Literature DB >> 22298427

Roles of putative Rho-GEF Gef2 in division-site positioning and contractile-ring function in fission yeast cytokinesis.

Yanfang Ye1, I-Ju Lee, Kurt W Runge, Jian-Qiu Wu.   

Abstract

Cytokinesis is crucial for integrating genome inheritance and cell functions. In multicellular organisms, Rho-guanine nucleotide exchange factors (GEFs) and Rho GTPases are key regulators of division-plane specification and contractile-ring formation during cytokinesis, but how they regulate early steps of cytokinesis in fission yeast remains largely unknown. Here we show that putative Rho-GEF Gef2 and Polo kinase Plo1 coordinate to control the medial cortical localization and function of anillin-related protein Mid1. The division-site positioning defects of gef2Δ plo1-ts18 double mutant can be partially rescued by increasing Mid1 levels. We find that Gef2 physically interacts with the Mid1 N-terminus and modulates Mid1 cortical binding. Gef2 localization to cortical nodes and the contractile ring depends on its last 145 residues, and the DBL-homology domain is important for its function in cytokinesis. Our data suggest the interaction between Rho-GEFs and anillins is an important step in the signaling pathways during cytokinesis. In addition, Gef2 also regulates contractile-ring function late in cytokinesis and may negatively regulate the septation initiation network. Collectively, we propose that Gef2 facilitates and stabilizes Mid1 binding to the medial cortex, where the localized Mid1 specifies the division site and induces contractile-ring assembly.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22298427      PMCID: PMC3315812          DOI: 10.1091/mbc.E11-09-0800

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Biol Cell        ISSN: 1059-1524            Impact factor:   4.138


INTRODUCTION

Cytokinesis, the last stage of the cell cycle, partitions a mother cell into two daughter cells. Cytokinesis requires coordination of four key events: division-plane selection, contractile-ring assembly, constriction and disassembly of the contractile ring, and plasma membrane fusion and daughter-cell separation (Balasubramanian ; Barr and Gruneberg, 2007; Pollard and Wu, 2010). The last step involves septum formation in fungi and midbody formation in animal cells. To ensure that daughter cells faithfully inherit chromosomes from mother cells, cytokinesis must be tightly spatiotemporally controlled and coordinated with mitosis (Storchova and Pellman, 2004). Cytokinesis failure leads to genomic instability and tumorigenesis (Fujiwara ; Sagona and Stenmark, 2010). In animal cells signals from the central spindle/spindle midzone, astral microtubules, or both are required to ensure that cytokinetic events occur properly on the cell cortex (Bringmann and Hyman, 2005; Cabernard ). Many studies have shown that the Polo kinase/Rho‑guanine nucleotide exchange factor (GEF)/Rho GTPase module regulates the signaling from the central spindle to the cortex to trigger contractile-ring assembly and cytokinesis (Petronczki ). At anaphase, the conserved Polo kinase promotes the complex formation of Cyk‑4/MgcRacGAP/RacGAP50C, a subunit of the centralspindlin complex, and Ect2/Pebble, a Rho-GEF (Petronczki ; Wolfe ). Binding of Ect2 to Cyk-4 recruits Ect2 to the division site (Somers and Saint, 2003; Yüce ; Zhao and Fang, 2005; Nishimura and Yonemura, 2006). This determines the cleavage plane by locally activating GTPase RhoA, which in turn recruits and activates downstream effectors, such as anillin, nonmuscle myosin-II, and actin nucleator formin, eventually leading to contractile-ring formation and cleavage-furrow ingression (Hall, 1998; Shandala ; Gregory ; Hickson and O'Farrell, 2008; Piekny and Glotzer, 2008; Piekny and Maddox, 2010). The Polo/GEF/Rho module is also conserved in the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, in which Polo kinase Cdc5 phosphorylates and recruits Rho-GEF Tus1 to the bud neck (Yoshida ). The Rho-GEF promotes Rho1 recruitment and activation and consequently induces actomyosin-ring formation and cytokinesis (Tolliday ; Yoshida ). Cells of the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe are rod shaped and divide by medial fission. The anillin-like protein Mid1 and its regulators Polo kinase Plo1 and DYRK kinase Pom1 specify the division site in fission yeast (Almonacid and Paoletti, 2010). During interphase, Mid1 shuttles between the nucleus and interphase nodes on the plasma membrane near the nucleus (Sohrmann ; Bähler ; Paoletti and Chang, 2000). Nodes refer to discrete protein clusters (20–65) on the equatorial plasma membrane (Wu ; Laporte , 2011). Pom1 kinase forms a polar gradient on the plasma membrane and confines Mid1 to the cell middle through Cdr2 kinase (Celton-Morizur ; Padte ; Huang ; Almonacid ; Martin and Berthelot-Grosjean, 2009; Moseley ; Hachet ). Cdr2 establishes interphase nodes by recruiting Cdr1 kinase, Mid1, Blt1, Rho-GEF Gef2, kinesin-like protein Klp8, and Wee1 kinase (Breeding ; Morrell ; Martin and Berthelot-Grosjean, 2009; Moseley ). The Pom1 gradient and interphase nodes coordinate to regulate cell size and mitotic entry (Martin and Berthelot-Grosjean, 2009; Moseley ; Hachet ). Besides Cdr2's role in recruiting Mid1 by binding to its N-terminus (Almonacid ), functions of other interphase-node proteins in cytokinesis are unknown. At G2/M transition, Mid1 is phosphorylated by Plo1 at multiple sites and completely exits from the nucleus to form cytokinesis nodes at cell equator (Bähler ; Paoletti and Chang, 2000; Almonacid ). Mid1 in cytokinesis nodes recruits essential contractile-ring components, IQGAP Rng2, myosin-II (heavy chain Myo2 and light chains Cdc4 and Rlc1), F-BAR protein Cdc15, and the formin Cdc12 to form mature cytokinesis nodes, the precursors of the contractile ring (Wu , 2006; Almonacid ; Laporte ; Padmanabhan ). Cdc12 nucleates the majority of actin filaments for contractile-ring formation (Kovar ; Coffman ). The nodes condense into a compact contractile ring by interactions between actin filaments and myosin-II through a search, capture, pull, and release mechanism at early mitosis (Bähler ; Wu ; Vavylonis ; Coffman ; Laporte ; Ojkic ). The ring matures by increasing Cdc15 concentration and by recruiting other components during anaphase B under the regulation of the septation initiation network (SIN) pathway (Wu ; Wu and Pollard, 2005; Hachet and Simanis, 2008; Huang ). At the onset of ring constriction after spindle breakdown, Mid1 disappears from the contractile ring and returns to the nucleus and then to interphase nodes (Paoletti and Chang, 2000; Wu ). Although Mid1 is essential for division-site positioning and cytokinesis-node formation, it is not essential for contractile-ring formation. Without Mid1, the Plo1-activated SIN pathway is required for ring assembly (Hachet and Simanis, 2008; Huang ), although this pathway is involved in ring maturation in mid1 cells (Wu ). While the Mid1-independent pathway is capable of ring formation, it is far less efficient than the Mid1-dependent pathway and cannot position the division plane correctly. Plo1 is involved in both pathways for ring assembly, suggesting that Plo1 is a key regulator in cytokinesis. However, whether Rho-GEFs and Rho GTPases regulate division-site selection and contractile-ring assembly in S. pombe remains largely unknown. S. pombe contains six Rho GTPases (Cdc42 and Rho1–5) and seven Rho GEFs (Scd1, Gef1–3, and Rgf1–3). Cdc42 mainly controls cell polarity, and Scd1 and Gef1 induce its activation (Coll ; Hirota ). Rho1 is a regulatory subunit of (1,3)-β-d-glucan synthase and regulates cell wall/septum formation, as well as cell polarization. Rho1 is activated by Rgf1–3 (Tajadura ; Morrell-Falvey ; Mutoh ; Garcia , 2009a, 2009b; Wu ). Rho2 and Rho5 are also involved in cell wall/septum formation (Calonge ; Nakano ). Rho3 modulates exocytosis and cell polarity (Nakano ; Wang ). Rho4 regulates septum degradation (Santos ). Although Rgf3 might be involved in contractile-ring assembly (Mutoh ), no Rho-GEFs and Rho GTPases have been shown to play a role in division-site positioning. The functions of Gef2 and Gef3 are unknown, but the localization of Gef2 in cortical nodes and the contractile ring implies that Gef2 might play a role in early cytokinesis (Iwaki ; Moseley ). In this study, we find that putative Rho-GEF Gef2 is involved in division-site and contractile-ring positioning by interacting with anillin-related protein Mid1. This function overlaps with that of Polo kinase Plo1. In addition, Gef2 also stabilizes the contractile ring during its constriction. Thus the Rho-GEF does have a function in early stages of cytokinesis in fission yeast.

