The Xenopus LIM homeodomain (LIM-HD) protein, Xlim-1, is expressed in the Spemann organizer and cooperates with its positive regulator, Ldb1, to activate organizer gene expression. While this activation is presumably mediated through Xlim-1/Ldb1 tetramer formation, the mechanisms regulating proper Xlim-1/Ldb1 stoichiometry remains largely unknown. We isolated the Xenopus ortholog (XRnf12) of the RING finger protein Rnf12/RLIM and explored its functional interactions with Xlim-1 and Ldb1. Although XRnf12 functions as a E3 ubiquitin ligase for Ldb1 and causes proteasome-dependent degradation of Ldb1, we found that co-expression of a high level of Xlim-1 suppresses Ldb1 degradation by XRnf12. This suppression requires both the LIM domains of Xlim-1 and the LIM interaction domain of Ldb1, suggesting that Ldb1, when bound to Xlim-1, escapes degradation by XRnf12. We further show that a high level of Ldb1 suppresses the organizer activity of Xlim-1/Ldb1,suggesting that excess Ldb1 molecules disturb Xlim-1/Ldb1 stoichiometry. Consistent with this, Ldb1 overexpression in the dorsal marginal zone suppresses expression of several organizer genes including postulated Xlim-1 targets, and importantly, this suppression is rescued by co-expression of XRnf12. These data suggest that XRnf12 confers proper Ldb1 protein levels and Xlim-1/Ldb1 stoichiometry for their functions in the organizer. Together with the similarity in the expression pattern of Ldb1 and XRnf12throughout early embryogenesis, we propose Rnf12/RLIM as a specific regulator of Ldb1 to ensure its proper interactions with LIM-HD proteins and possibly other Ldb1-interacting proteins in the organizer as well as in other tissues.
INTRODUCTION
The Spemann organizer plays a central role in body axis determination in vertebrates. It possesses the ability to direct surrounding cells to specific characters, namely dorsalization of mesoderm, neuralization of ectoderm, and anteroposterior patterning of these tissues(Harland and Gerhart, 1997; De Robertis et al., 2000; Bouwmeester, 2001), which are thought to be mediated by secreted antagonists for peptide growth factors such as BMPs, Wnts and Nodals (Harland and Gerhart, 1997; De Robertis et al., 2000). Their gene expression is supposedly regulated by several transcriptional activators expressed in the organizer region(Harland and Gerhart, 1997; Bouwmeester, 2001). The LIM homeodomain (LIM-HD) protein Xlim-1 is one of the important transcriptional activators specifically expressed in the organizer(Taira et al., 1992; Taira et al., 1994a; Taira et al., 1994b; Agulnick et al., 1996; Breen et al., 1998; Hiratani et al., 2001). In mice, Lim1 null embryos exhibit a striking headless phenotype that lacks fore- and midbrain structures anterior to rhombomere 3(Shawlot and Behringer, 1995). In Xenopus, Xlim-1 is also required for head formation(Nakano et al., 2000; Kodjabachian et al., 2001). Among the targets of Xlim-1 are organizer genes such as goosecoid(gsc), chordin (chd), and Xotx2, the expression of which is upregulated by Xlim-1 in the presence of its positive regulator, Ldb1 (LIM-domain-binding protein 1) in animal caps(Taira et al., 1994b; Agulnick et al., 1996; Taira et al., 1997; Mochizuki et al., 2000). chordin encodes a secreted BMP inhibitor(Sasai et al., 1995), which is likely to mediate the neural inducing activity of Xlim-1(Taira et al., 1994b; Agulnick et al., 1996).
LIM-HD proteins have two highly conserved LIM domains in their N termini,which are involved in protein-protein interactions(Dawid et al., 1998; Bach, 2000). The LIM domains have been shown to produce negative regulatory effect on Xlim-1(Taira et al., 1994b). Binding of cofactors to the LIM domains is thought to relieve the inhibitory effect of the LIM domains on Xlim-1; Ldb1 (also known as NLI and CLIM2) being one such factor (Agulnick et al., 1996; Jurata et al., 1996; Bach et al., 1997). Ldb1 contains a self-dimerization domain and a LIM interaction domain(Jurata and Gill, 1997; Breen et al., 1998), and a dimer of Ldb1 has been shown to bridge two LIM-HD molecules (Lhx3/Lim3, Isl1,or Isl3) to form a tetrameric complex(Jurata et al., 1998). In the Drosophila wing disc, overexpression of Chip, the Drosophilaortholog of Ldb1, results in wing malformation, which is rescued by co-expression of the LIM-HD protein Apterous, suggesting that the stoichiometric ratio between LIM-HD and Ldb proteins is critical for LIM-HD activity (Fernandez-Funez et al.,1998; Milan and Cohen,1999; van Meyel et al.,1999; Rincon-Limas et al.,2000). Tetrameric complex formation has also been supported by the observations that chimeric molecules in which the dimerization domain of Chip or Ldb1 is fused to a LIM domain-deleted construct of Apterous or Xlim-1,respectively, are as functional as co-expressed wild-type molecules(Milan and Cohen, 1999; van Meyel et al., 1999; Rincon-Limas et al., 2000; Hiratani et al., 2001). Thus,LIM-HD proteins are likely to function as a tetrameric complex with Ldb1 in a number of developmental contexts, but the mechanisms regulating the stoichiometric ratio between LIM-HD factor and Ldb1 are largely unknown.
In mice, a novel regulator for the LIM-HD transcription factor Lhx3, RLIM(also referred to as Rnf12 according to mouse gene nomenclature), has been isolated and shown to be capable of suppressing the activity of Lhx3(Bach et al., 1999). Rnf12 contains a RING finger motif at its C terminus, which is a conserved,cysteine-rich, zinc-binding motif found in a diverse group of ubiquitin (Ub)ligases that mediate the transfer of Ub to heterologous substrates(Jackson et al., 2000; Joazeiro and Weissman, 2000). Ub ligases (E3) are determinants of target specificity in the protein ubiquitination pathway. After Ub is transferred from a Ub-activating enzyme(E1) to a Ub-conjugating enzyme (E2), Ub ligases (E3) promotes transfer of Ub from Ub-conjugating enzyme (E2) to a specific target protein, which is subsequently degraded by the proteasome(Hershko and Ciechanover,1998; Glickman and Ciechanover, 2002). Suppression of LIM-HD factors by Rnf12 possibly relies on this activity, which has proved to be the case from recent work by Ostendorff et al. (Ostendorff et al., 2002), in addition to its proposed role in recruiting the histone deacetylase complex (Bach et al.,1999). Thus, Rnf12/RLIM appears to be a negative regulator for LIM-HD/Ldb1 complexes.
