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Vol. 15, Issue 1, 142-150, January 2004
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-Tubulin Isotypes


* Genes and Development Research Group, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, T2N 4N1 Canada;
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, T2N 4N1 Canada
Submitted June 18, 2003;
Revised August 25, 2003;
Accepted September 8, 2003
Monitoring Editor: Susan Strome
| ABSTRACT |
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-tubulin gene that partially inhibits MEI-1/MEI-2 activity: sb26 rescues lethality caused by ectopic MEI-1/MEI-2 expression during mitosis, and sb26 increases meiotic defects in a genetic background where MEI-1/MEI-2 activity is lower than normal. sb26 does not interfere with MEI-1/MEI-2 microtubule localization, suggesting that this mutation likely interferes with severing. Tubulin deletion alleles and RNA-mediated interference revealed that TBB-2 and the other germline enriched
-tubulin isotype, TBB-1, are redundant for embryonic viability. However, limiting MEI-1/MEI-2 activity in these experiments revealed that MEI-1/MEI-2 preferentially interacts with TBB-2containing microtubules. Our results demonstrate that these two superficially redundant
-tubulin isotypes have functionally distinct roles in vivo. | INTRODUCTION |
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C. elegans female meiosis takes place in the fertilized zygote. Therefore, the zygote cytoplasm must support the formation of both the meiotic and the first mitotic spindle, which form within 20 min of one another (Kemphues et al., 1986
). This along with other convenient genetic and molecular tools makes C. elegans an ideal system (Brenner, 1974
) to study how these different types of spindles form. Previously, we showed that mei-1 and mei-2 encode two meiotic spindle-specific components. MEI-1 and MEI-2 are the C. elegans homologs of the p60 (catalytic) and p80 (localization) subunits of the sea urchin microtubule-severing complex katanin (Clark-Maguire and Mains, 1994a
,b
; Hartman et al., 1998
; Srayko et al., 2000
). Because MEI-1 and MEI-2, like sea urchin p60 and p80, disassembled interphase microtubules when coexpressed in HeLa cells, we proposed that they specifically regulate spindle microtubule dynamics and/or restrict microtubule length in meiosis, and thus are required for the formation of a bipolar spindle in the absence of centrosomes (Srayko et al., 2000
). In mei-1 and mei-2 loss-of-function (lf) mutants, meiotic spindles fail to form properly but subsequent mitotic spindles are not affected (Mains et al., 1990a
; Clandinin and Mains, 1993
; Srayko et al., 2000
). However, ectopic MEI-1/MEI-2 activity in mitosis, resulting either from the mei-1(ct46) gain-of-function (gf) mutation, or loss of the mei-1/mei-2 postmeiotic inhibitor mel-26, instead disrupt mitotic spindle structure (Mains et al., 1990a
; Clark-Maguire and Mains, 1994a
,b
; Dow and Mains, 1998
; Kurz et al., 2002
). This ectopic microtubule-severing activity results in smaller, mispositioned mitotic spindles. Consistent with reduced microtubule length caused by ectopic microtubule-severing activity, mei-1(ct46gf) is phenocopied by low doses of the microtubule-destabilizing drug nocodazole (Strome and Wood, 1983
; Hyman and White, 1987
).
To better understand the role of MEI-1/MEI-2 katanin in spindle formation, we performed a screen for suppressors that rescue the lethality of ectopic katanin activity caused by the mei-1(ct46gf) mutation (Clandinin and Mains, 1993
). Here, we describe the analysis of an extragenic suppressor, sb26, which is a missense allele of the
-tubulin gene tbb-2. tbb-2(sb26) genetically behaves as if it produces meiotic and mitotic microtubules that are resistant to katanin severing. Immunofluorescence with TBB-2specific antibodies shows ubiquitous TBB-2 expression in microtubule structures throughout worm development. Furthermore, tubulin iso-type-specific RNA interference (RNAi) experiments demonstrate a redundant role for tbb-2 with the closely related gene tbb-1 during the early cleavage divisions. Finally, using a sensitized genetic background, we demonstrate that microtubules containing the TBB-2
-tubulin isotype are preferred for MEI-1/MEI-2 activity.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Genetic Mapping and Cloning of tbb-2(sb26)
Three-factor crosses placed sb26 between two cloned markers, pat-3 and mpk-1 on LGIII (data submitted to WormBase, www.wormbase.org), a region covered by 10 overlapping cosmids. The genomic sequence of tbb-2(sb26) was PCR amplified from sb26 homozygous mutants and sequenced from two independent PCR products as described by Srayko et al. (2000
).
