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Vol. 11, Issue 6, 2103-2115, June 2000
Department of Molecular Biology, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, Texas 75390-9148
Submitted February 17, 2000; Revised March 23, 2000; Accepted March 27, 2000| |
ABSTRACT |
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Cells modulate the expression of nuclear genes in response to
changes in the functional state of mitochondria, an interorganelle communication pathway called retrograde regulation. In yeast, expression of the CIT2 gene shows a typical retrograde
response in that its expression is dramatically increased in cells with dysfunctional mitochondria, such as in
o petites. Three
genes control this signaling pathway: RTG1 and RTG3, which encode basic helix-loop-helix leucine zipper
transcription factors that bind as heterodimer to the
CIT2 upstream activation site, and RTG2,
which encodes a protein of unknown function. We show that in
respiratory-competent (
+) cells in which
CIT2 expression is low, Rtg1p and Rtg3p exist as a
complex largely in the cytoplasm, and in
o petites in
which CIT2 expression is high, they exist as a complex predominantly localized in the nucleus. Cytoplasmic Rtg3p is multiply phosphorylated and becomes partially dephosphorylated when localized in
the nucleus. Rtg2p, which is cytoplasmic in both
+ and
o cells, is required for the dephosphorylation and
nuclear localization of Rtg3p. Interaction of Rtg3p with Rtg1p is
required to retain Rtg3p in the cytoplasm of
+ cells; in
the absence of such interaction, nuclear localization and
dephosphorylation of Rtg3p is independent of Rtg2p. Our data show that
Rtg1p acts as both a positive and negative regulator of the retrograde
response and that Rtg2p acts to transduce mitochondrial signals
affecting the phosphorylation state and subcellular localization of Rtg3p.
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INTRODUCTION |
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Cells can monitor and respond to changes in the state of their
organelles. In the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), for example, there is a
stress-related signal transduction pathway that responds to the
accumulation of unfolded proteins in the lumen of the ER, activating
expression of genes encoding some ER-resident proteins, such as the
chaperone BiP (for review, see Kaufman, 1999
). Similarly, cells can
modulate the expression of nuclear genes in response to alterations in
mitochondrial function, a response termed retrograde regulation (Parikh
et al., 1987
; Liao and Butow, 1993
). In animal cells,
interference of mitochondrial gene expression and loss of mitochondrial
DNA result in changes in the level of a subpopulation of
nuclear-derived mRNAs (Poyton and McEwen, 1996
). Biswas et al. (1999)
showed recently that in mouse C2C12 cells, decreases in
mitochondrial DNA content or the addition of mitochondrial poisons
resulted in elevated cytosolic Ca2+ levels. This
was accompanied by an activation of the calcineurin and c-Jun
N-terminal kinase pathways, a reduction in the level of nuclear
factor-
B, and increased transcription of the sarcoplasmic reticular
ryanodine receptor-1 Ca2+ release channel and the
cytochrome oxidase subunit Vb gene. These effects were attributed to
changes in the mitochondrial membrane potential,

m, and an attendant reduction in ATP levels.
In yeast, the retrograde signaling pathway functions as a homeostatic
or stress response mechanism to adjust various biosynthetic and
metabolic activities to the alterations in the mitochondrial state
(Liao et al., 1991
; Shyjan and Butow, 1993
; Small et
al., 1995
; Liu and Butow, 1999
). One member of the retrograde
responsive set of genes is CIT2, which encodes a peroxisomal
isoform of citrate synthase that catalyzes the first step in the
glyoxylate cycle, a metabolic pathway responsible for the conversion of
two carbon compounds (generated, for example, from the oxidation of
long-chain fatty acids) into intermediates such as succinate that can
enter the mitochondrial tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle. This metabolic interaction between the glyoxylate and TCA cycles enables cells to use
two carbon compounds for anabolic pathways, because the glyoxylate
cycle bypasses the steps in the TCA cycle at which two equivalents of
CO2 are released. Thus, activation of the
CIT2 retrograde response allows for a more efficient use of
carbon for biosynthetic processes.
In wild-type, respiratory-competent cells (
+),
CIT2 expression is low. But in cells with compromised
mitochondrial function, such as those with mutations in one or more
genes encoding enzymes of the TCA cycle, or those that are respiratory
deficient because they lack mitochondrial DNA
(
o petites), CIT2 expression is
high (Liao et al., 1991
; Liao and Butow, 1993
; Chelstowska
and Butow, 1995
; Kos et al., 1995
; Small et al.,
1995
). Depending on the severity or number of different mitochondrial
lesions, CIT2 expression can be elevated as much as 30- to
40-fold. Both basal and elevated levels of CIT2 expression are dependent on three genes, RTG1, RTG2, and
RTG3. RTG1 and RTG3 encode basic helix-loop-helix
leucine zipper (bHLH-Zip) transcription factors (Liao and Butow, 1993
;
Jia et al., 1997
). Most members of this family bind to
canonical E box target sites, CANNTG. Rtg1p (18 kDa) and Rtg3p (54 kDa)
are unusual, however, because they do not recognize E boxes, but,
rather, activate transcription by binding as a heterodimer to a novel
site called an R box (GTCAC), two of which are located in the
CIT2 promoter (Jia et al., 1997
). Neither protein
alone is able to bind to a target R box site. Although transcriptional
activation requires both Rtg1p and Rtg3p, only Rtg3p has been found to
contain transcriptional activation domains (Rothermel et
al., 1997
). The basic domain of Rtg3p strongly resembles that of
many other bHLH transcription factors containing conserved amino acid
residues (e.g., histidine, glutamic acid, and arginine) with conserved
spacing that have been shown to be important for contacting target site
DNA (Ferré-D'Amaré et al., 1993
; Ellenberger,
1994
; Ellenberger et al., 1994
). In contrast, Rtg1p,
although essential for CIT2 expression, is a novel member of
the bHLH family, because its truncated basic domain lacks the conserved
amino acid residues noted above, and it has no discernable transactivation activity (Rothermel et al., 1997
). We have
suggested that Rtg1p may facilitate the binding of Rtg3p to R box sites through its interaction with Rtg3p (Jia et al., 1997
;
Rothermel et al., 1997
).