To determine whether Rnf12 also plays any role in the regulation of Xlim-1,we isolated the Xenopus ortholog XRnf12 and examined its functional interactions with Xlim-1 and Ldb1 in early Xenopusdevelopment. Developmental expression analysis of XRnf12 in comparison with Xlim-1 and Ldb1 revealed that the three genes are co-expressed in the Spemann organizer, raising the possibility that XRnf12 does not simply function as a negative regulator for Xlim-1. Our biochemical and functional analyses show that XRnf12 initiates ubiquitinproteasome-dependent degradation of excess Ldb1 but not Ldb1 bound to Xlim-1 nor Xlim-1 itself, suggesting a role for XRnf12 in adjustment of Xlim-1/Ldb1 stoichiometry in the organizer by assuring proper Ldb1 expression levels.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Embryo manipulations, preparation of synthetic mRNAs and RNA injections
Xenopus embryo manipulations were carried out as described(Hiratani et al., 2001). Template preparations, and synthesis and quantification of mRNAs have been described (Hiratani et al.,2001). Embryos were injected with RNA (10 nl/embryo) and incubated until the sibling embryos reached the appropriate stages. Animal caps were dissected at stage 8-9, cultured, and collected at the gastrula stage for further analysis.
Cloning of XRnf12
PCR with degenerate primers, dF4 and dR5, was carried out using a Xenopus neurula (stage 17/18) cDNA library (J. Shinga and M.T.,unpublished). Primers were designed based on the conserved amino acid sequences in mouse and chick Rnf12: forward primer dF4,5′-CA(A/G)AT(A/C/T)ATGACIGG(A/C/G/T)TT-(C/T)GG-3′ (I, inosine),which corresponds to the amino acid sequence QIMTGFG of XRnf12, and reverse primer dR5, 5′-TT(A/G)TC(A/G/T)AT-(C/T)TG(C/T)TC(C/T)TT-3′, which corresponds to the sequence KEQIDN of XRnf12. An amplified 0.36 kb fragment was cloned and used as a probe to screen a Xenopus gastrula cDNA library (a kind gift from B. Blumberg).
Plasmid constructs
The following plasmids were constructed and used for mRNA injections. To make pCS2+XRnf12, a PCR-amplified, NcoI-digested XRnf12 coding region was subcloned into NcoI-StuI-digested pCS2+AdN(Mochizuki et al., 2000). pCS2+XRnf12(HC>AA) was generated by replacing His585 and Cys588 of XRnf12 with alanines using the Gene Editor in vitro Site-Directed Mutagenesis System(Promega). pCS2+Xlim-1-FLAG contains the Xlim-1 coding region flanked by a single FLAG epitope tag at the C terminus. pCS2+FLAGLdb1 contains the Ldb1 coding region downstream of a single FLAG epitope tag derived from pCS2+FTn(formerly pCS2+FLAG) (Mochizuki et al.,2000). pCS2+FLAG-Ldb1ΔC was constructed by replacing Ldb1 with Ldb1ΔC [formerly Ldb1(1-291)](Hiratani et al., 2001). For pCS2+3HA-ubiquitin, a single copy of the Xenopus ubiquitin was PCR-amplified from a Xenopus neurula cDNA library and subcloned into EcoRI-XbaI-digested pCS2+3HA, which provides three N-terminal HA epitope tags. Primer sequences were based on the second ubiquitin repeat sequence of pXlgC20(Dworkin-Rastl et al., 1984)and are as follows: forward,5′-ggaattctATGCAGATCTTTGTAAAA-3′ (lower case, linker sequences; underline, restriction site); reverse,5′-gctctagaCTAGCCACCCCTGAGCCGAAG-3′. pCS2+NLS-ABL60,pCS2+NLS-CT239, and pCS2+NLS-CT261 contain amino acids 1-177, 239-403, and 261-403 of Xlim-1, respectively, downstream of the SV40 large T antigen NLS(MAPKKKRKV). pCS2+HD34 contains amino acids 178-272 of Xlim-1. pCS2+LMO2 contains full-length mouse LMO2 amplified by PCR. pCS2+hRNF6, pCS2+hRNF13, and pCS2+hRNF38 were constructed with pCS2+ by PCR amplification of the entire coding region from cDNA clones (GenBank accession numbers: BC034688, BC009781,and BC033786, respectively) provided by the Mammalian Gene Collection (MGC)project (NIH) through Open Biosystems. pSP64-Xβm (Xenopusβ-globin) has been described (Krieg and Melton, 1984).
The following plasmids were used for GST pull-down assays. pGEX2TNEX-XRnf12ΔC and pGEX2TNEX-XRnf12ΔN contain amino acids 1-283 and 282-616, respectively, of XRnf12 in pGEX2TNEX(Hiratani et al., 2001). pGEX2T-Ldb1 contains full-length Ldb1 in pGEX2T. pGEX2T-ABL60,pGEX2T-ΔC, pGEX2TCT239, pGEX2T-ΔNA, and pGEX2T-Xlim-1 contain portions of Xlim-1 shown in Fig. 5E in pGEX2T. pGEX2T-HD27 has been described previously [formerly GST/Xlim-1(HD27)] (Mochizuki et al.,2000). pSP64T-Xlim-5 was constructed as follows: the coding region of Xlim-5 was obtained from pBluescript-KS(+)Xlim-5 plasmid(Toyama et al., 1995) by PvuII-HincII digestion, and inserted into end-filled BglII site of pSP64T (Krieg and Melton, 1984). pSP64T-Xlim-3 has been described previously(Yamamoto et al., 2003). All constructs were verified by sequencing.
GST (glutathione S-transferase) pull-down assay
Generation of GST fusion proteins, in vitro translation, and GST pull-down assay were carried out as described previously(Mochizuki et al., 2000; Hiratani et al., 2001), except for the use of approximately 5 μg of GST fusion proteins per assay. For in vitro translation, pCS2+Xlim-1 (Hiratani et al., 2001), pSP64T-Xlim-3, pSP64T-Xlim-5, pSP64RI-XLdb1(Agulnick et al., 1996),pCS2+Ldb1ΔC, pCS2+XRnf12, pCS2+hRNF6, pCS2+hRNF13 and pCS2+hRNF38 were used.
