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Molecular and Cellular Biology, November 2001, p. 7137-7149, Vol. 21, No. 21
0270-7306/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/MCB.21.21.7137-7149.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
ZAP-70-Independent Ca2+ Mobilization
and Erk Activation in Jurkat T Cells in Response to T-Cell Antigen
Receptor Ligation
Xiaochuan
Shan,1,
Richard
Balakir,1
Gabriel
Criado,2
Jason S.
Wood,1
Maria-Cristina
Seminario,1
Joaquin
Madrenas,2 and
Ronald L.
Wange1,*
Laboratory of Cellular and Molecular Biology,
National Institute on Aging, National Institutes of Health, Baltimore,
Maryland 21224-6825,1 and The John P. Robarts Research Institute and Departments of Microbiology and
Immunology and of Medicine, The University of Western Ontario, London,
Ontario, Canada N6A 5K82
Received 12 February 2001/Returned for modification 21 March 2001/Accepted 16 July
2001
 |
ABSTRACT |
The tyrosine kinase ZAP-70 has been implicated as a critical
intermediary between T-cell antigen receptor (TCR) stimulation and Erk
activation on the basis of the ability of dominant negative ZAP-70 to
inhibit TCR-stimulated Erk activation, and the reported inability of
anti-CD3 antibodies to activate Erk in ZAP-70-negative Jurkat cells.
However, Erk is activated in T cells receiving a partial agonist
signal, despite failing to activate ZAP-70. This discrepancy led us to
reanalyze the ZAP-70-negative Jurkat T-cell line P116 for its ability
to support Erk activation in response to TCR/CD3 stimulation. Erk was
activated by CD3 cross-linking in P116 cells. However, this response
required a higher concentration of anti-CD3 antibody and was delayed
and transient compared to that in Jurkat T cells. Activation of Raf-1
and MEK-1 was coincident with Erk activation. Remarkably, the time
course of Ras activation was comparable in the two cell lines, despite
proceeding in the absence of LAT tyrosine phosphorylation in the P116
cells. CD3 stimulation of P116 cells also induced tyrosine
phosphorylation of phospholipase C-
1 (PLC
1) and increased the
intracellular Ca2+ concentration. Protein kinase C (PKC)
inhibitors blocked CD3-stimulated Erk activation in P116 cells, while
parental Jurkat cells were refractory to PKC inhibition. The
physiologic relevance of these signaling events is further supported by
the finding of PLC
1 tyrosine phosphorylation, Erk activation, and
CD69 upregulation in P116 cells on stimulation with superantigen and
antigen-presenting cells. These results demonstrate the existence of
two pathways leading to TCR-stimulated Erk activation in Jurkat T
cells: a ZAP-70-independent pathway requiring PKC and a
ZAP-70-dependent pathway that is PKC independent.
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Signals generated on engagement of
the T-cell antigen receptor (TCR) are critical in the regulation of
T-lymphocyte function. TCR signal transduction is mediated proximally
by multiple tyrosine kinases, which act in concert to activate a
diverse array of signaling molecules (6, 10, 35, 55-57,
64). Key among these downstream effectors are the enzymes
phospholipase C-
1 (PLC
1) and the extracellular-signal-regulated kinase (Erk), both of which need to be activated in order for TCR
engagement to result in T cell activation. Activated PLC
1 catalyzes
the hydrolysis of phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate (PI-4,5-P2) to inositol-1,4,5-trisphosphate
(IP3) and diacylglycerol (DAG). The former product
regulates the levels of intracellular Ca2+, while the
latter is an activator of the classical (cPKC:
,
I,
II and
), and novel (nPKC:
,
,
and
)
isoforms of protein kinase C (PKC) and of Ras-GRP (25).
Erk is a proline-directed serine/threonine kinase that can
phosphorylate and regulate multiple downstream effectors, including
p90RSK and the transcription factor Elk-1.
The nature of the intervening steps between TCR stimulation and
activation of these enzymes has begun to be elucidated, but our
understanding of this process remains incomplete. Considerable evidence
points to a required Lck/Fyn-catalyzed tyrosine phosphorylation of the
CD3 and TCR
chains, with the resultant TCR recruitment and
activation of the protein tyrosine kinase (PTK) ZAP-70, which then
phosphorylates two of its substrates, SLP-76 and LAT, on key
tyrosine residues (10, 35, 56, 57, 64). These last two
proteins serve as linker molecules. They have no intrinsic enzymatic
activity but, when tyrosine phosphorylated, function by appropriately
colocalizing other signaling molecules. SLP-76 is cytosolic, while the
majority of LAT partitions to the lipid rafts by virtue of
posttranslational palmitoylation proximal to the endofacial side of its
transmembrane domain. When phosphorylated, LAT binds directly to
PLC
1, Grb2, Grap, and Gads, effectively localizing these molecules
and their associated proteins (including phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase,
SOS, c-Cbl, Vav, SLP-76, and Itk) to the lipid rafts of the plasma
membrane. This event is thought to be required for PLC
1 tyrosine
phosphorylation and activation, as well as the activation of Erk. It
has been proposed that the LAT-assembled complex colocalizes PLC
1
with the activated PTK (possibly Itk) that phosphorylates and activates
it and that this process requires Gads-bound SLP-76 (35, 56,
64). Additionally, LAT association positions PLC
1 near its
substrate, PI-4,5-P2, potentially increasing the rate of
PI-4,5-P2 hydrolysis.
Precisely how the formation of the LAT-associated signaling complex
leads to Erk activation is unclear. Erk activation proceeds primarily
through the sequential activation of Ras, Raf-1, and MEK. It has
been suggested that Ras is activated in TCR-stimulated T cells via
recruitment of Grb2-associated SOS, a guanine nucleotide exchange
factor for Ras, to the plasma membrane by virtue of the capability of
the SH2 domains of Grb2 to bind to membrane-resident, tyrosine-phosphorylated proteins such as LAT (10, 35, 56, 64). This is analogous to what has been observed for Ras
activation mediated by the engagement of growth factor receptors
(37). However, other mechanisms of Ras activation have
also been found in T cells. One mechanism involves activation of PKC
(6), which can activate Raf-1 directly (7, 26, 32,
53), and another involves Ras-GRP, which is expressed at high
levels in lymphocytes, and was recently identified as a phorbol
ester-activated (and presumably DAG-activated) guanine nucleotide
exchange factor for Ras (15, 29, 51). Ras-GRP is required
for normal thymocyte development and is activated in response to TCR
engagement (14, 16). Therefore, multiple signaling
pathways probably exist for connecting TCR engagement to Ras, and
subsequently Erk, activation.
Given the reported requirement for LAT and SLP-76 in TCR-initiated
activation of PLC
1 and Erk and the demonstrated importance of
ZAP-70-mediated tyrosine phosphorylation in supporting the function of
these linker molecules (10, 35, 56, 64), it would be
expected that ZAP-70 would also be required for PLC
1 activation and
Erk activation in TCR-stimulated T cells. Indeed, a previous study
found that overexpression of dominant negative forms of ZAP-70 could
block the activation of nuclear factor of activated T cells (NF-AT) (an
event distal to PLC
1 and Erk activation) in Jurkat T cells
(38). In addition, it has been reported that ZAP-70-negative mutants of the Jurkat T-cell line fail to flux Ca2+ or activate Erk in response to anti-CD3 monoclonal
antibody (MAb) (59, 60). However, increased Erk activation
(8, 9) and Ca2+ mobilization (4, 28,
47) have been measured in T-cell clones and naive
CD4+ peripheral T cells stimulated under partial-agonist
conditions, conditions that do not support the activation of ZAP-70
(4, 28, 31, 46). In an attempt to reconcile these
apparently discrepant observations, we have reexamined the signaling
pathways leading to Ca2+ mobilization and Erk activation in
TCR-stimulated, ZAP-70-negative P116 Jurkat T cells.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Cells.
The wild-type E6.1 subline of Jurkat T cells
(20, 41) and the P116, J14, JCaM1, and JCaM2 somatic
mutants of E6.1 Jurkat, which have deficient expression of ZAP-70,
SLP-76, Lck, and LAT, respectively, have been described previously
(18, 49, 60, 61). P116 cells were a gift of R.T. Abraham
(Duke University, Raleigh, NC). The J14-v-29 (vector-transfected) and
J14-s-11 (SLP-76-transfected) cells were a gift of A. Weiss (University
of California, San Franciso, Calif.). The JCaM1 cells were purchased
from the American Tissue Culture Collection, and the Lck-transfected
JCaM1 cells were a gift of David B. Straus (University of Chicago,
Chicago, Ill.). The JCaM2.5 and LAT-transfected JCaM2 cells (JCaM2.5B3)
were a gift of A. Weiss and L. E. Samelson (National Cancer
Institute, Bethesda, Md.). These cells were maintained in RPMI 1640 medium supplemented with 7.5% fetal bovine serum (HyClone), 2 mM
L-glutamine, and 10 µg of ciprofloxacin hydrochloride
(Bayer) per ml. The parental and mutant Jurkat T-cell lines were
periodically tested by flow cytometry to confirm equivalent expression
levels of CD3 and by Western blotting to confirm the appropriate
expression level of the signaling molecules under investigation. In
particular, the P116 cells were routinely tested to ensure that ZAP-70
was not being expressed in these cells. The LG2 B lymphoblastoid cell line that expresses HLA-DR1 and B7.1 was kindly provided by A. Sette
(Epimmune, San Diego, Calif.) and was maintained in RPMI 1640 medium
supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum, 2 mM
L-glutamine, 1 mM sodium pyruvate, 1× MEM nonessential
amino acids (GIBCO), penicillin (10 IU), and streptomycin (100 µg/ml)
(Wisent, Montreal, Quebec, Canada).
Antibodies and other reagents.
The human CD3-
-specific
MAbs OKT3 (immunoglobulin G2A [IgG2a]) and UCHT-1 (IgG1),
were a custom ascites (Biodesign International) and purchased from
Pharmingen, respectively. The MAbs to antiphosphotyrosine (4G10) and
PLC
1 were obtained from UBI. Rabbit polyclonal antibody to human
phosphorylated, activated Erk was purchased from Promega or StressGen.
MAb to phosphorylated, activated Erk and rabbit polyclonal antibody to
phosphorylated, activated MEK were purchased from Cell Signaling.
Anti-pan Ras antibody was purchased from CalBiochem. MAb (for
immunoprecipitation) and rabbit antisera (for blotting) against Raf-1
were obtained from BD Transduction Laboratories and Santa Cruz
Biotechnology, respectively. Horseradish peroxidase-conjugated sheep
anti-mouse and donkey anti-rabbit IgGs were purchased from Amersham.
Horseradish peroxidase-conjugated goat anti-rabbit IgG was from
Bio-Rad. Anti-TCR V
8-phycoarythrinP and anti-CD69-fluorescein
isothiocyanate were from Pharmingen. Partially purified staphylococcal
enterotoxin E (SEE) was purchased from Toxin Technologies, Inc.
(Sarasota, Fla.). Purified, full-length MEK (Raf-1 substrate) was from
Santa Cruz Biotechnology. The fusion protein containing the full-length
sequence of Grb2 fused to the C terminus of glutathione
S-transferase (GST) was purified from Escherichia
coli cultures transformed with the plasmid pGEX-2TK-Grb2 (a gift
of G. A. Koretzky, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pa.)
as previously described (43). The bacterial expression plasmid encoding the Ras binding domain of Raf-1 fused to GST was a
gift of S. J. Taylor (Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y.). The
NF-AT-luciferase reporter construct (36) was a gift of
G. R. Crabtree.
Cellular stimulation, immunoprecipitation, affinity
precipitation, and immunoblot analyses.
Cells were washed and
resuspended in RPMI 1640 at 108 cells/ml. Cell aliquots
were preincubated at 37°C for 5 min prior to the addition of
stimulus. OKT3 or UCHT-1 was used at the concentrations and for the
durations indicated in the figures. Where indicated, the cells were
also preincubated for 15 min at 37°C with the PKC inhibitors
Gö6850, Gö6976, or Ro-31-8220 or the tyrosine kinase inhibitor PP-1. Inhibitors were purchased from Calbiochem. Anti-CD3 stimulation was terminated by the addition of 5 volumes of 4°C lysis
buffer [20 mM HEPES (pH 7.4), 1% Triton X-100, 50 mM
-glycerophosphate, 2 mM EGTA, 10 mM sodium fluoride, 1 mM sodium
orthovanadate, 10% glycerol, 10 µg of leupeptin per ml, 10 µg of
aprotinin per ml, 100 µg of 4-(2-aminoethyl)-benzenesulfonyl
fluoride) per ml]. After a 30-min incubation on ice, whole-cell
lysates (WCL) were prepared by a 10-min centrifugation at 4°C and
21,000 × g. The lysates were either directly analyzed
by Western blotting or subjected to immunoprecipitation or affinity
precipitation with GST-Grb2 followed by immunoblotting as previously
described (43). Immunoblots were developed by enhanced
chemiluminescence using the Renaissance horseradish peroxidase
substrate (Dupont NEN). Where indicated, the immunoblots were
quantitated by densitometric analysis using Scion Image (Scion
Corp.)
Ras and Raf-1 activation assays.
The Ras activation assay
was carried out as previously described (50). In brief,
Jurkat lysates were incubated with a glutathione agarose-immobilized
GST fusion protein containing the Ras binding domain (RBD) of Raf-1.
The fusion protein does not bind to Ras-GDP but binds with high
affinity to Ras-GTP. The amount of Ras detected in immunoblots of the
GST-Raf-1-RBD affinity precipitations is a measure of Ras activation
(GTP binding). The Raf-1 activation assay was carried out as previously
described (3) and measures the ability of
immunoprecipitated Raf-1 to phosphorylate purified MEK protein in an
immune complex kinase assay, where Raf-1-phosphorylated MEK-1 is
detected by immunoblotting with an antibody specific for phosphorylated
MEK-1 (Ser-217 and Ser-221).
Intracellular free Ca2+ measurements.
Jurkat and
P116 cells were loaded with the Ca2+ indicator dye,
Indo-1-AM (Molecular Probes) essentially as described previously (60), and stimulated with UCHT-1 (various concentrations),
pervanadate (100 µM Na3VO4, 300 µM
H2O2) or Ionomycin (1 µg/ml). A 2-ml volume of cells at a density of 5 × 105 cells/ml were placed
online into the mixing chamber of a FACStar Plus flow cytometer (Becton
Dickinson). Baseline measurements were collected for 1 min, 50 µl of
40× stimulant was added, and measurement was continued for an
additional 5 min. Stimulus-induced changes in the intracellular
Ca2+ concentration were determined over time by monitoring
the fluorescence emission ratio of the Ca2+-bound versus
free form of indo-1 at 405 and 495 nm, respectively; data were analyzed
and plots were generated using MultiTime Kinetic software (Phoenix Flow Systems).
NF-AT reporter assay.
The NF-AT luciferase reporter gene was
transfected into Jurkat and P116 cells as previously described
(42). The cells were maintained overnight in complete
medium before being stimulated with increasing concentrations of the
anti-CD3 UCHT1 or phorbol myristate acetate PMA (50 ng/ml) for 6 hours
at 37°C. After stimulation, the cells were washed twice in
phosphate-buffered saline, lysed, and analyzed by the luciferase assay
system (Promega) with an Autolumat LB953 luminometer (Perkin-Elmer).
Superantigen stimulation.
For stimulation with SEE, T cells
were washed and resuspended in RPMI 1640 at 108 cells/ml.
After equilibration at 37°C for 10 min, aliquots of 107
cells were incubated for 30 min at 37°C for the indicated times with
2 × 106 LG2 cells previously loaded with the
indicated amount of SEE. SEE stimulation was terminated by the addition
at 4°C of phosphate-buffered saline-0.4 mM EDTA-0.4 mM sodium
orthovanadate. The cells were lysed with lysis buffer (10 mM Tris-HCl
[pH 7.5], 1% Triton X-100, 5 mM EDTA, 1 mM sodium orthovanadate, 10 µg of leupeptin per ml, 10 µg of aprotinin per ml, 25 µM
p-nitrophenyl-p'-guanidinobenzoate) for 30 min
at 4°C. Whole-cell lysates were prepared by a 10-min centrifugation
at 4°C and 21,000 × g and analyzed by Western
blotting, either directly or after immunoprecipitation with
anti-PLC
1 MAb. Immunoblots were developed by enhanced
chemiluminescence using the BM chemiluminescence substrate (Roche).
 |
RESULTS |
CD3 cross-linking activates Erk and MEK-1 in the absence of
ZAP-70 expression.
Previously we reported that the activation of
Erk in Jurkat T cells stimulated with anti-CD3 MAb does not necessarily
require the PTK ZAP-70. This conclusion was drawn from the observation that Erk2 activation, after 3 min of stimulation with OKT3, was largely
comparable in both ZAP-70-negative P116 cells and in the parental,
ZAP-70-replete, Jurkat T-cell line (21). This observation was unexpected, since overexpression of dominant negative ZAP-70 blocks
Erk activation in Jurkat T cells (38), and previous
studies have reported that P116 cells fail to flux Ca2+ or
activate Erk in response to anti-CD3 MAb (59, 60). In light of these discrepancies, we undertook to more thoroughly examine
the role played by ZAP-70 in Erk activation and the mechanisms that
might underlie ZAP-70-independent Erk activation in Jurkat T cells. A
kinetic analysis of Erk activation, as measured by immunoblotting for
the dually phosphorylated, activated forms of Erk1 and Erk2, found that
Erk activation in response to CD3 cross-linking was delayed and
transient in the P116 cells compared to the wild-type Jurkat cells
(Fig. 1A). In the parental Jurkat cells,
Erk activation was seen as early as 30 s and persisted at high
levels from 2 to 16 min. However, in P116 cells Erk activation was not
seen until 2 min after stimulation and declined rapidly thereafter,
approaching baseline by 8 min. Quantitation by densitometric analysis
of the anti-phospho-Erk immunoblots from a similar experiment with a
more extensive time course more clearly illustrates the delayed and
transient nature of Erk activation in P116 cells (Fig 1C). Activation
of Erk1 and Erk2 was very rapid in CD3-stimulated Jurkat T cells, with
measurable increases in Erk phosphorylation as early as 5 s after
stimulation (inset in Fig. 1C). Appreciable Erk1 and Erk2 activation in
CD3-stimulated P116 cells was not detected until 1 min after
stimulation. Erk1 activation was very weak in P116 cells. Identical
results were obtained with OKT3 and UCHT1 (anti-CD3 MAbs of
IgG2a and IgG1 isotypes, respectively) (data
not shown). Isotype-matched control MAbs had no effect on Erk
activation (data not shown), indicating that Erk activation in the P116
T cells was not due to nonspecific effects of the high concentration of
antibody.

