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Molecular and Cellular Biology, September 2002, p. 6209-6221, Vol. 22, No. 17
0270-7306/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/MCB.22.17.6209-6221.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138
Received 9 November 2001/ Returned for modification 31 January 2002/ Accepted 21 May 2002
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Among the protein kinases that regulate spindle function, the mitotic polo-like kinases have been implicated by genetic, biochemical, and cytological evidence to play a significant role. The polo-like kinases are a family of serine/threonine kinases that have a high degree of homology in their amino-terminal catalytic domains. In addition, regions of homology are present in the carboxy-terminal noncatalytic domains, which include the highly conserved stretch of
30 amino acids called the polo box (21) and two other regions of homology dubbed polo boxes 2 and 3 (31). Members of this family include the mammalian Plk (31, 32, 36, 37, 45, 47), Snk (65), and Prk/Fnk (24, 49), Xenopus laevis Plx1, Plx2, and Plx3 (25, 44), Drosophila melanogaster polo (51), Schizosaccharomyces pombe plo1 (55), Saccharomyces cerevisiae Cdc5p (42), and Caenorhabditis elegans plc1 and plc2 (57). Closely related to this family are mammalian Sak-a and Sak-b, which possess homology to the catalytic domain of the polo family members but lack the conserved carboxy terminus and characteristic polo boxes (28). All of these members, except for the G1-specific Snk and perhaps the putative Xenopus Snk homolog Plx2 proteins, regulate a variety of M-phase-specific events. These include centrosome maturation (34, 46), bipolar spindle formation (46, 51, 55), microtubule motor regulation (1, 17, 47), activation of Cdc2 via the Cdc25C phosphatase (44, 58), DNA damage checkpoint adaptation (69), regulation of anaphase-promoting complex and 26S proteasome activity (22, 26, 39, 43, 64), and regulation of cytokinesis (4, 17, 66).
The Drosophila polo1 mutant phenotype was the first to be characterized and displays extensive spindle abnormalities. polo mutants display a high mitotic index and spindle defects that include mono- and multipolar spindles and disorganized spindle poles. These defects are thought to contribute to the high degree of abnormal chromosome segregation which leads to the observed aneuploid and polyploid states (67). Lane and Nigg established the mammalian loss-of-function phenotype by microinjecting anti-Plk antibodies into HeLa cells. These injected cells displayed mitotic arrest, monopolar spindles with duplicated but not separated centrosomes, and abnormal nuclear states such as micro- and multinucleation and ball-like condensed chromatin (46). Monopolar spindles were also observed in the plo1 loss-of-function phenotype in S. pombe (55) as well as in Xenopus embryos microinjected with anti-Plx1 antibodies (62). Work with Drosophila shows that exogenous polo added to heat-inactivated lysates preferentially phosphorylated microtubule-associated substrates, which were identified as ß-tubulin, an 85-kDa microtubule-associated protein (MAP), and a 220-kDa protein later identified as the centrosomal abnormal spindle protein (asp). Genetic evidence of the synergy of the polo1 aspE3 double-mutant phenotype, as well as recent biochemical evidence, supports a role of polo in regulating centrosomal function through asp (23, 34, 68). Phosphorylation of DMAP-85 by polo was later shown to regulate its in vitro microtubule-binding activity (16). In addition, work with Xenopus egg extracts has suggested that Plx1 can phosphorylate the MAP Op18 and regulate its destabilizing activity (14). These substrates suggest possible pathways through which polo family members may function in regulating microtubule dynamics and controlling the formation of a bipolar spindle.
In this study, the yeast two-hybrid system identified a Plk substrate, the translationally controlled tumor protein (TCTP), which was recently shown to be a tubulin-binding protein that dynamically interacts with microtubules during the cell cycle (30). TCTP was originally identified as a serum-inducible 23-kDa protein band that undergoes an early and prominent increase upon serum stimulation in tissue culture cells (5). The TCTP mRNA is expressed at constant levels in both growing and nongrowing cells, and the translation is regulated by its polypyrimidine-rich 5' untranslated region (8). TCTP localizes to microtubules from G1 until metaphase and then detaches from the spindle at the metaphase-to-anaphase transition. Both in vitro tubulin binding by TCTP and sequence homology to the tubulin-binding domain of MAP-1B support these localization data. In addition, TCTP levels in overexpressing cells were correlated with microtubule stabilization and reduced growth rate in vivo (30). Here, TCTP was shown to be directly phosphorylated in mitosis in vivo and by Plk in vitro. The Plk phosphorylation sites were mapped to two serine residues, and overexpression of a double serine-to-alanine mutant led to an increase of phenotypes associated with mitotic catastrophe such as multinucleation and rounded cells with ball-like condensed chromatin very similar to a subset of those phenotypes reported by Lane and Nigg in the Plk loss-of-function study and by Mundt et al. in experiments studying the overexpression of wild-type and kinase-dead Plk (46, 53). The kinase-substrate relationship between Plk and TCTP and the correlation between the effects of neutralizing Plk activity and of expressing a Plk phosphorylation site-deficient mutant protein are consistent with the idea that TCTP is a key mitotic target of Plk for regulating anaphase progression.
