Abstract
In eukaryotic cells, cellular homeostasis requires that different organelles respond to intracellular as well as environmental signals and modulate their behavior as conditions demand. Understanding the molecular mechanisms required for these changes remains an outstanding goal. One such organelle is the lysosome/vacuole, which undergoes alterations in size and number in response to environmental and physiological stimuli. Changes in the morphology of this organelle are mediated in part by the equilibrium between fusion and fission processes. While the fusion of the yeast vacuole has been studied intensively, the regulation of vacuolar fission remains poorly characterized by comparison. In recent years, a number of studies have incorporated genome-wide visual screens and high-throughput microscopy to identify factors required for vacuolar fission in response to diverse cellular insults, including hyperosmotic and endoplasmic reticulum stress. Available evidence now demonstrates that the rapamycin-sensitive TOR network, a master regulator of cell growth, is required for vacuolar fragmentation in response to stress. Importantly, many of the genes identified in these studies provide new insights into potential links between the vacuolar fission machinery and TOR signaling. Together these advances both extend our understanding of the regulation of vacuolar fragmentation in yeast as well as underscore the role of analogous events in mammalian cells.
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Introduction
Eukaryotic cells are defined by the presence of distinct membrane-bound organelles that carry out specialized cellular functions. Proper homeostasis requires that these organelles respond to diverse metabolic and stress-related signals to modulate their behavior and maintain proper cellular function. Understanding these responses and the mechanisms involved is thus important for a full description of the behavior of normal cells as well as for an understanding of the basis of different human diseases. In this regard, studies in model organisms continue to play an indispensible role in the advance of our understanding of these important events within cells.
In budding yeast, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the vacuolar compartment is analogous to the mammalian lysosome and is the degradative compartment of the cell, specifically as the site of proteolysis as well as micro- and macroautophagy. As such, the vacuole/lysosome functions in processes critical to maintenance of cellular homeostasis, including detoxification of the cytoplasm, maintenance of cellular pH, response to osmotic shock and nutrient depravation, and storage of ions and metabolites (Li and Kane 2009). Vacuolar morphology is intimately linked to its function as the size and volume of this dynamic organelle change in response to environmental and stress conditions (Bonangelino et al. 2002; Kim et al. 2012; Stauffer and Powers 2015) (Fig. 1). Similarly, loss of proper lysosomal function has been implicated in various human disorders including neurodegenerative diseases and cancer (Kirkegaard and Jaattela 2009; Zhang et al. 2009).
The vacuole/lysosome are multi-copy organelles, where wild-type yeast contains between one and four vacuoles, depending upon strain background, while mammalian cells contain several hundred lysosomes under normal growth conditions (Banta et al. 1988; Luzio et al. 2007). Upon nutrient limitation or hypotonic conditions, both vacuoles and lysosomes become enlarged and their copy number reduced, with yeast containing essentially one large vacuole (Baba et al. 1994) (Fig. 1). Conversely, under hyperosmotic or acid stress, vacuoles undergo asymmetric fragmentation resulting in smaller and more numerous organelles (Bonangelino et al. 2002; Suzuki et al. 2012; Zieger and Mayer 2012) (Fig. 1). In yeast, alterations in vacuolar size and number are suggested to be regulated by an equilibrium between vacuolar fusion and fission processes (Baars et al. 2007). While the steps and molecular players involved in vacuolar fusion have been well characterized, the vacuolar fission process remains poorly defined and the molecular machinery responsible for fission remains largely uncharacterized. In addition, for the few components that have been identified, their requirement for vacuolar fragmentation appears to vary depending on the precise stimuli, further complicating our understanding of this process (Bonangelino et al. 2002; Zieger and Mayer 2012). Recent studies are now addressing this important area of research. For example, novel stimuli that induce vacuolar fission have been uncovered as we recently demonstrated that vacuolar fission occurs in response to stress within the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). Furthermore, a role for TORC1 in the vacuolar fission process has been solidified by recent findings that ER stress-induced as well as hyperosmotic stress-induced vacuolar fragmentation requires components of the rapamycin-sensitive TOR signaling network (Michaillat et al. 2012; Ho and Gasch 2015; Stauffer and Powers 2015). Additionally, by employing in vivo genome-wide visual screens, recent studies have identified several new molecular players involved in vacuolar fission (Michaillat and Mayer 2013; Stauffer and Powers 2015). Importantly, these studies provide evidence that ER stress stimulates fission in a manner that is overlapping yet distinct in comparison to other forms of cellular stress (Stauffer and Powers 2015).