Antisera Production and Immunoblotting
PCR-amplified sequence corresponding to the last 20 amino acids of TBB-2 (residues 431450) was inserted into the BamHI site of pGEX-3 x (Amersham Pharmacia, Uppsala, Sweden) to create a GST-fusion. Bacterially expressed protein was purified with a glutathione-Sephadex column (Pharmacia) and run on an SDS-PAGE gel. Immunization of rabbits was performed following Srayko et al. (2000
). Crude sera were affinity purified against a column of a synthetic peptide (Alberta Peptide Institute, Edmonton, AB, Canada) corresponding to the amino acids 432442 of TBB-2 (see Figure 3A). Western analyses was performed as described by Srayko et al. (2000
), by using affinity purified TBB-2 antisera at 1/1000 dilution.
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Microscopy and Immunofluorescence
Embryos and dissected gonads were freeze-cracked and fixed with methanolacetone as described by Kemphues et al. (1986
). Affinity-purified anti-TBB-2 antisera were used at 1/100 dilution for 1 h at 37°C.
-Tubulin localization was determined with either a mouse monoclonal antibody (Piperno and Fuller, 1985
) at 1/100 dilution or the mouse DM 1A
-tubulin monoclonal antibody (Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO) at 1/200 dilution. Secondary antibodies (Jackson ImmunoResearch Laboratories, West Grove, PA) were fluorescein isothiocyanate-conjugated goat anti-rabbit, tetramethylrhodamine B isothiocyanate-conjugated goat anti-mouse, or Texas Red-conjugated goat anti-mouse. DNA was visualized with 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) as described in Srayko et al. (2000
). Photographs were either taken with an Axioplan fluorescence microscope camera (Carl Zeiss, Thornwood, NY) with Techpan film (Eastman Kodak, Rochester, NY) developed at ASA100, or with a Hamamatsu ORCA-ER digital camera and deconvolved using Zeiss AxioVision software.
RNAi
tbb-1 and tbb-2 cDNA clones yk51f5 and yk84c10, respectively, were obtained from Dr. Yuji Kohara (University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan). Primers were designed to amplify the divergent C-terminal coding region and 3'-untranslated regions (UTRs) from each cDNA. Primers used for tbb-2 were forward: 5'-AAGCTTCACTTCACTCAGAT-3' and reverse: 5'-GAAGCAACTGCCGAAGACGAC-3'. Primers used for tbb-1 were forward: 5'-AAGGTACCGCCGAAGACGAGCC-3' and reverse: 5'-AATACGACTCACTATAG-3' (T7). PCR fragments were cloned into pBluescript SK(+) (Stratagene, La Jolla, CA). RNA was transcribed using the Megascript system (Ambion, Austin, TX), and DNA templates were digested with DNase I. The resulting RNAs were purified and annealed as described by Fire (ftp.ciwemb.edu/PNF:byName:/FireLabWeb/) and 150 µg/ml was used for injection. The resulting embryos were dissected for fixation 24 h after injection.
