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Address correspondence to Dr. Bonnie J. Howell, Dept. of Biology, CB#3280, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-3280. Tel.: (919) 962-2354. Fax: (919) 962-1625. E-mail: Bhowell{at}email.unc.edu
| Abstract |
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Key Words: mitosis; mitotic spindle checkpoint; Mad2; CENP-E; cytoplasmic dynein
| Introduction |
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The mitotic spindle checkpoint prevents errors in chromosome segregation, thus preventing aneuploidy, tumor progression, and cell death (Wassmann and Benezra, 2001). Spindle checkpoint proteins were originally identified by yeast genetic screens and were shown to concentrate at unattached mammalian kinetochores with no or few kinetochore microtubules (Maney et al., 1999; Shah and Cleveland, 2000; Hoffman et al., 2001; Hoyt, 2001). In mammalian tissue cells, Mad2 is essential for spindle checkpoint activity (Chen et al., 1996; Li and Benezra, 1996; Gorbsky et al., 1998; Waters et al., 1998; Canman et al., 2000; Dobles et al., 2000) and exchanges rapidly at kinetochores with the cytoplasmic pool (half-life is
25 s at kinetochores) (Howell et al., 2000). This rapid exchange helps explain how a single unattached kinetochore may delay anaphase onset (Rieder et al., 1995), i.e., by rapidly catalyzing the formation of inhibitory Mad2Cdc20 complexes and releasing them into the cytosol where they can prevent activation of the anaphase-promoting complex/cyclosome (APC/C)* (Kallio et al., 1998; Howell et al., 2000; Shah and Cleveland, 2000). BubR1 has also been shown to bind and inhibit Cdc20 activation of APC (Sudakin et al., 2001; Tang et al., 2001). Other spindle checkpoint proteins at unattached kinetochores are thought to catalyze Mad2 or BubR1 complex formation with Cdc20 (Shah and Cleveland, 2000; Hoyt, 2001; Skoufias et al., 2001; Sudakin et al., 2001).
The molecular mechanisms for checkpoint inactivation are not well understood, but checkpoint inactivation has been correlated with loss of kinetochore-bound Mad2 and dephosphorylation of the kinetochore 3F3/2 antigen (Gorbsky and Ricketts, 1993; Nicklas, 1997; Rieder and Salmon, 1998; Maney et al., 1999; Shah and Cleveland, 2000). Loss of kinetochore Mad2 depends mainly on kinetochore microtubule formation, whereas loss of 3F3/2 staining depends on tension generated by pulling forces at metaphase kinetochores (Nicklas et al., 1995; Waters et al., 1998). Mad2, cytoplasmic dynein, dynactin, CLIP-170, Rod, and Zw10 are unique in that they become substantially depleted at metaphase kinetochores (Williams et al., 1996; Starr et al., 1997, 1998; Maney et al., 1999; Scaërou et al., 1999; Howell et al., 2000; King et al., 2000; Hoffman et al., 2001), whereas Bub1, BubR1, Bub3, and the motor CENP-E are moderately depleted (Maney et al., 1999; Hoffman et al., 2001).
In our recent studies of Mad2 assembly dynamics in vivo (Howell et al., 2000), we developed a simple cellular ATP reduction assay and live cell imaging methods to demonstrate that Mad2 and its binding sites are transported from prometaphase kinetochores along spindle microtubules to the spindle poles. Upon ATP reduction, Mad2 disappeared from kinetochores and accumulated at spindle poles only in the presence of a spindle (i.e., no nocodazole treatment) and failed to accumulate when kinetochores lacked Mad2 as they do in metaphase (Howell et al., 2000). Here we use this ATP reduction assay to show that CENP-E, BubR1, cytoplasmic dynein, and the 3F3/2 antigen also undergo microtubule-dependent spindle pole accumulation in PtK1 cells. Cytoplasmic dynein, a minus-enddirected microtubule motor, has the correct polarity to produce depletion of kinetochore proteins and to transport them poleward. Inhibition of dynein/dynactin by microinjection of prometaphase cells with p50 "dynamitin" or the 70.1 anti-dynein antibody blocked protein redistribution from kinetochores to the poles, prevented anaphase onset, and resulted in accumulation of Mad2 at metaphase kinetochores with normal numbers of kinetochore microtubules. In contrast, dynein/dynactin inhibition did not prevent chromosome congression to the metaphase plate nor block anaphase chromosome segregation or cytokinesis when the spindle checkpoint was inactivated by microinjection of Mad2 antibodies in prometaphase.
