Proximodistal patterning in Drosophila requires division of the developing leg into increasingly smaller, discrete domains of gene function. The LIM-HOM transcription factors apterous (ap) and Lim1 (also known as dlim1), and the homeobox genes Bar and aristaless (al) are part of the gene battery required for the development of specific leg segments. Our genetic results show that there are posttranslational interactions between Ap, Bar and the LIM-domain binding protein Chip in tarsus four, and between Al, Lim1 and Chip in the pretarsus, and that these interactions depend on the presence of balanced amounts of such proteins. We also observe in vitro protein binding between Bar and Chip, Bar and Ap, Lim1 and Chip, and Al and Chip. Together with the previous evidence for interactions between Ap and Chip, these results suggest that these transcription factors form protein complexes during leg development. We propose that the different developmental outcomes of LIM-HOM function are due to the precise identity and dosage of the interacting partners present in a given cell.
Introduction
Homeodomain (HOM) proteins play fundamental roles in development. The common feature that characterises this protein family is the presence of a homeodomain, which is involved mainly in DNA interactions(Gehring et al., 1994). Assays of DNA-binding specificity with homeodomains of different HOM proteins have shown that they bind to the same core target sequence. However, HOM proteins regulate specific sets of downstream genes in vivo, suggesting that other factors contribute to their specificity. The members of the LIM-HOM subfamily are characterised by the presence of two tandem repeated LIM domains in the N-terminal end of the protein followed by a homeodomain. Each LIM domain consists of two tandem cystine-histidine-rich zinc-fingers(Curtiss and Heilig, 1998; Jurata and Gill, 1998). The LIM domains do not seem to bind DNA, instead they are implicated in specific protein-protein interactions (Arber and Caroni, 1996; Schmeichel and Beckerle, 1994). LIM-HOM proteins are involved in a wide variety of developmental processes, and it has been suggested that LIM-HOM proteins regulate specific genes by forming multiprotein transcriptional complexes with other LIM-HOM proteins and/or other cofactors(Dawid et al., 1998; Hobert and Westphal, 2000). The LIM-domain binding proteins (Ldb) can bind LIM domains with high affinity and have been found in mouse (Ldb1/Nl1/Clim2), Zebrafish (Ldb4), Xenopus (Xldb1) and Drosophila (Chip). Ldb proteins also contain a homodimerisation domain, and can act as a bridge dimer between two LIM proteins to form homo- and hetero-tetrameric complexes with LIM-HOM transcription factors (Jurata et al.,1998).
Experiments in Drosophila have identified interactions in vivo between Chip and the LIM-HOM protein Apterous (Ap). Apterous is required for dorsoventral (DV) patterning and growth of the wing(Cohen et al., 1992). Dosage interactions and other genetic experiments involving Chip and ap, plus biochemical assays, have indicated that Ap function is carried out by a tetramer complex comprising two molecules of Ap bridged by a Chip dimer (Fernández-Fúnez et al., 1998; Milan and Cohen,1999; Morcillo et al.,1997; Rincon-Limas et al.,2000; van Meyel et al.,1999).
Ap function in the wing is regulated by Dlmo (Bx – FlyBase; the Drosophila homologue of LIM-only, a protein composed only of LIM domains), which interacts with Chip with higher affinity than Ap to reduce the formation of active Ap-Chip complexes(Milan and Cohen, 2000; Shoresh et al., 1998; Weihe et al., 2001; Zeng et al., 1998). In the Drosophila CNS, Ap and Chip also interact physically and form tetrameric complexes required for the proper fasciculation of the ap-expressing interneurones. However, Ap function is regulated differently in the CNS than in the wing. For instance, dlmo(Bx) is not expressed in Ap neurones and the relative dosage between Ap and Chip is not limiting for the formation of Ap-Chip complexes(van Meyel et al., 2000). Furthermore, a combinatorial code between the LIM-HOM genes islet(isl; tailup, tup – FlyBase) and Lim3controls motoneurone pathway selection in flies and vertebrates(Thaler et al., 2002; Thor et al., 1999). In vertebrates, the combinatorial activities of Islet and Lim3 homologues are not carried out by homo- or heterotetrameric complexes, instead they are carried out by a single Ldb-mediated hexameric complex(Thaler et al., 2002). Finally, it has been shown that Chip plays a role in other patterning processes by binding non-LIM proteins, such as the HOM proteins Bcd and Fz,and the GATA factor Pannier (Ramain et al., 2000; Torigoi et al.,2000). Therefore, Lbd specificity depends on the presence of different cofactors in each developmental context.
