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Molecular and Cellular Biology, November 2002, p. 7802-7811, Vol. 22, No. 22
0270-7306/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/MCB.22.22.7802-7811.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Dexamethasone Causes Sustained Expression of Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase (MAPK) Phosphatase 1 and Phosphatase-Mediated Inhibition of MAPK p38
Marina Lasa, Sonya M. Abraham, Christine Boucheron, Jeremy Saklatvala, and Andrew R. Clark*
Kennedy Institute of Rheumatology Division, Imperial College Faculty of Medicine, London W6 8LH, United Kingdom
Received 15 February 2002/
Returned for modification 20 March 2002/
Accepted 16 August 2002

ABSTRACT
The stress-activated protein kinase p38 stabilizes a number
of mRNAs encoding inflammatory mediators, such as cyclooxygenase
2 (Cox-2). In HeLa cells the anti-inflammatory glucocorticoid
dexamethasone destabilizes Cox-2 mRNA by inhibiting p38 function.
Here we demonstrate that this effect is phosphatase dependent.
Furthermore, in HeLa cells dexamethasone induced the sustained
expression of mitogen-activated protein kinase phosphatase 1
(MKP-1), a potent inhibitor of p38 function. The inhibition
of p38 and the induction of MKP-1 by dexamethasone occurred
with similar dose dependence and kinetics. No other known p38
phosphatases were induced by dexamethasone, and other cell types
which failed to express MKP-1 also failed to inhibit p38 in
response to dexamethasone. The proinflammatory cytokine interleukin
1 (IL-1) induced MKP-1 expression in a p38-dependent manner
and acted synergistically with dexamethasone to induce MKP-1
expression. In HeLa cells treated with IL-1 or IL-1 and dexamethasone,
the dynamics of p38 activation mirrored the expression of MKP-1.
These observations suggest that MKP-1 participates in a negative-feedback
loop which regulates p38 function and that dexamethasone may
inhibit proinflammatory gene expression in part by inducing
MKP-1 expression.

INTRODUCTION
Members of the three mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK)
families mediate transcriptional and posttranscriptional changes
in gene expression in response to proinflammatory stimuli (reviewed
in references
15,
25, and
33). In addition to its effects on
transcription (
69), the MAPK p38 pathway positively regulates
the stability of several proinflammatory mRNAs, including tumor
necrosis factor alpha, vascular endothelial growth factor, interleukin
6 (IL-6), IL-8, and cyclooxygenase 2 (Cox-2) (
8,
19,
41,
46,
49,
54,
74,
76). Glucocorticoids are widely used in the treatment
of inflammation because of their ability to inhibit proinflammatory
gene expression. This inhibitory effect involves direct interactions
of the glucocorticoid receptor with transcription factors such
as NF-

B and AP-1, resulting in the inhibition of their function
(reviewed in references
1 and
47). However, glucocorticoids
also posttranscriptionally repress a number of proinflammatory
genes, several of which are known targets of the p38 pathway
(
3,
26,
48,
60,
67). As glucocorticoids have been shown to inhibit
other members of the MAPK family (
10,
27,
30,
31,
35,
73), we
hypothesized that posttranscriptional effects of dexamethasone
involve the inhibition of p38 function. The synthetic glucocorticoid
dexamethasone was demonstrated to inhibit p38 activity in a
manner requiring ongoing, glucocorticoid receptor-mediated gene
expression (
40). Here the link between dexamethasone, p38 activity,
and proinflammatory gene expression is investigated in further
detail.
Activation of MAPKs requires phosphorylation of both threonine and tyrosine residues within a Thr-Xxx-Tyr activation motif, where the central residue is glutamic acid in the case of the extracellular-signal-regulated kinase (ERK) family, proline in the case of the JNK family, and glycine in the case of the p38 family (15, 25, 33). Cellular function is profoundly affected by both strength and duration of MAPK activation, which must therefore be strictly controlled (45, 68). In part this control is mediated by a family of about 12 dual-specificity phosphatases (DUSPs) or MAPK phosphatases (MKPs), which inactivate MAPKs by dephosphorylation of both threonine and tyrosine residues within the activation motif (reviewed in references 11 and 36). These phosphatases differ in their target specificities, subcellular localizations, and patterns of expression. In many cases their expression or function is regulated by MAPKs, and they may also tightly associate with their substrates in vivo. The participation of MKPs in feedback regulation of MAPK activity has been described in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Drosophila melanogaster, and mammals and is thought to be critical to the dynamic regulation of MAPK responses. MKP-1 (otherwise known as CL-100, hVH1, Erp, or DUSP1) is the archetypal member of the MAPK phosphatase family and is expressed as an immediate-early gene in response to serum, growth factors, or cellular stresses (16, 37, 59, 78). Although MKP-1 is able to dephosphorylate ERKs (2, 59), it appears to act preferentially against the stress-activated protein kinases (21, 22, 44) and forms a stable association with p38 in vivo or in vitro (32).