| Results |
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Inhibition of dynein/dynactin blocks protein redistribution from kinetochores to spindle poles
We found 3F3/2 phosphorylation (Gorbsky and Ricketts, 1993; Fig. 1, C and D) and the motor activity responsible for the microtubule-dependent redistribution of outer domain proteins (Fig. 1, A and C) were not inhibited by the 30-min treatment with Az/DOG that reduced ATP to 510% of normal levels (see Materials and methods). Paschal and Vallee (1987) showed dynein has good motility at low ATP concentrations (10 µM) in in vitro motility assays, i.e., at
0.30.4% of the normal 23-mM cellular ATP concentration reported for tissue culture cells (Ikehara et al., 1984). Therefore, it seemed likely that dynein activity could be retained in our ATP reduction assays.
To examine dynein/dynactin function in the microtubule-dependent protein redistribution from kinetochores to the poles, we repeated our ATP inhibitor assay in prometaphase cells microinjected with high concentrations of the dynactin component, p50 dynamitin (Echeverri et al., 1996). High p50 levels have been shown to disrupt the dynactin complex (Echeverri et al., 1996; Whittman and Hyman, 1999; Merdes et al., 2000), prevent cytoplasmic dynein/dynactin localization to kinetochores (Echeverri et al., 1996), inhibit cytoplasmic dyneindependent translocation of membrane vesicles in interphase cells (Burkhardt et al., 1997), and block poleward transport and accumulation at spindle poles of two non-kinetochore proteins, NuMA (Merdes et al., 2000) and TPX2 (Whittman et al., 2000). Dynein normally concentrates 55-fold at kinetochores in nocodazole-treated cells, compared with unattached kinetochores in untreated cells (Hoffman et al., 2001), but p50 injection depleted most if not all dynein from these kinetochores by 30 min (Fig. 3 A; Table III). Importantly, we found p50 injection into mid-prometaphase cells, 15 min before addition of Az/DOG, blocked redistribution from kinetochores to the spindle poles of all three outer domain proteins tested, i.e., Mad2, BubR1, and CENP-E, without substantially disrupting the spindle or spindle poles (Fig. 3 B).
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Inhibition of dynein/dynactin function induces a Mad2-dependent mitotic arrest and blocks Mad2 depletion from attached kinetochores
To examine the effect of dynein/dynactin inhibition on mitotic progression in PtK1 cells, prometaphase cells containing an established bipolar spindle were microinjected with either p50 protein or 70.1 antibody and imaged by phase-contrast microscopy. Chromosome congression and oscillations continued in dynein-inhibited cells, yet cells arrested in metaphase, i.e., p50 or 70.1 antibody injected cells never entered anaphase during the time of observation (up to 3.5 h after metaphase arrest; n = 12) (Fig. 4 A; Video 1, available at http://www.jcb.org/cgi/content/full/jcb.200105093/DC1).
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14.5 min after microinjection (n = 8). Microinjection of anti-Mad2 antibodies into p50 or 70.1 mAbblocked cells resulted in a release from the metaphase arrest and entry into anaphase
16 min after Mad2 antibody injection (n = 7) (Fig. 4 B; Video 2, available at http://www.jcb.org/cgi/ content/full/jcb.200105093/DC1). Therefore, Mad2 activity is necessary for the observed mitotic block in dynein-inhibited cells.
