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Mol Cell Biol, July 1998, p. 3936-3946, Vol. 18, No. 7
Department of Cell Biology, Washington
University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri
63110,1 and
Cold Spring Harbor
Laboratory, Cold Spring Harbor, New York 117242
Received 18 February 1998/Returned for modification 8 April
1998/Accepted 20 April 1998
0270-7306/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Rac Regulates Integrin-Mediated Spreading and
Increased Adhesion of T Lymphocytes

SUMMARY
INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
REFERENCES
SUMMARY
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Leukocyte adhesion to the extracellular matrix (ECM) is tightly controlled and is vital for the immune response. Circulating lymphocytes leave the bloodstream and adhere to ECM components at sites of inflammation and lymphoid tissues. Mechanisms for regulating T-lymphocyte-ECM adhesion include (i) an alteration in the affinity of cell surface integrin receptors for their extracellular ligands and (ii) an alteration of events following postreceptor occupancy (e.g., cell spreading). Whereas H-Ras and R-Ras were previously shown to affect T-cell adhesion by altering the affinity state of the integrin receptors, no signaling molecule has been identified for the second mechanism. In this study, we demonstrated that expression of an activated mutant of Rac triggered dramatic spreading of T cells and their increased adhesion on immobilized fibronectin in an integrin-dependent manner. This effect was not mimicked by expression of activated mutant forms of Rho, Cdc42, H-Ras, or ARF6, indicating the unique role of Rac in this event. The Rac-induced spreading was accompanied by specific cytoskeletal rearrangements. Also, a clustering of integrins at sites of cell adhesion and at the peripheral edges of spread cells was observed. We demonstrate that expression of RacV12 did not alter the level of expression of cell surface integrins or the affinity state of the integrin receptors. Moreover, our results indicate that Rac plays a role in the regulation of T-cell adhesion by a mechanism involving cell spreading, rather than by altering the level of expression or the affinity of the integrin receptors. Furthermore, we show that the Rac-mediated signaling pathway leading to spreading of T lymphocytes did not require activation of c-Jun kinase, serum response factor, or pp70S6 kinase but appeared to involve a phospholipid kinase.
INTRODUCTION
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T lymphocytes primarily circulate in
the vascular system until they receive signals which trigger their
enhanced adhesion to extracellular matrix (ECM) components, such as
fibronectin, collagen, and laminin, or to vascular endothelium. The
adherence of T cells to ECM components is a prerequisite for their
migration into sites of inflammation (7, 10, 45, 47). Key
regulators of these adhesion events are members of heterodimeric cell
adhesion receptors, known as integrins (24). Integrin
receptors are composed of
and
subunits, and each subunit
consists of a large extracellular domain which is involved in ligand
recognition, a transmembrane region, and a short cytoplasmic domain.
The major integrin receptors for fibronectin on peripheral blood
mononuclear cells,
4
1 and
5
1, have been shown to be
involved in the migration of lymphoid cells into sites of inflammation
(17, 20, 26). Two physiological mechanisms have been
described for controlling the adhesion of T lymphocytes to the ECM
(16, 45). One mechanism involves the modulation of the
affinity of cell surface integrin receptors for ECM proteins. Divalent
cations such as Mg2+, Mn2+, and
Ca2+ and certain anti-integrin monoclonal antibodies (MAbs)
have been shown to induce an increase in integrin affinity
(47). The second mechanism involves an alteration of events
following postreceptor occupancy without affecting receptor affinity,
such as cell spreading and/or integrin clustering. For example,
treatment with phorbol esters stimulated the
5
1-dependent
adhesion of T cells onto fibronectin without alteration of the
fibronectin receptor binding affinity (16). In the latter
case, increased cell adhesion was dependent on the actin cytoskeleton
and cell spreading. One advantage of cell spreading is that it provides
a more streamlined shape to T cells and thereby reduces the shear
imposed on them by the vascular flow in the venules. Little is known
about the signaling components which are directly involved in this
latter mechanism of T-lymphocyte adhesion.
