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The Journal of Neuroscience, October 1, 1998, 18(19):7822-7835
Expression of the Mitotic Motor Protein Eg5 in Postmitotic
Neurons: Implications for Neuronal Development
Lotfi
Ferhat1,
Crist
Cook1,
Muriel
Chauviere2,
Maryannick
Harper2,
Michel
Kress2,
Gary E.
Lyons1, and
Peter W.
Baas1
1 Department of Anatomy, The University of Wisconsin
Medical School, Madison, Wisconsin 53706, and 2 IFC1,
UPR 9044 Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique,
Villejuif, France 94801
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ABSTRACT |
It is well established that the microtubules of the mitotic spindle
are organized by a variety of motor proteins, and it appears that the
same motors or closely related variants organize microtubules in the
postmitotic neuron. Specifically, cytoplasmic dynein and the
kinesin-related motor known as CHO1/MKLP1 are used within the mitotic
spindle, and recent studies suggest that they are also essential for
the establishment of the axonal and dendritic microtubule arrays of the
neuron. Other motors are required to tightly regulate microtubule
behaviors in the mitotic spindle, and it is attractive to speculate
that these motors might also help to regulate microtubule behaviors in
the neuron. Here we show that a homolog of the mitotic kinesin-related
motor known as Eg5 continues to be expressed in rodent neurons well
after their terminal mitotic division. In neurons, Eg5 is directly
associated with the microtubule array and is enriched within the distal
regions of developing processes. This distal enrichment is transient, and typically lost after a process has been clearly defined as an axon
or a dendrite. Strong expression can resume later in development, and
if so, the protein concentrates within newly forming sprouts at the
distal tips of dendrites. We suggest that Eg5 generates forces that
help to regulate microtubule behaviors within the distal tips of
developing axons and dendrites.
Key words:
microtubule; neuron; Eg5; axon; dendrite; motor
protein
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INTRODUCTION |
Microtubules are essential for the
differentiation of axons and dendrites. Throughout the axon and in the
distal region of the dendrite, microtubules are uniformly oriented with
their plus-ends distal to the cell body (Heidemann et al., 1981 ; Baas
et al., 1989 ). In contrast, microtubules in the proximal and middle
regions of the dendrite are nonuniformly oriented (Baas et al., 1988 , 1989 ). Given that the polarity of a microtubule is relevant to both its
dynamic and transport properties, these distinct patterns could provide
a basis for the morphological and compositional differences that
distinguish axons and dendrites from one another (Black and Baas,
1989 ). Most efforts to understand how cells regulate their microtubule
arrays have focused on dynamic events such as microtubule assembly,
disassembly, and stabilization. However, it is now clear that cells
have another powerful strategy for organizing their microtubules.
Specifically, motor proteins can generate forces on microtubules, and
thereby move them into specific locations within the cell and into
specific orientations. This strategy is particularly important in cells
such as neurons that must establish and regulate arrays of microtubules
in locations far from their nucleation sites within the cell body.
Recent studies suggest that microtubules are transported into axons and
dendrites with the appropriate polarity orientations by the motor
proteins known as cytoplasmic dynein and CHO1/MKLP1 (Sharp et al.,
1997 ; Ferhat et al., 1998b ; Ahmad et al., 1998 ).
Might other motor proteins generate forces on microtubules in the
neuron, and if so, might such forces be relevant to axonal and
dendritic differentiation? It is compelling to contemplate that the
growth of a neuronal process might be modulated by antagonistic and
complementary forces generated by a variety of motor proteins. Precedent for this scenario derives from the mitotic spindle, the
formation and functioning of which involve a host of motor proteins
that impose such forces on specific regions of the microtubule array
(for review, see Walczak and Mitchison, 1996 ). In fact, the two motor
proteins thus far implicated in the transport of neuronal microtubules,
cytoplasmic dynein and CHO1/MKLP1, are known to play key roles in
organizing microtubules during mitosis (Nislow et al., 1992 ; Heald et
al., 1996 ).
Here we sought to determine whether postmitotic neurons express a
homolog of the kinesin-related protein known as Eg5. This motor and
related members of the bimC family are critical for generating forces on microtubules that separate the duplicated centrosomes or spindle poles early in prophase (Enos and Morris, 1990 ;
LeGuellec et al., 1991 ; Hoyt et al., 1992 ; Roof et al., 1992 ; Hagan and
Yanagida, 1992 ; Sawin et al., 1992 , Sawin and Mitchison, 1995 ; Blangy
et al., 1995 ; Barton et al., 1995 ). In addition, these motors may help
organize the bipolar spindle later in mitosis by providing
counterforces to those generated by cytoplasmic dynein (Gaglio et al.,
1996 ). Our studies demonstrate that rodent neurons express a homolog of
Eg5 well past their terminal mitotic division, and that this protein is
localized in discrete and functionally important regions of developing
neuronal processes.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
cDNA library screening. A cDNA library constructed by
H. Okayama (unpublished data) using mRNA from MCA16 cells
(C3H10T1/2 mouse cells transformed by 3-methylcholanthrene; Shih et
al., 1979 ) was screened with a 32P-labeled 782 bp PCR
fragment (106 cpm/ml) coding for the motor domain of
HsEg5 (human Eg5; nt 327-1109, accession number X85137; Blangy et al.,
1995 ). A total of 1.5 × 105 colonies were
transferred to nitrocellulose filters (Schleicher and Schuell, Keene,
NH) and hybridized at 60°C for 24 hr in a hybridization buffer (6×
SSC, 0.5× Denhardt's solution, 0.1% SDS). Filters were washed four
times at 60°C for 15 min in a solution containing 6× SSC and 0.5%
SDS. Positive colonies were purified, and inserts were subcloned into
pBluescript KS+ plasmid (Stratagene, La Jolla, CA). The
remaining 120 bp at the 5' end of the cDNA were obtained with a
RT-PCR-based method using mRNA from mouse L cells primed with 5' primer
(5'-ATCTCGAGAACCATGGCGTCCCAGCCGAGTTC-3') derived from genomic sequences
and the 3' primer (5'-CTCAACAATTTGTTCCTCCTG-3') derived from cDNA
sequence corresponding to amino acids (aa) 414-420. Nucleotide sequence determination was performed by the dideoxy chain
termination method, using specific oligonucleotides as primers. Sequence data treatment was performed using computer facilities at the
Pôle de Bioinformatique de Villejuif (Dessen et al., 1990 ). The
cDNA nucleotide sequence encoding mouse Eg5 (termed MmEg5, Mus
musculus) reported in this paper has been submitted to the European Molecular Biology Laboratory/GenBank data bank under accession number AJ223293.