RESULTS

Putative Rho-GEF Gef2 and Polo kinase Plo1 coordinate to regulate division-site and contractile-ring positioning

We hypothesized that functional redundancy is responsible for the lack of obvious phenotypes of Rho-GEF mutants in early stages of cytokinesis (see Introduction). To elucidate this overlapping function, synthetic interactions between Rho-GEF mutants (rgf1Δ, rgf2Δ, 81nmt1-rgf3, gef1Δ, and gef2Δ) and mutations that affect early stages of cytokinesis were investigated. We found that gef2∆ had synthetic negative interactions with plo1, mid1, cdc4-8, rng2-D5, and myo2-E1 mutants. Among these interactions, gef2∆ showed strongest synthetic defects with plo1-ts18 and mid1 mutants, which were chosen for further studies. gef2∆ cells resembled wild-type (wt) cells with a septum at the cell center and perpendicular to the cell long axis during cytokinesis, as reported (Iwaki ). In this study, we defined a septum formed within the central 20% of the cell as a normal septum (Figure 1, A and B). At 25°C, 7% cells with abnormal septa were observed (Figure 1, A and B) in plo1-ts18 mutant, which has a mutation in the kinase domain and severe defects in division-site positioning and contractile-ring assembly at 36°C (MacIver ). In contrast, ∼95% gef2∆ plo1-ts18 double-mutant cells formed abnormal septa at 25°C, many septa were aberrant or even parallel to the cell long axis (Figure 1, A and B). Similar results were observed in the double mutants of gef2∆ and other plo1 temperature-sensitive alleles at 32°C (Supplemental Figure S1).
FIGURE 1:

Putative Rho-GEF Gef2 is required for division-site positioning and contractile-ring assembly when Polo kinase Plo1 function is compromised. Cells were grown and examined at 25°C. (A) Septum-positioning defects of gef2∆ plo1-ts18 mutant. Top, differential interference contrast (DIC). Bottom, calcofluor staining of the same cells. Strains used were wt (JW2556; see Supplemental Table S1), gef2∆ (JW3184), plo1-ts18 (JW3079), and gef2∆ plo1-ts18 (JW3078). (B) Quantification of septum positioning in calcofluor-stained cells as in A. In this and other figures, we defined a septum formed within the central 20% of the cell as a normal septum. (C) Defects in contractile-ring assembly and positioning in gef2∆ plo1-ts18 cells. Ring formation was examined in wt, gef2∆, plo1-ts18, and gef2∆ plo1-ts18 cells expressing mYFP-Myo2 Sad1-CFP (JW3547, JW3546, JW3066, and JW3067), mYFP‑Cdc15 CFP-Atb2 (JW3186, JW3185, JW3076, and JW3077), and GFP-CHD Rlc1-tdTomato (JW3554, JW3555, JW3230, and JW3229). GFP-CHD expression was induced for 21 h in EMM5S medium without thiamine. (D–F) Time courses (in minutes) of ring formation in wt (JW3547), gef2∆ (JW3546), plo1-ts18 (JW3066), and gef2∆ plo1-ts18 (JW3067) cells expressing mYFP-Myo2 and Sad1-CFP. (D, E) Time 0 is the time of SPB separation. (D) Arrowheads indicate the appearance of mYFP-Myo2 nodes or signal (in gef2∆ plo1-ts18 cells). Images are maximum-intensity projections of seven z-projections at 0.75-μm spacing. (E) Timing of mYFP-Myo2 signal appearance in cytokinesis nodes at the cell equator or a random location (for gef2∆ plo1-ts18 cells only). (F) Duration of mYFP-Myo2 compact ring (without lagging nodes) formation from the appearance of nodes. Because gef2∆ plo1-ts18 cells did not form rings during the movie or had severe delay in the formation of misplaced rings, no quantification is shown. **p < 0.01. Bars, 10 μm.

Putative Rho-GEF Gef2 is required for division-site positioning and contractile-ring assembly when Polo kinase Plo1 function is compromised. Cells were grown and examined at 25°C. (A) Septum-positioning defects of gef2∆ plo1-ts18 mutant. Top, differential interference contrast (DIC). Bottom, calcofluor staining of the same cells. Strains used were wt (JW2556; see Supplemental Table S1), gef2∆ (JW3184), plo1-ts18 (JW3079), and gef2∆ plo1-ts18 (JW3078). (B) Quantification of septum positioning in calcofluor-stained cells as in A. In this and other figures, we defined a septum formed within the central 20% of the cell as a normal septum. (C) Defects in contractile-ring assembly and positioning in gef2∆ plo1-ts18 cells. Ring formation was examined in wt, gef2∆, plo1-ts18, and gef2∆ plo1-ts18 cells expressing mYFP-Myo2 Sad1-CFP (JW3547, JW3546, JW3066, and JW3067), mYFP‑Cdc15 CFP-Atb2 (JW3186, JW3185, JW3076, and JW3077), and GFP-CHD Rlc1-tdTomato (JW3554, JW3555, JW3230, and JW3229). GFP-CHD expression was induced for 21 h in EMM5S medium without thiamine. (D–F) Time courses (in minutes) of ring formation in wt (JW3547), gef2∆ (JW3546), plo1-ts18 (JW3066), and gef2∆ plo1-ts18 (JW3067) cells expressing mYFP-Myo2 and Sad1-CFP. (D, E) Time 0 is the time of SPB separation. (D) Arrowheads indicate the appearance of mYFP-Myo2 nodes or signal (in gef2∆ plo1-ts18 cells). Images are maximum-intensity projections of seven z-projections at 0.75-μm spacing. (E) Timing of mYFP-Myo2 signal appearance in cytokinesis nodes at the cell equator or a random location (for gef2∆ plo1-ts18 cells only). (F) Duration of mYFP-Myo2 compact ring (without lagging nodes) formation from the appearance of nodes. Because gef2∆ plo1-ts18 cells did not form rings during the movie or had severe delay in the formation of misplaced rings, no quantification is shown. **p < 0.01. Bars, 10 μm. Because septum formation is guided by the contractile ring, we wondered whether the contractile ring was also defective in gef2∆ plo1-ts18 mutant. Myosin-II heavy chain Myo2 and light chain Rlc1, F-BAR protein Cdc15, and actin filament marker green fluorescent protein–calponin homology domain of IQGAP Rng2 (GFP-CHD; Wachtler ; Karagiannis ; Martin and Chang, 2006) were used to observe ring formation, and spindle pole body (SPB) protein Sad1 and α-tubulin Atb2 (Sato ) were used to monitor cell-cycle stages (Figure 1, C–F). All wt and gef2∆ cells and majority of plo1-ts18 cells formed cytokinesis nodes at G2/M transition and contractile rings before anaphase B at the cell equator (Figure 1, C and D, and Supplemental Videos S1–S3). Consistent with previous studies (Wu , 2006; Laporte ), Myo2 appeared as a broad band of precursor nodes 5.9 ± 1.8 min before SPB separation in wt cells, which condensed into a compact ring without lagging nodes 20.2 ± 2.1 min after its appearance (Figure 1, D–F). Both gef2∆ and plo1-ts18 mutants showed a small but significant delay in Myo2 node recruitment, which appeared at 1.6 ± 1.5 min (p < 0.001) and 2.1 ± 3.2 min (p < 0.001) before SPB separation, respectively. The compact-ring formation took 19.3 ± 3.4 min (p = 0.16) in gef2∆ and 28.0 ± 5.4 min (p < 0.001) in plo1-ts18 (Figure 1, D–F). In contrast, no nodes were detected in gef2∆ plo1-ts18 cells (Figure 1, C and D). Myo2 signal appeared at random location ∼7.3 ± 7.0 min (p < 0.001 compared with wt) after SPB separation and then formed aberrant filaments (Figure 1E). Some of the filaments could eventually form a misplaced contractile ring after a long delay (Figure 1, C and D, and Supplemental Video S4), but many cells failed to assemble the ring. Similar results were obtained in time-lapse movies using strains expressing monomeric yellow fluorescent protein (mYFP)–Cdc15 and CFP-Atb2. plo1-ts18 cells were defective in mitotic spindle (Figure 1, C and D, and unpublished data). However, from 19 to 32°C, gef2∆ had no obvious synthetic interaction with cold-sensitive β-tubulin mutant nda3-KM311, which blocks the spindle formation at the restrictive temperature (Hiraoka ). Thus the synthetic phenotype of gef2∆ plo1-ts18 cells is not caused by defective spindle. Together, Gef2 is involved in division-site positioning and contractile-ring assembly, but these roles are masked by the dominant functions of Polo kinase Plo1. Several proteins, including Blt1 and kinesin-like protein Klp8, also localize to interphase nodes similar to Gef2 (Moseley ). We wondered whether these proteins are required for division-site positioning in the sensitized plo1-mutant background. plo1-ts18 had no obvious synthetic defects in septum positioning with klp8∆. Nine percent of blt1∆ plo1-ts18 (n = 273 septating cells) and 55% of cdr2∆ plo1-ts18 (n = 231) cells displayed abnormal septa at 25°C. In addition, unlike cdr2∆, gef2∆ cells showed small defects in cell-size control since its length at septation was 14.6 ± 0.9 μm (n = 100 cells) compared with 13.7 ± 0.9 μm of wt cells (n = 105) and ∼20 μm of cdr2∆ cells (Martin and Berthelot-Grosjean, 2009; Moseley ). Therefore Gef2 and to a lesser degree Cdr2, but not Blt1 or Klp8, are critical for division-site specification in the plo1-mutant background.

Mid1 localization and dynamics are regulated by both Gef2 and Plo1

The defects in division-site positioning and contractile-ring formation of gef2∆ plo1-ts18 mutant were reminiscent of the mid1-mutant phenotypes (Chang ; Sohrmann ; Bähler ; Paoletti and Chang, 2000). To explore the molecular mechanism of the defects in gef2∆ plo1-ts18 mutant, we examined Mid1-monomeric enhanced GFP (mEGFP) or Mid1-monomeric enhanced Citrine (mECitrine; a YFP variant) localization and dynamics in wt, gef2∆, plo1-ts18, and gef2∆ plo1-ts18 mutants with or without the Cdr2 kinase (Figure 2, A–E). The defects did not seem to be caused by Mid1 protein levels because Mid1 global concentrations in these mutants were not dramatically different from that in wt cells (Figure 2C and Supplemental Figure S2). During interphase, Mid1 localized to the nucleus and interphase nodes in the three mutants, similar in distribution and intensity to those of wt (Figure 2, A and C, and unpublished data).
FIGURE 2:

Gef2 is important for anillin Mid1 localization and dynamics. (A) Mid1 cannot form a ring in gef2∆ plo1-ts18. Mid1 localization in the indicated strains JW4231-JW4234 expressing Mid1-mEGFP and Rlc1-tdTomato at 25°C. (B) Time courses (in minutes) of Mid1-mECitrine (a YFP variant) ring formation in the indicated cdr2∆ strains JW3578, JW3575, JW3577, and JW3576. Images are maximum-intensity projections of three z-projections at 1.2-μm spacing. Time 0 in cdr2∆ and cdr2∆ gef2∆ cells marks the appearance of Mid1 cytokinesis nodes and in cdr2∆ plo1-ts18 and cdr2∆ gef2∆ plo1-ts18 cells is the start of the movies. Bars, 10 μm. (C) Mid1 concentrations in whole cells and in interphase nodes. Left, the cell-size-corrected fluorescence intensity in whole cells (mean ± SD) is the intensity of Mid1-mECitrine–expressing strain subtracting the intensity of the corresponding strain without Mid1-mECitrine. From left to right: intensity of JW3323 − JW2556, JW3324 − JW3184, JW3559 − JW3079, and JW3558 − JW3078. Right, mean fluorescence intensity (mean ± SD) of interphase Mid1-mECitrine nodes measured as described in Materials and Methods. Strains (left to right): JW3323, JW3324, JW3559, and JW3558. *0.01 < p < 0.05 and **p < 0.01 compared with wt. (D) Mid1 concentrations in cytokinesis nodes and the nucleus during early mitosis. Mean fluorescence intensity (mean ± SD) of Mid1-mECitrine in the indicated strains in cdr2 and cdr2∆ backgrounds. Strains were the same as in B and C. **p < 0.01 compared with wt. In early mitotic cells of wt and gef2∆, Mid1 nuclear signal is very close to the cytoplasmic background and therefore not determined (ND). (E) Mid1 cortical nodes are more dynamic or mobile in gef2∆ mutant. FRAP curves of Mid1-mECitirne in wt (JW3323) and gef2∆ (JW3324) cells. (F) Gef2 coIP with Mid1. Antibody against mECitrine was used in IP. IPs were carried out from cell extracts of mid1-13Myc (JW3254), gef2-mECitrine (JW2997), mid1-13Myc gef2-mECitrine (JW3255), and cdr2∆ mid1-13Myc gef2-mECitrine (JW3333).

