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Vol. 13, No. 13, pp. 1704-1716, July 1, 1999
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biophysics, Columbia University, New York, New York 10032 USA
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Abstract |
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We characterize a 37-bp element (fkh[250]) derived from the fork head (fkh) gene, a natural target of the Hox gene Sex combs reduced (Scr). In vitro, Scr cooperatively binds to this DNA with the Hox cofactor Extradenticle (Exd), and the activation of this enhancer in vivo requires Scr and exd. Other Hox/Exd heterodimers do not activate this element in vivo and do not bind this element with high affinity in vitro. The amino-terminal arm of the Scr homeodomain is crucial for the specific activation of this element in vivo. By mutating two base pairs within this element, we can convert the Scr/Exd-binding site to a Hox/Exd consensus site that binds several different Hox/Exd heterodimers. This element, fkh[250con], is activated by Scr, Antennapedia (Antp), and Ultrabithorax (Ubx) but repressed by abdominal-A (abd-A). We also show that Scr and Exd are only able to activate the fkh[250] element during the early stages of embryogenesis because, by stage 11, Scr negatively regulates the gene homothorax (hth), which is required for the nuclear localization of Exd. These results suggest that Exd is a specificity cofactor for the trunk Hox genes, and that the control of Exd subcellular localization is a mechanism to regulate Hox activity during development.
[Key Words: Extradenticle; Pbx; Hox specificity; cooperative DNA binding]
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Introduction |
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During animal development, the Hox genes are required to interpret
positional information and confer the appropriate fate to each cell
(for review, see McGinnis and Krumlauf 1992
). Hox genes encode homeodomain proteins that transcriptionally regulate downstream genes that ultimately control morphology (for review, see
Graba et al. 1997
). Most Hox proteins share a high degree of sequence
homology within their homeodomains, and as a consequence have similar
DNA-binding properties (Ekker et al. 1994
). In vivo, however, Hox
proteins instruct unique morphologies, suggesting that they bind and
regulate distinct, though likely overlapping, sets of target genes. The
disparity between these in vitro and in vivo observations implies the
existence cofactors that contribute to the functional specificity of
Hox proteins in vivo.
In Drosophila, extradenticle (exd) encodes a
cofactor of the Hox proteins (Mann and Chan 1996
). exd and its
vertebrate homologs, the pbx genes, encode homeodomain
proteins of the PBC class (Burglin and Ruvkun 1992
; Rauskolb et al.
1993
). Like the Hox genes, exd is required for
anterior-posterior (A-P) patterning in both the embryo and adult of
Drosophila (Peifer and Wieschaus 1990
; Rauskolb and Wieschaus
1994
; Gonzalez-Crespo and Morata 1995
; Rauskolb et al. 1995
).
exd is required in most segments along the A-P axis, suggesting a genetic interaction with many Hox genes. Consistent with
this idea, Hox target genes such as teashirt and
decapentaplegic (dpp) in the visceral mesoderm and
labial (lab) in the endoderm also require
exd for their expression (Chan et al. 1994
, 1996
; Rauskolb and
Wieschaus 1994
). At the molecular level, Exd and Hox proteins
cooperatively bind as a heterodimer to a 10-bp DNA sequence,
TGATNNATNN, and such binding sites have been identified in the
autoregulatory enhancers from the Hox genes Hoxb-1,
lab, and Deformed (Dfd) (Pöpperl et
al. 1995
; Mann and Chan 1996
; Chan et al. 1997
; Grieder et al. 1997
;
Passner et al. 1999
; Piper et al. 1999
). Another interesting
characteristic of Exd is that its nuclear localization is regulated
during development and requires the direct interaction with another
homeodomain protein encoded by the gene homothorax
(hth) (Mann and Abu-Shaar 1996
; Rieckhof et al. 1997
; Pai et
al. 1998
; Abu-Shaar et al. 1999
).
Although it is clear that Exd is a Hox cofactor, two models have been
suggested to describe Exd's role in Hox function. The first model
proposes that Exd helps the Hox proteins achieve DNA-binding specificity in vivo. Such a role for Exd was initially reasoned from
the phenotype of exd mutant embryos, in which the Hox proteins appear to be expressed normally but function incorrectly (Peifer and
Wieschaus 1990
; Chan et al. 1994
; Rauskolb et al. 1995
). Evidence supporting this model comes in part from in vitro studies. First, because Hox/Exd heterodimers bind a 10-bp sequence, such
binding sites will be less frequent in the genome than the typical 6-bp sequence bound by Hox monomers (Mann and Chan 1996
). In addition, however, Exd may exert a more profound affect on Hox specificity: It
has been shown that Hox proteins that normally bind the same sequence
as monomers prefer to bind different sequences as Hox/Exd heterodimers (Chan et al. 1994
; Chan and Mann 1996
; Chang et al. 1996
;
Shen et al. 1996
; Phelan and Featherstone 1997
; Wilson and Desplan
1999
). Thus, at least in vitro, different Hox/Exd
heterodimers bind subtly different Hox/Exd-binding sites.
This property suggests that Exd may help to distinguish between the
functions of different Hox proteins in vivo, by selectively enhancing
the DNA binding of one Hox protein over another. In support of this
idea, there is one case in which different
Hox/Exd-binding sites were shown to direct distinct
Hox-dependent expression patterns in vivo. In that study, a
Labial/Exd-responsive enhancer could be converted to a
Dfd/Exd-responsive enhancer by changing only two
basepairs in a Hox/Exd-binding site (Chan et al. 1997
).
However, although the change in in vivo specificity was clear, this
experiment had several limitations. First, the modified binding site
was not specific for Dfd/Exd heterodimers; other
Hox/Exd heterodimers, for example, Lab/Exd,
also bound this sequence in vitro. Second, making the same alteration
in another Lab/Exd-binding site present within a
lab autoregulatory enhancer did not change its specificity to
Dfd (Grieder et al. 1997
). Third, the change of specificity from Lab to
another Hox protein could represent a special case, because the Lab
homeodomain is one of the most diverged among the Hox family.