The actions of glucocorticoids are mediated by a 777-amino-acid receptor (glucocorticoid receptor [GR]), which migrates from the cytoplasm to the nucleus upon binding of ligand and in the nucleus exerts both positive and negative effects upon transcription (reviewed in reference 47). Classically, positive regulation is mediated by the binding of GR dimers to palindromic glucocorticoid response elements (GREs). The negative regulatory interaction of GR with NF-
B and AP-1, known as transrepression, is independent of GR dimerization (28, 29). Although the absence of GR is lethal (18), mice expressing only a dimerization-deficient version of GR are viable (51) and show normal glucocorticoid-mediated down-regulation of proinflammatory genes in a phorbol myristate acetate-induced skin inflammation model (34, 51, 52). A degree of functional uncoupling can also be achieved using "dissociated" glucocorticoid analogues, which are selectively impaired in transactivating or transrepressing activity. Anti-inflammatory effects are displayed by glucocorticoid analogues which are relatively poor at transactivation of GRE-dependent reporters (5, 28, 71, 72). These observations suggest that critical anti-inflammatory actions of glucocorticoids are independent of gene induction. However, some glucocorticoid-induced genes do not possess GREs (13, 14, 20), and their activation may or may not require GR dimerization. It remains possible that induction of gene expression by glucocorticoids plays a significant role in the inhibition of inflammatory responses (4, 50, 77).
Here we report that the inhibition of p38 function by dexamethasone is phosphatase mediated. Circumstantial evidence implicates MKP-1 in the suppression of p38 function and Cox-2 gene expression by dexamethasone. Expression of MKP-1 is induced by proinflammatory stimuli in a p38-dependent manner, suggesting that MKP-1 participates in feedback regulation of p38 function. The rapid, sustained, and p38-independent induction of MKP-1 gene expression by dexamethasone may provide a novel mechanism for the posttranscriptional suppression of proinflammatory gene expression.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Materials.
Dexamethasone and RU486 were from Sigma-Aldrich. SB203580, GF109203X,
and protein kinase A inhibitor 14-22 amide were from Calbiochem-Novabiochem.
U-0126 was from Promega. The rabbit antiserum to the C-terminal
peptide of p38

MAPK used for both immunoprecipitation and Western
blotting has been described previously (
55). The rabbit anti-human
antibodies against the phosphorylated form of p38 MAPK (catalog
no. 9211L), the phosphorylated form of ERK (catalog no. 9101S),
and total ERK (catalog no. 9122) were from New England Biolabs.
Rabbit antiserum to DUSP-1 (M-18; catalog no. sc-1102) was from
Santa Cruz Biotech. Monoclonal antibody HA.11 was from BAbCO.
Rabbit antiserum to hsp27 was previously described (
24). IL-1
was purified from lysates of overexpressing bacteria (
75) by
serial ion-exchange chromatography and dialyzed against phosphate-buffered
saline. Epidermal growth factor was from BD Bioscience.
Plasmids.
