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Vol. 9, Issue 10, 2819-2837, October 1998



Departments of
*Pharmacological and Physiological Sciences,
Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, and
§Molecular Genetics and Cell Biology, The University of
Chicago, Chicago, Illinois 60637
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ABSTRACT |
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Small GTPases of the Ypt/Rab family are involved in the regulation of vesicular transport. Cycling between the GDP- and GTP-bound forms and the accessory proteins that regulate this cycling are thought to be crucial for Ypt/Rab function. Guanine nucleotide exchange factors (GEFs) stimulate both GDP loss and GTP uptake, and GTPase-activating proteins (GAPs) stimulate GTP hydrolysis. Little is known about GEFs and GAPs for Ypt/Rab proteins. In this article we report the identification and initial characterization of two factors that regulate nucleotide cycling by Ypt1p, which is essential for the first two steps of the yeast secretory pathway. The Ypt1p-GEF stimulates GDP release and GTP uptake at least 10-fold and is specific for Ypt1p. Partially purified Ypt1p-GEF can rescue the inhibition caused by the dominant-negative Ypt1p-D124N mutant of in vitro endoplasmic reticulum-to-Golgi transport. This mutant probably blocks transport by inhibiting the GEF, suggesting that we have identified the physiological GEF for Ypt1p. The Ypt1p-GAP stimulates GTP hydrolysis by Ypt1p up to 54-fold, has a higher affinity for the GTP-bound form of Ypt1p than for the GDP-bound form, and is specific to a subgroup of exocytic Ypt proteins. The Ypt1p-GAP activity is not affected by deletion of two genes that encode known Ypt GAPs, GYP7 and GYP1, nor is it influenced by mutations in SEC18, SEC17, or SEC22, genes whose products are involved in vesicle fusion. The GEF and GAP activities for Ypt1p localize to particulate cellular fractions. However, contrary to the predictions of current models, the GEF activity localizes to the fraction that functions as the acceptor in an endoplasmic reticulum-to-Golgi transport assay, whereas the GAP activity cofractionates with markers for the donor. On the basis of our current and previous results, we propose a new model for the role of Ypt/Rab nucleotide cycling and the factors that regulate this process.
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INTRODUCTION |
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Transport of proteins through the secretory pathway involves their
orderly progression through a series of membranous compartments. Movement between successive compartments appears to be mediated by
vesicles that bud from one compartment and fuse with the next (Jamieson
and Palade, 1967
; Palade, 1975
). Progress has been made in the last few
years in understanding the machinery and mechanisms contributing to the
directionality and specificity of vesicle targeting and fusion. The
Ypt/Rab family of small GTPases has been shown to play a key role in
vesicular trafficking in yeast and mammalian cells. These proteins are
implicated in the regulation of protein transport through the exocytic,
endocytic, and transcytotic pathways (Ferro-Novick and Novick, 1993
;
Zerial and Stenmark, 1993
). In yeast, four members of the Ypt/Rab
family have been shown to be essential for regulating the exocytic
pathway. Ypt1p is essential for the first two steps of the pathway,
endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-to-Golgi and cis-to-medial Golgi transport,
mediating the targeting and/or fusion of transport vesicles in the
first step (Segev et al., 1988
; Rexach and Schekman, 1991
;
Segev, 1991
; Jedd et al., 1995
). We recently showed that
Ypt31p and Ypt32p are essential for exit from the trans-Golgi
compartment (Jedd et al., 1997
). Sec4p functions at the
final step of the pathway (Novick et al., 1981
). It has been
suggested that Ypt/Rab proteins act at the different steps of the
secretory pathway to ensure the fidelity of vesicular targeting
(Bourne, 1988
; Novick and Brennwald, 1993
; Pfeffer, 1994
). However, the
specific mechanism by which Ypt/Rab GTPases regulate protein transport
and the means by which Ypt/Rab proteins themselves are regulated are
still unknown.
Ypt/Rab proteins cycle between GTP- and GDP-bound forms by nucleotide
exchange and GTP hydrolysis, reactions that are thought to switch the
conformation of these proteins and to determine the partner proteins
with which these proteins interact (Balch, 1990
; Novick and Brennwald,
1993
). The function of this nucleotide cycling by Ypt/Rab proteins has
been studied by the use of mutants that are restricted to one or the
other of the nucleotide-bound forms. The importance of nucleotide
exchange is suggested by studies of Ypt/Rab mutants that are restricted
to either the GDP form or the nucleotide-free form. These two types of
mutations were shown to be dominant inhibitors of protein transport
both in vivo and in vitro (Wagner et al., 1987
; Walworth
et al., 1989
; Gorvel et al., 1991
; Bucci et
al., 1992
; Tisdale et al., 1992
; Brondyk et
al., 1993
; Li and Stahl, 1993
; Nuoffer et al., 1994
;
Riederer et al., 1994
). In the case of Ypt1p, the
nucleotide-free mutations were shown to act via inhibition of the Ypt1p
nucleotide exchanger (Jones et al., 1995
). The importance of
GTP hydrolysis was studied by the use of Ypt/Rab mutants that are
defective in this process. Conflicting evidence suggests either that
these mutations have very little effect on the functioning of the
Ypt/Rab protein or that they have a dominant inhibitory or stimulatory
effect. For example, we have shown that Ypt1p-mediated ER-to-Golgi
transport is not affected by a mutation that severely impairs GTP
hydrolysis (Richardson et al., 1998
), whereas Rab5-mediated
endosome fusion was shown to be stimulated by such a mutation (Gorvel
et al., 1991
; Bucci et al., 1992
). We have
suggested that GTP hydrolysis is not important for general heterotypic
vesicle fusion, which is the basis for vectorial transport (e.g.,
Ypt1p-mediated transport), but is important for down-regulation of
homotypic membrane fusion (e.g., Rab5-mediated fusion) (Richardson
et al., 1998
).
Most small GTPases have slow intrinsic rates of nucleotide exchange and
GTP hydrolysis and thus require accessory factors to stimulate these
reactions. GDP dissociation and GTP binding are accelerated by guanine
nucleotide exchange factors (GEFs), whereas GTP hydrolysis is
stimulated by GTPase-activating proteins (GAPs). Current models propose
that GEF-stimulated nucleotide exchange occurs at the donor compartment
and is coupled to the localization of Ypt/Rab proteins to specific
membranes, whereas GAP-stimulated GTP hydrolysis occurs at the acceptor
compartment and is essential for vesicle fusion or its timing (Rybin
et al., 1996
; Novick and Zerial, 1997
) (see Figure 9A).
However, there is very little evidence to support such models, and in
particular, little is known regarding the localization of the
regulatory factors.
