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First published online May 16, 2007
doi: 10.1242/10.1242/dev.02848
1 Istituto Pasteur-Fondazione Cenci Bolognetti and Istituto di Biologia e
Patologia Molecolari del CNR, Dipartimento di Genetica e Biologia Molecolare,
Università di Roma "La Sapienza", P.le A. Moro 5, 00185
Roma, Italy.
2 Department of Molecular Biology and Genetics, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY
14853-2703, USA.
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: maurizio.gatti{at}uniroma1.it)
Accepted 12 March 2007
| SUMMARY |
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i localization nor spindle rotation.
Most aspects of the dlkb1 phenotype are exacerbated in dlkb1
pins double mutants, which exhibit more severe defects than those
observed in either single mutant. This suggests that Dlkb1 and Pins act in
partially redundant pathways to control the asymmetry of NB divisions. Our
results also indicate that Dlkb1 and Pins function in parallel pathways
controlling the stability of spindle microtubules. The finding that Dlkb1
mediates both the geometry of stem cell division and chromosome segregation
provides novel insight into the mechanisms underlying tumor formation in
Peutz-Jeghers patients.
Key words: Lkb1, Neuroblasts, Asymmetric division, Spindle formation, Drosophila
| INTRODUCTION |
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The asymmetric division of Drosophila NBs is regulated by several
proteins that concentrate at the cell cortex. The basal cortex is enriched in
the cell fate determinants Prospero (Pros) and Numb, as well as in their
respective adaptor proteins Miranda (Mira) and Partner of Numb (Pon). These
proteins are preferentially segregated into the GMC following NB cytokinesis.
Localization of Pros-Mira and Numb-Pon at the basal cortex is mediated by a
large multiprotein complex that concentrates at the apical cortex. This
complex includes two functionally distinct subcomplexes. One of them contains
Bazooka (Baz; PAR-3 in C. elegans), aPKC (Drosophila
atypical protein kinase C, DaPKC) and Par-6; this assembly is hereafter
referred to as the Baz/Par-6 subcomplex. The other subcomplex includes the
G
i subunit of the heterotrimeric G-protein complex and Partner of
inscuteable (Pins; Raps - Flybase), and is hereafter referred to as the
Pins/G
i subcomplex. The Baz/Par-6 and Pins/G
i subcomplexes are
integrated in a larger apical complex by the Inscuteable (Insc) protein that
binds both Pins and Baz (reviewed by
Betschinger and Knoblich, 2004
;
Wodarz, 2005
).
Recent genetic analyses have shown that the Baz/Par-6 subcomplex is mainly
involved in the control of proper basal localization of Pros/Mira and
Numb/Pon. The Pins/G
i subcomplex is instead required for spindle
orientation during NB divisions. Both complexes, however, cooperate in
controlling cleavage furrow positioning during asymmetric NB divisions.
Mutations that disrupt either the Baz/Par-6 or the Pins/G
i pathway have
little or no effect on asymmetric cytokinesis. However, mutations that disrupt
both pathways completely abrogate spindle displacement during telophase,
leading to symmetric cytokinesis (Cai et
al., 2003
; Izumi et al.,
2004
; Shaefer et al., 2000; Yu
et al., 2000
; Yu et al.,
2003
).
In this study, we have addressed the role of Drosophila Lkb1
(Dlkb1), the homolog of LKB1 kinase (STK11 - Human Gene Nomenclature Database)
in NB division. LKB1 kinase is mutated in the Peutz-Jeghers syndrome, an
autosomal dominantly inherited disorder characterized by the formation of
intestinal polyps and a high incidence of various cancer types. Somatic
mutations in the LKB1 gene have also been detected in sporadic
adenocarcinomas (reviewed by Alessi et al.,
2006
; Baas et al.,
2004b
). There is evidence that LKB1 plays a conserved role in the
control of cell polarity. Recent work has unambiguously shown that activation
of LKB1 leads to rapid and complete polarization of human intestinal
epithelial cells (Baas et al.,
2004a
). Similarly, PAR-4, the C. elegans homolog of LKB1,
is required for correct polarity and asymmetric division of one-cell embryos
(Watts et al., 2000
).
