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Molecular and Cellular Biology, June 2000, p. 4238-4252, Vol. 20, No. 12
0270-7306/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Differential Mechanisms of LEF/TCF Family-Dependent
Transcriptional Activation by
-Catenin and Plakoglobin
Jacob
Zhurinsky,
Michael
Shtutman, and
Avri
Ben-Ze'ev*
Department of Molecular Cell Biology, The
Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, 76100, Israel
Received 5 October 1999/Returned for modification 15 November
1999/Accepted 27 March 2000
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ABSTRACT |
-Catenin and plakoglobin are highly homologous components of
cell-cell adherens junctions linking cadherin receptors to the actin
cytoskeleton.
-Catenin, in addition, activates transcription by
forming a complex with LEF/TCF family transcription factors in the
nucleus. Plakoglobin can also bind to LEF-1 and, when overexpressed in
mammalian cells, enhances LEF-1-directed transcription. Plakoglobin overexpression, however, results in the elevation and nuclear translocation of endogenous
-catenin. We show here, by DNA mobility shift analysis, that the formation of a plakoglobin-LEF/TCF-DNA complex
in vitro is very inefficient compared to a complex containing
-catenin-LEF-DNA. Moreover, in plakoglobin-transfected cells plakoglobin-LEF/TCF-DNA complexes were not formed; rather, the endogenous
-catenin, whose level is elevated by plakoglobin
transfection, formed a
-catenin-LEF-DNA complex. Removal of the N-
and C-terminal domains of both
-catenin and plakoglobin (leaving the
armadillo repeat domain intact) induced plakoglobin-LEF-DNA complex
formation and also enhanced
-catenin-LEF-DNA complexing, both with
in vitro-translated components and in transfected cells. Transfection
with these truncated catenins increased endogenous
-catenin levels,
but the truncated catenins acted as dominant-negative inhibitors of
-catenin-driven transcription by forming transcriptionally inactive
complexes with LEF-1. When these catenin mutants were prevented from
entering the nucleus, by their fusion to the connexin transmembrane
domain, they indirectly activated transcription by increasing
endogenous
-catenin levels. These results suggest that
overexpression of plakoglobin does not directly activate transcription
and that formation of catenin-LEF-DNA complexes is negatively regulated by the catenin N- and C-terminal domains.
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INTRODUCTION |
-Catenin and plakoglobin
(
-catenin) are homologous proteins originally discovered as
cytoplasmic components of cell-cell adherens junctions
(52; for a review, see reference
6). Plakoglobin, in addition, is a component of the
submembranal plaque of desmosomes (10, 18). In adherens
junctions,
-catenin and plakoglobin independently bind to the
cytoplasmic domain of cell-cell adhesion receptors of the cadherin
family, linking them to the actin cytoskeleton by an association with
-catenin (reviewed in references 3, 6, 20, 34,
76, and 77).
In addition to their structural role in adherens junctions,
-catenin
and its Drosophila homologue, armadillo, are part of the wg/wnt signaling pathway (56, 57, 85). Armadillo acts downstream of the secreted signaling molecule wg (the homologue of vertebrate wnt) to regulate wg-dependent developmental
decisions (for example, specification of the anterior-posterior
segment polarity [56]). During embryonic development
in Xenopus laevis,
-catenin is required for the
specification of the early dorsoventral axis (24). Ectopic
elevation of
-catenin level (19), similar to wnt
overexpression (73), results in the induction of a complete secondary embryonic axis. Signaling by
-catenin is believed to involve the nonjunctional pool of this protein, as recruitment of
-catenin to adherens junctions blocks its signaling function (16, 66, 70).
In the absence of a wnt signal, nonjunctional
-catenin is
efficiently degraded by the ubiquitin-proteasome system (1, 51,
65). The targeting of
-catenin for degradation involves the
phosphorylation of its N terminus by glycogen synthase kinase 3
(GSK) (1, 88), which requires engagement of
-catenin in a
multiprotein complex that involves, in addition to
-catenin and GSK,
the adenomatous polyposis coli tumor suppressor protein (47,
60), axin (32, 89) or conductin (5, 87),
protein phosphatase 2A (27, 68), and dishevelled (17,
41, 72). This complex associates with the F-box/WD-repeat
ubiquitin ligase
-TrCP that is responsible for the ubiquitination of
-catenin, leading to its degradation by the proteasome (22, 35,
64, 84).
The binding of wnt to its receptor frizzled results in the inhibition
of GSK activity (9) and the subsequent elevation in
-catenin level (55). This is followed by the
translocation of
-catenin into the nucleus and its complexing with
LEF/TCF transcription factors (4, 29, 45). In this complex,
LEF/TCF provides the DNA binding domain, while
-catenin contributes
the transactivation domain, forming a bipartite transcription activator of LEF/TCF target genes (45, 80). Aberrant activation of
-catenin signaling, which may result from stabilization of
-catenin in cells carrying inactivating mutations in adenomatous
polyposis coli, or mutations in the N terminus of
-catenin, is
associated with tumors in a variety of tissues (8, 15, 40, 44, 46, 53, 61, 75, 81, 91). Increased
-catenin levels were shown
elsewhere to enhance cell proliferation (50, 86, 90) and, in
some cases, to induce neoplastic transformation (39). In
line with these findings, the target genes of
-catenin-LEF/TCF, in
mammalian cells, include oncogenes such as c-myc
(23) and cyclin D1 (69, 78).
While the involvement of
-catenin in wnt signaling is well
documented, it is still unclear whether its close homologue,
plakoglobin, also has a signaling role. During early development in
Xenopus, the reduction in plakoglobin level (38),
unlike that of
-catenin (24), does not affect embryonic
axis formation. The phenotypes of mice that are knockouts for
-catenin (21, 31) and plakoglobin (7, 62) are
also different. While embryos lacking
-catenin die before
gastrulation, plakoglobin-null mice undergo organogenesis and die owing
to heart failure that results from compromised desmosome assembly in
the absence of plakoglobin (7, 62). In addition, the level
of plakoglobin is often reduced in cancer cells (2, 48, 74),
and the human plakoglobin gene displays loss of heterozygosity in
certain tumors (2). Finally, plakoglobin was shown
previously to suppress tumorigenicity when overexpressed in various
cell lines (71).
Despite these differences between
-catenin and plakoglobin, a
transactivation domain was also identified in the plakoglobin molecule
(70) and plakoglobin can bind to LEF-1, similarly to
-catenin (29, 70). An elevation in plakoglobin expression was shown to lead to ectopic axis formation in Xenopus
(33) and activation of LEF/TCF-dependent transcription in
mammalian cells (70). Plakoglobin can also activate
LexA-responsive transcription when introduced into yeast cells together
with a LEF-LexA fusion protein (25). The interpretation of
these results regarding the signaling potential of plakoglobin in
Xenopus (42) and mammalian cells is, however,
complicated by the fact that increased levels of plakoglobin lead to
compromised degradation and nuclear accumulation of the endogenous
-catenin (43, 70). This was suggested to account for the
signaling effects reported in plakoglobin-overexpressing cells
(43, 70).
In this study, we addressed the mechanism(s) underlying
LEF/TCF-dependent transcriptional activation in mammalian cells
expressing increased plakoglobin levels. We show that, while
plakoglobin binds to LEF-1 with an affinity similar to that of
-catenin, it is inefficient in forming a ternary complex containing
LEF-1 and the LEF-1 binding DNA sequence. This apparently results from an inhibitory action confined to the N- and C-terminal domains of the
plakoglobin molecule and from the difference between the armadillo
repeat domains of
-catenin and plakoglobin. In addition, we
demonstrate that transactivation in plakoglobin-transfected cells
results from elevated endogenous
-catenin that becomes engaged in a
complex with LEF-1 and the LEF-1 binding DNA sequence.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Cell culture and transfections.
293-T human embryonic kidney
cells were cultured in Dulbecco modified Eagle medium and 10% calf
serum (Gibco Laboratories), at 37°C, in the presence of 7%
CO2. Cells were transiently transfected with the cDNA
constructs described below, using Ca2+-phosphate, and the
expression of transgenes was assessed 36 h after transfection.
Construction of plasmids.
The hemagglutinin (HA)-tagged
-catenin (
-CAT), HA-tagged plakoglobin (PG), vesicular stomatitis
virus (VSV)-tagged
-catenin (
-CAT-VSV-C), VSV-tagged plakoglobin
(PG-VSV-C),
-CAT 1-ins, and PG 1-ins constructs were described
previously (70). A
-catenin mutant containing armadillo
repeats 1 to 13 (
-CAT ARM) was obtained by PCR amplification using
oligonucleotides 5'-ACCTTCTAGATTGAAACATGCAGTTGTCAATTTG-3' and 5'-ACCTGGATCCTGCAGTCTCATTCCAAGCC-3'. The amplified
fragment was cloned into the XbaI/BamHI site of
pCGN (70), resulting in pHA-
-CAT ARM. The PG ARM mutant
was obtained by PCR amplification using oligonucleotides
5'-ACCTTCTAGACTCAAGTCGGCCATTGTGC-3' and 5'-ACCTGGATCCTACTGGGCAGCCTCCCAGGC-3'. The amplified fragment
was subcloned into the XbaI/BamHI site of the
pCGN vector, resulting in pHA-PG ARM. To prepare fusion constructs of
catenin armadillo repeat domains and the connexin transmembrane domain,
the latter was obtained by PCR amplification from pCS7. CnxHPkg-UGP
(42) using the following primers:
5'-ACCTTCTAGAAACTGGACAGGTCTATAC-3' and
5'-ACCTACTAGTCGCACAGGCCCGGATGAT-3'. The PCR product was
digested by XbaI/SpeI and subcloned into the
XbaI site of pHA-
-CAT ARM and pHA-PG ARM. To obtain the
-CAT ARM, PG ARM, PG 1-ins, and
-catenin constructs containing
the N-terminal VSV tag, pHA-
-CAT ARM, pHA-PG ARM, pHA PG 1-ins, and
pHA-
-catenin were digested with XbaI/BamHI and
the inserts were subcloned into pCGN-VSV bearing the N-terminal VSV tag
(provided by D. Helfman, Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y.).
For in vitro translation assays, catenin inserts were excised from the
pCGN expression vector by XbaI and BamHI and
subcloned into pIND-tkUTR (14), which was digested by
XbaI and BamHI. The resulting constructs were
digested by PmeI, and the inserts containing catenins, with
the 5' untranslated region of herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase,
were subcloned into the pCIneo vector, digested by SmaI, and
treated with alkaline phosphatase.
Chimeras of

