Cell surface reception of Sonic hedgehog (Shh) must ensure that the graded morphogenic signal is interpreted accordingly in neighboring cells to specify tissue patterns during development. Here, we report endocytic sorting signals for the receptor Patched1 (Ptch1), comprising two 'PPXY' motifs, that direct it to degradation in lysosomes. These signals are recognized by two HECT-domain ubiquitin E3 ligases, Smurf1 and Smurf2, which are induced by Shh and become enriched in Caveolin-1 lipid rafts in association with Ptch1. Smurf-mediated endocytic turnover of Ptch1 is essential for its clearance from the primary cilium and pathway activation. Removal of both Smurfs completely abolishes the ability of Shh to sustain the proliferation of postnatal granule cell precursors in the cerebellum. These findings reveal a novel step in the Shh pathway activation as part of the Ptch1 negative feedback loop that precisely controls the signaling output in response to Shh gradient signal.
Cell surface reception of Sonic hedgehog (Shh) must ensure that the graded morphogenic signal is interpreted accordingly in neighboring cells to specify tissue patterns during development. Here, we report endocytic sorting signals for the receptor Patched1 (Ptch1), comprising two 'PPXY' motifs, that direct it to degradation in lysosomes. These signals are recognized by two HECT-domain ubiquitin E3 ligases, Smurf1 and Smurf2, which are induced by Shh and become enriched in Caveolin-1lipid rafts in association with Ptch1. Smurf-mediated endocytic turnover of Ptch1 is essential for its clearance from the primary cilium and pathway activation. Removal of both Smurfs completely abolishes the ability of Shh to sustain the proliferation of postnatal granule cell precursors in the cerebellum. These findings reveal a novel step in the Shh pathway activation as part of the Ptch1 negative feedback loop that precisely controls the signaling output in response to Shh gradient signal.
The secreted Sonic hedgehog (Shh) protein specifies spatial tissue patterns during
development by providing positional cues embedded in its concentration gradient
(Jiang and Hui, 2008; Robbins et al., 2012; Ryan and Chiang, 2012). During embryogenesis, neighboring
progenitor cells in a developing field are able to discern incremental changes in
the Shh signal strength and adopt their respective fate accordingly (Ribes and Briscoe, 2009; Balaskas et al., 2012). This ability requires
a cell surface reception system that can transform the graded Shh signal into
different levels of signaling output, but how this is accomplished is poorly
understood. In the adult, Shh plays a crucial role in guiding the differentiation of
tissue-specific stem cells (Jaks et al.,
2008; Shin et al., 2011; Arwert et al., 2012), and inappropriate
activation of Shh signaling could be the culprit that underlines neoplastic growth
in the gut epithelium (Nielsen et al.,
2004) or lead to outright cancers (Scales
and de Sauvage, 2009; Stecca and Ruiz,
2010; Northcott et al.,
2012).At the cell surface, whereas a network of membrane proteins, including Hip1 (Chuang et al., 2003), Gas1 (Lee et al., 2001), Boc/iHog, and Cdo/Boi
(Okada et al., 2006; Tenzen et al., 2006; Yao et al., 2006; Beachy et
al., 2010), bind Shh and control the range and competence of its
receiving cells, the core of Shh signal reception consists of Patched1 (Ptch1), a
12-pass membrane receptor that acts negatively on Smoothened (Smo), a
G-protein-coupled, receptor-like signal transducer (Rohatgi and Scott, 2007b). Binding of Shh to Ptch1 alleviates
the Ptch1 inhibition of Smo, allowing the signal to propagate to three Gli proteins,
the transcriptional effectors of the pathway, and activate the expression of target
genes, including pathway components Ptch1 and Gli1 themselves. Since Gli1 is a
potent activator of Shh target genes, its induction by the ligand ensures that
pathway activation will attain the intended effect in a positive feedback loop. On
the other hand, induction of the inhibitory Ptch1 amounts to a negative feedback
control, which was regarded crucial to the interpretation of the Shh gradient signal
(Ribes and Briscoe, 2009). In effect,
Ptch1 serves two roles in Shh signaling: first, it acts cell autonomously in
suppressing the downstream pathway, and second, the excessive Ptch1 induced by Shh
acts as a sink in limiting the spread of the ligand, thereby affecting the
neighboring cells in a non-cell autonomous fashion (Chen and Struhl, 1996; Torroja et al., 2004). However, it is not clear what counteracts the
induction of Ptch1 to achieve the precision of the regulation.For many years, Ptch1 and Smo have been seen in punctate intracellular vesicles in
both Drosophila and mammalian cells (Capdevila et al., 1994; Ramirez-Weber et al., 2000; Zhu et
al., 2003; Li et al., 2012), and
their trafficking between the cytoplasmic membrane and intracellular vesicles found
to be crucial to the activation of the Hedgehog pathway (Denef et al., 2000; Incardona et al., 2000; Zhu et al.,
2003; Nakano et al., 2004; Lu et al., 2006; Milenkovic et al., 2009; Li
et al., 2012). It is known that ligand engagement of
Drosophila receptor Ptc triggers its internalization and
membrane presentation of Smo, but membrane trafficking of Ptch1 and Smo in mammalian
cells has an added complexity in that Shh signals through the primary cilium (Huangfu et al., 2003; Corbit et al., 2005; Goetz
and Anderson, 2009), a microtubule-based membrane protrusion that
emanates from the interphase centrioles (Lefebvre
and Rosenbaum, 1986; Pazour and Witman,
2003; Nachury et al., 2010). The
prevailing model for mammalianShh activation entails Ptch1 exiting from and Smo
translocating into the primary cilium (Rohatgi et
al., 2007a; Kovacs et al.,
2008). Some data suggest that Smo trafficking through membranous compartments
is controlled by small lipids and the sterol-sensing domain of Ptch1 (Martin et al., 2001; Bijlsma et al., 2006; Corcoran and Scott, 2006; Yavari et
al., 2010). Since the structural framework of Ptch1 resembles that of
bacterial amino acid transporters (Carstea et al.,
1997), it is conceivable that Ptch1 controls Smo activity or trafficking
through such a small molecular intermediate. However, little evidence is available
to account for how Ptch1 internalization through endocytosis is regulated, and it is
unclear whether ciliary trafficking and endocytosis are obligatorily coupled (Nachury et al., 2010).Receptor endocytosis plays crucial roles in coordinating the strength and duration of
many cell signaling systems (Piddini and Vincent,
2003; Polo and Di Fiore, 2006).
At various steps of the endocytic pathway, from the plasma membrane to the
endosomes, receptors can be sorted to the proteolytic lumens of lysosomes, leading
to desensitization, or back to the plasma membrane for a rapid recovery of cellular
responsiveness. In addition to the classical Clathrin-mediated endocytosis, recent
advances indicate that membrane receptors are also internalized through lipid rafts
(Le Roy and Wrana, 2005; Lajoie and Nabi, 2010), which are specialized
membrane domains enriched in cholesterol and sphingomyelin and stabilized by
Caveolin 1 (Cav-1) (Allen et al., 2007).
Unlike the Clathrin-mediated endocytosis, cargos of caveolae were shown to be
unloaded to late endosomes, thereby bypassing early endosomes (Quirin et al., 2008; Hayer
et al., 2010; Sandvig et al.,
2011). A major forward endocytic sorting signal is ubiquitination (Hicke and Dunn, 2003; Mukhopadhyay and Riezman, 2007; Hayer et al., 2010), and many HECT-domain E3 ligases have
been implicated in the Ubiquitin control of endocytosis, including Smurf2 (Di Guglielmo et al., 2003; Metzger et al., 2012), which was first
identified as a negative regulator of TGF-β/BMP signaling (Kavsak et al., 2000; Zhang et al., 2001). Here, we present evidence that Smurf1
and Smurf2 are the Ubiquitin E3 ligases that promote Ptch1 movement from lipid rafts
to late endosomes for subsequent degradation in lysosomes. This movement is
essential for Ptch1's clearance from primary cilia, Shh pathway activation, and the
role of Shh in sustaining the proliferation of cerebellar granule cell precursors.
In light of the negative feedback control of Shh signaling by Ptch1, this
destruction system would allow the level of signaling output to be set precisely
according to the level of the Ptch1 protein.
Results
Both PPXY-motifs deletion and endocytosis blockade cause Ptch1 to accumulate
in lipid rafts
The C-terminal tails of DrosophilaPtc and mousePtch1 play an
important role in determining its membrane distribution and stability, possibly
through the highly conserved ‘PPXY’ motif (Lu et al., 2006; Kawamura et al., 2008), which is recognized by the WW domain
frequently found in HECT-domain E3 ligases (Metzger et al., 2012). MammalianPtch1 contains an evolutionarily
conserved C-terminal ‘PPXY’ motif and a second one in the third
intracellular loop (Figure 1—figure
supplement 1), whereas Ptch2 does not and is quite stable (Kawamura et al., 2008). Under a confocal
microscope and in transfected murine embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs), Ptch1-GFP was
primarily detected in punctate vesicles (Figure
1A), consistent with what was reported in COS and HeLa cells (Incardona et al., 2000; Karpen et al., 2001); a large proportion
of these Ptch1-GFP vesicles were likely to be endosomes (see below and in Martin et al., 2001; Incardona et al., 2002). In light of the
ubiquitination control of endocytosis, we suspected that the
‘PPXY’ motifs of Ptch1 might be the signal that regulates its
turnover through endosomes and lysosomes. To test this hypothesis, we sought to
determine how Ptch1 engages the endocytic pathway by focusing our attention at
the rim of the plasma membrane, where treatment with conditioned medium (CM)
from HEK293 cells expressing the N-terminal signaling fragment of Shh (ShhN) for
1 hr rendered some of the Ptch1-GFP vesicles also positive for Cav-1 (Figure 1A), a specific marker of lipid
rafts. To quantify the colocalization, we sampled 10 randomly selected rim areas
from different cells imaged for each data point and calculated the
colocalization coefficient. The results indicated that ShhN almost doubled the
colocalization coefficient between Ptch1-GFP and endogenous Cav-1 from 0.37
± 0.04 to 0.68 ± 0.04 (Figure
1A,B). Blocking late endosome/lysosome passage with chloroquine
(Chlq) and concanavalin A (ConA) or lysosomal proteolysis with leupeptin (Leu)
showed similar effects (Figure 1A,B,
Figure 1—figure supplement
2). In contrast, the mutant Ptch1Δ2PY-GFP that lacks both
‘PPXY’ motifs exhibited a higher level of colocalization with
Cav-1 than its wildtype counterpart even without ShhN treatment (Figure 1A,B). Some of the Ptch1-GFP
vesicles at the plasma rim were also positive for Clathrin heavy chain that
marks the Clathrin-coated pits, but in contrast to the ligand-inducible
enrichment in Cav-1lipid rafts, the fraction of Ptch1-GFP in Clathrin-coated
pits was affected neither by ligand treatment nor deletion of the
‘PPXY’ motifs (Figure
1C,D). To complement the confocal imaging experiments, we conducted a
co-sedimentation experiment in a discontinuous sucrose density gradient and
found that both Ptch1-FLAG and Ptch1Δ2PY-FLAG co-sedimented with Cav-1 in
20% and 25% buoyancy fractions (Figure
1E), indicating that when expressed exogenously, Ptch1-FLAG can find its
way into Cav-1 positive lipid rafts even without Shh induction. Thus, both
deletion of the ‘PPXY’ motifs and blocking endocytosis cause Ptch1
to accumulate in lipid rafts.
Figure 1—figure supplement 1.
Position and sequence alignment of ‘PPXY’
motifs.
(A) Schematic representation of Ptch1 constructs (left) and
sequence alignments (right) of Drosophila and vertebrate Ptch1
surrounding the two evolutionarily conserved PPXY motifs.
DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02555.004
Figure 1.
The PPXY motifs define sorting signals from lipid rafts to
late endosomes.
(A) Confocal images showing colocalization of
exogenously expressed Ptch1-GFP or Δ2PY (green) with
native Cav-1 (red) at the rim of the plasma membrane, and
(B) calculation of the colocalization
coefficients in (A) in transfected MEFs. ShhN-CM
and Chlq were added 1 hr prior to fixation. The chamber slides
were chilled at 4°C for 20 min and then shifted to
37°C for another 20 min before fixation with 4%
paraformaldehyde in PBS. The cells were then permeabilized with
0.5% Triton X-100 and stained with an antibody for Cav-1.
(C) Representative images and (D)
quantification of colocalization between Ptch1-GFP and clathrin
heavy chain. MEFs were transfected with Ptch1-GFP or
PtchΔ2PY-GFP, then treated with ShhN or Ctrl medium for 1
hr before fixation. (E) Western analyses of sucrose
gradient fractions showing Ptch1-FLAG co-sedimented with
Smurf2CG-Myc and Cav-1. Δ2PY was inefficient in bringing
Smurf2CG-Myc into Cav-1 positive sedimentation fractions.
(F) Western blot analyses of stabilities of
Ptch1 and the ‘PPXY’ motif mutants in MEFs. Chlq
or MG132 treatment was carried out for 4 hr. The confocal images
were taken with a 63x objective, and the insets in 1A were
digitally magnified. Bars represent mean ± standard
deviation (SD). Statistical analyses were performed by two-tail
Student's t test.
***p<0.001, and n.s., not
statistically significant (p>0.05).
DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02555.003
(A) Schematic representation of Ptch1 constructs (left) and
sequence alignments (right) of Drosophila and vertebrate Ptch1
surrounding the two evolutionarily conserved PPXY motifs.
DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02555.004
(A) Representative confocal images showing
accumulation of Ptch1-GFP in Cav-1 positive lipid rafts after
blocking endocytosis with lysosomal inhibitors Leu and ConA.
(B) Calculation of colocalization coefficients
in (A). The confocal images were taken with a 63x
oil lens, and the insets were digitally magnified. Bars
represent mean ± standard deviation (SD).
DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02555.005
Figure 1—figure supplement 2.
Lysosomal inhibitors cause Ptch1-GFP to accumulate in lipid
rafts.
(A) Representative confocal images showing
accumulation of Ptch1-GFP in Cav-1 positive lipid rafts after
blocking endocytosis with lysosomal inhibitors Leu and ConA.
(B) Calculation of colocalization coefficients
in (A). The confocal images were taken with a 63x
oil lens, and the insets were digitally magnified. Bars
represent mean ± standard deviation (SD).
DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02555.005
The PPXY motifs define sorting signals from lipid rafts to
late endosomes.
(A) Confocal images showing colocalization of
exogenously expressed Ptch1-GFP or Δ2PY (green) with
native Cav-1 (red) at the rim of the plasma membrane, and
(B) calculation of the colocalization
coefficients in (A) in transfected MEFs. ShhN-CM
and Chlq were added 1 hr prior to fixation. The chamber slides
were chilled at 4°C for 20 min and then shifted to
37°C for another 20 min before fixation with 4%
paraformaldehyde in PBS. The cells were then permeabilized with
0.5% Triton X-100 and stained with an antibody for Cav-1.