Furthermore, Dlkb1 mediates determination of anterior/posterior polarity of
egg chambers and embryos, as well as the proper polarity of follicle cells
(Martin and St Johnston,
2003
). Here, we demonstrate that Dlkb1 controls many asymmetries
that characterize the mitotic division of larval NBs. dlkb1 mutations
also disrupt mitotic spindle assembly, leading to the frequent formation of
polyploid cells. Thus, in addition to cell polarity and the geometry of cell
division, Dlkb1 directly or indirectly regulates the stability of spindle
microtubules (MTs).
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Antibodies and immunoblotting
The anti-Dlkb1 antibody was generated in guinea pig using a maltose-binding
protein (MBP)/Dlkb1 fusion protein. Expression of the fused protein in
Escherichia coli and the production and purification of antibodies
against this fusion were according to Vernì et al.
(Vernì et al., 2004
).
Immunoblotting was performed as previously described
(Vernì et al., 2004
);
the anti-Dlkb1, anti-Pins and anti-Giotto
(Giansanti et al., 2006
)
antibodies were diluted 1:2000, 1:1000 and 1:5000, respectively.
Cytology
Brains from third instar larvae were dissected and fixed according to
Bonaccorsi et al. (Bonaccorsi et al.,
2000
). After several rinses in PBS, brain preparations were
incubated overnight at 4°C with a monoclonal anti-
-tubulin antibody
(Sigma-Aldrich), diluted 1:1000 in PBS-T (PBS with 0.1% Triton X-100), and any
of the following rabbit antibodies, also diluted in PBS-T: anti-Centrosomin
(1:300; gift of T. Kaufman, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN, USA),
anti-Deadpan (1:400; gift of Y. Jan, Howard Hughes Medical Institute,
University of California, CA, USA), anti-Mira (1:500; gift of Y. Jan),
anti-Bazooka (1:50; gift of F. Matsuzaki, Japan Science and Technology
Corporation, Kobe, Japan); anti-G
i (1:200; gift of J. Knoblich,
Austrian Academy of Sciences, Vienna, Austria); anti-Par-6 (1:1000; gift of J.
Knoblich); anti-DaPKC (1:100; Santa Cruz Biotechnology) and anti-Mud (1:200;
gift of F. Matsuzaki). After two rinses in PBS, primary antibodies were
detected by a 1-hour incubation at room temperature with FITC-conjugated
anti-mouse IgG+IgM (1:20; Jackson Laboratories) and Alexa 555-conjugated
anti-rabbit IgG (1:300; Molecular Probes), diluted in PBS.
For double Centrosomin/Pins immunostaining, brains were incubated overnight at 4°C with the rabbit anti-Centrosomin antibody (1:300) and a rat anti-Pins antibody (1:100; gift of W. Chia, The National University of Singapore, Singapore) diluted in PBS-T. Detection was performed by 1-hour incubation at room temperature with Alexa 555-conjugated anti-rabbit IgG (Molecular Probes) and FITC-conjugated anti-rat IgG (Jackson Laboratories) diluted 1:300 and 1:20 in PBS, respectively.
For Dlkb1 immunostaining, brain preparations were incubated overnight at 4°C with the anti-Dlkb1 antibody (1:100 in PBS-T) and, after rinsing in PBS, were incubated 1 hour at room temperature with Alexa 555-conjugated anti-guinea pig IgG diluted 1:500 in PBS.
In all cases, immunostained preparations were mounted in Vectashield medium H-1200 (Vector Laboratories) containing the DNA-dye DAPI (4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole). Preparations were examined with a Zeiss Axioplan microscope, equipped with an HBO100W mercury lamp and a cooled charged-coupled device (CCD camera; Photometrics CoolSnap HQ). Grayscale images were collected separately, converted to Photoshop (Adobe Systems), pseudocolored and merged.
