Subcellular localization of mRNAs within the Drosophila oocyte is an essential step in body patterning. Yps, a Drosophila Y-box protein, is a component of an ovarian ribonucleoprotein complex that also contains Exu, a protein that plays an essential role in mRNA localization. Y-box proteins are known translational regulators, suggesting that this complex might regulate translation as well as mRNA localization. Here we examine the role of the yps gene in these events. We show that yps interacts genetically with orb, a positive regulator of oskar mRNA localization and translation. The nature of the genetic interaction indicates that yps acts antagonistically to orb. We demonstrate that Orb protein is physically associated with both the Yps and Exu proteins, and that this interaction is mediated by RNA. We propose a model wherein Yps and Orb bind competitively to oskar mRNA with opposite effects on translation and RNA localization.
INTRODUCTION
Subcellular RNA localization is a strategy used by cells to generate cellular asymmetry. Examples include RNAs localized to the dendrites and axons of neurons, the processes of oligodendrocytes, the lamellopodia of mobile fibroblasts, the progeny of dividing yeast cells, and the eggs of many species [reviewed in Bashirullah et al., and Hazelrigg (Bashirullah et al., 1998; Hazelrigg, 1998)]. Localization to a particular subcellular domain allows the localized accumulation of the protein products of mRNAs, and in some cases restricts protein products from other cellular regions where their presence would be detrimental. Fine control over the spatial distribution of proteins within cells is often achieved by linking mRNA localization to translational regulation, such that only localized mRNA is translated [reviewed in Macdonald and Smibert, and Lipshitz and Smibert (Macdonald and Smibert, 1996; Lipshitz and Smibert, 2000)].
In Drosophila eggs, subcellular RNA localization is an essential step in anteroposterior and dorsoventral patterning of the embryo [reviewed in Cooperstock and Lipshitz (Cooperstock and Lipshitz, 2001)]. In the anteroposterior patterning system, transcripts that encode key developmental regulators are localized to the anterior or posterior poles of the developing oocyte. For example, bicoid (bcd) mRNA, which is localized to the anterior pole, encodes a transcription factor required for the development of embryonic head and thoracic structures. oskar (osk) mRNA, localized to the posterior pole, encodes a protein required for formation of the germ cells and the abdomen. Both transcripts are synthesized in the nurse cells, germline-derived cells attached to the developing oocyte, and subsequently transported into the oocyte through cytoplasmic bridges called ring canals. Within the nurse cells, bcd and osk mRNA share a common pattern of localization mid-way through oogenesis: both accumulate in apical patches within the nurse cell cytoplasm (St Johnston et al., 1989; Pokrywka and Stephenson, 1995; Karlin-Mcginness et al., 1996). This transient nurse cell localization may represent a common intermediate step in the localization pathway of these mRNAs. Following transport to the oocyte, the mRNAs are sorted, bcd to the anterior, and osk to the posterior, by a polarized microtubule network and microtubule-based motors (Theurkauf et al., 1992; Pokrywka and Stephenson, 1995; Brendza et al., 2000; Schnorrer et al., 2000). While Bcd protein is not expressed until early embryogenesis, when its mRNA undergoes cytoplasmic polyadenylation (Salles et al., 1994), osk mRNA is translated during oogenesis by a process of localization-dependent translation, which further restricts its protein product to the oocyte’s posterior pole (Kim-Ha et al., 1995; Markussen et al., 1995; Rongo et al., 1995).
The regulatory events underlying localization-dependent translation of mRNA are a current area of intense investigation. Several factors have been shown to mediate translational repression of unlocalized osk mRNA, including Bruno (Bru), Apontic (Apt) and Bicaudal C (BicC) (Kim-Ha et al., 1995; Webster et al., 1997; Saffman et al., 1998; Lie and Macdonald, 1999a). Several other proteins are implicated in the translational derepression of localized osk mRNA. These include two proteins, p50 and p68, which bind the osk 5′ UTR. p50 also binds the osk 3′UTR and may mediate translational repression as well as derepression (Gunkel et al., 1998). Factors that enhance osk translation include Vasa (Vas), Aubergine (Aub), Staufen (Stau) and Oo18 RNA-Binding Protein (Orb) (Wilson et al., 1996; Markussen et al., 1997; Chang et al., 1999; Micklem et al., 2000). Stau and Orb are also key factors in the osk mRNA localization pathway, as is Osk protein itself (Ephrussi et al., 1991; Kim-Ha et al., 1991; Christerson and McKearin, 1994; Lantz et al., 1994; Kim-Ha et al., 1995; Markussen et al., 1995; Rongo et al., 1995). Osk protein is autoregulatory in the sense that, while osk mRNA localization is required for Osk translation, Osk protein is required for maintaining the posterior localization of its own mRNA (Kim-Ha et al., 1995; Markussen et al., 1995; Rongo et al., 1995). The mechanisms by which the above factors regulate osk translation remain only partially understood.
The Drosophila exuperantia (exu) gene is required for localizing bcd mRNA to the anterior pole of the oocyte (Frohnhofer and Nusslein-Volhard, 1987), and also plays a secondary role in localizing osk mRNA (Wilhelm et al., 2000). A GFP-Exu fusion protein, which provides full exu function, associates with cytoplasmic particles that are transported along microtubules within the nurse cell-oocyte complex. The transport characteristics, and effects of exu mutations on RNA localization, suggest that these particles are transport vehicles that target RNAs from their sites of synthesis in the nurse cells to their final destinations in the oocyte (Wang and Hazelrigg, 1994; Theurkauf and Hazelrigg, 1998; Cha et al., 2001). GFP-tagged Exu provided a biochemical handle for the purification of several components of these particles, including at least seven proteins and RNA (Wilhelm et al., 2000). One of these proteins is the product of the ypsilon schachtel (yps) gene, previously identified in a degenerate PCR screen for Drosophila Y-box proteins (Thieringer et al., 1997; Wilhelm et al., 2000).
The presence of Yps, a Y-box protein, in the Exu RNP complex led us to rethink the role of this complex in the patterning of the Drosophila egg. Y-box proteins are a family of nucleic acid binding proteins, present in many invertebrate and vertebrate species [reviewed in Graumann and Marahiel, and Matsumoto and Wolffe (Graumann and Marahiel, 1998; Matsumoto and Wolffe, 1998)]. All members of this family contain a nucleic-acid binding domain, the cold shock domain, first identified in a set of bacterial proteins that are induced in response to low temperature [reviewed in Phadtare et al., (Phadtare et al., 1999)]. In E. coli, the major cold shock protein CspA binds to RNA, acts as an RNA chaperone to alter RNA secondary structure, and enhances translation of its target RNA (Jiang et al., 1997). In vertebrates, Y-box proteins play regulatory roles in both transcription and translation. Several Y-box proteins are highly expressed in germ cells. Examples include the Xenopus protein FRGY2, and the mouse proteins MSY2 and MSY4 [reviewed in Sommerville (Sommerville, 1999)]. Evidence from RNA injection experiments and in vitro assays indicates that FRGY2 is a translational repressor of stored maternal mRNAs (Richter and Smith, 1984; Crawford and Richter, 1987; Tafuri and Wolffe, 1993; Matsumoto et al., 1996). FRGY2 may also function in the nucleus, possibly linking transcriptional and translational regulation (Bouvet and Wolffe, 1994). MSY2 and MSY4 exist in an mRNP complex in mouse spermatocytes, and both proteins bind sequences within the 3′ UTR of Prm1, a translationally repressed mRNA (Davies et al., 2000).