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FIG. 1.
CD3 cross-linking induces Erk and MEK-1 phosphorylation
in P116 T cells. (A) Parental Jurkat and ZAP-70-negative P116 T cells
were stimulated by CD3 cross-linking at 37°C with OKT3 ascites (1:50)
for 0, 0.5, 2, 8, or 16 min. WCL proteins were resolved by
electrophoresis on 4 to 12% NuPAGE gradient gels run in
morpholinepropanesulfonic acid (MOPS) buffer, transferred to
nitrocellulose, and immunoblotted for dually phosphorylated, activated
Erk. Phospho-Erk1 is the upper band, and phospho-Erk2 is the lower
band. Membranes were stripped and then blotted for phosphorylated
MEK-1. (B) Jurkat and P116 T cells were stimulated by CD3 cross-linking
at 37°C for 3 min with purified UCHT1 MAb. The concentration of UCHT1
was varied from 0.2 to 20 µg/ml. Erk and MEK-1 phosphorylation were
measured as in panel A. (C) As for panel , except that the time
course encompassed 0-, 0.08-, 0.25-, 0.5-, 1-, 2-, 4-, 6-, 10-, 15-, and 30-min stimulations with OKT3 ascites (1:50). The data from the
phospho-Erk immunoblot were quantitated by densitometric analysis using
Scion Image software. Symbols: , Jurkat Erk2; , Jurkat Erk1; ,
P116 Erk2; , P116 Erk1. The inset is a replot of the first six time
points using an expanded scale on the x axis.
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In addition to examining the kinetics of Erk activation in these two
cell lines, we examined the dose response for Erk activation
by 3 min
of stimulation with anti-CD3 MAb (UCHT1). Erk activation
in the P116
cells required approximately 10-fold more UCHT1 than
was required for
comparable Erk activation in the parental Jurkat
cells (Fig.
1B).
Notably, while 1 µg of anti-CD3 MAb per ml was
sufficient to induce
maximal Erk activation in the parental Jurkat
T cells, this
concentration was completely ineffective in stimulating
Erk activation
in P116
cells.
Erk phosphorylation and activation proceeds via the phosphorylation and
activation of MEK-1, which directly phosphorylates
the regulatory
threonine and tyrosine residues of Erk. MEK-1 phosphorylation
in
response to CD3 stimulation in parental and P116 Jurkat T cells
was
measured by immunoblotting WCLs with a polyclonal antibody
specific for
phosphorylated MEK-1 (Fig.
1). In both cell lines,
CD3-stimulated MEK-1
phosphorylation proceeded via a time course
and dose response that was
identical to Erk phosphorylation. This
is consistent with Erk
phosphorylation in both the ZAP-70-negative
and -replete Jurkat T-cell
lines proceeding through the phosphorylation
and activation of MEK-1 by
Raf-1.
Activation of Raf-1 and Ras in the absence of ZAP-70
expression.
Anti-CD3 MAb-stimulated activation of Raf-1 kinase
activity was measured via an immune complex kinase assay for Raf-1
purified from either parental or P116 Jurkat T cells (Fig.
2A). Raf-1 activation was observed in
both cell lines and, as was the case for Erk and MEK-1 phosphorylation,
required higher concentrations of anti-CD3 MAb to elicit activation of
Raf-1 in the ZAP-70-negative P116 cells. We also examined the time
course of Raf-1 activation in the parental and P116 Jurkat T cells
(Fig. 2B). In both cell lines, the time course of Raf-1 kinase
activation correlated well with the time course of Erk and MEK-1
phosphorylation stimulated by anti-CD3 MAb. These data provide
additional evidence that CD3-stimulated Erk activation is likely to be
proceeding via Raf-1 and MEK-1 in both the ZAP-70-replete and
-deficient Jurkat T cells.