-catenin and plakoglobin were obtained by PCR and
contained the N-terminal amino acids 1 to 132 of

-catenin
fused to
amino acids 123 to 687 of plakoglobin (

-N/PG ARM), amino
acids 1 to
132 of

-catenin fused to amino acids 123 to 687 of
plakoglobin and
amino acids 698 to 781 of

-catenin (

-N/PG ARM/

-C),
amino acids
133 to 695 of

-catenin fused to amino acids 686 to
745 of
plakoglobin (

-ARM/PG C), and amino acids 123 to 685 of
plakoglobin
fused to amino acids 696 to 781 of

-catenin (PG ARM/

-C).

-N/PG
ARM and

-N/PG ARM/

-C were kindly provided by M. Wheelock
(University of Toledo, Toledo, Ohio) (
82).
In vitro translation and DNA binding assays.
In
vitro-translated proteins were synthesized from a T7 promoter with a
coupled transcription and translation (TnT) kit (Promega). The
efficiency of in vitro translation was assessed by sodium dodecyl
sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) of parallel
translation reactions performed in the presence of [35S]methionine (Amersham). To study the interaction
between LEF-1 and catenins, in vitro-translated LEF-1 (0.4 µl) was
incubated with a fivefold molar excess of in vitro-translated catenins
in the presence of a 32P-labeled duplex oligonucleotide
probe, containing a LEF-1 binding site from the cyclin D1 promoter
(69). The molar ratio of catenins to LEF-1 or TCF-4 was
determined by densitometric tracing of SDS-PAGE autoradiograms obtained
from parallel translations in the presence of
[35S]methionine. When in vitro-translated TCF-4 was used
for the binding reactions, 0.2 µl of TCF-4 and a 10-fold molar excess of catenins were employed. The binding reaction and native gel electrophoresis in 4% acrylamide were performed as described
previously (69).
Nuclear extracts.
293-T cells grown in 90-mm-diameter dishes
were transfected with 2 µg of LEF-1 and 8 µg of catenin expression
plasmids, or with the control pCIneo vector. Thirty-six hours after
transfection, nuclear extracts were prepared as described previously
(67). Briefly, cells were incubated for 15 min in low-salt
buffer, then NP-40 was added, nuclei were pelleted by centrifugation,
and nuclear proteins were extracted with high-salt buffer at 4°C.
Protein concentrations were determined using the bicinchoninic acid
protein assay reagent (Pierce) and bovine serum albumin as a standard. For DNA binding assays, 6 µg of nuclear extract was used. The polyclonal antibodies to
-catenin, the VSV-G epitope, and monoclonal antibody to the HA epitope were all previously described
(70). One microgram of antibody was added to the binding
reactions for analyzing the DNA mobility supershift. In competition
experiments, a 1,000-fold excess of unlabeled oligonucleotides
containing a mutant LEF-1 binding site from the cyclin D1 promoter was
employed (69).
Immunoblotting.
Equal amounts of protein from nuclear
extracts isolated from the transfected cells were separated by SDS-PAGE
and subjected to Western blotting using a monoclonal anti-HA antibody
(clone 12CA5; Boehringer Mannheim) and a polyclonal anti-VSV-G antibody (a gift from J. C. Perriard, Swiss Federal Institute of
Technology, Zurich, Switzerland).
Coimmunoprecipitation.
293-T cells grown in 90-mm-diameter
dishes were transfected with VSV-catenin and HA-LEF-1 plasmids and
lysed 24 h after transfection in 600 µl of buffer containing 20 mM Tris-HCl, 140 mM NaCl, 1% Triton X-100, 10% glycerol, 1 mM EGTA,
1.5 mM MgCl2, 1 mM dithiothreitol, and 1 mM
phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride (pH 8.0) (61). The lysates were centrifuged at 15,000 rpm for 15 min at 4°C in an Eppendorf centrifuge and the supernatants were used for Western blotting and
coprecipitation experiments. The lysates were precleared for 1 h
at 4°C in the presence of 20 µl of protein A/G-coated agarose beads
(Santa Cruz), centrifuged for 10 min at 15,000 rpm at 4°C, and
incubated with 2 µg of anti-HA or anti-VSV antibodies at 4°C for
1 h, followed by another 1-h incubation with 20 µl of protein A/G-agarose bead suspension, after which the beads were pelleted; washed three times with 1 ml of a buffer containing 20 mM Tris-HCl, 150 mM NaCl, and 0.5% NP-40 (pH 8.0); and boiled for 5 min in 20 µl of
SDS-PAGE sample buffer. The samples were subjected to SDS-PAGE and
immunoblotted with anti-VSV and anti-HA antibodies.
Transactivation assays.
293-T cells, in 35-mm-diameter
dishes, were transfected with 4 µg of catenin constructs, 0.5 µg of
the TOPFLASH reporter (80), and 0.5 µg of the control
simian virus 40 promoter-driven
-galactosidase, using
Ca2+-phosphate, and luciferase activity was measured
36 h after transfection from duplicate plates (70). The
inhibitory effects of catenin constructs on
-catenin-dependent
transactivation were examined by transfecting 0.6 µg of
-catenin
expression plasmid and 3.0 µg of catenin constructs, or control
vector, together with 0.5 µg of the TOPFLASH or FOPFLASH reporter and
0.5 µg of LacZ, which served as a control for transfection
efficiency. FOPFLASH activity was not affected by transfection of
catenin expression plasmids.
Immunofluorescence microscopy.
Cells cultured on glass
coverslips were fixed with 3.7% paraformaldehyde in phosphate-buffered
saline and permeabilized with 0.5% Triton X-100 (Sigma). Monoclonal
antibodies against the C terminus of
-catenin (6F9) and polyclonal
antibodies against the HA epitope were described previously
(70). The secondary antibody was fluorescein isothiocyanate-
or Cy3-labeled goat anti-mouse immunoglobulin G (Jackson ImmunoResearch
Laboratories, West Grove, Pa.). The epifluorescence images were
visualized with an Axiovert S100 TV microscope equipped with a cooled,
scientific-grade, charge-coupled device camera (Photometrics, Tucson,
Ariz.) and deconvoluted with the DeltaVision 2.10 software on a Silicon
Graphics computer. Images were assembled using the Adobe PhotoShop 4.0 software.
For the quantification of