Northern blot and RT-PCR analysis
Northern blot analysis was performed using the stored original blot from the previous study (Hikasa and Taira,2001). A 0.36 kb PCR fragment amplified with degenerate primers dF4 and dR5, which contained the XRnf12C sequence, was cloned into the pT7Blue vector (Novagen), excised with NdeI-EcoRI,gel-purified, and used as a XRnf12 probe. RT-PCR analysis was done as described previously (Osada et al.,2003).
Nuclear β-gal staining, whole-mount in situ hybridization and sectioning
For lineage tracing, nβ-gal mRNA transcribed from linearized pCS2+nβ-gal was co-injected and visualized by Red-Gal (Research Organics)staining. Whole-mount in situ hybridization was carried out as described previously (Harland, 1991; Shinga et al., 2001). For hemisections, rehydrated embryos were embedded in 2% low melt agarose in 1× PBS containing 0.3 M sucrose and 0.05% Triton X-100, and sectioned with a razor blade before hybridization as described previously(Lee et al., 2001). Digoxigenin-labeled antisense RNA probes were transcribed from Xlim-1(Taira et al., 1992),gsc (Cho et al.,1991), chd (Sasai et al., 1995), Xotx2(Pannese et al., 1995), XPAPC (Kim et al.,1998), cer(Bouwmeester et al., 1996), XFKH1 (Dirksen and Jamrich,1992), Xnot (von Dassow et al., 1993), Mix.1(Rosa, 1989) and Xbra(Smith et al., 1991) plasmid templates. PCR-amplified template containing a T7 promoter sequence was used for dkk1 (Shibata et al.,2001). pBluescript-SK(-)XRnf12 and pBluescript-SK(-)XLdb1(Agulnick et al., 1996) were used for XRnf12 and Ldb1 probes, respectively.
Albino embryos were stained slightly more intensively than usual for better interior staining and embedded in paraffin wax and sectioned. Nuclei were stained with DAPI (4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole) as described previously (Shibata et al.,2001).
Protein extraction
Embryos were collected at the gastrula stage (stage 10.5 or 11) and homogenized in 10 μl of homogenizing buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, 50 mM KCl, 20% glycerol, 1 mM EDTA, 1 mM EGTA, 5 mM DTT, 1 mM PMSF) per embryo (or 2-2.5 μl per animal cap), and the supernatant was collected after centrifugation. For the dispersed cell experiments, mRNA-injected embryos were cultured in Ca2+/Mg2+-free 1× MBS containing 0.2%BSA and 50 μg/ml gentamicin sulfate in agarose-coated dishes, and vitelline membranes were removed at stage 6. Then, 50 μM (final) MG-132 (Peptide Institute), or an equal volume of DMSO for the negative control, was added to the medium and embryos were dispersed into single cells by gentle agitation. Cells were collected at the gastrula stage for preparation of cell lysates. Protein concentrations of the lysates were determined by a Protein Assay kit(Bio-Rad).
Western blot analysis and whole-mount immunostaining
For western blotting, equivalent amounts of total proteins were separated by SDS-PAGE, transferred to a PVDF membrane, and visualized either by chemical luminescence using the ECL system (Amersham Pharmacia) or by alkaline phosphatase staining using NBT/BCIP. Whole-mount immunostaining was done essentially as described previously(Hiratani et al., 2001),except for the use of ImmunoPure Metal-Enhanced DAB Substrate Kit (Pierce) for staining. Bisection of gastrula embryos were done as described previously(Lee et al., 2001). Antibodies used are as follows: anti-FLAG (M2, Sigma), anti-HA (12CA5, Roche),anti-β-tubulin (clone tub 2.1, Sigma), anti-Ldb1/CLIM2 (N-18, Santa Cruz), anti-Ldb1/NLI (Jurata et al.,1996), horseradish peroxidase (HRP)-conjugated anti-mouse Ig antibody from sheep (Amersham Pharmacia), alkaline phosphatase-conjugated anti-mouse IgG antibody from goat (Promega), HRP-conjugated anti-goat IgG from donkey (Santa Cruz), and HRP-conjugated anti-rabbit Ig from donkey (Amersham Pharmacia).
Coimmunoprecipitation assay
Coimmunoprecipitation assays were done essentially as described previously(Watanabe and Whitman, 1999),with slight modifications. Cell lysates were collected as described above except for the use of lysis buffer [20 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0), 1 mM EDTA, 10%glycerol, 8 mM DTT, 40 μg/ml leupeptin, 20 μg/ml aprotinin, 1 mM PMSF]containing 0.1% NP-40. Equivalent amounts of lysates (100-200 μl) were incubated with 1 μg of anti-FLAG antibody for 1 hour at 4°C, then added with 40 μl of protein G-agarose (Roche), and incubated for another 30 minutes at 4°C. After being washed 5 times with lysis buffer sequentially containing each of the following: (1) 0.1% NP-40, (2) 0.4 M NaCl, (3) 0.5%NP-40, (4) 0.2 M NaCl and 0.25% NP-40, and (5) nothing, SDS sample buffer was added and the bound proteins were eluted from beads by boiling. The eluted proteins were separated by SDS-PAGE, followed by western analysis.
RESULTS
Isolation and characterization of XRnf12
To determine whether Rnf12 plays any role in regulating the activity of Xlim-1, we isolated the Xenopus Rnf12 ortholog by degenerate PCR procedure and subsequent screening of a Xenopus gastrula cDNA library. We obtained a clone encoding a protein of 616 amino acids that shared 65% and 70% identity with mouse and chick Rnf12, respectively. Based on phylogenetic comparison with the mouse, chick, and human Rnf12, and Rnf12-related proteins such as RNF6 (data not shown), we assume that this clone encodes the Xenopus ortholog of Rnf12, which we refer to as XRnf12 (Fig. 1A).
We also isolated two other genes highly related to XRnf12, named XRnf12B and XRnf12C (Fig. 1A,B). XRnf12B and XRnf12C share 89% identity with each other, and contain similar repetitive sequences of heptamer peptide of distinct sizes,the consensus of which is P-E/V-S-V-P/A-E/V. XRnf12B and XRnf12C may either be paralogs or alleles of XRnf12 because they both share 93% identity with XRnf12 outside of the repetitive sequence. Because XRnf12B and XRnf12C showed mRNA expression patterns and activities indistinguishable from XRnf12 in our studies (data not shown), we employed functional analyses that primarily used XRnf12, which is structurally closest to mouse Rnf12.
