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Molecular and Cellular Biology, November 2001, p. 7826-7838, Vol. 21, No. 22
0270-7306/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/MCB.21.22.7826-7838.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Integrase Mediates Nuclear Localization of
Ty3
Sophia S.
Lin,
M. Henrietta
Nymark-McMahon,
Lynn
Yieh, and
Suzanne B.
Sandmeyer*
Department of Biological Chemistry,
University of California, Irvine, California 92697
Received 15 June 2001/Returned for modification 19 July
2001/Accepted 9 August 2001
 |
ABSTRACT |
Retroviruses in nondividing cells and yeast retrotransposons must
transit the nuclear membrane in order for integration to occur.
Mutations in a bipartite basic motif in the carboxyl-terminal domain of
the Ty3 integrase (IN) protein were previously shown to block
transposition at a step subsequent to 3'-end processing of Ty3
extrachromosomal DNA. In this work, the Ty3 IN was shown to be
sufficient to target green fluorescent protein to the nucleolus. Mutations in the bipartite basic motif abrogated this localization. The
region containing the motif was shown to be sufficient for nuclear but
not subnuclear localization of a heterologous protein. Viruslike
particles (VLPs) from cells expressing a Ty3 element defective for
nuclear localization were inactive in an in vitro integration assay,
suggesting that nuclear entry is required to form active VLPs or that
this motif is required for post-nuclear entry steps. Ty3 inserts at
transcription initiation sites of genomic tRNA genes and plasmid-borne
5S and U6 RNA genes transcribed by RNA polymerase III. In situ
hybridization with Ty3- and Ty3 long terminal repeat-specific probes
showed that these elements which are associated with tRNA genes do not
colocalize with the ribosomal DNA (rDNA). However, a PCR assay of cells
undergoing transposition showed that Ty3 insertion does occur into the
5S genes, which, in yeast, are interspersed with the rDNA and
therefore, like Ty3 IN, associated with the nucleolus.
 |
INTRODUCTION |
The mechanisms used by viral
complexes to enter the nucleus are diverse (50). Some
retroviruses access the chromatin in mitotic cells, in which the
nuclear membrane is not intact. Lentiviruses access the nucleus in
nondividing cells, a process which is mediated by redundant functions
(15). In contrast, all fungal retrotransposons are assumed
to have mechanisms for nuclear entry of the preintegration complex, as
the nuclear membrane does not break down, even during cell division.
However, among the fungal elements which have been characterized, the
nuclear localization signal (NLS) and its context are not conserved.
Nuclear entry is presumed to be preceded by remodeling of the
retroviral core or retrotransposon virus like particles (VLPs) to allow
passage through the nuclear pore. This study was undertaken in order to
elucidate the nuclear transport mechanism for Ty3, a gypsylike element
in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae.
Many nuclear proteins access the nuclear translocation machinery
through interactions between a mono- or bipartite basic NLS and the NLS
receptor importin
(reviewed in reference 12). The
position of this domain in the primary sequence, as well as the
contribution of flanking sequence to its function, is variable. Importin
associates with importin
, which interacts with members of the nuclear porin family. Subsequent to the original discovery of
importin
and importin
, importin
-related proteins have been
identified that mediate nuclear translocation of certain classes of
proteins independent of importin
.
The lentiviruses infect nondividing cells, and their nuclear
localization mechanisms have been studied extensively. Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) nuclear localization is contributed to by
functions of the matrix (MA), viral protein R (Vpr), and integrase (IN)
(7, 15). Phosphorylated MA associates with IN and appears
to facilitate its nuclear entry (16). Vpr, a small
auxiliary protein was found to be required for infection of nondividing
cells and thus implicated in nuclear translocation of the
preintegration complex (24). Further in vitro studies have
shown that the amino-terminal domain of the nuclear receptor importin
associates with the alpha-helical domain of Vpr (33). This importin
domain is separate from the domain that interacts with the conventional simian virus 40 (SV40) monopartite basic NLS.
Although Vpr bound to importin
appears to dock at nuclear pores by
itself, as part of the preintegration complex, Vpr binding to
nucleoporins is dependent on importin
(43). HIV-1 IN
has a distinct, bipartite, basic NLS in its carboxyl-terminal region that has been shown to mediate nuclear localization of heterologous proteins, including green fluorescent protein (GFP) and
-galactosidase (16, 42). This domain may have
additional functions, because mutations abrogate infection of dividing
as well as nondividing cells (16). Aspects of chromatin
access are also incompletely understood in the case of retroviruses
believed to infect only dividing cells. For example, avian sarcoma
virus (ASV) IN can mediate nuclear localization of heterologous
domains, including GFP (30), and this activity appears to
be attributable to a bipartite basic sequence. As for the HIV NLS,
mutations in this domain block replication in dividing cells.
There is evidence that nuclear import is contingent on completion of
specific stages of replication in at least some viruses, implying
either that certain processes are required for exposure of the IN NLS
or that there are additional signals. HIV mutations that disrupt
replication at the internal plus strand start site inhibit the
appearance of closed circles. Because the appearance of closed circular
DNA is equated with exposure of the linear viral DNA to nuclear
ligases, this suggests that nuclear entry requires initiation of
plus-strand replication (55).
Retroviruslike elements are similar to retroviruses in that they encode
major structural and catalytic proteins in the upstream and downstream
portions of their genomes, respectively, and replicate through reverse
transcription of the genomic RNA (5, 44). Nuclear
localization has been characterized for the copialike Ty1 elements from
budding yeast and the gypsylike element Tf1 from fission yeast. In the
case of the copialike elements, IN is encoded upstream of the coding
region for reverse transcriptase (RT), while in the case of the
gypsylike elements, it is encoded downstream, as it is for
retroviruses. Nuclear entry in the case of the yeast copialike element
Ty1 is dependent on a bipartite, basic NLS that has been mapped to the
carboxyl-terminal domain of IN (27, 36). This domain has
been shown to be competent to mediate nuclear localization of
heterologous proteins, and mutations in this domain block
transposition. Tf1 encodes its proteins in a single open reading frame
(ORF) (1). In this gypsylike system, Gag contains a
monopartite basic NLS (13).
The Ty3 gypsylike element contains separate GAG3 and
POL3 ORFs. POL3 encodes protease (PR), RT, and
IN. The IN domain of Ty3 is found in VLPs as a 115-kDa fusion with RT
and as processed 61- and 58-kDa forms (20, 29). Ty3 is
unusual in that integration occurs exclusively at the sites of RNA
polymerase III transcription initiation. Alignment of Ty3 IN with
retroviral IN proteins shows that it contains a conserved central
domain with residues important for catalysis of strand transfer and
nonconserved amino- and carboxyl-terminal domains (22). In
a previous study, alanines were substituted for charged residues in the
nonconserved amino- and carboxyl-terminal domains in order to gain
insight into their possible functions (39). Of the
mutations that completely blocked transposition, two mutations were
identified in the carboxyl-terminal domain of IN that appeared to act
late in the Ty3 lifecycle. The resulting mutant elements were examined
for particle formation, protein maturation, reverse transcriptase
activity, DNA production, 3'-end processing, and transposition. Mutants
that were active in 3'-end processing of the Ty3 DNA were presumed to
have catalytically active IN. Two of these mutants, 412A(2) with
mutations E412A, D414A, and 419A(3), with KKK (amino acids [aa] 419 to 421) changed to AAA, were normal for 3'-end processing but
completely defective for transposition (39). These
mutations did not affect particle assembly or protein processing,
reverse transcription, or 3' processing activity.