| RESULTS |
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-tubulin gene tbb-2. Homozygous tbb-2(sb26) single mutant embryos develop the same as wild type, giving rise to fertile adults with wild-type brood sizes and hatching. However, although tbb-2(sb26) has no obvious mitotic phenotypes (Figure 1, A and B), it effectively suppresses (alleviates) the lethality caused by ectopic MEI-1/MEI-2 activity resulting from the mei-1(ct46gf) mutation (Table 1, lines 15). In mei-1(ct46gf) embryos, the first mitotic spindle is smaller than wild-type and is often mispositioned orthogonally to the anterior-posterior axis (Figure 1C). In contrast, when mei-1(ct46gf) is combined with the tbb-2(sb26) mutation, embryos have wild-type spindle morphology and orientation (Figure 1D). This result suggests that tbb-2(sb26) somehow interferes with the ectopic MEI-1/MEI-2 activity associated with the mei-1(ct46gf) mutation. To test whether tbb-2(sb26) also interferes with normal MEI-1/MEI-2 activity during meiosis, we looked at mutations that cause partial loss of mei-1and mei-2. On their own, mei-1 and mei-2 lf mutations result in defects in meiotic spindle formation, most likely due to decreased meiotic microtubule severing, and these defects were enhanced when combined with tbb-2(sb26) (Table 1, lines 1011). Whereas the meiotic defect of a weak mei-2(lf) allele, ct98, results in 86% hatching at the nonpermissive temperature of 25°, lethality increased dramatically when combined with tbb-2(sb26), resulting in a 3.7% hatching under the same conditions. In C. elegans, nondisjunction of the X chromosome results in a normal XO male, and thus the frequency of males among the survivors is a measure of meiotic failure. Normally,
1/500 zygotes from a selfed hermaphrodite is a male (Hodgkin and Brenner, 1977
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The sb26 Mutation Alters Rather than Eliminates Gene Function
Several lines of evidence indicate that the tbb-2 allele sb26 represents an altered rather than a loss of gene function. A chromosomal deficiency that removes the tbb-2 locus, sDf130, failed to dominantly suppress the maternal-effect lethality of mei-1(ct46gf), although tbb-2(sb26)/+ did so (Table 2, lines 13). We also acquired two tbb-2 deletion alleles, both predicted to be molecular nulls, from the C. elegans Gene Knockout Consortium (see MATERIALS AND METHODS). These produced no detectable protein on immunoblots with TBB-2specific antibodies (see below). In contrast to tbb-2(sb26), heterozygosity for a tbb-2 null allele decreased hatching when ectopic MEI-1/MEI-2 was present in mitosis (Table 2, line 4). Likewise, when the wild-type tbb-2 allele in mei-1(ct46gf)/+; tbb-2(sb26)/+ was removed and replaced with the molecular null gk129, suppression of the mei-1(ct46gf) embryonic lethality improved, although not to the extent of the complete suppression seen with sb26/sb26 (Table 2, compare lines 2, 5, and 6). This indicates that the wild-type tbb-2 allele interferes with the suppression by the sb26 allele. Finally, mei-1(ct46) lethality caused by the ectopic MEI-1/MEI-2 expression was rescued by transformation with tbb-2(sb26) but not with tbb-2(+) (see below). Together, these genetic studies clearly indicate that tbb-2(sb26) is a gf suppressor of mei-1(ct46gf).
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Other tbb-2 alleles that behave as gain-of-function mutations with mitotic spindle defects similar to mei-1(gf) are described by other groups (Ellis et al., 2004
; Wright and Hunter, 2003
). Neither tbb-2(t1623) nor tbb-2(or362), two missense tbb-2 alleles of such kind, suppresses mei-1(ct46gf), but rather acted as dominant enhancers (Table 1, lines 69). This likely results from the fact that these tbb-2 alleles and mei-1(ct46gf) both destabilize mitotic microtubules. Thus, tbb-2 interacts with mei-1 and mei-2 in an allele-specific manner.