Recombinant vector constructions. The XhoI
fragment of the longest cDNA clone was inserted into pBluescript KS+
plasmid (Stratagene) at the SalI site (pBSEg5). Plasmid
pBSEg5S containing the stalk domain and part of the tail (aa 349-881)
of MmEg5 was obtained by digestion of pBSEg5 by EcoRI and
BglII restriction enzymes and religated. For removal of the
3' UTR containing repetitive sequences, the plasmid pBSEg5S was
digested by EcoRV and XhoI and religated
pBSEg5S(-R). For Northern blot analyses, the double-stranded, 1.6 kb-purified cDNA insert encoding the stalk domain and part of the tail,
obtained by digestion of pBSEg5S9(-R) with XbaI and ApaI restriction enzymes, was labeled with
[ -32P]dCTP as described below.
mRNA isolation and Northern blot analyses. Total RNA from
mouse whole embryos at embryonic day 10.5 (E10.5), E11.5, E13.5, and
E15.5 and from mouse brains at postnatal day 0 (P0), P7, P14, P21, and
adult, respectively, was purified by the Trizol (Life Technologies,
Grand Island, NY) extraction method as described in the manufacturer's
protocol. After isopropanol RNA precipitation, pellets were washed with
75% ethanol and resuspended in diethylpyrocarbonate-treated water.
Aliquots of the RNA were used for quantification by optical density
scanning (210-320 nm), and the integrity of the extracted RNA was confirmed by running 2 µg total RNA on a denaturing
(formaldehyde 2.2 M) agarose gel (1%) in 1× MAE
buffer (in mM: 20 4-morpholinepropanesulfonic acid,
pH 7.0, and 8 sodium acetate, 1 EDTA, pH 8.0). For Northern blot analysis, RNA (30 µg/lane) was separated on a 1% agarose formaldehyde gel and capillary-transferred with 10× SSC onto
noncharged nylon membrane (Micron Separations, Inc., Westborough, MA).
The 1.6 kb Eg5 cDNA probe described above was labeled with
[ -32P]dCTP to >109 cpm per µg of
DNA using klenow enzyme and a random hexanucleotide kit (Promega,
Madison, WI). The blots were hybridized using 2.5 × 106 cpm/ml labeled probe in QuickHyb (Stratagene)
according to the manufacturer's protocol. The blots were washed with
2× SSC, 0.1% SDS at room temperature for 10 min (twice), and then at
high stringency at 68°C with 0.1× SSC, 0.1% SDS for 15 min (twice),
as recommended in the manufacturer's protocol. Finally, the washed
membranes were directly exposed at 70°C to X-Omat AR film (Eastman
Kodak, Rochester, NY) with two intensifying screens for 7 d.
Animal dissection and tissue preparation. For all of the
studies presented here, we used samples obtained from rodents. For the
studies on MmEg5 expression in vivo, we used mice because the clone was isolated from mouse cells (Shih et al., 1979 ). We reasoned that using mice would optimize the signal-to-noise ratio in
the in situ hybridization analyses. For the studies on
prenatal animals, pregnant mice were euthanized, and embryos were
removed by caesarean section on E10.5, E11.5, E13.5, or E15.5.
Postnatal studies were performed on animals at ages P0, P7, P14, P21,
and adult (ad). The whole embryos were rapidly removed and dissected from the amniotic membrane in ice-cold 1× PBS, pH 7.4, and
fixed overnight at 4°C in freshly prepared cold 4% paraformaldehyde (PFA). The embryos were then rinsed in 1× PBS, dehydrated through an
ascending ethanol series, embedded in paraffin (Paraplast; Oxford
Labware, St. Louis, MO), and stored at room temperature. The postnatal
animals (from P0 pups to adult) were decapitated, and their brains were
rapidly removed and treated as described above and then stored at room
temperature until needed. Sagittal sections (6 µm) of the whole
embryos and brains of P0 pups to adults were cut, mounted onto
gelatin-coated slides, and then kept desiccated at room temperature
until used.
Cell cultures. For most of our studies on cultured neurons,
we obtained the neuronal tissue from rats, because cultures of rat
hippocampal and sympathetic neurons are well characterized, and also
our studies showed sufficient cross-reactivity of cultured rat neurons
with the mouse probe and the affinity-purified polyclonal antibody
against the motor domain of HsEg5 described below to provide good
signal-to-noise ratio. Cultures of embryonic rat hippocampal neurons
were prepared as previously described (Goslin and Banker, 1991 ; Sharp
et al., 1995 ). Briefly, hippocampi were dissected from 18 d rat
embryos, treated with trypsin for 15 min at 37°C, and triturated with
fire-polished Pasteur pipettes. The cells were plated at a density of
1000 cells/cm2 onto glass coverslips coated with 1 mg/ml poly-D-lysine in Minimum Essential Medium (MEM, Life
Technologies) containing 10% horse serum. After 2-4 hr, the
coverslips plated with neurons were cocultured into plastic
tissue-culture dishes containing a monolayer of astroglial cells. The
astroglial cells had been grown in medium containing MEM and 10% fetal
bovine serum. One day before coculture, the medium was changed to a
fresh medium containing MEM, the N2 supplements described by
Bottenstein (Goslin and Banker, 1991 ), 0.1% ovalbumin, and 0.01 mg/ml
sodium pyruvate.
Cultures of sympathetic neurons from the superior cervical ganglia were
prepared from newborn rat pups. After dissection, the ganglia were
treated with 0.25% collagenase for 1 hr followed by 0.25% trypsin for
45 min, and then triturated with fire-polished Pasteur pipettes into a
single cell dispersion as previously described (Baas and Ahmad, 1993 ).
Before plating the cells, the glass coverslips were coated for 3 hr
with 1 mg/ml poly-D-lysine, rinsed extensively, and then
treated with 10 µg/ml laminin for 4 hr as described by Higgins et al.
(1991) . Cells were then plated in Leibovitz's L15 medium (Sigma, St.
Louis, MO) supplemented with 0.6% glucose, 2 mM
L-glutamine, 100 U/ml penicillin, 100 µg/ml streptomycin, 10% fetal bovine serum, and 100 µg/ml nerve growth factor for 24 hr.
For long-term culture, the medium was replaced the next morning by N2
medium (Baas and Ahmad, 1993 ) supplemented with 5% fetal bovine serum
and 100 ng/ml nerve growth factor. Cytosine arabinoside was added at 10 µM to reduce the proliferation of non-neuronal cells.
For one set of studies, primary neuron cultures were generated from
hamster cerebral cortex. The methods for generating these cultures have
been described in detail (Szebenyi et al., 1998 ).
Cultures of mouse neuroblastoma cells (N2a) and human HeLa cells were
maintained as previously described (Blangy et al., 1995 ; Yu et al.,
1997 ).
In situ hybridization probes. In vitro
transcription of 35S-UTP- or digoxigenin-UTP-labeled MmEg5
riboprobes was performed from linearized pBSEg5S(-R) plasmids using an
Ambion (Austin, TX) or Boehringer Mannheim (Indianapolis, IN) in
vitro transcription kit, respectively, according to each
manufacturer's protocol. The sense and antisense riboprobes were
prepared from the 1.6 kb mouse cDNA fragment cloned into pBSEg5S(-R)
vector described above flanked by T3 and T7 promoters. The sense
riboprobes (radioactive and nonradioactive) were transcribed in
vitro from an ApaI linearized plasmid using T7 RNA
polymerase purchased from Ambion and Boehringer Mannheim, respectively.
