Abstract
UBR1 is an E3 ubiquitin ligase best known for its ability to target protein degradation by the N-end rule. The physiological functions of UBR family proteins, however, remain not fully understood. We found that the functional loss of C. elegans UBR-1 leads to a specific motor deficit: when adult animals generate reversal movements, A-class motor neurons exhibit synchronized activation, preventing body bending. This motor deficit is rescued by removing GOT-1, a transaminase that converts aspartate to glutamate. Both UBR-1 and GOT-1 are expressed and critically required in premotor interneurons of the reversal motor circuit to regulate the motor pattern. ubr-1 and got-1 mutants exhibit elevated and decreased glutamate level, respectively. These results raise an intriguing possibility that UBR proteins regulate glutamate metabolism, which is critical for neuronal development and signaling.
Author Summary Ubiquitin-mediated protein degradation is central to diverse biological processes. The selection of substrates for degradation is carried out by the E3 ubiquitin ligases, which target specific groups of proteins for ubiquitination. The human genome encodes hundreds of E3 ligases; many exhibit sequence conservation across animal species, including one such ligase called UBR1. Patients carrying mutations in UBR1 exhibit severe systemic defects, but the biology behinds UBR1’s physiological function remains elusive. Here we found that the C. elegans UBR-1 regulates glutamate level. When UBR-1 is defective, C. elegans exhibits increased glutamate; this leads to synchronization of motor neuron activity, hence defective locomotion when animals reach adulthood. UBR1-mediated glutamate metabolism may contribute to the physiological defects of UBR1 mutations.
Introduction
In eukaryotic cells, the ubiquitin-proteasome system mediates selective protein degradation (1, 2). E3 ubiquitin ligases confer substrate specificity via selective interaction with the degradation signals in substrates (3-6).
UBR1 acts not only as an E3 ligase for the N-end rule substrates, whose metabolic stability is determined by the identity and post-translational status of their N-terminal moiety, but also for substrates that do not harbor the N-terminal degrons (6, 7). The UBR family proteins exist from yeast to man, and have been implicated in multiple cellular processes (reviewed in 7). Yeast UBR1 is not essential, but ubr1 mutants exhibit less efficient chromatin separation, and mildly increased doubling time (8). Yeast UBR1 also participates in protein quality control, potentiating the degradation of mis-folded proteins by ER membrane ligases (9). The loss of C. elegans UBR-1 results in delayed degradation of a regulator for post-embryonic hypodermic cell division, but does not cause obvious hypodermic defect (10). In mammalian cell lines, the N-end rule pathway targets pro-apoptosis fragments for degradation, affecting the efficacy of induced apoptosis (11). The simultaneous loss of two rodent UBR homologues results in embryonic lethality with severe developmental defects in the heart and brain (12). In human, loss-of-function mutations in one of several UBR family proteins, UBR1, cause the Johanson-Blizzard Syndrome (JBS), a genetic disorder with multi-systemic symptoms including pancreatic insufficiency, growth retardation, and cognitive impairments (13). To date, a unifying physiological function of UBR proteins in animal models and human is lacking. In fact, whether UBR1’s role as an N-end rule E3 ligase is relevant for the JBS pathophysiology remains elusive (14).
C. elegans has a single UBR1 ortholog, UBR-1. Using this simplified animal model, we reveal that the functional loss of UBR-1 leads to a specific, late onset and prominent motor pattern change, and such a change is reversed by removing a metabolic enzyme, GOT-1, which we find to synthesize glutamate from aspartate.
Glutamate is an abundant amino acid. As a metabolite, it is essential for metabolism and development. As a neurotransmitter, glutamate-mediated signaling regulates animals’ motor and cognitive functions (15-18). As such, glutamate level needs to be tightly regulated for metabolism, as well as neuronal signaling. Aberrant glutamate signaling has been implicated in cytotoxicity (19), and neurological disorders (20).
The genetic interaction between ubr-1 and got-1 mutants suggests that UBR-1 may affect glutamate metabolism. Consistent with this notion, we find that both genes are critically required in premotor interneurons to effect the reversal motor pattern change. Further, our metabolomics analyses reveal an inversely correlated change - increased and decreased glutamate level - in ubr-1 and got-1 mutant animals, respectively. These findings reveal a previously unknown role for the UBR family protein in glutamate metabolism. They further allude to the possibility that a common cellular defect, such as that in glutamate metabolism, may contribute to UBR’s multi-systemic functions.
Results
UBR-1 promotes bending during reversal movements
Wildtype C. elegans generates movements through propagating body bends. In a genetic screen for mutants with altered motor patterns, we isolated hp684 (Fig. 1A), a mutant that is capable of reversal movements, but does so with limited body flexing (Fig. 1B; Supplementary Movie 1). The stiffness is prominent during prolonged reversals, and is progressive as animals develop from the last-stage larvae into adults.
We quantified the motor phenotypes of one-day-old wildtype and hp684 adults. Because the forward movement is the preferred motor state under laboratory conditions, we assayed their motor behaviors on plates where they were frequently induced for prolonged reversals (Methods). We compared their body curvature and duration of reversals during these events (Fig. 1D-F). hp684 mutants exhibited significantly decreased mean curvature during reversals (Fig. 1D), significantly longer duration (Fig. 1F), and reduced reversal initiation frequency (Fig. 1G) under the assay conditions (Methods). The bending curvature and duration of forward movements, captured during the same recording periods, were only mildly affected or unchanged in hp684 mutant animals (Supplementary Movie 1).
We mapped and identified the causative genetic lesion in hp684 mutants (Methods): a recessive and nonsense mutation that leads to truncation of the last 194 amino acids (Q1864X) of UBR-1 (Fig. 1A). The UBR family proteins exhibit conserved domain organization from yeast to humans. In addition to a highly conserved C-terminal sequences, they share the N-terminal UBR box, and internal motifs that include a region enriched for basic amino acids (BRR), and a RING finger (21). The UBR box and its neighboring sequences interact with the substrates and E2 ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme of the N-end rule (22), whereas the RING finger is the hallmark motif utilized by a large class of E3 ligases to recruit non-N-end rule substrates (23-25).