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Western blot analyses Proteins resolved by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) were transferred to polyvinylidene difluoride (PVDF) blotting membranes (Immobilon-P; Millipore) at 80 V for 2 h using either a standard methanol or ethanol plus SDS Tris-glycine transfer buffer. Western blot analyses were performed with a PBST (phosphate-buffered saline plus 0.1% Tween 20) plus 3% bovine serum albumin blocking buffer, incubated with primary antibody in blocking buffer, washed three times with PBST, incubated with horseradish peroxidase-conjugated secondary antibodies (Amersham) in PBST plus 5% nonfat dry milk (Nestlé-Carnation), and finally washed four times with PBST. Bands were visualized by chemiluminescence using ECL detection reagents (Amersham-Pharmacia).
In vitro binding and phosphorylation assays.
To make glutathione S-transferase (GST)-TCTP fusion protein, the TCTP cDNA was cloned into the pGEX-KG vector. JM109 bacteria containing the resultant plasmid were diluted 1:10 from an overnight culture, grown for 1 h at 37°C, induced with 0.5 mM isopropyl-ß-D-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG) for 4 h, and harvested. The bacteria were lysed by freezing at -70°C followed by lysozyme treatment, and GST-TCTP was purified and eluted by standard methods. HA-Plk and HA-Snk proteins were made by infecting Sf9 cells with the appropriate baculovirus (47; M. Liu and R. Erikson, unpublished data) and used either as a crude lysate or as an immunoprecipitate with 12CA5 anti-HA monoclonal antibody. For the in vitro binding assay, Sf9 cells infected with HA-Plk baculovirus for 2 days were lysed in a buffer containing 100 mM NaCl, 20 mM Tris-Cl (pH 7.5), 1 mM EDTA, 1% Triton X-100, 1 mM 4-(2-aminoethyl)benzenesulfonyl fluoride (AEBSF), 10 µg of pepstatin per ml, 10 µg of leupeptin per ml, and 5 µg of aprotinin per ml. Supernatants from a 10-min microcentrifuge step were incubated for 1 h with GST or GST-TCTP prebound to glutathione-agarose, and the beads were washed four times in the lysis buffer. For the in vitro kinase assays, Plk immunoprecipitated with a Plk C-13 polyclonal antibody (47) from nocodazole-treated MEL cells, HA-Plk and HA-Snk immunoprecipitated with 12CA5 monoclonal antibody from Sf9 cells infected with the appropriate baculovirus, GST-Plk purified with glutathione-agarose from Sf9 cells infected with the pAcGHLT-Plk baculovirus, or 50-µg crude lysates of random and nocodazole-treated HeLa cells were used as kinase sources to phosphorylate TCTP and casein. Plk and crude lysate kinase reactions were carried out in TBMD cocktail as described previously (47). Snk kinase reactions were carried out in a kinase cocktail containing 25 mM Tris-Cl (pH 7.5), 10 mM MgCl2, 0.1 µg of bovine serum albumin per ml, 1 mM dithiothreitol, 50 µM ATP, and 5 µCi of [
-32P]ATP and terminated with Laemmli SDS sample buffer.
Phosphoamino acid, deletion, and point mutant analyses. GST-TCTP phosphorylated by immunoprecipitated Plk, purified GST-Plk, and crude lysates were subjected to phosphoamino acid analysis as described previously (10). Since all of the phosphorylation localized to serine residues, deletion mutants were created to determine which of the eight serines in TCTP were phosphorylated by Plk. pGEX KG-TCTP was digested with either ClaI-XhoI or KpnI-XhoI, filled in with Klenow and T4 polymerase, respectively, and ligated to form carboxy-terminal deletions. pGEX KG-TCTP was also digested with either EcoRI-ClaI or EcoRI-KpnI, filled in with Klenow and T4 polymerase, respectively, and ligated to form amino-terminal deletions. Potential serine phosphorylation sites in TCTP were mutated to alanine by the Dut- Ung- method of mutagenesis (71).