In the leg of Drosophila, a regulatory network of LIM-HOM and Prd-HOM (Paired-homeodomain) genes exists(Pueyo et al., 2000). The legs of Drosophila are formed from groups of epithelial cells, which segregate inside the embryo and grow during larval development, giving rise to sac-like structures called imaginal discs. The most distal part of the leg consists of five tarsal segments plus a pretarsus(Fig. 1A). Distal leg patterning first entails the establishment of the tarsal and pretarsal primordia at 80-90 hours after egg laying (AEL)(Galindo et al., 2002),followed by the subdivision of the tarsal field into smaller domains of gene expression (Fig. 1B-B′′′)(Galindo and Couso, 2000). These domains define each tarsal segment(Kojima et al., 2000; Pueyo et al., 2000) and a joint is then intercalated between every segment(Bishop et al., 1999; de Celis et al., 1998; Rauskolb, 2001; Rauskolb and Irvine, 1999). Thus at 80-90 hours AEL the presumptive distal region of the leg disc appears divided into two domains of Prd-HOM gene expression: aristaless(al) expression in the pretarsus and Bar expression in the adjacent tarsal cells (Kojima et al.,2000). These patterns are activated by Distal-less (Dll) and a distal gradient of Egfr-Ras signalling(Campbell, 2002; Galindo et al., 2002). From 90 hours AEL, Bar expression is maintained at high levels by self-activation in the presumptive fifth tarsal segment, whereas in the fourth tarsal segment lower levels of Bar are required for the expression of ap (Fig. 1B-B′′′). Consequently, a high dose of Bar protein and a low dose of Bar plus Ap are necessary for the development of the fifth and fourth tarsal segments, respectively. In the pretarsus, Al activates the expression of the LIM-HOM gene Lim1 (also known as dlim1) after 90 hours AEL, and a positive-feedback mechanism and cooperation between them ensures pretarsal development. During this process,mutual repression between Bar on the one hand and al plus Lim1 on the other establishes a sharp tarsal/pretarsal boundary(Pueyo et al., 2000; Tsuji et al., 2000).
In this study, we present more evidence for the existence of such a regulatory network, and suggest a role for direct protein interactions, in addition to transcriptional regulation, in its mechanism. Genetic interactions and ectopic expression experiments highlight dosage relationships between Ap and Bar, and between Al and Lim1, and posttranslational dominant-negative interactions between these and other LIM-HOM proteins. The interactions between Ap, Bar, Al and Lim1 involve Chip, which we show to be required for the development of the distal leg regions. We show that protein interactions between Bar, Ap and Chip exist, leading to the suggestion that Ap-Chip-Bar protein complexes are the functional transcriptional units that control tarsus four development. In the presumptive pretarsus, a similar relationship between Lim1, Al and Chip exists. Synergistic cooperation between Al and Lim1 is required to direct pretarsus development, and to repress Barexpression and function. Ectopic expression of other LIM-HOM proteins in the pretarsus disrupts this cooperation, which also depends on Chip and is sensitive to changes in the dosage of the proteins involved. We reveal the existence of protein interactions between Al and Chip, suggesting that the Al-Chip-Lim1 protein complexes are the functional transcriptional units in the pretarsus. Thus, our results suggest that, in the fly leg, just as in the vertebrate head organiser (Nakano et al.,2000), LIM-HOM gene function is implemented by transcriptional complexes involving LIM-HOM/Chip/Prd-HOM proteins. We propose that the different developmental outcomes of LIM-HOM protein function are due to the precise identity and dosage of the co-factors available locally.
Materials and methods
Fly strains and genetic manipulations
Several fly strains in this paper were described by Pueyo et al.(Pueyo et al., 2000). Other stocks were: UAS-Bar (Kojima et al., 2000); UAS-dlmo(Zeng et al., 1998); hdpR26 (Milan et al.,1998); UAS-apΔHD,UAS-apΔLIM and UAS-Lim3-ap(O’Keefe et al., 1998); UAS-ChipΔLID, UAS-ChipΔDD and UAS-Chip-ap (van Meyel et al.,1999); and alex(Campbell and Tomlinson,1998). The Gal4/UAS system was used to express genes in specific patterns of expression. The Gal4 drivers employed were: dppGal4,apGal4 and DllGal4. All flies and larvae were raised at 25°C unless specified in the text. Clones of null Bar and Chipalleles were generated by the FRT/FLP system. In the generation of Bar– clones, larvae of the genotype Df(1)B263-20 FRT 18A/yw hsGFPw+FRT18A;hsFLP122/+ were heatshocked at 37°C for 90 minutes at 24-48 hours AEL,and then transferred to 25°C. Bar– cells in the adult were marked by the loss of the forked gene, which is included in Df(1)Bar263-20. For staining of imaginal discs, larvae (100-120 hours AEL) were heatshocked again at 37°C for 1 hour to induce GFP expression, left to recover for one hour and then dissected. In the generation of null Chip clones, animals of the genotype y w FLP; FRTG13 Chipe55/FRT42B y+ M(2)(Morcillo et al., 1997) were heatshocked at 37°C for 90 minutes at 24-48 hours AEL. For the generation of null Bar clones, labelled as above, but expressing the aptransgene, males FRT18A Ubi-GFP; DllGal4; UAS-FLP/+ were crossed to females Df(1)B263-20 FRT18A/FM7i; UAS-ap. For the control cross, males FRT18A Ubi-GFP; DllGal4; UAS-FLP/+ were crossed to females Df(1)B263-20 FRT18A/FM7i-GFP. The progeny were raised at 18°C to avoid any mutant effects caused by the DllGal4driver. A similar experiment was performed using the weaker babGal4driver at 25°C, obtaining similar results.
