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Eukaryotic Cell, October 2004, p. 1176-1184, Vol. 3, No. 5
1535-9778/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/EC.3.5.1176-1184.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Howard Hughes Medical Institute,1 Department of Biochemistry and Cell Biology, Rice University, Houston, Texas,3 Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, University of Connecticut, Storrs, Connecticut2
Received 10 June 2004/ Accepted 23 July 2004
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20,000 cells. D. discoideum regulates group size by secreting and simultaneously sensing a multiprotein complex called counting factor (CF). If there are too many cells in a stream, the associated high concentration of CF will decrease cell-cell adhesion and increase cell motility, causing aggregation streams to break up. The pulses of cyclic AMP (cAMP) that mediate aggregation cause a transient translocation of Akt/protein kinase B (Akt/PKB) to the leading edge of the plasma membrane and a concomitant activation of the kinase activity, which in turn stimulates motility. We found that countin cells (which lack bioactive CF) and wild-type cells starved in the presence of anticountin antibodies (which block CF activity) showed a decreased level of cAMP-stimulated Akt/PKB membrane translocation and kinase activity compared to parental wild-type cells. Recombinant countin has the bioactivity of CF, and a 1-min treatment of cells with recombinant countin potentiated Akt/PKB translocation to membranes and Akt/PKB activity. Western blotting of total cell lysates indicated that countin does not affect the total level of Akt/PKB. Fluorescence microscopy of cells expressing an Akt/PKB pleckstrin homology domain-green fluorescent protein (PH-GFP) fusion protein indicated that recombinant countin and anti-countin antibodies do not obviously alter the distribution of Akt/PKB PH-GFP when it translocates to the membrane. Our data indicate that CF increases motility by potentiating the cAMP-stimulated activation and translocation of Akt/PKB. |
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20,000 cells. D. discoideum normally lives as individual amoebae that feed on bacteria on soil surfaces. When the cells overgrow their food supply, they use relayed pulses of extracellular cyclic AMP (cAMP) as a chemoattractant to aggregate in dendritic streams. The aggregated cells form a fruiting body consisting of a thin column of stalk cells supporting a mass of spore cells, and dispersal of the spores allows new colonies to form (28, 33). Because an excessively large fruiting body will collapse (5), the cells sense the number of cells in a stream and cause the stream to break into groups if there are too many cells in a stream (24, 29, 45).
The number of cells in a stream appears to be sensed by counting factor (CF), a
450-kDa complex of proteins (5). High extracellular levels of CF cause streams to break up and form smaller groups (3, 63). Disrupting the genes encoding either countin, CF45-1, or CF50, three components of CF, causes cells to secrete virtually undetectable levels of CF activity (5-7). The streams formed by developing countin, cf45-1, or cf50 cells do not break up, and as a result the streams coalesce into large groups which form large fruiting bodies that either collapse or fall over (5-7). Adding anti-countin antibodies to developing wild-type cells also causes cells to form larger groups (5). Adding recombinant countin or recombinant CF50 to developing cells mimics the effect of adding highly purified CF and causes cells to form smaller groups (6, 21). These data suggested that CF is part of a negative feedback loop that limits group size.
Computer simulations indicate that if the cell-cell adhesion in a stream is low and/or the random motility of the cells is high, the stream will begin to dissipate. If the adhesion then increases and/or the random motility decreases, the dissipated cells will coalesce into groups rather than reform a stream (42). We found that, as predicted, CF decreases cell-cell adhesion and also increases cell motility (42, 51). Wild-type cells starved in the presence of either countin conditioned starvation medium (CM) or anti-countin antibodies move more slowly than wild-type cells starved in wild-type CM, and wild-type cells starved in the presence of smlA (a transformant that oversecretes CF) CM or recombinant countin move faster than control cells (21, 51). It is important to note that the computer simulations predicted, and the observations verified, that CF causes small changes in motility rather than all-or-none changes in order to modulate stream breakup and thus regulate group size.
Motility in D. discoideum is mediated by actin-driven protrusion of the leading edge and by cell body translocation driven at least in part by myosin II-mediated contraction of the actin cortex in areas away from the leading edge (for review, see references 10, 17, and 35). Myosin heavy chain kinase is recruited to these new protrusions and phosphorylates myosin II in order to prevent minifilament assembly (2, 34, 43, 47). Cells which are morphologically polarized (for instance due to exposure to a cAMP gradient) have a clear cytoskeletal polarity, with actin-filled protrusions at the front and myosin II accumulation at the rear (12, 14, 36, 39). CF increases the percentage of polarized cells in a population and increases the amount of phosphorylated myosin II heavy chains; CF decreases the amount of polymerized myosin II without affecting total levels of myosin II (51). CF also increases the amount of F-actin in cells without affecting the total levels of actin (51). A 1-min exposure of cells to recombinant countin increases the levels of F-actin, increases myosin II heavy chain phosphorylation, and decreases the amount of polymerized myosin without affecting total levels of myosin II heavy chain (21).
