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Yeast Physiology Group, Department of Genetics and Microbiology, University of Murcia, 30071 Murcia, Spain
Correspondence
Mariano Gacto
maga{at}um.es
| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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Yeast cells are a suitable model system to study signalling mechanisms and stress responses. In the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe, sensing and transduction of oxidative stresses, heat shock, temperature downshifts and osmotic changes have been studied in some detail (Degols et al., 1996
; Shiozaki et al., 1998
; Wilkinson & Millar, 1998
; Quinn et al., 2002
; Soto et al., 2002
; Madrid et al., 2004
, 2006
). Biochemical and genetic evidence supports the existence in this yeast of three distinct MAPK phosphorylation pathways, including the stress-activated protein kinase (SAPK) pathway (composed of MAPKKKs Wak1/Wis4/Wik1 and Win1, MAPKK Wis1 and MAPK Sty1/Spc1/Phh1, which is highly similar to mammalian p38 kinase) (Shiozaki & Russell, 1995
), the cell-integrity pathway (which consists of MAPKKK Mkh1, MAPKK Pek1/Skh1 and MAPK Pmk1/Spm1, which is homologous to mammalian ERK1/2) (Zaitsevskaya-Carter & Cooper, 1997
) and the mating pheromone-responsive MAPK Spk1 pathway (Toda et al., 1991
).
Because life develops on Earth under rather constant gravity forces, changes in this physical factor may induce important physiological effects. Several studies have demonstrated the effects of microgravity on the regulation of microbial gene expression (Johanson et al., 2002
; Nickerson et al., 2004
). The results gathered may lead to a better understanding of cell behaviour under reduced-gravity space-flight conditions and disclose features of life that cannot be normally observed in ground-based experiments. However, comparatively less attention has been paid to cell responses under hypergravity conditions, even though many experimental protocols in current molecular and cell biology include centrifugation steps in which high gravitational forces are reached. In this context, a technical observation initially revealed that MAPK Sty1 became activated by phosphorylation when cells from S. pombe cultures were recovered by centrifugation instead of filtration (Shiozaki et al., 1998
). However, no further studies on this stimulation of MAPK Sty1 have been reported, except for the indication that centrifugation-induced Sty1 activation can be precluded in the cold (Soto et al., 2002
) and that such stimulation mimics some effects of heat shock-induced Sty1 activation (Petersen & Hagan, 2005
). In this work, we have characterized the molecular mechanisms by which centrifugation signals transduce into cells of the fission yeast to potentially modulate gene expression. Our results indicate that the SAPK signalling pathway is stimulated in response to hypergravitational conditions and that centrifugation-induced forces also signal through the Mkh1Pek1Pmk1 cell-integrity pathway in liquid media. Transduction of these centrifugation signals does not appear to trigger any obvious stress response of adaptive value. However, centrifuged cells slow down growth temporarily by arresting the cell-division cycle at G2/M, probably due to actin cytoskeletal alterations induced by the centrifugation stress.
| METHODS |
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Purification and detection of activated Sty1Ha6H, Atf1Ha6H and Pmk1Ha6H proteins.
To analyse Sty1 phosphorylation, total cell homogenates were prepared under native conditions, employing chilled acid-washed glass beads and lysis buffer [10 % glycerol, 50 mM Tris/HCl (pH 7.5), 150 mM NaCl, 0.1 % Nonidet NP-40, plus specific protease and phosphatase inhibitor cocktails for fungal and yeast extracts; Sigma]. The lysates were removed and cleared by centrifugation at 20 000 g for 15 min. Sty1 tagged with an epitope comprising haemagglutinin antigen plus six histidine residues (Ha6H) was purified by using Ni2+-NTAagarose beads (Qiagen), as reported previously (Soto et al., 2002
). The purified proteins were resolved in 10 % SDS-PAGE gels, transferred to nitrocellulose filters (Amersham Biosciences) and incubated with either mouse anti-haemagglutinin (Ha) (clone 12CA5; Roche Molecular Biochemicals) or mouse anti-(phospho-p38) (Cell Signaling Technology) antibodies. The immunoreactive bands were revealed with an anti-mouse horseradish peroxidase-conjugated secondary antibody (Sigma) and the ECL system (Amersham Biosciences). For Atf1Ha6H purification, the harvested cells were lysed into denaturing lysis buffer [6 M guanidine hydrochloride, 0.1 M sodium phosphate, 50 mM Tris/HCl (pH 8.0)] and the Atf1 protein was isolated by affinity precipitation on Ni2+-NTAagarose beads as described previously (Shiozaki & Russell, 1997
). The purified proteins were resolved in 6 % SDS-PAGE gels, transferred to nitrocellulose filters (Amersham Biosciences) and incubated with a mouse anti-Ha antibody (12CA5). The immunoreactive bands were detected as described above. Ha6H-tagged Pmk1 was purified and resolved from cell extracts as described for Sty1. As reported earlier (Madrid et al., 2006
), the purified Pmk1Ha6H fusion protein was assayed by Western blotting with mouse anti-Ha antibody (12CA5) for total Pmk1 protein or with a polyclonal anti-(phospho-p42/44) antibody (Cell Signaling Technology) to detect activated Pmk1 protein. Western blot analysis of the Pyp213myc fusion protein was performed with whole-cell extracts employing a mouse monoclonal anti-c-myc antibody (clone 9E10; Roche Molecular Biochemicals) and an anti-Cdc2 antibody (PSTAIRE; Sigma Chemical) as loading control.