Because the N-terminal region of Rnf12 binds to both LIMHD proteins and Ldb1/CLIM2 (Bach et al., 1999),we performed GST pull-down experiments with XRnf12, Xenopus LIM-HD proteins, and Ldb1. As expected, the N-terminal region [amino acids (aa)1-283] of XRnf12 interacted with Xlim-1, Xlim-3, Xlim-5, and Ldb1(Fig. 1C, GSTXRnf12ΔC),while the C-terminal region (aa 282-616) of XRnf12 showed little or no interaction with any of them (Fig. 1C, GST-XRnf12ΔN). We also found that the N-terminal region(aa 1-291) of Ldb1 is sufficient for the interaction with XRnf12ΔC(Fig. 1C, Ldb1ΔC). Thus,XRnf12 possesses characteristics similar to mouse Rnf12 in terms of protein-binding specificity.
Expression of XRnf12 overlaps with that of Xlim-1and Ldb1 in the gastrula mesoderm
To evaluate temporal expression patterns of the XRnf12 genes, we carried out northern analysis using a 359 base probe of XRnf12C,which shares 93% and 99% identity at the nucleotide level with XRnf12and XRnf12B, respectively, assuming that any of the three XRnf12 genes could be detected with this probe. Two maternal XRnf12 transcripts of different sizes (3.0 and 3.5 kb) were detected at the cleavage stage (Fig. 2A). While the 3.0 kb transcript disappeared at the gastrula stage(Fig. 2A, stage 11), the 3.5 kb transcript is maintained at relatively constant levels throughout early embryogenesis, with a slight increase at the late gastrula stage(Fig. 2A, stage 12.5). Judging from their size differences, the 3.0 kb and 3.5 kb transcripts may represent XRnf12 and XRnf12B/C genes, respectively.
If XRnf12 plays any role in the regulation of Xlim-1 or Ldb1, it should be colocalized with Xlim-1 or Ldb1. Thus, we next carried out whole-mount in situ hybridization using sagittally bisected embryos to compare their mRNA expression patterns at the gastrula stage. Xlim-1 mRNA was enriched in the dorsal mesoderm, with a faint expression also detected in the ventral mesoderm (Fig. 2B) as reported previously (Taira et al.,1992). XRnf12 expression was detected in the entire mesoderm and ectoderm (Fig. 2C), and showed remarkable resemblance to Ldb1 expression(Fig. 2D), consistent with the reported expression of Rnf12 and Ldb1 in mice(Bach et al., 1999) and Ldb1 in Xenopus (Agulnick et al., 1996). Taken together, these results show that the three mRNAs colocalize in the gastrula mesoderm.
The similarity of XRnf12 and Ldb1 expression at the gastrula stage led us to further compare their expression during embryogenesis. After the gastrula stage, the expression of both transcripts is gradually restricted to tissues originated from the ectoderm, the neuroectoderm, neural crest and epidermis (data not shown), and subsequently to the neural tube as well as the head and the tailbud region(Fig. 2E-J). Additional expression of Ldb1 is seen in the pronephric field, and the profundal-trigeminal placodal area (pPrV)(Schlosser and Northcutt,2000) at the neural groove to neural tube stages(Fig. 2H,I, arrowhead). Although not as localized, XRnf12 also appears to be present in the pPrV area (Fig. 2E,F,arrowhead). At the tailbud stage, expression of both genes is detected in the pronephric region and branchial arches(Fig. 2G,J). Cross sections of tailbud embryos confirmed their colocalization in the epidermis, neural crest,neural tube and head mesenchyme (Fig. 2K-P). These results show that the expression domains of XRnf12 and Ldb1 largely overlap throughout early embryogenesis, suggesting that the two genes may function in a common regulatory process rather than having distinct roles independent of each other(see Discussion).
XRnf12 suppresses secondary axis formation elicited by Xlim-1/Ldb1 and antagonizes organizer activity upon overexpression
Because Xlim-1, Ldb1 and XRnf12 transcripts colocalize in the gastrula mesoderm, we next asked whether XRnf12 could affect the axis-inducing activity of Xlim-1/Ldb1(Agulnick et al., 1996). As shown in Fig. 3A, co-expression of XRnf12 markedly suppressed secondary axis formation elicited by Xlim-1/Ldb1, while β-globin, as negative control, had no effect. Notably,point mutations in the RING finger, which is supposed to abolish its zinc binding activity (Saurin et al.,1996), almost totally abolished the inhibitory action of XRnf12(Fig. 3A, XRnf12(HC>AA)). We further examined the effect of overexpression of XRnf12 in the dorsal marginal zone. While XRnf12(HC>AA) had only a small effect (9% headless or cyclopic, n=118; Fig. 3B),overexpression of XRnf12 resulted in reduced head structures (52% headless or cyclopic, n=171; Fig. 3C), suggesting that XRnf12 is likely to interfere with organizer function through RING finger-dependent activity. This was also confirmed by downregulation of organizer gene expression by XRnf12 as described below.
XRnf12 mediates ubiquitination and proteasome-dependent degradation of Ldb1 but not Xlim-1
To examine whether specific protein degradation could account for the RING-dependent suppression by XRnf12, we examined the steady-state levels of FLAG-tagged Ldb1 or Xlim-1 overexpressed ventrally in the presence or absence of XRnf12. XRnf12 did not alter the steady-state level of Xlim-1-FLAG, either in the presence or absence of Ldb1 (Fig. 4A). Rather, we found that Ldb1 enhanced expression levels of Xlim-1-FLAG (Fig. 4A, compare lanes 4,5 with lanes 2,3; see Discussion). In contrast, XRnf12 caused marked reduction in the steady-state level of FLAG-Ldb1(Fig. 4B, lanes 3,5) in a RING-dependent manner (Fig. 4B,lane 6), in good correlation with the RING-dependent suppression of axis duplication (Fig. 3A). We also noticed that the expression level of FLAG-Ldb1 was increased by Xlim-1 co-expression (Fig. 4B, compare lanes 2 and 4; further described below).