How Rtg2p functions in the regulation of gene expression is less clear.
Rtg2p is a novel protein with an N-terminal ATP binding motif similar
to that found in hsp70 homologues, actin, and sugar kinases (Bork
et al., 1992
). In addition, Rtg2p shares some sequence similarity with bacterial polyphosphatases and phosphatases that hydrolyze the transcriptional regulators guanosine penta- and tetraphosphate (Koonin, 1994
). Genetic and transactivation studies suggested that Rtg2p acts upstream of the Rtg1p-Rtg3p complex in the
regulation of CIT2 expression (Rothermel et al.,
1997
). Finally, although none of the RTG genes is essential
for viability, null alleles of any one of them result in pleiotropic
phenotypes, including not only a loss of CIT2 expression but
an inability of cells to grow on acetate as a sole carbon source and a
growth requirement for glutamate or aspartate. These phenotypes are
characteristic of cells with defects in the TCA and glyoxylate cycles.
The RTG genes are also involved in the retrograde control of
expression of a cytosolic D-lactate dehydrogenase
activity encoded by a previously uncharacterized gene,
YEL071, now named DLD3 (Chelstowska et
al., 1999
), and in a novel, dual regulation of expression of the
TCA cycle genes CIT1, ACO1, IDH1, and
IDH2 (Liu and Butow, 1999
). These latter genes encode
proteins responsible for catalyzing the first three steps of the TCA
cycle leading to the synthesis of
-ketoglutarate. Their expression
in cells with robust mitochondrial function is largely dependent on the
Hap2,3,4,5p transcription complex, but as mitochondrial respiratory
function becomes more compromised, their expression becomes more
dependent
and, in some cases, entirely dependent
on the
RTG genes. We have suggested that the
HAP-to-RTG switch ensures that sufficient
glutamate is synthesized from
-ketoglutarate for biosynthetic
processes in cells with dysfunctional mitochondria. Collectively, these
findings suggest that diverse metabolic activities may be under the
control of the RTG genes.
The major objective of the present study was to understand how these RTG-dependent pathways of gene expression are activated in cells with compromised mitochondrial function. We show that in cells with robust mitochondrial function, in which expression of the RTG-dependent indicator gene CIT2 is low, Rtg1p and Rtg3p exist as a complex in the cytoplasm, and in cells with dysfunctional mitochondria, in which CIT2 expression is greatly elevated, these transcription factors accumulate in the nucleus. Nuclear translocation of Rtg3p correlates with (incomplete) dephosphorylation of the protein. Rtg2p is exclusively a cytoplasmic protein and is required for the nuclear localization and dephosphorylation of Rtg3p. Surprisingly, in addition to its requirement for transcriptional activation as a heterodimer with Rtg3p at target gene R box sites when the retrograde response is turned on, Rtg1p also functions to retain Rtg3p in a phosphorylated state in the cytoplasm when the retrograde response is off. These findings suggest a novel role for a component of a transcriptional activation complex and offer the first mechanistic view of the control of signaling between mitochondria and the nucleus in yeast.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Yeast Strains, Plasmids, and Growth Conditions
The S. cerevisiae strains used in this study are
derivatives of strain PSY142 (MAT
, leu2 lys2
ura3
+). The
o
derivatives were obtained by several passages of
+ cells through YPD medium (1% yeast extract,
2% bacto peptone, and 2% dextrose) containing 25 µg of ethidium
bromide/ml. Gene disruptions of RTG1, RTG2, or
RTG3 in PSY142 were carried out as described (Liao and
Butow, 1993
; Rothermel et al., 1995
; Jia et al.,
1997
). Cells were grown at 30°C in YPR medium (YP plus 2% raffinose)
or YNBR medium (0.67% yeast nitrogen base containing 1% casamino
acids [+cas] and 20 mg/l uracil as required).
pRS416Rtg3-GFP was constructed by PCR amplification of the
RTG3 coding and 5' flanking regions from
745 to +1458
using the oligonucleotides 5'-GTCCTGTCTAGATACAGGCAAC-3' and
5'-AAACTACTCGAGACCCCGAACC-3' (restriction sites used for
cloning are underlined). The oligonucleotides 5'-GGTTCGGGGGGTACCTAGTTTATG-3' and
5'-TCATTTTCCGGATCCACTTTAT-AG-3' were used to PCR
amplify 881 bp of the 3' untranslated region (UTR) of RTG3.
The PCR products were cleaved with the appropriate restriction enzymes,
and a 727-bp XhoI-KpnI fragment containing the
coding region of a bright green version of green fluorescent protein
(bGFP; see below) was cloned into the XbaI-BamHI
site of the yeast centromere plasmid pRS416. Truncated
versions of Rtg3-GFP (pRS416Rtg3
376-486-GFP,
pRS416Rtg3
2-279-GFP,
pRS416Rtg3
345-486-GFP,
pRS416Rtg3
314-344-GFP, and
pRS416Rtg3
280-298-GFP) were constructed by
amplifying the appropriate DNA fragments by PCR using pRS416Rtg3-GFP as
template and ligating the resulting fragments into pRS416 or a 6.5-kb
XbaI-XhoI fragment of pRS416Rtg3-GFP. Further
information on construction of p416Rtg3-GFP derivatives is available
upon request. The bGFP contains three amino acid substitutions, F99S,
M153T, and V163A (Okamoto et al., 1998
).
To construct pRS416Rtg1-GFP, the RTG1 coding and 5' flanking
region from
720 to +531 was amplified by PCR using the
oligonucleotides 5'-TTGTCTAGAAATTCGGATACGCAAAA-3' and
5'-AGTCTCGAGCGCTACCATTACCGTACTCAC-3'. The
oligonucleotides 5'-AGTGGTACCAAGTACTTCTGACTCTCAC-3'
and 5'-CCTGGATCCTTCCCGAGGATACAA-3' were used to PCR amplify
288 bp of the 3' UTR of RTG1. These fragments together with
the 727-bp XhoI-KpnI fragment of bGFP were
cloned into the XbaI-BamHI site of pRS416.