To further verify that the motor phenotypes that we observed in hp684 mutants result from the functional loss of UBR-1, we generated multiple ubr-1 deletion alleles, hp820, hp821, and hp821hp833 (Fig. 1A), by CRISPR-Cas9-mediated genome editing (26) (Methods). hp820 harbors a small in-frame deletion near the N-terminus (ΔR18-W25); hp821 a N-terminal four base pair deletion that leads to a frame-shift and a premature, N-terminal stop codon (E34X), and hp821hp833, in addition to hp821, a seven-base-pair deletion in the RING finger that leads to a frame shift and premature internal stop codon (E1315X). All alleles, like hp684, are recessive and viable, all exhibited motor defects similar to hp684, including reduced bending, increased duration, and reduced initiation frequency during reversal movements (Fig. 1B, 1E-G; Fig. S1). Also like hp684, their reversal defects were rescued by a genomic fragment that harbors only ubr-1 (Fig. 1B-G; Fig. S1).
These results confirm that the motor defects exhibited by all ubr-1 alleles result from the functional loss of UBR-1. The comparable phenotypic severity among hp684, hp820, hp821 and hp821hp833 mutants complements findings from the JBS patients, where diverse UBR1 mutations, resulting in a wide range of genetic lesions - early or late stop codons, reading frame shifts, and small internal in-frame deletions (Fig. 1A) - exert similar pathologic effects (27).
Hereafter, we present quantified results from the hp684 allele unless specified, and refer to it as the ubr-1 mutants. For behavioral analyses, we present data for reversal movements, and refer to it as the motor phenotype.
A critical requirement of UBR-1 in premotor interneurons to promote bending
To begin probing UBR-1’s function, we first examined the expression pattern of a GFP::UBR-1 reporter, which fully reversed ubr-1 mutants’ motor defects. GFP::UBR-1 exhibits strong expression in a fraction of neurons and all musculatures throughout development, and weak expression in hypodermal seam cells (Fig. 2A). In the motor circuit, UBR-1::GFP’s expression is prominent in premotor interneurons (INs in Fig. 2A) of the reversal motor circuit (Fig. 2A; Fig. S2A), and is absent from all ventral cord motor neurons that execute locomotion.
To determine the critical cellular origins of ubr-1 mutants’ motor defect, we examined the effect of restoring UBR-1 using exogenous and cell-type specific promoters. When UBR-1 expression was restored panneuronally (Prgef-1), the reversal motor defects (Fig. 2B) in ubr-1 mutants were fully rescued, whereas restoring UBR-1 in muscles (Pmyo-3) did not (Fig. 2B; Fig. S3A, B). These results show a neuronal origin of ubr-1 mutants’ motor phenotype.
Through examining the effect of restoring UBR-1 expression in subgroups of motor circuit neurons that partially overlap with identified UBR-1::GFP-positive neurons, we confirmed a critical requirement of UBR-1 in premotor interneurons (Fig. 2C; Fig. S3A, B). Specifically, restoring UBR-1 expression by either Pglr-1 or Pnmr-1 significantly rescued ubr-1 mutants’ motor defects, including bending, duration, and frequency during reversal movements (Fig. 2C; Fig. S3A, B), whereas restoring UBR-1 in motor neurons did not (Fig. 2C; Fig. S3A, B). Both Pglr-1 and Pnmr-1 activate expression in premotor interneurons of the reversal motor circuit, AVA, AVE, AVD, and RIM (28-30). Their activation, inactivation, and ablation affect the execution and characteristics of the reversal motor states (31-43). Importantly, restoration of UBR-1 in other interneurons, including the premotor interneurons of the forward motor circuit (AVB), did not rescue ubr-1 mutants’ motor phenotype (Table 1).
Within this group of premotor interneurons of the reversal circuit, restoration of UBR-1 in AVE and RIM (Popt-3) exerted the strongest partial rescue (Fig. 2D; Fig. S3C, D), whereas the restoration in AVA (Prig-3), or RIM (Pgcy-13) alone, led to modest to no rescue (Fig. 2D; Fig. S3C, D). UBR-1’s role in the reversal motor circuit involves the whole network of premotor interneurons, with AVA, AVE, and maybe RIM being the most critical components.
UBR-1 promotes bending by preventing simultaneous A motor neuron activation
What underlies the reduced bending in ubr-1 mutants? Premotor interneurons of the reversal motor circuit innervate the A-class motor neurons (A-MNs) (Fig. 3A). Multiple A-MNs innervate body wall muscles to execute reversal movements: they are divided into the ventral (VA) and dorsal (DA) muscle-innervating subtypes through likely non-overlapping neuromuscular junctions (32, 34, 44, 45). We examined the temporal activation pattern of a posterior cluster A-MNs, DA7, VA10, and VA11 (predicted muscle targets illustrated in Fig. 3B) in freely moving adults that express a calcium sensor GCaMP6s::wCherry (46) in these A-MNs (Methods).
Consistent with the notion that A-MNs execute reversal movements, they exhibited calcium changes when animals moved backwards (boxed area in Fig. 3C). While the frequency and amplitude of the calcium waveforms for A-MNs varied for each reversal event (47), their calcium profiles exhibited phase relations that are consisted with the expected temporal activation of muscle groups that they are predicted to innervate. Specifically, VA10 and VA11, two A-MNs that innervate adjacent ventral muscles exhibited asynchrony in activation (red and blue traces in Fig. 3C; left panel in Fig. 3C’), with variable lags (Fig. 3G; Methods), as expected from the sequential contraction of adjacent muscles during reversals at different velocities. DA7 likely innervates dorsal muscles that appose VA10 and V11’s ventral targets (Fig. 3B). Consistent with the alternating dorsal and ventral muscle contraction during bending, VA10 and DA7 exhibited asynchrony of activity patterns (green and red traces in Fig. 3C; middle panel in Fig. 3C’) with variable lags (Fig. 3H). DA7 and VA11 were activated in relative synchrony (green and blue traces in Fig. 3C; right panel in Fig. 3C’), exhibiting shorter lags (Fig. 3I) when compared to the other A-MN pairs. This indicates a more direct dorsal-ventral opposition between VA10 and DA7’s muscle targets.
