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Vol. 9, Issue 3, 653-670, March 1998



§
*Department of Biology, Division of Cellular and Molecular
Medicine, and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of
California, San Diego La Jolla, California 92093-0668; and
Department of Molecular Biology, Vanderbilt University,
Nashville, Tennessee 37235
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ABSTRACT |
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ADP ribosylation factor (ARF) is thought to play a critical role in
recruiting coatomer (COPI) to Golgi membranes to drive transport
vesicle budding. Yeast strains harboring mutant COPI proteins exhibit
defects in retrograde Golgi to endoplasmic reticulum protein transport
and striking cargo-selective defects in anterograde endoplasmic
reticulum to Golgi protein transport. To determine whether
arf mutants exhibit similar phenotypes, the anterograde transport kinetics of multiple cargo proteins were examined in arf mutant cells, and, surprisingly, both COPI-dependent
and COPI-independent cargo proteins exhibited comparable defects.
Retrograde dilysine-mediated transport also appeared to be inefficient
in the arf mutants, and coatomer mutants with no
detectable anterograde transport defect exhibited a synthetic growth
defect when combined with arf1
, supporting a role for
ARF in retrograde transport. Remarkably, we found that early and medial
Golgi glycosyltransferases localized to abnormally large ring-shaped
structures. The endocytic marker FM4-64 also stained similar, but
generally larger ring-shaped structures en route from the plasma
membrane to the vacuole in arf mutants. Brefeldin A
similarly perturbed endosome morphology and also inhibited transport of
FM4-64 from endosomal structures to the vacuole. Electron microscopy
of arf mutant cells revealed the presence of what appear
to be hollow spheres of interconnected membrane tubules which likely
correspond to the fluorescent ring structures. Together, these
observations indicate that organelle morphology is significantly more
affected than transport in the arf mutants, suggesting a
fundamental role for ARF in regulating membrane dynamics. Possible
mechanisms for producing this dramatic morphological change in
intracellular organelles and its relation to the function of ARF in
coat assembly are discussed.
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INTRODUCTION |
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ADP ribosylation factor (ARF) was originally identified as a
protein cofactor required for efficient ADP ribosylation of
heterotrimeric Gs
by cholera toxin (Kahn and Gilman,
1984
). It was later shown to be a small GTP-binding protein with
structural similarity to both monomeric and heterotrimeric G proteins
(reviewed in Boman and Kahn, 1995
). In eukaryotes, ARF is abundant and
ubiquitous, representing approximately 0.03-1% of total cell protein,
and is highly conserved across phylogenetic lines. For example, human and Saccharomyces cerevisiae ARF proteins share 74% amino
acid sequence identity (Sewell and Kahn, 1988
). In S. cerevisiae, ARF is encoded by two genes: ARF1 and
ARF2, which encode proteins with 96% identity and are
probably redundant in function (Stearns et al., 1990a
).
ARF3 encodes a protein 52% identical to Arf1p (Lee et
al., 1994
). Double arf1
arf2
mutants are
inviable, indicating that these genes provide an essential function
that cannot be carried out by ARF3. The Arf2 protein is only
expressed at 10% the level of Arf1 protein, and strains deleted for
the ARF2 gene show a wild-type phenotype. However, deletion
of ARF1 causes strains to exhibit modest defects in protein
secretion and modification. This is one initial line of evidence that
suggested a role for ARF in the secretory pathway (Stearns et
al., 1990a
,b
).
ARF proteins have been suggested to be important regulatory factors for
several membrane trafficking events, including exocytic protein
transport [endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-Golgi and intra-Golgi], endocytosis, and nuclear envelope assembly (Boman and Kahn, 1995
). Among these processes, the best characterized function of ARF is to
facilitate budding of nonclathrin-coated transport vesicles from
purified Golgi membranes. Activation of ARF by a Golgi-localized guanine nucleotide exchange factor causes ARF-GTP to bind the Golgi
membrane which leads to the recruitment of coatomer, a heptameric (
,
,
',
,
,
,
) complex of coat proteins (COPI), and
budding of a vesicle (Rothman and Wieland, 1996
). The ARF guanine
nucleotide exchange factor is inhibited by brefeldin A (BFA) (Morinaga
et al., 1996
; Peyroche et al., 1996
), a potent
inhibitor of protein transport in mammalian cells (Takatsuki and
Tamura, 1985
) and yeast (Graham et al., 1993
). ARF is also
an activator of phospholipase D (PLD) (Brown et al., 1993
;
Cockcroft et al., 1994
), an enzyme that cleaves
phosphatidylcholine into choline and phosphatidic acid, and it has
recently been suggested that PLD activation is primarily responsible
for coatomer recruitment to Golgi membranes (Ktistakis et
al., 1996
). The precise mechanism that ARF plays in recruiting
AP1/Clathrin coats to the trans-Golgi network for producing
clathrin-coated vesicles (Stamnes and Rothman, 1993
; Traub et
al., 1993
) is also unknown.
Although it seems clear that COPI is involved in vesicle-mediated
protein transport, the direction these vesicles travel is controversial. Biochemical analysis using an in vitro protein transport
assay suggested that COPI-coated vesicles mediate cis-Golgi to medial Golgi protein transport (Waters et al., 1991
;
Ostermann et al., 1993
). However, a carboxy-terminal
dilysine (KKXX) motif that mediates retrieval of type I ER membrane
proteins from the Golgi back to the ER interacts specifically with COPI
(Cosson and Letourneur, 1994
), suggesting that COPI is involved in
retrograde transport. Moreover, all coatomer mutants characterized thus
far in yeast exhibit defects in KKXX protein retrieval (Letourneur et al., 1994
; Cosson et al., 1996
), but only a
subset of these mutants are defective for anterograde (forward)
transport (Hosobuchi et al., 1992
; Duden et al.,
1994
). Surprisingly, mutants harboring temperature-sensitive alleles of
SEC21 (
-COP) were recently shown to exhibit dramatic
protein-specific anterograde transport defects at the nonpermissive
temperature. Cargo proteins such as carboxypeptidase Y (CPY) and
pro-
-factor accumulated in the ER of sec21-3 cells, but
invertase and HSP150 were secreted with normal transport kinetics from
the same cells. These data suggest that the effect of COPI on
anterograde transport is likely to be indirect, and that COPI mutants
may fail to retrieve proteins back to the ER which are required to
package specific cargo proteins into transport vesicles budding from
the ER (Gaynor and Emr, 1997
).