Similarly, for pRS416Rtg2-GFP, the RTG2 coding and 5'
flanking region from
396 to +1766 was amplified by PCR using
the oligonucleotides 5'-ATAAAGCTTCACCCCAATCCTTTCTGTTATT-3' and 5'-CTTTATTCTCGAGAAAATTGCACGCC-3'. The oligonucleotides
5'-TGGCGTGGTACCTTATGAAGAATAAAGA-3' and
5'-TCAGGATCCTGGATATGAGACATGC-3' were used to PCR
amplify 2988 bp of the 3' UTR of RTG2. These fragments
together with the 727-bp XhoI-KpnI fragment bGFP
fragment were cloned into pRS416.
Transplacements of the RTG3 gene by the various Rtg3-GFP
derivatives were carried out using linear
XbaI-BamHI fragments of the full-length or
truncated version of Rtg3-GFP from the different plasmids described
above that were transformed by standard procedures into an
rtg3::URA3 recipient strain of PSY142 (Jia
et al., 1997
) and selecting for Ura
transformants by plating on solid YNB+cas medium containing 3% glycerol, 0.1% 5-fluoroorotic acid, and 20 mg/ml uracil. All
transformants were verified by Southern hybridization. Similarly,
transplacement of RTG1 or RTG2 to Rtg1-GFP or
Rtg2-GFP, respectively, was done by transforming an
XbaI-BamHI fragment of Rtg1-GFP including 720-bp upstream and 288-bp downstream sequence of RTG1 from
pRS416Rtg1-GFP or a HindIII fragment of Rtg2-GFP including
396-bp upstream and 1377-bp downstream sequence of RTG2 from
pRS416Rtg2-GFP, respectively, into rtg1::URA3 or
rtg2::URA3 derivatives of PSY142.
Microscopy
Yeast strains containing Rtg3-GFP fusions were grown to logarithmic phase (OD600, 0.7-1.0) in YNBR+cas medium. Samples were observed using a Leica (Deerfield, IL) microscope (model DMRXE) equipped for an HBO 100 W/2 mercury arc lamp, an X100 Plan-Apochromat objective, and epifluorescence with the following filter set: 450 to 490-nm bandpass excitation filter, 510-nm dichroic reflector, and >515-nm long-pass emission filter for GFP. Images were collected with a charge-coupled device camera (model C5810; Hamamatsu, Hamamatsu City, Japan), and processed in Adobe (Mountain View, CA) Photoshop 5.0.
RNA Isolation and Northern Blot Analysis
Cells were grown in YPR medium to an OD600
of 0.7-1.0. Total yeast RNA was prepared using the hot phenol method
as described (Schmitt et al., 1990
). Northern blot analysis
was performed as described (Jia et al., 1997
).
Western Blot Analysis
Trichloroacetic acid precipitates of total yeast cell
proteins were prepared by pelleting cells from OD 0.7-1.0 culture as described before (Rothermel et al., 1995
). For SDS-PAGE,
equal volumes of extract dissolved in SDS-PAGE sample buffer (100 mM Tris-HCl, pH 6.8, 4% SDS, 20% glycerol, 0.002% bromphenol blue, and
0.1 M dithiothreitol) were loaded onto an SDS-PAGE gel with the
appropriate concentration of acrylamide and separated using the Ready
Gel system (Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA). Proteins were transferred to
nitrocellurose membranes (Schleicher & Schuell, Keene, NH) by semidry
transfer units (Hoefer Scientific, San Francisco, CA). Immunodetection
of proteins was carried out using primary rabbit anti-Rtg1p and
anti-Rtg3p polyclonal antibodies. Anti-Rtg1p polyclonal antibody was
raised as described by Rothermel et al. (1995)
. Anti-Rtg3p polyclonal antibody was raised against a purified maltose-binding protein-tagged version of the protein. Anti-rabbit immunoglobulin G-coupled HRP (Bio-Rad) was used as the second antibody and was visualized using the ECL system (Amersham, Arlington Heights, IL).
Immunoprecipitation
Cells were grown to OD600 0.7-1.0 in 50 ml of YNBR+cas, pelleted, and resuspended in 500 µl of solution A (50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.4, 50 mM NaCl, and 0.2% Triton X-100 containing 10 µg/ml protease inhibitors aprotinin, pepstatin A, and leupeptin and 1 mM PMSF) and 0.5 g of glass beads (0.5 mm). In some cases, 0.5 mM NaF and 5 mM sodium pyrophosphate were included in solution A to block phosphatase activity. Cells were broken by vortexing for 4 min (eight times for 30 s, with 30 s on ice between each vortex). The lysate was transferred to chilled 2-ml Eppendorf tubes and centrifuged at 21,000 × g for 30 min. Protein in the supernatant was adjusted to 3 µg/µl, and a 500-µl aliquot was incubated with polyclonal antiserum against Rtg3 or polyclonal antiserum against GFP (1 µl/100 µl of extract) at 4°C for 2 h. Then 150 µl of a slurry of protein G-Sepharose (Boehringer Mannheim, Indianapolis, IN) were added to the reaction mixture. The immune complexes were released by boiling in SDS-PAGE sample buffer after washing five times with solution A. The released immune complexes were analyzed by Western blotting as described above.
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RESULTS |
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Interaction between Rtg1p and Rtg3p Is Independent of the Retrograde Response
To determine whether the intrinsic interaction between Rtg1p
and Rtg3p might be modulated to control CIT2 expression,
Rtg3p was immunoprecipitated with Rtg3p-specific anitserum from
whole-cell extracts of wild-type
+ and
o cells and various mutant derivatives of
these strains, and the immunoprecipitates were analyzed by Western
blotting with antiserum specific for Rtg1p. In extracts of
+ and
o wild-type
cells, similar amounts of Rtg1p were coprecipitated with anti-Rtg3p
antiserum (Figure 1, lanes 1 and 2). As
expected, no Rtg1p was detected in extracts prepared from
rtg1
(lanes 3 and 4) or rtg3
(lanes 7 and
8) mutant derivatives of these strains. Thus, Rtg1p and Rtg3p appear to
interact comparably in
+ and
o cells despite the large difference in
CIT2 expression between these strains. Moreover, in
rtg2
+ and
o cells, we detected the same complex between
Rtg3p and Rtg1p (lanes 5 and 6). These data are consistent with
previous yeast two-hybrid experiments showing that the interaction
between Rtg1p and Rtg3p is independent of Rtg2p and that these proteins
are similarly expressed in
+ and
o cells (Rothermel et al., 1997
).
