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Article |
-dependent NFAT and mTOR pathways
Correspondence to Gordon W. Laurie: glaurie{at}virginia.edu
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-helix with a hydrophobic face, as per VEGF's and PTHLP's respective dimerization or receptor-binding domain. Lacritin targets downstream NFATC1 and mTOR. The use of inhibitors or siRNA suggests that lacritin mitogenic signaling involves G
i or G
oPKC
-PLCCa2+calcineurinNFATC1 and G
i or G
oPKC
-PLCphospholipase D (PLD)mTOR in a bell-shaped, dose-dependent manner requiring the Ca2+ sensor STIM1, but not TRPC1. This pathway suggests the placement of transiently dephosphorylated and perinuclear Golgitranslocated PKC
upstream of both Ca2+ mobilization and PLD activation in a complex with PLC
2. Outward flow of lacritin from secretory cells through ducts may generate a proliferative/secretory field as a different unit of cellular renewal in nongermative epithelia where luminal structures predominate.
Abbreviations used in this paper: CsA, cyclosporin A; HCE, human corneal epithelial; HSG, human salivary ductal; PLD, phospholipase D; PM, plasma membrane; PNG, perinuclear Golgi region; PTX, pertussis toxin; SF, serum-free; SOC, store-operated Ca2+.
| Introduction |
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The human mitogen lacritin is preferentially associated with nongermative epithelia. Lacritin is apically secreted by acinar cells in the adult lacrimal gland and by a subpopulation of ductal cells in salivary glands (Sanghi et al., 2001), and it has been detected by nonhistological methods in thyroid (Sanghi et al., 2001) and mammary glands (Weigelt et al., 2003) and some ocular surface cells, but not elsewhere. Acinar lumina and long ducts transport lacritin past apical membranes of the nongermative epithelia comprising both glands. Later, lacritin is deposited onto the rapidly renewing epithelia on the surface of the eye and mouth, where it can be detected by ELISA. Thus, instead of localized release to nurture crypt stem cells, as per Wnts, lacritin is apically secreted for broad distribution. Lacritin may therefore stimulate epithelia in its downstream path. Supporting this hypothesis are in vitro studies showing recombinant lacritin to be capable of promoting lacrimal acinar cell secretion, human salivary ductal cell proliferation, and Ca2+ mobilization by human corneal epithelial (HCE) cells (Sanghi et al., 2001). Thus, release of lacritin may hypothetically define a combined secretory and proliferative field that spreads through the nongermative epithelia of lacrimal and salivary glands. Because other nongermative epithelia have luminal structures, secretory/proliferative fields might be a general principle.
We sought to characterize lacritin's domain, cell target specificity, optimal dose, and signaling pathways. We determine that lacritin targets only a small subset of epithelia, and not fibroblasts or glia. It does so via a C-terminal domain, which, in parallel studies (Ma et al., 2006), appears to require heparanase (HPSE) to unblock a binding site in the core protein of coreceptor syndecan-1 (SDC1). Lacritin signaling to PKC
activates both Ca2+NFAT and phospholipase D (PLD)mTOR pathways via the Ca2+ sensor STIM1, suggesting a novel mitogenic approach for renewal.
| Results |
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-helices (Fig. 2).
Several C- and one N-terminal truncation mutants were therefore generated (Fig. 2 A). Mutants lacking 5 and 10 aa from the C terminus, or 24 aa from the N terminus, were fully active. Removal of 5 or 10 more C-terminal amino acids (C-15 or C-20), respectively diminished or completely abrogated activity (Fig. 2 B, shown at 10 nM). This pattern is mirrored by loss of binding to the core protein of lacritin coreceptor SDC1 (Ma et al., 2006). Thus, the 10 additional C-terminal amino acids deleted from C-10 (aa 100 109 of mature lacritin; Fig. 2 C) are important for both activities. To determine whether this region is capable of
-helical formation, we synthesized the active region KQFIENGSEFAQKLLKKFS with several flanking amino acids and subjected it to circular dichroism. In PBS it formed a random coil, and in 10 mM dodecylphosphocholine it formed an
-helix (Fig. 2 D). Although plasma membrane (PM) insertion is not in keeping with lacritin's low nanomolar activity and cell specificity, hydrophobic surfaces on the same or different proteins can create an environment appropriate for
-helical formation (Murre et al., 1989). By "helical wheel," 5 of 10 residues in the active region are hydrophobic, and all group along one face (Fig. 2 E) as an amphipathic
-helix. Amphipathic
-helices are common in ligandreceptor or ligandligand interactions. The hydrophobic face of PTHLH's C-terminal amphipathic
-helix, for example, mediates binding of PTHR1 (Barden et al., 1997). The same mechanism directs VEGF dimerization as a prerequisite for FLT1 and KDR receptor binding (Siemeister et al., 1998).