Established biochemical evidence linking the COPI complex with ARF
(Orci et al., 1993
; Ostermann et al., 1993
), the
fact that both arf1
and COPI mutants exhibit
Golgi-specific glycosylation and ER to Golgi transport defects (Stearns
et al., 1990b
; Gaynor and Emr, 1997
), and a previous report
which indicated that sec21-1/arf1
double mutants were
usually inviable (Stearns et al., 1990b
) prompted us to
investigate whether arf mutant strains (i.e.,
arf1
and arf1-3 ts arf2
strains) would
also exhibit cargo-specific anterograde and/or retrograde transport
defects. Unexpectedly, all anterograde cargo proteins assayed in the
arf mutants exhibited similar kinetic defects in transport
through multiple steps of the secretory pathway. Pulse-chase and
genetic analyses indicated that the arf mutants were also
partially defective for COPI-mediated Golgi to ER retrieval. Morphological studies revealed marked perturbations in Golgi, endosome,
and vacuolar membranes in arf mutants. Most striking was the
appearance of ring-like structures likely to correspond to abnormal
Golgi and endosomal compartments. The dramatic morphological changes in
multiple membrane structures in the arf mutants suggest that
although ARF clearly affects COPI-mediated transport events, the
primary role of ARF in the cell may instead be maintenance of normal
membrane dynamics and composition.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Strains, Plasmids, and Media
Yeast strains and plasmids used in this study are listed in
Table 1. 6210arf1
and
6211arf1
were constructed by transforming SEY6210 and
SEY6211 with the arf1::HIS3 allele carried on an
EcoRI-SpeI fragment from pRB1293. Disruption of
the chromosomal ARF1 gene was confirmed by polymerase chain
reaction. A Western blot loaded with equal amounts of protein from
SEY6210 and 6210 arf1
and probed with ARF antibodies
confirmed an approximate 10-fold reduction of ARF protein in the
6210arf1
strain, as previously reported in a different
strain background (Stearns, 1990a
). The arf1-3 allele was a
gift from Dr. Richard A. Kahn (Cavenagh and Kahn, unpublished data).
All other strains were constructed by standard yeast genetic
techniques. pKE2018 is a pSEY18-based plasmid (Herman and Emr, 1990
)
carrying KEX2 on a 4.71-kb
EcoRI-BamHI fragment (gift from Paul Herman,
Ohio State University, Columbus, OH). Yeast cells were grown on yeast
extract, peptone, and dextrose (YPD) or synthetic minimal (SD) media
supplemented as necessary (Sherman, 1991
). Cells were grown in liquid
SD media containing 0.2% yeast extract and required supplements for
metabolic labeling experiments.
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Cell Labeling, Subcellular Fractionation, Immunological Techniques, and Digital Imaging
Pulse-chase metabolic labeling of cells with
35S-amino acids, immunoprecipitations, and endoglycosidase
H treatment of immunoprecipitates were done as described previously
(Gaynor et al., 1994
). Except where marked with an asterisk,
the transport half-times reported in Table
2 were from pulse-chase experiments using
strains SEY6210 (wild-type) and 6210arf1
(arf1) performed at 30°C with a 10-min labeling period and
chase times of 0, 10, and 30 min for alkaline phosphatase (ALP) and
carboxypeptidase S (CPS), and a chase of 0, 2.5, 5, and 10 min for
invertase and HSP150. Those marked with a single asterisk were from
pulse-chase experiments using strains PSY315 (wild-type) or C156-1B
(arf1) preincubated for 30 min at 38°C, labeled for 5 min,
and chased for 0, 2, 5, 10, and 20 min. To examine the secretion of
invertase to the periplasmic space, cells were converted to
spheroplasts after pulse-chase labeling as described previously (Gaynor
and Emr, 1997
). The pulse-chase procedure used to determine half-times
for CPY and pro-
-factor are described in the legend to Figure
1. NIH Image software was used to
quantitate band intensities from scanned, digitized images of
autoradiograms. To determine half-times of transport, the log [100
(precursor/precursor + mature)] was plotted versus chase time for
vacuolar proteins. The log [100 (internal/internal + external)] was
used for invertase and HSP150, and the log [100 (glycosylated
precursors/glycosylated precursors at 0 min)] was used for
pro-
-factor.
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Subcellular fractionation (Gaynor et al., 1994
) (with
modifications listed in Gaynor and Emr, 1997
), Western blot analysis (Graham and Krasnov, 1995
), immunofluorescence analyses (Graham et al., 1994
), cell labeling with FM4-64 (Vida and Emr,
1995
), BFA treatment of cells (Graham et al., 1993
), and
electron microscopy (Rieder et al., 1996
) were performed as
described previously. Any modification of these standard protocols are
provided in the figure legends. Antisera to CPY (Klionsky et
al., 1988
),
-factor (Graham and Emr, 1991
),
1-6 and
1-3
mannose linkages (Franzusoff and Schekman, 1989
), Mnn1p (Graham
et al., 1994
), invertase (Gaynor et al., 1994
),
alkaline phosphatase (Seeger and Payne, 1992
), HSP150 (Russo et
al., 1992
), and CPS (Cowles et al., 1997
) have been
described previously. Antiserum to Kex2p was prepared at Scantibodies
Laboratory (Ramona, CA) against a bacterially expressed Kex2p-
-galactosidase fusion protein and affinity purified as described previously (Redding et al., 1991
). Secondary
antibodies were from Jackson Immunoresearch (West Grove, PA). Images of
cells were acquired using a Zeiss Axioplan fluorescence microscope and a Hamamatsu C4880 cooled CCD camera controlled through MetaMorph software (Universal Imaging, West Chester, PA). Images were printed using a Tektronix Phaser IISDX printer.
