Although termed central body, the centrosome is located off-center in many polarized cells. T cell receptor (TCR) engagement by antigens induces a polarity switch in T cells. This leads to the recruitment of the centrosome to the immunological synapse (IS), a specialized cell-cell junction. Despite much recent progress, how TCR signaling triggers centrosome repositioning remains poorly understood. In this paper, we uncover a critical requirement for the centrosomal casein kinase I delta (CKIδ) in centrosome translocation to the IS. CKIδ binds and phosphorylates the microtubule plus-end-binding protein EB1. Moreover, a putative EB1-binding motif at the C terminus of CKIδ is required for centrosome translocation to the IS. We find that depletion of CKIδ in T lymphocytes and inhibition of CKI in epithelial cells reduce microtubule growth. Therefore, we propose that CKIδ-EB1 complexes contribute to the increase in microtubule growth speeds observed in polarized T cells, a mechanism that might serve to generate long-stable microtubules necessary for centrosome translocation.
Although termed central body, the centrosome is located off-center in many polarized cells. T cell receptor (TCR) engagement by antigens induces a polarity switch in T cells. This leads to the recruitment of the centrosome to the immunological synapse (IS), a specialized cell-cell junction. Despite much recent progress, how TCR signaling triggers centrosome repositioning remains poorly understood. In this paper, we uncover a critical requirement for the centrosomal casein kinase I delta (CKIδ) in centrosome translocation to the IS. CKIδ binds and phosphorylates the microtubule plus-end-binding protein EB1. Moreover, a putative EB1-binding motif at the C terminus of CKIδ is required for centrosome translocation to the IS. We find that depletion of CKIδ in T lymphocytes and inhibition of CKI in epithelial cells reduce microtubule growth. Therefore, we propose that CKIδ-EB1 complexes contribute to the increase in microtubule growth speeds observed in polarized T cells, a mechanism that might serve to generate long-stable microtubules necessary for centrosome translocation.
The microtubule cytoskeleton is important for a variety of cellular processes such as
cell migration, division, or vesicle trafficking. Microtubule organization in
interphase animal cells is largely dependent on the centrosome (Doxsey et al., 2005). Although centrosomes
nucleate symmetric arrays of microtubules, relocating the centrosome from the
geometric center of the cell can generate asymmetries in microtubule organization.
The ability to reposition the centrosome is particularly crucial in helper and
cytotoxic T cells (Poo et al., 1988; Huse et al., 2008). When a T lymphocyte
encounters a cognate antigen-presenting cell, a signaling platform known as the
immunological synapse (IS) assembles around the T cell receptor (TCR; Monks et al., 1998; Grakoui et al., 1999; Dustin, 2008). Formation of the IS is accompanied by the remodeling of
the actin cytoskeleton and the repositioning (referred to as polarization hereafter)
of the centrosome to the IS, where it contacts the plasma membrane (Geiger et al., 1982; Kupfer and Dennert, 1984; Das et al., 2002; Stinchcombe et al.,
2006; Billadeau et al.,
2007).Intact microtubule cytoskeleton is essential for centrosome polarization, as
microtubule poisons inhibit the process (Kupfer
and Dennert, 1984). Proteins so far implicated in centrosome polarization
include mediators of TCR signaling such as the tyrosine kinases Lck, ZAP70, and Fyn
(Lowin-Kropf et al., 1998; Blanchard et al., 2002; Martín-Cófreces et al., 2006; Tsun et al., 2011). Recent work indicates
that in cytotoxic T cells, Fyn controls centrosome polarization, whereas Lck is
responsible for its docking at the plasma membrane (Tsun et al., 2011). Important roles for centrosome
polarization have also been assigned to several cytoskeletal proteins and their
regulators like the formins FMNL1 and DIA1 (Gomez
et al., 2007), the tubulin deacetylase HDAC6 (Serrador et al., 2004), and the dynein/dynactin complex
(Combs et al., 2006). Dynein and
dynactin are involved in centrosome positioning during directed cell migration
(Etienne-Manneville and Hall, 2001;
Palazzo et al., 2001; Dujardin et al., 2003; Gomes et al., 2005; Manneville et al., 2010). Recruitment of dynein to the IS by
diacylglycerol has been shown to promote centrosome translocation (Quann et al., 2009), reinforcing the current
model that dynein at the cell cortex pulls on centrosomal microtubules and hence
facilitates centrosome movement toward the IS (Combs et al., 2006; Kim and Maly,
2009).Many aspects of dynein function are modulated by dynactin (Berrueta et al., 1999; Vale,
2003). The dynactin subunit p150glued belongs to a group of
proteins called +TIPs that track the growing tips of microtubules. Many
+TIPs are recruited to the plus-ends of microtubules by members of the EB
protein family, +TIPs themselves (Watson
and Stephens, 2006; Slep, 2010).
EB1 and EB3 contain a C-terminal α-helical sequence consisting of a
dimerization motif, an EB homology domain, and an acidic tail (Honnappa et al., 2005; Slep
et al., 2005; Slep, 2010). Some
+TIPs like p150glued bind the acidic tail of EB1 via a
cytoskeleton-associated protein–glycine-rich (CAP-Gly) domain (Steinmetz and Akhmanova, 2008). Other
+TIPs interact with the EB homology domain through a Ser-X-Pro-Ile (SxIP)
polypeptide (Honnappa et al., 2005; Slep et al., 2005; Akhmanova and Steinmetz, 2008; Honnappa et al., 2009). Such SxIP-containing factors include
the adenomatous polyposis coli protein APC (Honnappa et al., 2009). Collectively, +TIPs are important
modulators of microtubule behavior. Their interaction with EB1 brings them close to
microtubule plus-ends, organelles, and the cell cortex, where they can locally
modulate microtubule behavior and control cell migration, polarity, and
differentiation (Tirnauer et al., 1999;
Rogers et al., 2002; Green et al., 2005; Mimori-Kiyosue et al., 2005; Vaughan, 2005; Coquelle et
al., 2009). The role of +TIPs in T cell centrosome polarization
has not yet been investigated in detail, but, IQGAP1, a protein that bridges
microtubule plus-ends with actin filaments, participates in the process (Fukata et al., 2002; Stinchcombe et al., 2006).To gain better understanding into the molecular mechanism responsible for centrosome
polarization, a candidate gene approach has led us to the casein kinase 1 (CKI)
family of proteins. In yeast, casein kinase plays an important role in chromosome
segregation during meiosis and ER-to-Golgi transport (Petronczki et al., 2006; Ishiguro et al., 2010; Katis et al.,
2010; Lord et al., 2011). CKIs
have been implicated in several cell polarity–dependent processes such as
spindle orientation in Caenorhabditis elegans (Walston et al., 2004; Panbianco et al., 2008), Drosophila
melanogaster planar polarity establishment (Klein et al., 2006), or vertebrate gastrulation (Tsai et al., 2007). Several members of the
CKI family are core centrosome components (Andersen
et al., 2003). Indicative of potential roles in microtubule organization,
CKIδ mediates neurite outgrowth and the function of brain-specific
microtubule-associated proteins (Behrend et al.,
2000; Li et al., 2004; Wolff et al., 2005; Flajolet et al., 2007; Greer and Rubin, 2011). In addition, CKIs regulate the circadian clock
in mammals (Ning et al., 2004; Eide et al., 2005; Xu et al., 2005).Here, we report that the centrosomal kinase CKIδ promotes efficient centrosome
polarization to the IS. We further show that CKIδ binds and phosphorylates
EB1 and promotes microtubule growth. Our findings indicate that
CKIδ-dependent regulation of microtubule behavior is important for centrosome
translocation to the IS during T cell activation.
Results
Inhibitors of the CKI family of kinases prevent centrosome polarization to
the IS
We first investigated the effect of CKI inhibition on centrosome polarization
using the CKI-specific inhibitors D4476 (Rena
et al., 2004) and PF-670462 (Badura
et al., 2007). Jurkat T cells were conjugated with staphylococcal
enterotoxin E (SEE)–pulsed Raji B cells to induce IS assembly. Jurkat
cells were treated with DMSO, D4476, or PF-670462 for 2 h before conjugate
formation and then scored for centrosome polarization to the IS. In DMSO,
centrosomes polarized to the IS in 89% ± 3 of cells. 50 and 100 µM
D4476 reduced the polarization efficiency to 67% ± 11 and 54% ±
11, respectively, whereas 25 and 50 µM PF-670462 reduced it to 67%
± 5 and 57% ± 6, respectively (Fig. 1 A; for scoring criteria and examples, see Fig. S1
[A and B]). The wide data distribution of D4476-treated cells in
the box plot in Fig. 1 A may reflect the
poor solubility of D4476 in aqueous media (Rena et al., 2004). D4476 also inhibits the TGF-β type I
receptor ALK5 kinase (Rena et al.,
2004), but, as the ALK5-inhibitor LY-364947 did not perturb centrosome
polarization, the effect of D4476 is likely to be independent of ALK5 (Fig. S1
C).
Figure 1.
CKIδ regulates TCR-mediated centrosome polarization to the
IS. (A) Conjugates of Jurkat and SEE-pulsed Raji cells in the
presence of the indicated drugs. Centrosomes are stained with
anti–γ-tubulin antibody. Raji cells are blue in merge. The
box plot shows quantification of centrosome polarization to the IS based
on scoring criteria in Fig. S1 A (n = 4 experiments;
200 conjugates/experiment). (B) Conjugates of Jurkat and SEE-pulsed Raji
cells in the presence of the indicated drugs. Cells are stained with
anti–PY174-Vav and anti–γ-tubulin antibodies. Raji
cells are blue in merge. (C) Cytoplasmic cell extracts of Jurkat cells
containing stably integrated EV (control), vector encoding
CSNK1D shRNA (clones shdelta1 and shdelta2), or
CSNK1E shRNA (clone sheps1) are immunoblotted with
antibodies against CKIδ or CKIε. Actin serves as a loading
control. WB, Western blotting. (D) Conjugates of control (EV),
CKIε- or CKIδ-depleted Jurkat cell clones, and SEE-pulsed
Raji cells. Centrosomes are stained with anti–γ-tubulin
antibody. Raji cells are blue in merge. The box plot shows
quantification of centrosome polarization to the IS (n
= 4 experiments; 200 conjugates/experiment). In the box plots,
whiskers are set at minimum and maximum, and horizontal lines mark the
median, whereas boxes indicate the interquartile range (25–75%).
