Tel1.
|
| DISCUSSION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
It has been proposed that telomeres normally interconvert between two
states, uncapped and capped (Blackburn,
2000
,
2001
), in which the structure
can become competent or inaccessible, respectively, to the action of
telomerase or other enzymes. Telomere capping has been suggested to protect
the physical integrity of the chromosomal termini and to avoid the telomeres
from being recognized as broken ends. When telomere capping fails, the
telomeres can be sensed as irreparable DNA double-strand breaks and may be the
substrates for the actions of several enzymes that can lead to end-to-end
fusion, degradation, and elongation by telomerase (reviewed in
Dubrana et al., 2001
;
Kolodner et al.,
2002
). A detailed knowledge of the factors and the molecular
mechanisms involved in end protection is crucial for understanding how cells
distinguish between a double-strand break and a normal telomere end.
Telomere Lengthening and Checkpoint Activation
It has been suggested that telomere length, telomere-specific proteins,
and/or the higher order telomeric DNA-protein complex may contribute to
telomere capping and confer properties that keep these ends from being
detected as DSBs (reviewed in Lundblad,
2000
; Blackburn,
2001
). Uncoupling telomere lengthening from capping would make
these chromosome ends susceptible to DNA repair activities and suitable to
elicit a DNA damage checkpoint response. For example, the lack of telomerase
may cause uncapping, and the unprotected telomeres may signal to arrest cell
cycle progression. In fact, as telomeres shorten in telomerase-deficient yeast
cells, a DNA damage response leads to G2/M cell cycle arrest that is mediated
by Mec1, whereas it does not seem to involve Tel1
(Enomoto et al.,
2002
; Ijpma and Greider,
2003
). In agreement with these data, we observed that
est2
cell cultures from spore clones progressively accumulate
G2-arrested cells (our unpublished data) and show Rad53 phosphorylation
(Figure 4).
In this study, we propose that a checkpoint response can be triggered also
by sudden telomere lengthening. We show that induction of TEL1
overexpression in tel1
or yku70
cells with
short telomeres causes telomere lengthening, which correlates with the
activation of a Rad53-dependent checkpoint leading to G2/M cell cycle arrest.
Moreover, both telomere elongation and checkpoint activation require
telomerase, because they are partially relieved by deletion of the
EST2 gene, encoding the catalytic telomerase subunit. Finally,
checkpoint-induced cell cycle arrest and sudden telomere elongation can be
triggered also by overexpression of a CDC13-EST1 fusion in otherwise
wild-type cells. The telomere lengthening property of this fusion is likely a
consequence of telomerase delivery to telomeres rather than of perturbation of
Cdc13 function. In fact, it has been shown that the same extensive telomere
lengthening is conferred also when only the DNA binding domain of Cdc13 was
fused to Est1, whereas leaving the full-length Cdc13 intact
(Evans and Lundblad,
1999
).
Checkpoint-induced cell cycle arrest caused by telomere shortening requires
Mec1 (Ijpma and Greider,
2003
), whereas Mec1 does not seem to be involved in the
TEL1 overexpression-dependent cell cycle arrest
(Clerici et al.,
2001
). Because it is known that Mec1 and Tel1 have partially
overlapping functions (Ritchie et
al., 1999
), increased Tel1 levels in our system might totally
substitute for Mec1, thus explaining why Mec1 is not required for checkpoint
activation by GAL1-TEL1.
Together, our data suggest that sudden telomerase-dependent increase in
telomere length may cause disequilibrium between telomere sequence addition
and the amount of telomere binding proteins available. Because
telomerase-mediated extension of the TG13 strand is tightly
coupled with the synthesis of the complementary C13A strand
(Diede and Gottschling, 1999
),
uncontrolled telomerase action could produce long single-stranded DNA regions.
These unprotected 3' overhangs may be detected as DNA damage and trigger
a checkpoint response (Maringele and
Lydall, 2002
).
