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Vol. 17, Issue 2, 917-930, February 2006
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* Centre de Génétique Moleculaire, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, F-91198 Gif-sur-Yvette Cedex, France;
Fachbereich Biologie, Universität Konstanz, D-78457 Konstanz, Germany
Submitted June 8, 2005;
Revised November 8, 2005;
Accepted November 14, 2005
Monitoring Editor: Howard Riezman
| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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In most organisms, the V-ATPase subunits are each encoded by a few genes, one to four in general. This also holds true for Paramecium whose genome is being currently sequenced and annotated, except for the V0 c-subunits, encoded by six genes, and the V0 a-subunits, the largest subunit of the V-ATPase (
100 kDa), encoded by not <17 genes (Wassmer et al., 2005
). This puzzling observation led us to investigate the consequence of such a diversity of sequences and to address the question of possibly different roles of a-subunits in Paramecium, compared with the generic role of the V-ATPase stator normally described.
In yeast, a-subunits are encoded by two genes, VPH1 and STV1 (Arata et al., 2002
). These two different a-subunits were shown to be localized differentially, Stv1p in the Golgi and Vph1p in the membranes of vacuoles (Kawasaki-Nishi et al., 2001a
). The N-terminal half of these proteins was shown to contain the localization signal for this differentiated targeting (Kawasaki-Nishi et al., 2001a
). Knockout of either VPH1 or STV1 does not result in the vma-phenotype, typical of vacuolar dysfunction, like knockout of any of the other V-ATPase genes does. Only the double disruption of VPH1 and STV1 leads to such a phenotype (Manolson et al., 1994
). Therefore, the a-subunit genes in yeast seem to be able to substitute for each other to some extent. V-ATPase complexes containing different a-subunits were shown to have different catalytic properties and different kinetics of association/dissociation of V1 to V0, especially in response to glucose depletion in the medium (Kawasaki-Nishi et al., 2001b
; Kane and Smardon, 2003
).
In mammals, the a-subunits are encoded by four genes that, in mice, were shown to have different expression levels in different tissues. For example, expression of the isoform 4 of the a-subunit is restricted to the kidney (Oka et al., 2001
; Smith et al., 2001
). The a4-containing protein is localized in the plasma membrane of renal intercalated cells. Loss-of-function mutations in that gene cause autosomal recessive distal renal tubular acidosis (Smith et al., 2000
). The isoform 3 of the a-subunits was shown to be important for bone resorption by osteoclasts (Toyomura et al., 2000
). Mutations in this isoform can lead to osteopetrosis (Li et al., 1999
).
In Paramecium, the V-ATPase was shown to be most important for the processes of osmoregulation, phagocytosis, and the biogenesis of dense core secretory granules, called trichocysts (Fok and Allen, 1988
; Allen and Naitoh, 2002
; Wassmer et al., 2005
). The major organelle for osmoregulation is the contractile vacuole complex that is known to contain a huge number of V-ATPase molecules, where the enzyme is used to create an electrochemical potential that is exploited to expel excess water from the cytosol (Grønlien et al., 2002
; Stock et al., 2002
). The radial arms of the organelle are built by two complex membrane systems, the smooth and the decorated spongiome (Allen and Naitoh, 2002
). By using an antibody against the V1 B-subunit, the V-ATPase holoenzyme was demonstrated to be restricted to the decorated spongiome (Fok et al., 1995
). In phagocytosis, the V-ATPase is required for the acidification that leads to the inactivation of ingested microorganisms and is necessary for enabling the fusion of phagosomes with lysosomes (Fok and Allen, 1988
). Concerning the biogenesis of secretory granules, we have recently shown that it is affected, together with the osmoregulatory and phagocytotic pathways, by the inactivation of V-ATPase subunits c, A, or F, although the precise role the V-ATPase in this process is not yet known (Wassmer et al., 2005
).
In this article, we show that the 17 isoforms of a-subunits define at least seven localizations within the Paramecium cell and suggest as many different functions. The necessity to maintain so many different a-subunits in a complex unicell such as Paramecium compared with multicellular organisms is discussed.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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-sitosterol (Sonneborn, 1970
Amplification, Cloning, and Sequencing from cDNA
A cDNA-library from P. tetraurelia was kindly provided by the laboratory of J. Schultz (University of Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany). The oligonucleotides (oligos) used for the amplification of the VATA1_1 cDNA from this library were 5'-aactgcagagtctttattagttgttgattccc-3' and 5'-ggggtaccttacaaaggatattcaaacattac-3', using the Advantage2-polymerase mixture (Clontech, Mountain View, CA). The PCR product was cloned into pBlueScript II SK- (Stratagene, La Jolla, CA) using the restriction enzymes PstI and Acc65I from New England Biolabs (Frankfurt, Germany) according to standard molecular biological protocols. Sequencing was performed by MWG-biotech (Ebersberg, Germany).