Gef2 is important for anillin Mid1 localization and dynamics. (A) Mid1 cannot form a ring in gef2∆ plo1-ts18. Mid1 localization in the indicated strains JW4231-JW4234 expressing Mid1-mEGFP and Rlc1-tdTomato at 25°C. (B) Time courses (in minutes) of Mid1-mECitrine (a YFP variant) ring formation in the indicated cdr2∆ strains JW3578, JW3575, JW3577, and JW3576. Images are maximum-intensity projections of three z-projections at 1.2-μm spacing. Time 0 in cdr2∆ and cdr2gef2∆ cells marks the appearance of Mid1 cytokinesis nodes and in cdr2∆ plo1-ts18 and cdr2gef2∆ plo1-ts18 cells is the start of the movies. Bars, 10 μm. (C) Mid1 concentrations in whole cells and in interphase nodes. Left, the cell-size-corrected fluorescence intensity in whole cells (mean ± SD) is the intensity of Mid1-mECitrine–expressing strain subtracting the intensity of the corresponding strain without Mid1-mECitrine. From left to right: intensity of JW3323 − JW2556, JW3324 − JW3184, JW3559 − JW3079, and JW3558 − JW3078. Right, mean fluorescence intensity (mean ± SD) of interphase Mid1-mECitrine nodes measured as described in Materials and Methods. Strains (left to right): JW3323, JW3324, JW3559, and JW3558. *0.01 < p < 0.05 and **p < 0.01 compared with wt. (D) Mid1 concentrations in cytokinesis nodes and the nucleus during early mitosis. Mean fluorescence intensity (mean ± SD) of Mid1-mECitrine in the indicated strains in cdr2 and cdr2∆ backgrounds. Strains were the same as in B and C. **p < 0.01 compared with wt. In early mitotic cells of wt and gef2∆, Mid1 nuclear signal is very close to the cytoplasmic background and therefore not determined (ND). (E) Mid1 cortical nodes are more dynamic or mobile in gef2∆ mutant. FRAP curves of Mid1-mECitirne in wt (JW3323) and gef2∆ (JW3324) cells. (F) Gef2 coIP with Mid1. Antibody against mECitrine was used in IP. IPs were carried out from cell extracts of mid1-13Myc (JW3254), gef2-mECitrine (JW2997), mid1-13Myc gef2-mECitrine (JW3255), and cdr2mid1-13Myc gef2-mECitrine (JW3333). At G2/M transition, nuclear Mid1 disappeared, whereas the cortical Mid1 nodes increased in intensity and coalesced into a ring in wt and gef2∆ cells (Figure 2, A, B, and D, and Supplemental Video S5). Plo1 phosphorylates Mid1 and regulates its nuclear export (Bähler ; Almonacid ). plo1-ts18 cells were defective in Mid1 nuclear export, but they still formed cytokinesis nodes and contractile ring at cell center at 25°C, although the Mid1 concentration in the nodes was reduced twofold compared to those in wt and gef2∆ cells (Figure 2, A and D, and Supplemental Videos S5 and S6). As expected, in gef2∆ and plo1-ts18 single mutants, myosin-II light-chain Rlc1 colocalized with Mid1 at nodes and the contractile ring at the cell equator during early mitosis (Figure 2A and Supplemental Video S5). However, no Mid1 and Rlc1 colocalization was observed in gef2∆ plo1-ts18 cells. Mid1 nodes failed to condense into a compact ring during mitosis, whereas Rlc1 appeared randomly in the cytoplasm and then formed aberrant filamentous structures or tilted ring (Figure 2A and Supplemental Video S5). In cdr2gef2∆ plo1-ts18 cells, Mid1 remained in the nucleus (with similar concentration to plo1-ts18 cells) and cytoplasm, the Mid1 ring was abolished, and Mid1 concentration in cytokinesis nodes was only ∼10% of that in wt (Figure 2, B and D, and Supplemental Video S7), indicating that the cortical nodes in gef2∆ plo1-ts18 cells are mainly Cdr2-dependent interphase nodes. Thus the division-site positioning and contractile-ring formation defects of gef2∆ plo1-ts18 cells could be due to the failure of Mid1 recruitment to the plasma membrane at G2/M transition. Next we tested whether Gef2 regulates Mid1 dynamics and stability on the plasma membrane, using fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP). Mid1 in interphase nodes was more dynamic in gef2∆, with a half-time of recovery 97 ± 71 s, compared with 184 ± 100 s in wt (Figure 2E; p = 0.04). Although the dynamics of Mid1 in cytokinesis nodes was not significantly affected in gef2∆ cells (Figure 2E; p = 0.68), the mobile fraction of Mid1 in gef2∆, 40 ± 15%, was significantly higher than that in wt, 29 ± 14% (Figure 2E; p = 0.04). Moreover, immunoprecipitation (IP) of fission yeast extracts revealed that Mid1 interacted with Gef2; deletion of Cdr2 reduced but did not block the interaction (Figure 2F). Together these results suggest that Gef2 might modulate Mid1 cortical binding by physical interactions.

Mid1 overexpression or artificial targeting of Mid1 to cortical nodes partially rescues gef2∆ plo1-ts18 defects in division-site positioning

We hypothesized that both Gef2 and Plo1 regulate Mid1 localization to cortical nodes, Plo1 phosphorylates Mid1 to promote its nuclear export (Bähler ; Almonacid ), and Gef2 facilitates and stabilizes Mid1 cortical anchoring. In gef2∆ plo1-ts18 cells, the additive defects reduce Mid1 level in cortical nodes (Figure 2, B and D) and result in failures to recruit downstream ring components to the cell equator. If so, increasing Mid1 expression or Mid1 concentration in nodes was predicted to suppress the defects in gef2∆ plo1-ts18 cells. We created gef2∆ plo1-ts18 strains containing either an extra copy of the mid1 gene (Celton-Morizur ) or endogenous mid1 under the control of inducible urg1 promoter (Watt ). As expected, both two mid1 copies and Purg1 induced Mid1 overexpression partially rescued the septum-positioning defects of gef2∆ plo1-ts18 mutant, and normal septum positioning was restored to 30 and 50% from ∼8%, respectively (Figure 3A). Consistently, mitotic gef2∆ plo1-ts18 cells (with mitotic spindle) containing the Mid1 ring increased from <3 to 24% when two copies of Mid1 were expressed (Figure 3B).
FIGURE 3:

Overexpression of Mid1 rescues gef2∆ plo1-ts18 defects in division-site positioning. (A) Overexpression of Mid1 under different promoters partially rescues septum-positioning defect in gef2∆ plo1-ts18 cells. gef2∆ plo1-ts18 (JW3078), 2x mid1 gef2∆ plo1-ts18 (an extra copy Pmid1-mid1 integrated at the leu1 locus in addition to the native mid1; JW3242), and gef2∆ plo1-ts18 Purg1-mid1 (integrated at the mid1 locus and induced in media with uracil; JW3237) were grown in YE5S medium at 25°C for 24 h. Top, DIC; bottom, calcofluor staining. Septum positioning in calcofluor-stained cells was quantified (right). Mean ± SD from three independent experiments. (B) Two copies of Mid1 partially rescue Mid1 ring formation in gef2∆ plo1-ts18 cells expressing Mid1-mECitrine and CFP-Atb2. Strains JW3281 and JW3383 grown at 25°C. The percentage of mitotic cells (with a spindle) with a Mid1 ring was quantified from two experiments. (C) Mid1-Cdr2 fusion protein partially rescues septum-positioning defect in gef2∆ plo1-ts18 cells. Left, DIC; middle, calcofluor staining; right, Mid1-mEGFP (top, JW3560) or Mid1-Cdr2-mEGFP (bottom, JW3426). Septum positioning in calcofluor-stained cells was quantified from two experiments. Bars, 10 μm.

Overexpression of Mid1 rescues gef2∆ plo1-ts18 defects in division-site positioning. (A) Overexpression of Mid1 under different promoters partially rescues septum-positioning defect in gef2∆ plo1-ts18 cells. gef2∆ plo1-ts18 (JW3078), 2x mid1 gef2∆ plo1-ts18 (an extra copy Pmid1-mid1 integrated at the leu1 locus in addition to the native mid1; JW3242), and gef2∆ plo1-ts18 Purg1-mid1 (integrated at the mid1 locus and induced in media with uracil; JW3237) were grown in YE5S medium at 25°C for 24 h. Top, DIC; bottom, calcofluor staining. Septum positioning in calcofluor-stained cells was quantified (right). Mean ± SD from three independent experiments. (B) Two copies of Mid1 partially rescue Mid1 ring formation in gef2∆ plo1-ts18 cells expressing Mid1-mECitrine and CFP-Atb2. Strains JW3281 and JW3383 grown at 25°C. The percentage of mitotic cells (with a spindle) with a Mid1 ring was quantified from two experiments. (C) Mid1-Cdr2 fusion protein partially rescues septum-positioning defect in gef2∆ plo1-ts18 cells. Left, DIC; middle, calcofluor staining; right, Mid1-mEGFP (top, JW3560) or Mid1-Cdr2-mEGFP (bottom, JW3426). Septum positioning in calcofluor-stained cells was quantified from two experiments. Bars, 10 μm. Furthermore, we tested whether artificially targeting Mid1 to medial cortical nodes rescues the defects of gef2∆ plo1-ts18. We fused Cdr2-mEGFP to the C-terminus of Mid1 under native mid1 promoter and integrated it at the mid1 locus. The fusion protein localized to the medial cortical nodes as expected, and the signal was much stronger than wt Mid1 at nodes but much weaker in the nucleus in gef2∆ plo1-ts18 cells (Figure 3C). Of interest, Mid1-Cdr2-mEGFP also partially rescued the defects of gef2∆ plo1-ts18 mutant; 17% of cells displayed normal septum positioning (Figure 3C). Collectively, these results suggest that the defect in gef2∆ plo1-ts18 mutant is indeed caused by the lack of sufficient functional Mid1 in cortical nodes (see Discussion).

