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Molecular and Cellular Biology, April 2004, p. 3112-3124, Vol. 24, No. 8
0270-7306/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/MCB.24.8.3112-3124.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Friedrich Miescher Institute for Biomedical Research, 4058 Basel,1 Novartis Pharma AG, 4057 Basel, Switzerland,4 INSERM 584, Hormone Targets, 75015 Paris, France,2 Cell Signaling Technology, Beverly, Massachusetts 019153
Received 18 July 2003/ Returned for modification 18 September 2003/ Accepted 14 January 2004
| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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In mice, removal of this kinase is not lethal, but the mice are approximately 20% smaller at birth (51). Such mice exhibit normal fasting glucose levels but are mildly glucose intolerant due to markedly reduced levels of circulating insulin (42). Reduced insulin levels are caused by a reduction in pancreatic endocrine mass and an impairment of insulin secretion, which can be traced to a selective reduction in ß-cell size. Unexpectedly, the effects on body mass and hypoinsulinemia do not appear to be attributable to a reduction in S6 phosphorylation, as this response proved to be largely intact in S6K1-deficient animals (51). However, S6 phosphorylation in such animals was still sensitive to the bacterial macrolide rapamycin (51), which inhibits the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) (1, 7, 16, 48), the upstream S6K1 kinase (4, 8, 18), suggesting the existence of a second S6K. Subsequent searches of expressed sequence tag databases and biochemical studies led to the identification of S6K2, which exhibited overall homology of over 80% with S6K1 in the highly conserved kinase and linker domains (17, 47, 51). In all tissues examined from S6K1-deficient mice, S6K2 transcripts were upregulated (51). From this observation, it was reasoned that S6K1 and S6K2 functions were redundant and that a deletion of the S6K1 gene led to a compensatory increase in the expression of S6K2.
In parallel studies, it was demonstrated that rapamycin suppressed the serum-induced translational upregulation of a family of mRNAs which contain a polypyrimidine tract at their 5' end (5'-terminal oligopyrimidine [5'TOP] mRNAs) (20, 55). These mRNAs largely code for components of the translational apparatus, most notably, ribosomal proteins (37). Earlier studies had shown that the translation of such transcripts is under selective translational control (22) and requires an intact 5'TOP tract (19, 49). In addition, a dominant interfering allele of S6K1 inhibited the mitogen-induced translational upregulation of 5'TOP mRNAs to the same extent as rapamycin, whereas an activated allele of S6K1, which exhibits a substantial degree of rapamycin resistance, largely protected these transcripts from the inhibitory effects of rapamycin (19, 49).
Seemingly consistent with these arguments, in embryonic stem (ES) cells from which S6K1 had been homologously deleted by selection with high doses of G418, serum no longer had an effect on the upregulation of 5'TOP mRNAs, nor was there a redistribution of 5'TOP mRNAs from polysomes to nonpolysomes in the presence of rapamycin (24). However, S6 phosphorylation was initially reported to be abolished in these cells (24), despite the fact that it was largely intact in cells and tissues derived from S6K1-/- mice (51). This difference seemed to be resolved in subsequent studies, where S6 phosphorylation was detected in these same S6K1-/- ES cells and S6K2 was present and active (31, 60). Despite these observations, it was again recently reported that S6 phosphorylation was absent from these same cells (53). Furthermore, it was also claimed in the latter study that S6K activation, S6 phosphorylation, and rapamycin had little impact on 5'TOP mRNA translation in PC12 cells (53), although others working with these same cells had reported earlier that rapamycin treatment abolished the selective recruitment of these transcripts from small to large polysomes (44).