(C) Representative images and (D)
quantification of colocalization between Ptch1-GFP and clathrin
heavy chain. MEFs were transfected with Ptch1-GFP or
PtchΔ2PY-GFP, then treated with ShhN or Ctrl medium for 1
hr before fixation. (E) Western analyses of sucrose
gradient fractions showing Ptch1-FLAG co-sedimented with
Smurf2CG-Myc and Cav-1. Δ2PY was inefficient in bringing
Smurf2CG-Myc into Cav-1 positive sedimentation fractions.
(F) Western blot analyses of stabilities of
Ptch1 and the ‘PPXY’ motif mutants in MEFs. Chlq
or MG132 treatment was carried out for 4 hr. The confocal images
were taken with a 63x objective, and the insets in 1A were
digitally magnified. Bars represent mean ± standard
deviation (SD). Statistical analyses were performed by two-tail
Student's t test.
***p<0.001, and n.s., not
statistically significant (p>0.05).DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02555.003
Position and sequence alignment of ‘PPXY’
motifs.
(A) Schematic representation of Ptch1 constructs (left) and
sequence alignments (right) of Drosophila and vertebrate Ptch1
surrounding the two evolutionarily conserved PPXY motifs.DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02555.004
Lysosomal inhibitors cause Ptch1-GFP to accumulate in lipid
rafts.
(A) Representative confocal images showing
accumulation of Ptch1-GFP in Cav-1 positive lipid rafts after
blocking endocytosis with lysosomal inhibitors Leu and ConA.
(B) Calculation of colocalization coefficients
in (A). The confocal images were taken with a 63x
oil lens, and the insets were digitally magnified. Bars
represent mean ± standard deviation (SD).DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02555.005Since an end point of endocytosis is degradation in lysosomes, we further asked
if wildtype Ptch1 and ‘PPXY’ motif mutants accumulate differently
in the presence of proteasomal or lysosomal blocker. When expressed in MEFs,
Ptch1-GFP was an unstable protein; the bulk of which appeared to turnover via
proteasomes as Ptch1-GFP accumulated to a very high level in the presence of
MG132 (Figure 1F, compare lanes 1 and 3).
A small portion of Ptch1-FLAG appeared to turnover via lysosomes as indicated by
the moderate level of accumulation in the presence of lysosomal inhibitor Chlq
(Figure 1F, lanes 1 and 2). In
contrast, Ptch1 mutants lacking either one of or both ‘PPXY’
motifs were relatively stable when expressed in MEFs, although they could be
induced to accumulate further by MG132 but not Chlq (Figure 1F, lanes 4–12). These results suggest that
Shh promotes turnover of at least a portion of ectopically expressed Ptch1 via
endosomes and lysosomes, but the entry point is likely the Cav-1 positive lipid
rafts rather than the conventional clathrin-coated pits.
The ‘PPXY’ motifs define an endocytic sorting signals of
Ptch1
To ascertain if the ‘PPXY’ motifs are the actual signal that sorts
Ptch1 from lipid rafts to endosomes/lysosomes, we asked if Ptch1-GFP or
Δ2PY-GFP could be identified in early endosomes, late endosomes, or
lysosomes, which are marked by Rab5-RFP, Rab7-RFP, or Lamp1-RFP, respectively.
In the absence of ShhN, Ptch1-GFP and Rab7-RFP could be readily detected
together in punctate vesicles, and ShhN treatment drastically increased that
colocalization as indicated by colocalization coefficient, which increased from
0.29 ± 0.03 to 0.51 ± 0.02 (Figure
2A,B). Similar colocalization between Ptch1-GFP and endogenous Rab7
was also observed under ShhN treatment using specific antibodies (Figure 2—figure supplement 1). We
could not detect vesicles marked positively with both Ptch1-GFP and Lamp1-RFP or
Ptch1-GFP and endogenous Lamp1-RFP without blocking lysosomal enzymes by
leupeptin (Figure 2—figure supplement
2A), but colozalization between Ptch1-GFP and endogenous Lamp1 was
revealed with the use of leupeptin (Figure
2C). We did not see Ptch1-GFP colocalizing with either transfected
Rab5-RFP (Figure 2—figure supplement
2B) or endogenous Rab5 (Figure
2—figure supplement 3) without or with ShhN treatment. These
observations are consistent with the notion that endocytic cargos of caveolae
are unloaded directly to late endosomes, bypassing early endosomes (Quirin et al., 2008; Hayer et al., 2010; Sandvig et al., 2011). In contrast to Ptch1-GFP,
Δ2PY-GFP was never found together with any of the three endosome/lysosome
markers and ShhN treatment caused no statistically significant change thereof
(Figure 2A–C, Figure 2—figure supplements 1 and
2), indicating that Shh is not able to induce Δ2PY to move
beyond lipid rafts to enter late endosomes.
Figure 2.
PPXY motifs are required for Shh-induced endocytosis of
Ptch1.
(A) Confocal images showing colocalization of
Ptch1-GFP or Δ2PY (green) with Rab7-RFP (red), and
(B) calculation of the colocalization
coefficients in (A) in transfected MEFs.
(C) Confocal images showing localization of
Ptch1-GFP or Δ2PY (green) in vesicles marked anti-Lamp1
(red) in the presence of 1 mg/ml leupeptin. (D)
Confocal imaging and (E) calculation of
colocalization coefficient of Ptch1-GFP and Rab7-RFP in
Kif3a−/− and control MEFs. ShhN
treatment was for 1 hr and the cells were processed as in Figure 1A. Statistical
analyses were performed by two-tail Student's t
test. ***p<0.001, and n.s.,
not statistically significant (p>0.05).
DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02555.006
Representative confocal images showing ShhN treatment promotes
colocalization of Ptch1-GFP in late endosomes visualized by
anti-Rab7. Transfected MEFs were treated with ShhN-CM or control
conditioned medium for 1 hr, followed by incubations at 4°C
for 20 min and 37°C for 20 min. The close-up images were
digitally amplified.
DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02555.007
Representative Confocal images and quantification of
colocalization coefficients showing that Ptch1-GFP or
Δ2PY-GFP does not colocalize with Lamp1-RFP (red)
(A) or Rab5-RFP (B). Transfected
MEFs were treated ShhN or control conditioned medium without
Leupeptin for 2 hr, and then the cells were processed as in
Figure 2A.
DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02555.008
Representative Confocal images showing Ptch1-GFP or
Δ2PY-GFP and endogenous Rab5 in non-overlapping green or
red channel, respectively.
DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02555.009
Figure 2—figure supplement 1.
Shh promotes colocalizaiton of Ptch1-GFP with endogenous Rab7
in late endosomes.
Representative confocal images showing ShhN treatment promotes
colocalization of Ptch1-GFP in late endosomes visualized by
anti-Rab7. Transfected MEFs were treated with ShhN-CM or control
conditioned medium for 1 hr, followed by incubations at 4°C
for 20 min and 37°C for 20 min. The close-up images were
digitally amplified.
DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02555.007
Figure 2—figure supplement 2.
Lack of colocalization of Ptch1-GFP or Δ2PY-GFP with
exogenous Rab5-RFP and Lamp1-RFP without blocking lysosomal
turnover.
Representative Confocal images and quantification of
colocalization coefficients showing that Ptch1-GFP or
Δ2PY-GFP does not colocalize with Lamp1-RFP (red)
(A) or Rab5-RFP (B). Transfected
MEFs were treated ShhN or control conditioned medium without
Leupeptin for 2 hr, and then the cells were processed as in
Figure 2A.
DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02555.008
Figure 2—figure supplement 3.
Ptch1-GFP or Δ2PY-GFP was not found in early endosomes
marked by anti-Rab5 immunofluorescence staining.
Representative Confocal images showing Ptch1-GFP or
Δ2PY-GFP and endogenous Rab5 in non-overlapping green or
red channel, respectively.
DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02555.009
PPXY motifs are required for Shh-induced endocytosis of
Ptch1.
(A) Confocal images showing colocalization of
Ptch1-GFP or Δ2PY (green) with Rab7-RFP (red), and
(B) calculation of the colocalization
coefficients in (A) in transfected MEFs.
(C) Confocal images showing localization of
Ptch1-GFP or Δ2PY (green) in vesicles marked anti-Lamp1
(red) in the presence of 1 mg/ml leupeptin. (D)
Confocal imaging and (E) calculation of
colocalization coefficient of Ptch1-GFP and Rab7-RFP in
Kif3a−/− and control MEFs. ShhN
treatment was for 1 hr and the cells were processed as in Figure 1A. Statistical
analyses were performed by two-tail Student's t
test. ***p<0.001, and n.s.,
not statistically significant (p>0.05).DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02555.006
Shh promotes colocalizaiton of Ptch1-GFP with endogenous Rab7
in late endosomes.
Representative confocal images showing ShhN treatment promotes
colocalization of Ptch1-GFP in late endosomes visualized by
anti-Rab7. Transfected MEFs were treated with ShhN-CM or control
conditioned medium for 1 hr, followed by incubations at 4°C
for 20 min and 37°C for 20 min. The close-up images were
digitally amplified.DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02555.007
Lack of colocalization of Ptch1-GFP or Δ2PY-GFP with
exogenous Rab5-RFP and Lamp1-RFP without blocking lysosomal
turnover.
Representative Confocal images and quantification of
colocalization coefficients showing that Ptch1-GFP or
Δ2PY-GFP does not colocalize with Lamp1-RFP (red)
(A) or Rab5-RFP (B). Transfected
MEFs were treated ShhN or control conditioned medium without
Leupeptin for 2 hr, and then the cells were processed as in
Figure 2A.DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02555.008
Ptch1-GFP or Δ2PY-GFP was not found in early endosomes
marked by anti-Rab5 immunofluorescence staining.
Representative Confocal images showing Ptch1-GFP or
Δ2PY-GFP and endogenous Rab5 in non-overlapping green or
red channel, respectively.DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02555.009The current paradigm stipulates that Shh induces Ptch1 exit from the primary
cilium during signaling (Rohatgi et al.,
2007a; Kovacs et al., 2008).
This prompted us to ask if ciliary export or its structural integrity is
prerequisite to endocytosis of Ptch1 by comparing the abilities of Ptch1-GFP to
associate with Rab7-RFP in
Kif3a or
otherwise isogenic control MEFs. Although
Kif3aMEFs
do not make cilia (Chen et al., 2011),
Ptch1-GFP could still proceed to late endosomes/lysosomes under the influence of
ShhN unabatedly (Figure 2D,E), implying
that Ptch1 endocytosis is downstream from or independent of ciliary
trafficking.Based on results from the above several lines of investigation, we conclude that
the ‘PPXY’ motifs constitute sorting signals that direct Ptch1 to
move into late endosomes for turnover in lysosomes. This sorting event likely
takes place in Cav-1 positive lipid rafts since Δ2PY accumulates there in
the absence of this signal.
Ptch1 endocytosis is required for the activation of Shh signaling
Ptc or Ptch1 endocytosis has been observed in cells from
Drosophila to mammals for some time (Denef et al., 2000; Incardona et al., 2000, 2002; Martin et al., 2001;
Torroja et al., 2004; Lu et al., 2006), but its role was
primarily attributed to ligand sequestration or clearing (Incardona et al., 2000; Torroja et al., 2004). In Drosophila, the role of
Ptc in ligand sequestration has been shown to be separable from that of
signaling based on analyses of certain mutants (Chen and Struhl, 1996; Torroja et al., 2004). However, we observed that when re-expressed
in Ptch1MEFs, the
‘PPXY’ motif mutants accumulated in the primary cilium, in
contrast to their wildtype counterpart; ShhN treatment effectively forced
Ptch1-GFP to exit the primary cilium, but it was less effective against these
mutants (Figure 3A,B). Ciliary
accumulation of the ‘PPXY’ motif mutants is likely a consequence
of their inability to endocytose, rather than a specific defect of ciliary
export, since these mutants also accumulate in lipid rafts (Figure 1A,B) and blocking endocytosis with high
concentration of leupeptin showed a similar effect without or with ShhN
treatment (Figure 3—figure supplement
1). Combined with results from the stability experiment (Figure 1F), this observation indicated that
these two ‘PPXY’ motifs play an equivalent role in regulating
Ptch1 function in cilia. To support this notion, we made temporal measurements
of endogenous Smo translocating into the primary cilium, which is an obligatory
early event of Shh signaling and was reported as concurrent to the exit of Ptch1
therefrom (Rohatgi et al., 2007a). In
Ptch1MEFs,
immunofluorescence staining showed that Smo was constitutively present in the
primary cilium (Figure 3C), as expected
(Corbit et al., 2005; Rohatgi et al., 2007a; Kovacs et al., 2008). Re-introducing
Ptch1-GFP cleared Smo out of the primary cilium, but ShhN treatment allowed Smo
to move back in to nearly its full extent within 4 hr (Figure 3C,D). Conversely, ShhN treatment triggered the
ciliary export of Ptch1 at a rate comparable to that of Smo import (Figure 3C, and compare Figure 3D,E). Re-introducing Δ2PY, on the other
hand, only allowed a substantially lower level of Smo to be imported back into
cilia after ShhN treatment and Δ2PY was itself resistant to Shh-induced
export (Figure 3C,E).
Figure 3.
The ‘PPXY’ motifs regulate the opposing
movements of Ptch1 out of and Smo into the primary
cilium.
(A) Representative confocal images and
(B) distribution of GFP fluorescence showing
accumulation of the ‘PPXY’ motif mutants of Ptch1
in primary cilia in the absence or presence of ShhN. Two-tail
Student's t test was used for statistical
analysis. ***p<0.001, n.s., not significant
(p>0.05). (C) Immunofluorescence of GFP as
well as endogenous Smo (red) and acetylated tubulin (blue)
staining in Ptch1−/− MEFs transfected
with Ptch1-GFP or Δ2PY. (D) Quantification of
anti-Smo staining and (E) GFP fluorescence as in
(C). Only transfected GFP positive cells were
counted for the ciliary localization of endogenous Smo. In all
of the above experiments, transfected cells were grown to
confluence and then serum-starved for 24 hr to allow for
ciliogenesis. ShhN-CM treatment was for 24 hr, or as
indicated.
DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02555.010
Representative confocal images and calculations thereof showing
Ptch1-GFP fluorescence accumulated in primary cilia. ShhN and
leupeptin (1 mg/ml) were added to the WT MEFs for 2 hr. Two-tail
Student's t test was used for statistical
analysis. **p<0.01, n.s., not significant
(p>0.05).
DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02555.011
Figure 3—figure supplement 1.