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FIG. 2.
CD3 cross-linking activates Raf-1 in P116 T cells. (A)
Jurkat and P116 T cells were stimulated by CD3 cross-linking at 37°C
for 2 min with purified UCHT1 MAb. The concentration of UCHT1 was
varied from 0.2 to 20 µg/ml. Raf-1 was immunoprecipitated from WCLs
and subjected to an in vitro immune complex kinase assay as described
in Materials and Methods (top panel). A Raf-1 immunoblot of the Raf-1
immunoprecipitates is shown (second panel). Erk and MEK-1
phosphorylation in WCLs were measured as in Fig. 1 (third and bottom
panels). (B) As for panel A, except that 20 µg/of UCHT1 per ml was
used and the time of stimulation was varied from 0 to 16 min.
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The biochemical events that regulate Raf-1 activation are complex and
incompletely understood (
33); however, Ras is recognized
as a common upstream regulator of Raf-1. Ras becomes activated
when GTP
is bound to its guanine nucleotide binding site. Once
Ras is activated,
a high-affinity binding site for Raf-1 is exposed,
permitting Raf-1
recruitment to the plasma membrane, an event
that facilitates the
activation of Raf-1. To assess if Ras becomes
activated on CD3
stimulation of ZAP-70-negative Jurkat T cells,
increasing
concentrations of anti-CD3 MAb were used to stimulate
the parental and
P116 Jurkat T-cell lines (Fig
3A). The
level
of GTP-bound Ras was measured by its ability to coprecipitate
with a GST fusion protein containing the Ras binding domain of
Raf-1.
Ras activation was observed in both cell lines. As with
Erk and MEK
phosphorylation, Ras activation was seen in the P116
cells only above
10 µg of anti-CD3 MAb per ml, while much lower
concentrations of
anti-CD3 were effective for Ras activation in
the parental Jurkat T
cells. We also examined the time course
of Ras activation in these two
cell lines in response to stimulation
with a high concentration of
anti-CD3 MAb (Fig
3B). Activated
Ras could be detected as early as 2 min poststimulation and persisted
to 8 min poststimulation in both cell
lines. Notably, the time
course for Ras activation was very similar in
both the ZAP-70-negative
and -replete Jurkat T-cell lines, even though
activation of Raf-1,
MEK-1, and Erk showed markedly delayed activation
in the P116
cells.