Obviously, cells lacking both S6K1 and S6K2 would facilitate such studies. Therefore, we set out to delete the S6K2 gene from mice and to determine whether we could generate S6K1-/-/S6K2-/- mice. Here we report on the deletion of the S6K2 gene and the effects of deleting both S6K1 and S6K2 on animal growth and viability as well as on S6 phosphorylation, cell proliferation, and 5'TOP mRNA translation.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Primary hepatocytes from 12- to 14-week-old male mice were isolated by liver perfusion by the method of Seglen (50) as modified by Klaunig et al. (25). After cannulation in the subhepatic vena cava, the liver was perfused at a flow rate of 10 ml/min with calcium-free HEPES buffer (0.33 mM, pH 7.6) for 3 min and then with HEPES buffer containing 7 µg of collagenase (Liberase; Roche)/ml and 5 mM calcium chloride for 5 min. The solutions were allowed to run through a cut made in the portal vein. After enzymatic digestion, cells were collected in L-15 medium (Invitrogen Corporation) supplemented with 1 mg of bovine serum albumin (BSA)/ml, filtered, and centrifuged for 2 min at 100 x g. Viable hepatocytes were purified by centrifugation on a 45% Percoll gradient for 10 min at 100 x g. The pellet was collected and washed twice in L-15 medium containing 1 mg of BSA/ml. Hepatocytes were plated at 12 x 104 cells/cm2 in Primaria dishes (Falcon) or on coverslips coated with collagen I (Sigma) in M-199 medium (Invitrogen) supplemented with 10% fetal calf serum (FCS), 1 mg of BSA/ml, and 100 nM dexamethasone in a 37°C incubator with a 5% CO2 atmosphere. After 3 h of adhesion, cells were incubated in serum-free M-199 medium containing 1 mg of BSA/ml. On the next day, hepatocytes were treated as indicated above. All of the media contained penicillin (100 U/ml), streptomycin (100 µg/ml), and amphotericin B (Fungizone) (250 ng/ml).
Antibody production. S6K2 cDNA sequences coding for amino acids 1 to 43 or 440 to 484 were cloned into vector pMAL (New England Biolabs) to bacterially express N-terminal or C-terminal S6K2 peptides fused to maltose binding protein. Fusion proteins were purified according to the manufacturer's protocol. Monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) were generated by immunization of BALB/c mice with the following protocol. Two mice were immunized by intrasplenic injection (52) of 13.5 µg of purified antigen, 10 µg of adjuvant peptide (N-acetylmuramyl-L-alanyl-D-isoglutamine; Sigma A5919), and 10 mg of liposomes, with encapsulated muramyl tripeptide phosphatidylethanolamine as an additional adjuvant (mixed in phosphate-buffered saline [PBS]; total volume, 70 µl). Booster injections with mixtures of 15 µg of antigen, 10 µg of adjuvant peptide, 550 U of interleukin 2, and 560 U of gamma interferon with 10 mg of liposomes in PBS were administered at days 17 (subcutaneously [s.c.]), 33 (s.c. and intrperitoneally [i.p.]), 49 (s.c.), and 67 (s.c. and i.p.).
Serum samples were taken on days 40 and 73 and tested for the presence of specific antibodies by using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay with full-length S6K2 protein fused to glutathione S-transferase (GST) (N terminus free and C terminus free, respectively). A final booster injection (same composition) was administered i.p. at day 86, followed by fusion of the spleen cells (30) at day 89. The fusion partner cell line was mouse myeloma line SP2/0-AG-14. After hypoxanthine-aminopterin-thymidine selection, hybridomas were grown in HB101 hybridoma medium containing 10% CLEX serum supplement, and hybridoma supernatants were screened for the presence of antibodies to the GST-S6K2 fusion protein. Positive hybridoma cells were subcloned, and clones producing specific MAbs were selected (enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, Western blotting, and immunocytochemical analysis). MAbs to the S6K2 N terminus (140.9.11 and 140.8.1) and to the S6K2 C terminus (141.8.5 and 141.5.23) were identified, and milligram amounts were produced by using a Miniperm culture system (Heraeus). Clones were screened for binding to the full-length S6K2 protein fused to GST.