Cell culture. HeLa, HEK293, and MEL cells were maintained in Dulbecco modified Eagle medium supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum (Intergen), penicillin G (100 U/ml), and streptomycin (100 µg/ml) (Gibco-BRL Life Technologies). Sf9 cells were cultured in suspension at 27°C in IPL-41 medium supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum, yeastolate, lactalbumin hydrolysate (VWR Scientific), and 0.1% pluronic acid F-68 (Gibco-BRL Life Technologies). Baculovirus infections were performed either on plates or in suspension.
Column chromatography and immunodepletion. Shake-off cells from plates of nocodazole-treated (400 ng/ml) (Sigma) HeLa cells were harvested and lysed by Dounce homogenization in TEV (20 mM Tris [pH 7.4], 1 mM EGTA, 100 µM sodium orthovanadate) plus 10 mM ß-glycerol phosphate, 20 mM p-nitrophenyl phosphate, 1 mM AEBSF, 10 µg of pepstatin per ml, 10 µg of leupeptin per ml, and 5 µg of aprotinin per ml. After centrifugation at 100,000 x g at 4°C, the supernatant was assayed for protein content by the Bradford method. A 10-mg portion of protein was then loaded onto a 1-ml MonoQ column (Amersham-Pharmacia) preequilibrated with TEV. A gradient of 0.0 to 1.0 M NaCl over 40 ml (with 5 ml of TEV supplemented with 0 and 1 M NaCl before and after the gradient, respectively) was used to elute protein from the column, and 1-ml fractions were collected. Aliquots of every other fraction as well as crude lysate were subjected to SDS-PAGE, transferred to PVDF, and Western blotted as described above using anti-Plk antibodies to determine where the Plk protein eluted. Kinase activity toward TCTP was measured for every other fraction and crude lysate by using either GST-wild-type (wt)-TCTP or GST-S46A S64A (AA)-TCTP as a substrate and utilizing kinase assay conditions described previously. The fractions containing kinase activity toward GST-TCTP were combined, dialyzed overnight in buffer A (50 mM sodium phosphate [pH 7.0], 1 mM EGTA), and loaded onto a 1-ml MonoS column (Amersham-Pharmacia) preequilibrated with buffer A. A gradient of 0.0 to 0.5 M NaCl over 35 ml followed by a gradient of 0.5 to 1.0 M NaCl over 5 ml (with 5 ml of buffer A supplemented with 0 M and 1 M NaCl before and after the gradient, respectively) was used to elute the protein from the column. All further analysis was the same as in the MonoQ run. Immunodepletion experiments were preformed by lysing nocodozole-arrested mitotic shake-off cells by Dounce homogenization in Plk kinase buffer with 150 mM NaCl. An equal amount of lysate was incubated with protein G beads, which were prebound with either anti-Plk antibodies (Zymed) or control antibodies (anti-Mek1 or anti-Myc). The lysate was then used in kinase assays with GST-wt-TCTP or GST-AA-TCTP bound to beads as substrates. The NaCl was diluted fourfold with kinase buffer to a final NaCl concentration of 37.5 mM. The GST-TCTP beads were washed and processed for SDS-PAGE.
In vivo labeling.
HEK293 cells were transfected with pCDNA-AmpI HA-TCTP (wt and AA mutant) by a standard calcium phosphate precipitation method. At
70% confluence, the cells were treated with nocodazole (400 ng/ml) for 16 h in standard medium, washed with PBS, and incubated in 4 ml of phosphate-free medium without serum or antibiotics and supplemented with nocodazole and 3 mCi of 32Pi per 10-cm plate. The cells were labeled for 3 h and harvested. The cell pellets were lysed in a modified RIPA buffer containing 20 mM Tris (pH 8.0), 50 mM NaCl, 1 mM MgCl2, 10% glycerol, 1% NP-40, 20 mM p-nitrophenyl phosphate, 100 µM sodium orthovanadate, 1 mM AEBSF, 10 µg of pepstatin per ml, 10 µg of leupeptin per ml, and 5 µg of aprotinin per ml. The lysates were microcentrifuged for 10 min at 4°C, and the supernatants were incubated with 4 µg of anti-HA monoclonal antibody followed by protein A-Sepharose beads. The beads were washed and prepared with Laemmli SDS sample buffer. Purified GST-TCTP was phosphorylated by purified GST-Plk using 100 µCi of [
-32P]ATP, and the reaction was stopped with sample buffer. The samples were subjected to SDS-PAGE and transferred to PVDF. Part of each sample was loaded separately for Western analysis to confirm protein expression. The membrane was then subjected to autoradiography, and the appropriate bands were excised with a scalpel. The standard tryptic mapping protocol (10) was followed. The electrophoresis was performed in pH 1.9 buffer, and the chromatography was performed in phosphochromatography buffer. The thin-layer chromatography plates were then subjected to autoradiography.
Microscopy.