Gef2 interacts with Mid1 N-terminus and is essential for its cortical localization

It is known that Mid1 is targeted to the plasma membrane using two independent mechanisms: one involves an amphipathic helix and the adjacent polybasic nuclear localization sequence (NLS) at its C-terminus; the other involves the interaction between Mid1(400-450) and Cdr2 kinase (Celton-Morizur ; Almonacid ). To further dissect how Gef2 regulates Mid1 localization and function, we investigated genetic interactions between gef2∆ and mid1 mutants/truncations (Figure 4, Supplemental Figure S3, and unpublished data). Strong synthetic defects in septum positioning were observed in double mutants of gef2∆ and 81nmt1-mECitrine-mid1 (under repressing condition), mid1-6, mid1-366, mid1(1-580), and mid1(1-506) (Figure 4, A and B, and Supplemental Figure S3, A and B). In addition, severe synthetic defects in septum positioning were observed in a double mutant of gef2∆ and the mid1(Helix*) mutant, which has mutations in the C-terminal amphipathic helix and severely affects Mid1 cortical binding (Celton-Morizur ), but the defects were not observed in a double mutant of gef2∆ and the mid1(NLS*) mutant, which impairs Mid1 nuclear localization but is dispensable for Mid1 cortical localization (Celton-Morizur ; Figure 4, A and B). These interactions suggest that Gef2 may regulate Mid1 function through its N-terminus.
FIGURE 4:

Gef2 interacts with Mid1 N-terminus and is essential for its cortical localization. (A, B) Gef2 is required for division-site positioning when Mid1 cortical localization is compromised. (A) DIC images and (B) quantification of septum positioning at 25°C in mid1 and gef2∆ mid1 mutants AP998, AP583, AP630, AP734, JW3570, JW3567, JW3721, and JW3568. Schematic of Mid1 domains is shown in B. (C) Mid1(1-506) cortical localization is abolished in gef2∆. Cells expressing GFP-Mid1(1-506) and Rlc1-tdTomato in gef2 (JW3628) and gef2∆ (JW3629) were grown at 25°C. Arrowheads indicate signals at early mitosis. (D) Mid1(1-580)-mECitrine localizations to cortical nodes and the contractile ring depend on Gef2. JW2603 and JW3670 cells at 25°C. Arrowheads indicate cortical nodes. (E) Mid1(1-506) still localizes to the contractile ring in cdr2∆ cells. AP998 and JW3647 cells at 25°C. Arrowheads indicate cortical nodes. (F) Gef2 coIP with Mid1(1-506) but not Mid1(507-920). IP using antibody against GFP was carried out in cell extracts of GFP‑mid1(1-506) (AP998), gef2-13Myc (JW3204), mid1(507-920)-GFP (AP621), gef2-13Myc GFP‑mid1(1-506) (JW3623), and gef2-13Myc mid1(507-920)-GFP (JW3624). (G) The interaction between Gef2 and Mid1 is significantly weakened in mid1 mutants lacking the cortical-targeting domains. IP using antibody against mECitrine was carried out in cell extracts of gef2-mECitrine mid1-13Myc (JW3255), gef2-mECitrine mid1(∆300-350)-13Myc (JW3829), and gef2-mECitrine mid1(∆400-450)-13Myc (JW3830). (H) DIC and quantification of septum-positioning defects in plo1-ts18 mid1(∆300-350). Strains of AP1977 and JW3705 grown at 25°C. Bars, 10 μm.

Gef2 interacts with Mid1 N-terminus and is essential for its cortical localization. (A, B) Gef2 is required for division-site positioning when Mid1 cortical localization is compromised. (A) DIC images and (B) quantification of septum positioning at 25°C in mid1 and gef2mid1 mutants AP998, AP583, AP630, AP734, JW3570, JW3567, JW3721, and JW3568. Schematic of Mid1 domains is shown in B. (C) Mid1(1-506) cortical localization is abolished in gef2∆. Cells expressing GFP-Mid1(1-506) and Rlc1-tdTomato in gef2 (JW3628) and gef2∆ (JW3629) were grown at 25°C. Arrowheads indicate signals at early mitosis. (D) Mid1(1-580)-mECitrine localizations to cortical nodes and the contractile ring depend on Gef2. JW2603 and JW3670 cells at 25°C. Arrowheads indicate cortical nodes. (E) Mid1(1-506) still localizes to the contractile ring in cdr2∆ cells. AP998 and JW3647 cells at 25°C. Arrowheads indicate cortical nodes. (F) Gef2 coIP with Mid1(1-506) but not Mid1(507-920). IP using antibody against GFP was carried out in cell extracts of GFP‑mid1(1-506) (AP998), gef2-13Myc (JW3204), mid1(507-920)-GFP (AP621), gef2-13Myc GFP‑mid1(1-506) (JW3623), and gef2-13Myc mid1(507-920)-GFP (JW3624). (G) The interaction between Gef2 and Mid1 is significantly weakened in mid1 mutants lacking the cortical-targeting domains. IP using antibody against mECitrine was carried out in cell extracts of gef2-mECitrine mid1-13Myc (JW3255), gef2-mECitrine mid1(∆300-350)-13Myc (JW3829), and gef2-mECitrine mid1(∆400-450)-13Myc (JW3830). (H) DIC and quantification of septum-positioning defects in plo1-ts18 mid1(∆300-350). Strains of AP1977 and JW3705 grown at 25°C. Bars, 10 μm. Consistent with previous studies (Celton-Morizur ; Lee and Wu, 2012), Mid1(1-506) and Mid1(1-580) localized to cytoplasm, nucleus, faint cortex nodes, and the contractile ring (Figure 4, C–E). However, their node and ring localizations were abolished in gef2∆ cells, whereas misplaced Rlc1 ring or filaments but not cytokinesis nodes were still present (Figure 4, C and D). The loss of Mid1 localization to the contractile ring or filaments was Cdr2 independent (Figure 4E). In contrast, the localization of Mid1 C-terminal fragment Mid1(507-920) did not require Gef2 (Supplemental Figure S3C). Consistent with the localization dependence, an interaction was detected between Gef2 and Mid1(1-506) but not between Gef2 and Mid1(507-920) in IP (Figure 4F). Thus Gef2 interacts with Mid1 N-terminus and is essential for its cortical localization. We further tested the Mid1 domain/motif required for the interaction with Gef2. Mid1(300-350) and Mid1(400-450) are important for Mid1(1-506) localization and function (Almonacid ). We hypothesized that these regions might bind to Gef2. Indeed, IP using yeast extracts revealed that the interaction between Gef2 and Mid1 was severely weakened in mid1(∆300-350) strain and to a lesser degree in mid1(∆400-450) strain (Figure 4G). Because Mid1(400-450) but not Mid1(300-350) binds to Cdr2 kinase (Almonacid ) and Cdr2 also affects the interaction between Gef2 and full-length (FL) Mid1 (Figure 2F), it is likely that Mid1(300-350) binds to Gef2. Consistently, mid1(∆300-350) plo1-ts18 double mutant resembled gef2∆ plo1-ts18 cells with severe defects in septum positioning (Figure 4H). Together these results suggest that Gef2 physically interacts with Mid1 through Mid1(300-350) to regulate Mid1's cortical localization and stability, and this interaction is Cdr2 independent.

Dependence of Gef2 localization on Blt1 but not on actin filaments

We next investigated Gef2 localization. As reported (Moseley ), Gef2 localizes to interphase nodes, cytokinesis nodes, and the contractile ring (Figure 5A). Compared to Mid1 (Wu and Pollard, 2005; Laporte ), each average cell had 4270 ± 1190 Gef2 molecules and each interphase node contained 14 ± 6 Gef2 molecules (Figure 5B). An interphase node has 17 Mid1 molecules (Laporte ), suggesting that Mid1 and Gef2 may bind to each other stoichiometrically during interphase. FRAP analysis revealed that the half-time of recovery of interphase Gef2 node was 115 ± 42 s (Figure 5C), which suggests that Gef2 is a relatively stable protein on the cell cortex, similar to Mid1 (Celton-Morizur ; Zhang ; Laporte ). Consistently, Gef2 partially colocalized with Mid1 at interphase and cytokinesis nodes, as well as contractile ring before its constriction (Figure 5D). In addition, Gef2 also colocalized with Plo1 at the contractile ring during its formation, but no colocalization in nodes was detected (Figure 5D).
FIGURE 5:

Dependence of Gef2 localization on Blt1 during interphase but not during mitosis. (A) mECitrine‑Gef2 (JW3825) localizes to cortical nodes and the contractile ring. (B) Counting Gef2 globally in the whole cells and in interphase nodes. Molecule numbers of Gef2 (JW3825) were normalized to those of Mid1. (C) FRAP analysis of Gef2 (JW3825). Cells were bleached at time zero, and images were taken with 10 s delay. (D) Colocalization of Gef2 with Mid1 and Plo1. Cells expressing tdTomato-Gef2 Mid1-mEGFP (JW4236; top) and tdTomato-Gef2 Plo1-3GFP (JW4235; bottom) were grown at 25°C. (E) Plo1 is not required for Gef2 localization. Cells expressing mECitrine-Gef2 (JW3825 and JW3843) were grown at 25°C and then shifted to 36°C for 2 h. Arrows indicate aberrant filaments; arrowheads indicate nodes. (F) Actin filaments are not required for Gef2 node and ring localizations. Cells expressing mECitrine-Gef2 mCFP-Myo2 CFP-Atb2 (JW3853) were treated with dimethyl sulfoxide or 100 μM Lat‑A for 5 min at 25°C. (G) Gef2 interphase-node localization but not cytokinesis-node and contractile-ring localization depends on Cdr2 kinase and Blt1. wt (JW3852), cdr2∆ (JW3846), and blt1∆ (JW3848) cells expressing mECitrine-Gef2 CFP-Atb2 were grown at 25°C. (H) Time course (in minutes) of mEGFP-Gef2 localization to cytokinesis nodes and the contractile ring in blt1∆ cells (JW4237). Time 0 indicates SPB separation. Images are maximum-intensity projections of four z-projections at 1.2 μm spacing. Bars, 10 μm.