Inducers of vacuolar fragmentation
Vacuolar fission is known to occur in response to hyperosmotic stress, acid stress, and at distinct stages of the cell cycle (Bonangelino et al. 2002; Weisman 2003; Suzuki et al. 2012). In response to hyperosmotic shock, water is release from the vacuolar compartment to maintain osmotic homeostasis following the increased solute concentration in the cytoplasm (Bonangelino et al. 2002; Weisman 2003). Fission of the vacuolar membrane under these conditions maintains the proper surface area to volume ratio of the vacuolar compartment and occurs rapidly, within 10 min of hyperosmotic shock. Addition of lactic and hydrochloric acid to yeast growth medium also results in vacuolar fragmentation, although the significance of fragmentation in response to these conditions remains unknown (Suzuki et al. 2012). Proper vacuolar inheritance is dependent upon correct partitioning of the vacuolar compartment into the daughter cell. Many early insights into vacuolar fission were gained following screens that identified mutants unable to undergo vacuolar fission and, subsequently, vacuolar inheritance (Weisman et al. 1990; Shaw and Wickner 1991; Gomes de Mesquita et al. 1996; Wang et al. 1996).
Recent studies have demonstrated that vacuolar fragmentation also occurs in response to ER stress, as cells treated with tunicamycin (Tm), a drug that inhibits N-linked glycosylation within the ER, also produced fragmented vacuoles (Kim et al. 2012; Stauffer and Powers 2015). Although the specificity and molecular basis for this observation were not determined in the first report, our subsequent study utilized both pharmacological and genetic approaches to determine if vacuolar fragmentation was indeed a general result of ER stress or, rather, whether it was a specific response to treatment with tunicamycin. ER stress was induced using a different chemical agent, dithiothreitol (DTT), as well as a temperature sensitive allele of ER oxidoreductin I, ERO1, and vacuolar morphology was examined. Disruption of Ero1 activity, as well as treatment with either Tm or DTT, results in vacuolar fragmentation, signifying that fragmentation is indeed a general response to ER stress (Stauffer and Powers 2015). Consistent with this conclusion, the kinetics of fragmentation was observed to be very similar to the kinetics of activation of the ER stress signaling pathway, the so-called unfolded protein response (UPR). Although we do not yet understand the physiological significance of fragmentation in response to ER stress, an inability to undergo fragmentation in response to Tm treatment was observed to enhance the ability of yeast cells to undergo cell death (Kim et al. 2012).
These findings raise the question of how ER stress signals to the vacuole to induce fragmentation. Initially, it was reasoned that one of the previously identified ER stress response pathways would likely be involved, including the UPR. However, we determined that mutants that are unable to induce the UPR, specifically a deletion of the ER transmembrane sensor kinase/nuclease IRE1 (Sidrauski and Walter 1997; Okamura et al. 2000), still undergo vacuolar fragmentation in response to ER stress (Stauffer and Powers 2015). Similarly, mutants in several additional ER stress-specific pathways, including the ER-associated degradation (ERAD) and ER surveillance (ERSU) pathways, are also able to respond to inducers and carry out fragmentation. Ultimately, components of the TOR signaling network were identified that provide the link between ER stress and vacuolar dynamics (Stauffer and Powers 2015).
