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Molecular and Cellular Biology, September 1998, p. 5291-5307, Vol. 18, No. 9
Department of Laboratory Medicine and
Pathology, Center for Immunology, and Cancer Center, University of
Minnesota Medical School, Minneapolis, Minnesota
554551;
Department of
Immunopathology, Parke-Davis Pharmaceutical Research, Division of
Warner-Lambert Company, Ann Arbor, Michigan
481052; and
The Dana Farber Cancer
Institute and Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts
021153
Received 8 April 1998/Accepted 10 June 1998
The CD2 molecule is one of several lymphocyte receptors that
rapidly initiates signaling events regulating integrin-mediated cell
adhesion. CD2 stimulation of resting human T cells results within
minutes in an increase in T lymphocytes continuously migrate
throughout the body, mediating immune responses to foreign antigens.
The capacity for normal T cells to function, develop, and migrate
depends upon adhesive contacts with other cells as well as with
extracellular matrix (ECM) components (76). These adhesive
contacts are regulated by and initiate a complex series of elegantly
controlled molecular signaling events. Members of the integrin
superfamily of adhesion molecules are involved in the cell-cell and
cell-ECM interactions that are essential for T-lymphocyte function and
migration. The integrins are a family of A number of different activation conditions are capable of increasing
integrin-mediated adhesion of T cells. These activation conditions
include pharmacological activators of intracellular signaling pathways,
such as the phorbol ester phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA)
(24, 74). Direct activation of integrins can also be
achieved with the use of unique integrin-specific antibodies or
alterations in the divalent cations present in the extracellular
environment (3, 28, 51, 71). These modes of increasing
integrin adhesiveness are presumed to bypass requirements for
intracellular signaling that are normally needed to activate integrins.
More significantly, activation of a number of different cell surface
receptors on T cells can initiate signaling events that result in
activation of One of these "integrin regulators" is the CD2 molecule, a 45- to
55-kDa immunoglobulin superfamily member that was first identified as
an important signaling molecule on human T cells (7, 20, 56). Studies of human T cells demonstrated that unique pairs of
CD2-specific monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) can induce T-cell proliferation in the absence of engagement of the CD3-T-cell
receptor (CD3-TCR) complex (56). CD2 stimulation can
also induce increased adhesion of human peripheral T cells and
CD2+ human T cell lines to ICAM-1, FN, and laminin
(57, 74, 84). CD2 itself is also an adhesion molecule and,
as with integrins, the adhesive activity of CD2 can be regulated by
T-cell activation (31, 33). Biochemical studies have
demonstrated that CD2 stimulation can initiate a multitude of
intracellular signaling events, including (i) tyrosine
phosphorylation (64); (ii) Ca2+ flux
(90); (iii) increased intracellular cyclic AMP (cAMP) (32); and (iv) the activation of phospholipase C- The structural basis for CD2-mediated signaling lies within the
116-amino-acid CD2 cytoplasmic domain, which is characterized by the
presence of at least four well conserved proline-rich regions and the
striking absence of tyrosine residues. Several conserved regions of the
cytoplasmic domain of human CD2 have been found to be important for
CD2-mediated stimulation of interleukin-2 (IL-2) production in mouse
T-cell hybridomas (7, 13, 14, 30, 33). Deletion of either of
two repeated P-P-P-G-H-R motifs, beginning at amino acid 260 and amino
acid 274 (Fig. 1), reduces CD2-mediated
IL-2 production (7, 14), while deletion of both motifs
results in a complete loss of CD2-mediated IL-2 production (7). The integrity of the P-P-P-G-H-R motifs is also
essential for increases in intracellular cAMP levels (7).
Moreover, the CD2 cytoplasmic domain contains two proline-rich regions
that are similar to SH3 binding motifs with the general consensus
sequence (h)-P-p-X-P, where "(h)" represents a hydrophobic
residue and "p" represents a likely proline residue
(17). These two proline-rich peptide segments have been
shown to interact with the SH3 domain of the Src-like protein tyrosine
kinase p56lck in vitro (6). Mutation
of the terminal asparagine residue in the CD2 cytoplasmic domain has
also been shown to abrogate the ability of the antigen-specific CD3-TCR
to increase CD2-mediated adhesion to its counter-receptor, LFA-3
(7, 33).
0270-7306/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Identification of a Proline-Rich Sequence in the CD2 Cytoplasmic
Domain Critical for Regulation of Integrin-Mediated Adhesion and
Activation of Phosphoinositide 3-Kinase

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ABSTRACT
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials & Methods
Results
Discussion
References
1-integrin-mediated adhesion to
fibronectin. We have utilized the HL60 cell line to map critical residues within the CD2 cytoplasmic domain involved in CD2 regulation of integrin function. A panel of CD2 cytoplasmic domain mutants was
constructed and analyzed for their ability to upregulate
integrin-mediated adhesion to fibronectin. Mutations in the CD2
cytoplasmic domain implicated in CD2-mediated interleukin-2 production
or CD2 avidity do not affect CD2 regulation of integrin activity. A
proline-rich sequence, K-G-P-P-L-P (amino acids 299 to 305), is
essential for CD2-mediated regulation of
1 integrin activity.
CD2-induced increases in
1 integrin activity could be blocked by two
phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI 3-K) inhibitors or by overexpression of a
dominant negative form of the p85 subunit of PI 3-K. In addition, CD2
cytoplasmic domain mutations that abrogate CD2-induced increases in
integrin-mediated adhesion also ablate CD2-induced increases in PI 3-K
enzymatic activity. Surprisingly, CD2 cytoplasmic domain mutations that inhibit CD2 regulation of adhesion do not affect the constitutive association of the p85 subunit of PI 3-K association with CD2. Mutation
of the proline residues in the K-G-P-P-L-P motif to alanines prevented
CD2-mediated activation of integrin function and PI 3-K activity but
not mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase activity. Furthermore, the
MEK inhibitor PD 098059 blocked CD2-mediated activation of MAP kinase
but had no effect on CD2-induced adhesion. These studies identify a
proline-rich sequence in CD2 critical for PI 3-K-dependent regulation
of
1 integrin adhesion by CD2. In addition, these studies suggest
that CD2-mediated activation of MAP kinase is not involved in CD2
regulation of integrin adhesion.
![]()
INTRODUCTION
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials & Methods
Results
Discussion
References

heterodimeric cell
surface receptors with a vast tissue distribution (67).
There are at least 20 different integrin heterodimers, with each
heterodimer containing 1 of 8
chains and 1 of 14
chains.
Members of the
1 integrin subfamily bind to components of the ECM,
such as fibronectin (FN), as well as cell surface counter-receptors,
such as VCAM-1 (34). The functional activity of
integrins on circulating leukocytes is dynamically regulated by
signaling events (21, 58). For example, resting human T
cells express the
4
1 and
5
1 integrins but adhere only
weakly to FN. Activation of resting T cells results in a rapid,
transient increase in
1-integrin-mediated adhesion to FN that does
not involve an alteration in the level of
1 integrin cell
surface expression (74). Activation-dependent regulation of
integrin activity is critical to effective T-cell recognition of
antigen during T-cell activation, as well as efficient and specific movement of lymphocytes across vascular endothelium
into extravascular tissue sites (40, 77).
1 and
2 integrin-mediated adhesion (11, 24,
73, 74, 80, 81, 84).
