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© The Rockefeller University Press,
0021-9525/2000//1097 $5.00
The Journal of Cell Biology, Volume 148, Number 6,
, 2000 1097-1102
Mini-Review |
Nuclear Migration
: From Fungi to the Mammalian Brain
Department of Pharmacology, University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, 675 Hoes Lane, Piscataway, NJ 08854.(732) 235-4073(732) 235-4081
morrisnr{at}umdnj.edu
© 2000 The Rockefeller University Press
Textbooks represent the animal cell nucleus as a sort of cellular Jabba the Hutt, torpidly enthroned in the center of the cell. In fact nothing could be farther from the truth. The nucleus more closely resembles Luke Skywalker, the hero of Star Wars, in its ability to move about in its cellular universe. Instances of nuclear motility are found throughout biology. Indeed, nuclear migration appears to be required for the proper growth and development of essentially all eukaryotes. Some well known examples, i.e., those in textbooks, are the congression of male and female pronuclei during fertilization, the movement of nuclei to the egg cortex during embryogenesis in Drosophila melanogaster, and during karyogamy and the migration of the daughter nucleus into the bud in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Innumerable other nuclear motility events have been described in animals, plants, insects, algae, and fungi. However, until relatively recently, little was known about the mechanism of nuclear migration, except that it required microtubules (MTs). An excellent recent review focuses particularly on how MTs exert forces on nuclei (Reinsch and Gonczy 1998). The focus of the present review will be on the contribution of genetic systems to our understanding of nuclear migration. The early work on the genetics of nuclear migration came from three "simple" organisms, the yeast S. cerevisiae, and two filamentous fungi, Aspergillus nidulans and Neurospora crassa. Recently, important findings have also come from Drosophila melanogaster, Caenorhabditis elegans, and possibly man. Nuclear migration has been studied in relation to karyogamy and migration of the daughter nucleus into the bud in budding yeast; in relation to the migration of nuclei through the mycelium in the filamentous fungi; during migration to the cortex in fly development; and during cell specific migrations in worm development. Similarities between the NUDF nuclear migration protein of A. nidulans and LIS1, a protein required for neuronal migration in the brain, have led us to suggest that nuclear migration is also a feature of brain development.
| Nuclear Migration in Yeast |
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During mitosis a much larger set of proteins moves the nucleus to the bud neck and into the bud, including three kinesins (Kar3p, Kip3p, and Kip2p) and cytoplasmic dynein (CD) plus dynactin (Eshel et al. 1993; Li et al. 1993; Cottingham et al. 1999; Kahana et al. 1998; Miller et al. 1998). There is substantial functional overlap among CD, Kar3p, and Kip3p. Deletion of any one of them has little effect, but deletion of more than one has an increasingly severe, deleterious effect on both nuclear positioning and cell viability. This is not necessarily related to loss of their motor functions because, like Kar3p, CD and Kip3p also affect astral MT stability. Deletion of the CD heavy chain causes an increase in astral MT length that is intensified by deletion of Kar3p and Kip3p. Since their loss increases MT length (i.e., stability), these proteins must normally act to destabilize MTs in vivo. In contrast, deletion of Kip2p increases astral MT length, reverses the MT length abnormalities caused by deletion of the CD heavy chain, Kar3p and Kip3p, and suppresses the effects of these deletions on nuclear positioning. Loss of Bim1p, which also affects MT stability, has similar effects (Schwartz et al. 1997; Tirnauer et al., 1999). These observations and other related pieces of genetic and pharmacological evidence suggest that astral MT dynamics play a significant role in nuclear positioning. Time-lapse fluorescence microscopy studies of GFP-tagged MTs showed that nuclear movements during mitosis, as during karyogamy, mirror the growing and shrinking rate of astral MTs attached to the cell cortex, consistent with the idea that dynamic MTs interacting with the cell cortex mediate nuclear movement (Carminati and Stearns 1997; Shaw et al. 1997; Maddox et al. 1999). Kar9p, which during mitosis orients astral MTs to the bud tip (Miller et al. 1999a), and Num1p, which is associated with the mother cell cortex, are also required for nuclear positioning, apparently by providing targets for MT capture by the cortex (Farkasovsky and Kuntzel 1995). All of the motors involved in S. cerevisiae nuclear movements are probably now known, but how they are targeted to specific locations in the cell, how their activities are regulated and coordinated, and how they actually generate force are still incompletely understood.