Next, we tested whether dynein/dynactin inhibition prevents the normal depletion of Mad2 from kinetochores of metaphase-aligned chromosomes (Waters et al., 1998; Fig. 5 A). Prometaphase cells were microinjected with p50 or 70.1 antibodies, allowed to arrest in metaphase, and then processed for Mad2 and tubulin immunofluorescence. Mad2 was seen at almost all kinetochores on metaphase-aligned chromosomes in either p50 (Fig. 5 A) or 70.1 mAbinjected cells (unpublished data). Quantitative analysis of Mad2 fluorescence showed that kinetochores on aligned chromosomes in the p50 microinjected cells had 25 times more Mad2 than kinetochores on aligned chromosomes in uninjected cells (Table IV). This amount of Mad2 represents
25% of the Mad2 that binds to unattached prometaphase kinetochores.
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Live-cell analysis of Mad2 at kinetochores and loss of poleward transport following dynein/dynactin inhibition
Recently, we found by live cell analysis that Mad2 binding sites are moved along spindle fibers to the poles (Howell et al., 2000). This transport explains why Mad2 disappears from spindle fibers and poles after Mad2 is depleted at kinetochores during kinetochore microtubule formation and chromosome alignment (Howell et al., 2000). If cytoplasmic dynein produces the transport of Mad2 and/or Mad2 binding sites to the poles along spindle microtubules as predicted from the ATP reduction assay, then we expected inhibition of dynein/dynactin activity should also induce loss of Mad2 localization to the spindle fibers and spindle poles.
To visualize Mad2 dynamics in dynein-inhibited cells, we microinjected late prometaphase PtK1 cells containing 13 unaligned chromosomes with fluorescent Mad2, and then immediately imaged the cell with fluorescence microscopy. As seen in Fig. 6 and demonstrated in our previous studies (Howell et al., 2000), fluorescent Mad2 localizes strongly to partially attached kinetochores, to the proximal spindle pole, and along the spindle in between the labeled kinetochore and pole. Fluorescent Mad2 is not detectable on fully attached, metaphase-aligned chromosomes. In contrast to previous observations of Mad2 dynamics (Howell et al., 2000), we found Mad2 fluorescence at the spindle poles and fibers proximal to unattached and partially attached kinetochores disappeared quickly (1015 min after p50 injection) after p50 microinjection, despite the fact that those kinetochores nearby retained Mad2 fluorescence for >1 h (Fig. 6). Mad2 fluorescence also reappeared gradually on kinetochores of some metaphase-aligned chromosomes (Fig. 6). Fluorescent Mad2 remained at kinetochores in p50-injected cells as chromosomes congressed to the spindle equator, further supporting dynein/dynactin activity in Mad2 depletion from kinetochores.
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Kinetochore tension on metaphase chromosomes is reduced 40% by dynein/dynactin inhibition
Cytoplasmic dynein has been proposed to have a major role in generation of poleward forces for chromosome movement (Maney et al., 1999; Sharp et al., 2000; Banks and Heald, 2001). However, we found chromosomes were able to congress and align near the spindle equator (Fig. 4), and kinetochores accumulated normal numbers of kinetochore microtubules in prometaphase cells microinjected with p50 protein (Fig. 5). To obtain an estimate of the average strength of the pulling forces at metaphase kinetochores in dynein/dynactin-inhibited cells, we measured the average stretch of the centromere between sister kinetochores. Cells were microinjected with p50 and allowed to arrest at metaphase. Control cells and microinjected cells were processed for Mad2 and tubulin immunofluorescence and viewed using confocal microscopy. We found the average interkinetochore distance measured between the ends of sister kinetochore fibers in p50 injected cells (1.9 ± 0.4 µm, n = 61) was significantly shorter than for noninjected metaphase cells (2.6 ± 0.6 µm, n = 44; P < 0.01). We recently determined the length of an unstretched centromere by measuring the distance between late prophase centromeres in PtK1 cells (0.9 ± 0.1 µm, n = 48) (Hoffman et al., 2001). From these numbers, the centromeric stretch in dynein-inhibited cells is
60% that of control cells, (i.e., [1.9 - 0.9]/[2.6 - 0.9] = 0.59).