TORC1 mediates vacuolar fragmentation
TOR is a Ser/Thr kinase that regulates cellular growth and is conserved in all eukaryotes examined to date. Budding yeast possesses two TOR proteins, Tor1 and Tor2, that provide the mechanistic center of two distinct protein complexes, termed TOR complexes 1 and 2 (TORC1 and TORC2, respectively) (Loewith and Hall 2011). TORC1 is composed of either Tor1 or Tor2, Tco89, Kog1, and Lst8, and is enriched at the vacuolar membrane, where it regulates a diverse range of cellular processes in response to nutritional cues as well as stress conditions (Barbet et al. 1996; Powers and Walter 1999; Urban et al. 2007; Binda et al. 2009; Michaillat et al. 2012; Betz and Hall 2013; Jin et al. 2014; Jiang 2016). TORC1 signaling is mediated through at least two major effector branches that include (1) the AGC kinase Sch9 and (2) a protein phosphatase complex that contains an essential regulatory protein Tap42 (Urban et al. 2007; Huber et al. 2009).
TORC1 has been implicated in vacuolar fragmentation, as multiple studies have found that treatment with rapamycin, a specific inhibitor of TORC1, blocks both hyperosmotic and ER stress-induced vacuolar fragmentation (Michaillat et al. 2012) (Stauffer and Powers 2015). In response to ER stress, loss of function mutations within both downstream effector branches, including deletion of SCH9 or temperature sensitive alleles of the essential TAP42 gene, also block vacuolar fragmentation in the presence of ER stress, suggesting that both these TORC1 branches are required for fragmentation. Conversely, Sch9 and Tap42 are not necessary for hyperosmotic stress-induced vacuolar fragmentation, although the phosphatase downstream of Tap42, Sit4 is required for fragmentation under both conditions (Michaillat et al. 2012; Stauffer and Powers 2015). Based on these findings, it is likely that TORC1 is involved in a distinct ER stress-induced signaling pathway that is required for vacuolar fragmentation.
An important question is whether TORC1 signaling is activated under ER stress conditions, as has been proposed for salt-induced vacuolar fragmentation (Michaillat et al. 2012). Results obtained thus far suggest that ER stress does not in fact affect TORC1 activity, indicating that ER stress and TORC1 may function in parallel to influence vacuolar morphology (Stauffer and Powers 2015) (Fig. 2). Similar findings have also been reported recently by the Cunningham group (Kim and Cunningham 2015).
Vacuolar membrane localization of TORC1
Cellular fractionation and localization studies of TORC1 components have shown that TORC1 is enriched at the vacuolar membrane (Reinke et al. 2004; Aronova et al. 2007; Urban et al. 2007; Sturgill et al. 2008; Binda et al. 2009). Because the vacuole is known to be a major compartment for nutrient storage and TORC1 responds to nutritional cues, it has become appreciated that localization of TORC1 to this compartment likely represents an important aspect of nutrient regulation within this pathway. Likewise, activation of mammalian TORC1 (mTORC1) by amino acids has been shown to require the regulated movement of mTORC1 from an endosome-like compartment to the lysosomal membrane, a process that requires the activity of the Rag GTPases (Sancak et al. 2010).
In yeast, association of TORC1 with the vacuolar membrane does not appear to change in response to nutrient status (Binda et al. 2009). Therefore, the possible regulation of TORC1 activity at the vacuole in yeast remains somewhat of a puzzle. It has been observed that TORC1 dissociates from the vacuolar membrane during heat stress, which is proposed to negatively regulate its function (Takahara and Maeda 2012). However, we observed that TORC1 remains associated with fragmented vacuoles under ER stress conditions (Stauffer and Powers 2015). This observation leads us to speculate that TORC1 functions at the vacuolar membrane to facilitate fission in response to ER stress.
A recent study has revealed that components of TORC1 are localized to so-called ER-vacuole membrane contact sites (MCS) (Murley et al. 2015), suggesting the possibility that direct communication between these organelles may convey information regarding ER stress to TORC1 and/or the vacuolar membrane directly. A comprehensive understanding of TORC1 localization at the vacuole and its possible connection to ER-vacuole MCS is an area of ongoing study.