The antisense riboprobes (radioactive and nonradioactive) were
transcribed from a XbaI linearized plasmid using T3 RNA
polymerase (Ambion).
In situ hybridization on brain sections. In
situ hybridization was performed by a modification of the protocol
of Lyons et al. (1996) . Briefly, sections were deparaffinized in
xylene, rehydrated through a descending ethanol series, fixed in 4%
PFA in 1× PBS for 15 min, rinsed in 1× PBS, and treated with
proteinase K (20 mg/ml, Boehringer Mannheim) for 7.5 min at room
temperature. After post-fixation with 4% PFA for 5 min, acetylation in
triethanolamine for 10 min, dehydration in 30, 50, 70, 85, 95, and
100% ethanol, and delipidation in chloroform for 5 min, the sections
were prehybridized for 2 hr in 4× SSC buffer containing 50%
formamide, 1× Denhardt's solution, 300 µg/ml yeast RNA, 300 µg/ml
salmon sperm DNA, and 100 mM dithiothreitol (DTT). The
sections were hybridized with 5 × 105 cpm/100
µl of the antisense or sense riboprobe overnight at 50°C. The
tissue was then rinsed three times in 2× SSC for 15 min at room
temperature, treated with 20 µg/ml RNase A (Boehringer Mannheim), and
finally washed in increasingly stringent conditions up to 0.1× SSC at
60°C for 30 min. All rinse and wash buffers contained 0.25 gm/ml
sodium thiosulfate. The sections were processed for both film
(Hyperfilm- max; Amersham, Arlington Heights, IL) and emulsion
autoradiography (NTB2, Eastman Kodak), with exposure times of 30 d
and 8 weeks, respectively. After development of emulsion
autoradiograms, the sections were counterstained with cresyl violet and
mounted with Permount. In the case of the film autoradiography,
photographs were digitized by scanning the films. In the case of the
emulsion autoradiography, photomicrographs were taken with a Zeiss
Axiophot (Carl Zeiss Incorporated, Thornwood, NY) microscope equipped
with dark-field illumination. Hybridization of adjacent sections with
the sense riboprobe was used as a control.
In situ hybridization on primary neuron cultures.
In situ hybridization was performed on cultured hippocampal
and sympathetic neurons that had been grown on glass coverslips. The
cells were fixed for 15 min at room temperature in 4% PFA in 1× PBS
and dehydrated in graded alcohols (30, 50, 70, 85, 95, and 100%),
after which they were hybridized with antisense or sense riboprobes
that had been either radioactively or digoxygenin-labeled. In the case of the radioactively labeled probes, hybridization was performed overnight at 50°C with the same hybridization mixture described above
using 5 × 105 cpm/100 µl of the sense or
antisense riboprobe. Subseqent steps and visualization of the
radioactive signal were performed as previously described (Ferhat et
al., 1997 , 1998a ,b ). In the case of the digoxygenin-labeled probes,
hybridization was performed overnight at 50°C with the same
hybridization using 7.5 ng/100 µl of the sense or antisense
riboprobe. After hybridization, cells were rinsed, treated with RNase
and then subjected to high stringency washes as described above. The
cells were then washed twice for 10 min each in Tris-HCl buffer (100 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.4, and 150 mM NaCl). After
exposure for 30 min to a blocking solution containing 0.1% Triton
X-100 and 2% normal sheep serum (Sigma) in Tris-HCl buffer, the cells
were incubated overnight at 4°C with sheep antidigoxigenin alkaline
phosphatase antibody (Boehringer Mannheim) diluted 1:1000 in blocking
buffer. The coverslips were rinsed twice for 10 min in Tris-HCl buffer
and then exposed for 10 min to color development buffer (in
mM: 100 Tris-HCl, pH 9.5, 100 NaCl, and 50 MgCl2), after which they were incubated with
Tris-HCl buffer substrate solution (100 mM Tris-HCl, pH
9.5, and 50 mM MgCl2) containing nitro-blue tetrazolium (NBT, 340 µg/ml) and bromochloroindolylyl phosphate (BCIP, 170 µg/ml). For reduction of the endogenous
phosphatase activity, 5 mM levamisole was added to the
color development buffer. The color signal was monitored by microscopy,
and the reaction was stopped when a strong cellular signal was
developed against a low background. After transferring them to buffer
containing 10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, and 1 mM
EDTA, the coverslips were washed twice for 10 min in distilled water,
air-dried, and mounted in mounting aqueous solution. Cells were
visualized, and photographs were taken using bright-field microscopy to
reveal the reddish alkaline-phosphate reaction product.
Affinity purification of anti-Eg5 antibodies. An
EcoRI-BglII cDNA restriction fragment of 494 bp
encoding 161 amino acid residues (17.9 kDa) of HsEg5 amino-terminal
region was cloned downstream from the trpE gene into the
EcoRI-BamHI of the pATH10 expression vector
(Koerner et al., 1991 ). The Eg5 fusion protein was resolved by
SDS-PAGE, purified, and injected into New Zealand white rabbits. Affinity-purified Eg5 motor antibodies were obtained by elution of Igs
bound to the MalE-HsEg5 fusion protein. In brief, the MalE-HsEg5 fusion protein was resolved by SDS-PAGE and transferred to an Immobilon
P filter (Millipore, Bedford, MA). The strip of Immobilon P filter that
carried the HsEg5 protein was incubated with the polyclonal antibody
for 16 hr at 4°C. After an extensive washing step, Igs bound to the
protein were recovered by brief treatment with 0.1 M
glycine, pH 2.8, followed by rapid neutralization with 0.1 volume of 1 M Tris-HCl, pH 8. The antibody was stored at 4°C after
addition of 5 mg of bovine serum albumin per milliliter (Sambrook et
al., 1989 ).
Preparation of protein samples for Western blotting.
Cultures were washed three times with 1× PBS, scraped, and homogenized at 4°C in (in mM:) 50 Tris-HCl, pH 7.5, 250 NaCl, 0.1%
NP40, and 5 EDTA with 1 PMSF and 10 µg/ml each of aprotinin and
leupeptin. Samples were centrifuged at 15,000 × g for
20 min at 4°C. Extracts were clarified by centrifugation at
15,000 × g for 30 min. Finally, protein concentrations
of cultures and tissues extracts were determined by the DC
protein assay (Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA) according to the manufacturer's
protocol.
SDS-PAGE and Western blotting. The protein samples were
boiled for 10 min, and the same amounts were loaded into each well and
resolved on 8% SDS-polyacrylamide gels. After electrophoresis, the
proteins were transferred to nitrocellulose membranes (Micron Separations, Inc.). Blots were blocked with 5% nonfat dried milk and
0.2% Tween 20 in 1× PBS (PBS-milk) for 3 hr at room temperature and
incubated overnight at 4°C in the Eg5 antibody described above at
1:1000 in PBS-milk. The membranes were washed six times for 15 min
each with a solution containing 1× PBS and 0.1% Tween 20, incubated
with horseradish peroxidase goat anti-rabbit Ig at 1/2500 in PBS-milk
for 2 hr at room temperature, washed, and immunodetected using the
enhanced chemiluminescence system (ECL; Amersham).