Construction of Green Fluorescent Protein (GFP)-Fusion Genes
Oligonucleotides used for amplification of a-subunits were a1f, 5'-cgaccggtcgccaccatgattagatctgaaggtatgag-3' and a1r, 5'-gcaccggtggaagtttcattttatcttattatttcttcatc-3'; a2f, 5'-gcgactagtatgagtttctttagatcggagac-3' and a2r, 5'-gcgctcgagatccttaatcctttggctgatttg-3'; a3f, 5'-gcgactagtatgagcttgtttagatcagagtag-3' and a3r, 5'-gcgctcgagatccatcatcttattcattactttt-3'; a4f, 5'-gcgactagtatgttaagatcgtaggaaatgtc-3' and a4r: 5'-gcgctcgagatcctaacgagtacacatgaaattcc-3'; a5f, 5'-gcgactagtatgagtttctttaggtctaaaaag-3' and a5r, 5'-gcgctcgagatccttttgaatttgcctatttcag-3'; a6f, 5'-gcgactagtatgagtttctttaggtccaaac-3' and a6r, 5'-gcgctcgagatcctttaagatgctcttataacattt-3'; a7f, 5'-gcgactagtatgttcagagcaaccgaaatacatc-3' and a7r, 5'-gcgctcgagatcccattcttgtactaaattaaaac-3'; a8f, 5'-gcgactagtatgtttagatcacaagaaatgag-3' and a8r, 5'-gcgctcgagatccctaagattctaaattgatgctttc-3'; and a9f, 5'-gcgactagtatgaacttctttaggtcccaaac-3' and a9r, 5'-gcgctcgagatccttcctcctttggaactgcattg-3'. Underlined codons correspond to the start codon ATG and the reverse complement of the former stop codon TGA mutated to tcc (a1) or gga (a2-9). VATA1_1 was cloned from cDNA using AgeI into pPXV-GFP described in Hauser et al. (2000a
). All other a-subunits were amplified using macronuclear DNA as template and cloned into pPXV-GFP described in Wassmer et al. (2005
) using SpeI and XhoI according to standard protocols.
Microinjection Experiments
Microinjections were made under an inverted Nikon phase-contrast microscope, using a Narishige micromanipulation device, and an Eppendorf air-pressure microinjector. DNA for microinjection was prepared as described in Wassmer et al. (2005
). When DNA was microinjected into wild-type cells, they were pretreated with a solution of the vital secretagogue aminoethyldextran at 0.2% (Plattner et al., 1985
) to trigger trichocyst discharge and avoid disturbance during the microinjection procedure. To assess the degree of expression, a serial dilution (1/10, 1/100, and 1/1000) of the a1-GFP construct was injected with plasmid DNA diluted in herring sperm DNA (Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO) containing water to reach the viscosity of the solution necessary for successful injection. Mock-injected cells were only transformed with herring sperm DNA.
Expression of Enhanced (e)GFP in Escherichia coli and Production of Polyclonal Antibody
For heterologous expression of eGFP, we selected the amino acid sequence of eGFP (Hauser et al. 2000b
). The coding region (M1-K238) was cloned into the XhoI/BamHI restriction sites of the pET16b expression vector from Novagen (Madison, WI). Purification of recombinant GFP was done by affinity chromatography on Ni2+-nitrilotriacetate agarose under native conditions, as recommended by the manufacturer (Merck, Bad Soden, Germany). Fractions containing recombinant GFP were used for immunization of rabbits. After several boosts, positive sera were taken and purified by two subsequent chromatography steps: the first step on a histidine (His)-tag peptide column (to remove His-tag-specific antibodies), followed by an affinity step on the recombinant GFP protein.
Expression of a1-1 Peptides in E. coli and Production of Polyclonal Antibody
The sequence coding for the amino acids P178-S328 of a-subunit 1-1 was amplified from macronuclear DNA with all the in-frame stop-codons (TAA and TAG) mutated to CAA or CAG by fusion PCR (Dillon and Rosen, 1990
) and cloned into the pET16 vector system (Novagen) using XhoI restriction enzyme. For the expression of a smaller, isoform-specific peptide of the a-subunits 1-1, the DNA-coding sequence corresponding to a1-1(P228-E259) was PCR amplified from macronuclear DNA and cloned into the pET32 vector system (Novagen) using NcoI, XhoI. Recombinant expression and purification by histidine affinity chromatography on Ni2+-nitrilotriacetate agarose was done under denaturing conditions according to the manufacturer's protocol. The resulting peptide a1-1(P178-S328) was injected into a rabbit for immunization. The serum obtained was affinity purified first using a column with an immobilized His-tagged protein to remove His-tag-specific antibodies and in the second step against the recombinant protein. To ensure the isoform specificity of anti a1-1-antibody, serum obtained with a1-1(P178-S328) was affinity purified in the second step using a a1-1(P228-E259)-column.