Based on the involvement of vertebrate Y-box proteins in translational regulation of stored germ cell mRNAs, we hypothesized that Yps might play a similar role in Drosophila oogenesis, and that the Exu RNP complex might function both to localize mRNAs and to regulate their translation. We describe here a genetic analysis of the yps gene. Our results show that yps regulates the localization and translation of osk mRNA by antagonizing the function of Orb, a known enhancer of osk translation and mRNA localization (Christerson and McKearin, 1994; Lantz et al., 1994; Chang et al., 1999). Furthermore, we present evidence that both Yps and Exu interact with Orb in Drosophila ovaries, and that this interaction is mediated by RNA. Our work represents the first genetic analysis addressing the germline functions of a Y-box protein, and provides the first known link between Y-box proteins and events that underlie localization-linked translation of mRNAs.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
In situ hybridization
In situ hybridization was performed as described (Wilhelm et al., 2000).
Immunofluorescence
Immunofluorescence was performed essentially as described (Lantz et al., 1994) with minor modifications. Ovaries from 1- to 2-day-old females were dissected into PBT (1×PBS, 0.1% Triton X-100) and fixed for 9 minutes in 6:1 heptane:fixative (6% formaldehyde, 16.7 mM KPO4, pH 6.8, 75 mM KCl, 25 mM NaCl, 3.3 mM MgCl2). Ovaries were blocked and permeablized for 3-5 hours in 1% BSA in PBST (1×PBS, 0.1% Triton X-100, 0.05% Tween-80), washed 3×10 minutes in PBT, and incubated overnight at 4°C in primary antibody diluted in 0.1% BSA in PBST (1:20 for anti-Orb 6H4, or 1:500 for anti-OskC or 1:500 for anti-Yps). The ovaries were then washed 3×10 minutes in PBT, then incubated for 3-4 hours at room temperature (RT) in secondary antibody (fluorescein-conjugated anti-mouse or rhodamine-conjugated anti-rabbit F(ab′)2 fragments, Jackson Immunoresearch) in PBT. Following final 3×10 minute washes in PBT, the ovaries were mounted in Fluoromount-G (Southern Biotechnology Associates).
Deletion mapping
The TM3-GFP balancer chromosome, designated TKG4, expresses green fluorescent protein (GFP) from a Kruppel promoter, and has been described (Casso et al., 2000). 0-2 hour embryos from Df(3L)BK9/TM3-GFP parents were collected and aged 7 hours at 25°C. The embryos were scored for GFP expression and placed individually in Eppendorf tubes. Single embryo DNA samples were prepared by homogenizing each embryo in 50 μl buffer (10 mM Tris, pH 8.2, 1 mM EDTA, 25 mM NaCl, 200 μg/ml proteinase K (Roche)) followed by incubation at 37°C for 30 minutes and at 95°C for 2 minutes. 25 μl samples for polymerase chain reaction (PCR) (5 μl DNA sample, 4.5 units AmpliTaq polymerase (Perkin Elmer), 1× Perkin-Elmer PCR buffer, 1.8 mM MgCl2, 10 mM of each dNTP, and 20 pmol of each primer) were subjected to 30 cycles of 1 minute at 94°C, 2 minutes at 67°C and 3 minutes at 72°C. The primers used amplified a fragment including both the start codon and cold shock domain (CSD) of yps, and include appended restriction sites. The following are the primer sequences: b, 5′GGG GGA TCC ATG GCC GAT GCC GCG GAG AGT A3′ (Fig. 1); d, 5′GCG AAG CTT GAA TTC CTA CTT GCG GCG ATT CTT CTT CAT C3′ (Fig. 1). To confirm genotypes, each DNA sample was subject to PCR with GFP primers. NGF-1: 5′CTG GTA ACC ATG AGT AAA GGA GAA3′ and GFP-XhoI: 5′CTC GAG TTT GTA TAG TTC ATC CAT3′. PCR reactions with the GFP primers were done with 1.5 mM MgCl2 and an annealing temperature of 55°C.
Generation of yps mutations
The EP(3)3078 P-insertion line was obtained from the Berkeley Drosophila Genome Project (BDGP, unpublished data) (Rorth, 1996; Rorth et al., 1998) Excisions of the EP(3)3078 P-element were generated by standard procedures (Hamilton and Zinn, 1994). y,w; EP(3)3078/TM3 virgin females were crossed en masse to w; SbΔ2-3/TM2UbxΔ2-3 males. Dysgenic w; EP(3)3078/SbΔ2-3 males were crossed to w; CxD/TM3 virgin females, and male progeny bearing the CxD balancer and white eyes (indicating excision of the EP element) were collected. These males were crossed individually to w; CxD/TM3 virgin females to establish stocks. Each excision line was crossed to Df(3L)BK9 and those viable as hemizygotes were tested by PCR for a deletion in yps. (Two hemizygous lethal lines were also obtained and balanced with the TM3-GFP balancer (see above), and non-GFP embryos were collected for PCR. However, by PCR analysis the yps gene appeared intact in these two cases, and since further analysis of a yps null allele showed that yps is not required for viability, these two lines probably contain second-site lethal mutations.) DNA samples for PCR were made from single flies or embryos following the protocol described above for single embryo PCR. Primers for the initial screening were b and d (Fig. 1). Deletions were confirmed by Southern blot (Sambrook et al., 1989) using a yps cDNA probe. For amplification of the CSD, the primers used were: c, 5′ATC AAC CGC AAC GAC ACC AGA GAG3′; and d (Fig. 1), with an annealing temperature of 55°C. As a positive control for the presence of template DNA in the PCR reaction, an unrelated region of the second chromosome was amplified. The sequences of the control primers are as follows: 5′EBP10-1: 5′CAC GAA TTC GAG CTG ATT CTG GAG GAG C3′, and 3′EBP10-1: 5′CAT CTC GAG CTT CTG TGC AGA TCT CTG3′. Breakpoints of the ypsJM2 deletion were determined by PCR amplification of the surrounding DNA using primer a, 5′GCT CTA GAC GCG TAA CAG CAC ACT GGA G3′; and primer d (Fig. 1), as described above except with an annealing temperature of 54°C. The amplified fragment was subcloned into the XbaI and EcoRI sites of PBS-SK and sequenced.