Anaphase A velocity is not substantially reduced by the dynein/dynactin inhibition that activates the spindle checkpoint
In our experiments, control Ptk1 cells induced prematurely into anaphase with anti-Mad2 antibodies during mid-prometaphase (n = 6 cells) showed anaphase A kinetochore-to-pole movements at rates of
1.3 ± 0.3 µm/min (18 chromosomes), and anaphase B spindle pole separation at rates of
1.0 ± 0.1 µm/min. Similarly, in all healthy, double-injected, dynein-inhibited cells like the one shown in Fig. 4 B (four cells injected with p50 and three injected with 70.1 antibody), anaphase chromosome segregation and subsequent cytokinesis between separated chromosomes occurred after anaphase onset with timing similar to controls. For the cell seen in Fig. 4 B, we found anaphase A kinetochore-to-pole movement occurred at
0.9 um/min (6 chromosomes measured), whereas anaphase B spindle pole separation occurred at
1.1 um/min (Fig. 4 C), similar to rates seen in control cells (see above). Overall, we were able to obtain reliable measurements of anaphase A and B from three out of seven dynein-inhibited cells in which visibility of the spindle poles was not inhibited by the cell-rounding that occurred during the metaphase block. The average values (n = 3 cells, 13 chromosomes) for dynein-inhibited cells were 0.9 ± 0.2 µm/min (P < 0.01) for anaphase A, and 1.2 ± 0.2 µm/min (P > 0.01) for anaphase B pole-to-pole elongation. Thus, dynein/dynactin inhibition appears to significantly reduce anaphase A velocities by
33%, and anaphase B movements remain similar to controls.
| Discussion |
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It is important to recognize that the poleward transport we infer from our ATP inhibitor assay or by direct observations of fluorescent Mad2 in living cells occurs poleward from unattached, partially attached, and fully attached kinetochores. This indicates that dynein/dynactin-dependent transport of proteins from kinetochores occurs by kinetochore lateral interactions with non-kinetochore microtubules (Fig. 7 A) as well as by lateral and end-on interactions with kinetochore microtubules (Fig. 7, B and C). We found dynein/dynactin-dependent poleward transport of Mad2 particles occurs at velocities of 23 µm/min (Howell et al., 2000). Interestingly, similar velocities have been reported for dynein/dynactin-dependent poleward transport of NuMA (Merdes et al., 2000).
Our results show that after washout of the ATP inhibitors, the outer domain kinetochore proteins tested, including cytoplasmic dynein, reaccumulate rapidly (within 10 min) to normal levels at kinetochores (Table I), indicating that the association of these complexes to kinetochores is prevented by the ATP reduction. Because these proteins do not decrease from kinetochores upon ATP depletion in nocodazole-treated cells (with exception of 3F3/2) (Table II) or in dynein/dynactin-inhibited cells, interactions between microtubules and dynein/dynactin are required for protein depletion by ATP inhibition. The conclusion from our ATP inhibitor assay that dynein/dynactin can transport various kinetochore outer domain components along microtubules to the poles suggests that dynein/dynactin is likely involved in removing a protein responsible for regulating or contributing attachment of other outer domain proteins, perhaps, for example, a protein localized to the base of the corona filament (Fig. 7 B), a structure which likely contains binding sites for CENP-E, dynein/dynactin, and various checkpoint proteins (Howell et al., 2000; Maney et al., 1999). Interestingly, ZW10 and Rod are required for accumulation of dynein/dynactin at unattached or partially attached kinetochores (Starr et al., 1998; Chan et al., 2000). Whether ZW10 or Rod are essential for dynein/dynactin-dependent transport of kinetochore proteins poleward along microtubules is an important unanswered question (Chan et al., 2000).