2D PAGE, immunoprecipitation, immunoblotting, kinase assays, and nuclear fractionation. Total 80S ribosomal proteins were isolated from either MEFs or mouse liver, and the level of in vivo S6 phosphorylation was examined by two-dimensional (2D) polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) as previously described (36, 41). For the preparation of total protein extracts, MEFs and hepatocytes were washed twice with cold PBS, scraped from the culture dish into egg lysis buffer, and homogenized with 10 strokes in a Teflon-glass homogenizer. To remove cell debris, homogenates were spun at 8,000 x g for 10 min. For the preparation of nuclear and cytosolic extracts, cells were scraped into hypotonic buffer (10 mM morpholinepropanesulfonic acid [MOPS] [pH 7.4], 10 mM KCl, 2 mM MgCl2, 0.1 mM EDTA, 5 mM dithiothreitol [DTT]), homogenized with 10 strokes in a glass-glass homogenizer, and spun at 8,000 x g for 3 min. The supernatants represented the cytosolic extracts. To purify nuclear proteins, pellets were resuspended in buffer I (0.32 mM sucrose, 3 mM CaCl2, 2 mM Mg acetate, 0.1 mM EDTA, 0.1% Triton X-100, 1 mM DTT, 10 mM Tris [pH 8]), layered onto a sucrose cushion (2 M sucrose, 5 mM Mg acetate, 0.1 mM EDTA, 1 mM DTT, 10 mM Tris [pH 8]), and spun at 30,000 x g for 45 min. Protein concentrations were measured by using a Bio-Rad D/C protein assay.
For immunoblot analysis, protein extracts were resolved by sodium dodecyl sulfate-PAGE before transfer to Immobilon membranes and incubation with the following primary antibodies: mouse anti-N-terminal or anti-C-terminal S6K2, rabbit anti-ribosomal protein L7a (62), rabbit anti-phosphorylated ribosomal protein S6 (Ser235 and Ser236 [Ser235/236] and Ser240 and Ser244 [Ser240/244]), and anti-phosphorylated ERK1/ERK2 (Cell Signaling Technology). The specificity of the anti-phoshorylated S6 antibodies was demonstrated by competition with differentially phosphorylated S6 peptides (V. L. Goss and R. Polakiewicz, unpublished data). For immunoprecipitation, 300 µg of protein extract was incubated with 4 µg of MAb precoupled to protein G-Sepharose beads. S6K activity was measured by using an immune complex assay with 40S ribosomal subunits as a substrate as previously described (45).
Immunofluorescence analysis. Primary hepatocytes were plated at 12 x 104 cells/cm2 on coverslips coated with collagen I and incubated overnight in M-199 medium containing 1 mg of BSA/ml. Hepatocytes were stimulated with 1 µM insulin, 25 ng of epidermal growth factor (EGF)/ml, and 10% FCS for 1 h in the presence or absence of 20 nM rapamycin. Cells were washed twice with Tris-buffered saline (TBS) (50 mM Tris [pH 7.4], 150 mM NaCl), fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde for 10 min at room temperature, and washed once again with TBS. Cells were permeabilized with methanol for 5 min at -20°C and washed three times for 5 min each time with TBS. Incubation in fresh 0.1% sodium borohydride in TBS for 5 min quenched the activity of the cells. Cells were rinsed once in TBS, blocked for 1 h at room temperature with PBS containing 10% goat serum, 1% BSA, and 0.02% sodium azide, and washed for 5 min with TBS. Prior to use, anti-phosphorylated ribosomal protein S6 (Ser235/236) primary antibodies or anti-60S ribosomal protein L7a primary antibodies were centrifuged at 13,000 x g for 5 min at 4°C, diluted 1:200 in TBS containing 0.1% BSA, and applied to the cells during overnight incubation at 4°C. After three washes for 5 min each time with TBS, the cells were incubated with a secondary fluorescent antibody (anti-rabbit Alexa 488; Molecular Probes) diluted 1:200 in TBS containing 0.1% BSA for 45 min at room temperature. After the cells were washed three times for 5 min each time with TBS in the dark, coverslips were mounted with a ProLong antifade kit (Molecular Probes) and observed under a confocal microscope.
