Open Access
How to translate text using browser tools
1 December 2003 Unique Behavior and Function of the Mitochondrial Ribosomal Protein S4 (RPS4) in Early Dictyostelium Development
Koh-ichi Hosoya, Aiko Amagai, Junji Chida, Yasuo Maeda
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

Certain proteins encoded by mitochondrial DNA (mt-DNA), including mt-ribosomal protein S4 (rps4), appear to play important roles in the initiation of cell differentiation. Partial disruption of rps4 in Dictyostelium discoideum Ax-2 cells by means of homologous recombination greatly impairs the progression of differentiation, while the the rps4OE cells in which the rps4 mRNA was overexpressed in the extra-mitochondrial cytoplasm exhibit enhanced differentiation (Inazu et al., 1999). We have prepared a specific anti-RPS4 antibody and generated transformants (rps4AS cells) by antisense-mediated gene inactivation of rps4. Surprisingly, in the rps4AS cells the progress of differentiation was found to be markedly inhibited, suggesting that the antisense rps4 RNA synthesized in the extra-mitochondrial cytoplasm might be as effective as the partial disruption of rps4 gene. Immunostaining of the rps4OE cells with the anti-RPS4 antibody demonstrated that the RPS4 protein synthesized in the extra-mitochondrial cytoplasm is capable of moving to the nucleus, as predicted by PSORTII. Taken together with the results obtained using immunostained Ax-2 cells, we propose a possible pathway of RPS4 translocation coupled with differentiation.

INTRODUCTION

In general, growth and differentiation are mutually exclusive and precisely regulated during development. Thus the mechanisms involved in the transition of cells from a proliferation to a differentiation state are of basic interest to developmental biologists and in the field of cancer research. Dictyostelium discoideum (strain Ax-2) cells grow and multiply by mitotic fission as long as nutrients are available. Upon exhaustion of nutrients, however, starving cells differentiate to acquire aggregation-competence and aggregate by means of chemotaxis to cAMP (Bonner et al., 1969) and EDTA-resistant cohesiveness (Gerisch, 1961). The cells in the aggregate then form into two major types in a migrating pseudoplasmodium (slug), anterior prestalk and posterior prespore cells. The slug eventually culminates to form a fruiting body consisting of a mass of spores and a supporting cellular stalk. The growth and differentiation phases are temporally separated from each other and easily controlled by nutritional conditions. A temperature-shift method for synchronizing cell-cycle phase of Ax-2 cells has been established (Maeda, 1986), and a particular checkpoint (referred to as the PS-point) from growth to differentiation phase has been specified in the mid-late G2 phase of the cell cycle (Maeda et al., 1989). This is the point from which cells initiate to differentiate when placed under conditions of nutritional deprivation. Thus, Dictyostelium development offers us a particularly useful system for elucidating the cellular and molecular mechanisms of the growth/differentiation transition (GDT).

We have identified several genes (car1, caf1, quit3, dia1, dia2, dia3) which are specifically or predominantly expressed in response to differentiation of starved Ax-2 cells from the PS-point and we have analyzed their functions (Abe and Maeda, 1994, 1995; Okafuji et al., 1997; Itoh et al., 1998; Chae and Maeda, 1998a, b; Chae et al., 1998; Inazu et al., 1999; Hirose et al., 2000). The cAMP receptor 1 (car1) gene is essential for differentiation (Sun et al., 1990; Sun and Devreotes, 1991), and CAR1-dependent events include receptor phosphorylation and influx of extracellular Ca2+ (Parent and Devreotes, 1996). The car1 mRNA is specifically expressed in cells starved just before the PS-point, thus providing evidence of the involvement of this gene in the entry of cells into differentiation and also pointing to the specific existence of the PS-point in the cell cycle (Abe and Maeda, 1994). The caf1 mRNA encodes a Ca2+-binding protein with four EF-hand domains (Abe and Maeda, 1995), and its overexpression enhances differentiation in a Ca2+-dependent manner (Itoh et al., 1998). Annexin VII, which is believed to be needed for Ca2+-homeostasis in the cell, increases after starvation of Ax-2 cells (Bonfils et al., 1994; Doring et al., 1995). Since the quit3 mRNA, which has no protein-coding region and contains the complementary sequence of annexin VII, is expressed more predominantly in the growth phase than in the differentiation phase, quit3 may regulate annexin VII synthesis via a natural antisense transcript. This results in a striking increase of annexin VII production at the transition (GDT) of cells from growth to differentiation (Okafuji et al., 1997). Taken together these data offer us indications of the importance of Ca2+ and its associated processes for the GDT of Dictyostelium cells. The dia2 gene codes for a lysine- and leucine-rich novel protein (Mr,16.9 kDa), and its antisense-mediated gene inactivation greatly impairs the GDT (Chae et al., 1998). In contrast, the overexpression of dia1 (which codes for a novel 48.6 kDa protein) inhibits the progression of differentiation, while anti-sense RNA-mediated dia1 inactivation enhances the initial step of cell differentiation (Hirose et al., 2000). We have also demonstrated that the phosphorylation levels of 90 kDa and 101 kDa proteins are specifically reduced during early cellular differentiation from the PS-point (Akiyama and Maeda, 1992). The 90 kDa and 101 kDa phosphoproteins were identified as homologues of GRP94 (glucose-regulated protein 94; the endoplasmic reticulum HSP90) in D. discoideum (Dd-GRP94) (Morita et al., 2000) and a Dictyostelium homologue of EF-2 (Watanabe et al., 2003) respectively.