Immunofluorescence microscopy. For immunofluorescence
analyses, the cultures were fixed for 6 min in cold methanol
( 20°C), rehydrated three times for 5 min each in 1× PBS, and
incubated for 30 min in blocking solution containing 5% normal goat
serum in 1× PBS. The cells were then exposed overnight at 4°C to a
mouse monoclonal antibody that specifically recognizes -tubulin
(used at 1:500; Amersham), a mouse monoclonal antibody that
specifically recognizes a poorly phosphorylated neurofilament protein
enriched in the somatodendritic domain of the neuron (RMDO9.6, used at 1:500, provided as a kind gift from Dr. V. Lee, Philadelphia, PA), or
to the human polyclonal Eg5 antibody described above (used at 1:500).
The cells were washed extensively in 1× PBS and incubated either with
an FITC anti-mouse second antibody or with a combination of a
biotinylated anti-rabbit secondary antibody followed by
streptavidin-conjugated with Cy3. Fluorescent second antibodies and
probes were purchased from Jackson ImmunoResearch (West Grove, PA).
Double-immunostaining for tubulin and Eg5 or neurofilament and Eg5 were
performed using appropriate combinations of the antibodies listed
above. After washes in 1× PBS, cells were mounted in a medium that
reduces photobleaching, and were then viewed with a confocal microscope (LSM 410, Carl Zeiss).
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RESULTS |
Isolation and DNA sequence analysis of mouse Eg5
To isolate the mouse Eg5 gene, we screened a cDNA library from
MCA16 cells using as a probe a cDNA fragment corresponding to the
amino-terminal motor domain of human Eg5 (see Materials and Methods).
Two positive clones were isolated, and the corresponding insert of the
longest clone (4412 nt) was subcloned in plasmid vectors and subjected
to DNA sequence analysis. The sequence of the longest cDNA contains a
single open reading frame encoding a polypeptide of 1014 amino acids.
This cDNA lacks the 5' end sequence. To complete the sequence, we
performed RT-PCR using specific oligonucleotides as primers (for
details, see Materials and Methods). Figure
1A shows the comparison
of the MmEg5-predicted protein sequence with the HsEg5-predicted
protein sequence (Blangy et al., 1995 ). The predicted sequences of the
mouse and human proteins are 80% identical and 87% similar, and show
greatest homology within their amino-terminal domains. However,
appreciable sequence conservation is also found within other domains of
the molecules, as shown in Figure 1B, suggesting that
the two proteins are functional homologs. MmEg5 also shows considerable
homology with Xenopus Eg5, but less so compared with human
Eg5. The predicted sequences between mouse and Xenopus are
56% identical and 71% similar, with most of the additional divergence
appearing within the C-terminal regions of the molecule. Using the
method of Lupas et al. (1991) , we determined that amino acid residues
325-440, 451-480, and 625-653 of MmEg5 should form an extensive
coiled coil conformation (probability >50%, Fig. 1C). The
amino-terminal domain contains the consensus motifs that are normally
found in motor domains of kinesin-related proteins, including
YGQTXXGK(T/S), NXXSSRSH, and DLAGXE (Fig. 1A),
indicating that this domain is responsible for force generation against
microtubules, as is the case with Eg5 homologs from other species. The
central -helical region contains leucine zipper motifs at amino acid
residues 408-436, which are probably involved in the association of
MmEg5 molecules into complexes. The C-terminal domain contains a cdc2
consensus site corresponding to Thr(887). Such a site has been shown to be essential for the interaction of the motor with microtubules in both
Xenopus (Sawin and Mitchison, 1995 ) and human (Blangy et
al., 1995 ).

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Figure 1.
Cloning and characterization of Eg5 in mouse cells
(MmEg5). A, Alignment of MmEg5 and HsEg5 protein
sequences. Amino acids are shown using the single-letter code. The
human sequence (Blangy et al., 1995 ) is shown only when it differs from
the mouse sequence. Identities are indicated by dashes,
and conservative substitutions (T/S, E/N/D/Q, K/R, Y/F/W, L/V/I/M) are
shown by dots. The amino-terminal domain contains the
consensus motifs that are normally found in motor domains of
kinesin-related proteins, including YGQTXXGK(T/S), NXXSSRSH,
and DLAGXE (boxes). Vertical
bars mark the boundaries of the motor, link, stalk, and tail
domains. Another group has recently published partial sequence
information from the N-terminal region of MmEg5 that is almost
identical to ours but contains a small number of nucleotide differences
that result in six amino acid substitutions and one additional amino
acid (Nakagawa et al., 1997 ). The asterisk indicates
threonine (T), a site that can be
phosphorylated presumably by cdc2 kinase. The consensus motifs of
kinesin-like proteins are boxed, and the leucine zipper
motif is underlined. B, Diagram showing
the homologies (similar/identical amino acids) in different domains of
MmEg5 and HsEg5. BESTFIT was used to find the best segments of
similarities between the two sequences (Devereux et al., 1984 ).
C, Coiled coil structure predicted by the algorithm of
Lupas et al. (1991) .
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Expression of Eg5 in tissues of the mouse determined by Northern
blot and in situ hybridization
Having obtained the above sequence information, our next goal was
to determine whether MmEg5 is expressed only in cells undergoing mitosis or alternatively, whether it is also expressed in
differentiated cells such as neurons. To investigate this
issue we first used Northern blot analyses to study
Eg5 expression in mouse whole embryos at E10.5, E11.5, E13.5, E15.5,
and mouse brain at P0, P7, P14, P21, and adult. Tissue from the small
intestine was also analyzed at P0 and adult. As a positive control, we
used mitotic mouse neuroblastoma cells during their exponential growth
phase in culture. Cultured human HeLa cells were used as a negative control because under high stringency conditions we would not expect
the MmEg5 probe to cross-hybridize with the human sequence. Equal
amounts (30 µg) of total RNA were loaded per lane. When these RNAs
were hybridized with the cDNA probe for MmEg5 (see Materials and
Methods), we observed three transcripts (5.0 kb, 5.6 kb, and 6.5 kb) in
the whole embryos at all stages of brain development, in the P0
intestine, and in the neuroblastoma cells (see Fig.
2A,B).
Quantitative analyses indicate that the three transcripts are roughly
equally expressed in all samples studied, although slight variations
were observed in some cases (Fig. 2A',B'). During the development of the whole embryo and the brain these transcripts were downregulated (Figs.
2A',B'). A similar downregulation of
expression was observed in the case of other structures such as the
developing small intestine (Fig. 2A'). These
transcripts may represent alternative splicing, different
5',3'-untranslated regions, or different poly (A+)
signals used in protein synthesis. However, the multiple transcripts could not be the result of multiple Eg5 genes, given that Southern blot
analyses demonstrate the presence of only one Eg5 gene in the mouse and
human (M. Kress, unpublished data). As expected based on sequence
divergence in the stalk and tail regions of the molecule, no
transcripts were visualized in HeLa cells using the MmEg5 probe.
