Abstract
btn1, the Schizosaccharomyces pombe orthologue of the human Batten disease gene CLN3, exerts multiple cellular effects. As well as a role in vacuole pH homoeostasis, we now show that Btn1p is essential for growth at high temperatures. Its absence results in progressive defects at 37°C that culminate in total depolarized growth and cell lysis. These defects are preceded by a progressive failure to correctly polarize sterol-rich domains after cytokinesis and are accompanied by loss of Myo1p localization. Furthermore, we found that in Sz. pombe, sterol spreading is linked to defective formation/polarization of F-actin patches and disruption of endocytosis and that these processes are aberrant in btn1Δ cells. Consistent with a role for Btn1p in polarized growth, Btn1p has an altered location at 37°C and is retained in actin-dependent endomembrane structures near the cell poles or septum.
Keywords: Batten, btn1, CLN3, end4, endocytosis, F-actin, myo1, neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis, polarity, sla2, sterol, Sz. pombe
Juvenile-onset neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis (JNCL) or Batten disease, a severe neurodegenerative lysosomal storage disease of childhood characterized by accumulation of lipofuscin-like material, is caused by mutations in CLN3. JNCL presents between the ages of 6–10 years with visual failure, followed by epilepsy and progressive cognitive and motor deterioration, leading to premature death. The conservation of CLN3 suggests that it has a basic cellular role, although its exact function is still unknown. CLN3 is a transmembrane protein (1–5) and is located in the endosome–lysosome membrane and possibly in lipid rafts (6,7). Its function has been linked to many cellular processes, including trafficking 8), cytoskeletal organization 9), lysosomal homoeostasis (10,11), autophagy 12), apoptosis 13) and lipid modification or changes (14,15).
To help understand the apparently complex role of CLN3, we have been using a simple model system, the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe. We have previously shown that deletion of btn1, the CLN3 orthologue, causes dysregulation of vacuole homoeostasis, with btn1Δ cells displaying larger and less acidic vacuoles (equivalent to mammalian lysosomes) 16), as in patient cells 10). In addition, we demonstrated that in Sz. pombe, Btn1p traffics slowly to the vacuole membrane through the endosomal system and Btn1p has a role prior to reaching the vacuole that impacts on vacuole function. Ectopic expression of N-terminally fused green fluorescent protein (GFP)–Btn1p or GFP–CLN3 constructs in btn1Δ cells complements the vacuole size and pH defects, confirming that Btn1p and CLN3 are functional homologues.
We also found that in the absence of a functional V-type H+ adenosine triphosphatase (v-ATPase), btn1 is required for completion of cytokinesis 16), suggesting an additional role for btn1 that is not linked to vacuole pH regulation. Consistently, we noted that at 25°C, under normal growth conditions, cells deleted for btn1 have an increased septation index, are longer and grow somewhat slower than wild-type cells 16). Given the tight control of progression through the cell cycle in fission yeast, we reasoned that the mild growth defects of btn1Δ cells could be significant and so examined the phenotype of these cells under different growth conditions. We discovered that btn1Δ cells are sensitive to growth at high temperature and lyse at 37°C following progressive depolarization of growth. Subsequent analysis revealed that at 37°C, Btn1p is involved in an F-actin-dependent process that links endocytosis and the polarized localization of sterol-rich membrane domains with polarized growth.
Results
Btn1p is essential for growth at 37°C
We explored the effect of increased temperature on the growth of btn1Δ cells. The presence of btn1 is not essential for growth of fission yeast cells under normal growth conditions. However, at 37°C in YES media, btn1Δ cells were found to be temperature sensitive for growth. After overnight growth (18 h) at 37°C, btn1Δ cells underwent striking changes in cell morphology, with the appearance of swollen cells that were pear shaped, elliptical or branched, and this was accompanied by some cell lysis (Figure 1A). btn1 Δ cells progressed through no more than two to three cell cycles within this time compared with at least six cell cycles for wild-type cells as measured by cell count (Figure 1B) and time lapse microscopy (data not shown). By 24–48 h at 37°C, all btn1Δ cells had undergone lysis. Growth curve analysis of early events at 37°C (Figure 1C) revealed that after transfer to 37°C, both wild-type and btn1Δ cells underwent a delay in growth, presumably because of activation of the heat-stress response pathway 17), but by 3 h growth had resumed in both strains. However, unlike wild-type cells, which appeared to have completed the first cell cycle by 5 h, btn1Δ cells were slightly delayed and took 6–7 h to reach this stage. After this point, growth was significantly delayed for btn1Δ cells compared with wild-type cells (Figure 1C). Thus, btn1Δ cells display severe and progressive growth defects at 37°C.