The p38 Asp-316-Asn mutant construct (HA-p38D316N) and wild-type p38 construct HA-p38WT (32) were kindly supplied by Yusen Liu (Baltimore, Md.). Expressed sequence tag (EST) clones (42) encoding DUSPs were identified and obtained from the United Kingdom Human Genome Mapping Project Resource Centre as follows: MKP-1, IMAGE4819422; DUSP2, IMAGE4385332; DUSP3, IMAGE3831894; DUSP4, IMAGE3920222; DUSP5, IMAGE1723172; DUSP6, IMAGE2960126; DUSP7, IMAGE4398897; DUSP8, IMAGE2675291; DUSP9, IMAGE2356893; MKP-10, IMAGE2310556; MKP-11, IMAGE3914630; MKP-12, IMAGE3958403; and MKP7, IMAGE2358910. The coding sequence of MKP-1 was amplified from the IMAGE4819422 clone using primers D51 (5'-GCGAATTCGGTCATGGAAGTGGGCACCCTG-3') and D31 (5'-GCGAATTCTCAGCAGCTGGGAGAGGTCG-3'). The PCR product was cut with EcoRI and inserted in frame at the EcoRI site of pFlagCMV2 (Sigma-Aldrich). To generate the catalytically inactive Cys-258-Ser MKP-1 mutant, coding fragments were amplified from the IMAGE4819422 clone using primers D51 and D32 (5'-GCCTGCCTGGGAGTGCACAAACACCCTTCC-3') or primers D31 and D52 (5'-GGAAGGGTGTTTGTGCACTCCCAGGCAGGC-3'). The amino-terminal and carboxy-terminal coding fragments were cut with EcoRI and ApaLI, ligated together, and inserted at the EcoRI site of pFlagCMV2. Both constructs were checked by sequencing.
Cell culture and transfection.
HeLa-TO cells were maintained in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium with 10% fetal calf serum. Cells were seeded in six-well plates, and the following day the cells were transfected using Superfect (Qiagen). After 24 h, cells were incubated with dexamethasone and then irradiated in a Stratalinker (40 J/m2; UV-C) (Stratagene). After the period indicated in each figure, the cells were harvested and processed for Western blotting. HeLa (American Type Culture Collection), human skin fibroblast, and RAW264.7 cells were maintained in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium with 10% fetal calf serum. Human peripheral blood T cells were prepared from the buffy coat fraction of a unit of blood from a single donor. T cells were isolated and maintained in RPMI 1640 medium as described previously (40).
Immunoprecipitation and assay of p38 MAPK.
HeLa cells were incubated in the absence or presence of IL-1 and dexamethasone as described in the figure legends. After the period indicated in each figure, the cells were lysed and the p38 MAPK was immunoprecipitated as previously described (40). p38 kinase assays were performed as described previously (40), using MAPKAPK-2 as the substrate.
Immunoprecipitation of MKP-1.
HeLa cells were incubated as described in the figure legends and then harvested in lysis buffer (20 mM HEPES [pH 7.4], 50 mM sodium ß-glycerophosphate, 2 mM EGTA, 1% Triton X-100, 10% glycerol, 150 mM NaCl, 10 mM NaF, 1 mM sodium orthovanadate, 2 mM dithiothreitol [DTT], 1 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, 3 µg of aprotinin per ml, 10 µM E64). The lysates were clarified by centrifugation at 13,000 x g for 10 min at 4°C and incubated for 1 h at 4°C with a rabbit antiserum to hsp27 previously linked to protein A-Sepharose beads. The supernatants were then incubated for 2 h at 4°C with an anti-MKP-1 antibody linked to protein A-Sepharose beads. The beads were washed, resuspended in sample buffer, and processed for Western blotting.
Western blotting.
HeLa cells were incubated as described in the figure legends and then harvested in lysis buffer as described above, separated by sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and electrophoretically transferred to nitrocellulose membranes (Sartorius). The membranes were probed with primary antibodies as indicated and then with a peroxidase-coupled second antibody (Dako). Proteins were detected using the enhanced chemiluminescence system (Amersham).
Northern blotting.
Total RNA was isolated using the RNeasy Kit from Qiagen, and 10-µg RNA samples were electrophoresed on denaturing formaldehyde-agarose gels. Gels were stained with SYBR green II RNA gel stain (Molecular Probes) and visualized using a phosphorimager (Fuji FLA-2000). RNA was then transferred to a Hybond N membrane by capillary transfer and fixed by UV cross-linking. cDNA probes for the different DUSPs were prepared by appropriate restriction digestion of EST clones as described above and labeled with 50 µCi of [
-32P]dCTP using the Ready-to-go kit (Amersham). Prehybridization (2 h) and hybridization (overnight) were performed at 42°C in Ultrahyb solution (Ambion). Blots were washed three times for 30 min each time at 42°C with the following three solutions: (i) 2x SSC (1x SSC is 0.15 M NaCl plus 0.015 M sodium citrate) and 0.1% SDS, (ii) 1x SSC and 0.1% SDS, and (iii) 0.1x SSC and 0.1% SDS. Signals were quantified by a phosphorimager (Fuji FLA2000).
Microarray analysis.