We observed a striking difference in A-MN’s activation pattern in ubr-1 mutants. While they also exhibited calcium changes during reversals, all three A-MNs’ activation exhibited synchrony (blue, red and green traces in Fig. 3D; Fig. 3D’). This led to a drastic reduction in the mean lag times between VA10 and VA11 (Fig. 3G), and between VA10 and DA7 (Fig. 3H), whereas the short lags between DA7 and VA11 remained statistically unchanged (Fig. 3I) between wildtype and ubr-1 mutants.
Hence, reduced bending in ubr-1 mutants was caused by increased synchronization, not lack of A-MNs’ activities. Importantly, when UBR-1 was restored in the premotor interneurons of the reversal circuit, A-MN’s phasic relationships were restored in ubr-1 mutants (Fig. 3E, E’, Fig. G-I). Therefore UBR-1 plays a critical role in premotor interneurons to ensure sequential motor neuron activation, which underlies bending during reversal movements.
Removing the GOT-1 transaminase restores ubr-1 mutants’ bending
If UBR-1, an E3 ligase, affects the animal’s motor pattern through negative regulation of a biological pathway, the pattern change should be rescued by a simultaneous decrease of the activity of the pathway. Accordingly, we screened for genetic suppressors of ubr-1 mutants’ motor phenotype.
We isolated hp731, which restored bending in ubr-1 mutants during reversal movements (Fig. 4C; Supplementary Movie 2). Notably, both hp731 and ubr-1; hp731 mutant animals exhibited slightly deeper bending than wildtype animals (Fig. 4C; Supplementary Movie 2). hp731 also significantly rescued ubr-1 mutant’s change in reversal duration and frequency (Fig. S4A, B). Consistent with synchronized A-MN activation underling ubr-1’s lack of bending, VA10, DA7 and VA11’s phasic relationships were restored in ubr-1; hp731 mutants (Fig. 3F-I).
We identified the causative mutation in hp731 mutant animals. hp731 harbors a causative, lf, and missense C184Y mutation (Methods) at the pyridoxal phosphate-binding domain in GOT-1.2 (Fig. 4A), one of the four predicted C. elegans glutamate-oxaloacetate transaminases (GOTs). GOT enzymes catalyze the transfer of an amino group between aspartate and α-ketoglutarate (α-KG) and convert them to oxaloacetate (OAA) and glutamate (48, 49) (Fig. 5A).
The genetic interaction between ubr-1 and got-1.2 is remarkably specific: lf mutations for other three GOT homologues did not restore bending of ubr-1 mutants (Table 2). lf mutations in other metabolic enzymes or transporters that may be involved in glutamate and aspartate metabolic pathways (Table 2), including the alanine aminotransferase, glutamine synthetase, and glutaminase, did not rescue ubr-1 mutant’s motor defects either. Henceforth, we refer to got-1.2 as got-1.
A critical requirement of GOT-1 activity in premotor interneurons to affect bending
To determine the endogenous expression pattern of GOT-1, we generated a functional GOT-1 reporter by inserting GFP at the endogenous got-1 locus. GOT-1::GFP exhibited cytoplasmic expression in all somatic tissues, including broad expression in the nervous system (Fig. 4B; Fig. S2B). To determine the critical cells that mediate the genetic interactions between ubr-1 and got-1, we restored cell-type specific GOT-1 expression in ubr-1; got-1 mutants, and assessed their effect on the animal’s motor pattern. Restoring GOT-1 in all neurons (Prgef-1), but not in all muscles (Pmyo-3), fully reverted the motor pattern of ubr-1; got-1 to the reduced bending as in ubr-1 mutants (Table 1); therefore, both UBR-1 and GOT-1 function through neurons to regulate motor patterns.
Because GOT-1 is more broadly expressed in the nervous system than the UBR-1::GFP reporter (Fig. 4B), we examined whether GOT-1 functions through UBR-1-expressing neurons to regulate bending. Similar to our observation for neuronal sub-type UBR-1 rescue (Fig. 2), restoring GOT-1 in premotor interneurons of the reversal circuit (Table 1) was required for reversion of ubr-1; got-1’s bending pattern to that of ubr-1. Similarly, restoring GOT-1 in the same subset of these premotor interneurons, including AVE and RIM, exerted the most significant, partial reversion of ubr-1; got-1’s motor defects (Fig. 4D; Fig. S4).
Therefore, not only does a predicted metabolic enzyme GOT-1 exhibit genetic interaction with UBR-1, but also both proteins exhibit similar prominent requirement in premotor interneurons to regulate the reversal motor pattern. These results raise the possibility that metabolic dys-regulation may underlie ubr-1’s motor defects.
GOT-1 synthesizes glutamate using aspartate
The catalytic activity of GOT-family transaminases enables reversible conversions between aspartate and glutamate (left panel in Fig. 5A). Their in vivo activity and physiological function, however, have not been examined in animal models.
To determine the metabolic changes associated with the loss of GOT-1, we uantified the amino acid levels of synchronized wildtype and got-1 adults by highperformance iquid chromatography (HPLC). As previously reported (50), glutamate is an abundant amino acid, whereas aspartate is maintained at a low abundance in C.elegans upper panel in Fig. 5B). In got-1 mutants, glutamate level exhibited a decrease of 27.6 ± 7.0% (mean ±SEM, n=4, P=0.0477 against wildtype animals), whereas the aspartate level exhibited a massive increase of 27.3 ± 4.76 folds (n=4, P=0.0076 against wildtype animals) (lower panel in Fig. 5B; Fig. 6A, B). These results implicate that in vivo, GOT-1 preferentially synthesizes glutamate from aspartate (right panel in Fig. 5A). Among the C. elegans GOTs, GOT-1 appears to be the key glutamate-synthesizing enzyme, because removing its homologue, GOT-2, did not lead to glutamate reduction (Fig. 6A).
We noted that compared to the massive aspartate accumulation, the reduction of glutamate was mild in got-1 mutants. This may result from compensatory activation of glutamate synthesis using other amino acids. As reported (50), alanine is the most abundant amino acid in C. elegans (upper panel in Fig. 5B). In got-1 mutants, alanine level exhibited a decrease of 48.5 ± 12.4% (n=4, P=0.0050 against wildtype animals) (lower panel in Fig. 5B; Fig. 6C), supporting the notion that alanine becomes the compensatory source for glutamate when conversion from aspartate is blocked.
