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Functional modulation of IFT kinesins extends the sensory repertoire of ciliated [复制链接]

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发表于 2009-4-25 10:16 |只看该作者 |倒序浏览 |打印
1 Section of Molecular and Cellular Biology, University of California, Davis, Davis, CA 95616
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2 Electron Microscopy Laboratory, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, CA 94720
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Abstract  M2 Q# s$ X7 d9 \
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The diversity of sensory cilia on Caenorhabditis elegans neurons allows the animal to detect a variety of sensory stimuli. Sensory cilia are assembled by intraflagellar transport (IFT) kinesins, which transport ciliary precursors, bound to IFT particles, along the ciliary axoneme for incorporation into ciliary structures. Using fluorescence microscopy of living animals and serial section electron microscopy of high pressure–frozen, freeze-substituted IFT motor mutants, we found that two IFT kinesins, homodimeric OSM-3 kinesin and heterotrimeric kinesin II, function in a partially redundant manner to build full-length amphid channel cilia but are completely redundant for building full-length amphid wing (AWC) cilia. This difference reflects cilia-specific differences in OSM-3 activity, which serves to extend distal singlets in channel cilia but not in AWC cilia, which lack such singlets. Moreover, AWC-specific chemotaxis assays reveal novel sensory functions for kinesin II in these wing cilia. We propose that kinesin II is a "canonical" IFT motor, whereas OSM-3 is an "accessory" IFT motor, and that subtle changes in the deployment or actions of these IFT kinesins can contribute to differences in cilia morphology, cilia function, and sensory perception.7 ?0 \" M" i4 k+ Z1 @

  N% y: M# |, Q0 p" z, F9 BAbbreviations used in this paper: 3D, three-dimensional; AWC, amphid wing; IFT, intraflagellar transport; MT, microtubule; RFP, red fluorescent protein; TEM, transmission EM; WT, wild type." N/ e2 O7 O8 v% Q" K2 {  ]
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Introduction: f, c: ?8 J& t( O
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Cilia are remarkable microtubule (MT)-based "nanomachines" that project from the surface of most eukaryotic cells and play diverse roles in motility and sensory reception (Rosenbaum and Witman, 2002; Pazour and Witman, 2003; Scholey, 2003; Snell et al., 2004). Sensory cilia on the dendritic endings of chemosensory neurons in Caenorhabditis elegans act as sensory antennae that control the animal's chemotactic movements in response to chemical gradients in the environment (Perkins et al., 1986). These cilia have distinct neuron-specific morphologies and sense different chemical stimuli (Bargmann et al., 1993; Lanjuin and Sengupta, 2004). For example, although the amphid channel cilia have a typical unbranched cylindrical morphology and detect hydrophilic molecules and high osmolarity, the adjacent amphid wing (AWC) cilia have a fan-like morphology and detect volatile odorants (e.g., benzaldehyde; Fig. 1; Perkins et al., 1986; Lanjuin and Sengupta, 2004). How these distinct structures and sensory modalities arise is unclear, although differences in intraflagellar transport (IFT) motor function in different cilia could play a key role.
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IFT motors of the kinesin 2 family (Lawrence et al., 2004) assemble and maintain cilia by transporting ciliary precursors, bound to multimeric protein complexes called IFT particles, from the cell body, along the axoneme, for incorporation into ciliary structures (Rosenbaum and Witman, 2002; Cole, 2003; Scholey, 2003). In some organisms, a single heterotrimeric kinesin 2 motor transports the IFT particles to the distal tip of the cilium, and a second motor, IFT dynein, recycles kinesin 2, IFT particles, and turnover products back to the cell body (Cole et al., 1993, 1998; Kozminski et al., 1993, 1995; Morris and Scholey, 1997; Pazour et al., 1999; Porter et al., 1999; Signor et al., 1999a). In C. elegans amphid channel cilia, however, two kinesin 2 motors, heterotrimeric kinesin II and homodimeric OSM-3 kinesin, cooperate in a semiredundant fashion to build two distinct domains of the axoneme: the middle segment consisting of nine MT doublets surrounding a few central singlets and the distal segment consisting of MT singlets, which are extensions of the middle segment A tubules (Fig. 1; Orozco et al., 1999; Signor et al., 1999b; Snow et al., 2004; Ou et al., 2005). (We use the standard name, kinesin 2, to describe the family and the terms kinesin II and OSM-3 kinesin to discriminate the two C. elegans IFT kinesin holoenzymes.) The two motors move the same IFT particles along the middle segment in a process that is required to build the middle segment, and then OSM-3 kinesin alone moves them the rest of the way along the distal segment in a process that is required to elongate the distal singlets.' \- m# U) K- D1 o7 v# s1 S, F