1
(61), protein kinase C (5), phosphoinositide
3-kinase (PI 3-K) (72), the tyrosine kinases
p56lck, p59fyn, and Itk (19, 46,
55), mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase (59), and
p21ras (29).

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FIG. 1.
Schematic diagram of the CD2 cytoplasmic mutations used
in this study. The position of each cytoplasmic truncation and internal
deletion is denoted by a lack of sequence. The position of amino acid
substitutions is indicated by bold letters. The TK amino acids at
positions 211 and 212 were altered to KL (underlined) by the
introduction of a HindIII restriction site at the
junction between the transmembrane domain and the cytoplasmic
sequence.
The signaling pathways that initiate integrin activation upon CD2
stimulation remain incompletely defined. The extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) MAP kinases may be involved in
CD2-mediated regulation of integrin function, since: (i) CD2
stimulation results in rapid activation of MAP kinases (59);
(ii) expression of constitutively active H-ras has recently
been shown to inhibit integrin activation (38); and (iii)
modulation of PI 3-K activity has been shown to affect MAP kinase
activity induced by a number of stimuli (25, 37, 44, 63, 66, 83,
88). Our prior studies have suggested a role for PI 3-K in the
CD2-mediated regulation of integrin adhesion, since CD2 stimulation
results in activation of PI 3-K, and CD2-mediated increases in
1
integrin activity in CD2+ HL60 transfectants and normal
human T cells can be blocked by the PI 3-K inhibitor wortmannin
(72).
The well-described form of PI 3-K consists of a heterodimer composed of
two subunits, an 85-kDa regulatory subunit (p85) and a 110-kDa
catalytic subunit (p110). At least three isoforms of p85 and four
isoforms of p110 have been cloned (35, 36, 42, 60, 62, 79,
85). Functionally, PI 3-K phosphorylates the D-3 position of the
inositol ring of PI, PI-4-phosphate, and PI-4,5-bisphosphate. The lipid
products of PI 3-K have recently been shown to act as second messengers
that bind to and regulate the activity of several intracellular
signaling mediators, including the serine-threonine kinase Akt/PKB
(22, 27, 49) and the intracellular protein GRP1
(48). GRP1 is structurally related to cytohesin-1, a protein that has been shown to specifically bind to and regulate the functional activity of the
2 integrin LFA-1 (50). A large number of
functional responses have been demonstrated to be dependent on the
activation of PI 3-K, including growth factor-dependent mitogenesis,
membrane ruffling, cytoskeletal rearrangements, glucose uptake,
prevention of apoptosis, cytokine production, and vesicular trafficking
(for reviews, see references 10, 43, 52, and
89). Studies by our laboratory and others on
agonist-induced activation of integrin activity (11, 12, 24, 53,
72-74, 81, 84, 91), coupled with the recent finding that PI 3-K
lipid products can bind to cytohesin-1 (48), also suggest a
critical role for PI 3-K signaling in the regulation of
integrin-mediated adhesion (70).
This study focuses on the structural requirements for CD2-mediated
regulation of
1-integrin-mediated adhesion. Site-directed mutagenesis and gene transfer was used to demonstrate a critical role
for one of the proline-rich regions of the CD2 cytoplasmic tail in
CD2-mediated increases in
1 integrin adhesiveness. This region of
the CD2 cytoplasmic domain is distinct from the repeated P-P-P-G-H-R motifs and the cytoplasmic residue involved in
CD3-TCR-mediated activation of CD2 adhesiveness. Cytoplasmic domain
mutations that abrogated CD2-induced increases in integrin adhesiveness
also blocked CD2-associated PI 3-K activity but did not affect
association of CD2 with the p85 regulatory subunit. In addition,
expression of a dominant negative isoform of the p85 regulatory subunit
inhibited the ability of CD2 to upregulate adhesion to FN. In contrast, the region essential for CD2-mediated integrin upregulation is not
required for CD2 stimulation of MAP kinase activity, implying that
CD2-mediated activation of MAP kinase is not an essential component in
the CD2 regulation of
1 integrin activity.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Cell lines and culture reagents. The cell line HL60 was maintained in RPMI 1640 medium supplemented with 10% fetal calf serum (FCS; Atlanta Biologicals, Norcross, Ga.), L-glutamine, and penicillin-streptomycin. Transfectants were maintained under 1-mg/ml G418 selection following electroporation. G418 was purchased from GIBCO-BRL (Gaithersburg, Md.). The HL60(CD2)-11.5 transfectant expressing wild-type human CD2 was generated as previously described (72).
Antibodies and reagents.
The following CD2-specific MAbs
were used either as culture supernatant or as dilutions of ascites
fluid: 95-5-49 (R. Gress, National Institutes of Health [NIH],
Bethesda, Md.), 35.1 (American Type Culture Collection [ATCC],
Rockville, Md.), TS2/18 (ATCC), and 9-1 (S. Y. Yang, Memorial
Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, N.Y.). The
1-integrin-specific MAb TS2/16 and the glycophorin-specific MAb 10F7
were obtained from the ATCC. The
4-integrin-specific MAb NIH49d-1
was provided by S. Shaw (NIH). The
5-integrin-specific MAb BIIG2 was
provided by C. Damsky (University of California, San Francisco,
Calif.). Rabbit polyclonal antibodies specific for the p85 subunit of
PI 3-K were purchased from Upstate Biotechnology (Lake Placid, N.Y.).
Rabbit polyclonal antibodies specific for the MAP kinase isoform ERK-2
(C-14) were purchased from Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Inc., (Santa Cruz,
Calif.) Protein A-Sepharose was obtained from Zymed Laboratories, Inc.
(San Francisco, Calif.). FN was purchased from the New York Blood
Center (New York, N.Y.). PI-4-phosphate was obtained from Sigma (St.
Louis, Mo.). PI was from Avanti Polar Lipids, Inc. (Alabaster, Ala.).
Stock solutions of PMA (LC Laboratories, Woburn, Mass.), wortmannin
(Sigma), LY294,002 (Alexis Corp., San Diego, Calif.),
bisindolylmaleimide (Calbiochem, La Jolla, Calif.) and PD 098059 (1, 23) (kindly provided by S. J. Decker, Parke-Davis
Pharmaceutical Research, Ann Arbor, Mich.) were dissolved in dimethyl
sulfoxide (DMSO) and stored at
70°C.
DNA constructs.
The following constructs were generated in
the lab of B. Bierer (7, 30): pFNeo (vector), pFNeo-16CD2,
pFNeo-CD2-N327A, pFNeo-CD2-
260-265, pFNeo-CD2-
274-279, and
pFNeo-
260 plus
274.
A mutagenic primer, 5'-GAACTCGAGG TCTGGCGAGG GCCGCGCCTT TCTGCTG-3'; and S1 selection primer,
5'-CTTTTGCAAA CCGCGGCACG CTGCCG-3'. All constructs were
sequenced to confirm the presence of the expected mutation.
The pEGFP-C2 vector was purchased from Clontech. The GFP-
p85
construct was described previously (11). The GFP-WTp85
construct was made by subcloning the wild-type p85 cDNA (obtained from
M. Kasuga and W. Ogawa, Kobe University, Kobe, Japan) into the
KpnI/BamHI sites of the pEGFP-C2 expression
vector. The resulting vector, pEGFP-WTp85, codes for a fusion
protein consisting of GFP fused to the amino-terminal end of
wild-type p85.
Stable transfection of HL60 cells.
