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1.
The [PSI+] prion may enhance evolvability by revealing previously cryptic genetic variation, but it is unclear whether such evolvability properties could be favored by natural selection. Sex inhibits the evolution of other putative evolvability mechanisms, such as mutator alleles. This paper explores whether sex also prevents natural selection from favoring modifier alleles that facilitate [PSI+] formation. Sex may permit the spread of “cheater” alleles that acquire the benefits of [PSI+] through mating without incurring the cost of producing [PSI+] at times when it is not adaptive. Using recent quantitative estimates of the frequency of sex in Saccharomyces paradoxus, we calculate that natural selection for evolvability can drive the evolution of the [PSI+] system, so long as yeast populations occasionally require complex adaptations involving synergistic epistasis between two loci. If adaptations are always simple and require substitution at only a single locus, then the [PSI+] system is not favored by natural selection. Obligate sex might inhibit the evolution of [PSI+]-like systems in other species.  相似文献   

2.
Evolution depends on the manner in which genetic variation is translated into new phenotypes. There has been much debate about whether organisms might have specific mechanisms for “evolvability,” which would generate heritable phenotypic variation with adaptive value and could act to enhance the rate of evolution. Capacitor systems, which allow the accumulation of cryptic genetic variation and release it under stressful conditions, might provide such a mechanism. In yeast, the prion [PSI+] exposes a large array of previously hidden genetic variation, and the phenotypes it thereby produces are advantageous roughly 25% of the time. The notion that [PSI+] is a mechanism for evolvability would be strengthened if the frequency of its appearance increased with stress. That is, a system that mediates even the haphazard appearance of new phenotypes, which have a reasonable chance of adaptive value would be beneficial if it were deployed at times when the organism is not well adapted to its environment. In an unbiased, high-throughput, genome-wide screen for factors that modify the frequency of [PSI+] induction, signal transducers and stress response genes were particularly prominent. Furthermore, prion induction increased by as much as 60-fold when cells were exposed to various stressful conditions, such as oxidative stress (H2O2) or high salt concentrations. The severity of stress and the frequency of [PSI+] induction were highly correlated. These findings support the hypothesis that [PSI+] is a mechanism to increase survival in fluctuating environments and might function as a capacitor to promote evolvability.  相似文献   

3.
The [PSI+] prion causes widespread readthrough translation and is rare in natural populations of Saccharomyces, despite the fact that sex is expected to cause it to spread. Using the recently estimated rate of Saccharomyces outcrossing, we calculate the strength of selection necessary to maintain [PSI+] at levels low enough to be compatible with data. Using the best available parameter estimates, we find selection against [PSI+] to be significant. Inference regarding selection on modifiers of [PSI+] appearance depends on obtaining more precise and accurate estimates of the product of yeast effective population size Ne and the spontaneous rate of [PSI+] appearance m. The ability to form [PSI+] has persisted in yeast over a long period of evolutionary time, despite a diversity of modifiers that could abolish it. If mNe < 1, this may be explained by insufficiently strong selection. If mNe > 1, then selection should favor the spread of [PSI+] resistance modifiers. In this case, rare conditions where [PSI+] is adaptive may permit its persistence in the face of negative selection.  相似文献   

4.
The molecular chaperone Hsp104 is a crucial factor in the acquisition of thermotolerance in yeast. Under stress conditions, the disaggregase activity of Hsp104 facilitates the reactivation of misfolded proteins. Hsp104 is also involved in the propagation of fungal prions. For instance, the well-characterized [PSI+] prion of Saccharomyces cerevisiae does not propagate in Δhsp104 cells or in cells overexpressing Hsp104. In this study, we characterized the functional homolog of Hsp104 from Schizosaccharomyces pombe (Sp_Hsp104). As its S. cerevisiae counterpart, Sp_hsp104+ is heat-inducible and required for thermotolerance in S. pombe. Sp_Hsp104 displays low disaggregase activity and cannot propagate the [PSI+] prion in S. cerevisiae. When overexpressed in S. cerevisiae, Sp_Hsp104 confers thermotolerance to Δhsp104 cells and reactivates heat-aggregated proteins. However, overexpression of Sp_Hsp104 does not propagate nor eliminate [PSI+]. Strikingly, [PSI+] was cured by overexpression of a chimeric chaperone bearing the C-terminal domain (CTD) of the S. cerevisiae Hsp104 protein. Our study demonstrates that the ability to untangle aggregated proteins is conserved between the S. pombe and S. cerevisiae Hsp104 homologs, and points to a role of the CTD in the propagation of the S. cerevisiae [PSI+] prion.  相似文献   