Dependence of Gef2 localization on Blt1 during interphase but not during mitosis. (A) mECitrineGef2 (JW3825) localizes to cortical nodes and the contractile ring. (B) Counting Gef2 globally in the whole cells and in interphase nodes. Molecule numbers of Gef2 (JW3825) were normalized to those of Mid1. (C) FRAP analysis of Gef2 (JW3825). Cells were bleached at time zero, and images were taken with 10 s delay. (D) Colocalization of Gef2 with Mid1 and Plo1. Cells expressing tdTomato-Gef2 Mid1-mEGFP (JW4236; top) and tdTomato-Gef2 Plo1-3GFP (JW4235; bottom) were grown at 25°C. (E) Plo1 is not required for Gef2 localization. Cells expressing mECitrine-Gef2 (JW3825 and JW3843) were grown at 25°C and then shifted to 36°C for 2 h. Arrows indicate aberrant filaments; arrowheads indicate nodes. (F) Actin filaments are not required for Gef2 node and ring localizations. Cells expressing mECitrine-Gef2 mCFP-Myo2 CFP-Atb2 (JW3853) were treated with dimethyl sulfoxide or 100 μM Lat‑A for 5 min at 25°C. (G) Gef2 interphase-node localization but not cytokinesis-node and contractile-ring localization depends on Cdr2 kinase and Blt1. wt (JW3852), cdr2∆ (JW3846), and blt1∆ (JW3848) cells expressing mECitrine-Gef2 CFP-Atb2 were grown at 25°C. (H) Time course (in minutes) of mEGFP-Gef2 localization to cytokinesis nodes and the contractile ring in blt1∆ cells (JW4237). Time 0 indicates SPB separation. Images are maximum-intensity projections of four z-projections at 1.2 μm spacing. Bars, 10 μm. Then we examined how Gef2 is localized to the division site. In mammalian and S. cerevisiae cells, Polo kinases are crucial for the recruitment of Rho-GEF proteins to the division site (Yoshida ; Petronczki , 2008). We tested whether Plo1 affected Gef2 localization. At 25°C, Gef2 localizations to nodes and the contractile ring were similar in plo1-ts18 cells and wt cells (Figure 5E). After 2 h at 36°C, Gef2 still localized to the nodes in both wt and plo1-ts18 mutant, although the signal decreased in plo1-ts18 cells. Compared to the normal ring in wt, plo1-ts18 cells, like mid1∆ cells, formed aberrant Gef2 ring or filamentous structures (Figure 5E). These results suggest that Plo1 is involved in but not required for Gef2 localization. To determine the proteins required for Gef2 localization, we next examined the actin dependence of Gef2 localization (Figure 5F). In mitotic cells treated with latrunculin A (Lat‑A), compared with cells in the dimethyl sulfoxide control, both Gef2 and Myo2 rings became discontinuous but remained at the division site. In addition, node localization of Gef2 was not affected. Similar results were obtained after 30-min treatment, indicating that Gef2 localization does not depend on actin filaments. Consistent with the results of Moseley , interphase nodes of Gef2 were abolished in cdr2∆ and blt1∆ cells (Figure 5G). Gef2 appeared in some scattered puncta in cdr2∆ cells and resembled Blt1 localization in cdr2∆ cells (Moseley ) but not in blt1∆ cells (Figure 5G), suggesting that Blt1 is required for Gef2 localization to interphase nodes. However, Gef2 still localized to cytokinesis nodes and the contractile ring in cdr2∆ and blt1∆ cells (Figure 5G). In blt1∆ cells, Gef2 cytokinesis nodes appeared 2.3 ± 1.8 min (n = 14 cells) after SPB separation (Figure 5H). Taken together, the results indicate that Gef2 localization depends on Blt1 during interphase but not during mitosis.

Gef2(957-1101) is sufficient for its localization, and the DBL-homology domain is important for division-site positioning

Gef2 is a putative Rho-GEF with 1101 amino acids (aa), which contains a conserved DBL-homology (DH) domain followed by a less conserved pleckstrin homology (PH) domain (Figure 6A). To dissect which region of Gef2 is required for its localization and function, we constructed Gef2 truncations under the native gef2 promoter and integrated at the gef2 locus (Figure 6A). We detected no Gef2 signals at cortical nodes or the contractile ring in the C-terminal truncations, even when only the last 145 aa were deleted, and the truncated Gef2 was diffused in the cells (Figure 6, A and B). Of interest, the last 145 aa were sufficient for localization to cortical nodes and the contractile ring (Figure 6B, ∆1-956). A weak nuclear signal was also detected in cells expressing Gef2(957-1101), (1-400), and (1-600) but not FL Gef2 (Figure 6B and unpublished data). On the other hand, the DH domain and other N-terminal regions were dispensable for Gef2 localization (Figure 6, A and B). Thus the C-terminal aa 957–1101 are required and sufficient for Gef2 localization.
FIGURE 6:

Importance of Gef2(957-1101) in Gef2 localization and the DH domain in division-site positioning. (A) Schematics of Gef2 domains and truncations constructed. For localization, a plus sign means that Gef2 localizes to nodes and the contractile ring, and a minus sign means no cortical localization. (B) Localizations of FL and truncated Gef2 in strains JW3825, JW4310, and JW3826, and JW3498. (C, D) Calcofluor staining of septa (C) and quantification of septum positioning (D) of gef2 truncations and gef2 plo1-ts18 mutants. Cells of JW3825, JW4238, JW4307-JW4310, JW3826-JW3828, JW3843, JW4241, JW4312-JW4315, and JW3856-3858 were grown at 25°C. Mean ± SD from two or three independent experiments is shown. Bars, 10 μm.

Importance of Gef2(957-1101) in Gef2 localization and the DH domain in division-site positioning. (A) Schematics of Gef2 domains and truncations constructed. For localization, a plus sign means that Gef2 localizes to nodes and the contractile ring, and a minus sign means no cortical localization. (B) Localizations of FL and truncated Gef2 in strains JW3825, JW4310, and JW3826, and JW3498. (C, D) Calcofluor staining of septa (C) and quantification of septum positioning (D) of gef2 truncations and gef2 plo1-ts18 mutants. Cells of JW3825, JW4238, JW4307-JW4310, JW3826-JW3828, JW3843, JW4241, JW4312-JW4315, and JW3856-3858 were grown at 25°C. Mean ± SD from two or three independent experiments is shown. Bars, 10 μm. We next tested how Gef2 domains/motifs contribute to Gef2 functions by crossing gef2 truncations to plo1-ts18 mutant (Figure 6, C and D). All the C-terminal truncations, which abolished the localization of Gef2 at nodes and the contractile ring, showed severe synthetic defects with the plo1-ts18 mutant in septum positioning as gef2∆. Even the smallest truncation, gef2(∆957-1101), showed 90 ± 0.4% abnormal septa in the plo1-ts18 mutant. The double mutant of gef2(∆211-443) plo1-ts18 exhibited 52 ± 21% abnormal septum, indicating the DH domain is important for Gef2 function. The region upstream of the DH domain was also important since 76 ± 16% of the gef2(∆1-443) plo1-ts18 cells had abnormal septa. Of interest, the smallest fragment, Gef2(957-1101), which can localize to nodes and the contractile ring but lacks the DH domain, still possessed partial function in division-site positioning, since only 42 ± 22% of gef2(∆1-956) plo1-ts18 cells had abnormal septa. Together these results suggest that Gef2 localizations are important for its function in division-site positioning, and both the N-terminal aa 1-443, including the DH domain, and the C-terminus (601–1101) contribute to division-plane specification.

Gef2 is important for contractile-ring stability and disassembly during ring constriction

Besides the interactions with mutants involved in division-site positioning and contractile-ring assembly, we found that gef2∆ also showed genetic interactions with cytokinesis mutants involved in contractile-ring maturation and constriction. A synthetic defect was observed in gef2∆ myp2∆ double mutant. Myp2 is an unconventional myosin II, which localizes to the contractile ring during late anaphase B and is important for ring integrity and constriction (Bezanilla , 2000). At 25°C, ∼23% wt and gef2∆ cells contained one septum (Figure 7A). In myp2∆ mutant, although septating cells increased to 31%, septum morphology was mostly normal (Figure 7A). However, in gef2∆ myp2∆ mutant, 35% cells contained one septum, and 15% had more than one septum. Many of the septa were incomplete or aberrant, suggesting that Gef2 is involved in ring constriction or septum formation.
FIGURE 7:

Gef2 is important for ring stability/anchoring during ring constriction. (A) DIC and septum staining of myp2∆ and gef2∆ myp2∆ mutants (left) and septation index of the indicated strains (right). JW729, JW1826, JW703, and JW2858 cells were grown in YE5S medium at 25°C for 36 h. (B, C) gef2∆ myp2∆ cells are defective in ring stability/anchoring and disassembly during ring constriction. Ring constriction and membrane invagination in JW3573, JW3574, JW2923, and JW2948 cells expressing GFP-Psy1 and Rlc1-tdTomato at 25°C. (B) Top, maximum-intensity projections of 12 z-projections at 0.5-μm spacing. Bottom, single focal plane of the magnified region within the white box. Asterisk indicates incomplete septa. (C) Time courses (in minutes) of ring constriction and membrane invagination. Images are maximum-intensity projections of eight z-projections at 0.75-μm spacing. Bars, 10 μm. (D) gef2∆ mutant suppresses SIN mutants sid2-250 and cdc11-136. Strains JW739, JW3972, YDM429, JW3009, TP47, and JW2972 were grown in YE5S medium at 25°C. Cells (4 × 104) were serially diluted (10×) and grown on YE5S plate at 25, 30, and 36°C for 3 d.