Northern analysis
Ovary poly(A+)RNA was prepared as follows. 50-100 hand-dissected ovaries from w1118 or ypsJM2/Df(3L)BK9 females were homogenized with a pestle in 1 ml homogenization buffer (50 mM Tris, pH 7.5, 60 mM NaCl, 20 mM EDTA, pH 8.0, 1% SDS, 100 μg/ml proteinase K), incubated for 1 hour at 37°C, and phenol-chloroform extracted and ethanol-precipitated by standard procedures (Sambrook et al., 1989). The pellet was redissolved in 250 μl 10 mM EDTA, pH 8.0, and RNA was precipitated overnight at 4°C by addition of 125 μl 10 M LiCl. The RNA was pelleted by centrifugation, washed in 70% ethanol, and redissolved in 0.5 ml 10 mM EDTA, pH 8.0. The solution was heated to 70°C for 10 minutes, cooled on ice for 5 minutes, then mixed with 100 μl 10 M LiCl and added to 0.2 g pretreated oligo-dT cellulose (Stratagene) in 1 ml LB (0.5 M LiCl, 10 mM Tris pH 7.5, 1 mM EDTA, 0.1% SDS). The oligo-dT cellulose was pretreated by hydrating in 1 ml EB (2 mM EDTA, 0.1% SDS) and washing 3× in LB. The RNA was allowed to bind the oligo-dT cellulose by incubation at RT for 15 minutes, and loaded onto a BioRad poly-prep chromatography column. The flow-through solution was reloaded once, the column was washed with 1 ml LB, and poly(A+)RNA was eluted from the column with 1 ml EB. The poly(A+)RNA was ethanol precipitated twice and redissolved in diethyl pyrocarbonate (DEPC)-H2O at a final concentration of 0.5 μg/μl.
1 μg poly(A+)RNA per lane was electrophoresed on a formaldehyde gel (1% agarose, 20 mM Mops, 0.5 mM sodium acetate, 0.1 mM EDTA, 6.5% formaldehyde), transferred to a Magna NT nylon membrane (MSI) on a vacuum blotter (LKB) following the manufacturer’s instructions, and crosslinked by UV light in a Stratalinker.
The blot was probed with the yps cDNA LD01538 (BDGP) insert, excised from pBluescript by digestion with XbaI and KpnI, and 32P-labeled with the RadPrime random-primer labeling kit (BRL) according to the manufacturer’s instructions.
Western analysis
Ovary protein was prepared by dissecting ovaries from 1-2 day old w1118 control and ypsJM2/Df(3L)BK9 females. For each mg ovary tissue, 10 μl homogenization buffer (100 mM benzamidine HCl, 1 mg/ml Pepstatin A, 100 mM PMSF, 1 mg/ml phenanthroline) was added, and the tissue was homogenized with a pestle. The concentration of protein was determined by a BioRad Protein Assay according to the manufacturer’s instructions. The remaining homogenate was diluted 1:1 in 2× Laemmli buffer (80 mM Tris, pH 6.8, 15.4 mg/ml dithiothreitol (DTT), 2% SDS, 10% glycerol, 0.006% Bromophenol Blue), boiled for 5 minutes, and passed 5× through a 26-gauge syringe needle. The protein preparations were frozen in liquid N2 and stored at –80°C until use. Prior to loading on a gel, each protein preparation was boiled for 5 minutes.
Approximately 0.03 mg ovary protein per lane was run on a 12% polyacrylamide gel (Sambrook et al., 1989). One set of samples was stained with Coomassie Blue (Sambrook et al., 1989), and the remainder of the gel was transferred to a Magna NT nylon filter (MSI) with a semi-dry electrophoretic transfer cell (BioRad) for 25 minutes at 15 V. After blocking overnight at 4°C in 4% BSA in TBST (10 mM Tris, pH 8.0, 150 mM NaCl, 0.05% Tween-20), and washing 3×10 minutes in TBST at RT, the blot was incubated for 1 hour at room temperature at a 1:5000 dilution in TBST of an antibody raised to the N-terminal portion of Yps, including the CSD (Wilhelm et al., 2000). Blots were washed for 3×10 minutes in TBST, then incubated with an alkaline-phosphatase conjugated anti-rabbit secondary antibody (Jackson Immunoresearch) at 1:5000 in TBST for 30 minutes. The blot was washed 3×10 minutes in TBST, then incubated in staining solution (100 mM Tris, pH 9.5, 100 mM NaCl, 5 mM MgCl2, 0.66 mg/ml NBT (Roche), 0.165 mg/ml BCIP (Roche)) until bands developed, before being washed and dried.
Generation of recombinants
ypsJM2, orbmel recombinants were recovered using PCR to identify the ypsJM2 and orbmel mutations. Virgin ypsJM2/TM3,Sb females were mated en masse to orbmel,ry/TM3,Sb,ry males, to generate ypsJM2/orbmel,ry female progeny. These females were crossed to TM2,ry/MKRS,ry,Sb males, and single Sb,ry males among the progeny were crossed individually to CxD/TM3,Sb females to generate individual lines of each potential recombinant. After mating for several days, each male was removed from the cross and subjected to single-fly PCR as described above for single embryos. Primers 5′-1: 5′CCA GTA TCA GAG CAT CGA TAG CAC C3′ and CSD-HE (see above) amplify a novel 100 bp band in ypsJM2 mutants, and were therefore used to identify single males carrying the ypsJM2 allele. Annealing conditions for these primers were 55°C and 1.8 mM MgCl2. To detect the orbmel mutation, single fly-PCR was performed on the same DNA with the primers orb 5′: 5′TGC TGA TAC GGC CAC ATC TGC3′ and orb 3′: 5′TGA AGC GGA TTG TCA GGC AGG3′, with an annealing temperature of 63°C and 2 mM MgCl2. These primers span the orbmel deletion and amplify a fragment that is approximately 500 bp smaller in the orbmel allele than in the corresponding wild-type DNA fragment. Recombinants between ypsJM2 and the orbF303 and orbF343 mutations were generated with a similar strategy as for orbmel, except that recombinant lines mutant for orb were detected by backcrossing to either orbF303 or orbF343 and assaying for early oogenesis arrest associated with these alleles (Lantz et al., 1994).
Fertility assays
The genotypes tested for female fertility were: w1118, ypsJM2/ypsJM2, orbmel/orbmel, ypsJM2orbmel/ypsJM2orbmel, orbmel/orbF303, ypsJM2orbmel/ypsJM2orbF303, orbmel/orbF343 and ypsJM2 orbmel/ypsJM2 ypsJM2 orbF343. Virgin females of these genotypes were collected and crossed to w1118 males. After allowing the flies to mate for at least 48 hours, eggs were collected on apple juice plates at 4 hour intervals and aged 25 hours at 25°C, and the percentage of eggs hatched was scored.