btn1Δ cells are defective in the distribution of sterol-rich membrane domains
The changes in cell shape are consistent with the loss of polarized growth. In fission yeast, sites of polarized growth and cell wall deposition are restricted to the cell poles in interphase cells and to the mid-zone, the site of cell division, in dividing cells. These sites form at and are maintained by the presence of sterol-rich membrane domains (lipid rafts) 18) that can be visualized by staining with filipin, a fluorescent sterol-binding dye. We examined the distribution of filipin-stained sterol domains in cells grown at 25°C and 37°C. These domains were correctly polarized at sites of growth in wild-type cells and in cells lacking btn1 grown at 25°C (Figure 2A). However, in contrast to wild-type cells that retained polarized filipin up to and after 18 h growth at 37°C, in btn1Δ cells, the polarization of filipin-stained sterol domains was lost (Figure 2B) and instead, these domains were depolarized and distributed over the plasma membrane surface. Spatial distribution graphs of filipin staining confirmed that in btn1Δ cells, there was increased filipin staining along the sides of interphase cells and at all locations in septated cells, particularly at the septa and cell sides (Figure 2C). Thus, in btn1Δ cells, after 18 h at 37°C, sterols are often concentrated at swollen regions of the cell including the division septum, suggesting that these cells are unable to correctly delimit sterols to cell poles during interphase or during the final stages of cell division after prolonged growth at 37°C. This broadening of filipin staining is consistent with the depolarized growth of btn1Δ cells. In order to establish whether sterol spreading was merely a secondary consequence of depolarized growth, we examined the location of these sterol-rich domains in btn1Δ cells at earlier time-points after the temperature shift to 37°C. Up to and including 4 h at 37°C, their location was correctly polarized in both wild-type cells and btn1Δ cells (data not shown and Figure 2C), but by 7 h at 37°C, in btn1Δ cells, sterol spreading began to occur. Interphase cells displayed broad regions of filipin staining either on the cell sides or spreading from the cell tips, and dividing cells showed sterol spreading from septum regions (Figure 2D). Spatial distribution graphs confirmed these findings. Additionally, in septated cells, filipin staining was observed mainly spreading outwards from the septum regions on to the cell sides but was rarely at the cell tips. At this time-point, btn1Δ cells are still largely rod shaped and not yet completely depolarized for growth. Thus, progressive spreading of sterols in btn1Δ cells at 37°C appears to precede total depolarized growth.
Btn1p affects the localization of Myo1p at 37°C
In Sz. pombe, polarization of sterol-rich membrane domains has been shown to be dependent on myo1, which encodes a type 1 myosin motor protein 19). We therefore explored whether localization of Myo1p was affected in btn1Δ cells. We crossed btn1Δ with a strain carrying endogenous Myo1p fused with GFP and found that although at 25°C Myo1p localized to cell tips and septum regions in both wild-type and btn1Δ cells (Figure 3A), after 18 h at 37°C, the location of Myo1p was completely depolarized in btn1Δ cells, showing mainly a diffuse or occasionally a depolarized punctate pattern of staining (Figure 3B). This depolarization concurred with the previously observed spreading of filipin staining (Figure 2B). We also observed Myo1p and filipin location at earlier time-points during growth at 37°C, prior to the cell swelling phenotype. Myo1p and sterol-rich domains were correctly polarized and found at the cell tips of interphase cells and at septa of dividing cells up to and including 4 h of growth at 37°C (Figure 3C). However, by 7 h at 37°C, GFP–Myo1p was fully depolarized in btn1Δ cells (Figure 3C). This coincided with the onset of filipin spreading (Figure 3C). In contrast, polarized location of Myo1p and sterols was observed in wild-type cells expressing GFP–Myo1p and grown under the same conditions (Figure 3B,C). Thus, mislocalization of Myo1p occurs with onset of sterol spreading and precedes total depolarized growth in btn1Δ cells, which occurs at 7 h at 37°C. These events are concurrent with completion of the first cell cycle for the total cell population (Figure 1C). Together, these data suggest that polarization of growth zones is defective post-cytokinesis in btn1Δ cells at high temperature.