The second model for Exd function proposes that instead of acting as a
specificity cofactor, Exd forms heterodimers with all Hox proteins and
changes their regulatory properties, from transcriptional repressors to
activators (Biggin and McGinnis 1997
; Pinsonneault et al. 1997
; Li et
al. 1999
). Consistent with this model, in vivo cross-linking
experiments show that homeodomain proteins are bound to many genes in
the Drosophila genome (Walter et al. 1994
; Liang and Biggin
1998
; Carr and Biggin 1999
). However, this binding has not been shown
to be functional, and is not unexpected for DNA-binding proteins with
low sequence specificity. Additional support for this model stems from
in vivo experiments in which the activity of a Dfd monomer-binding site
was compared with a Dfd/Exd heterodimer-binding site (Li
et al. 1999
). In these experiments it was shown that a
Dfd/Exd heterodimer was a more potent transcriptional activator than a Dfd monomer. Thus, at least for these artificial binding sites, it appears that Exd provided or revealed a latent activation domain in Dfd.
The two models for Exd function are not mutually exclusive; Exd could
be providing both additional specificity and activator functions to the
Hox proteins. Nevertheless, if Exd does function as a specificity
cofactor for most Hox proteins, it should be possible to demonstrate
that the presence of an Exd-binding site is important for
distinguishing between the functions of Hox proteins that have very
similar homeodomains, for example those of the Antennapedia
(Antp) class. A critical test of this idea would be to
demonstrate such a role for Exd on a natural
Hox/Exd-binding site. In Drosophila, the
Antp class Hox genes Sex combs reduced (Scr), Antp, Ultrabithorax (Ubx),
and abdominal-A (abd-A) have very similar
homeodomains and are expressed in the thoracic and abdominal (trunk)
segments. However, to date no Hox target genes have been described that
are directly coregulated by Hox and Exd proteins in the trunk ectoderm
of the fly. Here, we characterized a Hox/Exd-binding site
present in an enhancer from the fork head (fkh) gene,
a natural target of Scr (Panzer et al. 1992
; Andrew 1998
). We
show that Exd acts as a specificity cofactor for Scr on this element,
and that Exd can also act as a cofactor for other Antp class
Hox proteins on a variant of this Hox/Exd-binding site. Thus, Exd is a specificity cofactor for this class of Hox proteins.
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Results |
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A 37-bp fkh enhancer element is regulated by Scr and exd
The fkh gene of Drosophila is expressed in the
salivary placode, the primordia of the embryonic salivary gland (Panzer
et al. 1992
; Andrew 1998
). Salivary placodes are distinct regions of
columnar epithelial cells formed at the ventral side of parasegment (PS) 2 during stage 11. fkh-expressing cells eventually
invaginate to form the embryonic salivary gland. Scr is one of
the genes required for fkh activation and salivary gland
formation (Panzer et al. 1992
). A 5-kb enhancer from fkh
drives expression of a reporter gene in a pattern identical to the Fkh
protein (Kuo et al. 1996
; Fig. 1D,E). Within this
5-kb enhancer there is a 37-bp element (fkh[250]) including the
sequence, AGATTAATCG, that is related to the Hox/Exd
consensus-binding site (Fig. 1A). To test the activity of this element,
four copies of fkh[250] were cloned upstream of a minimal promoter
driving lacZ, and transgenic flies were generated with this
reporter gene, fkh[250]-lacZ. On immunostaining for
-galactosidase (
-gal), expression was observed in PS 2 (Fig. 1F,H). Double staining for Scr and
-gal confirmed that
fkh[250]-lacZ was expressed in a ventral subset of Scr+
cells (Fig. 1F,G). Weaker staining unrelated to the endogenous fkh
pattern was also detected along the lateral sides of these embryos.
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The presence of a putative Hox/Exd-binding site suggests
that fkh[250] could be activated by an Scr/Exd
heterodimer. Consistent with this idea, Scr and Exd are colocalized in
PS 2 nuclei at the time that fkh expression initiates (Fig.
1B-E). To obtain additional evidence, we examined
fkh[250]-lacZ expression in Scr and exd
mutant embryos. Most of the
-gal staining was abolished in
Scr
embryos, although the weak lateral staining remained
(Fig. 1I). To test for a requirement for exd, which is
expressed maternally and zygotically (Peifer and Wieschaus 1990
;
Rauskolb et al. 1993
), exd
germ-line clones were generated
in females that were crossed to males containing the
fkh[250]-lacZ reporter gene.
-Gal expression was not
observed in exd maternal
, zygotic
(exdmat
,zyg
) embryos (Fig. 1J). Because
Scr expression is diminished in exd
embryos (L. Komenda and S. Beckendorf, pers. comm.), we artificially provided high
levels of Scr in exdmat
,zyg
embryos using a
heat shock-Scr (HS:Scr) transgene. Despite high levels of Scr, we were unable to detect any fkh[250]-lacZ
expression in these embryos (Fig. 1K). Thus, the absence of
-gal
expression in exdmat
,zyg
embryos is unlikely
to only be due to the regulation of Scr by exd.
Although the above results show a genetic requirement for Scr
and exd for fkh[250] activation, they do not address whether these homeodomain proteins act directly on this enhancer. To examine whether a Scr/Exd heterodimer directly binds this element
in vivo, we generated point mutations in the
Hox/Exd-binding site. As with the wild-type element, the
mutant oligonucleotides were tested for activity in vivo by cloning
four copies upstream of a minimal promoter driving lacZ.
Within the Hox/Exd-binding site, the 5' half, AGAT,
resembles an Exd half-site, and the 3' half, TAATCG, resembles the
Hox half-site. On the basis of the Hox/Exd crystal structures (Passner et al. 1999
; Piper et al. 1999
), we mutated basepairs that make critical contacts with either Exd or Hox proteins. These mutations eliminate binding in vitro (see below). When the the
Exd half-site was mutated to AGGT (Fig. 1A,L), or when the Hox
half-site was mutated to TGGTCG (Fig. 1A,M),
-gal was no longer
detected in PS 2. These results demonstrate that the
Hox/Exd-binding site within fkh[250] is necessary for
its activity in PS 2, and suggest that activation is mediated, at least
in part, by an Scr/Exd heterodimer bound to this element.