GST pull-down assay
Glutathione-S-transferase (Gst)-Chip fusion constructs were generated and kindly provided by Dale Dorset (Torigoi et al., 2000). Gst-Ap and Gst-ApLim fusion constructs were generated by PCR amplification of the ap cDNA using specific primers. The same forward primer AGAGAGGATCCATGGGCGTCTGCACCGA was used in both amplifications,whereas the reverse primers were the Ap reverse primer GAGAGAGAATTCTTCCTGAGCATCCGTTAGTCC and the ApLim reverse primer GAGAGAGAATTCGCTATGCTGTAGTGGGTC. PCR products were firstly cloned using TA cloning kit (Invitrogen). Positive clones were double digested with XhoI/EcoRI and the appropriate DNA fragment was gel extracted. Finally, the DNA fragment was cloned in the pGEX-2T vector(Amersham Pharmacia). Expression of the Gst-fusion proteins and binding to Gluthathione-agarose beads (Amersham Pharmacia) were performed as described by Torigoi et al. (Torigoi et al.,2000). Fly extracts were obtained by homogenisation of 50 brain and leg complexes from third instar larvae in dry ice, and resuspension in 150μl of 50 mM Tris (pH 7.2), 150 mM NaCl, 2 mM EGTA, 5% Triton X-100 with protease inhibitors (Roche). 100 μl of blocked beads with the GST-fusion proteins were incubated with 300 μl of fly extract for 1 hour at 4°C. After the binding reaction, beads were washed three times with blocking solution, twice with PBT, and twice with PBS. 60 μl of 2×DS reducing buffer/DTT were added to the beads and boiled. The samples were loaded in a 10% SDS-PAGE gel and analysed by western blot. Rabbit anti-BarH1(Kojima et al., 2000) and guinea pig anti-Lim1 (Lilly et al.,1999) were used at a 1:5000 dilution, and Rat anti-Al(Campbell, 2002) was used at 1:10,000. Secondary antibodies coupled to peroxidase for rabbit and guinea pig were obtained from Dako and Jackson ImmunoResearch. Finally, the ECL system was used for detection of peroxidase reaction. In separate experiments, the TNT Quick Coupled Transcription/Translation Systems (Promega) were used to express BarH1 cDNA.100 μl of beads with the GST-Chip fusion proteins were incubated with 100 μl of the TNT reaction. Following the washes the protocol was followed as above.
Immunocytochemistry
Antibody staining procedures were performed as described previously(Pueyo et al., 2000). Antibodies used were: guinea pig anti-Lim1(Lilly et al., 1999); rat anti-Ap (Lundgren et al.,1995); rabbit anti-Dlmo (Milan et al., 1998); rabbit anti-β-galactosidase (Cappel). Secondary antibodies were obtained from Vector Laboratories and Jackson ImmunoResearch.
Results
The apterous and Chip genes interact during tarsus four development
The ap gene is expressed in the leg imaginal disc from 96 hours AEL in a ring of cells corresponding to the presumptive fourth tarsal segment(Fig. 1B,B′′′)(Cohen et al., 1992). In strong ap mutants, the fourth tarsal segment is either absent or reduced in size, and is fused to the fifth tarsal segment(Fig. 2A)(Pueyo et al., 2000). This ap mutant phenotype is completely rescued by expression of a UAS-ap transgene (Fig. 2B), showing that Ap is required for the proper development of the fourth tarsal segment.
The Chip gene is expressed ubiquitously in the legs(Fig. 1C)(Morcillo et al., 1997) but no functional requirement has been reported. We have induced clones of cells lacking Chip and observe defects in different parts of the leg, such as tarsal segments four and five, the pretarsus, the tibia(Fig. 1E,F), and the coxa and femur (not shown). Given this requirement, and the functional relationship between Chip and Ap in the wing, we searched for possible genetic interactions between ap and Chip. First, transheterozygous allelic combinations between ap and Chip (apGal4 or apUGO35/Chip371, Chip96.1,Chipe55) did not show any mutant phenotype in the legs (data not shown) (Pueyo et al.,2000). Second, UAS-ap and UAS-Chip full-length transgenes were overexpressed in the ap domain and in both cases no phenotype in the legs was observed (Pueyo et al., 2000), whereas the wings blister as described previously(Fernández-Fúnez et al.,1998). Finally, overexpression of a fragment of the Ap protein containing only the LIM domains, which interacts with Chip and acts as a dominant-negative form of Ap in the wing(O’Keefe et al., 1998),did not cause any phenotype in the legs (not shown). Only stronger and more sustained overexpression of UAS-Chip under the control of the DllGal4 driver compromises the development of tarsus four, without affecting ap expression (Fig. 1G,H). However, Ap and Chip proteins seem to be associated in tarsus four, as a chimaeric Ap-Chip protein that acts as a functional Ap protein in the wing (van Meyel et al.,1999) also rescues the ap leg mutant phenotype(Fig. 2C), whereas an Ap fragment without the LIM domains does not (data not shown). Altogether these results indicate that although interaction between Ap and Chip is required for the development of the leg, their relative stoichiometry is not as crucial as it is in the wings, but rather is more similar to the situation in the CNS.
It has been previously reported that dlmo is expressed in the legs, but its pattern of expression has not been fully characterised(Zeng et al., 1998). Using anti-Dlmo antibody and a dlmoGal4 reporter line(Milan et al., 1998), we did not detect Dlmo expression in the leg tissue but in a few cells of the peripodial disc membrane (Fig. 1D). In addition, loss-of-function dlmo alleles did not produce a mutant leg phenotype (not shown). Another dlmo-like gene annotated as CG5708 has been found in the fly genome(Adams et al., 2000). In situ hybridisation was performed using a specific cDNA for this gene as a probe and expression was observed in the CNS, but not in the leg imaginal discs (not shown). Thus it appears that dlmo genes do not regulate LIM-HOM function in the legs. Nevertheless, ectopic expression of UAS-dlmo in the ap domain causes the loss of the fourth tarsal segment(Fig. 1I) without removing Ap protein expression (data not shown). As the Dlmo protein cannot bind the LIM domains of Ap but does bind the Chip LIM-interaction domain with higher efficiency than Ap (Milan et al.,1998; Weihe et al.,2001), it is possible that ectopic expression of Dlmo in the leg sequesters Chip, thereby disrupting the formation of Chip-Ap complexes. In agreement with this interpretation, partial rescue of the UAS-dlmodominant-negative effect was achieved by co-expression of UAS-Chip(Fig. 1J). Therefore, although the dlmo gene is not expressed during the development of the wild-type leg, its ectopic expression interferes with the posttranslational interaction of Ap and Chip. We used a similar rationale to identify further interacting partners of Ap and Chip in the legs.