HeLa-TO cells were incubated in the absence or presence of dexamethasone for 2 h, and total RNA was isolated using the RNeasy kit (Qiagen). Subsequent steps were performed according to protocols provided by Affymetrix. First-strand cDNA synthesis was done at 42°C in 20-µl reaction mixture volumes containing 5 µM T7(T)24 primer (Helena Biosciences), 500 µM (each) deoxynucleoside triphosphates, and 400 U of Superscript II reverse transcriptase (Life Technologies). Second-strand cDNA synthesis was performed at 16°C in 150-µl reaction mixture volumes containing 200 µM (each) deoxynucleoside triphosphates, 10 U of DNA ligase, 40 U of DNA polymerase I, and 2 U of RNase H (Life Technologies). Double-stranded cDNA was purified by phenol extraction and ethanol precipitation. cRNA was synthesized using the Enzo RNA transcript labeling kit (Affymetrix) according to the manufacturer's instructions and purified using the RNeasy mini kit (Qiagen). Application of cRNA to the U95Av2 chip, amplification of signal, and collection of data were performed using an Affymetrix fluidics station and chip reader according to the manufacturer's instructions.

RESULTS
Inhibition of stress-activated protein kinases by dexamethasone is phosphatase mediated.
Dexamethasone suppressed the activity and decreased the phosphorylation
of p38 in UV-stimulated HeLa cells but did not affect the phosphorylation
of the p38 activator MKK6 (
40). To investigate whether the inhibition
of p38 could be mediated by a phosphatase, we tested the effects
of sodium orthovanadate, an efficient inhibitor of tyrosine
phosphatases and DUSPs (
37,
64,
65). Sodium orthovanadate did
not increase basal p38 phosphorylation in unstimulated cells
(Fig.
1A). In UV-stimulated cells sodium orthovanadate very
slightly increased p38 phosphorylation, probably due to the
inhibition of UV-induced phosphatase activity (see below). The
phosphatase inhibitor significantly blocked the dexamethasone-dependent
inhibition of p38 activation. Sodium orthovanadate was not toxic
within the range of concentrations used (data not shown). Okadaic
acid, a serine/threonine phosphatase inhibitor, was unable to
block the effect of dexamethasone upon p38 activation (data
not shown).
As an alternative approach, an epitope-tagged sevenmaker mutant
of p38 was expressed in HeLa cells. The sevenmaker mutation,
first described in a
Drosophila MAPK homologue (
9), is a single
amino acid substitution within an acidic patch that is conserved
between members of the MAPK superfamily and is involved in the
interaction between DUSPs and MAPKs (
63). This mutation inhibits
the kinase-phosphatase interaction and renders the kinase resistant
to dephosphorylation. Analogous mutations in mammalian ERKs
or p38 result in a similar gain of function, demonstrated by
reduced DUSP-mediated dephosphorylation in vitro or in vivo,
and extended or enhanced activation in vivo (
6,
12,
17,
32,
57). Wild-type and sevenmaker epitope-tagged p38 were expressed
at similar levels and were both phosphorylated in response to
UV light (Fig.
1B). The activation of endogenous p38, with a
mobility slightly different from those of the epitope-tagged
versions, could be detected in longer exposures of the Western
blot shown in Fig.
1B. The phosphorylation or activation of
wild-type p38 was inhibited by dexamethasone in a dose-dependent
manner, as previously shown (
40); however, the sevenmaker mutant
was resistant to the effects of dexamethasone.
Catalytically inactive mutants of MAPK phosphatases interact strongly with their substrates and protect them from dephosphorylation by endogenous phosphatases, a process known as substrate trapping (11, 32, 36, 57, 59). A catalytically inactive MKP-1 mutant was constructed and coexpressed with hemagglutinin (HA)-tagged p38 (Fig. 1C). UV treatment induced phosphorylation of p38 (lanes 1 and 2), which was inhibited by 100 nM dexamethasone (lane 7) or by coexpression of wild-type MKP-1 (lanes 3 to 6). Complete inhibition of p38 phosphorylation was observed with as little as 20 ng of the vector pCMV-Flag-MKP-1 (lane 3); however, the epitope-tagged phosphatase was detectable only with the highest quantities of the expression vector (data not shown). The inactive mutant MKP-1 reversed the inhibition of p38 phosphorylation in dexamethasone-treated cells in a dose-dependent manner (lanes 8 to 11). In the absence of any stimulus, expression of the mutant MKP-1 did not cause accumulation of phosphorylated p38 (lanes 12 to 15) or phosphorylated ERK (not shown). Hence, the inactive phosphatase does not activate p38 but prevents its inactivation in response to dexamethasone.