We next tested whether XRnf12 ubiquitinates Ldb1. FLAG-Ldb1 and HA-ubiquitin were co-expressed in the presence of XRnf12 and the lysates were immunoprecipitated with anti-FLAG antibody, followed by immunoblotting with anti-FLAG and anti-HA antibodies. Anti-FLAG immunoblotting confirmed that co-expression of XRnf12 results in downregulation of non-ubiquitinated FLAG-Ldb1 expression levels as expected(Fig. 4C, lower panel, lanes 6,7). While low amounts of ubiquitinated proteins, probably resulting from intrinsic ubiquitin ligase activity, were detected by anti-HA immunoblotting in the absence of XRnf12 (Fig. 4C, upper panel, lane 4), strong ladder-like signals, which probably correspond to polyubiquitin-conjugated Ldb1 products, appeared in the presence of XRnf12 (upper panel, lane 7), in contrast to the low amounts of non-ubiquitinated FLAG-Ldb1 present (lower panel, lane 7). As expected,XRnf12(HC>AA) did not enhance ubiquitination(Fig. 4C, compare lane 8 with lane 4), suggesting that the enhancement was RING dependent. By using FLAG-Ldb1ΔC, we obtained basically the same result except for the smaller sizes of the ubiquitinated protein bands(Fig. 4D), confirming that the ubiquitinated proteins in Fig. 4C are indeed Ldb1 but not some other proteins associated with FLAG-Ldb1. The results also suggest that the N-terminal region (aa 1-291) of Ldb1 is sufficient for the ubiquitination and degradation mediated by XRnf12. However, we also noticed that the degradation efficiency of Ldb1ΔC is somewhat lower than full-length Ldb1, possibly due to the lack of some residues present in the C-terminal region important for its ubiquitination and degradation. In contrast to Ldb1, we did not observe ubiquitination of Xlim-1 by XRnf12 (data not shown), consistent with the fact that XRnf12 does not alter the expression level of Xlim-1-FLAG(Fig. 4A). These data suggest that XRnf12 functions as a ubiquitin ligase specific to Ldb1, confirming a recent report on its mouse counterpart(Ostendorff et al., 2002). The weak intrinsic ubiquitin ligase activity toward Ldb1(Fig. 4C, upper panel, lane 4)may be due to endogenous XRnf12.
We further examined whether XRnf12 mediates Ldb1 degradation by the proteasome. We co-expressed FLAG-Ldb1, Xlim-1, and XRnf12 ventrally, dispersed embryos into single cells, and cultured them in the presence of the proteasome inhibitor MG-132 until the gastrula stage. XRnf12-mediated reduction of FLAG-Ldb1 showed suppression in the presence of MG-132(Fig. 4E, lane 6). MG-132 treatment alone had little or no effect on FLAG-Ldb1 expression(Fig. 4E, lanes 3,4). These results suggest that XRnf12 causes degradation of Ldb1 by the proteasome, also confirming the recent report on its mouse counterpart(Ostendorff et al., 2002).
To test the specificity of XRnf12, we analyzed three other related RING finger proteins, human RNF6, RNF38 and RNF13, for their ability to reduce Ldb1 expression levels. These three human proteins were chosen because they showed highest similarity to XRnf12 from database searching. Amino acid sequence identities of hRNF6, hRNF38 and hRNF13 to XRnf12 are 42%, 22% and 16% in entire proteins, and 80%, 51%, and 55% in the RING fingers, respectively. As shown in Fig. 4F, hRNF6 caused reduction in FLAG-Ldb1 expression levels, which seemed reasonable because of the relatively high sequence similarity between hRNF6 and XRnf12. That hRNF38 also caused reduction in FLAG-Ldb1 expression levels, albeit to a lesser extent, was somewhat unexpected, but the observed interaction between Ldb1 and hRNF38 in a GST pull-down assay provides a possible explanation for the activity of hRNF38 as well as hRNF6 (Fig. 4G). Human RNF13, which is the least similar to XRnf12 in the entire region of the three Rnf12-related proteins tested, did not interact with Ldb1 or affect its expression (Fig. 4F,G). These results suggest that not all Rnf12-related RING finger proteins can be involved in Ldb1 degradation, indicating that there is some degree of specificity in the activity of XRnf12.
Xlim-1 suppresses XRnf12-mediated degradation of Ldb1 through interaction with Ldb1
The fact that XRnf12 mediates ubiquitin-proteasome-dependent degradation of Ldb1 raises important questions. First, how is the activity of Xlim-1/Ldb1,which is apparently required in the organizer, assured in the presence of XRnf12? Second, what is the functional significance of Ldb1 degradation by XRnf12?
A clue to the first question came from our observation that co-expression of Xlim-1 reproducibly caused an increase in the expression level of FLAG-Ldb1(Fig. 4B, compare lanes 2 and 4). As shown in Fig. 5A, we further confirmed that Xlim-1 dose-dependently increased the expression level of FLAG-Ldb1 (lanes 8-12), which may result from interfering with endogenous XRnf12. Moreover, we found that Xlim-1 suppressed XRnf12-mediated reduction of FLAG-Ldb1 levels in a dose-dependent manner(Fig. 5A, lanes 3-7). While the expression level of FLAG-Ldb1 became saturated in our range of Xlim-1 dosages in the absence of XRnf12 (Fig. 5A, lanes 11,12), it continued to increase at the same Xlim-1 dosages in the presence of XRnf12 (Fig. 5A, lanes 6,7). These results suggest that Xlim-1 suppresses the degradation of Ldb1 caused by exogenous XRnf12 and possibly endogenous XRnf12,implying mutual interactions between the three proteins.
To define the region in Xlim-1 required for this suppression, we expressed a series of Xlim-1 deletion constructs together with FLAG-Ldb1 and XRnf12, and examined the expression level of FLAG-Ldb1. Of all the constructs tested, only the LIM domain-containing ABL60 efficiently suppressed degradation of Ldb1 caused by XRnf12 (Fig. 5B, lane 5). Mouse LMO2 (Foroni et al.,1992) also suppressed degradation of Ldb1 caused by XRnf12(Fig. 5C), although the interpretation of this result is complicated a little by the reported ubiquitin ligase activity of Rnf12 toward LMO2 (see Discussion). We conclude from our results that LIM domains are sufficient for the inhibition of XRnf12 activity.
We next defined the XRnf12-binding region in Xlim-1 by GST pull-down assay using a series of GST-Xlim-1 constructs and 35S-labeled XRnf12. Contrary to the reported LIM domain-binding of mouse Rnf12(Bach et al., 1999), the LIM domain-containing ABL60 showed virtually no interaction with XRnf12(Fig. 5D). In contrast, the homeodomain-containing HD27 and ΔNA showed weak interactions with XRnf12(Fig. 5D). Thus, the homeodomain-containing region (aa 178-265) of Xlim-1 is necessary and sufficient for the interaction with XRnf12(Fig. 5E). Under our experimental conditions, GST-Xlim-1 showed a weaker affinity for XRnf12 than GST-Ldb1 (Fig. 5D). We also noticed that XRnf12 interacts with itself through the C-terminal region (aa 282-616) (Fig. 5D,GST-XRnf12ΔN), suggesting that XRnf12 may form a homodimeric complex.