RNA isolation and hybridization.
Yeast cultures grown to an OD600 of 0.50.7 were either subjected to centrifugation or recovered by filtration and incubated at 28 °C. At different times, cells from 30 ml culture were collected and total RNA preparations were obtained essentially as described by Moreno et al. (1991)
and resolved through 1.5 % agaroseformaldehyde gels. Northern (RNA) hybridization analyses were performed as described by Soto et al. (2002)
. Probes for pyp2 and leu1 were prepared as reported previously (Madrid et al., 2004
). leu1 mRNA was employed as an internal standard for the RNA amount loaded in each lane.
Viability assays.
Centrifuged and control cell samples were plated on YES agar plates and incubated at 28 °C for 3 days or assayed by the methylene blue test according to Arnold (1972)
. To study the effect of centrifugation on the development of thermotolerance, yeast cultures were centrifuged at 800 g for 5 min, incubated at 28 °C for 30 min and then subjected to a thermal stress by incubating at 48 °C. Cell samples collected at different times were diluted appropriately and spread in triplicate onto YES plates. The viability of the cells was measured by their ability to form colonies after incubation at 28 °C for 4 days. The survival fraction was calculated as a percentage relative to control samples that received no heat treatment.
Fluorescence microscopy.
Cell fixation, calcofluor white staining of cell walls and septa, DAPI (4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole) staining of nuclei and rhodaminephalloidin staining of F-actin were performed as described by Alfa et al. (1993)
. Images were taken on a Leica DM 4000B fluorescence microscope with a x100 objective, captured with a cooled Leica DC 300F camera and IM50 software and then imported and processed with Adobe PhotoShop 6.0. Quantitative determinations of nuclei, septa and polarized actin involved the analysis of at least 300 cells per strain.
Reproducibility of results.
All experiments were repeated at least three times with similar results. Representative results are shown.
| RESULTS |
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) to altered gravitational forces by centrifugation. In this case, Sty1 activation increased only slightly compared with the control strain (Fig. 2a
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The expression of genes regulated by Atf1 in cells exposed to centrifugation was also examined. We performed Northern and Western blot analyses for pyp2, which is a representative Atf1 target gene. As indicated in Fig. 2(c)
, transcription of pyp2 increased in wild-type cells on centrifugation, whereas it was blocked in sty1
cells. Similarly, the level of a Pyp212myc fusion protein was enhanced upon centrifugation and this increase was dependent on Sty1 function (Fig. 2d
)
Transduction of centrifugation stress through the Pmk1 cell-integrity pathway
MAPK Pmk1 has been involved in cell-wall construction, morphogenesis, cytokinesis and ion homeostasis (Zaitsevskaya-Carter & Cooper, 1997
). More recently, it has been shown that Pmk1 is activated in multiple stress situations, including hypo- or hypertonic stress, glucose deprivation, presence of cell wall-damaging compounds and oxidative stress, leading to the suggestion that this pathway might reinforce the SAPK signalling pathway in the control of survival and adaptation to sublethal stressing conditions (Madrid et al., 2006
). We therefore examined the possibility of activation of the MAPK Pmk1 pathway by increased centrifugation forces. In these experiments, we used strain MI200, which harbours a genomic copy of pmk1 tagged with Ha6H (Table 1
). The purified Pmk1Ha6H fusion protein was assayed by Western blotting with a polyclonal anti-(phospho-p42/44) antibody to detect activation of the Pmk1 protein (Madrid et al., 2006
). Fig. 3(a)
illustrates that, above a certain value, which was roughly coincident with the threshold for activation of the SAPK pathway, the phosphorylation of Pmk1 was also dependent on the effective centrifugation force. Moreover, under a constant centrifuge-induced artificial gravity, Pmk1 activation was related to the temporal length of the stressing stimuli (Fig. 3b
). On the other hand, the transmission of the gravity-stress signal through the Pmk1 cell-integrity pathway required the function of both MAPKKK Mkh1 and MAPKK Pek1, suggesting a linear transduction course (Fig. 3c
). Activation of Pmk1 induced by centrifugation was also observed in the absence of Sty1 (Fig. 3c
). As MAPK Sty1 negatively controls the basal level of MAPK Pmk1 activation (Madrid et al., 2006
), sty1-deleted cells were characterized by a comparatively high phosphorylation level in the absence of gravitational stimulus (zero time).