The amino-terminal arm of the Scr homeodomain is required for activation of fkh[250]
To further test the in vivo specificity of fkh[250]-lacZ
for Scr, we investigated how this reporter gene responds to
ectopic expression of other Antp-class Hox genes. Whereas in
wild-type embryos fkh[250]-lacZ expression is restricted to
the ventral side of PS 2 (Fig. 2B), ectopic
Scr driven by a HS:Scr transgene expanded expression
of this element anteriorly as well as posteriorly (Fig. 2C). This
activation is similar to that of the fkh gene in response to
ectopic Scr (Panzer et al. 1992
). In contrast with Scr,
ectopic expression of Antp, which differs in only four amino acids within the homeodomain, or Ubx, which differs in only
nine amino acids within the homeodomain, failed to expand
fkh[250]-lacZ expression when ectopically expressed (Fig.
2D,E). Thus, the fkh[250] element is specifically activated by
Scr, but not by highly related Hox proteins.
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Within their homeodomains, Scr and Antp differ in four amino acids, all
of which are located in their amino-terminal arms (Fig. 2A). This
four-amino-acid difference is crucial for these proteins to specify
distinct embryonic and adult structures (Gibson et al. 1990
;
Furukubo-Tokunaga et al. 1993
; Zeng et al. 1993
). Scr-Antp chimeras
containing the amino-terminal arm from Antp generated structures
normally dictated by Antp, whereas other chimeras containing the
amino-terminal arm from Scr behaved as Scr (Furukubo-Tokunaga et al.
1993
; Zeng et al. 1993
). By use of such chimeras, we tested if the
activation of fkh[250] also exhibited specificity for the Scr
amino-terminal arm. Whereas HS:G26, a chimera with the Scr
amino-terminal arm (Fig. 2A), expanded
-gal expression (Fig. 2F),
HS:K26, which differs from G26 in only four amino-terminal arm
amino acids (Fig. 2A), failed to expand
-gal expression (Fig. 2G).
These experiments demonstrate that the Scr amino-terminal arm is
critical for the specific activation of fkh[250] in vivo.
fkh[250] prefers to bind Scr/Exd heterodimers in vitro
If Exd confers specificity to Hox proteins, the fkh[250] element, which is specifically turned on by Scr in vivo, should specifically bind Scr/Exd heterodimers in vitro. We tested this prediction by performing electrophoretic mobility shift assays (EMSAs) on the fkh[250] oligo with four Hox proteins, Scr, Antp, Ubx, and Abd-A, in the absence and presence of Exd. Exd did not bind to this oligo on its own (Fig. 3A, lane 2) and all four Hox proteins bound poorly as monomers (Fig. 3A, lanes 3,4,7,8,11,12,15,16). When Exd was combined with individual Hox proteins, only Scr made a robust and stable DNA-bound heterodimer with Exd (Fig. 3A, lanes 5,6). The other Hox proteins were apparently stimulated to bind fkh[250] as monomers in the presence of Exd, but did not generate stable heterodimers in this assay (Fig. 3A, lanes 9,10,13,14,17,18).
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To confirm that Scr/Exd was binding to the putative
Hox/Exd-binding site in fkh[250], we performed EMSAs
with oligos that had point mutations in either the Scr or Exd
half-sites (Fig. 1A). Mutations in either half-site prevented
Scr/Exd heterodimer formation (Fig. 3B). As expected, an
oligo with a mutation in the Exd half-site, fkh[250]exd,
was able to weakly bind to Scr monomers, as did the wild-type oligo
(Fig. 3B, lane 2-6). An oligo with a mutated Scr half-site, fkh[250]Scr, abolished monomer and heterodimer binding
(Fig. 3B, lane 7-12). These results suggest that Scr/Exd
heterodimers are binding to fkh[250] in a manner that is similar to
Hox/Exd heterodimers characterized previously (Passner et
al. 1999
; Piper et al. 1999
). Moreover, they demonstrate that the
binding site present in fkh[250] prefers Scr/Exd
heterodimers over other Hox/Exd heterodimers.
One explanation for the inability of Antp, Ubx, and Abd-A to
efficiently form heterodimers with Exd on fkh[250] is that these proteins cannot cooperatively bind with Exd to any sequence. This seemed unlikely, however, because the mammalian Antp class Hox proteins form heterodimers with the Exd homolog Pbx1, and the preferred
binding site is the consensus sequence, TGATTTATGG (Knoepfler and Kamps
1995
; Lu et al. 1995
; Pöpperl et al. 1995
; Chang et al. 1996
;
Neuteboom and Murre 1997
). Nevertheless, to rule out this possibility,
we tested the ability of these four Hox proteins to cooperatively bind
with Exd to a consensus Hox/Exd-binding site. In our
experiments, we used an oligo called fkh[250con] in which
two base pairs in the fkh[250]-binding site were changed so that it
resembled the Hox/Pbx consensus site (Fig. 1A). As with
fkh[250], Exd did not bind to fkh[250con] on its own
(Fig. 3C, lane 2), and these HOX proteins bound only weakly in the
absence of Exd (Fig. 3C, lanes 3,4,7,8,11,12,15,16). In the presence of
Exd, robust complex formation was observed with all four of these
Antp class Hox proteins (Fig. 3C, lanes 5,6,9,10,13,14,17,18).
The concentrations of the Hox and Exd proteins used in this experiment
were identical to those used in the experiment shown in Figure 3A. We
conclude that all four of these Hox proteins are capable of
cooperatively binding with Exd on a consensus
Hox/Exd-binding site, as is the case with their mammalian homologs.
These experiments demonstrate that although all four of these Hox proteins have the ability to form heterodimers on a consensus Hox/Exd-binding site, there exist binding sites that show a preference for one Hox/Exd heterodimer over another. The binding site in fkh[250] prefers to bind Scr/Exd heterodimers in vitro, reflecting the specificity of this enhancer in vivo.
