Previous Article | Next Article ![]()
Eukaryotic Cell, December 2004, p. 1574-1588, Vol. 3, No. 6
1535-9778/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/EC.3.6.1574-1588.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Junior Research Group, Growth-Control of Fungal Pathogens, Hans-Knöll Institute for Natural Products Research and Department of Microbiology, Friedrich-Schiller University, Hans-Knoell, Germany
Received 10 March 2004/ Accepted 30 August 2004
|
|
|---|
|
|
|---|
|
|
|---|
|
View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 1. Strains used in this study
|
|
View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 2. Oligonucleotide primers used in this study
|
-tubulin with green fluorescent protein (GFP), a PCR-based approach was applied. To this end, transformation cassettes were amplified from plasmids pFA-GFP-URA3 (for use in BWP17) or pFA-GFP-ARG4 (for use in GC3) with primers #692 and #693 for HHF1 and primers #694 and #695 for TUB1. With these primers, 100 bp of homology to two positions at the 3' ends of the target genes were added to PCR-amplified cassettes as described previously (7). The PCR fragments were then used to transform either BWP17 or the homozygous dyn1/dyn1 mutant strain GC3 to generate strains that contain heterozygous HHF1/HHF1-GFP or TUB1/TUB1-GFP alleles. Transformation of C. albicans. The lithium-acetate procedure was used to transform C. albicans as described previously (27). Basic features of this protocol include an overnight incubation with lithium-acetate followed by heat shock for 15 min at 44°C.
Staining procedures. For examination of nuclear positioning in the heterozygote mutants GC1 and GC2 and the TUB1-GFP-labeled strains, cells were stained with 4,6-diamino-2-phenylindol (DAPI; 1 mg/ml; Molecular Probes). For this staining, 200 µl of a cell suspension was fixed with 500 µl of 70% ethanol, and 1 µl of DAPI was added. After incubation for 2 min at room temperature, cells were analyzed by fluorescence microscopy. Chitin staining was done by directly adding 1 µl of calcofluor (1 mg/ml) to a 100-µl cell suspension followed by an incubation of 15 min at room temperature and a subsequent washing step. The positioning of septa is a valuable criterion to distinguish between true hyphae and pseudohyphae and was used to score the cell morphological defects of dyn1 strains (24). Additionally, septation in hyphae occurs without producing constrictions at the septal site, whereas in pseudohyphal cells invaginations at the sites of septation are found.
Time-lapse microscopy. Strains were grown to exponential phase either in complete or minimal medium, harvested, washed, and resuspended in sterile water. Small aliquots of cells (1.5 µl) were applied on microscopy slides with deep wells. Enrichment of media with oxygen and preparation of the media for microscopy were done as described previously (28). Temperature control was achieved via a heat stage mounted on the microscope table. Microscopy was done on a fully automated motorized Zeiss Axioplan II imaging microscope. Images were acquired by using Metamorph 4.6 software (Universal Imaging Corporation) and a digital imaging system (MicroMax1024; Princeton Instruments). For Hhf1-GFP, acquisition of images was done in 90-s intervals using 0.7-s exposure times and illumination transmission that was reduced to 5% by using appropriate neutral-density filters (Chroma Technology). Image acquisition into stacks was done via custom-designed software journals. Stacks containing brightfield/DIC (differential interference contrast) images were processed separately from images displaying GFP fluorescence. By using these conditions, nuclear dynamics of individual cells could be tracked for more than 10 h. A red look-up table was assigned to the phase-contrast images, and a green look-up table was assigned for the fluorescent images. Stacks were then combined by using overlay tools of the Metamorph software, converted to 8-bit format and processed as video clips with frame rates of 10 images/s.
|
|
|---|
![]() View larger version (27K): [in a new window] |
FIG.1. The C. albicans dynein heavy chain. (A) Schematic representation of the Dyn1 protein. The positions of the four ATP-binding sites (P-loops; P1, amino acids 1824 to 1832; P2, 2112 to 2119; P3, 2467 to 2474; and P4, 2809 to 2816) and the microtubule binding site (MTBS; amino acids 3151 to 3276) are indicated. Sequence alignment of the four P loops indicates identical P loops in P1 and P3 in the analyzed species, with greater divergence of P loops P2 and P4. Accession numbers of the protein sequences are the following: C. albicans CaDyn1p, orf19.5999.prot; S. cerevisiae ScDyn1p, NP_012980
[GenBank]
; A. gossypii AgDhc1p, AAK20175
[GenBank]
Drosophila melanogaster DmDyhc1p, P37276
[GenBank]
; human HsDyhc1p, Q14204
[GenBank]
. (B) Deletion of DYN1 via PCR-based gene targeting. Successive transformation of C. albicans strain BWP17 with PCR-amplified marker genes (FA-URA3 and FA-HIS1) that provide 100 bp of terminal target homology regions. In a first transformation independent, heterozygous DYN1/dyn1 strains were generated. From these strains independent homozygous dyn1/dyn1 mutant strains were derived in a second transformation event. Primer numbers (see Table 2) correspond to specific primers used for cassette amplification or PCR verification as indicated. (C) Ethidium-bromide-stained agarose gel image showing the result of diagnostic PCR that was used to verify the correct insertion of the marker genes at the target locus as described (7). The expected fragment lengths for fragments a to d were as shown in panel B.