-catenin fluorescence intensity, images of
transfected cells were collected with the DeltaVision
2.10 software and
integrated cytoplasmic and nuclear fluorescence
was measured using the
Priism software. Values were normalized
for the cell area, and the
resulting intensity was divided by
the corresponding values obtained
with control untransfected cells
(chosen within the same field of
view). The resulting values were
designated fold increase in
fluorescence
intensity.
 |
RESULTS |
Plakoglobin and
-catenin differ in their ability to form a
ternary complex with LEF/TCF factors and DNA.
To compare the
ability of
-catenin and plakoglobin to form ternary complexes with
LEF/TCF and DNA, we used the DNA mobility shift analysis
(electrophoretic mobility shift assay [EMSA]) with a radiolabeled
LEF-1 DNA binding site as the DNA probe. First, in vitro-transcribed
and -translated LEF-1,
-catenin, and plakoglobin and deletion
mutants of the two catenins (Fig. 1) were
prepared (Fig. 2A), and the interaction
of LEF-1 with catenins and DNA was determined (Fig. 2B). Incubation of
in vitro-translated LEF-1 with the DNA probe, in the absence of
catenins, resulted in the formation of a single LEF-1-DNA band (Fig.
2B, lane 2). When LEF-1 was incubated with the DNA in the presence of
-catenin (at a fivefold molar excess of
-catenin over LEF-1), an
additional slower-migrating band was formed (Fig. 2B, lane 3),
corresponding to the
-catenin-LEF-1-DNA complex. In contrast to
-catenin, plakoglobin did not form a detectable complex with LEF-1
and DNA (Fig. 2B, lane 4). When
-catenin and plakoglobin were
compared in their ability to form catenin-TCF-4-DNA ternary
complexes, plakoglobin was again found unable to form a complex
composed of plakoglobin-TCF-4-DNA (Fig. 2C, lane 3), while a
-catenin-TCF-4-DNA complex was efficiently formed under the same
conditions (Fig. 2C, lane 2, compare to lanes 1 and 3). These results
demonstrate that the observed difference between
-catenin and
plakoglobin in the efficiency in forming a ternary complex with LEF/TCF
factors and DNA was apparent with both LEF-1 and TCF-4 and was not
unique to LEF-1.

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FIG. 1.
Schematic representation of catenin constructs used in
this study. Catenin domains that have transactivation capacity are
hatched. The numbers 1 to 13 represent armadillo (ARM) repeats in
-catenin and plakoglobin with a nonrepeat region (ins) between
repeats 10 and 11. HA designates the HA epitope tag; CNX marks the
transmembrane domain of connexin-32.
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FIG. 2.
Identification of -catenin and plakoglobin domains
governing the formation of catenin-LEF-1-DNA complexes. (A) The
catenin constructs and LEF/TCF factors were transcribed and translated
in vitro in the presence of [35S]methionine, resolved by
SDS-PAGE, and visualized by autoradiography. The positions of molecular
weight markers (in thousands) are indicated on the right. (B) The in
vitro-translated LEF-1 was incubated with 32P-labeled DNA,
containing a LEF/TCF binding site, in the absence or presence of a
fivefold molar excess of the various in vitro-translated catenin
constructs. Protein-DNA complexes were separated by native 4% PAGE and
visualized by autoradiography. (C) In vitro-translated TCF-4 was
incubated with a 32P-labeled DNA probe containing the
LEF/TCF binding site in the presence or absence of a 10-fold molar
excess of -catenin or plakoglobin, and the EMSA was performed as
described for panel B.
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Since the armadillo repeat domain of

-catenin was implied to contain
the binding site for LEF/TCF (
4,
80), we next compared
the
abilities of deletion mutants of

-catenin and plakoglobin
comprised
of the armadillo repeat domains of these proteins (Fig.
1,

-CAT ARM
and PG ARM) to those of full-length catenins in forming
ternary
complexes by EMSA. The results shown in Fig.
2B demonstrate
that there
was a significant difference in catenin-LEF-1-DNA complex
formation
between these constructs: both

-CAT ARM and PG ARM
were
substantially more efficient in forming catenin-LEF-1-DNA
complexes
than were the respective full-length molecules (Fig.
2B, lanes 9 and
10, compare to lanes 3 and 4). To determine whether
the N or the C
termini of catenins were responsible for conferring
the inefficient
capacity to form ternary complexes by the full-length
catenins, we
prepared

N and

C deletion mutants of both

-catenin
and
plakoglobin (Fig.
1,

-CAT

C,

-CAT

N, PG

C, and PG

N)
and tested their ability to form complexes with LEF-1 and DNA.
Both

N and

C

-catenin mutants interacted with LEF-1 with an
efficiency that was similar to that of the full-length protein
but
which was much lower than that of the armadillo repeat domain
(Fig.
2B,
lanes 5 and 7, compare to lanes 3 and 9).