5.
During propagation, yeast prions show a strict sequence preference that confers the specificity of prion assembly. Although propagations of [PSI+] and [RNQ+] are independent of each other, the appearance of [PSI+] is facilitated by the presence of [RNQ+]. To explain the [RNQ+] effect on the appearance of [PSI+], the cross-seeding model was suggested, in which Rnq1 aggregates act as imperfect templates for Sup35 aggregation. If cross-seeding events take place in the cytoplasm of yeast cells, the collision frequency between Rnq1 aggregates and Sup35 will affect the appearance of [PSI+]. In this study, to address whether cross-seeding occurs in vivo, a new [PSI+] induction method was developed that exploits a protein fusion between the prion domain of Sup35 (NM) and Rnq1. This fusion protein successfully joins preexisting Rnq1 aggregates, which should result in the localization of NM around the Rnq1 aggregates and hence in an increased collision frequency between NM and Rnq1 aggregates. The appearance of [PSI+] could be induced very efficiently, even with a low expression level of the fusion protein. This study supports the occurrence of in vivo cross-seeding between Sup35 and Rnq1 and provides a new tool that can be used to dissect the mechanism of the de novo appearance of prions.Prions were originally defined as proteinaceous infectious particles responsible for transmissible spongiform encephalopathies in mammals (reviewed in reference 23). Since a non-Mendelian genetic element, [URE3], was identified as a yeast prion (37), however, this concept has been expanded to include protein-based genetic elements. In addition to [URE3], there are at least two more proteinaceous genetic elements in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, namely, [PSI+] and [RNQ+] (20, 22, 28). [Het-s] was also identified as a prion in the filamentous fungus Podospora anserina (2).Despite the absence of any structural and functional homologies between various prion proteins from different organisms, they share a common feature, i.e., prion proteins can adopt two distinct conformational states. One of these, the aggregated prion state, can stimulate the soluble, nonprion conformation to convert into the prion form. Gaining intermolecular β-sheet structures, purified yeast prion proteins aggregate and form amyloid fibers in vitro (8, 12, 28, 32). Protein extract from yeast cells in the prion state can facilitate the in vitro polymerization of soluble prion protein from nonprion cells (21), and amyloid fibers of purified yeast prion proteins can convert the cells into the prion state when introduced into yeast cells, demonstrating the protein-only hypothesis (15, 31). Thus, intracellular prion aggregates are thought to have the same structural basis as amyloid fibers formed in vitro.Yeast prion biology has provided invaluable insights into the prion concept at the molecular level. Because of its experimental convenience, [PSI+] has been investigated most intensively among various yeast prions. [PSI+] results from the aggregation of Sup35 protein, which is essential for terminating the translation at stop codons. When Sup35 is in the [PSI+] aggregated state, ribosomes often fail to release polypeptides at stop codons, causing a non-Mendelian trait which is easily detected by nonsense suppression. ade1 or ade2 nonsense mutants are used as marker genes to determine the [PSI+] state. These mutants cannot grow on adenine-deficient medium and form red colonies on medium supplemented with a limiting amount of adenine, such as yeast extract-peptone-dextrose (YPD). ade mutants in the [PSI+] state, however, can grow on adenine-deficient medium and form white colonies, as they produce functional Ade1 or Ade2 by virtue of a nonsense mutation readthrough. To sustain propagation, all yeast prions need the disaggregation activity of Hsp104, which can be inhibited by guanidine hydrochloride (GuHCl) (9). Since yeast prions are cured by growth on guanidine-containing medium, prion phenotypes can easily be distinguished from chromosomal suppressor mutants.Sup35 (eRF3) of S. cerevisiae has a prion-determining N-terminal domain (N), a highly charged middle domain (M) that confers solubility on the molecule, and an essential C-terminal domain that binds guanine nucleotides and stimulates the polypeptide release reaction catalyzed by Sup45 (eRF1) (17, 29, 33). The de novo appearance of [PSI+] can be induced by overexpression of SUP35 or its prion domain-containing fragments (NM) (6). [PSI+] induction, however, can be achieved only in [RNQ+] cells that harbor the prion state of the Rnq1 protein (4, 19). Two hypotheses about how [RNQ+] can affect the appearance of [PSI+] have been suggested. One is an inhibitor titration model that postulates the molecules preventing the aggregation of Sup35 and the recruitment of these inhibitors to Rnq1 aggregates in [RNQ+] cells. The other is a cross-seeding model in which Rnq1 aggregates directly catalyze the polymerization of Sup35. In vitro cross-seeding between different amyloidogenic proteins was reported, and Rnq1 amyloid fiber can also act as a seed for Sup35 polymerization in vitro (7, 13). These in vitro data support the possibility of cross-seeding between Rnq1 and Sup35. However, because the milieu of cytoplasm is very different from that of a test tube, whether this cross-seeding really occurs in vivo is still obscure. For this study, we developed a new, robust [PSI+] induction method that confirms the cross-seeding events in the cytoplasmic environment.  相似文献   

6.
The molecular chaperone Hsp104 is not only a key component of the cellular machinery induced to disassemble aggregated proteins in stressed cells of Saccharomyces cerevisiae but also plays an essential role in the propagation of the [PSI+], [URE3], and [RNQ/PIN+] prions in this organism. Here we demonstrate that the fungal pathogen Candida albicans carries an 899-residue stress-inducible orthologue of Hsp104 (CaHsp104) that shows a high degree of amino acid identity to S. cerevisiae Hsp104 (ScHsp104). This identity is significantly lower in the N- and C-terminal regions implicated in substrate recognition and cofactor binding, respectively. CaHsp104 is able to provide all known functions of ScHsp104 in an S. cerevisiae hsp104 null mutant, i.e., tolerance to high-temperature stress, reactivation of heat-denatured proteins, and propagation of the [PSI+] prion. As also observed for ScHsp104, overexpression of CaHsp104 leads to a loss of the [PSI+] prion. However, unlike that of ScHsp104, CaHsp104 function is resistant to guanidine hydrochloride (GdnHCl), an inhibitor of the ATPase activity of this chaperone. These findings have implications both in terms of the mechanism of inhibition of Hsp104 by GdnHCl and in the evolution of the ability of fungal species to propagate prions.  相似文献   

