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Molecular and Cellular Biology, January 2007, p. 170-181, Vol. 27, No. 1
0270-7306/07/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/MCB.01456-06
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

Institute of Biochemistry,1 Institute of Pharmacology, Medical School Hannover, Carl-Neuberg-Strasse 1, 30625 Hannover, Germany,2 Biological Technology,3 Inflammation Department, Wyeth Research, 200 Cambridge Park Drive, Cambridge, Massachusetts 021404
Received 7 August 2006/ Returned for modification 15 September 2006/ Accepted 2 October 2006
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/ß (7, 10, 24, 27, 31). Phosphorylation of MK2 and MK3 by p38
/ß at two or three major regulatory sites leads to activation and coupled nuclear export of both enzymes, which are localized in the nucleus of resting cells (4, 8, 26, 36, 41). A wide variety of substrates has been described for MK2 including proteins interacting with the cytoskeleton, such as small heat shock protein Hsp25 (33); mRNA-binding proteins, such as tristetraprolin (TTP) (6, 32); transcription factors, such as heat shock factor 1 (38); and regulators of the cell cycle and apoptosis, such as Cdc25B/C (23). The phosphorylation site recognition motifs of MK2 and MK3 are similar (20) or even identical (7). Despite the similar recognition motif, not all MK2 substrates have been described as MK3 substrates so far, probably because in most cells MK2 activity dominates and makes analysis of the minor MK3 activity dependent on antibodies which discriminate between both enzymes (7).
MK2-deficient mice are more resistant than wild type to endotoxic shock due to impaired production of cytokines such as tumor necrosis factor (TNF) (16). By genetic evidence it has been demonstrated that the mechanism by which MK2 stimulates lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-dependent TNF biosynthesis exists at the posttranscriptional level and is dependent on the adenine/uridine-rich element (ARE) in the 3' untranslated region of TNF mRNA (25) and on the existence of the TNF mRNA-destabilizing protein TTP (15). Probably, phosphorylation of TTP by MK2 inactivates its mRNA-destabilizing activity and, in parallel, leads to stabilization and storage of phospho-TTP in complex with 14-3-3 proteins until dephosphorylation reactivates TTP and down-regulates the inflammatory response (5, 6, 15, 32). Hence, phosphorylation of TTP by MK2 stabilizes TNF mRNA and stimulates its translation to TNF protein. The strong effect of deletion of MK2 on cytokine biosynthesis raised questions about the role of MK3 in this process and produced serious doubts about the functional congruence of both enzymes. Alternatively, MK3 could be responsible for residual cytokine biosynthesis or compensate an as yet undefined function of MK2 in an unrelated process such as contributing to polycomb-regulated development (37).
Here, we analyzed the role of MK3 by gene targeting strategy. By using an MK2-free genetic background, we were able to assess MK3-specific effects in vivo and, hence, to define the physiological role of this enzyme.
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Genotyping of MK3 conditional allele and MK3/MK2 knockout mice. Mice were genotyped by PCR analysis of proteinase K lysate of tail biopsies. Wild-type (WT) and MK3-CKO alleles were distinguished using PCR of an amplicon spanning the 5' LoxP insertion site with a forward primer of the sequence 5'-ATTGATTGAGCCGGGCGTGGTG-3' and a reverse primer of the sequence 5'-CCTGTAATTGCAGCGCGAGGAA-3', yielding 416-bp WT product and a 514-bp CKO product. The MK3 knockout (deletion) allele was distinguished from the WT allele by PCR of an amplicon spanning the deletion junction using the forward primer 5'-ATTGATTGAGCCGGGCGTGGTG-3' and a reverse primer of the sequence 5'-CACAAGGTAGAGATTACGGCCAC-3', yielding a 581-bp, MK3-KO-specific product. MK2 was genotyped as described previously (16).
Cell culture. Resident peritoneal macrophages were collected after intraperitoneal injection of 5 ml of Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium (DMEM) with 10% fetal bovine serum, washed once with phosphate-buffered saline (PBS), resuspended in complete medium, and plated at 5 x 103 cells on chamber slides (Nunc, Naperville, Ill.). After 2 h at 37°C in a 95% air-5% CO2 incubator, the macrophages were washed twice with DMEM to remove nonadherent cells and cultivated for a further 16 h prior to stimulation.