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i or G
o. Cells treated with positive control muscarinic agonist carbachol were unaffected (Fig. 3 C). Carbachol's G
q-mediated pathway is well known to be insensitive to PTX. The aminosteroid U73122 was tested next. U73122 inhibits G proteinmediated activation of PLC that, in turn, catalyzes the formation of IP3 and DAG. 1 µM U73122 inhibited Ca2+ mobilization by both lacritin and carbachol (Fig. 3 C), suggesting that PLC-generated IP3 directs Ca2+ release from intracellular stores. To test this hypothesis, cells were incubated in 2-[3H]myo-inositol for 24 h and then stimulated. IP3 generation was detected within 15 s of adding lacritin or carbachol. None was formed with C-25 (Fig. S2, available at http://www.jcb.org/cgi/contents/full/jcb.200605140/DC1). DAG activates downstream PKC. Yet, when cells were preincubated with 1 µM of the PKC inhibitor Go 6976, lacritin-stimulated Ca2+ mobilization was completely inhibited (Fig. 3 C), suggesting an unusual upstream requirement for active PKC. In contrast, mobilization was unaffected in positive control carbachol-stimulated cells (Fig. 3 C), even at 10 µM Go 6976 (unpublished data). Therefore, lacritin signaling displays distinctive features.
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q. HSG cells are known to express PKC
,
,
,
,
, and
(Jung et al., 2000), of which only the
isoform should be inhibited by Go 6976 at 1 µM. PKC
mRNA was thus targeted for degradation by RNAi (Fig. 4).
HSG cells were transfected with a pool of four siRNAs for PKC
. PKC
became depleted, and transfected cells failed to proliferate in response to lacritin. Serum-triggered mitogenesis was slightly reduced ("D7D10") in comparison to mock and negative controls. Cells were then individually transfected with each of the four siRNAs. Both PKC
D7 and D10 transfectants were lacritin unresponsive, but completely serum responsive in proliferation assays (Fig. 4). Importantly, further testing of D7 revealed no lacritin-dependent Ca2+ mobilization (Fig. 3 C; bottom). We hypothesize that ligation of coreceptor SDC1 (Ma et al., 2006) is coupled to binding of a G proteincoupled receptor, thereby successively activating G
i or G
o, PKC
, and PLC.
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plays a central role in lacritin mitogenic signaling, and that STIM1, but not TRPC1, may be necessary for Ca2+ influx, possibly via a SOC mechanism. This pattern was later confirmed in NFAT translocation and mitogenesis experiments.
Lacritin stimulates translocation of PKC
to the perinuclear Golgi region (PNG)
PKC
regulation of cell proliferation is initiated by translocation of cytoplasmic PKC
to membranes. Interaction of membrane-associated PKC
with other membrane-associated effectors drives downstream signaling to mitogenesis. To appreciate how lacritin mitogenic signaling is transduced in the context of Ca2+ mobilization, we asked whether lacritin promotes PKC
translocation and, if so, to which membrane compartment. PKC
was imaged in cells 15 min after treatment (Fig. 5 A).
10 nM nonmitogenic C-25 had no effect, leaving PKC
diffusely distributed throughout the cytoplasm. In contrast, 10 nM lacritin or N-24 shifted PKC
primarily to the PNG, as confirmed by colocalization with the Golgi marker mannosidase II (Fig. 5 B). Cells treated with positive control PMA concentrated PKC
solely in the PM (unpublished data). The phosphorylation state of PKC
influences its translocation site. Hyperphosphorylated PKC
becomes associated with the PM, whereas hypophosphorylated or dephosphorylated PKC
is known to translocate to the PNG (Hu and Exton, 2004). To determine if the latter is true and, if so, over what time course, cells were treated with lacritin, N-24, and C-25. Cell lysates were then blotted for phospho-PKC
(Fig. 6).