Identification of factors involved in vacuolar fission
To gain insight into the molecular machinery required for vacuolar fragmentation, two groups have performed forward in vivo genome-wide visual screens to identify factors that are involved in fragmentation following ER and hyperosmotic stress (Michaillat and Mayer 2013; Stauffer and Powers 2015). Protocols were used that allowed sampling of vacuolar morphology using a high-throughput fluorescence microscope in a time resolved manner following the addition of ER stress- and hyperosmotic stress-inducing agents (Fig. 3). Using this technique, the yeast haploid deletion collection (Giaever et al. 2002) was analyzed and mutants deficient in fragmentation following ER stress and hyperosmotic stress were identified. A comparison of the results of these screens by meta-analysis yielded an overlapping yet non-identical set of proteins required for both ER stress- and hyperosmotic stress-induced vacuolar fragmentation.
Our screen identified 315 genes required for vacuolar fragmentation following ER stress (Stauffer and Powers 2015). These candidate genes were ranked according to the severity of their fragmentation defects, and the top “hits”, along with a number of other candidate genes known to be involved in cellular signaling, were subjected to a more rigorous individual inspection of vacuolar morphology. We identified genes implicated in vacuolar fission in response to hyperosmotic stress, including the vacuolar ATPase (V-ATPase), TORC1 signaling components, members of the AP-3 adaptor complex, as well as genes involved in phosphatidylinositol 3,5 bisphosphate [PI(3,5)P2 biosynthesis (Michaillat and Mayer 2013; Stauffer and Powers 2015)]. Additionally, we identified genes that appear to be unique to ER stress, including genes involved in assembly of the V-ATPase as well as novel proteins localized to the ER and Golgi.
Interplay between TORC1 and the vacuole
Many of the genes required for vacuolar fragmentation identified in these visual screens have been implicated independently in the regulation of TORC1, suggesting that they may form part of the pathway that links ER stress to TORC1 activity. Conversely, these screens also identified factors that TORC1 has been proposed to regulate. These findings underscore the extent to which TORC1 function and vacuolar dynamics are likely to be interconnected.
Regulation of TORC1 activity is remarkably complex and influenced by many factors, including nutrient availability, temperature, osmotic conditions, redox stress, and caffeine (Kuranda et al. 2006; Reinke et al. 2006; Urban et al. 2007; Binda et al. 2009). The vacuolar GTPase EGO complex, Ego3, was identified in our screen as important for vacuolar fragmentation in response to ER stress (Stauffer and Powers 2015). The EGO complex consists of members of the Ras-like family of small GTPases Gtr1 and Gtr2, as well as Ego1, Ego2, and Ego3, which have unknown molecular functions but are probably orthologous to mammalian Ragulator components (see below) (Gao and Kaiser 2006; Binda et al. 2009; Powis et al. 2015). Discovery of this complex has provided insight into the regulation of TORC1 activity and has been proposed to couple amino acid signals to TORC1 (Gao and Kaiser 2006; Binda et al. 2009; Powis et al. 2015). Similarly, the mammalian Ragulator complex consists of components that recruit mTORC1 in mammalian cells to the lysosomal membrane for activation. TORC1 activity is sensitive to the nucleotide-binding state of Gtr1, where Gtr1GTP/Gtr2GDP activates TORC1, while the opposite GTP/GDP-bound configuration is proposed to inactivate TORC1 (Binda et al. 2009). The EGO complex is anchored to the vacuolar membrane by both palmitoylation and myristolation of Ego1, as well as by the fact that Ego3 is a transmembrane protein. Interactions between EGO and TORC1 have been identified as Gtr1GTP associates with both Tco89 and Kog1 in a nutrient-sensitive manner (Binda et al. 2009). How the EGO complex, specifically Ego3, influences TORC1 to influence vacuolar morphology remains to be determined.