Such a drastic shift in equilibrium of the three key amino acids - aspartate, glutamate, and alanine - in got-1 mutants must exert indirect metabolic consequences. To determine whether GOT-1’s loss affects the global metabolic state, we performed liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) analyses on whole worm lysates. Indeed, got-1 mutants exhibited increased AMP/ATP and NADP/NADPH, and decreased GSH/GSSG glutathione ratios (Fig. 6E, F), two hallmark features for increased cellular toxicity and metabolic stress (51).
We conclude that in C. elegans, GOT-1 synthesizes glutamate, and maintains glutamate level using aspartate. The loss of GOT-1 leads to glutamate reduction, aspartate accumulation, and potential compensatory glutamate synthesis using other amino acids.
Glutamate level is elevated in ubr-1 mutants
Removing the glutamate-synthesizing GOT-1 restored ubr-1’s bending pattern, suggesting that ubr-1’s motor defects may be associated with glutamate homeostasis.
We assessed the amino acid level in ubr-1 mutants by HPLC. In ubr-1 mutants, the glutamate level was increased by 22.2 ± 9.3% (n=5, P=0.0479 against wildtype animals). In ubr-1; got-1 mutants, similar to got-1 mutants, the glutamate level was reduced by 21.6 ± 2.4% (n=4, P=0.0230 against wildtype animals; P=0.0153 against ubr-1 mutants), whereas the aspartate level was increased by 30.2 ± 5.3 folds (n=4, P=0.0033 against wildtype animals, P=0.0031 against ubr-1 mutants) (Fig. 6A). Interestingly, there was a mild increase of aspartate in ubr-1 mutants (46.3 ± 12.4%, n=4, P=0.0302 against wildtype animals) (Fig. 6B), which may reflect a compensatory metabolic response to reduce glutamate accumulation. Reminiscent of the genetic interactions exhibited at the behavioral level, removing GOT-1’s homologue, GOT-2, which did not restore ubr-1’s bending, did not reduce ubr-1’s glutamate either (Fig. 6A).
To determine if homeostasis of other metabolic substrates for GOT-1, α-KG and OAA, also contributes to ubr-1’s motor defects, we surveyed their levels in ubr-1, got-1 and ubr-1; got-1 adults by LC-MS/MS. Unlike the case for glutamate, which exhibited inversely correlated changes between ubr-1 and got-1 mutants, and between ubr-1 and ubr-1; got-1 mutants, the α-KG and OAA levels did not exhibit consistent, or correlated changes (Fig. 6C). These results support that restored bending in ubr-1; got-1 animals primarily results from reduced glutamate, not from indirect - consequential or compensatory - metabolic effects that the reduced glutamate may have incurred.
Some premotor interneurons exhibit defective morphology in ubr-1 adults
Glutamate is a neurotransmitter, as well as an abundant amino acid partaking in other metabolic pathways including amino acid synthesis, energy production and urea cycle. An elevation of glutamate level may result in not only increased neuronal signaling in glutamatergic neurons, but also cellular stress in all UBR-1-expressing cells.
Because most of the critically required premotor interneurons for UBR-1’s role in motor pattern are cholinergic (52), the developmental effect of increased glutamate in these neurons may play a prominent role. To explore this possibility, we examined these interneurons using a transcriptional reporter (Pnmr-1-RFP) (18) that allows visualization of their somata (Fig. 7; Fig. S6), and a translation reporter (GLR-1::GFP) (18) that labels synapses of the AVA and AVE premotor interneurons(18) (Fig. 7).
In adult ubr-1 mutants, both reporters exhibited prominent and moderate decrease in fluorescence intensity in premotor interneurons AVA and AVE, respectively (Fig. 7A-D for Pnmr-1; E-F for GLR-1::GFP). Such a decrease was not observed for other interneurons including RIM (Fig. 7A-D). We further noted that unlike the smooth and round somata in wildtype animals (Fig. S6, wildtype), in ubr-1 mutants, the AVA and AVE somata exhibited rough edges and short branches in L4 stage larvae and adults (Fig. S6A, L4 and Adult panels), whereas other premotor interneurons such as RIM were appeared as in wildtype animals (Fig. S6B). The late onset of reversal bending defects coincides with the morphological change in AVA and AVE becoming prominent by the end of the larval stage (Fig. S6A). Their fluorescent intensity and morphology defects were significantly rescued by restoring UBR-1 expression in premotor interneurons (Fig. 7A-D; Fig. S6C), and in adult ubr-1; got-1 mutants (Fig. 7A-D; Fig. S6C).
These results support the notion that an increased glutamate level may lead to developmental defects in ubr-1 mutants, and premotor interneurons, in particular AVA and AVE, may be more susceptible to such a perturbation than other neurons or cells.
GOT activity but not total protein level is increased in ubr-1 mutants
Our analyses attributed the motor defect of ubr-1 mutants to altered glutamate metabolism, most critically from premotor interneurons. To address how UBR-1 may negatively regulates glutamate level through GOT-1, we first assayed the total GOT activity of the whole worm lysates. We observed a moderate increase of GOT activity in ubr-1 mutants (Fig. 8A). Consistent with the presence of multiple GOT homologues, the total GOT activity was drastically reduced, but not abolished in got-1 mutants. The increased GOT activity in ubr-1 mutants was attenuated in ubr-1; got-1 double mutants. The attenuation effect was also specific to GOT-1: the loss of GOT-2 did not reduce GOT activity in ubr-1 mutants (Fig. 8A).
An increased GOT activity is consistent with an elevated glutamate level in ubr-1 mutants. However, we did not observe changes in GOT-1 protein level in ubr-1 mutants. The level of GOT-1::GFP, expressed either from its endogenous locus or from an exogenous panneuronal promoter (Prgef-1), was similar between wildtype and ubr-1 mutants (Fig. 8B). These results suggest that GOT-1 is not a direct substrate of UBR-1. UBR-1-mediated regulation of glutamate metabolism may involve targeting other pathway components.