Dexamethasone treatment of HeLa cells inhibits the function of both JNK and p38 (40). The function of ERK was investigated in HeLa cells pretreated with 100 nM dexamethasone for 2 h and then stimulated with epidermal growth factor (Fig. 1D). Phosphorylation or activation of ERK was strongly induced but was not sensitive to dexamethasone under these conditions. These observations suggest that the inhibition of p38 function by dexamethasone is mediated by a tyrosine-specific or dual-specificity phosphatase (or phosphatases) selective for the stress-activated protein kinases.
Expression of MKP-1 is induced by dexamethasone.
The inactivation of p38 may be mediated by tyrosine-specific phosphatases such as HePTP (56) or by serine/threonine-specific phosphatases of the protein phosphatase 2 (PP2) class, PP2C
and Wip1 (61, 62). The former are restricted in expression, whereas the latter probably do not play a role in the inhibition of p38 by dexamethasone, since this effect is sensitive to sodium orthovanadate but not okadaic acid. The principal candidates are therefore members of the large family of DUSPs (11, 36). Several of these have been shown to inactivate p38 in vivo or in vitro, notably DUSP1/MKP-1 (22), DUSP2/PAC1 (17), DUSP10/MKP-5 (64, 66), and the recently described MKP-7 (65).
The inhibition of p38 enzyme activity by dexamethasone was prevented by RU486 or actinomycin D, and therefore depends upon GR-mediated transcription (40). Treatment of HeLa cells with dexamethasone for 2 h was sufficient for the inhibition of p38 function and the destabilization of p38 sensitive reporter mRNAs (40). To search for candidate dexamethasone-induced genes which might be involved in the negative regulation of p38, an oligonucleotide microarray experiment was performed. RNA was isolated from HeLa cells which had been treated for 2 h with vehicle (methanol), 100 nM or 1 µM dexamethasone, and analyzed using Affymetrix U95Av2 chips. A gene was considered to be induced by dexamethasone if its expression level was at least 200 U and was increased at least 50% by both 100 nM and 1 µM dexamethasone treatments. A total of 172 genes fitted these criteria, including known glucocorticoid-induced genes metallothionein 1A (MT1A) (53) and the inhibitor of nuclear factor NF-
B (I
B
) (4) (Table 1). Basal expression of the glucocorticoid-repressed IL-8 gene (67) was completely eliminated (Table 1). Basal expression of Cox-2 was close to the detection limit but was also eliminated by dexamethasone (data not shown). Levels of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) and ß-actin mRNAs were not affected by dexamethasone. HePTP and PP2C
mRNAs were not detected, while Wip1 mRNA was constitutively expressed at a low level and not induced by dexamethasone. Most members of the DUSP family were not expressed at the mRNA level or were not significantly induced by dexamethasone. Exceptions were DUSP2 (PAC-1), which was weakly expressed but apparently up-regulated by dexamethasone, and DUSP1 (MKP-1), which was expressed moderately strongly and induced almost twofold by 100 nM or 1 µM dexamethasone. The pattern of expression of MKP-1 was similar to that of MT1A in this experiment. No other dexamethasone-induced potential inhibitors of the p38 pathway were identified in this screen.
To confirm these observations and to study the expression of
MKP-7 (which was not represented on the Affymetrix U95Av2 chip),
mRNA from dexamethasone-treated or control HeLa cells was subjected
to Northern blotting using probes against all of the known DUSPs.
Some representative results are illustrated in Fig.
2A. The
up-regulation of DUSP1 (MKP-1) mRNA was similar to that observed
in the gene expression array experiment. In more than eight
independent experiments MKP-1 mRNA was induced two- to fivefold
by dexamethasone, while in two experiments basal expression
was lower and apparent gene induction was greater than 20-fold
(data not shown). PAC1, VHR, MKP-2, and hVH3 mRNAs were not
detected by Northern blotting (data not shown). MKP-5 and MKP-7
mRNAs were expressed at relatively low levels and did not respond
to dexamethasone.
We reported previously that dexamethasone inhibits p38 function
in HeLa cells, mouse macrophage-like RAW264.7 cells, and human
skin fibroblasts, although not in primary human T cells (
40).