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FIG. 3.
CD3 cross-linking activates Ras in P116 T cells. (A)
Jurkat and P116 T cells were stimulated by CD3 cross-linking at 37°C
for 2 min with purified UCHT1 MAb. The concentration of UCHT1 was
varied from 0.2 to 20 µg/ml. Activated (GTP-bound) Ras was purified
on the Ras binding domain of Raf-1 (Raf-1-RBD) as described in
Materials and Methods. Raf-1-RBD-associated proteins were resolved by
electrophoresis on 4 to 12% NuPAGE gradient gels run in
morpholinaethanesulfonic acid (MES) buffer, transferred to
nitrocellulose, and immunoblotted for Ras (top). Erk phosphorylation in
WCLs was measured as in Fig. 1 (bottom). (B) As for panel A, except
that OKT3 ascites (1:50) was used and the time of stimulation was
varied from 0 to 12 min.
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Failure of SLP-76 and LAT tyrosine phosphorylation on T-cell
stimulation with high concentrations of anti-CD3 MAb.
While the
above data show that Erk activation can be initiated by CD3
cross-linking in Jurkat T cells in the absence of ZAP-70, the data just
as clearly indicate that there are pronounced differences in the
strength of the signal required to initiate Erk activation, as well as
in the kinetics of Erk activation, depending on the expression status
of ZAP-70. This suggests that different signaling mechanisms may be
linking TCR/CD3 cross-linking to Erk activation in the ZAP-70-negative
and -replete cell lines above the level of either Ras or Raf-1
activation. In Jurkat T cells, TCR-stimulated, ZAP-70-mediated tyrosine
phosphorylation of the adapter proteins SLP-76 and LAT has been
correlated with efficient activation of Ras and signaling events
downstream of Ras. Likewise, Jurkat T cells deficient in SLP-76 or LAT
expression have been reported to be defective in these pathways
(18, 61, 63). We examined whether the high concentration
of stimulatory anti-CD3 MAb used in our studies is sufficient to
stimulate appreciable LAT and SLP-76 tyrosine phosphorylation in
ZAP-70-negative P116 T cells. A fusion protein containing full-length
Grb2 fused to GST was used to concurrently precipitate SLP-76 and LAT
(5, 34, 44) from Jurkat and P116 T cells stimulated at
37°C with 10 µg of UCHT1 per ml for various times between 0 and 30 min (Fig. 4A). While tyrosine
phosphorylation of SLP-76 and LAT was readily detectable within 1 min
of stimulation in the parental Jurkat T cells, in the P116 cells LAT
phosphorylation was undetectable and SLP-76 phosphorylation could be
detected only just above background in the 2-min-stimulated sample.
This suggests that Erk activation in P116 cells is occurring
independently of LAT and SLP-76 tyrosine phosphorylation. Similar
results were obtained in SLP-76 and LAT immunoprecipitations (data not
shown).

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FIG. 4.
SLP-76 and LAT are not required for Erk activation in
CD3-stimulated P116 cells. (A) Jurkat and P116 T cells were stimulated
by CD3 cross-linking at 37°C with 10 µg of UCHT1 per ml for 0, 0.25, 0.75, 2, 8, 15, or 30 min. WCLs were precleared with 20 µg of
GST bound to glutathione-agarose. Grb2-associating proteins were
precipitated from the cleared lysates with 20 µg of
glutathione-agarose-immobilized GST-Grb2. The extent of tyrosine
phosphorylation of associated proteins was determined by
antiphosphotyrosine (4G10) immunoblotting. Shown are the 76- and 36-kDa
proteins, which correspond to SLP-76 and LAT. (B)
SLP-76-deficient (J14-v-29) and SLP-76-reconstituted (J14-76-11) Jurkat
T-cell lines were stimulated with OKT3 ascites (1:50) for 0, 0.25, 0.75, 2, 8, 15, or 30 min at 37°C, and Erk activation was measured as
described in the legend to Fig. 1. (C) LAT-deficient (JCaM2.5) and
LAT-reconstituted (JCaM2.5.B3) Jurkat T-cell lines were analyzed as in
panel B.
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T-cell stimulation with high concentrations of anti-CD3 MAb induces
Erk activation in the absence of SLP-76 or LAT.
One would predict
that if CD3-stimulated Erk activation can occur in Jurkat T-cell
mutants in the absence of ZAP-70 expression and in the absence of
significant LAT and SLP-76 tyrosine phosphorylation, the same
CD3-stimulated Erk activation pattern should also be detectable in
Jurkat T cells that fail to express LAT (JCaM2.5 cells) or SLP-76 (J14
cells). Indeed, stimulation of these cell lines with OKT3 for various
times from 15s to 30 min resulted in Erk activation that was delayed
and transient compared to that in cell lines in which the expression of
these proteins had been restored (Figs. 4B and C).
Kinetics and dose response of PLC
1 phosphorylation coincides
with Erk activation.
While there has been considerable interest in
the potential of Grb2-SOS as a mediator of Ras activation, there is
some evidence indicating that TCR-stimulated Ras activation may be
mediated by PLC
1 (6, 16, 25), whose activity has been
correlated with its degree of tyrosine phosphorylation (17, 39,
57). Therefore, in consideration of the possibility that PLC
1
activation is responsible for anti-CD3 MAb-induced activation of Erk in
P116 T cells, PLC
1 was immunoprecipitated from OKT3-stimulated P116 and Jurkat T-cell lines and the degree of tyrosine phosphorylation of
PLC
1 was measured by antiphosphotyrosine immunoblotting (Fig. 5A). Comparable amounts of PLC
1 were
recovered in each of the immunoprecipitates. While PLC-
1 tyrosine
phosphorylation could be readily detected in Jurkat T cells after 2 min
of CD3 cross-linking with as low as 1 µg of UCHT1 per ml, 10 times as
much UCHT1 was required to obtain a comparable level of PLC-
1
phosphorylation in the P116 cells. Notably, the dose dependence for
UCHT1 in the activation of Erk correlates well with the dose dependence
for PLC
1 tyrosine phosphorylation. Examination of the kinetics of PLC
1 tyrosine phosphorylation after CD3 stimulation of these cells
found that PLC
1 tyrosine phosphorylation, like Erk activation, was
delayed and transient in P116 cells compared to parental Jurkat T cells
(Fig. 5B). Interestingly, PLC
1 tyrosine phosphorylation slightly
preceded Erk activation in both cell lines. Together, these data are
consistent with the possibility of PLC
1 activation being upstream of
Erk activation in the CD3-stimulated P116 cells.

