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Molecular and Cellular Biology, September 2000, p. 6779-6798, Vol. 20, No. 18
Departments of Biochemistry and Molecular
Biophysics1 and
Genetics,2 Washington University
Medical School, St. Louis, Missouri 63110
Received 22 December 1999/Returned for modification 28 February
2000/Accepted 13 June 2000
Colony-stimulating factor 1 (CSF-1) supports the proliferation,
survival, and differentiation of bone marrow-derived cells of the
monocytic lineage. In the myeloid progenitor 32D cell line expressing
CSF-1 receptor (CSF-1R), CSF-1 activation of the extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) pathway is both Ras and
phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3-kinase) dependent. PI3-kinase
inhibition did not influence events leading to Ras activation. Using
the activity of the PI3-kinase effector, Akt, as readout, studies with
dominant-negative and oncogenic Ras failed to place PI3-kinase
downstream of Ras. Thus, PI3-kinase appears to act in parallel to Ras.
PI3-kinase inhibitors enhanced CSF-1-stimulated A-Raf and c-Raf-1
activities, and dominant-negative A-Raf but not dominant-negative
c-Raf-1 reduced CSF-1-provoked ERK activation, suggesting that A-Raf
mediates a part of the stimulatory signal from Ras to MEK/ERK, acting
in parallel to PI3-kinase. Unexpectedly, a CSF-1R lacking the
PI3-kinase binding site ( Colony-stimulating factor-1 (CSF-1)
is a homodimeric growth factor secreted by numerous cell types
including fibroblasts and bone marrow stroma. It promotes the
proliferation, survival, and differentiation of cells of the
monocyte/macrophage lineage and their bone marrow progenitors (reviewed
in reference 72). The cell surface receptor for
CSF-1, the CSF-1R, is normally expressed in monocytes/macrophages,
osteoclasts, and trophoblasts and abnormally in a significant
number of human breast cancers and other cancers of the female
reproductive system (38). The CSF-1R is a receptor tyrosine
kinase (RTK) of the platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) receptor
family that also includes c-Kit and the Flt3/Flk2 receptor (reviewed in
references 34, 45, and 73). The
importance of CSF-1 in vivo is revealed by the functional defects of
the naturally occurring osteopetrotic (op/op) mouse, which
makes a truncated CSF-1 protein devoid of biological activity
(93). These mice exhibit many developmental and functional
abnormalities, implying potentially essential roles for CSF-1 in human
diseases such as osteopetrosis (94), atherogenesis
(77), and tumorigenesis (63). Such abnormalities
are the consequence of the severe deficiency observed in certain
macrophage populations, including reductions in hematopoietic stem
cells and progenitors (94). The latter finding indicates
that CSF-1 acts on early precursors as well as on the more mature
monocytes and macrophages.
CSF-1 binding activates the kinase function of the CSF-1R, leading to
receptor autophosphorylation and rapid stimulation of tyrosine
phosphorylation on a variety of intracellular signaling molecules.
Several tyrosine autophosphorylation sites have been mapped in the
CSF-1R, including Tyr 697, Tyr 706, and Tyr 721 in the so-called kinase
insert (KI) region that divides the catalytic domain, Tyr 807 in the
activation loop of the catalytic domain, and Tyr 559 in the
juxtamembrane region. Autophosphorylation converts some of these
tyrosines to binding sites for proteins containing Src homology 2 (SH2)
domains. Tyr 697 is the binding site for the adapter molecule Grb2
(86), which is constitutively associated with the Ras
guanine nucleotide exchange factor (Sos). Tyr 721 binds the p85
regulatory subunit of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3-kinase)
(68), thus bringing PI3-kinase into proximity with its
substrates in the plasma membrane. Tyr 706 is required for STAT1
activation (62), while phosphorylated Tyr 559 allows Src family kinases (SFKs) to bind (2). In addition to molecules that associate directly with the activated CSF-1R, several other proteins also become tyrosine phosphorylated upon CSF-1 binding, including the adapter Shc (55), c-Cbl, which is likely to be involved in the multiubiquitination and downregulation of CSF-1R (50), Ship, a 5'-phosphatase for phosphatidylinositol
3,4,5-trisphosphate (PI-3,4,5-P3) and inositol
1,3,4,5-tetrakisphosphate (56), Gab2, a multidomain
docking/scaffolding protein (29), and the tyrosine phosphatases SHP-1 in macrophages (10) and SHP-2 in myeloid progenitors (8). The role of these molecules in
CSF-1-mediated signaling has not been determined. Although it has never
been directly demonstrated, Grb2 binding to autophosphorylated Tyr 697 is presumed to be the initiating event in the CSF-1-mediated activation
of the Ras/ERK (extracellular signal-regulated kinase) pathway
(34). However, CSF-1 also induces tyrosine-phosphorylated Shc to associate with Grb2 (55), SHP-2 can serve as an
adapter linking activated PDGF and epidermal growth factor (EGF)
receptors to the Grb2/Sos complex (4, 54), and
overexpression of Gab2 enhances cytokine-stimulated ERK activation
(29, 61, 99). There are clearly other potential mechanisms
for coupling activated CSF-1R to the Ras/ERK pathway in addition to
that mediated by direct docking of Grb2 to the receptor.
The well-established paradigm linking Grb2/Sos to MEK/ERK is primarily
based on work in fibroblasts and COS cells. In this model, Grb2/Sos is
recruited to the plasma membrane, where Sos stimulates the exchange of
GTP for GDP on membrane-bound Ras, leading to sequential activation of
Raf-1, MEK, and ERK. Depending on cell type and stimulus, variations on
this theme include activation of MEK/ERK by Ras-independent mechanisms
(7) and utilization of B-Raf instead of Raf-1
(91). Although growth factors can activate A-Raf
(79), a physiological role for A-Raf in mediating ERK
activation remains to be clarified. Activity of the ERK pathway is also
modulated by cross-talk with other intracellular signaling pathways.
Many studies have documented the involvement of PI3-kinase in
regulating stimulus-induced ERK activation (13, 31, 43, 79),
but reports to the contrary also abound (9, 64, 74). Such
apparently contradictory findings are likely to reflect, in large part,
the different cell types and stimuli used in the various studies.
Moreover, the point at which PI3-kinase feeds into the
Ras/mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) cascade also varies with
different reports, and PI3-kinase has been placed both upstream and
downstream of Ras. Two studies have highlighted the importance of
signal strength as a determinant of PI3-kinase involvement (21,
92). Thus, under conditions of low receptor occupancy by PDGF in
fibroblasts or EGF in COS-7 cells, inhibition of PI3-kinase activity
leads to almost complete inhibition of growth factor-induced Ras and
ERK activation. As PI3-kinase is not activated by growth factors under
these conditions, the suggestion has been made that basal, not growth
factor-stimulated, PI3-kinase activity is required for Ras activation
(92). At intermediate growth factor concentrations, ERK but
not Ras activation is sensitive to PI3-kinase inhibition; at high
growth factor concentrations, PI3-kinase activity is not required at
all, implying the utilization of redundant pathways for activating
Ras/MAPK. These studies have helped to resolve some of the confusion in
the literature; however, the generality of these findings and precisely
how PI3-kinase modulates growth factor-stimulated ERK activity are
still not entirely clear. In some systems, novel (75, 83)
and atypical (5, 75) protein kinase C (PKC) isoforms have
been implicated as the link between PI3-kinase and the ERK pathway.
We have previously shown that CSF-1-stimulated ERK activity is required
for optimal protection of CSF-1R-expressing myeloid progenitor cells
from apoptosis induced by mitogen deprivation (46).
Similarly, expression of a constitutively activated ERK kinase (MEK) in
3T3 fibroblasts was found to restore mitogenicity to a mitogenically
defective CSF-1R mutant (11). These results implicate the
ERK pathway in positive signaling by the CSF-1R. In contrast, using
estrogen-dependent breast cancer cells transfected with the CSF-1R as a
model system for studying CSF-1's role in human breast cancer, we
found that CSF-1 treatment led to growth arrest as a consequence of
ERK-dependent induction of the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor
p21Waf1 (49). Such disparate behavior
illustrates the now well-documented concept that cellular context plays
an important role in determining outcome of ERK activation (reviewed in
reference 53). A clue to the underlying basis for
such differential biological responses might come from a detailed
understanding of the pathways emanating from the activated receptor
that converge on MEK/ERK in different cell systems. In this report, we
have analyzed the contribution of PI3-kinase and Src signaling pathways
to CSF-1-mediated ERK activation in the 32D myeloid progenitor cell
line transfected with wild-type (WT) or mutant CSF-1R. This cell line
lacks endogenous CSF-1R but expresses many of the signaling molecules
known to play an important role in cytokine-mediated signaling in
hematopoietic cells, such as c-Cbl (50), Ship
(56), and Gab2 (29). PI3-kinase activity is found
to be required for maximal CSF-1-induced ERK activation; unexpectedly,
CSF-1 can stimulate PI3-kinase independent of direct receptor binding.