Gef2 is important for ring stability/anchoring during ring constriction. (A) DIC and septum staining of myp2∆ and gef2∆ myp2∆ mutants (left) and septation index of the indicated strains (right). JW729, JW1826, JW703, and JW2858 cells were grown in YE5S medium at 25°C for 36 h. (B, C) gef2∆ myp2∆ cells are defective in ring stability/anchoring and disassembly during ring constriction. Ring constriction and membrane invagination in JW3573, JW3574, JW2923, and JW2948 cells expressing GFP-Psy1 and Rlc1-tdTomato at 25°C. (B) Top, maximum-intensity projections of 12 z-projections at 0.5-μm spacing. Bottom, single focal plane of the magnified region within the white box. Asterisk indicates incomplete septa. (C) Time courses (in minutes) of ring constriction and membrane invagination. Images are maximum-intensity projections of eight z-projections at 0.75-μm spacing. Bars, 10 μm. (D) gef2∆ mutant suppresses SIN mutants sid2-250 and cdc11-136. Strains JW739, JW3972, YDM429, JW3009, TP47, and JW2972 were grown in YE5S medium at 25°C. Cells (4 × 104) were serially diluted (10×) and grown on YE5S plate at 25, 30, and 36°C for 3 d. To further explore the defects in gef2∆ myp2∆ mutant, we used Rlc1-tandem Tomato (tdTomato) and GFP-Psy1 (Nakamura ) to examine the contractile ring and plasma membrane, respectively, during cytokinesis (Figure 7, B and C, and Supplemental Videos S8–S10). In wt and single-mutant cells, membrane invagination always occurred where a constricted ring was present. In some myp2∆ cells, asymmetric ring constriction was also observed (Figure 7, B and C, and Supplemental Videos S8 and S9). In contrast, the invaginated membrane and constricting ring were uncoupled in gef2∆ myp2∆ cells (Figure 7, B and C, and Supplemental Video S10). In time‑lapse movies, we observed that membrane invagination was coupled with ring constriction at the beginning and then the ring drifted away, which caused a delay for membrane invagination and cell separation (Figure 7C). In some cases, the ring collapsed during constriction, and the cells immediately tried to reassemble another ring near the original division site (Supplemental Video S10). Because the SIN pathway regulates ring disassembly (Krapp and Simanis, 2008; Roberts-Galbraith and Gould, 2008), we tested the genetic interactions between gef2∆ and SIN mutants. We found that gef2∆ mutant partially rescued the growth defects of SIN mutants cdc11-136 and sid2-250 at nonpermissive temperatures (Figure 7D). These results suggest that Gef2 plays a role in ring stability/anchoring and disassembly during late stages of cytokinesis.

DISCUSSION

Our data demonstrate that S. pombe putative Rho-GEF Gef2 is involved in division-site positioning and contractile-ring assembly through regulating Mid1 localization. In addition, Gef2 is also important for contractile-ring stability/anchoring and disassembly during ring constriction.

Gef2 and Plo1 coordinate for Mid1 localization and function

Mid1 phosphorylation by Polo kinase Plo1 triggers Mid1 nuclear export at the G2/M transition (Bähler ; Almonacid ). Our data indicate that Gef2 helps Mid1 anchor to the plasma membrane through physical interactions with the Mid1 N-terminus. Then Mid1 serves as a scaffold for recruiting other proteins for contractile-ring assembly. Thus Gef2 and Plo1 coordinate and define new overlapping pathways for Mid1 localization and function. Our results add another layer of complexity to Mid1 cortical targeting. Nuclear shuttling regulates the ratio between nuclear and cytoplasmic Mid1 (Bähler ; Paoletti and Chang, 2000; Daga and Chang, 2005; Almonacid ). Two domains—Mid1(300-350) and Mid1(400-450)—have been identified to localize Mid1(1-506) to cortical nodes (Almonacid ). In addition, the C-terminal amphipathic helix plus the polybasic NLS domain (Celton-Morizur ) and the PH domain (Lee and Wu, 2012) are also important for Mid1 cortical targeting. Moreover, the cortical ER network limits Mid1's lateral diffusion on the membrane (Zhang ). The synthetic defects of gef2Δ mid1 mutants also indicate that Mid1 localization and function are regulated by several pathways. Given the essential role of Mid1 in division-site selection, it is not surprising that fission yeast has several overlapping pathways to ensure the fidelity of Mid1 localization. It is a common theme in animal cells that overlapping signals from central spindle and astral microtubules specify the cleavage site (Bringmann and Hyman, 2005; Barr and Gruneberg, 2007; Cabernard ; Rankin and Wordeman, 2010). Although no evidence shows that Polo kinases phosphorylate anillins in multicellular organisms, anillins act synergistically with the centralspindlin complex for cleavage-furrow formation by interacting MgcRacGAP/RacGAP50C (Zhao and Fang, 2005; D'Avino ; Gregory ) and RhoA (Piekny and Glotzer, 2008). It will be interesting to explore whether anillins interact with Rho-GEF Ect2/Pebble in animal cells since it has been shown that Pebble controls anillin localization in Drosophila S2 cells (Hickson and O'Farrell, 2008). We do not know whether Mid1 binds to Gef2 directly or through a Rho GTPase. Moreover, it is unknown whether Gef2 is regulated by Polo kinase Plo1 through phosphorylation like other Rho-GEFs (Niiya ; Yoshida ). Nevertheless, our findings open new frontiers for studying division-site specification and contractile-ring assembly in both yeast and multicellular organisms.

The relationship between Gef2 and Cdr2 kinase in regulating Mid1 localization and function

Two overlapping mechanisms have been proposed to position Mid1 at the central cortex: one is the Cdr2-dependent anchoring of Mid1 in cortical nodes during interphase, and the other is Plo1-dependent Mid1 nuclear export at G2/M transition (Almonacid ). Now we find that Gef2 also plays overlapping functions with Plo1. What is the relationship between Gef2 and Cdr2 in regulating Mid1 localization to the central cortex? First, gef2Δ has no obvious synthetic defects with cdr2Δ in division-site specification (Figure 2B), so they are not on overlapping pathways. Second, both Cdr2 and Gef2 interact with the Mid1 N-terminus, but this might be through different domains. Almonacid shows that Cdr2 interacts with Mid1(400-450), and our results suggest that Gef2 likely binds to Mid1(300-350). The interaction between Gef2 and Mid1 is severely affected in the mid1(Δ300-350) strain (Figure 4G). The small amount of Mid1(Δ300-350) pulled down by Gef2 might be from indirect interactions through Blt1-Cdr2. We find that mid1(Δ300-350) plo1-ts18 mimics gef2Δ plo1-ts18 in septum-positioning defects, which is consistent with the proposed interaction between Gef2 and Mid1(300-350). Third, Cdr2 is more important than Gef2 for Mid1 localization during interphase. Mid1 is recruited to interphase nodes mainly by Cdr2 kinase, since Mid1 localization is dramatically reduced in cdr2Δ cells (Almonacid ; Moseley ) but is not obviously affected in gef2Δ (Figure 2, A–C). Gef2's role is more obvious for the localization of Mid1 N-terminus. Cortical nodes of Mid1 N-termini (1–580 or 1–506) are abolished in gef2Δ. Fourth, Gef2 is more important than Cdr2 for Mid1 localization and function during mitosis, based on several lines of evidence. The level of Cdr2 in cortical nodes decreases at early mitosis, and Cdr2 only transiently localizes to the contractile ring (Morrell ; Martin and Berthelot-Grosjean, 2009). In contrast, Gef2 remains in cytokinesis nodes and the contractile ring throughout cytokinesis. gef2Δ plo1-ts18 cells have more severe defects in division-site positioning than cdr2Δ plo1-ts18 and blt1∆ plo1-ts18 cells, despite the lack of Gef2 localization to cortical nodes during interphase in cdr2Δ or blt1Δ cells. In addition, Mid1 N-terminal truncations localize to the contractile ring in cdr2Δ but not in gef2Δ. Furthermore, the Mid1-Cdr2 fusion protein localizes to interphase nodes normally but can only partially rescues the defect of gef2∆ plo1-ts18 double mutant, indicating that the fusion protein cannot bypass the requirement for Gef2 during mitosis (Figure 3C). Collectively, the results indicate that Cdr2 kinase and Gef2 have overlapping functions with Plo1 for Mid1 localization and division-site selection at different cell-cycle stages. Cdr2 is more important during interphase, and Gef2 is critical during mitosis. The overlapping mechanisms provide more precision and fidelity for cytokinesis. It will be interesting to know whether homologues of Cdr2 (Kishi ) and Gef2 in multicellular organisms play overlapping roles with Polo kinase in regulating anillin localizations and functions.

Gef2 localization and function

Gef2 localization is actin independent (Figure 5F). During interphase, Gef2 depends on both Cdr2 and Blt1 for localization to interphase nodes (Figure 5G; Moseley ). Because Blt1 localization depends on Cdr2 and Blt1 physically interacts with Gef2 (Moseley ), it is more likely that Blt1 directly recruits Gef2 to interphase nodes. Although Mid1 concentration in interphase nodes is not affected without Gef2, Mid1 becomes more dynamic (Figure 2, C and E), suggesting that Gef2 stabilizes Mid1 cortical localization during interphase. However, Cdr2 and Blt1 are not required for Gef2 localization to cytokinesis nodes and contractile ring during mitosis (Figure 5, G and H). During mitosis, F-BAR protein Cdc15 might be involved in Gef2 localization. Gef2 appears in cytokinesis nodes ∼2 min after SPB separation in blt1Δ cells (Figure 5H), which is after Cdc15 (Wu ; Laporte ). In addition, the Gef2 level in the contractile ring is dramatically reduced in cdc15-140 cells at 36°C, and Cdc15 and Gef2 physically interact in IP (unpublished data). However, it is also possible that Gef2 binds to the plasma membrane directly using its last 145 aa, since this region is required for its localization (Figure 6, A and B). Consistently, Cdc15 is involved in the organization of lipid rafts (Takeda ). Cortical localization of human Ect2 requires a PH domain right downstream the DH domain and a polybasic cluster near its C-terminus (Chalamalasetty ; Su ). Of interest, Gef2 contains a domain with low similarity (16% identity and 43% similarity) to the PH domain of mouse Ect2, although it seems that this region is not important for Gef2 localization (Figure 6A). Thus further studies are needed to determine how Gef2 is localized during mitosis. Budding yeast and mammalian Rho-GEFs such as Tus1 and Ect2 are known to regulate Rho1/RhoA activation by converting Rho from GDP-bound to GTP-bound status (Schmelzle ; Chalamalasetty ; Yoshida ). The DH domain of Gef2 is important for Gef2 function in division-site positioning (Figure 6). None of the six Rho GTPases has been shown to regulate Mid1 or localize to cortical nodes in fission yeast. Deletion mutants of rho2 to rho5 showed no obvious defect in division-site positioning or contractile-ring assembly, even in the double mutants with plo1-ts18 (unpublished data). Although Rgf3—a GEF for Rho1—might be involved in contractile-ring assembly (Mutoh ), the downstream effector(s) of Rho1 is unknown. Activated Cdc42 localizes to the contractile ring, and the localization depends on human BIN3 orthologue Hob3 (Merla and Johnson, 2000; Coll ). However, hob3Δ cells have defects in contractile-ring constriction but not formation (Coll ). Thus further studies are needed to investigate whether Gef2 has GEF activity and which Rho GTPase might be activated by Gef2.