Inhibition of Lysosomal turnover dampens Shh-induced ciliary
exit of Ptch1-GFP.
Representative confocal images and calculations thereof showing
Ptch1-GFP fluorescence accumulated in primary cilia. ShhN and
leupeptin (1 mg/ml) were added to the WT MEFs for 2 hr. Two-tail
Student's t test was used for statistical
analysis. **p<0.01, n.s., not significant
(p>0.05).
DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02555.011
The ‘PPXY’ motifs regulate the opposing
movements of Ptch1 out of and Smo into the primary
cilium.
(A) Representative confocal images and
(B) distribution of GFP fluorescence showing
accumulation of the ‘PPXY’ motif mutants of Ptch1
in primary cilia in the absence or presence of ShhN. Two-tail
Student's t test was used for statistical
analysis. ***p<0.001, n.s., not significant
(p>0.05). (C) Immunofluorescence of GFP as
well as endogenous Smo (red) and acetylated tubulin (blue)
staining in Ptch1−/− MEFs transfected
with Ptch1-GFP or Δ2PY. (D) Quantification of
anti-Smo staining and (E) GFP fluorescence as in
(C). Only transfected GFP positive cells were
counted for the ciliary localization of endogenous Smo. In all
of the above experiments, transfected cells were grown to
confluence and then serum-starved for 24 hr to allow for
ciliogenesis. ShhN-CM treatment was for 24 hr, or as
indicated.DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02555.010
Inhibition of Lysosomal turnover dampens Shh-induced ciliary
exit of Ptch1-GFP.
Representative confocal images and calculations thereof showing
Ptch1-GFP fluorescence accumulated in primary cilia. ShhN and
leupeptin (1 mg/ml) were added to the WT MEFs for 2 hr. Two-tail
Student's t test was used for statistical
analysis. **p<0.01, n.s., not significant
(p>0.05).DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02555.011As a ligand-binding and inhibitory receptor, the functions of
DrosophilaPtc are twofold; first acting through Smo, Ptc
negatively regulates downstream pathway signaling cell autonomously, and second,
through ligand sequestration Ptc suppresses Hh signaling in neighboring cells.
To determine if Ptch1 endocytosis impinges on downstream pathway activation, we
measured the ability of Ptch1-GFP or Δ2PY to confer Shh inducibility to
the 8xGliBS-luc reporter in
Ptch1MEFs. When co-transfected with Ptch1-GFP, the 8xGliBS-luc reporter showed a
robust inductive response to ShhN, resulting in a dose–response curve
typical of a substrate-enzyme relationship; however, this reporter was barely
induced by ShhN when it was co-transfected with Δ2PY (Figure 4A). The Shh signaling blockade imposed by
Δ2PY could be by-passed by siRNA-mediated knockdown of Sufu (Figure 4B), a downstream negative
regulator, suggesting that the blockade is pathway-specific and occurs upstream
of Sufu function. So far all our evidence points to inability of the
‘PPXY’ motif mutants to undergo Shh-induced endocytosis rather
than a defect in their intrinsic activity. Indeed, in
Ptch1MEFs, these mutants were equally effective as wildtype Ptch1 or cyclopamine in
suppressing 8xGliBS-luc reporter independent of the Shh ligand (Figure 4C). Finally to address the effect
of the ‘PPXY’ motifs deletion on the non-cell-autonomous function
of Ptch1, we designed a ‘mixing’ experiment, in which
Ptch1MEFs
re-expressing wildtype Ptch1-GFP or Δ2PY-GFP were mixed at 5 to 1 ratio
with a line of stable NIH3T3 cells harboring the genomically integrated
8xGliBS-luc reporter (Chen et al.,
2011). In the presence of limiting amount of ShhN (1:64 dilution of the
conditioned medium), Δ2PY showed a robust inhibition of the ligand-induced
reporter activity in the neighboring cells; however this effect was nullified at
high ShhN concentration (1:16 dilution) (Figure
4D).
Figure 4.
The ‘PPXY’ motifs are required for eliciting both
cell and non-cell autonomous transcriptional responses to
Shh.
(A) Luciferase assays for Ptch1 and the Δ2PY
mutant in Ptch1−/− MEFs that were
transfected together with the 8xGliBS-luc reporter construct. Each
data point was obtained in triplicate and the error bars denote the
standard error. (B) Rescuing Shh induction blockade
imposed by Δ2PY using siSufu in
Ptch1
MEFs. The experiment was set up as in (A) except that
Sufu was knocked down by siRNA at the same time as cDNA transfection
and 1:16 dilution of ShhN-CM was used. (C) Relative
activities of the GliBS-luc reporter that was co-expressed with
Ptch1 or the ΔPY mutants in
Ptch1
MEFs without ShhN-CM treatment. The ΔPY mutants displayed same
inhibitory effect as WT Ptch1. (D) Non-cell autonomous
inhibition of GliBS-luc reporter in neighboring cells.
Ptch1
MEFs transfected with Ptch1-FLAG, Δ2PY, or the vector control
were mixed at 5:1 ratio with NIH3T3:GliBS-luc reporter cells. The
cells were given ShhN-CM for 24 hr, and two-tail Student's
t test was used for statistical analyses.
*p<0.05, **p<0.01,
***p<0.001, and n.s., not
significant (p>0.05).
DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02555.012
The ‘PPXY’ motifs are required for eliciting both
cell and non-cell autonomous transcriptional responses to
Shh.
(A) Luciferase assays for Ptch1 and the Δ2PY
mutant in Ptch1−/− MEFs that were
transfected together with the 8xGliBS-luc reporter construct. Each
data point was obtained in triplicate and the error bars denote the
standard error. (B) Rescuing Shh induction blockade
imposed by Δ2PY using siSufu in
Ptch1MEFs. The experiment was set up as in (A) except that
Sufu was knocked down by siRNA at the same time as cDNA transfection
and 1:16 dilution of ShhN-CM was used. (C) Relative
activities of the GliBS-luc reporter that was co-expressed with
Ptch1 or the ΔPY mutants in
Ptch1MEFs without ShhN-CM treatment. The ΔPY mutants displayed same
inhibitory effect as WT Ptch1. (D) Non-cell autonomous
inhibition of GliBS-luc reporter in neighboring cells.
Ptch1MEFs transfected with Ptch1-FLAG, Δ2PY, or the vector control
were mixed at 5:1 ratio with NIH3T3:GliBS-luc reporter cells. The
cells were given ShhN-CM for 24 hr, and two-tail Student's
t test was used for statistical analyses.
*p<0.05, **p<0.01,
***p<0.001, and n.s., not
significant (p>0.05).DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02555.012In summary, our data indicate that whereas Ptch1 engagement to the ligand may
have a nominal effect of internalizing Shh, it can be also regarded as an
interaction that allows Shh to induce Ptch1 clearance from the primary cilium,
the site of Shh signaling, and this regulation equally impinges on both cell and
non-cell autonomous signaling functions of Ptch1.
Smurf1 and Smurf2 are E3 ligases required for Shh signaling
Previously, the C-terminal domain of DrosophilaPtc was shown to
be recognized by Nedd4 HECT-domain E3 ligase (Lu et al., 2006). We expressed mouseNedd4 and Nedd4l together with
Ptch1-FLAG in HEK293 cells, and found that neither one promoted Ptch1
degradation, and several other HECT-domain E3 ligases including Wwp1, Wwp2,
Huwe1, Herc1, Herc3, Herc4, Herc6, Hecw1, and Hecw2 also showed no effect, but
co-expression of Smurf1 or Smurf2 did (Figure
5A,B). Consistent with a specific role, the ligase deficient Smurf1CA
and Smurf2CG mutants failed to influence Ptch1 stability (Figure 5B). Since the ‘PPXY’ motif mutants
accumulated in cilia, we asked if knockdown of either Smurf or both with siRNAs
could augment the ciliary localization of Ptch1-GFP. We found this was the case
in NIH3T3 cells without (Figure 5C,D) or
with ShhN treatment (Figure 5—figure
supplement 1). Because Smurf2 is known to direct the TGF-β type
I receptor and the μ opioid neuropeptide receptor to endocytic turnover
(Di Guglielmo et al., 2003; Henry et al., 2012), we posited that
Smurf1 and Smurf2 might be the enzymes that control Ptch1 endocytosis and chose
them for further analysis.
Figure 5.
Smurf1 and Smurf2 are E3 ligases required for Shh
signaling.
(A) Western analyses of Ptch1-FLAG in HEK293 cells
that were co-transfected with cDNAs encoding a battery of
HECT-domain E3 ligases as indicated, and (B) ligase
deficient Smurf mutants. β-actin was used as a loading
control. (C) Representative confocal images and
(D) calculations of Ptch1-GFP fluorescence
accumulated in primary cilia as the result of siRNA knockdown of
Smurf1, Smurf2, or both in
NIH3T3 cells. Primary cilia were marked by acetylated tubulin
(red). (E) RT-PCR detection of Gli1, Smurf1, and
Smurf2 mRNAs in wildtype (WT),
Smurf1
, and
Smurf2
MEFs transfected with non-silencing (NS) or Smurf-specific
siRNAs as indicated. HPRT mRNA was used as an internal control.
A representative gel image is shown here. (F)
RT-qPCR quantification of fold induction of Gli1 mRNA from an
experiment as in (E). Fold induction was calculated
using Gli1 mRNA level normalized against that of Hprt for even
loading and then against the normalized Gli1 mRNA level from
cells transfected with NS siRNA and without ShhN treatment.
(G) RT-qPCR analysis of relative levels of
Smurf1 and Smurf2 mRNAs from the experiment in (F).
(H) RT-qPCR detection of
endogenous Gli1 mRNAs in
Smurf1;Smurf2
MEFs that were infected with either Ad-GFP (mock) or Ad-Cre for
12 hr, and then treated with either control or ShhN conditional
medium for 72 hr. (I) Western analyses of
endogenous Smurf2 in
Smurf1;Smurf2
MEFs from the experiment in (H).
DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02555.013
Representative confocal images and calculations thereof showing
Ptch1-GFP fluorescence accumulated in primary cilia. NIH3T3
cells were transfected with siRNAs specific for
Smurf1 and Smurf2, and
then the cells were treated with control or ShhN conditioned
medium before Ptch1-GFP was visualized in cilia and quantified.
Two-tail Student's t test was used for
statistical analysis. *p<0.05,
***p<0.001.
DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02555.014
Figure 5—figure supplement 1.
Knockdown of Smurf1 and Smurf2 simultaneously dampens
Shh-induced ciliary exit of Ptch1-GFP.
Representative confocal images and calculations thereof showing
Ptch1-GFP fluorescence accumulated in primary cilia. NIH3T3
cells were transfected with siRNAs specific for
Smurf1 and Smurf2, and
then the cells were treated with control or ShhN conditioned
medium before Ptch1-GFP was visualized in cilia and quantified.
Two-tail Student's t test was used for
statistical analysis. *p<0.05,
***p<0.001.
DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02555.014
Smurf1 and Smurf2 are E3 ligases required for Shh
signaling.
(A) Western analyses of Ptch1-FLAG in HEK293 cells
that were co-transfected with cDNAs encoding a battery of
HECT-domain E3 ligases as indicated, and (B) ligase
deficient Smurf mutants. β-actin was used as a loading
control. (C) Representative confocal images and
(D) calculations of Ptch1-GFP fluorescence
accumulated in primary cilia as the result of siRNA knockdown of
Smurf1, Smurf2, or both in
NIH3T3 cells. Primary cilia were marked by acetylated tubulin
(red). (E) RT-PCR detection of Gli1, Smurf1, and
Smurf2 mRNAs in wildtype (WT),
Smurf1
, and
Smurf2MEFs transfected with non-silencing (NS) or Smurf-specific
siRNAs as indicated. HPRT mRNA was used as an internal control.
A representative gel image is shown here. (F)
RT-qPCR quantification of fold induction of Gli1 mRNA from an
experiment as in (E). Fold induction was calculated
using Gli1 mRNA level normalized against that of Hprt for even
loading and then against the normalized Gli1 mRNA level from
cells transfected with NS siRNA and without ShhN treatment.
(G) RT-qPCR analysis of relative levels of
Smurf1 and Smurf2 mRNAs from the experiment in (F).
(H) RT-qPCR detection of
endogenous Gli1 mRNAs in
Smurf1;Smurf2MEFs that were infected with either Ad-GFP (mock) or Ad-Cre for
12 hr, and then treated with either control or ShhN conditional
medium for 72 hr. (I) Western analyses of
endogenous Smurf2 in
Smurf1;Smurf2MEFs from the experiment in (H).DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02555.013
Knockdown of Smurf1 and Smurf2 simultaneously dampens
Shh-induced ciliary exit of Ptch1-GFP.
Representative confocal images and calculations thereof showing
Ptch1-GFP fluorescence accumulated in primary cilia. NIH3T3
cells were transfected with siRNAs specific for
Smurf1 and Smurf2, and
then the cells were treated with control or ShhN conditioned
medium before Ptch1-GFP was visualized in cilia and quantified.
Two-tail Student's t test was used for
statistical analysis. *p<0.05,
***p<0.001.DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02555.014Smurf1 and Smurf2 share redundant functions during development as individually
knockout Smurf1 or
Smurf2mice
are healthy and fertile, but the embryos lacking both genes were not able to
develop to term (Yamashita et al.,
2005; Narimatsu et al., 2009;
Blank et al., 2012). To assess the
role of Smurfs in Shh signaling, we quantified the transcriptional responses of
endogenous Gli1 by RT-PCR (Figure 5E) and
RT-qPCR (Figure 5F) in MEFs with
different Smurf genetic background, and found that silencing Smurf1 and Smurf2
simultaneously in wildtype MEFs completely abolished Shh induction of Gli1
(Figure 5E,F). MEFs that lack one of
the two Smurf genes still mounted a considerable Gli1
transcriptional response to ShhN; however, silencing the remaining
Smurf2 allele in
Smurf1 or
Smurf1 allele in
Smurf2MEFs, respectively, led to marked curtailment of Gli1 activation (Figure 5E,F). Expression of Smurfs showed a
compensatory upregulation in response to the loss of the other Smurf in these
MEFs as reported (Yamashita et al.,
2005; Tang et al., 2011),
but surprisingly, ShhN induced expression of both Smurfs (Figure 5E,G). During the course of this investigation, we
generated
Smurf1;Smurf2mice, which will be described in detail elsewhere. In
Smurf1;Smurf2MEFs, Ad-cre infection-mediated ablation of conditional
Smurf2 alleles severely
dampened the Gli1 transcriptional response to ShhN (Figure 5H,I). Similarly, two other Shh signaling
responses, namely Shh-induced ciliary import of Smo and Gli3, were also affected
(Figure 6A–C). Since we could
rescue Shh induction of GliBS-luc responses in Ad-cre infected
Smurf1;Smurf2MEFs (Smurfs null) by reintroducing wildtype Smurf1 or Smurf2
but not mutant Smurf1CA or Smurf2CG cDNA (Figure
6D), or by siRNA-mediated knockdown of Suppressor of
fused (Sufu) (Figure 6E), an essential downstream negative regulator of Shh
signaling, the observed defects of GliBS-luc induction have to be Smurfs and Shh
pathway specific. Taken together, the above results show that simultaneous
inactivation of both Smurf genes and removal of the
‘PPXY’ motifs of Ptch1 have congruent effects on various Shh
signaling events, and indicate that a common Smurf function is required at a
step upstream from the control of the ciliary import of Smo.