Polarization of sterol-rich domains is linked to the correct formation and polarization of F-actin patches and endocytosis
We explored the mechanism underlying Myo1p loss and its link to sterol spreading in more detail. Myo1p, the only type 1 myosin in fission yeast and its Saccharomyces cerevisiae orthologues, Myo3p and Myo5p, have independently been shown to be directly involved in the activation of the Arp2/3 complex at the plasma membrane. Arp2/3 activation promotes actin polymerization and drives F-actin patch formation at these sites (20–26). Deletion of genes encoding components of the Arp2/3 complex in Sz. pombe is lethal (27,28), but deletion of myo1 largely results in defective formation and depolarization of F-actin patches 20) consistent with the observed depolarized growth phenotypes.
We tested whether sterol spreading is linked to depolarization of the F-actin patch machinery. First, we examined the location and spreading of sterol-rich domains in cells totally defective in F-actin polymerization by the use of Latrunculin A, which disrupts the F-actin cytoskeleton by sequestering monomeric actin. At the concentration used, all F-actin cables and patches depolymerize by 10 min (Figure S1). We found that polarized sterol domains are not maintained after prolonged Latrunculin A treatment and filipin is instead spread over most of the cell surface in all cells after 2–4 h of treatment (Figure 4A), with the exception of small regions adjacent to the nuclei that remain free from sterol spreading. We measured filipin density in interphase cells (i.e. cells with one nucleus), which confirmed sterol spreading along the sides of the cells. Latrunculin A treatment prevents cell cycle progression to cytokinesis because the acto–myosin ring is not formed and the division plane is not assembled; so, we were unable to measure filipin density in septated cells. A previous report 19) describes broad bands of sterols on cell sides in cdc25-22‘block and release’ cells that had been treated with Latrunculin A. The authors suggest that this treatment allows the proportion of cells that proceed through mitosis to attempt assembly of a sterol band at the cell sides.
Next, we tested whether sterol spreading occurred in an actin mutant strain (cps8-188) 29) when grown at the non-permissive temperature. These cells exhibit a block at septation and depolarized growth consistent with a severe defect in actin after 2–4 h growth at 37°C. Again, severe sterol spreading was observed after 2 h at 37°C that worsened by 4-h growth, by which time the depolarized phenotype was apparent (Figure 4B). Spatial distribution graphs of filipin spreading confirmed this finding with sterol spreading to cell sides apparent in both interphase and septated cells (Figure 4B). These data support the hypothesis that polarization of F-actin and localization of sterol domains are linked.
We then explored the link between sterols and F-actin patches. Investigations in both S. cerevisiae and Sz. pombe yeasts have recently provided a link between F-actin patch formation and polarization and endocytosis. Indeed, ‘slow-moving’ F-actin patches at the plasma membrane have been identified as sites of endocytic membrane invagination (reviewed in 30), and the active process of actin polymerization at these sites forms part of the Sla1p and Sla2p/End4p-dependent endocytic machinery that causes the membrane to invaginate, ultimately giving rise to an early endocytic vesicle. F-actin patch formation at the plasma membrane is therefore not only coupled to endocytosis but also part of the endocytic process. Consistently, type 1 myosin has also been linked to endocytosis in S. cerevisiae(24,26,31), although not apparently in Sz. pombe19).
We tested cells that were compromised in early stages of endocytosis and/or F-actin patch polarization for sterol spreading. The sla2/end4Δ strain is defective in the membrane internalization step of endocytosis 32) and consistently displays severe F-actin defects (depolarized F-actin patches) and depolarized growth. The myo1Δ strain is also defective for F-actin patch formation/polarization 20). We found that sterols spread over the entire cell surface in end4Δ cells even at the permissive temperature of 25°C (Figure 5C). We also confirmed sterol spreading in myo1Δ cells at this temperature [Figure 4C and as previously reported 19)]. Measurement of the filipin intensity over the cell surface in interphase and septated cells confirmed that sterol spreading occurs in both cell types (Figure 4C). We noted that this was more severe in end4Δ cells compared with myo1Δ cells (Figure 4C), particularly at interphase, which may underlie the more severe defect in polarized growth in this strain.