We report here that Ty3 IN mediates localization of a heterologous
protein to a subnuclear compartment. Similar to Ty1 but different from
Tf1, nuclear localization activity is associated with a
carboxyl-terminal basic, bipartite NLS. Mutations in this domain block
nuclear localization of Ty3 and in vitro integration mediated by Ty3 VLPs.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Strains and culture conditions.
Escherichia coli
and S. cerevisiae strains were cultured and transformed by
standard methods (2) except as otherwise indicated. The
S. cerevisiae strains used in this study are W303-1a
(NOY505) (41), kindly provided by M. Nomura (University of
California [UC] Irvine); NOY770, an rdn
derivative
of NOY505 (41); and yTM443, a derivative of yVB110 which
contains no endogenous copies of Ty3 (4, 35) (Table
1). Yeast transformations were performed by the lithium acetate procedure or the dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) method (46). Rich medium for S. cerevisiae
cultures was YPD (1% yeast extract, 2% peptone, 2% dextrose). When
selection was necessary, synthetic 2medium was used that contained
dextrose (SD) (0.67% yeast nitrogen base, 2% dextrose), galactose
(SG) (0.67% yeast nitrogen base, 2% galactose), or raffinose as a
carbon source (SR) (0.67% yeast nitrogen base, 2% raffinose) and
lacked only the specified essential amino acids. E. coli
RZ1032 [lysA(61-62) thi-1 relA1 spoT1
dut-1 ung-1 (Tetr) supE44] was used for
production of single-stranded DNA for site-directed mutagenesis
(31). Plasmids were amplified in HB101 (F
hsd-20 [rB
mB
] recA13 leuB6 ara-14
proA2 lacY1 galK2 rpsL20 [Smr] xyl-5 mtl-1
supE44 
).
Plasmids.
Recombinant DNA techniques were performed
essentially as described in Current Protocols in Molecular
Biology (2). Ty3 elements modified by replacement of
the regulatory region with sequences from the GAL1 upstream
activation sequence (UASGAL1), were used for
transposition studies and for preparation of whole-cell extracts. The
wild-type Ty3 was expressed from plasmid pEGTy3-1 (21).
The catalytic site mutant IN(D255E/E261D) (29) was
expressed from plasmid pJK784. The pEGTy3-1 and pJK784 plasmids contain the 2µm sequence for maintenance at high copy number in S. cerevisiae and the yeast selectable marker URA3, which
allows cells containing this plasmid to be selected by growth on medium
lacking uracil. The target plasmid used in the transposition assays,
pCH2bo19V (28), contains the ARS1 and
CEN4 sequence for maintenance at low copy number in S. cerevisiae and the yeast selectable marker HIS3.
IN was expressed in yeast under control of the GAL1 promoter
(PGAL1) in plasmid pJK788 (J. Kirchner,
unpublished data). PJK788 was constructed from sequences of a Ty3-1
subclone in pVB193 (4).
PVB193 was mutagenized to make pJK802, using site-specific
oligonucleotide mutagenesis (31). Oligonucleotides used
for mutagenesis and in PCR are described in Table
2. An EcoRI site and an ATG start codon were inserted just upstream of the IN coding region. The
EcoRI/XhoI fragment containing the IN coding
region was then inserted into pYES2.0 (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, Calif.),
creating pJK788. The IN coding region was then modified to encode a
catalytic site mutant (D255E/E261D) using site-directed mutagenesis
(31).
To make IN-green fluorescent protein (GFP) fusions, a BamHI
site was substituted for the IN stop codon in pJK802 using
oligonucleotide 474. The coding region for S65T GFP was isolated on a
BamHI fragment from pRSETGFP (gift from R. Tsien, UC San
Diego) and inserted in frame downstream of the IN coding region. The
plasmid was digested completely with XhoI and partially with
EcoRI, yielding an EcoRI/XhoI fragment
containing the IN-GFP coding region. This fragment was inserted into
pYES2.0 to yield pSSL1648. IN-GFP mutants were created by mutagenizing
the IN coding sequence in pJK802 and subcloning the
EcoRI/XhoI fragment carrying the IN coding region
into pYES2.0. The HindIII-MluI fragment
containing the mutations was finally exchanged with the analogous
fragment in pSSL1648 to generate a series of clones expressing the
various IN-GFP mutants.
The candidate NLS domains were expressed in frame with the fused coding
regions for S65T GFP (23) and enhanced GFP (eGFP) (2×GFP). In order to construct the fusion, the coding region for S65T
GFP was subcloned into pYES2.0 on a BamHI fragment to yield pYES-GFP. A BglII site replacing the GFP stop codon was
created in this clone using oligonucleotide 569. The BamHI
fragment containing the eGFP coding region (Clontech Laboratories Inc.)
was then joined in frame at this BglII site to create
pSSL2010. The sequences encoding the candidate NLS peptides were
amplified by PCR using primers with SacI sites, digested
with SacI, and ligated into pSSL2010, creating pSSL2009.
PSSL2009 was then mutagenized using oligonucleotides (587 to 590 and
611 to 614) to generate N-terminal and C-terminal deletion mutants.
Peptide domains are referred to by the first and last IN codons present
in the fusion construct.
In order to monitor transposition in vivo, Ty3 expression plasmid
pMA1833 and its derivative pMA1890(SSL) were used. Plasmid pMA1833 (M. Aye, personal communication) contains the URA3 marker, ARS1/CEN4, and a galactose-inducible Ty3-1 element. The
negative control, pMA1890(SSL), is a D224E/E261D derivative of pMA1833 but contains a TRP1 marker in addition to URA3. A
plasmid, pDLC301 (10), containing a copy of the 5S rDNA
gene, 2µm sequence, and HIS3 was used as a negative
control for PCR. PDLC322, containing a Ty3 insertion upstream of the 5S
rDNA gene in pDLC301 (D. Chalker, unpublished data), was used as a
positive control.
The GFP fusion vectors pNfus-GFP and pGFP-NOP8 (54) were
used as negative and positive markers for nucleolar localization, respectively (both were generous gifts from D. Goldfarb,
University of Rochester). To express IN-GFP under the control of the
MET25 promoter (PMET25)
(37), GFP-NOP8 on a
HindIII/XhoI fragment was substituted with
the HindIII/XhoI fragment carrying IN-GFP
from pSSL1648.