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RESULTS |
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arf Mutants Exhibit a General Kinetic Delay in Protein Transport
Previous studies of protein transport in arf1
mutants showed a slight intracellular accumulation and
underglycosylation of invertase (Stearns et al., 1990b
).
Since the rate of invertase secretion is not affected in temperature
conditional COPI mutants that exhibit a complete block in the transport
of a subset of cargo proteins such as CPY and
-factor (Gaynor and
Emr, 1997
), we reasoned that arf1
mutants may show a more
substantial transport defect for other proteins. To clarify the extent
and specificity of protein transport defects in arf1
mutants, we monitored the transport kinetics of several marker proteins
through the secretory pathway by pulse-chase and immunoprecipitation
analysis.
The vacuolar hydrolase CPY is initially synthesized in the ER as a
core-glycosylated p1 proenzyme, which is then converted to a p2 form in
the Golgi complex by modification of core oligosaccharides and
subsequently processed to the mature form (mCPY) upon arrival in the
vacuole (Stevens et al., 1982
). After a 5-min pulse-labeling period, an equivalent amount of labeled p1 and p2CPY was seen in the
wild-type cells (Figure 1A, 0'). These CPY precursors were efficiently
converted to the mature form during the chase period with a half-time
of ~5 min (Figure 1A and Table 2). In the arf1
mutant,
only p1CPY was formed during the 5-min labeling period, suggesting that
CPY had not yet been transported out of the ER. A CPY precursor form
with slower mobility was formed during the chase, but fully
glycosylated p2CPY was not observed (Figure 1A). The half-time for
processing CPY to the mature form in the mutant was 14.5 min,
approximately 2.5-fold slower than the half-time for CPY processing in
wild-type cells (Table 2).
The transport kinetics of two integral membrane vacuolar proteins, ALP
(Klionsky and Emr, 1989
) and CPS (Spormann et al., 1992
),
and the secreted proteins invertase (Esmon et al., 1981
) and
HSP 150 (Russo et al., 1992
) were also examined by
pulse-chase analysis in wild-type and arf1
cells. The
half-time was determined for proteolytic processing of ALP and CPS in
the vacuole and for appearance of invertase and HSP150 in the media.
Surprisingly, all of these proteins were transported through the
secretory pathway of arf1
cells at a similar 2.5- to
4.5-fold slower rate than in wild-type cells (Table 2). The extremely
rapid transport of HSP150 and invertase presented a problem in
determining a precise half-time of secretion in wild-type cells, but
these proteins were clearly transported more slowly in the
arf1
cells. The primary conclusion from this analysis is
that loss of Arf1p caused a general anterograde protein transport
defect for both COPI-dependent (CPY, ALP, and CPS) and COPI-independent
(invertase and HSP150) proteins.
Protein transport kinetics were also examined in a strain harboring a
temperature conditional allele of ARF1 and deleted for ARF2 (arf1-3 ts arf2
), henceforth referred to
as the arf1-3 ts strain. This strain grows well at
temperatures up to 30°C but does not grow at 37°C (Kahn,
unpublished observation). The kinetic defects in transport of CPY and
HSP150 at the nonpermissive temperature (Table 2 CPY* and HSP150*) were
remarkably similar to those observed in the arf1
strain.
These data indicate that cells with insufficient ARF activity to
support growth are still capable of transporting proteins through the
secretory pathway, and that the transport defect observed in this
strain is comparable for COPI-dependent and -independent cargo.
arf1
Mutants Exhibit Defects at Multiple Intercompartmental
Transport Steps
A number of intercompartmental protein transport steps are
required to move a protein from the ER through the Golgi complex to the
extracellular space or vacuole. From the experiments described above,
it was not possible to determine specifically the kinetically slow
intercompartmental transport step(s) in the secretory pathway of
arf1
cells. Therefore, the transport of yeast
pro-
-factor was examined because the mobility of this protein in SDS
gels undergoes substantial and well-characterized changes as it is transported through at least four functionally distinct compartments of
the Golgi complex that are marked by 1) an initiating
1,6-mannosyltransferase; 2) an elongating
1,6-mannosyltransferase; 3) an
1,3-mannosyltransferase; and 4)
Kex2p which initiates proteolytic processing of pro-
-factor to the
mature form (Julius et al., 1983
; Franzusoff and Schekman, 1989
; Graham and Emr, 1991
; Gaynor et al., 1994
). Cells were
labeled for 10 min at 20°C and chased for the times indicated in
Figure 1B. Pro-
-factor was rapidly Golgi modified and converted to
the mature 13-amino acid peptide hormone in wild-type cells. In
contrast, a substantial fraction of both the ER core-glycosylated and
Golgi-modified pro-
-factor forms were present throughout the chase
period in the arf1
mutant. We measured the rate of
pro-
-factor disappearance during the chase period to estimate its
rate of transport from the ER through the trans-Golgi, where
the glycosylated pro-piece is proteolytically removed. The half-time
for pro-
-factor disappearance in the arf1
mutant was 8 min, which was fourfold slower than that measured in wild-type cells
(Table 2, ~2.0 min). Because both the ER- and Golgi-modified forms
accumulated in the arf1
mutant, transport of
pro-
-factor from the ER to the cis-Golgi and through the
early Golgi compartments must both be defective.
The Golgi-specific glycosylation defect in arf1
mutants
previously noted by others (Stearns et al., 1990b
) was also
apparent in our experiments (Figure 1A). Since the conversion of p1CPY to p2CPY is primarily due to the addition of
1,3-mannose residues (Graham and Krasnov, 1995
), which is catalyzed by Mnn1p in the medial
Golgi (Graham and Emr, 1991
; Graham et al., 1994
), we
reasoned that the partial loss of this modification may result from
underexpression or instability of Mnn1p in the arf1
mutant. To test this possibility, we performed a pulse-chase and
immunoprecipitation analysis for Mnn1p, but extended the chase period
to 3 h. In wild-type cells, Mnn1p undergoes a gradual
posttranslational automodification, primarily on O-linked
oligosaccharides, which is dependent on Golgi residence and causes a
slow increase in relative molecular mass (Graham et al.,
1994
). Mnn1p was synthesized normally in the arf1
mutant
and was stable for at least 3 h (Figure 1C). During the chase
period, the relative molecular mass of Mnn1p increased gradually in
both strains, suggesting that it had been transported out of the ER and
localized in the Golgi complex. However, after a 3-h chase, the
apparent molecular mass of Mnn1p in the wild-type strain increased 3.8 kDa, whereas it increased only 1.5 kDa in the arf1
mutant. These data suggest that the Mnn1p was expressed at normal
levels, was localized to the Golgi complex, but was catalytically
inefficient in the arf1
mutant. Consistent with the idea
that Mnn1p is inactivated under ARF-deficient conditions, the
arf1-3 ts mutant exhibited a near complete defect in
1,3-mannosylation of invertase after shift to nonpermissive temperature (our unpublished observations).