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Activation of the Retrograde Response Correlates with the Translocation of Rtg1p and Rtg3p from the Cytoplasm to the Nucleus
To investigate the possibility that the retrograde response is
controlled by regulation of the subcellular localization of Rtg1p and
Rtg3p, we constructed integrating vectors encoding in-frame fusions
between the C termini of full-length Rtg1p and Rtg3p and GFP.
Expression of each of the Rtg-GFP fusion proteins was placed under the
control of its natural promoter. These constructs were used in
integrative transformations to replace the respective chromosomal
copies of RTG1 and RTG3, and the expression of
the GFP fusion proteins was examined in
+ and
o wild-type and various mutant derivatives of
these strains. Preliminary experiments verified that each GFP fusion
protein expressed from an integrated single-copy gene was functional in
vivo, because each could complement their respective rtg
null allele as determined by restoration of CIT2 expression
and the activation of the retrograde response in
o cells (our unpublished results).
In wild-type
+ cells in which
CIT2 expression is low, Rtg3p-GFP is predominantly
cytoplasmic (Figure 2A, a). By contrast, Rtg3p-GFP shows a predominantly nuclear localization in
o cells in which CIT2 expression is
high (Figure 2A, b). This same pattern of cytoplasmic versus nuclear
localization was also observed for Rtg1p-GFP expressed in wild-type
+ and
o cells (Figure
2B, a and b). Thus, one level of control of the retrograde response is
by regulation of the subcellular localization of the Rtg1p-Rtg3p
complex.
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Rtg2p Is a Cytoplasmic Protein and Is Required for Nuclear Localization of Rtg1p and Rtg3p
Although Rtg2p is essential for CIT2 expression in both
+ and
o cells, it
lacks any obvious DNA binding motifs and shows no activity as a
transcriptional activator (Rothermel et al., 1995
). It was of interest, therefore, to determine the subcellular localization of
this protein as well. As was done for Rtg1p and Rtg3p, we constructed a
full-length fusion protein between the C terminus of Rtg2p and GFP and transplaced it into the RTG2 locus under control of
the RTG2 promoter. Complementation experiments also
indicated that Rtg2p-GFP is functional in vivo (our unpublished
results). In both
+ and
o cells, Rtg2p-GFP is strictly cytoplasmic and
appears to be excluded from the nucleus in those cells (Figure 2C, a
and b).
Given these findings and previous genetic data that Rtg2p acts upstream
of the Rtg1p-Rtg3p complex (Rothermel et al., 1997
), how
might Rtg2p function as a cytoplasmic protein in the regulation of
expression of retrograde responsive genes? One obvious possibility is
that Rtg2p controls the subcellular localization of Rtg1p and Rtg3p. To
test this, we deleted the RTG2 gene in strains harboring the
transplaced copies of Rtg3-GFP and Rtg1-GFP and determined the effect
on the localization of the GFP fusion proteins. These experiments show
that the rtg2
mutation had no obvious effect on the
cytoplasmic localization of either Rtg3p-GFP or Rtg1p-GFP in
+ cells (Figure 2, A, c, and B, c,
respectively) but blocked their nuclear accumulation in
o cells (Figure 2, A, d, and B, d). These data
suggest that Rtg2p regulates RTG-dependent gene expression
by controlling the nuclear localization of Rtg1p and Rtg3p.
Rtg1p Is Required to Retain Rtg3p in the Cytoplasm in
+ Cells but Not Vice Versa
Because Rtg1p and Rtg3p interact in the cytoplasm in
+ cells as well as in the nucleus when bound
to R box target sites, we asked whether the subcellular localization of
either protein might be affected by the absence of the other. To this
end, we examined the localization of Rtg3p-GFP expressed from the
transplaced gene in rtg1
+ and
o cells and, similarly, the localization of
Rtg1-GFP in rtg3
+ and
o cells. Surprisingly, we observed that the
absence of Rtg1p in
+ cells resulted in a
predominantly nuclear localization of Rtg3p-GFP (Figure 2A, e),
comparable with that observed in otherwise wild-type
o petite cells (Figure 2A, b). The nuclear
localization of Rtg3p-GFP in
o cells was
unaffected by the rtg1
mutation (Figure 2A, f). In sharp
contrast to these observations, Rtg1p-GFP remained cytoplasmic in both
+ and
o
rtg3
cells (Figure 2B, e and f). These observations
suggest that nuclear retention of Rtg1p requires that Rtg3p also be
present in the nucleus. They suggest further that Rtg1p functions not only as a positive regulator in the transcriptional activation of
retrograde responsive genes via its interaction with Rtg3p at R box
target sites but also as a negative regulator by contributing to the
sequestration of Rtg3p in the cytoplasm in
+
cells when the retrograde response is off and the level of target gene
expression is low.
Nuclear Localization of Rtg1p and Rtg3p Correlates with Dephosphorylation of Rtg3p
The subcellular localization of some transcription factors
has been shown to be regulated by phosphorylation (for reviews, see
Jans and Hubner, 1996
; Nigg, 1997
; Hopper, 1999
). To address whether
Rtg1p and Rtg3p are phosphoproteins and, if so, whether phosphorylation
correlates with their subcellular localization, we examined the
electrophoretic mobility of these proteins by Western blotting of
extracts from wild-type
+ and
o cells and different rtg mutant
derivatives using Rtg3p- and Rtg1p-specific antiserum. In wild-type
+ cells, different electrophoretic mobility
forms of Rtg3p are detected (Figure 3A,
lane 1), suggesting that in
+ cells, Rtg3p is
multiply phosphorylated (also see below). In extracts from wild-type
o cells (Figure 3A, lane 2), there is a
distinct shift in the mobility of Rtg3p to faster-migrating species,
indicating a substantial but incomplete dephosphorylation of the
protein compared with
+ cells. In
rtg1
+ and
o cells, Rtg3p is predominately
unphosphorylated (Figure 3A, lanes 3 and 4), and treatment of the
extracts with calf intestinal alkaline phosphatase (Figure 3A, lane 5),
resulted in the appearance of a single species whose electrophoretic
mobility is close to that expected for a 54-kDa protein. In contrast,
Rtg3p becomes hyperphosphorylated in rtg2
+ and
o cells,
evident by a dramatic shift to much slower-migrating species (Figure
3A, lanes 6 and 7); these species also are converted to a
faster-migrating form upon treatment with calf intestinal alkaline phosphatase (Figure 3A, lane 8). From these data we conclude that the
nuclear accumulation of Rtg3p correlates with incomplete
dephosphorylation of the protein and that both its subcellular
localization and phosphorylation state are controlled by Rtg2p.