All of the aforementioned
CD2 constructs were transfected into the myelomonocytic HL60 cell line
by electroporation as previously described (72). For each
CD2 construct, at least three different bulk-positive transfectants
were selected by using 1-mg/ml G418 resistance and subcloned by
limiting dilution. G418-resistant subclones were analyzed for CD2 cell
surface expression by flow cytometry with the CD2-specific MAb 95-5-49. In addition, each mutant CD2 protein was analyzed and quantified by
Western blot analysis with the CD2-specific MAb TS2/18. Reverse
transcription-PCR (RT-PCR) analysis, followed by DNA sequencing,
determined that the CD2 transcripts contain the expected sequence.
Finally, the level of
4
1 and
5
1 integrins expressed on
the cell surface of CD2 transfectants was assessed by flow cytometry by
using the
1-specific MAb TS2/16, the
4-specific MAb NIH49d-1, and
the
5-specific MAb BIIG2 to guarantee that each transfectant had a
comparable level of integrin expression.
Flow cytometry. Single-color flow cytometry was performed as previously described (72, 91) with saturating amounts of primary unlabeled MAb and detection with fluorescein isothiocyanate-conjugated goat anti-mouse immunoglobulin G (IgG) or goat anti-rat IgG (Southern Biotechnology, Birmingham, Ala.). Samples were analyzed with a FACScan (Becton Dickinson, Mountain View, Calif.) and by using Cellquest software.
Adhesion assays.
The ability of each CD2 mutation to
regulate
1 integrin activity was examined by measuring adhesion to
FN as previously described (72). At least three independent
subclones isolated from two separate bulk populations for each CD2
construct were analyzed. For PMA stimulation, cells were added to wells
containing a final PMA concentration of 10 ng/ml. For CD2 stimulation,
cells were added to wells containing a 1:10 dilution of the
CD2-specific MAb 95-5-49 and a 1:6,000 dilution of the CD2-specific
MAb 9-1. For direct stimulation of
1 integrins, cells were added to
wells containing a 1:10 dilution of the activating
1-specific MAb
TS2/16. After cells were allowed to settle for 60 min at 4°C, the
plates were rapidly warmed to 37°C for 10 min, the nonadherent cells were washed off, and the percentage of bound cells was determined by
lysing the well contents with detergent and counting gamma emissions.
All data are expressed as the mean percentage of cells binding from
three replicate wells.
CD2-associated PI 3-K activity assays. For each HL60 transfectant, 20 × 106 cells per condition were serum starved overnight in RPMI 1640-0.1% FCS and then washed once in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS). Cells were either left unstimulated or stimulated with an activating combination of CD2-specific MAbs for various times at 37°C. Cells were lysed in a modified radioimmunoprecipitation assay (RIPA) lysis buffer (1% sodium deoxycholate; 1% Triton X-100; 158 mM NaCl; 5 mM EDTA; 10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.2) supplemented with 10 µg of aprotinin per ml, 10 µg of leupeptin per ml, 1 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride (PMSF), and 1 mM Na3VO4 [sodium orthovanadate]). The level of protein in each cell lysate was normalized as determined by BCA protein assay (Pierce, Rockford, Ill.). CD2 and any CD2-associated molecules were immunoprecipitated with the CD2-specific MAb 35.1. Samples were then tested for PI 3-K activity in vitro by assessing the phosphorylation of PI as previously described (72, 91). Radioactive lipid product was visualized by autoradiography and quantified with a PhosphorImager (Molecular Dynamics, Sunnyvale, Calif.). The lipid standard was visualized by exposing the thin-layer chromatography plate to iodine vapor.
Glutathione S-transferase (GST) fusion protein
production.
The GST-p85
(SH3) fusion protein construct was a
generous gift of M. Waterfield (Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research,
London, England). The GST fusion construct was propagated in the BL21DE Escherichia coli cell line (Pharmacia Biotech, Inc.,
Piscataway, N.J.). The GST-p85
(SH3) fusion protein was generated,
purified, and coupled to glutathione-Sepharose 4B (Pharmacia) as
previously described (41).
GST binding reactions. Cells (25 × 106 cells per sample) were spun down and washed once in PBS-1% bovine calf serum (BCS; HyClone, Logan, Utah). Cells were either left unstimulated or were stimulated with an activating combination of CD2-specific MAbs 95-5-49 and 9-1 for 10 min; cells were then lysed in PI 3-K lysis buffer (50 mM HEPES, pH 7.5; 1% Triton X-100; 150 mM NaCl; 10% glycerol; 1.6 mM MgCl2; 1 mM EGTA) supplemented with 10 µg of aprotinin per ml, 10 µg of leupeptin per ml, 1 mM PMSF, and 1 mM Na3VO4. Cell lysates were incubated on ice for 15 min and then centrifuged at 4°C for 20 min at 11,000 × g.
Ten micrograms of GST-p85
(SH3) fusion protein immobilized on
glutathione-Sepharose 4B was incubated with each cell lysate for at
least 2 h at 4°C. The beads were then washed once in ice-cold supplemented PI 3-K lysis buffer; bound proteins were then eluted by
boiling in 4× sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) sample buffer under reducing conditions, separated on an SDS-10% polyacrylamide gel, and
transferred to a polyvinylidene difluoride (PVDF) membrane. The blot
was probed with the CD2-specific MAb TS2/18. The blot was then stripped
and reprobed with a polyclonal antibody for GST (Upstate Biotechnology)
by using GST fusion protein as an internal loading control. Detection
was done by enhanced chemiluminescence (Pierce).
Immunoprecipitations. Cells (1.25 × 106 cells per sample) were washed once in PBS-1% BCS (HyClone) and then stimulated for 10 min at 37°C with an activating combination of CD2-specific MAbs. Samples were then lysed in PI 3-K lysis buffer as described above. One microgram of polyclonal p85 antibody (Upstate Biotechnology) per immunoprecipitation was immobilized on goat anti-rabbit IgG-coupled Sepharose (ICN-Cappel, West Chester, Pa.). The anti-p85 antibody-coupled beads were washed twice in ice-cold supplemented PI 3-K lysis buffer, and then the antibody-coupled beads were incubated with 1 µg of normal rabbit IgG (Santa Cruz) per immunoprecipitation for at least 2 h at 4°C to mask any available unbound sites on the goat anti-rabbit IgG-coupled Sepharose beads. The anti-p85 antibody-coupled beads were washed twice in ice-cold supplemented PI 3-K lysis buffer to remove excess normal rabbit IgG and were then incubated with each cell lysate for at least 2 h at 4°C. The beads were then washed twice in ice-cold supplemented PI 3-K lysis buffer; bound proteins were eluted by boiling in 4× SDS sample buffer under reducing conditions, separated on a 10% SDS polyacrylamide gel, and transferred to a PVDF membrane. The blot was probed with the CD2-specific MAb TS2/18, stripped, and then reprobed with a polyclonal antibody for p85 to ensure equal loading of each immunoprecipitate. Detection was by enhanced chemiluminescence.
Transient transfection of HL60(CD2/WT) cells.