We went on to investigate whether sterol spreading was directly linked to endocytic defects in these strains. Endocytic defects are typically visualized by monitoring the uptake and trafficking of the lipophilic dye FM4-64, which is taken up at the cell tips in interphase cells and septum region in dividing cells 33) and transported to the vacuole within minutes. We found that at 25°C, cells deleted for end4, already known to have a severe endocytic defect 32), show very limited uptake of FM4-64 over time compared with wild-type and btn1Δ cells [Figure 5A,B and 32)]. We also found that myo1Δ cells are severely compromised for endocytosis, with minimal uptake of FM4-64 over time (Figure 5A,B). Even after 60-min incubation, only very low amounts of FM4-64 had entered myo1Δ cells. FM4-64 has been observed to eventually traffic to the vacuole (19,32), albeit at very reduced amounts, in these strains (Figure 5B). Although it has been reported that the myo1Δ strain does not have a defect in endocytosis 19), we show, using a more sensitive method of FM4-64 uptake, that this same strain is in fact severely delayed in endocytosis. When we used the previously reported method where excess FM4-64 is preloaded onto cells on ice prior to uptake 19), we found that although FM4-64 is ultimately taken up (between 10 and 20 min), at earlier time-points (1–10 min), a delay was clearly evident (Figure S2). The method used in the previous report 19) is more suited to detection of a total block in endocytosis rather than a delay unless earlier time-points are examined. We concluded that there is a link between defective F-actin patch polarization, defective endocytosis and sterol domain spreading.
btn1Δ cells are defective in F-actin patch formation and polarization
Because btn1Δ cells are defective in sterol localization at 37°C and we have now demonstrated a link between sterol spreading, depolarization of F-actin and reduced endocytosis, we examined btn1Δ cells for such defects. First, we stained for F-actin in btn1Δ cells grown at 25°C and 37°C. At 25°C, the distribution of F-actin in btn1Δ cells appeared relatively normal with polarized F-actin patches at the poles in interphase cells and at the septum in dividing cells (Figure 6A). We did however note that there was more diffuse F-actin in these cells compared with wild-type cells. At 37°C, after 18 h, by which time btn1Δ cells were already depolarized for growth (Figure 1A), severe F-actin defects were apparent. F-actin patches were mostly depolarized or completely absent (Figure 6B), with only a few cells displaying some polarized F-actin patches that were found at the polarized (non-swollen) end of pear-shaped cells. We explored earlier time-points at 37°C to follow the course of F-actin depolarization and its link to sterol spreading. At 4 h at 37°C, F-actin patches were mainly polarized in both wild-type and btn1Δ cells (Figure 6C), although again we noted more diffuse F-actin in btn1Δ cells. However, at 7 h at 37°C, btn1Δ cells exhibited a very diffuse F-actin staining together with defective localization of F-actin patches (Figure 6D). The majority of btn1Δ cells (71%, compared with 26% of wild-type cells) displayed a monopolar, rather than bipolar, distribution. For those patches localized at, or near, the one growing tip, as evidenced by calcofluor staining (Figure 6D), the distribution was not centred at the tip as in wild-type cells. Rather, patches were more dispersed around the tip. The predominance of monopolar over bipolar F-actin patches at 7 h suggested a defect in maintaining bipolar growth. This is likely to be a prerequisite for the more severe polarity defects at later time-points.
Sz. pombe cells typically grow in a bipolar manner, that is, at both cell tips. Briefly, following cell division, each daughter cell first resumes polarized growth at the ‘old’ end, marked by the polarized presence of F-actin patches, and thus grows in a monopolar manner for a set time. At a later point in G2, a ‘new end take-off’ (NETO) pathway 34) is established that additionally localizes F-actin at the new cell end, enabling polarized growth at this end as well as the old end (bipolar growth) until cell division. Cells that are blocked in NETO 35) continue to grow but remain monopolar in their growth up to septation. We therefore determined the percentage of septated cells that had only one growth cap, as visualized by calcofluor staining after 7 h growth at 37°C. Ninety-four per cent of septated btn1Δ cells were monopolar for growth at this time compared with 30% of wild-type cells (Figure 6D). Thus, by 7 h, after completion of the first cell division at 37°C and preceding the swollen growth phenotype, btn1Δ cells have a defect in polarizing F-actin, particularly at a new growth zone, that prevents the initiation of polarized growth at a new cell end. Further analysis revealed that after 7 h, the F-actin cytoskeleton became progressively depolarized with patches spread around the cell cortex, which was concurrent with loss of cylindrical morphology (Figures 1A and 6B and data not shown) and further sterol spreading. Thus, total depolarized growth is preceded by a defect in NETO arising from defective localization of F-actin at the new cell end.