Myosin II heavy chain phosphorylation and assembly are regulated by myosin II heavy chain kinases (13, 30). A kinase called PAKa regulates myosin II assembly, cell polarity, and cell motility via the myosin II heavy chain kinases (9, 10). PAKa is, in turn, phosphorylated and regulated by Akt/protein kinase B (Akt/PKB) (10). Akt/PKB binds to phosphatidylinositol 3,4,5-trisphosphate (PIP3) via a pleckstrin-homology (PH) domain (49). The pulses of cAMP that mediate chemotaxis activate phosphatidylinositol 3 (PI3) kinases that cause a transient appearance of phosphatidylinositol(3,4,5)P3 (PIP3) and phosphatidylinositol(3,4)P2 at the leading edge of cells; this in turn causes Akt/PKB to transiently bind to the leading edge of the cell and become activated by another two 3' phosphoinositide-regulated kinases named PDK1 and PDK2 (20, 25, 37). Another protein that binds to PIP3 at the leading edge of cells is PhdA (20). PhdA regulates the assembly of actin at the leading edge of cells (20), suggesting that the activation of PI3 kinase at the leading edge of cells causes both the disassembly of myosin and the appearance of an actin pseudopod at the leading edge. The pulses of cAMP that mediate chemotaxis activate a serpentine cAMP receptor, cAR1, which in turn activates a heterotrimeric G protein whose
subunit is G
2 (37). This in turn causes a transient activation of PI3 kinase (25).
CF regulates the pathway between cAMP stimulation and motility (51). CF does not appear to affect cAMP binding to cells, cAMP binding to membranes, the GTP
S-induced inhibition of cAMP binding to membranes, GTP binding to membranes, cAMP-stimulated GTP binding to membranes, or cAMP-stimulated membrane GTPase, suggesting that CF does not affect the cAMP receptor, the associated G proteins, or their interaction (50). Since CF does affect myosin phosphorylation, myosin assembly, cell polarity, and motility, we have examined whether CF regulates Akt/PKB, a key step in the pathway between the cAMP receptor and motility, and found that CF modulates the cAMP-induced translocation and activity of Akt/PKB.
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Cell culture. Cell culture and development of cells were done as previously described (5). GFP-CRAC/crac cells (a kind gift from Carole Parent) were cultured with 20 µg of G418 per ml. The preparation of CM and filter pad assays were performed as described elsewhere (6). Treatment of cells with 200 ng of recombinant countin per ml or 0.9 µg of affinity-purified anti-countin antibodies per ml followed the method of Gao et al. (21). Approximately once a week during the course of the experiments, we verified that countin cells, wild-type cells, and wild-type cells treated with anti-countin antibodies or recombinant countin formed normal aggregation territory sizes; that countin cells and wild-type cells treated with anti-countin antibodies formed large groups (less breakup of aggregation streams); and that wild-type cells treated with recombinant countin formed streams that broke into many small groups.
Akt/PKB activity assay.
Akt/PKB activity was measured according to the method of Meili et al. (37) with the following modifications: cells were starved in PBM (20 mM KH2PO4, 10 µM CaCl2, 1 mM MgCl2 [pH 6.1 with KOH]) in shaking culture (3) at a density of 5 x 106 cells/ml for 6 h without cAMP pulsing. Cells were then harvested by centrifugation and resuspended to a density of 3 x 107 cells/ml in PBM. A 200-µl sample was taken right before the cells were stimulated with cAMP, and the rest of the samples were taken at the indicated times after cAMP stimulation. Akt/PKB was immunoprecipitated with 1 µl of affinity-purified anti-Akt/PKB antibody (1.1 µg/µl). Akt/PKB kinase activity was assayed by incubating protein A beads (Roche, Indianapolis, Ind.) containing the immunocomplex with kinase buffer (37), [
-32P]ATP (NEN, Boston, Mass.) and histone H2B (Roche). The samples were separated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-15% polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-15% PAGE). The gel was then washed for 1 h with six changes of wash solution (5% trichloroacetic acid, 3% sodium pyrophosphate) and exposed to X-ray film to examine the extent to which the histone H2B was labeled with 32P.