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Rtg1p is also a phosphoprotein, because we generally observe two bands
both in
+ and
o cells
(Figure 3B) that collapse to a single band after alkaline phosphatase
treatment of the extract (Figure 3B, lanes 5 and 8). However, in
contrast to the results with Rtg3p, we have not observed any
significant difference in the distribution of these forms of the
protein in
+ and
o
cells (Figure 3B, lanes 1 and 2) or in rtg2
(Figure 3B,
lanes 3 and 4) or rtg3
(Figure 3B, lanes 6 and 7) mutant
derivatives of these cells. Thus, the phosphorylation state of Rtg1p
does not appear to play a role in its subcellular localization.
An rtg1
Mutation Suppresses the Effects of an rtg2
Mutation
on Rtg3p Localization and Phosphorylation States in
+
and
o Cells
It is clear from the data presented above that the
rtg1
and rtg2
mutations have entirely
opposite effects on the nuclear localization and phosphorylation state
of Rtg3p. It was of obvious interest therefore to examine the behavior
of Rtg3p in rtg1
rtg2
double-mutant
+ and
o strains. As
shown in Figure 4A, left panel, the
nuclear localization of Rtg3p-GFP in
+ cells
induced by the rtg1
mutation (Figure 2A, e) is unaffected in the rtg1
rtg2
double mutant. However, in
o cells (Figure 4A, right panel), the
rtg1
mutation reversed the block in nuclear localization
of Rtg3p-GFP caused by the rtg2
mutation (Figure 2A, d).
In a similar manner, we compared the phosphorylation state of Rtg3p in
+ rtg1
rtg2
cells with that in the
rtg1
and rtg2
single mutants and in
otherwise wild-type
o cells (Figure 4B). In
both
+ and
o cells,
the hyperphosphorylation of Rtg3p caused by the rtg2
mutation (lanes 3 and 7) is reversed in the rtg1
rtg2
double mutant (lanes 4 and 8), resulting in the same
dephosphorylated Rtg3p species as observed in rtg1
single-mutant cells (lanes 2 and 6). Collectively, these data show that
rtg1
is epistatic to rtg2
in affecting the
subcellular localization and phosphorylation state of Rtg3p.
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Functional Domains of Rtg3p
To identify domains of Rtg3p that are important determinants
in its subcellular localization, we constructed several Rtg3 deletion
mutants tagged at their C terminus with GFP (Figure
5A) and expressed these from the natural
RTG3 promoter as single-copy genes transplaced into the
RTG3 locus. In these experiments we were particularly
interested in knowing how these mutations affected not only the
subcellular localization of Rtg3p but also its phosphorylation state
and ability to interact with Rtg1p in
+ and
o cells. For some of the mutants, we also
determined whether their localization and phosphorylation states were
affected in rtg1
or rtg2
mutant cells and
whether the mutants affected CIT2 retrograde expression. The
results of these experiments are shown in Figure 6. Of the constructs shown in Figure 5A,
only the C-terminal deletion mutant,
Rtg3
376-486-GFP, behaved in all of the assays
essentially identical to that of wild-type Rtg3p. Thus,
Rtg3
376-486-GFP binds Rtg1p (Figure 6A, lane
2) and is a phosphorylated protein (Figure 6B, lane 1) that exists
predominantly in the cytoplasm of
+ cells
(Figure 6C) and in the nucleus in
o cells
(Figure 6C), partially dephosphorylated (Figure 6B, lane 2). From these
observations, it is not surprising that
Rtg3
376-486-GFP supports a robust
CIT2 retrograde response (Figure 6D, lanes 5 and 6)
requiring Rtg1p and Rtg2p (Figure 6D, lanes 7 and 8). Moreover,
phosphorylation and retention of
Rtg3
376-486-GFP in the cytoplasm of
+ cells require Rtg1p (Figure 6, B, lane 3, and C, respectively), and its dephosphorylation and nuclear
accumulation are dependent on Rtg2p (Figure 6, B, lane 4, and C,
respectively).
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In contrast to the results with
Rtg3
376-486-GFP, the N-terminal deletion
mutant Rtg3
2-279-GFP (Figure 5A), although
still able to interact with Rtg1p (Figure 6A, lane 5), is
dephosphorylated and predominantly nuclear in
+ as well as in
o
rtg2
cells (Figure 6, B, lanes 1 and 2, and C,
respectively). Nevertheless, this mutant protein is unable to support
CIT2 expression in either
+ or
o cells (Figure 6E, lanes 7 and 8). These
results are consistent with the presence of a transactivation domain in
the N terminus of Rtg3p (Rothermel et al., 1997
; Massari
et al., 1999
). Most of the potential phosphorylation sites
of Rtg3p are located in the N-terminal domain, which contains 80% of
the total serine and threonine residues of the protein. This would
account for the observations that only single band is observed for
Rtg3
2-279-GFP in the various strains
indicated in Figure 6B, lanes 1-4, all of which have the same mobility
as an alkaline phosphatase-treated extract from
Rtg3
2-279-GFP rtg2
cells
(Figure 6B, lane 5). These findings suggest that phosphorylation of
Rtg3p within its N-terminal domain is important for its retention in
the cytoplasm.
Most bHLH-Zip proteins function as homo- or heterodimers through
interactions that include the Zip and HLH domains
(Ferré-D'Amaré et al., 1993
; Ellenberger,
1994
). To investigate further the notion that interaction of Rtg1p with
Rtg3p is important for retaining Rtg3p in the cytoplasm in
+ cells, we examined two Rtg3p-GFP deletion
mutants, Rtg3
345-486-GFP, which lacks the
C-terminal and Zip domain, and
Rtg3
314-344-GFP, which lacks the loop-helix 2 domain (Figure 5A). Both mutant proteins are predicated to be
compromised in their ability to interact with Rtg1p.