btn1Δ cells are defective in endocytosis
We then examined btn1Δ cells grown at 37°C for defects in endocytosis 30). Severely reduced uptake of FM4-64 was observed in btn1Δ cells at 18 h at 37°C (Figure 6E). This was consistent with total depolarization of F-actin and sterol domains (Figure 6E). FM4-64 uptake was also severely reduced at 7 h when F-actin defects are apparent and sterol spreading is first observed. Upon examination of the localization of FM4-64 that had been taken up, we saw that in contrast to wild-type cells, which showed typical staining of cytoplasmic structures, FM4-64 was retained at one cell pole in interphase cells and no obvious vacuole staining was observed (Figure 6F), suggesting a defect both in uptake and in trafficking to the vacuole. Interestingly, uptake of FM4-64 was also reduced in btn1Δ cells that have been grown for 4 h at 37°C (Figure 6E). This is consistent with a mild defect in F-actin, visualized by slightly diffused actin staining, at this time-point (Figure 6C) but prior to sterol spreading (Figure 2C). This suggests that in btn1Δ cells, sterol spreading may be a downstream consequence of defects in F-actin patch formation/polarization and endocytosis. This is consistent with our observations that Latrunculin A treatment, which causes a total block in endocytosis 33), is followed by sterol spreading even in wild-type cells (Figure 4).
As previously reported 16), uptake and trafficking of FM4-64 were relatively normal in btn1Δ cells at the permissive temperature of 25°C when F-actin patches and sterol domains were largely polarized (Figures 2A and 6A), although some diffuse actin was evident and uptake of FM4-64 is slightly reduced over time (Figure 5A,B). This implies that at 25°C and under normal laboratory growth conditions, Btn1p plays a minor role in F-actin patch remodelling and endocytosis (as monitored by FM4-64 uptake) but has little effect on sterol domains, but at 37°C, this role is crucial.
Btn1p has a polarized location at 37°C
For Btn1p to affect events that normally occur at the cell poles or septum, that is, the formation and polarization of F-actin patches, endocytosis, polarization of sterol-rich domains and cell wall deposition, it might be expected that its location be spatially regulated, perhaps at these sites. We have previously shown that trafficking of Btn1p to the vacuole was through the endocytic pathway and was slower than for other vacuole membrane proteins and that it exerts an effect prior to reaching the vacuole 16), consistent with a prevacuolar location of Btn1p being functionally important. Because cells lacking btn1 have additional and severe defects when grown at 37°C, we examined the intracellular location of Btn1p at this temperature and found that it was altered. GFP–Btn1p was enriched at the cell poles and at the septa in wild-type cells grown at 37°C (Figure 7A) compared with cells grown at 25°C where it was located in structures distributed throughout the cytoplasm (Figure 7A) 16). The polar location of GFP–Btn1p was shown to be actin dependent as treatment with Latrunculin A, which prevents polymerization of actin, but not with methyl benzimidazol-2-yl carbamate (MBC), which depolymerizes microtubules, caused Btn1p to disperse throughout the cell (Figure 7B and data not shown). Importantly, the location of GFP–Btn1p in cells grown at 37°C overlapped that of early FM4-64-staining vesicles at the cell poles, but not late FM4-64-staining vacuoles, indicating that these Btn1p-containing compartments are prevacuolar and within the endomembrane system (Figure 7C). Intriguingly, the GFP–Btn1p-containing structures were found to localize adjacent to F-actin patches near the cell pole regions (Figure 7D). Thus, the location and trafficking of Btn1p appear to be differentially regulated at high temperature, with Btn1p being retained in compartments that locate at the cell poles at 37°C. Because Btn1p does not completely colocalize with F-actin patches at the plasma membrane, this suggests that Btn1p may be acting from a separate compartment that impacts on the early endocytic/F-actin patch machinery.
Btn1p is required for bipolar growth at 37°C
We have previously shown that ectopic expression of Btn1p rescues the cytokinesis defect displayed by btn1Δ cells grown at 25°C in minimal medium (MM) 16). Surprisingly, the depolarized phenotype and lysis of btn1Δ cells were not as severe when these cells were grown at 37°C in MM, a minimal media used to select expression plasmids (Figure 8A). Although minimal cell swelling or lysis was apparent upon growth in MM, we found that these cells still retained a NETO defect as evidenced by monopolar growth (Figure 8B) because at 7 h at 37°C, 53% of septated btn1Δ cells were monopolar for growth (Figure 8C). We examined whether expression of Btn1p and CLN3 could rescue this defect. We found that ectopic expression of GFP–Btn1p can rescue the monopolar growth phenotype and restore bipolar growth in btn1Δ cells (Figure 8C,D) and expression of CLN3 can partially restore bipolar growth (Figure 8C). We have previously shown that CLN3 traffics faster to the vacuole in btn1Δ cells at 25°C 16). Thus, the prolonged prevacuolar location of ectopically expressed Btn1p may be functionally important in establishing/maintaining polarized growth, further supporting its involvement in a pathway that affects F-actin patch formation, endocytosis and location of sterol-rich domains that is severely exacerbated in response to heat stress.