7.
Epigenetically inherited aggregates of the yeast prion [PSI+] cause genomewide readthrough translation that sometimes increases evolvability in certain harsh environments. The effects of natural selection on modifiers of [PSI+] appearance have been the subject of much debate. It seems likely that [PSI+] would be at least mildly deleterious in most environments, but this may be counteracted by its evolvability properties on rare occasions. Indirect selection on modifiers of [PSI+] is predicted to depend primarily on the spontaneous [PSI+] appearance rate, but this critical parameter has not previously been adequately measured. Here we measure this epimutation rate accurately and precisely as 5.8 × 10−7 per generation, using a fluctuation test. We also determine that genetic “mimics” of [PSI+] account for up to 80% of all phenotypes involving general nonsense suppression. Using previously developed mathematical models, we can now infer that even in the absence of opportunities for adaptation, modifiers of [PSI+] are only weakly deleterious relative to genetic drift. If we assume that the spontaneous [PSI+] appearance rate is at its evolutionary optimum, then opportunities for adaptation are inferred to be rare, such that the [PSI+] system is favored only very weakly overall. But when we account for the observed increase in the [PSI+] appearance rate in response to stress, we infer much higher overall selection in favor of [PSI+] modifiers, suggesting that [PSI+]-forming ability may be a consequence of selection for evolvability.THE yeast phenotype [PSI+] is characterized by prion aggregates of the protein Sup35. Cells are in either a [psi−] (normal) or [PSI+] state, depending on the absence or presence of the prion aggregates (Figure 1, a and b). Sup35 prion aggregates replicate in a similar fashion to mammalian prions but are cytoplasmic and, as such, the prion state is cytoplasmically inherited (Wickner et al. 1995).Open in a separate windowFigure 1.—Comparison between the three possible modes ([PSI+], genetic mimic, point mutation revertant) of the expression of 3′-UTR sequences in yeast. (a) The normal [psi−] phenotypic state; (b) the [PSI+] prion causes readthrough and low-level expression of 3′-UTRs across multiple genes, appearing at rate mPSI; (c) a genetic mimic of [PSI+] such as the sal3-4 mutant of Sup35 (Eaglestone et al. 1999) appearing at rate mmimic not reversible by the application of guanidine hydrochloride; (d) a point mutation in a single stop codon at rate μpoint, leading to incorporation of formerly 3′-UTR into a single coding sequence. (e) [PSI+] can act as a “stop-gap” mechanism, buying a lineage more time to acquire one or more adaptive stop codon readthrough point mutations. When this genetic assimilation is complete, [PSI+] can revert to [psi−] (Masel and Bergman 2003; Griswold and Masel 2009).When not part of an aggregate, Sup35 helps mediate translation termination in yeast (Stansfield et al. 1995b; Zhouravleva et al. 1995). Sup35 molecules that are incorporated into nonfunctional prion aggregates are presumably not available for translation termination, which can lead to the translation of stop codons by near-cognate tRNAs (Figure 1b) (Tuite and Mclaughlin 1982; Pure et al. 1985; Lin et al. 1986). This partial loss of Sup35 function leads to an increased frequency of readthrough translation of 3′-untranslated regions (3′-UTR) across all genes (Figure 1b). This increase is modest in wild-type yeast, from an average readthrough rate of 0.3% in [psi−] cells up to 1% in [PSI+] cells (Firoozan et al. 1991). Some [PSI+] yeast strains grow faster than [psi−] controls in certain harsh environments, suggesting that readthrough translation of some 3′-UTRs may be adaptive in certain conditions (True and Lindquist 2000; Joseph and Kirkpatrick 2008). This directly shows that [PSI+]-mediated capacitance may increase evolvability in the laboratory. [PSI+]-mediated phenotypes have a complex genetic basis, involving multiple loci (True et al. 2004).As an epigenetically inherited protein aggregate, [PSI+] can easily be lost after some generations (Cox et al. 1980). This returns the lineage to its normal [psi−] state and restores translation fidelity. If a subset of revealed phenotypic variation is adaptive, it may have lost its dependence on [PSI+] by this time (True et al. 2004). This process of genetic assimilation may, for example, involve one or more point mutations in stop codons, increasing readthrough up to 100% (Figure 1e) (Griswold and Masel 2009). This leaves the yeast with a new adaptive trait and with no permanent load of other, deleterious variation.In general, stop codons can be lost either directly through point mutations or indirectly through upstream indels. This leads to novel coding sequence coming from in-frame and out-of-frame 3′-UTRs, respectively. [PSI+] is expected to facilitate only the former, while mutation bias favors the latter. Yeasts show a much higher ratio of in-frame to out-of-frame 3′-UTR incorporation events than mammals do (Giacomelli et al. 2007), confirming a role for [PSI+] in capacitance-mediated evolvability in natural populations.The adaptive evolution both of evolvability in general (Sniegowski and Murphy 2006; Lynch 2007; Pigliucci 2008) and of capacitance in particular (Dickinson and Seger 1999; Wagner et al. 1999; Partridge and Barton 2000; Brookfield 2001; Pal 2001; Meiklejohn and Hartl 2002; Ruden et al. 2003) is highly controversial. In general, any costs of evolvability are borne in the present, while the benefits lie in the future, making it difficult for natural selection to favor an evolvability allele. For example, mutation rates seem to be set according to a trade-off between metabolic cost (favoring higher mutation rates) and the avoidance of deleterious effects (favoring lower mutation rates) (Sniegowski et al. 2000). The fact that mutation creates variation, the ultimate source of evolvability, is merely a fortuitous consequence of the metabolic cost of fidelity.Previous theoretical population genetic studies have, however, suggested that modifier alleles promoting the formation of [PSI+] might, unlike mutator alleles, be favored for their evolvability properties (King and Masel 2007; Masel et al. 2007; Griswold and Masel 2009; Masel and Griswold 2009). These models depend, however, on a number of parameter estimates. In particular, a number of predictions depend on the spontaneous rate of [PSI+] formation (Masel and Griswold 2009).

[PSI+] appearance rates and the fluctuation test:

The most widely cited spontaneous appearance rate for [PSI+] is mPSI ∼ 10−7–10−5, on the basis of experiments by Lund and Cox (1981). This estimate was calculated as the proportion of colonies scored as [PSI+] after growth over multiple generations from a single founding [psi−] clone. If [PSI+] happens to appear in the first generation of growth, this leads to a “jackpot” event with only one switching event, but many [PSI+] colonies. The proportion of colonies scored as [PSI+] therefore yields a systematic overestimation of the [PSI+] appearance rate.Various implementations of the fluctuation test (Luria and Delbrück 1943) can address such effects. The mutation rate experiment is replicated many times using independent populations, and a Luria–Delbrück distribution is fitted to the results across all replicates. In a simulation study, Stewart (1994) examined a number of estimators of the underlying Luria–Delbrück distribution and found that the maximum-likelihood estimator performed the best.Originally developed to study mutation rates, the fluctuation test can also be used for estimating epimutation rates. Fluctuation tests have been used to estimate the rate of gene silencing in Chinese hamster ovary cells (Holliday and Ho 1998) and in the yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe (Singh and Klar 2002). However, fluctuation tests do not appear to be used routinely for epimutation rate estimates. For example, although the rates of spontaneous appearance and disappearance of [ISP+], a prion-like element in yeast, have been measured using the fluctuation test (Volkov et al. 2002), to the best of our knowledge there are no published estimates of the spontaneous rate of [PSI+] appearance as measured using a fluctuation test. Although results from the fluctuation test can be confounded by reverse epimutation, or back-switching, this is an issue only if the rate of back-switching is very high, e.g., 10−1–10−2 per generation (Saunders et al. 2003). This is not the case for [PSI+], for which the reverse epimutation rate (loss of [PSI+]) is <2 × 10−4 (Tank et al. 2007).

Other [PSI+]-like phenotypes, including genetic mimics:

[PSI+] causes partial loss of Sup35 function, leading to elevated rates of translational readthrough at all stop codons (Figure 1b). There are many other spontaneous changes, presumably mutations, that also lead to elevated translational readthrough (Lund and Cox 1981). Mutations that affect readthrough at all stop codons (Figure 1c) (sometimes called “[PSI+]-like”) can be considered as genetic “mimics” because they produce the same phenotype as the Sup35 aggregate, but are generally not epigenetically inherited. A specific example of such a genetic mimic was characterized by Eaglestone et al. (1999), who identified the sal3-4 point mutation in the SUP35 gene. This leads to a defect in the Sup35 protein structure rendering the termination process less efficient (Eaglestone et al. 1999). The sal3-4 mutant can therefore be considered a partial loss-of-function genetic mimic of [PSI+], since it generates the same readthrough phenotype. Translation termination could also potentially be impaired through other point mutations or deletions, for example, in either the SUP35 or the SUP45 gene (Stansfield et al. 1995a) or in a tRNA that mutates to recognize stop codons at a higher rate. The presence of genetic mimics, whose effects are less reversible than those of [PSI+], can affect the evolution of the evolvability properties of the [PSI+] system such as its epimutation rate (Lancaster and Masel 2009). Note that genetic mimics are quite different from much rarer point mutations that convert stop codons into coding sequence (Figure 1d), resulting in readthrough at a single gene rather than multiple genes.Here we performed experiments to obtain accurate and precise estimates of the baseline appearance rates of both [PSI+] and [PSI+]-like phenotypes in permissive laboratory conditions, excluding stop codon point mutations that affect only a single gene. Our estimates are superior to previous estimates, since we use the fluctuation test. We consider the consequences of these estimates for the evolution of the [PSI+] system.  相似文献   

8.

Background

The aggregation of the baker''s yeast prion Sup35p is at the origin of the transmissible [PSI+] trait. We and others have shown that molecular chaperones modulate Sup35p aggregation. However, other protein classes might be involved in [PSI+] formation.

Results

We designed a functional proteomic study that combines two techniques to identify modulators of Sup35p aggregation and describe the changes associated to [PSI+] formation. The first allows measuring the effect of fractionated Saccharomyces cerevisiae cytosolic extracts from [PSI+] and [psi] yeast cells on Sup35p assembly. The second is a multiplex qualitative and quantitative comparison of protein composition of active and inactive fractions using a gel-free and label-free LC-MS approach. We identify changes in proteins involved in translation, folding, degradation, oxido-reduction and metabolic processes.

Conclusion

Our functional proteomic study provides the first inventory list of over 300 proteins that directly or indirectly affect Sup35p aggregation and [PSI+] formation. Our results highlight the complexity of the cellular changes accompanying [PSI+] formation and pave the way for in vitro studies aimed to document the effect of individual and/or combinations of proteins identified here, susceptible of affecting Sup35p assembly.  相似文献   

9.
Prions are self-perpetuating aggregated proteins that are not limited to mammalian systems but also exist in lower eukaryotes including yeast. While much work has focused around chaperones involved in prion maintenance, including Hsp104, little is known about factors involved in the appearance of prions. De novo appearance of the [PSI +] prion, which is the aggregated form of the Sup35 protein, is dramatically enhanced by transient overexpression of SUP35 in the presence of the prion form of the Rnq1 protein, [PIN +]. When fused to GFP and overexpressed in [ps] [PIN +] cells, Sup35 forms fluorescent rings, and cells with these rings bud off [PSI +] daughters. We investigated the effects of over 400 gene deletions on this de novo induction of [PSI +]. Two classes of gene deletions were identified. Class I deletions (bug1Δ, bem1Δ, arf1Δ, and hog1Δ) reduced the efficiency of [PSI +] induction, but formed rings normally. Class II deletions (las17Δ, vps5Δ, and sac6Δ) inhibited both [PSI+] induction and ring formation. Furthermore, class II deletions reduced, while class I deletions enhanced, toxicity associated with the expanded glutamine repeats of the huntingtin protein exon 1 that causes Huntington''s disease. This suggests that prion formation and polyglutamine aggregation involve a multi-phase process that can be inhibited at different steps.  相似文献   

10.
Prions are self-propagating conformations of proteins that can cause heritable phenotypic traits. Most yeast prions contain glutamine (Q)/asparagine (N)-rich domains that facilitate the accumulation of the protein into amyloid-like aggregates. Efficient transmission of these infectious aggregates to daughter cells requires that chaperones, including Hsp104 and Sis1, continually sever the aggregates into smaller “seeds.” We previously identified 11 proteins with Q/N-rich domains that, when overproduced, facilitate the de novo aggregation of the Sup35 protein into the [PSI +] prion state. Here, we show that overexpression of many of the same 11 Q/N-rich proteins can also destabilize pre-existing [PSI +] or [URE3] prions. We explore in detail the events leading to the loss (curing) of [PSI+] by the overexpression of one of these proteins, the Q/N-rich domain of Pin4, which causes Sup35 aggregates to increase in size and decrease in transmissibility to daughter cells. We show that the Pin4 Q/N-rich domain sequesters Hsp104 and Sis1 chaperones away from the diffuse cytoplasmic pool. Thus, a mechanism by which heterologous Q/N-rich proteins impair prion propagation appears to be the loss of cytoplasmic Hsp104 and Sis1 available to sever [PSI +].  相似文献   