Kinetochore microtubule formation may normally function to block the association pathways (Fig. 7 C) such that constitutive dissociation pathways, including direct dissociation into the cytosol and dynein/dynactin-driven depletion from kinetochores, results in protein depletion from metaphase kinetochores. So far, we only know the approximate relative contributions of these two dissociation pathways for the Mad2 binding site at kinetochores. Inhibition of dynein/dynactin-dependent transport prevents the complete depletion of Mad2 from metaphase kinetochores (Tables III and IV) that are capable of accumulating normal numbers of kinetochore microtubules (Fig. 5), but a 75% reduction does occur indicating the presence of dissociation pathways independent of dynein/dynactin.
In addition to the dynein/dynactin-dependent pathway of disassembly, outer domain proteins may also have individual dissociation rates from their binding sites into the cytosol (Fig. 7). Mad2 clearly does, as its turnover at Mad2 binding sites has a half-life of 2030 s, even in the presence of dynein/dynactin inhibition as measured by FRAP analysis. Similar data is needed to identify the other motor and checkpoint proteins that dynamically exchange with cytoplasmic pools.
How dynein/dynactin may contribute to spindle checkpoint inactivation
Consistent with others, we found inhibition of dynein/dynactin induces a strong mitotic block (Echeverri et al., 1996; Gaglio et al., 1997; Faulkner et al., 2000; Merdes et al., 2000; Wojcik et al., 2001). Inhibition of dynein/dynactin before mitosis and spindle formation can profoundly disrupt bipolar spindle organization and prevent chromosome congression to a metaphase plate (Vaisberg et al., 1993; Echeverri et al., 1996). In contrast, our studies show that inhibition of dynein/dynactin by p50 microinjection after bipolar spindle formation in prometaphase cells slows but does not block chromosome congression and alignment at the metaphase plate (Fig. 4), and spindle bipolarity is not substantially disrupted during the 4560-min metaphase block (Fig. 5); however, occasionally, spindles broadened and poles became more displaced during extended metaphase arrests (>1 h). Kinetochores on aligned chromosomes accumulated normal numbers of kinetochore microtubules (Fig. 5). Thus, unlike CENP-E, which appears to be required for recruitment and attachment of kinetochore microtubules (Schaar et al., 1997; Yao et al., 2000; McEwen et al., 2001), dynein/dynactin primarily contributes to checkpoint inactivation by another mechanism.
One way dynein/dynactin may contribute to checkpoint inactivation is by removing Mad2 binding sites from kinetochores by microtubule-dependent transport. This mechanism is supported by our ATP inhibition studies (Figs. 1 and 3), the persistence of substantial Mad2 at kinetochores of metaphase-aligned chromosomes (Table IV) with normal numbers of kinetochore microtubules in cells blocked in metaphase by dynein/dynactin inhibition (Fig. 5), and the transport and the inhabition of Mad2 transport from kinetochores to poles seen by live cell imaging (Fig. 6; Howell et al., 2000).
A second way dynein/dynactin may contribute to checkpoint inactivation is by removing ZW10 and Rod from kinetochores. In support of this hypothesis, depletion of ZW10 or Rod from kinetochores by antibody inhibition (Chan et al., 2000) or protein mutations (Basto et al., 2000) disrupts the spindle checkpoint. In addition, Drosophila embryos with mutant dynein become blocked in metaphase with elevated concentrations of ZW10 at their kinetochores (Wojcik et al., 2001).
Dynein/dynactin could also help inactivate the checkpoint by contributing to tension at kinetochores of aligned chromosomes. In our studies, inhibition of dynein/dynactin induced a 40% reduction in this tension either by reducing force production at kinetochores or by disrupting microtubule anchorage at the spindle poles (Gordon et al., 2001). CENP-E depletion from mammalian tissue cell kinetochores or microtubule stabilization with taxol is accompanied by 8090% reduction of tension without preventing MaD2 depletion from kinetochores with nearly normal numbers of kinetochore microtubules (Yao et al., 2000; McEwen et al., 2001). As a result, it seems unlikely that the 40% reduction of tension upon dynein/dynactin inhibition contributes to maintenance of kinetochore Mad2. However, this reduction in tension could contribute to checkpoint activation by other mechanisms, such as those that regulate BubR1 inhibition of Cdc20 activation of the APC/C (Skoufias et al., 2001; Sudakin et al., 2001; Tang et al., 2001).