The fkh[250con] element is activated by Scr, Antp, and Ubx in vivo
If Exd is a specificity cofactor for the Antp class Hox proteins, one prediction is that the fkh[250con] element, which is able to bind several different Hox/Exd heterodimers in vitro, might be activated by these Hox proteins in vivo. To test this possibility, we constructed a reporter gene with four copies of the fkh[250con] element upstream of a minimal promoter driving lacZ and tested its activity in vivo. Whereas expression of fkh[250con]-lacZ was primarily limited to PS 2 (Fig. 4A), expression of fkh[250con]-lacZ was observed from PS 2 through PS 6 (Fig. 4B-F). These parasegments are where Scr, Antp, and Ubx are most highly expressed. Double staining with Antp (Fig. 4C,D) or Engrailed (En) (Fig. 4E,F) confirmed that fkh[250con]-lacZ was expressed in PS 2 through 6. Expression was also observed at the posterior of the embryo (PS 14 and 15), but not in PS 7 to PS 13 in which abd-A is expressed (Fig. 4E,F). Also, as with the fkh[250] element, weak expression was observed in lateral regions of fkh[250con]-lacZ embryos.
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The expression pattern driven by the fkh[250con] element
suggested that it was activated by Scr, Antp, and
Ubx. To confirm that this element is being activated by
these trunk Hox proteins and Exd, we analyzed
-gal expression
in various mutant backgrounds. In exdmat
,zyg
embryos,
-gal staining was eliminated in all parasegments (Fig. 5B). In Scr
Antp
double-mutant embryos,
-gal was no longer observed in PS 2 to PS
5, but staining in PS 6 and in the most posterior segments remained
(Fig. 5C; data not shown). In Scr
Antp
Ubx
triple-mutant embryos, expression of
-gal was not
observed in PS 2 to PS 6, but staining remained in the very posterior
of the embryo (Fig. 5D; data not shown). Moreover, ectopic expression of Antp (Fig. 5E) or Ubx (Fig. 5F) in the
patched domain with the Gal4-UAS system (Brand and Perrimon
1993
) activated fkh[250con]-lacZ ectopically.
Thus, although fkh[250] is specifically activated by Scr,
fkh[250con] is activated by Scr, Antp, and Ubx.
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To confirm that the Hox/Exd-binding site in
fkh[250con] is required for its activation in vivo, we
introduced point mutations that disrupt each half-site (Fig. 1A), and
generated the corresponding reporter genes. Mutation of the Exd
half-site, AGAT, into AGGT, abolished most
-gal expression, except
for expression in PS 14 to PS 15, which remained (Fig. 5G; data not
shown). Mutation of the Hox half-site, TTATGG, into TTGTGG, abolished
nearly all
-gal expression, including expression in PS 14 to PS 15 (Fig. 5H; data not shown). These data are consistent with the idea that
Scr, Antp, and Ubx form heterodimers with Exd on this DNA in vivo. Further, these data suggest that the factor activating
fkh[250con] in PS 14 to PS 15 does not require the Exd
half-site and therefore is probably not forming heterodimers with Exd.
Although this domain overlaps with expression of the Hox gene
Abd-B, Abd-B
mutant embryos still express this
reporter gene (data not shown). Another possible activator is the
homeodomain protein Caudal, which is also expressed in this region of
the embryo (Macdonald and Struhl 1986
; Mlodzik and Gehring 1987
).
Consistent with this possibility, Caudal is able to activate
transcription by binding to the sequence TTATGG (Dearolf et al. 1989
),
which is the sequence of the Hox half-site in fkh[250con].
Hox genes are expressed not only during embryogenesis, but also during
the larval stages in imaginal discs, which are the precursors of the
adult structures. The leg imaginal discs from the first thoracic
segment (T1) express Scr, the leg and wing discs from T2
express Antp, and the leg and haltere discs from T3 express
Ubx (White and Wilcox 1985
; Condie et al. 1991
; Pattatucci and
Kaufman 1991
). Strikingly, both the fkh[250] and
fkh[250con] elements drive
-gal expression in imaginal
discs, and this expression correlates with the Hox proteins these
elements bind in vitro. fkh[250]-lacZ expression was
observed in T1 leg discs, but not in the other thoracic discs (Fig.
6A). In contrast,
fkh[250con]-lacZ expression was observed
in all leg discs, wing, and haltere discs (Fig. 6E-H). For both
elements, the expression of lacZ in discs was in a ring that,
in the leg, approximately corresponds to the future trochanter, a
region in which Exd is nuclear and functional (Abu-Shaar and Mann
1998
). The ring-like expression pattern suggests that other regulators
act on these elements and limit their activities along the
proximo-distal axis. For both fkh[250]-lacZ and
fkh[250con]-lacZ expression was also observed in
antennal discs, in which no known Hox gene is active, but where Exd is
nuclear (data not shown; Rieckhof et al. 1997
; Casares and Mann 1998
).
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These results support a model in which Exd has the ability to act as a cofactor for the Hox proteins Scr, Antp, and Ubx. Moreover, as fkh[250] and fkh[250con] illustrate, different Hox/Exd heterodimers have different DNA-binding preferences that correlate with the activities of these enhancers in vivo.
abd-A represses fkh[250con]-lacZ
Although Abd-A/Exd heterodimers bind
fkh[250con] in vitro, strong
fkh[250con]-lacZ expression was not detected in
the abdominal segments in which abd-A is expressed (Fig.
7A,B). Because the abdominal segments have lower
levels of nuclear Exd than the thoracic segments (Azpiazu and Morata
1998
), we considered the possibility that limiting amounts of nuclear
Exd could account for the lack of
fkh[250con]-lacZ expression in these segments. We
tested this idea by artificially generating high levels of nuclear Exd
in the abdominal segments by ectopically expressing the gene
hth, which is necessary and sufficient to import Exd into
nuclei (Rieckhof et al. 1997
; Pai et al. 1998
; Abu-Shaar et al. 1999
).