|
Defects of dyn1 mutant strains during yeast growth phase. By using in vivo time-lapse microscopy, we monitored growth of the wild-type and dyn1 mutant strains over several generations (Fig. 2). Defects of the dyn1 strain were quantified by using movie data, and additional measurements were taken from yeast cells grown in complete medium (Table 3). One of the major defects is the prolonged cell cycle time of dyn1 mutants compared to that of the wild type, which increased by about 40 min. Cells of the wild type are ellipsoidal in shape, roughly 6 µm in length, and 4.5 µm in width. Cells of the heterozygous DYN1/dyn1 mutant are slightly elongated, whereas the dyn1 mutant cells are considerably longer than wild-type cells (Table 3). In addition, cell aggregates were formed in the homozygous dyn1 mutant strains, indicating cell separation defects. Because dynein is involved in nuclear distribution, we aimed at the visualization of nuclear movement in C. albicans in vivo. To this end we used strain BWP17 and generated a fusion of the histone H4 gene with GFP (see Materials and Methods). As expected, Hhf1p-GFP-derived fluorescence marked the nucleus (Fig. 3). With the strong signal intensity of the GFP label we were able to record time-lapse series to monitor nuclear movement in the progenitor strain (i.e., corresponding to the wild type) (Fig. 3).
![]() View larger version (75K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 2. In vivo time-lapse analyses of yeast phase growth of the wild-type (SC5314) and dyn1 (GC3) strains. Representative frames of movies of the wild-type (A) and dyn1 cells (B) are shown over a growth period of 6 h. Cell cycle times in the dyn1 mutant are longer than in the wild type, resulting in slower growth. Also, cell morphology of dyn1 yeast cells is more elongated than that in the wild type (see Table 3). Time is in hours:minutes. Bars, 10 µm. Movies are available at http://pinguin.biologie.uni-jena.de/phytopathologie/pathogenepilze/index.html.
|
|
View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 3. Comparison of wild-type and dyn1 yeast cells
|
![]() View larger version (41K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 3. In vivo fluorescence time-lapse analysis of Hhf1p-GFP in wild-type C. albicans. Representative frames of a movie with strain GC12. Cells were pregrown to exponential phase and were mounted on microscopy slides. Note the realignment of the elongated spindle in the interval between 2 h 13 min and 2 h 21 min, as indicated by arrows. Time is in hours:minutes. Bar, 10 µm. The movie is available at http://pinguin.biologie.uni-jena.de/phytopathologie/pathogenepilze/index.html.
|
|
View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 4. Nuclear migration in C. albicansa
|
![]() View larger version (65K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 4. In vivo fluorescence time-lapse analysis of Hhf1p-GFP in C. albicans dyn1. Representative frames of a movie with strain GC17. Cells were pregrown to exponential phase and were mounted on microscopy slides using the same conditions as those used for the time-lapse movie with strain GC12 (Fig. 3). Note the completion of mitosis in a mother cell and postmitotic nuclear migration between 41 and 44 min, as marked by the arrowheads. Time is in hours:minutes. Bar, 10 µm. The movie is available at http://pinguin.biologie.uni-jena.de/phytopathologie/pathogenepilze/index.html.
|
![]() View larger version (40K): [in a new window] |
FIG.5. Orientation of mitotic spindles in C. albicans. Spindle positions in strains GC6 (DYN1/DYN1 TUB1/TUB1-GFP) and GC8 (dyn1/dyn1 TUB1/TUB1-GFP) were analyzed by fluorescence microscopy. (A) Representative images of wild-type spindle positions in which the spindle is either aligned in the mother daughter axis and extends into the daughter (top row) or is elongated in the mother cell (bottom row). (B) Images of the spindle positions in dyn1 cells in which the spindle is either aligned in the mother daughter axis or is misaligned and elongated only in the mother cell. DIC images of cells were merged into an overlay with the images showing the GFP fluorescence. Bar, 10 µm. (C) Quantification (bars indicate the standard deviation of the mean) of spindle positioning in GC6 and GC8 (n = 130 for each strain) corresponding to the observed spindle positions in panels A and B.