Dynein/dynactin may have a more critical function in spindle checkpoint inactivation than in chromosome movement
Typically in mammalian tissue cells, cytoplasmic dynein is barely, if at all, detectable at kinetochores in metaphase and anaphase (Hoffman et al., 2001). Here we found that inhibition of dynein/dynactin in prometaphase cells did not block pre-anaphase chromosome oscillations, chromosome congression to the spindle equator, or anaphase chromosome segregation when the spindle checkpoint was inactivated. Anaphase A velocities were reduced by
30%, similar to the 40% reduction in tension measured for kinetochores on chromosomes at the metaphase plate. In general, chromosome movements in mammalian cells appear less sensitive to dynein/dynactin inhibition (Echeverri et al., 1996; Gaglio et al., 1997; Faulkner et al., 2000; O'Connell and Wang, 2000), in comparison with recent findings for Drosophila meiosis and embryonic mitosis (Savoian et al., 2000; Sharp et al., 2000). The insensitivity of chromosome movement to dynein/dynactin inhibition and our ATP reduction results indicate that, for mammalian tissue cells, proteins other than cytoplasmic dynein and CENP-E are critical for the anchorage of kinetochore microtubule plus ends to the outer plate, and for dynamically coupling plus end polymerization/depolymerization to chromosome movement (Inoue and Salmon, 1995; Desai and Mitchison, 1997).
| Materials and methods |
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ATP levels were quantitatively measured using a luciferan/luciferase-based assay essentially as described previously (Kangas et al., 1984; Garewal et al., 1986). Two different methods, trichloric acetic acid (TCA) (Kangas et al., 1984) and boiling (Garewal et al., 1986), were used to release ATP from PtK1 cells with both yielding similar results. Each ATP assay was performed in duplicate or triplicate per assay condition and the overall experiment was repeated three times for each method described. An ATP determination kit containing substrate, enzyme, and buffer was purchased from Molecular Probes. In brief, PtK1 cells were grown in 6-well plates to cell density of 2 x 105 cells/mL. For the boiling method, cells were trypsinized, pelleted at 1,000 rpms, rinsed in HBSS (GIBCO BRL), repelleted, and then resuspended in either 1 mL of saline g or saline + ATP inhibitors for 30 min at 37°C. Cell counts were determined during this incubation period using a hemacytometer. Cells were then pelleted at 1,000 rpms for 4 min, resuspended in 100 µL deionized water ± ATP inhibitors, immediately boiled for 5 min, and frozen at -20°C until ATP measurements were made. For washout conditions, cells were incubated with ATP inhibitors for 30 min, pelleted and resuspended in saline g for 10 min at 37°C, counted, and then repelleted and boiled as described above. For TCA method, cells were grown to 2 x 105 cells/mL, rinsed with HBSS, and incubated in either saline g or saline ± inhibitors for 30 min. After the removal of saline ± inhibitors, 250 µL of 1% cold TCA was added, incubated on ice for 10 min, and then removed and frozen at 20°C. Washout conditions were performed as described above.
ATP measurements were made essentially as described in the ATP-determining kit protocol (Molecular Probes). In brief, a SLM-Aminco model 8100 Spectrofluorometer was used to measure light output at 560 nm, and ATP levels were quantitated by comparing light output from a test sample with that from a standard ATP solution. We found ATP to be 510% the level of saline g controls after a 30-min treatment with 5 mM Az and 1 mM DOG, and a recovery of 5075% after a 10-min washout period. These measurements are similar to those reported previously for PtK1 cells (DeBrabender et al., 1981; Bershadsky and Gelfand, 1983; Spurck et al., 1986).