Because exd transcription is also down-regulated in the
abdomen (Rauskolb et al. 1993
; Azpiazu and Morata 1998
), we ectopically
expressed both Exd and Hth using the patched-Gal4 driver. As
a result, these embryos had Hth and nuclear Exd levels that were at
least three times higher than wild type (Fig. 7D,F). However,
fkh[250con]-lacZ expression in these
embryos was similar to its expression in wild type (Fig. 7A,E). Thus,
the lack of fkh[250con] expression in the abdomen is
unlikely to be due to limiting amounts of nuclear Exd.
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In abd-A
Abd-B
embryos,
fkh[250con] expression is derepressed in the abdominal
segments, consistent with the idea that Abd-A is a repressor of this
element (Fig. 7C). The pattern and level of
-gal in the abdominal
segments of these embryos are similar to the level in PS 6, in which
UBX is expressed. These data are consistent with abd-A acting
either directly or indirectly to repress this reporter gene; it is
possible, for example, that the derepression of
fkh[250con]-lacZ in abd-A
Abd-B
embryos is an indirect effect of derepressing
Ubx, which is also repressed by abd-A (Struhl and
White 1985
). However, these results raise the possibility that Abd-A
directly represses the fkh[250con] enhancer, perhaps as an
Abd-A/Exd heterodimer.
Loss of nuclear Exd limits Scr's ability to activate fkh and fkh[250]-lacZ to early stages of embryogenesis
fkh expression and salivary gland formation is genetically
dependent on Scr and, once activated, fkh remains on
throughout salivary gland development (Panzer et al. 1992
).
Scr expression is not maintained, however, in salivary glands
during the later stages of embryogenesis and, conversely, the cells
that do express Scr in older embryos do not express fkh (Fig.
8A,B). Thus, Scr's ability to activate
fkh is temporally regulated, raising the question of how this
change in Scr's activity occurs.
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It has been suggested that the activity of the Hox proteins can be
controlled by regulating the nuclear localization of Exd (Mann and
Abu-Shaar 1996
; Aspland and White 1997
; Rieckhof et al. 1997
). We
tested whether this aspect of Exd regulation could account for
modulating the activity of Scr during development. Double
staining of wild-type embryos with anti-Scr and anti-Exd antibody
showed that in germ-band elongating embryos (stages 9 and 10) Scr and
Exd are colocalized in PS 2 nuclei (Fig. 1B,C). At these stages,
Scr and fkh-lacZ are also expressed in the same cells (Fig. 1D,E), as is fkh[250]-lacZ (Fig. 1F,G).
However, by stage 12, fkh and
fkh[250]-lacZ-expressing cells start invaginating to form
the salivary gland (Panzer et al. 1992
), and Scr expression is
turned off in these cells (Fig. 8A,B). Scr expression persists in other regions of PS 2 that do not express fkh, but at this stage, Exd is no longer detected in most PS 2 nuclei (Fig. 8C). hth, which is required for Exd's nuclear localization, is
also absent from PS 2 at later stages of embryogenesis (Fig. 8G)
(Rieckhof et al. 1997
). Because fkh and
fkh[250]-lacZ require Scr and Exd for expression, the
absence of nuclear Exd in the Scr-positive nuclei of stage 11 and older
embryos might account for Scr's inability to activate fkh
later in embryogenesis.
The above observations raise the question of what controls the shift of
Exd from the nucleus to the cytoplasm in PS 2. One possibility is that
Scr alone causes this shift by repressing hth. To test this
hypothesis, we examined Hth and Exd in Scr
mutant embryos.
In wild-type stage-12 embryos, when the germ band is being retracted,
Hth expression is absent and Exd cannot be detected in ventral PS 2 nuclei in which Scr is expressed (Fig. 8C,D). In stage 12 Scr
embryos Hth and nuclear Exd were observed throughout
this region of the embryo (Fig. 8E,F). Therefore, Scr
represses hth and, consequently, the nuclear accumulation of
its own cofactor, Exd, thereby modulating its ability to regulate
target genes in a temporally dynamic manner.
If the lack of nuclear Exd was the only reason for Scr's inability to activate fkh[250] later in embryogenesis, then forcing the nuclear localization of Exd in these Scr-expressing cells should activate fkh[250]. However, this appears not to be the case: Ectopic expression of Hth or Hth plus Exd did not ectopically activate fkh[250]-lacZ, even in Scr-expressing cells (data not shown). We conclude that in addition to the lack of nuclear Exd, there are additional mechanisms that make Scr-positive cells not competent to activate fkh[250] in older embryos.
| |
Discussion |
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|
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Exd confers specificity to highly similar Hox proteins in vivo
As outlined in the Introduction, Exd has been suggested to perform two different functions as a Hox cofactor: The first model suggests that Exd enhances the DNA-binding specificity of the Hox proteins in vivo, whereas the second model suggests that Exd changes the regulatory properties of the Hox proteins. For the reasons discussed below, the data presented here provide strong support for the first model.
In these experiments we characterized two Hox/Exd-binding sites; the first, present in fkh[250], is derived from an enhancer from the fkh gene, a natural target of the Hox gene Scr. In vitro, fkh[250] shows a preference for binding Scr/Exd heterodimers over other Hox/Exd heterodimers. In the absence of a functional Exd half-site, the Hox half-site in fkh[250] weakly binds several Hox proteins, but when the Exd half-site is functional, one of these Hox proteins (Scr) binds better than the others; thus, Exd selectively enhances the binding of one Hox protein over the others. Another Hox/Exd-binding site, present in fkh[250con], binds at least four different Hox/Exd heterodimers. In this case, Exd enhances the affinity of all four Hox proteins to this sequence. Outside of two basepair differences in the Hox/Exd-binding site, fkh[250] and fkh[250con] are identical. Yet in vivo, they generate very different patterns of expression: fkh[250] generates an Scr- and exd-dependent pattern of expression in PS 2, whereas fkh[250con] generates a more general Hox- and exd-dependent pattern of expression. Taken together, these results strongly suggest that Exd enhances the functional specificity of the Hox proteins, even among those that have very similar DNA-binding specificities as monomers. These results also suggest that subtle differences between Hox/Exd-binding sites are critical for distinguishing between different Hox/Exd heterodimers, both in vitro and in vivo.