Immunoprecipitation
Immunoprecipitations and RNAse treatments were as described previously using whole fly extracts (Wilhelm et al., 2000). Orb immunoblots used the anti-orb 6H4 mouse monoclonal antibody (Developmental Studies Hybridoma Bank) at a concentration of 1:20 using conditions described previously (Lantz et al., 1994).
RESULTS
yps maps to 68F3-F6
We mapped yps to polytene interval 68F3-F7 by chromosome in situ hybridization, using a yps cDNA probe (Fig. 1). The smallest published deficiency that removes this region is Df(3L)BK9 (Leicht and Bonner, 1988). To confirm that this deficiency deletes yps we constructed a Df(3L)BK9/TM3-GFP stock. The TM3-GFP balancer chromosome expresses GFP in the kruppel expression pattern (Casso et al., 2000). Embryos were collected from Df(3L)BK9/TM3-GFP parents, and scored for GFP expression commencing at the germ-band extension stage. Those not expressing GFP (homozygous deficiency embryos) were selected for single-embryo PCR using yps primers. Embryonic genotypes were confirmed by PCR amplification of a fragment of the gfp gene (see Materials and Methods). We were unable to amplify yps DNA from homozygous Df(3L)BK9 embryos, indicating that the deletion uncovers yps. In support of this result, we found by the same method that the larger 68F deficiencies Df(3L)vin4 and Df(3L)vin7 also uncover yps (Fig. 1). Df(3L)BK9 was used in our subsequent genetic analysis of yps.
yps expression in ovaries
Northern blot analysis, using a yps cDNA to probe poly(A+)RNA isolated from hand-dissected ovaries, revealed the presence of two species of transcripts: a broad mRNA band migrating at approximately 1.7 kb, which may contain several transcripts of similar size, and a minor 2.3 kb transcript (Fig. 2A, lane WT). Alignment of previously published yps cDNA sequences (Thieringer et al., 1997; Wilhelm et al., 2000) with genomic DNA reveals the gene structure shown in Fig. 1. The exon-prediction computer programs FGENE and FEX (see Materials and Methods) both give high scores to an alternate fourth exon, which could account for the size difference of approximately 600 bp between the larger and smaller transcripts. In addition, this predicted exon contains multiple consensus polyadenylation signals, which could produce the broad 1.7 kb band observed on northern blots. If used, this exon would replace the last 15 amino acids of the known protein sequence with 23 alternative amino acids.
We also examined yps expression in ovaries by whole-mount in situ hybridization (Fig. 2B). yps is transcribed throughout oogenesis, and its transcripts are evenly distributed in nurse cells, and at lower levels in the oocyte. A low level of expression is also detected in the follicle cells.
Generation of an internally deleted yps allele
The P-element insertion EP(3)3078 was obtained from the Berkeley Drosophila Genome Project. The original EP(3)3078 insertion chromosome is homozygous lethal, but this lethality proved to be due to a second-site mutation, which we removed by recombination. The insertion site of EP(3)3078 lies 259 bp upstream of the yps translation start. In order to generate a null allele, we screened for imprecise excisions of the EP(3)3078 element that delete portions of the yps coding region (see Materials and Methods for details of the screen). We identified ten imprecise excisions from which we could not PCR-amplify a DNA fragment extending from the yps translation start site to a site downstream of the cold shock domain (CSD) (using primers b and d in Fig. 1). One excision, ypsJM2, additionally failed to PCR-amplify with primers spanning the majority of the CSD (primers c and d in Fig. 1), as well as the initial primer pair used for screening. Using a primer upstream of the original EP(3)3078 insertion, coupled with a primer downstream of the CSD (primers a and d in Fig. 1), a novel DNA fragment was amplified from ypsJM2 DNA and sequenced. Analysis revealed that ypsJM2 contains a deletion of 1.8 kb of genomic DNA (Fig. 1), which removes both the translation start codon and the entire CSD.
The ypsJM2 allele produces truncated transcripts that are present at significantly reduced levels in ovaries (Fig. 2A, lane ypsJM2), and no protein is detected on western blots (Fig. 2C, lane ypsJM2). By immunocytochemistry, using antibodies against the amino terminus (including the CSD) or against the full-length Yps protein, we detected no Yps protein in ypsJM2 homozygous and hemizygous ovaries (not shown).
The ypsJM2 mutation has no effect on zygotic viability: ypsJM2/ypsJM2 and ypsJM2/Df(3L)BK9 flies survive at expected frequencies. Both homozygous and hemizygous ypsJM2 females are fertile, and although there is a slight reduction in the hatching rates of their embryos, these rates are comparable to Oregon R and w1118 control females (Table 1).
Yps and Exu proteins localize independently of each other
Previously, we showed that Yps and Exu proteins associate in vivo as well as in in vitro binding assays, and colocalize throughout oogenesis (Wilhelm et al., 2000). Both proteins accumulate in the oocytes of young egg chambers, associate with particles in the nurse cell cytoplasm, and localize to both the anterior and posterior poles of mid-stage oocytes (Fig. 3A,C). It therefore seemed reasonable that one protein could be required for the localization of the other. However, we found this not to be the case. In ovaries of ypsJM2/Df(3L)BK9 females expressing a gfp-exu transgene, GFP-Exu was localized normally throughout oogenesis (Fig. 3B). Conversely, using an antibody against Yps, we found no defects in Yps localization in exuSCO2 (a null allele) ovaries (Fig. 3D).
Yps is not required for osk mRNA localization in the oocyte
Yps is a member of an ovarian ribonucleoprotein (RNP) complex hypothesized to function in mRNA localization and/or translational regulation (Wilhelm et al., 2000). Therefore, we expected that yps mutants could be defective in one of these processes. Because osk mRNA is present in the Exu-Yps complex, we asked whether yps might play a role in osk mRNA localization or translation. By whole-mount in situ hybridization to ovaries, we found that osk mRNA localization is normal in ypsJM2 oocytes (Fig. 4B). Also, osk mRNA remains subject to localization-dependent translation in ypsJM2 ovaries: Osk protein is detected only at the posterior pole of the oocyte, and appears with normal developmental timing (see below, and Fig. 5B).
yps interacts genetically with orb
We reasoned that if Yps normally functions to regulate osk RNA localization or translation, we might detect genetic interactions with known repressors or activators of these events. In fact, we detected a robust genetic interaction between ypsJM2 and mutations in the oo18-RNA binding protein (orb) gene. Orb is an RNA binding protein with strong similarity to CPEB, a protein required for cytoplasmic polyadenylation of mRNAs in Xenopus oocytes (Lantz et al., 1992; Hake and Richter, 1994; Stebbins-Boaz et al., 1996; Chang et al., 1999). The phenotypes of orb mutants indicate that Orb is required for osk mRNA localization and translation, and that Orb may directly regulate cytoplasmic polyadenylation of osk mRNA (Christerson and McKearin, 1994; Lantz et al., 1994; Chang et al., 1999). Strong orb alleles are female-sterile and cause oogenesis to arrest at very early stages, indicating an early requirement for the protein. Weaker allelic combinations allow oogenesis to be completed, but are maternal-effect lethal. In these combinations, the localization of both grk and osk mRNA is disrupted at mid-oogenesis, and Osk protein is frequently not translated. These aberrations lead to embryonic defects in both anteroposterior and dorsoventral patterning (Christerson and McKearin, 1994; Lantz et al., 1994; Roth and Schupbach, 1994; Chang et al., 1999).