11.
We investigated the mechanisms of excitation-contraction (EC) coupling in human embryonic stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes (hESC-CMs) and fetal ventricular myocytes (hFVMs) using patch-clamp electrophysiology and confocal microscopy. We tested the hypothesis that Ca2+ influx via voltage-gated L-type Ca2+ channels activates Ca2+ release from the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) via a local control mechanism in hESC-CMs and hFVMs. Field-stimulated, whole-cell [Ca2+]i transients in hESC-CMs required Ca2+ entry through L-type Ca2+ channels, as evidenced by the elimination of such transients by either removal of extracellular Ca2+ or treatment with diltiazem, an L-type channel inhibitor. Ca2+ release from the SR also contributes to the [Ca2+]i transient in these cells, as evidenced by studies with drugs interfering with either SR Ca2+ release (i.e. ryanodine and caffeine) or reuptake (i.e. thapsigargin and cyclopiazonic acid). As in adult ventricular myocytes, membrane depolarization evoked large L-type Ca2+ currents (I Ca) and corresponding whole-cell [Ca2+]i transients in hESC-CMs and hFVMs, and the amplitude of both I Ca and the [Ca2+]i transients were finely graded by the magnitude of the depolarization. hESC-CMs exhibit a decreasing EC coupling gain with depolarization to more positive test potentials, “tail” [Ca2+]i transients upon repolarization from extremely positive test potentials, and co-localized ryanodine and sarcolemmal L-type Ca2+ channels, all findings that are consistent with the local control hypothesis. Finally, we recorded Ca2+ sparks in hESC-CMs and hFVMs. Collectively, these data support a model in which tight, local control of SR Ca2+ release by the I Ca during EC coupling develops early in human cardiomyocytes.  相似文献   

12.
Yeast prions are heritable amyloid aggregates of functional yeast proteins; their propagation to subsequent cell generations is dependent upon fragmentation of prion protein aggregates by molecular chaperone proteins. Mounting evidence indicates the J-protein Sis1 may act as an amyloid specificity factor, recognizing prion and other amyloid aggregates and enabling Ssa and Hsp104 to act in prion fragmentation. Chaperone interactions with prions, however, can be affected by variations in amyloid-core structure resulting in distinct prion variants or ‘strains’. Our genetic analysis revealed that Sis1 domain requirements by distinct variants of [PSI +] are strongly dependent upon overall variant stability. Notably, multiple strong [PSI +] variants can be maintained by a minimal construct of Sis1 consisting of only the J-domain and glycine/phenylalanine-rich (G/F) region that was previously shown to be sufficient for cell viability and [RNQ +] prion propagation. In contrast, weak [PSI +] variants are lost under the same conditions but maintained by the expression of an Sis1 construct that lacks only the G/F region and cannot support [RNQ +] propagation, revealing mutually exclusive requirements for Sis1 function between these two prions. Prion loss is not due to [PSI +]-dependent toxicity or dependent upon a particular yeast genetic background. These observations necessitate that Sis1 must have at least two distinct functional roles that individual prions differentially require for propagation and which are localized to the glycine-rich domains of the Sis1. Based on these distinctions, Sis1 plasmid-shuffling in a [PSI +]/[RNQ +] strain permitted J-protein-dependent prion selection for either prion. We also found that, despite an initial report to the contrary, the human homolog of Sis1, Hdj1, is capable of [PSI +] prion propagation in place of Sis1. This conservation of function is also prion-variant dependent, indicating that only one of the two Sis1-prion functions may have been maintained in eukaryotic chaperone evolution.  相似文献   

13.
ICRAC (the best characterized Ca2+ current activated by store depletion) was monitored concurrently for the first time with [Ca2+] changes in internal stores. To establish the quantitative and kinetic relationship between these two parameters, we have developed a novel means to clamp [Ca2+] within stores of intact cells at any level. The advantage of this approach, which is based on the membrane-permeant low-affinity Ca2+ chelator N,N,N′,N′-tetrakis (2-pyridylmethyl)ethylene diamine (TPEN), is that [Ca2+] within the ER can be lowered and restored to its original level within 10–15 s without modifications of Ca2+ pumps or release channels. Using these new tools, we demonstrate here that Ca2+ release–activated Ca2+ current (ICRAC) is activated (a) solely by reduction of free [Ca2+] within the ER and (b) by any measurable decrease in [Ca2+]ER. We also demonstrate that the intrinsic kinetics of inactivation are relatively slow and possibly dependent on soluble factors that are lost during the whole-cell recording.  相似文献   