The induction of MKP-1 mRNA by dexamethasone in the same cells
was assessed by Northern blotting (Fig.
2B). In HeLa, RAW264.7,
and human skin fibroblast cells, MKP-1 mRNA was induced by treatment
with 100 nM dexamethasone for 2 h. In contrast, MKP-1 mRNA was
constitutively expressed at a low level and not induced by dexamethasone
in human peripheral blood T cells. Dexamethasone also failed
to inhibit p38 or to induce MKP-1 expression in mouse embryonic
fibroblasts (data not shown). Thus, the induction of MKP-1 correlates
with the ability of dexamethasone to inhibit p38 activity within
the cell types that we have studied.
The kinetics of MKP-1 mRNA and protein expression were examined following stimulation of HeLa cells with 100 nM dexamethasone (Fig. 3A and B). The expression of MKP-1 mRNA was induced rapidly, within half an hour, and was sustained for at least 24 h. The protein was virtually undetectable in untreated cells, and its induction by dexamethasone appeared much stronger than at the mRNA level. Expression of protein reached a peak roughly 1 h after dexamethasone treatment and was sustained for at least 24 h (Fig. 3B). The dexamethasone dose dependence of MKP-1 mRNA and protein induction were also examined by Northern and Western blotting (Fig. 3C and D). Both mRNA and protein were induced by dexamethasone with an apparent 50% inhibitory concentration (IC50) between 1 and 10 nM, and this induction was almost completely blocked by the glucocorticoid antagonist RU486. These observations are consistent with a role of MKP-1 in the down-regulation of p38 function by dexamethasone. MAPK p38 enzyme activity was inhibited by dexamethasone with an IC50 between 1 and 10 nM, in an RU486-sensitive manner. Inhibition was dependent on time and appeared to reach a maximum half an hour to an hour after the addition of dexamethasone (40).
Proinflammatory stimuli cooperate with dexamethasone to induce MKP-1 gene expression.
The effects of dexamethasone upon the p38 pathway following
proinflammatory stimuli were measured (
40); however, in the
experiments described above, MKP-1 gene expression was investigated
in the presence of dexamethasone only. Therefore, MKP-1 expression
was examined following treatment of HeLa cells with a proinflammatory
stimulus (IL-1 or UV), with dexamethasone alone, or with dexamethasone
and proinflammatory stimulus (Fig.
4). As before, dexamethasone
induced MKP-1 mRNA three- to fourfold and in a sustained manner.
Induction by UV or IL-1 was stronger but more transient, rising
to sixfold (UV) or 13-fold (IL-1) within 1 h but then returning
close to basal levels by the 2-h time point. The presence of
both dexamethasone and proinflammatory stimulus resulted in
a cooperative stimulation of MKP-1 expression at the mRNA level
(Fig.
4A and C). The effects of dexamethasone and UV were approximately
additive, while those of dexamethasone and IL-1 were synergistic.
Cooperativity between dexamethasone and UV or IL-1 also occurred
at the protein level, as confirmed by the results of Western
blotting (Fig.
4B and D).
MAPK p38 is required for IL-1-induced expression of MKP-1.
In different cellular contexts, the expression of MKP-1 may
be regulated by several signal transduction pathways, including
ERK, p38, protein kinase C (PKC), PKA, and calcineurin (
38,
43,
44,
58,
70). To investigate the roles of different signaling
pathways in the control of MKP-1 gene expression in HeLa cells,
MKP-1 mRNA induction was stimulated with dexamethasone or IL-1
in the absence or presence of various inhibitors. Gene induction
by dexamethasone was not sensitive to any of the inhibitors
tested (Fig.
5), including the calcineurin inhibitor cyclosporine
A (not shown). Induction by IL-1 (Fig.
5) or UV (data not shown)
was strongly inhibited by 1 µM SB203580 and therefore
requires p38 activity. ERK, PKC, PKA, and calcineurin are dispensable
for induction of MKP-1 gene expression in response to UV or
IL-1.
The activity of p38 mirrors the expression of MKP-1.
The relationship between MKP-1 expression and p38 activity was
investigated further. HeLa cells were treated with IL-1 alone
or with IL-1 and dexamethasone. Over the next 24 h, expression
of MKP-1 was assessed by immunoprecipitation and Western blotting,
total p38 was quantified by Western blotting, and its activity
was measured by in vitro kinase assay. IL-1 induced transient
expression of MKP-1, with no protein detected beyond 2 h after
the stimulus (Fig.