Members of the Rho subfamily of the Ras-related GTP-binding proteins play a crucial role in the regulation of cytoskeletal organization and associated focal complex formation in response to extracellular growth factors. The Rho subfamily consists of several members, including Rho, Rac, and Cdc42, which cycle between the active GTP-bound state and the inactive GDP-bound state (reviewed in reference 49). In fibroblasts, it has been demonstrated that activation of Rho by extracellular growth factors such as lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) and bombesin triggers the formation of actin stress fibers and focal adhesion complexes (39), whereas activation of Rac (for example, by platelet-derived growth factor, epidermal growth factor, or insulin) elicits actin polymerization at the plasma membrane to produce lamellipodia and membrane ruffles (40). Activation of Cdc42 triggered the formation of filopodial protrusions and microspikes at the cell periphery (31, 36). Both Rac and Cdc42 have also been shown to induce the assembly of multimolecular focal complexes at the plasma membrane of fibroblasts (36). Studies by Hotchin and Hall (22) demonstrated the importance of the Rho family GTPases in regulating integrin clustering and subsequent interaction of integrins with focal adhesion and signaling molecules. They showed that attachment of fibroblast cells to the ECM is not sufficient to induce clustering of integrins and focal complex formation but requires the activity of the Rho GTPases, in particular Rho and Rac. Over the past few years, there has been increasing evidence that the Rho GTPases play crucial roles in other cellular events such as membrane trafficking, transcriptional regulation, cell growth control, and development (19, 38, 49).
Here, we have examined the role of the Rho family GTPases in T-lymphocyte adhesion. We demonstrate that an activated mutant form of Rac, but not of Rho or Cdc42, induces spreading and an increase in adhesion of T cells onto immobilized fibronectin in an integrin-dependent manner. We further show that expression of RacV12 did not alter the level of expression of integrins or their affinity state, indicating that Rac contributes to T-cell adhesion through events following postreceptor occupancy. Finally, we demonstrate that activation of c-Jun kinase (JNK), serum response factor (SRF), or pp70S6 kinase is not essential for Rac-induced T-cell spreading, but that the latter appears to involve a phospholipid kinase.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
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Antibodies and reagents.
Spliced fibronectin fragments,
p100FN and p33FN, and antibodies against
4 and
5 integrins were
kindly provided by J. Schorey and E. Brown (Washington University, St.
Louis, Mo.). MAb 15/7, which interacts selectively with
1 integrins
in the high-affinity state, was a generous gift from Ted Yednock
(Athena Neurosciences); the activating MAb 8A2 was kindly provided by
Nick Kovach (University of Washington, Seattle). Fluorescein
isothiocyanate (FITC)-conjugated anti-
5 antibodies were obtained
from Immunotech (Westbrook, Maine), phycoerythrin (PE)-conjugated
anti-
4 and anti-
1 antibodies were from Pharmingen (San Diego,
Calif.), and FITC-conjugated anti-CD69 MAb and PerCP-conjugated MAbs
against CD20 were from Becton Dickinson (Bedford, Mass.). Unlabeled
fibronectin was purchased from Becton Dickinson, and
125I-labeled fibronectin was from ICN (Irvine, Calif.).
FITC-labeled secondary antibodies used for immunofluorescence studies
were obtained from Cappel (Durham, N.C.), and rhodamine phalloidin was
from Molecular Probes (Eugene, Oreg.). Antibodies against T7 epitope
and H-Ras were purchased from Novagen and Oncogene, respectively.
Antibodies against ARF6 were raised against glutathione S-transferase-ARF6 (15), and antibodies against RhoA were
purchased from Santa Cruz Biotechnology. Wortmannin, LY294002, and
rapamycin were purchased from Calbiochem (La Jolla, Calif.), and
nocodazole, cytochalasin D, deoxyglucose, and sodium azide were
obtained from Sigma Chemical Co. (St. Louis, Mo.).
Cells, plasmids, and DNA transfection.
Jurkat T-cell lines
JJK CD4+ (generous gift from J. Skowronski, Cold Spring
Harbor Laboratory [CSHL]) and E6-1 (American Type Culture Collection)
and Molt-4 cells (CSHL) were maintained in RPMI 1640 medium
supplemented with 2 mM glutamine, 5 mM antibiotics, 20 mM HEPES (pH
7.4), and 10% fetal bovine serum. Plasmids encoding various cDNAs were
transfected into T cells by using an electroporation protocol as
previously described (25). Briefly, aliquots of 107 cells from exponentially growing cultures were
electroporated at 200 V and 960 mF with a total of 25 µg of DNA
containing various amounts of appropriate plasmids as indicated and
pBluescript as carrier DNA. To evaluate the transfection efficiencies
and the number of RacV12,N33-expressing cells that are spread, we
transfected 107 cells with an expression plasmid encoding
the green fluorescent protein (pCG-GFP) (gift from J. Skowronski and G. Pavlakis [National Institutes of Health]). The transfection
efficiencies usually vary between 25 and 40% of the total viable
cells. For flow cytometry analysis, 2 µg expression plasmid pCMV-CD20
was cotransfected for use as a marker of transfected cells. The amount
of pCMV-CD20 was kept relatively low to ensure that the CD20 reporter
was coexpressed with the RacV12,N33 protein in the majority of
CD20-positive cells. The mammalian expression plasmids, pCGT-RacV12,
pCGT-RacV12,L37, pCGT-RacV12,H40, pCGT-RacV12,N33, pcDNA3-ARF6(Q67L),
used in these studies have been previously described (14, 28,
55). pDCR-HRasV12 and pDCR-HRasN17 were a generous gift of C. Nicolette (CSHL). The expression plasmids pCGT-Cdc42V12, pCGT-Cdc42N17,
and pCGT-RhoV14 were obtained by PCR amplification of mutant cDNAs
(plasmids kindly provided by Alan Hall) and cloned into
XbaI/BamHI restriction sites of pCGT.