Although GEFs and GAPs that act on members of the Ras and Rho families
of small GTPases have been extensively characterized (McCormick, 1990
;
Boguski and McCormick, 1993
), less is known about GEFs and GAPs for
Ypt/Rab GTPases. To date, three genes encoding GEFs for Ypt/Rab
proteins have been identified, one in yeast for Sec4p and two in
mammalian cells for Rab3 and Rab5 (Horiuchi et al., 1997
;
Wada et al., 1997
; Walch-Solimena et al., 1997
). We have shown that Ypt1p mutant proteins inhibit Ypt1p-GEF activity and
are also potent inhibitors of ER-to-Golgi transport in vivo and in
vitro, implying that nucleotide exchange stimulated by this GEF is
essential for Ypt1p function (Jones et al., 1995
). In
agreement with this result, the Sec4p-GEF Sec2p is essential for
viability (Nair et al., 1990
). Recently, a number of Ypt/Rab GAP genes have been cloned; these are the mammalian tuberin and Rab3
GAP and the yeast GYP6, GYP7, and GYP1
(Strom et al., 1993
; Vollmer and Gallwitz, 1995
; Fukui
et al., 1997
; Xiao et al., 1997
; Du et
al., 1998
). There are several open questions regarding the mechanism of action, the localization, and the specificity of GEFs and
GAPs for Ypt/Rab proteins. Identifying and characterizing these
regulatory proteins should help resolve these issues. Because there is very little homology shared between the different known GEFs
or GAPs for Ypt/Rab proteins, we decided to take a biochemical approach
to identify factors that regulate the nucleotide cycling of Ypt1p.
In this article we describe both a GEF and a GAP for Ypt1p in yeast.
The novel GEF activity stimulates both GDP release and GTP uptake by
Ypt1p but not by other exocytic Ypt proteins. Contrary to the
predictions of current models, which assign GEF function to the donor
compartment, the Ypt1p-GEF activity is highly enriched in the
P100 (100,000 × g pellet) fraction, which
functions as the acceptor in a Ypt1p-mediated ER-to-Golgi cell-free
transport assay. The GAP activity for Ypt1p interacts with both Ypt1p
and Sec4p but not with Ypt31p or Ypt32p, indicating substrate
specificity. The novel GAP activity characterized here is highly
enriched in the P12 fraction, which functions as the donor in the ER-to
-Golgi transport assay, even though current models would predict that Ypt1p-GAP activity should be enriched in the acceptor compartment. On
the basis of the localization of these two Ypt1p regulators and our
previous results (Jones et al., 1995
; Richardson et
al., 1998
), we propose a new model for the role of nucleotide
cycling and associated regulatory factors in Ypt1-mediated vesicular
transport.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Yeast Strains and Materials
The yeast strains used in this study are listed in Table
1. GYP1 and GYP7
were deleted sequentially in NSY116 using PCR products amplified from
the following templates: kanMX4 (Wach et al., 1994
), for
disruption of the entire open reading frame of GYP1 with the kanr gene of Escherichia coli
using the upstream primer 5'-ACCAA TACCG ACCAC TTAAT AAAAG TAACC ATATA
CAGCT GAAGC TTCGT ACGCT-3' and the downstream primer 5'-TACAT ACTAT
ACAGT AAGTA AAATG AATAG GTCCG GCATA GGCCA CTAGT GGATCTG-3', and pRS303
(Sikorski and Hieter, 1989
), for disruption of the entire open reading
frame of GYP7 with the HIS3 gene using the
upstream primer 5'-AAAGT TCTAC AAGAG TCATT CATAC ATCCC CTGCT CTTGG
CCTCC TCTAG-3' and the downstream primer 5'-TATTC AATAT GTAAA GTTCC
GTTTC TATTT ACCTC GTTCA GAATG ACACG-3'. Yeast strains were grown in
rich medium (YEPD; 1% yeast extract, 2% bactopeptone, 2% dextrose)
(Rose et al., 1988
). All chemical reagents were purchased
from Sigma Chemical (St. Louis, MO), unless otherwise noted. All DNA
restriction endonucleases were from New England BioLabs (Beverly, MA)
or Boehringer Mannheim (Indianapolis, IN). Taq DNA
polymerase was from Life Technologies-Bethesda Research
Laboratories (Gaithersburg, MD).
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Expression and Purification of Ypt Proteins
Construction of plasmids for the expression of GST-Ypt1p
(pNS361), GST-Ypt1-D124N (pNS363), GST-Ypt31p (pNS210), GST-Ypt32p (pNS211), and GST-Sec4p (pNS212) is described elsewhere (Jones et
al., 1995
; Jedd et al., 1997
). To construct the
GST-Ypt1-T40K fusion protein pNS240, we used a pGEM3Zf(
) plasmid that
contains the ypt1-T40K allele (Jedd et al., 1995
)
as a template for PCR with the upstream primer 5'-CCT GGG GAT CCA TGA
ATA GCG AGT ACG ATT ACC TGT TCA AAC TGC TGT TGA TCG GG-3' (which
creates a BamHI site just upstream of the initiator
methionine) and the downstream primer 5'-GGG CCC GGA TCC GAT AAG GAA
GAA TG-3'. The PCR fragment was cut with BamHI and cloned
into the BamHI site of pGEX-KG (Guan and Dixon, 1991
) to
create pNS214. GST fusion proteins were purified as described elsewhere
(Jones et al., 1995
) and were dialyzed against Buffer 88 [250 mM sorbitol, 20 mM HEPES, pH 6.8, 150 mM KOAc, 5 mM
Mg(OAc)2] (Baker et al., 1988
). Thrombin
cleavage of these GST fusion proteins yields proteins with a two amino
acid extension (Gly-Ser) at the amino termini.
GST-Ypt1p was used as a substrate for the geranylgeranyl transferase
reaction. Geranylgeranyl transferase activity was reconstituted in
vitro as described (Jiang et al., 1995
). The prenylated and unprenylated forms of GST-Ypt1p were then separated by Triton X-114
phase partitioning (Bordier, 1981
). The two phases were then mixed with
a 50% slurry of glutathione agarose beads, and Ypt1p was purified
after thrombin cleavage as described above.
Yeast Cell Extract Preparation
Crude extracts were prepared from spheroplasts and fractionated
as described (Baker et al., 1990
; Wuestehube and Schekman, 1992
). For comparison of GEF activities in the various fractions, supernatant fractions (both S100 [100,000 × g
supernatant] and S12) were dialyzed in Buffer 88 overnight. To extract
endogenous Ypt1p from the particulate fraction, we treated P100 (~10
mg of protein per milliliter) with 1% Triton X-100 or 1%
n-octylglucoside for 1 h on ice. The mixture was
centrifuged at 100,000 × g for 1 h, and the
pellet was resuspended to the starting volume in Buffer 88 and
recentrifuged. The pellet, which contained >80% of the GEF activity,
was resuspended to the initial volume in Buffer 88 to generate a
fraction referred to as detergent-extracted P100 (Det-P100).
This fraction was further extracted with 0.5 M NaCl for 1 h on
ice. A final centrifugation at 100,000 × g for 1 h yielded a supernatant, termed solubilized GEF, that contained ~75%
of the total exchange activity in the original P100 fraction.
