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Current Biology, Vol. 12, R788–R790, November 19, 2002, ©2002 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved. PII S0960-9822(02)01295-2 Cytoskeleton: What Does GTP Do for Septins? Timothy J. Mitchison and Christine M. Field The recent observation of GTP-promoted polymerization of a single septin polypeptide suggests that this protein has tubulin-like biochemical properties. This model cannot, however, explain the GTPbiochemistry of heteromeric septin complexes from cytosol. The septins are a conserved family of GTP-binding proteins. They were discovered in the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae as a set of genes — CDC3, CDC10, CDC11 and CDC12 — required for normal bud morphology. Subsequent work suggested that septins are the building blocks of the neck filaments which organize the thin neck of cytoplasm separating the mother and bud. [1]. Septins are also present in metazoan cells, where they are required for cytokinesis in some systems, and implicated in a variety of other processes involving organization of the cell cortex and exocytosis [2–4]. Septins immunopurified from cytosol exist as heteromeric complexes containing three or four different septin polypeptides in a defined stochiometry. These complexes can polymerize into long filaments in vitro. All septins contain sequence elements distantly related to conserved motifs of the Ras/EF-Tu family of small GTPases [2,5], and analysis of isolated septin complexes from cells and Drosophila embryos showed that each septin subunit indeed binds a molecule of guanine nucleotide [6,7]. For all GTPases, understanding their biochemistry has hinged on understanding the role of GTP binding and hydrolysis, and it seems likely that the same will hold for septins. It is thus exciting that, as reported recently in Current Biology, Mendoza, Hyman and Glotzer [8] have observed rapid GTP hydrolysis by, and GTP-driven polymerization of, a single septin polypeptide expressed in bacteria (Figure 1). In previous work with septin complexes isolated from cytosol, it was difficult to characterize the biochemical role of GTP for two reasons. First, the complexes contain three or four different septins, each with its own GTP-binding site (Figure 1). Second, GTP exchange was very slow or absent in isolated complexes, and their polymerization was not affected by GTP [6,7,9]. Mendoza et al. [8] avoided the complexity of multiple GTP-binding sites by expressing a single septin polypeptide in bacteria. Earlier studies of bacterially produced septins [10,11] also reported rapid GTP binding and hydrolysis, but Mendoza et al.’s [8] observation of GTP-promoted polymerization is the first time that addition of nucleotide has been observed to influence septin behavior in vitro. As such, it may presage Department of Cell Biology, Harvard Medical School, 240 Longwood Avenue, Boston, Massachusetts 02115-5731, USA. Dispatch a breakthrough in the septin field. Figure 1 summarizes the reported biochemical differences between the expressed single septin polypeptide and complexes purified from cytosol. What are the likely implications of these new observations for septin biochemistry? Mendoza et al.’s [8] discussion of the physiological significance of their results is very much influenced by the biochemistry of β tubulin and the related bacterial protein FtsZ (Figure 2A). They propose that GTP binding promotes septin polymerization in cells. Their data are also consistent with the possibility that, as with β tubulin, GTP hydrolysis promotes septin depolymerization. To reconcile with the fact that their experiments were performed with a single polypeptide, rather than a heteromeric complex, Mendoza et al. [8] suggest that single septin polypeptides may polymerize in the cell under some circumstances. They cite genetic and cytological data as suggesting that not all the septins in a heteromeric complex may be required for function [10,12]. Alternatively, they suggest that the whole heteromeric complex behaves in the same way they observe for a single septin. In our opinion, the published genetic and cytological data do not support the view that single septins can function on their own, though this question requires more research. And while similarity to β tubulin is a reasonable hypothesis for the role of GTP in septin biochemistry, other models are also worth considering. For all GTPases, GTP binding and hydrolysis allow the protein to act as a molecular switch, but the