pcDNA3-ARF6T27N was obtained by PCR amplification and cloned into the
EcoRI site of pcDNA. pcEXV-RhoN19, pCMV-CD20, and the
constitutively active phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3 kinase)
catalytic p110 subunit (p110
CAAX) were a generous gift from M. Symons (Onyx Pharmaceuticals), J. Skowronski, and J. Downward (Imperial
Cancer Research Fund, London, England), respectively.
Cell spreading and adhesion. Jurkat cells transfected with indicated plasmids were seeded onto fibronectin- or poly-L-lysine-coated dishes or coverslips. Cells were viewed with a light microscope, and phase-contrast images of the cells were generated with a Canon camera. For quantitation of cell adhesion, 24 h posttransfection, unattached cells were rinsed off and the total numbers of adherent cells and spread cells were determined. Flattened cells with protrusions along the edges that exhibited a fibroblast-like morphology were counted as spread cells.
Flow cytometry analysis.
To measure the expression level of
integrins, approximately 24 h following electroporation, aliquots
of 1.5 × 106 Jurkat T cells cotransfected with either
10 µg of RacV12,N33 or empty vector and 2 µg of pCMV-CD20 were
washed once with phosphate-buffered saline containing 1% fetal bovine
serum and 0.1% sodium azide (PBS-FS). Cells were resuspended and
incubated in 100-µl aliquots of a cocktail containing 4 µl of
PerCP-conjugated MAb against CD20 together with 15 µl of
R-PE-conjugated anti-
4 MAb, 20 µl of FITC-conjugated anti-CD69
MAb, and a cocktail containing 4 µl of PerCP-conjugated anti-CD20
together with 20 µl of R-PE-conjugated anti-
1 MAb and 20 µl of
anti-
5 MAb for 1 h. The antibodies were titrated to obtain the
optimal concentrations. Similarly for the integrin affinity
experiments, 1.5 × 106 Jurkat T cells were
cotransfected with either 10 µg of RacV12,N33 or empty vector and 2 µg of pCMV-CD20, washed as described above, and resuspended in
100-µl aliquots of PBS-FS containing 4 µl of PerCP-conjugated
anti-CD20 and MAb 15/7 (0.5 µg/ml) for 1 h. The activating
antibody 8A2 was included as positive control. Cells were then washed
three times with PBS-FS and resuspended in 200 µl of PBS-FS. In the
case of anti-
5, CD69, and 15/7 MAbs, cells were subsequently treated
with FITC-labeled secondary antibody (including goat anti-mouse
immunoglobulin G [IgG] as a control) for 30 min and washed again
three times. Expression of the integrin receptors on the cell surface
was analyzed on an Epics-Elite flow cytometer.
Soluble fibronectin binding assay. Cells transfected with 10 µg of either empty vector or RacV12,N33 or cells treated with antibody 8A2 (20 ng/ml) were serum starved, seeded onto fibronectin-coated dishes, and incubated at 37°C overnight. Since we usually obtained an average transfection efficiency of between 25 and 40%, we used 40% 8A2-treated Jurkat cells mixed with 60% untreated cells. Adherent cells were detached from the dish by brief treatment with trypsin-EDTA; 2 × 106 cells (for each experimental condition) were washed and resuspended in serum-free medium and then incubated in RPMI medium containing 0.02% bovine serum albumin and radiolabeled 125I fibronectin, or in the same medium but with increasing amounts of unlabeled fibronectin, at room temperature for 1 h. Bound radioactivity was measured as previously described (44).
Immunofluorescent staining. Jurkat cells transfected with the indicated plasmids were seeded onto fibronectin- or poly-L-lysine-coated coverslips. At 16 to 20 h posttransfection, cells were rinsed and the adherent cells were fixed, permeabilized, and labeled with primary and secondary antibodies as previously described (15). Actin filament organization was visualized by staining the fixed cells with rhodamine phalloidin for 2 h after permeabilization. Coverslips were washed, mounted, and viewed as previously described (15).