Spindle measurements were taken on enlarged digital images and scaled down to their size in µm. In preparations stained for Centrosomin, measurements were taken from centrosome-to-centrosome. In the absence of Centrosomin staining, measurements were taken from pole-to-pole in anastral spindles; in the presence of asters, measurements were taken from the center of the astral MT array.
| RESULTS |
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Mutations in the dlkb1 gene affect spindle formation
Drosophila brains contain mostly two types of dividing cells: NBs
and GMCs (Goodman and Doe,
1993
). Wild-type larval NBs are characterized by many asymmetries
that develop during the course of mitosis. Prometaphases and metaphases of
larval NBs exhibit centrosomes and asters of similar sizes at the two cell
poles. However, as NBs progress through anaphase and telophase, the MTs of the
basal aster shorten dramatically, whereas those of the apical asters elongate
slightly (Fig. 1B).
Concomitantly, the basal centrosome becomes smaller than the apical one
(Bonaccorsi et al., 2000
) (see
Fig. 4A below). These changes
in aster and centrosome morphology are accompanied by a progressive
displacement of the central spindle towards the basal pole, resulting in
unequal cytokinesis (Giansanti et al.,
2001
). GMCs display equally sized centrosomes and very small
asters throughout mitosis, and divide symmetrically
(Fig. 1B)
(Bonaccorsi et al., 2000
).
To determine the mitotic defect leading to polyploid cell formation in dlkb1 mutants, we examined larval brain preparations from dlkb1315/dlkb1315, dlkb1315/Df(3R)urd and dlkb1315/dlkb17 larvae stained for both tubulin and DNA. These mutant combinations showed identical mitotic aberrations. Most strikingly, mutant spindles showed an overall MT density substantially lower than that seen in wild-type spindles (Fig. 1B). In approximately 80% of mutant spindles, asters were absent or severely reduced; in control brains, the frequency of spindles without asters, or with very small asters, was 49% (Fig. 1B; Table 1). In addition, most mutant prometaphase and metaphase figures were characterized by low densities of both kinetochore and interpolar MTs, and ana-telophases displayed central spindles thinner than their wild-type counterparts (Fig. 1B and Fig. 3D below). Mutant brains also showed an increase in the relative frequency of metaphase figures with respect to wild type, suggesting that dlkb1 mutations lengthen metaphase duration (Table 1). Finally, mutant brains displayed approximately 20% polyploid cells (not shown); in wild-type brains, the frequency of polyploid cells was virtually zero (Table 1). The phenotype of dlkb1315 homozygotes was qualitatively and quantitatively similar to that observed in dlkb1315/Df(3R)urd hemizygotes, indicating that dlkb1315 is a null mutation (Table 1).
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dlkb1 mutations disrupt the asymmetry of NB division leading to a reduction in NB size
Observation of mitotic divisions stained for tubulin and DNA revealed that
the spindles of dlkb1 mutant cells are generally smaller than in wild
type (Fig. 1). In addition, the
frequency of asymmetric telophases in mutant brains (35-37%) was significantly
lower than in wild-type brains (65%) (Table
1). These phenotypes could reflect a partial loss of morphological
asymmetry during NB division, resulting in smaller than normal daughter NBs.
We thus examined in greater detail the pattern of cell division in
dlkb1315/Df(3R)urd brains, and compared this pattern with
those observed in wild-type pins and asl brains. Comparison
between dlkb1 and pins mutants was prompted by two previous
findings. First, mutations in pins partially suppress the asymmetry
of NB divisions, leading to a progressive reduction in NB size
(Cai et al., 2003
;
Parmentier et al., 2000
).
Second, the Drosophila and the human LKB1 kinases interact with the
orthologous proteins Pins and AGS3 (GPSM1 - Human Gene Nomenclature Database),
respectively (Blumer et al.,
2003
). In addition, more detailed comparisons between
dlkb1 and asl mutants would allow us to assess more
precisely the role of astral MTs in asymmetric NB divisions.
|
In pins and asl mutants, the spindles of Dpn-negative GMCs displayed a normal morphology and were indistinguishable from their wild-type counterparts (data not shown). However, in dlkb1 mutants, GMC spindles were characterized by low MT density just as were those of the NBs (Fig. 1B). Thus, the wild-type function of dlkb1 is required for proper spindle formation in both NBs and GMCs.