Discussion
CLN3 was first identified as the gene underlying JNCL in 1995 36), and recent reports have suggested multiple and apparently unconnected phenotypes associated with defects in its function. Despite much effort, its mechanism of action is still unknown, although its conservation suggests that it has a basic cellular role. Our results using the fission yeast Sz. pombe shed further light on the apparent complexity of CLN3 function. We describe several phenotypes associated with loss of btn1, the Sz. pombe orthologue of CLN3, and investigation of the underlying molecular pathways provided evidence of a link between these and with Btn1p function (Table 1).
Table 1:
Phenotypea | btn1Δ at 25°C | myo1Δ at 25°C | end4Δ at 25°C | btn1Δ after 18 h at 37°C |
---|---|---|---|---|
Cell lysis | − | + | + | ++ |
Depolarized sterols | − | ++ | ++ | ++ |
Depolarized F-actin | + | ++ | ++ | ++ |
Endocytosis defects | + | ++ | ++ | ++ |
Depolarized growth | − | ++ | ++ | ++ |
These phenotypes are absent in wild-type cells; + is mild, ++ is severe, − is no defect.
We discovered that Btn1p is essential for polarized growth, particularly at high temperature. Progressive depolarization and spreading of sterol-rich domains commenced after the first cell cycle (7 h) at 37°C, and this was preceded by a progressive failure in the formation and polarization of F-actin patches and by endocytic defects that we now show are linked. Previously, sterol domains and F-actin patch polarization have separately been linked to Myo1p (19,20,21), and consistent with this, we found a loss of polarized location of Myo1p in btn1Δ cells after 7 h at the restrictive temperature. We additionally show that Myo1p is required for efficient endocytosis, and we directly link endocytosis with polarization of sterol-rich domains because end4Δ cells, which are severely compromised in endocytosis, exhibit total sterol spreading. end4 Δ cells (32,37), like btn1Δ cells, have a block in NETO prior to total depolarization of growth. Thus, in Sz. pombe, the formation and polarization of F-actin patches and the early stages of endocytosis are intimately linked with the polarization of sterol-rich domains, and co-ordination of these aspects is required both for establishing new sites for growth (NETO) and for maintaining polarized and rod-shaped growth. We speculate that under certain conditions, defects in the positioning of the early endocytic vesicle/F-actin patch formation machinery during NETO give rise to sterol spreading and a feedback system of further depolarized growth, resulting from a loss of co-ordination of the endocytic and secretory pathways that specify sites for delivery of membrane and new cell wall components. We further speculate that the process of endocytosis regulates and delimits these sites to the cell tips/septum and that a major purpose of endocytosis in Sz. pombe is to co-ordinate membrane retrieval from the surface during ongoing polarized secretion.
We had previously observed an underlying cell cycle delay at 25°C in btn1Δ cells in addition to the cytokinesis defect with longer and more binucleate cells 16). These cell cycle delays could be because of a delay in remodelling of the polarization and actin-dependent machinery at each major transition throughout the cell cycle, in particular during NETO. Exploration of the phenotypes of btn1Δ cells under normal growth conditions (25°C) revealed that the uptake and trafficking of FM4-64 are slightly reduced in these cells at the permissive temperature of 25°C when Myo1p and sterol domains appear to be polarized, although F-actin patches are slightly abnormal, consistent with Btn1p playing a minor role in endocytosis (as monitored by FM4-64 uptake) at 25°C and under normal growth conditions. Further investigation is required to fully elucidate the role that btn1 plays in these processes under non-stress conditions.
While the link between F-actin patches, the early steps of endocytic membrane invagination and establishment of polarity is well understood in S. cerevisiae30) and to a lesser extent in Sz. pombe33), this is only just being explored in mammalian systems (38–40). It is tempting to speculate that an intimate link exists between F-actin, endocytosis, the type 1 myosins and sterol polarization across all eukaryotes. Furthermore, from our data in the Sz. pombe system, we propose that F-actin-dependent early endocytic events are upstream of sterol and Myo1p-related polarity events.