Bars:10 µm; (en face) 5 µm.
CKIδ regulates TCR-mediated centrosome polarization to the
IS. (A) Conjugates of Jurkat and SEE-pulsed Raji cells in the
presence of the indicated drugs. Centrosomes are stained with
anti–γ-tubulin antibody. Raji cells are blue in merge. The
box plot shows quantification of centrosome polarization to the IS based
on scoring criteria in Fig. S1 A (n = 4 experiments;
200 conjugates/experiment). (B) Conjugates of Jurkat and SEE-pulsed Raji
cells in the presence of the indicated drugs. Cells are stained with
anti–PY174-Vav and anti–γ-tubulin antibodies. Raji
cells are blue in merge. (C) Cytoplasmic cell extracts of Jurkat cells
containing stably integrated EV (control), vector encoding
CSNK1D shRNA (clones shdelta1 and shdelta2), or
CSNK1E shRNA (clone sheps1) are immunoblotted with
antibodies against CKIδ or CKIε. Actin serves as a loading
control. WB, Western blotting. (D) Conjugates of control (EV),
CKIε- or CKIδ-depleted Jurkat cell clones, and SEE-pulsed
Raji cells. Centrosomes are stained with anti–γ-tubulin
antibody. Raji cells are blue in merge. The box plot shows
quantification of centrosome polarization to the IS (n
= 4 experiments; 200 conjugates/experiment). In the box plots,
whiskers are set at minimum and maximum, and horizontal lines mark the
median, whereas boxes indicate the interquartile range (25–75%).
Bars:10 µm; (en face) 5 µm.Impaired centrosome polarization can arise from defective IS formation and/or
signaling. To address whether CKI inhibition affected TCR signaling or IS
assembly, we assayed the localization of phosphorylated Vav (Tyr174), a ZAP-70
effector (Tybulewicz, 2005). The
inhibitors did not preclude either the phosphorylation or the accumulation of
Vav at the IS, indicating that inhibition of CKI does not impede either
processes (Fig. 1 B).
CKIδ promotes centrosome polarization to the IS
D4476 and PF-670462 are both ATP-competitive inhibitors, and it was therefore
crucial to confirm that their effect on centrosome polarization was specific to
their action against CKI kinases. As D4476 and PF-670462 inhibit CKIδ and
CKIε (Rena et al., 2004; Badura et al., 2007) and CKIδ is
highly active in isolated lymphocytes (Maritzen et al., 2003), we first assayed the role of the closely
related CKIδ and CKIε in centrosome polarization using a
loss-of-function approach. Short hairpin RNAs (shRNAs) targeting either
CSNK1D or CSNK1E were embedded into
sequences derived from the miR30 microRNA and introduced into Jurkat cells
(Chang et al., 2006). The same
vector without a hairpin sequence (referred to as empty vector [EV]) was used as
a control. Of two CSNK1E and five
CSNK1D-specific short hairpin sequences, one
CSNK1E (sheps) and two CSNK1D (shdelta and
shdeltaB) hairpins achieved substantial depletions (60–70% reduction) in
cell populations. Single clones of CKIδ- or CKIε-depleted cells
were isolated, and the most efficiently depleted ones were characterized further
(88 and 90% reduction in CKIδ levels in clones shdelta1 and shdelta2,
respectively; 92% reduction in CKIε levels in clone sheps1; Fig. 1 C). Note that shdelta1 and shdelta2
are independent Jurkat cell clones that contain the same shdelta short hairpin
sequence. In humans, the CKIδ gene can be alternatively
spliced to produce two mRNAs that differ only in their last coding exon: the
canonical 415-aa-long protein and a shorter 409-aa protein (hereafter called
CKIδ-2). The shdelta RNA sequence targets the 3′ untranslated
region (UTR), and, therefore, shdelta cells are depleted of both isoforms.EV, sheps1, shdelta1, and shdelta2 cells were viable in long-term cell culture
and exhibited no morphological or cell cycle defects (unpublished data). When
conjugated to SEE-pulsed Raji cells, only CKIδ-depleted cells displayed
an impairment in centrosome polarization (Figs.
1 D and S2
A). Whereas clones shdelta1 and shdelta2 were used for subsequent
experiments, centrosome polarization was similarly impaired by a different
CSNK1D-specific hairpin sequence (Fig. S2 B). Thus, despite
sharing over 80% sequence identity with CKIε, only CKIδ is
required for centrosome polarization. CKIα, another centrosomal CKI
(Gross et al., 1995), was
dispensable for centrosomal polarization (Fig. S2 C).
CKIδ is required for translocation of the centrosome to the IS
Centrosome polarization involves the translocation of the centrosome to the IS
and its subsequent docking to the plasma membrane (Stinchcombe et al., 2006). To identify which of these is
abrogated by CKIδ depletion, we followed centrosome movement in real time
in Raji-conjugated Jurkat cells transiently transfected with the GFP-tagged
centrosome component, centrin-1. 82% of EV cells translocated and maintained
their centrosomes at the IS for the duration of filming (Fig. 2 [A and B] and Videos
1 and 2). In contrast, only 46% of CKIδ-depleted cells
translocated their centrosomes to the IS. We observed no major defect in
centrosome maintenance at the IS in these cells (Fig. 2 [A and B] and Videos
3 and 4). However, in those CKIδ-depleted cells that polarized
their centrosome, the centrosome took longer to reach the IS (Fig. 2 C). Therefore, we conclude that
CKIδ is required for efficient centrosome translocation to the IS.
Figure 2.
CKIδ is required for centrosome translocation to the
IS. (A) Still images from time-lapse videos showing conjugate
formation between Jurkat cells transfected with GFP-centrin1 (green) and
SEE-pulsed Raji cells (blue). Control (EV; top; Videos 1 and 2) and CKIδ-depleted Jurkat cells (shdelta;
bottom; Videos 3 and 4) are shown. Bar, 10 µm. The percentages next to
panels indicate the frequency of the particular phenotype. The plots
below depict the distance between the centrosome and the IS as a
function of time; time 0 is when the conjugate forms. Tracks are symbol-
and color-matched to individual cells. The shdelta cell (orange)
polarizes its centrosome with a delay. (B) Summary of the time-lapse
data collected. (C) Distribution of the time required for centrosome
polarization to the IS in control (EV) and CKIδ-depleted
(shdelta) cells. Median values are marked by horizontal lines.
CKIδ is required for centrosome translocation to the
IS. (A) Still images from time-lapse videos showing conjugate
formation between Jurkat cells transfected with GFP-centrin1 (green) and
SEE-pulsed Raji cells (blue). Control (EV; top; Videos 1 and 2) and CKIδ-depleted Jurkat cells (shdelta;
bottom; Videos 3 and 4) are shown. Bar, 10 µm. The percentages next to
panels indicate the frequency of the particular phenotype. The plots
below depict the distance between the centrosome and the IS as a
function of time; time 0 is when the conjugate forms. Tracks are symbol-
and color-matched to individual cells. The shdelta cell (orange)
polarizes its centrosome with a delay. (B) Summary of the time-lapse
data collected. (C) Distribution of the time required for centrosome
polarization to the IS in control (EV) and CKIδ-depleted
(shdelta) cells. Median values are marked by horizontal lines.
CKIδ is dispensable for early TCR signaling and high-order IS
assembly
We examined IS assembly in EV and CKIδ-depleted Jurkat cells by studying
three key features of the IS (Monks et al.,
1998; Billadeau et al.,
2007): LFA-1 integrin accumulation, F-actin cap formation, and clustering
of the TCR subunit CD3. All three features appeared normal in the absence of
CKIδ (Fig. 3 A), indicating that
high-order IS assembly can occur without the kinase. Next, we assayed the
kinetics of early TCR signaling events in CKIδ-depleted cells. Tyrosine
phosphorylations of ZAP70 (Tyr352), LAT (Tyr191), and Vav (Tyr174) were similar
in EV and CKIδ-depleted cells over a time course of 30 min after
conjugate formation with SEE-pulsed Raji cells (Fig. 3 B). Anti-CD3 antibody–coated beads that cluster TCRs
on the surface of T cells can induce centrosome polarization. Unlike the IS of
Jurkat–Raji cell conjugates, this IS forms without integrin engagement
and thus drives centrosome polarization solely by TCR signaling (Tsun et al., 2011). As
anti-CD3–activated CKIδ-depleted cells still displayed a
centrosome polarization defect, we conclude that CKIδ is required for
centrosome polarization independent of integrin engagement (59 ± 1.6%
centrosome polarization in CKIδ-depleted cells compared with 82 ±
2.5% in control cells in two experiments [150 cells/experiment]).
Figure 3.