10 nM lacritin promotes PKC
dephosphorylation within 1 min of addition. This form is sustained for at least 15 min, but by 30 min has returned to baseline phosphorylation. Dephosphorylation triggered by increasing molar levels of lacritin or N-24 mirrored the proliferation response, with optimal dephosphorylation at 1 or 10 nM. Nonmitogenic C-25 had no effect, whereas positive control PMA promoted some phosphorylation. It was suggested that lacritin-stimulated signaling toward Ca2+ mobilization follows a G
i or G
oPKC
PLC pathway. If so, PTX and Go 6976, but not U73122 should inhibit PKC
translocation. We retested each and observed that lacritin-dependent PKC
translocation and dephosphorylation were inhibited by 100 ng/ml PTX and 1 µM Go 6976, but also by 1 µM U73122 (Fig. 5 A). The weakly active analogue U73343 is often used as a negative control for U73122. Cells preincubated with 1 µM U73343 displayed full translocation (Fig. 5 A). This implies that an interdependent complex of PKC
and PLC may be intermediate between G
i or G
o activation and PKC
translocation, most logically in the PM. Yet as early as 1 min, PKC
was dephosphorylated, and therefore likely already translocated to the PNG. An alternative possibility is that a PLC isomer is stationed in the PNG and when active serves to capture translocating PKC
. PLC
2 is concentrated in the PNG in mast cells before and after antigen stimulation (Barker et al., 1998). Is PLC
2 or another PLC isomer located in the PNG of HSG cells and, if so, does it complex with PKC
? Cells were treated for 15 min with 10 nM lacritin, and then immunostained for PKC
and PLC
2 (Fig. 7).
PLC
2 displays a discrete perinuclear Golgi localization, which partially overlaps with PKC
(Fig. 7 A), suggesting that the two are in sufficient proximity to form a signaling complex. The existence of a PLC
2PKC
complex was, including some activated PLC
2, confirmed by anti-PLC
2 immunoprecipitation (Fig. 7, B and C).
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to the PNG is anchored by an interdependent complex with active PLC
2. Local generation of IP3 then may drive Ca2+ mobilization, followed by extracellular Ca2+ entry via a STIM1-regulated mechanism. Could other effectors be activated from this site? Recently, Hu and Exton (2004) linked perinuclear translocation of hypophosphorylated PKC
to activation of PLD1 via a proteinprotein interaction. PLD1 is most concentrated in the PNG and plays a key role in cell proliferation and secretion (for review see Foster and Xu, 2003), which are both functions of lacritin. Therefore, we hypothesized that lacritin-stimulated translocation of hypophosphorylated PKC
activates perinuclear Golgi PLD to, in turn, generate phosphatidic acid by hydrolysis of phosphatidylcholine. Endogenous PLD activity was measured. After lacritin addition, PLD displays a bell-shaped activation curve that was optimal at 10 nM lacritin (Fig. 7 D), thus, recapitulating the same dose dependency observed for mitogenesis, PKC
translocation, and PKC
dephosphorylation. To ask whether PKC
was upstream of PLD in lacritin signaling, cells were transfected with D7 siRNA. Depletion of PKC
completely abrogated PLD activation in response to lacritin, whereas PLD activation by serum was unaffected (Fig. 7 D). By confocal microscopy, PLD1 displays a broader perinuclear, and partially nuclear, distribution that partially colocalizes with PKC
in lacritin-stimulated cells (Fig. 7 A). Both are detected in anti-PLC
2 immunoprecipitates (Fig. 7 A). Therefore, it appears that transiently hypophosphorylated perinuclear Golgi PKC
complexes with PLC
2 to perform at least two roles. It triggers IP3 generation and Ca2+ mobilization, and it also activates PLD1.
Common upstream signals diverge
Downstream lacritin signaling toward cell cycle progression may follow at least two different pathways. First, the prominence of Ca2+ mobilization raises the possibility that cytoplasmic Ca2+ may stimulate the phosphatase calcineurin to activate cytoplasmic NFAT. Dephosphorylated NFAT translocates into the nucleus, where it binds DNA in an obligatory cooperative interaction with other transcription factors including Fos, Jun, GATA, and C/EBP. Second, because lacritin signaling activates PLD1 (Fig. 7 D) and active PLD1 generates phosphatidic acid, it is possible that lacritin signals to the mitogenic phosphatidic acidmTORp70 S6 kinase 1 pathway (Fang et al., 2003). Hypothetically, both pathways could be additively required for lacritin mitogenesis, as per parallel ERK and mTOR mitogenic signaling in response to FGF-9 (Wing et al., 2005). Alternatively, one may modulate the other, as per PI(3)K/Akt inhibition of calcineurin in muscle IGF-1 signaling (Rommel et al., 2001). The first question was whether calcineurin is activated. Dose response assays revealed that lacritin activated calcineurin in a biphasic manner (Fig. 8 A) within 1 min of addition and was substantially reduced at 30 min (unpublished data).