Mammalian cells have eight type 1 myosins, two of which (MYO1E and MYO1F) are long-tailed like Sz. pombe Myo1p. MYO1E plays a role in endocytosis 41), like Myo1p, and MYO1F is important for cell migration 42). It will be interesting to investigate whether the function of Btn1p in relation to polarity, cytoskeletal regulation, endocytosis, Myo1p, and sterols, is conserved through CLN3 in higher eukaryotes. Certainly, endocytic defects have been reported in mammalian systems with CLN3 mutations (8,9). A similar depolarization phenotype has not been reported for S. cerevisiae lacking the orthologue BTN1 despite varying growth, temperature and hyperosmotic conditions (43,44). This may be a reflection of some important difference in their biology or the presence in S. cerevisiae of two long-tailed type 1 myosins that functionally compensate for each other 31). S. cerevisiae cells also differ from Sz. pombe in their requirement for a programme of polarization only during budding of a new daughter cell. Sz. pombe, in contrast, relies on a continuous programme of polarized cell growth to maintain and restrict growth to the cell tips. It will be interesting to check for polarization of bud formation in the mother cell and its daughters in S. cerevisiae deleted for btn1, particularly following heat or other stress.
An important question raised by this data is how a protein that is considered to be a vacuole/lysosome membrane protein impacts on early endocytosis, cytoskeletal dynamics and the polarity machinery (including sterol-rich domains). We have previously provided evidence that Btn1p traffics slowly to the vacuole through the endocytic system and that Btn1p has a function prior to reaching the vacuole 16). We now show that the location of Btn1p within endomembrane compartments is controlled, particularly in response to heat stress, when the location of Btn1p becomes polarized in an actin-dependent manner at sites of active growth. We propose that it is from these endomembrane compartments that Btn1p is affecting the F-actin machinery and sterol domains. Interestingly, CLN3 has been found to have additional polarized location in neurons where it localizes at the synapse (5,7,45,46). Thus, the evidence suggests that Btn1p and also CLN3 are spatially controlled and that their main function is outside the vacuole/lysosome.
In addition to the novel phenotypes reported in this paper, Btn1p and CLN3 play a role in vacuole/lysosome acidification (10,16,47,48) under normal conditions. Vacuole/lysosome acidification by v-ATPase is modulated by many factors, including the actin cytoskeleton (49–57); so, Btn1p may be affecting vacuole pH by indirectly modulating v-ATPase activity by an effect on the cytoskeleton. Alternatively, or in addition, Btn1p may be affecting the trafficking of v-ATPase and perhaps other transporters to the vacuole, again through its effect on actin.
In conclusion, we have further characterized the phenotype of cells deleted for the Sz. pombe orthologue of the human Batten disease gene CLN3, btn1. We identified a failure to correctly polarize F-actin patches and the endocytic machinery, leading to the loss of polarity of Myo1p and sterol-rich membrane domains. Our work suggests that CLN3 may act in a similar manner and affect the regulation of the actin cytoskeleton and membrane trafficking, perhaps resulting in changes in lipid domains. This could have far-reaching consequences on the trafficking and activity of other proteins including CLN3 itself as well as type 1 myosins. Failure to correctly regulate the endocytic pathway could give rise to many of the features of JNCL, for example, defective antigen processing, leading to the production of autoantibodies (58,59) or aberrant modulation of receptor signalling in neurons leading to seizures 60). The precise events that contribute to neuronal cell death in JNCL remain to be delineated. We are continuing to use the Sz. pombe system to investigate the basic function of Btn1p, and by extrapolation CLN3, and expect this to provide new avenues for the development of therapies for patients with JNCL.
Materials and Methods
Yeast strains and general techniques
Strains used in this study are listed in Table 2. Media, growth, maintenance of strains and genetic methods were as described 61). Cells were grown in rich medium (YES) or synthetic ‘minimal’ medium (MM) containing appropriate supplements. For protein expression, cells were grown overnight in MM plus thiamine (4 μm). Cells were washed three times in MM lacking thiamine and grown for 18 h in the same medium. Latrunculin A (Molecular probes) was used at a final concentration of 10 μm and MBC (Sigma) at a final concentration of 25 μm.