Localization of wild-type and catalytic site mutant IN-GFP fusions was
tested in a background in which the nucleoli were disrupted (NOY770)
(40). In this experiment, the fusions were expressed from
a low-copy-number plasmid. The region containing the cloning site of
pYES2.0 together with its promoter and terminator sequences was
amplified from template pYES2.0 in a PCR primed with oligonucleotides 807 and 808 (Table 2). This fragment was restricted with
SmaI and ligated to pRS314 (48) linearized with
PvuII, yielding pSSL2047. PSSL2047 was restricted with
SstI and XhoI. The
SstI/XhoI fragments encoding the wild-type IN-GFP
from pSSL1648 and the catalytic site mutant IN-GFP from pSSL1649 were
ligated to linearized pSSL2047 to yield pSSL2050 and pSSL2051, respectively.
In vitro integration into SNR6 targets.
In vitro
integration reactions were performed essentially as described
(53). Briefly, samples for in vitro integration contained, in 50 µl of reaction buffer (40 mM Tris-HCl [pH 8.0,] 7 mM
MgCl2, 3 mM dithiothreitol [DTT], 100 µg of bovine
serum albumin [BSA] per ml, and 50 mM NaCl), recombinant TFIIIB (50 fmol of TATA-binding protein, 36 fmol of Brf, and 75 fmol of B") and
178 fmol of SNR6 target plasmid pLY1855 DNA. Recombinant
TFIIIB was a gift from G. Kassavetis and E. P. Geiduschek (UC San
Diego). These components were incubated for 30 min at 23°C and
shifted to 15°C, and 5 µg of Ty3 VLP protein was added, followed by
incubation at 15°C for 15 min. Reactions were stopped by adding
proteinase K, sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS), and EDTA (pH 8.0) to final
concentrations of 0.2 mg/ml, 0.2% (wt/vol), and 20 mM, respectively,
and incubating at 37°C for 30 min. Reaction products were extracted
with phenol-chloroform, and DNA was precipitated and redissolved in 10 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0)-1 mM EDTA.
PCR was performed essentially as described (53), using
primers 242 and 411 to amplify portions of Ty3 integrations in the target plasmid and primers 679 and 680 to amplify the
-lactamase gene on the target plasmid to monitor DNA recovery. PCR products were
resolved by electrophoresis on nondenaturing 8% polyacrylamide gels
and visualized by staining with ethidium bromide.
Fluorescence microscopy.
Transformants of cells containing
the IN-GFP constructs, pSSL1648, -1649, -1650, -1654, and -1655, -1656, were inoculated in SR-Ura medium containing 1.25 µg of
4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) and grown at 30°C to early log
phase (optical density at 600 nm [OD600] of 0.1 to 0.3).
Protein expression was induced by adding galactose to 2% final
concentration, followed by incubation for 30 min. Glucose was then
added to 2% final concentration, and the incubation was continued for
1 h to repress galactose-induced expression. The cells were
pelleted, washed once, and resuspended in SR-Ura. Cells were applied to
microscope slides and visualized with a Zeiss Axioplan 2 (Carl Zeiss
Inc., Oberkochen, Germany) fluorescence microscope equipped with a
SenSys camera (Photometrics, Tucson, Ariz.) with a 100× objective
using filters for fluorescein, rhodamine, and UV detection. Digital
images were collected using the Kontran Software 400 (Carl Zeiss Inc.)
or Axiovision 2. Images were processed, pseudocolored, and superimposed
for composites using Adobe Photoshop 5.0 (Adobe Systems Inc.).
Transformants containing the various deletion NLS-2XGFP constructs
(pSSL1677, -2010, -2009, -2021, -2023, -2025, -2034, -2035, -2036, -2037, -2040, -2041, and -2042) were similarly induced, visualized, and imaged.
For visualization of IN-GFP under control of the
PMET25, single-colony transformants of cells
were inoculated under conditions of constitutive expression in
SD-Ura-Met containing DAP1 (1.25 µg/ml) and grown overnight at
30°C. The cells were diluted and grown to early log phase
(OD600 of 0.1 to 0.3), pelleted, washed, and resuspended in
SD-Ura-Met. Cells were mounted onto microscope slides and visualized as
described above. For visualization of IN-GFP in the
rDNA deletion strain NOY770, single-colony transformants containing plasmid pSSL2050 or pSSL2051 were induced and processed as
described for IN-GFP.
Immunofluorescence microscopy.
Immunofluorescence microscopy
was carried out essentially as described (41). Yeast cells
transformed with IN-expressing construct pJK788 or pSSL1639 or pYES2.0
as a negative control were isolated as single colonies in SD-Ura and
grown at 30°C overnight in SR-Ura to early log phase
(OD600 of 0.1 to 0.2). Galactose was added to 2% final
concentration, and cells were incubated for 3 h at 30°C. For
visualization of IN and nucleolar proteins, cells were first fixed in
3.7% formaldehyde for 10 min, digested with Zymolase 100T (Seikagaku
Corp.) and glucuronidase (Sigma, St. Louis, Mo.), applied to
polylysine-coated slides, and permeabilized with methanol followed by
acetone. The immunoglobulin G (IgG) fraction of rabbit anti-IN
antiserum was affinity purified over an IN-Sepharose column and used at
a 1:1,000 dilution in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) containing BSA (1 mg/ml). The IgG fraction was preadsorbed on fixed cells to reduce
nonspecific binding. Mouse YN2C1 serum (a gift from M. Nomura,
UC. Irvine), containing antinucleolar protein antibody, was used at a
1:1,000 dilution in PBS-BSA. Rabbit IgG was detected with fluorescein
isothiocyanate (FITC)-conjugated or Alexa-488 (Molecular
Probes)-conjugated anti-rabbit IgG (Sigma) in PBS-BSA at a 1:2,000
dilution. Mouse IgG was detected with tetramethyl rhodamine isocyanate
(TRITC)-conjugated or Alexa-586-conjugated goat anti-mouse IgG (Sigma)
in PBS-BSA at a 1:2,000 dilution. The mounting medium (90% glycerol
and DAPI at 1 µg/ml [Sigma]) was used to stain DNA.
FISH.
Fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH) was performed
as described (8, 19). Plasmid pRDN-hyg1 (11)
was digested with BamHI, and the rDNA-containing fragment
was isolated and biotinylated using the Random Prime labeling system
(Boehringer Mannheim Corp., Indianapolis, Ind.) to detect rDNA. The
control plasmid pBR328 was digested with EcoRI and labeled
with digoxigenin using the Random Prime labeling system containing
digoxigenin-11-UTP (Boehringer Mannheim Corp.). The XhoI
fragment of pEGTy3 was simlarly labeled with digoxigenin. The long
terminal repeat (LTR) sequence was amplified in the presence of
digoxigenin-11-UTP using primers 562 and 563. Hybridized biotinylated
probes were detected by successive incubations in FITC-avidin (5 µg/ml), biotinylated antiavidin (5 µg/ml), and finally FITC-avidin
(5 µg/ml). Hybridized digoxigenin probes were detected using mouse
antidigoxigenin at a 1:250 dilution (Boehringer Mannheim Corp.) and
then anti-mouse Alexa 586 (Molecular Probes, Eugene, Oreg.) at a 1:1000
dilution. FISH was performed using the microscope, camera, and software
described above.