N- and

C-plakoglobin
constructs were also significantly less effective in their interaction
with LEF-1 than was PG ARM (Fig.
2B, lanes 6 and 8, compare to
lane
10). PG

C was slightly more efficient than full-length plakoglobin
in forming such a complex (Fig.
2B, compare lane 4 to 8, which
displays
a smear). Thus, both the N- and C-terminal domains of

-catenin and
plakoglobin could apparently act as negative regulators
of
catenin-LEF-1-DNA ternary complex formation. Removal of the
last
three armadillo repeats of both

-catenin and plakoglobin
(Fig.
1,

-CAT 1-ins and PG 1-ins) completely abolished the interaction
with
LEF-1 and DNA (Fig.
2B, lanes 11 and 12), indicating that
the integrity
of the armadillo repeat domain is necessary for
binding to LEF-1 (see
below).
To determine the contribution of the catenin terminal domains and the
armadillo repeats to the difference in ternary complex
formation
between the two catenins, chimeras of

-catenin and
plakoglobin were
also prepared (Fig.
3A). These constructs
were
translated in vitro (Fig.
3B) and tested for the ability to form
ternary complexes with LEF-1 (Fig.
3C). When the terminal domains
of
plakoglobin were replaced by those of

-catenin, the resulting
chimera (

-N/PG ARM/

-C), similarly to full-length plakoglobin
(Fig.
3C, lane 4), was unable to form a detectable complex with
LEF-1
and the DNA (Fig.
3C, lane 5), thus being significantly
different from

-catenin (Fig.
3C, lane 3). This implies that
the terminal domains
of either

-catenin or plakoglobin exert
a similar inhibitory effect
on ternary complex formation by PG
ARM.

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FIG. 3.
Formation of catenin-LEF-DNA complexes by a chimera of
-catenin and plakoglobin. (A) Schematic representation of
-catenin and plakoglobin chimeric molecules. The -catenin domains
are shown in black, and those of plakoglobin are shown in white. (B)
The catenin constructs were translated in vitro in the presence of
[35S]methionine, resolved by SDS-PAGE, and visualized by
autoradiography. Numbers at right of panel B represent molecular masses
in kilodaltons. (C) In vitro-translated LEF-1 was incubated with a
32P-labeled DNA probe that contained a LEF/TCF binding site
in the presence or absence of a fivefold molar excess of the in
vitro-translated catenin mutants over LEF-1, and the EMSA was performed
as described in the legend to Fig. 2.
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To determine the inhibitory properties of the C-terminal domains, in
the absence of the N terminus, we tested chimeric molecules
consisting
of the ARM repeats of plakoglobin and

-catenin linked
to the
C-terminal domain of the other molecule (Fig.
3A, PG ARM/

-C
and

-CAT ARM/PG-C). Comparison of these chimeras to

-catenin

N and
plakoglobin

N showed that the

-CAT ARM/PG-C chimeric
molecule
behaved similarly to

-catenin

N (Fig.
3C, lanes 6 and
8) and that
PG ARM/

-C was similar to plakoglobin

N (Fig.
3C,
lanes 7 and 9),
in their efficiency in forming ternary complexes.
The

-N/PG ARM
chimeric molecule formed a smear (Fig.
3C, lane
10) indicative of weak
complexing, similar to that observed with
plakoglobin

C (Fig.
2C,
lane 8). Taken together, these experiments
demonstrate that the
inhibitory properties of the N- and C-terminal
domains of

-catenin
and plakoglobin are similar, and the major
difference between the
catenins in ternary complex formation is
apparently determined by the
ARM domains of these molecules (Fig.
2B, compare lanes 9 and
10).
-Catenin-LEF-1-DNA but not plakoglobin-LEF-1-DNA complexes
are formed in cells transfected with plakoglobin.
We have
previously demonstrated that the transfection of plakoglobin into 293-T
cells results in LEF-1-dependent transcriptional activation
(70). Since plakoglobin was inefficient in the formation of
a complex with LEF-1 and DNA in vitro (Fig. 2B and C and Fig. 3C), we
next asked whether it could form such a complex in the nuclei of cells
overexpressing plakoglobin. 293-T cells were transfected with HA-tagged
LEF-1 either alone or together with VSV-tagged plakoglobin, or
-catenin (Fig. 4A), and EMSAs with
nuclear extracts from the transfected cells were conducted (Fig. 4B).
Nuclear extracts from cells transfected with a control vector formed
bands (Fig. 4B, lane 1, N. S.) that were competed by excess
unlabeled DNA comprised of the mutant LEF-1 binding site and were thus
considered nonspecific (results not shown).

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FIG. 4.
-Catenin-LEF-1-DNA complex formation in
plakoglobin-transfected cells. (A) Schematic representation of N- and
C-terminally VSV-tagged catenin constructs. (B) Catenin-LEF-1-DNA
complex formation was analyzed with nuclear extracts from 293-T cells
transfected with LEF-1 and VSV-plakoglobin, or VSV- -catenin. Gel
EMSAs were performed with 6 µg of nuclear extract from 293-T cells
transfected with control vector (lane 1) or with LEF-1 and the
indicated catenin mutants. Nuclear extracts were incubated with a
32P-labeled DNA probe containing the LEF-1 binding site, in
the absence or presence of the indicated antibodies. DNA-protein
complexes were analyzed as described in the legend to Fig. 2. N. S., nonspecific. (C) The nuclear extracts used in panel B were
analyzed, by immunoblotting, for levels of catenins (with anti-VSV
antibody [upper panel]) and LEF-1 (with anti-HA antibody [lower
panel]).
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When nuclear extracts from cells transfected with HA-tagged LEF-1 were
analyzed, an additional strong band was detected (Fig.
4B, lane 2),
which corresponded to the LEF-1-DNA complex and displayed
a lower
mobility in the presence of anti-HA antibodies (results
not shown).
When extracts from cells transfected with LEF-1 and

-catenin, or
plakoglobin, were analyzed, an additional band (

-CAT-LEF-DNA)
whose position corresponded to the expected position of a
catenin-LEF-1
complex was apparent (Fig.
4B, lanes 3 and 6). To
identify the
molecular composition of this band, nuclear extracts were
incubated
with antibodies to the VSV tag, or to

-catenin (Fig.
4B,
lanes
4 and 7 and 5 and 8, respectively). As expected, in extracts from

-catenin-transfected cells this band was supershifted by anti-VSV
and anti-

-catenin antibodies (Fig.
4B, lanes 7 and 8, compare
to
lane 6), confirming that it contained the

-catenin-LEF-1-DNA
complex. In contrast, with extracts from cells transfected with
VSV-plakoglobin, only the anti-

-catenin antibody induced a shift
in
this band (Fig.
4B, lane 5), while the anti-VSV antibody did
not alter
the migration of this band (Fig.
4B, lane 4). Since
the level of
transfected plakoglobin in the nuclear extracts was
higher than that of
transfected

-catenin (Fig.
4C), these results
imply that plakoglobin
did not form a detectable complex with
LEF-1-DNA in the
VSV-plakoglobin-transfected cells (Fig.
4B, lane
4) but that, rather,
the endogenous