Western immunoblotting. After electroporation, Jurkat cells transfected with indicated plasmids were resuspended in 10 ml of RPMI medium; 3 ml was plated on fibronectin-coated dishes, and the remaining 7 ml was used to prepare lysates. Cell lysates were subjected to sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) and transferred to nitrocellulose membranes, and proteins were visualized with an enhanced chemiluminescence detection system (Amersham) by using goat anti-mouse or goat anti-rabbit peroxidase-conjugated secondary antibodies.
RESULTS
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Constitutively active Rac, RacV12, triggers T-lymphocyte spreading and an increase in adhesion. To examine the involvement of the members of the Rho subfamily of small GTPases in T-lymphocyte adhesion, a Jurkat T-cell line, JJK CD4+, was transfected with expression plasmids encoding T7-tagged constitutively activated mutant forms of Rac, Rho, and Cdc42, i.e., RacV12, RhoV14, and Cdc42V12, respectively, and their ability to adhere to immobilized matrix proteins was assessed. Expression of these mutants was confirmed by immunoblotting (data not shown). We observed that when plated on fibronectin-coated dishes, RacV12 (but not Cdc42V12 or RhoV14)-transfected cells exhibited a dramatic spread phenotype and numerous surface protrusions (Fig. 1A). This response was detected as early as 4 h after transfection and was restricted to cells expressing RacV12, as confirmed by immunofluorescence staining (Fig. 1B). No spread phenotype was observed when RacV12-transfected cells were plated on poly-L-lysine-coated dishes (Fig. 1B). Interestingly, a Rac mutant, RacV12,N33, that was previously isolated in a two-hybrid screen designed to identify effector domain mutants which display differential binding to Rac effector proteins (55) induced cell spreading onto fibronectin more potently than RacV12 (Fig. 1A). Hence, we resorted to the use of this mutant in order to investigate the mechanism of Rac induced T-cell spreading and adhesion. We found that 4 to 6 h posttransfection, approximately 10 to 20% of the viable cells showed the spread phenotype; the number of spread cells increased gradually with time and reached a maximum (ca. 30 to 40%) at 16 to 20 h posttransfection. At this point, all RacV12,N33-expressing cells exhibited a spread phenotype. To determine whether RacV12,N33-induced cell spreading was associated with an increase in adhesion, RacV12,N33-transfected cells were seeded onto fibronectin-coated dishes; 16 h posttransfection, nonadherent cells were rinsed off and the number of adherent cells was determined. Notably, all spread cells remained adhered to the dish, and as shown in Table 1, the total number of adherent cells was consistently 25 to 35% higher in the dish containing the RacV12,N33-transfected cells than in the dish transfected with vector alone. This dramatic spreading and increase in adhesion onto immobilized fibronectin was also observed when RacV12,N33 was expressed in other lymphocyte cell lines such as Molt-4, H9, and the Jurkat line E6-1 (data not shown). These results suggest that Rac contributes to T-cell adhesion on immobilized fibronectin most likely through a mechanism involving cell spreading. In addition to fibronectin, spreading of RacV12,N33-expressing cells, although to a lesser extent, was also observed on collagen but not on laminin (data not shown).
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Rac-induced spreading and increased adhesion on immobilized
fibronectin are mediated by
4
1 and
5
1 integrins.
Since
adhesion of leukocytes to the ECM is primarily mediated by integrin-ECM
interactions and since
4
1 and
5
1 dimers are the principal
fibronectin receptors expressed on peripheral blood mononuclear cells
(20), we sought to examine whether RacV12-induced spreading
and enhanced adhesion on immobilized fibronectin were mediated by
integrin receptors. Therefore, we tested the ability of antibodies
directed against
4,
5,
1, and
2 integrins to block
RacV12,N33-elicited spreading and enhanced adhesion by pretreating transfected cells with anti-integrin antibody prior to seeding them on
fibronectin-coated coverslips. As shown in Fig.
2A, antibodies against
4 and
1
completely abolished cell spreading, whereas antibodies against
5
(Fig. 2A) and
2 (not shown) had no apparent effect. Also,
pretreatment of RacV12,N33-transfected cells with antibodies against
4 and
1 abolished the increased adhesion, as determined by
counting the total adherent cells (data not shown). To confirm that the
RacV12,N33-induced effect was mediated by
4
1, we tested the
ability of RacV12,N33-expressing cells to spread and promote adhesion
on spliced fibronectin fragments p33FN, an alternative spliced V region
that specifically recognizes
4
1 (18, 53), and p100FN,
the central domain of fibronectin containing the RGDS motif that
interacts specifically with
5
1 (23, 42). Surprisingly,
RacV12,N33-expressing cells spread onto both fibronectin fragments.