| Nuclear Migration in Filamentous Fungi |
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As in yeast, genetic studies have identified many of the proteins required for nuclear migration in the filamentous fungi (Morris 1975; Plamann et al. 1994; Xiang et al. 1994, Xiang et al. 1999; Bruno et al. 1996; Inoue et al. 1998; Minke et al. 1999a). The first nuclear migration mutants were a byproduct of a mitotic mutant search in A. nidulans 25 years ago (Morris 1975). These were termed nud (for nuclear distribution) mutations. In N. crassa similar mutations were termed ropy (ro) because the hyphae resemble intertwined rope strands. Phenotypically, the nud and ro mutants are characterized by a strikingly uneven distribution of nuclei along the mycelium (Fig. 1). Both grow slowly, branch excessively, and sporulate poorly. The A. nidulans apsA (which encodes a protein similar to Saccharomyces cerevisiae NUM1p) and apsB mutants, initially identified as sporulation defective, also affect nuclear distribution (Clutterbuck 1994; Fischer and Timberlake 1995). Many of the nud and ro genes encode subunits of CD or of dynactin (Table ), including the heavy, intermediate, and light chains of CD and the p150glued and ARP1 subunits of dynactin (Xiang et al. 1994; Plamann et al. 1994; Robb et al. 1995; Tinsley et al. 1996; Beckwith et al. 1998; Xiang et al. 1999; Xiang and Morris, unpublished data). Other nud and ro genes encode proteins that are not known components of CD or dynactin, but may be required for the integrity, localization (e.g., ro-10) or activity of CD or dynactin. Of particular interest is the nudF gene of A. nidulans, which encodes a protein similar to LIS1, a protein required for human brain development (Xiang et al. 1995a; see below).
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Immunostaining showed the CD heavy chain to be concentrated at the hyphal tip in both A. nidulans and N. crassa (Xiang et al. 1995b; Minke et al. 1999b). This could reflect an abundance of CD-containing vesicles near the tip (see Seiler et al., 1999), but it is also consistent with a model in which tip-anchored CD pulls the nucleus toward the tip by migrating on astral MTs toward the SPB (Xiang et al. 1995b). A modification of this model suggested that CD on SPB MTs links nuclei together in a chain pulled toward the tip as described above (Plamann et al. 1994), and a third model suggested that the CD is anchored to the cortex at intervals along the mycelium (Efimov and Morris 1998). However, CD has not been detected either on MTs between nuclei or on the lateral cell wall. Observations of GFP-tagged CD and NUDF in living cells shows comet-like structures that migrate toward, and become more concentrated at, the tip (Xiang, X., D. Winkelmann, and N.R. Morris, unpublished data; also, see http://www2. umdnj.edu/rmlabweb/moventer.html#two). The comets appear to be at the ends of advancing MTs. Whether this localization of CD and NUDF at the tips of MTs influences MT stability or is even related to nuclear migration still remains to be determined. Direct observational studies similar to those that have been done in yeast are needed to determine the relationship between CD, NUDF, and MT dynamics and nuclear migration in Aspergillus and other filamentous fungi.
| Nuclear Migration in Flies and Worms |
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| Nuclear Migration and Neuronal Migration |
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The migration of WART lung adenocarcinoma cells in culture provides a model to connect LIS1-mediated neuronal migration with NUDF-mediated nuclear migration. WART cells move by extending a long anterior process through which the cell body translocates (Klominek et al. 1991). The cells then retract the rearward cytoplasmic remnant and move forward by reiterating the process. This type of nuclear-driven cell migration is termed nucleokinesis. Certain neurons in culture also move by nucleokinesis (Book and Morest 1990; Liesi 1992), as do early blastomeres of the P cell lineage in C. elegans (Gonczy et al. 1999). The hypothesis that the defective neuronal migration seen in lissencephaly may be a failure of nucleokinesis (Morris et al. 1998a) has been tested by an examination of the migratory behavior of cerebellar granule cell explants from a LIS1 knockout mouse (Hirotsune et al. 1998). Wild-type explants send out cytoplasmic processes through which the cell bodies then migrate. Explants from LIS1 knockout mice extend processes similar to those from wild-type mice, but migration of the cell bodies is defective. Thus, the LIS1 knockout mouse experiment supports the hypothesis that a nuclear migration defect underlies the neuronal migration defect of lissencephaly. Like A. nidulans NUDF, LIS1 affects MT stability, but whereas NUDF deficiency increases MT stability in vivo (Willins et al. 1995) and purified NUDF inhibits MTs in vitro, purified LIS1 has been reported to stabilize MTs in vitro (Sapir et al. 1997).
Many features are common to nuclear migration in lower and higher eukaryotes. In both, nuclei are pulled around by an attached organelle: in the fungi by the SPB and in higher eukaryotes by the centrosome. In all cases, MTs, CD, and dynactin are involved, but in S. cerevisiae, kinesin proteins also play a role. Whether the involvement of the kinesins in nuclear migration is general or specifically related to the peculiarities of yeast bud nucleation remains to be determined. The effects of the motor proteins on MT stability and nuclear movement in the fungi are of great interest because they invoke the question of whether nuclear migration is mediated by motor activity and/or by effects on MT dynamics. Whether NUDF and LIS1 have a conserved mechanism, what that mechanism may be, and whether and how they affect CD, dynactin, and/or MTs, remain as fascinating topics for future investigation.
| Acknowledgments |
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This work was supported by a grant GM52309 from the National Institutes of Health.
Submitted: 10 January 2000
Revised: 17 February 2000
Accepted: 18 February 2000
Abbreviations used in this paper: CD, cytoplasmic dynein; MT, microtubule; nud, nuclear distribution; PAF, platelet activating factor; SPB, spindle pole body.
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