As previously presented, the dia3 gene, which encodes a mitochondrial protein cluster including ribosomal protein S4 (RPS4), is expressed specifically during the GDT of Ax-2 cells: its overexpression enhances the progress of cell differentiation, while its partial inativation by means of homologous recombination greatly impairs differentiation and morphogenesis after starvation (Inazu et al., 1999). Interestingly, RPS4 has several nuclear localization signals after PSORTII and is predicted to be located in the nucleus with 95% or more probability, provided that this mitochondrial protein or rps4 mRNA is capable of moving into the cytosol. The present work was undertaken to analyze the expression pattern of RPS4 protein and its intracellular localization during early Dictyostelium development, using a specific antibody raised against RPS4. It was also examined if the antisense rps4 RNA expressed in the extra-mitochondrial cytoplasm is effective in the GDT.

MATERIALS AND METHODS

Cell cultures and developmental conditions

Vegetative cells of Dictyostelium discoideum Ax-2 were grown axenically in PS-medium (1% Special Peptone (Oxoid: Lot. No. 333 56412), 0.7% Yeast extract (Oxoid), 1.5% D-glucose, 0.11% KH2PO4, 0.05% Na2HPO4 · 12H2O, 40 ng/ml of vitamin B12, 80 ng/ml of folic acid, pH 6.4). rps4-underexpressing transformants (rps4AS cells) produced by antisense gene inactivation and rps4-overexpressing transformants (rps4OE cells) isolated previously by Inazu et al. (1999) were grown axenically in shaking cultures in PS-medium containing 50 μg/ml of G418. rps4HR cells, in which the rps4 gene was disrupted in about half the mitochondrial genomes by means of homologous recombination (Inazu et al., 1999), were also used for comparison. To allow cells to differentiate, cells were harvested at the exponential growth phase, washed twice in BSS (Bonner's salt solution; 10 mM NaCl, 10 mM KCl, 2.3 mM CaCl2; Bonner, 1947) as starvation medium, and either shaken at a density of 1.5×107cells/ml or incubated in a 24-well titer plate (Falcon, #3047) at a density of 5×105 cells/well at 22°C.

Transformation of cells

pDNeo2 (Witke et al., 1987) was used the original vector for preparation of antisence-mediated gene inactivation. This vector was cut by digestion with BamHI and SalI and then ligated overnight with the rps4 gene that had been amplified by PCR using pBluescript II KS(+) with the mitochondrial DNA of D. discoideum as the template and then digested with BamHI and XhoI. The ligates were inserted into XL1-blue competent cells. To produce cells underexpressing the rps4 mRNA, Ax-2 cells were transformed with the antisense construct by electroporation, as described by Nellen et al. (Nellen et al., 1987). Transformed cells were selected in 10 ml of PS-medium containing 10 μg/ml G418 in Petri dishes (9 cm diameter). Two days after the appearance of colonies of transformed cells, the colonies were cultured by shaking in PS-medium containing 20–50 μg/ml G418 for 2–3 days and then cloned in 96-well titer plates (Iwaki, Chiba, Japan).

Preparation of the anti-RPS4 antibody and western blot analysis

Chemically synthesized oligopeptide (EEPKLTAIKYPFTLQPEK; from the 368th to 385th amino acid of RPS4) with an additional cysteine residue at the C-terminus was conjugated with KLH (keyhole limpet hemocyanin) as a carrier protein by Research Genetics, Inc. (Huntsville, Alabama, USA). The KLH-conjugated oligopeptide was injected 4×1 ml s.c. into the foot pads of rabbits with complete Freund's adjuvant. The total amount of the antigen was 5 mg per animal. 5 weeks later, a total amount of 1 mg KLH-conjugated oligopeptide per animal with adjuv. was supplied s.c.. Samples of blood (about 50 ml) were collected 10 days after the final injection, and aliquoted serum containing the polyclonal anti-RPS4 antibody was stored at −80°C. The IgG fraction of the serum was absorbed by homogenates prepared from vegetatively growing Ax-2 cells that were almost devoid of RPS4 protein, and the absorbed antibody (referred to as the anti-RPS4 antibody) was used for western analysis and immunostaining.

Cells were harvested from shaken cultures and lysed in SDS sample buffer (2% SDS, 10% glycerol, 41.7 mM dithiothreitol, 0.01% bromophenol blue, and 62.5 mM Tris-HCl (pH 6.8)). Proteins were size fractionated on 10% SDS gels and blotted onto polyvinylidene difluoride (PVDF) membranes (Millipore). After blotting, the membranes were gently shaken in TBS-T (20 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0), 150 mM NaCl, 0.5% Triton X-100) containing 5% BSA or 5% skim milk, overnight at 4°C. Subsequently, the membranes were incubated in the primary antibody solution (1/2,500 anti-RPS4 antibody in TBS-T with 5% BSA or 5% skin milk and 0.15% Tween 20), overnight at 4°C. After washing in TBS-T for 20 min, the membranes were incubated in the secondary antibody solution (1/30,000 HRP-conjugated anti-rabbit IgG, goat (Amersham Pharmacia Bio-technology) in TBS-T with 5% BSA for 1 hr, according to the suggestions made by ICN Biochemicals. The chemical enhanced chemiluminescence (ECL kit; Amersham Biosciences) was used for detection of the RPS4 protein.