Antibodies against
4 blocked spreading on p33FN, whereas those
against
5 did not (Fig. 2C). Conversely, antibodies against
5
inhibited cell spreading on p100FN, whereas antibodies against
4 had
no effect (Fig. 2B). Similar results were obtained when we evaluated
T-cell adhesion on the above-described spliced fibronectin fragments
(data not shown). These results indicate that RacV12,N33-induced spreading and enhanced adhesion on immobilized fibronectin are mediated
predominantly by
4
1 integrins; however, the
5
1 integrins can also contribute to this adhesion mechanism.
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Rac-induced cell spreading is accompanied with cytoskeletal rearrangements and integrin clustering. The observation that RacV12,N33-expressing cells exhibited cytoskeletal rearrangements (Fig. 3A) prompted us to investigate whether Rac's effect on cell spreading is dependent on actin polymerization. To this end, we tested the effect of cytochalasin D, an inhibitor of actin polymerization, on RacV12,N33-induced cell spreading. As shown in Fig. 3A, pretreatment of RacV12,N33-expressing cells with cytochalasin D abolished cell spreading. Since the increase in adhesion appeared to be associated with an increase in cell spreading (Table 1), we examined whether pretreatment of RacV12,N33-expressing cells with cytochalasin D also interfered with the increased adhesion. As shown in Table 1, cytochalasin D abrogated the increase in adhesion, indicating that Rac-induced cell spreading and enhanced adhesion were dependent on the actin cytoskeleton. Evidence supporting the importance of Rac-elicited cytoskeletal rearrangements in mediating cell spreading came from our studies using mutant forms of the GTPases Rho, ARF6, Cdc42 and H-Ras, all of which have been shown to induce cytoskeletal rearrangements (6, 14, 31, 36, 39). For these studies, Jurkat cells were cotransfected with mutant forms of each of these GTPases and RacV12,N33 and then seeded on fibronectin-coated tissue culture dishes. Coexpression of dominant negative mutants of the GTPases with RacV12,N33 did not interfere with cell spreading. Expression of these mutants was confirmed by Western blot analysis (data not shown). Interestingly, coexpression of the constitutively activated mutants RhoV14, ARF6(Q67L), and to a lesser extent Cdc42V12 inhibited RacV12,N33-induced spreading (Fig. 3B). Notably, coexpression of the mutants with RacV12,N33 resulted in characteristic cytoskeletal rearrangements distinct from the RacV12,N33 spread phenotype or when RacV12 was coexpressed with RacV12,N33 (Fig. 3C). The effect on the cytoskeleton on expression of RhoV14, ARF6(Q67L), or Cdc42V12 alone is shown in Fig. 3D. The minor changes in cytoskeletal organization elicited upon coexpression with H-RasV12 did not alter the RacV12,N33-induced spread phenotype (Fig. 3B and C). Western blot analysis showed that the level of RacV12,N33 expression was not altered on coexpression of the different GTPases mentioned above (Fig. 3E). Although activated mutant forms of Rho, ARF6, and Cdc42 triggered cytoskeletal rearrangements, none of them were able to induce T-cell spreading on fibronectin. Thus, these data suggest that cytoskeletal rearrangements which accompany T-lymphocyte spreading on immobilized fibronectin are triggered exclusively by Rac and not by the other GTPases investigated. The Rac-induced spreading was energy dependent since this phenotype was not observed by treatment of the cells with 2-deoxyglucose-azide, an energy-depleting system. Also, pretreatment of RacV12,N33-expressing cells with nocodazole had no effect, indicating that cell spreading was independent of microtubule assembly (see Fig. 7C).
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4 and
5
integrins, RacV12,N33-expressing cells were stained with antibodies
against
4 and
5. As shown in Fig.
4, clustering of
4 and
5 integrin
receptors was indeed observed at sites of cell attachment in the
RacV12,N33-expressing cells, as opposed to control transfected cells.
The observation that integrin staining appears more prominent in the
spread, flattened RacV12,N33-transfected cells than in the spherical
control cells does not reflect a higher level of integrins present on
RacV12,N33-transfected cells (as shown below) but is due to the
presence of clustered integrins in these cells, which results in
brighter peripheral staining compared to the more dispersed staining of
integrins in control cells. Along with integrins, focal adhesion
proteins such as vinculin and paxillin were also found at sites of
attachment (data not shown). These findings suggest that clustering of
integrin receptors may contribute to Rac's ability to mediate T-cell
adhesion. This distribution of integrin receptors was not observed in
RacV12,N33-expressing cells that were treated with cytochalasin D (data
not shown).
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Expression of Rac does not alter expression levels or the affinity
state of the integrin receptors.
Although the above results
suggest that Rac's effect on T-cell adhesion is dependent on cell
spreading, we could not exclude the possibility that the Rac-promoted
T-cell adhesion onto immobilized fibronectin is due in part to an
increase in the level of expression of integrin receptors at the cell
surface or to an increase in affinity of the receptors for fibronectin.