Discussion
Dys-regulated E3 activities have been implicated in neurodevelopmental and neurological disorders (53). Using the C. elegans model and its motor output as the functional readout, we reveal a previously unknown role of UBR-1 in glutamate metabolism. The absence of UBR-1 elevates glutamate level, which promotes simultaneous activation of A-class motor neurons, leading to reduced bending during reversal movements. This defect is compensated by removing a glutamate-synthesizing enzyme and reducing glutamate level in premotor interneurons of the reversal motor circuit. Aberrant glutamate metabolism may underlie ubr-1 mutant’s physiological defects.
ubr-1’s motor phenotype is associated with glutamate level change
Coinciding with an elevated GOT activity, ubr-1 mutants exhibit increased glutamate level. Removing a key glutamate-synthesizing enzyme GOT-1 reduces the glutamate level in ubr-1 mutants. These metabolic changes parallel those in motor behaviors: removing the activity of GOT-1 enzyme restores bending in ubr-1 mutants. These results imply that elevated glutamate level is associated with ubr-1’s defective bending.
Genetic mutations in key metabolic enzymes can exert effects beyond their primary substrates and immediate metabolic pathways. For example, upon the loss of GOT-1, the reduction of glutamate synthesis from aspartate likely induces compensatory utility of other amino acids, thus the reduction of alanine. When converting aspartate to glutamate, GOT-1 may indirectly affect the equilibrium of other substrates, OAA and α-KG, metabolites that take part in multiple metabolic functions, including energy production, amino acid homeostasis, nucleotide synthesis, and lipid synthesis.
Our metabolomics analyses of got-1 mutants revealed no consistent or correlated changes in the level of OAA, α-KG (Fig. 6C), and all other TCA cycle metabolites from wildtype controls (Fig. S5). Because the same samples exhibited consistent and correlated changes between the aspartate, glutamate and alanine levels, the variability in other metabolite levels likely reflects flexibility of compensatory or adaptive changes in response to the primary metabolic dysfunction upon the loss of GOT-1. Indeed, the only consistent and anti-correlated metabolic change that we observed between ubr-1 and got-1 (and ubr-1; got-1) mutants was the glutamate level. Cumulatively, these results strongly support that the primary metabolic change - the level of glutamate - causes the motor pattern change in ubr-1 and ubr-1; got-1 mutants.
Our analyses measured glutamate level in whole animals, not the specific neuron groups that are critically required for both UBR-1 and GOT-1’s effect on reversals. Examples of genes with broad expression, but cell-type specific functions have been reported (32, 54, 55). These and other results – such as the presence and requirement of both UBR-1 and GOT-1 in premotor interneurons in mediating their effects on the reversal motor pattern – suggest that the glutamate level change in premotor interneurons significantly contribute to the motor pattern change in ubr-1 and ubr-1; got-1 mutants. We reckon that other UBR-1-expressing neurons likely also contribute to such an alteration. Furthermore, the glutamate change in other neurons and cells may cause other physiological effects that were not examined in this study, where we only followed the most obvious motor defect.
Increased glutamate may cause defective premotor interneuron development
Glutamate has multiple functions. Being a key neurotransmitter itself, glutamate also serves as the sole precursor of another neurotransmitter GABA. Glutamate is also one of the abundant amino acids partaking in other metabolic pathways including amino acid synthesis, energy production and urea cycle. An elevation of glutamate not only affects signaling in glutamatergic and likely GABAergic neurons, but also increases metabolic stress in all cells.
Because both UBR-1 and GOT-1 exert strong effects on the reversal motor pattern through premotor interneurons, most of which cholinergic (52), the developmental effect of increased glutamate may play a prominent role in these interneurons. Indeed, we observed morphological changes of premotor interneurons that coincided with the onset of motor pattern change in ubr-1 mutants. Interestingly, within the reversal motor circuit, premotor interneurons that exhibited the prominent changes, AVA and AVE, provide direct synaptic inputs to the A-class motor neurons. These observations suggest that compared to other cells and neurons, the development and function of premotor interneurons, in particular AVA and AVE, may be more susceptible to glutamate increase, likely through both increased glutamatergic inputs and cellular stress.
GOT-1 is a key enzyme for glutamate homeostasis in neurons
Despite its broad expression, GOT-1 can only influence ubr-1’s motor defects through neurons. These results indicate that maintaining glutamate level in neurons, especially the premotor interneurons, is critical for the proper motor output of ubr-1 mutants.
In the mammalian brains, glutamate has to be locally synthesized because it cannot cross the blood-brain barrier (56). The activity of transaminases, mainly by GOT and ALT, establishes and maintains homeostasis of three abundant amino acids, glutamate, alanine, and aspartate (57, 58). A recent study suggests that GOT also contributes to glutamate synthesis at synapses (59).
The main sources of glutamate synthesis and homeostasis in C. elegans neurons have remained elusive (60). Our study establishes GOT-1 as a key enzyme for glutamate synthesis. Further, it provides the first evidence of a critical role of GOT-1 in glutamate metabolism in the nervous system.
Direct substrates through which UBR-1 regulates glutamate level are unknown
How UBR-1 negatively regulates glutamate level remains to be elucidated. UBR family proteins are often addressed in the context of N-end rule E3 ligases (6, 7, 10). However, UBR proteins have non-N-end rule substrates, and N-end rule substrates do not account for all described functions of UBR proteins (21, 61-64), and their physiological relevance remains to be clarified.
For example, in mammalian cells, UBR1’s N-end rule substrates include pro-apoptotic fragments (11). In C. elegans, the CED-3 caspase promotes apoptosis. During postembryonic development, it interacts with UBR-1 to expose the N-degron of LIN-28 (10), a regulator of seam cell patterning (65) to promote its degradation. However, neither UBR-1 nor LIN-28’s N-degron were essential for LIN-28’s degradation (10). Removing either apoptotic regulators CED-3 or CED-4, which generates pro-apoptotic fragments, or LIN-28, neither mimic nor rescue ubr-1 mutants’ bending defects (Table 2; Supplementary Movie 3). Substrates for neuronal function of UBR-1 remain to be identified.