Ectopic expression of LIM-HOM genes interferes with Ap function posttranslationally
Sequence comparisons have shown that LIM-HOM proteins have been conserved throughout evolution (Dawid et al.,1998; Hobert and Westphal,2000). Their developmental role also seems to be conserved,because distinct neural fates are specified by identical combinations of LIM-HOM genes in Drosophila and in vertebrates(Thor et al., 1999). Furthermore, ectopic expression of vertebrate LIM-HOM orthologues induce the same developmental effects in flies as the endogenous Drosophilagenes do, indicating that the mechanisms of action of LIM-HOM proteins are conserved (Rincón-Limas et al.,1999; Tsuji et al.,2000). In view of these LIM-HOM functional relationships, we tested whether other LIM-HOM proteins could rescue Ap function in legs. Expression of UAS-Lim1 in ap mutant legs does not produce any rescue of the ap mutant phenotype(Pueyo et al., 2000), and no rescue was obtained by expressing the LIM-HOM gene islet either (not shown). However, O’Keefe et al.(O’Keefe et al., 1998)showed that expression of a hybrid protein containing the LIM domains of Lim3 and the homeodomain of Ap (Lim3-Ap) was able to partially rescue the ap mutant phenotype in the wing. This functional overlap extends to the leg as the hybrid Lim3-Ap molecule also rescues the ap mutant leg phenotype (Fig. 2D); this shows that the primary function of the LIM domains of Ap must be common to those of Lim3, most likely binding of Chip as shown in other systems(Milan et al., 1998; Thor and Thomas, 1997; van Meyel et al., 2000).
When LIM-HOM genes (Lim3, islet) were expressed ectopically in the ap domain of otherwise wild-type flies, the existence of an unknown cofactor of Ap was revealed. apGal4;UAS-Lim3 and apGal4;UAS-isl flies lack the fourth tarsal segment(Fig. 2E). These flies still expressed ap in the legs (Fig. 2G-G″) and their phenotype was not rescued by simultaneous co-expression of UAS-ap(Fig. 2F). As these LIM-HOM proteins can interact with Chip, quenching of Chip could explain their ap-like dominant-negative phenotypes. However, these dominant-negative effects were also not rescued by co-expression of UAS-Chip (data not shown). The lack of phenotypic rescue by co-expression of either Chip or Ap could be due either to higher binding affinities of the Islet and Lim3 proteins, or to different levels of expression of the UAS transgenes employed. However, several UAS-apand UAS-Chip transgenes with different expression levels were used in these experiments, with no rescue of the dominant-negative mutant phenotype. An alternative explanation is that Lim3 and Islet proteins interfere with another cofactor required for Ap function in the legs.
Overexpression of Bar suppresses the dominant-negative effect caused by ectopic LIM-HOM proteins in the ap domain
An element related to Ap function is the HOM gene Bar. Bar is required for the development of tarsal segments four and five(Fig. 1B,B′ and Fig. 3A)(Kojima et al., 2000). The main functional role of Bar in tarsus four had been attributed to the transcriptional activation of ap, as part of the regulatory network patterning the distal leg (Kojima et al.,2000; Pueyo et al.,2000). Ectopic Lim1 driven by apGal4 eliminates tarsal structures and represses Bar expression(Fig. 3C,D-D″), leading to the loss of Ap expression (Pueyo et al., 2000). As it might be expected, co-expression of Bar in apGal4/UAS-Lim1;UAS-Bar flies produces a partial rescue of the fourth tarsal segment (Fig. 3E).
However, the dominant-negative effect on tarsus four produced by ectopic expression of Islet is not mediated by repression of either Bar or Ap expression (Fig. 2E,G-G″). Surprisingly, this Islet effect was also partially suppressed by co-expressing Bar (Fig. 3F). Therefore, Bar may be the Ap cofactor in tarsus four that is interfered with by ectopic Islet and Lim3 proteins, and whose existence we inferred in the previous section. To confirm whether there is a requirement for Bar in fourth tarsal development apart from ap transcriptional activation, we generated Bar mutant clones that still express ap in the distal part of the leg (see Materials and methods). Bar mutant clones show, as described before, a fusion of T3 to T5 tarsal segments (Fig. 3A)(Kojima et al., 2000). When the UAS-ap transgene was expressed in these Bar mutant clones, no phenotypic rescue was observed(Fig. 3B), indicating that the functional requirement for Bar in tarsus four goes beyond the activation of ap, and favouring its role as an Ap cofactor.