Cell Fractionation and Western Blots
Whole cell homogenates were prepared as described in Kissmehl et al. (2004
). Soluble and particulate fractions were separated by centrifugation of homogenates at 100,000 or 190,000 x g for 60 min at 4°C. Cell surface complexes ("cortices") were prepared according to Lumpert et al. (1990
). SDS-gel electrophoresis was carried out essentially as described by Laemmli et al. (1970
), Western blotting was performed using a semidry blotter from Bio-Rad (Hercules, CA) according to the manufacturers protocol. Various sample buffers and boiling times for SDS-PAGE were tested, because the a1-1 protein signal was found to be very sensitive in sample preparation before gel electrophoreses, as described in yeast (Manolson et al., 1992
). The protocol provided by Manolson et al. (1992
) proved to be most suitable for the detection of endogenous a1-1 protein in Paramecium.
Protein/DNA Extraction and Slot Blots
Paramecium cells were grown in 300-ml culture until a density of
1500 cells/ml, checked for the absence of autogamy, concentrated by centrifugation, and lysed in 3 ml 6 M guanidine, 100 mM NaPi, and 10 mM Tris-Cl, pH 8,0. Five microliters of the lysates was loaded per slot when decorated with anti-a1-1 (P178-S328) or anti-actin1-1 serum (described in Kissmehl et al., 2004
) as loading control, whereas 20 µl was loaded when decorated with the mouse monoclonal anti-GFP antibody (Roche Diagnostics, Mannheim, Germany). Slot blots were performed using the Bio-Dot apparatus according to the manufacturer's instructions (Bio-Rad). To prepare total DNA, 100 µl of the cell lysates was precipitated according to Wessel and Flügge (1984
), and the aqueous, DNA-containing fraction was ethanol precipitated and redissolved in 100 µl of Tris-EDTA buffer.
PCR for the Detection of GFP-Plasmids in Paramecia
The successful transformation of injected paramecia was verified using PCR. The oligonucleotide located in the open reading frame of the GFP was 3'GFPseq 5'-aaagttaacttcaaaattagacac-3' and the one located in the 3'-untranslated calmodulin region was TW-3 5'-catatgatgtctatgtattgtttg-3', leading, in the case of successful transformation with pPXV-GFP, to the amplification of an
380-base pair fragment.
Immunolabeling of Paramecia and Fluorescence Microscopy
Individual paramecia were transferred as small pools in depressions slides and permeabilized with 1% Triton X-100 in PHEM buffer [60 mM piperazine-N, N'-bis(2-ethanesulfonic acid, 25 mM HEPES, 10 mM EGTA, and 2 mM MgCl2, pH 6.9] for 90 s, followed by rapid transfer to PHEM containing 2.5% formaldehyde for 10-min fixation. Alternatively, cells were fixed in 2.5% formaldehyde in PHEM buffer containing 0.5% digitonin or 0.5% Triton X-100 at room temperature for 10 min. Cells were then washed twice in Tris-buffered saline (TBS) + bovine serum albumin (BSA) (10 mM Tris-Cl, 150 mM NaCl, and 3% BSA, pH 7.4), followed by incubation with the primary antibody in TBS + BSA. The primary anti-trichocyst antibody was kindly provided by K. Klotz and F. Ruiz (Centre de Génétique Moleculaire, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Gif-sur-Yvette, France) and used at 1/300 dilution. The primary anti-tubulin antibody was the monoclonal ID5 described in Wehland and Weber (1987
), used at 1/300 dilution according to the digitonin permeabilization protocol for microtubular structures staining given above. The primary anti a1-1(P228-E259) was used at a concentration of 5 µg/ml. Afterward, cells were washed once in TBS + BSA, followed by the incubation with the secondary antibody, either Alexa568-coupled goat anti-mouse F(ab')2 at 1/300 dilution or goat anti-rabbit F(ab')2 (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA) at 1/400 dilution, for 30-45 min. Finally, cells were washed twice in TBS + BSA and mounted in Citifluor AF2 (Citifluor, London, United Kingdom). Fluorescence was analyzed under an Axioskop 2 Plus microscope (Carl Zeiss, Jena, Germany), equipped with a CoolSNAP cf. camera (IPS, North Reading, MA), using the plan-Neofluar objective 63x 1/1.25 (Carl Zeiss) with immersion oil ZEISS 518N or using an Axiovert 100TV microscope (Carl Zeiss) equipped with a plan-Neofluar 40x/1.30 objective and a ProgRes C10plus camera system from Jenoptik (Jena, Germany). Images were acquired using the MetaMorph software (Molecular Devices, Sunnyvale, CA).