Regardless of the nature of UBR-1 targets, our results show that UBR-1 is unlikely to directly regulate GOT-1’s protein stability: we did not observe a change in the level of GOT-1::GFP in ubr-1 mutants. We speculate that UBR-1-mediated regulation of glutamate level may involve targeting other components that subsequently affect glutamate metabolism. For example, the activity of many rate-limiting metabolic enzymes in glycolysis, fatty acid synthesis, cholesterol synthesis, and gluconeogenesis are regulated by phosphorylation and de-phosphorylation (66, 67). UBR-1 may mediate the ubiquitination of kinases or phosphatases that modify GOT-1’s activity. A large-scale ubr-1 suppressor screen may be required to yield insights on UBR-1’s direct substrates.
The C. elegans motor behavior as a model to investigate UBR1 and JBS
The UBR family proteins have been extensively examined in yeast, cultured cells, and mouse models, but only recently in C. elegans. In yeast, UBR1 affects cell cycle progression, but is non-essential (6). Mouse models revealed the functional redundancy of multiple UBR homologues, where combinatorial knockout of UBR1 and UBR2 results in embryonic lethality (12). C. elegans UBR1 affects the stability of LIN-28, a regulator of postembryonic hypoderm seam cell division (10); both UBR1 and LIN-28 are non-essential for viability. The simplicity and viability of the C. elegans ubr-1 model has allowed us to reveal, and genetically dissect a previously unknown physiological role of UBR-1 in glutamate homeostasis. We note that aberrant glutamate metabolism may cause systemic cellular and other unexamined neuronal defects in ubr-1 mutants. However, the simplicity and sensitivity of the C. elegans premotor interneuron circuit, and the prominent motor pattern change provided a quantifiable functional readout to afford genetic pathway dissection.
Our study provides the first demonstration of a UBR protein’s physiological role in glutamate regulation. We noted with interest that in a case study of a JBS patient with severe cognitive impairments, GOT activity levels, used as a biomarker of inflammation, were increased (68). In addition to its role in development, there is a growing body of evidence for glutamate signaling in non-neuronal tissues (48, 69, 70). It will be of interest to examine whether glutamate level and signaling in other JBS animal models and JBS patients are aberrant, and whether they contribute to JBS pathophysiology.
Methods
Strains and constructs
Strains
See Tables 1, 2 and S1 for a complete strain list generated in this study. All C.elegans were cultured on standard NGM plates seeded with OP50, and maintained at 22°C.
hp684 and hp731 were isolated by EMS mutagenesis. They were mapped using SNP mapping and whole genome sequencing (71, 72), followed by behavioral rescue using fosmids and genomic fragments that harbor ubr-1 and got-1.2, respectively. Placing hp731 over a deficiency mnDf1 fully recapitulated the rescuing effect in the ubr-1 mutant background, confirming that hp731 being a lf allele of got-1.2 (Table 2). hp820, hp821, hp820hp833 and hp865 were generated by CRISPR-Cas9-mediated genome editing, following protocols described in (26). The rest of genetic mutants were obtained from CGC; all strains were backcrossed at least four times against N2 by genotyping.
Transgenic strains include those with extra-chromosomal multi-copy arrays (hpEx), integrated multi-copy arrays (hpIs), single-copy integrated arrays (hpSi), and a got-1.2 GFP knock-in allele (hp). Transgenic animals carrying extra-chromosomal arrays (hpEx) were created by co-injecting the DNA plasmid of interest and a co-injection marker at 5-30 ng/μL. Extra-chromosomal arrays were integrated into the genome using UV irradiation to create stable, transgenic lines (hpIs) (73). We found that GOT-1 overexpression rendered sick animals. Hence, all got-1 tissue-specific rescue lines were generated using Mos1-mediated single copy insertion (hpSi) as previously described (74). All integrated strains were outcrossed several times against N2 prior to phenotypic analyses.
GOT-1.2::GFP knock-in
The in-frame GOT-1 C-terminal GFP fusion allele (hp881) was generated by CRISPR-Cas9 mediated homologous recombination, following protocols described in (75). The replacement template for GOT-1::GFP (pJH3629) includes 1kb sequence upstream to the got-1 start codon, the entire got-1 coding sequence, and 1.5kb sequence downstream of the got-1 stop codon. GFP was inserted in-frame after the last amino acid of GOT-1. A LoxP-Prps-27-NeoR-loxP cassette was inserted between the stop codon and 3’ UTR. After injection, animals were allowed to lay eggs overnight at 250C before G418 selection. Animals with extra-chromosomal arrays were selected against as described. Candidates for insertion were confirmed by genotyping and sequencing. Confirmed insertion lines were injected with a Pelt-3::Cre plasmid to remove the LoxP cassette. The resulting hp881 allele was outcrossed against N2 wildtype animals twice before crossed into the ubr-1 mutants.
Locomotion Analysis
Plate conditions
When transferred to a new, thinly seeded plate, C. elegans typically spend most of the time moving forward, with brief interruptions of backward movement. As previously described (42), 35 mm NGM plates with limited food (lightly seeded OP50 bacteria) were used for automated tracking and behavioral analyses. Here we quantified body curvature, initiation frequency, and duration on one-day old young adults using copper chloride (CuCl2), an aversive stimulus for C. elegans (76). Briefly, immediately before transferring worms onto the NGM plates, a ∼10-20 μl of 100 mM CuCl2 solution was pipetted into a small circle (∼20 mm in diameter) in the middle of the plate for the animal to roam. One animal was placed in the center of the circle and allowed to habituate for one minute prior to recording for three minutes. For the next recording,CuCl2 was pipetted onto the same circle before another animal was placed on the plate and recorded. For all data presented in the same graph, animals were recorded on the same day, with at least one animal from each genotype recorded on the same plate. We altered the order of recording for animals of different genotype.
Tracking and data analysis
Behavior was recorded using a Zeiss Axioskop 2 Plus equipped with an ASI MS-40000 motorized stage and a CCD camera (Hamamatsu Orca-R2). Tracking and analysis were performed using Micromanager and Image J software plug-ins developed in-house (courtesy of Dr. Taizo Kawano). Image sequences were sampled at 100-msec exposure (10 frames per second). For the post-imaging analysis, an Image J plug-in was used to skeletonize the worm and extract its centerline. The centerline was divided into 29 equal segments, and the angle between each segment and its tangent line was calculated to quantify the curvature of the animal. These segments were binned into four groups to capture the most consistent curvature trends across the entire length of the animal. The directionality of movement (forward vs. backward) was determined by first identifying the anterior-posterior axis or the “head” and “tail” points, which was manually defined at the first two frames and verified throughout the recording. To calculate directionality of movement, the displacement of the midline point in relation to the head and tail for each worm was determined based on its position in the field-of-view and the stage coordinates. Image sequences wherein animals touched the edge of the recording field and crossed over on themselves were not processed.