Interestingly, Vam6, the guanine exchange factor (GEF) for Gtr1, is also a component of the homotypic vacuolar fusion and protein sorting (HOPS) tethering complex utilized during homotypic vacuolar fusion (Binda et al. 2009) and, moreover, is suggested to function upstream of TORC1 (Takahara and Maeda 2012; Kingsbury et al. 2014).
Similarly, components of the class C core vacuole-endosome transport (CORVET) endolysosomal membrane trafficking complex, which has been implicated in vacuolar fission, is also thought to regulate TORC1 activity (Kingsbury et al. 2014). The link between the vacuole, TORC1, and the HOPS and CORVET complexes is extended by the evidence that deletion of these complexes leads to vacuolar acidification defects, as well as the inability of the cell to resume growth after rapamycin treatment (Kingsbury et al. 2014). Interestingly, both these phenotypes are rescued by overexpression of Vph2, a V-ATPase assembly factor that is also implicated in vacuolar fission (Bachhawat et al. 1993; Kingsbury et al. 2014). We demonstrated that Vph2 is required for ER stress-induced vacuolar fragmentation, and that this protein undergoes changes in localization in a TORC1-dependent manner (Stauffer and Powers 2015). The molecular mechanism of TORC1 regulation by these complexes, as well as the relationship of Vph2 to TORC1, remains to be characterized.
Members of the vacuolar ATPase (V-ATPase), which acidifies the vacuole, were also identified as required for ER stress-induced vacuolar fragmentation. The V-ATPase has been implicated in both vacuolar fission and fusion processes as deletion of specific components results in either fusion or fission defects (Baars et al. 2007). However, whether the role of the V-ATPase is simply to provide acidification of the organelle during fission and fusion or an alternative process that requires its presence at the vacuolar membrane remains somewhat controversial (Coonrod et al. 2013). Additionally, recent studies in mammalian cells and yeast have shown that the V-ATPase influences TORC1 activity. In mammalian cells, the V-ATPase is necessary for mTORC1 activation in response to amino acids (Zoncu et al. 2011). Interestingly, in yeast, the V-ATPase is thought to be stabilized by phosphatidylinositol 3,5 bisphosphate PI(3,5)P2 (Li et al. 2014), which also influences TORC1 activity.
PI(3,5)P2 is a low abundant phospholipid that increases in response to hyperosmotic shock (Bonangelino et al. 2002) and, moreover, is required for vacuolar fragmentation in response to hyperosmotic and ER stress as well as in response to changes in the cell cycle. Recently, PI(3,5)P2 has also been shown to influence TORC1 activity in both yeast and mammalian cells. Deletion of genes that mediate PI(3,5)P2 synthesis in yeast (FAB1, VAC7, VAC14) or their counterparts in mammalian cells (PIKFYVE, VAC14 or FIG4) have decreased TORC1 activity as assessed by hypersensitivity to rapamycin, and decreased phosphorylation of the TORC1 substrates Sch9, Npr1, Atg13, and mammalian S6K (Bridges et al. 2012b; Jin et al. 2014). Increased PI(3,5)P2 levels restore TORC1 activity of these mutants in yeasts, clarifying the role of PI(3,5)P2 in regulation of TORC1 activity (Jin et al. 2014). Additionally, insulin and amino acid stimulation increase PI(3,5)P2 levels in mammalian cells (Bridges et al. 2012b). Although phosphorylated phosphoinositides often recruit proteins to specific membranes to modify their function, yeast TORC1 components remain localized to the vacuolar membrane regardless of PI(3,5)P2 levels (Jin et al. 2014). Interestingly, while PI(3,5)P2-dependent changes in localization of the Kog1 were not evident, artificial tethering of this TORC1 subunit to the vacuolar membrane partially suppressed rapamycin hypersensitivity of PI(3,5)P2-deficient strains (Jin et al. 2014). Similarly, interactions between raptor, the mammalian Kog1 homolog, and PI(3,5)P2 may partially mediate its interaction of with the lysosomal membrane as well as play a role in activation of mTORC1 (Bridges et al. 2012b). Additionally, in certain cell lines, mTORC1 changes localization in response to altered PI(3,5)P2 levels, suggesting differences between yeast and mammalian cells (Bridges et al. 2012b). Moreover, PI(3,5)P2 levels modulate recruitment of TORC1 effectors to the vacuolar membrane as depletion of PI(3,5)P2 compromises Sch9 vacuolar localization, while elevated levels of PI(3,5)P2 restore localization (Urban et al. 2007; Jin et al. 2014).