Figure 6.
Smurf1 and Smurf2 are required For Shh signaling.
(A) Representative confocal images of Smo and Gli3
immunofluorescence staining in cilia of wildtype (WT),
Smurf1;Smurf2,
or
Smurf1;Smurf2
MEFs infected with Ad-Cre viruses. (B) Quantification
of Smo and (C) Gli3 immunofluorescence staining in
cilia of (A). In the above experiments, ShhN treatment
was carried out for 24 hr, and the means and standard deviation were
calculated from two independent experiments (n = 20).
(D) GliBS-luc assays in
Smurf1;Smurf2
MEFs showing the deficiency of Shh induction associated with genomic
ablation of both Smurfs can be rescued by re-introducing either
wildtype Smurf1 or Smurf2 but not their corresponding mutants.
(E) GliBS-luc reporter assays for the ability of
siSufu to by-pass the requirement of Smurfs in Shh signaling.
Smurf1;Smurf2
MEFs were infected with Ad-cre and then transfected with siSufu or
ns control. The cells were then treated with a series of dilutions
of ShhN-CM before luciferase activities were assayed. Error bars
denote standard deviations. Statistical analyses were performed by
two-tail Student's t test. *p<0.05,
**p<0.01, ***p<0.001, and
n.s., not significant (p>0.05).
DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02555.015
Smurf1 and Smurf2 are required For Shh signaling.
(A) Representative confocal images of Smo and Gli3
immunofluorescence staining in cilia of wildtype (WT),
Smurf1;Smurf2,
or
Smurf1;Smurf2MEFs infected with Ad-Cre viruses. (B) Quantification
of Smo and (C) Gli3 immunofluorescence staining in
cilia of (A). In the above experiments, ShhN treatment
was carried out for 24 hr, and the means and standard deviation were
calculated from two independent experiments (n = 20).
(D) GliBS-luc assays in
Smurf1;Smurf2MEFs showing the deficiency of Shh induction associated with genomic
ablation of both Smurfs can be rescued by re-introducing either
wildtype Smurf1 or Smurf2 but not their corresponding mutants.
(E) GliBS-luc reporter assays for the ability of
siSufu to by-pass the requirement of Smurfs in Shh signaling.
Smurf1;Smurf2MEFs were infected with Ad-cre and then transfected with siSufu or
ns control. The cells were then treated with a series of dilutions
of ShhN-CM before luciferase activities were assayed. Error bars
denote standard deviations. Statistical analyses were performed by
two-tail Student's t test. *p<0.05,
**p<0.01, ***p<0.001, and
n.s., not significant (p>0.05).DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02555.015
Smurfs and Ptch1 colocalize and interact in lipid rafts
If Smurfs are the E3 ligases that recognize the endocytic sorting signals of
Ptch1, these proteins should physically interact in lipid rafts. A number of
evidence demonstrates that this is the case. First, in non-permeabilizing MEFs,
we found exogenously expressed Ptch1-RFP colocalized with the ligase deficient,
GFP-tagged Smurf2CG mutant in Cav-1 positive lipid rafts at the rim of the
plasma membrane (Figure 7A). Although
first identified as modulators of TGF-β/BMP signaling, Smurfs are
preferentially localized in the nucleus (Kavsak et al., 2000) and play a crucial function in maintaining
genomic stability (Blank et al., 2012).
Serendipitously, we found that treatment with ShhN ligand or co-expression with
Ptch1-RFP each caused Smurf2GFP to move from the nucleus to the cytoplasm (Figure 7B, Figure 7—figure supplement 1). In light of the
Shh induction (Figure 5E,F), these
results indicate that Shh signaling could increase the cytoplasmic pool of
Smurfs. Third, fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) analysis showed
that Ptch1-CFP was localized in close proximity with Smurf1-YFP or Smurf2-YFP at
punctate intracellular vesicles in MEFs (Figure
7C,D), and ShhN treatment enhanced this colocalization (Figure 7E). However, Δ2PY-CFP failed
to generate FRET with Smurf2-YFP (Figure
7C,D). Theses result were further corroborated in the discontinuous
sucrose gradient sedimentation experiment described earlier, in which the
ligase-deficient Smurf2CG-Myc co-sedimented in the Cav-1-containing
20–25% sucrose fractions readily with Ptch1-FLAG, whereas Δ2PY was
inefficient in bringing Smurf2CG-Myc into these fractions (Figure 1E). Finally, using co-immunoprecipitation, we
demonstrated that Ptch1 specifically binds either Smurf1 or Smurf2, and Ptch1
mutants lacking either PY-1 or PY-2 motif can still bind Smurfs, albeit with
reduced affinity; however, Δ2PY completely lacks affinity for either
Smurf1 or Smurf2 (Figure 7F).
Figure 7.
Colocalization and interaction between Ptch1 and Smurfs in
Cav-1 positive lipid rafts.
(A) Confocal images showing colocalization of
GFP-Smurf2CG and Ptch1-RFP in Cav-1 positive lipid rafts. The
cells were not permeabilized before they were stained with
anti-Cav-1, and the images were taken with a 63x oil lens.
(B) Quantification of nuclear and cytoplasmic
distribution of Smurf2GFP as in Figure 7—figure supplement 1. The
percentage of mostly nuclear (N > C), even distribution (N
= C), or mostly cytoplasmic (N < C) of Smurf2GFP
pattern cells was calculated based images of 40 cells at each
data point. (C) FRET analysis of Ptch1-CFP or
Δ2PY-CFP interaction with Smurf1-YFP or Smurf2-YFP in
transfected MEFs. Representative images of CFP, YFP, FRET
fluorescence, and N-FRET are shown. (D)
Quantification of N-FRET values using the sensitized emission
method, which is expressed as means plus SD in the bar graph.
(E) FRET analysis of Ptch1-CFP interaction with
Smurf2-YFP in transfected MEFs that were treated with ShhN or
control conditioned medium for 2 hr. Quantification of N-FRET
values described in (D). (F)
Co-immunoprecipitation analyses of FLAG-Ptch1 and the
‘PPXY’ motif mutants with Myc-tagged Smurf1CA or
Smurf2CG ligase-deficient mutants. The immunocomplexes were
precipitated using anti-FLAG, and blotted with anti-Myc.
DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02555.016
Representative fluorescent images showing subcellular
localization of Smurf2GFP in MEFs co-transfected with empty
vector or Ptch1-RFP and treated without or with ShhN conditioned
medium.
DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02555.017
Western analyses of Ptch1-FLAG or SmoA1-FLAG immunoprecipitated
with anti-FLAG in HEK293 cells that were also co-transfected
with Myc-tagged Smurf1CA or Smurf2CG ligase-deficient mutants.
Although Smurf1CA or Smurf2CG was readily detected in the
anti-Ptch1-FLAG precipitates, they did not co-precipitate with
Smo-FLAG.
DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02555.018
Figure 7—figure supplement 1.
ShhN treatment and co-expression with Ptch1 caused Smurf2 to
redistribute from the nucleus to the cytoplasm.
Representative fluorescent images showing subcellular
localization of Smurf2GFP in MEFs co-transfected with empty
vector or Ptch1-RFP and treated without or with ShhN conditioned
medium.
DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02555.017
Colocalization and interaction between Ptch1 and Smurfs in
Cav-1 positive lipid rafts.
(A) Confocal images showing colocalization of
GFP-Smurf2CG and Ptch1-RFP in Cav-1 positive lipid rafts. The
cells were not permeabilized before they were stained with
anti-Cav-1, and the images were taken with a 63x oil lens.
(B) Quantification of nuclear and cytoplasmic
distribution of Smurf2GFP as in Figure 7—figure supplement 1. The
percentage of mostly nuclear (N > C), even distribution (N
= C), or mostly cytoplasmic (N < C) of Smurf2GFP
pattern cells was calculated based images of 40 cells at each
data point. (C) FRET analysis of Ptch1-CFP or
Δ2PY-CFP interaction with Smurf1-YFP or Smurf2-YFP in
transfected MEFs. Representative images of CFP, YFP, FRET
fluorescence, and N-FRET are shown. (D)
Quantification of N-FRET values using the sensitized emission
method, which is expressed as means plus SD in the bar graph.
(E) FRET analysis of Ptch1-CFP interaction with
Smurf2-YFP in transfected MEFs that were treated with ShhN or
control conditioned medium for 2 hr. Quantification of N-FRET
values described in (D). (F)
Co-immunoprecipitation analyses of FLAG-Ptch1 and the
‘PPXY’ motif mutants with Myc-tagged Smurf1CA or
Smurf2CG ligase-deficient mutants. The immunocomplexes were
precipitated using anti-FLAG, and blotted with anti-Myc.DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02555.016
ShhN treatment and co-expression with Ptch1 caused Smurf2 to
redistribute from the nucleus to the cytoplasm.
Representative fluorescent images showing subcellular
localization of Smurf2GFP in MEFs co-transfected with empty
vector or Ptch1-RFP and treated without or with ShhN conditioned
medium.DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02555.017
Neither Smurf1 nor Smurf2 interact with Smo.
Western analyses of Ptch1-FLAG or SmoA1-FLAG immunoprecipitated
with anti-FLAG in HEK293 cells that were also co-transfected
with Myc-tagged Smurf1CA or Smurf2CG ligase-deficient mutants.
Although Smurf1CA or Smurf2CG was readily detected in the
anti-Ptch1-FLAG precipitates, they did not co-precipitate with
Smo-FLAG.DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02555.018
Smurfs are required for Ptch1 turnover and ubiquitin modification
To delineate the requirement of Smurfs for Shh-induced Ptch1 turnover, we took
the advantage of the conditional
Smurf1;Smurf2MEFs, and quantified the turnover rate of exogenously expressed Ptch1-FLAG
following cyclohexamide treatment without or with removal of the
Smurf2 alleles following Ad-cre infection. The results
indicated that Ptch1-FLAG was indeed rendered stable against ShhN induced
degradation by the removal of the
Smurf2 conditional
alleles whereas the stability of Δ2PY was resistant to change in response
to either ShhN treatment or eradication of Smurf’s
function (Figure 8A–D). The
induction by Shh is likely a function of ligand-binding, rather than a signaling
outcome, as the loop2 mutant Ptch1 that lacks the ability to bind Shh (Briscoe et al., 2001) completely lost the
capacity to respond to ShhN treatment in wildtype MEFs, although it was more
stable in Smurf-null MEFs (Figure 8E,F). We further found that Shh-induced endocytic turnover
of Ptch1 was not affected in Smo null MEFs (Figure 8G,H), suggesting that it is an
upstream signaling event, independent of Smo function.
Figure 8.
Smurfs are required for the Shh-induced endocytic turnover of
Ptch1.
Western analysis of Ptch1-FLAG and Δ2PY-FLAG turnover rates
(A) and quantification thereof (B) in
WT MEFs. ShhN and CHX were added for duration as indicated.
(C) Western analysis of Ptch1-FLAG and
Δ2PY-FLAG turnover rates (C) and quantification
thereof (D) in
Smurf1;Smurf2
MEFs infected with Ad-cre. (E) Western analysis of
Ptch1-Δloop2-FLAG turnover rate and quantification thereof
(F) in WT (upper) and
Smurf1;Smurf2
MEFs infected with Ad-cre (lower). (G) Western analysis
of Ptch1-FLAG turnover rate and quantification thereof
(H) in WT (upper) and
Smo
MEFs (lower). Each data point denotes mean ± standard deviation
from two independent experiments.
DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02555.019
Smurfs are required for the Shh-induced endocytic turnover of
Ptch1.
Western analysis of Ptch1-FLAG and Δ2PY-FLAG turnover rates
(A) and quantification thereof (B) in
WT MEFs. ShhN and CHX were added for duration as indicated.
(C) Western analysis of Ptch1-FLAG and
Δ2PY-FLAG turnover rates (C) and quantification
thereof (D) in
Smurf1;Smurf2MEFs infected with Ad-cre. (E) Western analysis of
Ptch1-Δloop2-FLAG turnover rate and quantification thereof
(F) in WT (upper) and
Smurf1;Smurf2MEFs infected with Ad-cre (lower). (G) Western analysis
of Ptch1-FLAG turnover rate and quantification thereof
(H) in WT (upper) and
Smo
MEFs (lower). Each data point denotes mean ± standard deviation
from two independent experiments.DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02555.019To demonstrate the Ubiquitin E3 ligase activity of Smurfs on Ptch1, we assayed
for the ability of Ptch1-FLAG or Δ2PY to be ubiquitinated by HA-tagged
Ubiquitin (HA-Ub) in
Smurf1;Smurf2MEFs. In these cells, Ptch1-FLAG was readily ubiquitinated, but the level of
ubiquitination of Ptch1Δ2PY-FLAG was diminished (Figure 9A). More importantly, neither of the two forms of
Ptch1 was ubiquitinated after the conditional
Smurf2 alleles were
removed with Ad-cre, (Figure 9A). We were
also able to demonstrate ubiquitination of Ptch1-FLAG that was produced and
isolated from HEK293 cells in an in vitro reconstituted system, in which the
level of ubiquitinated species was greatly enhanced by His6-Smurf2, but not the
ligase-inactive His6-Smurf2CG purified from the insect expression system (Figure 9B), indicating a direct enzyme and
substrate relationship. Although we were not able to detect mono-ubiquitination,
the poly-ubiquitin chains on Ptch1 are likely of both K48 and K63 linkage, as
re-expression of Smurf2-Myc in Smurf2 null cells enhanced Ptch1
ubiquitination in the presence of wt, KO, K48, or K63 ubiquitin (Figure 9C). Finally, ShhN treatment
enhanced the level of high molecular weight ubiquitinated Ptch1 species in
wildtype MEFs (Figure 9D), consistent
with the ability of Shh to induce Ptch1 turnover (Figure 8).
Figure 9.
Smurfs are required for ubiquitin modification of Ptch1.
(A) Western analysis of ubiquitinated Ptch1-FLAG and
Ptch1Δ2PY-FLAG in
Smurf1;Smurf2
MEFs infected with Ad-GFP or Ad-Cre. These MEFs were first infected
with adenoviruses and then transfected with HA-Ub and the Ptch1
plasmids as marked. The exogenously expressed Ptch1 proteins were
immunoisolated using anti-FLAG beads prior to analysis.