Roles of Gef2 in contractile-ring stability and disassembly in late cytokinesis

Our data provide evidence that Gef2 plays a role in ring constriction during late cytokinesis. We find that Gef2 and Myp2 control contractile-ring stability/anchoring (Figure 7, B and C). In fission yeast, the postanaphase array of microtubules is important for stabilizing the contractile ring (Pardo and Nurse, 2003), and Myp2 is important for its formation (Samejima ). However, gef2∆ showed no obvious genetic interactions with mto1∆ or mto2∆ mutants (unpublished data), which are also required for postanaphase array formation (Samejima ), suggesting that Gef2 and Myp2 regulate contractile-ring stability through a microtubule-independent pathway. Among the seven Rho GEFs, Rgf1–3 are also involved in late stages of cytokinesis (Tajadura ; Morrell-Falvey ; Mutoh ; Garcia , 2009a, 2009b; Wu ). Our preliminary results show that Gef2 and Rgf1 have synthetic defects in cytokinesis. Further studies are needed to map out the redundancy among the Rho-GEFs in late stages of cytokinesis. gef2∆ myp2∆ cells also have defects in contractile-ring disassembly (Supplemental Video S10), which suggests that the SIN pathway might be hyperactive or cannot be turned off in these cells (Krapp and Simanis, 2008; Roberts-Galbraith and Gould, 2008). Because myp2∆ is synthetic with SIN mutants cdc11 and cdc14 (Bezanilla ) but gef2∆ can partially suppress the growth defects of sid2 and cdc11 mutants (Figure 7D), Gef2 activity might be antagonistic to the SIN pathway during ring constriction. It will be interesting to determine the molecular mechanism of the suppression. In conclusion, we find that the putative Rho-GEF Gef2 regulates division-site selection and contractile-ring assembly in fission yeast. Gef2 and Polo kinase coordinate to regulate the cortical localization of anillin Mid1. These findings provide the first evidence that Gef2 plays an important role in early steps of cytokinesis in fission yeast.

MATERIALS AND METHODS

Strains, genetics, molecular, and cellular methods

Strains used in this study are listed in Supplemental Table S1. Standard genetic and PCR-based gene targeting methods were used to transform yeast cells and construct strains (Moreno ; Bähler ). All tagged, truncated, and fusion genes are under endogenous promoters and integrated into their native chromosomal loci, except for Purg1-mid1 (under the control of urg1 promoter and integrated at mid1 locus) and leu1::Pmid1-mid1 (under mid1 promoter and integrated at leu1 locus). The urg1 promoter is induced when cells are grown in media with uracil (Watt ). To construct gef2 N-terminal truncations, gef2 5′ untranslated region (UTR; −600 to +3) was cloned into pFA6a-kanMX6-P3nmt1-mECitrine at BglII and PacI sites. mECitrine was constructed from mYFP (S65G, V68L, Q69K, S72A, T203Y, and A206K) by introducing the F64L and Q69M mutations. The resulting plasmid was used as template, and kanMX6-Pgef2-mECitrine fragments were amplified by using primers corresponding to the desired truncations and transformed to wt strain as described (Bähler ). The positive transformants were confirmed by PCR and/or sequencing. To construct gef2 C-terminal truncation strains, ADH1 terminator with the selectable marker T or T was amplified by PCR using primers corresponding to each truncation and transformed into mECitrine-gef2 strain (JW3825) as described (Bähler ). For constructing Gef2(Δ211-443)-mECitrine with the DH domain deleted (JW3498), a DNA fragment gef2(631-3435)-mECitrine-natMX6 + 400 base pairs 3′ UTR of gef2 was amplified by PCR from gef2-mECitrine-natMX6 strain (JW2997) and cloned into the TOPO vector. Note that gef2 has three introns. The resulting plasmid was used as template to amplify the DNA fragment gef2(1330-3435)-mECitrine-natMX6 + 400 base pairs 3′ UTR of gef2, with the forward primer containing the first 70 base pairs, corresponding to gef2(561-630), and the last 20 base pairs corresponding to gef2(1330-1349), and the reverse primer (20 base pairs) complementary to the 3′ end of gef2 3′ UTR. Then the PCR fragment was transformed into the strain expressing Gef2(Δ211-1101)-mECitrine (JW3497). To construct Gef2(Δ211-443) without the C-terminal tag (JW4238), a DNA fragment gef2(3132-3435) + 442 base pairs 3′ UTR of gef2 (Tgef2) was amplified by PCR and inserted into pFA6a-mYFP-kanMX6 at PacI and BglII sites. The resulting plasmid was used as template to amplify Tgef2-kanMX6 with the corresponding primers, and the PCR fragment was transformed into Gef2(Δ211-443)-mECitrine strain (JW3498). All truncations were confirmed by PCR and sequencing. We tested the functionalities of tagged FL Gef2 in plo1-ts18 background at 25°C. Approximately 50% of gef2-mECitrine plo1-ts18 cells had abnormal septa, whereas only ∼8% of Pgef2‑mECitrine-gef2 plo1-ts18 cells had abnormal septa, which is similar to plo1-ts18 single mutant. Thus the N-terminally tagged Gef2 under its endogenous promoter is more functional than the C-terminally tagged one. However, for an unknown reason, both mECitrine-Gef2 and Gef2-mECitrine formed some aggregates at 36°C (Figure 5E). Thus tagged Gef2 may not be 100% functional. To construct Mid1-Cdr2 fusion protein, mid1-FL-linker and cdr2-mEGFP-kanMX6 were first cloned into the TOPO vector. mid1-FL-linker was amplified by using a forward primer starting 25 base pairs before the start codon of mid1 ORF and a reverse primer complementary to the canonical C-terminal gene targeting linker CGGATCCCCGGGTTAATTAAC (Bähler ). SalI and PmeI sites were added to the reverse primer for further construction. cdr2-mEGFP-kanMX6 was amplified from the genomic DNA of cdr2-mEGFP (JM346) using a forward primer with a SalI site followed by the first 20 base pairs of cdr2 and a reverse primer GAATTCGAGCTCGTTTAAAC. The reverse primer is complementary to the C-terminal–targeting module of pFA6a and has a PmeI site (Bähler ). cdr2-mEGFP-kanMX6 was then inserted into the 3′ end of mid1-FL-linker after SalI and PmeI digestion and ligation. The resulting plasmid was digested by SpeI and XhoI. Then the fragment of mid1-FL-linker-cdr2-mEGFP-kanMX6 was transformed into the strain mid1-13Myc-hphMX6 (JW3206). The positive transformants were confirmed by PCR. The linker between Mid1 and Cdr2 is RIPGLINVD. Septum staining with 10 μg/ml calcofluor and treatment with 100 μM Lat-A to depolymerize actin filaments were carried out as described (Wu ).

Microscopy and data analysis

Cells were restreaked from −80°C stocks, grown 1–2 d on yeast extract plus five supplements (YE5S) plates at 25°C, and then inoculated into 10-ml YE5S liquid cultures. Cells were grown at exponential phase for 18–48 h at 25°C except where noted. The short culture times for gef2Δ plo1-ts18 were to prevent the effects of adaptation or second-site suppressor(s). Cells were collected from liquid cultures by centrifugation at 3500 rpm, washed with Edinburgh minimal medium plus five supplements (EMM5S), and resuspended in EMM5S with 0.1 mM n‑propyl-gallate. Live-cell microscopy was carried out by loading samples onto a thin layer of 125 μl of EMM5S liquid medium with 20% gelatin (G-2500; Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO) and 0.1 mM n‑propyl-gallate, sealed under a coverslip with valap, and observed at 23–25°C. Some samples were loaded directly onto slides for imaging at single time points. For quantification of septation patterns, calcofluor-stained cells were imaged with a 100×/1.4 numerical aperture (NA) Plan-Apo objective lens on a Nikon Eclipse Ti inverted microscope (Nikon, Melville, NY) equipped with a Nikon cooled digital camera DS-QI1 and a 4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) filter. All other microscopy was carried out on a spinning disk confocal microscope (UltraVIEW ERS with CSU22 confocal head; PerkinElmer Life and Analytical Sciences, Waltham, MA) equipped with a 100×/1.4 NA Plan-Apo objective lens and an ORCA-AG camera (Hamamatsu, Hamamatsu, Japan) on a Nikon Eclipse TE2000-U inverted microscope. A 440-nm solid‑state laser, 488- and 514-nm argon-ion lasers, and a 568-nm krypton-argon-ion laser were used for excitation. Images were analyzed using ImageJ (Bethesda, MD) and UltraVIEW. Fluorescence images shown in figures and movies are maximum-intensity projections of stacks of images spanning whole cells at 0.4- or 0.5-μm spacing, except where noted otherwise. Fluorescence intensity was measured as described before (Coffman ; Laporte ). Briefly, 14 z-sections with 0.4‑μm spacing were taken at the exactly same imaging conditions for all strains except the images used for mitotic Mid1 intensity measurement in cdr2∆ background, which were 12 z-sections with 0.5‑μm spacing. The images were subtracted by the offset and corrected for the uneven illumination. Mean intensities in the whole cells were measured using sum intensity projections. The corresponding untagged strains were used for background subtraction. Mean intensities of interphase nodes were measured using a rectangular region of interest (ROI) with an average area of 60–85 pixels in the best focal plane. The intensities of the plasma membrane outside the ROI in the same cell were used for background subtraction (Figure 2C). Mid1 mean intensities in cytokinesis nodes and in the nucleus of early mitotic cells were measured using a rectangular or circular ROI with an average area of ∼44 (for cytokinesis node) or ∼328 (for nucleus) pixels in the best focal plane. The intensity of the cytoplasm outside the ROI in the same cell was used for background subtraction (Figure 2D). Because Mid1 signal spreads on the plasma membrane of gef2Δ plo1-ts18 and cdr2Δ gef2Δ plo1-ts18 cells during early mitosis, the smaller ROI and the cytoplasmic background (instead of the plasma membrane background) were used for the measurements. To count the Gef2 molecules, the global and local intensities of Gef2 and Mid1 were measured as described, and then the Gef2 intensities were normalized to Mid1 intensities to obtain molecule numbers (Wu and Pollard, 2005; Laporte ).