The PI3-kinase requirement occurred at concentrations that optimally
activate Akt/PKB, a downstream target of PI3-kinase, indicating that in
myeloid cells, CSF-1R activation of PI3-kinase constitutes an integral
component of the ERK pathway. We demonstrate that while Src kinase
activity played a minimal role in CSF-1-dependent PI3-kinase and ERK
activation in cells expressing a significant number of WT CSF-1R
molecules, contribution from the Src pathway was more prominent in
cells expressing low receptor numbers and was indispensable in cells expressing a mutant CSF-1R lacking the KI. These results imply that
CSF-1 can recruit redundant pathways to induce PI3-kinase and ERK activity.
Antibodies and reagents.
Cell culture reagents were from
GIBCO BRL (Gaithersburg, Md.), wortmannin was from Sigma (St. Louis,
Mo.), LY294002 was from Calbiochem (La Jolla, Calif.),
4-amino-5-(4-methylphenyl)-7-(t-butyl)pyrazolo[3,4-d]pyrimidine 1 (PP1) was from BioMol (Plymouth Meeting, Pa.), and bovine
phosphatidylinositol (PI) was from Avanti Polar Lipids (Alabaster,
Ala.). Recombinant human CSF-1 was a gift of Genetics Institute
(Cambridge, Mass.), and recombinant murine interleukin-3 (IL-3) was
purchased from Becton Dickinson (Bedford, Mass.). All other reagents
were from Sigma.
0270-7306/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Both Src-Dependent and -Independent Mechanisms
Mediate Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinase Regulation of Colony-Stimulating
Factor 1-Activated Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinases in
Myeloid Progenitors
![]()
ABSTRACT
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
KI) remained capable of activating MEK/ERK
in a PI3-kinase-dependent manner. To determine if Src family kinases (SFKs) are involved, we demonstrated that CSF-1 activated Fyn and Lyn
in cells expressing wild-type (WT) or
KI receptors. Moreover, CSF-1-induced Akt activity in cells expressing
KI is SFK dependent since Akt activation was prevented by pharmacological or genetic inhibition of SFK activity. The docking protein Gab2 may link SFK to
PI3-kinase. CSF-1 induced Gab2 tyrosyl phosphorylation and association
with PI3-kinase in cells expressing WT or
KI receptors. However,
only in
KI cells are these events prevented by PP1. Thus in myeloid
progenitors, CSF-1 can activate the PI3-kinase/Akt pathway by at least
two mechanisms, one involving direct receptor binding and one involving SFKs.
![]()
INTRODUCTION
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
![]()
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
Plasmids.
Cloning of the murine CSF-1R cDNA has been
described previously (47). The
KI-CSF-1R mutant was
constructed by replacing the internal HincII fragment
spanning the KI in the WT receptor with the corresponding
HincII fragment lacking residues 678 to 747 produced by the
two-step PCR method described previously (48). The WT and
KI-CSF-1R cDNA inserts were introduced into vector pCEN/MPSV
(46) or LTR-2 (18). To construct a
dominant-negative PI3-kinase (p110-N), residues 171 to 1034 were
deleted from the catalytic subunit of murine PI3-kinase, p110
,
leaving intact the N-terminal p85 binding domain. p110-N was
constructed by isolating the 5-kb
AccI-HindIII fragment from pCG-p110
Kin
(provided by Anke Klippel, Chiron Corp., San Francisco, Calif.)
followed by religation with an AccI-HindIII
linker that encodes residues 167 to 170. This leaves intact the Myc
epitope (EQKLISEEDL) fused to the C terminus of p110
Kin. A
Myc-tagged ERK2 plasmid was constructed by amplifying full-length rat
ERK2 from HA-tagged ERK2 cloned into pCEP4
(46) with a 5'
primer encoding a KpnI restriction site, 9 bases upstream of
the ATG start site (Kozak consensus sequence), and the first 24 bases
of the coding region and a 3' primer that overlapped with the last 27 bases of the coding region followed by the Myc epitope, a stop codon,
and an EcoRV restriction site. The digested PCR product was
subcloned into the KpnI and EcoRV sites of
pCEP4
. All PCR-amplified segments were confirmed by DNA sequencing.
R1
downstream of the elongation factor 1
promoter have been described
previously (79) and were kindly provided by Larry Karnitz
(Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn.). The cDNA encoding Hck K269M (KD-Hck)
was a gift from Dan Link (Washington University, St. Louis, Mo.) and
cloned into the EcoRI site of pEF-BOS
R1. WTc-Src and
Myc-tagged Src251 consisting of the first 251 residues of chicken c-Src
followed by the Myc epitope both cloned downstream of the
cytomegalovirus promoter in the vector HyTCX have been described
previously (39) and were kind gifts of Pam Schwartzberg (National Human Genome Research Institute, National Institutes of Health).
Recombinant proteins. Recombinant bacterially produced His-tagged KD-MAPK and KD-MEK were expressed and purified as described elsewhere (46). GST-RBD, containing the Ras binding domain of Raf (residues 51 to 131) (RBD) fused to GST (plasmid generously provided by Johannes Bos, Utrecht University, Utrecht The Netherlands), was expressed and purified according to the procedure of de Rooij and Bos (16).
Cell culture and transfections. The IL-3-dependent nonleukemic murine myeloid cell line 32Dcl23 and its transfectants were maintained in RPMI 1640 medium (RPMI) supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum (FBS) and 5 to 10% WEHI conditioned medium as a source of murine IL-3. Exponentially growing cells were washed thoroughly in Hanks' buffered salt solution and deprived of serum and IL-3 for 2 to 4 h prior to treatment with inhibitors and growth factors.
Stable cell lines expressing WT CSF-1R have been described elsewhere (46). Stable cell lines expressing
KI-CSF-1R were similarly generated by electroporation and individual drug-resistant clones isolated by limiting dilution. Clones were screened for CSF-1R
expression by saturation binding with 125I-CSF-1, and
selected clones were further characterized by Scatchard analysis as
previously described (47). Except where noted, two clones
each of WT CSF-1R and
KI-CSF-1R were used in the studies shown. WT
clones 1 and 2 expressed 4.5 × 104 and 1.0 × 104 receptors/cell, respectively, with an average binding
affinity for CSF-1 of 1.84 × 1010/M;
KI clones 1 and 2 expressed 4.9 × 104 and 4.3 × 104 receptors/cell, respectively, with an average binding
affinity of 2.0 × 1010/M. The protocol for transient
transfection has also been previously described (46);
transfected cells were allowed to express for 24 h before
starvation and analysis. The amounts of DNA transfected were adjusted
to yield approximately equivalent expression of the reporter plasmid
(HA-ERK2, ERK2-Myc, and Flag-Akt). The total amount of transfected DNA
was kept constant with vector DNA.
Immunoprecipitation and immunoblotting.
Starved cells were
washed in RPMI and then resuspended in RPMI for treatment. Cells were
immediately lysed in an equal volume of ice-cold 2× lysis buffer (LB;
1× LB is 20 mM Tris [pH 7.4], 2 mM EDTA, 100 mM NaCl, 50 mM NaF, 50 mM
-glycerophosphate, 1% NP-40, 10% glycerol, and 1 mM
dithiothreitol) with protease inhibitors and 1 mM
Na3VO4. Protein concentration was determined
with the Bio-Rad assay kit. For immunoprecipitations, 0.5- to 1.0 mg of lysate was added to PAS conjugated to the appropriate antibody and
allowed to rock end over end for 2 to 4 h at 4°C. Immune
complexes were washed four times in lysis buffer and once in
HEPES-buffered saline before boiling in Laemmli sample buffer. After
separation by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis
(SDS-PAGE) and transfer to polyvinylidene difluoride (PVDF) membranes
(Millipore), blots were blocked for 1 h in 5% nonfat dry milk in
Tris-buffered saline with Tween (TBST) except when probing for PY, in
which case blots were blocked in 3% bovine serum albumin-TBST.