Histological analysis. Newborn mice were left for several minutes on ice before being anaesthetized and sacrificed. Tissues were fixed by injecting at several points under the skin 10% formalin in 0.1 M phosphate buffer (pH 7.4) (Baker) and incubating overnight at 4°C. Bodies were cut into three parts: the head, the thorax, and the abdomen. Samples were embedded in paraffin, and five consecutive transverse sections 5 µm thick were obtained at different levels (100 µm apart) of each mouse pup with a Leica RM2135 microtome. Sections were mounted, and one out of five consecutive slides was stained with hematoxylin and eosin for histological examination.
| RESULTS |
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Phenotypes of S6K1-/-/S6K2-/- mice. As the S6K1 and S6K2 genes share a high degree of homology and as S6K2 mRNA is upregulated in S6K1-/- mice (51), the two genes might compensate functionally for one another in vivo. To fully evaluate the impact of the S6K pathway on mouse development, we set out to generate mice lacking both protein kinases. We intercrossed mice null for the S6K1 and S6K2 genes to obtain mice with combined heterozygous mutations in both alleles. The S6K1+/-/S6K2+/- mice were bred, and the genotypes of the progeny were identified by Southern blot analysis. As shown in Table 1, all possible genotypic combinations were represented, although S6K1-/-/S6K2+/- and S6K1-/-/S6K2-/- mice were born at lower frequencies than expected, 65 and 30%, respectively (Table 1). Indeed, only 10 S6K1-/-/S6K2-/- mice were viable from among 526 offspring. However, analysis of embryos at 18.5 days of gestation indicated a normal Mendelian distribution of genotypes (data not shown). These data suggested that the reduced viability of S6K1-/-/S6K2+/- and S6K1-/-/S6K2-/- mice was due to wastage between delivery and the time of weaning. Close observation of the litters revealed that approximately one-third of the S6K1-/-/S6K2-/- mice were born dead. The corpses were found in a fetal position, still lying in the yolk sac and attached to the placenta (Fig. 2A). Among the S6K1-/-/S6K2-/- mice that were born alive and emerged from the yolk sac, the majority developed signs of cyanosis, and approximately half of them died shortly after birth. The mice surviving the first day after delivery usually reached adulthood and were fertile. However, the litters from the viable S6K1-/-/S6K2-/- parents were small and showed a high incidence of perinatal lethality (data not shown). Caesarean delivery appeared to rescue neonatal viability, although the S6K1-/-/S6K2-/- mice were more likely to develop transient signs of hypoxia, as indicated by a bluish discoloration of the skin (Fig. 2B).
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To assess the possible causes of reduced viability of the S6K1-/-/S6K2-/- mice, histopathological analyses of mice born dead, viable mice with signs of cyanosis, and viable mice with no signs of cyanosis were compared to those of wild-type mice at postnatal day 0. Such analyses failed to reveal any gross anatomical defects in S6K1-/-/S6K2-/- neonates. Moreover, in all viable neonates, the lungs were inflated and properly developed. However, in the nonviable neonates and in the cyanotic neonates, the internal organs were hyperemic and the heart chambers tended to be more dilated. In addition, the nonviable neonates showed several hemorrhagic sites, as revealed by diapedesis of red blood cells throughout the entire myocardium (Fig. 2E).