However, three transcripts with a similar pattern have been detected in
HeLa cells using a probe specific to the human Eg5 sequence (M. Kress,
unpublished data).

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Figure 2.
Expression of MmEg5 mRNAs in mouse tissues and
cultured cells determined by Northern blot analyses. Total RNA (30 µg/lane) isolated from whole embryo at E10.5, E11.5, E13.5, E15.5
(A, lanes 1-4),
from small intestine at P0 and adult (lanes 5,
6), from whole brain at P0, P7, P14, P21, and
adult (B, lanes
2-6), and from cultured mouse
neuroblastoma cells (used as a positive control; A,
lane 7) was electrophoresed in a formaldehyde 1%
agarose gel, transferred to a nylon membrane, and then probed with
radioactively labeled MmEg5 cDNA (see Materials and Methods). The
transcripts (5.0, 5.6, and 6.5 kb) detected in whole embryo, small
intestine, and whole brain were identical in size to those found in
neuroblastoma cells. The histograms A' and
B' show the changes in the levels of Eg5 mRNAs in
different tissues during their development.
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Having established the presence of Eg5 transcripts in mouse tissues, we
next used in situ hybridization to study the regional and
cellular distribution of Eg5 mRNA in developing mouse tissues. For
these analyses, we used sense and antisense riboprobes that were
synthesized from the same 1.6 kb MmEg5 cDNA fragment described above.
The specificity of the MmEg5 antisense riboprobe was first assessed in
analyses on neuroblastoma cells used as a positive control and HeLa
cells used as a negative control. In neuroblastoma cells, hybridization
signal was observed both during interphase and mitosis, but was clearly
higher in dividing cells (Fig.
3A). Consistent with the
specificity of the antisense probe, hybridization signal was barely
detectable within the HeLa cells, with levels no higher than the very
low background detected in neuroblastoma (Fig. 3B) and HeLa
cells using the sense riboprobe. Figure 3C shows an embryo
at E15.5 hybridized with the antisense riboprobe. Prominent signal was
detected in structures including the submandibular gland, epithelium
surrounding the eye (better visualized in other sections), the liver,
kidney, lung, thymus gland, cartilage primordium of the body of the
hyoid bone, and the gut. Emulsion analyses indicate that the
hybridization signal is present in postmitotic cells, such as the
smooth muscle cells of the gut, as well as in mitotic cells, such as
the mucosal cells of the gut (data not shown). Lower levels of signal
were detected in structures such as the tongue, the heart, and the
epithelium of the hindlimbs. Hybridization of sagittal sections of
whole embryo E15.5 (and all other ages) with the sense riboprobe
resulted in only background labeling with low density and equal grain
distribution over the embryo (Fig. 3D). Consistent with the
results of the Northern blot analyses on whole brain, MmEg5 mRNAs are
also strongly expressed in CNS structures such as the E15.5 epithalamus
(Fig. 3E) and cerebral cortex (Fig.
3E,F) but their expression
is downregulated during development. By P7, the signal is low within
the hippocampus, but is high within the cerebellum and the olfactory
bulb (Fig. 3G). At P21 and in the adult, the signal is low
throughout most of the brain (Fig.
3H,I). In the adult,
detectable signal is again visible within the olfactory bulb (Fig.
3I). No such signal was apparent with the sense
control (Fig. 3J). These patterns of
expression are consistent with the different temporal patterns of
development of these various brain structures and the fact that neurons
within the olfactory bulb remain plastic even in the adult.

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Figure 3.
Expression of MmEg5 mRNAs in mouse tissues and
cultured cells determined by in situ hybridization.
A and B show cultured mouse neuroblastoma
cells hybridized with the MmEg5 antisense and sense riboprobes,
respectively. Autoradiographs C and D are
representative of the hybridization pattern obtained with MmEg5
antisense and sense riboprobes, respectively, at E15.5. Hybridization
signal was detected within the submandibular salivary gland
(sg), cartilage primordium of the body of the hyoid bone
(cb), thymus gland (tg), liver
(l), gut (g), heart
(h), tongue (t), kidney
(k), lung (lu), and epithelial
cells of the hindlimbs (hl). Shown in
E and F, respectively, are a film
autoradiograph and corresponding dark-field illumination of a
transverse section of the cerebral cortex (Cx) at E15.5
obtained with the MmEg5 antisense riboprobe. Et
indicates epithalamus, and SVZ indicates subventricular
zone. LV indicates lateral ventricle. Autoradiographs
G-I are representative of the
hybridization patterns obtained with MmEg5 antisense riboprobe at P7,
P21, and adult mouse brain (Ad), respectively.
Cb, cerebellum; Hip, hippocampus;
Ob, olfactory bulb. Autoradiograph J is
representative of the adult mouse brain hybridization pattern obtained
with MmEg5 sense riboprobe. K, Dark-field illumination
of the cerebellum hybridized for MmEg5 at P7. At P7, the external
granular cell layer (egl) and the internal
granular cell layer (igl) are labeled. Scale bar:
A, B, 6 µm; C,
D, 0.3 cm; E, 0.1 cm;
F-K, 0.2 cm.
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We next explored the expression of MmEg5 mRNAs in developing cells of
the CNS. One possibility is that the expression and downregulation of
these mRNAs relate to the mitotic divisions of undifferentiated
neuroblasts rather than terminally postmitotic neurons. Another
possibility is that developing neurons continue to express MmEg5 mRNAs
after their terminal mitotic division. As a first measure toward
exploring this issue, we focused our attention on the laminar structure
of the developing cerebellum. The external granular layer contains
mitotic neuroblasts that gradually become postmitotic. Then, these
postmitotic neurons migrate into the internal granular layer in which
they continue to differentiate (Hatten et al., 1997 ). Analyses of
sections exposed to emulsion indicate that in the P7 cerebellum, the
external granule cells are highly labeled by the MmEg5 probe and that
cells of the internal granular layer are labeled as well (Fig.
3K). Although the labeling in the external granular
layer might reflect the residual mitotic activity of some of these
cells, it is unlikely that the labeling in the internal granular layer
can be attributed to such activity. Thus, these observations suggest
that postmitotic neurons continue to express MmEg5 as they
differentiate.
Expression of Eg5 in neuronal cultures determined by in
situ hybridization
To confirm that Eg5 is expressed in postmitotic neurons as well as
in dividing neuroblasts, we performed in situ hybridization analyses on two well characterized culture systems of terminally postmitotic neurons, one from the central and one from the peripheral nervous system. Hippocampal and sympathetic neurons were obtained from
rat fetuses and newborn rat pups at times when most of them had
completed their terminal mitotic division (Goslin and Banker, 1991 ;
Higgins et al., 1991 ). In situ hybridization was performed using both radioactively labeled probes and probes labeled with digoxygenin. Sympathetic neurons form axons within the first few hours
in culture and dendrites within the first few days. The mRNAs encoding
MmEg5 were expressed in sympathetic neurons at 1 d (Fig.