Guanine Nucleotide Exchange Assays
[3H]GDP Release Assays. Ten picomoles of Ypt1p were preloaded by incubating with 20 pmol of [5',8'-3H]GDP (31.7 Ci/mmol; New England Nuclear, Boston, MA) in preload buffer (20 mM HEPES, pH 7.2, 20 mM KOAc, 1 mM DTT, 5 mM EDTA) for 10 min at 30°C. At the end of the incubation, samples were placed on ice, and MgCl2 was added to 10 mM. [3H]GDP remained stably bound to the Ypt1p for at least 1 h. The cell fractions containing the GEF activity for Ypt1p, or bovine serum albumin (BSA) as a control, were diluted into reaction buffer [20 mM HEPES, pH 7.2, 5 mM Mg(OAc)2, 0.75 mM GTP, 0.75 mM GDP, 1 mM DTT], and exchange reactions were initiated by the addition of Ypt1p-[3H]GDP. The reaction volume was 50 µl. Incubations were performed at 30°C for varying periods of time, as noted. To monitor the release of [3H]GDP from Ypt1p by filtration, we applied 5 µl samples to wet nitrocellulose filters (BA85; Schleicher & Schuell, Keene, NH) by pipetting samples into 3 ml of ice-cold wash buffer (20 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.5, 20 mM NaCl, 5 mM MgCl2, 1 mM DTT). Filters were washed twice more with 3 ml of the same buffer and were counted with Ready Protein+ (Beckman, Fullerton, CA) or Filtron-X (National Diagnostics, Atlanta, GA) scintillation fluid. In all experiments, initial values were ~8-10 × 103 dpm per 5 µl sample.
Ras2 protein, expressed and purified from E. coli (a gift from K. York and J. Broach), was preloaded with [3H]GDP exactly as described for Ypt1p above. His6-Sec4 protein (a gift from P. Novick) was preloaded with [3H]GDP as described (Kabcenell et al., 1990[32P]GTP Uptake Assays.
Bacterially expressed
Ypt1p was preloaded as described above but with nonradioactive GDP. The
preloaded Ypt1p was added together with cell fractions containing the
GEF activity for Ypt1p or ovalbumin (as a control) to reaction buffer
lacking guanine nucleotides. ATP was added to 1 mM to prevent
nonspecific hydrolysis of [32P]GTP.
[
-32P]GTP (3000 Ci/mmol; Amersham, Arlington Heights,
IL) was diluted to a specific activity of 75 Ci/mmol. Exchange
reactions were initiated by the addition of 100 pmol of GTP to a 50 µl reaction mixture containing 10 pmol of Ypt1p and various amounts
of exchange-containing cellular fractions. Samples of 5 µl were
removed at intervals, and the amount of [
-32P]GTP
bound to Ypt1p was determined by quantitative immunoprecipitation with
2.5 µg of anti-Ypt1p immunoglobulin G purified from polyclonal serum
(Segev et al., 1988
) and with 20 µl of protein A sepharose (Zymed, San Francisco, CA). Immunoprecipitation was necessary to
distinguish between Ypt1p and other GTP-binding proteins present in the
extract. Immunoprecipitation was performed for 2 h at 4°C in
reaction buffer (see above) plus 150 mM KOAc, 1% Triton X-100, and 150 µM GDP and GTP. At the end of the incubation, immune complexes were
washed five times with 1 ml of wash buffer (see [3H]GDP
Release Assay) plus 1% Triton X-100. Washed immune complexes were
boiled for 5 min in the presence of 2% SDS, and the amount of bound
radioactivity was determined by liquid scintillation counting.
Immunoprecipitation under these conditions was quantitative as
demonstrated by comparison of immunoprecipitation with
filtration of Ypt1p-[3H]GDP from reaction mixtures
identical to those above. Specificity of immunoprecipitation was
demonstrated with preimmune and non-Ypt1p-specific antisera. Values for
GTP uptake by trace amounts of endogenous Ypt1p in the extracts were
determined by performing the reactions in the absence of bacterially
produced Ypt1p. These values (equal to <5% of those for GTP uptake by
the bacterially produced substrate) were subtracted from the
measurements of stimulated exchange. Further background measurements
were determined by sampling at the initiation of the reaction
(time = 0). These values (also <5% of those for GTP uptake by
the bacterially produced substrate) were subtracted from the
measurements of stimulated exchange as well.
Partial Purification of GEF Activity
Gel Filtration. Twenty-one milliliters of solubilized GEF (n-octylglucoside extracted) was prepared from 20,000 OD600 units of cells (strain GPY60) as described above. The solubilized GEF was applied to a 2.5 × 92.5 cm column of Sephacryl S-300 HR equilibrated in Buffer 88 in three separate runs using 7 ml (at 1.8 mg/ml) per run. The column was eluted at 1.4 ml/min, and 2.5 ml fractions were collected. GEF activity was measured by performing the [3H]GDP release assay on alternating fractions. Peak fractions were collected into two pools: a high-specific activity pool A and a low-specific activity pool B. The specific activities of the pools were assayed using both the [3H]GDP release assay and the [32P]GTP uptake assay. Each pool of fractions was concentrated ~30-fold in a Centriprep-30 unit.
Hydroxyapatite Chromatography. Concentrated material (2.3-2.9 ml) from the Sephacryl S-300 HR column was applied to a 1 × 5 cm ceramic hydroxyapatite (HAP) (Bio-Rad, Richmond, CA) column in Buffer 88 with 0.5 M NaCl and 10 mM KPO4, pH 6.8 (HAP wash buffer). The column was run at 30 cm/h (~23.6 ml/h), and 1 ml fractions were collected. The column was washed with 1-3 column volumes of HAP wash buffer until the absorbance returned to baseline. Bound protein was then eluted with a linear gradient from 10 to 200 mM KPO4 in Buffer 88 followed by one to three column volumes of 400 mM KPO4, pH 6.8. Samples were dialyzed against Buffer 88 in a microdialysis unit (Life Technologies-Bethesda Research Laboratories) for 2 h before assaying for guanine nucleotide exchange activity by the GDP loss assay. Fractions with the greatest GDP release activity were pooled and concentrated in a Centriprep-30 unit.
ER-to-Golgi Transport Assay
An in vitro ER-to-Golgi transport system using permeabilized
yeast cells as the donor compartment was used for the experiments that
demonstrate rescue by purified Ypt1p-GEF of Ypt1p-D124N inhibition of
ER-to-Golgi transport (Ruohola et al., 1988
).