function of this switch differs markedly between GTPase sub-families. In Figure 2 we summarize a subset of the known roles of GTP in GTPase subfamilies, focusing on those of greatest potential relevance to septins. The polymerization model (Figure 2A) is based on the established β tubulin/FtsZ mechanism. This is the model favored by Mendoza et al. [8]; it explains their data with isolated septin polypeptide well, but does not account for behavior of heteromeric complexes (Figure 1). The folding model, illustrated in Figure 2B, is exemplified by α tubulin, and is worth considering for septins. It is possible that the GTPase domain of the septin expressed in Escherichia coli was unfolded, that GTP binding triggered its folding, and that this in turn promoted polymerization and hydrolysis. A pessimistic extension is that the GTP-driven polymerization seen by Mendoza et al. [8] is not in fact a clue to septin biochemistry, but an artifact of bacterial expression. We do not favor this idea, in part because addition of GDP did not promote polymerization. But it would be worth checking the folding state of the E. coli-expressed single septin. The complex assembly model, illustrated in Figure 2C, describes the biochemistry of several important GTPases, including Ras and EF-Tu, and may well be relevant to septins. With only one septin present, Current Biology R789 Exchange and hydrolysis Polymerization Pi Single septin expressed in E. coli GTP – – GTP FAST GDP + Pi ? Heteromeric complex from cytosol GTP GTP GDP GDP GTP GDP GDP High salt Lo w salt Dialysis SLOW GDP + Pi Current Biology Figure 1. Comparison of an isolated septin complex with a recombinant single septin polypeptide. A Xenopus septin expressed in E. coli [8] was purified without bound nucleotide. This septin exchanged and hydrolysed GTP rapidly. Addition of GTP promoted polymerization into paired filaments containing bound GDP. Septins were purified as heteromeric complexes [3,7,9] from cytosol of Drosophila embryos, yeast or baculovirus-infected insect cells. These heteromeric complexes contained tightly bound nucleotide (one molecule per septin polypeptide, GDP:GTP ratio about 2:1). Pure heteromeric complexes exchanged GTP very slowly. The yeast complex polymerized into paired filaments, and the baculovirus-expressed complex into bundles and rings when the salt was lowered by dialysis. Addition of GTP did not affect polymerization of heteromeric complexes. Mendoza et al. [8] observed that GTP binding promoted formation of a homodimer interface, leading to polymerization. But when a different septin is also present, perhaps the same biochemical switch promotes formation of a heterodimer interface, and thus assembly of a discrete complex, without polymerization. This model is consistent with the known biochemistry of heteromeric complexes (Figure 1) and not inconsistent with the data of Mendoza et al. [8]. An interesting extension of this model is that GTP hydrolysis might promote disassembly of the heteromeric complex, so that regulation of complex assembly might be important for septin biology. In the complex assembly model, it is switching between isolated septin molecules and heteromeric complexes that is key to the biology, rather than switching between subunit and polymer as in the polymerization model. What needs to be done next? At a biochemical level, the most important direction seems to be to try to bridge between the new observations with a single septin and previous observations with isolated heteromeric complexes. It will be interesting to mix two (or three) different expressed and correctly folded septins, for example, and ask whether GTP addition promotes polymerization of a single septin or the A GTP Polymerization Figure 2. Models for the role of GTP in the biochemistry of septins. (See text.) GDP GTP GTP GTP GTP GTP GDP B assembly of discrete heteromeric complexes. The only published attempt to date at reconstituting a heteromeric complex from single expressed subunits was not successful [13], but this does not preclude the possibility. Another important direction will be to try to find conditions where isolated heteromeric complexes exchange nucleotide more rapidly, and thus determine whether guanine nucleotide regulates polymerization or complex assembly — or some other, unexpected function. This may require identification of a septin GTP-exchange promoting protein. At a cellular level, a key question in our minds is to what extent septin function depends on polymerization, or even