tbb-2(sb26) Does Not Prevent Ectopic MEI-1/MEI-2 Localization
MEI-1 and MEI-2 localize exclusively to wild-type female meiotic spindles; both proteins are found throughout the spindle but are more concentrated at the poles and on chromatin (Clark-Maguire and Mains, 1994a
; Srayko et al., 2000
). In mutants resulting in ectopic MEI-1 and MEI-2 expression, both MEI-1 and MEI-2 localize to the analogous regions during mitosis (Figure 2, A and C), disrupting mitotic spindle function (Clark-Maguire and Mains, 1994a
; Srayko et al., 2000
). We asked whether the suppression of mitotic spindle defects by tbb-2(sb26) was due to absent (or reduced) MEI-1 and/or MEI-2 in the mitotic apparatus. Immunolocalization using anti-MEI-1 or MEI-2 showed that the gene products still persisted in the double mutants (Figure 2, B and D). Therefore, sb26 suppresses mei-1(ct46gf) despite the presence of ectopic MEI-1/MEI-2 protein. This suggests that sb26 interferes with MEI-1/MEI-2 function via a mechanism other than blocking localization or causing degradation of the complex and instead likely acts by inhibiting microtubule severing (see DISCUSSION).
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sb26 Has a Missense Mutation in the
-Tubulin Gene tbb-2
sb26 was genetically mapped (see MATERIALS AND METHODS) to a region containing the
-tubulin gene tbb-2 (C36E8.5) (Gremke, 1986
). Sequencing of tbb-2 in sb26 mutants revealed a single G-to-A transition at the 3' end of the coding region, resulting in a Glu to a Lys change (Figure 3A). Reverse transcription-PCR showed that a SL1 leader sequence (Krause and Hirsh, 1987
) was trans-spliced onto the 5' end of the tbb-2 transcript; sequencing confirmed the predicted gene structure in WormBase (www.wormbase.org). To eliminate the possibility that the mutation we found in tbb-2 was an unrelated ethylmethansulfonate-induced lesion very tightly linked to sb26, we transformed worms with tbb-2(+) and tbb-2(sb26) genomic constructs. One transgenic line of tbb-2(+) and three independent lines of tbb-2(sb26) were obtained. Wild-type worms carrying extrachromosomal arrays of either tbb-2(+) (sbEx156) or the mutant tbb-2(sb26) (e.g., sbEx145) showed essentially wild-type hatching rates (Table 3, lines 2 and 3), although both showed an incompletely penetrant protruding vulva phenotype. As expected from the genetic nature of tbb-2(sb26), only transgenic arrays made from sb26 mutant genomic DNA rescued the embryonic lethality of mei-1(ct46gf), with hatching rates increasing nearly 10-fold for tbb-2(sb26) compared with the control at 20° (Table 3, lines 1, 4, and 5). In addition, two independent TBB-2::GFP expressing lines failed to rescue mei-1(ct46gf) (our unpublished data). These results confirm that sb26 alters rather than eliminates gene function and that the tbb-2 mutation corresponds to sb26.
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TBB-2 Is Widely Expressed throughout the Life Cycle
Because tbb-2(sb26) suppresses ectopic mei-1 activity during early embryogenesis, we expected tbb-2 to be a component of the meiotic and early mitotic spindles, where it perhaps facilitates MEI-1/MEI-2 microtubule severing. To explore the expression pattern of TBB-2, we generated specific polyclonal antisera directed to a nonconserved region of 11 amino acids in the C terminus (Figure 3A; see MATERIALS AND METHODS). Affinity-purified antisera recognized a single band at the expected size of 50 kDa on Western blots, and this band disappeared when blotting either of the two tbb-2 deletion strains (Figure 3B, lanes 13), demonstrating antisera specificity.
We predicted that TBB-2 is maternally provided and should be present during early embryogenesis. Female gonads were dissected from gravid hermaphrodites, fixed, and stained with TBB-2specific antisera and costained with a generic monoclonal anti-
-tubulin antibody to visualize microtubule structures. TBB-2 was expressed throughout the female gonad, from the distal syncytial arm to maturing oocytes (Figure 4, AC). We next examined TBB-2 expression in meiotic and early mitotic spindles, the developmental stage at which the genetic interactions take place. Figure 4, DF, shows TBB-2 localization in a meiosis metaphase I spindle in a pattern identical to that of the
-tubulin staining. Digital deconvolution microscopy was used to examine in detail TBB-2 expression in mitotic spindles. As shown in Figure 4, GI, TBB-2 was expressed in every subset of spindle microtubules recognized by the generic anti-
-tubulin antibody, including spindle midzone and astral microtubules.