Incubations with primary and horseradish peroxidase-conjugated
secondary antibodies were at the recommended dilutions, and blots were
developed by enhanced chemiluminescence (Amersham). For reprobing,
blots were stripped by five 15-min washes in 0.1 M glycine (pH 2.5).
Blot quantitation was carried out as described previously
(46) by scanning multiple exposures with Adobe Photoshop
software and quantitating band intensities with NIH Image 1.62 software.
Kinase assays. (i) Raf, MEK, and ERK assays. The assays were carried out essentially as described previously (46), with the following modifications for Raf assays to decrease background counts in the gels. Immunoprecipitation was carried out with Raf-1 or A-Raf antibodies already conjugated to PAS; after separation by SDS-PAGE, kinase products were transferred to PVDF membranes. Blots were first quantitated with a Storm PhosphorImager (Molecular Dynamics) before probing with the appropriate antibodies to ensure equal loading. For transient cotransfections with HA-ERK2 or ERK2-Myc, expression of the transfected ERK2 was first quantitated by immunoblotting and the amount of lysate used for each condition was adjusted to contain equivalent levels of transfected ERK2 as described elsewhere (46). ERK kinase gels were cut at the 30-kDa marker such that the bottom part containing myelin basic protein (MBP) was fixed, stained with Coomassie blue, and subjected to quantitation with the PhosphorImager, while the top part was transferred to a PVDF membrane for probing with ERK antibodies.
(ii) Src autophosphorylation.
Cells were lysed in a buffer
containing 50 mM HEPES (pH 7.4), 150 mM NaCl, 1 mM EDTA, 1 mM EGTA, 25 mM NaF, 20 mM
-glycerophosphate, 10% glycerol, and 1% Triton
X-100, supplemented with protease inhibitors and
Na3VO4; 900 µg of lysate was used for each
immunoprecipitation and first precleared with normal rabbit
immunoglobulin G (IgG) bound to PAS before incubation with 1 µg of
anti-Fyn or anti-Lyn conjugated to PAS. Immune complexes were washed
four times with lysis buffer, washed twice with kinase buffer (50 mM
HEPES [pH 7.4], 10 mM MnCl2, 1 mM dithiothreitol), and
then resuspended in kinase buffer with 15 µCi of
[
-32P]ATP and incubated for 15 min at 30°C. The
reaction was terminated by the addition of Laemmli buffer and boiling.
(iii) PI3-kinase assay. PI3-kinase activity in CSF-1R or PY immunoprecipitates was determined as described elsewhere (48).
(iv) Akt kinase assay.
Starved cells were resuspended in
RPMI, stimulated with CSF-1, and subjected to lysis in 2× LB as
described above; 200 µg of lysates was immunoprecipitated with 1 µg
of goat anti-Akt antibodies and protein G-Sepharose. Lysates from
transient transfections with Flag-Akt were immunoprecipitated with 2 µg of M2 antibody and rabbit anti-mouse secondary antibody
preconjugated to PAS. Immune complexes were washed twice in 1× LB,
twice in wash buffer (25 mM HEPES [pH 7.4], 1 M NaCl, 10% glycerol,
1% Triton X-100, 1% bovine serum albumin), and twice in kinase buffer
(same as for ERK assays) and resuspended in 25 µl of kinase buffer
containing 2 µg of histone H2B, 6 µM ATP, and 10 µCi of
[
-32P]ATP. Reactions proceeded for 25 min at 30°C
before termination. After SDS-PAGE, the bottom part of the gel
containing histone H2B was fixed and quantitated by PhosphorImager,
while the top part containing Akt was transferred and immunoblotted
with anti-Akt antibodies.
Analysis of GTP and GDP bound to Ras. The assay was performed essentially as described previously (20). Cells were starved for 15 h in RPMI containing reduced FBS (5%) and WEHI (0.5%) and then incubated for 1 h in phosphate-free RPMI with 1% dialyzed FBS. [32P]orthophosphate was added to a final concentration of 0.25 mCi/ml, and cells were labeled for 3 h followed by stimulation and lysis. Ras was immunoprecipitated with Y13-259-conjugated agarose and extensively washed; GTP and GDP were eluted and developed by thin-layer chromatography on polyethyleneimine-cellulose plates in 1.2 M NH4COOH-0.8 N HCl. Spots corresponding to GDP and GTP were cut and Cerenkov counted.
GST-RBD Ras activation assay. Extract equivalent to 25 µg of GST-RBD was bound to glutathione-Sepharose for 1 h at 4°C, washed six times with Ras lysis buffer (50 mM Tris [pH 7.4], 1% NP-40, 150 mM NaCl, 10% glycerol, 20 mM MgCl2), and stored on ice until use. 32D cells were starved, stimulated, and lysed in Ras lysis buffer supplemented with protease inhibitors; 500 µg of lysate was mixed with GST-RBD for 30 min to 1 h at 4°C and washed three times with Ras lysis buffer; Ras-GTP bound to GST-RBD was eluted by boiling. Ras proteins were separated by SDS-PAGE and detected by immunoblotting with a pan-Ras antibody.
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RESULTS |
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Inhibition of PI3-kinase prevents CSF-1-induced ERK2 and MEK1 activation but does not inhibit Raf-1 activity. IL-3-dependent 32D myeloid progenitor cells transfected with the murine WT CSF-1R proliferate indefinitely in the presence of CSF-1 (46, 47). Addition of CSF-1 induces a transient but robust increase in ERK activity which is required for maximal CSF-1-mediated protection against apoptosis induced by mitogen deprivation (46). CSF-1 also stimulates PI3-kinase activity in several cell types (48, 76, 89, 98). A number of studies have demonstrated that PI3-kinase may play a role in ERK activation (see the introduction). We therefore investigated whether CSF-1-provoked ERK activation required PI3-kinase activity.
In 32D cells expressing WT CSF-1R, CSF-1 stimulated ERK transiently, with peak activity at 4 min (46). Cells were starved, pretreated with the PI3-kinase inhibitor wortmannin or LY294002, and then stimulated with 10 nM CSF-1 for 4 min. ERK activation was assessed by an immune complex in vitro kinase (IVK) assay using MBP as substrate. Pretreatment with 300 nM wortmannin or 50 µM LY294002 reduced CSF-1-stimulated ERK activity by 94 and 81%, respectively (Fig. 1A, left and middle panels). Wortmannin did not affect JNK activation by CSF-1 (data not shown), indicating that the inhibitory action on ERK was not due to nonspecific effects of the agent. Moreover, dose dependence studies with wortmannin showed that the 50% inhibitory concentration for ERK was
1 nM (Fig. 1A, right panel), consistent with a specific
inhibition of PI3-kinase. We confirmed that wortmannin inhibited
CSF-1-induced PI3-kinase activity. As shown (Fig. 1B). PI3-kinase
activity assayed in anti-PY immunoprecipitates increased sevenfold
after 4 min of CSF-1 stimulation and was inhibited by
80% when
cells were pretreated with 300 nM wortmannin. In COS cells and
fibroblasts (21, 92), the dependence of growth
factor-stimulated ERK activity on PI3-kinase varies with signal
strength. We therefore examined the sensitivity of ERK activity to
PI3-kinase inhibition over a 100-fold variation in CSF-1 concentration
(0.1 to 10 nM). As a reference, 0.5 nM CSF-1 is comparable to 10% WEHI
conditioned medium (the amount used for cell maintenance) in supporting
proliferation. ERK activity was detected by immunoblotting with an
antibody that recognizes the activating phosphorylation sites on ERK.
As shown (Fig. 1C), wortmannin or LY294002 dramatically suppressed ERK phosphorylation at all CSF-1 concentrations tested, indicating that in
myeloid progenitors, PI3-kinase activity was an integral part of the
ERK response to CSF-1.
|
Effect of PI3-kinase inhibitors and cAMP-elevating agents on CSF-1
and IL-3-induced A-Raf activity.