Immunoprecipitation experiments confirm these predictions, showing that
neither of these deletion mutants forms a stable complex with Rtg1p
(Figure 6A, lanes 3 and 6), and neither could support CIT2
expression (Figure 6E, lanes 3-6). Moreover, like
Rtg3
2-279-GFP, both of the deletion mutants
were largely dephosphorylated (Figure 6B, lanes 1-3) even in
rtg2
cells (Figure 6B, lane 4) and were localized in the
nucleus in
+ and in
o
rtg2
cells (Figure 6C). The similarity in the
localization and phosphorylation states of these deletion mutants to
that of wild-type Rtg3p in rtg1
cells further supports
the notion that Rtg1p functions to sequester Rtg3p in the cytoplasm of
+ cells.
Rtg3p contains a putative bipartite nuclear localization sequence (NLS)
in the basic domain of the bHLH motif (Figure 5B). To test whether it
is a functional NLS, that sequence was deleted in the mutant protein,
Rtg3p
280-298 (Figure 5B). Immunoprecipitation
experiments showed that the absence of the putative NLS region in
Rtg3p
280-298 did not impair the ability of
this mutant protein to interact with Rtg1p (Figure 6A, lane 4).
Importantly, Rtg3p
280-298-GFP failed to
localize to the nucleus in
o rtg1
cells
(Figure 6C), a genetic background that we have shown is optimal for
nuclear accumulation of wild-type Rtg3p. These findings are consistent
with the absence of CIT2 expression in
+ and
o cells
expressing Rtg3p
280-298-GFP (Figure 6E, lanes
9 and 10). From these experiments, we conclude that the bipartite
sequence in Rtg3p functions as an NLS.
The finding that Rtg3p
280-298-GFP fails to
localize to the nucleus but can still interact with Rtg1p allowed us to
assess whether the conversion of Rtg3p to more dephosphorylated forms
in
o or in rtg1
+ cells is a cytoplasmic or nuclear activity.
As shown in Figure 6B, lanes 1-3,
Rtg3p
280-298-GFP, despite being cytoplasmic,
is largely unphosphorylated. In rtg2
o cells,
Rtg3p
280-298-GFP appears slightly
phosphorylated (Figure 6B, lane 4), although not nearly to the same
extent as seen for wild-type Rtg3p-GFP in rtg2
o cells. Considered together, these results
suggest that cytoplasmic Rtg3p is a substrate for a regulated kinase or
phosphatase activity or both.
The Phosphorylation State of Rtg3p Is Subject to a Feedback Control
It was somewhat surprising to us that
Rtg3p
280-298-GFP was largely unphosphorylated
in
+ or in rtg2
o cells, despite being complexed with Rtg1p in
the cytoplasm. The analysis of this deletion mutant, as well as the
other deletion mutants described above, was carried out in cells in
which the wild-type, chromosomal copy of RTG3 was replaced
with those genes encoding the deletion mutant variants. Although none
of the RTG genes is essential for viability, the RTG system
appears to influence the expression of a broad spectrum of genes (C. Epstein, unpublished observations). Moreover, even in
+ cells with robust mitochondrial function,
there is some RTG-dependent gene expression. Thus, the
absence of a functional Rtg3p might itself be stressful to cells and,
like mitochondrial dysfunctions, might lead to an activation of events
resulting in the dephosphorylation and nuclear translocation of
cytosolic Rtg3p. To examine this possibility, the chromosomal copy of
RTG3 in
+ cells was replaced with
the NLS deletion mutant rtg3
280-298
(which lacks the C-terminal GFP tag), and
Rtg3
280-298-GFP or wild-type Rtg3-GFP was
coexpressed in those cells from the centromeric plasmid p
b-rtg3-GFP
or pRtg3-GFP, respectively. Western blot analysis using Rtg3p-specific
antiserum was then performed to assess the phosphorylation state of the
chromosomally expressed Rtg3p
280-298, which
could be readily distinguished from the plasmid-expressed proteins
because it lacks the 27-kDa GFP extension. Analysis of controls with
either the chromosomal wild-type RTG3 or rtg3
alleles was carried out in parallel. As shown in Figure
7, lane 3, chromosomally expressed
Rtg3p
280-298 is largely dephosphorylated in
cells expressing Rtg3
280-298-GFP from
p
b-rtg3-GFP, whereas it is significantly more phosphorylated in
cells expressing wild-type Rtg3-GFP from pRtg3-GFP (Figure 7, lane 4).
Control experiments show that chromosomally expressed wild-type Rtg3p
is phosphorylated in these
+ cells regardless
of whether those cells are coexpressing
Rtg3
280-298-GFP or wild-type Rtg3-GFP (Figure
7, lanes 1 and 6, respectively). From these data we conclude that
Rtg3p
280-298 is capable of being
phosphorylated and that both phosphorylation and dephosphorylation
activities of Rtg3p are cytoplasmic. The data also support the
conclusion that the phosphorylation state of cytoplasmic Rtg3p is
subject to modulation by stress responses, which include not only
mitochondrial dysfunction but also the absence of a functional Rtg3p.
|
| |
DISCUSSION |
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|
|---|
The Functional State of Mitochondria Determines the Subcellular Localization and Phosphorylation State of Rtg3p
We have shown that a key factor in the control of
mitochondria-to-nuclear signaling is the regulated nuclear localization of the bHLH-Zip transcription factor Rtg3p. In
+ cells in which CIT2 expression is
low, Rtg3p is localized largely in the cytoplasm bound to its
heterodimeric partner Rtg1p. In
o petite cells
in which CIT2 expression is high, both Rtg3p and Rtg1p are
predominantly nuclear. These changes in the subcellular localization of
Rtg3p are accompanied by changes in its phosphorylation state: When
present in the cytoplasm, wild-type Rtg3p is multiply phosphorylated,
and when localized in the nucleus in
o cells,
it is partially dephosphorylated. Rtg1p is also a phosphoprotein, but
we have not detected any difference in its phosphorylation state
between
+ and
o
cells. Although Rtg1p and Rtg3p are both required for expression of
CIT2, only Rtg3p appears to have a direct transactivation
function (Rothermel et al., 1997
), and only its nuclear
localization is regulated. Unlike Rtg3p, the nuclear accumulation of
the 18-kDa Rtg1p (plus 27 kDa of GFP) appears to be passive (in
general, proteins smaller than 45-50 kDa can freely diffuse into the
nucleus), requiring only that Rtg3p be present in the nucleus,
presumably to anchor Rtg1p there in an active transcription complex. It
is also possible that Rtg1p is transported to the nucleus as a complex with Rtg3p. A tentative model summarizing the findings of the present
work is shown in Figure 8.