GTP Hydrolysis Assays
Three methods were used to measure GTP hydrolysis: charcoal
binding, TLC, or filtration through nitrocellulose. For the
charcoal-binding assay (Brandt et al., 1983
; Higashijima
et al., 1987
), Ypt1p (10 µM) was preloaded with 5 µl of
[
-32P]GTP (2000 Ci/mmol; Amersham) in preload buffer
(20 mM HEPES, pH 7.2, 20 mM KOAc, 5 mM EDTA, 0.5 mg/ml BSA, 1 mM DTT)
for 15 min at 30°C in a 10 µl volume. Preload reactions were
diluted with 50 µl of reaction buffer [20 mM HEPES, pH 7.2, 5 mM
Mg(OAc)2, 300 mM sorbitol, 1 mM DTT] plus 0.5 mg/ml BSA,
and unbound nucleotide was removed at 4°C with two successive
acrylamide spin columns (BioSpin6; Bio-Rad) equilibrated with reaction
buffer plus 0.5 mg/ml BSA. The volume of the flow-through was adjusted
to 250 µl with reaction buffer plus BSA to give a final Ypt1p
concentration of 40 nM. GAP-stimulated hydrolysis was measured by
incubating 2 nM preloaded Ypt1p with the indicated quantities of the
indicated subcellular fractions in reaction buffer plus 1 mM each GTP,
GDP, and ATP at 30°C. Intrinsic GTP hydrolysis was measured by
substituting BSA (a nonspecific protein) for the subcellular fraction.
Aliquots were removed at the indicated time points and processed as
described (Richardson et al., 1998
). When TLC was used to
measure GTP hydrolysis, Ypt1p was preloaded as described above but with
[32P]GTP labeled at the
position (3000 Ci/mmol;
Amersham), and unbound nucleotide was removed as described above. GTP
hydrolysis reactions were performed as described above. Aliquots were
removed at the indicated times, and reactions were stopped by addition of an equal volume of stop buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.5, 40 mM EDTA,
2% SDS). Samples were heated at 65°C for 5 min. Aliquots (5 µl)
were spotted on polyethyleneimine-cellulose TLC plates, and
nucleotides were resolved by developing plates in water followed by 1 M
LiCl (Tanaka et al., 1991
). Detection and quantitation of
radioactivity were performed with a radioanalytic imager (QuantProbe 3.0; Ambis Systems, San Diego, CA). When the filtration method was used
to assay GTP hydrolysis, Ypt1p was preloaded with
[
-32P]GTP as described above, except that spin columns
were not used to separate unbound nucleotide. GTP hydrolysis reactions
were performed as described above for the charcoal assay, except that aliquots removed at the indicated time points were processed as for the
GDP release assay (see above).
Extraction of GAP Activity
Yeast extracts were prepared and fractionated as described
(Baker et al., 1990
; Wuestehube and Schekman, 1992
). The P12
fraction was used as the source of GAP activity. For trypsin
extractions, digestion was performed on P12 at 10 mg/ml with trypsin at
0.1 mg/ml for 1 h on ice and then stopped by the addition of
soybean trypsin inhibitor at 0.2 mg/ml. As a control, trypsin inhibitor was added before trypsin, and the mixture was incubated for 1 h on
ice. An aliquot was removed and saved as "total." The remainder was
centrifuged at 12,000 × g. The supernatant was removed
and saved. The pellet was resuspended in Buffer 88 to the original volume before centrifugation. Equivalent volumes of total, supernatant, and pellet fractions of extracted material were incubated with 2 nM
Ypt1p preloaded with [32P]GTP as described above. GTP
hydrolysis was determined by the charcoal-binding assay as described
above. For detergent inhibition curves, the P12 or the
trypsin-extracted activity was used as a source of GAP activity. These
fractions were incubated with the indicated amounts of detergent and 2 nM Ypt1p preloaded with [32P]GTP as described above.
Aliquots were removed at the indicated time periods and processed for
quantification by the charcoal-binding assay or by the filtration assay
as indicated. To test geranylgeranylated Ypt1p as a substrate, we
preloaded 1.2 pmol of the aqueous or detergent phase of Triton
X-114-partitioned Ypt1p (see below) with [
-32P]GTP
(2000 Ci/mmol) as described above; 1.2 nM preloaded Ypt1 proteins were tested for responsiveness to trypsin-extracted GAP in the
absence or presence of detergent. GTP hydrolysis was monitored by the
filtration assay as described above.
Competition of Ypt1p-GAP Activity
For competition experiments, Ypt1p was preloaded with
[
-32P]GTP as described above. Competitor protein (90 µM) was preloaded for 15 min at 30°C with 180 µM unlabeled
nucleotide, either GDP, GTP, or GppNHp, in a 20 µl reaction that
contained 20 mM HEPES, pH 7.2, 20 mM KOAc, 5 mM EDTA, 0.5 mg/ml BSA,
and 1 mM DTT. After preloading, 0.1 M Mg(OAc)2 was added to
a final concentration of 5 mM. For the no-competitor control, a mock
preload reaction was performed that contained nucleotide but no
competitor protein. Labeled Ypt1p (2 nM) was mixed with the indicated
quantities of cold competitors (or the mock preload control) before the
addition of the P12 GAP activity. Reactions were initiated by the
addition of 0.75 mg/ml of P12, and incubation was at 30°C. Aliquots
were removed at 0, 10, 20, and 30 min and were processed for
quantification by the charcoal-binding assay as described above.
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RESULTS |
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Identification of Ypt1p-GEF
To identify a GEF activity for Ypt1p in yeast cells, we first assayed the ability of cell lysates to stimulate release of GDP from Ypt1p. Crude extracts of Saccharomyces cerevisiae strain GPY60 and fractions obtained by differential centrifugation were incubated with recombinant Ypt1p preloaded with [3H]GDP. Yeast cell extracts stimulated GDP release from Ypt1p above the intrinsic rate in a time- (Figure 1A) and concentration-dependent manner. Because we later show that this activity also promotes GTP uptake specifically by Ypt1p (see below), we refer to this activity as Ypt1p-GEF. Comparing equal amounts of protein from different cell fractions revealed that the P100 fraction was enriched in GEF activity, whereas there was no detectable or little activity in the S100, S12, and the P12 fractions, respectively (Figure 1A). The highest specific activity of Ypt1p-GEF was found in the P100 fraction (~three- to fivefold enrichment relative to the crude lysate; Figure 1B). Approximately one-half of the Ypt1-GEF activity present in the total extract was recovered in the P100 fraction, whereas very little (~2.5%) was found in the P12 fraction (Figure 1C), suggesting that the Ypt1p-GEF associates with a light particulate cellular compartment.
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To characterize the association of the Ypt1p-GEF activity with this particulate compartment, we extracted the P100 fraction with detergents and NaCl. Although Ypt1p can be extracted from the P100 fraction by nonionic detergent treatment, the Ypt1p-GEF activity was resistant to detergent treatment. Instead, ~75% of the GEF activity was liberated by 0.5 M NaCl (Figure 2A). Increasing the NaCl concentration beyond 0.5 M did not significantly increase the recovery of Ypt1p-GEF activity. The ability of the Ypt1p-GEF to be extracted by salt but not by detergent is consistent with an association with membranes or cytoskeletal elements by electrostatic interactions.