Retrograde Golgi-ER Protein Transport Is Inefficient in arf1
Cells
COPI/coatomer is required for Golgi to ER retrieval of type I
membrane proteins containing a C-terminal cytoplasmic dilysine (KKXX)
motif (Cosson and Letourneur, 1994
; Letourneur et al., 1994
). Given the intimate connection between ARF and coatomer (Ostermann et al., 1993
), we reasoned that the
arf1
mutant, like COPI mutants, may also be defective for
dilysine-mediated Golgi to ER retrieval. We therefore analyzed
retrieval of a chimeric protein containing the periplasmic enzyme
invertase fused to the transmembrane domain and KKXX-bearing
cytoplasmic tail of Wbp1p (Inv-Wbp1p) in the arf1
mutant.
This ER-localized fusion protein is efficiently retrieved from the
cis-most Golgi compartment wild-type cells, which contains
initiating
1,6-mannosyltransferase (Och1p) activity but not
elongating
1,6- or
1,3-mannosyltransferase activities. When the
dilysine signal is destroyed by mutation or when the fusion
protein is analyzed in COPI mutants, the 70-kDa chimera travels through
more distal Golgi compartments, acquiring extensive outer chain
carbohydrate modifications, and is then delivered to the vacuole, where
it is proteolytically cleaved to produce a soluble 56-kDa invertase
fragment (Gaynor et al., 1994
; Letourneur et al.,
1994
).
To analyze Golgi-specific modification and vacuolar processing of
Inv-Wbp1p, cells harboring the chimera were subjected to pulse-chase
analysis. After 0 and 60 min of chase, the fusion protein was recovered
by immunoprecipitation with invertase antiserum, then split into equal
aliquots and subjected to a second immunoprecipitation with antiserum
against either invertase,
1,6-mannose linkages, or
1,3-mannose
linkages. Half of each resulting immunoprecipitate was treated with
endoglycosidase H (endo H) to remove N-linked carbohydrates,
which caused the protein to migrate as a discrete band and allowed the
vacuolar processing event to be visualized. After 60 min of chase, more
than 90% of the the Inv-Wbp1p recovered from both wild-type and
arf1
mutant cells migrated as the intact 70-kDa form of
the protein after endo H treatment (Figure
2A, +endo H), indicating that the fusion
protein had not reached the vacuole but was retained in earlier
compartments of the secretory pathway. The fusion protein was also
quantitatively modified with
1,6- but not
1,3-linked mannose in
both cell types (Figure 2A). Likewise, the Inv-Wbp1p was also not
significantly mislocalized to the vacuole in the arf1-3 ts
mutant preincubated for 1 h at nonpermissive temperature (our
unpublished observations).
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When not treated with endo H, the glycosylated Inv-Wbp1p from wild-type
cells migrated as a distinct band (Figure 2A,
endo H; Gaynor et
al. 1994
), indicating that it was efficiently retrieved from the
cis-most Golgi compartment. In contrast, Inv-Wbp1p from arf1
cells migrated as a hyperglycosylated, high
molecular mass smear (Figure 2A,
endo H). This migration pattern was
most likely due to the elongating
1,6-mannosyltransferase, because
this enzyme controls the extent of hyperglycosylation on endogenous
invertase in wild-type cells (reviewed in Herscovics and Orlean, 1993
), and because the fusion protein did not acquire significant
1,3-linked mannose in the arf1
mutant (Figure 2A,
right panels). Modification of Inv-Wbp1p with
1,6-linked mannose
required ER to Golgi transport, because in both a sec18-1
mutant [Sec18p/NSF is required for ER to cis-Golgi protein
transport (Novick et al., 1980
)] and a
sec18-1/arf1
double mutant at nonpermissive temperature,
the Inv-Wbp1p did not acquire
1,6-linked mannose (Gaynor et
al., 1994
and our unpublished observations).
To determine the intracellular location of the hyperglycoslyated
Inv-Wbp1p in the arf1
mutant, subcellular fractionation experiments were performed. Cells harboring the Inv-Wbp1p were converted to spheroplasts, pulse labeled, chased, and fractionated by
differential centrifugation (see legend to Figure 2). In the arf1
mutant cells, as in wild-type cells, nearly all of
the Inv-Wbp1p was found in the 13,000 × g pellet
(Figure 2B, P13), which is where ER membrane proteins fractionate
(Gaynor et al., 1994
). In contrast, the
trans-Golgi protein Vps10p and most of the
cis-Golgi protein Och1-HA [Och1-HA is a hemagglutinin
epitope-tagged form of Och1p (Harris and Waters, 1996
)], were
primarily found in the 100,000 × g pellet (Figure 2B,
P100), which is where most Golgi membranes fractionate (Gaynor et
al., 1994
; Marcusson et al., 1994
). Further support for
ER localization of the hypermodified Inv-Wbp1p in arf1
cells was provided by resolving the P13 fraction on a two-step sucrose
gradient, which revealed that the majority of the Inv-Wbp1p was found
in a dense membrane, ER-enriched fraction. In contrast, both Vps10p and
Och1-HA from the P13 primarily localized to the less dense membrane
fraction, which is typical for Golgi proteins contaminating the P13
(our unpublished observations and Gaynor et. al., 1994
).