(B) Western analysis of Ptch1-FLAG ubiquitination
in vitro in a reconstituted system comprising purified recombinant
His6-Smurf2 or the ligase-deficient
His6-Smurf2CG from the baculovirus, HA-Ub, and an ATP
regeneration system. Ptch1-FLAG was immunoisolated from HEK293 cells
and the ubiquitination reaction was carried out on beads. The
proteins were eluted prior to Western blot analysis.
(C) Western analysis of ubiquitinated Ptch1-FLAG in
Smurf2−/− MEFs that were also
transfected with Wt, KO, K48, or K63 ubiquitin in the absence or
presence of Myc-Smurf2. (D) Western analysis of
ubiquitinated Ptch1-FLAG in WT MEFs treated with ShhN or control
conditioned medium. Ptch1-FLAG in A-C was resolved by 6% SDS-PAGE,
but a 4–12% gradient gel was used in D.
DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02555.020
Smurfs are required for ubiquitin modification of Ptch1.
(A) Western analysis of ubiquitinated Ptch1-FLAG and
Ptch1Δ2PY-FLAG in
Smurf1;Smurf2MEFs infected with Ad-GFP or Ad-Cre. These MEFs were first infected
with adenoviruses and then transfected with HA-Ub and the Ptch1
plasmids as marked. The exogenously expressed Ptch1 proteins were
immunoisolated using anti-FLAG beads prior to analysis.
(B) Western analysis of Ptch1-FLAG ubiquitination
in vitro in a reconstituted system comprising purified recombinant
His6-Smurf2 or the ligase-deficient
His6-Smurf2CG from the baculovirus, HA-Ub, and an ATP
regeneration system. Ptch1-FLAG was immunoisolated from HEK293 cells
and the ubiquitination reaction was carried out on beads. The
proteins were eluted prior to Western blot analysis.
(C) Western analysis of ubiquitinated Ptch1-FLAG in
Smurf2−/− MEFs that were also
transfected with Wt, KO, K48, or K63 ubiquitin in the absence or
presence of Myc-Smurf2. (D) Western analysis of
ubiquitinated Ptch1-FLAG in WT MEFs treated with ShhN or control
conditioned medium. Ptch1-FLAG in A-C was resolved by 6% SDS-PAGE,
but a 4–12% gradient gel was used in D.DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02555.020
Requirement of Smurfs in sustaining the proliferation of cerebellar granule
cell precursors by Shh
Mice deficient in both Smurf1 and Smurf2 were
reported embryonic lethal due to absence of planar cell polarity among other
pleiotropic defects (Narimatsu et al.,
2009). More than half of the double null embryos that we generated
failed to gastrulate and those rare embryos that did escape seldom passed
Theiler stage 13, thus precluding a thorough analysis of the neural tube
phenotype where Shh function is well characterized. To address the physiological
relevance of Smurf regulation of Ptch1 endocytosis, we examined the role of
Smurfs in sustaining the proliferation of cerebellar granule cell precursors
(GCPs), which has an absolute requirement for Shh. For this purpose, we cut
cerebellar slices from P7
Smurf1;Smurf2
pups and cultured them for 12 days in vitro as described (Kapfhammer, 2010). Anti-NeuN immunofluorescence staining
revealed that the number of post-mitotic granule cells were severely reduced in
slices infected with Ad-cre viruses (Figure
10A), suggesting that Shh signaling was compromised there. We also
isolated GCPs from cerebella of normal P7 pups of the C57/B6 strain, and
cultured them in vitro. In the presence of ShhN, GCPs grew healthily for at
least 5 days, but siRNA knockdown of Smurf1 and
Smurf2 simultaneously blocked GCP proliferation (Figures 10B, Figure 10—figure supplement 1A,C). To ascertain
that the effect of Smurf knockdown was Shh-pathway specific, we repeated the
above experiment using IGF1, which is capable of sustaining the proliferation of
GCPs in lieu of Shh (Rao et al., 2004;
Fernandez et al., 2010), and found
that knockdown of Smurfs had no effect on IGF-1-induced GCP
growth (Figure 10C, Figure 10—figure supplement 1B). Thus, these
data unequivocally demonstrated that Smurf1 and Smurf2 share a critical role in
supporting Shh signaling during cerebellar organogenesis.
Figure 10.
Requirements of Smurfs for Shh-induced organogenesis.
(A) Immunostaining of P7 cerebellar slices cultured
in vitro with anti-calbindin (red) and anti-NeuN (green). The
slices were first infected with control or cre-expressing
adenoviruses for 24 hr and then continuously cultured for 12
days. Quantification of EdU incorporated GCPs in cerebellar
slices cultured in the presence of ShhN from Figure 10—figure
supplement 1A (B) or IGF-1 from Figure 10—figure
supplement 1B (C), respectively. The
data at each time point were derived from four separate fields,
and the bars denote standard deviation.
DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02555.021
EdU incorporation by GCPs growing in medium containing
(A) ShhN or (B) IGF-1. Freshly
isolated GCPs from normal C57/B6 mice were seeded in chamber
slides that were coated with poly-D-lysine and Matrigel. The
cells were then transfected with non-silencing (NS) control or
Smurf1- and Smurf2-specific siRNAs. 12 hr later, Shh-N or IGF-1
conditioned medium was added to the culture and began the time
point 0 hr. EdU was given to cells for 12 hr. (C)
RT-PCR detection of Smurf1 and Smurf2 mRNAs for monitoring the
siRNA knockdown efficiency.
DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02555.022
Figure 10—figure supplement 1.
Smurfs are required for ShhN but not IGF-1 induced GCP
proliferation.
EdU incorporation by GCPs growing in medium containing
(A) ShhN or (B) IGF-1. Freshly
isolated GCPs from normal C57/B6 mice were seeded in chamber
slides that were coated with poly-D-lysine and Matrigel. The
cells were then transfected with non-silencing (NS) control or
Smurf1- and Smurf2-specific siRNAs. 12 hr later, Shh-N or IGF-1
conditioned medium was added to the culture and began the time
point 0 hr. EdU was given to cells for 12 hr. (C)
RT-PCR detection of Smurf1 and Smurf2 mRNAs for monitoring the
siRNA knockdown efficiency.
DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02555.022
Requirements of Smurfs for Shh-induced organogenesis.
(A) Immunostaining of P7 cerebellar slices cultured
in vitro with anti-calbindin (red) and anti-NeuN (green). The
slices were first infected with control or cre-expressing
adenoviruses for 24 hr and then continuously cultured for 12
days. Quantification of EdU incorporated GCPs in cerebellar
slices cultured in the presence of ShhN from Figure 10—figure
supplement 1A (B) or IGF-1 from Figure 10—figure
supplement 1B (C), respectively. The
data at each time point were derived from four separate fields,
and the bars denote standard deviation.DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02555.021
Smurfs are required for ShhN but not IGF-1 induced GCP
proliferation.
EdU incorporation by GCPs growing in medium containing
(A) ShhN or (B) IGF-1. Freshly
isolated GCPs from normal C57/B6 mice were seeded in chamber
slides that were coated with poly-D-lysine and Matrigel. The
cells were then transfected with non-silencing (NS) control or
Smurf1- and Smurf2-specific siRNAs. 12 hr later, Shh-N or IGF-1
conditioned medium was added to the culture and began the time
point 0 hr. EdU was given to cells for 12 hr. (C)
RT-PCR detection of Smurf1 and Smurf2 mRNAs for monitoring the
siRNA knockdown efficiency.DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02555.022
Discussion
Shh plays a fundamental role in setting up the body plan during embryogenesis, and is
also critical in guiding stem cell differentiation for maintaining tissue
homeostasis in the adult. Cell surface reception of Shh signaling is a multistep
process that entails, but is not limited to, ligand engagement, reciprocal movements
of Ptch1 exiting from and Smo translocating into the primary cilium, and activation
of the G-protein-coupled Smo by still-controversial mechanisms (Ogden et al., 2008). The central task of this
process is to sense and convert incremental changes in the Shh gradient into
corresponding levels of signaling output, thereby allowing the positional cues to be
executed. In this study, we extended our knowledge of the Shh signaling activation
process by revealing a ubiquitination switch that regulates Ptch1 endocytosis, which
is essential in clearing Ptch1 from its site of action in the primary cilium, and to
ligand sequestration, as previously described (Incardona et al., 2000). Our data demonstrate that ubiquitination of
Ptch1 mediated by the two ‘PPXY’ motifs is controlled by HECT-domain
E3 ligases Smurf1 and Smurf2, which are induced by Shh (Figure 5E,G) and redistributed into the cytoplasm under Shh
influence (Figure 7B, Figure 7—figure supplement 1). Shh also promotes the
association of Ptch1 and Smurfs in intracellular vesicles (Figure 7E), most likely the Cav-1 positive lipid rafts (Figure 1A,B), as well as ubiquitination (Figure 9D) and endosomal entry (Figure 2A–C), leading to lysosomal
turnover (Figures 1F, 8A–D). So,
an increase in the Shh signal strength would cause a corresponding increase in both
the production of Ptch1 and its rate of turnover en route from the primary cilium to
the lipid rafts and to the endosomes/lysosomes. This regulatory scheme is
reminiscent of an electronic amplification circuit, in which a feedback loop added
to an open-loop amplifier has the effect of stabilizing the gain and increasing the
linearity of the output signal to a given range, which can be controlled by
adjusting the feedback strength. By analogy, Shh induction of Gli1 can be viewed as
the open-loop amplifier, with Ptch1 providing the negative feedback. In this wiring
logic, the graded Shh morphogenic signal can be stably transformed into stepwise
output responses tailored for a predetermined cell fate specification. Without
endocytosis, Ptch1 would accumulate in the primary cilium (Figure 1A,B, Figure
1—figure supplement 2, Figure
3—figure supplement 1), thus hampering Smo import and function.
More importantly, without Ptch1 removal/degradation, the amplitude of Shh signaling
would be restricted by the accumulation of newly synthesized inhibitory Ptch1.
Oversupplied Ptch1 could also impact on signaling in neighboring cells through
non-cell autonomous inhibition. So, Ptch1 endocytosis plays a crucial role in
setting the output range of Shh signaling.The presence of Ptc in membranous vesicles has long been noted in
Drosophila and mammalian cells (Capdevila et al., 1994; Denef et al., 2000; Ramirez-Weber et
al., 2000; Zhu et al., 2003),
but its significance was not fully appreciated and regulation unknown. Ptc or Ptch1
is a 12-pass transmembrane protein, whose internal sequence spanning from IV to X
transmembrane domains resembles the resistance, nodulation, division (RND) family of
bacterial proton-driven transporter and the sterol-sensing domain found in SREBP and
NPC1 (Carstea et al., 1997; Taipale et al., 2002). Substantial evidence
in the literature suggests that Ptch1 inhibition of Smo occurs by way of small
molecular intermediates that may be transported by Ptch1 through the membrane (Di Guglielmo et al., 2003; Bijlsma et al., 2006; Yavari et al., 2010). Perhaps it is not a coincidence that we
found Ptch1 exits the primary cilium and enters the endocytic pathway via
cholesterol and sphingomyelin-rich lipid rafts, whereas Smo was shown previously to
enter the primary cilium via Clathrin-coated pits when induced by Shh (Chen et al., 2004; Kovacs et al., 2008). It is possible that Ptch1 and Smo are
required to be sorted into different membranous compartments and to keep a mutually
exclusive presence in the primary cilium, so that a cross-membrane imbalance of the
small molecular intermediates is attained. The RND/sterol-sensing domain is critical
to Ptch1 function as multiple inactivating mutations in this region have been found
in Drosophila as well as in Gorlin syndromepatients (Martin et al., 2001; Strutt et al., 2001; Taipale et al., 2002). However, although certain RND mutants of
DrosophilaPtc accumulate in endosomes (Martin et al., 2001; Strutt
et al., 2001), this domain may be more important to Ptch1 function than
to its endocytic turnover, since we found that combining a RND mutation with the
2-PY deletion did not alter the latter's impact on Ptch1 stability (data not
shown).Through cDNA-mediated screens, we have identified Smurf1 and Smurf2 as the E3 ligases
responsible for generating the sorting signal for Ptch1 endocytosis. Although
subsequent experiments indicated that deletion of one Smurf gene
was not sufficient to inactivate Shh signaling, siRNA-mediated knockdown of either
Smurf1 or Smurf2 was enough to dampen the
8xGliBS reporter response in transfected MEFs. This apparent discrepancy is likely
to be reconciled by the mutual, compensatory upregulation of either of the two
Smurf genes upon the loss of the other, resulting in the
adaptation of single-Smurf-knockout MEFs for a robust Shh signaling
response. On the other hand, such an adaptive response might not have been
established in time under the conditions found in transiently transfected MEFs in
response to siRNA-mediated knockdown. The observation of Shh induction of Smurf
expression (Figure 5E,G) and cytoplasmic
pivoting (Figure 7B, Figure 7—figure supplement 1) further implicated
Smurfs in Shh signaling. Previously, DrosophilaPtc was shown to
interact with and regulated by Nedd4 (Lu et al.,
2006), another HECT-domain E3 ligase. In addition, the mousePtch1 was
also shown to bind Nedd4, but this interaction triggers apoptosis through
ubiquitination of Caspase 9 (Fombonne et al.,
2012). It is likely that Ptch1 is regulated by multiple E3 ligases with
different functional outcomes. Recently, DrosophilaDSmurf was
identified as a Ptc-interacting partner in a yeast 2-hybrid screen, and shown
subsequently as a specific E3 ligase that regulates Ptc stability (Huang et al., 2013). However, DSmurf was
shown to promote Ptc turnover in the presence of activated SmoSD, bind
Smo, and prefer ligand-unbound Ptc as a substrate (Huang et al., 2013). We did not observe interaction between mammalian
Smurfs and Smo by Co-IP experiments (Figure
7—figure supplement 2), and found that Shh induction of Ptch1
turnover proceeded unabatedly even in the absence of Smo (Figure 8G,H). In Huang et al., when ectopically expressed in
the anterior compartment of the wing disc, activated SmoSD induced
massive amount of Ptc; these two proteins could form a complex at the high levels,
much like their mammalian counterparts do when overexpressed in HEK293 cells (Stone et al., 1996; Taipale et al., 2002). Perhaps, DSmurf could recognize this
unnatural complex and triggers a proteasomes-mediated degradation, even
specifically.
Figure 7—figure supplement 2.
Neither Smurf1 nor Smurf2 interact with Smo.
Western analyses of Ptch1-FLAG or SmoA1-FLAG immunoprecipitated
with anti-FLAG in HEK293 cells that were also co-transfected
with Myc-tagged Smurf1CA or Smurf2CG ligase-deficient mutants.