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FIG. 5.
CD3 cross-linking induces PLC 1 tyrosine
phosphorylation in P116 T cells. (A) Jurkat and P116 T cells were
stimulated by CD3 cross-linking for 2 min at 37°C with the indicated
concentration of purified UCHT1 MAb. PLC 1 was immunoprecipitated
from WCLs and immunoblotted for phosphotyrosine with the 4G10 MAb
(top). The membrane was then stripped and blotted for PLC 1 (bottom).
The presence of active Erk in the WCLs (middle) was measured as
described in the legend to Fig. 1. (B) Jurkat and P116 T cells were
stimulated by CD3 cross-linking at 37°C with OKT3 ascites (1:50) for
the indicated times. WCLs were analyzed as in panel A.
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Distinct calcium mobilization pattern in P116 cells on CD3
cross-linking.
To assess if the transient and low-level
PLC
1 tyrosine phosphorylation seen in anti-CD3 MAb-stimulated P116
cells is associated with activation of PLC
1, we monitored changes of
intracellular calcium ([Ca2+]i) in
Indo-1-AM-loaded Jurkat and P116 cells upon CD3 stimulation (Fig.
6). Figure 6A reflects changes in
[Ca2+]i with time, while Fig. 6B shows the
maximum mean channel response, a measure of the peak Ca2+
response. Anti-CD3 MAb initiated a dose-dependent increase in [Ca2+]i in both cell lines, although P116
cells required substantially more MAb to initiate a response. It should
be noted that the P116 data in Fig. 6A are plotted on an exaggerated
scale compared to the Jurkat data in order to better visualize the
Ca2+ response in the P116 cells and that the stimulatory
MAb dosage is 1 log unit higher in the P116 samples. Even saturating
levels of anti-CD3 MAb (20 µg/ml) engendered submaximal increases in [Ca2+]i in P116 cells, taking substantially
longer to reach peak values and reaching only 45% of the peak response
elicited in parental Jurkat T cells stimulated with a 10-fold-lower
concentration of MAb. As reported previously, pervanadate stimulation
gives the same maximal response in P116 cells but is delayed in onset
compared to the situation in parental Jurkat T cells (60).
Equivalent loading of Indo-1-AM into each cell line was indicated by
the comparable response of both cell lines to administration of calcium ionophore (Fig 6B). An isotype-matched control MAb had no effect on
[Ca2+]i in either cell type (data not shown).
These data are consistent with the induction of a transient and weak
activation of PLC
1 in the ZAP-70-deficient P116 cells on CD3
stimulation.

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FIG. 6.
CD3 cross-linking induces Ca2+ flux in P116
T cells. Jurkat and P116 T cells were loaded with Indo-1-AM. Baseline
fluorescence ratio (405 nm to 495 nm) was measured for 1 min prior to
the administration of indicated stimulus, and readings of the
fluorescence ratio were acquired for an additional 5 min. (A) Change in
fluorescence ratio as a function of time. Concentrations refer to
purified UCHT1 MAb. The y-axis scale, reflecting changes in
fluorescence ratio, runs from 0 to 160 for Jurkat cells and 0 to 100 for P116 cells. (B) Plot of maximum mean channel response observed
during a 6-min run versus anti-CD3 MAb concentration. Solid bars, P116
cells; open bars, parental Jurkat cells. "n.d", data points that
were not determined.
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Differential sensitivity of Erk activation to PKC inhibitors in
anti-CD3 MAb-stimulated P116 and parental Jurkat T cells.
PKC
(classical and novel isoforms) is also activated in response to PLC
1
activation. PKC has the capacity to indirectly activate Erk through its
stimulatory effects on Raf-1 (7, 26, 32, 53). Furthermore,
it has been previously shown that TCR-mediated activation of the
Ras/Raf-1/MEK/Erk cascade is partially sensitive to inhibition of PKC
activity (6). On the basis of the ability of CD3
stimulation of P116 cells to induce tyrosine phosphorylation of PLC
1
and mobilization of intracellular Ca2+, we hypothesized
that PLC
1-driven PKC activation might be responsible for the Erk
activation observed in these cells. To ascertain the contribution of
PKC activity to Erk activation in P116 versus parental Jurkat T cells,
we examined the ability of three widely used pharmacologic inhibitors
of PKC to disrupt Erk activation in response to either anti-CD3 MAb
cross-linking or stimulation with the phorbol ester PMA (Fig.
7). Two of the inhibitors, Gö6850 (also known as BIM-1 or GF 109203X) and Ro-31-8220 (also known as
BIM-IX), display little selectivity between the classical and novel
classes of PKC isozymes, while the third inhibitor, Gö6976, is
specific for the classical PKC isozymes. Looking first at
PMA-stimulated Erk activation, very similar patterns were seen in P116
cells and parental Jurkat cells. Both cell lines exhibited a
dose-dependent loss of PMA-induced Erk activation when pretreated with
the pan-PKC inhibitors Gö6850 and Ro-31-8220, while the
classical-PKC-specific inhibitor Gö6976 had little effect. In
contrast, CD3-stimulated Erk activation in the two cell lines showed
very different susceptibilities to the inhibition of PKC activity.
UCHT1-stimulated parental Jurkat cells were refractory to all but the
highest doses (30 µM) of Gö6850 and Ro-31-8220 used and, even
then, were only partially affected. UCHT1-stimulated P116 cells, on the
other hand, gave a pattern of inhibition that was nearly
indistinguishable from that of PMA-stimulated Jurkat and P116 cells.
Neither UCHT1-stimulated P116 nor Jurkat cells were particularly
sensitive to Erk inhibition by the cPKC-specific inhibitor Gö6976
(the apparent decrement in the Erk signal in 10 and 30 µM
Gö6976-treated P116 cells was not a reproducible observation).
These data suggest that the Erk activation observed in the
CD3-stimulated ZAP-70-negative P116 cells occurs via a mechanism
entirely dependent on the activation of one or more isozymes of the
nPKCs, while in the ZAP-70-replete cells, PKC plays only a small role
in CD3-stimulated Erk activation.

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FIG. 7.
Anti-CD3 MAb-stimulated Erk activation is PKC dependent
in P116 cells but not in parental Jurkat T cells. Jurkat cells and P116
cells at 6 × 107 cells/ml were preincubated for 15 min at 37°C with the indicated concentration of PKC inhibitors, prior
to stimulation at 37°C with either 10 µg of UCHT1 per ml for 3 min
or 50 ng of PMA per ml. for 15 min. Erk activation was measured in
these cells as described in the legend to Fig. 1. The first lane in
each panel is an unstimulated, vehicle control.
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Non-Lck protein tyrosine kinase activity is required for
ZAP-70-independent Erk activation.
If Erk activation in P116 cells
is a consequence of PLC
1 activation subsequent to its tyrosine
phosphorylation, then CD3-stimulated Erk activation in P116 cells
should be subject to inhibition by PTK inhibitors. PP-1 is a potent PTK
inhibitor that is selective for Src family PTKs (22). Erk
activation induced by CD3-cross-linking was inhibited in both Jurkat
and P116 cells with a similar sensitivity to PP-1 (
30 µM) (Fig.
8). Herbimycin (a broader-specificity PTK inhibitor) (54) also blocked Erk activation comparably in
both cell lines above 3 µM (data not shown). However, PMA-mediated Erk activation, which bypasses the requirement for PTK activity, is
insensitive to either PTK inhibitor. These data indicate the involvement of another PTK, possibly a Src family member, in the process of anti-CD3 MAb-stimulated, ZAP-70-independent Erk activation and are consistent with a role for PLC
1 tyrosine phosphorylation and
activation in Erk activation in these cells.