In vivo integration and PCR detection of transposition into
genomic 5S rDNA targets.
Yeast cells transformed with pMA1833 or
pMA1890, the low-copy-number plasmids expressing wild-type or
catalytic site mutant IN-GFP, were isolated on SD-Ura. Cells were grown
at 30°C to log phase (OD600 of 0.3 to 0.4). Ty3
transcription was induced for 6, 9, or 18 h by adding galactose to
2% final concentration. The cells were harvested, and DNA was
extracted. PCR was performed as described previously (35)
except that primers 411 and 729 were used, which annealed in the Ty3
element and in the 5S rDNA gene, respectively, to allow amplification
of insertions in the rDNA repeat. The 125 ng of genomic DNA was
incubated for 2.5 min at 95°C, followed by 40 cycles of denaturation
at 94°C for 1 min, renaturation at 60°C for 30 s, and
extension at 72°C for 30 s. PCR products were resolved by
electrophoresis on nondenaturing 8% polyacrylamide gel and visualized
by staining with ethidium bromide. The gel image was photographed using
a digital camera, and PCR products were quantified by NIH image.
 |
RESULTS |
Ectopically expressed Ty3 IN localizes to the yeast nucleus.
In a previous study, alanine scanning mutations were introduced
throughout the nonconserved amino-terminal and carboxyl-terminal domains of Ty3 IN (39). Two mutants, 412A(2) and 419A(3),
produced wild-type patterns of Ty3 DNA, including 3'-end processing
(39). Mutated residues in these elements were within a
region containing a concentration of basic amino acids, prompting
analysis of IN for an NLS. Gag3p and Pol3p predicted protein sequences
were subjected to analysis using PSORT (http://psort.nibb.ac.jp/), a
protein-sorting signal prediction program (38). Within the
IN sequence, two potential NLS motifs were identified,
Q363RRKP and K419KKHR. Inspection of the region
containing residue 419 showed that basic residues also occurred
amino-terminal to KKKHR, at positions 404 and 405. A new mutant was
constructed in which these two residues were changed to alanine
[mutant 404A(2)]. This mutant was shown to have normal levels of
correctly processed IN and cDNA but to be moderately reduced for
transposition (data not shown). The domain from aa 404 to 421 has basic
residues at each end and several acidic residues in the intervening
region. Thus, it loosely resembles the bipartite type of NLS observed
in the carboxyl-terminal domain of Ty1 (27, 36) and HIV IN
proteins (16).
The observation that mutations in a basic region in the
carboxyl-terminal domain of IN interfered with a late step in the Ty3
life cycle suggested that the mutated region contained the Ty3 NLS. We
first tested this hypothesis by examining whether IN, if expressed in
the absence of other Ty3 proteins, localized to the nucleus. Yeast
strain W303-1a transformed with the vector alone or with a plasmid
producing wild-type Ty3 IN (pJK788) or IN(D255E/E261D) (pSSL1639) was
grown in galactose-containing medium. IN(D225E/E261D) is a catalytic
site mutant which produces IN and synthesizes cDNA (39).
It was used as a control throughout this study in order to detect any
effects attributable to the expression of a strand transferase that was
not associated with a VLP. Transformants were cultured in the presence
of DAP1 for 10 to 12 h and induced for 30 min, followed by 1 h of
incubation in glucose-containing medium. They were prepared and
visualized by fluorescence microscopy as described in Materials and
Methods (Fig. 1). Overlay of the IN and
DAPI images showed that staining of wild-type and mutant IN was
concentrated within the nucleus, but that IN was not distributed throughout the nucleus.

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FIG. 1.
Nuclear localization of Ty3 IN and nucleolar antigen
using double indirect fluorescence microscopy. Yeast cells expressing
Ty3 wild-type (WT) and D255E/E261D mutant IN induced under
PGAL1 were analyzed for the localization of Ty3
IN using anti-IN rabbit IgG (Alexa-488) and nucleolar proteins using
mouse antiserum YN2C1 (Alexa-586). Images were recorded on an
automatic exposure setting, which resulted in longer exposure of
control cells. DNA was visualized using DAPI.
|
|
Ty3 IN-GFP fusion protein localizes to the nucleus, and mutations
in bipartite basic region disrupt this localization.
Because
processing cells for indirect immunofluorescence can disrupt nuclear
organization, fusions of IN to GFP (23) were used to
localize Ty3 IN in living cells. In addition, these constructs could be
used together with fusions involving smaller domains to delimit the IN
NLS. Plasmids expressing wild-type IN-GFP (pSSL1648) and catalytic site
mutant (D255E/E261D) IN-GFP (pSSL1649) were used to visualize IN
localization (Fig. 2A). In order to limit GFP diffusion into the nucleus, a construct was also created in which
GFP coding sequence was tandemly repeated (pSSL2010). For a positive
control, the SV40 large T antigen (LgTAg) NLS (26) was
fused to the tandemly repeated GFP (pSSL1677). These plasmids were
transformed independently into yeast strain W303-1a. Transformants were
cultured and induced as described above and in Materials and Methods.

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FIG. 2.
Localization of Ty3 IN-GFP. (A) Wild-type (WT) IN-GFP
and mutant IN-GFP constructs. Top, PGAL1
followed by IN and GFP coding regions. Middle, expanded view of IN
showing residues conserved among retrovirus IN proteins. Bottom,
expanded view of Ty3 NLS. (B) Direct fluorescence microscopy of SV40
LgTAg NLS fused to GFP and 2×GFP. DNA was visualized with DAPI. Images
of GFP and DNA were pseudocolored green and red, respectively.
Individual images were overlaid, and regions of colocalization appear
as orange to yellow fluorescence. (C) Direct fluorescence microscopy
analysis of IN-GFP fusion protein localization. Yeast cells expressing
wild-type Ty3 IN, D225E/E261D IN, 404(2) IN, 412A(2) IN, and 419A(3) IN
fused to GFP were analyzed for fusion protein and DNA localization.
Images were manipulated panel as in B.
|
|
Cells expressing the tandem GFP repeat protein (2×GFP) showed bright
fluorescence throughout the cell except for the vacuole (Fig. 2B).
Apparent nuclear staining may have occurred due to partial degradation
of the tandem GFP and diffusion into the nucleus or to weak NLS
activity in GFP. The positive control cells, expressing the SV40 LgTAg
NLS fused to GFP, showed very defined concentrations of GFP
fluorescence overlapping the same region as DAPI staining (Fig. 2B).
Cells expressing wild-type IN-GFP fusions showed a concentration of GFP
fluorescence closely associated with or partially overlapping the DAPI
staining (Fig. 2C). A similar pattern was observed for the catalytic
site mutant IN-GFP (IN-GFP 225/261). Thus, Ty3 IN contains sequences
capable of localizing a heterologous protein to the nucleus.