CKIδ is dispensable for IS formation and early TCR
signaling. (A) Conjugates of control (EV) or
CKIδ-depleted (shdelta) Jurkat and SEE-pulsed Raji cells are
stained with anti–LFA-1 antibody (top), phalloidin (F-actin;
middle), or anti-CD3 antibody (bottom). Centrosomes are stained with
anti-CDK5RAP2 antibody. Raji cells are in blue in merge. (B) Cytoplasmic
cell extracts of control (EV) or CKIδ-depleted (shdelta) Jurkat
cells were lysed at different time points after conjugate formation with
SEE-pulsed Raji cells and were immunoblotted with the indicated
antibodies. WB, Western blotting. (C) Conjugates between control (EV;
left) or CKIδ-depleted (shdelta; right) Jurkat and SEE-pulsed
Raji cells are stained with anti-DIC (green in merge) and anti-CDK5RAP2
(red in merge) antibodies. Arrowheads highlight DIC accumulation at the
IS. (D and E) Cytoplasmic cell extracts (CCE) were prepared from control
(EV) and CKIδ-depleted (shdelta; D) or DMSO- and D4476-treated
(E) Jurkat cells that were unconjugated (−) or conjugated
(+) to anti-CD3 antibody beads. Immunoprecipitations (ip) were
performed with random IgG (ip con) or anti-p150glued (ip
p150glued) antibodies. Bars: 10 µm; (en face) 5
µm.
CKIδ is dispensable for IS formation and early TCR
signaling. (A) Conjugates of control (EV) or
CKIδ-depleted (shdelta) Jurkat and SEE-pulsed Raji cells are
stained with anti–LFA-1 antibody (top), phalloidin (F-actin;
middle), or anti-CD3 antibody (bottom). Centrosomes are stained with
anti-CDK5RAP2 antibody. Raji cells are in blue in merge. (B) Cytoplasmic
cell extracts of control (EV) or CKIδ-depleted (shdelta) Jurkat
cells were lysed at different time points after conjugate formation with
SEE-pulsed Raji cells and were immunoblotted with the indicated
antibodies. WB, Western blotting. (C) Conjugates between control (EV;
left) or CKIδ-depleted (shdelta; right) Jurkat and SEE-pulsed
Raji cells are stained with anti-DIC (green in merge) and anti-CDK5RAP2
(red in merge) antibodies. Arrowheads highlight DIC accumulation at the
IS. (D and E) Cytoplasmic cell extracts (CCE) were prepared from control
(EV) and CKIδ-depleted (shdelta; D) or DMSO- and D4476-treated
(E) Jurkat cells that were unconjugated (−) or conjugated
(+) to anti-CD3 antibody beads. Immunoprecipitations (ip) were
performed with random IgG (ip con) or anti-p150glued (ip
p150glued) antibodies. Bars: 10 µm; (en face) 5
µm.Cortical localization of the retrograde microtubule motor dynein has been
implicated in centrosome translocation to the IS (Combs et al., 2006; Martín-Cófreces et al., 2008; Quann et al., 2009). Thus, impaired centrosome
polarization in the absence of CK1δ could reflect inefficient recruitment
of dynein to the IS. This is unlikely, however, as dynein accumulated at the IS
of CKIδ-depleted cells (Fig. 3 C).
Cytoplasmic dynein acts with dynactin to mediate centrosome translocation to the
IS (Martín-Cófreces et al.,
2008). Could CKIδ depletion affect the formation of
dynein/dynactin complexes in cells? To eliminate molecular contamination from
Raji cells, immunoprecipitation was performed on Jurkat cells activated by
anti-CD3–coated beads. The interaction between dynein and dynactin is
mediated by the dynein intermediate chain (DIC) and the p150glued
subunit of dynactin (Vaughan and Vallee,
1995). Binding between DIC and p150glued persisted in both
CKIδ-depleted (Fig. 3 D) and in
D4476-treated cells (Fig. 3 E),
indicating that dynein/dynactin complexes assemble independently of CKIδ.
Therefore, CKIδ is dispensable for IS assembly and early TCR
signaling.
CKIδ is a microtubule-associated protein in T cells
Consistent with previous studies (Andersen et
al., 2003; Sillibourne et al.,
2002; Greer and Rubin,
2011), CKIδ is an integral centrosomal protein in Jurkat cells
(Fig. S2 D). Time-lapse imaging confirmed the presence of GFP-tagged CKIδ
at the centrosome of Jurkat cells during activation (Fig. 4 A), but no GFP signal was detected at the IS.
GFP-CKIδ also appeared on dynamic fiberlike structures that extended out
of the centrosome, reminiscent of microtubule ends (Fig. 4 A and Video
5). To enable better visualization of this behavior, we tried to
increase expression levels of GFP-CKIδ, but high levels proved toxic to
Jurkat cells. Expression of GFP-CKIδ diminished endogenous kinase levels
in Jurkat cells, revealing tight cellular control of kinase levels (Fig. S3
A). Consistent with its dynamic localization pattern, both
endogenous and GFP-fused CKIδ copelleted with microtubules (Fig. 4 B). Thus, CKIδ is a
microtubule-associated protein in lymphocytes, similar to the brain (Behrend et al., 2000; Li et al., 2004; Wolff et al., 2005; Flajolet et al., 2007).
Figure 4.
CKIδ interacts with the microtubule plus-end–binding
proteins EB1 and p150 (A) Still images from
time-lapse imaging (Video 5) showing conjugate formation between a Jurkat
cell expressing GFP-CKIδ (green) and an SEE-pulsed Raji cell
(blue). Insets correspond to higher magnifications of the centrosomal
region. Asterisks mark fiberlike extrusions near the centrosome. Bars:
10 µm; (inset) 1 µm. (B) In vitro microtubule-pelleting
assay. Pure tubulin was incubated in the presence of GTP without
(−) or with (+) taxol and then added to cytoplasmic
extracts of Jurkat cells transfected with GFP-CKIδ. High-speed
supernatants (S) and pellets (P) were collected and immunoblotted with
antibodies as indicated. WB, Western blotting. (C) A schematic view of
key functional domains of CKIδ: kinase, autoinhibitory (Longenecker et al., 1998), and
centrosome-targeting (Greer and Rubin,
2011) domains. Sequence alignments of the extreme C termini
of two CKIδ isoforms and CKIε are shown below. Acidic and
basic amino acids are in red and blue, respectively. Hs, Homo
sapiens; Mm, Mus musculus; Gg,
Gallus gallus; Xl, Xenopus laevis;
Dr, Danio rerio. (D) Cytoplasmic cell extracts (CCE) of
Jurkat cells were subjected to pull-down assays with GST, GST-EB1 (EB1),
or GST-EB3 (EB3) and were immunoblotted with antibodies as indicated.
Recombinant GST products are shown in Ponceau S staining below. (E)
Jurkat cells were unconjugated (−) or conjugated (+) with
anti-CD3–coated beads. Cytoplasmic cell extracts were processed
for immunoprecipitation (ip) with random IgG (ip con) or
anti-p150glued (ip p150glued) antibodies and
immunoblotted with the indicated antibodies. (F) Cytoplasmic cell
extracts of Jurkat cells were mock depleted with random IgG (−)
or immunodepleted of p150glued (+). Depleted extracts
were then processed for pull-down assays with GST or GST-EB1 (EB1) and
immunoblotted with the indicated antibodies. Recombinant GST products
are visible in Ponceau S staining below.
CKIδ interacts with the microtubule plus-end–binding
proteins EB1 and p150 (A) Still images from
time-lapse imaging (Video 5) showing conjugate formation between a Jurkat
cell expressing GFP-CKIδ (green) and an SEE-pulsed Raji cell
(blue). Insets correspond to higher magnifications of the centrosomal
region. Asterisks mark fiberlike extrusions near the centrosome. Bars:
10 µm; (inset) 1 µm. (B) In vitro microtubule-pelleting
assay. Pure tubulin was incubated in the presence of GTP without
(−) or with (+) taxol and then added to cytoplasmic
extracts of Jurkat cells transfected with GFP-CKIδ. High-speed
supernatants (S) and pellets (P) were collected and immunoblotted with
antibodies as indicated. WB, Western blotting. (C) A schematic view of
key functional domains of CKIδ: kinase, autoinhibitory (Longenecker et al., 1998), and
centrosome-targeting (Greer and Rubin,
2011) domains. Sequence alignments of the extreme C termini
of two CKIδ isoforms and CKIε are shown below. Acidic and
basic amino acids are in red and blue, respectively. Hs, Homo
sapiens; Mm, Mus musculus; Gg,
Gallus gallus; Xl, Xenopus laevis;
Dr, Danio rerio. (D) Cytoplasmic cell extracts (CCE) of
Jurkat cells were subjected to pull-down assays with GST, GST-EB1 (EB1),
or GST-EB3 (EB3) and were immunoblotted with antibodies as indicated.
Recombinant GST products are shown in Ponceau S staining below. (E)
Jurkat cells were unconjugated (−) or conjugated (+) with
anti-CD3–coated beads. Cytoplasmic cell extracts were processed
for immunoprecipitation (ip) with random IgG (ip con) or
anti-p150glued (ip p150glued) antibodies and
immunoblotted with the indicated antibodies. (F) Cytoplasmic cell
extracts of Jurkat cells were mock depleted with random IgG (−)
or immunodepleted of p150glued (+). Depleted extracts
were then processed for pull-down assays with GST or GST-EB1 (EB1) and
immunoblotted with the indicated antibodies. Recombinant GST products
are visible in Ponceau S staining below.
CKIδ interacts with microtubule plus-end proteins EB1 and
p150glued
Several +TIPs interact with the microtubule end-binding proteins EB1 and
EB3 via an SxIP motif (Honnappa et al.,
2009). At the C terminus of CKIδ, we identified a SQIP motif
embedded in a sequence rich in serine and basic amino acids (Fig. 4 C). GST pull-down assays revealed a
specific interaction between endogenous CKIδ (from Jurkat cell extracts)
and recombinant GST-EB1 and -EB3 (Fig. 4
D). Similar to other SxIP-containing +TIPs (Honnappa et al., 2009), interaction
between endogenous CKIδ and EB1 seems too weak to be detectable. However,
CKIδ coimmunoprecipitated with the dynactin subunit p150glued
from Jurkat cell extracts (Fig. 4 E). As
p150glued binds EB1 directly (Askham et al., 2002), it could potentially mediate the interaction
between EB1 and CK1δ. To address whether this is indeed the case, GST-EB1
pull-downs were performed from cell lysates previously immunodepleted of
p150glued. As reported before, GST-EB1 failed to precipitate DIC
from p150glued-depleted lysates, consistent with p150glued
mediating the binding between DIC and EB1 (Fig.