A proper balance of Bar and Ap proteins is required during tarsal development
LIM-HOM proteins can form multi-protein complexes with other HOM proteins,either by direct interactions or through interaction with Ldb proteins(Hobert and Westphal, 2000). As Bar behaves as a cofactor of Ap, Ap and Bar proteins could interact and form a transcriptional complex to regulate target genes. In this case, changes of dosage of either Bar or ap might disrupt the formation of Ap-Bar complexes. To test this hypothesis, we performed gene dosage experiments. First, the phenotypes of both Bar(InBM2) and ap (apGal4/apUGOat 25°C) mutants were enhanced by removing a copy of ap and Bar, respectively (Fig. 4A-C; compare with Fig. 2A). Second, overexpression of Bar causes loss of the fourth tarsal segment (Fig. 4E),although Ap was still expressed in these flies(Fig. 4D)(Kojima et al., 2000). As Bar is expressed in a graded manner in the wild type, at a higher level in the fifth tarsal segment and at a lower level in the fourth(Fig. 1B,B′), these observations suggest that the correct amount of Bar is necessary for the development of the fourth tarsal segment. If Bar overexpression alters the stoichiometry of Ap and Bar, and thus prevents the formation of functional Ap-Bar complexes, then this dominant-negative effect should be rescued by restoring the appropriate balance with co-expression of Ap. As predicted, apGal4/UAS-ap;UAS-Bar flies show a completely rescued phenotype with five tarsal segments (Fig. 4F).
No rescue of the dominant-negative effect of UAS-Bar on tarsus four was obtained by co-expression of Ap protein fragments lacking the LIM domains or the homeodomain (data not shown), which suggests that an Ap protein with functional LIM and HOM domains is required for the rescue. Interestingly,full rescue of the Bar overexpression phenotype by co-expression of the chimeric Lim3-Ap protein was observed (Fig. 4G), indicating again a non-specific requirement for the LIM domains. The LIM domains could be interacting with a common cofactor, such as Chip, in the formation of Ap-Bar functional complexes. In agreement with this interpretation, the dominant-negative effect caused by UAS-Baroverexpression was also completely rescued by simultaneous overexpression of UAS-Chip, revealing that Chip is involved in the interaction between Ap and Bar (Fig. 4H). This hypothesis is also supported by the requirement for Chip in tarsus four development (Fig. 1E,F), and by the dominant-negative effect of UAS-Chip overexpression with strong Gal4 drivers (Fig. 1G). In addition, no rescue of the UAS-Bardominant-negative phenotype was obtained by co-expression of Chip protein fragments lacking the dimerisation domain or the LIM-interacting domain(Fig. 4I), suggesting that both domains of Chip are required for the rescue of this UAS-Bardominant-negative effect. Finally, to determine whether the interaction of Ap with Bar is carried out through an Ap-Chip dimer, the chimaeric Chip-Ap fusion protein was co-expressed with UAS-Bar. Partial rescue of the dominant-negative phenotype was observed(Fig. 4J), suggesting that Ap and Chip bind to each other to form functional protein complexes and interact with Bar in the fourth tarsal segment.
Bar interacts with Chip and Ap
To test the possibility of Chip-mediated complexes involving Bar, a direct interaction between Bar and Chip was tested in a Gst pull-down assay. Bar protein, both expressed in vitro or present in leg disc extracts, is retained by Chip-Gst fusions (Fig. 5A,B), as is Lim1 (Fig. 5A,B) (Lilly et al.,1999) and Ap (Torigoi et al.,2000). This protein interaction explains the requirement for Chip in tarsus five, and suggests that a complex of Bar-Chip is the functional element in this segment. In tarsus four, Chip seems to also bind Ap, as shown by the results involving the Ap-Chip chimaera in the legs (see above). Therefore, the dominant-negative interactions between Bar and Ap (and other LIM-HOM) proteins in tarsus four could be based on competition for Chip.
However, whereas the interaction between Chip and Ap or Lim1 depends on the LIM-interaction domain (LID) of Chip (Fig. 5A,B), and the interaction of Chip with other HOM proteins, such as Bicoid, depends on the Other Interaction Domain (OID)(Fig. 5A)(Torigoi et al., 2000), the interaction between Chip and Bar does not rely on these domains(Fig. 5A,B). This suggests that, in principle, binding of Bar and Ap to Chip does not need to be mutually exclusive. These results are compatible with the possibility of Bar and Ap being simultaneously bound to Chip in a complex. If this were the case, an association between Ap and Bar proteins could be found. As expected, Bar protein present in protein extracts from leg discs is retained by Gst-Ap in a pull-down experiment (Fig. 5C,D). A fragment of Ap consisting of the LIM domains is also able to pull down Bar in a similar experiment(Fig. 5C,D). Altogether these results suggest that the interaction between Ap and Bar takes place in a protein complex that involves Chip (see Discussion).
In summary, our results show that the development of the tarsus requires stoichiometric interactions between Bar, Ap and Chip proteins, with Bar being the limiting factor in this process. These interactions seem to rely on: (1)the binding of Ap and Chip through their LIM and LID domains, respectively;(2) an interaction between Bar and Chip through a different domain; and (3)further complexing mediated by the Chip dimerisation domain. These interactions lead to the formation of Ap-Chip-Bar and Bar-Chip, functional units in tarsus four and five, respectively. Direct interactions between LIM-HOM and HOM transcription factors leading to the transcriptional regulation of target genes have already been described(Bach et al., 1997).