|
![]() View larger version (114K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 6. Induction of hyphal growth in wild-type and mutant strains. Hypha formation on solid media was determined by plating the indicated strains on either (A) complete synthetic medium (CSM) containing 10% serum or (B) on Spider medium. All plates were incubated for 4 days at 37°C prior to photography. Note the abundant filamentation at the colony edges of both the wild type (SC5314) and heterozygous DYN1/dyn1 on both media; this filamentation is completely absent in the homozygous dyn1dyn1 mutant. Images representing magnifications of the colony edges were acquired via digital microscopy of the corresponding colonies.
|
![]() View larger version (121K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 7. In vivo time-lapse analyses of growth of wild-type and dyn1 mutant strains under hypha-inducing conditions. Representative frames of movies of wild-type (A) and Cadyn1 cells (B) are shown at the indicated time points. Cells were preincubated overnight in sterile water. Single cells were mounted on inducing solid CSM containing serum at 37°C. Time is in hours:minutes. Bars, 50 µm each. Movies are available at http://pinguin.biologie.uni-jena.de/phytopathologie/pathogenepilze/index.html.
|
|
View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 5. Analysis of polarized morphogenesis
|
|
View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 6. Position of septa in germ tubesa
|
![]() View larger version (49K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 8. Analysis of nuclear positioning in wild-type and dyn1 mutant strains. Cells were incubated for 10 h under hypha-inducing conditions (CSM in the presence of 0.5 g of proline/liter). DIC images and images showing the DAPI fluorescence of stained nuclei were merged into an overlay. Characteristic nuclear positioning in the wild type (A) shows elongated hyphae with regular nuclear spacing, septal intervals, and one nucleus in the apical compartment, whereas inducing conditions resulted in germ tube formation in the dyn1 mutant (B) in which nuclei were either trapped in the germ cell or did not migrate into the hyphal tip. (C) Hyphal induction using C. albicans strain CAT23 (MAL2p-DYN1:HIS1/dyn1::URA3) in maltose-containing medium shows wild-type-like nuclear positioning, whereas hyphal induction on CSM containing glucose (D) reveals the dyn1 mutant phenotype.
|
|
|
|---|
Functional analysis of CaDYN1: morphological defects. Rapid and efficient strain constructions were achieved by PCR-based gene targeting using 100 bp of target homology regions. C. albicans dyn1 mutant strains showed prolonged cell cycle times and a more elongated yeast cell shape than those of the wild type. The latter phenotype was accompanied by the generation of cell aggregates in the dyn1 strain that did not occur in the wild type; this activity was monitored by in vivo time-lapse microscopy. Under hypha-inducing conditions, vigorous filamentation occurred in the wild type, resulting in the formation of branched mycelia. C. albicans dyn1 strains failed to support hyphal growth both on solid and in liquid media. Germ tube formation was initiated in the dynein mutant with wild-type frequencies, but hyphal growth after application of inducing extracellular stimuli came to a halt and swollen cells were generated that failed to produce elongated hyphal filaments. The germ tubes appeared to be in the hyphal state, because septa were frequently placed within the germ tubes of the dyn1 mutant. Severe growth defects were also observed in dynein mutants of A. nidulans and A. gossypii. These were based either on a lack of nuclear migration into the hyphal tip in A. nidulans or on the trapping of nuclei in apical parts of hyphae in A. gossypii (2, 29).
Nuclear migration in the C. albicans wild type.
We used GFP-tagged histone H4 and
-tubulin to monitor nuclear migration in C. albicans. The Hhf1p-GFP label proved to be strong enough for in vivo time-lapse microscopy, whereas Tub1p-GFP was too weak and did not sustain cell viability after prolonged UV exposure to capture fluorescent images. Our Hhf1p-GFP in vivo time-lapse recordings were efficiently run over several hours, enabling us to follow several cell cycles. Compared to the nuclear migration phases that were discerned in S. cerevisiae, in C. albicans several key differences were evident: (i) nuclear movement to the bud site, as shown for S. cerevisiae (10, 32), was not that pronounced in C. albicans; (ii) oscillatory movements of elongated spindles upon insertion into the bud neck could not be observed in C. albicans; (iii) as a consequence of the low frequency of nuclear migration to the bud neck, we observed spindle elongation in a manner not coordinated with the mother bud axis, which then required realignment of elongated spindles with the mother-bud axis in the C. albicans wild type. This realignment of the spindle ensured that mitoses resulted in correct nuclear distribution between mother and daughter cells, as there were very few instances in the wild type in which mitosis was completed in a mother cell. Such a realignment of elongated spindles is a very infrequent event in S. cerevisiae (10). In baker's yeast, the nucleus is moved close to the bud neck early in G1/S phase via a Bim1p- and Kar9p-dependent search-and-capture mechanism that already ensures correct positioning of the spindle pole body with respect to the mother-daughter axis (11, 12, 17, 22, 30). Within the Candida genome sequence, open reading frames that encode potential homologs of S. cerevisiae Bim1p (orf19.00676.prot) and Kar9p (YPL269w) (orf19.05011.prot) proteins were identified which allow further analysis of a similar mechanism in C. albicans.