: f) g5 y1 Z! i' WTherefore, in C. elegans, the basic "canonical" mechanism of IFT, in which a single anterograde motor delivers precursors to the tip of the assembling cilium, is complicated by the use of two kinesin 2 motors, but what selective advantage might this confer We address the possibility that the differential regulation of the two motors in different cilia may contribute to neuron-specific sensory ciliary diversity. We reconstructed the three-dimensional (3D) structure of the cilia from serial EM sections of wild type (WT), kinesin II (klp-11, kap-1), OSM-3 kinesin (osm-3), and kinesin II/OSM-3 (osm-3;klp-11 and osm-3; kap-1) single- and double-mutant animals. To ensure optimal preservation of cell ultrastructure, worms were high-pressure frozen and freeze substituted (Muller-Reichert et al., 2003). The results confirm our model in which OSM-3 and kinesin II function redundantly to build the middle segments of amphid channel cilia, whereas OSM-3 alone builds the distal singlets (Snow et al., 2004), but suggest that, in the adjacent fan-like AWC cilia, the kinesin 2 motors have a different functional relationship that appears to contribute to the morphological and sensory differences between the AWC and channel cilia.% q: E9 K2 W4 c$ Y+ z% @
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Results and discussion9 B4 ~9 U% D0 N5 _9 \+ v
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Partially redundant roles of IFT kinesins in building amphid channel cilia1 l' ]1 S0 d- Y0 E
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We reconstructed amphid channel cilia from WT animals and from a variety of IFT motor mutants (Fig. 2) and observed that in WT animals and single (kap-1 and klp-11) and double (kap-1;klp-11) kinesin II mutants, full-length cilia, 7.5 μm in length, were present. In mutants lacking IFT dynein function (che-3), the cilia are truncated and bulbous, whereas cilia in mutants lacking OSM-3 kinesin function (osm-3) were only 4.5 μm long because of the specific loss of distal segments (Perkins et al., 1986). In OSM-3 kinesin/kinesin II double mutants (kap-1;osm-3 and klp-11;osm-3), however, the entire ciliary axoneme was missing (Fig. 2). In previous work, we observed no fluorescent IFT particles (GFP::OSM-6) extending from the transition zone of these double mutants (Snow et al., 2004). Our TEM analysis rigorously eliminates the possibility that this reflected a failure of transport of IFT particles along residual cilia in these animals (assembled, for example, by diffusion of ciliary precursors to their site of assembly) but instead is due to a complete loss of ciliary axonemes, confirming that either OSM-3 kinesin or kinesin II is required to build the middle segments of these axonemes, whereas OSM-3 alone is required to extend the distal singlets (Perkins et al., 1986; Snow et al., 2004).1 c  Z" `) I5 W: Q8 [1 ~- O
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Redundant roles of IFT kinesins in building AWC cilia
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Although kinesin II and OSM-3 kinesin act in a partially redundant fashion to build the channel ciliary axonemes, they act in a completely redundant fashion to build the adjacent AWC cilia (Figs. 3–5). We used fluorescence microscopy (Fig. 3) to examine the distribution of GFP-tagged translational reporters of IFT particle proteins (OSM-5 or OSM-6::GFP) in amphid channel cilia and a red fluorescent protein (RFP)–tagged transcriptional reporter of the AWC guanylyl cyclase ODR-1::RFP (L'Etoile and Bargmann, 2000) to examine the morphology of AWC cilia. The channel and wing cilia in WT animals (Fig. 3, A and F) were indistinguishable from those in single mutants in the kinesin II motor (Fig. 3, C and H). However, although the apparent lengths of the channel cilia in osm-3 mutants were reduced from 7.5 to 5 μm because of the loss of their distal segments (Fig. 3 B), the morphology of wing cilia was indistinguishable from WT (compare Fig. 3, F and G). No differences in the morphology of any single mutant and WT AWC cilia could be detected by visual inspection of scores of animals. Our efforts to quantify the dimensions of these AWC cilia yielded equivocal results. The largest measured difference was between WTs (length, 5.04 ± 1.08 μm, and width, 8.9 ± 2.16 μm; n = 32) and klp-11 (length, 4.56 ± 0.98 μm, and width, 8.62 ± 1.92 μm; n = 33), but this small difference probably results from problems encountered in tracking fluorescence from edge to edge along these asymmetric cilia. However, clear and obvious differences were noted in kinesin II/OSM-3 kinesin double mutants (klp-11;osm-3), where no fluorescence was observed distal to the transition zone, consistent with a complete loss of cilia on the AWC neuron (Fig. 3 I). We confirmed that kinesin II and OSM-3 kinesin are indeed expressed in AWC neurons because translational fusions of KAP-1::GFP (Fig. 4 A) and OSM-3::GFP (Fig. 4 B) colocalized with the AWC marker, ODR-1::RFP (Fig. 4, A and B). The results suggest that either kinesin II or OSM-3 kinesin can build the AWC cilia and that either motor, but not both, is dispensable for this. No differences in IFT dynein function were seen, based on the morphology of channel and AWC cilia (Fig. 3, E and J).