on heteromeric complex formation. Analysis of yeast strains deleted for one septin suggested that not all septin function requires normal polymerization into filaments [9]; whether all functions of septins depend on heteromeric complex formation has not been rigorously tested. A related question is whether isolated septin molecules exist in the cell, and if so, whether they have a function. Beyond these issues of assembly state, the work of Mendoza et al. [8] may help generate tools to probe septin biology. For small GTPases, mutants deficient in β-tubulin, FtsZ GTP Folding GTP C Complex assembly GTP GDP α-tubulin GDP GTP EF-Tu, Ras Current Biology Dispatch R790 GTP hydrolysis have been key tools for elucidating cellular function, and the same will likely be true for septins. Septin sequences diverge from Ras at key residues implicated in catalyzing GTP hydrolysis, and so far, GTPase-deficient mutants have not been reported. Expression of septins with mutations that prevent GTP binding cause interesting biological effects [10,14], but as the GTPase domain in these mutants may not be correctly folded, these data are hard to interpret at a molecular level. With a system where GTP binding and GTPase activity can be easily measured, it may be possible to systematically test septin mutants for decreased (or increased) GTPase rate. Septins have been slow to yield their biochemical secrets, but the first observation of a functional effect of GTP should have a tonic effect on the field. While the implications of the new observation are yet clear, we are confident they will stimulate new interest and experimental approaches, and are thus a major step forward. (And as a final note, aficionados should bear in mind that a new nomenclature has recently been adopted for mammalian septins [15].) References 1. Gladfelter, A.S., Pringle, J.R., and Lew, D.J. (2001). The septin cortex at the yeast mother-bud neck. Curr. Opin. Microbiol. 4, 681–689. 2. Field, C.M., and Kellogg, D. (1999). Septins: cytoskeletal polymers or signalling GTPases. Trends Cell Biol. 9, 387–394. 3. Trimble, W.S. (1999). Septins: A Highly conserved family of membrane-associated GTPases with functions in cell division and beyond. J. Membr. Biol. 169, 75–81. 4. Kartmann, B., and Roth, D. (2001). Novel roles for mammalizn septins: from vesicle trafficking to oncogenesis. J. Cell Sci. 114, 839–844. 5. Bourne, H.R., Sanders, D.A., and McCormick, F. (1991). The GTPase superfamily: conserved structure and molecular mechanism. Nature 349, 117–127. 6. Field, C.M., al-Awar, O., Rosenblatt, J., Wong, M.L., Alberts, B., and Mitchison, T.J. (1996). A purified septin complex forms filaments and exhibits GTPase activity. J. Cell Biol. 133, 605–616. 7. Kinoshita, M., Field, C.M., Coughlin, M.L., Straight, M.F., and Mitchison, T.J. (2002). Self- and actin-templated assembly of mammalian septins. Dev. Cell, in press. 8. Mendoza, M., Hyman, A.A., and Glotzer, M. (2002). GTP binding induces filament assembly of a reconstituted septin. Curr. Biol., 29th October issue. 9. Frazier, J.A., Wong, M.L., Longtine, M.S., Pringle, J.R., Mann, M., Mitchison, T.J., and Field, C.M. (1998). Polymerization of purified yeast septins: evidence that organized filament arrays may not be required for septin function. J. Cell Biol. 143, 737–749. 10. Kinoshita, M., Kumar, S., Mizoguchi, A., Ide, C., Kinoshita, A., Haraguchi, T., Hiraoka, Y., and Noda, M. (1997). Nedd5, a mammalian septin, is a novel cytoskeletal component interacting with actin-based structures. Genes Dev. 11, 1535–1547. 11. Zhang, J., Kong, C., Xie, H., McPherson, P., Grinstein, S., and Trimble, W.S. (1999). Phosphatidylinositol polyphosphate binding to the mammalian septin H5 is modulated by GTP. Curr. Biol. 9, 1458–1467. 12. Adam, J.C., Pringle, J.R., and Peifer, M. (2000). Evidence for functional differentiation among Drosophila septins in cytokinesis and cellularization. Mol. Biol. Cell 11, 3123–3125. 13. Joberty, J., Perlungher, R.R., Sheffield, P.J., Kinoshita, M., Noda, M., Haystead, T., and Macara, I.G. (2001). Borg proteins control septin organization and are negatively regulated by Cdc42. Nat. Cell Biol. 3, 861–866. 14. Beites, C.L., Xie, H., Bowser, R., and Trimble, W. (1999). The septin CDCrel-1 binds syntaxin and inhibits exocytosis. Nat. Neurosci. 2, 434–439. 15. Macara, I.G., Baldarelli, R., Field, C.M., Glotzer, M., Hayashi, Y., Hsu, S., Kennedy, M. B., Kinoshita, M., Longtine, M., Low, C., et al. (2002). Mammalian septins nomenclature. Mol. Biol. Cell, in press.