Immunoelectron Microscopy
Cells derived from clones transformed with a1-, a4-, a7-, and a8-GFP were fixed for 2.5 h at room temperature with 2.5% formaldehyde + 0.15% glutaraldehyde in 50 mM cacodylate buffer, pH 7.4, followed by two washes in 50 mM cacodylate buffer, pH 7.4. Cells were trapped in 1% agarose and dehydrated in an ethanol series followed by embedding in LR-White resin according to standard protocols for immunoelectron microscopy. Ultrathin sections were decorated with affinity-purified, polyclonal anti-GFP antibody described above, followed by protein A-gold (5-nm) conjugates obtained from the Department of Cell Biology (University of Utrecht, Utrecht, The Netherlands).
Gene Silencing by Feeding
The open reading frames of the VATA2_1 and VATA3_1 genes were excised from the plasmids pPXV-a2-GFP and pPXV-a3-GFP with SpeI and XhoI and cloned into the double T7-promotor plasmid pL4440 (described in Timmons et al., 2001
). Plasmids were introduced in the E. coli Ht115 strain, and Paramecium cells were fed with these strains as described in Wassmer et al. (2005
) following the protocol of Galvani and Sperling (2002
). After 38-48 h of feeding paramecia were analyzed.
Construction of Chimeras
The N- and C-terminal halves of the a2-1 subunit were amplified from the corresponding gene of the macronuclear DNA using oligonucleotides a2f/a2r-Xma (5'-catcccggggttcacttccttatacc-3') and a2r/a2f-Xma (5'-gaaccccgggatgtttgccgttatg-3') and cloned into pL4440 using SpeI/XmaI (yielding pL4440/a2v) and XmaI/XhoI (yielding pL4440/a2h), respectively. Afterward the 5' and the 3' halves of the gene encoding a3 were amplified using oligonucleotides a3f/a3r-Xma (5'-caacccgggattgatttccttgtatc-3'), cloned into pL4440/a2h using SpeI/XmaI (yielding pL4440/a3v/a2h), and a3r/a3f-Xma (5'-aatcccgggttgtctactatcataac-3') cloned into pL4440/a2v using XmaI/XhoI (yielding pL4440/a2v/a3h). Both inserts were excised using SpeI/XhoI and cloned into pPXV-GFP, yielding pPXV-a2a3-GFP and pPXV-a3a2-GFP (compare Figure 11) with an artificially introduced XmaI site that does not change the amino acid sequence (ccc.ggg/Pro.Gly) between the N- and C-terminal halves of the protein. These two plasmids were used to construct other plasmids by cloning with SpeI, XmaI, and XhoI to test the localization of different N and C termini of the corresponding proteins. Amplification of the 5' end corresponding to the N terminus of a4 was carried out using the oligos a4f and a4r-Xma (5'-tagcccggggttgatttctcgatatctagc-3'); for the 3'-end corresponding to the C terminus of a5 a5f-Xma (5'-aaccccgggttatttaccataatcacattc-3') and a5r were used.
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| RESULTS |
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By alignment of the deduced protein sequences using the ClustalW algorithm, the a-subunits were found to cluster in pairs except the a-subunit 4 (encoded by VATA4_1) (Figure 1, compare with the alignments in Supplemental Materials). Within a pair, the two genes show a nucleotide identity of >80%, whereas the encoded proteins show sequence identities of 82.5-96.8%. Alignment and comparison of Paramecium a-subunit sequences with those of Mus musculus, Caenorhabditis elegans, Arabidopsis thaliana, Dictyostelium discoideum, and Saccharomyces cerevisiae resulted in amino acid identities between 18 and 28%.
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380-440 amino acids, followed by six to nine transmembrane segments, highly conserved among the a-subunits of Paramecium. Also, most residues identified in Vph1p being crucial for V-ATPase activity, e.g., D425 and R735 (Leng et al., 1996
Localization of the a-Subunits In Vivo by Tagging with GFP
In yeast, the V-ATPase a-subunit Vph1p was found in the membrane of vacuoles, whereas Stv1p was found in the Golgi complex (Kawasaki-Nishi et al., 2001a
). To test whether the 17 a-subunits in Paramecium also have differential localization, genes of each of the nine groups of isoforms were fused at their 3' end to the 5' of the GFP gene in the Paramecium expression vector pPXV-GFP. In general, always the first gene of a pair (VATA1_1, VATA 2_1, and so on) was selected, except the a-subunit 9 pair, from which both genes were GFP tagged (Table 1). After transformation with the different fusion constructs, intracellular labeling of resulting clones was observed by fluorescence microscopy. Interestingly, most of the fluorescent a-subunits labeled different organelles, giving a total of seven distinct cellular labeling (Figure 2).