Although Smurf1CA or Smurf2CG was readily detected in the
anti-Ptch1-FLAG precipitates, they did not co-precipitate with
Smo-FLAG.
DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02555.018
Smurf2 was shown previously to function in lipid rafts (Di Guglielmo et al., 2003), and the necessity of removing
both Smurf1 and Smurf2 to reveal their requirement
in Shh signaling strongly argues that this shared function has a deep root in
evolution. In any event, our work presents a rather comprehensive view of the Shh
pathway activation process. Considering two neighboring cells in a given Shh
influence field (Figure 11), the cell that
receives lower Shh input (upper cell) encounters a stronger feedback inhibition due
to lower endocytic turnover of Ptch1, resulting in a lower level of Shh signaling
output represented by Gli1. In the cell that receives higher Shh input (lower cell),
although the synthesis of Ptch1 is induced, upregulation of Smurfs and the induction
of colocalization in lipid rafts ensure a faster Ptch1 turnover such that the level
of Ptch1 feedback inhibition is actually low, resulting in higher pathway activity.
The endocytic turnover also has impact on the ligand sequestration role of Ptch1
through controlling the availability of the ligand ‘sink’ on cell
surface. In this regard, the Smurf-mediated endocytosis of Ptch1 is an essential
signaling event, and it is theoretically possible to block Shh function both cell
and non-cell autonomously using Smurf inhibitors, thus opening a new route for
Shh-targeted cancer treatment.
Figure 11.
A model for the role of Smurf-mediated Ptch endocytosis in Shh
signaling.
DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02555.023
A model for the role of Smurf-mediated Ptch endocytosis in Shh
signaling.
DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02555.023
Materials and methods
Animals
All mice were maintained and handled according to protocols approved by the
Animal Care and Use Committee of the National Cancer Institute, NIH. The
conditional Smurf2 knockout allele,
Smurf2 was generated by
insertion of two loxP sites into introns flanking Exon 9 and 10 through
homologous recombination. Further details of the construction will be described
elsewhere.
Cells, plasmids, and siRNAs
Smurf1,
Smurf2, and
Smurf1;Smurf2MEFs were isolated from E14.5 embryos and cell immortalization was carried out
according to the 3T3 protocol. NIH3T3:Gli-Luc-3T3 and
Ptch1MEFs
were described previously (Chen et al.,
2011). Full-length mousePtch1 cDNA was obtained from ATCC, and the
FLAG, GFP, or RFP-tagged variants of which were generated by PCR and subcloned
into the pRK5 vector. The ΔPY mutants of Ptch1 were generated using a
PCR-based strategy. All PCR-amplified fragments were sequence verified. Plasmids
for Myc-tagged Smurf1, Smurf1CA, Smurf2, Smurf2CG, GFP-tagged Smurf2, HA-tagged
Ub, UbKO, UbK63 and UbK48 were described previously (Zhang et al., 2001; Yamashita et al., 2005, 2008; Tang et al., 2011;
Blank et al., 2012). RFP-tagged
Rab5, Rab7, and Lamp1 were acquired from Addgene. siRNAs specific for the mouse
HECT family of E3 ligases and cDNAs encoding human HECT E3 ligases were
purchased from QIAGEN (Germantown, MD).
Immunofluorescence staining
Approximately 0.6 × 105 cells per well were seeded in Lab-Tek
chambered slides and cultured for 24 hr. The cells were transfected, allowed to
recover for 24 to 36 hr, and then treated with ShhN-CM or other compounds, as
indicated. For visualizing ciliary proteins, the transfected cells were starved
in DMEM containing 0.5% FBS for 24 hr before other treatments. The cells were
fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde for 10 min at 4°C, and standard procedures
for immunostaining were followed. The primary antibodies used were rabbit
anti-Caveolin-1 (1:1000; Sigma-Aldrich (St. Louis, MO)), rabbit anti-Clathrin
heavy chain (1:200; Cell Signaling Technology (Danvers, MA)), rabbit anti-Rab5
(1:150, Cell Signaling Technology), rabbit anti-Rab7 (1:50, Cell Signaling
Technology), rabbit anti-Lamp1 (1:150; Sigma), mouse anti-acetylated Tubulin
(1:2000; Sigma), rabbit anti-Gli3 (1:500; R&D (Minneapolis, MN)), and
rabbit anti-Smo (1:500; a gift from Dr Rajat Rohatgi). Alexa-coupled secondary
antibodies were purchased from Life Technologies Corp.
Confocal microscopy and FRET
Confocal images were acquired on a Carl Zeiss LSM710 microscope. Colocalization
coefficient was calculated using Zeiss ZEN2011 program, and quantification of
the fluorescence intensity of Ptch1-GFP, Smo, and Gli3 in primary cilia was
carried out using Image-Pro as described previously (Chen et al., 2011). For FRET analysis, MEFs were
transfected with the plasmids encoding Ptch1-CFP or Δ2PY-CFP together with
Smurf1-YFP or Smurf2-YFP. Confocal images were acquired with a 40 ×
objective lens. In track I, cells were excited with a 405-nm laser, and CFP
signals were collected in channel II at 470–500 nm. FRET signals were
collected in channel III at >530 nm. In track II, cells were excited with a
514-nm laser line, and YFP signals were collected in channel III at >530
nm. FRET efficiency between CFP and YFP, shown as N-FRET, was calculated using
Zeiss ZEN2011 program, and the sensitized emission crosstalk coefficients were
determined using control cells that expressed only CFP or YFP.
GliBS-luc reporter assay for non-cell autonomous inhibition of Ptch1
Ptch1MEFs were
transfected with Ptch1-GFP or Ptch1Δ2PY-GFP along with the Rellina control
(15:1) using Lipofectamine Plus (Life technologies, Grand Island, NY)). These
cells were then re-seeded with NIH3T3:GliBS-luc reporter cells at 5:1 ratio.
After 24 hr, the cells were treated with ShhN-CM in different dilutions for
additional 36 hr before the luciferase activities were assayed using the
luciferase assay system on a GloMax-96 luminometer (Promega, Madison, WI). The
firefly luciferase activity from the indicator cells was normalized against the
Rellina luciferase activity to correct for transfection efficiency of Ptch1
constructs in the testing
PtchMEFs
as the measurement of non-cell autonomous inhibition by Ptch1.
Immunoprecipitation and immunoblotting
Transfected cells were lysed in modified RIPA buffer (50 mM Tris–HCl, pH
7.4, 150 mM NaCl, 1% vol/vol NP-40, 1% n-Dodecyl β-D-maltoside, 0.25%
wt/vol sodium deoxycholate, 1 mM DTT, and 1 × Roche cOmplete Protease
Inhibitor Cocktail) for 1 hr at 4°C. The lysate was clarified by
centrifugation for 1 hr at 20,000×g. The protein
concentration was determined using a bicinchoninic acid assay and equal amounts
of total protein from each of the samples was supplemented with 6 × SDS
loading buffer, incubated at room temperature for 1 hr, subjected to SDS-PAGE,
followed by western blot analysis. To assay for interactions between exogenous
Ptch1-FLAG and the Myc-Smurfs, transfected Ptch1-FLAG was immunopurified with
anti-FLAG M2 agarose beads (Sigma) and subjected to SDS-PAGE, followed by
western blotting with anti-Myc (Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Dallas, TX).
Ubiquitination assays
To assay for Ptch1 ubiquitination in vivo,
Smurf1/Smurf2MEFs were infected with either Ad-GFP or Ad-Cre adenovirus for 24 hr, then
transfected with Ptch1-FLAG or Ptch1Δ2PY-FLAG along with HA-Ub using
Lipofectamine Plus (Invitrogen). The cells were lysed 24 hr later and Ptch1 and
its mutant were isolated with anti-FLAG agarose beads and resolved by SDS-PAGE
on 6% or 4–12% gradient gels. The ubiquitinated Ptch1 was then detected
with anti-HA (Roche-Shanghai, China). To assay for Ptch ubiquitination in vitro,
an ubiquitination assay was modified from a previously described procedure
(Tang et al., 2011). Ptch1-FLAG was
captured from transfected HEK293 cell lysates using anti-FLAG agarose. After a
thorough wash, the Ptch1-bound agarose was divided into three aliquots. Empty
anti-FLAG agarose was used as a control. The in vitro ubiquitination assay was
performed by incubating either Ptch1-bound agarose or control agarose at
37°C for 1 hr with ubiquitin-activating enzyme UBE1, E2-conjugating enzyme
UbcH5c, HA-Ub and ATP (all from Boston Biochem, Cambridge, MA) in the presence
or absence of purified His6-Smurf2 or His6-Smurf2CG. After the incubation, the
supernatant was removed, the agarose thoroughly washed, and the Ptch1-FLAG
eluted using the FLAG peptide (Sigma). The eluted fraction was then subjected to
Western blot analysis.
Sucrose gradient sedimentation
Sucrose equilibrium density gradient sedimentation experiments were performed as
described (Coulombe et al., 2004).
Briefly, HEK293 cells grown in 10 cm plates were transiently transfected with
Ptch1-FLAG or Δ2PY-FLAG along with Myc-Smurf2CG. 48 hr after transfection,
the cells were lysed in pre-chilled 2 ml MES buffer, which contains 25 mM MES
(2-[N-morpholino]ethanesulfonic acid), pH 6.5, 150 mM NaCl, 1% Triton X-100,
supplemented with 1 × Roche cOmplete Protease Inhibitor Cocktail and was
set on ice for 1 hr. The lysates were mixed with equal volume of 80% (wt/vol)
sucrose/MES solution and placed at the bottom of an ultracentrifuge tube. Tube
was then overlaid in consecutive order with 2 ml each of 30%, 25%, 20%, and 4 ml
of a 5% (wt/vol) sucrose/MES buffer. After centrifugation at 39,000 rpm for 16
hr at 4°C in an SW 41 Ti rotor on Beckman Optima L-100 XP ultracentrifuge,
the gradient was separated into twelve 1 ml fractions taken from the top for
Western blot analysis.
RT-PCR and quantitative real-time PCR
Total RNA was isolated from cultured cells using the RNAiso reagent (TaKaRa,
Shiga, Japan), and reverse transcription was carried out using the PrimeScript
RT reagent Kit (TaKaRa). Standard RT-PCR was carried out with the following
primers: mouseGli1 (5′-TCCAGCTTGGATGAAGGACCTTGT-3′ and
5′-AGCATATCTGGCACGGAGCATGTA-3′), mouseSmurf1
(5′-CTACCAGCGTTTGGATCTAT-3′ and
5′-TTCATGATGTGGTGAAGCCG-3′), mouseSmurf2
(5′-TAAGTCTTCAGTCCAGAGACC-3′ and
5′-AATCTCTTCCCTAGACACCTC-3′), and mouseHPRT
(5′-TATGGACAGGACTGAAAGAC-3′ and
5′-TAATCCAGCAGGTCAGCAAA-3′). Real-time PCR was carried out using
the FastStart SYBR Green Master mix (Roche) on a 7500 Real-Time PCR System
(Applied Biosystems, Grand island, NY) with primers for mouseGli1
(5′-GCTTGGATGAAGGACCTTGTG-3′ and
5′-GCTGATCCAGCCTAAGGTTCTC-3′) and mouseHPRT
(5′-TATGGACAGGACTGAAAGAC-3′ and
5′-TAATCCAGCAGGTCAGCAAA-3′). Experiments were repeated at least
three times, and samples were analyzed in triplicate.
Cerebellar slice culture
Cerebellar slice cultures were prepared as described (Kapfhammer, 2010). Briefly, sagittal sections (350
µm) were cut from cerebella of P7
Smurf1;Smurf2
pups using a McIlwain tissue cutter under septic condition. Slices were
transferred onto a permeable membrane (Millicell-CM, Millipore-China, Beijing,
China) in a 6-well plate with 0.8 ml of culture medium (Neurobasal A medium with
B27 supplement) and incubated at 37°C, 5% CO2. For adenovirus infection,
the viral stock (3 × 1010 pfu/ml) was mixed with equal volume of
type I collagen gel and applied as a drop on top of each slice, and 5 ×
107 pfu of virus was also added in the culture medium. After 24
hr, the infected slices were washed and maintained in culture medium. The medium
was changed every 2–3 days for a total of 12 days. Slices were then fixed
in 4% paraformaldehyde overnight at 4°C and immunostained with
anti-calbindin (1:500; Sigma) and anti-NeuN (1:100; Millipore).
GCP isolation and proliferation assay
Mouse cerebellar GCPs were isolated from 7-day-old pups according to a published
protocol (Hatten and Shelanski, 1988).
Briefly, cerebella were removed aseptically and incubated at 37°C for 5 min
in trypsin/DNase buffer. Tissues were then triturated with fine Pasteur pipettes
to obtain a single-cell suspension, overlaid on top of a step gradient of 35%
and 65% Percoll (Pharmacia, GE Health-China, Shanghai, China) and centrifuged at
2,000×g for 10 min at 4°C. GCPs harvested from
the 35% and 65% Percoll interface were further purified by depleting adherent
cells with two consecutive 1-hr incubations in tissue culture dishes, then
seeding them in Lab-Tek chambered slides coated with poly-D-lysine and Matrigel,
and incubating them at 35°C, 5% CO2. GCPs were transfected with
siRNAs using FugeneHD Transfection Reagent (Promega) after 1 hr incubation.
Proliferation of transfected GCPs was evaluated using Click-iT EdU cell
proliferation assays (Life Technologies) at different time points after ShhN-CM
or IGF1 (100 ng/ml) treatment. GCPs were incubated with EdU
(5-ethynyl-2′-deoxyuridine) for 12 hr before fixation and
permeabilization. EdU detection was performed according to the manufacturer's
instruction. Images were acquired on a Leica inverted fluorescence microscope
(DMI 300B) with a 20 × objective lens. Quantification of EdU-positive GCPs
was performed using the ImageJ software.eLife posts the editorial decision letter and author response on a selection of
the published articles (subject to the approval of the authors). An edited
version of the letter sent to the authors after peer review is shown, indicating
the substantive concerns or comments; minor concerns are not usually shown.