-catenin became engaged in
a complex with LEF-1 and
the
DNA.
Removal of the N- and C-terminal domains of
-catenin and
plakoglobin enhances catenin-LEF-1-DNA complex formation in
transfected cells.
To analyze the ability of the terminal domains
of
-catenin and plakoglobin to regulate catenin-LEF-1-DNA complex
formation in cells, nuclear extracts from cells transfected with LEF-1
and with VSV-tagged armadillo repeat domains of
-catenin and
plakoglobin (Fig. 4A) were subjected to DNA mobility shift analysis. In
these experiments, the strong band corresponding to the LEF-1-DNA
complex (Fig. 5A, lane 3) was almost
completely supershifted in extracts containing the armadillo repeat
domains of
-catenin (Fig. 5A, lane 6) and plakoglobin (Fig. 5A, lane
7) compared to full-length catenins (Fig. 4B, lanes 3 and 6). This
demonstrates the very efficient formation of DNA-bound complexes
comprised of LEF-1-DNA and the armadillo domains. To confirm that
these complexes indeed contained
-CAT-ARM-VSV and PG-ARM-VSV, the
anti-VSV antibody was added to the nuclear extracts. This resulted in
the induction of a supershift in the migration of these bands (Fig. 5A,
lanes 10 and 11, compare to lanes 6 and 7). The addition of antibodies to
-catenin to such lysates did not induce an efficient supershift (Fig. 5A, lanes 14, 15), indicating that the nuclear extracts from
cells cotransfected with LEF-1 and the armadillo repeat domains of
catenins did not contain significant amounts of endogenous
-catenin
complexed with LEF-1. Since the polyclonal antibody to
-catenin that
was used here did not react with the armadillo repeat domain of
-catenin (data not shown), we attributed the very weak supershift
observed with this antibody (Fig. 5A, lanes 14 and 15) to a ternary
complex formed by the endogenous
-catenin.

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FIG. 5.
The armadillo repeats of -catenin and plakoglobin
efficiently form ternary complexes with LEF-1 and DNA in transfected
cells. (A) EMSA was conducted with nuclear extracts from 293-T cells
transfected with control vector (lane 2) or with LEF-1 and the
indicated catenin constructs (lanes 3 to 15, illustrated in Fig. 4A).
Nuclear extracts were incubated with a 32P-labeled DNA
probe containing the LEF/TCF binding site, in the absence or presence
of antibodies, as indicated. In lane 1, the radiolabeled DNA was
incubated without the nuclear extract. DNA-protein complexes were
analyzed by native gel electrophoresis as described in Fig. 2. N. S., nonspecific bands that could be competed with wild-type or mutant
LEF-1 binding DNA sequences. Abs, antibodies. (B and C)
Coimmunoprecipitation of VSV-tagged catenins (B) and their deletion
mutants (C) with HA-tagged LEF-1 using cell lysates of transfected 293 cells. (B) The amount of catenins coprecipitated by LEF-1 was
determined (lower panel); (C) the amount of LEF-1 coprecipitated by
catenins (lower panel) is shown. The levels of transfected proteins in
the cell lysates were determined by Western blotting (upper and middle
panels). Numbers to the right of panel C are molecular masses in
kilodaltons. WB, Western blot; IP, immunoprecipitation.
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|
The VSV-tagged

-catenin used in this experiment (Fig.
5A, lane 4)
contained an N-terminal VSV tag (Fig.
4A), in contrast
to the
C-terminal VSV tag used in the experiments described for
Fig.
4B. This
resulted in a different efficiency in the supershifts
induced by the
anti-VSV and anti-

-catenin antibodies in the two
experiments
(compare Fig.
4B, lanes 7 and 8, to Fig.
5A, lanes
8 and 12). It is
noteworthy that in nuclear extracts from transfected
cells, PG-ARM-VSV
was an efficient partner for LEF-1-DNA, while
full-length plakoglobin
did not form a detectable complex with
LEF-1-DNA (Fig.
5A, lanes 7 and
11, compare to lanes 5 and 9),
although the level of plakoglobin in
such extracts was higher
than that of the PG ARM, as determined by
Western blotting (results
not shown). These results demonstrate that
the increase in catenin-LEF-1-DNA
complex formation observed after
removal of the N- and C-terminal
domains using in vitro-translated
components (Fig.
2B) was also
apparent with nuclear lysates from cells
transfected with these
constructs.
To examine whether the differences observed in ternary complex
formation resulted from different affinities of the various
catenin
constructs for LEF-1, we determined the interaction of
catenins and
their deletion mutants with LEF-1 by coimmunoprecipitation
(Fig.
5B and
C). VSV-tagged catenins were cotransfected with HA-tagged
LEF-1, and
immunoprecipitation was performed with either monoclonal
anti-HA
antibody (Fig.
5B) or polyclonal anti-VSV antibodies (Fig.
5C). In
cells expressing similar levels of catenins and LEF-1
(Fig.
5B), the
efficiencies of coprecipitation of full-length

-catenin and
plakoglobin with LEF-1, by an antibody recognizing
the transfected
LEF-1 (HA), were very similar (Fig.
5B, lower
panel, lanes 1 and 2).
Similarly, the coprecipitations of LEF-1
with both catenins by anti-VSV
that recognized the catenins were
also similar (Fig.
5C, lower panel,
lanes 2 and 3). These results,
together with previously published data
(
29), strongly suggest
that the differences observed between

-catenin and plakoglobin
in ternary complex formation with LEF-1 and
DNA apparently do
not result from different affinities of the catenins
for LEF-1
but most probably are due to the weaker capacity of the
plakoglobin-LEF-1
complex to interact with
DNA.
We have also compared the abilities of full-length catenins to those of
their deletion mutants (by coimmunoprecipitation)
in the interaction
with LEF-1. The results shown in Fig.
5C (lower
panel, lanes 4 and 5)
demonstrate that both ARM repeats efficiently
bind LEF-1 while PG 1-ins
does not display a detectable binding
to LEF-1 (Fig.
5C, lane 6), in
agreement with its inability to
shift the LEF-1-DNA complex in EMSA
(Fig.
2B, lanes 11 and 12).
The low expression level of the VSV-tagged

-CAT 1-ins precluded
us from using it in this experiment (results
not
shown).
Differential ability of catenin deletion mutants to elevate and
translocate endogenous
-catenin into the nucleus.
The formation
of a complex between endogenous
-catenin and LEF-1 and DNA, using
extracts from cells transfected with catenin mutants (
-CAT-ARM-VSV
and PG-ARM-VSV), suggested that these mutants could elevate endogenous
-catenin, similar to observations made with cells transfected with
full-length plakoglobin (70). To examine this possibility,
we determined, by immunofluorescence microscopy, the abilities of the
catenin deletion mutants to elevate and consequently alter the
localization of endogenous
-catenin.
293-T cells were transiently transfected with deletion mutants of
catenins and doubly stained for the endogenous

-catenin
and for the
transfected protein (Fig.
6 and
7). In general, the
various deletion
mutants displayed similar subcellular localizations:
they were mainly
localized in the nuclei of the transfected cells
(Fig.
6C and G and 7A
and E) and only sometimes also localized
at cell-cell junctions (arrows
in Fig.
6 and
7). In addition,
PG 1-ins staining was mainly diffuse,
while the other constructs
were mostly confined to the nucleus.