Transfection
of HL60(CD2/WT) cells was done as described previously (11)
with the following modifications. Logarithmically growing HL60(CD2/WT)
cells were washed once with Opti-MEM (GIBCO-BRL) and resuspended at
40 × 106 cells/ml in 0.8 ml of Opti-MEM
containing 120 µg of pEGFP-C2 (empty vector), pEGFP-
p85, or
pEGFP-WTp85 for 10 min at room temperature. Cells were
electroporated with a BTX Gene Pulser set to low-voltage (LV) mode, at
230 V with one 15-ms pulse. After electroporation, cells were
incubated for 30 min at room temperature before resuspension at
106 cells/ml in RPMI 1640 medium supplemented with 10%
FCS, L-glutamine, and penicillin-streptomycin. Cells were
harvested after 16 to 18 h and used in the adhesion assay
described below.
Adhesion assay of transiently transfected cells. The adhesion of transiently transfected HL60(CD2/WT) cells to FN (1 µg/well) was analyzed as previously described (11). Adhesion was quantitated by the collection of adherent cells and analysis by flow cytometry. Cells from six replicate wells were pooled and resuspended in 200 µl of Hanks balanced salt solution supplemented with 1% BCS and 0.2% sodium azide. A 50-µl aliquot (10,082 beads) of PKH26 reference microbeads (Sigma) and 25 µl of PI were added to each tube, for a total sample volume of 275 µl. Each sample was analyzed on the flow cytometer, acquiring a minimum of 30,000 total events.
For each sample, analysis of adherent cells was performed by using the forward-scatter and side-scatter profiles to gate independently the reference microbeads and transfected cells. FL2 events within the microbead gate were used to calculate the total number of reference microbeads in each acquired sample. FL1/FL2 density plots were used to discriminate the live, PI-negative cells from the fluorescent microbeads. Gates were established by using FL1 fluorescence to calculate the number of cells in each of three populations: green fluorescent protein (GFP) negative (GFP
), GFP low
positive (GFP+), and GFP positive (GFP++). The
total number of adherent cells was calculated by using the events in
the microbead gate and the events in each of the GFP gates as
previously described (11).
MAP kinase assays. Assays for MAP kinase activity were performed as previously described (15) with modifications. 107 HL60 cells per sample were preincubated with PMA (10 ng/ml) or with saturating concentrations of a mitogenic pair of CD2-specific MAbs, 95-5-49 and 9-1, for 30 min in 0.5 ml of PBS-BCS at 4°C. The cells were then stimulated for the indicated periods by incubation at 37°C. The stimulation was stopped by the addition of an equal volume of 2× modified RIPA lysis buffer (300 mM NaCl; 2% Nonidet P-40; 1% deoxycholate; 100 mM HEPES, pH 7.5; 2 mM Na3VO4; 100 mM NaF; 2 mM PMSF; 20 µg of aprotinin per ml; 10 mM benzamidine). The lysates were incubated on ice for 30 min with frequent vortexing and then centrifuged for 30 min in a microcentrifuge at 4°C. The lysates were transferred to new tubes containing 2 µg of ERK-2-specific MAb and 40 µl of protein A-Sepharose and incubated at 4°C for a minimum of 3 h. One-tenth of each immunoprecipitated sample was removed; bound proteins were then eluted by boiling in 4× SDS sample buffer under reducing conditions, separated on an SDS-10% polyacrylamide gel, and transferred to a PVDF membrane. The blot was probed with the ERK-2 specific antibody, and the resulting data were quantified with a Molecular Dynamics densitometer for use as a normalized ERK-2 loading control.
The remaining immunoprecipitates were washed two times with 0.25 M Tris (pH 7.6) and once with 0.1 M NaCl-50 mM HEPES (pH 8.0) and then incubated for 30 min at 30°C in 90 µl of reaction mixture (1 µCi of [
-32P]ATP; 50 µM ATP; 10 mM MgCl2; 1 mM dithiothreitol; 1 mM benzamidine; 25 mM HEPES, pH 8.0; and 0.3 mg of
myelin basic protein [MBP]). The reaction was stopped by centrifuging
the samples for 1 min in a microcentrifuge and transferring the
supernatant to a new tube containing 30 µl of 4× SDS-polyacrylamide
gel electrophoresis (PAGE) sample buffer. The samples were boiled 3 min
and subjected to 15% PAGE. The gel was dried and the labeled MBP was
detected by autoradiography. Data were quantified with a Molecular
Dynamics PhosphorImager or densitometer.
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RESULTS |
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In order to conduct an analysis of CD2-mediated integrin
activation, we have developed and characterized a gene transfer system that allows for an assessment of the adhesion regulatory signaling properties of mutated CD2 molecules (72). Human CD2 was
expressed in the CD2-negative human myelomonocytic cell line HL60
(Fig. 2). Stimulation of CD2+
HL60 transfectants with an activating pair of CD2-specific MAbs resulted in an upregulation of
1 integrin-dependent adhesion of HL60
cells to the
1 integrin ligand FN that was comparable to the
adhesion induced by treatment with the phorbol ester PMA (Fig.
3) or by direct activation of
1
integrins with an activating
1-specific MAb (data not shown).
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Cytoplasmic regions of CD2 that regulate CD2-mediated
interleukin-2 (IL-2) production in T cells or CD2 avidity do not
modulate integrin activity.
We utilized a number of
previously described CD2 cytoplasmic mutation constructs (7,
30) to determine whether regions of the CD2 cytoplasmic domain
that have been shown to regulate other CD2-mediated functional
responses are also involved in CD2-mediated upregulation of
1 integrin activity (Fig. 1). These mutant CD2 constructs
included the following: a deletion of the proximal P-P-P-G-H-R
motif (pFNeo-CD2/
260-265), a deletion of the distal P-P-P-G-H-R motif (pFNeo-CD2/
274-279), deletions of both
proximal and distal P-P-P-G-H-R motifs (pFNeo-CD2/
260 +
274), and an asparagine-to-alanine amino acid mutation at
the last position of the CD2 cytoplasmic domain
(pFNeo-CD2/N327A).
1,
4, and
5 integrin were
equivalent among the various CD2 transfectants analyzed (Fig. 2),
indicating that
1 integrin expression was not altered by the
transfection procedure. CD2-expressing HL60 transfectants
were analyzed in adhesion assays for adhesion to FN under various
stimulation conditions. As shown in Fig. 3, stimulation of wild-type
CD2+ transfectants, but not a transfectant expressing the
expression vector only, resulted in increases in FN that were
comparable to that seen following PMA stimulation. Although the
P-P-P-G-H-R motifs have been shown to be critical to CD2-mediated
regulation of IL-2 production in T-cell lines (7, 14),
mutation of either or both of the P-P-P-G-H-R motifs in the CD2
cytoplasmic domain did not consistently inhibit the ability of
activating pairs of CD2-specific MAbs to upregulate HL60 cell adhesion
to FN (Fig. 3). In addition, a mutation that has been shown to inhibit
CD3-TCR-mediated regulation of CD2 avidity (CD2-N327A) (7,
33) did not affect CD2-induced increases in HL60 adhesion to FN
(Fig. 3).
The proline-rich sequence between amino acids 299 and 305 is
essential for CD2-mediated upregulation of
1 integrin activity.
In order to identify the region of the CD2 cytoplasmic domain that is
involved in CD2-mediated increases in
1 integrin adhesiveness, additional CD2 cytoplasmic domain mutants were created and expressed in
HL60 cells (Fig. 1). These mutations involved the introduction of
stop codons at various places in the CD2 cytoplasmic domain to create
truncations containing 3 (CD2/215), 53 (CD2/265), 67 (CD2/279),
79 (CD2/291), and 93 (CD2/305) amino acids of the CD2 cytoplasmic domain. These truncation mutants were expressed in HL60 cells at levels comparable to that of the wild-type CD2 (Fig. 4A), indicating that truncation of the
CD2 cytoplasmic sequence does not alter its ability to be expressed at
the cell surface.
|
1 integrin activity was not due to defects
in
1 integrin function in the CD2/215 transfectants, since PMA
stimulation resulted in an increase in adhesion to FN comparable to
control transfectant cells expressing the vector only (Fig. 4B).