To generate bone marrow-derived macrophages (BMDMs), bone marrow cells were flushed from the femurs of mice. Cells were cultured on 10-cm dishes in DMEM supplemented with 10% heat-inactivated fetal bovine serum, 2 mM L-glutamine, 100 U/ml penicillin G, 100 µg/ml streptomycin, and 50 ng/ml recombinant macrophage colony-stimulating factor (CSF) (Wyeth, Boston, MA) for 7 days.
Primary mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs) were isolated from day 13.5 mouse embryos. The heads and internal organs were removed from the embryos. The remaining tissues were then cut into small pieces, and single cells were obtained by incubation in trypsin. Cells were then cultured in DMEM containing 10% serum, 2 mM L-glutamine, 100 U of penicillin G/ml, and 100 µg of streptomycin/ml and used at passages 3 to 5. To immortalize primary MEFs, cells were cotransfected with pSV40Tag encoding simian virus 40 large T antigen and pREP8 plasmid (Invitrogen) in a 10:1 mixture; colonies were selected with 3 mM histidinol (Sigma).
Cloning and site-directed mutagenesis. The full-length murine MK3 open reading frame was amplified from cDNA clone MGC:25617 distributed by BioCat (Heidelberg/Germany) using the forward primer MK3_EcoRI (5'-CAT GGG AAT TCA TGG ATG GCG AGA CAG CAG GG-3') and reverse primer MK3_SalI (5'-CAT GGG TCG ACG TTA CTG GTTGTT GCA TCC TTG-3'). The PCR product was digested by EcoRI/SalI and cloned into of pGEX-5x-1 (Amersham).
For cloning into pENTR/D-TOPO (Invitrogen), mouse p38 full-length cDNA was amplified by PCR using the primer pair 5'-CAC CTC GCA GGA GAG GCC CAC GTT CTA C-3' (forward) and 5'-GGA CTC CAT TTC TTC TTG GTC AAG-3' (reverse). The recombination reaction between the entry clone and the pDEST15 vector for glutathione S-transferase (GST)-tagged alpha-p38 bacterial expression was achieved with an LR Clonase Kit (Invitrogen). Site-directed mutagenesis was performed in pDEST15-alpha-p38 using a Quick-Change XL site-directed mutagenesis kit (Stratagene).
GST-p38 pull-down and kinase assay. Cells cultivated overnight in serum-free medium were stimulated with either anisomycin, arsenite, or LPS (Sigma) using the concentrations and times indicated in the figures and figure legends. For kinase assays and immunoblotting, cells were lysed in 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5), 1 mM EGTA, 1 mM EDTA, 1 mM sodium orthovanadate, 50 mM sodium fluoride, 1 mM sodium pyrophosphate, 0.27 M sucrose, 1% (vol/vol) Triton X-100, 0.1% (vol/vol) 2-mercaptoethanol, and complete proteinase inhibitor cocktail (Roche, East Sussex, United Kingdom). The lysates were centrifuged at 13,000 rpm for 5 min at 4°C, and the supernatants were removed and stored at 80°C until use.
For GST pull-down 1 mg of lysate protein was incubated with 0.1 nmol of recombinant catalytically dead mutant GST-p38 (TGY/AFG) bound to glutathione-Sepharose 4B (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech). After five washes with immunoprecipitation buffer (1x Tris-buffered saline, 50 mM NaF, 1% Triton X-100, 1 mM Na3VO4), the beads were used for kinase assay (16) or applied for an in-gel kinase assay (9). In both cases recombinant Hsp25 was used as a substrate. Radioactivity incorporated into Hsp25 was visualized by phosphorimaging using a Fuji Bas-1500, and the signal was quantified by the use of TINA 2.09 software.
Western blotting. Soluble protein extract was run on sodium dodecyl sulfate-10% polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-10% PAGE) gels and transferred to Hybond ECL membranes (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech). Blots were incubated for 2 h in PBS-1% Tween 20 containing 5% powdered skim milk. After three washes with PBS-1% Tween 20, membranes were incubated for 16 h with the primary antibody at 4°C and for 1 h with horseradish peroxidase-conjugated secondary antibodies (diluted 2,000-fold) at room temperature. Blots were developed with an ECL detection kit (Santa Cruz Biotechnology), and the digital chemiluminescence images were taken by a Luminescent Image Analyzer LAS-3000 (Fujifilm).