S6 phosphorylation in S6K-deficient mice. Upon growth factor stimulation, ribosomal protein S6 is multiply phosphorylated at the carboxy terminus on five serine residues in an ordered fashion beginning with Ser236, followed sequentially by Ser235, Ser240, Ser244, and Ser247 (27, 36). This response is readily measured by the decreased electrophoretic mobility of S6 following the separation of its differentially phosphorylated derivatives by 2D PAGE. To determine whether the deletion of the S6K2 gene affected the mitogen-induced phosphorylation of ribosomal protein S6, total ribosomal proteins from serum-stimulated MEFs were analyzed by 2D PAGE. As shown in Fig. 3A, in serum-stimulated wild-type MEFs, the majority of S6 migrated in highly phosphorylated derivatives d and e, corresponding to proteins phosphorylated on four and five serine residues, respectively (36, 41). Under similar experimental conditions, Shima et al. previously demonstrated that the extent of S6 phosphorylation in S6K1-/- cells was largely comparable to that in wild-type MEFs (51). In S6K2-/- MEFs, S6 was still highly phosphorylated in response to serum, although to a lesser extent than in wild-type and S6K1-/- MEFs; a considerable amount of S6 was present in phosphorylated derivatives a, b, and c, representing phosphorylation on one, two, and three serine residues, respectively (Fig. 3A). Pretreatment with rapamycin drastically decreased S6 phosphorylation in all three genotypes, resulting in the presence of the unphosphorylated, monophosphorylated, or biphosphorylated forms of S6 (Fig. 3A) (51). These data suggest that in S6K2-/- cells, S6 phosphorylation was catalyzed by a second rapamycin-sensitive kinase, most likely S6K1, although somewhat less efficiently. To test this hypothesis, we assessed S6 phosphorylation in MEFs from S6K1-/-/S6K2-/- mice. As shown in Fig. 3B, the combined deletion of the S6K1 and S6K2 genes severely suppressed S6 phosphorylation compared to that in wild-type cells. Moreover, rapamycin treatment attenuated S6 phosphorylation in wild-type MEFs, bringing it to the same level as that in serum-stimulated S6K1-/-/S6K2-/- MEFs, where rapamycin had no effect on S6 phosphorylation (Fig. 3B). S6 phosphorylation was also attenuated in the liver of S6K1-/-/S6K2-/- mice following refeeding of starved animals (data not shown). These data suggested that S6K1 and S6K2 are the sole kinases responsible for mediating rapamycin-sensitive phosphorylation.
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-tubulin, respectively (Fig. 4B). Consistent with the results of the immunofluorescence experiments, the deletion of S6K2 significantly affected S6 phosphorylation in both cell compartments, and the combination of the two gene deletions further reduced the levels of the phosphorylated protein. Moreover, in contrast to the results obtained with the other genotypes, the residual S6 phosphorylation staining observed with the anti-phosphorlyated S6 (Ser235/236) antibody in the cytosol and the nuclei of S6K1-/-/S6K2-/- hepatocytes was not inhibited by rapamycin treatment (Fig. 4A) (also see below).
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(EF1
) mRNA on polysomes in MEFs derived from wild-type and S6K1-/-/S6K2-/- mice. As shown in Fig. 5A, serum induced the recruitment of EF1
mRNA into polysomes in both cell types to almost the same extent, and this effect was largely abolished by rapamycin in both S6K1-/-/S6K2-/- and wild-type cells. Furthermore, the combined deletion of S6K1 and S6K2 did not alter the cell doubling times or the saturation densities compared to that of wild-type MEFs (data not shown). Rapamycin inhibited the S-phase entry of cells from both genotypes with similar potencies and 50% inhibitory concentrations (Fig. 5B).