4 F; Berrueta et al., 1999).
In contrast, binding between CK1δ and GST-EB1 persisted in the absence of
p150glued, implying that the interaction between CK1δ and
GST-EB1 is independent of p150glued.At least two other members of the CKI family are centrosomal: CKIα and
CKIε. A conserved SxIP motif is present in the C terminus of CKIε
but not in CKIα (Fig. 4 C).
Consistently, CKIε but not CKIα interacted with GST-EB1 (Fig. 4 F). As CKIδ and CKIε
exhibit similar substrate specificity, their kinase domains might also
contribute to their interaction with EB1 (Dahlberg et al., 2009). In summary, our results point to the
existence of a specific interaction between EB1 and the CKI kinases CKIδ
and CK1ε.
Identification of a CKIδ phosphorylation site on EB1
The kinase activity of CKIδ is required for centrosome polarization to the
IS (Fig. 1 A). Our finding that
CKIδ and EB1 are part of the same protein complex prompted us to
investigate whether EB1 is a substrate of CKIδ. We performed two
independent in vitro kinase assays and subsequently analyzed the substrates with
phosphopeptide mapping using mass spectrometry. The assays were designed with
two considerations in mind. First, we wanted to find out whether the kinase
required the SQIP domain to phosphorylate EB1, and, therefore, we used the
C-terminal–truncated CKIδ[aa 1–318] in assay 1 and the
full-length kinase in assay 2. Second, as a GST tag can drive oligomerization,
in each assay, only the kinase or the substrate was tagged but not both. In
assay 1, untagged CKIδ[aa 1–318] was tested on GST-EB1, whereas in
assay 2, GST-CKIδ was tested on untagged EB1 (Fig. 5 A). Mass spectrometry analysis achieved >95%
coverage of EB1. The two assays identified the same single phosphopeptide
carrying an ATP- and dosage-dependent phosphorylation event on Ser140 (Fig. 5, B and C). Thus, the SQIP motif of
CKIδ is dispensable for EB1 phosphorylation in vitro.
CKIδ[aa 1–318] did not phosphorylate the GST part of the GST-EB1
fusion protein, reinforcing the specificity of the phosphorylation event on EB1
(Fig. 5 A).
Figure 5.
Identification of a CKIδ phosphorylation site on EB1.
(A) A table summarizing the experimental conditions and results for
assay 1. Fragmentation spectra were obtained and analyzed for all
conditions. The spectrum on the right corresponds to 10 units of kinase.
Ponceau S staining shows purified recombinant GST-EB1 used in the assay.
Molecular mass (MM) is indicated in kilodaltons. (B) A table summarizing
the experimental conditions and results for assay 2. Fragmentation
spectra were obtained and analyzed for all conditions. The spectrum on
the right corresponds to 10 units of kinase. Ponceau S staining shows
the purified recombinant EB1 used in the assay. (A and B) Fragmentation
spectra of the triply charged [M + 3H]3+
peptide ion at m/z 700.3676 (A) and m/z 700.367 (B) correspond to the
phosphorylated peptide of aa 131–150 with the sequence
phospho-QGQETAVAPSLVAPALNKPK of EB1. The predominant y-ion series for
both spectra, extending from y11 to y17, confirm the sequence
ETAVAP-phosphoS (dots). The fragment ions observed at m/z 667.93 (A) and
668.14 (B) correspond to the neutral loss of H3PO4
from the precursor ions, whereas those observed at m/z 662.14 (A) and
662.14 (B) correspond to the neutral loss of H3PO4
and H2O. GST-CKIδ and CKIδ[1–318] were
commercially sourced. (C) A schematic diagram shows the position of the
phosphorylation site in EB1. The domains shown are calponin homology
(CH) and end binding homology (EBH).
Identification of a CKIδ phosphorylation site on EB1.
(A) A table summarizing the experimental conditions and results for
assay 1. Fragmentation spectra were obtained and analyzed for all
conditions. The spectrum on the right corresponds to 10 units of kinase.
Ponceau S staining shows purified recombinant GST-EB1 used in the assay.
Molecular mass (MM) is indicated in kilodaltons. (B) A table summarizing
the experimental conditions and results for assay 2. Fragmentation
spectra were obtained and analyzed for all conditions. The spectrum on
the right corresponds to 10 units of kinase. Ponceau S staining shows
the purified recombinant EB1 used in the assay. (A and B) Fragmentation
spectra of the triply charged [M + 3H]3+
peptide ion at m/z 700.3676 (A) and m/z 700.367 (B) correspond to the
phosphorylated peptide of aa 131–150 with the sequence
phospho-QGQETAVAPSLVAPALNKPK of EB1. The predominant y-ion series for
both spectra, extending from y11 to y17, confirm the sequence
ETAVAP-phosphoS (dots). The fragment ions observed at m/z 667.93 (A) and
668.14 (B) correspond to the neutral loss of H3PO4
from the precursor ions, whereas those observed at m/z 662.14 (A) and
662.14 (B) correspond to the neutral loss of H3PO4
and H2O. GST-CKIδ and CKIδ[1-318] were
commercially sourced. (C) A schematic diagram shows the position of the
phosphorylation site in EB1. The domains shown are calponin homology
(CH) and end binding homology (EBH).
The SQIP motif of CKIδ is essential for centrosome
polarization
To address the role of the SQIP motif in CKIδ, we first asked whether the
C terminus of CKIδ containing the putative EB1-binding region but lacking
the kinase domain (ΔKD) could bind EB1. ΔKD did not bind either
EB1 or p150glued (Fig. S3 B), suggesting that the kinase domain is
essential for these interactions. Second, we created two CKIδ mutants
with disrupted SQIP motifs: CKIδ-ΔC, lacking the last 22 aa, and
CKIδ-NN, in which the hydrophobic Ile-Pro dipeptide of the SQIP motif was
replaced with Asn residues (Fig. 6 A;
Honnappa et al., 2009). GST-EB1
pull-downs were performed as previously described, but, to minimize contribution
by endogenous CKIδ, GFP-CKIδ, GFP-CKIδ-ΔC, or
GFP-CKIδ-NN was expressed in CKIδ-depleted Jurkat cells. Plasmids
encoding these products did not contain CSKN1D 3′ UTR
sequences and were therefore resistant to shRNA. Contrary to our expectations,
GST-EB1 precipitated both GFP-CKIδ-ΔC and GFP-CKIδ-NN (Fig.
S3 C). This was not caused by p150glued, as binding persisted in
p150glued-depleted extracts. In addition, GFP-CKIδ-NN
copelleted with microtubules (Fig. S3 D). Thus, the SQIP motif of CKIδ is
dispensable for interactions with EB1 and microtubules in vitro.
Figure 6.
The SQIP motif of CKIδ is required for centrosome
polarization. (A) A schematic view of various GFP-fused
CKIδ constructs is shown on top. Examples for conjugates formed
between SEE-pulsed Raji cells and CKIδ-depleted Jurkat cells
(shdelta) expressing the indicated GFP fusion product (green in merge).
Asterisks mark cells with GFP signal. Centrosomes are stained with
anti-CDK5RAP2 antibodies (red in merge). Raji cells are blue in merge.
Bars, 10 µm. (B) A graph showing quantification of centrosome
polarization to the IS in cells expressing the different GFP constructs
(n = 4 experiments; at least 50 GFP-positive
cells were scored per experiment). Error bars represent SD.
The SQIP motif of CKIδ is required for centrosome
polarization. (A) A schematic view of various GFP-fused
CKIδ constructs is shown on top. Examples for conjugates formed
between SEE-pulsed Raji cells and CKIδ-depleted Jurkat cells
(shdelta) expressing the indicated GFP fusion product (green in merge).
Asterisks mark cells with GFP signal. Centrosomes are stained with
anti-CDK5RAP2 antibodies (red in merge). Raji cells are blue in merge.
Bars, 10 µm. (B) A graph showing quantification of centrosome
polarization to the IS in cells expressing the different GFP constructs
(n = 4 experiments; at least 50 GFP-positive
cells were scored per experiment). Error bars represent SD.Next, we tested whether the SQIP motif of the kinase has a role in centrosome
polarization in vivo. CKIδ-depleted Jurkat cells were
transfected with GFP-CKIδ, GFP-CKIδ-ΔC, or
GFP-CKIδ-NN and then conjugated to Raji cells. GFP-CKIδ
complemented the centrosome polarization defect of CKIδ-depleted cells,
whereas GFP-CKIδ-ΔC and GFP-CKIδ-NN did not (Fig. 6 B). Therefore, the SQIP motif in the
kinase is dispensable for binding to EB1 in vitro, but this sequence seems
important for centrosome polarization in vivo. Interestingly,
both mutants were present at the centrosome (Fig. 6 A), implying that centrosomal localization of CKIδ is
not sufficient for its function. Dynamic localization of CKIδ is likely
to be important for its role because when the kinase is immobilized at the
centrosome with a PACT tag (a centrosome-targeting domain derived from the
scaffolding protein AKAP450 [Gillingham and
Munro, 2000]), it no longer supports centrosome polarization (Fig. 6 B).The shdelta shRNA targeted both CKIδ isoforms (Fig. S4
A), and, therefore, we asked whether CKIδ-2 could also
complement the centrosome polarization defect in CKIδ-depleted cells.