4A), 3 d (Fig.
4B), and 7 d (Fig. 4C) but were not
detected at 14 d (Fig. 4D). At 1 d, most
cells displayed high levels of expression. At 3 d, all of the
cells exhibited their highest levels of expression. At 7 d,
expression levels were lower than at 1 or 3 d. At 14 d, the
signal was significantly decreased and was no higher than the low
background signal obtained with the sense riboprobe at all time points
(Fig. 4E).

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Figure 4.
Expression of Eg5 mRNAs in cultured rat
sympathetic neurons determined by in situ hybridization.
Cultured sympathetic neurons were hybridized with either the
radioactive (large panels) or with the
digoxygenin-labeled (small panels) antisense
(A-D) or sense (E)
riboprobe for MmEg5. Sympathetic neurons were obtained from superior
cervical ganglia of newborn rat pups and were grown for 1, 3, 7, and
14 d. In situ hybridization analyses show that
mRNAs encoding Eg5 were expressed at 1, 3, and 7 d. At 14 d,
the hybridization signal was similar to that detected at 3 d with
the sense riboprobe control. Note also that Eg5 mRNAs are downregulated
during in vitro development. Scale bar, 10 µm.
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The hippocampal cultures are useful for developmental studies because
they differentiate axons and dendrites in a well characterized sequence
of stages that presumably reflects their in vivo development (Dotti et al., 1988 ). The cells initially extend lamellipodia (stage 1)
which coalesce into immature processes within a few hours after plating
(stage 2). One of these immature processes becomes the axon by 1.5 d in culture (stage 3), after which those remaining differentiate into
dendrites by 3-4 d in culture (stage 4). By 1 week, the neurons have
developed many mature characteristics, such as the presence of
dendritic sprouts (stage 5). Hybridization signal for MmEg5 mRNAs was
present at all of these stages (data not shown). Levels varied from
cell to cell at stage 1, but were high in all cells at stage 2. At
stage 3, stage 4, and in some cells at stage 5, expression levels were
substantially decreased compared with those at stages 1 or 2. At stage
5, some cells displayed levels of expression that were as high as those
at stages 1 or 2. Hybridization of neurons with the sense riboprobe at
all stages resulted only in low background labeling. These results on
cultured hippocampal and sympathetic cultures indicate that neurons
continue to express MmEg5 mRNAs well past their terminal mitotic
division. The fact that older hippocampal but not sympathetic neurons
express detectable levels of MmEg5 mRNAs may relate to the fact that
hippocampal neurons are more plastic later in development.
Identification of MmEg5 protein in neurons
Western blot analyses were performed on samples extracted from
cultured sympathetic neurons at 3 d because the levels of mRNAs for Eg5 were highest at this stage of development (Fig.
5). These analyses were performed using
an affinity-purified polyclonal antibody raised against a region of the
motor domain of HsEg5 that is highly conserved in MmEg5 (see Materials
and Methods). HeLa cells, used as a positive control, showed a single
major band at 135 kDa when 10 µg of total protein were loaded (data not shown), and an additional minor band of 130 kDa when at least 50 µg were loaded. Similar results have been obtained with a
polyclonal antibody against the tail region of HsEg5 (Blangy et
al., 1995 ; M. Kress, unpublished data). We also obtained similar
results with the polyclonal antibody against the motor domain in
studies on chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells. Cultured neuroblastoma
cells showed the same major 135 kDa band when 50 µg of total protein were loaded. At 3 d in culture, the sympathetic neurons showed a
comparable 135 kDa band. Overexposure of the blots revealed an
additional band at 93 kDa within the 3 d cultures (data not shown). No bands were observed in control studies in which the primary
antibody was deleted. These results indicate that neurons express
protein recognized by a polyclonal antibody specific for Eg5.

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Figure 5.
Western blot analyses using a polyclonal antibody
against Eg5 on extracts prepared from cultured cells. Western blot
analyses were performed on samples extracted from rat cultured
sympathetic neurons (SN) at 3 d using an
affinity-purified polyclonal antibody raised against a region of the
motor domain of HsEg5 that is highly conserved in MmEg5. The mitotic
form of the Eg5 protein focuses as a 135 kDa band in CHO, HeLa, and
neuroblastoma (N2a) cells, used as positive controls.
HeLa cells also show a minor 130 KDa band. The 135 kDa protein is also
expressed in postmitotic sympathetic neurons. Arrows
indicate protein ladder (Life Technologies).
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Distribution of Eg5 protein in mitotic cells and
developing neurons
To further confirm the specificity of the polyclonal Eg5 antibody
in mouse cells, we performed immunofluorescence analyses on the
cultured neuroblastoma cells. The results of these analyses were
entirely similar to those obtained on HeLa cells using either the tail
polyclonal (Blangy et al., 1995 ) or the motor polyclonal HsEg5 antibody
(data not shown). Specifically, staining is low and diffuse in the
cytoplasm during interphase (Fig. 6,
arrows), after which it becomes concentrated in the region
of the centrosomes during their separation in prophase (Fig.
6A) and in the half-spindles near each centrosome
during metaphase (Fig. 6B). Then during anaphase, the
staining becomes weaker and more diffuse (Fig. 6C), after which it localizes to the postmitotic bridges during telophase (Fig.
6D). Thus immunofluorescence staining with the
polyclonal antibody results in a pattern consistent with its specific
recognition of the Eg5 protein.

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Figure 6.
The polyclonal HsEg5 antibody recognizes MmEg5
protein in neuroblastoma cells. The polyclonal antibody generated from
the N-terminal motor region of the human Eg5 molecule reveals the same
distribution of Eg5 protein during different phases of mitosis in mouse
neuroblastoma cells as observed in HeLa cells with an antibody directed
against the tail region of HsEg5 (Blangy et al., 1995 ).
Arrows indicate interphase cells in various panels. Each
panel also shows one or more cell in a particular stage of mitosis.
A, Prophase; B, Metaphase;
C, Anaphase; D, Telophase. Scale bar, 10 µm.
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At stage 1 of development, cultured hippocampal neurons show Eg5
immunoreactivity within the cell body and lamellipodia (data not
shown). At stage 2, the protein is localized within the cell body and
within most of the immature processes (Fig.
7A). Most typically the
protein was concentrated at the distal tips of the processes, but
sometimes along their lengths. At stage 3, the protein is still present
within the cell body and minor processes. In some axons, the protein
was no longer observed at the distal tip of the early axon (Fig.
7B, arrow). In most cases, the protein was
observed at the distal tips of the early axon (Fig.
7C,D) and within branches of the axons
(Fig. 7D). At stage 4, protein levels were significantly
diminished throughout the neuron (Fig. 7E). Very low levels
of protein were sometimes detected at dendrite tips (Fig.