Antibodies. Anti-MK3 antibodies were raised against bacterially expressed MK3 protein. The full-length murine MK3 open reading frame was cloned in pGEX-5x-1 vector. Recombinant protein was affinity purified on glutathione-Sepharose and, the GST part was removed by Xa factor cleavage, injected into rabbits at Eurogentec (Seraing, Belgium). Antibodies that recognize p38 MAPK, phospho-p38 MAPK, MAPKAPK-2, and phospho-MAPKAPK-2 (Thr222) were from New England Biolabs. Antibody against Hsp25 was from Stressgene, and anti-phospho-Hsp25 (S86) was from Biosource. Anti-GAPDH (glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase) antibody was from Chemicon. Antibodies against green fluorescent protein (GFP), actin, and horseradish peroxidase-conjugated secondary antibodies were from Santa Cruz. Anti-TTP antibody was previously described (22).
Retroviral gene transfer. Full-length murine MK2, MK3, and MK2 catalytically dead mutant (K76R) were subcloned into the pMMP-IRES-GFP (kind gift of C. Klein, MHH, Hanover) bicistronic retroviral vector upstream of the internal ribosome entry site (IRES). To obtain MEF cell lines stably expressing the kinases, retroviral supernatants were generated by transient transfection of the BD EcoPack 2-293 packaging cell line with bicistronic vectors encoding the gene of interest and GFP as marker and were used for infection. Cell lines with more than 90% GFP-positive cells were used for experiments.
Measurement of cytokines. BMDMs were scraped from 10-cm dishes, and 104 cells per well were transferred to a 98-well plate and incubated in 100 µl of medium for 2 h before the addition of 1 µg/ml LPS for 2 and 6 h. Murine TNF, interleukin-6 (IL-6), and CXCL1 were measured using specific enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) kits (R&D) according to the manufacturer's instructions. In selected experiments cytokine profiling was performed using Meso Scale Discovery (MSD) Multi-Spot plates and an MSD Sector Imager 6000 reader (Gaithersburg, MD). A total of 10 cytokines were measured simultaneously in each well of 96-well plates using an MSD 10-Plex Mouse Cytokine Panel (IL-12p40, IL-6, KC [IL-8], IL-10, IL-1, RANTES, granulocyte macrophage-CSF [GM-CSF], gamma interferon, monocyte chemoattractant protein 1, and TNF) according to the manufacturer's instructions.
Oligonucleotide DNA microarray experiments. The inflammation array (Inflmus; MWG Biotech, now sold by Ocimum as Inflammation OciChip) used in this study contains 155 validated oligonucleotide probes for 136 murine inflammatory and 19 housekeeping genes. Total RNA from MK-2-deficient and reconstituted cell lines treated as indicated in the legend of Fig. 6 was purified with a QIAGEN RNeasy kit followed by on-column DNase I digestion (QIAGEN). RNA was used to prepare Cy3-labeled cRNA by oligo(dT)-T7-primed double-stranded cDNA synthesis (cDNA synthesis system; Roche), followed by in vitro transcription with T7 polymerase (MEGAscript T7 kit; Ambion) as directed by the manufacturers. cRNA yield was determined photometrically. Equal amounts of cRNAs derived from approximately 1.5 µg of total RNA were hybridized individually to microarrays in preprepared hybridization solution (MWG Biotech) at 42°C overnight and then washed sequentially in 2x SSC (1x SSC is 0.15 M NaCl plus 0.015 M sodium citrate), 0.1% SDS, 1x SSC, and 0.5x SSC. Hybridized arrays were scanned at maximal resolution on an Affymetrix 428 scanner at variable photomultiplier tube voltage settings. Fluorescence intensity values from Cy3 channels were processed using Imagene 4.2 software (Biodiscovery). Normalized values were obtained by MAVI software (version Pro 2.5.1; MWG Biotech).
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FIG.6. Rescue of mRNA stability and stimulation of CXCL1 production in MK2-deficient MEFs by MK2 and MK3. (A) DNA microarray analysis of mRNA stability. cRNAs derived from the indicated samples were labeled with Cy3 and hybridized to 12 microarrays containing probes for 155 inflammatory genes including 19 housekeeping genes. A total of 129 genes with fluorescence intensity values of >100 in MK2-reconstituted cells stimulated with LPS were regarded as significantly expressed and selected for further analysis. Expression values of each indicated sample were divided by those of the MK2 KO control samples. The resulting ratios were log 2 transformed and are grouped according to dependence on MK2 and LPS (ratio of MK2 treated for 2 h with LPS/MK2/ of >2.0) followed by their sensitivity to ActD treatment in the absence of MK2 as an indirect indicator of mRNA stability (ratio of MK2 / treated for 2 h with LPS/MK2 / treated for 2 h with LPS and for 2 h with ActD). Transcripts whose mRNA levels decreased by 50% (socs3) down to 4% (csf2) are indicated. (B) Shown are the relative mRNA expression values for the four most unstable mRNAs as determined by microarray experiments or by real-time PCR (C) CXCL1 production of LPS-stimulated MK2-deficient MEFs transduced with constructs coding for catalytically active MK2 and MK3, for MK2-K76R, and as control for GFP alone or nontransduced (). Asterisks indicate statistically significant difference (single-sided t test, P < 0.05).