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We used serial-section TEM to confirm that the morphology defects seen in AWC cilia by light microscopy of the IFT motor mutants reflect changes in ciliary structure (Fig. 5). By examining multiple serial sections, we found that AWC cilia were intact in WT and in single kinesin II or OSM-3 mutants but were completely absent in double mutants (Fig. 5). Careful examination of WT cilia revealed mixtures of doublet and singlet MTs that lie side by side rather than being organized into a cylinder (Fig. 5 A, insets). Significantly, moving toward the distal tip of the cilium, both the singlet and doublet MTs terminated at the same point, 0.5 μm below the overlying ciliary membrane. Because serial sections were taken every 100 nm, the maximum length of any distal singlets must be less than this distance (i.e., 1/25 the length of the distal singlets in channel cilia), suggesting that AWC cilia lack distal singlets. Therefore, the two motors act redundantly to build the doublet and singlet MTs of AWC cilia just like in the middle segments of channel cilia, whereas OSM-3 extends the distal singlets in channel cilia but not in AWC cilia, where its function is unknown.
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, ?& P% I: c2 Z8 W6 g7 kWhy channel cilia require distal singlets whereas AWC cilia do not is unclear, and in general the function of distal segments is unknown. The distal segments of cilia and flagellar axonemes in other systems are of variable length and prominence; e.g., they are 200 μm long in frog olfactory cilia (Reese, 1965), whereas in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii they are lacking, but they do elongate transiently during mating (Mesland et al., 1980). There are speculations that distal singlets are dynamic structures that are required for some aspect of sensory signaling because the specific loss of the singlets (e.g., in osm-3 mutants) leads to loss of sensory signaling. However, both the channel and wing cilia have sensory functions in C. elegans, so this may not be universally true.7 o' F0 [5 N: B+ i2 h0 n3 U8 |9 w* V
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Based on studies of amphid channel cilia (Snow et al., 2004), we had predicted that OSM-3 kinesin would be deployed in a broad range of cilia to specifically elongate the distal singlets. However, the current study suggests that this is an oversimplification because AWC cilia in WTs do not have distal singlets and these cilia were morphologically indistinguishable in osm-3 mutants and WTs. It will now be interesting to identify regulatory factors that act via OSM-3 to control the elongation of the distal singlets either by promoting their extension in channel cilia or by suppressing their extension in wing cilia. Such factors may be uncovered among ciliary mutants (Perkins et al., 1986; Starich et al., 1995; Ou et al., 2005).
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4 K" _, V. G3 s) \Novel chemosensory function for kinesin II in AWC cilia! p8 w8 @+ V1 i- x# e% z
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Sensory cilia in the head of the animal have diverse functions and provide diverse sensory modalities. Defects in osmotic avoidance are associated with the channel cilia and are present in osm-3 mutants but not in klp-11 or kap-1 mutants (Snow et al., 2004). We used chemotaxis toward benzaldehyde as a specific assay for AWC cell function (Fig. 4 C; Bargmann et al., 1993) and observed that chemotaxis was normal in WT animals and in osm-3 mutants, but in klp-11 or kap-1 single and osm-3;kap-1 double mutants, chemotaxis was impaired by 50%, similar to the IFT particle mutant, osm-1 (Peckol et al., 1999). The results suggest that these two motors are functionally redundant for AWC ciliary length determination, but once a full-length cilium is assembled, kinesin II has additional chemosensory functions that may involve the delivery of signaling molecules for incorporation into cilia, as proposed for C. reinhardtii kinesin II (Pan and Snell, 2002). Future studies of ciliary mutants may uncover this predicted cargo of kinesin II.8 P0 P1 ^0 r  z1 D
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How kinesin II and OSM-3 redundantly assemble AWC cilia is unclear because we were unable to detect IFT in assays identical to those that demonstrate vigorous IFT along channel cilia (Snow et al., 2004; Ou et al., 2005). Thus, it is possible that in AWC neurons, ciliary assembly does not depend on IFT and the kinesin 2 motors build cilia using a different mechanism. However, we favor the idea that IFT does operate in these cilia but was not seen because it occurs transiently during de novo ciliary assembly or for technical reasons such as a low level of expression of the IFT machinery.4 j# l! i) c% G+ K: ]) P1 U" _/ ^