Quantification
Analyses of the output data were carried out using an R program-based code developed in-house (courtesy of Dr. Michelle Po). From a group of recordings (N≥10 for each genotype per experiment), we quantified the following parameters,among other behavioral parameters analyzed by the program: 1) Curvature, the average curvature of each animal at each segment; 2) Initiation (defined as the frequency of directional change for each animal; 3) Duration (defined as the time spent moving in the same direction for >3 frames or 300msec, calculated for each bout of forward or backward initiation). Body curvature, initiations, and durations were calculated for forward and backward locomotion separately.
The A-class motor neuron calcium imaging and analysis
Animals of various genotypes were crossed into a reporter hpIs460 (Punc-4-GCaMP6::wCherry), using a calcium reporter GCaMP6 fused in-frame at its C-terminus with wCherry for both tracking and ratiometric correction for motion artifacts in moving animals during recordings (46). A-MN imaging in moving young adults was carried out as described previously (32). Briefly, C. elegans were placed on a 2.5% agar pad, immersed in a few drops of M9 buffer, and covered by a coverslip to allow slow crawling. Each recording lasted for 3 minutes. Images were captured using a 40x objective on a Zeiss Axioskop 2 Plus equipped with an ASI MS-40000 motorized stage, a dual-view beam splitter (Photometrics) and a CCD camera (Hamamatsu Orca-R2). The fluorescence excitation light source from X-CITE (EXFO Photonic Solution Inc.) was reduced to prevent saturation of imaging field. The fluorescent images were split by Dual-View with a GFP/RFP filter set onto the CCD camera operated by Micromanager. The 4x-binned images were obtained at 50-msec exposure time (10 frames per second). Regions of interest (ROIs), containing the soma of DA7, VA10 and VA11, were defined and simultaneously tracked using an in-house developed Image J plug-in (32). The ratio between GFP and RFP fluorescence intensities from individual ROI was plotted over time to produce index for calcium profile for each neuron. Displacement for the DA7 soma, which exhibited the strongest RFP signal, was plotted over time to generate the example instantaneous velocity profiles. For example velocity profiles, we also manually annotated videos to verify the reversal periods. Reversal events longer than 5 seconds were used for cross-correlation analyses shown in the example traces.
The pair-wise phase relationships between the activity patterns of A-MNs during each reversal event were assessed by cross-correlation analyses. In each example trace, cross-correlation during the entire period of reversal was calculated to determine the phase lags between the calcium signals of VA11, DA7, and VA10. The maximum of the cross-correlation function denotes the time point when the two signals are best aligned; the corresponding argument of the maximum correlation values denotes the lag between the two neurons. The absolute time lags were used to represent the synchrony of VA11, DA7 and VA10’s activation. N (≥10) refers to the number of reversal events analyzed for each genotype per experiment.
C. elegans metabolomics analyses by HPLC and LC-MS/MS
Synchronized last-stage larval worms were grown on 100 mm NGM agar plates seeded with OP50 bacteria. Worms were collected using M9 buffer and were washed thoroughly to remove bacteria. Worm pellets were snap-frozen in liquid nitrogen and pulverized using a cell crusher. Amino acids and other metabolites were extracted by addition of ice-cold extraction solvent (40% acetonitrile, 40% methanol, and 20% water) and incubated on dry ice for an hour with occasional thawing and vortexing. Samples were then moved to a thermo mixer (Eppendorf) and shook for an hour at 4°C at 1400 rpm. These samples were centrifuged at 14000 rpm for 10 min at 4°C. Supernatant was transferred to fresh tubes and lyophilized in a CentreVap concentrator (Labconco) at 4°C. Samples were stored at -80 °C until used for HPLC or LC-MS/MS analyses.
Amino acid quantitation was performed using the Waters Pico-Tag System (Waters). After hydrolysis and pre-column derivatization of the sample by PITC, samples were analyzed by reverse phase HPLC (Amino acid facility, SPARC BioCentre, Sick Kids, Toronto, Canada). LC-MS/MS metabolite analysis was performed as described previously (77). Raw values were normalized against the total protein concentration as determined by a Bradford Protein Assay (Bio-Rad). Results were compared from at least three sets of independent experiments (N≥3), with all samples collected and analyzed in parallel in each replica.
Measurement of total GOT Activity from the C. elegans lysate
Synchronized late L4 larval stage worms were grown on 100 mm NGM agar plates seeded with OP50 bacteria. Worms were collected using M9 buffer and were washed thoroughly to remove bacterial contamination. Samples were homogenized by sonication in 100-200ul ice-cold AST buffer. Samples were centrifuged at 13,000g for 10 minutes to remove insoluble materials. The supernatant was used for the AST assay and pellets were used to quantify the total protein in the samples (as described above).
GOT (also referred to as AST) activity was measured using a colorimetric assay with AST Activity Assay Kit (Sigma-Aldrich) according to the manufacturer’s instructions. Data were normalized by the total protein content of the whole worm lysate as determined by a Bradford Protein Assay.
C. elegans Biochemistry
Mixed stage C. elegans were grown on 100 mm NGM plates seeded with OP50 and collected using M9 buffer. Lysates were prepared as described previously (78). For western blot analyses, total protein concentration was determined using a Bradford Protein Assay (Bio-Rad). Anti-GFP antibodies (Roche) were used to probe for GOT-1::GFP and tubulin was used for the loading control.
Statistical Analysis
For bending curvature and calcium imaging analyses, statistical significance was determined using the Kruskal-Wallis test and the two-way repeated measures (RM) ANOVA and subsequent post-hoc analysis. For metabolite analyses, two-tailed Student’s t-tests were applied to determine statistical differences. p< 0.05 were considered to be statically significant. All statistics were performed using Prism software (GraphPad).