We had previously observed that
cyclic AMP (cAMP) synergized with CSF-1 to greatly enhance ERK
activation but to completely suppress Raf-1 activity (46),
suggesting that in the presence of increased cAMP levels a MAPKKK other
than Raf-1 functions as the major CSF-1-induced MEK kinase. Recently,
in the FDC-P1 myeloid cell line, wortmannin was shown to inhibit
IL-3-induced MEK/ERK, and A-Raf was proposed to be the IL-3-induced MEK
activator since it was inhibited by wortmannin but resistant to cAMP,
paralleling the effects of these inhibitors on ERK activity
(79). To clarify the role of A-Raf in 32D cells, we modified
the Raf assay to enhance detection of weak signals that might have been
obscured by high gel background (see Materials and Methods), as we had
previously not been able to detect A-Raf activity in response to CSF-1
(46). In this way, we were able to observe CSF-1-induced
A-Raf activity (Fig. 2A). We cannot
interpret the significantly weaker A-Raf activity induced by CSF-1, as
different antibodies were used to immunoprecipitate Raf-1 and A-Raf.
Similar to Raf-1, A-Raf activity was enhanced by PI3-kinase inhibition
(Fig. 2A) and inhibited by cAMP elevation (Fig. 2B, bottom panel,
forsk/ibmx). To examine the generality of these observations, we
determined how PI3-kinase inhibition affected IL-3-induced ERK pathway.
In 32D cells, cAMP also synergized with IL-3 to increase ERK activity
(46). Pretreatment with 200 nM wortmannin or 50 µM
LY294002 was found to significantly reduce IL-3-stimulated ERK
activation (Fig. 2B, top panel). Importantly, although IL-3-induced a
weak activation of A-Raf, its activity was inhibited by cAMP and
increased by PI3-kinase inhibition (Fig. 2B, lower panel). Thus, the
ERK pathway in 32D cells is influenced similarly by CSF-1- or
IL-3-induced PI3-kinase activity. Our results show that in the presence
of cAMP, neither Raf-1 nor A-Raf mediates the activating signal from
CSF-1 or IL-3 to ERK; however, in the absence of cAMP, their
involvement cannot be excluded.
|
Dominant-negative A-Raf but not dominant-negative Raf-1 partially
inhibits CSF-1 and IL-3-induced ERK activation.
To further
investigate the role of Raf-1 and A-Raf in mediating CSF-1 and
IL-3-dependent ERK activation in the absence of cAMP, 32D-CSF-1R cells
were transiently cotransfected with ERK2-Myc and either control vector,
KD-Raf-1-HA or KD-A-Raf-HA. Such KD constructs have been used
previously to block Raf activation (79). Immunoblotting with
anti-HA antibody showed that both KD-Raf proteins were expressed at
equivalent levels (Fig. 2C, top panel). ERK2-Myc was immunoprecipitated
with anti-Myc antibodies, and its activity was determined (Fig. 2C,
middle panel). The immunoprecipitates were also blotted with an ERK
antibody to demonstrate comparable amounts of ERK2-Myc in all samples
(Fig. 2C, bottom panel). Overexpression of KD-Raf-1 had no significant
effect on either CSF-1- or IL-3-stimulated ERK activity, whereas
KD-A-Raf inhibited by
60% the ERK activity induced by these
cytokines. These results are in agreement with those reported by Sutor
et al. (79) in their studies of IL-3-stimulated ERK
activation in FDC-P1 cells. The lack of inhibition in the presence of
KD-Raf-1 and the incomplete inhibition in the case of KD-A-Raf could be
due to inadequate expression or because part of the activating signal
is being relayed by another MAPKKK. Total cell lysates were blotted
with Raf-1 or A-Raf antibodies and by densitometry, Raf in the cells
transfected with KD constructs was overexpressed threefold compared
with vector-transfected cells (data not shown). Given that the
efficiency of transient transfection in 32D cells does not much exceed
20% (46), this implies that in cells expressing KD-Rafs,
the mutant protein was present at
10-fold excess over the endogenous
protein, making inadequate expression a less likely explanation for
the observed results. Taking these data together, we suggest that in
32D cells, CSF-1 and IL-3 activate MEK/ERK in a manner that is
dependent on both A-Raf, whose activity is inhibited by cAMP, and
another MAPKKK that is cAMP insensitive.
CSF-1-induced ERK activation is Ras dependent, and Ras activity is not affected by inhibition of PI3-kinase. Ras is required for the activation of MEK/ERK in response to many but not all stimuli. We first confirmed that CSF-1 was able to activate Ras in vivo. Ras was immunoprecipitated from 32P-labeled 32D-CSF-1R cells that were unstimulated or stimulated with CSF-1 or IL-3 for the indicated times. Ras-bound GTP and GDP were eluted. As shown, both CSF-1 and IL-3 induced a transient twofold increase in the ratio of Ras-GTP to GDP (Fig. 3A).
We next investigated if CSF-1-mediated induction of ERK activity required Ras. Cells were transiently cotransfected with HA-ERK2 and either vector or a dominant-negative Ras (17NRas). Expression of 17NRas was verified by immunoblotting with a Ras antibody (Fig. 3B, lower panel). HA-ERK2 was immunoprecipitated, and its activity was determined. As shown (Fig. 3B, top panel), 17NRas expression resulted in almost complete inhibition of both basal and CSF-1-stimulated ERK activity. The transfection was repeated multiple times, and similar degrees of inhibition were observed (Fig. 3B, bottom panel), indicating that in 32D cells, CSF-1 induction of ERK is dependent on Ras. To determine the effect of PI3-kinase inhibition on Ras activation, we made use of the sensitive assay that exploits the ability of the RBD in Raf to discriminate between Ras-GTP and Ras-GDP (16, 81). Ras-GTP was extracted from cells using a GST-RBD fusion protein, and the amount was determined by immunoblotting. Starved cells had low Ras-GTP levels which increased rapidly and markedly in response to CSF-1 stimulation (Fig. 3C). The kinetics of activation as determined by the GST-RBD pull-down assay parallels that measured by in vivo 32P labeling (Fig. 3A), but the pull-down assay is significantly more sensitive. Wortmannin had no effect, even at concentrations of up to 1 µM. These results show that PI3-kinase acts either downstream of or in parallel to Ras.
|
Dominant-negative Ras does not block CSF-1-activated Akt/PKB, and
oncogenic Ras does not increase basal Akt activity.
PI3-kinase can
function as a Ras effector in COS and PC12 cells (71). To
address the possibility that PI3-kinase functions downstream of Ras in
32D-CSF-1R cells, we used as readout the activity of the
serine/threonine kinase Akt/PKB, a well-established downstream target
of PI3-kinase (19) that is activated by CSF-1 in monocytes
(41). In COS cells (44) and fibroblasts
(40), expression of oncogenic Ras led to strong activation
of Akt. We first verified that CSF-1-mediated Akt activation in
32D-CSF-1R cells is PI3-kinase dependent (Fig.
4A). Next, using a transient transfection
approach, we asked if oncogenic 61LRas could increase basal activity of
cotransfected WT Flag-Akt and if dominant-negative 17NRas could prevent
CSF-1-induced Akt activation. Immunoblotting verified that both 61LRas
and 17NRas were expressed at levels significantly above that of
endogenous Ras (Fig. 4B). Akt was immunoprecipitated with anti-Flag
antibodies, and its activation status was determined by analyzing Akt
phosphorylation on Thr 308, one of two phosphorylation sites required
for full activation (19). Figure 4B shows that CSF-1-induced
Akt phosphorylation was not inhibited by 17NRas. Moreover, 61LRas did
not elevate basal Akt phosphorylation. Similar results were obtained
when Akt activity was monitored by an IVK assay with histone H2B as substrate (Fig. 4B). We confirmed the functionality of 61LRas in a
parallel experiment in which it was cotransfected with HA-ERK. An MBP
kinase assay showed that 61LRas increased basal HA-ERK activity
10-fold, comparable to that induced by CSF-1 (Fig. 4C). There was also
minimal effect of PI3-kinase inhibition on ERK activity induced by
oncogenic Ras (Fig. 4D), in agreement with previous observations in COS
cells (31). Thus, no evidence can be found for PI3-kinase
functioning in a linear pathway downstream of Ras leading to ERK
activation in 32D cells. Also, we were unable to detect any interaction
between Ras and the p110 subunit of PI3-kinase by coimmunoprecipitation
(data not shown).
|
CSF-1R lacking the Grb2 and PI3-kinase binding sites can still
activate ERK in a PI3-kinase-dependent manner.