To examine whether expression of Rac altered the surface integrin
levels, Jurkat cells were cotransfected with RacV12,N33 or empty vector
and an expression plasmid encoding the cell surface marker CD20. After 24 h, the cells were harvested and analyzed by flow cytometry for
expression of CD20 (to identify transfected cells) and of
4,
5,
1, and CD69, using antibodies against these proteins (Fig.
5). The results revealed that the surface
expression of
4,
5, and
1 integrins in RacV12,N33-transfected
cells was similar to that of control cells transfected with vector
alone. It was previously shown that the activated mutant form of Rac,
RacV12, triggered CD69 expression (25). Consistent with
previous data, we observed that RacV12,N33 induced CD69 antigen
expression, indicating that the level of RacV12,N33 expression, using
our transfection conditions, is sufficient to trigger CD69 expression.
To determine whether Rac could modulate integrin affinity, we tested by
fluorescence-activated cell sorting analysis the ability of
RacV12,N33-transfected cells to bind to MAb 15/7, which interacts
selectively with
1 integrins in the high-affinity state
(57). Jurkat cells cotransfected with RacV12,N33 or empty
vector and the CD20 expression plasmid were stained for CD20 expression
and assessed for 15/7 binding. As a positive control, we pretreated
vector transfected cells with MAb 8A2, previously shown to induce the
high-affinity state of
1 integrins (30). As shown in Fig.
6A, which represents binding of
CD20-positive cells to MAb 15/7, cells treated with MAb 8A2 were
recognized by 15/7, whereas cells expressing RacV12,N33 were not. To
assess whether the integrin receptors were locked in an inactive
conformation in RacV12,N33-transfected cells, we tested for the ability
of RacV12,N33-transfected cells pretreated with MAb 8A2 to bind to
15/7. We observed that 8A2 was still able to induce a high-affinity
state of
1 integrins on RacV12,N33-transfected cells (Fig. 6A). In
addition, we tested for the ability of cells transfected with
RacV12,N33 or with vector alone, or cells treated with 8A2, to bind to
125I-labeled soluble fibronectin. As shown in Fig. 6B and
C, cells pretreated with 8A2 bound soluble fibronectin, whereas
RacV12,N33-transfected cells did not. Moreover, the same basal-level
binding profile was observed for RacV12,N33-transfected cells as for
empty vector-transfected cells (Fig. 6B). Taken together, the above
results suggest that Rac exerts its effect on T-cell adhesion through
events following receptor occupancy, such as cell spreading and
possibly integrin clustering, rather than alterations of integrin
affinity or cell surface expression.
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Rac-mediated spreading and adhesion appear to involve a
phospholipid kinase.
Rac has been shown to regulate
multiple biological activities including actin polymerization,
activation of the JNK cascade, cell proliferation, and invasion
(49). The isolation and characterization of Rac mutants such
as RacV12,L37, RacV12,H40, and RacV12,N33 have aided in delineating the
signaling pathways conveying the cellular responses induced by
Rac (28, 32, 55). The RacV12,L37 mutant has been shown to
induce PAK and JNK kinase activation but not membrane ruffling
and cell transformation. The RacV12,H40 mutant, on the other hand, does
not stimulate PAK and JNK activity but retains the ability to induce
membrane ruffling and transformation (28). The RacV12,N33
mutant used for the studies described above is capable of inducing
cytoskeletal rearrangements and activates PAK and JNK kinases but is
impaired in SRF activation (55). Consistent with the data
obtained for COS and fibroblast cells, we observed that in Jurkat
cells, RacV12,L37 and RacV12,N33 mutants but not RacV12,H40 were able
to induce JNK activity (data not shown). To gain additional insight
into the signaling pathways that regulate Rac-mediated cell
spreading, we tested the Rac mutants RacV12,L37 and RacV12,H40 (Fig.