HEK293 cells were grown on collagen (Sigma)-coated coverslips and transfected with green fluorescent protein (GFP), GFP-wt-TCTP, GFP-AA-TCTP, HA-wt-TCTP, and HA-AA-TCTP expression vectors by the standard calcium phosphate protocol. The cells were fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde for 10 min and permeabilized with methanol for 2 min. They were stained with anti-ß-tubulin and anti-
-tubulin primary antibodies (Sigma) and donkey anti-mouse fluorescein isothiocyanate-conjugated secondary antibodies (Jackson ImmunoResearch) by a standard method. DNA was stained with propidium iodide. Stained cells were viewed either under a Zeiss LSM-410 confocal microscope equipped with a krypton-argon laser or under a Nikon Optiphat 2 microscope and Diagnostic Instruments Spot camera.
Polyclonal antibody generation. Polyclonal antibodies were generated in rabbits by Cocalico Biologicals, Inc. (Reamstown, Pa.), using bacterially produced and purified GST-TCTP as the antigen. Antibodies were immunopurified by first preclearing with GST covalently linked to CNBr-activated Sepharose 4B (Amersham-Pharmacia), binding to GST-TCTP Sepharose 4B beads, washing with 100 mM Tris (pH 8.0)-500 mM NaCl, and eluting with 100 mM glycine (pH 2.5).
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FIG. 1. Two-hybrid analysis of the TCTP-Plk interaction. A Plk carboxy-terminal bait containing the polo box interacts with HeLa partial clones of TCTP in the two-hybrid screen. Five of the nine positives from the screen were partial clones of human TCTP. One partial human clone and full-length murine TCTP were shown to interact with full-length Plk but not full-length Snk, and this interaction was shown to be dependent on the polo box of Plk (f.s. is the frameshift mutation). Lamin and GBT9 (GAL4 DNA-binding domain vector) were used as negative controls. Interactions were determined by assaying for ß-galactosidase activity, with interaction or activity strength denoted by dark, medium, light, and (--), which roughly correlated to turning blue in under 1 h, between 1 and 4 h, longer than 4 h, and not detectable after 24 h, respectively. The Plk bait showed a slight degree of autoactivation; however, the Plk-TCTP (both partial and full-length) interactions were consistently much stronger (detectably blue in 1.5 h versus 6 h for the control) as determined by ß-galactosidase activity.
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-32P]dCTP-labeled probe of clone 56.1 (coding for amino acids 97 to 172). Eight positives in duplicate from 106 plaques were picked, and six phages were determined to contain full-length coding sequences. PCR was used to subclone the TCTP open reading frame and remove the translational inhibitory signals (9, 20). The full-length murine TCTP gene was subcloned in frame with the GAL4 DNA-binding domain to determine if full-length Plk, Snk, and TCTP interact in the two-hybrid system in the same fashion as the Plk polo box bait and partial TCTP clones. Full-length TCTP interacted with Plk in a polo box-dependent manner, but not with Snk, as determined by the ß-galactosidase assay (Fig. 1). The interaction is specific for Plk even though both Plk and Snk contain almost identical 30-amino-acid polo boxes. Perhaps the slight variability in the polo boxes themselves or the divergence in the polo box-flanking regions could explain the specificity of binding to TCTP. Plk interacts with and phosphorylates TCTP in vitro. To confirm that Plk and TCTP interact in vitro as they do in the two-hybrid system, TCTP was expressed as a GST fusion protein. GST-TCTP and GST immobilized on glutathione-agarose beads were incubated with lysates from baculovirus-infected Sf9 cells expressing HA-Plk. After extensive washing, GST-TCTP, but not the GST control, was found to retain HA-Plk from these lysates (Fig. 2).
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FIG. 2. In vitro binding of HA-Plk to GST-TCTP. Lysates from baculovirus-infected Sf9 cells expressing HA-Plk were used in a pull-down assay with either GST or GST-TCTP prebound to glutathione (GSH)-agarose beads. HA-Plk and GST/GST-TCTP were detected by Western immunoblotting with anti-HA monoclonal and anti-GST polyclonal antibodies, respectively.
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-32P]ATP and either GST-TCTP or casein as substrates. As shown in Fig. 3, HA-wt-Plk could efficiently phosphorylate both GST-TCTP and the exogenous substrate casein. Thrombin cleavage of GST-TCTP, as well as kinase reactions using GST alone as a substrate, indicated that Plk phosphorylates residues in TCTP and not in the GST moiety (data not shown). HA-wt-Snk displayed kinase activity toward casein but could not phosphorylate TCTP to any appreciable degree. In addition, kinase-defective mutants of both HA-Plk and HA-Snk could not phosphorylate GST-TCTP, indicating that the phosphorylation of GST-TCTP by HA-wt-Plk was due to the catalytic activity of Plk and not to a Plk-associated kinase.