Staining of cells with a mitochondrion-selective dye, MitoTracker Orange

Ax-2 cells were starved for 4 hr and then incubated in BSS containing 0.5 μM MitoTracker Orange CMTMRos (Molecular Probes) for 15 min. The stained cells were washed twice with BSS, and observed under a scanning confocal fluorescence microscope.

Double staining of cells with the anti-RPS4 antibody and DAPI

After 0–4 hr of starvation, Ax-2 cells and rps4 -overexpressing cells (rps4OE cells) that had been allowed to adhere to coverslips were fixed with 100% methanol for 10 min. To prevent cell shrinkage during fixation, samples were pre-fixed with 50% and then 100% methanol (1 min for each). The fixed samples were incubated for 16 hr at 22°C in the primary antibody (50-times diluted anti-RPS4 antibody) solution. Following threefold washing (10 min for each) in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS; 0.14 M NaCl, 3 mM KCl, 10 mM Na2HPO4, 2 mM KH2PO4, pH 7.2), the samples were incubated with the secondary antibody solution (FITC-conjugated anti-rabbit IgG antibody, goat; 2,000 times-diluted with 1% BSA) for additional 3 hr at 22°C. After repeated washings with PBS, the samples were mounted in PBS containing 20% glycerol. They were visualized by a fluorescence microscope. In the case of double staining with the anti-RPS4 antibody and DAPI (4′,6′-diamidino-2-phenylindole-dihydrochroride), cells adhering to coverslips were fixed with 2.0% formaldehyde solution containing 0.1% glutaralde-hyde for 20 min, followed by treatment with 0.1% Triton X-100 solution to make cells permeable. The fixed samples were immunostained with the anti-RPS4 antibody as described above, and then stained with 0.5 μg/ml of DAPI for 1–4 hr at room temperature.

Subcellular fractionation

Vegetatively growing Ax-2 cells (t0-cells) and t4-cells starved for 4 hr were fractionated by a slight modification of the method of Ikeda and Takeuchi (1971). Vegetative and starving Ax-2 cells were separately harvested from shaken cultures, washed twice with BSS, and suspended in 5 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5) containing 0.25 M sucrose. The cells were homogenized and centrifuged at 400×g for 10 min to remove undisrupted cells. The supernatant was centrifuged twice at 900×g for 10 min to obtain the membrane fraction that mainly contained the cell membrane and nuclei as the pellet. The resulting supernatant was then centrifuged twice at 2,000×g for 20 min to the pelleted particulate fraction including mitochondria. The supernatant was centrifuged at 18,000×g for 60 min, and the resulting supernatant was collected as the cytosolic faction. The pellet fractions were washed with 5 mM Tris-HCl (pH, 7.5) containing 0.25 M sucrose, and then were dissolved in the SDS sample buffer for western blot analysis. The cytosol fraction was two-times diluted with 2×SDS sample buffer, followed by western blotting.

RESULTS

Uniqueness of Dictyostelium RPS4 protein

An alignment of the deduced amino acid sequence of Dictyostelium discoideum mitochondrial RPS4 (Dd-mtRPS4) with sequences of RPS4 homologues from other species show a moderate degree of homology (25–35%) (Fig. 1). Although the homology of Dd-mtRPS4 to human mt-RPS4 is not so high as a whole, the N-terminus of Dd-mtRPS4 which is supposed to be an RNA-binding region is well conserved. More significantly for this work, several putative nuclear localization signals are present in Dd-mtRPS4, but not in mt-RPS4 protein of other organisms (Fig. 1). Thus the Dd-mtRPS4 protein, if present in the cytosol, would be predicted to be transferred to the nucleus with 95% or more probability according to the PSORTII Search.

Fig. 1

Amino acid alignment of Dictyostelium discoideum mitochondrial RPS4 (D.d-mt), Clostridium RPS4 (Clostridium), Reclinomonas RPS4 (Reclinomonas), Oryza mitochondrial RPS4 (Oryza) and Arabidopsis mitochondrial RPS4 (Arabidopsis). Identical amino acids are blocked in black and similar amino acids are indicated with gray shading. In D.d-mt, part 4-type and bipartite-type nuclear localization signals predicted by PSORTII are underlined. The nuclear localization signals are specifically present in D.d-mt; such signals have not been reported in mt-RPS4 protein of other organisms, yet.