Immunofluorescence
For Mad2, BubR1, CENP-E, and cytoplasmic dynein staining, cells were rinsed briefly in PHEM (60 mM Pipes, 25 mM Hepes, pH 6.9, 10 mM EGTA, 4 mM MgSO4) and lysed in 0.5% Triton-X 100/PHEM for 5 min at 37°C. Cells were fixed in 4% formaldehyde/PHEM for 20 min at 37°C. For 3F3/2 staining, 100 nM Microcystin was added to the lysis buffer, and cells were fixed in 1% formaldehyde/PHEM as described above. After a brief rinse in PBS (0.14 M NaCl, 2.5 mM KCl, 10 mM Na2HPO4, 1.5 mM KH2PO4, pH 7.4), cells were blocked in 10% boiled donkey serum/PHEM at 25°C for 1 h. Primary antibody dilutions were performed in 10% boiled donkey serum/PHEM for 1 h at 25°C as follows: 1:100 anti-Mad2; 1:500 BubR1, a gift of Dr. Tim Yen (Fox Chase Cancer Center, Philadelphia, PA); 1:750 CENP-E, a gift of Dr. Gordan Chan (Fox Chase Cancer Center); 1:2,000 cytoplasmic dynein 70.1 intermediate chain (Sigma-Aldrich); 1:5,000 3F3/2, a gift of Dr. Gary Gorbsky (University of Oklahoma, Oklahoma City, OK); 1:750 CREST serum, a gift of Dr. Bill Brinkley (Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX), and 1:300 DM1A tubulin (Sigma-Aldrich). After four 5-min rinses in PBST (PBS supplemented with 0.05% Tween-20), cells were incubated with appropriate secondary antibodies diluted into 5% boiled donkey serum/PHEM at 25°C for 1 h. Secondary antibodies were conjugated to either Rhodamine Red X (Jackson Laboratories) or Alexa 488 (Molecular Probes), and dilutions were as follows: 1:100 donkey antirabbit (Mad2, BubR1, CENP-E); 1:200 donkey antimouse (cytoplasmic dynein, 3F3/2, tubulin), and 1:100 donkey antihuman (CREST). Cells were then rinsed four times for 5 min in PBST, and mounted as described previously (Howell et al., 2000). For immunofluorescent studies of Mad2 and tubulin, cells were lysed (see above), fixed for 20 min in PHEM containing 4% formaldehyde/0.5% grade gluteraldehyde, quenched with 1 mg/ml NaBH4 in PHEM three times for 5 min at 25°C, and stained for Mad2 and tubulin.
Quantitation of fluorescence intensities was performed exactly as described in detail by Hoffman et al. (2001). Computer generated 9 x 9 and 13 x 13 pixel circles (for kinetochores) and 18 x 18 and 24 x 24 pixel circles (spindle poles) were used to measure kinetochore, spindle pole, and background fluorescence (Hoffman et al., 2001). Each coverslip was costained for CREST to allow precise identification of kinetochores. Spindle poles were identified by fluorescence and/or phase-contrast microscopy. Images were collected using identical imaging settings.
Microinjection
PtK1 cells were grown on coverslips, mounted into modified Rose chambers, and microinjected as described previously (Howell et al., 2000). Stage temperature was maintained at 3638°C using a Sage air curtain incubator. Immediately after injection, growth media was replaced with dye-free F12 medium, and time-lapse images were obtained as described by Canman et al. (2000). Cells were microinjected with either 10 mg/ml purified p50 (Whittman and Hyman, 1999) or concentrated 70.1 anti-dynein antibody (
78 mg/ml) (Waterman-Storer et al., 2000) in injection buffer (10 mM Na2HPO4, pH 7.4, 100 mM KCl, 1 mM MgCl2), and time-lapse images were taken every 20 s using a MetaView image acquisition system (Universal Imaging Corp.) For the Mad2 antibody microinjection studies, prometaphase cells were first injected with either p50 or concentrated anti-70.1 dynein antibody, allowed to block in metaphase for 4560 min, and finally microinjected with affinity-purified, anti-Mad2 antibody as previously described (Waters et al., 1998; Canman et al., 2000).