7E, arrow). At stage 5, the protein levels in
most cells were notably increased. Figure
8 shows three such cells double-labeled
with a -tubulin antibody to reveal cellular morphology (Fig.
8A-C) and the polyclonal Eg5 antibody
(Fig. 8A'-C'). Figure 8, A and
A', shows a neuron early in stage 5 before the development of dendritic sprouts. Eg5 staining is apparent in the distal tips of
the dendrites. The remaining panels of the figure show two neurons
later in stage 5 after the development of dendritic sprouts. Eg5
staining is concentrated within the sprouts.

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Figure 7.
Immunofluorescence analyses on the distribution of
Eg5 in cultured rat hippocampal neurons at early stages of development.
At stage 2 (A), the protein is localized within
cell bodies and within most minor processes. Most typically, it is
present at the tips of the minor processes, but sometimes along their
lengths. At stage 3, the protein is still present within the cell body
and minor processes. In some axons, the protein was no longer observed
at the distal tip of the process (B,
arrow). In most cases, the protein was observed at the
distal tips of the early axon (C, D) and
within branches of the axons (D). At stage 4 (E), protein levels were significantly diminished
throughout the neuron. Very low levels of protein were sometimes
detected at dendrite tips (arrow). Scale bar, 10 µm.
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Figure 8.
Immunofluorescence analyses on the distribution of
Eg5 in cultured rat hippocampal neurons at stage 5 of development.
Shown are stage 5 hippocampal cultures double-immunostained for
-tubulin in A-C to reveal cellular
morphology and in A'-C' to show Eg5
distribution. Eg5 protein levels are significantly higher than at stage
4. The protein is localized within the tips of dendrites
(A'), as well as within newly forming sprouts of
dendrites (B', C'). Scale bar, 5.5 µm.
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Figure 9A shows cultured
sympathetic neurons stained for Eg5 6 hr after plating.
Immunoreactivity is localized within the cell body, lamellipodia, and
distal regions of developing processes. Figure 9, B and
B', shows a neuron with longer axons from a 6 hr culture
double-labeled for -tubulin to reveal cellular morphology and Eg5,
respectively. Eg5 is localized within the cell body and distal tips of
the axons. The remaining panels of the figure show cells double-labeled
with a neurofilament antibody to reveal cellular morphology (Fig.
9C-E) and the polyclonal Eg5 antibody (Fig.
9C'-E'). The neurofilament antibody recognizes a
poorly phosphorylated epitope that is enriched in cell bodies and
dendrites and, hence, is particularly useful for discerning dendrites
from axons. At 3 d, Eg5 is localized in the distal tips of the
dendrites (Fig. 9C,C'). Unlike the case with
cultured hippocampal neurons, the dendrites of cultured sympathetic
neurons do not branch as extensively and tend not to form sprouts later
in development. In the rare instances in which we were able to observe
a single short branch extending from a dendrite, Eg5 staining appeared
within the branch (Fig. 9D,D'). At
7 d (data not shown) and 14 d (Fig.
9E,E'), Eg5 was observed within the
cell body. Staining was also found along the length of the dendrite,
but this staining was weak and diffuse, and never enriched in their
distal tips.

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Figure 9.
Immunofluorescence analyses on the distribution of
Eg5 in developing cultured rat sympathetic neurons. A,
B, and B' show neurons cultured for 6 hr.
A shows that Eg5 is present within cell bodies,
lamellipodia, short processes resulting from coalescence of
lamellipodia, and within the distal tips of early axons.
B is a -tubulin double-stain to reveal morphology.
B' shows that Eg5 is present within the cell bodies and
distal tips of somewhat longer axons. The remaining panels show older
cultures (3 and 14 d) double-immunostained for a dendrite-enriched
neurofilament protein in C-E to reveal
morphology and for Eg5 in C'-E'. At
3 d, Eg5 is concentrated at the dendrite tip (C',
D') as well as in dendritic branches
(D'). At 14 d, Eg5 is still detected in the cell
body, but is no longer concentrated at the dendrite tip
(E'). Scale bar: A, 15 µm;
B-E', 10 µm.
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Association of Eg5 with microtubules
The immunofluorescence images of the cultured rat hippocampal and
sympathetic neurons do not provide sufficient resolution to determine
whether Eg5 is directly associated with microtubules in the distal
regions of neuronal processes. To obtain better resolution, we
performed double-label immunostain analyses for tubulin and Eg5 on
cultured hamster cortical neurons, which we have found to generate
unusually broad growth cones with splayed microtubules. Figure
10 shows two examples of the distal
regions of developing axons. Eg5 immunostaining is concentrated in the most distal region of the growth cone (Fig.
10A',B') and shows colocalization with a
subpopulation of the microtubule polymer (Fig.
10A,B).

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Figure 10.
Immunofluorescence analyses on the distribution
of Eg5 in cultured hamster cortical neurons. Shown are hamster cortical
neurons double-immunostained for -tubulin in A and
B and for Eg5 in A' and
B'. Eg5 immunostain colocalizes with a subpopulation of
microtubule polymer within the growth cone. Scale bar, 13 µm.
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DISCUSSION |
The organization of microtubule arrays within living cells cannot
be explained entirely by the association of individual microtubules with their sites of nucleation. Recent studies have identified some of
the molecular mechanisms by which microtubules are organized into a
bipolar spindle in mitotic cells. These studies demonstrate that
microtubules are organized by forces generated by a variety of
molecular motor proteins that are expressed during mitosis. We have
proposed that the microtubule arrays of the postmitotic neuron are
established by forces generated by the same or closely motor proteins.
Studies from our laboratory have shown that cytoplasmic dynein, a
multifunctional motor required for spindle formation, is also important
for organizing microtubules in developing neuronal processes (Ahmad et
al., 1998 ). Other studies from our laboratory have shown that
CHO1/MKLP1, which is thought to generate forces against oppositely
oriented microtubules in the spindle midzone, is essential for
establishing the nonuniform microtubule polarity pattern of developing
dendrites (Sharp et al., 1997 ; Yu et al., 1997 ; Ferhat et al., 1998b ).
Microtubule organization in the mitotic spindle requires additional
forces to those generated by cytoplasmic dynein and CHO1/MKLP1, and it
seems reasonable that this may also be the case in the postmitotic
neuron.
In the present study, we sought to determine whether rodent neurons
express a homolog of Eg5, a member of the bimC family of
kinesin-related motors known to be essential for mitotic spindle formation. We cloned from mitotic cells a cDNA encoding the mouse homolog, which we have called MmEg5. The sequence shares homology with
other members of the BimC family, which have been isolated from widely divergent organisms from yeast to humans. These homologs share 50-60% identity within the motor domain and relatively little homology elsewhere in the molecule. Indeed, the deduced amino acid
MmEg5 sequence is 80% identical to that of the HsEg5 sequence derived
from HeLa cells (Blangy et al., 1995 ). In addition, MmEg5 localizes to
the same regions of the mitotic spindle as its homologs, suggesting
identical functions. We have documented that Eg5 is also expressed
within developing neurons well past their terminal mitotic division.