These analyses indicate that Golgi-ER retrieval of dilysine-containing
proteins occurs even in the absence of Arf1p. However, because the
Inv-Wbp1p acquired significant additional Golgi modification in
arf1
cells compared with wild type, retrieval is likely
to be less efficient, with hypermodification of Inv-Wbp1p reflecting a
slightly increased residence time of the protein in the
cis-Golgi and/or transport to more distal Golgi
compartment(s) than normal prior to ER retrieval.
Genetic Interactions between ARF1 and COPI
The pulse-chase and fractionation studies described above
suggested that arf1
cells exhibit a modest defect in
COPI-dependent retrograde transport of a KKXX-bearing fusion protein.
This interpretation is supported by a previous study which reported
that double mutant combinations of arf1
with
sec21-1 (
-COP) were usually inviable (or synthetically
lethal), whereas arf1
did not exaggerate the growth
defects of 11 other mutations that perturb the yeast secretory pathway
(Stearns et al., 1990b
). However, the sec21-1
mutant exhibits defects in both anterograde and retrograde protein
transport (Hosobuchi et al., 1992
; Letourneur et
al., 1994
). To determine whether arf1
is
synthetically lethal with other COPI mutants that exhibit a slight
(sec27-1) or undetectable (sec21-2,
ret1-1) anterograde transport defect, we crossed the
6210arf1
strain with strains harboring mutations in
SEC21 (
-COP), RET1 (
-COP), and
SEC27 (
'-COP). Surprisingly, all resulting
COPI/arf1
haploid double mutants, even
sec21-1/arf1
, were viable and occurred at the expected frequency after tetrad dissection. The dramatic increase in survival of
our COPI/arf1
double mutants compared with the previous
study (Stearns et al., 1990b
) was most likely due to
differences in laboratory strain backgrounds.
Because the COPI/arf1
mutants were in fact viable, we
performed additional analyses to explore genetic interactions between COPI genes and ARF1. All of the double mutants exhibited
synthetic growth defects that reduced the permissive growth
temperatures 4-7°C relative to the corresponding COPI single mutants
(Figure 3A). As a control, a
sec18-1/arf1
double mutant was prepared which did not
show a synthetic growth defect (Figure 3A), even though
sec18-1 mutants exhibit a defect at each of the protein transport steps that are perturbed in arf1
cells (Graham
and Emr, 1991
; Figure 1). Anterograde transport of CPY was also assayed in these mutants. Cells were incubated at the indicated temperatures, pulse labeled for 10 min, and chased for 60 min.
sec21-1/arf1
and ret1-1/arf1
are shown as
representative examples. Interestingly, at temperatures where the
single mutants exhibited little to no defect in transport of CPY, p1CPY
was still present after a 60-min chase period in all double mutants
(Figure 3B). Even the ret1-1/arf1
double mutant showed a
substantial defect, which was surprising, because ret1-1
mutants have not been observed to exhibit defects in anterograde
transport of CPY at any temperature or condition tested (Letourneur
et al., 1994
). The underglycosylation of CPY in the
arf1
mutant was also observed for the COPI mutants but was not exaggerated in the double mutants (Figure 3B). Together, these
analyses suggest that synthetic defects observed between arf1
and COPI mutants may represent a decreased capacity
of these double mutants to recycle factors required for efficient ER
export of proteins like CPY and further support a role for Arf1p in the Golgi-ER retrieval pathway.
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Immunofluorescent Localization of Golgi Enzymes to Large Ring
Structures in arf1
Cells
The Golgi-specific glycosylation defect in the arf1
mutant could not be attributed to underexpression or instability of at least one Golgi mannosyltransferase, and the increase in Mnn1p relative
molecular mass observed by pulse-chase analysis in the arf1
mutant suggested that this protein was localized to
the Golgi complex (Figure 1C). To examine Mnn1p localization and Golgi morphology in the arf1
mutant more directly,
immunofluorescence analyses were performed. In wild-type cells,
antibodies to Mnn1p stained several small, solid punctate structures
(Figure 4A), which is typical of Golgi
morphology in S. cerevisiae (Redding et al.,
1991
; Graham et al., 1994
). No staining was seen in cells harboring a deletion of the MNN1 gene (Figure 4E),
demonstrating the specificity of the antibody preparation. Remarkably,
Mnn1p was localized to abnormally enlarged, ring-shaped structures in the arf1
mutant (Figure 4C). Ring structures were found
in approximately 90% of the cells that stained well, and the number of
rings varied from 1 to ~7 per cell. Figure 4, G-H, shows a Z-axis
series of a budding cell with five ring structures that appeared in
different optical planes. The rings were typically one-tenth to
one-fifth the diameter of the cell and appeared to be localized
randomly throughout the cytoplasm. Most arf1
cells also
exhibited normal-appearing Golgi structures in addition to the rings.
The strains used for immunofluorescence studies are diploid and
overexpress Mnn1p to allow easier detection; however, the haploid
arf1
strains that express Mnn1p at wild-type levels also
exhibited ring structures to a similar extent.
|
Mnn1p marks a medial Golgi compartment in wild-type yeast (Graham and
Emr, 1991
; Graham et al., 1994
). We also examined the localization of proteins that mark the cis- and
trans-Golgi by staining cells with antibodies to Och1-HA (an
epitope-tagged initiating
1,6-mannosyltransferase) and Kex2p. The
staining pattern observed for Kex2p and Och1-HA in wild-type cells was
again typical of the yeast Golgi (shown for Kex2p only in Figure
5A). The Och1-HA staining pattern in the
arf1
mutant was similar to that of Mnn1p: most of the
cells exhibited ring-shaped structures (Figure 5E). However, only about
10% of the arf1
mutant cells exhibited ring structures
when stained with antibodies to Kex2p (Figure 5C), suggesting that the
morphology of the Kex2p compartment was much less affected than the
earlier Golgi compartments and that the compartmental organization of
the Golgi was maintained. In no case did the ring structures align with
the vacuole, which appeared as a large depression when observed using
differential interference contrast (DIC) optics, and costaining with
antibodies to the vacuolar ATPase and Mnn1p revealed clearly distinct
structures (our unpublished observations). The localization of Och1-HA
was also examined in the arf1-3 ts strain incubated at the
nonpermissive temperature (Figure 5G) with results comparable to those
observed in the arf1
strain. Ring structures were also
observed in arf1-3 ts cells incubated at permissive
temperature, suggesting that this strain is partially deficient in ARF
activity at the permissive temperature, a condition where growth and
1,3-mannosylation appear to be normal (our unpublished
observations).
|
FM4-64 Staining Reveals Large Ring-shaped Endosomal Structures in
arf1
Cells
The morphology of organelles in the endocytic pathway was also
examined by staining living cells with the lipophilic styryl dye
FM4-64. This compound intercalates into the plasma membrane of cells
and is delivered to the vacuole via small cytoplasmic intermediates
that represent endocytic vesicles and endosomes (Vida and Emr, 1995
).