To determine if the
involvement of PI3-kinase in ERK activation required recruitment of
PI3-kinase to the p85 docking site on the receptor, we stably expressed
in 32D cells a mutant CSF-1R which lacks the KI region, thus deleting
both the p85 and Grb2 binding sites. Immunoblotting with CSF-1R
antibodies directed against the KI, the C terminus, or the majority of
the cytoplasmic domain showed that
KI-CSF-1R expressed in 32D cells
to be of the expected size and to lack immunoreactivity corresponding
to the KI (Fig. 5A). To confirm that the
KI deletion eliminated PI3-kinase binding to the receptor in response
to CSF-1, CSF-1R-associated PI3-kinase activity was measured in an IVK
assay (Fig. 5B, top panel). In cells expressing WT CSF-1R, CSF-1
stimulated an increase in receptor-associated PI3-kinase activity after
5 min at 37°C. When stimulation was performed at 4°C for 30 min to
reduce receptor internalization and degradation, the increase was
significantly greater. Under the same conditions, CSF-1 did not
increase receptor-associated PI3-kinase activity in cells expressing
KI-CSF-1R. We also examined the co precipitation of CSF-1R with the
p85 subunit of PI3-kinase and found that p85 associated with WT CSF-1R
but not
KI-CSF-1R after CSF-1 stimulation (Fig. 5B, bottom panel).
Also shown is the association of p85 with a CSF-1R mutant lacking the C
terminus (CTRUNC). This region contains several tyrosines conserved
among CSF-1R from different species but whose functions are not known. Since their removal has no effect on p85-CSF-1R association, they are
not involved in direct binding of PI3-kinase to the receptor.
|
KI-CSF-1R
cells. Surprisingly, wortmannin markedly inhibited CSF-1 induction of
ERK activity, findings confirmed by a second clone and by the use of
LY294002 (Fig. 5C). Figure 5C (bottom panel) summarizes the results
from multiple experiments demonstrating that in
KI-CSF-1R, PI3-kinase activity was required upstream of MEK/ERK, analogous to that
observed for the WT receptor. Consistent with the ability of
KI-CSF-1R to activate ERK, Ras activation was also retained and was
insensitive to wortmannin pretreatment (Fig. 5D). As the Grb2 binding
site is also missing in
KI-CSF-1R, the observation that this
receptor remained capable of activating Ras/ERK in a manner comparable
to the WT receptor indicates that direct Grb2 binding to CSF-1R is not
required for ERK activation.
The results of Fig. 5 imply that deletion of the PI3-kinase binding
site had no apparent effect on CSF-1R's ability to activate PI3-kinase. As this conclusion is rather unexpected, we sought to
confirm our findings by blocking PI3-kinase function with expression of
a dominant-negative PI3-kinase. A Myc-tagged truncation mutant of
p110
containing only the N-terminal p85 binding domain (p110-N) was
transiently cotransfected with HA-ERK2 into 32D-
KI-CSF-1R cells.
p110-N competes with endogenous p110 for the regulatory p85 subunit and
prevents functional complex formation. A similar mutant was shown to
have dominant-negative properties in erythropoietin-stimulated cells
(43). Figure 6A shows that
p110-N substantially inhibited CSF-1-induced ERK activation, in
agreement with the inhibitor studies. Figure 6B summarizes results from
four independent transfections, showing an average of 81% inhibition
by p110-N (P < 0.05). Since there is residual ERK
activity not blocked by PI3-kinase inhibitors or dominant-negative
PI3-kinase, a PI3-kinase-independent route cannot be entirely excluded.
Taken together, our data indicate that PI3-kinase played a major role
in the activation of ERK by
KI-CSF-1R and that activation of
PI3-kinase by
KI-CSF-1R is not mediated by direct binding of
PI3-kinase to the receptor.
|
Src family kinases couple
KI-CSF-1R to the PI3-kinase/Akt
pathway.
The CSF-1R contains a Src binding site at Tyr 559 which
is retained in
KI-CSF-1R. Thus, it is possible that the
KI
receptor utilizes SFKs to signal to PI3-kinase. 32D cells express Fyn
and Lyn. Hck expression in 32D cells has been reported by some
(3) but not others (23); however, we have not
been able to detect Hck either by immunoblotting of total cell lysates
with a polyclonal anti-Hck antibody (see Fig. 8B) or by anti-PY or
anti-Hck blotting of Hck immunoprecipitates. We first confirmed that
CSF-1 can activate SFKs in 32D cells expressing WT or
KI receptors.
Fyn was immunoprecipitated and subjected to in vitro
autophosphorylation (Fig. 7A). Src
activity as measured by autophosphorylation has been shown to track
activity assayed by phosphorylation of exogenous substrates
(12). After 4 min of stimulation, CSF-1 induced a maximal 2- to 2.5-fold increase in Fyn autophosphorylation in both WT and
KI
cells. The fold increase in Src activity is in agreement with what has
been reported for CSF-1 (12). Similar results were obtained
with Lyn (data not shown).
|
KI receptor, we turned to an extensively used, specific chemical
inhibitor of Src kinases, PP1, reported to inhibit T-cell tyrosine
phosphorylation in the micromolar range (30). Activation of
the PI3-kinase pathway was monitored by assaying Akt activity in an
immune complex kinase assay. We first demonstrated that both WT CSF-1R
and
KI-CSF-1R can activate Akt (Fig. 7B), thus supporting our
earlier conclusion that CSF-1 activates the PI3-kinase pathway in
KI
cells. Akt activation was transient, with maximal activity at 5 to 10 min after CSF-1 addition. Akt phosphorylation at Thr 308 was found to
follow the same trend as Akt kinase activity (Fig. 7B). Next, the role
of Src in Akt activation was assessed. Dose-dependent studies
demonstrated that 10 µM PP1 inhibited CSF-1-induced Akt
phosphorylation in
KI cells by 80% but that an equivalent
inhibition in WT cells required a 10-fold-higher concentration of PP1
(Fig. 7C). These findings suggest that the
KI receptor activates
PI3-kinase by Src-dependent mechanisms but that the WT receptor
utilizes predominantly Src-independent means to activate PI3-kinase,
most likely through direct binding of PI3-kinase to the KI. We sought
to confirm the PP1 results by examining the effect of dominant-negative
SFK expression on CSF-1-dependent Akt activity in
KI-CSF-1R cells.
Src251 is a c-Src truncation mutant lacking the catalytic domain and
C-terminal tail (39) and functions as a dominant-negative
for multiple SFKs (6, 22). Cells were cotransfected with
Flag-Akt and either vector (pEF-BOS
R1 or pcDNA), WT Src, or Src251.
CSF-1 stimulated comparable increases in Flag-Akt activity for either vector (Fig. 8A). WT Src increased basal
Akt activity 4.7-fold, indicating that when overexpressed, WT Src is
constitutively active. In contrast, Src251 inhibited CSF-1-stimulated
Akt activity by
70%. We also tested a second dominant-negative Src
construct, KD-Hck. Figure 8B shows that KD-Hck inhibited CSF-1-induced
Akt activity by
55%, compared to an inhibition of
80% by
Src251. KD-Hck was a less effective inhibitor than Src251, probably
because of lower expression level and perhaps because the SH2 domain in KD-Hck is more constrained due to interactions with the C-terminal phosphorylated tyrosine (97) which is absent in Src251.
These results, together with those utilizing PP1, strongly support a role for SFKs in the activation of PI3-kinase by the
KI-CSF-1R, although we cannot exclude a minor contribution from SFK-independent mechanisms.
|
Src family kinases may also contribute to ERK activation by
the
KI-CSF-1R.