: f, c& ?3 |) D1 C& G! W4 iThus, in the simple, canonical mechanism of IFT, kinesin II alone delivers precursors to the tip of assembling cilia to build the axoneme. In C. elegans and perhaps elsewhere, OSM-3 is deployed as an "accessory" motor to functionally substitute for the loss of kinesin II function or, when kinesin II is active, to augment the canonical IFT pathway and, in some cases, to elongate the distal singlets. Our results suggest that modulating the activity of the two IFT kinesins in different cilia contributes to functional differences between cilia on different sensory neurons, providing a selective advantage by allowing the animal to receive and respond to a greater diversity of sensory cues.1 \- g" Q' N" Y! G% {5 O

9 ~) r: W$ v+ }8 U* vMaterials and methods
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% o; a7 W' N  e: O: l) k) t6 y: VGenetic crosses/ F$ _; \) `4 L8 J* O# {

: [/ ^2 L5 }$ v  c( r  o+ _Animals were maintained and crossed using standard methods (Brenner, 1974) as described previously (Snow et al., 2004). Homozygosity was confirmed for osm-3(p802)IV and che-3(e1124)I by dye filling and for kap-1 (ok676)III and klp-11(tm324)IV by single-worm PCR. Because klp-11 and osm-3 are on the same chromosome, we crossed klp-11(tm324)IV;dpy-20(e1282)IV with osm-3 (p802)IV;mnIs17[osm-6::gfp] to produce animals with the final genotype klp-11(tm324)IV;dpy-20(e1282)IV;osm-3 (p802)IV;mnIs17[osm-6::gfp]. Amphid channel cilia were marked by introducing either mnIs17[osm-6::gfp] or Ex[osm-5::gfp   rol-6(su1006)] into motor mutants, and AWC cilia in WT and mutants were imaged with oyIs44[odr-1::rfp]. ODR-1::RFP was supplied by P. Sengupta (Brandeis University, Waltham, MA).
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1 h& ~. p" g, Z' gAs described previously (Snow et al., 2004; Ou et al., 2005), worms were anesthetized with 10 mM levamisole, mounted on agar pads, and maintained at 21°C. Fluorescent images were collected on a microscope (Olympus) equipped with a 100x, 1.35 NA objective and a spinning disc confocal head (UltraView; PerkinElmer) and further processed using MetaMorph software (Universal Imaging Corp.).
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. o7 l9 h7 M. C9 tTEM and image processing
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Specimens were ultrarapidly frozen using a high-pressure freezer (HPM 010; Bal-Tec) and freeze substituted at –90°C in anhydrous acetone containing 1% osmium tetroxide and 0.1% uranyl acetate using an EM AFS (Leica; Muller-Reichert et al., 2003). The cryofixed specimens were raised to room temperature and subsequently infiltrated and embedded in Epon-Araldite resin. Samples were cut into 100-nm-thick sections using an Ultracut E microtome (Leica). Serial sections were collected on slot grids covered with a Formvar support film, poststained with 2% uranyl acetate followed by Reynold's lead citrate, and covered by a second layer of Formvar for increased stability. Grids were visualized on a transmission electron microscope (JEM-2100FEG; JEOL) operated at 200 keV. Images of each section were recorded at 4 μm defocus on a 4,096 x 4,096–pixel charge-coupled device camera (Tietz; TVIPS) and at a nominal magnification of 8,000, yielding a pixel size of 1.25 nm. The images of the serial sections were manually aligned using the manual image deformation and alignment system (Mastronarde et al., 1992) and modeled as surface renderings using 3DMOD to depict the length and paths of the amphid pore and each cilium (Kremer et al., 1996).3 |! ~) q* i& Y0 z( n* P