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FIG. 6.
The effect of plakoglobin mutants on the localization of
endogenous -catenin. 293-T cells were transiently transfected with
the HA-tagged plakoglobin constructs described in Fig. 1 and doubly
stained for the HA tag (A, C, E, and G) and the endogenous -catenin
(B, D, F, and H). Cells were transfected with PG (A and B), PG ARM (C
and D), CNX-PG ARM (E and F), and PG 1-ins (G and H). Note that PG ARM
is efficient in translocating the endogenous -catenin into the
nucleus while PG 1-ins is not. The localization of the transfected
proteins to cell-cell contacts is marked by arrows, while localization
of CNX-PG ARM to cytoplasmic vesicles is marked by an arrowhead. Bar,
10 µm.
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FIG. 7.
Transfection of deletion mutants or membrane-tethered
forms of -catenin increases the level and translocates endogenous
-catenin to the nucleus. 293-T cells were transiently transfected
with plasmids encoding the armadillo repeat of -catenin ( -CAT
ARM) (A and B), a connexin-fused derivative (CNX- -CAT ARM) (C and
D), and -CAT 1-ins (E and F). Cells were stained for the HA tag to
detect the transfected proteins (A, C, and E) and doubly stained for
endogenous -catenin with the 6F9 antibody (B, D, and F), which does
not recognize the truncated -catenin mutants. Note that both
CNX- -CAT ARM and -CAT ARM are efficient in translocating the
endogenous -catenin into the nucleus. Localization of the
transfected proteins to cell-cell contact sites (arrow) and to
cytoplasmic vesicles (arrowhead) is indicated. Bar, 10 µm. (G) Levels
of nuclear and cytoplasmic -catenin in control and transfected cells
were determined by computerized quantitation of the fluorescence
intensity as described in Materials and Methods. The values were
derived from 30 cells and represent the means ± standard errors
of the means. Note that transfection of the catenin constructs induced
an increase in the levels of the endogenous -catenin in both the
cytoplasm and the nucleus of the transfected cells.
|
|
Double staining for the endogenous

-catenin showed that transfection
with both

-CAT ARM (Fig.
7A) and PG ARM (Fig.
6C) resulted
in
nuclear translocation of the endogenous

-catenin (Fig.
7B
and
6D,
respectively), similar to the effect of full-length plakoglobin
(Fig.
6A and B). This result is attributed to the compromised
degradation of

-catenin in these cells (
43). The shorter truncation
mutants, PG 1-ins and

-CAT 1-ins (Fig.
1), differed in their
effect
on endogenous

-catenin (Fig.
6H and
7F), as previously
described
(
70). While transfection with

-CAT 1-ins (Fig.
7E)
resulted in nuclear localization of the endogenous

-catenin (Fig.
7F), transfection with PG 1-ins (Fig.
6G) did not display a detectable
effect on the endogenous

-catenin (Fig.
6H). This implies that
the
regions within the armadillo repeat domains that determine
the binding
of catenins to components of the degradation machinery
are different in

-catenin and in
plakoglobin.
To examine whether nuclear localization of the armadillo repeat domains
of both catenins was necessary for nuclear translocation
of the
endogenous

-catenin, we also prepared fusion constructs
of these
molecules to the transmembrane domain of connexin (Fig.
1). Such
membrane-tethered armadillo repeats of

-catenin and
plakoglobin were
excluded from the nucleus and localized to cytoplasmic
vesicles and to
cell borders (arrowheads in Fig.
6E and
7C). The
ability to affect the
level and localization of endogenous

-catenin,
however, was
preserved in such constructs, and cells overexpressing
these
cytoplasm-anchored mutants displayed nuclear staining of
the endogenous

-catenin (Fig.
6F and
7D).
We have also determined the fluorescence intensity of endogenous

-catenin in the nuclei and cytoplasm of cells transfected
with
plakoglobin and with various deletion mutants of catenins
(Fig.
7G) and
found that, except for PG 1-ins, which did not affect
the level of
endogenous

-catenin, transfection with the other
catenin mutants
moderately elevated the cytoplasmic pool of

-catenin
(between 1.5- and 2.5-fold) and induced a two- to fourfold increase
in the nuclear
level of

-catenin (Fig.
7G). The connexin-anchored
catenin mutants
were the most efficient in their effect on endogenous

-catenin, most
probably owing to their exclusive cytoplasmic
localization.
Interestingly, the level of junctional

-catenin
was not
significantly affected by transfection with the catenin
constructs
(Fig.
6 and
7 and data not
shown).
Taken together, these results suggest that the

-catenin and
plakoglobin mutants examined (except PG 1-ins), were capable
of
increasing the level and induced the translocation into the
nucleus of
the endogenous

-catenin, and their cytoplasmic sequestration
did not
affect this
ability.
Transcriptional capacities of deletion mutants of
-catenin and
plakoglobin.
The ability of the various catenin deletion mutants
to increase the level and translocate endogenous
-catenin into the
nucleus did not always correlate with their ability to form ternary
complexes with LEF-1-DNA (Fig. 2B, compare to Fig. 6 and 7). For
example, while both
-CAT ARM and
-CAT 1-ins could translocate the
endogenous
-catenin into the nucleus (Fig. 7B and F), only
-CAT
ARM, not
-CAT 1-ins, formed a complex with LEF-1 and DNA (Fig. 2B,
lanes 9 and 11). We have therefore analyzed the transactivation
capacity of these constructs. We expected that constructs lacking the
transactivation domain, but which efficiently formed a complex with
LEF-1 and the DNA, would act as dominant-negative inhibitors of
transactivation by
-catenin, irrespective of their influence on
endogenous
-catenin. We also expected that the transactivation
capacity of catenin deletion mutants that do not form complexes with
LEF-1 and DNA (
-CAT 1-ins and PG 1-ins) would depend on their
capacity to elevate endogenous
-catenin (70).
To test these predictions, 293-T cells were transfected with the
various constructs, together with a reporter plasmid that
detected
LEF-1-responsive transcription, and the activity of this
reporter was
determined (Fig.
8A). As expected,
neither

-CAT
ARM nor PG ARM and PG 1-ins induced significant
transcriptional
activation of the reporter, while transfection of

-CAT 1-ins
led to a 20-fold activation of the reporter (Fig.
8A).
The transactivation
potential of

-CAT 1-ins was similar to that of
PG (Fig.
8A) (
70),
in line with their similar capacities to
elevate the level of
endogenous

-catenin (Fig.
6 and
7). PG ARM and
PG 1-ins were
both weak in transactivation (Fig.
8A), while their
abilities
to form complexes with LEF-1-DNA were very different (Fig.
2B,
lanes 10 and 12).

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FIG. 8.
Transcriptional properties of various -catenin and
plakoglobin constructs. 293-T cells were transfected with different
catenin constructs together with a LEF-1-responsive reporter and the
LacZ plasmid that served as control for transfection efficiency and
lysed 36 h after transfection, and luciferase activity was
determined. The values (fold activation) were normalized for
transfection efficiency by analyzing -galactosidase activity. (A)
Note that transfection with the armadillo repeat constructs PG ARM and
-CAT ARM, which lack the transactivation domain, was inefficient in
the induction of reporter activation, while the connexin fusion of
these constructs (CNX-PG ARM and CNX- -CAT ARM) effectively induced
transactivation. (B) The inhibitory effect of catenin constructs on
transcriptional activation driven by full-length -catenin was
determined by transfecting 0.6 µg of -catenin and 3 µg of
control plasmid, or the indicated catenin constructs, together with the
reporter plasmid and the LacZ control. Note the inhibitory effect of
-CAT ARM and PG ARM (probably by a dominant-negative action in the
nucleus). In contrast, CNX- -CAT ARM and CNX-PG ARM, which are
sequestered in the cytoplasm, elevated transcription similarly to
plakoglobin. In addition, -CAT 1-ins and PG 1-ins, which could not
complex with LEF-DNA (Fig. 2B), had no significant effect on
-catenin-directed transactivation.
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|
To examine whether an efficient complex formation by these mutants with
LEF-1-DNA is reflected in a dominant-negative effect
on