7A). RacV12,L37-expressing cells did not spread on immobilized fibronectin, whereas the expression of
RacV12,H40 induced cell spreading onto immobilized fibronectin, to an
extent similar to RacV12. Expression of the Rac mutants was confirmed
by immunoblotting (Fig. 7B). These results indicate that the ability of
Rac to induce T-cell spreading is controlled by pathways leading to
cytoskeletal rearrangements and is independent of PAK, JNK, and SRF
activation. The Rac-induced spreading was also independent of
pp70S6 kinase since rapamycin, a specific inhibitor of this
enzyme, had no effect on cell spreading (Fig. 7C). pp70S6
kinase was previously shown to interact with and be activated by
Rac and Cdc42 (11). Interestingly, the drug wortmannin
dramatically reduced Rac-mediated spreading at a concentration of 50 nM. Similarly, pretreatment of RacV12,N33-expressing cells with
100 µM LY294002 inhibited their ability to spread on immobilized
fibronectin (Fig. 7C). Although lower concentrations of LY294002 (25 or
50 µM) or wortmannin (25 nM) have previously been shown to interfere
with most of the cellular responses mediated by PI3-kinase, these
concentrations did not inhibit RacV12,N33-induced spreading. To further
explore a potential role of PI3-kinase in Rac-induced T-cell spreading, we tested whether a constitutively active, membrane-targeted PI3-kinase (p110
-CAAX) was able to mimic RacV12,N33-induced cell spreading. We
could not observe any cell spreading on expression of constitutively active PI3-kinase at concentrations between 5 to 25 µg (data not shown). These data suggest that PI3-kinase is most likely not the
kinase responsible for mediating Rac's effect on T-cell spreading. Potential candidates are the more recently identified novel lipid kinases which appear to be sensitive only to higher concentrations of
wortmannin and LY294002.
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DISCUSSION
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The importance of T-cell adhesion is reflected by several inflammatory disorders resulting from abnormalities in this process. Successful adhesion appears to require a combination of sufficient high-affinity receptors and postreceptor events involving cell spreading and/or integrin clustering (7, 16, 45, 46). However, the signaling pathways involved in T-cell adhesion remain elusive. Recently, a few signaling molecules, such as calreticulin, R-Ras, and H-Ras, have been demonstrated to be important for the modulation of integrin affinity for their ligands (12, 23, 58). R-Ras was reported to promote ligand binding affinity of integrin receptors, whereas H-Ras was shown to decrease the ligand binding affinity (23, 58). Our study demonstrates that Rac promotes integrin-mediated T-lymphocyte-ECM adhesion by triggering cell spreading rather than by altering the receptor affinity, and to our knowledge it is the first signaling molecule identified in this process. Interestingly, Rac has recently been reported to contribute to E-cadherin-mediated adhesion in MDCK cells and keratinocytes (8, 21, 48). A role for Rac in motility and invasion of fibroblasts and epithelial cells has also been reported (4, 29, 43). We provide two lines of evidence that demonstrate the importance of actin polymerization and cytoskeletal rearrangements in Rac-induced T-cell spreading. First, treatment of cells with cytochalasin D inhibited Rac-elicited spreading and increased adhesion on immobilized fibronectin. Second, coexpression of activated mutant forms of ARF6, Rho, and Cdc42 abolished Rac-induced T-cell spreading, most likely through their effect on the cytoskeleton, since all three GTPases caused a dramatic change of the cytoskeletal organization of RacV12,N33-expressing cells. The effects of Cdc42, Rac, and Rho on the cytoskeleton in macrophages and monocytes have recently been described (3). These cell types, like T cells, do not possess stress fibers as seen in fibroblasts. Cdc42 and Rac were shown to induce filopodium formation and the formation of lamellipodia and membrane ruffles, respectively, whereas Rho elicited actin redistribution and the cells assumed a rounded contracted phenotype (3). Similarly, we observed the formation of filopodium-like structures and a more contracted phenotype on expression of activated mutant forms of Cdc42 and Rho, respectively, in Jurkat cells. Notably, activated mutant forms of neither ARF6, Cdc42, nor Rho induced T-lymphocyte spreading on immobilized fibronectin, indicating that the cytoskeletal rearrangement required for T-cell spreading was restricted to the Rac GTPase. Consistent with our observation that coexpression of activated Rho abolished Rac-induced spreading and adhesion was the report by Aepfelbacher et al., in which Rho was demonstrated to be a negative regulator of human monocyte spreading by maintaining cell tension and cortical actin organization (1). More recently Rac has been shown to promote neurite outgrowth of N1E-115 neuroblastoma cells (52). The observations that an activated mutant form of Rac prevented LPA-induced neurite retraction and that a dominant negative mutant form of Rho mimicked the phenotype of RacV12 suggest that Rac may act by antagonizing Rho function. However, we did not observe T-cell spreading on expression of a dominant negative mutant of Rho, indicating that the Rac does not exert its effect on T-cell spreading by antagonizing Rho function.