The observation that
KI-CSF-1R can activate
ERK independent of Grb2 binding to the receptor prompted us to examine
if ERK activation is initiated by Shc tyrosine phosphorylation and
subsequent association with Grb2. Shc was immunoprecipitated and
examined for tyrosine phosphorylation content and association with
Grb2. In both WT and
KI cells, CSF-1 stimulated robust tyrosine
phosphorylation of the p46 and p52 isoforms of Shc and their binding to
Grb2 (Fig. 9A, left panel). Moreover,
when cells were treated with PP1 prior to CSF-1 stimulation,
KI
cells showed a dose-dependent inhibition of Shc tyrosine
phosphorylation and Grb2 binding, similar to that observed for Akt
phosphorylation. WT cells showed inhibition only at 100 µM PP1. To
confirm these findings, the same experiment was performed with a second
pair of clones (Fig. 9A, right panel). The two clones of
KI
expressed approximately the same number of receptors per cell, but WT
clone 2 expressed only 25% as many receptors as clone 1 (see Materials
and Methods). While the two clones of
KI behaved similarly, PP1 was
a more potent inhibitor of WT clone 2 than of clone 1, suggesting that
the Src pathway makes a greater contribution when fewer receptors are
engaged. In data not shown, pretreatment with wortmannin had no effect on Shc tyrosine phosphorylation and Grb2 association.
|
KI
cells. Figure 9B shows that in
KI clone 1 cells, PP1 markedly inhibited CSF-1-induced Ras activation measured by the GST-RBD pulldown
assay and ERK activation assessed by Western blotting with an
anti-active ERK antibody. Similar results were obtained with
KI
clone 2 (not shown). Thus, there is a strong correlation between
diminished Shc-Grb2 association and reduction in activity of the
Ras/ERK pathway. Analogous to its effect on SHC and Grb2 association,
PP1 exerted a modest inhibitory effect on ERK activation in WT clone 2. Transient transfection of
KI-CSF-1R cells with the plasmid encoding
Src251 inhibited both basal and CSF-1-induced ERK activation,
supporting a role for SFKs (Fig. 9C). Together, these results are
consistent with the model described for
KI cells, in which
CSF-1-mediated recruitment of SFKs may be the primary mechanism by
which the PI3-kinase/Akt and Ras/ERK pathways are activated, the latter
possibly proceeding through phosphorylation of Shc and association with
Grb2. On the other hand, in WT cells, SFKs appear to play a less
important role, particularly when a larger number of receptors are engaged.
The contribution of Src family kinases to ERK and Akt activation
induced by the WT CSF-1R is dependent on receptor expression
levels.
The results in Fig. 9 suggest that the contribution of
SFKs to CSF-1-stimulated ERK and Akt activities may depend on WT
receptor expression level. This possibility has physiological relevance since CSF-1R expression increases with maturation: whereas early myeloid precursors express 2,000 receptors/cell, mature macrophages have 50,000 receptors/cell (72). To further investigate the role of SFKs in mediating signaling by WT CSF-1R, we used WT clones that our laboratory has established with CSF-1R expression levels spanning the physiological range (clone 1, 45,000 receptors/cell; clone
3, 25,000 receptors/cell; clone 2, 10,000 receptors/cell; clone 4, 3,900 receptors/cell). PP1 was used to assess the role of SFKs in
mediating CSF-1-induced ERK and Akt activation. The effectiveness of
PP1 inhibition was clearly dependent on CSF-1R expression levels:
CSF-1-mediated ERK phosphorylation in clone 4 was almost
completely abolished by 10 µM PP1; the same dose was much less
effective in clones 1 and 3, although an inhibitory effect was still
evident (Fig. 10A). The decrease in ERK
phosphorylation in the presence of PP1 and the dependence on
receptor expression was not due to differences in ERK protein levels,
as the same blot when stripped and reprobed with anti-ERK antibodies
showed equivalent levels in all samples. Also, PP1 did not
directly affect CSF-1R autophosphorylation (Fig. 10B). We note
for clone 1 that whereas CSF-1-induced Ras activation was unaffected by
100 µM PP1 (Fig. 9B), ERK activation was partially inhibited even at 10 µM PP1 (Fig. 10A). This suggests that in addition to acting upstream of Shc/Grb2 recruitment, Src may also act downstream of Ras.
Although the mechanism of activation of A-Raf is not well understood,
maximal activation of Raf-1 requires tyrosine phosphorylation possibly
mediated by SFKs (24, 37, 57). PP1 inhibition of CSF-1-induced Akt phosphorylation showed a similar dependence on CSF-1R
levels, although the extent of inhibition is less than that observed
for ERK phosphorylation. These results show that the contribution of
SFKs to CSF-1-dependent signaling may depend on receptor expression
levels.
|
Gab2 may be an intermediate linking Src family kinases to
PI3-kinase during CSF-1-mediated signaling in cells expressing
KI-CSF-1R.
Recently, a multisite docking protein was identified
that responds to a variety of cytokines by undergoing tyrosine
phosphorylation and creating binding sites for signaling molecules
including the p85 subunit of PI3-kinase (29, 61, 99). This
is Gab2, which shares
35% identity with Gab1, another docking
protein demonstrated to act downstream of RTKs and cytokine receptors
(32, 33, 70, 80). To determine if Gab2 might be involved in
linking
KI-CSF-1R to PI3-kinase, we compared the spectra of
tyrosine-phosphorylated proteins that coimmunoprecipitated with p85 or
Gab2 in 32D-WT-CSF-1R and 32D-
KI-CSF-1R cells. In WT cells, CSF-1
stimulated the tyrosine phosphorylation of p85 and induced its
coimmunoprecipitation with a broad, tyrosine-phosphorylated band at 160 kDa and a second broad, tyrosine-phosphorylated band at 97 kDa (p97)
(Fig. 11A). In contrast, p85 from
KI
cells was not tyrosine phosphorylated and coprecipitated predominantly
with p97. The 160-kDa band is most likely CSF-1R, consistent with its
absence in
KI cells, as the
KI receptor lacks the p85 binding
site. A third coprecipitating protein at 110 to 120 kDa was not pursued
since CSF-1 did not consistently induce its tyrosine phosphorylation in
KI cells. p97 appears to comigrate with tyrosine-phosphorylated Gab2
detected in Gab2 immunoprecipitates (Fig. 11A) which was strongly
stimulated by CSF-1 in both WT and
KI cells. Gab2 coprecipitated a
tyrosine-phosphorylated protein at
66 kDa which is SHP-2 (Fig. 11C).
To further confirm that p97 detected in p85 immunoprecipitates is Gab2,
we took an immunodepletion approach. Lysates were first
immunoprecipitated with anti-Gab2; the depleted lysates were then
reimmunoprecipitated with anti-p85. The two sets of immunoprecipitates
were analyzed side by side (Fig. 11B). The results showed that
immunodepletion with anti-Gab2 effectively removed p97 from p85
immunoprecipitates from both WT and
KI cells. Note that the blot was
overexposed so as to detect any residual p97. The blot was stripped and
reprobed with anti-p85, confirming its presence in Gab2
immunoprecipitates. The association of p85 with Gab2 was transient and
had decreased after 15 min of CSF-1 treatment (Fig. 11B).
|
KI cells. 32D-WT-CSF-1R (clone 1)
and 32D-
KI-CSF-1R (clone 1) cells were pretreated or not with 10 µM PP1 prior to CSF-1 stimulation (Fig. 11C). PP1 completely eliminated CSF-1-stimulated Gab2 tyrosine phosphorylation in
KI but
not WT cells, an effect accompanied by the loss of CSF-1-inducible association of Gab2 with p85 and SHP-2 (Fig. 11C). The anti-PY blots in
Fig. 11A and C also showed two bands migrating at 46 and 52 kDa upon
CSF-1 treatment, which could correspond to p46Shc and
p52Shc. Gab2 immunoprecipitates probed with a monoclonal
Shc antibody to avoid obscuration by the IgG heavy chain showed the
faint presence of p46Shc and p52Shc associated
with Gab2 (Fig. 11C), similar to what has been reported elsewhere
(29). Taken together, our data demonstrate that CSF-1 stimulated the tyrosine phosphorylation of Gab2 and its association with PI3-kinase in both WT and
KI cells, but only in the latter case
does Src kinase activity appear to be required for these events to occur.
| |
DISCUSSION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
The primary aim of this work was to develop a detailed understanding of how CSF-1 activates the ERK/MAPK pathway in hematopoietic cells. IL-3-dependent myeloid progenitor cell lines expressing transduced CSF-1R have been used extensively to investigate CSF-1 signaling since they provide the appropriate cellular context and permit analysis of CSF-1R mutants (8, 46-48, 55, 65). The major conclusions of the present study are that CSF-1-mediated ERK activation in the 32D myeloid cell line depends on Ras and requires CSF-1-induced PI3-kinase activity which feeds into the ERK pathway at a point upstream of MEK/ERK, probably in parallel to Ras. Activation of PI3-kinase by the CSF-1R can occur by direct recruitment of PI3-kinase to the receptor or indirectly, by a Src-dependent mechanism. The Src pathway is mainly utilized at low CSF-1 receptor occupancy, such as one might find in early myeloid precursors, or when the direct pathway is not available. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study demonstrating that an RTK such as the CSF-1R which binds PI3-kinase directly (68, 76) can also activate PI3-kinase by a separate mechanism independent of direct PI3-kinase-receptor interactions. Other RTKs such as the insulin/IGF-1 receptor (reviewed in reference 90), EGF receptor (70), and TrkA (33) also activate PI3-kinase via recruitment of docking proteins, but they either do not bind or weakly bind PI3-kinase.