i0289-0003-20-12-1455-f01.gif

Expression pattern of RPS4 protein during early development

Western blottings using the anti-RPS4 antibody absorbed beforehand by homogenates of vegetative growth phase cells that were supposed to be almost devoid of RPS4 protein gave a single band at the predicted position of 30 kDa RPS4, as shown in Fig. 2. As was expected, the RPS4 protein was scarcely noticed in vegetatively growing Ax-2 cells, and began to increase transiently in response to starvation, reaching the maximum level after 4–6 hr (Fig. 3). In rps4AS cells expressing the antisense rps4 RNA, the expression level of RPS4 protein was considerably reduced as a whole (Fig. 3A). In contrast, rps4OE cells overexpressing the rps4 mRNA in extra-mitochondrial space exhibited an augmented expression of RPS4 even during the vegetative growth phase (Fig. 3B). Like the rps4AS cells, rps4HRcells in which about a half of the mitochondrial copies of the rps4 gene were disrupted by homologous recombination showed a reduced level of RPS4 expression (Fig. 3)C>. The time course of RPS4 expression in Ax-2 cells was found to vary fairly from experiment to experiment, the expression peak being 6 hr, 4 hr, and 2 hr in Fig. 3A, B, and C, respectively. In this connection, it has been recently revealed that the expression of rps4 mRNA is moderately augmented depending on increased cell density during the vegetative growth phase: the rps4 mRNA is scarcely expressed at low cell densities less than 1×106 cells/ml in growth medium, whereas the expression becomes detectable at 2–3×106cells/ml and increases gradually coupled with increased cell densities in growth medium. This seems to indicate that the rps4 mRNA expression is under control of prestarvation factor(s) (PSFs) which accumulates as a function of cell density in growth medium, as the case for certain proteins that were previously believed to be induced by starvation. Thus Ax-2 cells acquire differentiation-competence during the vegetative growth phase in a PSF-dependent manner, and cells exposed to more PSF exhibit more rapid differentiation and morphogenesis when starved. Considering from these facts, it is most likely that the variation of RPS4-expression time course, as observed in Ax-2 cells, might be due to slight differences in cell density at the time-point of cell's starvation.

Fig. 2

Western blot analysis of the RPS4 protein in Ax-2 cells, using the absorbed anti-RPS4 antibody. Cells were harvested at the exponential growth phase (v), washed twice in BSS and shaken for the indicated times (hr) at 22°C. Western blottings were performed as described in Materials and Methods. It is clear that the antibody detects monospecifically the 30 kDa RPS4 protein, particularly in t4-cells starved for 4 hr.

i0289-0003-20-12-1455-f02.gif

Fig. 3

Expression patterns of the RPS4 protein during the early development of Ax-2 cells and several transformed cells. Cells were harvested at the exponential growth phase (v), washed twice in BSS and shaken for the indicated times (hr) at 22°C, followed by western blot analysis using the anti-RPS4 antibody. The expression patterns in Ax-2 cells, (A) rps4AS cells expressing the antisense rps4 RNA, (B) rps4OEcells overexpressing the rps4 mRNA in the extra-mitochondrial cytoplasm and (C) rps4HR cells in which the rps4 gene was disrupted by homologous recombination in about half mitochondrial genomes in the cell. The relative amount of RPS4 protein at t4- and t6-cells of Ax-2 varies from experiment to experiment.

i0289-0003-20-12-1455-f03.gif

Relation of the RPS4 protein to the car1 expression

Our previous findings suggested that in the regulatory cascade controlling early development, rps4 expression at the onset of differentiation might be located upstream of the expression of cAMP receptor 1 (car1), because car1 expression is markedly reduced in the rps4-inactivated cells like rps4HR cells (Inazu et al., 1999). To investigate this further, the expression patterns of rps4 in car1-null cells (JB4 cells) and parental Ax-3 cells were compared by western blot analysis. The result has demonstrated that the RPS4 protein exists in the car1-null cells, though its amount seems to be slightly reduced as compared to that in Ax-3 cells, particularly at the early stage of starvation (data not shown). Therefore, car1 expression might have some effect on the synthesis of RPS4, but the cAMP receptor1 (CAR1) is not necessarily required for RPS4 formation.

Antisense rps4 RNA expressed in the extra-mitochondrial cytoplasm greatly impairs the progression of cell differentiation

When cells of the transformed rpsAS strain and its parent Ax-2 cells were separately starved and incubated in BSS under submerged conditions at 5×105 cells/cm2, most of rpsAS cells showed no sign of cell aggregation and remained as round-shaped single cells at 8 hr of incubation (Fig. 4A), while Ax-2 cells were elongated in shape, acquiring aggregation-competence, and some of them formed tiny aggregates (Fig. 4B). After a more prolonged time of incubation (12–16 hr), Ax-2 cells formed aggregation streams and then tight mounds (Fig. 4C, E). In contrast, some of rpsAS cells form aggregation streams, but many cells were still rounded in shape and remained as nonaggregated single cells (Fig. 4D, F).

As expected, starving rpsAS cells also exhibited marked delay of development on agar. At 10 hr of incubation, while most rpsAS cells showed no sign of cell aggregation, Ax-2 cells had already aggregated to form tight mounds. During further incubation, Ax-2 cells formed a tip on each aggregate, migrated as a slug, and eventually constructed a soro-carp after 24 hr of incubation. In contrast, a small population of rpsAS cells participated in sorocarp formation, but a considerable number of cells still remained as nonaggregated single cells.