Four alleles of orb have been described, three of which were used in our study. orbmel, a hypomorphic allele, is associated with a 500 bp deletion within the gene that is predicted to yield a transcript in which the second exon, which encodes a portion of the orb 5′UTR, is missing, and exons 1 and 3 are spliced directly together (Christerson and McKearin, 1994). Orb protein is expressed in orbmel homozygous ovaries, although at reduced levels, and with abnormal distribution (Christerson and McKearin, 1994; Chang et al., 1999). Homozygous females complete oogenesis, but many of their progeny die with defects in both anteroposterior and dorsoventral patterning. orbF343 is a protein null; in homozygous females, oogenesis arrests during cyst formation, so that egg chambers are not formed (Lantz et al., 1994). A strong allele, orbF303, is a point mutation that expresses only one of the two Orb protein isoforms (Lantz et al., 1994), and displays an intermediate phenotype. Homozygous orbF303 females are completely sterile, and oogenesis arrests shortly after egg chambers have budded from the germarium (Lantz et al., 1994). The orb allelic combinations we used in this study are expected to provide varying levels of functional Orb protein, from least to most, in the following order: orbF343/orbF343 < orbF303/orbF303 < orbmel/orbF343 < orbmel/orbF303 < orbmel/orbmel.
We constructed ypsJM2 orbmel, ypsJM2 orbF303 and ypsJM2 orbF343 doubly mutant chromosomes (see Materials and Methods), and tested the fertility of these females. We found that ypsJM2 rescues the embryonic hatching defects of the weakest orb allelic combination, orbmel/orbmel. While the hatching rate of eggs laid by orbmel/orbmel females was 44% in our assay, this rate increased to 83% in ypsJM2 orbmel/ypsJM2 orbmel females, the same as the hatching rate of eggs from ypsJM2 single mutants (Table 1A). We confirmed the genotypes of all orbmel/orbmel and ypsJM2 orbmel/ypsJM2 orbmel females used in our assay by single-fly PCR to detect the unique DNA fragments associated with these alleles (see Materials and Methods). In the case of orbmel/orbF303, only 6% of eggs laid by mutant females hatched (Table 1B). Additional loss of yps increased the hatching rate to 40%. As previously reported, we found that no eggs hatch from orbmel/orbF343 mothers (Christerson and McKearin, 1994). We observed a very weak rescue of this phenotype in ypsJM2 orbmel/ypsJM2 orbF343 mothers, such that rare escapers complete embryogenesis and hatch. ypsJM2 did not rescue the female sterile phenotype of the strongest allelic combinations, orbF303/orbF303 or orbF343/orbF343. Thus, rescue of the orb maternal effect lethal phenotype by ypsJM2 requires the presence of some functional Orb protein, and the degree of rescue reflects the level of Orb supplied by each mutant combination.
ypsJM2 rescues orb-associated defects in osk mRNA localization and translation
Defects in osk mRNA localization have been described for orbmel/orbF343 ovaries (Christerson and McKearin, 1994), and we found an identical phenotype in orbmel/orbF303 ovaries. In these females, osk mRNA accumulates normally in the oocyte during previtellogenic stages. During mid-oogenesis, however, osk mRNA fails to localize to the posterior pole of the oocyte (Fig. 4C). As shown in Fig. 4D, this defect is strikingly rescued in ypsJM2orbmel/ypsJM2orbF303 egg chambers. The amount and distribution of osk mRNA is not completely normal, however; its signal is reduced, and it is often less tightly localized to the posterior pole than in wild type. We analyzed this further by comparing osk mRNA localization in early stage-9, late stage-9 and stage-10 oocytes [for staging, see Spradling (Spradling, 1993)]. We divided stage 9 into early and late stages on the basis of follicle cell migration: egg chambers in which the columnar follicle cells had migrated less than half of the distance between the anterior tip of the egg chamber and the anterior margin of the oocyte were considered early stage 9. Chambers in which the columnar follicle cells had migrated more than half of this distance were considered late stage 9. During early stage 9, osk mRNA is in the process of being relocalized from the anterior to the posterior of the oocyte, leading to variability between samples that made precise quantitation at this stage difficult. By late stage 9, however, the osk mRNA localization process is complete: 100% of late stage-9 control (w1118) oocytes had posteriorly localized osk mRNA, and localization was maintained in stage 10 (Table 2A). In ypsJM2 ovaries, osk mRNA localization was comparable to control oocytes at both stages. In orbmel/orbF303, there was a striking reduction in the percentage of oocytes with localized osk mRNA at both late stage 9 (22%) and stage 10 (9%). This defect was substantially rescued at both stages in ypsJM2orbmel/ypsJM2orbF303 ovaries: the percentage of double mutant egg chambers with posteriorly localized osk mRNA peaked at late stage 9 at 66%, and fell to 45% at stage 10. The percentage of egg chambers with correct RNA localization at stage 10 (45%) closely parallels the degree of rescue of the maternal effect lethal phenotype (40% hatching; Table 1B).
In wild-type egg chambers, Osk protein is translated at the posterior pole of the oocyte following localization of its mRNA (Rongo et al., 1995) (Fig. 5A). The same is true of ypsJM2 mutant egg chambers (Fig. 5B). We found that Osk protein is absent, or greatly reduced, at the posterior pole of orbmel/orbF303 oocytes (Fig. 5C), as has been reported for orbmel/orbF343 egg chambers (Christerson and McKearin, 1994). In contrast, Osk protein is present at the oocyte posterior in many ypsJM2orbmel/ypsJM2orbF303 egg chambers (Fig. 5D). We examined the timing of appearance of Osk protein to determine if this time-course was altered in mutants; these data are presented in Table 2B. By late stage 9, all of the w1118 control oocytes had detectable Oskar protein at their posterior poles, and the protein was retained at the posterior during subsequent stages of oogenesis. The same was observed in ypsJM2 mutant oocytes. In contrast, Osk protein was first reliably detected at the posterior of ypsJM2orbmel/ypsJM2orbF303 oocytes at stage 10. Thus, while there is substantial rescue of the Oskar protein defect in the ypsJM2orbmel/ypsJM2orbF303 double mutant, there is a temporal delay in detecting the protein.