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Real-time PCR.
cDNA prepared in parallel to the microarray experiments was used to validate selected results by real-time PCR. Assays on demand (Applied Biosystems; detailed information is in parentheses) for the following transcripts were used: ß-actin (Actb; Mm00607939_s1), I
B-
(Nfkbia; Mm00477798_m1), Cxcl1 (Mm00433859_m1), c-Jun (Jun; Mm00495062_s1), and Csf2 (Mm00438328_m1). PCR was performed on an ABI7500 real-time PCR instrument. The threshold cycle (CT) for each individual PCR product was calculated by the instrument software, and CT values obtained for Nfkbia, Cxcl1, Jun, and Csf2 were normalized by subtracting the CT values obtained for Actb to obtain
CT values. Mean values were calculated from two to four CT measurements; the standard error of the mean for all corresponding CT values was less than 0.2. Relative expression of each mRNA was calculated by the 
CT method assuming a PCR efficiency of two.
LPS treatment of mice. LPS from Escherichia coli serotype 026:B6 (Sigma) was diluted in pyrogen-free saline, and 5 mg per kg of body weight was injected intraperitoneally into five mice of each genotype. Ninety minutes after injection mice were sacrificed. Spleens were isolated and immediately frozen in liquid nitrogen. Spleen lysates were prepared using kinase assay lysis buffer and analyzed by Western blotting as described above. Serum cytokines were quantified by ELISA or by a Multi-Spot cytokine assay as described above.
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FIG. 1. Gene targeting strategy of MK3 deletion and absence of MK3 protein in MK3/ tissues. (A) The MK3-CKO construct is composed of a 7-kb fragment of the MK3 gene with a 3-kb short arm and a 4-kb long arm flanking exons 1 and 2 and the neomycin resistance selectable marker gene (Neor). Exons 1 and 2 and Neor are flanked with LoxP sites as indicated by solid triangles. Positions of the Hind III restriction sites are indicated. Also indicated are positions of PCR primers, amplicons, and product sizes used for genotyping. (B) Southern blot analysis showing wild-type (+/+) and targeted (+/C) ES cell clones. PCR genotyping results from different sets of tail biopsies distinguishing WT (+) and conditional (C/C and C/+) alleles. (D) PCR results identifying KO () alleles after the MK3 KO allele was converted via germ line Cre-mediated deletion by crossing protamine-Cre transgenic mice (129SvEvBrd) with MK3-CKO mice. (E) Endogenous MK3 and MK2 were precipitated from 1 mg of spleen lysates by means of recombinant GST-p38 bound to glutathione-Sepharose 4B. Beads and 0.2 mg of whole lysates were subjected to SDS-PAGE and Western blotting using anti-MK3 antiserum (upper blot) and anti-MK2 antibodies (lower blot). There is a specific 42-kDa MK3 band precipitated from WT tissues which completely disappears in MK3/ tissues. Endogenous MK3 is not detectable in whole cell lysates.ns, nonspecific band.
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FIG. 2. Analysis of p38/MK2 signaling in MK3-deficient macrophages. There were no significant changes in p38 MAPK, MK2, and TTP expression and phosphorylation levels in MK3-deficient cells. Peritoneal macrophages from WT, MK3+/, and MK3/ mice were serum starved for several hours and then stimulated with 10 ng/ml LPS for the times indicated. Lysates were then immunoblotted for total and phosphorylated p38 MAPK and MK2 and with an antiserum that recognizes both the phosphorylated and nonphosphorylated forms of TTP.
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FIG. 3. Analysis of MK2 and MK3 expression and phosphorylation. MK3 expression in different tissues. GST-p38 was bound to glutathione-Sepharose 4B (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech). The beads were incubated with the lysates from different WT and MK2/ tissues. (A) The blot was developed against MK3 using anti-MK3-specific antiserum. The same blot was redeveloped against MK2 using anti-MK2 antibodies. (B) Comparison of the phosphorylation sites of MK2 and MK3, recognized by the phospho-specific antiserum against human phospho-T222 MK2 (MK2 pT222). (C) Detection of phospho-MK2 and phospho-MK3 in LPS-stimulated macrophages by Western blotting. Peritoneal macrophages from WT, MK3+/, and MK3/ mice were serum starved for several hours and then stimulated with 10 ng/ml LPS for the times indicated. Lysates were then immunoblotted using antibodies against phosphorylated MK2 (pT222) that recognize the phosphorylated MK3 as well (see panel B).