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FIG. 8.
Anti-CD3 MAb-stimulated Erk activation in P116 cells can
be blocked by PP-1. Jurkat cells and P116 cells at 6 × 107 cells/ml were preincubated for 15 min at 37°C with
the indicated concentration of PP-1, prior to stimulation at 37°C
with either OKT3 ascites (1:50) for 3 min or 50 ng of PMA per ml for 15 min. Erk activation was measured as described in the legend to Fig.
1.
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As a test of whether the PTK activity required for signaling in the
absence of ZAP-70 comes from Lck, we examined the Lck-negative
JCaM1
cell line, which does not activate ZAP-70 in response to
CD3
cross-linking (
13), for its ability to support the
phosphorylation
of MEK and Erk in response to CD3 stimulation.
UCHT1-stimulated
JCaM1 cells require MAb concentrations of 10 µg/ml
or above to
elicit detectable phosphorylation of MEK-1 and Erk;
however, JCaM1
cells in which Lck expression is restored (JCaM1/Lck)
respond
to concentrations of UCHT1 as low as 1 µg/ml (Fig.
9A). As was
seen in the ZAP-70-negative
cells, the time course of Erk and
MEK-1 phosphorylation is delayed in
the absence of Lck expression
(Fig.
9B). In other experiments, Erk
phosphorylation was also
observed to be transient, although this is not
evident in this
experiment. These data argue that Lck is dispensable
for activation
of the Raf-1/MEK-1/Erk kinase cascade in response to
high-concentration
anti-CD3 MAb stimulation of Jurkat T cells in the
absence of ZAP-70
expression (P116) or activation (JCaM1).

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FIG. 9.
High-concentration anti-CD3 MAb stimulates Erk
activation in Lck-negative Jurkat. (A) JCaM1 and JCaM1/Lck T cells were
stimulated by CD3 cross-linking for 2 min at 37°C with the indicated
concentration of purified UCHT1 MAb. Erk and MEK-1 phosphorylation in
WCLs were measured as in Fig. 1. (B) As for panel A, except that 20 µg of UCHT1 per ml was used and the time of stimulation was varied
between 0 and 16 min.
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Failure to activate the NF-AT transcriptional reporter in
CD3-stimulated P116 T cells.
Given the ability of CD3 stimulation
to induce Erk activation and Ca2+ mobilization in
ZAP-70-negative P116 T cells, we also assessed the ability of CD3
stimulation to induce transcriptional activation of the luciferase
reporter construct containing the triplicated NF-AT binding sites of
the interleukin-2 promoter region driving the transcription of
luciferase (Fig. 10). The parental
Jurkat cells showed a dose-dependent increase in reporter activity in response to CD3 stimulation, while the P116 cells were unresponsive. The apparent increase in the constitutive level of NF-AT activity in
the P116 cells is due to the relatively poor response of these cells to
the 50 ng of PMA per ml used as the maximal stimulus for normalizing
the results.

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FIG. 10.
CD3 cross-linking enhances NF-AT transcriptional
activity in Jurkat cells but not P116 cells. Parental Jurkat cells and
P116 cells were transfected with the luciferase reporter construct
driven by NF-AT. These cells were subsequently stimulated with the
indicated dosages of UCHT1 or 50 ng of PMA per ml (defined as the
maximal response) for 6 h before being analyzed for luciferase
activity. The results shown are expressed as the percentage of the
maximal response to PMA.
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Superantigen induces PLC
1 tyrosine phosphorylation, Erk
activation, and CD69 upregulation in the absence of ZAP-70
expression.
The high degree of TCR engagement implicit in the use
of the high levels of anti-CD3 MAb is reminiscent of the conditions that can exist after challenge of peripheral T cells with superantigen (SAg). The staphylococcal enterotoxins are prototypic SAg, that stimulate T cells in a manner specific for the V
region of the TCR
(23, 27). SAgs have also been causally implicated in many diseases, including rheumatoid arthritis, diabetes mellitus, and toxic
shock syndrome. Activation of T cells by staphylococcal enterotoxins
leads to rapid proliferation followed by apoptosis or anergy. Since
Jurkat cells express TCR V
1/V
8.1, we stimulated these cells with
SEE in the context of HLA-DR1-expressing antigen-presenting cells (APCs).
APCs, LG2 B cells, pulsed with increasing amounts of SEE were used to
stimulate ZAP-70-negative and -replete Jurkat T cells,
and the
induction of PLC

1 tyrosine phosphorylation and Erk phosphorylation
was assessed (Fig.
11A). P116 cells did
phosphorylate PLC

1 and
Erk in response to SEE-pulsed APCs, although
the response was
considerably weaker than that which was elicited in
ZAP-70-replete
Jurkat T cells at all concentrations of SEE analyzed.
Analysis
of the time course of PLC

1 tyrosine phosphorylation in
response
to SEE-pulsed APC stimulation of the ZAP-70-negative and
-replete
Jurkat T-cell lines indicated that P116 and the parental
Jurkat
T cells exhibit markedly different kinetics (Fig.
11B, top
panel).
In both cell lines, maximal phosphorylation of PLC

1 was very
rapid, being seen within 30 s. However, while PLC

1 remained
strongly
tyrosine phosphorylated out to 30 min poststimulation in the
parental
Jurkat T cells, PLC

1 tyrosine phosphorylation was transient
in
the P116 cells, falling steadily after the peak at 30 s and
returning
to baseline by 10 min. In contrast, the kinetics of Erk
activation
was comparable in the two cell lines, with rapid and
prolonged
phosphorylation being induced on stimulation with SEE-pulsed
APCs
(Fig.
11B, third panel). As was the case throughout the study,
ZAP-70 was undetectable in the P116 cells but was readily detectable
in
the parental Jurkat T cells.

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FIG. 11.
SAg induces PLC 1 and Erk phosphorylation in P116 T
cells. (A) Parental E6.1 Jurkat and ZAP-70-negative P116 T cells were
stimulated at 37°C for 2 min by APCs loaded with the indicated amount
of SEE. Cell lysates (10,000,000 T-cell and 2,000,000 LG2 cell
equivalents) were subjected to immunoprecipitation with anti-PLC -1,
transferred to a polyvinylidene difluoride membrane, and immunoblotted
for phosphotyrosine (top). The membrane was then stripped and blotted
for PLC 1 (middle). Lanes: APCs; PLC -1 immunoprecipitate from
2,000,000 LG2 cell equivalents; Beads, immunoprecipitating
antibody-coated beads alone without cell lysate. WCL proteins (450,000 T-cell and 90,000 LG2 cell equivalents) were resolved by
electrophoresis on 8% polyacrylamide gels, transferred to a
polyvinylidene difluoride membrane, and immunoblotted for dually
phosphorylated, activated Erk (bottom). Lane APCs, WCL from LG2 cells
(90,000 cell equivalents) alone. (B) Parental Jurkat and
ZAP-70-negative P116 T cells were stimulated with APCs loaded with 300 ng of SEE per ml at 37°C for 0.5, 2, 5, 10, or 30 min. Tyrosine
phosphorylation of PLC 1 and activation of Erk in the cells were
measured as in panel A. The membrane loaded with WCLs was also
immunoblotted for ZAP-70.
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To determine if the prolonged Erk activation that could be induced in
the P116 cells in response to SEE-pulsed APC stimulation
can support
distal signaling events, the ability of SEE-pulsed
APC stimulation to
upregulate CD69 in Jurkat T cells was assessed.
While SEE-pulsed
APC-stimulated CD69 upregulation in P116 cells
was inferior to that
stimulated in ZAP-70-replete Jurkat T cells,
there was nonetheless a
marked increase in CD69 expression that
was not seen in the absence of
SEE (Fig.
12).