Reviewers have the opportunity to discuss the decision before the letter is sent
(see review
process). Similarly, the author response typically shows only
responses to the major concerns raised by the reviewers.Thank you for sending your work entitled “Requirement of Smurf-mediated
endocytosis of Patched1 in Sonic Hedgehog signal reception” for consideration
at eLife. Your article has been favorably evaluated by a Senior
editor and 3 reviewers, one of whom is a member of our Board of Reviewing
Editors.The following individuals responsible for the peer review of your submission have
agreed to reveal their identity: Robb Krumlauf (Reviewing editor); Jin Jiang and Ben
Allen (peer reviewers).The Reviewing editor (Robb Krumlauf) and the other reviewers (Jin Jiang, Ben Allen,
and a third anonymous reviewer) discussed their comments before we reached this
decision, and the Reviewing editor has assembled the following comments to help you
prepare a revised submission.The consensus view of all of the reviewers is that the work is potentially of
significant interest and could represent an important advance in the field. However,
each reviewer has substantial concerns that would need to be addressed before
publication of the paper could be considered. This involves additional
experimentation and major revisions to the text. There are also issues raised over
interpretation of data and missing key citations. Under normal circumstances
requests for such substantial revisions would lead to a decision to reject the
paper, but in this case because the reviewers would like to see the paper published
if their concerns are met we wish to offer the opportunity for a revision.To aid the revision process in this case we provide the specific comments of all
three reviewers.Reviewer #1:In this manuscript, Yue et al investigated the role of Smurf-mediated Ptch1
ubiquitination in the regulation of Shh signaling. They provided evidence that Shh
promotes Ptch1 enrichment in the lipid rafts and that the PPXY sorting signals (PY
motifs) in Ptch1 promotes endocytosis and degradation of Ptch1. They further showed
that the PY motifs are required for Shh-induced ciliary exit of Ptch1 and optimal Hh
pathway activation. They identified Smurf 1 and 2 as two E3 critical ligases that
promote Ptch1 ubiquitination and degradation through the PY motifs. Interestingly,
they found that the expression of Smurf1/2 is upregulated in response to Shh. By
using FRET and CoIP, they provided evidence that Smurf and Ptch1 physically interact
depending on the PY motifs. Finally, they showed that genetic ablation of Smurf1 and
2 specifically affected Shh-induced proliferation of GCPs. Overall, the experiments
were well executed and the data are convincing. The work is complementary to a
recent publication that mainly described a role of Smurf in targeting DrosophilaPtc
(Huang et al., PLOS Bio 2013), and represents an important advance in the field,
allowing one to compare and contrast the fly and mammalian systems. However, the
authors should address the following concerns either by discussion or by additional
experiments before publication is recommended.1) Whereas the evidence for Smurf/PY-mediated Ptch1 endocytosis and degradation is
strong, it is not so clear how this process is promoted by Shh. Although Shh-induced
upregulation of Smurf could contribute, other mechanisms may exist. Have the authors
examined whether Shh promotes the binding of Smurf to Ptch1? For example, does Shh
treatment increase the FRET between GFP-Smurf2CG and Ptch1-RFP shown in Figure 9A-C? On the other hand, Smurf-mediated
degradation of Ptch1 could be Shh independent, as suggested by Casali (Science
Signaling, 2010). For example, Ptch1Δ2, which has the Shh binding domain
deleted (Briscoe et al., Mol Cell 2001), might still be regulated by Smurf/PY.
Furthermore, Huang et al suggested that Smurf prefers degrading ligand-unbound Ptc
(Huang et al., PLOS Bio 2013). How could the authors reconcile their finding that
Shh promotes Ptch1 degradation? Could they examine whether Ptch1Δ2 is
degraded more or less effectively by Smurf than Ptch1 in the presence of Shh?2) Huang et al argued that Smurf-mediated ubiquitination and degradation of Ptc are
promoted by activated forms of Smo (SmoSD) in Drosophila (Huang et al.,
PLOS Bio 2013). Have the authors examined whether Shh promotes Ptch1 degradation
through Smo? For example, does overexpression of mammalian SmoSD promote
Smurf-mediated ubiquitination/degradation of Ptch1?3) The authors showed that mutating the PY motifs or Smurf1/2 affected both Ptch1
ciliary exit and endocytosis. Is the failure of Ptch1 ciliary exit the result of
defective endocytosis? Or could Shh induce Ptch1 ubiquitination in the primary
cilium, which may directly regulate ciliary exit of Ptch1? Is there any evidence
that Smurf1/2 can be found in the primary cilium with or without Shh treatment? In
Figure 6C, can Shh trigger ciliary exit
of Ptch1 in the absence of Smurf1/2? Does pharmacological blockage of Ptch1
endocytosis/degradation affect Ptch1 ciliary exit?4) The effect of Δ2PY-GFP on Smo ciliary localization presented in Figure 4 does not match the quantification
well, especially at 4 hours after Shh treatment where there is almost no difference
in the ciliary Smo levels between Δ2PY-GFP and Ptch1-GFP (Figure 4C) while there is a 2-told difference
in the quantification (Figure 4D). The
authors need to provide a better image reflecting the quantification. Of note, it
has been shown that Shh/Ptch1 regulates both the ciliary localization and
conformation of Smo (Zhao et al., nature 2007). Have the authors examined whether
Δ2PY-GFP affect mSmo conformation using FRET analysis?Reviewer #2:In this manuscript Yue et al. uncover a role for the Hect E3 ligases Smurf1 and
Smurf2 in promoting Hedgehog-dependent changes in the subcellular localization of
the Patched receptor that leads to their increased turnover. This Smurf1/2-mediated
trafficking of Patched is also important for its exit from primary cilia during
pathway activation. Using cultured cells including MEFs knockout for Smurf1&2,
the authors show that this trafficking event is, in turn, important for the ciliary
accumulation of Smoothened and for the activation of Gli-mediated transcription. The
authors show that the Shh-promoted proliferation of granule cell progenitors
requires Smurf1 and Smurf2, suggesting an important function of this regulatory
mechanism in a well-characterized physiological context dependent on Hedgehog
ligands.This is an interesting manuscript that adds to our understanding of the molecular
mechanisms underlying Hedgehog signaling. In particular, although it has been
speculated that endocytic trafficking may be implicated in Patched and Smoothened
localization, ciliary accumulation and signaling, the molecular mechanisms
implicated in this process are poorly defined.The strongest aspects of this manuscript are the loss of function experiments
conducted with the Sf1-/-,Sf2fl/fl MEFs and GPCs. Indeed, the complete absence of
Sf1 and Sf2 leads to a remarkable inhibition of Smo and Gli3 ciliary localization
and blunting of Shh-promoted induction of Gli1 levels in MEFs. These results are
strongly supported by the experiments in Figure
11 showing a reduction of neural progenitors in cerebellar slice cultures
knockout for Sf1 and Sf2 and an inability of Shh to promote the in vitro
proliferation of granule cell progenitors when Sf1 and Sf2 are knocked out. These
experiments strongly support an important functional requirement of Smurf proteins
for Hedgehog signal transduction.In terms of mechanisms describing the function of Smurf proteins, the evidence
presented in the manuscript are however disappointing in that they are too often not
convincing, confusing or incomplete. For example, according to their model, Hedgehog
ligands are shown to promote the localization of Patched in caveolae, a transitory
localization that promote the Smurf dependent ubiquitination of Patched and its
endosomal routing to the lysosomes where it is degraded. First of all, although
scattered evidence suggests that caveosomes and endosomes may physically interact in
specific contexts, the authors present their evidence supporting a role of Rab
proteins and endosomal trafficking in promoting Patched exit from caveolae as a well
defined and accepted mechanism. However, caveolae-mediated endocytosis is most often
described to be separate from endosomal sorting. Although this could represent a
novel sorting mechanism for cell surface receptors, the characterization of this
process needs to be strengthened and better discussed.Moreover, all of the evidence supporting the localization of Ptch in different
subcellular fraction relies on overexpression experiments and on colocalization with
overexpressed markers tagged with fluorescent proteins (especially important for
Rab7). These experiments should be repeated using endogenous proteins and images
obtained at higher resolution to more precisely follow the fate of Ptch trafficking
and more convincingly support the implication of caveolae and/or endosomal
trafficking.In addition in my opinion the biggest question that is left unanswered is how
ubiquitination of Patched by Smurf proteins contributes to its function. Do Smurfs
lead to Patched mono-ubiquitination or to K63 or K48 ubiquitin chain conjugations?
Is ubiquitination involved in Patched endocytosis per se or in its sorting from
endosomes to lysosomes? Does Hedgehog ligand promote the interaction of Patched with
Smurfs? Do Hedgehog ligands promote Patched ubiquitination?There also seems to be a disconnection between the results obtained using the
Ptch-d2PY mutant (when rescuing the Ptch1-/- MEFs) and the results obtained in the
Sf1, Sf2 double KO cells. Indeed, whereas the Shh-promoted accumulation of Smo and
Gli1 activation are blunted in the dKO cells, Smo accumulation is only reduced when
the d2PY mutant is expressed (4C,D). Since the interaction between the d2PY mutant
and Smurf proteins seems to be completely abolished (9E) how is this explained? If
there is more Ptch1-d2PY in cilia, why do Smo enters at all?Reviewer #3:In the manuscript entitled “Requirement of Smurf-Mediated Endocytosis of
Patched 1 in Sonic Hedgehog Signal Reception”, Yu et al. present evidence
that Smurf1 and Smurf2 promote ubiquitination of PTCH1 resulting in endocytic
turnover that is required for HH pathway activation. In particular, the authors
provide significant experimental data examining the subcellular localization of
PTCH1 and the role of two PPXY motifs in regulating PTCH1 localization turnover, and
downstream effects on HH pathway function. While, overall the results appear to be
of high quality, there are some issues with both interpretation of the data and
proper acknowledgement of previous work that the authors must address.Major comments:1) There is an unfortunate lack of proper citation of previous work by other labs in
this field. Two essential examples include the recent publication of work
identifying a role for Smurfs in regulating Drosophila Ptc turnover (Huang et al.,
PLOS Biology, 2013), and work from Tom Kornberg that defined a role for the PPXY
motif in regulating the turnover of vertebrate PTCH1 (Kawamura et al., JBC, 2008).
These two papers directly impact the current study by Yue et al., and this work
should be considered in the context of these previous studies.2) In Figure 5, the authors utilize Ptch1-/-
MEFs to address differences in the ability of PTCH1 and PTCH1Δ2PY to promote
ligand-dependent signaling. However, the authors miss an opportunity to distinguish
between the ligand-dependent and ligand-independent effects of PTCH1 in the HH
pathway. They should use these cells and constructs to examine the ability of PTCH1
or PTCH1Δ2PY to antagonize SMO in the absence of ligand. That is, Ptch1-/-
MEFs display constitutive HH pathway activation; however, re-expressing PTCH1
rescues this pathway activity. The question is whether PTCH1Δ2PY is equally
effective? Do the authors observe equivalent antagonism of SMO in these cells? Or is
PTCH1Δ2PY a more effective antagonist of SMO than wt PTCH1? These are
straightforward questions to address since the authors have all the necessary tools
and reagents in hand.Reviewer #1:In this manuscript, Yue et al investigated the role of Smurf-mediated Ptch1
ubiquitination in the regulation of Shh signaling. […] However, the
authors should address the following concerns either by discussion or by
additional experiments before publication is recommended.1) Whereas the evidence for Smurf/PY-mediated Ptch1 endocytosis and
degradation is strong, it is not so clear how this process is promoted by Shh.
Although Shh-induced upregulation of Smurf could contribute, other mechanisms
may exist. Have the authors examined whether Shh promotes the binding of Smurf
to Ptch1? For example, does Shh treatment increase the FRET between GFP-Smurf2CG
and Ptch1-RFP shown in
? On the
other hand, Smurf-mediated degradation of Ptch1 could be Shh independent, as
suggested by Casali (Science Signaling, 2010). For example, Ptch1Δ2,
which has the Shh binding domain deleted (Briscoe et al., Mol Cell 2001), might
still be regulated by Smurf/PY. Furthermore, Huang et al suggested that Smurf
prefers degrading ligand-unbound Ptc (Huang et al., PLOS Bio 2013). How could
the authors reconcile their finding that Shh promotes Ptch1 degradation? Could
they examine whether Ptch1Δ2 is degraded more or less effectively by
Smurf than Ptch1 in the presence of Shh?We thank this reviewer for raising these very important issues. Our previous and new
data indicate that Shh promotes the Smurf-mediated endocytosis of Ptch1 in several
ways. First, Smurfs are preferentially localized in the nucleus in normal cells
(Kavsak et al., Mol Cell 6:1365-75, 2000) and play important roles in maintaining
the genomic stability (Blank et al, Nature Medicine 18:227-34, 2012). In the revised
manuscript, we show that Shh promotes a re-pivoting of Smurf2 from the nucleus to
the cytoplasm (Figure 7B, and Figure 7–figure supplement 1). Second,
our data also show that Shh induces Smurfs expression (Figure 5E, 5G). So, these two events should lead to an
increase of the effective cytoplasmic concentration of Smurfs. Third, as requested,
we conducted a new FRET experiment and found that Shh indeed promotes the
colocalization of Ptch1 and Smurf2 (Figure
7E). Fourth, we further add new data showing that ShhN treatment enhances the
ubiquitin modification of Ptch1 (Figure 9D),
consistent with our data showing that Shh promotes Ptch1 turnover (Figure 8).In Huang et al, the authors ectopically expressed activated Smo mutants,
SmoSD, in the entire A-compartment, which drastically increased the
level of Ptc (Huang et al, Figure 4D). They
argue that DSmurf prefers the ligand-unbound Ptc as a substrate because ectopic
expression of DSmurf reduced Ptc staining selectively in the A compartment. However,
comparing their Figure 4D and 4E, one could
find that the intensity of Ptc staining at the A/P boundary was also reduced by
DSmurf, notwithstanding the fact that Ptc is normally high at the boundary. On the
other hand, since the authors did not examine the distribution of Hh in the disc
that received the ectopically expressed SmoSD, it would be an unsupported
assumption that the elevated Ptc in the A compartment was still in the unbound form.