Furthermore, levels of
1 integrin on the CD2/215 transfectants were
comparable to HL60 transfectants expressing wild-type CD2 or vector
only (Fig. 4A), indicating that differences in the amount of
1
integrin could not explain the inability of CD2 stimulation to increase
the adhesion of HL60(CD2/215) transfectants to FN.
Stimulation of transfectants expressing the CD2/265, CD2/279, and
CD2/291 truncation mutants with an activating pair of CD2-specific MAbs
also failed to result in increased adhesion to FN (Fig. 4B). As with
the CD2/215 transfectant, PMA stimulation of these other transfectants
did result in increased adhesion to FN, indicating that the
1
integrins expressed on these transfectants were responsive to
integrin-activating signals. Conversely, CD2 stimulation of transfectants expressing the CD2/305 truncation mutant increased adhesion comparable to that observed following CD2 stimulation of
wild-type CD2+ transfectants (Fig. 4B). This suggests that
a region between amino acids 291 and 305 of the CD2 cytoplasmic domain
is essential for CD2-mediated regulation of
1-integrin-dependent
adhesion to FN.
Since it is also plausible that the truncation mutations cause an
alteration in the kinetics of CD2-mediated stimulation of
1 integrin
activity, we analyzed the adhesion of transfectants to FN at various
time points following CD2 stimulation, ranging from 10 to 80 min.
At all of the time points tested, only CD2/305 and CD2/WT
possessed the ability to upregulate
1 integrin activity upon CD2
engagement (data not shown).
Two additional CD2 cytoplasmic mutations were generated to further
define the region responsible for CD2-mediated regulation of
1
integrin activity. A stop codon was generated in frame following amino
acid 299 to generate the CD2 mutant construct CD2/299 (Fig. 1).
Transfection of the CD2/299 construct into HL60 cells resulted in
expression of CD2 at the cell surface at a level comparable to
wild-type CD2 and the other CD2 truncation mutants tested (Fig. 5A). However, stimulation of
CD2/299-expressing HL60 transfectants with the activating pairs of
CD2-specific MAbs did not result in increased adhesion to FN at any of
the stimulation time points tested (Fig. 5B and data not shown). As
with other transfectants expressing mutant CD2 molecules
that were unable to upregulate
1 integrin adhesiveness, the
responsiveness of
1 integrins on CD2/299 HL60 transfectants to
activation was demonstrated by increased adhesion to FN after PMA
stimulation (Fig. 5B). These results indicate that the K-G-P-P-L-P
sequence in the CD2 cytoplasmic domain (amino acids 300 to 305) is
critical for CD2-mediated increases in
1-integrin-dependent adhesion
to FN.
|
1 integrin adhesiveness,
each of the three proline residues in this motif
amino acids 302, 303, and 305
was mutated to alanine residues in the context of the
wild-type CD2 cytoplasmic tail (Fig. 1). The resulting CD2 mutant
construct, designated CD2/P
A, was transfected into HL60 cells, and
expression was found to be comparable to that of wild-type CD2 and the
other CD2 mutant constructs analyzed in this study (Fig. 5A). In
adhesion assays, CD2 stimulation failed to increase the
adhesion of HL60 transfectants expressing the CD2/P
A
mutant construct (Fig. 5B). This result provides further evidence
for the importance of the K-G-P-P-L-P motif in general, and the three
proline residues in particular, in CD2-mediated regulation of
1
integrin adhesiveness.
Two structurally distinct PI 3-K inhibitors abolish CD2-mediated
upregulation of
1 integrin activation.
We have previously
demonstrated that the PI 3-K inhibitor wortmannin is capable of
abolishing CD2-mediated activation of
1-integrin-dependent adhesion
(72). However, the specificity of wortmannin as a selective inhibitor of PI 3-K has recently come under scrutiny, since wortmannin has been implicated as an inhibitor of phospholipase A2
(18), phospholipase D, myosin light-chain kinase,
mammalian target of rapamycin (9), and pleckstrin
phosphorylation (2). Thus, we also tested the
ability of LY294,002, another PI 3-K inhibitor whose mode of action on
PI 3-K is distinct from wortmannin (87), to block
CD2-induced increases in HL60 adhesion to FN. As shown in
Fig. 6, either 25 µM LY294,002 or 100 nM of wortmannin blocked adhesion induced by stimulation of HL60
transfectants expressing either wild-type CD2 or the CD2/305 truncation
mutant. At the depicted concentrations, the presence of these
inhibitors did not affect adhesion induced by either PMA
treatment (Fig. 6) or activating
1-specific MAbs (data not shown),
suggesting that they were not acting via a toxic effect on the cells or
a general impairment of cell adhesive function. Dose-response
studies indicated that the 50% inhibitory concentration
(IC50) of LY294,002 is in the range of 5 to 15 µM
(data not shown). This IC50 value is consistent with the
concentrations of LY294,002 found to specifically inhibit PI 3-K
activity in other systems (9, 82, 86).
|
Expression of dominant negative p85 causes inhibition of
CD2-mediated upregulation of adhesion to FN.
We also employed a
genetic approach to further define the role of PI 3-K in CD2-mediated
regulation of
1 integrin adhesiveness. The effect of GFP fusion
proteins expressing wild-type or a dominant negative form of p85 on
CD2-induced increases in HL60(CD2/WT) cell adhesion to FN was
assessed. The GFP tag, together with flow cytometric analysis, was used
to determine the adhesion of transiently transfected cells expressing
various levels of the GFP fusion protein (11). As shown in
Fig. 7A, 5 to 10% of
electroporated HL60(CD2/WT) cells expressed GFP or expressed
GFP fusion proteins with wild-type p85 (GFP-WTp85) or dominant
negative p85 (GFP-
p85). Typically, GFP alone was expressed at
higher levels in individual cells than either GFP-WTp85 or GFP-
p85.
|
p85 fusion protein inhibited
CD2-mediated increases in adhesion to FN (Fig. 7B). The inhibitory
effect of GFP-
p85 was observed at high levels of GFP-
p85
expression. However, cells expressing high levels of the GFP-
p85
protein still exhibited adhesion comparable to that of GFP-negative
cells after PMA stimulation or stimulation with the activating
1-integrin-specific MAb TS2/16 (Fig. 7B and data not shown).
This suggests that
1 integrins were still functional and responsive
to stimulation despite high levels of GFP-
p85 expression. Thus,
these results provide further support to the pivotal role that PI 3-K
plays in CD2 regulation of
1 integrin activity.
Effects of CD2 cytoplasmic domain mutations on CD2-induced
increases in PI 3-K activity.
CD2 stimulation of CD2+
HL60 transfectants and human T cells results within minutes in an
increase in CD2-associated PI 3-K activity (72). If PI 3-K
is involved in CD2-mediated increases in
1 integrin function, we
reasoned that CD2 cytoplasmic domain mutations that abrogated
CD2-induced increases in adhesion to FN should also show a loss of
CD2-induced increases in associated PI 3-K activity. Thus, we assessed
PI 3-K activity upon CD2 stimulation in a panel of HL60 transfectants
expressing wild-type CD2 and various CD2 cytoplasmic domain mutants.