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Salt extraction of Det-P100 yielded solubilized Ypt1p-GEF activity free of Ypt1p. The solubilized GEF activity is enriched 4-fold relative to the P100 fraction and ~16- to 20-fold relative to the total cell extract (Figure 2B). The solubilized GEF was proteinaceous because it was sensitive to protease or heat but not to RNase or DNase. The Det-P100 fraction was used for experiments in which high concentrations of the exchange activity were needed, whereas the salt extract was used for further purification of the Ypt1p-GEF (see below; the solubilized GEF fraction could not be used in high concentrations because salt interferes with the exchange reaction and salt removal caused protein precipitation).
To confirm that this Ypt1p-GEF activity corresponds to a genuine
exchange activity, we used the partially purified exchange factor to
assay stimulation of GTP binding by recombinant Ypt1p. Recombinant
Ypt1p was preloaded with nonradioactive GDP; then the binding of
[
-32P]GTP was measured in the presence of either the
Det-P100 fraction or the solubilized GEF. The intrinsic rates of GDP
release and GTP uptake of Ypt1p were very similar (0.76 ± 0.13 and 0.87 ± 0.12 fmol/min per picomole of Ypt1p, respectively).
Adding increasing amounts of the Det-P100 fraction accelerated GTP
uptake by Ypt1p to a maximum 10-fold stimulation at 5 mg/ml (Figure
3A). When the solubilized
GEF was used as a source of exchange activity, both GTP uptake and GDP
release rates were also linear with respect to concentration and time
(Figure 3B) and were essentially identical. Thus, the activity that we
identified on the yeast cell membranes and that was solubilized and
partially purified stimulates the exchange of Ypt1p-bound GDP for GTP
at least 10-fold.
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A candidate for Ypt1p-GEF activity is Dss4p, a suggested GDP-release
factor for the closely related Sec4p. Previous work demonstrated that
purified recombinant Dss4p was capable of stimulating release of GDP
from Ypt1p by 2.5-fold above the intrinsic rate (Moya et al., 1993
). We compared the stimulation of GDP release for Ypt1p by yeast cell extracts prepared from a wild-type strain and a strain in
which the DSS4 gene was deleted (Moya et al.,
1993
). P100 fractions prepared from both yeast strains yielded
equivalent results and stimulated GDP release from Ypt1p by 4- to
5-fold (Table 2A). Therefore, the
Ypt1p-GEF activity that we have identified is not Dss4p.
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Substrate Specificity of Ypt1p-GEF
To determine the specificity of the Ypt1p-GEF activity, we assayed
the ability of the Det-P100 fraction to stimulate the exchange of
guanine nucleotides bound to Ras2p, Ypt32p, or Sec4p. Under conditions
in which the Det-P100 fraction stimulated GDP release by
~12-fold from Ypt1p, there was an ~4- to 6-fold stimulation of GDP release from Ras2p but no effect on the other two proteins (Figure 4). To determine whether the
exchange factors for Ypt1p and Ras2p are distinct, we used a mutant
Ypt1p, D124N, that inhibits the Ypt1p-GEF (Jones et al.,
1995
). Stimulation of nucleotide exchange by the Ypt1p was abolished by
the mutant protein, while the stimulation of GDP release from Ras2p was
unaffected (Figure 4, compare panels A and D), indicating that the
factors that stimulate release of GDP from Ypt1p and Ras2p are
distinct. Thus, the exchange activity present in the Det-P100 cellular
fraction seems to be specific for Ypt1p and does not act on the other
exocytic Ypt proteins. Partially purified Ypt1p-GEF (see HAP peaks A
and B below) also failed to stimulate nucleotide exchange for Ypt31p and Ypt32p (our unpublished observations).
|
At least one Rab GEF was reported to act preferentially on the
prenylated form of Rab relative to the unprenylated form (Miyazaki et al., 1994
). However, prenylation of the recombinant Ypt1p
had no effect on the ability of the Ypt1p-GEF (P100 fraction) to
stimulate nucleotide exchange (our unpublished observations).
Partial Purification of Ypt1p-GEF
To purify Ypt1p-GEF further, the P100 fraction was extracted with 1% n-octylglucoside (because it is more readily removed by dialysis than is Triton X-100), and the residual membranes were extracted with 0.5 M NaCl to generate a solubilized GEF fraction that lacks Ypt1p. Sephacryl S-300 HR gel filtration partially resolved two peaks of activity with apparent molecular sizes of ~400-450 and ~200 kDa (Figure 5A). The two peaks were collected as individual pools, termed pool A and pool B. Approximately 17-31% of the starting Ypt1p-GEF activity was recovered in pool A with a purification of ~3- to 5-fold. Approximately 14-17% of the starting Ypt1p-GEF activity was recovered in pool B with a purification of ~1.5- to 1.7-fold. The apparent molecular sizes of the Ypt1p-GEF peaks were the same regardless of whether n-octylglucoside or Triton X-100 was used in the extract preparation and did not change if the solubilized GEF fraction was dialyzed to remove residual n-octylglucoside before chromatography. Thus the apparent molecular sizes derived from gel filtration are not attributable to protein inclusion in detergent micelles. Each S-300 pool was loaded separately onto a ceramic HAP column and eluted with a 10-200 mM potassium phosphate gradient. Pool A exhibited a peak of activity at ~105 mM phosphate, whereas pool B showed a single peak of activity at ~80 mM phosphate (Figure 5B). We verified that these partially purified activities, which stimulate GDP release from Ypt1p, are GEFs by assaying both pools for stimulation of GTP uptake. The specific activities measured by GDP release and GTP uptake were similar (within a factor of 2) during each step of the purification procedure. The purification factor after HAP chromatography was ~120 for peak A and ~37 for peak B. It is not clear whether the two peaks represent two different Ypt1p-GEFs or the same GEF in two different protein complexes.
|
Rescue of ER-to-Golgi Transport by Partially Purified Ypt1p-GEF
We showed previously that the Ypt1p-GEF activity present in the
P100 or Det-P100 fraction is completely inhibited by the Ypt1p-D124N mutant protein (Figure 4A; Jones et al., 1995
). The two
peaks of Ypt1p-GEF generated by sequential purification on the S-300 and HAP columns are also inhibited to equal extents by Ypt1p-D124N (our
unpublished observations). We have also shown that this dominant-mutant Ypt1p is a potent inhibitor of an ER-to-Golgi in vitro transport assay,
probably because of inhibition of the Ypt1p-GEF (Jones et
al., 1995
). To lend support to the assertion that the partially purified Ypt1p-GEF described here is an authentic Ypt1p-GEF, we tested
the most purified exchange factor, peak A from the HAP column, for its
ability to restore transport function to an in vitro ER-to-Golgi
transport reaction inhibited by Ypt1p-D124N. The HAP peak A restored
~50% of the inhibited transport reaction in a
concentration-dependent manner (Figure
6). These results suggest that the
partially purified exchange activity described here is a physiological
Ypt1p-GEF.
|
Identification and Characterization of a GAP Activity for Ypt1p
GAP activity was measured as the stimulation of GTP hydrolysis by
recombinant Ypt1p preloaded with [32P]GTP, using the
charcoal-binding method. Wild-type Ypt1p hydrolyzed GTP at a low
intrinsic rate of 0.002 mol of GTP per mole of Ypt1p per minute at
30°C (Richardson et al., 1998
), similar to previously reported values (Wagner et al., 1987
). A GAP activity that
stimulated GTP hydrolysis by Ypt1p was found to be highly enriched in
the P12 fraction (see below). Treatment of this fraction at 95°C for 5 min or incubation with trypsin (1 mg/ml) ablated GAP activity, suggesting that the active factor is proteinaceous. GAP activity in the
P12 fraction was linear with respect to protein concentration (0.5-1
mg/ml; Figure 7A) and time (0-30 min).