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FIG. 3. Plk but not Snk phosphorylates TCTP. HA-wt-Plk, HA-wt-Snk, and their respective kinase-defective mutants from baculovirus-infected Sf9 cells were used in anti-HA immunocomplex kinase reactions with either GST-TCTP or casein as substrates. The exogenous Plk and Snk substrate casein was used as a control for kinase activities.
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FIG. 4. Plk phosphorylates TCTP on two serine residues. (A) Both Plk and mitotic lysates phosphorylate TCTP on serine residues. Partial acid hydrolysis followed by phosphoamino acid analysis was performed on GST-TCTP phosphorylated by GST-Plk purified from baculovirus-infected Sf9 cells, immunoprecipitated Plk from nocodazole-treated MEL cells, and crude lysate from nocodazole-arrested HeLa cells. (B) Deletion mapping of in vitro Plk phosphorylation sites in TCTP indicates more than one phosphorylation site. (C) Serine-to-alanine point mutant analysis indicates that Plk phosphorylates TCTP on serines 46 and 64 in a hierarchical fashion. GST-TCTP and mutant fusion proteins were phosphorylated by Sf9-produced GST-Plk in separate in vitro kinase reactions. (D) Serine-to-threonine mutations in TCTP support the two-Plk-phosphorylation-site hypothesis. TCTP mutants with combinations of serines and threonines at resides 46 and 64 were phosphorylated by GST-Plk and subjected to phosphoamino acid analysis. The lack of apparent Plk phosphorylation on the Ser64Thr residue indicates a specificity for serine at this site.
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Kinase activity toward TCTP is upregulated in mitosis, and the majority of activity cofractionates with Plk.
Since the kinase activity of Plk peaks in mitosis, crude lysates were assayed for kinase activity toward TCTP to determine if both kinase activities coincided in a cell cycle-dependent manner. Cell lysates from growing and nocodazole-arrested HeLa cells were lysed, and 50 µg of each lysate was incubated with [
-32P]ATP and GST-TCTP immobilized on glutathione-agarose. The GST-TCTP beads were washed, the TCTP was cleaved from the GST moiety with thrombin, the supernatants were resolved by SDS-PAGE, and TCTP phosphorylation was visualized by autoradiography. In vitro kinase activity toward TCTP was elevated approximately 18-fold in nocodazole-arrested cell lysates compared to unsynchronized cell lysates (Fig. 5A).
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FIG. 5. Kinase activity toward TCTP is high in mitotic lysates, and the majority cofractionates with Plk on successive MonoQ and MonoS columns. (A) Unsynchronized and nocodazole-arrested HeLa lysates were incubated with GST-TCTP on beads in an in vitro kinase reaction. The washed GST-TCTP was thrombin cleaved, and subjected to SDS-PAGE and then to autoradiography. (B) Nocodazole-arrested HeLa lysates were fractionated over a MonoQ column. The top panel is an anti-Plk blot showing the Plk elution pattern over the salt gradient. The middle and bottom panels are kinase reactions using GST-wt-TCTP and GST-AA-TCTP, respectively, to monitor the elution pattern of kinase activities toward TCTP. (C) MonoQ fractions 19 to 29 were loaded onto a MonoS column and subjected to a similar analysis as performed on the MonoQ fractions. The middle and bottom panels depict kinase reactions with each column fraction and either GST-wt-TCTP or GST-AA-TCTP, respectively, as a substrate. The top panel shows Plk fractionation as determined by Western blotting. The slightly faster-migrating band phosphorylated in fraction 23 from the MonoQ and fraction 23 from the MonoS column correspond to a contaminating protein from the lysate and not phosphorylation on GST-TCTP. (D) Immunodepletion experiments show that at least one-third of the kinase activity toward TCTP in HeLa cells is due to Plk or a Plk complex in vitro. The top panel shows kinase reactions with an equal amount of crude lysate that were immunodepleted with a control antibody (anti-Myc or anti-Mek1) or with anti-Plk antibodies. The bottom panel shows the Coomassie-stained bands of GST-TCTP with the wild-type fusion protein in the left two lanes and the double-alanine mutant in the right two lanes. The right-hand panel shows the effectiveness of the Plk immunodepletions.
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Fractions 19 through 29 were loaded on a MonoS column, and analyses similar to those done in the MonoQ run were performed on the MonoS fractions. The kinase activity toward TCTP eluted in the flowthrough in fractions 3 through 5 and in the salt gradient in fractions 19 through 29. A non-serine 46- and serine 64-directed kinase activity appears relatively faintly in fractions 23 through 27. Plk protein coeluted with the kinase activity toward TCTP in both the flowthrough and salt gradient fractions. The second kinase activity as observed in the MonoQ run was not distinct from the Plk elution pattern and may be coeluting with Plk in some of the fractions (Fig. 5C).