Taken together, the LIM domain-containing region of Xlim-1, which is required for the interaction with Ldb1(Agulnick et al., 1996; Breen et al., 1998) but not XRnf12, is sufficient for the suppression of XRnf12-mediated Ldb1 degradation. This suggests that binding of Xlim-1 to Ldb1 is a requisite for the suppression. We further tested this possibility by using FLAG-Ldb1ΔC,which does not contain the LIM interaction domain(Jurata and Gill, 1997; Breen et al., 1998). FLAG-Ldb1ΔC contains the region required for ubiquitination(Fig. 4D) and RING finger-dependent degradation by XRnf12(Fig. 5F, lanes 2,3,6). In striking contrast to FLAG-Ldb1, XRnf12-mediated degradation of FLAG-Ldb1ΔC was not suppressed by Xlim-1 or other Xlim-1 constructs tested in Fig. 5B(Fig. 5F lanes 4,5 and data not shown), further supporting our hypothesis that binding of Xlim-1 to Ldb1 is required for the suppression. These results suggest that Ldb1 escapes degradation by XRnf12 upon association with Xlim-1, providing a plausible explanation of the way in which Xlim-1/Ldb1 could exert its effect in the presence of XRnf12 in the organizer.
No apparent dorsal-to-ventral (D/V) difference in the expression levels of the Ldb1 protein
Because Xlim-1 is enriched in the dorsal mesoderm, our results suggest that Ldb1 may be subject to selective degradation by XRnf12 in the ventrolateral mesoderm, thus contributing to further spatial restriction of Xlim-1 activity to the dorsalmost region. We addressed this question by using an anti-Ldb1 antibody, N-18, which recognizes a peptide sequence mapping at the conserved N terminus of vertebrate Ldb1. Specificity of the antibody to the Xenopus Ldb1 protein was assessed by immunoblotting of Xenopus embryo extracts, which expressed a single band of a predicted size of approximately 46 kDa. Furthermore, exogenous Ldb1 expression by mRNA injection enhanced this 46 kDa band, whereas addition of blocking peptides at 1 μg/ml eliminated immunoreactivity, reflecting specificity (not shown). We also confirmed that endogenous Ldb1 expression in animal caps is downregulated by overexpression of XRnf12 in a RING-dependent fashion(Fig. 6A), consistent with the results using exogenous Ldb1 constructs (Figs 4, 5).
Explants from the ventral marginal zone (VMZ) or dorsal marginal zone (DMZ)were dissected from gastrula embryos, and protein extracts were subjected to anti-Ldb1 immunoblotting. We noticed little dorsal-toventral (DV) difference in Ldb1 expression levels throughout early to mid gastrula stages 10, 10.5 and 11 (Fig. 6B and data not shown). We further examined DV difference by whole-mount immunostaining of bisected mid gastrula stage embryos (stage 10.5). Because the N-18 antibody did not react with Ldb1 on hemisections, we tested anti-mouse Ldb1/NLI antibodies (Jurata et al.,1996), and found they cross reacted with Xenopus Ldb1. As shown in Fig. 6C, signals were again detected uniformly in the mesoderm and ectoderm, and weakly in the endoderm, and showed subcellular localization to the nuclei, as predicted(Agulnick et al., 1996). Taken together, these results suggest that Ldb1 is not subject to selective degradation by XRnf12 in the ventrolateral mesoderm, possibly because of the presence of a Ldb1-binding protein in the ventrolateral mesoderm. Such a ventrally expressed Ldb1-interacting factor could be the LIM-only protein,XLMO4 (J. L.Gomez-Skarmeta, personal communication; see Discussion).
Excess Ldb1 suppresses the expression of Xlim-1 target genes, which is rescued by co-expression of XRnf12
We next hypothesized that the functional significance of Ldb1 degradation by XRnf12 may be to eliminate excess Ldb1 molecules. We first examined the effect of Ldb1 overexpression on the axis-inducing activity of Xlim-1(Fig. 7). As previously reported (Agulnick et al.,1996; Hiratani et al.,2001), co-expression of Xlim-1 (0.25 ng mRNA/embryo) and Ldb1 (0.5 ng mRNA/embryo) initiated secondary axis formation. Notably, excess amounts of Ldb1 (1.0 to 4.0 ng/embryo) inhibited this activity dose-dependently, whereas increasing the dose of Xlim-1 effectively suppressed the inhibitory action of excess amounts of Ldb1 (4.0 ng mRNA/embryo)(Fig. 7). These results suggest that the stoichiometry of Xlim-1 and Ldb1 is important for the exertion of their function, and that excess Ldb1 molecules are deleterious to Xlim-1. It is also possible that excess Ldb1 interferes with LIM domain-dependent association of Xlim-1 with other proteins, if any.
To further assess the likelihood of this hypothesis, we analyzed the effect of Ldb1 overexpression on the expression of candidate Xlim-1 targets, gsc,chd, Xotx2, cerberus (cer), and Paraxial protocadherin(XPAPC) (Taira et al.,1994b; Taira et al.,1997; Mochizuki et al.,2000; Hukriede et al.,2003; Yamamoto et al.,2003), as well as other organizer genes, XFKH1, Xnot and dickkopf1 (dkk1)(Dirksen and Jamrich, 1992; von Dassow et al., 1993; Glinka et al., 1998). Panmesodermal and pan-mesendodermal markers, Xbra and Mix.1,respectively (Rosa, 1989; Smith et al., 1991), were also examined. As shown in Fig. 8,the patterns of alterations in gene expression could be categorized roughly into three groups. Group 1 is composed of genes that are downregulated by overexpression of either Ldb1 or XRnf12 alone(Fig. 8A-E), but restored by their co-expression in a RING-dependent manner (gsc, chd, Xotx2,XPAPC and cer). We found that genes reported as targets or candidate targets of Xlim-1 are all categorized into group 1. We have recently shown that cer expression is regulated by a complex of Xlim-1,Siamois and Mix.1 in a LIM domain-dependent fashion that does not involve Ldb1(Yamamoto et al., 2003). Therefore, the effect of Ldb1 on cer expression could be explained by disruption of the LIM domain-dependent transcription factor complex, as has been exemplified in the case of complex formation by the LIMHD protein Lmx1 and the bHLH protein E47, which is disrupted by Ldb1(Jurata and Gill, 1997). In contrast, there is no simple explanation for the effect of XRnf12 overexpression on cer expression, but it may result from some uncharacterized roles of the pleiotropic factor Ldb1(Mukhopadhyay et al., 2003) in cer regulation. Nevertheless, these results are generally consistent with the idea that XRnf12 indirectly contributes to organizer gene expression through elimination of excess Ldb1 molecules, which are supposed to disturb Xlim-1/Ldb1 stoichiometry.