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mRNA on polysomes in ES cells derived from embryos of S6K1-/-/S6K2-/-, S6K1-/-, and wild-type mice. Similar to what was observed for MEFs, the deletion of S6K1 alone or the deletion of both S6K1 and S6K2 in ES cells did not alter the upregulation of 5'TOP mRNA or sensitivity to rapamycin (Fig. 5C). Thus, despite a pronounced effect on the development and growth of the animal, in two distinct cell types, neither the reduction of S6 phosphorylation nor the loss of S6K1 and S6K2 function is sufficient to deregulate 5'TOP mRNA translation; these findings suggest that other rapamycin-sensitive events are required. Evidence for functional redundancy with the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway. The findings described above raised the possibility of either a compensatory or a redundant S6K pathway. On closer analysis of S6 phosphorylation, a small amount of partially phosphorylated S6 was still detected in MEFs from S6K1-/-/S6K2-/- mice as well as in rapamycin-treated wild-type MEFs, as evidenced by the presence of derivatives a and b (Fig. 3B). The residual S6 phosphorylation in wild-type MEFs could have been due to the relatively short treatment in the presence of rapamycin, as longer times were reported for complete S6 dephosphorylation (20). However, this finding was unexpected for S6K1-/-/S6K2-/- MEFs, as the level of S6 phosphorylation was low in these cells and was unaffected by rapamycin (Fig. 3B). To examine this situation further, we monitored S6 phosphorylation in primary hepatocytes stimulated with EGF and insulin by using phosphospecific antibodies directed against the first and second phosphorylation sites, Ser236 and Ser235, or the third and fourth phosphorylation sites, Ser240 and Ser244. Following insulin stimulation, phosphorylation at both Ser235/236 and Ser240/244 increased in wild-type, S6K1-/-, and S6K2-/- hepatocytes, whereas only Ser235/236 phosphorylation was detectable in S6K1-/-/S6K2-/- hepatocytes (Fig. 6A and B); these results were consistent with the order and extent of S6 phosphorylation (Fig. 3B) (3). In wild-type hepatocytes as well as in S6K1-/- and S6K2-/- hepatocytes, the increase in S6 phosphorylation was sensitive to rapamycin (Fig. 6A). However, in S6K1-/-/S6K2-/- hepatocytes, the increase in S6 phosphorylation was resistant to rapamycin (Fig. 6B), suggesting that a rapamycin-resistant S6K was operating in the absence of S6K1 and S6K2.
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The MAPK-dependent phosphorylation of S6 could represent either the upregulation of a compensatory pathway or the presence of a pathway that normally operates in wild-type cells but whose activity is masked by S6Ks. It was difficult to distinguish between these possibilities, given the high level of basal S6 phosphorylation displayed by wild-type hepatocytes. To circumvent this problem, hepatocytes were deprived of nutrients as well as serum, a step which resulted in the complete dephosphorylation of S6 (Fig. 6D). Under these conditions, rapamycin abolished the insulin-induced increase in Ser240/244 phosphorylation but only attenuated the phosphorylation of Ser235/236 (Fig. 6D). In contrast, PD184352, an MKK1/ERK1/ERK2 pathway inhibitor that is more specific than U0126 (38), had little effect on S6 phosphorylation when used alone but, when used together with rapamycin, totally abolished the insulin-induced response. In contrast, in S6K1-/-/S6K2-/- hepatocytes, rapamycin had no effect on Ser235/236 phosphorylation, whereas PD184352 abolished this response (Fig. 6C). Thus, in the absence of S6K1 and S6K2 activity, an MAPK pathway which cooperates in the regulation of S6 phosphorylation was unveiled.
| DISCUSSION |
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One of the early intracellular responses to growth factor stimulation in both invertebrates and vertebrates is multiple phosphorylation of 40S ribosomal protein S6 (14, 58). Although many kinases have been shown to mediate this response in vitro, only two have been demonstrated to phosphorylate S6 in the same specific order and extent as those observed in vivo: S6K1 (10) and p90rsk from Xenopus (61). Although a role for p90rsk in this response has been controversial, studies of progesterone-induced meiotic maturation of Xenopus oocytes support such a function (29, 49). That S6K1 is not involved in this response is further supported by the fact that rapamycin, which selectively inhibits S6K1 but not p90rsk activation (28), abolished S6K1 activity, with little effect on progesterone-induced S6 phosphorylation (49). In contrast to the findings in progesterone-treated Xenopus oocytes, rapamycin eliminates serum-induced S6 phosphorylation in mammalian cells (20), an inhibitory effect that is reversed by the use of an S6K1 variant that is largely rapamycin resistant (19, 59). In seeming agreement with the findings in mammalian cells, S6K1-/- ES cells were reported to be devoid of phosphorylated S6 (24, 53). However, in tissues derived from S6K1-/- mice, S6 phosphorylation was shown to be intact but still rapamycin sensitive (51), leading to the discovery of S6K2 (17, 47, 51). Although studies with ES cells have been difficult to rationalize, some investigators recently demonstrated that growth factor stimulation of these same cells leads to S6K2 activation and increased S6 phosphorylation in a rapamycin-sensitive manner (31, 60). These conflicting results may be attributable to different stimulation conditions or detection methods.