Northern blot analyses revealed similar transcripts in both mitotic
cells and nervous tissue, and in situ hybridization analyses
confirmed the presence of Eg5 mRNAs in postmitotic neurons. Western
blot analyses also showed a similar polypeptide in mitotic cells and
postmitotic neurons. Samples obtained from mouse, rat, and hamster all
showed good cross-reactivity and cross-hybridization with the available
probes.
It has been suggested that all of the motor proteins expressed in
postmitotic neurons are involved in the transport of membranous organelles rather than of microtubules (Hirokawa, 1997 ). However, the
Eg5 homologs do not appear to interact with membranous organelles, but
instead appear to associate primarily with microtubules (Chang et al.,
1996 ). In the neuron, we have found Eg5 to be tightly concentrated
within discrete regions of the processes. This pattern is more
reminiscent of the localization of Eg5 and other motor proteins along
microtubules within the mitotic spindle and of fibrous MAPs that bind
to microtubules along their lengths. High-resolution images of
flattened growth cones with splayed microtubules reveal a tight
colocalization of Eg5 with a subpopulation of the microtubule polymer.
Together, these observations suggest that Eg5 is unlikely to be
involved in the transport of membranous organelles and is more likely
to be involved in organizing microtubules themselves.
We suspect that the precise functions of Eg5 in the neuron are in some
way analogous to its functions in mitotic cells. Several lines of
evidence indicate that Eg5 and other members of the bimC family are essential for separating the duplicated centrosomes or
spindle pole bodies during prophase (for review, see Kashina et al.,
1997 ), but the precise mechanisms for this are not fully understood. At
least in the case of Drosophila, the Eg5 homolog forms a
homotetramer with all four motor domains directed outward (Kashina et
al., 1996 ). Because Eg5 moves toward plus-ends of microtubules, it has
been suggested that the homotetramer could drive apart the two poles by
generating forces against oppositely oriented microtubules emanating
from each pole. Another possibility is that the tail end of the
molecule might be tethered to the centrosome or spindle pole body while
the motor end moves toward the plus-ends of microtubules from the
opposite pole. This would also drive the two poles apart. During
metaphase, Eg5 localizes within each half-spindle near the pole,
suggesting that an additional function of the motor might be to hold
the minus-ends of microtubules near the pole after their release from
it (Sawin et al., 1992 ). Such forces would antagonize those generated
by cytoplasmic dynein, which would otherwise transport the microtubules
with plus-ends leading away from each spindle pole (Gaglio et al.,
1996 ).
In light of the manner by which Eg5 functions during mitosis, there
would appear to be multiple possibilities for the means by which Eg5
could modulate microtubule organization in the distal regions of
neuronal processes. First, the motor might form a homotetramer that is
not tethered to any other structure. In this case, the motor complex
translocates toward the plus-ends of neighboring microtubules, thus
zippering them together but not inducing the transport of either.
Second, the motor might form a homotetramer that is tethered to some
other structure in the cytoplasm that has a greater resistance to
movement than the microtubules. This structure may be a component of
the cell cortex, for example, and would be functionally analogous to
the structure that has been proposed to tether the motor to the
centrosome. In this case, movement of the motor complex toward the
plus-ends of the microtubules would cause the microtubules to
move in a retrograde direction within the process. Third, the
motor might exist as a dimer or monomer that generates forces between
neighboring microtubules, with the longer microtubule associated with
the motor domain and the shorter microtubule associated with the tail.
In this case, the shorter microtubule would move in an anterograde
direction. The fourth possibility is similar to the third, except that
the shorter microtubule is associated with the motor domain. In this case, the shorter microtubule would move in a retrograde direction. The
final possibility is that the motor exists as a dimer or monomer whose
tail is associated with a nonmicrotubule structure with greater
resistance to movement. In this case, the microtubules would move in a
retrograde direction.
The concentration of Eg5 at the tips of developing processes suggests
an important role for the protein in regulating their growth. At least
in the case of hippocampal neurons, the cells initially generate
several immature processes that remain roughly the same length until
one differentiates into the axon (Dotti et al., 1988 ). The others
maintain their short length for a few days, after which they begin to
grow longer and become dendrites. Notably, the axon ceases its rapid
growth until after the dendrites have completed their elongation. Then,
as indicated by studies on a variety of different types of neurons, the
growth of the axon is marked by intermittent forward movements,
backward movements, and pauses (Halloran and Kalil, 1994 ). We strongly
suspect that these various behaviors relate to the transport of
microtubules within the distal regions of these processes (Tanaka and
Kirschner, 1991 ). As discussed above, Eg5 has the appropriate
properties to produce forces that could modulate the anterograde
transport of microtubules by cytoplasmic dynein. But, does Eg5
complement or antagonize anterograde microtubule transport? If it is
the former, then we would conclude that in the neuron, Eg5 is activated in processes undergoing rapid phases of process growth and inactivated in processes undergoing retraction or pauses in their growth. If it is
the latter, we would conclude that Eg5 is activated in processes
undergoing retraction or pauses and inactivated in processes undergoing
bouts of rapid growth. The latter explanation seems more satisfactory
because it can explain all of the observed behaviors, whereas the
former does not explain why processes retract or pause. In addition,
the latter explanation is more consistent with the enrichment later in
development of Eg5 within dendritic sprouts, which tend to remain
short. In either case, however, the modulation of microtubule transport
by Eg5 would be a major factor in regulating the growth properties of a
developing neuronal process and thereby defining it as an axon or a
dendrite.
How might Eg5 be activated or inactivated in select regions of
developing neurons? Although there are numerous ways in which the
function of a motor might be regulated, a particularly compelling possibility is suggested by studies on Eg5 homologs in other species. These studies indicate that the association of the motor with microtubules is mediated by phosphorylation of a single amino acid
(Blangy et al., 1995 ; Sawin and Mitchison, 1995 ). MmEg5 has a similar
potential phosphorylation site, which probably regulates its
association with microtubules. It is possible that the capacity of Eg5
to influence microtubule organization depends on the binding to the
microtubules of a certain number of motor molecules and that this
association is regulated by phosphorylation. If this is correct,
regulation of Eg5 phosphorylation may be an important means by which
the development of axons and dendrites is integrated with external and
intrinsic cues, both of which are known to affect protein
phosphorylation as well as neuronal differentiation (Ferhat et al.,
1993 ).
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received March 20, 1998; revised July 1, 1998; accepted July 13, 1998.
This work was supported by grants from the National Institutes of
Health and the National Science Foundation to P.W.B., and from the
Association de la Recherche sur le Cancer to M.K. We thank Hassan
Bousbaa and Pierre d'Hérin for their assistance in the isolation
of the murine Eg5 cDNAs. We thank John Callaway, Erik Dent, and
Katherine Kalil for advice and assistance in the preparation of
cultures of hamster cortical neurons.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Peter W. Baas, Department of
Anatomy, The University of Wisconsin Medical School, 1300 University
Avenue, Madison, WI 53706.
 |
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