Wild-type and arf1
cells were stained with FM4-64 on ice
for 45 min, allowing the dye to stain the plasma membrane, then the
cells were warmed to 25°C in fresh media lacking the dye to initiate
endocytosis. Cells were collected for fluorescence microscopy 10 min
later, a chase point where endosomes and endocytic compartments would
be prominently stained but where most of the dye would not yet have
reached the vacuole. As previously described (Vida and Emr, 1995
), a
number of small punctate structures corresponding to endosomes and
endocytic membranes were observed in the cytoplasm of wild-type cells
(Figure 6A). In contrast, large ring
structures were seen in the arf1
cells (Figure 6C) that
were clearly distinct from the vacuole, which appears as a large
depression in the DIC image (Figure 6, B and D). These ring structures
were commonly found juxtaposed to the vacuole or plasma membrane and
were larger (on average) than the rings observed by immunofluorescence
of Golgi enzymes. A few small punctate structures were also seen in
most arf1
cells. At later time points, the vacuoles were
stained normally in both wild-type and arf1
cells, and
there did not appear to be a substantial difference in the rate of
FM4-64 endocytosis or in vacuole morphology between arf1
and wild-type cells in these experiments. These data suggest that the
arf1
mutation markedly perturbs the structure of
endosomes in vivo.
|
The structure of endocytic compartments was also examined in the
arf1-3 ts strain (Figure 6) grown at 23°C and
preincubated for 1 h at either 23°C (Figure 6, E and F) or
37°C (Figure 6, G and H) before staining with FM4-64. Rings stained
with FM4-64 were observed in cells incubated at both temperatures;
however, the rings observed in cells stained at 37°C were typically
larger and less uniform in size than the rings observed in cells
stained at 23°C. As with the arf1
mutant, the ring
structures observed in the arf1-3 ts mutant (Figure 6, E
and G) are distinct from the vacuoles, which are apparent in the
accompanying DIC images (Figure 6, F and H). The kinetics of FM4-64
delivery to the vacuole in the arf1-3 ts strain was not
significantly different from wild-type cells at either temperature.
Although the size of the endocytic ring structures observed by FM4-64
in the arf1-3 ts or arf1
cells varied, many
cells exhibited rings that were approximately 1.5-2 µm in diameter
(up to one-third the diameter of the cell), particularly in the
arf1-3 ts cells incubated at 37°C. Ring structures this large were never observed by immunofluorescence localization of Golgi
enzymes.
Endosome Structure and FM4-64 Endocytosis Are Perturbed in BFA-treated Cells
The dramatic difference in endosome morphology between wild-type
and arf mutant cells strongly suggests a role for ARF in endocytosis. To test the effects of ARF inactivation on endosome morphology and endocytic membrane flux in a strain harboring wild-type ARF genes, we examined the effect of BFA on the uptake of
FM4-64 using an erg6/ise1 strain of yeast that is sensitive
to this drug. We had previously shown that BFA rapidly induces a block
in protein transport early in the yeast secretory pathway (Graham
et al., 1993
; Gaynor and Emr, 1997
), and others have shown
that BFA blocks transport of proteins from early to late endosomes
(Hicke et al., 1997
). To test whether this drug can also
perturb FM4-64 endocytosis immediately after addition, erg6
cells were incubated in the presence or absence of BFA for 5 min and
then stained for 7 min with FM4-64 and resuspended in fresh media with
or without BFA as appropriate for a chase period of 1 h. Cells
were harvested at the time points indicated (Figure
7) and immediately examined by
fluorescence microscopy. The FM4-64 was rapidly internalized in
BFA-treated (Figure 7, A and B) and untreated cells (Figure 7, C and
D). However, the BFA-treated cells exhibited a marked inhibition in
delivery of FM4-64 to the vacuole (Figure 7, E, I, and M) as compared
with untreated cells (Figure 7, G, K, and O), in which vacuolar
staining was observed in 15 min. In addition, endocytic ring structures were observed in the BFA-treated cells (Figure 7, I and M) that appeared to be similar to what was observed in the arf
mutants.
|
Electron Microscopy Reveals Rings of Interconnected Membrane Tubules in arf Mutant Cells
To examine the ultrastructural morphology of the
arf1
mutant and to characterize further the ring
structures we had observed by fluorescence microscopy, wild-type and
arf mutant cells were prepared for electron microscopy (see
MATERIALS AND METHODS). Large rings of seemingly discontinuous membrane
were frequently observed in arf1
mutant cells (Figure
8, B-D, arrows and arrowheads). These
rings were typically 0.3-0.8 µm in diameter, approximately one-tenth
to one-fifth the diameter of the cell. Structures of this type were
rarely observed in electron micrographs of wild-type cells (a
representative cell is shown in Figure 8A). Most of the ring structures
were formed from vesicular and tubular profiles in a circular
arrangement (Figure 8D), although some sections, particularly those
that appear to glance the surface of a ring, showed a reticular network
of membrane comprising the rings (marked with asterisks in Figure 8, B
and C). Even though the membrane appeared to be discontinuous in thin
sections, the rings were nearly always complete and usually circular,
consistent with a hollow sphere structure comprised of interconnected
membrane tubules rather than a short cylindrical object. The interior
of the spheres gave the same appearance as the surrounding cytoplasm
and is likely continuous with the cytoplasm. The double rings marked
with an arrowhead in Figure 8B may represent a sphere with one side
folded inward perpendicular to the section plane. Comparable structures were found in the arf1-3 ts strain incubated for 1 h
at the nonpermissive temperature before fixation, including some large
ring structures that were approximately one-fifth to one-third the
diameter of the cell. Attempts at immunogold labeling of ring
structures that contain Mnn1p have not been successful; however, the
similar size, structure, and prevalence in the cell strongly suggest
that the rings observed in electron micrographs are the same structures observed by fluorescence microscopy.