6A). Under these conditions, the activation
of p38 was biphasic (Fig.
6C and D). A rapid, transient peak
of strong activity was followed by a return to basal levels
at the 2-h time point and then by a second phase of increasing
activity. Maximum p38 activity during this second phase was
approximately 10% of that in the initial peak (Fig.
6D). No
significant variations in the expression of p38 were observed
(Fig.
6B), confirming the equal loading of protein for measurement
of MKP-1 expression and p38 activity. In the presence of IL-1
and dexamethasone, the expression of MKP-1 showed a transient
peak but did not return to zero, instead remaining at a sustained,
moderate level for the duration of the time course. Under these
conditions, the initial peak of p38 activity was inhibited by
approximately 40%; however, the second phase of activity was
almost completely inhibited.
Sustained p38 activity is required for the expression of Cox-2 in response to IL-1.
Under identical conditions, dexamethasone completely blocked
the induction of Cox-2 gene expression by IL-1 (Fig.
7 and data
not shown). Because dexamethasone modestly affected the first
phase of p38 activity but profoundly inhibited the second phase,
we hypothesized that the second phase was critical for the expression
of Cox-2. To test this hypothesis, HeLa cells were treated with
IL-1, and the expression of Cox-2 protein was examined 24 h
later (Fig.
7). Dexamethasone or SB203580 was added 1 h before
the stimulus, at the same time as the stimulus, or 2 h later
(after the transient peak of p38 activation). Both dexamethasone
and SB203580 efficiently blocked the IL-1-induced expression
of Cox-2 regardless of time of addition. Hence, the initial
transient phase of p38 activity is not sufficient for Cox-2
expression, but the sustained second phase is necessary.

DISCUSSION
In several cell types, dexamethasone inhibited the function
but not the expression of p38 (
40). This effect was dependent
upon GR-mediated transcription and was accompanied by a decrease
in p38 phosphorylation, but no effect on signaling events upstream
of p38 could be shown. These observations are consistent with
phosphatase-mediated reversal of p38 activation or with prevention
of phosphorylation of p38 by active MKK6, for example due to
the sequestration of one or both of these proteins. Here we
provide three lines of evidence that the inhibition of p38 function
by dexamethasone is phosphatase mediated. (i) Inhibition of
p38 is blocked by sodium orthovanadate, an efficient inhibitor
of tyrosine-specific and dual-specificity phosphatases (
11,
32,
36). (ii) A sevenmaker mutation of p38, a single amino acid
substitution previously shown to confer resistance to phosphatases
(
32), also conferred resistance to the inhibitory effects of
dexamethasone. (iii) Inhibition of p38 was blocked by a catalytically
inactive mutant of the DUSP MKP-1, which was previously shown
to bind strongly to p38, and protect it from dephosphorylation
(
32).
A gene expression array approach was used to search for phosphatases which could be involved in the negative regulation of p38 by dexamethasone. Of the candidate phosphatase genes, only MKP-1 was expressed at significant levels and induced by dexamethasone treatment of HeLa cells. This finding was confirmed by Northern blotting using probes against all of the known DUSPs. For example, the expression array data suggested that both DUSP2 (PAC1) and DUSP4 (MKP-2) mRNAs were expressed at low levels and responded to dexamethasone, but neither transcript could be detected by Northern blotting. The stress-activated protein kinase phosphatase MKP7 (65), not represented on the Affymetrix U95Av2 chip, was additionally shown by Northern blotting not to be regulated by dexamethasone.
In HeLa cells, the induction of MKP-1 mRNA was consistently in the three- to fivefold range, but the protein was virtually undetectable in untreated cells and appeared to be induced much more strongly than the mRNA. The time course and dose dependence of MKP-1 gene induction by dexamethasone were consistent with a role for this phosphatase in the inactivation of p38. In human peripheral blood lymphocytes, as well as in mouse embryonic fibroblasts, dexamethasone failed to inhibit p38 function and failed to induce the expression of MKP-1. The induction of MKP-1 in HeLa cells was accompanied by inhibition of both p38 and JNK but not ERK, consistent with evidence that MKP-1 preferentially targets the stress-activated protein kinases (21, 22). However, the possibility that p38 inhibition by dexamethasone involves a phosphatase or phosphatases other than MKP-1 remains. We have attempted to address this possibility by using two different antisense oligonucleotides and four different short interfering RNA duplexes to inhibit MKP-1 gene expression but were unable to block the induction of MKP-1 gene expression by dexamethasone. Therefore, the role of MKP-1 in the inhibition of stress-activated protein kinases by glucocorticoids will be investigated using an MKP-1 knockout mouse strain. The absence of functional MKP-1 in this strain does not result in dysregulation of ERK or abnormalities of cell division, but the stress-activated protein kinase pathways were not investigated (21).