Thus, Plk appeared to cofractionate with the majority of the kinase activity toward TCTP over two successive column runs. The majority of all kinase activity toward TCTP was specific for the two serine residues phosphorylated by Plk in vitro. There appears to be at least one other in vitro kinase activity toward Ser46 and Ser64 in TCTP that does not coelute with Plk in some of the fractions. The presence of this secondary kinase activity is supported by in vitro kinase assay data obtained using anti-Plk immunodepleted cell lysates (Fig. 5D). Purified cdc2-cyclin B1 and anti-cyclin B1 immunocomplexes, both with high histone H1 kinase activities, were not able to phosphorylate TCTP to any detectable level in vitro, which indicates that cdc2-cyclin B1 is unlikely to be the other kinase activity observed in vitro (data not shown).
In vivo phosphorylation sites on TCTP include those phosphorylated by Plk in vitro. To show that the sites on TCTP phosphorylated by Plk in vitro are relevant sites in vivo, HEK293 cells were transfected with cytomegalovirus (CMV) promoter-driven HA-TCTP constructs (both wt and AA), treated with nocodazole for 16 h, and labeled with 3 mCi of 32Pi for 3 h in the presence of nocodazole. The products of an in vitro kinase reaction with GST-Plk and GST-TCTP as well as the anti-HA immunoprecipitates from the in vivo-labeled cell lysates were processed for two-dimensional tryptic analysis.
HA-wt-TCTP was phosphorylated on two different tryptic peptides (Fig. 6A), while the double-alanine mutant was phosphorylated on only one tryptic peptide (Fig. 6B). GST-TCTP was phosphorylated by Plk on one tryptic peptide in vitro (Fig. 6C), which matches the phosphorylated tryptic peptide present in HA-wt-TCTP but absent in HA-AA-TCTP in vivo, as confirmed by a mixing experiment (Fig. 6D).
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FIG. 6. The Plk in vitro phosphorylation sites on TCTP are phosphorylated in vivo in mitosis. Tryptic mapping of in vivo-labeled overexpressed HA-wt-TCTP (A) and HA-AA-TCTP (B) of GST-TCTP phosphorylated by GST-Plk in vitro (C) and of in vivo HA-wt-TCTP and in vitro GST-TCTP mixed (D). The horizontal axis represents electrophoresis in pH 1.9 buffer, and the vertical axis represents chromatography in phosphochromatography buffer.
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FIG. 7. Overexpression of AA-TCTP leads to an increase in the number of multinucleated cells, and overexpression of wt-TCTP and AA-TCTP leads to an increase in the number of cell deaths and cells with ball-like condensed DNA. (a to c) GFP (a), GFP-wt-TCTP (b), and GFP-AA-TCTP (c) were overexpressed in HEK293 cells. Panel c shows an example of the multinucleate phenotype. (d and e) Overexpression of either form of TCTP leads to an increase in the number of rounded cells with ball-like condensed DNA (d) and the number of cells undergoing cell death (e). DNA is stained with propidium iodide (red) and transfected cells fluoresce green in these images. (f) The microtubule network in these multinucleate HA-tagged AA-TCTP-expressing cells appears interphase-like and is concentrated in the center of the ring of nuclei (upper left). Interphase nontransfected cells possess a microtubule network throughout the cytoplasm (right). The green signal is ß-tubulin staining, and the red signal is DNA (propidium iodide staining). (g) A pair of centrosomes also localizes to the center of the nuclear annulus in AA-TCTP-transfected cells, as determined by -tubulin staining (green) and DNA staining (red).
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- or anti-ß-tubulin antibodies indicates that this core is enriched with interphase-like microtubules and that these microtubules are radiating out from the center of the annulus. On the other hand, interphase nontransfected cells have microtubules throughout the cytoplasm, with a slight enrichment at the cell periphery (Fig. 7f). The observed intensely fluorescent GFP-AA-TCTP cores may be due to the enrichment of microtubules in this region and the ability of TCTP to bind tubulin (Fig. 7c and f). Staining with anti-
-tubulin antibodies suggests that a pair of centrosomes is in the center of the nuclear ring (Fig. 7g). In addition, over a 9-day observation period, these transfected multinucleate cells continued to grow to well over 10-fold larger than the untransfected neighboring cells, and these multinucleate cells failed to enter mitosis or undergo cell death (Fig. 7c and data not shown). |
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TABLE 1. Phenotypes of 40-h GFP, GFP-wt-TCTP, and GFP-AA-TCTP overexpression in HEK293 cellsa
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Low-level taxol treatment and expression of double-alanine TCTP have an additive effect on karyokinesis.