Fig. 4

Development of rps4AS cells (B, D, F) and parental Ax-2 cells (A, C, E) under submerged conditions. rps4AS cells and parental Ax-2 cells were harvested during the exponential growth phase, washed twice in BSS and plated in a 24-well titer plate at a density of 5×105 cells/ml (1 ml of cell suspension/well). This was followed by incubation at 22°C. At 8 hr of incubation, (A) Ax-2 cells acquire aggregation-competence and form small cell clumps (arrows), while (B) rps4AS cells show no sign of cell aggregation and remain as round-shaped single cells. At 12–16 hr, (C, E) Ax-2 cells form aggregation streams and tight aggregates, but (D, F) many of rps4AS cells still remain as round-shaped single cells, though a small number of cells participate in formation of aggregation streams. Bar, 200 μm.

i0289-0003-20-12-1455-f04.gif

Since rpsAS cells grew normally by binary fission in growth medium, with almost the same doubling time as parental Ax-2 cells, it was concluded that the observed effect of rps4-inactivation by the antisense RNA was limited to the process of cell differentiation. Here it is of interest to note that the developmental phenotype of rps4AS cells is quite similar to that of rps4HR cells in which about a half of the mitochondrial rps4 genes have been disrupted by homologous recombination. During a prolonged time of axenic culture in growth medium, the phenotype of transforments such as rps4HR cells has been shown to change moderately even in the presence of G418, eventually resulting in a return into the parental Ax-2-like phenotype. In the phenotypic revertants, we previously demonstrated that the dia3 RNA including the rps4 mRNA was recovered at almost the same level as that in Ax-2 cells (Inazu et al., 1999). In the rps4AS cells, however, the developmental phenotype was retained stably during a prolonged time of successive axenic culture in growth medium.

When starved rps4AS cells and Ax-2 cells (vitally stained with MitoTracker) were mixed in various number-ratios and incubated in BSS under submerged conditions at a density of 5×105 cells/cm2, no synergism was observed between the two. In a mixed culture of rps4AS and Ax-2 (10:1), they completely sorted out after aggregation: a few number of small aggregates, consisting of Ax-2 cells were formed in a non-aggregated sheet composed of rps4AS cells. The inability of Ax-2 cells to compensate for the development of rps4AS cells indicates that the phenotype of rps4AS cells is cell-autonomous.

Is RPS4 protein synthesized in the cytoplasm capable of moving actively to the nucleus?

Immunostaining of Ax-2 cells by the anti-PRS4 antibody has revealed that RPS4 is only slightly detected in granular structures (presumably mitochondria) of vegetatively growing cells (Fig. 5B). In cells (t4-cells) starved for 4 hr, their cytoplasmic granules were strongly stained, as shown in Fig. 5D. The granules were confirmed to be mitochondria by double-stainings of the cells with DAPI or MitoTracker Orange. Here it is of interest to note that the extra-mitochondrial region of t4-cells is only slightly stained, and that only a weak nuclear staining is sometimes recognized in some of t4-cells. In this connection, the presence of a small amount of RPS4 in the cytosolic fraction of t4-cells was detected by subcellular fractionation of cell homogenates and subsequent immuno-blottings using the anti-RPS4 antibody. Although these observations seemed to suggest that a trace of RPS4 protein might be released from mitochondria to the cytosol and then to the nucleus, this possibility remains to be tested using a more sensitive detection method, because the staining, if present in the cytosol and nucleus, is quite weak.

Fig. 5

Localization of RPS4 in Ax-2 cells just before starvation (B) and after 4 hr of starvation (D). Cells were harvested at the exponential growth phase, washed twice in BSS and fixed either immediately or after 4 hr of starvation at 22°C, followed by staining with the anti-RPS4 antibody or non-immune serum. At the vegetative growth phase (B), granular structures like mitochondria are weakly stained. In starving t4-cells (D), the staining of mitochondria becomes highly marked. (E–G) Starving t4-cells were double-stained with the anti-RPS4 antibody (E) and MitoTrtacker Orange (G), as described in Materials and Methods. Although both the stains are mostly colocalized, the extra-mitochondrial cytoplasm is very weekly stained only with the anti-RPS4 antibody (F, arrows). Bar; (A–D) 30 μm, (E–G) 15 μm.

i0289-0003-20-12-1455-f05.jpg

When rps4OE cells overexpressing the RPS4 protein were immunostained with the anti-RPS4 antibody and DAPI, they were strongly stained all over at the vegetative growth phase (Fig. 6A). In the t4-cells, however, their nuclei in addition to the cytoplasm were strongly stained (Fig. 6D), thus at least indicating that the RPS4 protein synthesized in the cytoplasm may be preferentially transferred into the nucleus.