The studies presented here reveal two novel aspects of S6 phosphorylation in mammalian cells in vivo, i.e., the major role of S6K2 in this response and the involvement of an MAPK pathway, whose function is detectable when S6K1 and S6K2 are inactive. S6K2 appears to be the dominant S6K in embryo fibroblasts as well as in adult hepatocytes and skeletal and heart muscle, as S6K2-/- mice showed a more dramatic reduction in the amount of phosphorylated S6 in these tissues than did S6K1-/- mice (Fig. 3 and 6 and data not shown). In addition, the nucleolar phosphorylation of S6 was greatly affected in S6K2-/- hepatocytes (Fig. 4), implying that the nucleus-targeted isoform of S6K1, p85S6K (46), may not efficiently mediate phosphorylation in nucleoli. Ectopically expressed S6K2 predominantly resides in the nucleus due to a nuclear localization signal in the C-terminal region of the protein (26, 57). Upon mitogen stimulation, protein kinase C-dependent phosphorylation of S6K2 in the C-terminal region masks the nuclear localization signal, causing the retention of the kinase in the cytosol (57). Our data are compatible with this model and suggest the presence of active S6K2 in the cytosol and nucleoli, where it can phosphorylate S6. However, S6K1 clearly contributes to the overall amount of S6 phosphorylation, as deletion of both kinases was required to reduce S6 phosphorylation to the same extent as rapamycin (Fig. 3). Indeed, with our experimental model, we cannot conclusively determine to what extent each kinase contributes to this response under physiological conditions, as it was previously reported that in S6K1-/- mice, S6K2 mRNA transcripts are upregulated in all tissues examined (51). Such upregulation of S6K2 could explain its dominance as an S6K and the reliance of complete S6 phosphorylation on S6K1. That S6K1 and S6K2 are the only genes coding for rapamycin-sensitive S6Ks is consistent with two other S6K genes identified by the human genome project representing pseudogenes (34). However, the combined inactivation of S6K1 and S6K2 revealed the presence of another S6K, most likely p90rsk, which is rapamycin resistant and phosphorylates at least the first two Ser residues of S6 (Fig. 3 and 6). p90rsk appears to be the physiological S6K during Xenopus (49) and mouse (15) meiotic maturation. The murine p90rsk family includes several members which are directly phosphorylated and activated by ERK1 and ERK2 (12). p90rsk family members have two kinase domains; the N-terminal one shows approximately 60% sequence identity with S6K1 and S6K2 and has a similar consensus substrate recognition motif (32). The functional redundancy among the S6K pathways indicates the importance of the phosphorylation of S6 or another common substrate at one or more steps of embryonic development.
The functional compensation between S6K1 and S6K2 was initially proposed based on the upregulation of S6K2 in S6K1-/- mice and could represent a mechanism to ensure the survival of the animal (51). This suggestion is supported by the data presented here, showing semilethality in both S6K1-/-/S6K2-/- and S6K1-/-/S6K2+/- mice. Interestingly, Wang et al. (60) showed that S6 phosphorylation was reduced in the S6K1-/- ES cells described above (24) but found no difference in the level of S6K2 protein. These ES cells were obtained by selection in vitro with high doses of G418 (24), rather than from crossing heterozygous founders. Therefore, they may not have upregulated S6K2 compensatorily, as they have not undergone the stress associated with embryonic development. Following a similar reasoning, the MAPK-dependent S6K activity described here could alleviate the phenotype of the double-mutant mice. Surprisingly, the body size phenotype of the single-mutant mice did not appear to correlate with the extent of S6 phosphorylation. For S6K1-/- mice, body size was clearly reduced, with little effect on S6 phosphorylation, whereas S6K2-/- mice exhibited normal body size but had reduced levels of S6 phosphorylation. Similarly, the defect in ß-cell growth and insulin levels was associated mainly with the deletion of S6K1, which has a minor effect on S6 phosphorylation in ß cells (data not shown). These data raise the interesting possibility that S6K1 and S6K2 also exert specific functions through distinct substrates. Consistent with such a model, the two kinases have been reported to be differentially localized and regulated (5, 31, 35). Despite these observations, it should be noted that recent studies with phosphospecific site mutations in Drosophila S6 suggested that Drosophila S6 is epistatic to dS6K, the single S6K gene in Drosophila, arguing that it may be required to elicit the dS6K growth response (T. Radimerski and G. Thomas, unpublished data).