ypsJM2 does not rescue orb-associated defects in Orb protein distribution or grk mRNA localization
The distribution of Orb protein in wild-type egg chambers has been described previously (Lantz et al., 1994; Chang et al., 1999) and is shown in Fig. 5E. Orb is concentrated in the oocyte cytoplasm of young egg chambers (stages 1-6), and is also detected in the nurse cell cytoplasm, particularly in the nurse cells closest to the oocyte. By mid-oogenesis (stages 8-10), Orb is localized to the cortex of the oocyte, with peak concentrations at the anterior margin and the posterior pole (Fig. 5E, arrow). In ypsJM2 mutant egg chambers, the amount and distribution of Orb appears identical to control egg chambers (Fig. 5F). In orbmel/orbF303 mutant egg chambers (Fig. 5G), the amount and distribution of Orb is abnormal. In mutant stage 8-10 egg chambers, Orb frequently persists in the posteriormost nurse cells that border the oocyte at higher levels than in wild-type (Fig. 5G, arrow). Within the oocyte, the protein rarely localizes to the anterior or posterior poles. The expression pattern of Orb in ypsJM2orbmel/ypsJM2orbF303 double mutants is identical to orbmel/orbF303 mutants (Fig. 5H). Therefore, ypsJM2 does not rescue the orbmel/orbF303 phenotype by increasing the level, or altering the localization of Orb protein itself.
Embryos from orb mutant mothers have dorsoventral polarity defects in their chorions, usually fused and/or reduced dorsal appendages (Christerson and McKearin, 1994; Roth and Schupbach, 1994). In mid-oogenesis in wild-type ovaries, grk mRNA becomes localized to the dorsal-anterior corner of the oocyte (Fig. 6A). This RNA localization pattern is normal in ypsJM2 egg chambers (Fig. 6B), and no chorionic patterning defects were observed in ypsJM2 mutant eggs. In orbmel/orbF343 egg chambers, grk mRNA is mislocalized: instead of localizing to the anterior dorsal corner of the oocyte, grk mRNA is spread out along the entire anterior margin of the oocyte (Christerson and McKearin, 1994). The same is true of many mid-stage orbmel/orbF303 oocytes (Fig. 6C). We found that the orb-associated dorsoventral patterning defects are not rescued in the ypsJM2orbmel/ypsJM2orbF303 double mutant: eggs laid by ypsJM2orbmel/ypsJM2orbF303 mothers had fused, reduced, or absent dorsal appendages, and grk mRNA was diffused along the anterior margin of the oocyte in many mid-stage egg chambers (Fig. 6D). While we cannot rule out a role for yps in dorsoventral patterning, the rescued phenotypes we have observed in ypsJM2orbmel/ypsJM2orbF303 double mutants are specific for the anteroposterior patterning defects of orbmel/orbF303mutants.
Orb is part of an RNP complex containing Yps and Exu
Since yps mutants rescue the osk mRNA localization and translation defects associated with orb mutants, we investigated whether or not Yps and Orb are part of the same biochemical complex. We immunoprecipitated Yps from Drosophila extracts and assayed for the presence of Orb by immunoblot. We found that Orb specifically coimmunoprecipitates with Yps (Fig. 7A). Because we previously demonstrated that Exu and Yps bind directly to each other (Wilhelm et al., 2000), we also wished to determine if Exu protein was in a complex with Orb. Immunoblots of GFP-Exu immunoprecipitations showed that Exu and Orb are also part of the same biochemical complex (Fig. 7A). We previously showed that Exu and Yps do not require the presence of RNA for their physical interaction (Wilhelm et al., 2000), so we asked whether RNA was necessary for interactions between Orb and Yps or Orb and Exu. For this, we assayed the ability of Orb to coimmunoprecipitate with Exu or Yps in extracts that had been treated with RNAse A (Fig. 7B). Immunoblots of these immunoprecipitates demonstrated that Orb’s ability to coimmunoprecipitate with Exu and Yps is dependent on the presence of RNA. Together these results suggest that Orb is part of a ribonucleoprotein complex containing Yps and/or Exu and that RNA is an essential component of the complex.
A small proportion of ypsJM2orbmel/ypsJM2orbF303 egg chambers exhibit a bipolar phenotype
We observed a novel phenotype in ypsJM2orbmel/ypsJM2orbF303 egg chambers, never seen in either single mutant alone. During all stages of oogenesis, we observed bipolar egg chambers, meaning that the oocyte lies in the middle of the egg chamber with nurse cells on either side of it (not shown). Females bearing strong alleles of orb produce egg chambers in which the oocyte is mispositioned; however, these alleles cause egg chambers to arrest in the germarium or shortly after budding from it (Lantz et al., 1994). In contrast, the bipolar egg chambers we observed in ypsJM2orbmel/ypsJM2orbF303 females included mid- and late-stage egg chambers. The frequency of bipolar egg chambers was low: in one sample of stage-9 or older egg chambers, 5% (12/219) were bipolar. This result suggests that yps may also serve an as-yet-uncharacterized function in early oogenesis (see Discussion).
DISCUSSION
We previously showed that Ypsilon Schachtel (Yps), a Drosophila Y-box protein, is a subunit of a cytoplasmic RNA-protein complex hypothesized to regulate subcellular RNA localization in Drosophila ovaries (Wilhelm et al., 2000). In the present study, we generated a loss-of-function allele of the yps gene, and analyzed its effects on the localization and translation of oskar (osk) mRNA, a known component of this RNP complex.
Y-box proteins are present in a diverse set of species, including worms, flies, frogs, mice and humans [reviewed in Graumann and Marahiel, and Matsumoto and Wolffe (Graumann and Marahiel, 1998; Matsumoto and Wolffe, 1998)]. All members of this family of proteins contain a well-defined nucleic acid binding domain, the cold shock domain (Schindelin et al., 1993; Schindelin et al., 1994; Schroder et al., 1995). In vertebrate germ cells, Y-box proteins are major cellular components [reviewed in Matsumoto and Wolffe (Matsumoto and Wolffe, 1998)]. Biochemical evidence indicates that some of these proteins bind mRNA and regulate translation. For example, FRGY2 in Xenopus, and MSY2 and MSY4 in the mouse, repress translation of mRNAs in oocytes and spermatocytes (Richter and Smith, 1984; Ranjan et al., 1993; Bouvet and Wolffe, 1994; Fajardo et al., 1994; Fajardo et al., 1997; Gu et al., 1998; Davies et al., 2000). In somatic cells, Y-box proteins are also implicated in translational regulation. The p50/YB-1 proteins are highly conserved across vertebrate species (Matsumoto and Wolffe, 1998) and can enhance or mask translation in a concentration-dependent manner [reviewed in Evdokimova and Ovchinnikov (Evdokimova and Ovchinnikov, 1999)]. The mechanism by which such translational masking and enhancement is accomplished is not well understood, although it appears to involve modulation of mRNA secondary structure (Evdokimova and Ovchinnikov, 1999).