Stimulation of hydrolysis approached a maximum at 5 mg/ml P12, in which
the rate of GTP hydrolysis was increased 54-fold (to 0.108 mol per mole
of Ypt1p per minute). Phosphate release from GTP hydrolysis in the
charcoal-binding assay has been confirmed by TLC analysis that shows
that the GTP is being converted to GDP. Two observations argue against
the possibility that the GAP activity in the P12 fraction is a
protease. 1) Ypt1p mutants that are resistant to the GAP activity have
been identified (see below), and 2) the total amount of nucleotide bound to Ypt1p during the course of incubation with the P12 fraction remains constant.
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To test models of Ypt/Rab function that assign the site of action of their GAPs to the acceptor compartment, we wanted to determine the compartment in which Ypt1p-GAP resides. Lysates were fractionated by differential centrifugation into 12,000 × g supernatant (S12) and pellet (P12) fractions. The S12 was then subjected to centrifugation at 100,000 × g to generate supernatant (S100) and pellet (P100) fractions. Although detectable Ypt1p-GAP activity exists in crude lysates, 73% of the activity fractionated into the P12 fraction where it is approximately eightfold enriched over that in the cell lysate (Figure 7B). Eighteen percent of the activity was found in the P100 fraction, where its specific activity is lower than is that in cell lysates. Therefore, the activity in the P100 probably represents contamination by P12 membranes. Only 1% or less of Ypt1p-GAP activity was found in the S100 fraction. The finding that the Ypt1p-GAP is enriched in the P12 fraction, with the majority of its activity found in this fraction, suggests that it is associated with large particulate cellular structures.
Extraction of Ypt1p-GAP from Membranes
The association of Ypt1p-GAP with P12 membranes was examined using different procedures, including incubation with trypsin, high salt, high pH, and detergent. Only limited trypsin digestion (0.1 mg/ml, 1 h, 0°C) resulted in solubilization accompanied by a two- to threefold stimulation of GAP activity (Figure 7C). This indicates that Ypt1p-GAP is tightly associated with P12 membranes. The trypsin extraction may lead to elevated GAP activity by increasing substrate accessibility.
One interesting feature of the Ypt1p-GAP is that it is potently
inhibited by both ionic (CHAPS) and nonionic
(n-octylglucoside, Triton X-100) detergents. Triton X-100
causes a dose-dependent inhibition of GAP activity, and the
trypsin-solubilized GAP is ~10-fold more sensitive than is the
insoluble GAP (Figure 7D). Ypt1p itself is still active for GTP binding
under these conditions (Richardson et al., 1998
). The lower
sensitivity of the insoluble activity may be attributable to titration
of Triton by membrane lipids and proteins. The detergent sensitivity of
GAP does not appear to be attributable to interaction of GAP with the
prenyl group of Ypt1p, because geranylgeranylated Ypt1p is as sensitive to detergent as unprenylated Ypt1p. Therefore, our data favor a model
in which detergents exert their inhibitory effects either by unfolding
GAP or by preventing interaction of GAP with Ypt1p.
Substrate Specificity of Ypt1p-GAP
The substrate specificity of GAP was examined using competition assays. To determine whether GAP has a higher affinity for the GTP- or GDP-bound form of Ypt1p, we incubated the P12 fraction with Ypt1p preloaded with [32P]GTP, and increasing concentrations of Ypt1p preloaded with cold nucleotide were added as a competitor. Ypt1p preloaded with either GppNHp (a poorly hydrolyzable analog of GTP; Figure 8A) or GTP were both effective competitors, but high concentrations (60 µM) were needed for 50% inhibition of GAP activity. This may reflect a relatively low-affinity interaction between GAP and recombinant Ypt1p. When Ypt1p preloaded with GDP is used as a competitor, ~60 µM gives only 32% inhibition of GAP activity. These data indicate that the GAP has a higher affinity for the GTP-bound form of Ypt1p than for the GDP-bound form.
|
Because the P12 fraction may contain other GAP activities, we used competition assays to determine whether other Ypt proteins can compete with Ypt1p for the GAP activity. In their GppNHp forms, Ypt31p or Ypt32p, which share 42% identity with Ypt1p, were poor competitors for the GAP activity. On the other hand, Sec4p, which shares 48% identity with Ypt1p, showed 35% inhibition of GAP activity at 60 µM, as compared with 50% inhibition by Ypt1p itself (Figure 8B). Therefore, the Ypt1p-GAP is specific to a subgroup of exocytic Ypt proteins.
To assess the effect of mutations predicted to affect
interactions of GTPases with their GAPs, we examined whether mutants of
Ypt1p would exhibit reduced responsiveness to the activity. Specifically, we examined the behavior of a Ypt1p variant containing a
mutation, T40K, in the putative effector domain, a region that is
important for interaction of Ras with Ras-GAP (Boguski and McCormick,
1993
; Polakis and McCormick, 1993
). To determine whether Ypt1p-T40K is
resistant to GAP, we assayed stimulation of GTP hydrolysis by wild-type
or mutant Ypt1p preloaded with [32P]GTP in the presence
of the P12 fraction. As seen in Figure 8C, the intrinsic rate of GTP
hydrolysis by Ypt1p-T40K is nearly identical to that of wild type.
However, the mutant protein has an ~60% lower rate of GAP-stimulated
hydrolysis. Therefore, the effector-domain mutation T40K impairs the
ability of Ypt1p to respond to its GAP. GTP hydrolysis in the presence
of GAP was found to be even more severely impaired in another mutant,
Ypt1p-Q67L (Richardson et al., 1998
). These data support the
suggestion that the activity we have identified does not cause the
nonspecific dissociation and breakdown of GTP from Ypt1p but is an
authentic Ypt1p-GAP.
Is Ypt1p-GAP the Product of a Previously Characterized Gene?
Several yeast proteins are known to act as GAPs for Ypt
proteins (Strom et al., 1993
; Vollmer and Gallwitz, 1995
).