The phenotype of cells expressing TCTP with alanine substitutions in the Plk phosphorylation sites in HEK293 cells was quite similar to the observations made by Jordan et al. for HeLa cells treated with low (
10 nM) concentrations of the microtubule-stabilizing drug taxol. These phenotypes include spindle abnormalities as well as a similar multinucleate terminal state (40). To determine if the karyokinesis defects induced by taxol treatment and the AA-TCTP mutant expression could be additive, HEK293 cells were transfected with either GFP, GFP-wt-TCTP, or GFP-AA-TCTP and treated with 0, 1, 3, 10, 30, or 100 nM taxol. The cells were fixed and stained for fluorescence microscopy 24 h after transfection and drug treatment. Green fluorescent cells were scored for being either mono- or multinucleate. The experiment was performed in triplicate, with approximately 100 cells scored for each condition per trial. The effect of the taxol treatment on cells expressing the double-alanine TCTP mutant protein in terms of inducing multinucleation was additive and at some concentrations was synergistic relative to both the cells expressing wild-type TCTP and vector the alone control (Fig. 8A). An anti-TCTP Western blot shows comparable levels of exogenous wt- and AA-TCTP expression (Fig. 8B). Therefore, it appears that the double-alanine TCTP mutant and taxol may be working in a similar pathway to disrupt spindle function and mitotic progression.
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FIG. 8. Taxol and expression of AA-TCTP have additive effects to the multinucleate-cell index. (A) Cells grown on coverslips were transfected and taxol treated for 24 h, fixed, and scored for a multinucleate phenotype (average of three separate transfections). (B) An anti-TCTP Western blot showing that the phenotype is not due to differential stability or expression levels of GFP-wt-TCTP and GFP-AA-TCTP.
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To gain some insight into the Plk-TCTP interaction and TCTP function in general, a mutant that cannot be phosphorylated by Plk was generated. The Plk phosphorylation sites on TCTP were mapped by deletion and point mutant analysis to two serines located at residues 46 and 64. These two sites are similar in that the serine residues are preceded by one or two aspartate or glutamate residues and followed by several residues with uncharged side chains [E-G-(A/E)-(I/G)-(D/T)-(D/E)-S-(L/T)-(I/V)]. This consensus site is similar to that predicted by Golsteyn et al. By comparing specific residues in the conserved kinase domain of Plk to those in protein kinase A which have been analyzed by X-ray crystallography, the authors predicted that the second and third residues amino-proximal to the phosphorylated serine or threonine in the Plk substrate would not be positively charged and that the residue following the serine or threonine would be hydrophobic (32). This prediction matches the evidence from serine-to-alanine and serine-to-threonine mutations than Ser46 (IDDSL) is a stronger Plk phosphorylation site than Ser64 (GTEST). In addition, Plk appears to prefer negatively charged regions and substrates such as casein,
-, ß-, and
-tubulin, and TCTP (pI = 4.5) over positively charged ones such as histone H1 (27, 30, 33, 47). Along with the sites mapped in S. cerevisiae Cdc5p phosphorylation of Scc1p and in Xenopus Plx1 and human Plk phosphorylation of human cyclin B1, a polo kinase phosphorylation site consensus sequence can be derived as a stretch of six uncharged or negatively charged residues preceding a serine (or threonine). All but Ser147 of cyclin B1 are directly preceded by one or two aspartate or glutamate residues in the two positions amino-proximal to the phosphorylated residue, and the phosphorylated residue is followed by an uncharged residue (2, 70).
The vast majority of phosphorylation by crude lysates on TCTP in vitro matches these two Plk phosphorylation sites. In addition, column chromatography demonstrated that a large proportion of the kinase activity toward TCTP cofractionates with Plk over two columns. The contribution by Plk in crude lysates toward phosphorylating TCTP in vitro was further demonstrated by anti-Plk immunodepletion experiments. The other mitotically active polo family members and related members, Fnk/Prk (19, 59) and Sak-a (29), might be responsible for this mitotic non-Plk kinase activity toward TCTP. Support for the possibility of overlapping regulation of mitotic substrates by polo family members is drawn from the fact that both Plx1 (44) and Prk (58) have been reported to be able to phosphorylate Cdc25C and upregulate its phosphatase activity in vitro.