Prior to this work, only one member of the Y-box family had been genetically characterized, the C. elegans heterochronic gene lin-28, which functions in the development of somatic cell lineages (Moss et al., 1997). Targets of Lin-28 activity have not yet been reported, and while it is predicted to be an RNA-binding protein, its mode of action is not known [reviewed in Ambros (Ambros, 2000)]. The null allele of yps that we generated, ypsJM2, produced by excising a P-element, contains an internal deletion in the gene that removes the start codon and the N-terminal half of the protein, including the entire cold shock domain. Several lines of evidence indicate that osk mRNA, which encodes a primary organizer of the germ plasm, is a target of Yps’ activity. First, we have previously shown that osk mRNA is coimmunoprecipitated with both Yps and Exu proteins from ovary extracts (Wilhelm et al., 2000). Second, osk mRNA colocalizes with Yps and Exu throughout oogenesis. Third, we have demonstrated a robust genetic interaction between yps and oo18 RNA-binding protein (orb), a known regulator of osk mRNA translation and localization: our yps null allele rescues orb-associated defects in osk mRNA localization and translation (Table 1, Table 2, Fig. 4, Fig. 5).
In intermediate allelic combinations of orb, osk mRNA fails to localize to the posterior pole of the oocyte, and Osk protein is not translated (Christerson and McKearin, 1994; Lantz et al., 1994; Chang et al., 1999). The localization and translation of osk mRNA is subject to a complex autoregulatory loop, whereby osk mRNA must first be localized to the posterior pole of the oocyte to be translated, and subsequently Osk protein is required to maintain the localization of its own mRNA (Kim-Ha et al., 1995; Markussen et al., 1995; Rongo et al., 1995). Because the localization and translation processes are so entwined, it can be difficult to establish which process a regulatory factor affects. In the case of Orb, however, evidence suggests that its primary function may be translational regulation of osk (Chang et al., 1999). In Xenopus, CPEB, which is virtually identical to Orb in its RNA-binding domain, regulates translation of stored maternal mRNAs by binding a U-rich region of 3′UTRs (the Cytoplasmic Polyadenylation Element) and promoting cytoplasmic polyadenylation [reviewed in Richter (Richter, 1999)]. The role of osk’s poly(A) tail in translation is controversial. Results from in vitro systems developed to study translation in Drosophila ovaries suggest that the length of osk’s poly(A) tail is not critical for regulating its translation (Lie and Macdonald, 1999b; Castagnetti et al., 2000). However, in vivo studies of osk mRNA suggest that poly(A) tail length does affect its translation (Chang et al., 1999). These latter results indicate that polyadenylation of the osk transcript is dependent on the function of orb, as is accumulation of Osk protein, suggesting that Orb serves a similar function to that of CPEB. In addition, Orb binds specifically to the osk 3′UTR (Chang et al., 1999). Given this evidence, it appears that Orb may function as a translational enhancer of Osk, although a direct role in osk mRNA localization cannot be ruled out.
The orb genotypes that are rescued in double mutant combinations with ypsJM2 all include the orbmel mutation, a hypomorphic allele that produces some functional Orb protein (Christerson and McKearin, 1994; Chang et al., 1999). In contrast, females homozygous for a null allele (orbF343) or a strong allele (orbF303) show no rescue by the ypsJM2 mutation. These results indicate that rescue by ypsJM2 requires the presence of some functional Orb protein, and that Yps may normally act antagonistically to Orb. In the presence of Yps, the low amount of functional Orb protein present in orbmel mutants is not capable of promoting normal osk mRNA localization and translation, whereas in the absence of Yps, the reduced Orb protein is sufficient.
Our data indicate that yps is unlikely to regulate the expression or localization of Orb protein itself. First, the distribution and levels of Orb produced by hypomorphic orb alleles are not altered in a ypsJM2 background. In addition, our genetic analysis of yps, orb double mutants shows that ypsJM2 specifically rescues defects in osk mRNA localization and translation, but not orb-associated defects in dorsoventral chorion patterning or grk mRNA localization. Taken together, these results indicate a specific effect of yps on orb’s function in localizing and/or translating osk mRNA.
Previous work has shown that, in the minority of orbmel egg chambers in which Osk protein is detectable, Orb protein can be detected at the posterior pole as well (Chang et al., 1999). This correlation has been interpreted as evidence of a requirement for Orb for the on-site expression of Osk (Chang et al., 1999). We find that, when ovaries are doubly mutant for yps and orb, this correlation disappears. While Orb can rarely be detected at the posterior pole of the oocyte in yps, orb mutants, Osk protein is frequently present even in the absence of detectable Orb (Fig. 5). However, our results also show that loss of Yps cannot eliminate the requirement for Orb in Osk expression. It is possible that, in the absence of Yps, a very low concentration of Orb, which is undetectable by immunocytochemistry, is sufficient to localize or enhance the translation of osk mRNA at the posterior pole. Alternatively, in the absence of Yps, the function of Orb might be accomplished at regions other than the posterior, since in yps, orb double mutants Orb protein is present throughout the oocyte.
Although osk translation is significantly rescued in yps, orb ovaries, the amount of Osk present at the posterior appears reduced compared to wild type. In addition, as shown in Table 2B, Osk is not reliably detected in yps, orb egg chambers until stage 10. In wild-type ovaries, however, Osk can be detected in stage-9 oocytes, and sometimes as early as stage 8 (Kim-Ha et al., 1995; Markussen et al., 1995; Rongo et al., 1995) (Table 2B). We believe that the temporal delay in detecting Osk is due simply to a reduction in Osk expression in yps, orb egg chambers during all stages of oogenesis, such that accumulation of the protein to levels detectable by our method does not occur until stage 10. We also hypothesize that, due to this reduction in the accumulation of Osk protein in yps, orb ovaries, osk mRNA localization is not efficiently maintained. As shown in Table 2A, in late stage 9, 66% of yps, orb oocytes displayed localized osk mRNA, while in stage 10 the percentage fell to 45%. This number closely parallels the percentage of yps, orb stage-10 oocytes with detectable Osk protein (43%) and the number of eggs (40%) that hatched from mutant mothers (Table 2B, Table 1B).