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TBB-2 expression persisted in mitotic spindles and asters throughout embryogenesis (our unpublished data), beyond the end of the temperature-sensitive period of mei-1(ct46gf) (Mains et al., 1990a
). Indeed, TBB-2 expression was not germline and embryo specific, because the protein was also expressed (albeit at lower levels) in a glp-1 mutant, which lack germline and fertilized embryos (Figure 3B, lane 4). Finally, TBB-2 was detected postembryonically in larval and adult neuronal tissues (Figure 4K). TBB-2 is therefore widely expressed throughout worm development. TBB-2(sb26) showed the same expression pattern as wild-type TBB-2.
tbb-2 and tbb-1 Are Partially Redundant during Early Development
Because sb26 results in an altered rather than a loss of gene activity, we used RNAi (Fire et al., 1998
) to deplete its expression during embryonic development to better determine the gene's normal function. However, TBB-2 and the other
-tubulin that is expressed at high levels in the germline, TBB-1, share >85% DNA sequence identity within their coding regions. Therefore, full-length RNAi to either gene results in simultaneous inhibition of both gene's function (our unpublished data). Because sequence similarities among the 3' coding and 3'-UTRs of these worm
-tubulins are <50%, we examined the effect of silencing tbb-2 by using dsRNA targeted to the last 210 base pairs of the transcript. This reduced TBB-2 expression to nearly undetectable levels by immunofluorescence (Figure 5F). However, 86% of tbb-2(RNAi) embryos hatched and grew to fertile adults (Table 4, line 1), similar to the level of lethality seen with either of the tbb-2 deletion strains (Table 4, line 2). These data suggest that other
-tubulins can compensate for loss of tbb-2.
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Because tbb-1 is the only other
-tubulin expressed in early embryos at a significant level (Reinke et al., 2000
; Baugh et al., 2003
), we used RNAi to determine whether tbb-1 functions redundantly with tbb-2. Like tbb-2(RNAi), injection of dsRNA directed to the divergent 3' coding and 3'-UTR of tbb-1 showed little embryonic lethality (Table 4, line 3), also similar to the level of lethality associated with a tbb-1 deletion strain, gk207 (Table 4, line 4). However, RNAi to both tbb-1 and tbb-2 resulted in 100% embryonic lethality and completely abolished spindle formation, and all embryos arrested without division (Table 4, line 5; and Figure 5, GI). Oocyte meiosis also failed because no polar bodies were seen. Similar results were obtained by doing tbb-1(RNAi) in animals carrying a tbb-2 deletion (Table 4, line 6). Therefore, tbb-2 and tbb-1 function redundantly during embryonic development.
TBB-1and TBB-2containing Microtubules Interact Differently with MEI-1/MEI-2
During meiosis, microtubules fully resistant to MEI-1/MEI-2 katanin activity should result in meiotic defects similar to the complete loss of either mei-1 or mei-2. However, tbb-2(sb26) alone does not have any meiotic defects. It is possible that the MEI-1/MEI-2interfering property of TBB-2(sb26) is simply masked by the presence of the functionally redundant TBB-1(+). Alternatively, TBB-2(sb26) may also permit some MEI-1/MEI-2 activity even in the absence of TBB-1(+). If the former is true, mei-1 and mei-2 lf phenotypes might be expected when TBB-1 is depleted by RNAi in the tbb-2(sb26) mutant. However, this only slightly increased the embryonic lethality (Table 4, line 7). Because no other
-tubulins are expressed at significant levels at this stage (Reinke et al., 2000
; Baugh et al., 2003
), microtubules containing TBB-2(sb26) as the only
-tubulin component are still partially sensitive to katanin activity, thus favoring the latter model described above. However, the high survival rate associated with removal of TBB-2 by RNAi or the tbb-2 null allele demonstrates that microtubules containing TBB-1 as the only
-tubulin isotype are also sensitive to MEI-1/MEI-2 (Table 4, lines 12).