|
The vacuoles often exhibited distorted shapes and appeared to have more
internal membrane in the arf1
mutant when observed by
electron microscopy. This may represent a more involuted vacuolar membrane, increased autophagy of other organelles, or an accumulation of lipid droplets within the vacuole. There also appeared to be more
lipid droplets in the cytoplasm of arf1
cells, but we did not observe a marked accumulation of ER in this mutant. Clearly, the
rings of discontinuous or reticular membrane and the unusual appearance
of the vacuoles were the most dramatic morphological difference between
arf1
and wild-type cells observed by electron microscopy,
although the vacuoles observed in living cells by light microscopy
appeared to be normal (Figure 6D).
| |
DISCUSSION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
To gain a better understanding for the role of ARF in vivo, we have taken a broad, multifaceted approach to analyze phenotypic defects in yeast arf mutants. Analysis of multiple secretory cargo proteins in these mutants revealed general defects in both anterograde and retrograde transport through the ER/Golgi system as well as Golgi-specific glycosylation abnormalities. Even though protein transport was only modestly affected, morphological studies demonstrated that the arf mutants exhibited substantial perturbations of the Golgi complex. In addition, we have found that the arf mutants exhibit a marked change in endosome structure and that BFA both perturbs endosome morphology and causes an immediate block in the delivery of FM4-64 from endosomes to the vacuole, together providing significant in vivo evidence that ARF plays a role in endocytosis in yeast. These data thus clearly indicate that ARF is required in vivo to maintain the normal structure and function of both Golgi and endocytic compartments. The comprehensive nature of our in vivo analysis combined with previous reports on the biochemical properties of ARF has allowed us to formulate a model to explain how ARF might regulate both the structure and function of multiple intracellular organelles.
Arf1p Is Required for Maintenance of Normal Golgi and Endosome Morphology
Fluorescence microscopy of the arf mutants revealed a
particularly striking change in the structure of Golgi and endosomal compartments. Large ring structures were stained with antibodies to
early and medial Golgi enzymes and with the endocytic marker FM4-64
(Figures 4-6). The simplest interpretation of these data is that Golgi
and endocytic compartments adopt similar but distinct ring-shaped
structures in these cells. It is possible that the same ring-shaped
compartment is stained by antibodies to the Golgi enzymes and by
FM4-64 in the arf mutant cells, which could occur by
inappropriate fusion of Golgi and endosome compartments,
mislocalization of Golgi enzymes to the endosome, or misrouting of
FM4-64 through the Golgi. However, we favor the idea that the Golgi
and endosome compartments retain separate identities in the
arf mutants for the following reasons. First, the ring
structures stained by FM4-64 were generally larger and more frequently
found juxtaposed to the vacuole or plasma membrane than ring structures
observed by immunofluorescent localization of Golgi enzymes. This was
particularly evident for the arf1-3 ts mutant, in which
many cells exhibited extremely large endocytic structures, some of
which were more than twice the diameter as the largest rings observed
when these cells were stained for Och1-HA by immunofluorescence.
Second, the growth rate of arf1
cells was nearly
indistinguishable from that of wild-type cells (Figure 3), and protein
transport and modification were only modestly affected. These
observations do not seem compatible with a complete breakdown of
compartmental identity in the arf mutants through membrane
fusion or protein mislocalization. Finally, distinct ARF proteins have
been associated with the function of the cis-Golgi and
endosomes in mammalian cells (Boman and Kahn, 1995
), and we have shown
that BFA perturbs transport through early Golgi compartments (Graham
et al., 1993
) and through the endocytic pathway (Figure 7)
in yeast. For these reasons, we suggest that loss of ARF function
affects both organelles in yeast and that these organelles remain
physically and functionally distinct in arf mutant cells.
Thin-section electron microscopy of arf1 mutant cells provided insight into the structural basis of these membrane rings. We typically observed clusters of apparently vesicular and tubular profiles arranged with even spacing to form a ring. In some sections, the membrane that formed the rings presented a more reticular profile. Many arf mutant cells exhibited several ring structures within the same section, suggesting the presence of multiple, independent ring structures. We interpret these two-dimensional images to represent section planes through hollow spheres of interconnected membrane tubules.
Some insight into how these structures might form comes from previous
structural analyses of both mammalian and wild-type yeast Golgi
membranes. In mammalian cells, individual Golgi cisternae are arranged
in contorted stacks of membrane ribbons with regions of compact zones,
where cisternal membranes appear to be continuous and form a flattened
saccule with few fenestrae, separated by tubular zones from which
transport vesicles appear to bud (Rambourg and Clermont, 1990
; Weidman
et al., 1993
). The Golgi complex of wild-type yeast has been
characterized by immunoelectron microscopy and appears as isolated
disk, or shallow bowl, structures with a diameter of ~400 nm and a
width of ~50 nm (Preuss et al., 1992
). Tubular zones
continuous with the plate-like Golgi cisternae in wild-type cells were
not described as such in this detailed report on the ultrastructure of
the yeast Golgi. However, tubular zones would appear as small vesicular
elements when lateral views of Golgi cisternae are observed in thin
sections. Indeed, Preuss et al. (1992)
noted that small
vesicular profiles, which may represent tubular zones, tended to
cluster around yeast Golgi cisternae observed in thin sections. Others
have observed tubular networks of membrane in wild-type yeast that were
suggested to represent Golgi membranes (Rambourg et al.,
1993
). The compact zones and tubular zones of a cisterna are unlikely
to be static structures; rather, it is more plausible to imagine these
structures in a dynamic equilibrium, with the relative amount of
compact and tubular zones in constant flux within a ribbon of membrane.
If tubular zones are precursors to transport vesicles, then these zones
may normally be transient, particularly in yeast where vesicle-mediated protein transport through the cell is extremely rapid.