10 nM nonmitogenic C-25 had no effect, whereas N-24 was activating (Fig. 8 A). Activation was dependent on PKC
and STIM1, but not TRPC1, and was inhibited by cyclosporin A (CsA; Fig. 8 D). Because NFAT in lacrimal, salivary gland, or corneal epithelia has not previously been studied, we chose to examine NFATC1, which is the only NFAT isomer selectively up-regulated in the proliferative compartment of skin epithelium (Tumbar et al., 2004). We localized NFATC1 in cells 15 min after treatment (Fig. 5 A). 10 nM nonmitogenic C-25 had no effect; NFATC1 was diffusely distributed throughout the cytoplasm. In contrast, 10 nM lacritin or N-24 shifted NFATC1 to the nucleus. For verification and to follow the dose response and time course, cells were treated with lacritin, N-24, and C-25, and then purified nuclei blotted for NFATC1 (Fig. 8, B and C). 10 nM lacritin promoted NFAT translocation within 1 min of addition. Translocation was sustained for 30 min. As per PKC
, PLD, and mitogenic responses, 1 or 10 nM lacritin was optimal. In contrast, the Ca2+ dose response is sigmoidal (unpublished data). This suggests that a step associated with calcineurin is responsible for the sigmoidal-to-biphasic transition. To ask whether NFATC1 translocation was downstream of G
i or G
o, PKC
and PLC cells were treated with each of the inhibitors. Translocation was inhibited by PTX, U73122, and Go 6976, but not by the negative control U73343 (Fig. 5 A). Cells transfected with siRNA for PKC
or STIM1 (but not for TRPC1) were also incapable of lacritin-dependent NFATC1 translocation, as were cells in EGTA (Fig. 9 A).
This could be quantitated at the cellular level (Fig. S4, available at http://www.jcb.org/cgi/contents/full/jcb.200605140/DC1). As noted, Ca2+-activated calcineurin promotes NFATC1 translocation. CsA inhibits calcineurin (Fig. 8 D). Addition of 1 µM CsA to cells completely blocked lacritin-dependent NFATC1 translocation (Fig. 9 A). To ask whether this pathway is mitogenic, 1 µM CsA was included in the proliferation assay. Other cells were depleted of NFATC1 or STIM1 by siRNA. All three approaches blocked lacritin-stimulated mitogenesis (Fig. 9, C and D). PTX, U73122, and Go 6976, but not U73343, nifedipine (unpublished data), or depletion of TRPC1 (Fig. 9 C), also blocked mitogenesis. Thus, mitogenesis via lacritin-induced NFATC1 translocation appears to be downstream of G
i or G
oPKC
-PLCCa2+calcineurin. Moreover, upstream STIM1 appears to be essential as a regulator of Ca2+ influx necessary for NFATC1 translocation.
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Recently, Fang et al. (2003) demonstrated that phosphatidic acid generated by PLD1 activates the rapamycin-sensitive mTORpS6K1 pathway. mTORpS6K1 regulates mitogenicity and cell growth by promoting protein translation necessary for G1 cell cycle transition (Lane et al., 1993). Preincubation of cells with 100 nM of the mTOR inhibitor rapamycin (Fig. 9 D) or depletion of mTOR (Fig. 9 C) by siRNA was inhibitory. Both also suppressed COX2 expression (Fig. 9 B). Recently phosphoactivated RSK was found to bind and stabilize an activated NFATC4DNA complex, thereby contributing to transcriptional activation (Yang et al., 2005). Phosphorylation of RSK is rapamycin-insensitive and downstream of p42/p44. In Fig. 1 D, we showed that p42/p44 is not activated by lacritin. In keeping with this result, no evidence of RSK activation could be detected in lacritin-treated cells (unpublished data). Collectively, these data suggest that mitogenic G
i or G
oPKC
-PLCCa2+calcineurinNFATC1 and G
i or G
oPKC
-PLCCa2+calcineurinPLD1mTOR pathways are triggered by lacritin via STIM1 activation (Fig. 10).
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| Discussion |
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i or G
o, PKC
, PLC, and STIM1-regulated Ca2+ signaling (Fig. 10). The possibility that lacritin transactivates another growth factor pathway involving Rho-MAPK appears to be ruled out by lack of MAPK1/MAPK2 and pRSK activation.