Interactions between LIM-HOM, Chip and HOM proteins in the pretarsus
The pretarsus at the tip of the leg is composed of the claw organ (a multicellular organ providing sensory information and grip to the substrate),plus a muscle attachment site and its associated tendon. Lim1 and the Prd-HOM gene al are required for pretarsus development, and display synergistic functional interactions (Pueyo et al., 2000). One of the outcomes of their co-operation is the repression of Bar expression. Thus, weak alleles of al or strong alleles of Lim1 lead to mild ectopic Bar expression in the pretarsus(Fig. 6A,B)(Kojima et al., 2000), whereas complete loss of both al and Lim1 allows Bar to completely invade the presumptive leg tip (Fig. 6C) (Tsuji et al.,2000). Reciprocally, ectopic expression of Al or Lim1 alone does not repress Bar (Fig. 6D)(Kojima et al., 2000), but ectopic expression of Lim1 plus the ensuing ectopic expression of Al(Fig. 6F)(Tsuji et al., 2000) produce loss of Bar expression (Fig. 3D-D″) (Pueyo et al.,2000). The repression of Lim1 plus Al on Bar expression is reciprocal, as ectopic Bar represses Al and Lim1 expression(Fig. 6I-I′′′; compare with H-H′′′)(Tsuji et al., 2000),producing the loss of pretarsal structures(Fig. 6E), whereas loss of Bar leads to ectopic expression of Lim1 (Fig. 6G). Thus, mutual antagonism between Al plus Lim1 in the pretarsus and Bar in the tarsus leads to mutually exclusive patterns of expression, and establishes a sharp pretarsus-tarsus boundary that is crucial for both tarsus five and claw organ development (Kojima et al., 2000; Pueyo et al.,2000).
As Al, Lim1 and Bar are transcription factors, these regulatory interactions could be directly and solely mediated by binding to their respective regulatory regions. However, we have also uncovered functional interactions not based on transcriptional control. When Al is ectopically expressed in the ap domain in apGal4/UAS-al flies, neither the expression of Bar or Ap is affected (not shown), yet a loss of tarsus four is produced (Fig. 7A). This dominant-negative effect is partially rescued by co-expression of Bar(Fig. 7B), but not by expression of Ap or Chip, indicating that, similar to LIM-HOM proteins, Al can exert a posttranslational effect on Bar. Reciprocally, ectopic expression of the LIM-HOM proteins Ap, Islet or Lim3 in the pretarsus leads to loss of claw organ elements without affecting the expression of Lim1(Fig. 7C-D′). We surmise that the functional relationship in the wild-type pretarsus between Al and Lim1 may be similar to that of Bar and Ap in tarsus four, i.e. putative protein interactions leading to the formation of multimeric transcriptional complexes. In agreement with this hypothesis, Chip binds to the LIM domains of Lim1 (Fig. 5A,B)(Lilly et al., 1999) and is required for pretarsus development (Fig. 1E,F). Strong overexpression of Chip in the pretarsus also leads to Lim1-like mutant phenotypes(Fig. 1G), mimicking the results obtained in tarsus four. Supporting this hypothesis, ectopic expression of Dlmo in the pretarsus also produces loss of claw organ without affecting Lim1 expression (Fig. 7F,H,I). Finally, overexpression of Lim1 in the pretarsus also has a dominant-negative phenotype, just as Bar does in the fourth tarsal segment(Fig. 7G). It follows that, as in the fourth tarsal segment, Chip might be participating in direct interactions between LIM-HOM and Prd-HOM proteins. This putative interaction with Chip seems to involve the LIM-interaction and the dimerisation domains,as ectopic expression of a Chip fragment lacking either of these domains produces loss of the claw organ (Fig. 7E), possibly by still being able to sequester Lim1(Fig. 5A,B).
To test this hypothesis, a Gst pull down using different Gst-Chip constructs was performed. Al protein from leg disc extracts is retained by the full-length Chip construct, suggesting that a direct protein interaction exists (Fig. 5A,B). The Al interaction with the two other Chip deletion constructs is weaker or absent,suggesting that both domains are required for the proper binding between Chip and Al (Fig. 5A,B). Altogether our results support the hypothesis of a balanced functional relationship between Lim1, Al and Chip that can interfere with, or be interfered by, other LIM-HOM proteins, and that might be based on multimeric, specific protein complexes.
Discussion
Biochemical studies in vitro have shown that LIM-HOM transcription factors confer little transcriptional activation of target genes on their own(Bach et al., 1995; German et al., 1992). LIM-HOM proteins interact with a variety of proteins, including members of the bHLH family (Johnson et al., 1997),the POU family (Bach et al.,1995), the PAS family (Bach et al., 1997) and also other LIM family members(Jurata et al., 1998; Thaler et al., 2002; Thor et al., 1999), to control specific developmental processes (Hobert and Westphal, 2000). It has been suggested that these protein interactions confer specificity and modulate LIM-HOM activity(Bach, 2000). For example, Dlmo proteins reduce LIM-HOM activity, and Lbd proteins such as Chip modulate LIM-HOM activity by acting as a bridge between LIM-HOM proteins and Chip-binding cofactors, thus leading to the formation of heteromeric complexes. An example of regulation of LIM-HOM protein activity in different contexts is the development of Drosophila.