TEL1 Overexpression and Telomere Elongation
The telomerase-mediated telomere lengthening caused by Tel1 overproduction
suggests that Tel1 may activate the telomerase pathway, for example by
increasing the ability of telomerase to access the telomere. In agreement with
this hypothesis, artificial telomerase targeting to chromosomal ends causes
telomere lengthening in the absence of Tel1 and Mec1, whereas both telomerase
catalytic activity and Cdc13 binding to telomeres are unchanged
(Chan et al., 2001
;
Tsukamoto et al.,
2001
). Together, these data suggest that Tel1 allows telomerase
action in vivo by modulating its interaction with telomere substrate, rather
than altering its catalytic properties.
Indeed, the MRX complex, which is required for Tel1-dependent checkpoint
response to unprocessed DSBs (Usui et
al., 2001
) and acts in the same pathway as Tel1 to maintain
telomere length (Ritchie and Petes,
2000
), is required both to activate the checkpoint and to promote
telomere elongation in galactose-induced GAL1-TEL1 cells (our
unpublished data). Because the MRX complex has been proposed to prepare a
3' single-stranded tail at the end of a telomere to be used as a
telomerase substrate (Nugent et
al., 1998
; Diede and
Gottschling, 2001
; Lobachev
et al., 2002
), processing of the ends by MRX complex may
be essential to elongate telomeres in the presence of high levels of Tel1.
On the other hand, an unprotected chromosome end can be channeled into
recombination pathways (DuBois et
al., 2002
) that may extinct the damage signals arising from
the dysfunctional ends and allow cells to overcome checkpoint arrest.
Deletions of the LIF1 and LIF2 genes, which are necessary
for nonhomologous end joining pathway
(Herrmann et al.,
1998
; Vaillant and Marcand,
2001
), neither suppress nor exacerbate the growth defects and
hypersensitivity to DNA-damaging agents of galactose-induced
GAL1-TEL1 cells (our unpublished data). This indicates that the NHEJ
pathway may not be involved in cellular response to ectopic TEL1
overexpression. Conversely, we found that deletion of RAD51, which
does not reduce telomere lengthening and checkpoint activation in
galactose-induced GAL1-TEL1 cells, also enhances their cell
lethality, suggesting that the homologous recombination repair pathway can
protect cells from the effects caused by turning on GAL1-TEL1.
We observed telomere elongation and checkpoint activation only when
TEL1 expression is turned on in cells with short telomeres. This
suggests that short telomeres, although stable under unperturbed conditions,
might be more susceptible to the action of telomerase, once TEL1 is
overexpressed, than full-length telomeres. In fact, it has been proposed that,
when telomeres shorten below a critical level, Rap1/Rif molecules are lost
from the telomeres, which then shift the equilibrium at the terminus toward a
structure permissive to telomeric sequence addition (reviewed in
Lundblad, 2000
;
Blackburn, 2001
).
Telomere Length Reequilibration and Checkpoint Inactivation
Tel1-dependent telomere lengthening is transient. When telomeres reach an
equilibrium length, although Tel1 is still present at high levels, the
checkpoint is inactivated and cell cycle progression resumes. This suggests
that, once telomeres in galactose-induced GAL1-TEL1 cells reach a
certain length, they might fold into a higher order structure. This
configuration may limit telomere accessibility to telomerase or to telomere
binding proteins required for telomerase action.
The mean length and length distribution of telomeres are determined by a
balance between lengthening and shortening activities. It has been proposed
that telomeres themselves control elongation by telomerase, when their length
exceeds a certain threshold. In fact, telomere elongation is restricted to a
few base pairs per generation and its rate decreases progressively with
increasing telomere length (Marcand et
al., 1999
). The Rap1, Rif1, and Rif2 proteins, together with
the gradual folding of the telomere into a restrictive higher order
configuration, may regulate the gradual decline of telomerase activity. We
propose that a sudden telomerase-dependent telomere lengthening can uncouple
telomeric sequence addition from the binding of telomeric proteins that
provide the capping functions necessary to protect telomere termini.