CD2 stimulation of wild-type CD2+ and CD2/305+
transfectants resulted in increased PI 3-K activity in CD2
immunoprecipitates (Fig. 8). Both of
these transfectants also demonstrated increased adhesion to FN after
CD2 stimulation (Fig. 4B and 5B). Interestingly, transfectants
expressing mutant CD2 proteins that did not induce increases in
adhesion upon CD2 stimulation also did not exhibit changes in
CD2-associated PI 3-K after stimulation with activating pairs of
CD2-specific MAbs (compare Fig. 5B with Fig. 8). This included the
CD2/299 truncation mutant, as well as the CD2/P
A substitution mutant
(Fig. 8). Therefore, a direct relationship exists between CD2-mediated
induction of CD2-associated PI 3-K activity and CD2-mediated
1
integrin regulation.
|
Association between CD2 and the p85 subunit of PI 3-K is
independent of the K-G-P-P-L-P motif.
To further delineate the
structural basis for the association of CD2 with PI 3-K, we examined
the effect of CD2 cytoplasmic domain mutations on the in vitro
association of CD2 with the p85 regulatory subunit. We reasoned that
the proline-rich motif K-G-P-P-L-P between amino acids 299 and 305 might mediate the association of CD2 with the SH3 domain of the
p85 subunit. Therefore, we analyzed whether a GST fusion protein
expressing the SH3 domain of p85
could precipitate wild-type
CD2 and various CD2 cytoplasmic domain mutant proteins. Cell lysates
were prepared from unstimulated or CD2-stimulated transfectants
and then incubated with beads coated with GST-p85
(SH3). Figure
9A shows that GST-p85
(SH3) was
also able to precipitate wild-type CD2 under both unstimulated and
stimulated conditions. The GST-p85
(SH3) was not able to
precipitate the CD2/215 truncation mutant protein (Fig. 9A), which
lacks all but three amino acids of the CD2 cytoplasmic domain. This
result suggests that the association of CD2 with p85 is dependent upon the presence of the CD2 cytoplasmic domain. Stimulation of the cells with CD2 MAbs prior to p85 precipitation did not affect the
amount of CD2 precipitated by the GST-p85
(SH3) fusion
protein (Fig. 9A). The GST-p85
(SH3) fusion protein
was also able to precipitate the CD2/299 and CD2/305 truncation mutant
proteins, as well as the CD2/P
A substitution mutant protein (Fig.
9A).
|
(SH3) fusion protein, we also examined the association of
wild-type CD2 and various CD2 cytoplasmic domain mutants with the p85
subunit by determining whether CD2 could be coprecipitated in an
anti-p85 immunoprecipitate. The results shown in Fig. 9B were
equivalent to those observed in the GST-p85
(SH3) pull-down experiments. Wild-type CD2 and all of the CD2 cytoplasmic domain mutants, with the exception of CD2/215, could be coprecipitated with p85. In addition, stimulation of the cells with CD2 MAbs prior to immunoprecipitation did not affect the amount of CD2 coprecipitated with p85 (Fig. 9B). The results presented in Fig. 9
suggest that the K-G-P-P-L-P motif in the CD2 cytoplasmic domain is not
the primary structural element mediating the association of CD2 with
p85. More significantly, the results depicted in Fig. 9
illustrate that the association of p85 with CD2 appears to be independent of the ability of CD2 to regulate
1 integrin
adhesiveness.
CD2 stimulation results in wortmannin-sensitive induction of MAP kinase activity. In order to investigate the role of MAP kinase in CD2-mediated activation of integrin-mediated adhesion, we also analyzed the ability of CD2-expressing HL60 cells to activate MAP kinase upon CD2 stimulation. Figure 10A shows that ligation of CD2 by an activating pair of CD2-specific MAbs resulted in the rapid induction of MAP kinase activity, peaking at 10 min of stimulation and declining to baseline levels by 30 min. In a way similar to that of CD2-mediated upregulation of integrin activity, CD2-mediated activation of MAP kinase requires the presence of both CD2-specific MAbs (72; data not shown). As a positive control, PMA stimulation of CD2/WT expressing HL60 cells resulted in increased MAP kinase activity (Fig. 10B). Both the kinetics of PMA-induced MAP kinase activation and the magnitude of increase in MAP kinase activity compared to unstimulated cells were similar to CD2-mediated activation of MAP kinase (data not shown). We next tested the effects of wortmannin on CD2-mediated activation of MAP kinase. While wortmannin had a minimal effect on the ability of PMA to induce MAP kinase activity, wortmannin completely inhibited CD2-mediated increases of MAP kinase activity (Fig. 10B). In contrast, treatment of CD2+ HL60 cells with the protein kinase C inhibitor bisindolylmaleimide blocked PMA-induced activation of MAP kinase, but such treatment had no effect on CD2-induced activation of MAP kinase (Fig. 10B).
|
Effects of inhibiting MEK on CD2- and PMA-dependent induction of integrin function and MAP kinase. In order to determine the functional consequences of CD2-dependent induction of MAP kinase as they pertain to integrin-mediated adhesion, we employed an inhibitor of the MAP kinase activation cascade, PD 098059 (1, 23). This compound specifically inhibits MAPK/ERK kinase (MEK), the upstream regulatory kinase that phosphorylates and activates the MAP kinases ERK-1 and ERK-2. Figure 11 shows that PD 098059 inhibited both PMA- and CD2-induced MAP kinase activity in a dose-dependent manner, with an IC50 of 10 to 20 µM for both stimuli. These IC50s are similar to those reported for the inhibition of MAP kinase activity in vitro and growth factor-mediated activation of MAP kinase in vivo by PD 098059 in other studies (1, 23). In adhesion assays, PD 098059 inhibited PMA-induced adhesion, suggesting a role for PMA-induced activation of the MAP kinase pathway in phorbol ester-mediated activation of integrin function (Fig. 12). Although PD 098059 blocked CD2-mediated activation of MAP kinase, it failed to inhibit CD2-mediated activation of integrin adhesion (Fig. 12).
|
|
Effects of various mutations within the CD2 cytoplasmic domain on
CD2-mediated activation of MAP kinase.
In order to determine if
CD2-mediated MAP kinase activation could be dissociated from
CD2-mediated activation of
1-integrin-mediated adhesion, the CD2/WT,
CD2/299, CD2/305, and CD2/P
A constructs (Fig. 1) were analyzed for
their ability to activate MAP kinase in HL60 cells. In comparison to
the wild-type CD2 transfectant, the CD2/299 truncation mutant failed to
support any appreciable increase in MAP kinase activity (Fig.
13). In contrast, both the CD2/P
A
and the CD2/305 mutations supported CD2-mediated MAP kinase activation,
although at lower levels than wild-type CD2 did. These differences in
CD2-mediated activation of MAP kinase do not appear to be due to
differences in MAP kinase itself, since PMA stimulation resulted in a
comparable activation of MAP kinase in all of the transfectants (Fig.