FRAP analysis

FRAP experiments were performed with the photokinesis unit on the UltraVIEW ERS confocal system as described (Coffman ; Laporte ). Optimal focal plane for bleaching was selected from z-sections. After collection of four prebleach images, the ROIs containing several cortical nodes were bleached >50% of the original signal, and 120 postbleach images with 10-s delay were collected. Intensity of every three consecutive time points was averaged to reduce noise. After subtracting the background and correcting for photobleaching during image acquisition (using intensity at unbleached region), the ROI intensity was normalized with the mean prebleach intensity set to 100% and the intensity just after bleaching set at 0%. Time 0 was set as first time point after bleaching. The exponential equation y = m1+m2 exp(−m3x) was used for the curve fit, in which m3 is the off-rate (KaleidaGraph; Synergy Software, Reading, PA). The half-time of recovery was calculated as t1/2 = (ln 2)/m3.

IP and Western blotting

Yeast cells expressing tagged proteins under the control of native promoters were harvested at exponential phase, washed with CXS buffer (50 mM 4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-1-piperazineethanesulfonic acid [HEPES], 20 mM KCl, 2 mM EDTA, 1 mM MgCl2, pH 7.5), and frozen with liquid nitrogen in CXS buffer with EDTA-free protein inhibitor (Roche, Indianapolis, IN). A total of ∼2 × 108 frozen cells were disrupted by grinding in mortar with liquid nitrogen. After thawing and centrifugation at 3500 rpm for 5 min at 4°C, lysis buffer (10 mM Tris, 130 mM NaCl, and 1% Triton, pH 8.0) was added to the crude extract, then centrifuged at 13,000 rpm for 20 min at 4°C. Thirty microliters of protein G covalently coupled magnetic Dynabeads (100.04D; Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA) per sample was washed three times with cold phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) buffer (2.7 mM KCl, 137 mM NaCl, 10 mM Na2HPO4, and 2 mM KH2PO4, pH 7.4), and 5 μl of rabbit anti-YFP antibody (NB600-308; Novus Biologicals, Littleton, CO) per sample in PBS buffer was added to beads. After incubation for 1 h at room temperature, the beads were washed three times with PBS buffer and twice with CXS buffer. Cell extracts of ∼200 μl were mixed with antibody-coupled Dynabeads and incubated for 1.5 h at 4°C. The precipitated beads were washed five times with CXS buffer plus 1% Triton, then dissolved in sample buffer and boiled for 5 min. After separation of proteins in SDS–PAGE, Western blotting was performed as described (Laporte ) using monoclonal anti–GFP/YFP JL-8 antibody (632381, 1:2500 dilution; Clontech,) or monoclonal anti-Myc antibody (9E10, 1:2500 dilution; Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Santa Cruz, CA). For Mid1 total protein analysis (Supplemental Figure S2), yeast cells were harvested at exponential phase, washed twice with double-distilled H2O, and resuspended in LiAc/SDS buffer (200 mM LiAc, 1% SDS, pH 7.5). After incubation at 65°C for 10 min, cells were mixed with sample buffer and boiled for 5 min. After centrifugation at 3000 rpm for 5 min, proteins in the supernatant were separated in SDS–PAGE, and Western blotting was performed as described. The intensities of Mid1 and tubulin bands were measured using Image J. The intensity for each strain was subtracted by the background of the same size in a nearby area before ratio comparison.
  98 in total

1.  Spatial and temporal pathway for assembly and constriction of the contractile ring in fission yeast cytokinesis.

Authors:  Jian-Qiu Wu; Jeffrey R Kuhn; David R Kovar; Thomas D Pollard
Journal:  Dev Cell       Date:  2003-11       Impact factor: 12.270

2.  A 'marker switch' approach for targeted mutagenesis of genes in Schizosaccharomyces pombe.

Authors:  Fiona H MacIver; David M Glover; Iain M Hagan
Journal:  Yeast       Date:  2003-05       Impact factor: 3.239

Review 3.  From polyploidy to aneuploidy, genome instability and cancer.

Authors:  Zuzana Storchova; David Pellman
Journal:  Nat Rev Mol Cell Biol       Date:  2004-01       Impact factor: 94.444

4.  Equatorial retention of the contractile actin ring by microtubules during cytokinesis.

Authors:  Mercedes Pardo; Paul Nurse
Journal:  Science       Date:  2003-06-06       Impact factor: 47.728

5.  Gef1p and Scd1p, the Two GDP-GTP exchange factors for Cdc42p, form a ring structure that shrinks during cytokinesis in Schizosaccharomyces pombe.

Authors:  Kouji Hirota; Kayoko Tanaka; Kunihiro Ohta; Masayuki Yamamoto
Journal:  Mol Biol Cell       Date:  2003-05-29       Impact factor: 4.138

Review 6.  Comparative analysis of cytokinesis in budding yeast, fission yeast and animal cells.

Authors:  Mohan K Balasubramanian; Erfei Bi; Michael Glotzer
Journal:  Curr Biol       Date:  2004-09-21       Impact factor: 10.834

7.  Sterol-rich plasma membrane domains in the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe.

Authors:  Volker Wachtler; Srividya Rajagopalan; Mohan K Balasubramanian
Journal:  J Cell Sci       Date:  2003-03-01       Impact factor: 5.285

8.  Rho3p regulates cell separation by modulating exocyst function in Schizosaccharomyces pombe.

Authors:  Hongyan Wang; Xie Tang; Mohan K Balasubramanian
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  2003-08       Impact factor: 4.562

9.  Role of guanine nucleotide exchange factors for Rho family GTPases in the regulation of cell morphology and actin cytoskeleton in fission yeast.

Authors:  Nobuhiko Iwaki; Kumiko Karatsu; Masaaki Miyamoto
Journal:  Biochem Biophys Res Commun       Date:  2003-12-12       Impact factor: 3.575

10.  The fission yeast cytokinesis formin Cdc12p is a barbed end actin filament capping protein gated by profilin.

Authors:  David R Kovar; Jeffrey R Kuhn; Andrea L Tichy; Thomas D Pollard
Journal:  J Cell Biol       Date:  2003-06-09       Impact factor: 10.539

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1.  Characterization of Mid1 domains for targeting and scaffolding in fission yeast cytokinesis.

Authors:  I-Ju Lee; Jian-Qiu Wu
Journal:  J Cell Sci       Date:  2012-03-16       Impact factor: 5.285

Review 2.  Molecular form and function of the cytokinetic ring.

Authors:  MariaSanta C Mangione; Kathleen L Gould
Journal:  J Cell Sci       Date:  2019-06-17       Impact factor: 5.285

Review 3.  Molecular mechanisms of contractile-ring constriction and membrane trafficking in cytokinesis.

Authors:  Kenneth S Gerien; Jian-Qiu Wu
Journal:  Biophys Rev       Date:  2018-11-17

4.  The putative exchange factor Gef3p interacts with Rho3p GTPase and the septin ring during cytokinesis in fission yeast.

Authors:  Sofía Muñoz; Elvira Manjón; Yolanda Sánchez
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  2014-06-19       Impact factor: 5.157

5.  NDR Kinase Sid2 Drives Anillin-like Mid1 from the Membrane to Promote Cytokinesis and Medial Division Site Placement.

Authors:  Alaina H Willet; Ashley K DeWitt; Janel R Beckley; Dawn M Clifford; Kathleen L Gould
Journal:  Curr Biol       Date:  2019-03-07       Impact factor: 10.834

6.  Blt1 and Mid1 provide overlapping membrane anchors to position the division plane in fission yeast.

Authors:  Mercè Guzman-Vendrell; Suzanne Baldissard; Maria Almonacid; Adeline Mayeux; Anne Paoletti; James B Moseley
Journal:  Mol Cell Biol       Date:  2012-11-12       Impact factor: 4.272

7.  The Functionally Important N-Terminal Half of Fission Yeast Mid1p Anillin Is Intrinsically Disordered and Undergoes Phase Separation.

Authors:  Moon Chatterjee; Thomas D Pollard
Journal:  Biochemistry       Date:  2019-06-25       Impact factor: 3.162

8.  Mechanistic insights into the anchorage of the contractile ring by anillin and Mid1.

Authors:  Lingfei Sun; Ruifang Guan; I-Ju Lee; Yajun Liu; Mengran Chen; Jiawei Wang; Jian-Qiu Wu; Zhucheng Chen
Journal:  Dev Cell       Date:  2015-05-07       Impact factor: 12.270

Review 9.  Contractile-ring assembly in fission yeast cytokinesis: Recent advances and new perspectives.

Authors:  I-Ju Lee; Valerie C Coffman; Jian-Qiu Wu
Journal:  Cytoskeleton (Hoboken)       Date:  2012-08-23

10.  Anillin-related protein Mid1p coordinates the assembly of the cytokinetic contractile ring in fission yeast.

Authors:  Shambaditya Saha; Thomas D Pollard
Journal:  Mol Biol Cell       Date:  2012-08-23       Impact factor: 4.138

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