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FIG. 12.
SAg induces surface expression of CD69 in P116 T cells.
Parental Jurkat cells and ZAP-70-negative P116 T cells were stimulated
at 37°C for 15 h by APCs loaded with 300 ng of SEE per ml, and
CD69 expression was analyzed by FACS on TCR-positive cells.
FITC, Fluorescein isothiocyanate.
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 |
DISCUSSION |
Previously, in the course of experiments that examined the
requirement for ZAP-70 in T cells responding to hydrogen peroxide treatment, we made the unexpected observation that although ZAP-70 was
required for Erk activation in response to hydrogen peroxide, it was
not necessarily required for TCR-stimulated Erk activation (21). In the present study we have attempted to determine
the mechanism by which Erk becomes activated after TCR/CD3 stimulation of ZAP-70-negative Jurkat T cells by carrying out more detailed analyses of the kinetics and dose response of Erk activation in these
cells, as well as by examining the status of various signaling molecules believed to be intermediate between TCR engagement and Erk
activation. Additionally, to explore the potential physiologic relevance of this signaling pathway, we have examined the ability of
superantigen-pulsed APCs to activate signaling in ZAP-70-negative Jurkat T cells.
In addition to confirming our previous observation of CD3-stimulated
Erk activation in ZAP-70-negative Jurkat T cells, our results indicate
that PLC
1, PKC, Ras, Raf-1, and MEK-1 are being activated in these
cells in response to CD3 stimulation. Notably, though, much higher
concentrations of anti-CD3 MAb were required to elicit a response in
the P116 T cells than were required to elicit a comparable response in
the ZAP-70-replete Jurkat T cells. This finding may help to explain why
previous studies with the P116 cells did not detect the activation of
these signaling molecules following TCR/CD3 stimulation (59,
60). These previous studies examined responses to only a single,
comparatively low concentration of anti-CD3 MAb (1 µg/ml). In the
present study, no signaling could be detected in P116 cells after
stimulation with 1 µg of anti-CD3 MAb per ml, even though this
concentration of MAb was sufficient to induce maximal Erk activation in
the parental Jurkat T cells. In addition to the requirement of P116
cells for a higher concentration of anti-CD3 MAb for induction of
signaling, signaling in these cells was significantly delayed and
transient compared to that in parental Jurkat T cells. This narrow
kinetic window also helps to explain the failure of earlier studies to
observe signaling in P116 cells in response to CD3 stimulation
(59, 60). The possibility that the P116 cell line had
regained the capacity to express ZAP-70 or Syk or that the cell line
had become contaminated with parental Jurkat T cells was ruled out by
Western blotting for ZAP-70 and Syk (data not shown). Likewise, CD3
expression levels were equal in all cell lines (reference
24 and data not shown).
In all experiments, there was a strong positive correlation for the
timing and dose dependency of phosphorylation and activation between
Raf-1, MEK-1, and Erk following CD3 stimulation of both the
ZAP-70-negative and -replete Jurkat T cells, although clearly the
pattern of activation was different between the two cell lines. This
suggests that Raf-1 and MEK-1 are intermediate signaling components
between TCR/CD3 engagement and Erk activation in both cell lines and is
consistent with previous reports identifying Raf-1 and MEK-1 as being
upstream of TCR-stimulated Erk activation in Jurkat T cells
(6). The MEK-1 inhibitor PD98059 was also able to inhibit
CD3-stimulated Erk activation in both cell lines (data not shown),
further supporting this supposition.
Despite generally weaker Raf-1 and MEK-1 activation in the P116 cells,
the degree of Erk2 activation, as measured by the strength of signal
detected on immunoblots of dually phosphorylated Erk2 present in
cellular lysates (40), was generally comparable at the
peak time point (usually 2 to 3 min poststimulation) between Jurkat and
P116 cells. This presumably reflects the catalytic nature of
MEK-1-mediated Erk2 activation and indicates that a relatively small
amount of activated MEK-1 can support maximal activation of the Erk2
pool. Erk1 activation showed considerably more variability, and Erk1
activation was often much weaker in P116 cells, even at the time point
of maximum stimulation. The reason for this is unknown, but it may
indicate different requirements for full activation of these two isozymes.
The results of the Ras activation assays with the ZAP-70-negative and
-replete Jurkat T-cell lines are interesting in a number of respects.
In keeping with the results for the other signaling molecules
investigated, Ras was activated in the P116 cells only in response to
anti-CD3 MAb in the range of 10 to 20 µg/ml; however, unlike for
Raf-1, MEK-1, Erk, and PLC
1, there was no marked difference in the
time course of Ras activation in the P116 cells compared to the
parental Jurkat T cells. Thus, despite the failure to initiate LAT
tyrosine phosphorylation in the CD3-stimulated P116 cells, Ras
activation appears to be proceeding normally in these cells. Precisely
how Ras is being activated under these conditions remains to be
established but may involve the activation of Ras-GRP as a consequence
of DAG production by activated PLC
1 (15, 29, 51).
Additionally there is an apparent discrepancy between the time courses
of Ras activation and Raf-1/MEK-1/Erk cascade activation in the
CD3-stimulated P116 cells. Notably, while Ras activation peaked in both
parental Jurkat and P116 cells at 30 s following stimulation with
soluble anti-CD3 MAb, Erk activation was nearly maximal in wild-type
Jurkat at this time whereas no Erk activation could be detected at this
time in the P116 cells. While other explanations are also tenable,
these results suggest the existence of additional signaling events that
are required in efficiently translating Ras activation into the
activation of the Raf-1, as has been suggested previously
(58). Our data suggest that ZAP-70 plays an important role
in this process.
The distinct magnitude, kinetics, and dose response of Raf-1/MEK-1/Erk
cascade activation in P116 cells stimulated by CD3 cross-linking
compared to that in the parental Jurkat T cells suggests the existence
of an alternative Raf-1 activation pathway that can be initiated in
response to TCR stimulation in the absence of ZAP-70. Notably,
Raf-1/MEK-1/Erk cascade activation in these cells is temporally
correlated with tyrosine phosphorylation of PLC
1 and increases in
[Ca2+]i, indicating that activation of
PLC
1, with its attendant production of IP3 and DAG, is
coincident with activation of Raf-1, MEK-1, and Erk. Unfortunately,
attempts to directly test the importance of PLC
1 in CD3-stimulated
Raf-1/MEK-1/Erk cascade activation in P116 cells were uninformative,
since in our hands the reported PLC
1 pharmacologic inhibitor U73122
had no effect on PLC
1 activity at concentrations that were not
overtly toxic to the cells.
Nonetheless, the correlation between activation of the Raf-1/MEK-1/Erk
cascade and PLC
1 tyrosine phosphorylation suggests some possible
mechanisms by which Erk activation may be occurring in CD3-stimulated
P116 T cells. Two signaling pathways have been recognized in T cells
that can support Erk activation in response to increases in the
concentration of Ca2+ and DAG (Fig.
13). The first is based on the ability
of PKC to activate Raf-1 (7, 26, 32, 53). The second
pathway relies on the recently discovered guanine nucleotide exchange
factor for Ras, Ras-GRP, which is believed to be activated by the
binding of DAG to its C1 domain (15, 16, 51). Support for
the idea that the first pathway plays an important role in Erk
activation in CD3-stimulated P116 cells is provided by the sensitivity
of Erk activation in these cells to the panspecific PKC inhibitors Gö6850 and Ro-31-8220. The inability of Gö6976, a
classical-PKC-selective inhibitor, to block Erk activation in P116
cells suggest that the implicated PKC is a members of the "novel"
class of PKC isozymes. This result is consistent with previous results
showing that transient transfection with PKC-
(novel class) could
strongly support transactivation of NF-AT and AP-1 in Jurkat T cells
while PKC-
(classical class) was considerably less effective
(19). Which novel PKC mediates this signaling pathway
remains to be established, although it is unlikely that this enzyme is
PKC-
, since ZAP-70 expression is required for PKC-
activation in
Jurkat T cells (24) and since PKC-
activation requires
the activation of both TCR/CD3 and CD28 (11). Consistent
with previously published results, in the ZAP-70-replete Jurkat cells,
Erk activation was largely insensitive to PKC inhibition
(6). Additional studies are required to determine if
Ras-GRP is also contributing to the activation of the Raf-1/MEK-1/Erk
cascade in P116 cells. Although the ability of the PKC inhibitors to
block Erk activation in CD3-stimulated P116 cells shows that Ras-GRP
activation is not sufficient to stimulate Erk activation, DAG-mediated
activation of Ras-GRP may be required for the activation of Ras
observed in these cells.