A regulatory network of transcription factors controls distal leg development
Bar and ap genes are expressed in the fourth tarsal segment and are required for its proper development, whereas the aland Lim1 genes are expressed and required in the pretarsus(Kojima et al., 2000; Pueyo et al., 2000; Tsuji et al., 2000). All of these genes encode putative transcription factors and display canonical regulatory relationships. Thus, al activates lim1 expression and then both genes cooperate to repress Bar expression in the pretarsus. Reciprocally, Bar represses al and lim1expression while activating the expression of ap in tarsus four. After the refinement of their gene expression domains by these regulatory interactions, Bar directs tarsus five development, whereas cooperation between al and lim1 directs pretarsus development (Pueyo et al.,2000), and cooperation between Bar and apdirects tarsus four (this study). Our results offer more evidence for the existence of this regulatory network, but also suggest an interesting role for direct protein interactions in its mechanism.
The cooperation between Bar and Ap on the one hand, and Al and Lim1 on the other, is likely to be carried out by transcriptional complexes involving Chip(Fig. 8). The Chip protein is required for development of the tarsus four, five and pretarsus, and Gst experiments reveal its ability to bind Ap, Bar, Lim1 and Al(Lilly et al., 1999; Milan et al., 1998) (this work). However, our results also show that modulation of LIM-HOM protein activity by Chip alone does not explain distal leg development. For example,Ap function is not modulated primarily by Chip and Dlmo. The relative amount of Chip and Ap has to be grossly unbalanced before a phenotype is obtained in the leg (Pueyo et al., 2000)(this work), and dlmo is not expressed or required in leg development. Furthermore, the interaction between Ap and Chip does not confer the developmental specificity that allows LIM-HOM proteins to produce different outcomes in different parts of the leg. First, Ap and Chip also interact in the wing and the CNS. Second, a chimaeric Lim3-Ap protein containing the LIM domains of Lim3 and the HOM domain of Ap does not behave as a dominant negative when expressed in tarsus four, and is even able to fulfil Ap function and rescue ap mutants. In the distal leg, developmental specificity seems to be achieved at the level of DNA binding and the transcriptional control of targets genes, mediated by partnerships between LIM-HOM and HOM proteins.
The evidence for this is presented first by dosage interactions between LIM-HOM and HOM proteins. Whereas there seems to be a relative abundance of endogenous Ap in tarsus four, an excess of Bar or Chip leads to a mutant phenotype, which is rescued by restoring the normal balance between Ap, Bar and Chip proteins in co-expression experiments. The effects observed could be explained simply by independent competition and the binding of Bar and Ap to Chip, leading, for example, to an excess of Bar-Chip complexes and a reduction of the pool of Chip available for Ap-Chip ones. However, this hypothesis alone does not explain the additional dominant-negative effects of ectopic LIM-HOM and HOM proteins in tarsus four (Lim3, Islet and Al), which are also not mediated by transcriptional regulation but are nonetheless rescued by co-expression of appropriate endogenous proteins. For example, ectopic expression of UAS-islet or UAS-Lim3 in the apdomain produces loss of tarsus four without affecting Ap or Bar expression,and simultaneous co-expression of UAS-Bar partially suppresses this phenotype. If the sole effect of both UAS-Bar and UAS-Lim3or UAS-islet were to quench Chip away from Ap, then simultaneous co-expression of Bar and Lim3 or Islet should worsen the phenotype, not correct it as observed. Moreover, ectopic expression of Islet or Lim3 proteins is not corrected by simultaneous co-expression of either UAS-Chip or UAS-ap. Altogether these results show instead that UAS-isletand UAS-Lim3 must interfere posttranslationally with Bar. The most direct explanation is that Islet and Lim3 have the ability to quench Bar protein into a non-functional state. Interestingly, the hybrid UAS-Lim3:ap does not behave as dominant negative but as an endogenous Ap protein in these experiments, as it does not produce a mutant phenotype on its own and it rescues UAS-Bar overexpression. This suggests that the LIM domains are not very specific when it comes to interaction with Bar, and points to the involvement of a common LIM-binding intermediary such as Chip. These results suggest that a protein complex involving Ap, Chip and Bar is the correct functional state of these proteins in tarsus four, and deviations from this situation into separate Bar-Chip, Ap-Chip, or Bar-Chip-Lim3 or Bar-Chip-Islet complexes leads to a mutant phenotype.
The notion of a protein complex involving Ap, Chip and Bar together is also supported by the Gst pull-down assays. The domain of Chip involved in Ap binding, the LID, is not involved in Bar binding. However, the LID and the dimerisation domains of Chip are necessary to rescue the dominant-negative effect of UAS-Bar on tarsus four, suggesting a requirement for the formation of a complex with a LIM-HOM protein such as Ap. In agreement with this view, the Ap protein, and the LIM domains of Ap alone, are able to retain Bar protein in a Gst assay.
In the pretarsus, Al and Lim1 are possibly engaged in a partnership with Chip similar to that suggested for Ap, Chip and Bar. Synergistic cooperation between Al and Lim1 is required to direct pretarsus development and to repress Bar expression and function. Their cooperation entails a close functional relationship because a proper balance of Al, Lim1 and Chip is required, as is shown by the loss of pretarsal structures in UAS-Chip or UAS-Lim1 flies. Ectopic expression of LIM-HOM proteins in the pretarsus also disrupts pretarsal development without affecting Lim1 and Al expression. The possibility of direct protein interactions between Al, Lim1 and Chip is also suggested by the reciprocal ability of Al to interfere posttranscriptionally with Bar and Ap in tarsus four, and by the binding of Chip to Lim1 and to Al in in vitro experiments(Fig. 5)(Lilly et al., 1999).