13). In addition, Western blotting analysis revealed similar levels of
MAP kinase expressed in the transfectants (data not shown). Thus, these
results provide additional evidence that CD2-mediated activation
of MAP kinase is not involved in CD2-mediated activation of
integrin-mediated adhesion.
|
| |
DISCUSSION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
In this study, we used mutational analysis to identify the
structural basis for the regulation of
1 integrin functional
activity by the CD2 molecule. This analysis demonstrated that the CD2
cytoplasmic domain is necessary for CD2-mediated activation of
1-integrin-mediated adhesion to FN. Furthermore, the proline-rich
region between amino acids 299 and 305 (K-G-P-P-L-P) of the CD2
cytoplasmic domain was found to be essential for CD2-mediated
regulation of
1 integrin activity, since the substitution of the
three proline residues at amino acid positions 302, 303, and 305 with
alanines abrogated the ability of CD2 to regulate
1 integrin
activity. The region of the CD2 cytoplasmic tail critical for
CD2-mediated activation of PI 3-K also mapped to the K-G-P-P-L-P motif.
Expression of the dominant negative p85 fusion isoform GFP-
p85, but
not GFP-WTp85, inhibited CD2-mediated induction of FN adhesion,
providing additional evidence for a role for PI 3-K in regulation of
integrin adhesiveness by CD2. However, structure-function analysis
revealed that the coupling of CD2 to PI 3-K does not appear to involve
the well-described binding of the p85 regulatory subunit of PI 3-K to a
sequence in the CD2 cytoplasmic tail. Nor does this domain appear to
couple CD2-mediated activation of MAP kinase to CD2 regulation of
1 integrin activity.
Previous studies of CD2-mediated signaling have demonstrated a role for
the two well-conserved P-P-P-G-H-R motifs in CD2-regulated IL-2
production and increases in intracellular cAMP (7). In contrast to those earlier studies, deletion of either or both of the
P-P-P-G-H-R motifs in the CD2 cytoplasmic tail did not have any effect
on the ability of CD2 stimulation to increase
1-integrin-mediated adhesion of HL60 cell transfectants to FN. Furthermore, mutation of the terminal asparagine residue to
alanine, which blocks CD3-TCR-mediated modulation of CD2-mediated
adhesion, also had no effect on CD2-mediated regulation of
1
integrin function in our experimental system. Thus, our data
suggest that the regulation of
1 integrin adhesiveness by the CD2
molecule can be distinguished structurally from other CD2-dependent
functional responses, such as IL-2 production and avidity regulation of
CD2 itself. However, we were unable to directly compare the effect of
CD2 cytoplasmic domain mutations on these various responses, since HL60
cells do not produce IL-2 or express CD3-TCR. Our studies are also
consistent with other studies of CD2 signaling demonstrating that
interaction of CD2 with its cellular counter-receptor, LFA-3,
cannot by itself initiate the signals observed with the
activating pairs of CD2-specific MAbs used in this study
(39). The presence or absence of the CD3-TCR complex may
influence CD2 signaling, since some, but not all, studies have
suggested that CD2-mediated signaling is dependent on the expression of
CD3-TCR (8). However, CD2 is expressed on natural killer and
certain thymocyte subsets in the absence of CD3-TCR expression
(26, 75). Furthermore, CD2-mediated signaling is observed in
these cells, as well as in CD3-negative murine mast cells
(4), indicating that CD2 can function as a signaling
molecule in the absence of the CD3-TCR. Our studies also support a role
for CD2 in transducing signals in the absence of CD3-TCR and suggest
that fairly discrete regions of the CD2 cytoplasmic tail regulate
specific intracellular signaling pathways.
Previous studies of CD2 regulation of integrin function
demonstrated that treatment of CD2+ HL60
transfectants or T cells with wortmannin blocked CD2-mediated activation of
1-integrin-mediated adhesion (72). This
study provides additional evidence that PI 3-K is in fact involved in CD2-mediated activation of
1 integrin function. Treatment of transfectants expressing either wild-type CD2 or the CD2/305 truncation mutant with the structurally distinct PI 3-K inhibitor, LY294,002, resulted in inhibition of increased adhesion induced by CD2 stimulation but not by activating
1-specific MAbs or by PMA stimulation. The IC50s for both inhibitors was in the range
previously shown to inhibit PI 3-K activity in other systems
(9, 16, 68, 82, 86), providing additional evidence
implicating PI 3-K as the common target of the inhibitory effect of
these two drugs on CD2-mediated activation of
1 integrin
activity. More significantly, the ability of dominant negative
p85 to specifically inhibit CD2-induced adhesion of HL60 cells to FN
provides additional genetic evidence that PI 3-K is critical to CD2
regulation of
1 integrin function.
If PI 3-K activation is in fact critical for CD2 induction of
1
integrin activity, then CD2 cytoplasmic domain mutations that block CD2
regulation of integrin function should also block the ability of CD2 to
activate the PI 3-K signaling pathway. Our structure-function analysis
of CD2-mediated regulation of
1 integrin adhesiveness confirms this
prediction. CD2 mutant proteins that were unable to activate
1-integrin-mediated adhesion upon stimulation, such as the CD2/P
A
mutant and the CD2/299 truncation mutant, also failed to show
CD2-dependent increases in PI 3-K activity associated with CD2 (Table
1). Although engagement of either the
CD2/WT molecule or the CD2/305 molecule expressed on HL60 cells induced
only a twofold increase in CD2-associated PI 3-K activity
(Fig. 8) or phosphotyrosine-associated PI 3-K activity (data not
shown), other studies have recently demonstrated that similar 1.5- to
2-fold increases in PI 3-K activity were associated with PI
3-K-dependent increases in the invasiveness of breast carcinoma cells
(69). Thus, modest changes in PI 3-K activity, as assessed
by in vitro labeling of an exogenous substrate, can lead to clear
changes in cell adhesion. However, it should also be noted that the in
vitro PI 3-K assay employed in this study may not completely reflect
the changes in PI 3-K activity that occur upon CD2 stimulation in vivo.
|
The well-described form of PI 3-K consists of two subunits, a
regulatory subunit (p85) and a catalytic subunit (p110). The p85
subunit of PI 3-K contains several protein binding motifs, including
SH2 domains and an SH3 domain, as well as proline-rich sequences that
fit the consensus sequences for binding sites recognized by SH3
domains. The association of CD2 with PI 3-K cannot occur via direct
binding of the SH2 domain of p85 with a sequence in the CD2 cytoplasmic
domain, since SH2 domains bind to a specific phosphotyrosine-containing
motif (Y-X-X-M) and the CD2 cytoplasmic domain lacks tyrosine residues.
However, the K-G-P-P-L-P motif that we have identified as being
critical to CD2-mediated regulation of
1 integrin adhesiveness is
similar to the consensus sequence for SH3 binding motifs, (h)-P-p-X-P.
Furthermore, the SH3 domain of the tyrosine kinase p56lck
has been demonstrated to associate in vitro with a proline-rich region
of the rat CD2 cytoplasmic domain that shares amino acid identity with
the K-G-P-P-L-P sequence in human CD2 (6). Therefore, we
reasoned that CD2 might associate directly with PI 3-K via binding of
the SH3 domain of the p85 subunit with the K-G-P-P-L-P motif in the CD2
cytoplasmic domain. To our surprise, pull-down experiments with both
GST-p85
(SH3) and immunoprecipitated p85 revealed that p85 was
able to efficiently precipitate wild-type CD2 and all of the CD2
cytoplasmic domain mutants tested, with the exception of CD2/215, which
essentially lacks all of the cytoplasmic domain. The efficiency of
precipitation of CD2 by the SH3 domain of p85 or anti-p85 antibodies
was not altered by prior stimulation of the cells with CD2 MAbs. Thus,
the interaction between CD2 and the SH3 domain of p85 is independent of
the K-G-P-P-L-P motif that is critical for CD2-mediated regulation of
1 integrin activity. This suggests that the direct association of
p85 with the CD2 cytoplasmic domain is not sufficient for CD2-mediated
activation of PI 3-K or integrin function. While a constitutive
association between the CD2 cytoplasmic domain and p85 was previously
documented in our laboratory (72), there are few other
examples of a constitutive association between p85 and other cell
surface receptors. However, the constitutive association of p85 with
intracellular proteins, such as the docking protein
p120Cbl, has been reported (65).