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The a1-GFP fusion protein exclusively localized to a punctuate network at the cell cortex and the cytostome (Figure 2, a and b). Double labeling of paramecia with a monoclonal anti-tubulin antibody staining basal bodies and a1-GFP (Figure 3) showed that this protein is present in an organelle close to basal bodies, probably representing early endosomes or vesicles of the endocytotic route that are known to be located in proximity to basal bodies in Paramecium (Allen et al., 1992
). To define the labeled structure more clearly, a1-GFP-transformed cells were prepared for immunoelectron microscopic analysis and decorated with anti-GFP antibody. Gold label was clearly found on vesicles in close relation to early endosomes, the so-called terminal cisternae in Paramecium (Figure 4, A-C).
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The a3-GFP fusion protein is localized in membranes of dense core secretory granules of Paramecium (Figure 2, d and e), known as trichocysts. Trichocysts' biogenesis occurs after massive discharge into the medium (Plattner et al., 1985
; Garreau de Loubresse, 1993
) or during cellular growth, in a process tightly regulated at the transcriptional level (Galvani and Sperling, 2000
). The faint labeling of the cytoplasm therefore probably corresponds to the biogenetic pathway of these organelles. The V-ATPase was previously shown to be crucial for the formation of trichocysts (Wassmer et al., 2005
).
The a4-GFP fusion protein was found in small vesicles at the cytostome and can be seen in the first one or two phagosomes just after pinching off of the cytostome, whereas older phagosomes are devoid of a4-GFP labeling (Figures 2h and 5a). In some cases, labeled "strings" emanating from phagosomes back to the cytostome can be observed (Figure 2g). These probably represent trains of small vesicles that are transported from phagosomes back to the oral cavity gliding along cytoskeletal elements. To investigate this phenomenon more closely, we inhibited phagosome formation by the addition of cytochalasin B to the a4-GFP-transformed cells for 60 min and analyzed them after fixation. The addition of cytochalasin B to Paramecium cells inhibits the process of phagocytosis almost instantaneously (Allen and Fok, 1983
; Cohen et al., 1984
). By light microscopy, it can be seen indeed that phagosome formation is inhibited by cytochalasin B and that the oral cavity is enormously enlarged (Figure 5d). In addition, the oral cavity is surrounded by a cloud of small vesicles that display a4-GFP fluorescence (Figure 5b). Because the membrane of the cavity is not continuously stained, this may indicate that fusion of the vesicles with the forming phagosome has not taken place. In contrast, control cells show staining of the membrane of the first food vacuole (asterisk) in a continuous manner, indicating that membrane fusion has taken place. Immunoelectron microscopy of the cytostome of a4-GFP cells showed gold label of vesicles docked at the oral cavity (Figure 4E). The physiology and the ultrastructure of these vesicles suggest that they represent acidosomes (Allen and Fok, 1983
). Indeed, Paramecium acidosomes are known to have high V-ATPase activity, to be localized at the cytostome, and to fuse with phagosomes immediately after pinching off. This induces a rapid and strong acidification of the phagosomes' contents. In addition, excess membrane of these phagosomes is withdrawn and recycled after a few minutes, whereas lysosomes fuse in turn with the phagosomes (Fok and Allen, 1988
).
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The a5-GFP, a6-GFP, and both a9-1- and a9-2-GFP fusion proteins mainly localized to the membranes of phagosomes (Figure 2, f, i, and l) but also to clouds of small fluorescent vesicles, which may represent lysosomes. It is noteworthy that the cytostome is not labeled with any of these three a-subunits in contrast to a-subunit 4.
The a7-GFP fusion protein seemed to be in a continuous network that may represent at least a part of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) (Figure 2j; Hauser et al., 2000a
; Ramoino et al., 2000
). Immunoelectron microscopy of a7-GFP cells showed labeling in the ER-rich cortical region, although any more strict structural assignment was not possible (Figure 4D).
The a8-GFP fusion protein gave strong staining of small dot-like structures in the cytoplasm (Figure 2k). These structures most likely represent the Golgi apparatus that, in Paramecium, consists of many stacks with very few cisternae that are dispersed throughout the cytoplasm (Estève, 1972
; Garreau de Loubresse, 1993
). In immunoelectron microscopy, we did find gold labeling on Golgi stacks but also in association with lysosomes (Figure 4, G-I).