Different developmental outcomes correlate with different sets of interacting proteins
Comparison of tarsal development with other developmental processes illustrates how LIM-HOM proteins are versatile factors to regulate developmental processes. It had been observed that the outcome of LIM-HOM activity depends on their developmental context. This context we can now analyse as being composed of the presence, concentration and relative affinities of other LIM-HOM proteins, Ldb adaptors, and other cofactors such as LMO proteins and HOM proteins (Fig. 8). We propose that the different developmental outcomes of LIM-HOM protein function could be due to the precise identity and dosage of cofactors available locally.
Ectopic expression experiments distort these contexts and lead to non-functional or misplaced LIM-HOM activities. In the wing, a finely balanced amount of functional Ap protein is modulated by Dlmo and Chip(Fig. 8A). Over-abundance of Chip stops the formation of functional tetramers in the wing but not in the CNS, where the relative amount of Ap, which is not modulated by Dlmo, is limiting for the formation of Ap-Chip functional complexes(Fig. 8B)(Fernández-Fúnez et al.,1998; Milan and Cohen,1999; Milan et al.,1998; O’Keefe et al.,1998; van Meyel et al.,1999; van Meyel et al.,2000). In tarsus four (Fig. 8C), the Ap-Chip-Bar partnership is affected by experimentally induced over-abundance of Chip, presumably also because ectopic Ap-Chip tetramers typical of the CNS and the wing, and Bar-Chip complexes typical of tarsus five, are produced. Similarly, an excess of Bar might be interpreted by the cells as being a wrong developmental outcome, as high levels of Bar in the absence of Ap direct tarsus five development(Fig. 8D)(Kojima et al., 2000). Overexpression of Ap rescues this Bar dominant-negative effect, by restoring the relative amounts of Bar and Ap, which are determinant and limiting for tarsus four development. Finally, the dominant-negative effects produced by overexpression of either Chip or Lim1 in the pretarsus could either prevent the formation of Al-Chip-Lim1 complexes(Fig. 8E), or could favour the existence of Lim1-Chip complexes typical of the CNS(Lilly et al., 1999).
The wing and the CNS models have postulated that Ap function is carried out by an Ap-Chip tetramer; however, the molecular scenario might be more complex. A new component of Ap-Chip complexes, named Ssdp, has been identified and is required for the nuclear localisation of the complex(Chen et al., 2002; van Meyel et al., 2003). Thus it is possible that an Ap-Chip tetramer also contains two molecules of Ssdp. In addition, different types of Chip-mediated transcriptional complexes and different regulators have been identified in other developmental contexts,such as in sensory organ development and thorax closure, in which the GATA factor Pannier forms a complex with Chip and with the bHLH protein Daughterless. Heterodimers of this complex are negatively regulated by a protein interaction with Osa (Heitzler et al., 2003; Ramain et al.,2000). Thus, although our results indicate that in different segments of the leg there exist specific interactions between LIM-HOM, Chip and HOM proteins, the involvement of further elements in these multiprotein complexes is not excluded.
Partnership between Prd-HOM and LIM-HOM proteins in flies and vertebrates
Our results support a partnership between HOM and LIM-HOM proteins in the specification of distinct segments of the leg, and the results are compatible with Ap-Chip-Bar, Bar-Chip and Lim1-Chip-Al forming transcriptional complexes. Although the characterisation of the target sequences, followed by further biochemical and molecular assays, is necessary to study the transcriptional mechanism of these interactions, it has been shown that LIM-HOM proteins can interact specifically and directly with other transcription factors to regulate particular genes. For instance, mouse Lim1 (Lhx1) interacts directly with the HOM protein Otx2 (Nakano et al.,2000). In addition, the bHLH E47 transcription factor interacts with Lmx1, and both synergistically activate the insulin gene(Johnson et al., 1997). This interaction is specific to Lmx1, as E47 is unable to interact with other LIM-HOM proteins such as Islet (Johnson et al., 1997). Moreover, Chip is able to bind to other Prd-HOM proteins, such as Otd, Bcd and Fz, to activate downstream genes(Nakano et al., 2000; Perea-Gomez et al., 1999; Shawlot et al., 1999; Varela-Echavarría et al.,1996). Chip also complexes with Lhx3 and the HOM protein P-Otx,increasing their transcriptional activity(Bach et al., 1997). Our results reinforce the notion of Chip as a multifunctional transcriptional adaptor that has specific domains involved in each interaction.
Experiments in Drosophila have demonstrated a conservation of LIM-HOM activity at the functional and developmental level in the CNS between Drosophila and vertebrates(Thaler et al., 2002; Thor et al., 1999). In addition, xenorescue experiments have shown that the mechanism of action of Ap and its vertebrate homologue Lhx2 is very conserved in Drosophilawings (Rincón-Limas et al.,1999), whereas ectopic expression of dominant-negative forms of chick Lim1, Chip, Ap and Lhx2 mimic both Ap and Lhx2 loss-of-function phenotypes (Bach et al., 1999; Milan and Cohen, 1999; O’Keefe et al., 1998; Rodríguez-Esteban et al.,1998; van Meyel et al.,1999). The developmental role of Ap, Bar and Al in the fly leg,and their putative molecular interactions may also have been conserved because their vertebrate homologues Lhx2, Barx and Al4 are also co-expressed in the limb bud (Barlow et al., 1999; Qu et al., 1997; Rincón-Limas et al.,1999). We would expect that the interactions between the LIM-HOM and Prd-HOM proteins shown here represent a conserved mechanism to specify different cellular fates during animal development.