Nuclear migration in the C. albicans dyn1 mutant. The dyn1 mutant exhibited a failure to move the nucleus to the bud site. On the other hand, only those nuclei that obtained a position close to the bud neck exhibited spindle elongation in the mother-bud axis, which then also resulted in correct nuclear distribution between mother and daughter cells during mitosis. Two striking defects of dyn1 mutant yeast cells were the lack of any spindle realignment and the subsequent completion of mitosis in the mother cell in those cases were the spindle was not realigned (Fig. 9). As in S. cerevisiae, those C. albicans cells in which mitosis occurred in the mother cell still managed to distribute their nuclei evenly between mother and daughter cells. This is contrasted by U. maydis mutants deficient in dynein, in which mitosis aberrantly occurs in the mother cell but postmitotic nuclear migration is missing, resulting in lethality of the cells (23). Postmitotic nuclear migration in Cadyn1 yeast cells largely prevents the generation of binucleate cells. As in S. cerevisiae, this nuclear migration may be triggered by a Kip3p homolog in C. albicans (see below). Under hypha-inducing conditions, however, nuclear migration defects became more dramatic in C. albicans dyn1 cells. Mitotic divisions frequently took place in the dyn1 mother cells even though germ tubes were formed. Therefore, the C. albicans dyn1 defect resembles the nudA1 phenotype in A. nidulans, which refers to clusters of nuclei in the germ cell (29). In C. albicans as in A. nidulans, these clusters are located in the germ cells, whereas in A. gossypii dynein mutant nuclei accumulate at the hyphal tips (2). Mitosis that took place in dyn1 germ cells is in contrast to that of the C. albicans wild type, in which serum-induced cells predominantly undergo their first mitotic divisions in the germ tubes (24). Lack of long-range nuclear migration in dyn1 hyphae finally results in the breakdown of polarized hyphal growth in dyn1 cells (Fig. 9). Other microtubule-based motor proteins, for example, Kip2p and Kip3p, for which homologs exist in Candida, may be responsible for postmitotic nuclear migration in the dyn1 mutant during yeast-like growth but fail to achieve a nuclear distribution that can support hyphal development in C. albicans. This indicates a dependency of polarized hyphal growth on the faithful delivery of a nucleus in the case of C. albicans (or nuclei in the case of true filamentous ascomycetes, such as A. nidulans) to the tip compartment, even if establishment of polarized hyphal growth in ascomycetes may be solely a function carried out by the actin cytoskeleton (9). Efficient nuclear migration in S. cerevisiae is carried out by two partially redundant pathways centering on dynein and Kar9p (16). This is in line with the observation that deletion of KAR9 in S. cerevisiae is synthetically lethal with deletions in DYN1. Analyses of the C. albicans set of motor proteins with respect to their contribution to nuclear migration, particularly during the hyphal growth stage, need to be performed in the future.
![]() View larger version (31K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 9. Summary of nuclear migration defects in dyn1 compared to migration of the wild type (wt). During the yeast phase, spindle realignment with the mother-bud neck occurs frequently in the wild type but is absent in dyn1. In the dyn1 mutant, spindle elongation may occur in the mother-bud axis, resulting in correct nuclear migration, or else leads to mitosis in the mother cell. The generation of binucleate cells in dyn1 is prevented (with high frequency) by postmitotic nuclear migration delivering one nucleus into the daughter cell (see also Table 4). Hyphal growth in the wild type results in nuclear migration and in evenly distributed nuclei along the hyphal segments. In dyn1 cells induced for hyphal formation failure in nuclear migration leads to anucleate hyphal tips that cease growth and thus establish a filamentation defect.
|
This research was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, the Friedrich-Schiller University, and the Hans-Knöll Institute. Sequencing of Candida albicans was accomplished with the support of the NIDR and the Burroughs Wellcome Fund.
|
|
|---|
This article has been cited by other articles:
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Copyright © 2009 by the American Society for Microbiology. For an alternate route to Journals.ASM.org, visit: http://intl-journals.asm.org | More Info»