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Centrifugation induces a delay at the G2/M transition
Eukaryotic cells arrest the cell cycle in response to different environmental stresses. For example, S. pombe cells undergo a G2/M delay after a hyperosmotic shock (Rupes et al., 1999
). To test whether centrifugation induces a similar effect on the cell cycle, cdc25-22 cells (strain PPG148) were grown at 25 °C to exponential phase and shifted to 37 °C for 3.5 h to synchronize the cells in G2. Once arrested, the cells were either centrifuged at 200 g for 5 min or incubated without centrifugation for the same period, before being placed at the permissive temperature of 25 °C. Finally, we estimated the emergence of binucleated and septated cells in aliquots taken at different times. As shown in Fig. 6(a)
, compared with untreated cells, centrifugation induced a modest but reproducible delay of approximately 15 min in the commitment to mitosis (and consequently cell separation). The arrest was clearly smaller than that observed in cultures treated with 0.6 M KCl, which is included in Fig. 6(b)
for comparative purposes. The extent of the delay in the commitment of mitosis after centrifugation did not increase when higher centrifugation forces (800 g) were used, suggesting a low saturation level for this effect. These results confirm that cell perturbation induced by centrifugation promotes a transient cell-cycle arrest in S. pombe, even at low g forces.
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strain TS4 subjected to either 200 g (not shown) or 2900 g did not change significantly after centrifugation (Fig. 7a, b
mutant cells upon centrifugation, the results indicated that, unlike sty1
cells, those lacking Atf1 function still showed actin depolarization (Fig. 7a, b
cells and, in contrast to sty1
cells, they showed a wild-type pattern of actin depolarization after centrifugation (not shown).
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| DISCUSSION |
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Several studies during space flights and simulated microgravity conditions have suggested that low gravity affects proliferation and differentiation of both eukaryotic and prokaryotic cells (Zayzafoon et al., 2005
). In contrast, the effects of the reverse situation, i.e. hypergravity, are scarcely known, despite the fact that centrifugation procedures are often used in biological studies. Centrifugation forces developed in swinging-bucket rotors whose axes are parallel to the normal gravity vector simulate high-gravity fields. In S. pombe, such conditions promote a markedly elevated phosphorylation of the MAPKs Sty1 and Pmk1, provided that a minimal response threshold is exceeded. This threshold explains the absence of gravity-induced effects on cells during the incubation of flask cultures in conventional, non-reciprocal gyrorotatory shakers. As judged from the basal phosphorylation values of the MAPKs Sty1 and Pmk1 obtained in our experiments, standard gyrorotatory shakers only produce a gravity-like mechanical signal whose intensity is well below that required for the cellular signal-response chain of gravity perception.
Although the intensity of the phosphorylation signal prompted by centrifugation appears stronger in MAPK Sty1 than in MAPK Pmk1, this does not imply that the stress signal is transmitted preferentially via the SAPK pathway relative to the cell-integrity pathway. Western immunoblot assays for phosphorylated Sty1 and Pmk1 were performed, using two different antibodies. Consequently, the sensitivity of our experimental analyses reflects different affinities towards phosphorylated Thr and Tyr residues within the respective proteins, invalidating direct quantitative comparisons based on the intensity of the blot reactions.
There are conflicting results about the effect of centrifugation on the survival of yeast cells. Some reports indicate that yeasts do not lose viability and are scarcely damaged during centrifugation at high speed (Nakamura & Schlenk, 1973
), whereas others show a decreased ability for colony formation after artificial hypergravitational stress by long-term centrifugation (Yoshida et al., 1999
). Although our experiments were performed at comparatively lower g values, we did not find any significant difference in viability between centrifuged and control samples, regardless of the method for cell-survival determination.