We next measured the spindle length of metaphase and ana-telophase figures in both NBs (Dpn-positive) and GMCs (Dpn-negative). In dlkb1 and pins mutant brains, the average sizes of NB spindles were substantially smaller than those measured in either asl or wild-type brains. This is mainly due to the absence of large NBs, as both dlkb1 and pins mutants lacked NB metaphases and telophases longer than 19 and 26 µm, respectively; these large NBs represented approximately 20% of the NBs found in wild-type or asl mutant brains. By contrast, the average sizes of the GMC spindles observed in dlkb1, asl and pins mutants were very similar and comparable to those of wild-type controls (Fig. 3B,C). An explanation for these results is that in both dlkb1 and pins mutants, NBs divide more symmetrically than in either asl or wild type. To test this possibility, we directly evaluated the degree of asymmetry of NB telophases showing strong Dpn staining. The asymmetry index was determined using the formula a-b/a+b, in which a is the long axis of the spindle and b its short axis (Fig. 3D). This analysis (Fig. 3E) clearly shows that the NBs from dlkb1 and pins mutants divide more symmetrically than those of either asl or wild type. Collectively, these results indicate that mutations in either dlkb1 or pins partially suppress the asymmetry of NB division, leading to a reduction in the NB size at each cell division cycle.
To ask whether mutations in dlkb1 and pins affect
centrosome size, brain preparations were stained for Centrosomin (Cnn), an
integral component of Drosophila centrosomes
(Megraw et al., 2001
).
Observations were restricted only to those cells that, according to our
analysis of spindle size distribution (Fig.
3B,C), were likely to be NBs (wild-type, dlkb1 and
pins metaphases longer than 12 µm, and ana-telophases longer than
16 µm). This analysis (Fig.
4A,B) revealed that 88% (n=76) of wild-type NBs display
centrosomes of different sizes at their poles. By contrast, only in 34%
(n=180) of dlkb1 NBs and 39% (n=100) of
pins NBs was the centrosome at the apical pole larger than that at
the basal pole. These results indicate that dlkb1 and pins
control asymmetry in centrosome size during NB division.
dlkb1 mutations affect Mira and Baz/Par-6/DaPKC but not Pins/G
i localization in dividing NBs
We examined whether dlkb1 and pins mutations affect the
distribution of Mira in dividing NBs. Larval brain preparations were
simultaneously stained for both tubulin and Mira and analyzed for Mira
localization (Fig. 5A). We
again restricted our analysis to large mitotic figures that are likely to be
NBs by the criteria employed above. Both dlkb1 and pins
mutant NBs revealed abnormal Mira distribution, but the patterns of Mira
mislocalization were different (Fig.
5A,B). In wild type, 93% of NB metaphases and ana-telophases
displayed a clear Mira crescent at the basal pole, whereas the remaining 7%
showed diffuse Mira staining. By contrast, in dlkb1 and pins
mutants the frequencies of NBs with a basal Mira crescent were 47% and 26%,
respectively. Most (97%) of the dlkb1 mutant NBs lacking a Mira
crescent displayed a diffuse cytoplasmic localization of Mira. However,
although the majority (67%) of pins mutant NBs without a Mira
crescent had this same pattern, a substantial minority (33%) of these cells
showed a diffuse cortical distribution of Mira
(Fig. 5B).
|
i at the apical cortex of dividing NBs (NBs were again
identified by their size). A regular Pins signal was observed in 95%
(n=60) of the wild-type NBs and in 84% (n=145) of the
dlkb1 NBs (Fig. 6A,B).
G
i formed a crescent at the apical pole of 96% of wild-type NBs
(n=61) and 74% of dlkb1 mutant NBs (n=75)
(Fig. 6A,B). Consistent with
previous results (Cai et al.,
2003
i apical crescent only in 4%
(n=50) of pins mutant NBs (data not shown). Thus, although
dlkb1 mutations affect Mira localization at the basal cortex, they
have little or no effect on Pins and G
i localization at the apical
cortex.
|
|
Recent work has suggested that DaPKC delocalization from the apical cortex
can result in NB overproliferation (Lee et
al., 2006a
). Consistent with this idea, the brains from third
instar larvae of dlkb1-null mutants exhibit a dramatic hyperplasia of
both the hemispheres and the ventral ganglion; this phenotype has been
attributed to a reduction in developmental apoptosis during embryogenesis
(Lee et al., 2006b
). We
observed a clear brain overgrowth in all our dlkb1 mutant alleles,
confirming that Dlkb1 regulates Drosophila brain size (data not
shown). It is likely that the brain hyperplasia elicited by dlkb1
mutations results from both defective apoptosis and DaPKC-related NB
overproliferation.