Our results do not rule out that there are other sequences in fkh[250] that contribute to its specific spatial and temporal activation in vivo. The fact that fkh[250] is activated in a subset of cells that have both Scr and nuclear Exd suggest that other regulators also act on this enhancer in vivo. Its limited activation along the proximo-distal axis of imaginal discs also implies the existence of additional regulators. Nevertheless, the ability to alter the Hox responsiveness of this enhancer by only changing basepairs within the Hox/Exd-binding site suggests that different Hox/Exd-binding sites are sufficient to direct different Hox-dependent patterns of expression in vivo.
Although the Hox/Exd-binding site present in fkh[250]
shows a preference for Scr/Exd, we do not suggest that
all Hox/Exd-binding sites will show a preference for a
particular Hox protein. There may be many functional
Hox/Exd-binding sites in the genome that do not
discriminate between different Hox/Exd heterodimers. In fact, on the basis of our limited knowledge of Hox target genes, Hox
proteins, especially those expressed in the trunk and abdominal segments, probably activate many of the same target genes (Graba et al.
1997
). These target genes may utilize-binding sites that are similar to
the Hox/Exd site in fkh[250con], which can be
activated effectively by several different Hox/Exd heterodimers in vivo.
fkh, however, is an example of a Hox target gene that is specifically activated by Scr, but not by other highly related Hox genes. The specificity of this regulation is critical for limiting salivary gland morphogenesis to cells derived from PS 2. We suggest that the specificity exhibited by the Scr/Exd-binding site in fkh[250] may be critical to this regulation. Given the limited number of characterized Hox target enhancers, we cannot predict the frequency of specific versus nonspecific Hox/Exd-binding sites in the genome. But it is clear that specific Hox/Exd-binding sites do exist, and probably play an important role in mediating Hox functions.
There are other examples of Hox target genes that are known to be
specifically activated by only one Hox protein in combination with Exd.
One example is the Hox gene lab, which is positively autoregulated by a Lab/Exd heterodimer bound to a single
Lab/Exd-binding site (Grieder et al. 1997
). This binding
site, like the one described here for Scr/Exd, strongly
prefers Lab/Exd heterodimers over other Hox/Exd heterodimers. Moreover, the
Lab/Exd-binding site differs in sequence from the
Scr/Exd or consensus binding sites, again suggesting that
subtly different Hox/Exd-binding sites direct distinct
Hox-dependent outputs in vivo. A second example is the dpp
gene, which requires Ubx and exd for its activation
in PS 7 of the visceral mesoderm (Chan et al. 1994
). However, in the dpp enhancer that directs this expression, there are no
sequences that fit the consensus Hox/Exd-binding site,
suggesting that these proteins may bind to this enhancer differently
from how Scr/Exd or Lab/Exd recognize
their-binding sites, respectively. Finally, the Dfd
autoregulatory enhancer also requires exd for its activation (Pinsonneault et al. 1997
). In this enhancer,
Hox/Exd-binding sites have been identified that, as
multimerized 20-bp oligonucleotides, can generate a Dfd
pattern of expression in vivo (Chan et al. 1997
). In addition, Dfd and
Exd also bind to other regions of this enhancer that do not contain
consensus Hox/Exd-binding sites (Pinsonneault et al. 1997
).
From this survey, there are several examples of specific Hox/Exd-binding sites that, like the Scr/Exd-binding site described here, generate specific Hox-dependent outputs in vivo. However, there may be additional ways in which Hox and Exd proteins can effectively interact on target enhancers. Furthermore, on the basis of our characterization of fkh[250con], we suggest that there exist Hox/Exd-binding sites that do not discriminate between different Hox/Exd heterodimers. In principle, these-binding sites could be used in target gene enhancers that are activated by multiple Hox proteins.
Importance of the Hox amino-terminal arm in Hox/Exd heterodimers
The characterization of chimeras generated between closely related
Hox proteins such as Scr and Antp (Gibson et al. 1990
; Furukubo-Tokunaga et al. 1993
; Zeng et al. 1993
), Antp and Ubx (Mann
and Hogness 1990
; Chan and Mann 1993
), and Dfd and Ubx (Kuziora and
McGinnis 1989
; Lin and McGinnis 1992
) has consistantly come to the
conclusion that the homeodomains of these proteins are important for
their specific in vivo functions. This was surprising because the
homeodomains are highly similar among the Antp class of Hox
proteins; in fact, some of these homeodomains exhibit nearly identical
DNA-binding properties in vitro (Ekker et al. 1994
). Moreover,
differences within the amino-terminal arms of these homeodomains are
necessary and in some cases sufficient for distinguishing between their
functions in vivo (Furukubo-Tokunaga et al. 1993
; Zeng et al. 1993
;
Phelan et al. 1994
). We have shown here that the significance of the
Hox amino-terminal arm can be extended to the activation of the
fkh[250] element in vivo. However, we have not demonstrated that
differences between the amino-terminal arms of Scr and Antp are
sufficient to account for their different in vitro DNA-binding
properties in the presence of Exd; from our experiments it is possible
that other regions of these proteins contribute to these differences.
Nevertheless, the amino-terminal arm of Scr is likely to be, at least
in part, responsible for selecting specific Hox/Exd-binding sites in vivo.
There are two crystal structures of Hox/Exd (or Pbx)
heterodimers bound to DNA in which the Hox amino-terminal arm can be examined (Passner et al. 1999
; Piper et al. 1999
). As expected from the
in vitro and in vivo data, the Hox amino-terminal arm is located in the
center of the complex, in the minor groove, close to basepairs 5 and 6 of the Hox/Exd-binding site. It is these basepairs that
are known to influence Hox binding (Chan and Mann 1996
; Chang et al.