Akt/PKB and CRAC translocation assay. The translocation of Akt/PKB or cytosolic regulator of adenylyl cyclase (CRAC)-GFP to membranes was performed by the method of Parent et al. (41) with the following modifications: log-phase vegetative cells were harvested by centrifugation, resuspended in PBM to a density of 5 x 106 cells/ml, and allowed to starve in shaking culture for 6 h without exogenous pulses of cAMP, and the subsequent caffeine treatment was omitted. The cells were then harvested and resuspended to a density of 8 x 107 cells/ml in PM (41). A 200-µl sample was taken before the cells were stimulated with cAMP, mixed with an equal volume of lysis buffer (20 mM Tris-Cl [pH 8.0], 2 mM MgSO4), and lysed by filtration through a 5-µm-pore-size Cameo 17N nylon syringe filter (Osmonics, Minnetonka, Minn.) into a 1.5-ml Eppendorf tube containing 1 ml of ice-cold PM buffer. Microscopic examination of the filter-lysed cells indicated that less than 0.1% were not lysed, and this percentage was not affected by the cell strain used or the presence of recombinant countin or anti-countin antibodies. The rest of the samples were taken at the indicated times after cAMP stimulation and were similarly lysed. Membranes were collected by centrifugation for 4 min at 15,000 x g. Each pellet was dissolved in 60 µl of SDS sample buffer, and 15 µl of each sample was separated by SDS-7.5% PAGE and then blotted onto Immobilon-P membranes (Millipore, Bedford, Mass.). Western blotting was done by using an ECL Western blotting system following the manufacturer's directions (Amersham Biosciences, Piscataway, N.J.). The level of Akt/PKB translocation to membranes was assayed by staining the blotted membrane with 0.5 µg of affinity-purified anti-Akt/PKB antibodies per ml. CRAC-GFP/crac cells were used for the CRAC PH domain translocation assay and Western blots were stained with 1:10,000 anti-GFP antibodies.
Visualization of Akt/PKB PH-GFP translocation. Ax4 parental cells were electroporated according to the method of Pang et al. (40) with a vector in which expression of an AKT/PKB PH domain-GFP fusion protein is under control of the actin 15 promoter (37). The cells were selected for resistance to 10 µg of G418 per ml, and then fluorescent cells were selected by flow cytometry by using a FACScalibur (Becton Dickson Inc., Mountain View, Calif.). For visualization of Akt/PKB PH-GFP localization during pulsatile cAMP signaling, the cells were imaged by using an under-agarose development assay. Cells were harvested during vegetative growth, washed twice with MCPB buffer (10 mM Na2HPO4, 10 mM KH2PO4, 2 mM MgCl2, 0.2 mM CaCl2 [pH 6.5]) and resuspended in MCPB, and 2 ml of a 1:10 mixture of Akt/PKB PH-GFP cells and Ax2 cells at a final density of 106 cells/ml was plated into each of three 30-mm glass-bottom petri dishes (Willco Wells, Amsterdam, The Netherlands). In a second set of three dishes, an agarose gel was poured consisting of 2 ml of 1.5% DNA-grade agarose (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, Calif.) dissolved in MCPB plus either no addition, 2 µl of recombinant countin (at a concentration of 0.2 mg/ml), or 5 µl of affinity-purified anti-countin antibodies (at a concentration of 0.9 mg/ml). The recombinant countin and anti-countin antibodies were added just before the cooled agarose was added to the dish. Once the cells had attached to the first set of dishes, the buffer was removed, and the agarose gels were transferred to overlay the cells. The agarose flattens the aggregation streams so that the cAMP wave response is essentially two dimensional, making it much easier to visualize cell movement. The dishes were then incubated in a humid box until aggregation streams formed (6 to 10 h). Imaging was performed on a Leica SP2 laser scanning confocal microscope with a 488-nm argon laser line. Images were captured every 10 s in an area of broad flat aggregation streams by using a 100x objective with a numerical aperture of 1.4. For each treatment, data were collected for multiple pulses in the same region and in multiple regions. All data were collected with the same laser power and photomultiplier tube gain settings. Images were processed and analyzed by using ImageJ (developed at the National Institutes of Health and available on the Internet at http://rsb.info.nih.gov/imagej).