Mechanical forces of fluid-shear stress and gravitational forces are different physical entities, and the use of centrifugation as a tool to generate gravity-like accelerations may subject the samples to unwanted inertial forces (Nickerson et al., 2004
). Hence, it could be argued that the activation of Sty1 during centrifugation was due only to associated stresses produced in liquid media, such as local heating or shearing forces. However, several observations suggest that this is unlikely. First, the basal level of phosphorylation of Sty1 and Pmk1 is almost undetectable in cells cultured at 28 °C, a temperature value that is never exceeded under temperature-controlled centrifugations. Thus, although the gravitational effect on cells may show dependence on thermal conditions, like other metabolic responses, it does not seem to be caused by increases in temperature. Second, the stimulation of MAPK Sty1, but not that of Pmk1, is still observed by centrifugation of cells supported on filters, i.e. when the linear displacement of cells along fluid columns is virtually nil. This suggests that an increased gravity force appears to be, by itself, a main component of the signal responsible for the activation of the SAPK transduction pathway, irrespective of the contribution of additional stress forces. An intriguing conclusion of this study is that mechanisms different from those that account for the activation of MAPK Sty1 (a combination of increased gravitational force plus shearing) operate for the activation of MAPK Pmk1 during centrifugation. Activation of the cell-integrity pathway is triggered by centrifugation only in liquid medium, suggesting that Pmk1 phosphorylation results exclusively from the effect of shearing forces associated with the centrifugation process. Whether the fission yeast funnels the centrifugation signal into the cell-integrity pathway as a friction-induced input or as a mechanical stimulus resulting from stretching deformations of the cell wall or plasma membrane is at present unknown.
For simplicity, the centrifugation signalling pathways can be separated into three sequential steps: perception of gravity or associated forces, signal transduction and cell response. As outlined above, the sensing mechanisms initiating transduction of the signals in fission yeast are unknown. In the case of the SAPK pathway, our results rule out the participation of histidine kinases Mak13 in early molecular steps. Activation of this pathway also entails phosphorylation of the transcription factor Atf1, and we have determined that there is hypergravity-inducible gene expression in S. pombe. Enhanced transcription of Atf1-dependent genes occurs under various physical and chemical stresses and underlies the general stress response, so that it is not uncommon for yeasts to exhibit some degree of crosstalk in response to different environmental stimuli (Attfield, 1997
). Although centrifugation activates signal-transduction systems involved in the transcriptional control of cross-protection, we have been unable to detect any gross adaptive phenotypic alteration after centrifugation, suggesting that activation of these systems may be necessary, but not sufficient, for induction of protection. This situation is strikingly reminiscent of what has been described following activation of the p53 signalling pathway induced by hypergravity in human cell lines (Okaichi et al., 2004
).
There have been suggestions that mechanical and physical forces may be sensed initially as local deformations or perturbations of the cell surface and that mechanosensitive systems might promote changes in cell-signalling pathways, which are converted subsequently into molecular responses (Nickerson et al., 2004
; Ingber, 2006
). Another different view is that the triggering factor results from the intracellular polarized displacement of some cell components under high-gravity fields, by analogy with what happens in statenchyma cells of higher plants and the otolith-related cells of animals (Monshausen & Sievers, 2002
; Lai et al., 2006
). Indeed, subcellular organelles move inside S. pombe along the hypergravity-force vector because of their differential density, thus affecting cell behaviour (Daga & Chang, 2005
). Irrespective of the nature of the sensors, the impact of altered gravity is probably related closely to the functional state of membranes and contractible elements of the cytoskeleton (Lewis et al., 1998
; Tabony et al., 2001
). The involvement of these cell components may be critical in the processes of reception and realization of gravitational stimuli, as demonstrated by the noticeable alterations in the molecular organization of membranes and cytoskeleton under altered gravity conditions on a variety of cells (Goldermann & Hanke, 2001
; Tairbekov, 2004
). In this respect, our results are consistent with the observation that application of centrifugation to S. pombe cells perturbs the pattern of actin patches in the cell tips and blocks cell growth temporarily (Petersen & Hagan, 2005
). Notably, we show that the displacement of actin from the tip of these cells during centrifugation is Sty1-dependent, thus providing an additional function for this kinase and the SAPK pathway. As a whole, the above results support the hypothesis that S. pombe may be a powerful genetic model that is useful in the dissection of the molecular mechanisms of gravity perception and response.
| ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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Edited by: M. Molina
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Received 13 November 2006;
revised 9 January 2007;
accepted 16 January 2007.
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