We had previously demonstrated that costimulation of the CSF-1/CSF-1R and cAMP/PKA pathways, while producing a large synergistic enhancement of ERK activity, concomitantly suppressed the activity of Raf-1 (46). In addition, IL-3 also exhibited the same type of cross-talk between the ERK and cAMP/PKA pathways. Since then, Sutor et al. (79) have reported very similar findings for IL-3 acting on the FDC-P1 myeloid progenitor cell line. Here, we showed that CSF-1-stimulated-A-Raf activity, in addition to Raf-1, was suppressed at a time when ERK activity was significantly increased by cAMP-elevating agents and upregulated at a time when ERK activity was inhibited by PI3-kinase inhibitors (Fig. 1, Fig. 2, and reference 46). Since it is well established that PKA phosphorylates Raf-1 on sites that prevent interaction with Ras (96) and inhibit catalytic activity (59), the latter site being conserved in all three Rafs, our findings in the presence of cAMP are most consistent with the explanation that neither Raf-1 or A-Raf is responsible for relaying the activating signal to MEK/ERK.
In the absence of cAMP, dominant-negative A-Raf but not dominant-negative Raf-1 partially blocked ERK activity stimulated by CSF-1 or IL-3 (Fig. 2C). A concern with dominant-negative Rafs is that they may exert their inhibitory function by sequestering a shared upstream activator (Ras) away from the authentic MAPKKK, so that the block may not necessarily suggest a role for the Rafs themselves. This concern does not appear to be an issue for dominant-negative Raf-1 since its presence had no significant effect. As we do not have a way of determining if dominant-negative A-Raf competes with the authentic MAPKKK, the most straightforward explanation for our observations is that CSF-1-stimulated MEK/ERK activity is mediated by A-Raf-dependent and -independent mechanisms. We did not specifically investigate the role of B-Raf in this study, as B-Raf was previously found to have high constitutive activity which was not further stimulated by CSF-1 (46). Our findings regarding Raf-1 and B-Raf are in agreement with those of Sutor et al. (79). In contrast, they reported that IL-3-induced A-Raf activity in FDC-P1 cells is suppressed by PI3-kinase inhibition and resistant to cAMP elevation. For B-Raf the susceptibility to PKA inhibition may be isoform dependent, with the 68-kDa but not 95-kDa form of B-Raf being inhibited by PKA (91). Since 32D and FDC-P1 cells have somewhat different lineages (17, 28), it is conceivable that they contain different A-Raf variants with distinct PKA inhibition profiles, although we are not aware of any reports to this effect.
The results presented in this study strongly support a major role for PI3-kinase in the regulation of the MEK/ERK pathway by CSF-1. Evidence is obtained with two unrelated PI3-kinase inhibitors, wortmannin and LY294002, in a dose range generally accepted to be specific for PI3-kinase (26) and with a dominant-negative PI3-kinase, p110-N. Although the dependence on PI3-kinase appears to vary with signal strength in COS cells and fibroblasts (21, 92), in 32D-CSF-1R cells, PI3-kinase activity is required over a 100-fold variation in CSF-1 concentration (0.1 to 10 nM). Akt phosphorylation, used as a convenient readout for PI3-kinase activation, was induced at all doses of CSF-1 tested, indicating that CSF-1-dependent rather than basal PI3-kinase activity contributes to MEK/ERK activation. PI3-kinase activity was not necessary for Ras activation or activation of the events leading to Ras-GTP accumulation, namely, Shc tyrosine phosphorylation and subsequent association with Grb2. In some cell types, PI3-kinase functions as a downstream effector of Ras (71). However, we obtained no evidence to indicate that PI3-kinase is on a linear pathway between Ras and MEK, although we cannot exclude the possibility that PI3-kinase is activated by multiple mechanisms which might obscure blockade by 17NRas. Our results are in agreement with those of Genot et al. (27), who also used Akt activity as a readout for PI3-kinase activation in Jurkat T cells. They also showed that PI3-kinase did not activate Rac/PAK, a potential link to MEK (25, 42). Although we did not specifically investigate the role of Rac/PAK in CSF-1-mediated ERK activation, the available data do not strongly support such an involvement. While EGF-mediated ERK activity is potentiated by constitutively active PAK, it is not blocked by dominant-negative Rac or PAK, implying that EGF does not utilize Rac/PAK to activate ERK. Rather, Raf/MEK may represent a regulatory point for divergent signals (25, 92). The precise mechanism by which PI3-kinase regulates MEK/ERK activity in 32D-CSF-1R cells is unknown. We have some preliminary evidence suggesting that PI3-kinase may feed into the MEK/ERK pathway via atypical PKCs (A. W.-M. Lee and D. J. States, unpublished data). Another possibility is that a lipid product of PI3-kinase or a PI3-kinase protein effector acts at the level of MEK, e.g., by affecting the stability of a MEK/ERK complex.
An intriguing finding is our observation that the CSF-1R can activate
PI3-kinase by more than one mechanism, revealed when the mutant CSF-1R
lacking the KI was found to be still capable of activating Akt and
regulating MEK/ERK in a PI3-kinase-sensitive manner. We used a
combination of pharmacological and genetic approaches to conclude that
the
KI receptor stimulated an SFK-dependent mechanism to activate
both the Ras/ERK and PI3-kinase/Akt pathways. Although the SFK
inhibitor PP1 can antagonize the EGF receptor kinase activity when
added directly to in vitro assays (30), it is unlikely that
our findings are due to inactivation of the CSF-1R kinase function
because in vivo CSF-1R autophosphorylation was unaffected at PP1
concentrations up to 50 µM (Fig. 10B), consistent with studies
showing that PP1 had no effect on EGF receptor autophosphorylation when
added to cells (95). In addition, the inhibitory action of
PP1 on ERK and Akt activation in cells expressing WT CSF-1R depended on
receptor expression levels (Fig. 10A), an observation not easily
explained by inhibition of CSF-1R kinase activity. In support of the
PP1 results, CSF-1-induced ERK and Akt activities were also inhibited
in
KI cells overexpressing dominant-negative SFKs. Presumably the
SH2 and SH3 domains in these mutant SFKs compete with endogenous SFKs
to bind to cellular proteins with Src binding sites, including the
CSF-1R. Hence our findings with dominant-negative SFKs cannot be taken
to imply that the SFK pathway leading to ERK and PI3-kinase activation
depends on SFK binding to the CSF-1R. CSF-1 activates both Fyn and Lyn,
but we have not examined expression of all SFKs. The question of which
SFK member is utilized by the CSF-1R in 32D cells to initiate signaling
is an important one, as SFKs play nonredundant roles in vascular endothelial growth factor-mediated angiogenesis (22) and
T-cell receptor signaling (15).