1996
; Shen et al. 1996
; Chan et al. 1997
; Phelan and Featherstone 1997
;
Wilson and Desplan 1999
). However, despite the importance of the Hox
amino-terminal arm in specificity, these amino acids are not making any
specific interactions with the DNA. In fact, the first three amino
acids of the Hox amino-terminal arms are disorded in both structures, as they are in the crystal structures of homeodomain monomers bound to
DNA (Kissinger et al. 1990
; Wolberger et al. 1991
; Hirsch and Aggarwal
1995
; Fraenkel and Pabo 1998
). How might we rationalize the importance
of the Hox amino-terminal arm with the lack of specific interactions
seen in the Hox/Exd crystal structures? One possibility
stems from the fact that the Hox/Exd-binding sites present in both crystal structures are consensus sites, similar to the
one present in fkh[250con]. The lack of specific
interactions seen in the crystal structures is consistent with the lack
of specificity exhibited by this binding site both in vitro and in
vivo. Perhaps when structures of Hox/Exd heterodimers
bound to more selective binding sites (for example, Scr/Exd bound to fkh[250]) are available, specific
contacts between the amino-terminal arm and the DNA will be visible.
Another possibility is that the interactions between the amino-terminal
arm and the DNA that are responsible for specificity may be too subtle
to be seen in a crystal structure (Passner et al. 1999
). A third possibility is that, at least in vivo, there are additional proteins that contribute to specificity that are not present in the crystal structures. At least one such additional factor may be Hth, which binds
to DNA together with Hox/Exd heterodimers (H.D. Ryoo and R.S. Mann, in prep.). Although Hth binds together with and stabilizes the Hox/Exd heterodimers, it does not appear to
contribute to Hox DNA-binding specificity (H.D. Ryoo and R.S. Mann, in
prep.). There may be other factors in addition to Hth, Scr, and Exd
that bind to fkh[250] and contribute to its specificity in vivo.
Although at this time we cannot distinguish between these
possibilities, it will be important to eventually understand how the
Hox amino-terminal arm, in the context of a Hox/Exd
heterodimer, achieves specificity at atomic resolution.
Abd-A/Exd may be a repressor
For some target genes, Hox proteins act as activators, whereas for
other targets they act as repressors. One interesting observation made
here is that Abd-A represses the
fkh[250con]-lacZ reporter gene, whereas
Scr, Antp, and Ubx activate this same reporter. All four of these Hox
proteins cooperatively bind this element with Exd in vitro. We suggest
three explanations to account for these observations. In the first, all
four Hox/Exd heterodimers would bind to
fkh[250con] in vivo, but the Abd-A/Exd
heterodimer acts as a transcriptional repressor, whereas the other
Hox/Exd heterodimers act as activators. Similar to what
was proposed for Dfd/Exd heterodimers (Li et al. 1999
),
Exd might reveal a latent repression domain in Abd-A. A second
possibility suggests that the lack of fkh[250con]
activation in the abd-A domain is due to inadequate amounts of
nuclear Exd because of repression of hth by the abdominal Hox genes (Azpiazu and Morata 1998
). This appears unlikely because overexpression of Exd and Hth in posterior segments was not sufficient to derepress fkh[250con]-lacZ in the
abd-A domain. A third possibility is that
Abd-A/Exd heterodimers do not directly activate or
repress the fkh[250con] element, perhaps because the
binding of this heterodimer is not stable in vivo. In this case, the
lack of activation of fkh[250con]-lacZ in
the abd-A domain might be due to insufficient amounts of the
activators Antp or Ubx, which are normally
down-regulated in the abdominal segments (Struhl and White 1985
; White
and Wilcox 1985
). One experiment that might help to resolve this
question is to determine whether Abd-A/Exd heterodimers
are directly bound to fkh[250con] in vivo.
The subcellular localization of Exd modulates Hox activity
Exd is regulated in an unusual manner for a homeodomain protein;
during development, it is often found in the cytoplasm, and its nuclear
localization is a regulated process (Mann and Abu-Shaar 1996
; Aspland
and White 1997
; Abu-Shaar and Mann 1998
; Abu-Shaar et al. 1999
). When
Exd is in the cytoplasm, it is nonfunctional as a Hox cofactor;
therefore, any Hox target gene that requires activation by
Hox/Exd heterodimers can be inactivated by shifting Exd
from the nucleus to the cytoplasm. The nuclear localization of Exd
requires the direct interaction with the homeodomain protein encoded by
hth and it appears that most, if not all, of the regulation of
Exd's nuclear localization is mediated indirectly by controlling hth transcription (Rieckhof et al. 1997
; Abu-Shaar et al.
1999
). Our experiments show that, by stage 11, Scr represses
hth in PS 2, resulting in the cytoplasmic accumulation of its
own cofactor, Exd. One consequence of this regulation is that Scr is no
longer able to activate fkh[250] and probably fkh,
itself, later in development. The temporal regulation of Scr's ability
to activate fkh results in Scr being able to trigger a
developmental program, such as salivary gland morphogenesis, although
only being transiently expressed in that tissue. Once the fkh
gene is activated, it has the ability to positively autoregulate, thus
ensuring its stable expression during the remainder of salivary gland
development (L. Komenda and S. Beckendorf, pers. comm.). Conversely, in
the absence of nuclear Exd, Scr is no longer able to activate
fkh in the remainder of PS 2, but instead probably controls
other developmental pathways by activating different target genes. In these cells, in the absence of nuclear Exd, Scr may be using other, as
yet unidentified, cofactors. Although no candidates are yet known,
these putative cofactors will be important to identify in the future.
We suggest that the control of the nuclear localization of Exd, by
regulating hth transcription, is a way to modulate Hox activity in vivo. In the presence of nuclear Exd, Scr is able to
activate certain target genes, for example fkh. But Scr almost certainly regulates other target genes in an Exd-independent manner. Thus, the regulation of Exd's subcellular localization is a way to
create two different versions of Scr
one that functions as an
Scr/Exd heterodimer, and one that regulates target genes independently of Exd.
The role of Exd in Hox function
On the basis of the data presented here and elsewhere (Chan et al.
1997
) we suggest that, at least for a subset of
Hox/Exd-binding sites, Exd selectively enhances the
DNA-binding of one Hox protein over another. Although there are likely
to be other proteins that contribute to Hox specificity in vivo, we
suggest that this aspect of Exd function is central to the mechanism by
which different Hox proteins target different sets of downstream genes.