Like the WntCa2+ pathway, lacritin signaling is PTX-sensitive and involves NFAT. NFATC1 regulates prostate cancer cell expression of prostate-specific membrane antigen (Lee et al., 2003), smooth muscle proliferation in response to PDGF, and lymphocytic cell cycle progression (Caetano et al., 2002). Linkage of mTOR signaling to cell proliferation has been documented in stem cells of the cerebral cortical proliferative zone (Sinor and Lillien, 2004), CD133(+) bone marrowderived endothelial precursors (Butzal et al., 2004), and, to a considerable extent, in embryonic stem cells of preimplantation embryos (Gangloff et al., 2004). Thus, each plays key roles in cell proliferation. Upstream PKC
signaling differs. Wnt5a promotes translocation of PKC
to the PM (Sheldahl et al., 1999), whereas lacritin signaling (Fig. 10) appears to stimulate the formation of a transient perinuclear Golgi complex of PKC
, PLD1, and PLC
2. This activates PLD1 of the mTOR pathway. Some PLC
2 activation and considerable IP3 generation were detected. Ca2+ mobilization may then be a direct spatiotemporal consequence of PKC
perinuclear Golgi translocation via local generation of IP3 thereby placing PKC
upstream of Ca2+. The exact mechanism is unclear. Although supported by PKC
knockdown, Go 6976 suppression can, for example, seem contradictory at first glance. Normally, Go 6976 opposes PKC
phosphorylation as a competitive inhibitor of ATP binding to PKC
's catalytic domain, whereas in lacritin-treated cells the opposite appears to be true. Mirroring our observation, the PKC
inhibitors RO and Bis-1 prevent dephosphorylation of PKC
and translocation to the PNG after PMA treatment of COS-7 cells (a system in which PKC
translocates to both PM and Golgi). Hu and Exton (2004) accordingly proposed that RO and Bis-1 may be acting as inhibitors of dephosphorylation or inducers of phosphorylation via another protein kinase or phosphatase, as is also likely the case for Go 6976. Interestingly, Go 6976 is also capable of suppressing the activity (Davies et al., 2000) of the mTOR effector and inhibitor S6K1 (Holz and Blenis, 2005), but this is likely inconsequential to lacritin signaling. PKC
is also upstream of calcineurin, and it is possible that biphasic PKC
-dependent regulation of the calcineurin inhibitor DSCR1 may drive calcineurin's biphasic response to lacritin. This would effectively transform the Ca2+ sigmoidal response into the observed biphasic mitogenic response.
Lacritin also promotes COX2 expression as a downstream consequence of NFATC1 activation. Both NFAT and mTOR inhibitors appear to suppress expression (Fig. 9 B). This raises the possibility that NFAT and mTOR mitogenic pathways might overlap before COX2 transcription in HSG cells. COX2 is also widely linked to epithelial proliferation and survival (Slice et al., 2005), and, when dysregulated, to epithelial tumors. Mice transgenic for COX2 display sebaceous gland hyperplasia when expression is driven by the keratin 5 promoter (Neufang et al., 2001) and enhanced mammary alveolar differentiation when controlled by the MMTV promoter (Liu et al., 2001). Both conditions are associated with enhanced secretory product (lipid or ß-casein, respectively), independent of an effect on cell number. Because lacritin is both mitogenic and prosecretory, it is possible that COX2 might mediate both functions. This possibility is in keeping with new lacritin studies suggesting that the prosecretory and mitogenic doseresponse curves might overlap in HCE cells (unpublished data). On the other hand, 10 nM lacritin did not promote amylase expression (unpublished data) by HSG cells that, for mitogenic studies, were routinely plated on plastic, or in Ca2+ signaling for only short periods on a thin basement membrane coating. Others have shown that HSG cells require several days of growth on a thicker basement membrane substratum to promote amylase production and cell polarization (Hoffman et al., 1996). Secretory vesicles (Royce et al., 1993) are detected together with the formation of acinar-like structures.
The discovery of STIM1 and, very recently, Orai1 as being, together, essential for SOC influx (Peinelt et al., 2006; Soboloff et al., 2006) opens new areas of investigation. STIM1 undergoes ER to PM or near-PM translocation regulated by its Ca2+-binding EF hand (Liou et al., 2005; Zhang et al., 2005). Orai1 is thought to form or help form the Ca2+ channel. TRPC1 is considered to be a SOC candidate (Ambudkar, 2006). TRPC1 is endogenously expressed in HSG cells, and when stably overexpressed enhances SOC influx, unlike overexpression of TRPC3 (Liu et al., 2000). Why would depletion of TRPC1 have no effect on lacritin-induced Ca2+ influx, NFATC1 translocation, or mitogenesis; or on SOC in the thapsigargin-treated cells of Roos et al. (2005) and Liou et al. (2005)? Possibly another TRPC compensates (i.e., TRPC3 at low levels is store operated; Vazquez et al., 2003), although