Dlkb1 is not required for NB spindle rotation
We examined 128 metaphases of dlkb1 mutant NBs stained for Mira;
53 of them displayed a Mira crescent, but only in one case was this crescent
incorrectly oriented with respect to the spindle axis
(Fig. 5B). By contrast, this
crescent was misoriented with respect to the spindle axis in nine of the 29
pins NB metaphases with a Mira crescent
(Fig. 5B). These results
confirm that Pins is required for proper spindle rotation during NB division
and indicate that the Dlkb1 kinase is not involved in this process.
Recent work has shown that that spindle rotation is regulated by Mud
(Mushroom body defect), a protein related to vertebrate NuMA (also known as
Numa1) that interacts with both Pins and the spindle MTs. In embryonic NBs,
Mud forms an apical crescent and accumulates at the spindle poles; in larval
NBs, the cortical localization of Mud is weak or undetectable but the protein
remains enriched at the spindle poles
(Bowman et al., 2006
;
Izumi et al., 2006
;
Siller et al., 2006
).
Immunostaining for Mud revealed that the protein is enriched at the
centrosomes and the astral MTs in 93% (n=45) of prophase and early
prometaphase NBs (Fig. 7A).
With progression through mitosis, Mud localization became more diffuse and 62%
(n=45) of NB metaphase figures did not exhibit clear Mud
accumulations at the spindle poles (Fig.
7A); however, Mud relocalized at the pericentrosomal regions of
most anaphases and telophases (83%, n=30; data not shown). In
dlkb1 mutant NBs, Mud accumulated at the centrosomes/asters in 91%
(n=35) of prophase and early prometaphase NBs
(Fig. 7C), and remained
associated with the spindle poles in 78% (n=37) of the metaphases
(Fig. 7D) and 85%
(n=20) of the ana-telophases (not shown). Thus, mutations in
dlkb1 do not affect Mud localization during metaphase and
ana-telophase, but appear to increase Mud concentration at the spindle poles
during metaphase.
|
63 kDa) in larval,
embryonic and S2 cell extracts. This band was absent from both
dlkb1315/Df(3R)urd and
dlkb1315/dlkb17 larvae
(Fig. 8A), demonstrating that
it corresponds with Dlkb1. Since the truncated forms of Dlkb1 encoded by the
dlkb1315 and dlkb17 mutant alleles
were not observed in mutant animals, either the mutant transcripts or the
truncated proteins are unstable. These findings provide strong support for the
genetic data (Table 1),
indicating that the dlkb1315 mutant allele is functionally
null.
Immunolocalization experiments revealed that Dlkb1 is dispersed in both the
nucleus and the cytoplasm of interphase larval brain cells, and in the
cytoplasm of both NBs and GMCs undergoing mitotic division. Immunostaining of
dlkb1315/Df(3R)urd mutant cells did not reveal any clear
cytoplasmic signal, confirming the specificity of the antibody
(Fig. 8B and data not shown).
The diffuse localization of Dlkb1 in brain cells is not consistent with its
cortical localization in Drosophila oocytes
(Martin and St Johnston,
2003
). However, the Dlkb1 localization pattern in brain cells does
not reflect the quality of our antibody, as the same antibody revealed a
cortical accumulation of Dlkb1 in oocytes (data not shown).
Dlkb1 and Pins function in different pathways controlling NB division
The finding that Dlkb1 and Pins co-precipitate
(Blumer et al., 2003
), and that
dlkb1 and pins mutations cause similar (but not identical)
phenotypes, prompted us to perform an epistasis analysis. We thus compared the
phenotype of the dlkb1315 pinsP62 double mutant
with those of the single mutants by examining brain preparations stained for
tubulin, Dpn and DNA. In dlkb1 pins mutant brains, the spindles of
both NBs and GMCs were much more defective than those observed in either of
the single mutants (compare Fig.