14.
Although propagation of Saccharomyces cerevisiae prions requires Hsp104 protein disaggregating activity, overproducing Hsp104 “cures” cells of [PSI+] prions. Earlier evidence suggests that the Hsp70 mutant Ssa1-21 impairs [PSI+] by a related mechanism. Here, we confirm this link by finding that deletion of STI1 both suppresses Ssa1-21 impairment of [PSI+] and blocks Hsp104 curing of [PSI+]. Hsp104''s tetratricopeptide repeat (TPR) interaction motif was dispensable for curing; however, cells expressing Sti1 defective in Hsp70 or Hsp90 interaction cured less efficiently, and the Hsp90 inhibitor radicicol abolished curing, implying that Sti1 acts in curing through Hsp70 and Hsp90 interactions. Accordingly, strains lacking constitutive or inducible Hsp90 isoforms cured at reduced rates. We confirm an earlier finding that elevating free ubiquitin levels enhances curing, but it did not overcome inhibition of curing caused by Hsp90 defects, suggesting that Hsp90 machinery is important for the contribution of ubiquitin to curing. We also find curing associated with cell division. Our findings point to crucial roles of Hsp70, Sti1, and Hsp90 for efficient curing by overexpressed Hsp104 and provide evidence supporting the earlier suggestion that destruction of prions by protein disaggregation does not adequately explain the curing.Saccharomyces cerevisiae prions are self-replicating misfolded forms of normal cellular proteins. They are believed to propagate as amyloid, which is a highly ordered fibrous aggregate. What triggers prion formation is uncertain, but in order to be maintained in an expanding yeast population, prions must grow, replicate, and be transmitted to daughter cells during cell division. Growth occurs when soluble protein joins the fiber ends and is converted into the prion form (30, 52, 58). Replication is associated with fragmentation of prion polymers, which generates new prions from preexisting material (37, 50). Transmission is believed to occur by passive diffusion of prions with cytoplasm (57).Although it is uncertain to what extent cellular factors influence growth or transmission of prions, it is clear that the Hsp104 disaggregation machinery is necessary for prion replication (10, 17, 55, 70). Hsp104 is a hexameric AAA+ chaperone that protects cells from a variety of stresses by resolubilizing proteins from aggregates (24, 25, 53). With help from Hsp70 and Hsp40, it extracts monomers from aggregates and extrudes them through its central pore (24, 41, 68). This machinery could act in prion replication by extracting monomers from amyloid fibers (29, 68), which would destabilize the fibers, causing them to break into more numerous pieces that each can continue to propagate the prion.Paradoxically, overexpressing Hsp104 very efficiently “cures” cells of the [PSI+] prion, which is composed of the translation termination factor Sup35 (10). A widely held view of this curing is that elevating the cellular protein disaggregation activity causes complete destruction of prions. However, elevating Hsp104 has little or no effect on most other amyloidogenic prions (15, 16, 38, 47, 54, 66), although it can be inferred to cure [MCA] prions in cells also propagating a prion of an Mca1-Sup35 fusion (49). Together, these results suggest that prions of Sup35, and perhaps those of Mca1, are particularly sensitive to Hsp104 disaggregation activity. Alternatively, something in addition to or other than a simple increase in protein disaggregation is involved in the curing.Although protein disaggregation activity of Hsp104 is required for both thermotolerance and prion propagation, we and others have identified mutations in Hsp104 that affect these processes separately (27, 32, 39, 60). The ability of Hsp104 to thread proteins through its central pore, however, is required for both processes (29, 41, 68), so this distinction in Hsp104 function could be due to differences in how Hsp104 interacts with amorphous aggregates of thermally denatured proteins and highly ordered prion aggregates or with cofactors that interact with the different prions as substrates. In any scenario, efficiency and specificity of Hsp104 function are affected by interactions with other components of the disaggregation machinery, in particular the Hsp70s and Hsp40s, which are believed to interact first with substrates to facilitate action of Hsp100 family disaggregases (2, 71, 72).Increasing expression of either ubiquitin (Ub) or Ssb, an Hsp70 that has roles in protein translation and proteasome degradation, enhances Hsp104 curing of [PSI+] (3, 11, 12). Predictably, reducing expression of either of them reduces curing efficiency. The mechanisms underlying these effects are unknown, but the combined effects of Ssb and Ub are additive, suggesting that they act in different pathways. The role of Ub is indirect, as Sup35 is neither ubiquitylated nor degraded during curing. Whether other chaperones are involved in the effects of Ub on curing has not been investigated.Earlier we isolated a mutant of the Hsp70 Ssa1, designated Ssa1-21, that weakens and destabilizes [PSI+] propagation (33). We later isolated several Hsp104 mutants that suppress this antiprion effect (29). The Hsp104 mutants retain normal functions in thermotolerance, protein disaggregation, and prion propagation, but when overexpressed, they are unable to cure [PSI+], even in wild-type cells. These findings argue against a specific hypersensitivity of [PSI+] to disaggregation and support the notion that something distinct from or in addition to complete destruction of prions is involved in the curing. They also imply that Ssa1-21 and elevated Hsp104 inhibit [PSI+] prions by similar mechanisms. A prediction from this conclusion is that other suppressors of Ssa1-21 will also inhibit curing of [PSI+] by overexpressed Hsp104. Indeed, we find here that alterations that suppress Ssa1-21 inhibition of [PSI+] do interfere with curing of [PSI+] by overexpressed Hsp104. We also provide evidence that Hsp90 has a critical role in this curing and that the ability of Ub to enhance curing depends on proper function of Hsp90 machinery.  相似文献   

15.
Prions are proteins that can adopt different infectious conformations known as “strains” or “variants,” each with a distinct, epigenetically inheritable phenotype. Mechanisms by which prion variants are determined remain unclear. Here we use the Saccharomyces cerevisiae prion Rnq1p/[PIN+] as a model to investigate the effects of chaperone proteins upon prion variant determination. We show that deletion of specific chaperone genes alters [PIN+] variant phenotypes, including [PSI+] induction efficiency, Rnq1p aggregate morphology/size and variant dominance. Mating assays demonstrate that gene deletion-induced phenotypic changes are stably inherited in a non-Mendelian manner even after restoration of the deleted gene, confirming that they are due to a bona fide change in the [PIN+] variant. Together, our results demonstrate a role for chaperones in regulating the prion variant complement of a cell.  相似文献   