Biochemically we have detected an association between Yps and Orb. Orb protein was found to coimmunoprecipitate with Yps (Fig. 7). This association is mediated by RNA, since their coimmunoprecipitation is RNAse-sensitive. Similarly, Orb coimmunoprecipitates with Exu, in an RNA-dependent manner (Fig. 7). Exu and Yps also coimmunoprecipitate, but independently of RNA, and bind each other in vitro, indicating that their interaction is probably direct (Wilhelm et al., 2000). Despite their direct association, Yps is localized normally in exu null ovaries, and Exu protein is localized normally in yps null ovaries. Thus Yps and Exu appear to be recruited to this ovarian complex independently. Do the associations detected by immunoprecipitation reflect biologically significant interactions that occur in vivo? Several other lines of evidence suggest that these proteins interact in vivo, and that osk mRNA is part of this complex. First, all three proteins, and osk mRNA, colocalize throughout oogenesis. Second, osk mRNA associates with both Exu and Yps (Wilhelm et al., 2000), and Orb binds directly to osk mRNA (Chang et al., 1999). And finally, the genetic results presented in this work are strong evidence for a biologically significant interaction of Yps and Orb in Drosophila ovaries.
Doubly mutant ypsJM2orbmel/ypsJM2orbF303ovaries display a novel phenotype, not observed in ypsJM2 or orbmel/orbF303 females: a small proportion (5%) of mid- and late-stage egg chambers are bipolar. Strong allelic combinations of orb also generate a high proportion of egg chambers with the oocyte mispositioned (Lantz et al., 1994), but these egg chambers arrest oogenesis before budding from the germarium, or shortly thereafter. The low frequency of late-stage bipolar egg chambers observed in ypsJM2orbmel/ypsJM2orbF303 females may result from partial rescue of egg chambers that would normally have arrested at very early stages in orbmel /orbF303 ovaries, with a phenotype similar to orbF303/orbF303 egg chambers. Alternatively, this may be a novel phenotype resulting from the additive loss of both yps and orb. In either case, this phenotype suggests an earlier, as yet uncharacterized function of yps. In support of this idea, yps is expressed in the germarium (Wilhelm et al., 2000).
In addition to its expression in female germ cells, yps is also expressed in the testes and in somatic cells (Thieringer et al., 1997; Wilhelm et al., 2000) (J. M. and T. H., unpublished data). We therefore believe it unlikely that osk mRNA is the only target of Yps. In fact, most Y-box proteins are thought to be general factors that regulate the translation of large classes of mRNAs [reviewed in Matsumoto and Wolffe (Matsumoto and Wolffe, 1998)]. FRGY2, for example, is thought to be a general masking factor for stored maternal mRNAs in the oocyte (Tafuri and Wolffe, 1993). However, we have no evidence to suggest that Yps serves such a general role in translational repression. The fact that Yps is localized to specific subcellular sites in the nurse cells and the oocyte argues against it being a general regulator of translation. We favor the hypothesis that Yps is specific to a limited number of target mRNAs. Perhaps Exu, which has been shown to coimmunoprecipitate with both Yps protein and osk mRNA, or another protein in the complex, confers sequence specificity on Yps’ RNA-binding activity.
An interesting possibility is suggested by studies of the p50/YB1 Y-box proteins. p50/YB1 is nearly completely conserved across vertebrate species, including human, mouse, rabbit and chick, and is expressed in both germline and somatic cells [reviewed in Evdokimova and Ovchinnikov (Evdokimova and Ovchinnikov, 1999)]. The most abundant protein in mRNP particles in a variety of cells types, p50/YB1 has been shown to act as a translational repressor at high concentrations and a translational enhancer at low concentrations. Recent work has shown that, at low concentrations (i.e. when mRNAs are unmasked) p50/YB1 also binds actin, and at higher p50/YB1: mRNA ratios (conditions under which translation is repressed) p50/YB1 and actin do not bind (Ruzanov et al., 1999). This suggests a mechanism by which unmasked mRNAs may be anchored to regions of the cytoplasm. This is particularly intriguing in the light of evidence that osk mRNA is anchored by an actin-dependent mechanism to the posterior pole of the oocyte, where it is translated (Erdelyi et al., 1995; Tetzlaff et al., 1996; Glotzer et al., 1997; Lantz et al., 1999). While Yps cannot be an essential component of a posterior RNA anchor, it may play a role in the association of osk mRNA with the actin cytoskeleton, which may in turn affect translation.
One model supported by our data is that Yps and Orb both bind to osk mRNA, and have opposite effects on translation: Yps represses, and Orb activates translation. Our immunoprecipitation experiments (Fig. 7) show that both proteins are present in an RNP complex and that their association is mediated by RNA, suggesting that both proteins simultaneously bind a common RNA target. This target is likely to be osk mRNA. osk mRNA is a member of this RNP complex (Wilhelm et al., 2000), Orb is known to bind osk mRNA (Chang et al., 1999), and our genetics results show that a yps loss-of-function mutation suppresses the defects in osk mRNA localization and translation associated with reduced function orb alleles (Fig. 4, Fig. 5). Yps could prevent translation by preventing Orb from promoting cytoplasmic polyadenylation. At the posterior of the oocyte, where Orb and Yps both concentrate during mid-oogenesis, and where osk mRNA is localized and translated, concentration differences between the two proteins could push the complex from being a negative to a positive regulator of translation. Additional factors at the posterior could also interact with either Orb or Yps to modify their functions, as might association with the actin cytoskeleton. This model accounts for why our yps mutation cannot eliminate the requirement for Orb, but can reduce the amount of Orb required for sufficient osk translation. In the rescued genotypes, there may be enough Orb at the oocyte posterior to allow for on-site cytoplasmic polyadenylation of osk mRNA, in the absence of negative regulation by Yps. It is also possible that, in the absence of Yps, Orb can stimulate polyadenylation of osk mRNA before it becomes localized, although it remains subject to translational repression by other factors, such as Apontic and Bruno, until it reaches the posterior pole. Future studies will test this model by determining if Yps and Orb bind competitively to osk mRNA, and if so, how their combined binding affects the translation of osk mRNA, and its polyadenylation state. These studies should contribute not only to our understanding of localization-dependent mRNA translation in Drosophila, but also to a better understanding of the biological roles of the widespread family of Y-box proteins.
Acknowledgements
Special thanks to Woongjoon Moon for the chromosome in situ hybridization, and to Kathleen Smith for excellent technical assistance. We are grateful to Ron Vale for his encouragement and helpful discussions, and to the following people for generously providing fly stocks, antibodies and cDNAs: Anne Ephrussi, Thomas Kornberg, Ruth Lehmann, Judith Lengyel, Paul Macdonald, Dennis McKearin, Paul Schedl and Trudi Schupbach. The 6H4 Orb antibody developed by Paul Schedl was obtained from the Developmental Studies Hybridoma Bank developed under the auspices of the NICHD and maintained by The University of Iowa, Department of Biological Sciences, Iowa City, IA 52242, USA. This work was supported by an NSF grant to T.H. (IBN-98-17089) and J.E.W. is an HHMI fellow of the Life Sciences Research Foundation.