9 with Figs 1 and
2). In addition to cells with
severely defective spindles (Fig.
9A,C,F,G,I), we also observed many (50%, n=300) mitotic
figures in which the spindle morphology was barely recognizable
(Fig. 9B,D,E,H); the frequency
of the latter type of cells was only 4% (n=201) in the dlkb1
single mutant. In dlkb1 pins metaphases, the MT density was extremely
low, the spindle poles had a characteristic pointed appearance and the asters
were completely absent (Fig.
9A). The ana-telophases were also devoid of asters and displayed
few and sparse central spindle MTs, which were never pinched in the middle
(Fig. 9C,F). These results
indicate that dlkb1 and pins function in parallel pathways
to control spindle formation.
The absence of central spindle pinching, which suggests an accompanying failure of cytokinesis, prevented a reliable assessment of the degree of asymmetry of NB divisions. However, NB spindles of the double mutant were smaller than in wild type (Fig. 9J). In addition, the analysis of centrosome size in large metaphase figures (longer than 14 µm), most of which are likely to be NBs, revealed that 90% (n=106) of them had equally sized centrosomes. In wild type, dlkb1 and pins, the frequencies of NB metaphases with centrosomes of equal size were 12%, 72% and 61%, respectively (Fig. 4B). Finally, only 3% (n=120) of the dlkb1 pins NB metaphases were characterized by a Mira crescent; in the remaining cells, Mira was either diffuse in the cytoplasm (85%) or associated with the entire cell cortex (12%). Thus, the Mira mislocalization phenotype observed in dlkb1 pins double mutants is stronger than that seen in the single mutants (see Fig. 5B).
|
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Collectively, our results suggest that dlkb1 and pins act in different pathways to control the asymmetry of NB division. These genes also function in parallel pathways involved in MT stability and spindle formation. Whether the latter pathways are the same as those that control the asymmetry of NB mitosis remains to be determined.
| DISCUSSION |
|---|
|
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|---|
The precise function of Dlkb1 in spindle formation and/or maintenance is
currently unclear. However, the finding that the spindles of dlkb1
asl double mutants display a lower MT density than asl single
mutants argues for a defect in MT stability and not in centrosome function.
Studies in mammalian cells have shown that LKB1 is a master kinase that
phosphorylates at least 14 kinases, all of which are related to AMP-activated
kinases (AMPK). Kinases of the AMPK family include regulators of cellular
energy levels, as well as four Microtubule affinity regulating kinases (MARKs)
(reviewed by Alessi et al.,
2006
; Baas et al.,
2004b
). The MARK enzymes are the mammalian homologs of C.
elegans and Drosophila Par-1. However, Drosophila
Par-1, which controls MT stability in oocytes
(Shulman et al., 2000
),
appears to act upstream of Dlkb1 (Martin
and St Johnston, 2003
). It is therefore unlikely that the Dlkb1
substrate required for the stability of spindle MTs is Par-1. Further evidence
that Dlkb1 does not act via Par-1 phosphorylation comes from RNAi experiments
showing that Dlkb1 depletion, but not Par-1 depletion, causes defects in
spindle morphology (Bettencourt-Dias et
al., 2004
). Thus, current data indicate that the Dlkb1 kinase
regulates the activity of an unknown factor required for the stability of the
spindle MTs; this factor could either be a direct substrate of Dlkb1 or a
substrate for one of the kinases acting downstream of Dlkb1.
|
Dlkb1 controls the asymmetry of NB division
We have analyzed the phenotypic consequences of dlkb1 mutations in
larval brain NBs. In contrast to embryonic NBs that display small, regularly
sized spindles (their metaphase spindles are approximately 5 µm long),
brain NBs exhibit spindles of very different sizes (ranging from 5 to 32 µm
for metaphase spindles). Nonetheless, dividing brain NBs exhibit the same
asymmetries as their embryonic counterparts, including asymmetries in aster
and centrosome size, localization of specialized protein complexes and
positioning of the cleavage furrow (Bowman
et al., 2006
; Giansanti et
al., 2001
; Lee et al.,
2006a
; Parmentier et al.,
2000
; Rolls et al.,
2003
; Siller et al.,
2006
) (this study). However, the degree of asymmetry of brain NB
division is directly related to the cell size, so that large NBs divide more
asymmetrically than small NBs (Fig.