16.
Recent studies have shown that Sup35p prion fibrils probably have a parallel in-register β-structure. However, the part(s) of the N-domain critical for fibril formation and maintenance of the [PSI+] phenotype remains unclear. Here we designed a set of five SUP35 mutant alleles (sup35KK) with lysine substitutions in each of five N-domain repeats, and investigated their effect on infectivity and ability of corresponding proteins to aggregate and coaggregate with wild type Sup35p in the [PSI+] strain. Alleles sup35-M1 (Y46K/Q47K) and sup35-M2 (Q61K/Q62K) led to prion loss, whereas sup35-M3 (Q70K/Q71K), sup35-M4 (Q80K/Q81K), and sup35-M5 (Q89K/Q90K) were able to maintain the [PSI+] prion. This suggests that the critical part of the parallel in-register β-structure for the studied [PSI+] prion variant lies in the first 63–69 residues. Our study also reveals an unexpected interplay between the wild type Sup35p and proteins expressed from the sup35KK alleles during prionization. Both Sup35-M1p and Sup35-M2p coaggregated with Sup35p, but only sup35-M2 led to prion loss in a dominant manner. We suggest that in the fibrils, Sup35p can bind to Sup35-M1p in the same conformation, whereas Sup35-M2p only allowed the Sup35p conformation that leads to the non-heritable fold. Mutations sup35-M4 and sup35-M5 influence the structure of the prion forming region to a lesser extent, and can lead to the formation of new prion variants.  相似文献   

17.
[PIN+] is the prion form of Rnq1 in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and is necessary for the de novo induction of a second prion, [PSI+]. The function of Rnq1, however, is little understood. The limited availability of defective rnq1 alleles impedes the study of its structure-function relationship by genetic analysis. In this study, we isolated rnq1 mutants that are defective in the stable maintenance of the [PIN+] prion. Since there is no rnq1 phenotype available that is applicable to a direct selection or screening for loss-of-function rnq1 mutants, we took advantage of a prion inhibitory agent, Rnq1Δ100, to develop a color-based genetic screen. Rnq1Δ100 eliminates the [PSI+] prion in the [PIN+] state but not in the [pin] state. This allows us to find loss-of-[PIN+] rnq1 mutants as white [PSI+] colonies. Nine rnq1 mutants with single-amino-acid substitutions were defined. These mutations impaired the stable maintenance of [PIN+] and, as a consequence, were also partially defective in the de novo induction of [PSI+]. Interestingly, eight of the nine alleles were mapped to the N-terminal region of Rnq1, which is known as the non-prion domain preceding the asparagine and glutamine rich prion domain of Rnq1. Notably, overexpression of these rnq1 mutant proteins restored [PIN+] prion activity, suggesting that each of the rnq1 mutants was not completely inactive. These findings indicate that the N-terminal non-prion domain of Rnq1 harbors a potent activity to regulate the maintenance of the [PIN+] prion.Key words: Rnq1, [PIN+], Sup35, [PSI+], yeast prion  相似文献   

18.
Protein-only (prion) epigenetic elements confer unique phenotypes by adopting alternate conformations that specify new traits. Given the conformational flexibility of prion proteins, protein-only inheritance requires efficient self-replication of the underlying conformation. To explore the cellular regulation of conformational self-replication and its phenotypic effects, we analyzed genetic interactions between [PSI+], a prion form of the S. cerevisiae Sup35 protein (Sup35[PSI+]), and the three Nα-acetyltransferases, NatA, NatB, and NatC, which collectively modify ~50% of yeast proteins. Although prion propagation proceeds normally in the absence of NatB or NatC, the [PSI+] phenotype is reversed in strains lacking NatA. Despite this change in phenotype, [PSI+] NatA mutants continue to propagate heritable Sup35[PSI+]. This uncoupling of protein state and phenotype does not arise through a decrease in the number or activity of prion templates (propagons) or through an increase in soluble Sup35. Rather, NatA null strains are specifically impaired in establishing the translation termination defect that normally accompanies Sup35 incorporation into prion complexes. The NatA effect cannot be explained by the modification of known components of the [PSI+] prion cycle including Sup35; thus, novel acetylated cellular factors must act to establish and maintain the tight link between Sup35[PSI+] complexes and their phenotypic effects.  相似文献   

19.
The yeast prion [PSI+] represents an aggregated state of the translational release factor Sup35 (eRF3) and deprives termination complexes of functional Sup35, resulting in nonsense codon suppression. Protein-remodeling factor Hsp104 is involved in thermotolerance and [PSI+] propagation, however the structure-and-function relationship of Hsp104 for [PSI+] remains unclear. In this study, we engineered 58 chromosomal hsp104 mutants that affect residues considered structurally or functionally relevant to Hsp104 remodeling activity, yet most remain to be examined for their significance to [PSI+] in the same genetic background. Many of these hsp104 mutants were affected both in thermotolerance and [PSI+] propagation. However, nine mutants were impaired exclusively for [PSI+], while two mutants were impaired exclusively for thermotolerance. Mutations exclusively affecting [PSI+] are clustered around the lateral channel of the Hsp104 hexamer. These findings suggest that Hsp104 possesses shared as well as distinct remodeling activities for stress-induced protein aggregates and [PSI+] prion aggregates and that the lateral channel plays a role specific to [PSI+] prion propagation.Key Words: Hsp104, reverse genetics, hexamer, nonsense suppression, yeast prion [PSI+], thermotolerance  相似文献   