How do SFKs couple the CSF-1R to PI3-kinase? There are a number of
possibilities. Upon activation by binding to the CSF-1R, SFKs can
directly recruit PI3-kinase, a mechanism that may be utilized by the T-
and B-cell receptors (66, 67). Alternately, activated SFKs
can phosphorylate docking/scaffolding proteins which contain binding
sites for the SH2 domain of the p85 subunit of PI3-kinase. Examples of
docking proteins implicated in RTK signaling are the IRS family
members, which include Gab1/2 and the proto-oncogene product c-Cbl. 32D
cells have no endogenous IRS-1, IRS-2 and IRS-4 (84) and
anti-PY blots of p85 immunoprecipitates from
KI cells did not
consistently reveal CSF-1-induced phosphorylation of proteins in the
110-kDa range (Fig. 11A and B), which would have suggested the presence
of Gab1. Both Gab2 and c-Cbl are tyrosine phosphorylated in response to
CSF-1 in WT and
KI cells (Fig. 11; A. W.-M. Lee, unpublished
data). c-Cbl has been shown to function as a negative regulator of
CSF-1 signaling by promoting multiubiquitination and hence degradation
of the CSF-1R (50) similar to that observed for the PDGF and
EGF receptors (52, 60). Such a role in negative regulation
of signaling has not been reconciled with the observations that
tyrosine-phosphorylated c-Cbl also recruits signaling molecules (e.g.,
PI3-kinase). It is not known if these signaling molecules bound to
c-Cbl are sequestered and destined for degradation or are normally
presented to their substrates and downstream effectors. In this report
we have focused on Gab2 as a possible intermediary between SFKs and
PI3-kinase. Data supporting a role for Gab2 are our observations that
CSF-1 induced the association of Gab2 with p85/PI3-kinase in WT and
KI cells and in
KI cells, PP1 prevented CSF-1-stimulated Gab2
tyrosine phosphorylation and binding to the p85 subunit of PI3-kinase,
suggesting possibly that Gab2 is a substrate for SFKs. In WT cells, PP1
had no effect on CSF-1-induced Gab2 tyrosine phosphorylation; Gab2 may
be phosphorylated by the CSF-1R itself or by non-RTKs other than SFKs.
In addition to being a downstream effector of Gab1, PI3-kinase can also
function as an upstream activator since the PI3-kinase product
PI-3,4,5-P3 binds to the pleckstrin homology (PH) domain of
Gab1 and recruits it to the plasma membrane (58, 70).
PI-3,4,5-P3 will likely also bind to the PH domain of Gab2,
as the PH domains of Gab1 and Gab2 are 73% identical (29).
Therefore, in WT cells, there is a potential for
PI-3,4,5-P3 generated upon direct binding of PI3-kinase to
Tyr 721 in the activated CSF-1R to recruit Gab2, a mechanism that is
not available to the
KI-CSF-1R.
With regard to activation of the Ras/ERK pathway by the CSF-1R, likely
mechanisms include binding of Grb2/Sos to Tyr 697 on the activated
CSF-1R and the recruitment and tyrosine phosphorylation of Shc and
subsequent association with Grb2/Sos. We have not observed coprecipitation of Shc with the CSF-1R, implying that Shc tyrosine phosphorylation does not require stable complex formation with the
receptor. In
KI cells, the activating signal to Ras is presumably sent via Shc, as the route involving direct Grb2 binding is eliminated. In these cells, Src kinase activity was shown to play a significant role in mediating the tyrosine phosphorylation of Shc and association with Grb2 (Fig. 9A). SFKs can directly phosphorylate Shc
(87), but the relationship may also be an indirect one since
Shc is bound to Gab2 upon CSF-1 stimulation (Fig. 11C), similar to that previously reported for IL-3 (29), and Gab2 is
phosphorylated in an SFK-dependent manner in
KI cells. Whether
Gab2-bound Shc is involved in mediating Ras/ERK activation remains to
be elucidated. When overexpressed, Gab1 and Gab2 potentiate
cytokine-mediated ERK activation (29, 61, 80); moreover,
embryonic fibroblasts from Gab1
/
mice show much
diminished ERK activation in response to IL-6, EGF, PDGF, and
hepatocyte growth factor (36). The tyrosine phosphatase SHP-2 binds to Gab1/2 (29, 32, 33, 61, 80) and is required for activation of Ras/ERK in response to a variety of signals (reviewed
in reference 35). The published data concerning
whether Gab1/2 and SHP-2 act in concert to influence Ras/ERK activation are confusing since mutation of the SHP-2 binding sites in Gab1/2 either had no effect (29) or blocked (14) growth
factor-induced ERK activity. In 32D-CSF-1R cells, CSF-1 induced
significant tyrosine phosphorylation of SHP-2, and SHP-2 coprecipitated
Grb2 (data not shown) and Gab2 (Fig. 11C). Although
tyrosine-phosphorylated SHP-2 has binding sites for Grb2/Sos (4,
54), Gab2 can bind Grb2 constitutively (29); hence we
cannot exclude a three-way complex (SHP-2-Gab2-Grb2). Additional
experiments utilizing Gab2 and SHP-2 mutants will be required to
determine the contribution of Gab2 and SHP-2 to CSF-1-mediated ERK activation.
Src's contribution to CSF-1-mediated ERK and PI3K/Akt activation in
32D clones expressing WT CSF-1R appears to depend on receptor levels.
This suggests that under conditions when fewer receptors are engaged
such as what occurs in clone 4 (3,900 receptors/cell) or early myeloid
precursors (2,000 receptors/cell) or when ligand concentration is low,
fewer redundant pathways are activated and the Src-dependent mechanism
plays a more prominent role. That different signaling pathways may
require different signal strengths for activation has been noted
previously. Soler et al. (78) found that whereas
phospholipase C-
1 and RasGAP were poorly phosphorylated by EGF in
cells expressing <104 receptors/cell, Shc remained
efficiently phosphorylated; all three proteins were strongly
phosphorylated when >4 × 104 receptors/cell were
occupied. Signal strength, determined by receptor levels
(21) or ligand concentration (92), has also been
shown to be a primary factor in the PI3-kinase contribution to ERK
activation (see the introduction). Factors that might explain why the
Src-dependent pathway was more important at low signal strength include
differences in the stoichiometry of phosphorylation of the Src versus
p85 and Grb2 binding sites, in the binding affinity of Src, p85, and
Grb2 to their respective sites, and in the efficiency with which the
different pathways couple to their downstream targets. Recently, it was
reported that a Kit/SCF receptor mutant lacking the Src binding site
when expressed in endothelial cells exhibited much reduced
ligand-induced ERK activation (51), while the same mutant
expressed in mast cells had an intact ERK response (82). Our
findings suggest two possible explanations: in mast cells the mutant
might have been able to activate redundant mechanisms not available in
endothelial cells. Alternately, expression levels of Kit might have
altered the signaling pathways used.
The experiments described in this report extend our current model for
how the CSF-1R mediates activation of the Ras/ERK and PI3-kinase/Akt
pathways in myeloid cells. Importantly, our findings point to the
utilization of redundant mechanisms by the CSF-1R to activate
downstream pathways that affect the cell's ability to proliferate and
survive. A corollary of our observations is that PI3-kinase exerts its
downstream effects in myeloid progenitors in part via the ERK pathway.
Inhibitors of MEK/ERK and of PI3-kinase independently induced apoptosis
and reduced proliferation in 32D-CSF-1R cells in the presence of CSF-1
(H.-L. Lin and A. W.-M. Lee, unpublished data). Further work will
be needed to distinguish the ERK from the Akt branch in mediating
PI3-kinase's survival and proliferative functions in these cells. The
role of PI3-kinase in mediating CSF-1-induced DNA synthesis has
been examined previously. Utilizing fibroblasts transfected
with the CSF-1R, Roche et al. (69) showed that microinjected
anti-p110
antibodies had no effect on CSF-1-induced DNA synthesis.
In marked contrast, Ridley's group found that microinjected anti-p110
antibodies completely abrogated CSF-1-dependent DNA synthesis in BAC1 macrophages (88). Possibly, cell type
difference played a role in determining the outcome of the two studies.
Clearly there is a need to fully identify and characterize the
signaling pathways activated by the CSF-1R in both myeloid precursors
and mature macrophages and the cellular context that permits redundant regulation of growth and survival.
| |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
This work was supported by National Science Foundation Research Planning grant MCB-9306519 (to A.W.-M.L.) and by National Institutes of Health grant RO1-DK48929 (to A.W.-M.L.).
We acknowledge the contribution of Raymond Yeh, who performed the Akt kinase assay shown in Fig. 7B, the advice of Johan de Rooij regarding the GST-RBD pulldown assay, and discussions with Masahiko Hibi regarding Gab2 immunoprecipitations. We also appreciate the continuing generosity of the Genetics Institute for recombinant human CSF-1 and Johannes Bos, Melanie Cobb, P. Di Fiore, Toshio Hirano, Gary Johnson, Ushio Kikkawa, Anke Klippel, Dan Link, Jeffrey Pessin, and Pam Schwartzberg for reagents.
| |
FOOTNOTES |
|---|
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biophysics, Washington University Medical School, Box 8231, 660 S. Euclid Ave., St. Louis, MO 63110. Phone: (314) 362-4466. Fax: (314) 747-0431. E-mail:lee{at}biochem.wustl.edu.
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