-catenin-directed transactivation,

-catenin was transfected
together with the expression plasmids coding for

-CAT ARM, PG
ARM,

-CAT 1-ins, and PG 1-ins (Fig.
8B). In agreement with the
in vitro
binding studies, both

-CAT ARM and PG ARM inhibited

-catenin-driven transactivation, while

-CAT 1-ins and PG 1-ins
had no effect (Fig.
8B; see Fig.
9C for the proposed
mechanism).
To demonstrate that this inhibition of transcription requires nuclear
localization of the

-CAT ARM and PG ARM constructs,
we have also
used fusion proteins of these catenin mutants with
the transmembrane
domain of connexin (Fig.
1). With these membrane-tethered
forms of

-CAT ARM and PG ARM (CNX-PG ARM and CNX-

-CAT ARM),
there was no
inhibition of transactivation, but rather a significant
induction of
transcription (Fig.
8B). This was expected, as these
fusion proteins
were localized in the cytoplasm (Fig.
7C and
6E),
elevated endogenous

-catenin levels, and efficiently activated
transcription (Fig.
8A),
most probably by the endogenous

-catenin
(Fig.
9D).


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FIG. 9.
Schematic representation of the proposed effect of
plakoglobin and catenin mutants on endogenous -catenin and
LEF/TCF-dependent transcription. (A) When -catenin levels are
elevated, -catenin activates transcription directly by forming a
-catenin-LEF/TCF complex. (B) Plakoglobin blocks degradation of
endogenous -catenin in the cytoplasm and also localizes to the
nucleus but does not form a plakoglobin-LEF/TCF-DNA complex; rather, it
induces transactivation indirectly by elevating the level of endogenous
-catenin. (C) The armadillo repeat domains of -catenin and
plakoglobin (CAT ARM) elevate endogenous -catenin but act as
dominant-negative inhibitors of transcription by forming a
transcriptionally inactive complex with LEF/TCF and DNA. (D) The
membrane-tethered armadillo repeats of -catenin and plakoglobin
(CNX-CAT ARM) act as transcriptional activators by elevating endogenous
-catenin similarly to plakoglobin.
|
|
Taken together, the transactivation studies demonstrated that the
differences observed in vitro in LEF-1-DNA complex formation
with the
various

-catenin and plakoglobin mutants were also reflected
in
their different transactivation capacities in transfected
cells.
 |
DISCUSSION |
-Catenin and plakoglobin display a high degree of homology and
have similar functions in the assembly of cell-cell adherens junctions,
but the two proteins are clearly different in various aspects (for a
review, see reference 6). This was most convincingly demonstrated by the different phenotypes observed in mice that were
knockouts for plakoglobin (7, 62) and
-catenin (21, 31) and by the different effects of the interference with the function of maternal
-catenin (24) and plakoglobin
(38) in Xenopus embryos. Mice lacking plakoglobin
did not display abnormalities that could be attributed to compromised
wnt signaling in early development, and a decrease in maternal
plakoglobin level in Xenopus did not affect embryonic axis
formation, which, in contrast, is critically dependent on
-catenin-LEF/TCF-driven transcription. Furthermore, activating
mutations in
-catenin were reported to lead to oncogenic
transformation (reviewed in references 6 and
58), and oncogenes such as c-myc and
cyclin D1 (23, 69, 78) and invasion-promoting secreted
proteases including matrilysin (13) are direct
transcriptional targets of the
-catenin-LEF/TCF complex. In
contrast, the levels of plakoglobin are often reduced in cancer cells
(2, 48, 71, 74), and overexpression of plakoglobin was shown
to suppress tumorigenicity (71).
In spite of these differences, when several functional tests were
applied to
-catenin and plakoglobin, they revealed a high degree of
similarity in the effects of the two catenins. For example, ectopic
overexpression of either
-catenin (19, 24) or plakoglobin (33) leads to axis duplication in Xenopus, and
both proteins can induce transcriptional activation of a LEF/TCF
reporter plasmid when transfected into mammalian cells (46,
70). To address this apparent contradiction between the
similarities and the differences in
-catenin and plakoglobin
functions, we studied the mechanism of transcriptional activation in
plakoglobin-overexpressing cells and compared the abilities of
-catenin and plakoglobin to form complexes with LEF/TCF and DNA.
The difference between
-catenin and plakoglobin in the formation
of catenin-LEF/TCF-DNA complexes.
By applying the DNA EMSA, we
demonstrated that plakoglobin differs from
-catenin in its ability
to form a catenin-LEF/TCF-DNA complex. While
-catenin-LEF/TCF-DNA complexes were efficiently formed using this
experimental approach, plakoglobin-LEF/TCF-DNA complex formation was
undetectable. However, we (this study) and others (29) found
that transfected
-catenin and plakoglobin were both effective in
coimmunoprecipitating LEF-1, and vice versa, and the catenin-binding
domain of LEF-1 is equally potent in recruiting
-catenin and
plakoglobin to a LexA-driven promoter (25). In addition,
overexpression of either
-catenin or plakoglobin results in its
colocalization with LEF-1 in the nuclei of the transfected cells
(4, 63, 70). Taken together with the present study, these
results suggest that, while a plakoglobin-LEF-1 complex can form, this
complex is probably very inefficient in binding to DNA. This difference
in DNA binding of the catenin complexes was detected with nuclear
extracts from transfected cells and also with in vitro-translated
proteins, using either LEF-1 or TCF-4. Such a difference, therefore,
likely results from inherent structural variations between
-catenin
and plakoglobin and not from differential regulation of catenins by
their interaction with other regulatory proteins.
Since cells transfected with plakoglobin display LEF/TCF-dependent
transactivation, while plakoglobin-LEF-1-DNA complexes
were not
detected in the nuclear extracts of these cells, we examined
the reason
for LEF-directed transcription in these cells. We demonstrated
that the
catenin-LEF-1-DNA complex detected by DNA mobility shift
analysis
with nuclear extracts from plakoglobin-transfected cells
is comprised,
by and large, of the endogenous

-catenin whose
level was increased
in these cells (
43,
70). It appears, therefore,
that
transactivation in cells transfected with plakoglobin is
most likely
mediated by the elevated endogenous

-catenin and
not by plakoglobin
(Fig.
9A and B). In addition, the apparent
similarity in the effects of

-catenin and plakoglobin on transcriptional
activation does not
reflect similar mechanisms of action of the
two proteins (Fig.
9).
While the overexpression of

-catenin probably
mimics the elevation
in

-catenin following activation of the
wnt pathway, which leads to

-catenin-driven transactivation after
complexing with LEF/TCF,
overexpression of plakoglobin results
in compromised degradation of the
endogenous

-catenin (by the
interaction of plakoglobin with
components of the degradation
machinery [
30,
37,
43,
59,
64]), thereby indirectly
leading to transactivation (Fig.
9A
and B). This plakoglobin-induced
transcription masks the apparent
inability of plakoglobin to act
as coactivator of LEF/TCF factors as
shown in the present study.
These findings support the hypothesis that
the function of plakoglobin
in
Xenopus axis specification is
mediated by the elevation of
the endogenous