Inhibition of MAPK function by glucocorticoids has been described elsewhere (10, 27, 30, 31, 40, 73). In a mast cell line, dexamethasone induced the expression of MKP-1 within 5 h, but inhibition of ERK function was observed only at much later time points (35). The acquisition of ERK-inactivating function required a relatively slow change in the sensitivity of MKP-1 to proteasome-mediated degradation (7, 35). Hence, there appear to be two distinct mechanisms for the modulation of MKP-1 function by glucocorticoids, and their relative contributions may differ according to cell type. In HeLa cells, the expression of MKP-1 and the inhibition of p38 function both occurred rapidly after dexamethasone treatment; therefore, the modulation of MKP-1 protein stability may not play a significant role. We have not determined whether prolonged treatment of HeLa cells with dexamethasone results in the inhibition of ERK function.
Dexamethasone and IL-1 cooperate to induce MKP-1 gene expression, a highly unusual synergy between pro- and anti-inflammatory stimuli, which merits further investigation. The expression of MKP-1 in response to dexamethasone is sustained, in contrast to the transient induction by growth factors and cellular stresses demonstrated elsewhere (16, 37, 39, 59, 70, 78), or the induction by IL-1 shown here. IL-1-induced MKP-1 expression is dependent on p38, MKP-1 may be catalytically activated by p38 (32), and MKP-1 efficiently inactivates p38 (22, 23, 32, 44, 57). These observations suggest the participation of MKP-1 in a complex feedback loop which modulates p38 function. This is consistent with the dynamics of p38 activation and MKP-1 expression in HeLa cells (although a causal relationship between these phenomena remains to be established). The activation of p38 by IL-1 is biphasic, with a strong transient peak followed by a sustained phase of increasing activity. The down-regulation of the initial peak coincides with the up-regulation of MKP-1 expression, and the second phase of p38 activation occurs in the absence of detectable MKP-1 expression. In the presence of both IL-1 and dexamethasone, the initial peak of MKP-1 expression is augmented, and sustained expression is also observed. This is accompanied by a significant blunting of the initial peak of p38 activity and a complete ablation of the second, sustained phase of p38 activity.
Addition of SB203580 during this second phase causes a rapid destabilization of Cox-2 mRNA (54). The addition of SB203580 or dexamethasone 2 h after IL-1 stimulation of HeLa cells completely blocks IL-1-induced Cox-2 expression; therefore, the prolonged late phase of p38 activity appears to play a critical role in Cox-2 gene expression by maintaining the stability of the transcript. A similar inhibition of IL-1-induced Cox-2 gene expression by late addition of dexamethasone has been described in a pulmonary epithelial cell line (48). This underscores a potential difference between transrepressive and posttranscriptional mechanisms of inhibition of gene expression by glucocorticoids. The former can function only if the glucocorticoids are present during the phase of active transcription, which may be relatively brief in the case of proinflammatory genes. In contrast, the inhibition of p38 and the destabilization of mRNA by glucocorticoids may result in the rapid shutoff of gene expression even when the glucocorticoids are present long after the initial proinflammatory stimulus. This may be relevant to the role of endogenous corticosteroids in negative-feedback control and the resolution of inflammatory responses. Future experiments using the MKP-1 knockout mouse strain will address the physiological relevance of this phosphatase in the control of inflammation.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We are grateful to Yusen Liu for provision of reagents, to Helen
Causton and Peter Broderick of the CSC/IC Microarray Centre
for expert help with Affymetrix microarray experiments, and
to Jon Dean for constructive criticism of the manuscript.
This work was supported in part by Programme Grant G8623776 from the Medical Research Council of the United Kingdom.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Kennedy Institute of Rheumatology Division, Imperial College Faculty of Medicine, 1 Aspenlea Rd., Hammersmith, London W6 8LH, United Kingdom. Phone: (44) 20 8383 4430. Fax: (44) 20 8383 4499. E-mail:
andy.clark{at}ic.ac.uk.


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