After all, the Hh ligand is normally restricted to the compartmental border by the
high level of Ptc there. If the border stripe of high level Ptc was made to expand,
Hh zone should expand with it. Furthermore, it is well known in the field that Ptc
and Smo, when over-expressed, tend to form a nonphysiological complex (Stone et al,
Nature 384:129, 1996, and Taipale et al, Nature 418:892, 2002).This raises a
possibility that the nonphysiological Ptc-Smo complex could trigger an
“unfolded protein response” of some sort that leads to the
DSmurf-mediated destruction. This type of degradation is very different from the one
that we describe in our manuscript, although both could be mediated by the Smurf E3
ubiquitin ligases, even specifically.Notwithstanding the above analysis, assuming DSmurf does prefer the ligand unbound
form of Ptc for degradation, this would put the site of DSmurf action in the A
compartment, where Ptc level is low and Smo is in an inactive state. However, their
data indicated that Smo has to be activated in order to promote Ptc degradation. In
Huang et al, there is no data that either indicate or imply the source of the
activated Smo for activating the Smurf-mediated Ptc turnover or to explain this
conspicuous conflict.We measured the turnover rate of the loop2 mutant of Ptch1 in wt MEFs, and found that
the effect of Shh ligand induction was abolished (Figure 8E, 8F). We further quantified the turnover rate of Ptch1 in
Smonull cells, and found that Shh still promotes Ptch1 turnover there
(Fig.8G, 8H). Moreover, we did not detect
interaction between Smo and Smurfs by co-IP experiments, even though Smurf was shown
to bind Ptch1 readily (Figure7–figure
supplement 2). So, these results demonstrate that Smurfs likely promote
Ptch1 endocytic turnover through direct binding, rather than using Smo as an
intermediate, as suggested by Huang et al. However, Smo probably still has a long
term feedback role through enhancing downstream Smurf gene expression.2) Huang et al argued that Smurf-mediated ubiquitination and degradation of
Ptc are promoted by activated forms of Smo
(Smo) in Drosophila (Huang et
al., PLOS Bio 2013). Have the authors examined whether Shh promotes Ptch1
degradation through Smo? For example, does overexpression of mammalian
Smo
promote Smurf-mediated ubiquitination/degradation of Ptch1?As stated above, we examined Ptch1 turnover in Smonull cells, and found
that Shh still promotes Ptch1 turnover. We also found by Co-IP experiment that Ptch1
binds Smurf but Smo does not (Figure 7-figure
supplement 2). These data strongly argue that Shh-induced,
Smurfs-mediated Ptch1 endocytic turnover is independent of Smo.3) The authors showed that mutating the PY motifs or Smurf1/2 affected both
Ptch1 ciliary exit and endocytosis. Is the failure of Ptch1 ciliary exit the
result of defective endocytosis? Or could Shh induce Ptch1 ubiquitination in the
primary cilium, which may directly regulate ciliary exit of Ptch1? Is there any
evidence that Smurf1/2 can be found in the primary cilium with or without Shh
treatment? In
, can Shh
trigger ciliary exit of Ptch1 in the absence of Smurf1/2? Does pharmacological
blockage of Ptch1 endocytosis/degradation affect Ptch1 ciliary
exit?It is our interpretation that Ptch1Δ2PY fails to exit cilia because of
defective endocytosis. Despite an initial hypothesis, we found neither endogenous
nor transfected Smurfs in the cilia with or without Shh treatment. Our data also
show that the Shh-induced ciliary export of Ptch1 was compromised when Smurf1 and
Smurf2 were knocked down with siRNAs (Figure
5–figure supplement 1). We further show that blocking Ptch1
endocytosis with Leupeptin also blocked its ciliary exit (this result were not
included in the previous submission, but is now added as Figure 3–figure supplement 1 in the revised
manuscript).4) The effect of Δ2PY-GFP on Smo ciliary localization presented
in
does not match the quantification well, especially at 4 hours after Shh
treatment where there is almost no difference in the ciliary Smo levels between
Δ2PY-GFP and Ptch1-GFP () while there is a 2-told
difference in the quantification (). The authors need to provide a
better image reflecting the quantification. Of note, it has been shown that
Shh/Ptch1 regulates both the ciliary localization and conformation of Smo (Zhao
et al., nature 2007). Have the authors examined whether Δ2PY-GFP affect
mSmo conformation using FRET analysis?We replaced the images in the old Figure 4C
with better ones in the revision (new Figure
3C). By using a sophisticated FRET imaging approach, Zhao et al elegantly
demonstrated that Hh induces phosphorylation and a conformational change of Smo
c-tail that result in Smo dimerization and activation of downstream signaling. Their
work also extended this observation to mammalian Smo. However, this regulation,
albeit a likely key event in the Shh pathway activation, lies downstream to Ptch1
functions. Since we have demonstrated that Shh-induced Ptch1 endocytic turnover is
independent of Smo, and analyzed extensively the ciliary trafficking of Smo, another
well recognized key event of the Shh pathway activation, we felt that examining
Δ2PY-GFP on mSmo conformation would be a repetition of an already
well-addressed issue. In addition, setting up the FRET experiment on Smo
conformation would not be a trivial endeavor, if one needs to do it properly. If
this reviewer and the editors deem this FRET experiment absolutely essential, which
we would respectfully disagree, we will perform as demanded, provided that we are
granted additional time.Reviewer #2:In this manuscript Yue et al. uncover a role for the Hect E3 ligases Smurf1
and Smurf2 in promoting Hedgehog-dependent changes in the subcellular
localization of the Patched receptor that leads to their increased
turnover. […]The strongest aspects of this manuscript are the loss of function experiments
conducted with the Sf1-/-,Sf2fl/fl MEFs and GPCs. Indeed, the complete absence
of Sf1 and Sf2 leads to a remarkable inhibition of Smo and Gli3 ciliary
localization and blunting of Shh-promoted induction of Gli1 levels in MEFs.
These results are strongly supported by the experiments in
showing a reduction of neural progenitors in cerebellar slice cultures
knockout for Sf1 and Sf2 and an inability of Shh to promote the in vitro
proliferation of granule cell progenitors when Sf1 and Sf2 are knocked out.
These experiments strongly support an important functional requirement of Smurf
proteins for Hedgehog signal transduction.In terms of mechanisms describing the function of Smurf proteins, the
evidence presented in the manuscript are however disappointing in that they are
too often not convincing, confusing or incomplete. For example, according to
their model, Hedgehog ligands are shown to promote the localization of Patched
in caveolae, a transitory localization that promote the Smurf dependent
ubiquitination of Patched and its endosomal routing to the lysosomes where it is
degraded. First of all, although scattered evidence suggests that caveosomes and
endosomes may physically interact in specific contexts, the authors present
their evidence supporting a role of Rab proteins and endosomal trafficking in
promoting Patched exit from caveolae as a well defined and accepted mechanism.
However, caveolae-mediated endocytosis is most often described to be separate
from endosomal sorting. Although this could represent a novel sorting mechanism
for cell surface receptors, the characterization of this process needs to be
strengthened and better discussed.We agree with this reviewer that caveolae was a recently recognized alternative route
for internalization of membrane-bound ligand-receptor complexes, but this phenomenon
was actually noted more than two decades ago. At that time, a term of
“potocytosis” was coined to distinguish it from the Clathrin-mediated
endocytosis (Anderson RG, Science 255:410-1, 1992; Gleizes PE, Eur. J. Cell Biology
71:144-53, 1996), because the cargo of potocytosis was thought to be emptied
directly into the cytosol. Later studies demonstrated that caveolae-mediated
internalization actually feeds into the conventional endocytic pathway, and
“caveosomes”, which were previously regarded as independent organelles
distinct from endosomes, were actually late endosomes modified by the accumulated
Caveolin-1 therein (Hayer et al, J Cell Biol 191:615-29, 2010; Sandvig et al, Curr
Opin Cell Biol 23:413-420, 2011). To clarify this issue, we made modifications in
the Introduction and cited several key references.Moreover, all of the evidence supporting the localization of Ptch in
different subcellular fraction relies on overexpression experiments and on
colocalization with overexpressed markers tagged with fluorescent proteins
(especially important for Rab7). These experiments should be repeated using
endogenous proteins and images obtained at higher resolution to more precisely
follow the fate of Ptch trafficking and more convincingly support the
implication of caveolae and/or endosomal trafficking.Antibodies again mousePtch1 are not commercially available, precluding a direct
visualization of the endogenous Ptch1, which is present at extremely low level in
cells (Rohatgi et al Science). Fluorescence labeled Rab5, Rab7, and Lamp1 are widely
used for marking early endosomes, late endosomes, and lysosomes, and the data in
question were generated through confocal imaging on a newly acquired Zeiss LSM710
microscope. We have repeated the experiments in question using Ptch1GFP and
antibodies against endogenous Rab5, Rab7, and Lamp1, respectively. The data are
displayed in new Figure 2 and Figure 2–figure supplements 1 and
3. Signals from antibody staining of endogenous proteins were quite low,
probably reflecting the low abundance of the interacting species or the low avidity
of this commercial antibody, nevertheless, colocalization between Ptch1GFP and Rab7
poitive late endosomes was confirmed. We also showed colocalization between Ptch1GFP
and Lamp1 positive lysosomes using leupeptin to block proteolysis. However, we were
unable to detect colocalization between Ptch1GFP and early endosomes (Rab5) without
or with ShhN treatment, confirming our previous finding that Ptch1 traverses from
lipid rafts directly to late endosomes, bypassing early endosomes. Finally, the d2PY
mutant was not colocalized with any of these vesicles. We want to emphasize that
these confocal images presented were taken in z-stack using a 63x oil lens. Some
images may appear fuzzy, particularly in colocalizing areas/vesicles. This is likely
because only a very small fraction of cytoplasmic Ptch1 is channeled to the
endocytic pathway; the bulk of forced expressed Ptch1 still turns over via
proteasomes (Figure 1F).In addition in my opinion the biggest question that is left unanswered is how
ubiquitination of Patched by Smurf proteins contributes to its function. Do
Smurfs lead to Patched mono-ubiquitination or to K63 or K48 ubiquitin chain
conjugations? Is ubiquitination involved in Patched endocytosis per se or in its
sorting from endosomes to lysosomes? Does Hedgehog ligand promote the
interaction of Patched with Smurfs? Do Hedgehog ligands promote Patched
ubiquitination?In our humble opinion, elucidation of the type of Smurfs-mediated ubiquitin
modification of Ptch1is certainly informative, but is nevertheless a mechanistic
detail in our investigation. It is also extremely difficult to visualize
monoubiquitination of Ptch1 under natural settings, given the size of this protein.
We did however use mutant forms of ubiquitin and found that Smurf2 promotes Ptch1 to
undergo both K63 and K48 ubiquitin chain-mediated ubiquitination (new Figure 9C). We further show that Shh-N promotes
interaction of Ptch1 with Smurfs (new Figure
7E) and Ptch1 polyubiquitination (new Figure 9D). Because Ptch1 ΔPY is accumulated in Caveolin-positive
lipid raft but not in late endosome (Figs.1A,
1B, and 2A, 2B), we believe that Smurf-mediated Ptch1 ubiquitination is
involved in sorting of Ptch1 from lipid raft to late endosomes.There also seems to be a disconnection between the results obtained using the
Ptch-d2PY mutant (when rescuing the Ptch1-/- MEFs) and the results obtained in
the Sf1, Sf2 double KO cells. Indeed, whereas the Shh-promoted accumulation of
Smo and Gli1 activation are blunted in the dKO cells, Smo accumulation is only
reduced when the d2PY mutant is expressed (4C,D). Since the interaction between
the d2PY mutant and Smurf proteins seems to be completely abolished (9E) how is
this explained? If there is more Ptch1-d2PY in cilia, why do Smo enters at
all?We replaced the d2PY images in old Figure 4C
as well as those in old Figure 8B with new
ones that better reflect the corresponding statistic graphs. We apologize for those
images that may have exaggerated the difference. Judging from the data graphs, it is
clear that the reduction in Smo ciliary localization and Gli1 activation caused by
d2PY deletion is clearly in line with that by Smurfs knockdown (compare Figure 3D, time point 1-4 hours vs. Figure 6B, 6C).With regard to the last question, the current paradigm of Ptch1 inhibiting Smo by
preventing the latter entry into cilia is based on the observation that Smo moves in
whereas Ptch1 moves out of cilia under the influence of Shh (Rohatgi et al, Science
317:372-8, 2007). However, there is no evidence to indicate that the presence of
these two membrane receptors in the cilium is mutually exclusive. To the contrary,
there are published studies reporting cyclopamine actually promotes Smo entry into
the cilium, suggesting that Smo and Ptch1 can co-exist in cilia.Reviewer #3:In the manuscript entitled “Requirement of Smurf-Mediated Endocytosis
of Patched 1 in Sonic Hedgehog Signal Reception”, Yu et al. present
evidence that Smurf1 and Smurf2 promote ubiquitination of PTCH1 resulting in
endocytic turnover that is required for HH pathway activation. In particular,
the authors provide significant experimental data examining the subcellular
localization of PTCH1 and the role of two PPXY motifs in regulating PTCH1
localization turnover, and downstream effects on HH pathway function. While,
overall the results appear to be of high quality, there are some issues with
both interpretation of the data and proper acknowledgement of previous work that
the authors must address.Major comments:1) There is an unfortunate lack of proper citation of previous work by other
labs in this field. Two essential examples include the recent publication of
work identifying a role for Smurfs in regulating Drosophila Ptc turnover (Huang
et al., PLOS Biology, 2013), and work from Tom Kornberg that defined a role for
the PPXY motif in regulating the turnover of vertebrate PTCH1 (Kawamura et al.,
JBC, 2008). These two papers directly impact the current study by Yue et al.,
and this work should be considered in the context of these previous
studies.We have cited these two papers and discussed extensively the Huang’s recent
publication.2) In
, the
authors utilize Ptch1-/- MEFs to address differences in the ability of PTCH1 and
PTCH1Δ2PY to promote ligand-dependent signaling. However, the authors
miss an opportunity to distinguish between the ligand-dependent and
ligand-independent effects of PTCH1 in the HH pathway. They should use these
cells and constructs to examine the ability of PTCH1 or PTCH1Δ2PY to
antagonize SMO in the absence of ligand. That is, Ptch1-/- MEFs display
constitutive HH pathway activation; however, re-expressing PTCH1 rescues this
pathway activity. The question is whether PTCH1Δ2PY is equally effective?
Do the authors observe equivalent antagonism of SMO in these cells? Or is
PTCH1Δ2PY a more effective antagonist of SMO than wt PTCH1? These are
straightforward questions to address since the authors have all the necessary
tools and reagents in hand.We did the experiment as requested and the results indicate that Δ2PY is
equally effective as the wt Ptch1 in antagonizing Smo in Ptch1-/- MEFs (Figure 4C). This is different from the results
obtained from Shh-induced signaling events.
Authors: Michael Blank; Yi Tang; Motozo Yamashita; Sandra S Burkett; Steven Y Cheng; Ying E Zhang Journal: Nat Med Date: 2012-01-08 Impact factor: 53.440
Authors: Jynho Kim; Elaine Y C Hsia; Amira Brigui; Anne Plessis; Philip A Beachy; Xiaoyan Zheng Journal: Sci Signal Date: 2015-06-02 Impact factor: 8.192
Authors: Xiaole L Chen; Pilar Chinchilla; Joanna Fombonne; Lan Ho; Catherine Guix; James H Keen; Patrick Mehlen; Natalia A Riobo Journal: Mol Cell Biol Date: 2014-08-04 Impact factor: 4.272
Authors: Jarrod W Barnes; Elif T Kucera; Liping Tian; Noël E Mellor; Nina Dvorina; William W Baldwin; Micheala A Aldred; Carol F Farver; Suzy A A Comhair; Metin Aytekin; Raed A Dweik Journal: Am J Respir Cell Mol Biol Date: 2016-10 Impact factor: 6.914