In order to test the hypothesis that mutations 404(2), 412A(2), and
419A(3) act by disrupting nuclear localization of IN, constructs in
which these mutant domains were substituted for the wild-type Ty3 IN in
pSSL1648 (Table 2) were transformed into yeast strain W303-1a. Cells
were induced as described above. IN-GFP 404(2) localized to the nucleus
but showed more cytoplasmic staining than wild-type IN-GFP. IN-GFP
412A(2) was slightly more diffuse than IN-GFP 404(2). IN-GFP 419A(3)
showed the most diffuse fluorescence. Immunoblot analysis of wild-type
and NLS mutant proteins showed that comparable amounts of the fusion
proteins were present in cells, so that enhanced cytoplasmic staining
was unlikely to arise from different amounts of free GFP (data not
shown). The staining pattern of the triple mutant was comparable to the
pattern of IN-GFP 419A(3). These results suggested that the region from
aa 404 to 419 contributed to wild-type nuclear localization of IN, but
that residues in the vicinity of 419 contributed more significantly to
localization than did residues clustered between aa 404 and 414. Thus,
Ty3 IN can target a heterologous protein to the nucleus and has
sequences in the region from aa 404 to 419 which contribute directly or
indirectly to this localization.
A basic, bipartite motif in carboxyl-terminal domain of Ty3 IN is
sufficient to mediate nuclear localization of a heterologous
protein.
Although the experiments described above showed that
basic residues included in a potential NLS contributed to nuclear
localization, they did not show that this effect was direct or define
the domain sufficient to confer nuclear localization. PCR was used to
amplify the region encoding aa 396 to 439, including the putative NLS and flanking residues. Subdomains were also amplified using the appropriate primers. The products were cloned in frame with 2×GFP under control of PGAL1 as described in Materials and
Methods. These constructs were transformed into yeast and induced for
GFP expression as described for IN-GFP. The aa 396 to 439 domain of Ty3
IN conferred nuclear localization on the fusion protein (Fig. 3A), similar to the the SV40 LgTAg NLS,
indicating that it contained sequences sufficient for nuclear
localization. In contrast to the pattern of IN-GFP staining, the
peptide domain-GFP fluorescence occurred throughout the
DAPI-stained region.

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FIG. 3.
Direct fluorescence analysis of IN peptide-2×GFP
fusion protein localization. (A) Expression of amino-terminal deletion
series of IN peptide domains fused to 2×GFP. Yeast cells expressing
the indicated IN peptides fused to 2×GFP were analyzed for fusion
protein and DNA localization as described in Materials and Methods and
in the legend to Fig. 2 except that images are not shown in pseudocolor
and overlay is omitted. (B) Expression of carboxyl-terminal deletion
series of IN peptide domains fused to 2×GFP. Yeast cells expressing
the constructs as described for panel A. (C) Expression of amino- and
carboxyl-terminal IN peptide domains fused to 2×GFP. Yeast cells
expressing the fusion constructs as described for panel A.
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|
In order to define the limits of the domain both necessary and
sufficient for nuclear localization of GFP, the IN aa 396 to 439 sequence was truncated at each end in different constructs and at both
ends in the same construct. A domain from aa 401 to 439 did not have
localization properties appreciably different from those of the domain
from aa 396 to 439. In contrast, aa 403 to 439 did not confer nuclear
localization (Fig. 3A), indicating that the amino terminus of the NLS
lay between aa 401 and 403.
In order to define the carboxyl-terminal border of the NLS, successive
deletions were introduced at the distal end of the aa 396 to 439 construct. The effect of deletions on this end was complex (Fig. 3B).
Deletion of a single residue (construct aa 396-438) was sufficient to
result in diffuse fluorescence (Fig. 3B). However, aa 396-436, aa
396-432, and aa 396-430 gave levels of nuclear localization
comparable to that with aa 396-439. Although nuclear localization
activity was associated with aa 396 to 430, at least a portion of the
region from aa 430 to 439 appeared to have a negative effect, because
the aa 396-438-2×GFP fusion was only weakly localized. The fusion
peptide including aa 396 to 421 was cytoplasmic, with no observable
nuclear localization (data not shown).
In order to define the region sufficient for localization of GFP to the
nucleus, several combinations of carboxyl-terminal truncations were
tested with the construct that had an amino-terminal IN residue at
position 401, the most extreme of the amino-terminal deletions that
still showed nuclear localization (Fig. 3C). In this context, nuclear
localization was observed for 401-436, but fluorescence for the
slightly longer construct 401-438 was more diffuse. Localization was
weaker for 401-432 and was not observable for 401-430. These results
were consistent with the weak localization observed for 396-438 and
with the interpretation that residues at the carboxyl-terminal region
might be slightly inhibitory. The most robust nuclear localization
mediated by this region of Ty3 IN therefore corresponded to the region
spanning aa 401 to 439. The sequence of this region is compared to the
sequences of known NLS, including those for HIV-1 IN (16)
and Ty1 IN (27, 36), in Table
3. As noted above, the NLS domain confers
localization to the nucleus, but does not confer localization to the
subcompartment, as observed for the IN-GFP fusions.
Mutations in Ty3 NLS block in vitro integration.
The Ty3
element containing mutation 419A(3), which had the most dramatic effect
on nuclear localization of Ty3 IN-GFP, was blocked at a late stage in
integration. It is possible that Ty3 replication and uncoating are
complete at the time of nuclear entry and the VLP fraction itself would
therefore contain preintegration complexes competent for integration.
An in vitro assay for Ty3 integration into the U6 RNA gene
(SNR6) (53) was used to determine the
integration activity of the Ty3 VLP fraction from cells expressing the
419A(3) NLS mutant. This assay relies on amplification of a diagnostic
Ty3-SNR6 chimeric fragment from a plasmid-borne
SNR6 gene that has undergone Ty3 integration (Fig.
4).

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FIG. 4.
In vitro integration into SNR6 targets. Top,
schematic of SNR6 TATA flanked by two sites (left and right)
for transcription initiation and Ty3 integration. Triangles indicate
Ty3 insertion positions. Straight arrows show orientation and position
of Ty3 and SNR6 primers. Bent arrows show positions of
transcription initiation. Samples for in vitro integration containing
recombinant TFIIIB (rTFIIIB) and DNA were incubated for 30 min
at 23°C and shifted to 15°C, and then 5 or 10 µg of protein of
Ty3 wild-type (WT) or mutant VLP fraction was added and allowed to
incubate for 15 min. Reactions were processed for PCR as described in
Materials and Methods. PCR was then performed with primers specific to
the Ty3 and the SNR6 target, primers 411 and 242, respectively, using DNA from the integration reactions as the template.
PCR products were resolved by electrophoresis on a nondenaturing 8%
polyacrylamide gel and visualized by staining with ethidium bromide.
The positive control (Pos) was amplified using 5 pg of pDLC370 (for
r-U6) and 5 pg of pLY1842 (for l-U6), and the negative control (Neg)
lacked VLPs but was otherwise a complete reaction. The sizes of the
r-U6 (442 bp) and l-U6 (492 bp) products are shown inside triangles
associated with those positions.