The cooperativity between Hox and Exd illustrate an elegant example of
combinatorial control in which the DNA sequence helps to assemble
specific complexes between a generally expressed cofactor (Exd) and a
family of related transcription factors (Hox) that have restricted
expression patterns.
These results are also consistent with the alternative model proposed
for Exd; that Exd modifies the transcriptional regulatory properties of
the Hox proteins (Pinsonneault et al. 1997
; Li et al. 1999
). In
principle, Exd could be providing both specificity and regulatory
functions to the Hox proteins. However, if Exd is modifying the
regulatory properties of the Hox proteins, it may be doing more than
simply turning Hox proteins from repressors into activators (Biggin and
McGinnis 1997
; Pinsonneault et al. 1997
). Instead, in part suggested by
the data presented here, Exd might also help some Hox proteins be
better repressors, or change the level of activation mediated by a
particular Hox protein. In summary, we suggest that Exd probably serves
both functions
to increase Hox DNA-binding specificity and modify Hox
transcriptional regulatory properties
and that both mechanisms are
critical for Hox function in vivo.
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Materials and methods |
|---|
|
|
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Fly stocks and transformants
All fly stocks had the w1118 mutation to monitor
the presence of the mini-white gene in all P-element
transgenes (Pirrotta 1988
). P-element transformation was carried out by
standard procedures. All reporter genes were generated by multimerizing
four copies of 40 bp in the same orientation, 37 bp of which is from
the original fkh enhancer. A total of 3 bp was added to make
the junction GATC. For wild-type fkh[250], the 40-bp sequence is as
follows: GATCTCAATGTCAagattaatcgCCAGCTGTGGGACGAGG, in which the underlined bases indicate the added linker sequence, and
the small letters show the Scr/Exd-binding site (Fig. 1). Four copies of this element were required for sufficient levels of
reporter gene activation (data not shown). Multimerized elements were
blunted with klenow and ligated into a blunted SphI site of
the CPLZ vector as described previously (Chan et al. 1997
). For each
reporter construct, the lacZ expression pattern was identical in multiple independent transformant lines.
The following Hox mutant chromosomes were used:
Scr2; ScrC1
AntpNs+RC3; ScrC1
AntpNs+RC3 UbxMX12 (Struhl 1982
);
and abd-AM1 Abd-BM8 (Casanova et
al. 1987
). exdmat
,zyg
embryos were generated
as described (Rieckhof et al. 1997
) by the FLP recombination system and
the null allele exdXP11. Mutant embryos were
identified with either marked balancers, or by directly staining for
mutant (absent) gene products. For analysis of ectopic Hox proteins
with heat shock, the following lines were used:
HS:Antp/FM7 (Jaffe et al. 1997
), HS:Ubx
(Mann and Hogness 1990
), HS:Scr (Gibson et al. 1990
), and the
chimeric transgenes G26 and K26 (Furukubo-Tokunaga et al. 1993
).
Ectopic Hox expression by the Gal4-UAS system was carried out by the
patched-Gal4 driver (Brand and Perrimon 1993
) and the
appropriate UAS:Hox transgene. fkh-lacZ used in
Figure 1, D and E has been described previously and includes 5 kb of
fkh regulatory DNA (Kuo et al. 1996
).
Antibody stainings
HS:Hox embryos were collected for 3 hr, aged for 3 hr, and
heat shocked at 37°C for the time required to make cuticle
transformation, as was described previously for individual transgenes
(Gibson et al. 1990
; Mann and Hogness 1990
; Furukubo-Tokunaga et al.
1993
; Jaffe et al. 1997
), and recovered for 2 hr before fixation.
The anti-
-gal (Cappell), anti-Exd (Mann and Abu-Shaar 1996
),
anti-Scr (Pattatucci and Kaufman 1991
), anti-Antp (Condie et al. 1991
),
and anti-Abd-A (Karch et al. 1990
) antibodies have been described.
Anti-Hth was either a chicken antibody (Casares and Mann 1998
) or from
guinea pigs, and directed against a full-length recombinant his-tagged
Hth protein.
EMSA
EMSAs were carried out with his-tagged recombinant proteins
synthesized in Escherichia coli and purified with
Ni2+ chromatography (Chan and Mann 1996
). his-Antp (Jaffe et
al. 1997
) and his-Exd (Chan et al. 1997
) were described previously.
his-Scr protein is nearly full length (amino acids 2-404) fused to the his tag in the pQE31 vector (Qiagen). His-Ubx protein (isoform Ia) is
from amino acid 57 to its carboxyl terminus fused to the his tag in the
pQE9 vector (Qiagen). his-Abd-A protein is from amino acid 79 to its
carboxyl terminus fused to the his tag of the pET14b vector (Novagen).
Oligos for EMSAs were identical to those used to make reporter
constructs and were not multimerized. Oligos were end labeled with
[32P]dCTP and gel purified. For all EMSAs, each Hox protein
was tested at two concentrations, in the presence and absence of Exd:
for Scr, Ubx, and Abd-A these were 10 ng and 30 ng; for Antp these were
30 ng and 90 ng. The amount of Exd used was 80 ng.
| |
Acknowledgments |
|---|
We thank S. Beckendorf and L. Komenda for sharing with us the sequence of fkh[250] and for first recognizing the presence of a potential Hox/Exd-binding site. We thank W. Gehring, L. Pick, R. White, and the Bloomington Stock Center for reagents or fly stocks and D. Andrew, S. Beckendorf, and L. Komenda for sharing unpublished results. We are indebted to members of the Mann laboratory for discussions and comments throughout this work, C. Tomkins for embryo injections, and A. Aggarwal, T. Jessell, J. Passner, and D. Thanos for comments on the manuscript. This work was supported by an National Institutes of Health grant to R.S.M., who is a Scholar of the Leukemia Society of America.
The publication costs of this article were defrayed in part by payment of page charges. This article must therefore be hereby marked `advertisement' in accordance with 18 USC section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
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Footnotes |
|---|
Received April 7, 1999; revised version accepted May 20, 1999.
1 Corresponding author.
E-MAIL rsm10{at}columbia.edu; FAX (212) 305-7924.
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References |
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