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FIG. 13.
Potential pathways leading to Erk activation following
TCR stimulation. The figure schematically depicts two pathways by which
TCR stimulation can lead to Erk activation. The pathway on the left is
proposed to mediate ZAP-70-dependent Erk activation, while the pathway
on the right is proposed to mediate Erk activation in the absence of
active ZAP-70.
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Anti-CD3 MAb signaling to Erk in the P116 cells required a signal
generated by an Src family PTK, as evidenced by the ability of the Src
family-selective PTK inhibitor PP-1 to block Erk activation in these
cells. Unlike the parental Jurkat T cells, this signal seems unlikely
to be delivered by Lck in the P116 cells, since Lck does not appear to
play an important role in the ZAP-70-independent activation of the
Raf-1/MEK-1/Erk cascade, on the basis that Erk could also be activated
following CD3 stimulation in the Lck-negative Jurkat T-cell line JCaM1,
with a dose dependency and time course similar to those observed in the
ZAP-70-negative P116 cells. Fyn would seem to be a logical candidate
for providing the requisite Src family signal, since Fyn is also
rapidly activated following TCR/CD3 stimulation (12, 52)
and has been implicated in TCR/CD3-stimulated PLC
1 activation
(1, 48, 62).
Consistent with the ability of Fyn to signal PLC
1 and Erk activation
following TCR stimulation, Denny et al. (13) have recently
demonstrated that increasing the expression level of Fyn in the
Lck-negative Jurkat T-cell line JCaM1 enabled signaling to multiple
pathways in response to TCR/CD3 stimulation. In particular, TCR/CD3-stimulated PLC
1 tyrosine phosphorylation, Ca2+
mobilization, Ras activation, and Erk activation were all enabled, via
a ZAP-70-independent signaling pathway (13). Notably, as with the ZAP-70-negative signaling pathway that we report here, this
signaling pathway was also found to be independent of LAT tyrosine
phosphorylation. It seems likely that the increased expression level of
Fyn in these cells has shifted the dose-response function of the
signaling pathway to TCR stimulation, such that responses which
previously required high levels of anti-TCR/CD3 MAb (this study) or
superantigen stimulation (62) can now be stimulated with
lower concentrations of soluble antibody (13). Whether increasing the expression level of Fyn in the P116 cells would permit a
signaling response to lower concentrations of anti-CD3 MAb is the
subject of current investigations.
In an effort to probe the physiologic relevance of a ZAP-70-independent
signaling pathway that is revealed only at high levels of anti-CD3 MAb,
we also tested whether SAg-pulsed APCs, which provide a potent stimulus
via the TCR, could deliver activating signals to Erk in P116 cells.
SEE-pulsed LG2 B cells rapidly stimulated PLC
1 tyrosine
phosphorylation and Erk activation in P116 cells, demonstrating the
competency of these cells to respond to TCR stimulation via SAg.
Indeed, it is interesting that Erk activation was often observed to be
as good (strength of signal and duration) in SEE-stimulated P116 cells
as it was in ZAP-70-replete Jurkat T cells. SEE stimulation of P116
cells also resulted in upregulation of CD69 surface expression. The
differences in the duration of Erk activation and downstream signaling
events (NF-AT activation or CD69 upregulation) in response to anti-CD3
MAb and SEE-pulsed LG2 B cells are likely to be due to the additional
costimulatory signals provided by the APCs that are lacking during
stimulation with soluble MAb to CD3, although we have not ruled out the
possibility that the two stimulatory agents are activating Erk via
different pathways.
In considering situations in which a mature peripheral T cell would be
likely to be stimulated via TCR engagement in the absence of a signal
from ZAP-70 (or Syk) activity, two scenarios seem plausible: (i)
stimulation by partial-agonist- or antagonist-altered peptide ligands,
and (ii) maintenance of peripheral T cell tolerance in previously
tolerized T cells. It has been well established, for both T-cell clones
and CD4+ peripheral T cells, that engagement of the TCR
with a conservatively modified major histocompatibility
complex-antigenic peptide ligand or in the absence of CD4 costimulation
can result in a partial engagement of the TCR-associated signaling
machinery (30, 45). A hallmark of these partial-agonist
systems is that these stimuli do not activate ZAP-70, despite their
ability to stimulate TCR-mediated Ca2+ flux (4, 28,
47) and Erk activation (8, 9). It seemed likely,
therefore, that there should exist conditions under which the TCR of
Jurkat T cells could be induced to stimulate Ca2+
mobilization and Erk activation in the absence of ZAP-70 activation. This hypothesis is borne out by the data presented here. Interestingly, the increase in [Ca2+]i that was observed in
P116 cells stimulated with anti-CD3 MAb was substantially weaker than
that observed in the parental Jurkat T cells, even when 100 times more
stimulatory antibody was used. This is reminiscent of what has been
observed for Ca2+ flux in partial-agonist-stimulated cells
(4, 28, 47). Likewise, partial-agonist-stimulated Erk
activation has been reported to be significantly more transient than
full-agonist-stimulated Erk activation in T-cell clones (8,
9), which is consistent with our observations in anti-CD3
MAb-stimulated P116 T cells.
The biochemical mechanism by which peripheral T cells become tolerized
or anergized is incompletely understood, and even less is known about
how the anergic state is maintained in these cells. It seems clear,
though, that maintenance of peripheral T-cell anergy is an active
process, since removal of the tolerizing antigen often results in
release of anergy. On becoming anergized, T cells elevate their Fyn
expression and/or activity levels three- to fourfold while
simultaneously reducing the Lck expression level by 50 to 90%
(2). Anergized T cells also exhibit pronounced defects in
ZAP-70 activation and show decreased SLP-76 and LAT tyrosine
phosphorylation in response to TCR stimulation. Thus, anergized T cells
increase their Fyn signaling capacity while simultaneously reducing
their Lck signaling capacity, thereby favoring signaling pathways that
bypasses ZAP-70 activation. Presumably these alterations are important
in the process of initiating and maintaining tolerance in these cells.
We would like to suggest that the signaling pathway that we have
uncovered in the ZAP-70-negative and Lck-negative Jurkat T cells in
response to high-dose anti-CD3 MAb and that we and others
(62) have demonstrated in these cells in response to
superantigen stimulation is representative of the signaling pathway
delivered by the TCR in anergized cells and may be responsible for the
maintenance of anergy in these cells.
In summary, we find, contrary to previously published results, that the
ZAP-70-negative Jurkat T-cell line P116 is able to generate signals in
response to TCR/CD3 cross-linking that result in Ca2+
mobilization and Erk activation. This finding provides further evidence
for the idea that T cells can generate both ZAP-70-dependent and
-independent signaling pathways. We also provide evidence to suggest
that the pathways leading to Erk activation are qualitatively different
in the presence and absence of ZAP-70 signaling, with the
ZAP-70-independent pathway being completely dependent on PKC activation
and ZAP-70-dependent Erk activation being independent of PKC activity.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We thank R. T. Abraham, G. R. Crabtree, G. A. Koretzky, L. E. Samelson, A. Sette, D. B. Straus, S. J. Taylor, and A. Weiss for their generous gifts of reagents. We are also
grateful to F. J. Chrest and R. Wersto of the Flow Cytometry
Laboratory for their skillful assistance with the intracellular calcium
measurements. We also thank P. Schwartzberg and D. McVicar for many
insightful conversations.
Work at the Madrenas laboratory was funded by the Canadian Institutes
of Health Research and the Ontario Research and Development Challenge
Fund. G.C. is an ORDCF postdoctoral fellow, and J.M. holds a Canada
Research Chair in Transplantation and Immunobiology.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: National
Institute on Aging, 5600 Nathan Shock Dr., MSC-12, Baltimore, MD
21224-6825. Phone: (410) 558-8054. Fax: (410) 558-8107. E-mail:
wanger{at}grc.nia.nih.gov.
Present address: Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Johns
Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD 21287.
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Molecular and Cellular Biology, November 2001, p. 7137-7149, Vol. 21, No. 21
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