|
It is now clear that phosphorylation plays an important role in
regulating the distribution of some proteins between the cytosol and
nucleus in response to nutritional or other environmental signals (Jans
and Hubner, 1996
; Nigg, 1997
; Hopper, 1999
). For instance, several
phosphorylation events control the subcellular localization of Pho4, a
transcriptional activator required in a pathway of gene regulation that
monitors changes in the external concentration of phosphate (Oshima,
1997
; Kaffman et al., 1998b
; Komeili and O'Shea, 1999
). In
phosphate-poor medium, Pho4 is dephosphorylated, and in the nucleus,
when cells are exposed to a phosphate-rich medium, a subset of serine
residues in Pho4 are phosphorylated by the Pho80-Pho85
cyclin-cyclin-dependent kinase complex (Kaffman et al.,
1994
) effecting Pho4 nuclear export (Kaffman et al., 1998a
) through interaction with Msn5p, a member of the importin-
family of
nuclear receptors (Fornerod et al., 1997
; Gorlich et
al., 1997
). Phosphorylation of Pho4 has also been shown to be
important in preventing Pho4 nuclear import by blocking its interaction
with the nuclear import receptor Pse1p/Kap121, another member of the importin-
nuclear receptor family (Kaffman et al.,
1998b
). Nuclear import of the transcriptional repressor Mig1p is also
regulated by phosphorylation (De Vit et al., 1997
). In
high-glucose medium, a dephosphorylated form of Mig1p is rapidly
imported into the nucleus, where it acts as a negative regulator of
gene expression. In low-glucose medium, nuclear Mig1p is phosphorylated
by the protein kinase Snf1p and, like Pho4, is exported to the
cytoplasm via the Msn5p pathway (De Vit and Johnston, 1999
).
Preliminary experiments suggest that Msn5p may also function in
regulating Rtg3p nuclear export (T. Sekito, unpublished observations).
The relevant kinase and phosphatase activities affecting the
phosphorylation state of Rtg3p, as well as the phosphorylation sites
critical for its regulated subcellular localization, remain to be
identified. Experiments are presently under way to resolve these
issues. Most of the potential phosphorylation sites in Rtg3p are
located in the N-terminal region, which contains 80% of the total
serine and threonine residues of the protein. Deletion of this
N-terminal domain in the mutant Rtg3
2-279-GFP
did not affect its interaction with Rtg1p, but the mutant protein was
nevertheless constitutively localized in the nucleus, implicating one
or more of the N-terminal phosphorylated residues in regulating the
subcellular location of Rtg3p.
In addition to containing most of the potential phosphorylation sites,
the N-terminal domain of Rtg3p has an important transactivation function. Recently, Massari et al. (1999)
identified a novel
amino acid motif (LDFS) at the extreme N terminus of Rtg3p located
within a conserved
-helical activation domain, termed AD1 (Aronheim et al., 1993
; Quong et al., 1993
; Massari
et al., 1996
). The LDFS motif has been found in class I HLH
proteins such as E2A, HEB, and E2-2 (Massari et al.,
1999
), and appears to be unique among yeast bHLH proteins. The LDFS
motif has been suggested to function in transactivation by interacting
with components of the SAGA complex allowing chromatin remodeling
through histone modification in and around target genes (Grant et
al., 1997
, 1998
). Mutants lacking Gcn5p, a histone acetylase and a
component of the SAGA complex, were shown to have a ~50% reduction
in CIT2 expression (www.wi.mit.edu/young/expression.html), suggesting that the AD1 domain is important but not essential for CIT2 expression.
Identification of the Rtg3p NLS
The basic region of Rtg3p contains a bipartite sequence
similar to many NLS's. When that sequence was deleted in the mutant, Rtg3p
280-298-GFP, the protein remained
cytoplasmic in
o cells and in cells lacking
Rtg1p, genetic backgrounds in which wild-type Rtg3p was predominantly
nuclear. Moreover, just the basic HLH domain of Rtg3p can accumulate in
the nucleus (our unpublished results), further supporting the notion
that the bipartite element functions as an NLS. Although deletion of
the basic region in Rtg3p
280-298-GFP did not
appear to compromise the protein's ability to interact with Rtg1p, it
was surprising to find that, despite its cytoplasmic location,
Rtg3p
280-298-GFP was largely unphosphorylated
in
+ cells and in cells lacking Rtg2p; in the
latter, wild-type Rtg3p is hyperphosphorylated. Because the gene
encoding the deletion mutant was transplaced into the chromosomal copy
of RTG3, there was no functional form of Rtg3p present in
those cells. Although the level of expression of genes such as
CIT2 and DLD3 is much lower in
+ than in
o cells
(Liao and Butow, 1993
; Chelstowska and Butow, 1995
; Chelstowska et al., 1999
), that (low) level of expression is
nevertheless dependent on the RTG genes. We reasoned,
therefore, that the loss of expression of one or more
RTG-dependent genes in
+ cells
attributable to the absence of the functional form of Rtg3p might
itself trigger a stress or feedback response, similar to the
o state, initiating nuclear translocation of
Rtg3p; for Rtg3p
280-298-GFP, which can bind
Rtg1p but cannot translocate to the nucleus, this response might be
manifest as an unphosphorylated form of the protein. This notion was
supported by the finding that when a wild-type form of Rtg3p was
coexpressed from a plasmid in cells expressing
Rtg3p
280-298 from a chromosomal gene
transplaced into RTG3 locus, the deletion mutant protein
became phosphorylated. In addition to suggesting a feedback mechanism
for Rtg3p subcellular localization, these experiments suggest that both
phosphorylation and dephosphorylation of Rtg3p are cytoplasmic
activities. They do not, however, exclude the possibility that nuclear
dephosphorylation and phosphorylation activities may also function in
nuclear import and export of Rtg3p associated, respectively, with
activation or repression of the retrograde response.