Although GFP-CKIδ-2 attenuated the defect, it was less effective than
canonical CKIδ (Fig. S4 B). CKIδ-2 also interacted with GST-EB1
despite containing the sequence SQNSIP instead of the consensus SxIP (Fig. S4, C
and D). In addition to EB1, GST-fused canonical isoform also precipitated
CKIδ-2 (Fig. S4 D). As the two CKIδ isoforms exist in multimeric
protein complexes, CKIδ-2 may interact with EB1 via canonical
CKIδ, hence explaining the poor performance of GFP-CKIδ-2 in
complementing CKIδ-depleted cells (Fig. S4 B).
CKIδ increases microtubule growth speeds in T cells
Centrosome polarization requires an intact microtubule cytoskeleton. Interactions
between CKIδ and the microtubule-associated factors EB1 and
p150glued suggested that CKIδ could control microtubule
behavior. Indeed, microtubules appeared somewhat disorganized in
CKIδ-depleted Jurkat cells conjugated to Raji cells (Fig. S5
A). In fixed cells, however, growing microtubule plus-ends were
visible in D4476-treated cells (Fig. S5 B).Microtubules switch between phases of growth and shrinkage, a behavior termed
dynamic instability (Mitchison and Kirschner,
1984). Transitions from growth to shrinkage or shrinkage to growth
are called catastrophes or rescues, respectively. To characterize the effect of
CKIδ on microtubule behavior, we first tried to visualize microtubules
with GFP-tubulin in live cells, but no microtubule bundles were detectable as a
result of the small cytoplasmic volume of interphase T cells. Fluorescently
tagged EB1 and EB3 exhibit characteristic cometlike patterns that arise as a
result of a transient association between these proteins and growing microtubule
plus-ends. The tracking of comets is a widely used method for the analysis of
microtubule dynamics (Tirnauer et al.,
2002; Goodson et al., 2010).
Although this approach seems counterintuitive to study EB-binding proteins, as
CKIδ is not required for comet formation by EB1 (Fig. S5 B) or EB3 (Fig. 7 A and Videos
6 and 7), we reasoned that overexpression of EB3 may not mask the
effects of the kinase on microtubules (if any). In time-lapse experiments,
EB3-GFP signal was filmed for 1 min in a single focal plane containing the
centrosome. Data were analyzed with plusTipTracker, an open source software
described in Matov et al. (2010). This
method identifies +TIP comets using a particle-tracking algorithm (Jaqaman et al., 2008) and selects
collinear and sequential growth tracks to reconstruct microtubule trajectories
with inferred states such as pause and shrinkage. In Jurkat cells, such
trajectories were too short to provide reliable information other than the
direct measurement of growth speeds. Nonetheless, CKIδ depletion reduced
microtubule growth speeds by 20% in shdelta1 and 16% in shdelta2 cells (Fig. 7 A and Videos 6 and 7). Likewise,
manually constructed kymographs of EB3-GFP comets tracked shorter distances in
CK1δ-depleted cells (Fig. 7 B),
confirming the defective growth observed with plusTipTracker. Next, we asked
whether results obtained from CK1δ-depleted cells could be mimicked by
treatments with microtubule poisons. We tested different concentrations of
colcemid in Jurkat cells and found that 50 nM did not obliterate the microtubule
network yet reduced centrosome polarization by 25% and mean microtubule growth
speeds by 14% (Figs. 7 A and S5 [C and
D]).
Figure 7.
CKIδ promotes microtubule growth in Jurkat cells. (A)
Analysis of EB3-GFP comets in control (EV), CKIδ-depleted
(shdelta) Jurkat cell clones, and colcemid-treated EV cells. The box
plot shows the distribution of mean growth speeds of tracked EB3-GFP
comets per cell. On the right, an overlay of EB3 growth tracks collected
over 1 min is shown in individual cells (dots mark centrosome position).
Bar, 5 μm. (B) Maximum intensity projection of EB3-GFP signal in
individual cells over 28 sequential frames (0.5 s per frame).
Corresponding kymographs on the right show the growth of individual
microtubules in control (EV) and CKIδ-depleted (shdelta) Jurkat
cells. Bars, 5 µm. (C) Analysis of EB3-GFP comets in
nonconjugated (Non-conj) or Raji-conjugated (Conj) Jurkat cells. The box
plot shows the distribution of mean growth speeds of tracked EB3-GFP
comets per cell. In box plots, whiskers are set at 5–95
percentiles; horizontal lines mark the median, and boxes indicate
interquartile range (25–75%).
CKIδ promotes microtubule growth in Jurkat cells. (A)
Analysis of EB3-GFP comets in control (EV), CKIδ-depleted
(shdelta) Jurkat cell clones, and colcemid-treated EV cells. The box
plot shows the distribution of mean growth speeds of tracked EB3-GFP
comets per cell. On the right, an overlay of EB3 growth tracks collected
over 1 min is shown in individual cells (dots mark centrosome position).
Bar, 5 μm. (B) Maximum intensity projection of EB3-GFP signal in
individual cells over 28 sequential frames (0.5 s per frame).
Corresponding kymographs on the right show the growth of individual
microtubules in control (EV) and CKIδ-depleted (shdelta) Jurkat
cells. Bars, 5 µm. (C) Analysis of EB3-GFP comets in
nonconjugated (Non-conj) or Raji-conjugated (Conj) Jurkat cells. The box
plot shows the distribution of mean growth speeds of tracked EB3-GFP
comets per cell. In box plots, whiskers are set at 5–95
percentiles; horizontal lines mark the median, and boxes indicate
interquartile range (25–75%).As a result of the rapid movement of the centrosome that follows engagement
between Jurkat and Raji cells, it proved difficult to assay microtubule behavior
in Jurkat cells undergoing centrosome polarization. Instead, we measured
microtubule plus-end dynamics in Raji-conjugated Jurkat cells that already
polarized their centrosomes. 15–20 min after conjugation, Jurkat cells
displayed a 15% increase in mean microtubule growth speeds compared with
unconjugated T cells (Fig. 7 C). This
raises the possibility of a persistent change in microtubule behavior after
activation of T cells.
The CKI inhibitor D4476 reduces microtubule growth in epithelial
cells
To assess whether CKIδ contributes to microtubule behavior in cell types
other than lymphocytes, we first confirmed the interaction between CKIδ,
p150glued, and EB1 in retinal pigment epithelial (RPE1) cell
extracts (Fig. 8 A). Next, using the CKI
inhibitor D4476, we asked whether CKI function is required for microtubule
growth in RPE1 cells. Whereas EB3 growth tracks (i.e., comets that persist for a
minimum of four frames) were less frequent in Jurkat cells treated with 100
µM D4476 (Fig. 8 B), tracks were
significantly reduced in RPE1 cells treated with 50 µM D4476 (not
depicted). Yet, this dose did not prevent microtubule formation, as microtubules
regrew in 50 µM D4476 after cold-induced depolymerization (Fig. 8 C). 25 µM D4476 also
decreased EB3 track numbers but to a lesser extent (Fig. 8 D). The Golgi apparatus nucleates almost half of
all microtubules in RPE1 cells (Efimov et al.,
2007; Rivero et al., 2009)
and is in close proximity with the centrosome. To prevent Golgi-nucleated
microtubules from masking an effect on the centrosome, the Golgi apparatus was
dispersed by Brefeldin A (BFA), a fungal toxin that disassembles Golgi stacks
without affecting microtubule numbers or behavior in RPE1 cells (Efimov et al., 2007). Similar to Jurkat
cells, the focal plane containing the centrosome was selected for imaging. The
larger size and flat morphology of RPE1 allowed a more in-depth analysis of
microtubule behavior. 25 µM D4476 decreased growth and shrinkage speeds
and reduced microtubule dynamicity, a parameter describing the distance
plus-ends track while shrinking and growing over their lifetime (Fig. 8 E). To address whether this effect
was caused by inhibition of CKIδ, single clones of RPE1 cells carrying
shdelta shRNA were isolated. The best clones displayed ∼70% depletion,
but, when assayed with plusTipTracker, they showed normal plus-end microtubule
dynamics (unpublished data). Thus, the extent of CKIδ depletion in RPE1
cells is either suboptimal, or, perhaps, in these cells, CKIδ is
redundant with CKIε. Results obtained by D7746 treatment do not
distinguish between the respective roles of CKIδ and CKIε in the
process.
Figure 8.
Inhibition of CKI suppresses microtubule growth in epithelial
cells. (A, left) Cytoplasmic cell extracts (CCE) of RPE1
cells were processed for immunoprecipitation (ip) with random IgG
(control [con]) or anti-p150glued (p150glued)
antibodies. (right) Cytoplasmic cell extracts of RPE1 cells were
subjected to pull-down assays with GST, GST-EB1 (EB1), or GST-EB3 (EB3)
and were immunoblotted with antibodies as indicated. Recombinant GST
products are visible in Ponceau S staining below. WB, Western blotting.
(B) Analysis of EB3-GFP comets in Jurkat cells treated with DMSO or 100
µM D4476. The box plot shows the distribution of mean growth
speeds of tracked EB3-GFP comets per cell. (C) Microtubules were
depolymerized on ice in DMSO- or 50 µM D447-treated RPE1 cells.
Cells were then shifted to 37°C for 10 min to allow microtubule
polymerization. Cells are stained with anti–α-tubulin
antibodies. Bar, 10 µm. (D) Number of EB3-GFP growth tracks in
DMSO- or 25 µM D4476-treated RPE1 cells. The box plot shows the
number of EB3-GFP growth tracks per cell. (E) Analysis of EB3-GFP comets
in RPE1 cells treated with DMSO or 25 µM D4476. (left) The box
plot shows distribution of mean growth speeds of tracked EB3-GFP comets
per cell. (right) The table lists microtubule dynamic parameters by
plusTipTracker. Pshrink indicates the probability of shrinkage at the
end of grouped growth tracks. Pgrowth and Pfgap indicate the percentage
of time all microtubules spend in growth or in pause between growth
phases, respectively. **, P < 0.0001;
#, P = 0.05 (using permutation
t tests). In box plots, whiskers are set at
5–95 percentiles; horizontal lines mark the median, and boxes
indicate interquartile range (25–75%).