-catenin (
43)
and are also in agreement with
the phenotype of plakoglobin knockout
mice (
7,
62), which
display normal wnt signaling. These
results are also consistent
with the inability of plakoglobin to rescue
the signaling function
of armadillo in arm
/
Drosophila embryos (
83).
Taking these results together with studies demonstrating the ability of
both plakoglobin and

-catenin to complex with LEF-1
in transfected
cells (this study and references
29 and
70),
we suggest a model (Fig.
9B) in which
plakoglobin can form a complex
with LEF-1 in the nuclei of cells
transfected with plakoglobin
but this complex is not bound to DNA,
while the elevated endogenous

-catenin in such cells forms
transcriptionally active

-catenin-LEF/TCF-DNA
complexes.
This model does not rule out the possibility that plakoglobin may have
a role in transactivation under other circumstances.
This notion is
based on the presence of a C-terminal transactivation
domain in the
plakoglobin molecule that is active in transcription
when linked to a
Gal4 DNA binding domain, similar to the C terminus
of

-catenin and
armadillo (
70). In addition, the comparison
of the ARM
repeats of the two catenins in their ability to complex
with LEF-DNA
suggests a quantitative, rather than a qualitative,
difference between
the two proteins (Fig.
2, lanes 9 and 10).
Moreover, a fusion protein
consisting of a heterologous DNA binding
domain with LEF-1
(LexA-LEF-1) could activate transcription with
both

-catenin and
plakoglobin in yeasts, which lack endogenous
catenins (
25).
It is noteworthy, however, that the heterologous
LexA DNA binding
domain that mediated DNA binding in the plakoglobin-LEF-1-DNA
complex
(
25) could have been differently affected by plakoglobin,
compared to the binding of LEF-1 to DNA via its native high-mobility
group domain (as used in the present
study).
Regulation of catenin-LEF-1-DNA complex formation by the N- and
C-terminal domains of catenins.
While plakoglobin was inefficient
in the formation of a catenin-LEF-1-DNA complex, we found that its
armadillo repeat domain was highly competent in this activity. This
rather unexpected finding suggests that catenins may have built-in
regulatory domains that affect catenin-LEF/TCF-DNA complex formation.
Our attempts to map such regulatory domains led us to conclude that
both the N- and C-terminal domains of the catenin molecules are
required for such negative regulation of plakoglobin-LEF-1-DNA
complex formation. Interestingly, a similar negative effect on
-catenin-LEF-1-DNA complex formation of the N- and C-terminal
domains of
-catenin was also observed, suggesting a common
regulatory mechanism for both catenins.
Our efforts to determine whether the difference between catenins in
ternary complex formation results from different terminal
domains or
from differences in the ARM repeats lead us to conclude
that this is
most probably attributable to the ARM domains of
the two proteins and
is enhanced by the inhibitory effect of the
terminal domains. Our
finding that the terminal domains of one
catenin could be replaced by
those of the other, without a significant
change in the efficiency of
the molecules in forming a ternary
complex, supports this
notion.
A recent study using the yeast two-hybrid screen demonstrated that the
C terminus of the
Drosophila melanogaster 
-catenin
(armadillo) could bind to the armadillo repeat domain of this
molecule
(
11). It is possible that the inhibitory effect of
the
terminal domains of catenins on catenin-LEF-1-DNA complex
formation
results from intramolecular interactions within the
catenin molecule, a
property conserved in evolution between
Drosophila and
mammals. In this respect, it is noteworthy that the C termini
of

-catenin and plakoglobin are acidic, while the armadillo repeat
domain forms a positively charged groove (
28) that can
potentially
serve as a binding site for the terminal domains.
Interestingly,
deletion of the C terminus of plakoglobin was shown to
increase
its binding in vitro to the cytoplasmic domain of E-cadherin
(
79)
and to enhance desmosome assembly in transfected cells
(
54).
In addition, terminal domains of

-catenin were
shown to negatively
regulate its interaction with desmoglein, the
effect that may
arise from the intramolecular interactions within the
catenin
molecule (
82). Together, these results strongly
support the
existence of a negative regulation of ternary complex
formation
with LEF/TCF-DNA and the interaction of catenins with other
partners
by their terminal
domains.
The in vitro ternary complex formation studies were corroborated by
transactivation experiments demonstrating that the armadillo
repeat
domains of both catenins (which lack the transactivation
domains) can
act as dominant-negative effectors of

-catenin-mediated
transcription, by forming inactive complexes with LEF-1 on the
DNA.
Such inactive complexes on the DNA could prevent the complexing
of
endogenous

-catenin with LEF-DNA and thus inhibit transactivation
(Fig.
9C).
Interestingly, the ARM domain of

-catenin was shown to act
positively in the wnt signaling pathway of
Xenopus
(
19), in
contrast to the results of the present study. One
possible explanation
for this difference could be that the balance
between the negative
effect (owing to ARM complexing with LEF-1) and
the positive effect
(by elevating endogenous

-catenin) is different
when comparing
the injection studies in
Xenopus and the
transfection in mammalian
cells, therefore leading to an activation
rather than to inhibition
in the
Xenopus system.
As predicted, cytoplasmic anchorage of the armadillo domains, of either
plakoglobin or

-catenin, by their fusion to the transmembrane
domain
of connexin abolished their inhibitory effect on transcription.
In
contrast, such membrane-tethered forms of the armadillo domains
of both
catenins acted as transcription activators, by elevating
the endogenous

-catenin, similar to the effect of membrane-anchored

-catenin
(
12,
26,
42,
43,
49) (Fig.
9C and D) and plakoglobin
(
36,
43).
In conclusion, this study demonstrated significant differences between
the abilities of

-catenin and plakoglobin to form
DNA-bound
complexes with LEF/TCF factors. In addition, transcriptional
activation
in cells overexpressing plakoglobin is apparently not
directly
regulated by plakoglobin but is mediated by the elevated
endogenous

-catenin. These results are consistent with the differential
roles
that the two catenins may play in wnt signaling (
7,
38,
62).
Nevertheless, since the armadillo repeat domain of plakoglobin can
efficiently bind to the LEF-1-DNA complex and since there
is a
transactivation domain in the C terminus of plakoglobin (
25,
70), plakoglobin may have a potential to act as a transcription
activator under certain conditions. Current studies in our laboratory,
employing DNA-microarray technology, are addressing the question
of the
possible capacity of plakoglobin to induce genes in cells
lacking

-catenin.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
This study was supported by grants from the German-Israeli
Foundation for Scientific Research and Development and the Cooperation Program in Cancer Research between DKFZ and IMOSA. A.B.Z. holds the Lunenfeld-Kunin Chair in Genetics and Cell Biology.
We are grateful to M. Wheelock, H. Clevers, M. van de Wetering, M. Klymkowsky, and D. Helfman for sending reagents; to D. Riveline for
stimulating discussions; to E. Sadot and T. Gottlieb for critical
reading of the manuscript; and to Inbal Simcha for continuous support.
J.Z. and M.S. contributed equally to this work.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Molecular Cell Biology, The Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot,
76100, Israel. Phone: (972)-8-934-2422. Fax: (972)-8-946-5261. E-mail: avri.ben-zeev{at}weizmann.ac.il.
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Molecular and Cellular Biology, June 2000, p. 4238-4252, Vol. 20, No. 12
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Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
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