3E). This is likely to render large brain NBs particularly
sensitive to mutations that affect cleavage furrow positioning. Consistent
with this hypothesis, mutations in pins have mild effects on the
asymmetry of embryonic NB divisions (Cai
et al., 2003
), but disrupt unequal cytokinesis in most larval
brain NBs (Parmentier et al.,
2000
) (Fig.
3E).
dlkb1 larval NBs also divide more symmetrically than their
wild-type counterparts, leading to larval brains devoid of large NBs. In
addition, most dlkb1 NBs display centrosomes of equal size and very
small asters at both poles. However, the symmetric cytokinesis of
dlkb1 NBs cannot result from their short astral MTs, as asl
NBs divide asymmetrically in the complete absence of asters
(Fig. 3E). dlkb1
mutant NBs are also characterized by the abnormal distribution of several
components of the apical and basal complexes. In dlkb1 mutant brains,
most NBs display normal Pins and G
i crescents at their apical pole but
fail to accumulate Baz, DaPKC and Par-6 at the same pole. In addition, most
dlkb1 mutant NBs fail to exhibit a normal Mira crescent at the basal
pole cortex. A normal localization of Pins and G
i has been observed in
most embryonic NBs defective in the Baz/Par-6 pathway
(Cai et al., 2003
;
Izumi et al., 2004
;
Schaefer et al., 2000
;
Yu et al., 2000
;
Yu et al., 2003
). Moreover,
studies on embryonic NBs have suggested that Baz, Par-6 and DaPKC function as
a complex, are interdependent for their localization at the NB apical pole,
and are required for the formation of the Mira crescent at the basal pole
(Petronczki and Knoblich,
2000
; Wodarz et al.,
2000
). However, subsequent work on second instar larval NBs has
shown that these proteins are not mutually dependent for the formation of the
Baz/Par-6/DaPKC apical crescent; they accumulate at the apical cortex in a
hierarchical fashion, with Baz and Par-6 mediating proper DaPKC localization
(Rolls et al., 2003
).
Mutations that disrupt the Pins/G
i pathway prevent asymmetrical
localization of either Pins or G
i in embryonic NBs but do not
substantially affect Mira accumulation at the basal pole
(Cai et al., 2003
). However,
it should be noted that mutations in pins partially disrupt
asymmetric Mira localization in larval brain NBs
(Parmentier et al., 2000
)
(this study), suggesting that larval NBs differ from embryonic NBs in some
aspects of the control of Mira localization. Thus, taking into account the
differences between embryonic and larval NBs, our results indicate that
mutations in the dlkb1 gene and those that disrupt the Baz/Par-6
pathway affect similar aspects of NB mitotic division.
Our analyses have shown that in dlkb1 pins double mutants, the NBs
divide more symmetrically than in the corresponding single mutants. This
indicates that the dlkb1 and pins genes act in different
pathways that mediate unequal cytokinesis. Previous studies have shown that
the asymmetry of NB cytokinesis depends on the Baz/Par-6 and Pins/G
i
redundant pathways. When only one of these pathways is impaired, NBs still
divide asymmetrically, but they divide symmetrically when both are disrupted
(Cai et al., 2003
). The
simplest interpretation of our findings is that dlkb1 acts in the
Baz/Par-6 pathway. In addition, the observation that Dlkb1 is required for
proper localization of Baz, Par-6 and DaPKC suggest that this kinase acts at
the top of the hierarchical mechanism that mediates accumulation of the
Baz/Par-6 complex at the apical cortex. However, although we favor the
hypothesis that Dlkb1 acts in the Baz/Par-6 pathway, we cannot exclude the
possibility that this kinase functions in both the Baz/Par-6 and
Pins/G
i pathways, or in a third pathway different from either.