Table 2:
Strain | Genotype | Source |
---|---|---|
972 | h− | Laboratory stock |
ED665 | h−, ura4-D18, leu1-32, his2 | Laboratory stock |
YG660 (btn1Δ) | h+, btn1::leu2, ura4-D18, leu1-32, his2 | Laboratory stock |
SC2D (btn1Δ) | h−, btn1::leu2, leu1-32 | Laboratory stock |
SC36A (ED665 + pREP42GFPBtn1) | h−, ura4-D18, leu1-32, his2 | Laboratory stock |
SC1A (YG660 + pREP42GFP) | h+, btn1::leu2, ura4-D18, leu1-32, his2 | Laboratory stock |
SC4A (YG660 + pREP42GFPBtn1) | h+, btn1::leu2, ura4-D18, leu1-32, his2 | Laboratory stock |
SC31A (YG660 + pREP42GFPCLN3) | h+, btn1::leu2, ura4-D18, leu1-32, his2 | Laboratory stock |
myo1Δ (TP190) | h−, myo1::kanMX, leu1-32, ura4-D18, ade6, his3-D1 | T. D. Pollard |
GFP-myo1 | h−, kanMX-Pmyo1-mGFP-myo1, leu1-32, his-D1, ura4-D18, ade6-M216 | T. D. Pollard |
SC505D (btn1ΔGFP-myo1) | h−, kanMX-Pmyo1-mGFP-myo1, btn1::leu2, leu1-32, his-D1, his2, ura4-D18 | This study |
sla2/end4Δ | h−end4::kanMX leu1-32, ura4-D18, ade6-M210 | S. Castagnetti |
cps8-188 | H, cps8-188, ura4-D18 | W. Kobayashi |
Fluorescence staining and microscopy
For cell fixation, cells in log-phase growth were fixed in 10% formaldehyde for 15 min, washed three times in ×1 PBS and stored at 4°C. Calcofluor (50 μg/mL; Polysciences Inc.) was used to visualize septa and cell wall deposition 61). Cells were stained with 4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) for DNA. For endocytosis assays, FM4-64 dye (Molecular Probes) was dissolved in dimethyl sulphoxide at a concentration of 0.82 mm. Typically, 2 μL FM4-64 stock was added to 1 mL cells at equal cell density, typically 2.5 × 106 cell/mL (1.64 μm final concentration), and cells incubated at 25°C for 20 min and where indicated chased for 40 min in fresh media to allow all FM4-64 to reach the vacuole. Samples were viewed immediately. In one experiment, excess FM4-64 was preloaded onto cells on ice 19) prior to uptake. For FM4-64 densitometry measurements, 20 μL FM4-64 was added to 10 mL cells, and cells were grown at 25°C or 37°C with shaking. At indicated times (typically 5, 10, 15, 20 and 60 min), 1 mL of cells were removed, washed in fresh, cold media to remove FM4-64 that had not been taken up and stored on ice until image capture. For densitometry measurements, n = 30 individual cell measurements were obtained using openlab software. For visualization of sterol-rich domains, filipin staining was performed as described 18) and at a final concentration of 5 μg/mL. Briefly, 1 μL of filipin was added to 1 mL log-phase cells (at equal cell density, typically 2.5 × 106 cell/mL), and cells were rapidly washed in media and visualized immediately. All cells (wild type or mutant) were kept at the stated temperature until just prior to image capture and were treated identically. Microscopy (at room temperature) was rapidly performed to minimize any changes in temperature. Measurements were obtained using openlab software from n = 25 cells for interphase measurements and n = 25 for septated cell measurements and transferred to Excel for analysis. The mean fluorescence intensity of a set tool area was obtained in the same cell for three non-overlapping regions – cell tip, cell septum (if present) and cell side (which was equidistant between the mid region and the tip of the cell). For cells at 37°C, the same set area was used. Septation in depolarized cells gave the orientation. Most depolarized interphase cells retained an elliptical or egg shape, allowing orientation for positioning the measuring tool. Cells with septa that had not separated were considered septated cells. For actin staining, cells were fixed by adding formaldehyde (to a final concentration of 3.7%) to the culture for 60 min with shaking, washed twice with PM (35 mm K2HPO4 and 0.5 mm MgSO4, pH 6.9), permeabilized with 1% Triton-X-100, washed twice with PM and stained with rhodamine–phalloidin (Molecular Probes). We note that the defects present in btn1Δ cells may interfere with visualization of intracellular structures. Images were visualized using a Hamamatsu digital camera C4742-95 fitted to a Zeiss Axioskop microscope with plan-Apochromat ×63 1.25 oil objective and were recorded using openlab 3.4 software (Improvision Ltd.) and downloaded to either Microsoft Excel for analysis or to adobe photoshop 7 for assembly into montages. A DAPI filter was used for DAPI, calcofluor and filipin fluorescence. A fluorescein isothiocyanate filter was used for GFP detection and a rhodamine filter for detection of FM4-64.
Acknowledgments
We thank T. D. Pollard, S. Castagnetti and W. Kobayashi for supplying strains and C. Kitzmüller and D. Cutler for helpful discussion. This work was supported by the Medical Research Council, UK (core support), MRC Research Studentship to R. L. H., the European Commission (503051) and the Wellcome Trust, UK (067991). We thank the Batten Disease Family Association, UK, and Children's Brain Diseases Foundation, USA, for additional financial support.
Supplementary material
Supplemental materials are available as part of the online article at http://www.blackwell-synergy.com
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