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FIG. 1. Countin potentiates cAMP-stimulated Akt/PKB activity. (A) Anti-countin antibodies decrease Akt/PKB activity. Ax4 cells were starved in the absence (control) or in the presence (4 h) of anti-countin antibodies. After 6 h of starvation, the cells were collected, stimulated with cAMP, and lysed at the indicated times after stimulation. Akt/PKB was immunoprecipitated from the NP-40-soluble fraction with anti-Akt/PKB antibodies, and Akt/PKB kinase activity was assayed by using [ -32P]ATP and histone H2B as substrates. The samples were then subjected to SDS-PAGE, and the gel was exposed to X-ray film. The heavy band is phosphorylated histone H2B. The autoradiograms were scanned, and the integrated density in each band was calculated. All of the densities, including the time zero experimental value, were normalized to the time zero control value, which was set to 1. The graph shows the means ± standard errors of the means from three separate experiments. The difference at 20 s was significant (P < 0.01; t test). (B) cAMP-stimulated Akt/PKB activity is decreased in countin cells. Akt/PKB activities were examined in 6-h-starved countin cells and parental Ax4 cells (WT). Cells were stimulated with cAMP and processed as described for panel A. The graph shows data normalized as for panel A from three separate experiments. The difference at 20 s was significant (P < 0.05; t test). (C) Recombinant countin increases Akt/PKB activity. Ax4 cells were starved and exposed to 200 ng of recombinant countin per ml for 4 h, 1 min, or never (control) prior to harvesting at 6 h. Cells were stimulated with cAMP and assayed for Akt/PKB activity as described for panel A. The graph shows data normalized as for panel A from four separate experiments. The differences between control and either countin treatment at 10 s were significant (P < 0.01; t tests).
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FIG. 2. Countin does not affect the level of Akt/PKB protein during development. (A) Vegetative and 6-h-starved Ax4 and countin cells were collected, and Western blots of the total cell lysates were stained with anti-Akt/PKB antibodies. The results are representative of three independent experiments. (B) Western blots of total cell lysates from cells treated without (control) or with anti-countin antibodies were stained with anti-Akt/PKB antibodies. (C) Western blots of the NP-40-soluble fractions of the cell lysates were stained with anti-Akt/PKB antibodies. The difference in band intensities compared to bands shown in panel B is due to a difference in the exposure of the X-ray film to the chemiluminescence-stained Western blot.
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FIG. 3. Countin potentiates the cAMP-stimulated translocation of Akt/PKB to membranes. (A) Anti-countin antibodies inhibit Akt/PKB translocation to the membrane. Ax4 cells were developed in the presence or absence of anti-countin antibodies, collected at 6 h, and stimulated with cAMP, and then aliquots of cells were filter lysed at the indicated times after stimulation. The membrane fraction was collected and isolated by SDS-PAGE. Western blots stained with anti-Akt/PKB antibodies are shown. The graph shows densitometry of the X-ray films normalized as described for Fig. 1 from four separate experiments. The difference at 5 s was significant (P < 0.05; t test). (B) countin cells have a reduced Akt/PKB translocation. Akt/PKB translocation to membranes was examined in 6-h-starved countin cells and parental Ax4 cells (WT). Cells were stimulated with cAMP and processed as described for panel A. The graph shows data normalized as for panel A from four separate experiments. The difference at 5 s was significant (P < 0.01; t test). (C) A 1-min exposure of cells to recombinant countin potentiates Akt/PKB translocation to the membrane. After 6 h of starvation, Ax4 cells were exposed to 200 ng of recombinant countin per ml for 1 min, and then cells were stimulated by cAMP. Samples were treated as above, and Western blots were stained with anti-Akt/PKB antibodies. The graph shows data normalized as described for panel A from four separate experiments. The difference at 5 s was significant (P < 0.05; t test).
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FIG. 4. Countin enhances cAMP-stimulated GFP-CRAC binding to membranes. (A) Treatment of cells with anti-countin antibodies inhibits CRAC translocation to the membrane. CRAC-GFP/crac cells were treated as described in the legend of Fig. 3A, and Western blots were stained with anti-GFP antibodies. The graph shows data normalized as described for Fig. 3 from three separate experiments. The difference at 5 s was significant (P < 0.05; t test). (B) A 1-min treatment of cells with recombinant countin enhances cAMP-stimulated CRAC-GFP binding to membranes. CRAC-GFP/crac cells were treated as described in the legend of Fig. 3C, and Western blots of the membranes were stained with anti-GFP antibodies. The graph shows data normalized as described for panel A from three separate experiments. The difference at 5 s was significant (P < 0.05; t test).
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CF appears to enhance both the translocation and the total activity of Akt/PKB. Since the first step of the Akt/PKB activation is membrane translocation (1, 18), it is possible that the increased translocation caused by CF leads to the observed increase in Akt/PKB activity. Both the translocation and the activity of Akt/PKB are potentiated by a 1-min treatment of cells with recombinant countin, and we previously observed that a 1-min treatment of cells with recombinant countin increases actin polymerization and myosin heavy chain phosphorylation and decreases myosin heavy chain polymerization (21). Since Akt/PKB is upstream of myosin in the cAMP-motility signal transduction pathway (8), our working hypothesis is that Akt/PKB is part of the fast signal transduction pathway whereby CF modulates the effect of cAMP on cell motility.