Although Gyp6p was reported not to have GAP activity on Ypt1p (Strom
et al., 1993
), possible activity of Gyp7p on Ypt1p was not
reported. In addition, we found a closely related gene in the S. cerevisiae genome database (YOR070C), whose product was
recently shown to have a GAP activity for Sec4p and Ypt1p and was
termed GYP1 (Du et al., 1998
). To test whether
Gyp7p or Gyp1p are responsible for the Ypt1p-GAP activity that we have
identified, we deleted GYP7 and GYP1 individually
or together. No reduction in GAP activity was observed in the P12 (or
S12) fraction from either the single (our unpublished observations) or
double deletion strains (Table 2B). Hence, the GAP activity we have
characterized is the product of a gene or genes distinct from
the known GYP genes.
Among the proteins implicated in the ER-to-Golgi transport step in
yeast are components and regulators of the soluble
N-ethyl-maleimide sensitive factor attachment protein (SNAP)
receptor (SNARE) complex, a set of proteins thought to help
determine the specificity of vesicle targeting. If Ypt1p regulates the
assembly of the SNARE complex in a GTP-dependent manner, as suggested
in the literature (Lian et al., 1994
; Sogaard et
al., 1994
; Lupashin et al., 1996
), the assembled SNARE
complex could turn off Ypt1p function by acting as a GAP
or by signaling to a GAP. To test this, we determined whether
preventing or promoting SNARE complex assembly would affect Ypt1p-GAP
activity. To prevent SNARE complex assembly, we used extracts from
sec22 mutant cells. SEC22 encodes a component of the SNARE complex, and sec22 mutants fail to form stable
SNARE complexes (Lian et al., 1994
; Sogaard et
al., 1994
). Conversely, to promote SNARE complex assembly, we
generated extracts from sec17-1 and sec18-1
cells, in which the SNARE complex is stabilized (Sollner et
al., 1993
; Sogaard et al., 1994
). The cells were
shifted to the nonpermissive temperature of 37°C for 1 h before
cell lysis, and all cellular fractions were tested for GAP activity, in
case inactivating one of these gene products caused redistribution of
the GAP activity. No differences in the localization or specific activity of GAP were observed in fractions prepared from
sec18-1, sec17-1, or sec22-3
cells (Table 2C); thus, it is unlikely that the Ypt1p-GAP is either the
product of these genes or influenced by the activity of these gene
products.
| |
DISCUSSION |
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A Novel Ypt1p-GEF
In this study we identify and present an initial characterization
of both GEF and GAP activities for Ypt1p. The Ypt1p-GEF identified in
the present study represents a novel enzyme and is the first GEF in
yeast that has been shown to act on only one exocytic Ypt protein. We
propose that our partially purified activity is the physiological
Ypt1p-GEF because it can rescue the inhibition of protein transport
caused by a dominant Ypt1p mutant. Stimulation of GDP release by this
factor is accompanied by uptake of GTP. In contrast, a previously
described GDP dissociation stimulator for the Ypt1/Sec4 GTPases in
yeast, Dss4p, does not stimulate GTP uptake (Collins et al.,
1997
; Nuoffer et al., 1997
). The Ypt1p-GEF is distinct from
Dss4p because it is present in cells in which the DSS4
gene is deleted. Sec2p was recently identified as having GEF
activity on Sec4p, stimulating both GDP release and GTP uptake (Walch-Solimena et al., 1997
). Two pieces of data argue that
the activity identified in the present study is distinct from Sec2p. 1)
As shown above, Ypt1p-GEF is not active on Sec4p. 2) Purified Sec2p
does not promote exchange on Ypt1p (our unpublished
observations).
The high apparent molecular weight of the Ypt1p-GEF is shared with
other GEFs for Ypt/Rab proteins, e.g., Rab3A-GRF (Burstein and
Macara, 1992
), Sec2p (Nair et al., 1990
), and Rabex-5
(Horiuchi et al., 1997
). With Rabex-5 and Sec2p, the high
molecular mass of these exchange factors reflects the fact that they
are part of larger protein complexes that are required for membrane
fusion or for specification of secretory vesicle localization. Although the precise role of GEFs for Ypt/Rab proteins in vesicular transport is
still unclear, our evidence suggests that the Ypt1p exchange factor
described in this article is required for ER-to-Golgi transport. This
conclusion is based on analysis using YPT1 dominant
mutations that inhibit this exchange factor (Jones et al.,
1995
). Similarly, Sec2p is essential for yeast protein transport (Nair
et al., 1990
).
GEFs for Ypt/Rab GTPases may be important for more than simply
catalyzing the guanine nucleotide exchange reaction. For example, an
alternative explanation for the fractionation of Ypt1p-GEF to the P100
is that it is associated with cytoskeletal elements, which reside in
this fraction. Consistent with this possibility, the exchange factor
could be extracted from the particulate fraction with salt, but not
with detergent. A potential association of the Ypt1p exchange factor
with the cytoskeleton is interesting because an association between the
secretory pathway and the cytoskeleton has been proposed (Novick and
Botstein, 1985
; Vale, 1987
; Murphy et al., 1996
). Such a
connection is also implied for Sec2p, a GEF for Sec4p, by the discovery
that Sec2p has a role in localization of secretory vesicles to the
growing bud, a process thought to be actin dependent (Novick and
Botstein, 1985
; Walch-Solimena et al., 1997
). In addition,
we have recently found that Ypt1p-D124N, a potent inhibitor of
Ypt1p-GEF, inhibits protein transport even in the presence of the
GTPase-defective Ypt1p-Q67L (Richardson et al., 1998
).
Because the Ypt1p-Q67L mutant protein is constitutively GTP-bound and
does not require GEF for achieving this state, the Ypt1p-D124N protein
may inhibit the ability of Ypt1p-GEF to perform another essential
function.
A Novel Ypt1p-GAP
The Ypt1p-GAP activity was found to be highly enriched in the P12
membrane fraction. A cytosolic Ypt1p-GAP activity was previously found
in yeast extracts (Tan et al., 1991
). However we found that the cytosolic GAP activity represented <1% of the total activity in
fractionated yeast lysates; therefore this is clearly not the major
Ypt1p-GAP. There are several precedents for Ypt/Rab GAP activities
fractionating with membranes, e.g., a GAP activity from mammalian
membranes that can work on Ypt1p (Jena et al., 1992
), a
Rab3A GAP activity (Burstein et al., 1991
), a Sec4 GAP activity (Walworth et al., 1992
), and tuberin, a Rab5 GAP
(Xiao et al., 1997
). Such a localization for Ypt/Rab GAPs is
consistent with evidence that the active GTP-form of Ypt/Rab proteins
is membrane associated, and after hydrolysis, the inactive GDP-form is
removed from membranes by a GDP dissociation inhibitor (GDI) (Novick and Zerial, 1997
).