Potential Mechanisms for ARF-dependent Regulation of Organelle Morphology
The morphological data presented here suggest a novel role for ARF
in regulating the equilibrium between compact and tubular zones of
Golgi cisternae. We speculate that a yeast Golgi cisterna normally
exists as a curved, disk-shaped compact zone with a modest tubular zone
at the periphery that gives rise to transport vesicles, analogous to
mammalian Golgi cisternae. In the arf mutants, the size of
the compact zone would decrease by fenestration of this region, and
most of the cisterna would become a tubular network. This would
increase the area occupied by the Golgi disk and would likely make the
membrane more flexible. Expansion of the curved Golgi membrane and
greater flexibility could bring the edges in close enough proximity to
allow tubular elements at the periphery to interconnect and form a
hollow sphere, which is what the ring-like structures observed in
arf mutant cells appear to represent. The initial
fenestration event could result from extensive fusion of apposed
membranes of the same cisterna initiated from the luminal leaflets of
the bilayer. Flattened Golgi cisternae, in which the lipid bilayers are
within 50 nm of each other, seem particularly amenable to this process.
In the arf mutants, the luminal fusion events would not be
balanced properly by the opposing reaction, homotypic fusion of
membrane initiated from the cytoplasmic membrane surface of a tubular
cisterna. Consistent with our observations in arf1
cells,
tubular membrane networks have been observed by electron microscopy in
cells treated with BFA (Rambourg et al., 1995
).
How might ARF regulate these processes? Apart from its initially
described role in ADP ribosylation, there are currently two biochemical
activities attributed to ARF in normal cells: 1) recruitment of coats
(COPI and AP1/clathrin) to sites of vesicle budding (Rothman and
Wieland, 1996
) and 2) activation of PLD (Brown et al., 1993
; Cockcroft et al., 1994
). ARF appears to be dispensable for
coatomer recruitment in vitro if membranes are pretreated with PLD
(Ktistakis et al., 1996
), suggesting that the primary role
of ARF may be to regulate lipid bilayer modification. A role for ARF in
regulating the lipid composition of membrane bilayers is consistent
with the pleiotropic phenotypes exhibited by the arf mutants
in our study. For instance, altered membrane composition in the
arf mutants may account for the inefficient function of both
Golgi glycosyltransferases and proteins required for vesicular
transport. Our morphological data can be explained if modulation of
Golgi and endosome membrane composition by ARF influences the
probability of homotypic membrane fusion events initiated from the
luminal membrane surface versus those initiated from the cytoplasmic
membrane surface. Yeast have two distinct PLD enzymes which are encoded
by at least two genes (Waksman et al., 1996
, 1997
). Although
it is not yet clear whether a PLD activity is required in the yeast
secretory or endocytic pathways, the ARF-dependent activation of
mammalian PLD provides an example of how ARF could influence the
properties of the cytoplasmic leaflet of these organelles. It is also
possible that ARF may regulate other lipid modifying enzymes
responsible for normal composition of Golgi and endosome membranes.
In Vivo Evidence for Additional Functions for ARF beyond COPI Recruitment
The specific synthetic growth defects observed for all
arf1
COPI double mutants constructed strongly implicates
ARF activity in COPI function. Indeed, mutant COPI alleles that do not
exhibit an anterograde transport defect still exhibit exaggerated
growth and protein transport defects when combined with
arf1
. Likewise, Golgi to ER retrieval of a fusion protein
bearing a KKXX motif in arf1
cells was perturbed, since
the fusion protein appeared to reach a more distal Golgi compartment
than normal prior to being recycled. Although many observations have
suggested additional roles for ARF aside from coat recruitment, there
is little in vivo support for these observations that does not rely on
overexpression of dominant-activated mutant forms of ARF or the
inhibitory affect of GTP
S on in vitro systems. Our data are most
consistent with the idea that ARF plays a more pleiotropic role in the
cell rather than simply recruiting COPI to Golgi membranes. For
instance, yeast COPI mutants exhibit dramatic protein-specific defects
in anterograde transport, where proteins such as CPY, ALP, and
-factor require COPI function for ER export whereas invertase and
HSP150 do not. If the only and/or primary function of ARF is to recruit coatomer to form COPI-coated vesicles, we would expect arf
mutant cells to exhibit similar cargo-specific anterograde defects.
However, the transport kinetics of all anterograde proteins assayed
were two- to fourfold slower in the arf mutant cells as
compared with wild-type cells. COPI mutants also have a clearly
distinct effect on Golgi structure and function from what we observed
in the arf mutants. For instance, in sec21-3
cells at the nonpermissive temperature, the normally punctate
immunofluorescent staining pattern of Och1p-HA appeared to disperse,
although the staining pattern of Mnn1p was unaffected (Gaynor and Emr,
1997
). The Mnn1p staining pattern was also unaffected in a
ret1-1 mutant (our unpublished observations), and the
Golgi-specific glycosylation defects we and others observed in the
arf1
mutant were significantly different from those
observed in COPI mutants (Gaynor and Emr, 1997
). The effects of the
arf mutations on Golgi and endosome morphology are also
substantially different from those previously described for clathrin or
adaptin mutants in yeast (Payne and Schekman, 1989
; Phan et
al., 1994
; Rad et al., 1995
; Stepp et al.,
1995
).
As with most temperature-conditional alleles, we cannot determine with
absolute certainty whether the arf1-3 ts mutant exhibits a
complete loss of function phenotype at the nonpermissive temperature. However, it is clear that protein transport can continue relatively efficiently in this mutant under conditions of insufficient ARF activity to support growth and despite substantial morphological changes to organelles in the exocytic and endocytic pathways. Interestingly, strains harboring temperature conditional alleles of the
ARF exchange factor (gea1-2 gea2
and gea1-4
gea2
) or deleted for an ARF-GAP protein (gcs1
)
exhibit a partial block in protein transport which is comparable to
what we have observed in the arf mutants (Peyroche et
al., 1996
; Poon et al., 1996
). Collectively, these
observations suggest that these partial transport defects may in fact
represent a near-to-complete loss of ARF function phenotype, which is
reflected in the much more profound effect ARF seems to have