It has previously been observed that a 1-min exposure of cells to purified CF increases the cAMP-stimulated cAMP pulse (50) and a 1-min exposure of cells to recombinant countin increases GTP
S-stimulated adenylyl cyclase activity without affecting the basal activity or the Mn2+-stimulated activity (21). CRAC translocation to membranes is required for the GTP
S stimulation of adenylyl cyclase activity (31). A 1-min treatment of cells with recombinant countin causes a small increase in the translocation of CRAC to membranes, so one possibility is that CF regulates GTP
S stimulation of adenylyl cyclase activity by regulating CRAC translocation. We observed a smaller percent increase in CRAC translocation than was observed by Parent et al. (41). This may be due to differences in how the cells were treated, since we starved vegetative cells that were at a density of 2 x106 cells/ml while Parent et al. used cells that were at a density of 5 x 106 cells/ml; we starved cells for 6 h in PBM at a density of 107 cells/ml without exogenous cAMP pulses or a caffeine treatment while Parent et al. starved cells in DB (5 mM Na2HPO4, 5 mM KH2PO4, 2 mM MgSO4, 0.2 mM CaCl2) at a density of 2 x 107 cells/ml with exogenous cAMP pulses and with a caffeine treatment. Using confocal microscopy of cells expressing GFP-CRAC to assay translocation, our laboratory previously reported that CF did not appear to affect cAMP-induced CRAC translocation (50). We observed here by using cell fractionation that although there is a quantitative change in the translocation of CRAC in the presence of anti-countin antibodies or recombinant countin, the changes are relatively small, and we doubt that we would have been able to see these changes by using imaging of cells expressing CRAC-GFP. We thus conclude that a previous report by our laboratory that CF does not affect CRAC translocation was incorrect.
Since CF appears to regulate both CRAC and Akt/PKB translocation, this suggests that CF either regulates the translocation of the two proteins independently or through a common mechanism. Both proteins bind to PIP3 on membranes (15, 16, 31, 37, 41, 48, 52, 53). If there is a common mechanism, a good candidate for regulation by CF would be the appearance of PIP3 on membranes. Each pulse of cAMP causes a transient translocation to and activation of PI3 kinase at the leading edge of cells (19, 25, 38) and a transient removal of the PI3 phosphatase PTEN from the leading edge of cells (11, 19, 26), and so one possibility is that the CF signal (which changes relatively slowly with time) modulates the relatively rapid pulsatile activity and/or translocation of PI3 kinase and/or PTEN.
We found that CF does not have an obvious effect on the area of the plasma membrane that the Akt/PKB PH domain localizes to. This localization is due to the binding of Akt/PKB to PIP3 (25, 37, 49). Disruption of the PI3 phosphatase PTEN leads to cells that show an abnormally broad region of Akt/PKB PH-GFP localization (26). However, the pi3k1/2 (cells lacking the two PI3 kinases that appear to be regulated by pulses of cAMP) and pten cells do not aggregate. This is in contrast to smlA cells and cells treated with recombinant countin, recombinant CF45-1, recombinant CF50, or combinations of these proteins, where in all cases examined the cells do aggregate (4, 6, 7, 21). Thus, if CF does regulate Akt/PKB translocation and activation by regulating either PI3 kinase or PTEN, there is likely to be CF-independent basal and cAMP-regulated activity.
The cAMP-stimulated activation of PI3 kinase and, thus, the translocation and activation of Akt/PKB require the presence of the cAMP receptor-activated G protein components G
2 and Gß, as well as the starvation response kinase YakA (25). The cAR1 cAMP receptor, G
2, Gß, the Ras subfamily protein RasC, and the Ras guanine exchange factor AleA are also required for Akt/PKB activation (32, 37). CF does not appear to affect the cAR2 cAMP receptor or its interaction with G proteins (50). Thus, possible candidates in the cAMP to motility pathway that might mediate the regulation of myosin II polymerization and assembly by CF would include Akt/PKB itself, one or more of the PI3 kinases, PTEN, YakA, RasC, and AleA. Our working hypothesis is, thus, that by modulating the activity of a preexisting pathway that mediates chemotaxis, a secreted factor is able to regulate group size in D. discoideum.
R.H.G. is an Investigator of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. This work was supported by grant C-1555 from the Robert A. Welch Foundation. D.A.K. was supported by a grant from the National Institutes of Health (GM40599).
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