1 ?$ \, M* ~% X5 K; i" W! A5 D' TChemotaxis assays
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/ |0 B) Y* F$ t/ FChemotaxis assays were performed as described previously (Bargmann et al., 1993). 15–20 young adult animals were placed onto a 10-cm Petri dish without bacteria for 1 h and then transferred to a 10-cm Petri dish containing 1.6% Bacto agar, 5 mM potassium phosphate, pH 6.0, 1 mM CaCl2, and 1 mM MgSO4, along with 2 μl of the attractant, benzaldehyde (1:200 in ethanol), and 2 μl of the counterattractant, ethanol. The worms were placed at a marked origin, equidistant from the attractant and counterattractant, 2 μl of sodium azide was used to anesthetize the animals, and the numbers located at attractant and counterattractant were counted after 1 h. The chemotaxis index was defined as follows: (numbers at attractant – numbers at counterattractant) ˉ total (Peckol et al., 1999). Assays were repeated multiple times. A one-way analysis of variance was performed using Proc Mixed (SAS Institute), and obvious assay differences between strains were observed using Tukey's test for multiple comparisons at a significance level of 0.05. On the graphs (Fig. 4 C), standard error bars are shown.
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5 {+ c( j0 W5 d6 c! r$ f" EOnline supplemental material2 O. k$ R0 l$ g1 C  A1 {

9 z5 {( _* j2 j# R' R' v; n$ dAcknowledgments$ O5 d1 p. x$ Q9 }4 N
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We thank Piali Sengupta for discussions on amphid cilia and Noelle L'Etoile for advice on chemotaxis assays., d( j2 f3 c4 u" s, k6 L
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This research was supported by a grant from the National Institutes of Health (GM50718) to J.M. Scholey.4 f1 v; {6 f! W
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沙发
发表于 2015-6-11 08:43 |只看该作者
这年头,分不好赚啊  

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藤椅
发表于 2015-6-29 16:35 |只看该作者
不错,感谢楼主

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板凳
发表于 2015-7-9 13:41 |只看该作者
干细胞之家微信公众号
每天都会来干细胞之家看看

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报纸
发表于 2015-7-18 11:25 |只看该作者
干细胞产业是朝阳产业

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地板
发表于 2015-7-19 22:16 |只看该作者
每天早上起床都要看一遍“福布斯”富翁排行榜,如果上面没有我的名字,我就去上班……  

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发表于 2015-7-25 07:08 |只看该作者
不错 不错  比我强多了  

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发表于 2015-8-7 22:00 |只看该作者
努力~~各位。。。  

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发表于 2015-8-22 23:53 |只看该作者
干细胞研究重在基础

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发表于 2015-8-26 13:35 |只看该作者
谢谢楼主啊!
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