Protein Level of a-Subunit-GFP Fusion Gene Products
Because our fusion gene is expressed under the control of the calmodulin promotor and may reside in the macronucleus at a higher copy number than the endogenous gene, we tried to assess the degree of overexpression achieved by our system using a dilution series of plasmid DNA over a 1000-fold spectrum (Figure 6). Paramecia were transformed with
5 µg/µl and 1/10, 1/100, and 1/1000 serial dilutions thereof, grown to large culture volumes, harvested, and lysed. By PCR, the cell lysates were shown to contain the a1-GFP fusion gene (Figure 6C), whereas by slot-blots the content of the endogenous a1-1 was compared with that of recombinant a1-GFP (Figure 6B). The affinity-purified anti a1-1 antibody used to probe the slot blots was directed against the P178-S328 region of the a1-1 subunit (see Materials and Methods) and characterized by a Western blot analysis on Paramecium fractions (Figure 6A). Using PCR amplification, we were able to detect the a1-GFP fusion gene in all the clones of the dilution series, proving the actual transformation. In contrast, the slot-blot decoration with anti-GFP antibody was able to detect the presence of the a1-GFP protein only in clones transformed with 5 µg/µl and the 1/10 dilution thereof. Consequently, the GFP fluorescence signal is only visible in cells injected with the concentrations of 5 µg/µl and the 1/10 dilution (Figure 6D). Note that the localization in structures forming the regular, punctate, cortical pattern is the same at both concentrations, arguing for a localization that is independent of the concentration. Interestingly, decoration of the slot-blot with the a1-1 (P178-S328) antibody that is supposed to label the endogenous a1-1 as well as the recombinant a1-GFP, resulted in equally strong staining throughout the dilution series, meaning that the a1-1-plus the a1-GFP-content is constant in the range of the detection limit. A possible interpretation of this result is that the transformation system using the pPXV-GFP vector system produces only weak protein expression, which may not be detectable in the slot-blot system used. Another interpretation may be that Paramecium tightly controls the assembly of the V-ATPase and degrades excess a-subunits that are not incorporated in V0-complexes, as shown for Saccharomyces (Jackson and Stevens, 1997
; Hill and Cooper, 2000
). Therefore, using our transformation system for the expression of V-ATPase a-subunits apparently does not result in strong overexpression and was judged to be applicable for the localization of the a-GFP constructs.
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Silencing of VATA2_1,2_2 genes led to heavy perturbations of the contractile vacuole complex. The cells became swollen within 38 h and died within 48 h of feeding, whereas control cells and cells with silenced VATA3_1,3_2 genes showed no impairment of the contractile vacuole shape or activity and continued to divide. In contrast, silencing of the VATA3_1,3_2 genes completely blocked trichocyst exocytosis, as tested by picric acid, whereas control cells and cells silenced for VATA2_1,2_2, even shortly before death, showed a wild-type exocytosis phenotype (Figure 8). Immunolabeling in silenced cells showed an almost total absence of trichocysts in VATA3_1,3_2-silenced cells, whereas control- or VATA2_1,2_2-silenced cells showed a normal number of trichocysts docked at the cell cortex (Figure 9). This experiment shows that silencing of one of these a-subunit pairs cannot be complemented by any other a-subunit gene, suggesting that not only the localization of the a-subunits differs but also that they differentiated to exert specific biological functions.
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Surprisingly, silencing of the F-subunits of V1 also led to near elimination of fluorescence within 48 h. This suggests that excess V0 subunits are degraded if not enough functional V1 complexes are available for building the holoenzyme. So, the assembly of the V-ATPase in Paramecium seems to be tightly controlled at the protein level. This contrasts with the situation in yeast in which V0 is assembled and targeted correctly despite the loss of any of the V1-subunits (Parra et al., 2000
).
The Search for the Targeting Signal
In contrast to the c-subunit isoforms that all seem to be targeted to all organelles containing V0 sectors (Wassmer et al., 2005
), a-subunit isoforms are specific to particular organelles with little or no overlap in localization between the different isoforms. We wondered whether the addressing signal was contained within the primary sequence of the a-subunits and tried to unravel the nature of this signal. The principle of the experiment was to construct chimerical molecules between subunits in tandem with GFP and to follow their subcellular localization. The junctions between peptides of different origin were always carefully chosen in regions that are well conserved between all Paramecium a-subunits, to avoid the fusion of nonhomologues regions.