Dual Function of Rtg1p
Two complementary lines of evidence suggest that when
RTG-dependent gene expression is low, as in
+ cells, Rtg1p functions as a negative
regulator by sequestering Rtg3p in the cytoplasm. First, simply
deleting the RTG1 gene resulted in nuclear accumulation and
dephosphorylation of Rtg3p, effects associated with activation of the
retrograde response. Second, deletion of two domains of Rtg3p that, by
analogy with other bHLH-Zip homo- or heterodimeric interactions, should
be important interfaces for interaction with Rtg1p
the Zip domain
(Rtg3
345-486-GFP) and the loop-helix 2 domain
(Rtg3
314-344-GFP)
gave the same result as
observed with full-length Rtg3p-GFP in a rtg1
background,
namely, unphosphorylated proteins that are constitutively localized in
the nucleus. Indeed, immunoprecipitation experiments showed that these
Rtg3p deletion mutants do not interact with Rtg1p. Because Rtg1p also
functions as a positive effector, being required together with Rtg3p
for transcriptional activation of target gene expression (Jia et
al., 1997
; Rothermel et al., 1997
), Rtg1p would thus
have a novel dual activity in the regulation of the retrograde
response. Rtg1p alone has no ability to activate gene expression when
bound to a promoter as a fusion protein with a heterologous DNA binding
domain (Rothermel et al., 1997
). Rtg3p, by contrast, which
cannot bind to an R box in the absence of Rtg1p (Jia et al.,
1997
), is a robust transactivator of gene expression in cells lacking
Rtg1p when expressed as a fusion protein containing a heterologous DNA
binding domain (Rothermel et al., 1997
). We speculated that
the role of Rtg1p in transcriptional activation is as an accessory
protein to Rtg3p, whereby the heterodimer allows for binding and
correct positioning of Rtg3p at R box target sites (Jia et
al., 1997
).
Transcription factors and other regulatory proteins may be sequestered
in the cytoplasm by a variety of mechanisms, including interaction with
other proteins (retention factors) that prevent nuclear translocation
until the appropriate signals effect their release. In
+ cells, Rtg1p would function like the
cytoplasmic retention factors I
B and Cactus, two negative regulatory
proteins that down-regulate gene expression by sequestering the Rel
homology transcription factors nuclear factor-
B and Dorsal,
respectively, in the cytoplasm (Sen and Baltimore, 1986
; Baeuerle and
Baltimore, 1988
; Roth et al., 1991
; Geisler et
al., 1992
; Kidd, 1992
). Under appropriate signals, I
B and
Cactus are targeted for degradation by their phosphorylation, allowing
access of the transcription factors to the nuclear import machinery
(Brown et al., 1995
; Reach et al., 1996
).
An alternative explanation for the finding that interaction with Rtg1p
is necessary for retention of Rtg3p in the cytoplasm in
+ cells is activation of the feedback response
caused by the absence of RTG-dependent gene expression, suggested from
the finding that the constitutively cytoplasmic deletion mutant
Rtg3p
280-298 is phosphorylated as long as a
functional Rtg3p is coexpressed. In that scenario, Rtg1p would not be
functioning in
+ cells strictly as a
cytoplasmic anchor for Rtg3p, but rather, the loss of RTG-dependent
gene expression caused by the absence of Rtg1p initiates the feedback
dephosphorylation and nuclear import of Rtg3p. However, this
interpretation is not easily reconciled with the findings that Rtg3p is
nuclear and dephosphorylated in the rtg1
rtg2
double mutant, whereas in the rtg2
single mutant, in which RTG-dependent gene expression is also blocked,
Rtg3p is cytoplasmic and hyperphosphorylated. Moreover, we have
observed that Rtg3p
280-298-GFP is
substantially phosphorylated in
+ rtg2
cells (our unpublished results), suggesting that the dephosphorylation attributable to the feedback response cannot completely overcome the
absence of Rtg2p. The feedback response could effect a destabilization of this tethering complex via a change in the phosphorylation state of
Rtg3p. Attempts to override the constitutive cytoplasmic localization
of the NLS deletion protein Rtg3p
280-298-GFP
by introducing ectopic NLS sequences within the C- or N-terminal regions of the protein were unsuccessful, suggesting that the mechanism
of retention of Rtg3p in the cytoplasm by Rtg1p binding may not be by
simple occlusion of the Rtg3p NLS. Further experiments will be required
to explore this possibility in greater detail.
Function of Rtg2p
Previous genetic data indicated that Rtg2p acts upstream of Rtg1p
and Rtg3p (Rothermel et al., 1997
). The current data support and extend those findings and suggest that Rtg2p may act as a proximal
sensor of mitochondrial dysfunction by promoting the dephosphorylation
and nuclear accumulation of Rtg3p when the retrograde response is
activated in
o cells. Although the biochemical
function of Rtg2p remains to be established, its absence results in a
hyperphosphorylated, constitutively cytoplasmic form of Rtg3p. Because
the requirement for Rtg2p in the dephosphorylation and nuclear
localization of Rtg3p can be bypassed in rtg1
rtg2
mutant cells, one plausible mechanism for the action
of Rtg2p would be to effect the dissociation of a cytoplasmic
Rtg1p-Rtg3p complex, allowing accessibility of Rtg3p to a phosphatase
activity or preventing accessibility to a kinase. The effects of Rtg2p
on the Rtg1p-Rtg3p complex may be indirect, however, because neither
yeast two-hybrid (Rothermel et al., 1997
) nor
coimmunoprecipitation experiments hint at any interaction between Rtg2p
and the Rtg1p-Rtg3p complex.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
We are grateful to Zhengchang Liu and other members of the Butow laboratory for many helpful discussions and also for sharing many of the reagents and strains used in these studies. This work was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health (GM-22525) and from The Robert A. Welch Foundation (I-0642).
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FOOTNOTES |
|---|
* Corresponding author. E-mail address: butow{at}swmed.edu.
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REFERENCES |
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