In this context, it is important to note that our results exclude the
possibility that dlkb1 acts via Pins phosphorylation. Previous
studies have shown that mammalian LKB1 co-precipitates and phosphorylates
AGS3, the mammalian ortholog of Pins
(Blumer et al., 2003
). Dlkb1
and Pins coimmunoprecipitate as well, but it is currently unclear whether Pins
is phosphorylated by Dlkb1 (Blumer et al.,
2003
). Regardless of whether Pins is a substrate of Dlkb1, the
phenotypes elicited by dlkb1 mutations cannot be the consequence of
an impairment of Pins function. dlkb1 and pins mutant NBs do
in fact differ in a number of phenotypic traits, including spindle
organization and the pattern of Mira localization, and do not belong to the
same epistasis group.
Dlkb1 is not required for NB spindle rotation
In vivo imaging has shown that the spindles of embryonic NBs rotate during
metaphase to become aligned with the center of the Pins apical crescent
(Kaltschmidt et al., 2000
). By
contrast, the spindles of larval NBs align with the Pins crescent at prophase
(Siller et al., 2006
). Failure
of proper rotation of larval NB spindles results in spindles that are
misoriented with respect to the apical (Pins) and basal (Mira) crescents
(Giansanti et al., 2001
;
Siller et al., 2006
). There is
also evidence that proper positioning of larval NB spindles depends on astral
MTs, because in approximately 50% of asl NB metaphases the Mira
crescent is misoriented with respect to the spindle axis
(Giansanti et al., 2001
).
Our results indicate that spindle rotation occurs normally in
dlkb1 mutant NBs. In addition, we have shown that
prophase/prometaphase larval NBs of dlkb1 mutants normally accumulate
the Mud protein, which mediates proper spindle alignment in both embryonic and
larval NBs (Bowman et al.,
2006
; Izumi et al.,
2006
; Siller et al.,
2006
). Together, these results indicate that the Dlkb1 kinase is
not required for spindle rotation and that the short astral MTs of
dlkb1 mutant NBs can mediate proper spindle positioning. These
results are consistent with the idea that the Pins/G
i, but not the
Baz/Par-6, pathway is involved in spindle rotation
(Izumi et al., 2004
;
Siegrist and Doe, 2005
) and
provide further support for the hypothesis that Dlkb1 functions in the latter
pathway.
Recent work has shown that in the absence of the Baz/Par-6 pathway, astral
MTs can mediate the localization of Pins/G
i at the apical cortex
(Siegrist and Doe, 2005
).
Assuming that Dlkb1 acts in the Baz/Par-6 pathway, the finding that this
kinase is not required for the formation of Pins/G
i crescents indicates
that the short astral MTs of dlkb1 NBs retain the ability to mediate
Pins/G
i cortical localization.
Conclusions and perspectives
Our results indicate that Dlkb1 and Pins function in partially redundant
pathways controlling the stability of spindle MTs. These proteins are also
required for the asymmetry of NB divisions and, here again, they appear to
function in different pathways. Pins acts in a common pathway with G
i,
whereas Dlkb1 is likely to function in the Baz/Par-6 pathway. Intriguingly,
recent work has shown that simultaneous loss of pins and baz
functions results in the formation of abnormally small embryonic NB spindles
that lack astral MTs at both poles (Fuse
et al., 2003
). Thus, the embryonic NBs of baz pins double
mutants have a spindle phenotype reminiscent of that observed in
dlkb1 larval NBs. These findings raise the question of whether the
Pins/G
i and Baz/Par-6 pathways redundantly control spindle organization
as they do for the asymmetry of NB divisions. The extant data do not provide a
clear answer to this question. The analysis of the roles of the two pathways
in spindle formation and their precise relationships with the Dlkb1 kinase are
interesting issues to be addressed in future studies.
Previous studies in Drosophila and mammalian cells have led to the
suggestion that loss of epithelial cell polarity is ultimately responsible for
the Peutz-Jeghers cancer syndrome (Martin
and St Johnston, 2003
; Baas et
al., 2004b
). Here, we have shown that Dlkb1 plays an essential
mitotic role and is required for the asymmetry of NB division. These results
lead us to propose that tumor development in Peutz-Jeghers patients depends on
the impairment of multiple processes, including cell polarity, the asymmetry
of stem cell division and the fidelity of chromosome segregation during
mitosis.
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