Inhibition of CKI suppresses microtubule growth in epithelial
cells. (A, left) Cytoplasmic cell extracts (CCE) of RPE1
cells were processed for immunoprecipitation (ip) with random IgG
(control [con]) or anti-p150glued (p150glued)
antibodies. (right) Cytoplasmic cell extracts of RPE1 cells were
subjected to pull-down assays with GST, GST-EB1 (EB1), or GST-EB3 (EB3)
and were immunoblotted with antibodies as indicated. Recombinant GST
products are visible in Ponceau S staining below. WB, Western blotting.
(B) Analysis of EB3-GFP comets in Jurkat cells treated with DMSO or 100
µM D4476. The box plot shows the distribution of mean growth
speeds of tracked EB3-GFP comets per cell. (C) Microtubules were
depolymerized on ice in DMSO- or 50 µM D447-treated RPE1 cells.
Cells were then shifted to 37°C for 10 min to allow microtubule
polymerization. Cells are stained with anti–α-tubulin
antibodies. Bar, 10 µm. (D) Number of EB3-GFP growth tracks in
DMSO- or 25 µM D4476-treated RPE1 cells. The box plot shows the
number of EB3-GFP growth tracks per cell. (E) Analysis of EB3-GFP comets
in RPE1 cells treated with DMSO or 25 µM D4476. (left) The box
plot shows distribution of mean growth speeds of tracked EB3-GFP comets
per cell. (right) The table lists microtubule dynamic parameters by
plusTipTracker. Pshrink indicates the probability of shrinkage at the
end of grouped growth tracks. Pgrowth and Pfgap indicate the percentage
of time all microtubules spend in growth or in pause between growth
phases, respectively. **, P < 0.0001;
#, P = 0.05 (using permutation
t tests). In box plots, whiskers are set at
5–95 percentiles; horizontal lines mark the median, and boxes
indicate interquartile range (25–75%).
Discussion
Using a candidate gene approach, we identified CKIδ as a crucial kinase
required for centrosome polarization to the IS in T cells. CKIδ binds and
phosphorylates EB1, and disruption of a putative EB1-binding motif in the kinase
perturbs its function in centrosome positioning. We propose that CKIδ-induced
changes in microtubule behavior may contribute to centrosome polarization during the
immune response.
Insight into the role of centrosome polarization in immune response
As depletion of CKIδ does not preclude IS formation, CKIδ-depleted
cells represent a useful tool to dissect the role of centrosome polarization in
IS assembly and function. In agreement with previously published observations
(Gomez et al., 2007), our results
indicate that the absence of centrosome from the IS does not preclude TCR
clustering, actin cap formation, and LFA-1 integrin accumulation. The basic
bull’s eye pattern of IS components is intact in the absence of a
centrosome at the IS (Billadeau et al.,
2007). Centrosome translocation to the IS is thought to contribute to
sustained TCR signaling, as dynein-depleted cells that did not polarize their
centrosomes failed to maintain TCR signaling beyond 15 min (Martín-Cófreces et al.,
2008). Despite defects in centrosome polarization, however,
CKIδ-depleted cells show normal induction and maintenance of early TCR
signaling. This discrepancy may be a result of dynein depletion having a more
profound effect on centrosome polarization than depletion of CKIδ (Martín-Cófreces et al.,
2008). Alternatively, dynein/dynactin may play additional roles in
TCR signaling.
The molecular interplay between CKIδ and EB1
We find that CKIδ binds and phosphorylates EB1 on Ser140 in vitro. Ser140
maps to a flexible linker region that lies between the N- and C-terminal
globular domains (Fig. 5 C). The precise
role of this linker is unclear, but it is required for full EB1 functionality
(Komarova et al., 2009; Buey et al., 2011). Phosphorylation of
EB1 by CKIδ may modulate its interactions with CAP-Gly, SxIP-containing
proteins, or even microtubules. The kinase might also phosphorylate other
EB1-binding proteins. Indeed, the dynactin subunit p150glued
coimmunoprecipitated with CKIδ, raising the possibility of a ternary
complex between EB1, p150glued, and CKIδ. CKIδ may also
be present in a complex with EB1 and APC. APC binds EB1 via a SQIP motif (Su et al., 1995; Honnappa et al., 2009) and is also a CKIδ
substrate (Gao et al., 2002).The conserved SQIP motif is neither necessary nor sufficient for the interaction
between EB1 and CKIδ, yet it is required for centrosome polarization in
intact cells. How can we explain this discrepancy? One possibility is that
CKIδ uses the motif for molecular interactions other than with EB1, and
these underlie its role in centrosome polarization. Alternatively, the SQIP
motif may contribute to the EB1–CKIδ interaction in intact cells.
Indeed, in the case of the highly similar CKIε, there is evidence that
the C-terminal tail can influence substrate binding, even though substrate
specificity is conferred by the kinase domain (Dahlberg et al., 2009). Therefore, the C-terminal tail of
CKIδ could stabilize binding between the kinase and EB1.
The roles of CKIδ in microtubule dynamics and centrosome polarization
in T cells
Although our study clearly implicates CKIδ in regulating both microtubule
growth and centrosome polarization, a conclusive link between the two roles
remains to be established. Centrosome polarization in T cells activated by
CD3-coated surfaces does not depend on dynamic microtubules (Baratt et al., 2008). Our results are
consistent with this finding, as we had to use 50 nM colcemid to impair
centrosome polarization, which is greater than the minimal concentration
required for suppressing microtubule dynamics (Jordan and Wilson, 2004; Yang et
al., 2010). Instead of dynamic microtubules by itself, centrosome
positioning in cells seems sensitive to microtubule length and numbers (Baratt et al., 2008; Kim and Maly, 2009; Maly and Maly, 2010). Indeed, short microtubules cannot polarize
centrosomes effectively (Kupfer and Dennert,
1984), whereas overly long microtubules interfere with centrosome
polarization to and centrosome positioning within the IS (Baratt et al., 2008). Regulators of microtubule dynamics
contribute to steady-state microtubule length (Verde et al., 1992; Tournebize et
al., 2000). Therefore, we postulate that when CKIδ function is
impaired in cells, lower growth speeds generate microtubule populations of
suboptimal length to mediate centrosome translocation. One caveat of using
+TIPs to characterize microtubule behavior is the inability to detect
catastrophes. However, 50 nM colcemid in CHO cells reduces growth speeds,
dynamicity, and shrinkage rates, yet it does not alter catastrophe frequencies
(Yang et al., 2010). Thus, the
effect of colcemid on centrosome polarization in Jurkat cells is unlikely to be
a result of a change in catastrophe rates. Unlike colcemid in CHO cells (Yang et al., 2010), D4476 did not
increase pause times in RPE1 cells, indicating that the two drugs have distinct
mechanisms of action. The molecular mechanism by which CKIδ promotes
microtubule growth remains to be identified but likely targets include EB1 and
APC. The clustering of APC at microtubule plus-ends near the leading edge of
migrating cells contributes to centrosome reorientation (Etienne-Manneville and Hall, 2003; Etienne-Manneville et al., 2005). The CKI inhibitor D4476
reduced the number of these APC clusters and perturbed directed cell migration
(Harris and Nelson, 2010).
Therefore, CKI could modulate local microtubule behavior via APC.EB1 also participates in microtubule anchoring at the centrosome together with
dynactin (Askham et al., 2002), CAP350,
and FGFR1 oncogene partner (Yan et al.,
2006). As an integral centrosomal protein, CKIδ is well placed
to contribute to microtubule anchoring at the centrosome (Askham et al., 2002; Ligon et al., 2003; Yan et al.,
2006; Vitre et al., 2008).
Such a function could be particularly important for centrosome polarization in T
cells, as forces generated by dynein at the cell cortex can only translocate the
centrosome if these are balanced by microtubule anchoring within the centrosome
or other microtubule bundling/cross-linking activity near the centrosome.
Colcemid treatment of Jurkat cells partially mimicked effects of CKIδ
depletion in terms of lowering microtubule growth speeds and centrosome
polarization. Interestingly, similar concentrations of colcemid in CHO cells
cause microtubule release from the centrosome (Yang et al., 2010).Finally, EB1 function has also been implicated in interactions between the cortex
and microtubules (Lee et al., 2000;
Buttrick et al., 2008). Although we
could not observe CKIδ at the IS and our results are more consistent with
a role for CKIδ in generating rather than capturing long microtubules,
CKIε has been recently reported to promote dynein-dependent trafficking
of pigment granules in Xenopus laevis melanophores (Ikeda et al., 2011). Therefore, it is
feasible that CKIδ travels to the cortex on microtubule plus-ends with
EB1, where it subsequently phosphorylates dynein enriched at the IS.
Phosphorylation could enhance the minus-end–directed motility of dynein.
Whether or how TCR signaling modulates CKIδ activity remains to be
established. Last but not least, the involvement of CKI family members in Wnt
and Hedgehog signaling (Price, 2006)
raises the question whether these signaling pathways could play a role in
modulating cell polarity during immune response.
Materials and methods
Cell lines, drugs, and reagents
The Jurkat E6.1 and Raji cell lines were obtained from Cancer Research UK Cell
Services and grown in RPMI1640 containing 5 (Jurkat) or 10% (Raji) FBS
supplemented with penicillin and streptomycin. hTERT-RPE1 cells were obtained
from the American Type Culture Collection and grown in DMEM:F12 (Life
Technologies) containing 10% FBS supplemented with penicillin and streptomycin.