The mechanistic basis for coupling of CD2 to the PI 3-K signaling
pathway is currently unknown. One possibility is that the K-G-P-P-L-P
motif in the CD2 cytoplasmic domain associates with a SH3
domain-containing protein that subsequently binds to and activates the
p85-p110 PI 3-K complex. Alternatively, CD2 stimulation may result in
the activation of a wortmannin-sensitive PI 3-K that is not dependent
on the p85 subunit, such as the recently described p110
(79). The p110
form of PI 3-K requires G
protein
subunits to become catalytically active (54, 78), and recent
studies have demonstrated a role for p110
in the activation of the
MAP kinase signaling pathway by G-protein-coupled receptors (54). However, pertussis toxin treatment of wild-type
CD2+-expressing HL60 cells failed to block CD2-mediated
activation of
1 integrin function (data not shown). Another
possibility that deserves exploration is that CD2 stimulation may lead
to phosphorylation or dephosphorylation of the catalytic p110 subunit that results in activation of constitutively associated PI 3-K.
Since stimulation with PMA and CD2/WT also results in activation of the
MAP kinase signaling cascade (Fig. 10 and data not shown), we also
explored the involvement of the MAP kinase signaling cascade in
activation-dependent regulation of
1 integrin activity. Both
pharmacological and genetic evidence suggests that CD2-mediated activation of MAP kinase is not an essential component in the CD2
regulation of
1 integrin activity. The MEK inhibitor PD 098059 (1, 23) is effective at inhibiting MAP kinase
activation in HL60 cells stimulated with either CD2-specific MAbs or
PMA. However, PD 098059 demonstrated differential effects on the
activation-dependent upregulation of
1 integrin function in HL60
cells: it inhibited PMA-induced, but not CD2-induced, adhesion to FN.
This result indicates a potential role for the MAP kinase
signaling cascade in PMA-mediated activation of integrin-dependent
adhesion, but it also suggests that CD2-mediated activation of MAP
kinase is not essential in the signaling pathway by which CD2 regulates integrin function. PD 098059 does not appear to be nonspecifically toxic to HL60 cells, since increases in integrin function mediated by
CD2 stimulation or direct activation of
1 integrins with an activating
1-specific MAb were not inhibited by the concentration of
PD 098059 that effectively blocked PMA-induced adhesion (Fig. 12 and
data not shown).
Structure-function analysis of the CD2 cytoplasmic domain provided
additional evidence that CD2-mediated activation of MAP kinase can be
dissociated from CD2-mediated activation of integrin-mediated adhesion
(Table 1). Activation of MAP kinase by the CD2/305 truncation mutant
was reduced when compared to wild-type CD2. However, this truncation of
the CD2 cytoplasmic domain had no effect on CD2-induced activation of
adhesion to FN. The CD2/P
A mutant also had a reduction in
CD2-mediated activation of MAP kinase, yet this mutation completely blocked the ability of CD2 stimulation to upregulate integrin function.
Finally, the CD2/299 truncation mutant was unable to activate MAP
kinase or upregulate integrin function upon CD2 stimulation. This
suggests that the carboxy-terminal 28 amino acids of the CD2
cytoplasmic domain are critical for both of these intracellular responses. However, the CD2/305 and CD2/P
A mutations suggest that genetic inhibition of CD2-mediated activation of MAP kinase does not impair the ability of CD2 to regulate cell adhesion. Combined
with the inhibitory effects of PD 098059 on PMA-induced adhesion, our
results suggest the existence of multiple signaling cascades that
independently regulate integrin activity and that are utilized in a
stimulus-specific fashion.
In contrast to the results with the MEK inhibitor, wortmannin had no effect on PMA-induced activation of MAP kinase but did inhibit CD2-mediated activation of MAP kinase. The inhibition of CD2-mediated activation of MAP kinase by wortmannin parallels the findings shown in Fig. 6, in that CD2 regulation of integrin function is wortmannin sensitive. The simplest interpretation of our results is that CD2-dependent activation of PI 3-K results in the activation of two independent signaling pathways, one that activates MAP kinase (presumably via MEK) and one that upregulates integrin function. A number of recent studies in a variety of cell systems are consistent with a role for PI 3-K in the activation of MAP kinase. First, expression of a constitutively active form of the p110 subunit of PI 3-K has been shown to result in the activation of certain ras-dependent responses (37). This result is consistent with an upstream requirement for PI 3-K in the ras signaling pathway, although other studies suggest that activation of ras itself may lead to activation of PI 3-K (45, 47, 63). Second, wortmannin has been shown to inhibit the activation of MAP kinase induced by a number of different stimuli, including platelet-activating factor, IL-2, IL-3, granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor, and antibody cross-linking of the CD3-TCR complex (25, 44, 66, 88). In addition, studies with wortmannin have implicated PI 3-K in the activation of MAP kinase by the polyomavirus middle T antigen (83).
In summary, we have identified a six-amino-acid sequence of the CD2
cytoplasmic domain that is essential for CD2-mediated upregulation of
1 integrin activity. This region, K-G-P-P-L-P, represents
amino acids 300 through 305 of the CD2 cytoplasmic domain and is
distinct from the cytoplasmic domains of CD2 responsible for
CD2-regulated IL-2 production and CD2 avidity. While proline rich, this
region does not mediate the interaction of CD2 with the p85 subunit of
PI 3-K, yet it is critical for an induction of CD2-associated PI 3-K
activity caused by CD2 engagement. CD2-mediated activation of MAP
kinase can be perturbed by pharmacological or genetic approaches
without affecting the ability of CD2 to activate
1 integrins. These
studies provide the basis for identification of proteins that interact
with the K-G-P-P-L-P sequence and for studying the role of such
proteins in coupling CD2 engagement to the induction of PI 3-K activity
and regulation of
1-integrin-mediated cell adhesion.
| |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
We thank C. Damsky, S. J. Decker, R. Gress, S. Shaw, M. Waterfield, and S. Y. Yang for providing antibodies and other reagents. Y.S. is the Harry Kay Chair of Cancer Research at the University of Minnesota Medical School.
This work was supported by Public Health Service grants AI31126 and AI38474 from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (to Y.S.), NIH postdoctoral fellowship F32-AR09438 (to W.J.K.), and a Cancer Research Institute postdoctoral fellowship (to J.L.M.).
| |
FOOTNOTES |
|---|
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathology, Center for Immunology, University of Minnesota Medical School, Box 609 UMHC, 420 Delaware Street S.E., Minneapolis, MN 55455-0385. Phone: (612) 626-6849. Fax: (612) 625-2199. E-mail: shimi002{at}tc.umn.edu.
Present address: Parke-Davis Pharmaceutical Research, Division of
Warner-Lambert Company, Ann Arbor, MI 48105.
| |
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