Unprotection of the ends in turn elicits a checkpoint response. In this case,
it should be possible to suppress checkpoint activation in galactose-induced
GAL1-TEL1 cells by increasing the levels of telomeric proteins with
capping functions. Indeed, we found that overproduction of Rif2 accelerates
both reentry into the cell cycle and telomere length reequilibration in
galactose-induced GAL1-TEL1 cells. We suggest that an excess of Rif2
may accelerate recapping of telomeric ends and/or prevent telomerase activity,
either directly or through Tel1/MRX inhibition, thus blocking further telomere
elongation and shutting off the checkpoint. Consistent with this, deletion of
either RIF1 or RIF2 causes a telomerase-mediated lengthening
of telomeric ends (Hardy et al.,
1992
; Wotton and Shore,
1997
; Teng et al.,
2000
; Chan et al.,
2001
), which may occur because the lack of Rif proteins either
relieves telomerase from an inhibitory effect or affects telomere capping.
Capping properties of Rif proteins may be related to their suggested
structural role in establishing a chromatin structure that limits telomerase
access (Diede and Gottschling,
1999
; Teng et al.,
2000
). Tel1 in turn may be required for the Rif-dependent
inhibition of telomerase. In fact, telomere elongation in rif2
mutants is largely dependent on Tel1
(Craven and Petes, 1999
;
Chan et al., 2001
),
and the addition of synthetic Rap1-binding sites, which results in telomere
shortening in wild-type cells, fails to cause the same effect in a
tel1
strain (Ray and
Runge, 1999
).
High levels of the Sae2 protein, likely involved in processing DSBs
(McKee and Kleckner, 1997
;
Rattray et al.,
2001
), concomitantly accelerate reentry into the cell cycle and
resetting of stable telomere length in GAL1-TEL1 cells. Telomere
length is increased in Sae2-overproducing cells compared with wild-type,
suggesting that this protein might facilitate telomere length reequilibration
and subsequent checkpoint switch off in galactose-induced GAL1-TEL1
cells by generating structures at telomeres that enhance Tel1/MRX action. It
is worth mentioning that SAE2 deletion enhances the ability of DNA
damage to activate Tel1 in the absence of Mec1
(Usui et al., 2001
)
and causes accumulation of unresected DSBs
(McKee and Kleckner, 1997
;
Rattray et al.,
2001
). Based on the possible role of Sae2 in processing DSBs, it
is tempting to speculate that an excess of Sae2 might promote processing of
the chromosomal termini, thus facilitating the generation of telomeric ssDNA
that triggers telomerase recruitment and action
(Nugent et al., 1998
;
Diede and Gottschling,
2001
).
Thus, high levels of Sae2 and Rif2 have opposite effects on telomere length, but they both facilitate telomere length reequilibration and checkpoint inactivation, indicating that not telomere length per se, but the protection of telomeric ends from further elongation is critical to allow checkpoint switch-off.
The finding that sudden telomerase-mediated telomere elongation can trigger
a Rad53-dependent cell cycle arrest implies that cells must tightly control
telomerase action during telomere replication. In vivo polymerization by
telomerase occurs in the late S and G2/M cell cycle phases in cycling cells
(McCarroll and Fangman, 1988
).
Accidental de novo telomeric DNA addition that may cause overelongation could
be prevented by dynamic remodeling of telomeric proteins at telomeres
(Smith et al., 2003
).
In this view, the checkpoint pathway might provide a protective mechanism
against unregulated telomerase action leading to formation of unprotected
telomere ends, which in turn may favor chromosome rearrangements.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
| Footnotes |
|---|
* Corresponding author. E-mail address: mariapia.longhese{at}unimib.it.
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