The first experiment consisted in joining N-terminal halves to C-terminal halves of different a-subunits. The N-ter./C-ter. chimeras tested combined respectively a2-1 with a3-1 (a2a3), a3-1 with a2-1 (a3a2), a3-1 with a5-1 (a3a5), a4-1 with a5-1 (a4a5), and a4-1 with a2-1 (a4a2). Consistently, all chimerical peptides localized to the compartment corresponding to the target of the a-subunit composing their C terminus: a2a3 went to the trichocysts (Figure 11b), a3a2 and a4a2 went to the contractile vacuole complex (Figure 11a), whereas a3a5 and a4a5 are located in the membranes of phagosomes (Figure 11c). This means that the targeting information is within the C terminus of the proteins, a very surprising finding because it represents the opposite situation compared with yeast, in which the targeting signal is contained within the N terminus (Kawasaki-Nishi et al., 2001a
).
To get a better idea of the nature of the localization signal within the C-terminal half of the a-subunits, we focused on the a2- and a3-subunits and constructed a series of chimeras, also fused to GFP, keeping the N terminus of a3-1 and exchanging several portions of the C termini of a2-1 and a3-1 (Figure 11). First, halves of the a2-1 C terminus were introduced in the a3-1 subunit. Then, the a3-1/a2-1 middle junction or the a2-1/a3-1 C-terminal junction was displaced toward the end of the molecule to include varying parts of a2-1 in the a3-1 C terminus. In all these cases (Figure 11), the localization of the chimeras was mainly found in the ER (Figure 11e) and in vesicle-like structures that are normally not visible in cells (Figure 11d), and cells were unable to divide and died within 48 h. This result may indicate that there is no particular region shorter than the C-terminal half of the molecule with targeting efficiency. The localization signal seems to be much more than a short signal sequence and seems to depend on the overall organization of the C-terminal region.
Local and Remote Effects Caused by Chimeras
Cells transformed with the a3a2 chimera showed some slight alterations of the contractile vacuole complex. The frequency of contraction of the contractile vacuole was somewhat prolonged and cells looked inflated, compared with noninjected control cells or cells injected with a2-GFP or a3-GFP, indicating a general insufficiency of the contractile vacuole complex. The number and length of radial canals in these chimerical cells were also larger than in control cells (Figure 12a). The effects seemed to depend on the quantity of the material injected. From these observations, we conclude that the composite a3a2-subunit differs in its physiological properties from the a2-subunit, although the localization in the contractile vacuole complex is the same. It should be kept in mind that besides the expression of a3a2, the endogenous forms a2-1 and a2-2 are also expressed, possibly obscuring a clear-cut phenotype that would be provoked by the selective expression of the chimera. We call this phenomenon "local effect" because the phenotype touches the organelle in which the protein is present.
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After the discovery of this distant effect, cells transformed with the a3a2-chimera were reexamined and analyzed for exocytosis by the picric acid test. We found a mild impairment of exocytotic capacity, estimated to be decreased down to 50%. So, the remote effect seems to exist for other chimeras as well, although it is less pronounced than with the a2a3-chimera.
| DISCUSSION |
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If we assume that all different localizations actually correspond to different functions, this means that a-subunits bear both localization signals specific for a compartment and functional domains specific for their activity in this compartment. They should thus act as a bridge between two interaction domains, the one interacting with compartment-specific partners, the other one with functional partners.
C-Terminal Localization Domain
We found the localization signal in the C-terminal half of the molecule, a region containing transmembrane domains. This contrasts with the observations made in yeast in which both V-ATPase a subunits are targeted to their compartment through their N-terminus (Kawasaki-Nishi et al., 2001a
). Using various composite chimeras within the C-terminal half of a2 and a3, we found that the signal is unlikely to be restricted to short sequences in the molecule. Indeed, all the tested chimeras led to retention of the composite a-subunit in the ER, to growth arrest and cell death, so it was not possible to define more precisely the signal. The block of the chimerical proteins in the ER could either be because of defective targeting by "incompatible mixing" of signal domains or because of subunit trapping because of incorrect association with other V-ATPase subunits. Regardless, the localization signal seems to encompass several sites over the C terminus, most probably as loops between the highly conserved transmembrane segments. The nature of this localization signal is novel, because it differs from the classical signals, e.g., for secretion, mitochondrial presequences, or nuclear localization that are short stretches of amino acids that target any protein to the cognate compartment. Here, within V-ATPase a-subunits, the signal seems to be spread over a large region in which several sequences or structural motifs cooperate to define the efficient conformation. The interesting goal would be to identify the proteins that interact with this domain and direct each a-subunit to the correct compartment.