SOC was not affected by coordinated targeting of all three Drosophila melanogaster trp genes (Roos et al., 2005). We ruled out the possibility that siRNA depletion was not complete (Fig. S3 A). TRPC1 may turnover relatively slowly and, thus, protein levels might take longer to lower, yet recent 80 nM siRNA depletion of TRPC1 protein in IEC cells was almost and entirely complete by 24 and 48 h, respectively (Marasa et al., 2006). Because we have not examined the effect of siSTIM1 or siTRPCI on thapsigargin-stimulated Ca2+ entry or NFAT activation, it is possible that the mechanism observed is relatively specific for lacritin. FBS stimulation was unaffected by both depletions. Early studies suggested that STIM1 overexpression affects cell phenotype and adhesion without diminishing viability (Oritani and Kincade, 1996) or, contrastingly, is apoptotic (Manji et al., 2000). We observed no apparent affect of STIM1 depletion on adhesion, and have found lacritin to be antiapoptotic (unpublished data). Future studies seeking to move lacritin from HSG cells to mouse models and primary cultures of dispersed glands (Luo et al., 2001) provide an opportunity to explore these interrelated observations. How does lacritin selectively target some, but not other, epithelia? New data suggests a novel mechanism in which extracellular HPSE unblocks a lacritin-binding site on the core protein of SDC1 (Ma et al., 2006). This transforms a widely expressed cell surface proteoglycan into a selective coreceptor that hypothetically presents lacritin to a lower affinity signaling receptor. siRNA depletion of HPSE abrogates lacritin-dependent, but not EGF-dependent, mitogenesis. In pull-down assays, SDC1 core protein binding maps to lacritin's mitogenic domain. Neither syndecans-2 nor -4 bind lacritin, in keeping with poor ectodomain conservation. Immunostaining for SDC1 in human lacrimal gland reveals a basolateral distribution that appears to reach to the apical surface (unpublished data). HPSE cleavage of heparan sulfate is associated with follicular stem cell migration in mouse skin (Zcharia et al., 2005) and when added exogenously inhibits stroma-induced quiescence of bone marrow stem cells (Gordon et al., 1997). Whether lacritin can act on corneal/limbal stem cells as it flows onto the eye is not known. Lacritin's HPSE-dependent binding of SDC1 ectodomain contrasts with heparan sulfatebinding growth factors such as FGF's, Wnts, and hedgehogs, which do not appear to discriminate among syndecans or other heparan sulfate proteoglycans. By limiting availability of HPSE, lacritin can hypothetically target fewer differentiated epithelia as it flows downstream.
Like lacritin, several other mitogens are secreted apically, including TGFß1 (Murphy et al., 2004), neurotrophin (Yeaman et al., 1997), and VEGF (Hornung et al., 1998), as well as EGFs, TGFs, HGF, and FGFs, and have all been detected in lacrimal and salivary ductal secretions. Although apical membranes are not commonly considered to be receptor-rich, CD-44 (mammary gland, salivary gland, and pancreas) nucleates MMP7 and proHB-EGF in an apical complex with ErbB4 are necessary for epithelial cell survival (for review see Wang and Laurie, 2004). The M3 muscarinic receptor is apically concentrated in exocrine pancreas (Luo et al., 2005), and polarized MDCK cells sort nerve growth factor receptor to the apical surface (Yeaman et al., 1997). Such outward mitogenic flow from secretory cells through ducts of nongermative epithelia could potentially regulate secretory physiology and cellular renewal.
| Materials and methods |
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modification). Other cells were grown as per American Type Culture Collection guidelines. All media were purchased from Invitrogen.
Lacritin constructs and purification
A 363-bp region of DNA coding for intact mature lacritin without signal peptide was PCR-amplified from lacritin cDNA and subcloned into pTYB1 (New England Biolabs, Inc.) as the lacritinintein fusion plasmid "pLAC." Respective additions of SapI to forward primer 5'-GGTGGTCATATGGAAGATGCC-3' and of NdeI to reverse primer 5'-GGTGGTTGCTCTTCCGCATGCCCATGG-3' facilitated subcloning. C-terminal deletions of 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, and 59 aa were generated using forward primer 5' -GGTGGTTGCTCTTCCAACTATTATTACTATGAAGATGCCTCCTCT-3' and the reverse primers 5'-GGTGGTGAATTCTCATAGACTGAATT-3', 5'-GGTGGTGAATTCTCACAGTAATTTTTG-3', 5'-GGTGGTGAATTCTCAAAATTCACTTCC-3', 5'-GGTGGTGAATTCTCATTCGATGAATTC-3', 5'-GGTGGTGAATTCTCATTCACCTGGCA-3', and 5'-GGTGGTGAATTCTCACTGCCTGCTTG-3', respectively. Amplicons were directionally subcloned into pTYB11 using SapI and EcoRI as "pLAC/C-5 pLAC/C-59." Forward and reverse primers for the N-24terminal deletion were 5'-GGTGGTTGCTCTTCCAACATCTCAGGTCCAGCAGAAC-3' and 5'-GGTGGTTGCTCTTCCGCATGCCCATGG-3', respectively, creating the plasmid "pLAC/N-24." All constructs were verified by sequencing.