Clustering of integrin molecules is thought to enhance integrin-ligand
interaction through multivalent interactions with ligand without an
alteration in the affinity of the integrin for the ligand (9, 45,
51). Our data show that expression of constitutively active Rac
triggers the clustering of
4
1 and
5
1 integrins. It was
previously reported that clustering of LFA-1 facilitates the binding of
interleukin-2-phytohemagglutinin-activated peripheral blood
lymphocytes (PBLs) to ICAM-1, and that the actin cytoskeleton maintains
LFA-1 in a clustered (high-avidity) state on activated PBLs and in a
homogeneously distributed state in resting PBLs (33). In
contrast, it was reported that
1-mediated adhesion was inhibited
when actin polymerization was inhibited (33). It is possible
therefore that clustering of
4
1 and
5
1 integrins in
RacV12,N33-expressing cells is dependent on Rac-elicited cytoskeletal rearrangements. Our results also demonstrate that Rac does not induce
an alteration in the affinity state of the integrin receptors. Interestingly, although H-Ras was recently shown to suppress the transition of
1 integrins to the high-affinity state
(23), coexpression of activated H-Ras with RacV12 did not
abolish the ability of RacV12-expressing cells to spread and adhere on
immobilized fibronectin. These findings support the fact that
RacV12-mediated T-cell adhesion is not dependent on alterations of the
affinity state of the integrins.
It has been well documented that phorbol esters (phorbol myristate
acetate [PMA]) induce T-cell adhesion without any measurable change
in the affinity for soluble fibronectin but by an increase in cell
spreading (16, 54). However, PMA-induced spreading of Jurkat
cells is not mediated by Rac since the dominant negative mutant form of
Rac does not interfere with PMA-induced spreading on immobilized
fibronectin (unpublished observations). Natural agonists, such as the
chemokine MIP-1
and the cell surface receptor CD3, have been
demonstrated to promote VLA-4-mediated adhesion to VCAM without
altering the integrin affinity state (27). Hence, of
particular interest in the future will be the identification of
extracellular agonists which trigger Rac-induced cell spreading.
To obtain more insight in the downstream signaling pathways mediating
Rac-induced cell spreading, we made use of the previously characterized
Rac effector mutants (28, 55). Our results indicate that
activation of JNK or SRF is not sufficient or required for Rac-induced spreading since (i) the RacV12,H40 mutant, defective in JNK activation, was still able to induce spreading, whereas the
RacV12,L37 mutant, which is still able to induce JNK activation, failed
to induce spreading and (ii) the RacV12,N33 mutant, which is the most
potent for the induction of cell spreading, was significantly impaired
in SRF activation. Furthermore, the lack of inhibition of T-cell
spreading by the drug rapamycin (inhibitor of pp70S6
kinase) excluded S6 kinase as a potential mediator of the
Rac-elicited phenotype. We observed that wortmannin and LY294002 (at
concentrations of 50 nM and 100 µM, respectively) did interfere with
the ability of RacV12,N33 to induce T-cell spreading on immobilized
fibronectin, suggesting the involvement of a lipid kinase downstream of
Rac. The lipid kinase activities of most of the PI3-kinase enzymes (including p110
-
, -
, and -
) were found to exhibit
comparable sensitivities to inhibition by wortmannin and LY294002 (50%
inhibitory concentrations of 5 nM and 0.5 µM, respectively) (37,
50). LY294002, at a concentration of 25 µM, has been
demonstrated to block most cellular responses mediated by PI3-kinase,
including platelet-derived growth factor-induced membrane ruffling
(41). Our observations that inhibition of RacV12,N33-induced
spreading can be obtained by using this drug at a concentration of 100 µM but not lower and that a constitutively active form of PI3-kinase cannot mimic RacV12-induced cell spreading suggest that lipid kinases
other than PI3-kinase may be responsible for mediating Rac's effect on
T-cell spreading. In light of this, several PI4-kinases (referred to as
type III PI4 kinases) have recently been identified and shown to be
sensitive to wortmannin and LY294002, although at concentrations higher
than those required to inhibit PI3-kinase in vitro (5, 13, 34, 35,
56). Further experiments will be required to define the lipid
kinase mediating Rac-induced T-cell spreading.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
|
|
|---|
We thank P. D. Stahl for generous support; E. J. Brown, J. Schorey, and H. Shenoi for reagents, helpful discussions, and critical reading of the manuscript; A. Iafrate and J. Skowronski for cells, protocols, and advice for T-cell electroporation; R. Packer and M. Coronesi for technical assistance; and N. Novach and T. A. Yednock for providing antibodies.
This work was supported by grants of the National Cancer Institute (1R01CA 72982-OIAI) and an award from the Sidney Kimmel Foundation for Cancer Research and The V Foundation to L.V.A. and by grants from the Leukemia Research Foundation and the American Cancer Society (ACS-IRG 36-39) to C.D.-S. C.D.-S. is a Leukemia Society of America Special Fellow.
FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 1 Bungtown Road, Cold Spring Harbor, NY 11724. Phone: (516) 367-6829. Fax: (516) 367-8815. E-mail: vanaelst{at}cshl.org.
Present address: Department of Biological Sciences, University of
Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN 46556.
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