For studies of fluorescent Mad2 localization in dynein-inhibited cells, prometaphase cells were microinjected with Alexa 488-Mad2 protein (Fig. 6; Howell et al., 2000) and subsequently injected
5 min later with p50. Fluorescent and phase-contrast images were collected as described below.
Microscopy and laser photobleaching
Immunofluorescence and live cell digital images were acquired using wide-field eip-fluorescence and phase microscopy using procedures and instrumentation described by Howell et al. (2000). Confocal images of fixed cells were obtained with an Orca-ER CCD camera (Hamamatsu Photonics) on a Nikon TE300 inverted microscope equipped with a spinning disk confocal module (PerkinElmer Wallac) and scanner (Yokagawa), and acquired using a 100x 1.4 NA Plan Apochromat phase objective, a 100mW Argon-Krypton laser, and a Sutter filter wheel for selecting and shuttering of 488-, 568-, or 647-nm wavelengths. All images were acquired at 0.2-µm steps using MetaMorph software controlling the Nikon TE300 focus motor. Laser photobleaching and FRAP analysis were as described by Howell et al. (2000).
Electron microscopy
After cell treatment and fixation (see above), coverslips were flat embedded in Epon and serial 80-nm-thick sections were cut, stained, and imaged at 5,000x as previously described (McEwen et al., 1997; Rieder and Cassels, 1999). Microtubule counts for individual kinetochores were determined in duplicate counting trials as described by McEwen et al. (1997). Counting variation was 1.3% for unextracted cells, and 0.4% for extracted cells. Statistical computations were preformed using Microsoft Excel.
Measurements of interkinetochore distances and chromosome movements
Distances between sister kinetochores were measured in control and p50 blocked metaphase cells, as described by Hoffman et al. (2001). Anaphase chromosome movements and spindle elongation were measured from time-lapse images of cells obtained from the microinjection microscope system (see above) using MetaMorph image analysis software (Universal Imaging Corp.). Distance measurements were obtained between the leading edges of separating sister chromosomes, the leading edges of chromosomes and their poles, and the separation of the poles. The leading edges of separating chromosomes were easy to detect in the phase-contrast images, but the position of the poles was more difficult, particularly when poles were disrupted by dynein/dynactin inhibition. In phase-contrast, the spindle excludes dark cytoplasmic organelles. The spindle pole was usually identified as the polar end of the less dense region occupied by the spindle at the focal point of most chromosome movements.
Online supplemental material
Video 1 is a QuickTime movie of a prometaphase PtK1 cell microinjected with 10 mg/ml p50 dynamitin. Images were collected every 12 min. Time, hr:min:sec. Video 2 is a QuickTime movie of a prometaphase PtK1 cell microinjected with 10 mg/ml p50 dynamitin that arrested in metaphase and was subsequently injected with Mad2 antibodies. Images were collected every 12 min. Time, hr:min:sec. Videos are available at http://www.jcb.org/cgi/content/full/jcb.200105093/DC1.
| Footnotes |
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B.F. McEwen and J.C. Cantman contributed equally to this work.
* Abbreviations used in this paper: APC/C, anaphase-promoting complex/cyclosome; DOG, 2-deoxyglucose; Az, sodium azide; TCA, trichloric acetic acid.
| Acknowledgments |
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This work is supported by an American Cancer Society Postdoctoral Fellowship to B.J. Howell (00-147-01-CCG), National Institutes of Health grant to E.D. Salmon (GM-24364), National Science Foundation grant to B.F. McEwen (MCB0110821), and National Institutes of Health grant to C.L. Rieder (GMS-R01-40198).
Submitted: 18 May 2001
Revised: 6 November 2001
Accepted: 8 November 2001
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