We also observed two other types of gene response to overexpression of Ldb1 and XRnf12. Group 2 contains genes that are downregulated by XRnf12 overexpression but not by Ldb1, and the effect of XRnf12 was suppressed by co-expression of Ldb1 (XFKH1 and Xnot,Fig. 8F,G,). Group 3 is composed of genes that are downregulated (dkk1 and Mix.1,Fig. 8H,I) or slightly affected(Xbra,Fig. 8J) by Ldb1 overexpression, but not by XRnf12. The effect on Xbra was relatively weak, compared to other genes, implying only a partial contribution of Ldb1, if any. Although there are no convincing explanations for the phenotypes of groups 2 and 3 at present (see Discussion), co-expression of Ldb1 and XRnf12 always restores the expression of the genes in groups 2 and 3 as well as those in group 1. This emphasizes the specificity of XRnf12 toward Ldb1 as well as the importance of maintaining the expression of Ldb1 to a proper level.
Ldb1 overexpression affects the maintenance phase of organizer gene expression
Our previous study suggests a role for Xlim-1 in the maintenance phase of organizer gene expression rather than initiation(Mochizuki et al., 2000). Therefore, we analyzed the effect of Ldb1 overexpression on gscexpression during late blastula to mid gastrula stages (stages 9.5, 10, 10.5,and 11) to see if Ldb1 overexpression primarily affected the maintenance phase. Embryos were injected dorsally with Ldb1 mRNA and RNA was then isolated from these embryos at stages 9.5, 10, 10.5 and 11 and subjected to RT-PCR analysis. As shown in Fig. 9, downregulation of gsc by Ldb1 overexpression was prominent at stages 10.5 and 11, whereas the effect was not as prominent at stages 9.5 and 10. Consistent with the results in Fig. 8, the reduction of gsc expression at stages 10.5 and 11 was suppressed by co-expression of XRnf12. These data support the idea that Ldb1 overexpression primarily affected the maintenance phase of gsc expression elicited by Xlim-1 rather than initiation.
DISCUSSION
Role of XRnf12 in gene regulation by Xlim-1 and Ldb1 in the organizer
In this study, we have analyzed the role of XRnf12 in the regulation of the activity of Xlim-1/Ldb1 in the Spemann organizer. Our initial overexpression study suggested a role for XRnf12 in negative regulation of Xlim-1/Ldb1 through Ldb1 degradation (Fig. 3), in agreement with a recent report on its mouse counterpart(Ostendorff et al., 2002). However, we have further shown that: (1) overexpression of Ldb1 suppresses axis duplication elicited by Xlim-1/Ldb1(Fig. 7) as well as the expression of Xlim-1 target genes in the organizer(Fig. 8); (2) co-expression of XRnf12 rescues the effect of Ldb1 overexpression on putative Xlim-1 targets in a RING-dependent manner (Fig. 8); (3) ubiquitination-mediated degradation of Ldb1 by XRnf12 is inhibited by Xlim-1 through association of its LIM domains with the LIM interaction domain of Ldb1 (Fig. 5). Therefore, we propose a role for XRnf12 in selective degradation of excess Ldb1 molecules unbound to Xlim-1, which contributes to the establishment of proper Xlim-1/Ldb1 stoichiometry for the formation of functional Xlim-1/Ldb1 complex (Fig. 10).
We assume that Xlim-1/Ldb1 tetramer is the functional complex in the dorsal mesoderm (Figs 7, 10)(Hiratani et al., 2001), as has been suggested in the case of Drosophila LIMHD Apterous and Chip/dLDB (Milan and Cohen,1999; van Meyel et al.,1999; Rincon-Limas et al.,2000). This is also supported by the observation that overexpression of Ldb1ΔC, which is expected to disturb Xlim-1/Ldb1 tetramer formation, in the dorsal marginal zone (2 ng/embryo) leads to downregulation of putative Xlim-1 targets, gsc and chd (data not shown). The importance of LIM-HD/Ldb stoichiometry has also been dealt with in the case of Apterous and Chip/dLDB(Fernandez-Funez et al., 1998; Milan and Cohen, 1999; van Meyel et al., 1999).
We have shown that overexpression of Ldb1 or XRnf12 affects expression of candidate Xlim-1 target genes, gsc, chd, Xotx2, XPAPC and cer (Fig. 8, group 1). However, we have also noticed that overexpression of either XRnf12 (group 2)or Ldb1 (group 3) affects the expression of genes that have not been shown to be regulated by Xlim-1 and Ldb1 (Fig. 8, groups 2 and 3). Possible explanations for this observation with the group 2 and 3 genes are as follows: (1) The group 2 genes may be regulated by a Ldb1-containing complex which is disrupted by XRnf12 but not by excess amounts of Ldb1, and (2) Mix.1 and dkk1 in group 3 may be regulated by a Ldb1-independent complex, but this complex is disrupted by excess Ldb1 through Ldb1-interacting components in the complex, similar to the case of the cer gene. Curiously, inhibition of dkk1expression by Ldb1 was also rescued by XRnf12(HC>AA)(Fig. 8H). Binding of XRnf12(HC>AA) to Ldb1 may suffice to suppress the effect of excess Ldb1 in this case. Although these possibilities remain to be elucidated, it should be emphasized that the expression of candidate Xlim-1 target genes, but not other genes examined, are affected by both Ldb1 and XRnf12. In addition, because the effect of excess Ldb1 on the expression of group 3 genes was relatively small compared to that on group 1 genes, it seems that Ldb1 overexpression primarily affects dorsal mesodermal gene expression by Xlim-1. Most importantly, all the genes examined show normal expression upon co-expression of Ldb1 and XRnf12,supporting the requirement of proper expression levels of Ldb1, which may be assured in the presence of XRnf12.