Bacterial protein expression was performed using standard procedures. Cleared cell lysates were loaded on chitin columns (IMPACT-CN System; New England Biolabs, Inc.) and equilibrated with 50 mM Tris, 0.5 M NaCl, pH 8.0, followed by 20-column volumes of washing, elution with 50 mM DTT for 16 h at RT in the same buffer, extensive dialysis against PBS (4°C), and protein quantitation. The size of lacritin from pLAC is 18 kD (12.3 kD predicted) versus 23 kD from pET28b (18.4 kD predicted with His tag plus signal peptide; previously indicated in error as greater in Sanghi et al. [2001]). Mass spectrometry sequencing, and immunoblotting confirmed protein identity. Circular dichroism analysis was performed in a spectropolarimeter running numerical analysis software (AVIV 215 and Igor Pro, respectively; both Wyatt Technology, Corp.).
Phosphotyrosine blotting and mitogenesis
Cells in serum-containing media were seeded overnight in 24-well plates at a density of 0.5 x 105 cells/mm2 corresponding to 2030% confluency after cell attachment (see optimization experiments in Fig. S1). Cells were then incubated in serum-free (SF) media without supplements for 24 h (phosphotyrosine), or washed with SF media without supplements three times (mitogenesis) and then incubated with lacritin (11,000 nM). In positive controls, cells were incubated with 1.6 nM EGF or 10% FBS. In negative controls, cells were incubated with BSA or without additive in SF media without supplements. Duration of incubation with lacritin, or with negative or positive controls, was for the indicated times (phosphotyrosine) or for 30 h (mitogenesis). In phosphotyrosine assays, cells were extracted in 1% NP-40 containing sodium vanadate, 5 mg/ml DTT, protease inhibitors, 50 mM Hepes, 100 mM NaCl, and 2 mM EDTA; the cells were then separated by 2 mg/ml 10% SDS PAGE, transferred, and blotted. Antiphosphotyrosine antibody (P-Tyr-100), antiphoshpo-PKC
ßII, anti-PKC
, anti-p44/p42 MAPK, anti-PLC
2, and anti-GSK were purchased from Cell Signaling Technology. After washing, bound antibodies were detected with peroxidase-labeled secondary antibody and ECL. For mitogenesis, 2 µCi/ml [3H]TdR was added for an additional 6 h. Labeling was stopped with ice-cold PBS and followed by addition of cold and RT TCA (10%) for 10 min each. After washing, radioactivity was quantitated in a scintillation counter. For PKC
depletion, a pool of four PKC
-specific siRNAs or individual siRNAs (100 nM; Millipore) were transfected into HSG cells via Lipofectamine 2000 in Opti-MEMI Reduced Serum medium (Invitrogen) in the absence of serum and antibiotics, according to the manufacturer's instructions. PKC
depletion was confirmed by Western blotting. Other cells were transfected with pools of NFATC1-, TRPC1-, mTOR-, or STIM1-specific siRNAs. In negative controls, cells were transfected with a pool of four lamin-specific siRNAs (all 100 nM; Dharmacon Inc.). 72 h after transfection, mitogenesis was assessed by coaddition of 10 nM lacritin and 2 mCi/ml [3H]TdR (GE Healthcare) for 24 h. For rapamycin and CsA inhibition, cells that had been incubated in SF media overnight were treated with 1 µM CsA (Sigma-Aldrich) for 5 h, 100 nM rapamycin (Calbiochem) for 15 min, or both; they were then stimulated with 10 nM lacritin in the same medium with 2 mCi/ml [3H]TdR for an additional 24 h. For RT-PCR analyses, total RNAs from cells were reverse transcribed (RETROscript; Ambion) and subjected to PCR using Super Taq DNA polymerase (Ambion) for 10 min at 95°C, followed by 35 cycles for 45 s at 95°C, 45 s at 55°C, and 90 s at 72°C. Primers used were: (COX2 forward) 5'-AATTTAACACCCTCTATCACTGGC-3' and 5'-AATTGAGGCAGTGTTGATGATTTGAA-3' (COX2 reverse); (IL-6 forward) 5'-GACAGCCACTCACCTCTTCA-3', and (IL-6 reverse) 5'-TCTGGCTTGTTCCTCACTACTCTCA-3'; and (GAPDH forward) 5'-GTCGGAGTCAACGGATTTGGT-3' and (GAPDH reverse) 5'-TCATGAGCCCTTCCACGATGCC-3'. PLD activity was measured as previously described by Santy and Casanova (2001). For immunoprecipitation experiments, cells were lacritin treated for 15 min, lysed with protease inhibitors, spun, precleared using protein ASepharose, and then subjected to anti-PLC
2 affinity precipitation. Precipitates were separated by 10% SDS-PAGE gels, transferred, and blotted using standard assays.