Vps9 is the sole guanine nucleotide exchange factor in yeast that mediates GDP exchange for the Rab5 GTPases (Vps21, Ypt52, Ypt53), and is required for correct localization of the CORVET complex to endosomes (Balderhaar et al. 2013). We found that Vps9 is also required for vacuolar fission in response to ER stress (Stauffer and Powers 2015). Interestingly, deletion of Vps9 results in rapamycin hypersensitivity, which is rescued by overexpression of a Rab5 GTPase, Vps21 (Bridges et al. 2012a). Vps9 overexpression also results in rapamycin resistance, a phenotype characteristic of many upstream TORC1 regulators (Bridges et al. 2012a). A role for Rab5 family members and their GEF’s in TORC1 regulation is conserved as Rab5 activity changes mTORC1 activity in response to insulin and amino acid signaling (Bridges et al. 2012a). Additionally, Rab5 expression influences mTORC1 localization (Bridges et al. 2012a). Although proteins found to regulate TORC1 activity have been identified, we are still lacking a clear understanding of how TORC1 activity is controlled, particularly in the context of association with membranes.
As described above, not only do vacuolar proteins regulate TORC1, but TORC1 also regulates many vacuolar processes. TORC1 negatively regulates autophagy, the catabolic process where portions of the cytoplasm are carried to the vacuole for turnover. Similarly, piecemeal microautophagy of the nucleus, a process that degrades portions of the nuclear membrane at nuclear-vacuole junctions, is also proposed to be regulated by TORC1 (Roberts et al. 2003). A recent study found that TORC1 promotes vacuolar membrane permeabilization and cellular death in response to simultaneous ER stress initiation and calcineurin inhibition (Kim and Cunningham 2015). However, the precise relationship between TORC1 and vacuolar function with respect to ER stress remains to be defined.
Conclusions and perspective
The physiological consequence of the inability of cells to undergo fragmentation in response to environmental conditions remains to be addressed comprehensively. In response to increased solute concentration in the cytoplasm, the vacuole releases water to balance osmotic pressure that results in a shriveling of the vacuolar membrane (Bonangelino et al. 2002). Fragmentation of the vacuolar is thought to occur in order to maintain the correct surface area to volume ratio of the vacuolar membrane. However, fragmentation during the cell cycle occurs to allow proper vacuolar inheritance into the daughter cell (Weisman 2003). While we do not fully understand why vacuoles undergo fragmentation in response to ER stress, preliminary evidence suggests that cells unable to undergo division under these conditions are more susceptible to cell death (Kim et al. 2012). More insight into the process of vacuolar fission, including the signaling networks that regulate the fusion and fission equilibrium, the timing and location of division events, and molecular machinery involved, is needed. Remarkably, our examination of ER stress signaling pathways and vacuolar morphology excludes involvement of known ER stress pathways and instead identifies a signaling pathway that includes TORC1. Ongoing studies are thus aimed at further characterization of this pathway in yeast, as well as exploring the relationship between cellular stress, TOR signaling, and lysosomal dynamics in mammalian cells.
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This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health Grant GM086387 to Ted Powers.
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Communicated by M. Kupiec.
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Stauffer, B., Powers, T. Target of rapamycin signaling mediates vacuolar fragmentation. Curr Genet 63, 35–42 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00294-016-0616-0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00294-016-0616-0