For time-lapse imaging, cells were incubated in serum-free Leibovitz medium
(Life Technologies). The Phoenix amphotrophic packaging cell line was a gift
from M. Narita (Cancer Research UK Cambridge Research Institute, Cambridge,
England, UK). D4476 was obtained from Merck Biosciences. PF-670462, LY364947,
and colcemid were obtained from Tocris Bioscience. SEE was purchased from Toxin
Technology, Inc. BFA was purchased from Enzo Life Sciences. Cell Tracker blue
CMAC was obtained from Life Technologies, and Paclitaxel and
poly-l-lysine were obtained from Sigma-Aldrich.
Antibodies
The primary antibodies used in this study were mouse monoclonal antibodies
against γ-tubulin (GTU88; Sigma-Aldrich); α-tubulin (Dm1α;
Sigma-Aldrich); p150glued (BD); DIC (clone 70.1; Sigma-Aldrich);
LFA-1 (TS1/22), CD3 (OKT3), and EB1 (Cancer Research UK Clare Hall
laboratories); rabbit polyclonal antibodies against CDK5RAP2 (Bethyl
Laboratories, Inc.); pericentrin (Covance); ZAP-70, LAT, PY352-ZAP-70, and
PY191-LAT (Cell Signaling Technology); and rabbit monoclonal antibodies against
Vav and PY174-Vav (Epitomics, Inc.). CKIδ was detected with goat (Abcam)
antibodies, CKIδ-2 and CKIα with rabbit antibodies (Bethyl
Laboratories, Inc.), and CKIε with a mouse monoclonal antibody (BD).
Phalloidin-TRITC and Alexa Fluor–labeled secondary antibodies (Alexa
Fluor 488, 555, or 647) were obtained from Life Technologies.
Expression vectors and transfections
Jurkat cells (3 × 106) were transfected with 1.5 µg of
plasmid DNA using the cell line nucleofector kit V and the program X-001
(Lonza). Modified MSCV-miR30puro vector was a gift from S. Lowe (Cold Spring
Harbor Laboratory, Cold Spring Harbor, NY). pEGFP-centrin1 (Piel et al., 2000) was provided by M.
Bornens (Institut Curie, Paris, France). EB3-GFP was a gift from A. Akhmanova
(Utrecht University, Utrecht, Netherlands). CKIδ and
CKIδ-ΔC were subcloned into pEGFP-C1 (Takara Bio Inc.) vector to
generate GFP fusion proteins. GFP-CKIδ-NN was generated using the
QuikChange site-directed mutagenesis kit (Agilent Technologies). EB1 and
CKIδ were inserted in frame into pGex6P2 to create GST fusions. aa
278–415 of CKIδ (ΔKD) was inserted in frame into pMalc4x to
create maltose-binding protein (MBP)–ΔKD fusion.
Retrovirus-mediated RNAi
Oligonucleotides containing shRNAs specific for the CSNK1D,
CSNK1E, or CSNK1A genes were designed as
follows. First, target sequences were selected using the prediction algorithm
developed by the Novartis Institutes for BioMedical Research (access to the
Software was provided by the Friedrich Miescher Institute). The 19-mer short
hairpin sequences used were CSNK1D: shdelta
5′-CGATGAGAACTCTCCTT-3′ (3′ UTR target) and shdeltaB
5′-GGGATGTGAAGCCAGACAA-3′; CSNK1E: sheps
5′-CCTCCGAATTCTCAACATA-3′; and CSNK1A: shalpha
5′-AGAACTTAATTTCAGTATA-3′.Corresponding 110-bp shRNA oligonucleotides were then designed from the Cold
Spring Harbor Hannon laboratory website for cloning into the miR30 context of
the modified MSCV-miR30puro vector. XhoI and EcoRI overhangs were added for
direct cloning into the modified MSCV-miR30puro vector (a gift from M. Narita
and S. Lowe). Empty MSCV-miR30puro vector was used as a control (EV). These
constructs were transfected in amphotrophic Phoenix cells by the calcium
phosphate method, and viral supernatants were collected 48 h after transfection
and were added to Jurkat or RPE1 cells (1 ml of viral supernatant was mixed with
106 cells). Polybrene was added to 5 µg/ml to Jurkat
cells, and mixtures were centrifuged at 1,300 g for 45 min. 0.6
µg/ml puromycin was added 48 h after infection to select for stable
integration events. Single cell clones were generated by dilution cloning in the
presence of puromycin. Depletion of CKI isoforms was assessed by
immunoblotting.
Conjugate formation
Raji cells were pulsed with 1 µg/ml SEE for 1 h, stained with 10 µM
CMAC for 20 min, washed three times in RPMI 1640 media containing 5% FBS, and
mixed with Jurkat cells at a 1:2 ratio (105 Raji and 2.105
Jurkat for one 13-mm-diameter coverslip). Conjugates were allowed to form for 20
min on poly-l-lysine–coated glass coverslips at 37°C
before fixation.
Immunofluorescence, image acquisition, and analysis
Cells were fixed in cold methanol (for γ-tubulin, pericentrin, CDK5RAP2,
and EB1 staining), 3.7% formaldehyde (for LFA-1, CD3, and phalloidin staining),
and 3% PFA (for DIC) or 3% PFA/0.25% glutaraldehyde (for α-tubulin and
CDK5RAP2 staining). Permeabilization was achieved with 0.2% saponin or 0.2%
Triton X-100 for 2 min. For microtubule regrowth experiments, RPE1 cells were
incubated in PBS/0.1% Triton X-100 for 1 min before methanol fixation. Blocking
was performed in PBS/5% BSA followed by incubation with the relevant primary and
secondary antibodies. Coverslips were mounted in ProLong Gold (Life
Technologies) and imaged with a 60× oil/1.40 NA objective on a scanning
confocal microscope (Eclipse 90i; Nikon) fitted with a camera (Eclipse C1Si;
Nikon). Images were acquired using EZ-C1 software (Nikon). The images presented
are 3D projections of z stacks (0.5-µm steps). Images of any individual
figure were acquired using the same settings and were imported into Volocity
(PerkinElmer) and Photoshop software (Adobe) before being processed in an
identical manner. Images were adjusted to use the full range of pixel
intensities in Photoshop CS4. The fluorochromes used in this study were Alexa
fluorophores (Life Technologies) Alexa Fluor 488, 555, and 637. Raji cells were
visualized with CMAC, a cell tracker dye. For time-lapse imaging of Raji/Jurkat
conjugates, SEE-pulsed CMAC-stained Raji cells were allowed to adhere onto a
poly-l-lysine–coated glass-bottom dish (MatTek Corporation)
for 10 min in Leibovitz medium. Dishes were then transferred to an incubation
chamber (Tokai Hit) at 37°C. Jurkat cells expressing centrin-GFP were
added to the dish to initiate conjugate formation. For microtubule plus-end
analysis, EB3-GFP–transfected Jurkat or RPE1 cells were seeded onto
poly-l-lysine–coated glass-bottom dishes and were filmed in
Leibovitz medium. All live-cell imaging was performed using a spinning-disk
confocal system (PerkinElmer), mounted on an inverted microscope (Eclipse
TE2000-S; Nikon), and equipped with an electron microscope charge-coupled device
digital camera (C9100-13; Hamamatsu Photonics). A 60×/1.40 NA oil
immersion objective was used to film conjugate formation (Fig. 2 and Videos 1–4), whereas a 100×/1.40
NA oil immersion objective was used to analyze microtubules (Figs. 4, 7 and 8 and Videos
5–7). Multiple fields were imaged every 3 or 4 min (Fig. 2 and Videos 1–4) or every minute (Fig. 4 and Video 5) as z stacks
(1-µm steps) using Volocity (version 5.0). For EB3-GFP signal, a single
focal plane containing the centrosome was imaged at a 2-Hz frame rate. 2D
volume-rendered image sequences were exported as QuickTime files. For video
stills, snapshots of 2D volume-rendered time points were taken in Volocity and
were processed as previously described.
Quantitative analysis of microtubule plus-end behavior
The MATLAB-based open source software package plusTipTracker (Matov et al., 2010) was downloaded and
used according to the accompanying technical report to analyze videos of Jurkat
and RPE1 cells transfected with EB3-GFP and acquired as described under image
acquisition. The following settings were used in plusTipTracker: maximum gap
length (frames) was set to 14; maximum angle for forward growth was set to 30;
maximum angle for backward growth was set to 10; minimum subtrack length
(frames) was set to 4; search radius range (pixels) was set to 5–10; and
max shrinkage factor (relative to growth speed) was set to 1.5. The cortex of
Jurkat cells was excluded from the analysis using the sub-ROI feature of
plusTipTracker. This was necessary, as the signal-to-noise ratio was poor in
this region as a result of the roundness of the cell. In RPE1 cells, all comets
were included in analyses. Kymographs were produced in ImageJ (National
Institutes of Health) using the kymograph plugin.
Western blots and immunoprecipitation
Cell pellets were washed in ice-cold PBS and lysed in a buffer containing 50 mMTris-HCl, pH 8, 1% NP-40, 150 mMNaCl, 10% glycerol, and cocktails of protease
and phosphatase inhibitors (Sigma-Aldrich). Postnuclear supernatants were
separated by SDS-PAGE. Immunoblotting was performed using the relevant primary
and peroxidase-labeled secondary antibodies (Dako) and quantified by
densitometry using the ImageJ software. For immunoprecipitation, 107
Jurkat cells were washed in serum-free RPMI, left untreated or mixed with 5
× 106 anti-CD3 antibody–bound MACSi beads (T cell
activation and expansion kit; Miltenyi Biotec) at 37°C for 20 min, and
treated with 1 µg/ml cytochalasin D and 2 µM nocodazole for 30 min
before lysis in 1 mMHepes, pH 7, 0.5% NP-40, 50 µM MgCl2, and
0.1% β-mercaptoethanol, supplemented with protease inhibitors.