Fig. 6

Localization of RPS4 in rps4-overexpressing (rps4OE cells) just before starvation (A) and after 4 hr of starvation (D). Cells were harvested at the exponential growth phase, washed twice in BSS and fixed either immediately or after 4 hr of starvation at 22°C, followed by double-staining with the anti-RPS4 antibody and DAPI. At the vegetative growth phase (A), the cells were strongly stained all over (A). In the t4-cells, however, it is clear that their nuclei are strongly stained (D, arrows). Bar; (A–C) 20 μm, (D-F) 30 μm.

i0289-0003-20-12-1455-f06.jpg

DISCUSSION

We previously reported that the rps4 gene encoding mitochondrial ribosomal protein S4 (RPS4) was specifically expressed during the transition of D. discoideum Ax-2 cells from growth to differentiation; rps4HR cells in which the rps4 gene is disrupted in about a half of the cell's mitochondrial genomes by homologous recombination exhibited greatly delayed differentiation after starvation, while rps4OE cells overexpressing the rps4 mRNA in the extra-mitochondrial cytoplasm perform enhanced differentiation through car1 induction (Inazu et al., 1999). The present work has revealed that rps4AS cells expressing the antisense rps4 RNA in the extra-mitochondrial cytoplasm exert markedly impaired differentiation after starvation, as was the case for the rps4HR cells. Again, these results indicate that both the partial disruption of rps4 gene in mitochondria and the anti-sense-mediated partial inactivation of rps4 in the extra-mitochondrial cytoplasm are likewise effective in suppressing the progression of cell differentiation, while the enforced expression of rps4 mRNA in the extra-mitochondrial cytoplasm leads to enhanced differentiation. This seems to indicate that a trace of the rps4 mRNA and RPS4 protein, both of which were synthesized in mitochondria, might be released to the extra-mitochondrial cytoplasm. Alternatively, it is also possible that the antisense rps4 RNA might enter mitochondria to inactivate the rps4 mRNA and inhibit RPS4 formation. After PSORTII Prediction, the RPS4 protein released into the cytosol is predicted to move preferentially to the nucleus. This was confirmed by the present immunohistochemical observation that in the rps4OE cells the RPS4 protein in the cytoplasm is capable of moving actively to the nucleus (see Fig. 6D). Although the fact that only the RPS4 protein of Dictyostelium cells has several nuclear localization signals is quite mysterious, at least a part of the RPS4 protein seems to work in the nucleus to regulate cell differentiation. In general, it is difficult for proteins located in the mitochondrial matrix to go out to the cytosol, because mitochondria are partitioned by two (outer and inner) membranes. Recently, however, several mitochondrial proteins like AIF (apoptosis-inducing factor; Daugas et al., 2000a, b), endonuclease G (Ohsato et al., 2002) and HSP70 (heat shock protein 70; Susin et al., 1999) have been shown to move to the nucleus in response to apoptosis or heat shock. All of these proteins are coded by the nuclear genome DNA, followed by translocation to the mitochondrion and then again to the nucleus. In this connection, the behavior of the Dictyostelium RPS4 is unique in that it is coded by the mitochondrial DNA.

The car1 gene encoding the cAMP receptor 1 (CAR1) is specifically expressed in Ax-2 cells that were starved just before the growth/differentiation checkpoint (PS-point) and now in the initial phase of cell differentiation (Abe and Maeda, 1994). As revealed by several workers, CAR1 is essential for differentiation (Sun et al., 1990; Sun and Devreotes, 1991). We previously demonstrsted that car1 expression was markedly reduced in the rps4HR cells, while the rps4OE cells exhibited the precocious and pronounced car1 induction, thus suggesting that the rps4 expression might be located in the upstream of the car1 expression in the pathway controlling early differentiation (Inazu et al., 1999). This is also supported by the fact that the RPS4 protein is expressed albeit slightly reduced levels in the car1-null cells (JB4 cells) as well as in parental Ax-3 cells.

The phosphorylation level of a 101 kDa protein has been shown to be specifically reduced at the initiation of differentiation from the PS-point (Akiyama and Maeda, 1992). Recently, we have revealed that the 101 kDa protein is a Dictyostelium homologue of elongation factor 2 (EF-2) (Watanabe et al., 2003). In this connection, it has been demonstrated in animal cells that the activity of EF-2 in translation is regulated by its phosphorylation levels, and that the dephosphorylated state is generally the active form (Ryazanov et al., 1988). A 32 kDa phosphoprotein (recently identified by Nakao et al. as ribosomal protein S6; RPS6) is known to be completely dephosphorylated under conditions of nutritional deprivation: Blockage of the dephosphorylation by phosphatase inhibitors such as okadaic acid and calyculin A completely inhibits differentiation of starving Ax-2 cells from the PS-point so that they advance instead through Mand S-phases to a particular position of the cell cycle (Akiyama and Maeda, 1992). On the other hand, Tapparo et al. (1998) have reported that ribosomal protein S4 (RPS4; not mitochondrial RPS4) and S10 (RPS10), both of which are coded by nuclear genome DNA, are expressed at the vegetative growth phase, followed by decrease in response to starvation. Taken together these data offer us indications as to the importance of differential operation of the machinery used for mitochondrial protein synthesis during the transition of cells from growth to differentiation.