In the absence of the sb26 mutation, it seems that microtubules are effective katanin substrates whether they contain only TBB-1 or only TBB-2 as the
-tubulin component. However, because mei-1 activity is present in excess during meiosis (Clandinin and Mains, 1993
), microtubules containing either of the two
-tubulin isotypes could nonetheless differ in terms of their effectiveness of being MEI-1/MEI-2 katanin substrates. We took advantage of the partial lf mei-2 allele ct98, because in this sensitized background, differences in the genetic interactions between the different tubulin isotypes and katanin can be monitored more easily. As shown in Table 4 (lines 810), removal of TBB-2 by either a null mutation or RNAi in mei-2(ct98) animals substantially decreased hatching. In contrast, removal of TBB-1 by RNAi or the null mutation had very little effect (Table 4, lines 1112). Therefore, MEI-1/MEI-2 interacts with microtubules more efficiently when TBB-2 is present, revealing a functional difference between the two
-tubulin isotypes. It is unlikely that this effect stems from TBB-2 being the more prevalent embryonic isotype because both tbb-1 and tbb-2 are expressed at similar levels at this stage (Reinke et al., 2000
; Baugh et al., 2003
), and Ellis et al. (2004
) showed that TBB-1 expression is up-regulated in tbb-2 null mutants. Therefore, although TBB-1 and TBB-2 isotypes can each support embryogenesis on their own, these data demonstrate that MEI-1/MEI-2 katanin interacts with the two tubulins differently in vivo.
| DISCUSSION |
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-tubulin that results in microtubules that are most susceptible to MEI-1/MEI-2 activity. Our genetic evidence shows that the gf mutation tbb-2(sb26) inhibits MEI-1/MEI-2 katanin's activity on microtubules. This was demonstrated by the ability of tbb-2(sb26) to suppress mutations that cause ectopic mitotic MEI-1/MEI-2 expression and its enhancement of mutations that limit meiotic MEI-1/MEI-2 activity. However, sb26-containing microtubules are clearly not fully resistant to MEI-1/MEI-2 activity; otherwise tbb-2(sb26), which is wild type on its own, would be lethal as seen for null alleles of mei-1 or mei-2.
MEI-1 and MEI-2 still ectopically localize to mitotic spindles in mei-1(ct46gf); tbb-2(sb26) double mutants (Figure 2). These data, together with the known biochemical activity of MEI-1/MEI-2 katanin and the similarity of the mei-1(ct46gf) phenotype to that of embryos treated with microtubule-depolymerizing drugs (Strome and Wood, 1983
; Hyman and White, 1987
), strongly suggests that the sb26 tubulin mutation reduces the sensitivity of microtubules to the severing activity of katanin without interfering with other intrinsic properties of the MEI-1/MEI-2 complex, such as its intracellular localization. However, taxol-stabilized microtubules from sb26 and wild-type worms were at least qualitatively equally susceptible to human katanin severing in vitro (McNally, personal communication). This result was not surprising because completely resistant microtubules would be lethal, similar to mei-1 or mei-2 null mutations, and the in vitro assay may not be sensitive enough to detect subtle differences. An alternative way that tbb-2(sb26) could suppress ectopic MEI-1/MEI-2 severing is that it could result in intrinsically more stable microtubules. According to this model, sb26 microtubules might depolymerize more slowly in a cold environment (Hannak et al., 2002
). However, wild-type and sb26 embryos showed similar length and organization of their mitotic spindles after different time periods of cold-induced depolymerization (our unpublished data). Furthermore, tbb-2(sb26) does not genetically interact with the lf zyg-9 allele b244 (our unpublished data), a mutation that results in a mei-1(ct46gf)-like mitotic phenotype, albeit due to loss of a microtubule-stabilizing protein (Kemphues et al., 1986
; Matthews et al., 1998
). This again suggests that sb26 specifically inhibits activity of the MEI-1/MEI-2 katanin complex rather than altering general microtubule dynamics.