Different Functions of V-ATPases According to Cellular Compartments
It is clear from the chimera experiments that at least a part of the functional domain of the a-subunits is localized within their N-terminal halves, and it is likely that different a-subunits have different functions and properties in each compartment. So, V-ATPases containing a1-subunits are probably involved in endocytosis. Acidification of early endosomes is necessary for uncoupling of receptor/ligand complexes internalized from the plasma membrane and for vesicle trafficking via late endosomes (Stevens and Forgac, 1997
). The V-ATPase containing the a2-subunit is localized in the osmoregulatory system and is crucial for the process of osmoregulation in Paramecium (Fok et al., 1995
; Allen and Naitoh, 2002
). The proton potential is used for secondary active transport mainly of K+ and Cl- but also of Ca2+ ions into the lumen of the contractile vacuole (Stock et al., 2002
), although the exact mechanism and its correlation with the ultrastructural differentiation into the decorated and the smooth spongiome are unclear. The role of the V-ATPase containing a3-subunits in trichocysts is also unclear. The V-ATPase was shown previously to be essential for the biogenesis of these secretory organelles (Wassmer et al., 2005
), although they were found not to be acidic (Lumpert et al., 1992
; Garreau de Loubresse et al., 1994
). So, it is likely that the electrochemical potential created by the V-ATPase is deployed for the accumulation/depletion of other ions, thus creating the environment required for the crystallization of trichocyst matrix proteins to the highly structured paracrystaline cores of trichocysts. In contrast, nascent phagosomes that contain the V-ATPase with the a4-subunit are rapidly acidified by the V-ATPase after its delivery by acidosomes immediately after pinching off the cytostome (Fok and Allen, 1988
). These V-ATPase molecules are quickly withdrawn from the phagosomes and transported back to the cytostome. After the withdrawal, these "young" phagosomes were reported to fuse with lysosomes (Allen and Fok, 2000
). Our results suggest that these lysosomes deliver V-ATPases containing a5, a6, and a9. Therefore, within the digestive cycle of Paramecium should exist two cycles of delivery and withdrawal of V-ATPase enzymes, both being distinguishable by the presence of different a-subunits within the V-ATPase. This exchange may explain the biphasic acidification profile of phagosomes, from a rapid and strong acidification burst to pH <5 within the first 3 to 5 min, followed by an increase to
pH 6 throughout the rest of the life span of a phagosome (Fok and Allen, 1988
). Also in the trans-Golgi network, a mildly acidic milieu that is necessary for protein targeting (Sun-Wada et al., 2004
) is established by the V-ATPase containing a8-2.
Chimerical a-Subunits Reveal Local and Remote Interactions
In addition to revealing the localization domain in the V-ATPase a-subunits, the use of chimeras allowed to distinguish two kinds of deleterious effects introduced by the combination of different N- and C-terminal halves. The first effect was observed by providing the contractile vacuole complex with a chimera containing the N terminus of the trichocyst-specific a3-1-subunit. As expected, this disturbed its functioning in an easily understandable way, because abnormal molecules are introduced in its structure, thus causing a local effect. The more intriguing effect was observed in the reciprocal chimera in which the N terminus of the contractile vacuole-specific a2-1-subunit was targeted to trichocysts. Indeed, in this case, the strongest effect was observed in the contractile vacuoles not in trichocysts. There are two explanations for this remote effect, which have now to be experimentally tested. The simplest explanation would be to assume that V1-complexes exist with different affinities for different V0-complexes, depending on the a-subunit it contains. Localization of an a-subunit N terminus to a wrong compartment would lead to the titration of the V1-sectors specific for this a-subunit, because they are redirected to this compartment. So, we have to assume that there are at least as many V1-sectors as there are V0 a-subunit localizations, i.e., seven. In previous work, we could identify for the V1-sector four A-, B-, E-, and H-, two F-, and one C- and D-subunit-encoding genes in the Paramecium draft genome (Wassmer et al., 2005
). It may be possible that, by the combination of the different paralogues, several distinct V1-complexes are formed, thus conferring organelle specificity to the V1-subcomplexes. However, the different V1-subunit sequences are highly conserved: they often differ by a single or few amino acids. Thus, it remains speculative whether these variations are sufficient to yield functionally different V1-complexes. Another explanation of the remote effect would be to assume a competition for potential assembly factors necessary during V-ATPase biogenesis. In such a case, the mistargeting of an N terminus because of chimerical proteins would unroute bona fide assembly molecules and drive them to the wrong place, thus preventing the correct assembly of other V-ATPase molecules.
The system we describe here will facilitate addressing specific questions about the V-ATPase and its role in acidification and membrane energization and targeting in an absolutely compartment-specific way by investigating the different a-subunits.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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| Footnotes |
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The online version of this article contains supplemental material at MBC Online (http://www.molbiolcell.org). ![]()
Present address: Universität Konstanz, Universitätsstraße 10, D-78457 Konstanz, Germany. ![]()
Address correspondence to: Thomas Wassmer (thomas.wassmer{at}uni-konstanz.de).
| REFERENCES |
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