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|
Ty3 VLPs were prepared (20) from cells expressing
wild-type and 419A(3) NLS mutant Ty3 elements from high-copy-number
plasmids. These VLPs contained correctly processed capsid, reverse
transcriptase, and IN and full-length, 3'-end-processed cDNA
(39; data not shown). Recombinant TFIIIB was incubated
with SNR6 target plasmid pLY1855 followed by either
wild-type or 419A(3) mutant VLPs as described in Materials and Methods.
It has previously been shown that VLPs, a U6 DNA target, and
recombinant TFIIIB are sufficient for in vitro integration in the
buffer used (see Materials and Methods). After termination of the
reaction, DNA was extracted and used as the template for PCR primed by
oligonucleotides 411 and 242, which anneal within Ty3 and
SNR6, respectively. Products were analyzed by nondenaturing
polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis.
In the presence of TFIIIB, products representing insertions into the
left and right transcription initiation sites of the SNR6
TATA were apparent for the wild-type Ty3 VLP preparation (Fig. 4, WT).
No integration products were observed for the mutant VLPs, even in a
reaction with twice the amount of VLPs that resulted in detectable
levels of product with wild-type VLPs (Fig. 4, 419, lanes marked 5, 10 µg). Recovery of DNA from the integration reaction was monitored by
amplification of the gene for beta-lactamase.
Ty3 IN-GFP fusion proteins localize to yeast nucleolus.
A
curious aspect of our results with IN (Fig. 1) and IN-GFP (Fig. 2) was
that localization corresponded to a poorly staining portion of the
region defined by DAPI as the nucleus. The rDNA repeats in yeast
localize to the nucleolus, which stains relatively poorly with DAPI.
This suggested that Ty3 IN was localized to the nucleolus or an
associated structure. A double-staining experiment was performed in
which Ty3 IN was visualized as described above using affinity-purified
rabbit IgG and secondary goat anti-rabbit IgG antibodies conjugated to
Alexa 488 and a nucleolar protein and localized using primary mouse
monoclonal antibody YN2C1 (M. Oakes and M. Nomura, personal
communication) followed by Alexa 586-conjugated goat anti-mouse IgG
antibodies. Alexa 488 and 586 appeared to colocalize to a
crescent-shaped compartment of the nucleus, although the staining for
IN was extremely weak and more diffuse than for the nucleolar marker
(Fig. 1).
The pattern of Ty3 IN-GFP localization was also determined in cells
expressing IN-GFP under the MET25 promoter, which produced a
fainter signal representing a lower level of expression. The patterns
in cells expressing Nop8p, a known nucleolar protein, fused to GFP or
GFP alone, each under control of the MET25 promoter, were used for comparison with the IN-GFP pattern
(54). Expression was induced by growth in medium deficient
in methionine. Wild-type IN-GFP expressed under the MET25
promoter on a centromeric plasmid showed more broadly distributed
fluorescence than GFP-NOP8, but the fluorescence was clearly
concentrated over a region similar to that stained by GFP-NOP8 (Fig.
5A). Thus, the subnuclear concentration of Ty3 IN-GFP was not unique to cells expressing IN-GFP under the
PGAL1 promoter and was similar to localization
of a known nucleolar protein.

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FIG. 5.
(A) Similar localization of IN-GFP and a nucleolar
protein fused to GFP. Yeast cells expressing GFP, GFP-NOP8, and
wild-type (wt) Ty3 IN-GFP under PMET25 were
analyzed for fusion protein and DNA localization. Images of GFP and DNA
were pseudocolored green and red, respectively. Individual images were
overlaid, and regions of colocalization appear as orange to yellow
fluorescence. (B) Fragmentation of Ty3 IN-GFP localization in rDNA
deletion mutants with fragmented nucleoli. Ty3 IN-GFP and D225E/E261D
IN-GFP were expressed in yeast strain W303-1a and its derivative,
NOY770. In this mutant, which lacks chromosomal rDNA and expresses rRNA
from a high-copy-number plasmid, the nucleolus is fragmented.
White arrowheads indicate examples of cells with nucleolar fragments.
GFP and DNA are visualized as described for Fig. 2.
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|
If Ty3 IN-GFP is physically associated with the nucleolus, then cells
in which the nucleolus is fragmented should have a similar pattern of
staining for IN-GFP. The mutant yeast strain NOY770, a derivative of
W303-1a in which a deletion of the rDNA repeat is complemented by a
high-copy-number plasmid containing one copy of the rDNA, has a
fragmented nucleolus (40). Therefore, if Ty3 IN-GFP
localizes to the nucleolus, it should show a disrupted pattern in this
strain. The UASGAL1 Ty3 IN-GFP construct pSSL2050 was transformed into wild-type W303-1a and into NOY770. Cells
were induced for Ty3 expression as described above. In the wild-type strain, as previously observed, IN-GFP localized to an
apparent subcompartment of the nucleus (Fig. 5B). NOY770 cells were observed in which multiple IN-GFP foci occurred. These
corresponded to sites that were poorly staining and located on the
periphery of the DAPI-stained region. Similar patterns are observed
using nucleolar proteins in this strain (40). Although the
presumptive nucleoli in wild-type cells sometimes had tails of IN-GFP
fluorescence, multiple foci were not observed. This result was
consistent with the interpretation that IN localizes to nucleolar
fragments in mutant cells and nucleoli in wild-type cells. In dividing
cells, IN-GFP localized to a stripe which corresponded to a
subcompartment of the DAPI-stained region.
Ty3 LTRs do not colocalize with rDNA repeats.
Cells expressing
Ty3 and stained with antibodies to Ty3 IN show fluorescence associated
with clustered element proteins in the cytoplasm, but no definitive
nuclear signal. Inability to detect nuclear Ty3 proteins complicates
evaluation of the physiological implications of nucleolar localization
of Ty3 IN. Nevertheless, nucleolar localization has not been reported
for retroviral or Ty1 IN proteins. These proteins have not only a
similar central domain containing the residues in the catalytic site
but similar strand transfer activities as well. This suggests that
nucleolar localization of Ty3 is not a nonspecific property associated
with DNA binding or strand transfer activities of integrases generally. If nucleolar localization of Ty3 is physiological, then it might be
associated with another property that distinguishes Ty3 IN activity
from those of other IN proteins
position specificity. The most
straightforward rationalization of Ty3 localization to the nucleolus,
if it occurs, would be that Ty3 integration targets are concentrated in
that part of the nucleus. A study that selected strains with insertions
expressing a HIS3 marker in Ty3 recovered 91 elements, of
which all sequenced copies were associated with tRNA genes
(9), suggesting that the predominant genomic target of Ty3
integration is tRNA genes. Several reports have recently raised the
intriguing possibility that at least a subset of these genes may be
associated with the nucleolus (3, 51).
In order to explore the possibility that tRNA gene targets of Ty3
integration are associated with the nucleolus, we undertook an
experiment to test the colocalization of Ty3 sequences with rDNA.