Initial studies showed that rapamycin selectively inhibited the translation of 5'TOP mRNAs (20, 55), with the extent of inhibition varying between cell types (21). This finding led to the conclusion that some cell types use both rapamycin-sensitive and rapamycin-resistant pathways to control this response, whereas other cell types are largely reliant on the rapamycin-sensitive pathway (20). Such an explanation is consistent with the ability of rapamycin to inhibit cell proliferation in certain cell types, such as endothelial, smooth muscle, and naive T cells, while having a less dramatic impact on other cell types. Here we show, as previously demonstrated (51), that the inhibitory effect of rapamycin on 5'TOP mRNA translation is complete in MEFs derived from wild-type cells (Fig. 5). Earlier it was also demonstrated that the effect of rapamycin requires an intact polypyrimidine tract, that dominant interfering alleles of S6K1 were as effective in blocking the upregulation of 5'TOP mRNAs as rapamycin, and that the inhibitory effects of rapamycin could be largely prevented by the use of a rapamycin-resistant allele of S6K1 (19, 49). Unexpectedly, we found here that rapamycin still inhibited the translation of 5'TOP mRNAs despite the absence of S6K1 and S6K2 (Fig. 5). The effect of the dominant-negative S6K1 allele can be rationalized by its ability to titrate mTOR, potentially through Raptor (40), and block mTOR from phosphorylating other key downstream targets (19, 59). However, in view of the findings presented here, it is more difficult to understand the ability of the rapamycin-resistant allele of S6K1 to protect 5'TOP mRNA translation from the inhibitory effects of rapamycin (19, 49). One possibility is that S6K1 is not involved in this response but that ectopic expression of the rapamycin-resistant allele can lead to the phosphorylation of a target protein that is involved in 5'TOP mRNA translation and whose phosphorylation is not mediated by endogenous S6K1. It is also possible that in the absence of S6K1 and S6K2, a rapamycin-sensitive, compensatory pathway is activated during development. Stolovich et al. (53) recently reported that S6 phosphorylation, S6K1, and rapamycin had little impact on 5'TOP mRNA translation. However, they used ES cells in which the S6K pathway was not completely inhibited, as S6K2 was still expressed (31, 60). To resolve this issue and the discrepancies concerning the inhibitory effect of rapamycin on 5'TOP mRNA translation in nerve growth factor-treated PC12 cells (42, 51), an understanding of the molecular mechanisms which control 5'TOP mRNA translation is required.
In summary, these studies provide a first comparative analysis of the distinct phenotypes of S6K1- and S6K2-deficient mice and should serve as a basis to search for other specific cellular targets of these enzymes. They also reveal an alternative mechanism leading to S6 phosphorylation in the absence of S6K1 and S6K2, i.e, an MAPK pathway; this function should be taken into account when the impact of this pathway on growth and development is evaluated.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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M.P. is a recipient of a stipend from the Foundation pour la Recherche Medicale. This work was supported in part by a grant to M.P. from the INSERM Avenir Program (R01131KS) and a grant to S.C.K. and G.T. from the EEC (EU BIO4-CT97-2071) and the Novartis Research Foundation.
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