TCTP is phosphorylated in vivo on the in vitro Plk phosphorylation sites and may transiently colocalize with Plk during the metaphase-to-anaphase transition. Two-dimensional mapping shows that two different tryptic peptides are phosphorylated in vivo, and one of the peptides appears to contain the two sites phosphorylated by Plk in vitro. The identity of the second peptide, as well as the kinase responsible for the phosphorylation and the functional significance of this phosphorylation, is not known. The in vivo phosphorylation on this second peptide could be due to the same activity which is responsible for the in vitro phosphorylation detected in both the MonoQ and MonoS columns runs while using the double-alanine TCTP mutant protein as a substrate.
These two in vitro Plk phosphorylation sites are just amino-terminal to the basic domain in TCTP, which has similarity to the tubulin-binding domain of MAP-1B. TCTP is a tubulin-binding protein in vitro, and it interacts with microtubules in interphase through metaphase and detaches during the metaphase-to-anaphase transition (30). It is possible that when Plk translocates at the metaphase-to-anaphase transition from the centrosomes to the midzone by way of the spindle microtubules (33) in a hypothesized MKLP-1/CHO1-dependent fashion (1, 17, 47), it can phosphorylate any TCTP bound to these microtubules. The binding affinity of TCTP for tubulin may be phosphorylation dependent, similar to that of several MAPs including MAP2 (13), E-MAP-77 (12), and tau (35).
The Plk phosphorylation site mutant of TCTP appears to induce an abortive mitosis by overstabilizing microtubules during the metaphase-to-anaphase transition. The multinucleate phenotype observed in cells overexpressing the double-alanine mutant of TCTP is quite similar to that seen in other p53+ cells treated with low concentrations of the microtubule-stabilizing drug taxol. These taxol-treated cells arrest at the metaphase-to-anaphase transition after sister chromatid separation and proceed to undergo an aberrant mitotic exit without the occurrence of anaphase chromosome-to-pole movement or cytokinesis. The cells re-form nuclear membranes around subgenomic chromosome aggregations, giving rise to a multinucleate state, and enter a G1-like arrested state with interphase-like microtubule arrays and decondensed chromatin. More than 55% of these taxol-treated cells become multinucleate and later undergo apoptosis after 3 to 5 days (40, 41, 73). Similarly, overexpression of wt-TCTP during interphase has been reported to show an increase of microtubule bundling and stabilization against depolymerization by nocodazole treatment (30). Perhaps this microtubular stabilization activity of TCTP during interphase is carried over into mitosis in cells expressing the double-alanine mutant and thereby interferes with the delicate balance of microtubule-stabilizing and -destabilizing proteins needed to ensure a proper karyokinesis. Low-level taxol treatment also yields monopolar spindles as well as abnormal bipolar metaphase-like spindles with lagging chromosomes near one or both poles (40). Preliminary data from double-alanine TCTP mutant-expressing tetracycline-repressible HeLa cells showed similar phenotypes of monopolar spindles as well as bipolar spindles with chromosomes dispersed from the midzone to each pole only in the absence of tetracycline (data not shown). In addition, taxol treatment and the expression of the double-alanine TCTP mutant in HEK293 cells, which are generally assumed to be p53+, induced a greater number of multinucleate cells after 24 h than did either treatment alone or with the combined expression of wild-type TCTP and treatment with taxol. The effect of multinucleation in taxol treatment is thought to be a result of an abortive mitosis due to a block specifically at the metaphase-to-anaphase transition. This block has been proposed to be caused by taxol increasing the stability of microtubules and decreasing their dynamic nature, which is required to apply tension between sister chromatids (40). Similarly, TCTP has been reported to increase the stability of microtubules and has been shown to dissociate from the spindle at the metaphase-to-anaphase transition (30).
TCTP may be a key target substrate of Plk, since this multinucleate phenotype as well as the increase in cells undergoing cell death and rounded cells with ball-like condensed chromatin show a remarkable similarity to a subset of the effects of microinjecting anti-Plk antibodies into tissue culture cells. Injection of anti-Plk antibodies into HeLa cells and overexpression of AA-TCTP in HEK293 cells caused a fivefold and a threefold increase, respectively, in the number of multinucleate cells compared to the control conditions (46). The similarities in the stabilization of microtubules by taxol and by interphase TCTP, the effect of taxol and expression of the double-alanine mutant on anaphase progression, and the temporal correlation of Plk traversing the microtubules from the centrosome to the midzone and of TCTP detaching from the microtubules seem to suggest that Plk plays a regulatory role through TCTP in controlling spindle dynamics at the metaphase-to-anaphase transition. Furthermore, the similarities between removing Plk kinase activity from the cell and expressing a nonphosphorylatable in vitro Plk substrate indicate that TCTP could be an important downstream signaling component of Plk, regulating the cell cycle at both the metaphase-to-anaphase and the mitosis-to-interphase transitions.
This research was supported by NIH grants CA62580 and GM59172.
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