Ca2+ translocation and colocalization analyses
Cells were seeded at 1.4 or 0.7 x 104 cells/mm2 on Matrigel-coated coverslips (100 µg/ml; BD Biosciences) to respectively achieve 7080% confluency after overnight or 48-h growth in 6-well plates containing phenol redfree DME with 10% FCS. Cells were washed repeatedly in Ca2+/phenol redfree HBSS with 20 mM Hepes (Invitrogen), and then incubated for 10 min in the same solution containing 1 µM U73122, 1 µM U73343 (BIOMOL Research Labs), 1 µM Go 6976, or 10 µM nifedipine (Calbiochem); or for control in vehicle (DMSO/Pluronic diluted to same level in inhibitor solution) alone. Other cells were incubated (0.7 x 104 HSG cells/mm2 overnight plating) with 100 ng/ml PTX (Calbiochem) in phenol redfree DME with 10% FCS or with vehicle alone). Cells were washed with Ca2+/phenol redfree HBSS and 20 mM Hepes, and then incubated for 1 h at RT with the same solution containing Fluo-4 AM at 4 µM (FluoroPure grade [Invitrogen] dissolved in DMSO plus 20% Pluronic F-127). Cells were washed three times for 60 min at RT with Ca2+/phenol redfree HBSS with 5 mM Ca2+ or EGTA. Temperature was stabilized for 5 min at 37°C, and then coverslips were placed on the stage of an epifluorescent microscope (TE300; Nikon; located in the W.M. Keck Center for Cellular Imaging at the University of Virginia). TE300 was coupled to a Radiance 2100 confocal/multiphoton system using a Plan Fluor 60x, NA 1.4, oil IR objective lens (both from Bio-Rad Laboratories). Cells were subjected to a 488-nm argon laser light source with emission at 528 nm. Baseline monitoring was followed by addition of lacritin or the deletion fragments in phenol redfree HBSS. Images were acquired at 23-s intervals using LaserSharp2000 software (Bio-Rad Laboratories) and stored on disc for later analysis. Cells were depleted of STIM1 or TRPC1 by siRNA and stimulated with lacritin. In other assays, cells were treated with 10 µM BHQ for 15 min in Ca2+/phenol redfree HBSS and stimulated with 10 nM lacritin. Later, 1.5 mM Ca2+ was added. For translocation assays, HSG cells on Matrigel-coated coverslips with or without inhibitors were treated with 10 nM lacritin or positive control, 200 nM PMA, or vehicle for 15 min, washed with PBS, formaldehyde-fixed, blocked with PBS containing 1% BSA and 10% goat serum, and incubated with anti-PKC
(C-20) or anti-NFATC1 (mAb 7A6; both from Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Inc.), followed by secondary Cy3-, FITC-, or Alexa Fluor 488labeled antibodies and confocal microscopic visualization (Radiance 2100; Bio-Rad Laboratories). In colocalization studies, we used anti-PKC
(H-7; Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Inc.), anti-PLC
2 (Cell Signaling Technology), and purified anti-PLD1 (from serum 41) provided by D. Shields (Albert Einstein College of Medicine of Yeshiva University, New York, NY). For NFATC1 blots, nuclei from lacritin-treated cells without or with inhibitors were purified, separated by SDS-PAGE, blotted, and detected with anti-NFATC1. As loading control, anti-Ran antibody was provided by I. Macara (University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA). For measurement of IP3 generation, HSG cells were incubated SF in 2-[3H]myo-inositol for 24 h, washed, and treated with 10 nM lacritin or C-25 or 100 µM carbachol. Processing was as previously described by Webb et al. (1995). Measurement of calcineurin activity used the Calcineurin Cellular Activity Assay kit (Calbiochem). 8090%-confluent HSG cells in 6-well plates were treated in triplicate and collected for assay of calcineurin activity.
Statistical analyses
All experiments were performed at least three times. Data are presented as the mean ± the SEM.
Online supplemental material
Fig. S1 (A and B) display lacritin mitogenic time course and confluency analyses, respectively. Fig. S2 documents lacritin-dependent generation of IP3. Fig. S3 analyzes lacritin-dependent Ca2+ influx in cells depleted of STIM1 or TRPC1. Fig. S4 quantitates the proportion of lacritin-treated cells in which NFAT is nuclear. Cells were treated with 10 nM lacritin for 15 min. Nuclear localization was confirmed by DAPI. Normal, U73122-inhibited, and STIM1- and TRPC1-depleted cells are compared. Online supplemental material is available at http://www.jcb.org/cgi/content/full/jcb.200605140/DC1.
| Acknowledgments |
|---|
S.L. Beck was supported by National Institutes of Health (NIH) grant T32 GM08715. This work was supported by NIH grant RO1 EY13143 (to G.W. Laurie).
We have no competing financial interests.
Submitted: 23 May 2006
Accepted: 18 July 2006
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