Roles of XRnf12 in other developmental contexts
XRnf12 and Ldb1 are expressed in a similar fashion throughout early developmental stages (Fig. 2). This is reminiscent of the term `synexpression group'(Niehrs and Pollet, 1999),supporting the close functional interactions between Ldb1 and XRnf12. Because Ldb1 seems to escape degradation by binding to Xlim-1, we first assumed a dorsal-to-ventral gradient of Ldb1 protein expression, according to the distribution of Xlim-1 protein (Karavanov et al., 1996). This seems not to be the case, as we did not observe dorsal-toventral difference in Ldb1 expression levels(Fig. 6B,C). This result raises the possibility that Ldb1-interacting proteins other than Xlim-1, which could bind and protect Ldb1 from degradation, are present in the lateral and ventral regions as well as in the animal pole region(Fig. 10). This possibility could be explained by the presence of XLMO4 in the ventrolateral mesoderm of the Xenopus embryo (J. L. Gomez-Skarmeta, personal communication) and Xlim-5 in the animal pole region (Toyama et al., 1995). In the ventrolateral mesoderm, Ldb1 may participate in a transcriptional regulatory complex that contains XLMO4 and perhaps GATA proteins, by analogy with the case of Ldb1, LMO2, and GATA-1 in blood development (Osada et al.,1995; Wadman et al.,1997). Because mouse LMO2, which is related to XLMO4, can block degradation of Ldb1 by XRnf12 (Fig. 5C), it is possible that LMO proteins [LMO1-4 (reviewed by Bach, 2000)] also utilize XRnf12 to acquire proper LMO/Ldb1 stoichiometry.
During the course of neuronal differentiation in the neural tube, several LIM-HD proteins are expressed to generate a so-called LIM code that is thought to define neuronal identity (Lumsden,1995; Tanabe and Jessell,1996). LIM-HD proteins are also involved in brain development(Sheng et al., 1996; Porter et al., 1997; Zhao et al., 1999). Interestingly, it has recently been shown that LIM-HD/Ldb1 stoichiometry appears to be important for the specification of motor neuron and interneuron identity by Lhx3/Islet-1/Ldb1 and Lhx3/Ldb1, respectively(Thaler et al., 2002). Because XRnf12 and Ldb1 are co-expressed in the brain and the spinal cord(Fig. 2), XRnf12 may contribute to LIM-HD/Ldb1 stoichiometry in these regions as well.
Regulation of protein stability by mutual interactions
In the Drosophila wing disc, complex formation between Apterous and Chip/dLDB attenuates proteasome-dependent degradation of Apterous and stabilizes Apterous protein (Weihe et al.,2001). Interestingly, we also noticed an increase in the expression level of Xlim-1 by Ldb1 co-expression(Fig. 4A, compare lanes 2,3 with lanes 4,5), suggesting that a similar mechanism for stabilization of Xlim-1 protein exists in vertebrates. Therefore, Xlim-1 may be more susceptible to proteasome-mediated degradation by some unknown factor(s) when not bound to Ldb1. This may contribute to the establishment of proper Xlim-1/Ldb1 stoichiometry dorsally, or may contribute to complete elimination of Xlim-1 protein ventrally (Fig. 10). Notably, similar protein stabilization by heterodimerization has been reported for the yeast transcription factors MATα2/MATa1(Johnson et al., 1998) and for the Drosophila homeodomain proteins Homothorax and Extradenticle(Abu-Shaar and Mann, 1998).
Cofactor exchange or maintenance of stoichiometry?
Ostendorff et al. proposed a model showing that Rnf12 mediates degradation of Ldb1/CLIM2 in complex with Lhx3 on the promoter region, thereby replacing Ldb1/CLIM2 with other cofactors(Ostendorff et al., 2002). However, this does not accord with our results that showed suppression of XRnf12-mediated degradation of Ldb1 by excess amounts of Xlim-1. It was also reported that Rnf12 regulates the activity of Lhx3 by recruiting the histone deacetylase complex (Bach et al.,1999), and that this regulation is independent of its RING finger(Ostendorff et al., 2002). In contrast to Lhx3, the inhibitory effect of XRnf12 overexpression on the activity of Xlim-1 solely relied on its RING finger, suggesting that ubiquitin ligase activity toward Ldb1 is the primary cause of the inhibition. Thus,there seems to be some difference in the way in which Rnf12 regulates different LIM-HD transcription factors. Alternatively, the difference may be the result of the different experimental systems: Xenopus embryos and cell cultures. We also did not observe interaction between XRnf12 and the LIM domains of Xlim-1, contrary to the reported binding of mouse Rnf12 to LIM domains of LIM-HD proteins, Lhx2, Lhx3 and Isl-1(Bach et al., 1999). This may imply a difference in the binding affinity between Rnf12 and different LIM-HD proteins. Alternatively, XRnf12 might actually interact with the LIM domains of Xlim-1, although this could not be observed under our experimental conditions. Thus, the molecular basis underlying the difference in Rnf12-mediated regulation of Lhx3 and Xlim-1 remains to be elucidated. The functional significance of the reported ubiquitination and degradation of LMO proteins by Rnf12/RLIM (Ostendorff et al.,2002), and the mechanisms by which Rnf12/RLIM distinguishes LMO proteins from LIM-HD proteins, are also important questions to be answered.
Nevertheless, the results so far seem to be in good agreement about the close functional interactions between LIM-HD, Ldb1 and Rnf12 proteins. We believe that our results expand the knowledge of LIM-HD regulation and provide an attractive possibility that multimeric transcriptional regulatory complex such as LIM-HD/Ldb1 complexes are regulated in a similar way in which selective degradation of excess transcription factors or adapter proteins occurs through the ubiquitinproteasome pathway for the establishment of their proper stoichiometry.
Acknowledgements
We thank the following for their generous contribution of reagents: B. Blumberg (a Xenopus gastrula cDNA library), D. Turner, R. Rupp and J. Lee (pCS2+ and pCS2+nβgal), E. De Robertis (gsc, XPAPC, and cer), Y. Sasai (chd), M. Pannese and E. Boncinelli(Xotx2), M. Jamrich (XFKH1), D. Kimelman (Xnot), F. Rosa (Mix.1), J. Smith (Xbra), M. Watanabe and M. Whitman(pCS2+3HA), H. Osada (LMO2), C. Niehrs (dkk1) and G. Gill (anti-NLI antibodies). We are also grateful to J. L. Gomez-Skarmeta for sharing unpublished results of XLMO4 analysis, N. Sugimoto for pSP64T-Xlim-5, M. Watanabe and M. Whitman for the bisection and coimmunoprecipitation protocols,J. Shinga for a Xenopus neurula cDNA library, S. Taira for sectioning, and M. Itoh, A. Takahashi and M. Inamori for whole-mount in situ hybridization. This work was supported in part by a Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research from the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology of Japan, and by the Toray Science Foundation, Japan. I.H. is a research fellow of the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science.