Because Ty3 and its approximately 40 340-bp LTRs are associated virtually exclusively with tRNA genes, these sequences provide an
excellent probe for the nuclear positions of approximately one seventh
of the 272 genomic tRNA genes (17). FISH analysis was
undertaken to localize Ty3 insertion sites relative to the rDNA (Fig.
6). An rDNA probe was biotinylated using
random priming in order to visualize the nucleolus. Cells were stained
with rDNA and also with control plasmid, Ty3 LTR, or Ty3 probe. The
non-rDNA probes were labeled with digoxigenin, using random priming and digoxigenin-11-UTP. Hybridized biotinylated (rDNA) probes were visualized with FITC-avidin, biotinylated antiavidin, and FITC-avidin. Hybridized digoxigenin (pUC, LTR, and Ty3) probes were detected using
mouse antidigoxigenin IgG followed by anti-mouse IgG-Alexa 586. DNA
was visualized by DAPI staining.

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FIG. 6.
LTR, Ty3, and rDNA sequences do not all localize to the
nucleolus. W303-1a cells were analyzed for the nuclear location of the
genomic LTR and Ty3 sequences compared to rDNA. Probes containing rDNA
sequences were biotinylated and detected by successive incubations in
FITC-avidin, biotinylated antiavidin, and finally FITC-avidin
(pseudocolored green). Probes containing control plasmid, LTR, or Ty3
sequences were labeled with digoxigenin. Hybridized digoxigenin probes
were detected using antidigoxigenin and then anti-mouse IgG-Alexa-586
(pseudocolored red). DNA was stained with DAPI (pseudocolored blue).
Each frame represents the indicated overlay.
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|
Hybridization showed that the rDNA, as expected, was localized to a
crescent along one side of the nucleus. The control probe showed
reactivity over the cells but was not localized to any particular
structure (Fig. 6, top row). The Ty3 LTR probe hybridized to multiple
sites per nucleus but did not concentrate with rDNA staining (second
row). The Ty3 probe, which included one copy of the LTR, stained more
brightly than the LTR-specific probe, but also did not localize within
the region stained by the rDNA probe (third row). Our experiments do
not exclude the possibility that a subset of tRNA genes are localized
to the nucleolus. In addition, it is formally possible that tRNA genes
identified with these probes were nucleolar at the time of Ty3
insertion. Nevertheless, these results did not support the hypothesis
that Ty3 targets are restricted to the nucleolus.
Ty3 can use genomic 5S rRNA genes as its transposition
targets.
In addition to tRNA genes, Ty3 targets other genes
transcribed by RNA polymerase III, including the 5S genes. In yeast,
the approximately 120 copies of 5S rDNA are within the rDNA repeat. Thus, if Ty3 targeted genomic 5S rDNAs, nucleolar localization could
play a role in targeting. The 5S genes have been shown to act as
plasmid targets for Ty3 integration, used at about one-fourth the
frequency that tRNA genes are used (10). However, to date there is no evidence for their use as genomic targets. In the study of
91 genomic insertions of the HIS3-marked Ty3, assuming their
less efficient use compared to tRNA genes, at least 1/10 of the
insertions should have been into 5S rDNAs. Southern blot analysis was
used to specifically probe for insertions into the 5S rDNAs in
HIS+ cells. However, no cells containing Ty3
genomic insertions were identified. Chromosomal rDNA in yeast is
repressed for recombination (18) and expression of genes
transcribed by RNA polymerase II (6, 49). Thus, failure to
recover Ty3 insertions in the rDNA could be attributed to either
interference with integration, so that chromosomal 5S genes are
prevented from acting as targets, or to failure to select cells with
insertions expressing the Ty3 HIS3 marker under conditions
of the assay.
To circumvent the requirement of the genetic assay for marker
expression, a PCR assay was developed for detection of insertions into
the rDNA locus. This assay was similar to previous PCR assays for Ty3
integration but relied on a combination of primers that annealed in the
Ty3 and in the 5S genes. Control experiments used a 5S plasmid that
contains a Ty3 insertion isolated during an in vivo transposition study
(D. Chalker and S. B. Sandmeyer, unpublished results) (Fig.
7, lanes P). Yeast strain yTM443 was
transformed with low-copy-number plasmid pMA1833 or pMA1890, expressing
GAL1-regulated wild-type and IN(D255E/E261D) Ty3,
respectively. Twelve isolates of each were inoculated into 9 ml of
SR-Ura and grown overnight at 30°C to log phase (OD600 of
0.3 to 0.4). Transcription of Ty3 was induced by addition of galactose
to 2%, and cells were incubated for 6 h. The cells were
harvested, and genomic DNA was extracted, purified, and quantified. PCR
was performed using 125 ng of genomic template DNA together with
primers 411 and 720, which anneal in Ty3 and the 5S rDNA sequence,
respectively. PCR products were resolved by electrophoresis on a
nondenaturing polyacrylamide gel and visualized by staining with
ethidium bromide.

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FIG. 7.
Detection of 5S integration using PCR. Top panel, yTM443
transformed with a low-copy-number plasmid expressing wild-type Ty3
(pMA1833) (upper panel) or Ty3 IN catalytic mutant (pMA1890) (lower
panel) was induced for transposition in the presence of galactose for
6 h, and the DNA was harvested for PCR analysis. Ty3 elements
integrated into the 5S rDNA were amplified using primers 411 (Ty3) and
720 (5S rDNA), and the PCR products were resolved by electrophoresis on
a nondenaturing polyacrylamide gel and visualized by staining with
ethidium bromide. Arrows indicate the positions of the amplified
integration fragment. Negative control (N) contains only genomic DNA
and primers. Positive control (P) contains genomic DNA, primers, and
0.05 ng of pDLC322, a plasmid containing a Ty3 upstream of a 5S rDNA
gene (D. Chalker, unpublished data).
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Most reactions using genomic DNA templates from cells expressing
wild-type Ty3 showed a fragment of the same size as the
positive-control fragment, although the intensity of this fragment
varied considerably (Fig. 7, lanes A to L, upper panel). Reactions
templated by genomic DNA from cells expressing IN(D255E/E261D) did not
produce this fragment (Fig. 7, lanes A to L, lower panel). Thus, Ty3
insertions into genomic 5S genes do occur, although it is not yet
possible to compare the global frequency for 5S genes to that for tRNA genes because of the PCR background problems created by existing LTRs
associated with most families of tRNA genes (data not shown).
 |
DISCUSSION |
Identification of the NLS for Ty3 provides an entrée to
understanding regulation of a key step in the life cycle of this retrotransposon. Nuclear entry is of particular interest, as the analogous step in the case of animal retroviruses appears to
distinguish viruses that can infect nondividing cells from those which
cannot. Additional interest arises from the observation that even for infection of dividing cells, the NLS motif may be essential for some
retroviruses. In the current investigation, IN was shown to be capable
of targeting itself, as well as an IN-GFP fusion, to the nucleus. It
was previously shown that mutations in Ty3 affecting charged IN
residues in the vicinity of aa 412 and 419 block Ty3 transposition but
do not disrupt 3'-end processing. These residues are localized to a
bipartite basic region contained within aa 401 to 436 that is
sufficient to target a covalent dimer of GFP to the nucleus. Thus, the
NLS of Ty3 is located in the carboxyl-terminal domain of IN, similar to
positions of HIV-1, ASV, and Ty1 NLS motifs in their respective IN proteins.