Postnuclear supernatants were then incubated with Dynabeads (Life Technologies)
coupled to anti-p150glued or random IgG antibodies for 2 h at
4°C. The beads were washed four times and eluted with 0.1 M glycine, pH
2.2. The neutralized eluates (1 M Tris, pH 8) were separated by SDS-PAGE and
analyzed by immunoblotting.
Protein purification and GST pull-down assays
Recombinant MBP and GST fusions were expressed in Escherichia
coli T7 Express (New England Biolabs, Inc.) and purified using
amylose resin (New England Biolabs, Inc.) or glutathioneSepharose beads (GE
Healthcare), respectively. For GST pull-downs, Jurkat cells were lysed in a
buffer containing 30 mMHepes, pH 7.4, 150 mMNaCl, and 1% TX-100, supplemented
with protease and phosphatase inhibitors. Beads were washed in lysis buffer,
added to cytoplasmic cell extract, and incubated for 2 h at 4°C before
extensive washing in wash buffer (30 mMHepes, pH 7.4, 150 mMNaCl, and 0.1%
TX-100). Beads were boiled in 2× SDS-PAGE loading buffer. Complexes were
separated by SDS-PAGE and analysis by immunoblotting.
Microtubule pelleting and microtubule regrowth
Whole Jurkat cell extracts were made in a lysis buffer containing 50 mMTris-HCl,
pH 7.4, 5 mMMgCl2, 0.1 mMEGTA, and 0.5% Triton X-100, supplemented
with protease and phosphatase inhibitor cocktails, and passed through a 26G
gauge needle 10 times. After a first spin at 13,000 g, the
cytoplasmic extracts were precleared at 189,000 g for 20 min at
4°C. After addition of 0.5 mMMgGTP and 2 mMMgATP, extracts were warmed
to RT before sequential addition of 5 µM taxol (or DMSO for control
extracts) and 15 µM taxol (or DMSO for control extracts). Tubulin was
obtained from Cytoskeleton. Taxol-stabilized microtutubules (0.2 mg/ml) or
nontaxol-treated tubulin (control extracts; 0.2 mg/ml) was added, and extracts
were incubated at 30°C for 30 min before layering onto a 1 M sucrose
cushion made in BRB80 buffer (80 mMPipes, pH 6.8, 1 mMMgCl2, and 1
mMEGTA) with 0.5 mMATP and with or without 10 µM taxol. Microtubules
were pelleted at 69,500 g for 20 min at 22°C.
Supernatants were removed and saved for immunoblotting. Pellets were washed
twice in BRB80 and resuspended in 1× SDS-PAGE loading buffer to one
fourth of the volume of supernatant. For microtubule regrowth experiments, RPE1
cells were treated for 2 h with 5 µg/ml BFA and chilled on ice for 45 min
before being transferred to a 37°C incubator for the indicated time
period.
Kinase assay
For assay 1, 5 µg GST-EB1 was mixed with CKIδ[aa 1–318] (the
number of units is indicated in Fig. 5 A;
Promega). For assay 2, to remove the GST tag from GST-EB1, 300 µg GST-EB1
was incubated with 10 µl PreScission protease (GE Healthcare) for 4 h on
ice following the manufacturer’s instruction. Uncleaved GST-EB1 was
captured by glutathioneSepharose. 5 µg of EB1 was then mixed with
GST-CKIδ (the number of units is indicated in Fig. 5 A; Life Technologies). Assays were performed in 25
mMTris-HCl, pH 7.4, 10 mMMgCl2, 1 mMDTT, 0.01% Triton X-100, and
0.1 mMATP (apart from no ATP condition). Reactions were incubated for 5 min at
37°C and then boiled in SDS 4× sample buffer and separated by
SDS-PAGE.
Peptide separation, mass spectrometry, and database analysis
Digested peptides mixtures were subjected to liquid chromatography tandem mass
spectrometry (MS/MS) using a mass spectrometer (LTQ Orbitrap Velos; Thermo
Fisher Scientific) coupled to a rapid separation liquid chromatography system
(UltiMate Nano LC; Dionex Corporation) fitted with an Acclaim PepMap100 column
(C18, 3 µm, and 100 Å; Dionex Corporation) with an internal
diameter of 75 µm and a capillary length of 25 cm. A flow rate of 350
nL/min was used with a solvent gradient of 5 to 50% solvent B in 57 min. Solvent
A was 0.1% (volume/volume) formic acid, and aqueous 80% (volume/volume)
acetonitrile in 0.1% (volume/volume) formic acid was used as solvent B. The mass
spectrometer was operated using an Nth order double play method to automatically
switch between Orbitrap mass spectrometry and LTQ Velos MS/MS acquisition.
Survey full-scan Mass spectra (from m/z 400 to 1,600) were acquired in the
Orbitrap with a resolution of 60,000 at m/z 400 (after accumulation to a target
of 1,000,000 charges in the LTQ). The method used allowed sequential isolation
of the 20 most intense ions for fragmentation in the linear ion trap, depending
on signal intensity, using collision-induced dissociation at a target value of
5,000 charges. For accurate mass measurements, the lock mass option was enabled
in mass spectrometry mode, and the polydimethylcyclosiloxane ions generated in
the electrospray process from ambient air were used for internal recalibration
during the analysis. Target ions already selected for MS/MS were dynamically
excluded for 60 s. General mass spectrometry conditions were as follows: an
electrospray voltage at 1.76 kV with no sheath or auxiliary gas flow and an ion
selection threshold of 1,000 counts for MS/MS. An activation Q value of 0.25, an
activation time of 30 ms, a capillary temperature of 250°C, and an S-Lens
radio frequency level of 60% were also applied for MS/MS. Raw files were
processed using Proteome Discoverer software (version 1.3; Thermo Fisher
Scientific). Processed files were searched against the Swiss-Prot human database
using the Mascot search engine (version 2.3.0; Matrix Science). The possible
structure modifications allowed were carbamidomethyl cysteine as a fixed
modification. Oxidized methionine, deamidation of asparagine and glutamine,
phosphorylated serine, threonine, and tyrosine were searched as variable
modifications. Searches were performed with tryptic specificity, allowing up to
two miscleavages and a tolerance on mass measurement of 10 parts per million in
mass spectrometry mode and 0.6 D for MS/MS ions. Phosphorylation sites assigned
by Mascot were cross-checked against the fragmentation data in Proteome
Discoverer.
Centrosome purification
Centrosomes were purified as described in Bornens and Moudjou (1999). In brief, Jurkat cytoplasmic cell
lysates were spun onto 2 ml of 60% sucrose cushion in an SW40 rotor at 10,000
g for 30 min. Centrosome-containing supernatant was then
loaded onto a discontinuous sucrose gradient consisting of 1 ml of 70% sucrose,
600 µl of 50% sucrose, and 600 µl of 40% sucrose. Samples were
centrifuged for 2 h at 120,000 g in an SW55 Ti rotor. Fractions
were collected by punching a small hole in the bottom of the centrifuge tube.
After addition of 10 mMPipes-KOH, pH 7.2, centrosomes in each fraction were
pelleted at 115,000 g in the MLA-55 rotor in an ultracentrifuge
(Beckman Coulter).
Statistical analyses
Prism software (GraphPad Software) was used for statistical data analysis. Error
bars are mean ± SD. Normality was tested with a D’Agostino and
Pearson omnibus test, and equality of variance among datasets was tested with an
F-test. Apart from microtubule growth parameters (in the table of Fig. 8 E) that were analyzed using
permutation t tests, p-values have been derived by two-tailed
unpaired Student’s t test or t test
with Welch correction when variances were unequal.
Online supplemental material
Fig. S1 shows criteria for scoring centrosome polarization in Fig. 1 (A and D). Fig. S2 illustrates that
depleting CKIδ with a different CSNK1D-specific shRNA
affects centrosome polarization and that CKIα is not required for
centrosome polarization. Fig. S3 demonstrates that CKIδ lacking the SQIP
domain still interacts with EB1. Fig. S4 shows that CKIδ isoform-2
promotes centrosome polarization and binds EB1. Fig. S5 shows the microtubule
network in CKIδ-depleted and colcemid-treated cells. Videos 1–4,
5, and 6 and 7 correspond to Figs. 2 A,
4 A, and 7 B, respectively. Conjugate formation between SEE-pulsed
Raji cells and control (EV) or CKIδ-depleted Jurkat cells expressing
GFP-centrin is depicted in Videos 1 and 2 or Videos 3 and 4, respectively. Video
5 corresponds to Fig. 4 A and shows
conjugate formation between SEE-pulsed Raji cells and Jurkat cells transfected
with GFP-CKIδ. Videos 6 and 7 show EB3-GFP comets in control (EV) and
CKIδ-depleted Jurkat cells. Online supplemental material is available at
http://www.jcb.org/cgi/content/full/jcb.201106025/DC1.
Authors: R Tournebize; A Popov; K Kinoshita; A J Ashford; S Rybina; A Pozniakovsky; T U Mayer; C E Walczak; E Karsenti; A A Hyman Journal: Nat Cell Biol Date: 2000-01 Impact factor: 28.824
Authors: Yulia Komarova; Christian O De Groot; Ilya Grigoriev; Susana Montenegro Gouveia; E Laura Munteanu; Joseph M Schober; Srinivas Honnappa; Rubén M Buey; Casper C Hoogenraad; Marileen Dogterom; Gary G Borisy; Michel O Steinmetz; Anna Akhmanova Journal: J Cell Biol Date: 2009-03-02 Impact factor: 10.539
Authors: Peter Jan Hooikaas; Hugo Gj Damstra; Oane J Gros; Wilhelmina E van Riel; Maud Martin; Yesper Th Smits; Jorg van Loosdregt; Lukas C Kapitein; Florian Berger; Anna Akhmanova Journal: Elife Date: 2020-12-21 Impact factor: 8.140