Although it may be surprising, there is increasing evidence that mitochondria have novel and crucial functions as the regulatory machinery of growth/differentiation transition, cell-type determination, cellular movement and pattern formation. As shown here, the expression of rps4 is necessary for differentiation of Dictyostelium cells from the PS-point. Recently, a novel mitochondrial protein (Tortoise) was found to be required for directional responses of Dictyostelium cells in chemotactic gradients (van Es et al., 2001). In addition, a Dictyostelium homologue (Dd-TRAP1) of TRAP-1, a mitochodrial HSP90, was isolated from D. discoideum, and its marked translocation between the mitochondria and cell cortex during early development has been demonstrated (Morita et al., 2002). The origin of the mitochondrion is believed to be an aerobic bacteria which once established a symbiosis with a host cell such as an archaebacterion and has been handing over parts of its own genome to the nuclear DNA of the host cell during evolution. The result is that mitochondria depend on the nuclear genome for their normal biogenesis and function. In turn, they provide respiratory energy, in the form of ATP and reduced nucleotides to the host cell. What is surprising, however, is that mitochondria evidently have critical and somewhat unexpected roles in a variety of cellular events including differentiation and pattern formation.

1464

Acknowledgments

We thank Paul Fisher and Wolfgang Nellen for their critical reading of the manuscript and insightful comments. We are also grateful to Peter Devreotes for kindly providing us car1-null cells (JB4). This work was supported by a Grant-in-Aid (No. 14654170) from the Ministry of Education, Science, Sports and Culture of Japan. This work was also funded by the Mitsubishi Foundation.

REFERENCES

1.

F. Abe and Y. Maeda . 1994. Precise expression of the cAMP receptor gene, car1, during transition from growth to differentiation in Dictyostelium discoideum. FEBS Lett 342:239–241. Google Scholar

2.

F. Abe and Y. Maeda . 1995. Specific expression of a gene encoding a novel calcium-binding protein, CAF-1, during transition of Dictyostelium cells from growth to differentiation. Dev Growth Differ 37:39–48. Google Scholar

3.

M. Akiyama and Y. Maeda . 1992. Possible involvements of 101kDa, 90kDa, and 32kDa phosphoproteins in the phase-shift of Dictyostelium cells from growth to differentiation. Differentiation 51:79–90. Google Scholar

4.

C. Bonfils, M. Greenwood, and A. Tsang . 1994. Expression and characterization of a Dictyostelium discoideum annexin. Mol Cell Biochem 139:159–166. Google Scholar

5.

J. T. Bonner 1947. Evidence for the formation of cell aggregates by chemotaxis in the development of the cellular slime mold Dictyostelium discoideum. J Exp Zool 106:1–26. Google Scholar

6.

J. T. Bonner, D. S. Barkley, E. M. Hall, T. M. Konijn, J. W. Mason, G. O'Keefe, and P. B. Wolfe . 1969. Acrasin, acrasinase and the sensitivity to acrasin in Dictyostelium discoideum. Dev Biol 20:72–87. Google Scholar

7.

S. C. Chae, Y. Inazu, A. Amagai, and Y. Maeda . 1998. Underexpression of a novel gene, dia2, Impairs the transition of Dictyostelium cells from growth to differentiation. Biochem Biophys Res Commun 252:278–283. Google Scholar

8.

S. C. Chae and Y. Maeda . 1998a. Preferential expression of the cDNA encoding the proteasome subunit during the growth/differentiation transition of Dictyostelium cells. Biochem Biophys Res Commun 245:231–234. Google Scholar

9.

S. C. Chae and Y. Maeda . 1998b. Cloning and sequence analysis of the cDNA encoding elongation factor-1β of Dictyostelium discoideum. Biochim Biophys Acta 1383:1–3. Google Scholar

10.

E. Daugas, D. Nochy, L. Ravagnan, M. Loeffler, S. A. Susin, N. Zamzami, and G. Kroemer . 2000a. Apoptosis-inducing factor (AIF): a ubiquitous mitochondrial oxidoreductase involved in apoptosis. FEBS Lett 476:118–123. Google Scholar

11.

E. Daugas, S. A. Susin, N. Zamzami, K. F. Ferri, T. Irinopoulou, N. Larochette, M. Prevost, B. Leber, D. Andrews, J. Penninger, and G. Kroemer . 2000b. Mitochondrio-nuclear translocation of AIF in apoptosis and necrosis. FASEB J 14:729–739. Google Scholar

12.

V. Doring, F. Veretout, R. Albrecht, B. Muhlbauer, C. Schlatterer, M. Schleicher, and A. A. Noegel . 1995. The in vitro role of annexin VII (synexin): characterization of an annexin VII deficient Dictyostelium mutant indicates an involvement in Ca2+-regulated processes. J Cell Sci 108:2065–2076. Google Scholar

13.

G. Gerisch 1961. Zellfunktionen und Zellfunktionwechsel in der Entwicklung von Dictyostelium discoideum. V. Stadienspezifische Zellkontaktbildung und ihre quantitative Erfassung. Exp Cell Res 25:535–554. Google Scholar

14.

S. Hirose, Y. Inazu, S. C. Chae, and Y. Maeda . 2000. Suppression of the growth/differentiation transition in Dictyostelium development by transient expression of a novel gene, dia1. Development 127:3263–3270. Google Scholar

15.

T. Ikeda and I. Takeuchi . 1971. Isolation and characterization of a pre-spore specific structure of the cellular slime mold, Dictyostelium discoideum. Dev Growth Differ 13:221–229. Google Scholar

16.

Y. Inazu, S. C. Chae, and Y. Maeda . 1999. Transient expression of a mitochondorial gene cluster including rps4 is essential for the phase-shift of Dictyostelium cells from growth to differentiation. Dev Genet 25:339–352. Google Scholar

17.