The sb26 lesion is at the extreme C terminus of the
-tubulin protein, a region that is not essential for in vitro polymerization of microtubules (Lu and Ludueña, 1994
). Interestingly, the small C-terminal fragments of both
- and
-tubulins are required for microtubule severing by katanin (McNally and Vale, 1993
): when the C-terminal regions of the tubulins were removed by subtilisin digestion, katanin was able to bind the microtubules and hydrolyze ATP but could not disassemble the microtubules. This suggests that sb26 specifically disrupts a site required for katanin-mediated microtubule disassembly.
C. elegans has six
-tubulins. Among them, mec-7 is expressed exclusively in six touch neurons and two other neurons and is required only for touch sensitivity (Savage et al., 1989
, 1994
; Hamelin et al., 1992
). Null alleles of the
-tubulin ben-1, which is also nonessential for development, confer resistance to the microtubule-depolymerizing drug benzimidazole (Driscoll et al., 1989
). Among all the
-tubulins, microarray data indicates that only tbb-1 and tbb-2 mRNAs are expressed at a significant (and also at an equivalent) level in embryos (Reinke et al., 2000
; Baugh et al., 2003
). tbb-2specific RNAi using the 3' region resulted in only slight lethality (Table 4), consistent with the phenotype of tbb-2 deletion alleles. Similarly, depleting TBB-1 by either RNAi or a deletion allele also results in slight lethality (Table 4). However, simultaneous RNAi to both tbb-2 and tbb-1 resulted in 100% lethality and eliminated all microtubule structures (Figure 5), indicating that these tubulin isotypes function redundantly during embryonic development. Similar findings on developmental redundancies of
- and
-tubulins are also reported by Phillips et al. (personal communication) and Wright and Hunter (2003
).
Even though katanin is involved in different microtubule-mediated developmental processes in a variety of species (Ahmad et al., 1999
; Lohret et al., 1999
; Webb et al., 2002
; Bouquin et al., 2003
), little is known about whether katanin prefers specific types of microtubules. Interestingly, although both tbb-1 and tbb-2 suffice for early C. elegans development and viability, MEI-1/MEI-2 katanin complex seems to prefer TBB-2 over TBB-1 for its activity (Table 4). The meiotic defects resulting from the weak lf mei-2(ct98) were enhanced by depleting tbb-2(+) by either RNAi or a deletion allele (Table 4). However, removal of the other
-tubulin isotype, TBB-1, by RNAi or the null mutation had no effect. Therefore, MEI-1/MEI-2 katanin severs spindle microtubules more efficiently when the TBB-2
-tubulin isotype is present. Because the tbb-2 deletion allele alone does not give complete embryonic lethality, MEI-1/MEI-2 likely also uses other tubulin sites,
or
, in the absence of TBB-2, albeit less efficiently. The relatively high viability of animals lacking tbb-2 likely reflects the excess mei-1(+) activity normally present during meiosis (Clandinin and Mains, 1993
), which can compensate for the decreased sensitivity of microtubules when TBB-2 is removed by mutations or RNAi.
Eukaryotic cells often express multiple
- and
-tubulin isotypes simultaneously, and these may also differ in their posttranslational modifications (Ludueña, 1998
). Although different tubulin isotypes seem to be largely redundant, evidences for functional differences among tubulin isotypes do exist. For example, the budding and fission yeasts both express a pair of
-tubulin genes that are interchangeable for viability but the budding yeast isotypes differ in their effects on in vitro microtubule dynamics (Bode et al., 2003
). Likewise, different mammalian
-tubulin isoforms have varying effects on in vitro microtubule dynamics and drug sensitivities (Panda et al., 1994
; Derry et al., 1997
). Our results demonstrate that different tubulin isotypes play different roles during katanin severing. Although at a superficial level tubulin isotypes may seem to be completely interchangeable, closer examination reveals that they indeed have specializations that may be important in nature.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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| Footnotes |
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Abbreviations used: gf, gain-of-function; lf, loss-of-function.
Present address: Max-Planck-Institute of Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics, Pfotenhauerstrasse 108, D-01307 Dresden, Germany. ![]()
Corresponding author. E-mail address: mains{at}ucalgary.ca.
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