We have found that Ypt1p-GAP is sensitive to detergents. A sensitivity
of Ras-GAP to lipids has also been reported (Tsai et al., 1989
; Serth et al., 1991
). The crystal structure
of Ras-GAP in complex with Ras suggests that hydrophobic interactions
occur on the surfaces of contact between Ras and GAP (Scheffzek
et al., 1997
), and this hydrophobic interface may be
disrupted by the intercalation of lipids. Ypt1p contains identical or
conservatively substituted amino acids at the analogous positions and
may participate in similar hydrophobic contacts with its GAP.
Therefore, the detergent inhibition we have observed may be caused by
the disruption of hydrophobic interactions between Ypt1p and its GAP.
The Ypt1p-GAP described here is probably an authentic GAP because the
stimulation of GTP hydrolysis is significantly reduced by a mutation in
the Ypt1p effector domain. Competition assays showed that Ypt1p-GAP can
interact with Ypt1p, and to a lesser extent with Sec4p, but not with
Ypt31p or Ypt32p. This is similar to results reported for Gyp1p (Du
et al., 1998
). Other GAP activities reported in the
literature show a high degree of substrate specificity, e.g., Gyp6p
(Strom et al., 1993
), tuberin (Xiao et al.,
1997
), and Rab3 GAP (Fukui et al., 1997
). Partially purified
Ypt1p-GAP has a slightly higher affinity for the GTP-bound form of
Ypt1p than for the GDP-bound form. Purified Ras-GAP has a much higher affinity for the GTP-bound form of RAS than for the GDP-bound form of
Ras (Vogel et al., 1988
). A comparison of the crystal structures of Ras in the GDP versus GTP forms reveals major structural rearrangements between the two forms, especially in the region of
contact between Ras and GAP, termed the switch 1 region (Milburn et al., 1990
). Hence, the Ypt1p-GAP, like the Ras-GAP, is
likely to participate in a cycle of binding to Ypt1p-GTP, stimulation of hydrolysis, and release of Ypt1p-GDP.
A New Model for Ypt/Rab Regulation
The unexpected finding in this work is the localization
of the Ypt1p-GEF and -GAP activities. Conventional models designate the
donor compartment as the site of Ypt/Rab recruitment to membranes and
of nucleotide exchange and the acceptor compartment as the site of GTP
hydrolysis (Goud and McCaffrey, 1991
; Novick and Brennwald, 1993
;
Novick and Zerial, 1997
) (Figure 9A). In
Ypt1p-mediated ER-to-Golgi vesicular transport, the donor is the ER and
the acceptor is the Golgi, and these two compartments reside in the P12
and P100 cellular fractions, respectively (Baker et al.,
1988
, 1990
). However, in subcellular localization experiments, we find
that Ypt1p-GEF cofractionates in the P100 with Golgi markers,
suggesting that this regulator localizes to the acceptor compartment
for Ypt1p-mediated protein transport. In contrast, Ypt1p-GAP is
enriched in the P12 fraction, which contains larger membranous
structures, including the ER and the plasma membrane (PM).
|
On the basis of the intriguing localization of the Ypt1p-GEF and -GAP
activities and of our previous studies of YPT1 mutations that affect nucleotide cycling, we propose a new model for the mechanism of action of the Ypt/Rab GTPases. Our combined information, from studies of a GTPase-defective mutant Ypt1p (Richardson et al., 1998
) and of GAP localization, suggests that GTP hydrolysis is dispensable for vesicle fusion and that Ypt1p-GAP does not function
at the acceptor compartment. We have shown previously that nucleotide
exchange is essential for Ypt1p-mediated vesicular transport (Jones
et al., 1995
), and here we show that Ypt1p-GEF localizes to
the acceptor compartment. Therefore, in our model the event that is
crucial for vesicle targeting and/or fusion is the shift from the GDP-
to the GTP-bound form, whereas GTP hydrolysis is needed for the
recycling of Ypt/Rab proteins. We propose the following hypothesis. 1)
Nucleotide exchange by GEF to generate the GTP-bound form is essential
for vesicle targeting or fusion, and GEF functions at the acceptor
compartment. 2) GTP hydrolysis by GAP to generate the GDP-bound form
does not have a direct role in vesicle fusion but rather in a process
that occurs after vesicle fusion (Figure 9B). If Ypt1p-GAP is localized
to the PM, as indicated in Figure 9, GTP hydrolysis occurs at the end
of the exocytic pathway and has a role in GDI-mediated recycling of
Ypt/Rab proteins between membranes, a process that is not essential for
Ypt1p function. If Ypt1p-GAP resides in the ER, GTP hydrolysis might
occur after Ypt1p recycles back to the ER, probably by retrograde vesicular transport. The role of GTP hydrolysis in this case would be
to shift the Ypt1p to its GDP-bound form, which is the preferred form
for interaction with GEF. Thus, although current models predict that
GEF for Ypt1p localizes to the ER and GAP for Ypt1p localizes to the
Golgi, our model reflects the findings that GEF localizes to the Golgi
and GAP localizes to the PM or ER.
A number of previous observations support our model. First, we propose
that GEF activity is directly involved in vesicle targeting and/or
fusion and is not important for the correct membrane localization of
Ypt/Rab proteins. This suggestion is in agreement with the finding of a
lag between the in vitro binding of Rab5 and Rab9 to membranes and the
uptake of GTP by these proteins (Soldati et al., 1994
;
Ullrich et al., 1994
), although in these experiments the
function of the membranes as donor or acceptor compartments is not
clear. Second, in agreement with our suggestion that GTP hydrolysis is
not essential for Ypt/Rab function in vesicular transport, it has been
shown that nucleotide hydrolysis is not essential for Rab5-mediated
endosome fusion. In that study it was suggested that GTP hydrolysis by
Rab5, although not essential for membrane fusion, is required for its
timing, because inhibition of hydrolysis actually resulted in the
stimulation of endosome fusion (Rybin et al., 1996
). We
postulate that the difference in the requirement for GTP hydrolysis
between Ypt1p and Rab5 is caused by their roles in heterotypic and
homotypic membrane fusion, respectively. Hence, in heterotypic fusion,
GTP hydrolysis is not required to turn off Ypt1p-mediated vesicle
fusion, because after the fusion of the vesicle with the acceptor
compartment, the Ypt/Rab protein is neither in the right place nor in
the right context to stimulate such an event (Richardson et
al., 1998
). Third, according to our model, Ypt1p travels to late
compartments in the secretory pathway. Support for this argument comes
from the finding that Ypt1p is present on late secretory vesicles that accumulate in sec mutants defective in fusion of these
vesicles with the plasma membrane (Mulholland et al., 1997
).
And fourth, our model proposes that GTP hydrolysis has a role in
GDI-mediated recycling of Ypt/Rab proteins. However, because GTP
hydrolysis is not essential for Ypt1p function, we suggest that
GDI-mediated recycling between membranes is also not essential for
Ypt1p function. This suggestion is consistent with the observation that
Ypt1p is still functional when perman