The Ty3 NLS is distinct from the NLS motif of the other gypsylike
element, Tf1. That NLS is a monopartite basic domain located within the
major structural protein (13). While it is presumed that
the earliest-acting defect in these mutants is the block in nuclear
entry, this could not be assessed directly because nuclear entry of IN
in cells expressing Ty3 was not detectable using Ty3 IN antiserum (data
not shown). Identification of the Ty3 NLS extends the members of the
retroelement class, including retroviruses, with bipartite or extended
regions containing basic residues with NLS activity. These include
HIV-1 IN (16), Ty1 IN (27, 36), and ASV
(30). The finding that NLS mutant Ty3 VLPs are not active
in strand transfer in vitro suggests that, similar to the HIV NLS,
these residues may have functions in addition to nuclear entry.
A blast search of the Ty3 NLS motif using the Saccharomyces
Genome Database (http://genome-www.stanford.edu/Saccharomyces/) did not
reveal any non-Ty3 identical matches with the Ty3 motif. Short
sequences within the domain did show similarity to other proteins (data
not shown), but the significance of these was not compelling. A large
number of gypsylike elements have now been identified, and the IN
proteins have been compared. The NLS peptide domain identified here for
Ty3 lies carboxyl-terminal to the conserved central region of these IN
proteins and overlaps the carboxyl-terminal portion of a block of
residues conserved among a set of gypsylike elements which is referred
to as the GPY/F domain (34). The pattern of basic residues
found in this portion of Ty3 does not appear to be highly conserved
among gypsylike elements, although other elements do have
concentrations of basic residues in the vicinity (data not shown).
Interestingly, this is just amino-terminal of the chromodomain that
occurs in some gypsylike elements but not in Ty3 (34).
This study did not directly address the pathway through which Ty3
enters the nucleus. Other bipartite NLS signals in yeast, for example,
nucleoplasmin (14), have been shown to interact with
importin
. Localization of overexpressed, ectopic Ty3 IN to a
subcompartment of the nucleus, the nucleolus, was observed. At least
some nucleolar proteins appear to enter the nucleus through importin
-independent pathways mediated by importin
homologs (52). However, until preintegration complexes are
visualized in the nuclei of cells expressing intact Ty3, it is a matter
of speculation whether Ty3 preintegration complexes are similarly targeted. In contrast to NLS motifs, nucleolar localization signals (NOS) are not well defined. Some NOS are contiguous with the NLS, and
some are discrete (47). Some defined NOS consist of
extended basic regions or RG repeats, neither of which is obvious in
the Ty3 IN sequence. Because the NLS peptide did not localize the GFP
fusion to the nucleolus, the Ty3 IN NOS must encompass additional residues or be separated from the NLS. Interestingly, Ty3 transposition is sensitive to overexpression of a number of proteins involved in
translation, including particular ribosomal proteins (J. Claypool and
S. B. Sandmeyer, unpublished data). Whether this could be related
to competition with nuclear transport is not yet known.
Ty3 is position specific for genes transcribed by polymerase III. It is
intriguing to consider that nucleolar localization of the Ty3
preintegration complex, if it occurs, could contribute to delivery of
Ty3 DNA to genomic targets. Previous studies have indicated that
pre-tRNAs and processing complexes may be distributed between nucleolar
and nonnucleolar loci (25, 45). However, electron
microscopic localization of a polymerase III subunit in S. cerevisiae failed to find a significant concentration of the
protein in the nucleolus, suggesting that the majority of polymerase
III is not nucleolar (32). In this study we also did not
find evidence that tRNA genes, the previously identified major
chromosomal target of Ty3 integration, are generally localized to the
nucleolus. However, Ty3 also targets 5S genes, which are presumed to be
nucleolar by virtue of their association with the rDNA in yeast. In
this study, we found that integration at sites adjacent to 5S
chromosomal genes could be detected using PCR, a physical method,
rather than genetic selection. Thus, nucleolar targeting could
contribute to insertions at a subset of polymerase III-transcribed genes.
A mutation involving IN residues 419 to 421 within the NLS blocked in
vitro integration mediated by Ty3 VLPs. The stringency of ordering of
DNA replication relative to nuclear entry and nuclear entry relative to
DNA 3-end processing for retroviruses and retroviruslike elements is
not clear. The Ty3 mutation NLS mutation did not block 3-end processing
(39). Thus, 3-end processing is not dependent on nuclear
entry. Nevertheless, in the in vitro assay, fractions containing
particles from cells expressing the mutant NLS failed to show
significant amounts of integration at a tRNA gene target. This result
appears to distinguish Ty3 nuclear localization mutants from Ty1
nuclear localization mutants which have been reported to have
integration activity in vitro (27, 36). However, the conditions of the respective assays were not identical, making it
difficult to conclude that this necessarily represents a significant biological difference between the two types of elements.
It is presumed that retroviruses and retrotransposons must undergo
uncoating to negotiate the nuclear pore. IN contains the NLS and, in
models proposed for retroviral structure, would be presumed to be
internal, making exposure of the NLS secondary to uncoating.
Nevertheless, the signals for uncoating are not known, and post-reverse
transcription, IN might play a role in this process. Alternatively,
passage through the nuclear pore could be essential for activation of
the preintegration complex in some way. A simpler scenario is suggested
by the proximity of the NLS and presumed DNA-binding domains of IN. The
basic NLS and DNA-binding domains of other proteins have been found to
overlap. Indeed, this overlapping function has been suggested as the
explanation for the failure of HIV-1 NLS mutants to integrate in
dividing host cells (data not shown) (16).
In summary, the current study identified a motif in the Ty3 IN that is
essential and sufficient for nuclear localization. Mutations in this
domain blocked integration in vitro, suggesting a dual function for the
NLS motif. In addition, our study raises the intriguing possibility
that nucleolar localization of retroelements could occur and contribute
to insertion specificity for at least a subset of sites.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We thank M. Oakes, H. Wai, M. Tabb, and M. Nomura for
immunological reagents, strains, and many helpful discussions. We thank G. Kassavetis and E. P. Geiduschek for recombinant TFIIIB
subunits. We thank V. Perreau for helpful discussions. We thank V. Nguyen and H. Archibald for technical assistance and M. Aye for
communication of results prior to publication.
S. Lin was supported by an American Heart Predoctoral Fellowship. This
work was supported by Public Health Service grant 33281 from the
General Medicine Institute.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Biological Chemistry, College of Medicine, University of California, Irvine, Irvine, CA 92697-1700. Phone: (949) 824-7571. Fax: (949) 824-2688. E-mail: sbsandme{at}uci.edu.
 |
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