Supporting Information
Supplementary figure legends
S1 Fig. ubr-1 mutants exhibit reduced bending.
A) Representative images of wildtype animals and two alleles of ubr-1 mutants during reversals (left to right panels). The wildtype animal generates sinusoidal body bends, whereas ubr-1(hp820, hp821) animals do not bend. This defect was rescued by restoring the expression of UBR-1. Dots denote position of tail. Scale bar: 200µm. In ubr-1(hp820) (B) and ubr-1(hp821) (E) alleles (grey line), bending curvature is reduced throughout head to tail compared to wild type (black line), and this was rescued by restoring expression of UBR-1 using its endogenous promoter (red line). ubr-1 mutants have fewer initiations (C, F) and longer durations for reversals (D, G). ***P<0.001, **P<0.01, *P<0.05 by the Two-way RM ANOVA test. Data are represented as mean ± SEM. ***P< 0.001, **P<0.01, *P< 0.05 by the Kruskal-Wallis test. Data are represented as mean ± SEM.
S2 Fig. UBR-1 and GOT-1 are expressed in AVA, AVE and RIM.
A) A confocal image of animals expressing a functional UBR-1::GFP transgene from its endogenous promoter (green), and the Pnmr-1-RFP reporter (red). B) A confocal image of animals expressing endogenous GOT-1::GFP from the knock-in allele (green), and the Pnmr-1-RFP reporter (red). Robust expression of UBR-1 and GOT-1 was present at the pharynx; neuronal UBR-1::GFP and GOT-1::GFP signals were present in the AVA, AVE and RIM premotor interneurons (denoted), and other unidentified neurons (not shown). Scale bar, 5 μm.
S3 Fig. ubr-1 function is required in premotor interneurons to regulate reversals.
A-B) In ubr-1 mutants, the reversal duration is increased, while reversal initiation frequency is decreased. Both the parameters were rescued by restoring the expression of UBR-1 in premotor interneurons, but not in GABAergic or cholinergic motor neurons. C-D) Expression of UBR-1 in multiple premotor interneurons, which include AVE/RIM exhibited significant rescue of ubr-1 for reversal duration and initiation frequency. Expression of UBR-1 in the RIM alone or in AVA alone did not result in rescue.*P<0.05, **P<0.01, ***P<0.001 by the Kruskal-Wallis test. Data are represented as mean ± SEM.
S4 Fig. GOT-1 function in premotor interneurons is required to suppress ubr-1’s reversal defects.
The functional loss of got-1 restores the reversal duration (A) and the reversal initiation frequency (B) in ubr-1 mutants. Restoring GOT-1 expression in multiple premotor interneurons, including AVE and RIM, reverted the reversal duration of ubr-1; got-1 to that of ubr-1 (A), whereas the reversal initiation frequency exhibited the trend of decrease but did not reach statistic significance (B). Expression of GOT-1 in RIM alone had no effect, while the expression of GOT-1 in AVA partially reverted the reversal duration.*P<0.05, **P<0.01, ***P<0.001 by the Kruskal-Wallis test. Data are represented as mean ± SEM.
S5 Fig. Metabolites of the TCA cycle in ubr-1, got-1 and ubr-1; got-1 mutants did not exhibit consistent changes from wildtype animals.
Metabolite levels measured by LC-MS, normalized against the total protein level in the lysate. All mutants were normalized to that of wildtype animals. Metabolites of the TCA cycle did not show any coordinated changes among these mutants.
S6 Fig. The AVA and AVE somata exhibit morphological changes in ubr-1 mutants by the end of larval stage development
A) Confocal images of the AVA and AVE premotor interneuron somata in wildtype and ubr-1 animals, which were labeled with cytosolic RFP, from the L1 juvenile larva to adult stages. Depending on the focal planes, some images contain that of nuclei, which were devoid of RFP signals. Left panels: images from wildtype animals. The surface of both somata was round and smooth throughout larval development and in young adults. Right panels: images from ubr-1 mutants. In young (L1 to L3) larva, somata appeared similar to those in age-matched wildtype animals. In the L4 larva and adult animals, somata developed rough surface and short branches, denoted by arrows. B) The RIM soma exhibited normal morphology in adults, similar to wildtype animals. C) The round morphology AVA and AVE somata in ubr-1 adults were restored in ubr-1; got-1 double mutant adults, and in ubr-1 adults with restored UBR-1 expression in multiple premotor interneurons including AVE and RIM. Asterisks (*) mark the AVA or AVE axons, which could not be shown in some panels when they were in a different focal plane as the somata. Scale bar, 2μm (for the L1 and L2 panels) 5 μm (for the L3 to adult panels).
Supplementary movie captions
S1 Movie: Reversal behaviors exhibited by the wildtype (N2) (Part 1) and UBR-1(hp684; lf) (Part 2) young adults.
The ubr-1 mutant exhibits prominent rigidness during reversals.
S2 Movie. Reversal behaviors exhibited by ubr-1(hp684; lf) (Part 1), got-1(hp731; lf) (Part 2), and ubr-1(hp684; lf); got-1(hp731; lf) (Part 3) young adults.
The functional loss of GOT-1.2 in the ubr-1 mutant background led to significant improvement of body bending during reversals.
S3 Movie. Reversal behaviors exhibited by lin-28(n719; lf) (Part 1), and UBR-1(hp684; lf) lin-28(n719; lf) (Part 2) young adults.
The functional loss of the LIN-28 protein in the ubr-1(hp684; lf) mutants did not improve body bending during reverses.
Acknowledgements
We thank Asuka Guan, Josh Kaplan, Gene Knockout Consortium and National Bioresource Project and Caenorhabditis elegans Center (CGC) (funded by NIH Office of Research Infrastructure Programs P40 OD010440) for strains, Reynaldo Interior for the HPLC analyses, Don Moerman and Stephen Flibotte for the whole-genome sequencing analyses, Amy Caudy for advice on the metabolomics analyses. We thank Taizo Kawano, Michelle Po, Valeriya Laskova, and Asuka Guan for technical and programming support. We thank Aravinthan Samuel and Andrew Chisholm for comments on the manuscript.