20.
Pollen tube growth is crucial for the delivery of sperm cells to the ovule during flowering plant reproduction. Previous in vitro imaging of Lilium longiflorum and Nicotiana tabacum has shown that growing pollen tubes exhibit a tip-focused Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]) gradient and regular oscillations of the cytosolic [Ca2+] ([Ca2+]cyt) in the tip region. Whether this [Ca2+] gradient and/or [Ca2+]cyt oscillations are present as the tube grows through the stigma (in vivo condition), however, is still not clear. We monitored [Ca2+]cyt dynamics in pollen tubes under various conditions using Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) and N. tabacum expressing yellow cameleon 3.60, a fluorescent calcium indicator with a large dynamic range. The tip-focused [Ca2+]cyt gradient was always observed in growing pollen tubes. Regular oscillations of the [Ca2+]cyt, however, were rarely identified in Arabidopsis or N. tabacum pollen tubes grown under the in vivo condition or in those placed in germination medium just after they had grown through a style (semi-in vivo condition). On the other hand, regular oscillations were observed in vitro in both growing and nongrowing pollen tubes, although the oscillation amplitude was 5-fold greater in the nongrowing pollen tubes compared with growing pollen tubes. These results suggested that a submicromolar [Ca2+]cyt in the tip region is essential for pollen tube growth, whereas a regular [Ca2+] oscillation is not. Next, we monitored [Ca2+] dynamics in the endoplasmic reticulum ([Ca2+]ER) in relation to Arabidopsis pollen tube growth using yellow cameleon 4.60, which has a lower affinity for Ca2+ compared with yellow cameleon 3.60. The [Ca2+]ER in pollen tubes grown under the semi-in vivo condition was between 100 and 500 μm. In addition, cyclopiazonic acid, an inhibitor of ER-type Ca2+-ATPases, inhibited growth and decreased the [Ca2+]ER. Our observations suggest that the ER serves as one of the Ca2+ stores in the pollen tube and cyclopiazonic acid-sensitive Ca2+-ATPases in the ER are required for pollen tube growth.In many flowering plants, a pollen grain that lands on the top surface of a stigma will hydrate and germinate a pollen tube. Following germination, the pollen tube enters the style and grows through the wall of transmitting tract cells on the way to the ovary, where the tube emerges to release the sperm for double fertilization. Therefore, pollen tube growth is essential for reproduction in flowering plants.Since Brewbaker and Kwack (1963) revealed that Ca2+ is essential for in vitro pollen tube cultures, the relationship between the Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]) and pollen tube growth has been further examined under in vitro germination culture conditions. Ratiometric ion imaging using fluorescent dye has revealed that the apical domain of a pollen tube grown in vitro contains a tip-focused [Ca2+] gradient (Pierson et al., 1994, 1996; Cheung and Wu, 2008) and that the cytoplasmic [Ca2+] ([Ca2+]cyt) in the tip region and the growth rate oscillate with the same periodicity (Pierson et al., 1996; Holdaway-Clarke et al., 1997; Messerli and Robinson, 1997). Therefore, oscillation of the [Ca2+]cyt has been thought to correlate with pollen tube growth. It is not clear, however, whether regular [Ca2+]cyt oscillations in the tip region occur in pollen tubes growing through stigmas and styles.The [Ca2+]cyt is controlled temporally and spatially by transporters in the membranes of intracellular compartments and in the plasma membrane (Sze et al., 2000). Studies using a Ca2+-sensitive vibrating electrode revealed Ca2+ influx in the tip region of the pollen tube (Pierson et al., 1994; Holdaway-Clarke et al., 1997; Franklin-Tong et al., 2002). Stretch-activated Ca2+ channels have been found in the plasma membrane using patch-clamp electrophysiology (Kuhtreiber and Jaffe, 1990; Dutta and Robinson, 2004). Recently, CNGC18 was identified as a Ca2+-permeable channel in the plasma membrane that is essential for pollen tube growth (Frietsch et al., 2007). The intracellular compartments that store Ca2+ in the pollen tube and the relevant Ca2+ transporters, however, have yet to be identified.Yellow cameleons are genetically encoded Ca2+ indicators that were developed to monitor the [Ca2+] in living cells (Miyawaki et al., 1997). These indicators are chimeric proteins consisting of enhanced cyan fluorescent protein (ECFP), calmodulin (CaM), a glycylglycine linker, the CaM-binding domain of myosin light chain kinase (M13), and enhanced yellow fluorescent protein (EYFP). When the CaM domain binds Ca2+, the domain associates with the M13 peptide and induces fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) between ECFP and EYFP. Several types of cameleons have been developed by tuning the CaM domain binding affinity for Ca2+. Yellow cameleon 2.1 (YC2.1) is a high-affinity indicator that has been used to monitor the [Ca2+]cyt in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) guard cells (Allen et al., 1999, 2000, 2001), Lilium longiflorum and Nicotiana tabacum pollen tubes (Watahiki et al., 2004), and the root hair of Medicago truncatula (Miwa et al., 2006). YC3.1 is a low-affinity indicator that has been used to monitor the [Ca2+]cyt during pollen germination and in papilla cells of Arabidopsis (Iwano et al., 2004).Recently, YC3.60 was developed as a new YC variant (Nagai et al., 2004), in which the acceptor fluorophore is a circularly permuted version of Venus rather than EYFP (Nagai et al., 2002). YC3.60 has a monophasic Ca2+ dependency with a dissociation constant (Kd) of 0.25 μm. Compared with YC3.1, YC3.60 is equally bright with a 5- to 6-fold larger dynamic range. Thus, YC3.60 results in a markedly enhanced signal-to-noise ratio, thereby enabling Ca2+ imaging experiments that were not possible with conventional YCs. On the other hand, YC4.60 was developed by mutating the Ca2+-binding loop of CaM in YC3.60. Because YC4.60 has a significantly lower Ca2+ affinity with a biphasic Ca2+ dependency (Kd: 58 nm and 14.4 μm), it allows changes in [Ca2+] dynamics to be detected against a high background [Ca2+] (Nagai et al., 2004).To examine whether the [Ca2+]cyt oscillates in pollen tubes growing through a stigma after pollination (in vivo condition), in those placed in germination medium immediately after passing through a style (semi-in vivo condition), or in those grown in germination medium (in vitro condition), we generated transgenic Arabidopsis and N. tabacum lines expressing the YC3.60 gene in their pollen grains and monitored Ca2+ dynamics in the pollen tube tip. We also examined how inhibitors of pollen tube growth affect Ca2+ dynamics in pollen tubes growing under the semi-in vivo condition. To examine Ca2+ dynamics in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), we generated transgenic Arabidopsis plants expressing YC4.60 in the pollen tube ER. The results are discussed in relation to the physiological relevance of [Ca2+] oscillations for pollen tube growth.  相似文献   

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