M. Itoh, M. Noguchi, and Y. Maeda . 1998. Overexpression of CAF1 encoding a novel Ca2+-binding protein stimulates the transition of Dictyostelium cells from growth to differentiation. Dev Growth Differ 40:677–683. Google Scholar

18.

Y. Maeda 1986. A new method for inducing synchronous growth of Dictyostelium discoideum cells using temperature shifts. J Gen Microbiol 132:1189–1196. Google Scholar

19.

Y. Maeda, T. Ohmori, T. Abe, F. Abe, and A. Amagai . 1989. Transition of starving Dictyostelium cells to differentiation phase at a particular position of the cell cycle. Differentiation 41:169–175. Google Scholar

20.

T. Morita, K. Saitoh, T. Takagi, and Y. Maeda . 2000. Involvement of the glucose-regulated protein 94 (Dd-GRP94) in starvation response of Dictyostelium discoideum cells. Biochem Biophys Res Commun 274:323–331. Google Scholar

21.

T. Morita, A. Amagai, and Y. Maeda . 2002. Unique behavior of a Dictyostelium homologue of TRAP-1, coupling with differentiation of D. discoideum cells. Exp Cell Res 280:45–54. Google Scholar

22.

W. Nellen, S. Datta, C. Reymond, A. Silvertsen, S. Mann, T. Crowley, and R. A. Firtel . 1987. Molecular biology in Dictyostelium: Tools and applications. In “Methods in Cell Biology, Vol 28”. Ed by J. A. Spudich Academic Press. New York. pp. 67–100. Google Scholar

23.

T. Ohsato, N. Ishihara, T. Muta, S. Umeda, S. Ikeda, K. Mihara, N. Hamasaki, and D. Kang . 2002. Mammalian mitochondrial endonuclease G. Digestion of R-loops and localization in intermembrane space. Eur J Biochem 269:5765–5770. Google Scholar

24.

T. Okafuji, F. Abe, and Y. Maeda . 1997. Antisense-mediated regulation of Annexin VII gene expression during the transition from growth to differentiation in Dictyostelium discoideum. Gene 189:49–56. Google Scholar

25.

C. A. Parent and P. N. Devreotes . 1996. Molecular genetics of signal transduction in Dictyostelium. Ann Rev Biochem 65:411–440. Google Scholar

26.

A. G. Ryazanov, E. A. Shesakova, and P. G. Natapov . 1988. Phosphorylation of elongation factor 2 by EF-2 kinase affects rate of translation. Nature 334:170–173. Google Scholar

27.

T. J. Sun, P. J. M. Haastert, and P. N. Devreotes . 1990. Surface cAMP receptors mediate multiple responses during development in Dictyostelium: evidenced by antisense mutagenesis. J Cell Biol 110:1549–1554. Google Scholar

28.

T. J. Sun and P. N. Devreotes . 1991. Gene targeting of the aggregation stage cAMP receptor CAR1 in Dictyostelium. Genes Dev 5:572–582. Google Scholar

29.

S. A. Susin, H. K. Lorenzo, N. Zamzami, I. Marzo, B. E. Snow, G. M. Brothers, J. Mangion, E. Jacotot, P. Costantoni, M. Loeffler, N. Larochette, D. R. Goodlett, R. Aebersold, D. P. Siderovski, J. M. Penninger, and G. Kroemer . 1999. Molecular characterization of mitochondrial apoptosis inducing factor. Nature 397:441–446. Google Scholar

30.

A. Tapparo, M. Satre, and G. Klein . 1998. Cloning, sequencing and developmental expression of the genes encoding S4 and S10 ribosomal proteins in the cellular slime mould Dictyostelium discoideum. Curr Genet 34:410–418. Google Scholar

31.

S. van Es, D. Wessels, D. R. Soll, J. Borleis, and P. N. Devreotes . 2001. Tortoise, a novel mitochondrial protein, is required for directional responses of Dictyostelium in chemotactic gradients. J Cell Biol Behavior and Function of Dictyostelium mt-RPS4 1465 152:621–632. Google Scholar

32.

S. Watanabe, K. Sakurai, A. Amagai, and Y. Maeda . 2003. Unexpected roles of a Dictyostelium homologue of eukaryotic EF-2 in growth and differentiation. J Cell Sci 116:2647–2654. Google Scholar

33.

W. Witke, W. Nellen, and A. Noegel . 1987. Homologous recombination in the Dictyostelium alpha-actinin gene leads to an altered mRNA and lack of the protein. EMBO J 6:4143–4148. Google Scholar
Koh-ichi Hosoya, Aiko Amagai, Junji Chida, and Yasuo Maeda "Unique Behavior and Function of the Mitochondrial Ribosomal Protein S4 (RPS4) in Early Dictyostelium Development," Zoological Science 20(12), 1455-1465, (1 December 2003). https://doi.org/10.2108/zsj.20.1455
Received: 16 July 2003; Accepted: 1 July 2003; Published: 1 December 2003
KEYWORDS
antisense RNA
Dictyostelium
differentiation
mitochondria
rps4
Back to Top