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Detection of stress-stimulated catalytic activity of MK3 in MK2-deficient cells. To find out whether MK3 is activated in response to stress stimuli other than LPS, we stimulated primary WT and MK2-deficient MEFs with arsenite. Phosphorylation of MK2 as well as MK3 upon arsenite treatment can be demonstrated by Western blotting using the anti-phospho-T222-MK2 antibodies. In WT cells both phospho-MK2 (55 and 47 kDa) and phospho-MK3 (42 kDa) are detected, while in MK2-deficient MEFs only arsenite-stimulated phosphorylation of MK3 can be seen (Fig. 4A). Endogenous MK2 and MK3 were precipitated from WT and MK2/ cells by GST pull-down using a catalytically dead mutant of p38, GST-p38-AFG, and were assayed in an in vitro kinase reaction with recombinant small heat shock protein Hsp25 as a substrate. As a negative control, pull-down was carried out with GST alone. In WT cells, where both MK2 and MK3 are precipitated, a strong induction of kinase activity upon arsenite stimulation can be seen (Fig. 4B). In MK2/ cells, Hsp25 phosphorylation is significantly reduced but still detectable and stimulated by the p38 activator arsenite (Fig. 4B). Quantification of Hsp25 phosphorylation by phosphorimaging revealed about 10 to 20% activity for MK3 in the MK2-deficient cells, corresponding approximately to the ratio of MK2/MK3 phospho-protein levels. To prove that this remaining kinase activity in MK2-deficient cells is due to MK3, we performed an in-gel kinase assay with Hsp25 as the substrate polymerized into the gel to visualize the electrophoretic mobility of the kinase activities precipitated by catalytically dead GST-p38-AGF. Three bands representing arsenite-stimulated Hsp25 kinase activity can be detected: two bands correspond to the 47-kDa and 55-kDa isoforms of MK2 and disappear in MK2/ cells; the third weak 42-kDa band corresponds to MK3 and is also detectable in MK2-deficient MEFs (Fig. 4C). These findings support the notion that MK2 and MK3 are both activated upon stress and display catalytic activity against Hsp25.
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FIG. 4. In vivo phosphorylation and activation of MK3 by arsenite. Primary WT and MK2/ MEF cells were starved overnight and then stimulated with 200 µM arsenite (Ars) for 30 min. The protein lysates were prepared. (A) The lysates were immunoblotted for phosphorylated MK2/MK3 and for total MK2. (B) MK2/MK3 kinase activity against recombinant Hsp25. Endogenous MK2 and MK3 were precipitated indirectly by using catalytically dead mutant GST-p38 (TGY/AGF) coupled to glutathione-Sepharose beads. The beads were used in a kinase reaction with recombinant Hsp25 as a substrate. The reaction mixture was resolved by SDS-PAGE immunoblotted for MK3 (WB), and then Hsp25 phosphorylating activity was detected by phosphorimaging (autoradiogram). (C) In-gel Hsp25 kinase assay of precipitates from GST-p38 (TGY/AGF) pull-down in WT and MK2/ MEFs.
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MAPK, increasing its intracellular level (Fig. 5A, p38 alpha). In a parallel experiment, cell lysates of the transduced MEFs were used for in vitro kinase assays using recombinant Hsp25 as a substrate (Fig. 5B). MK3 and MK2 phosphorylated recombinant Hsp25 with the same intensity as endogenous MK2. These data indicate functional congruence of MK2 and MK3 at least in regard to phosphorylation of endogenous Hsp25.
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FIG. 5. Rescue of Hsp25 phosphorylation and p38 level in MK2-deficient MEFs by overexpression of MK3. MK2/ immortalized MEF cells were transduced with pMMP-IRES-EGFP vector expressing EGFP in parallel with wild-type MK2, a catalytically dead mutant of MK2-K76R, or MK3 and as a negative control with empty vector expressing EGFP alone. Cells were starved overnight and then were left unstimulated (Ars) or were stimulated for 40 min with 200 µM arsenite (Ars+). (A) In vivo rescue of Hsp25 phosphorylation and p38-alpha protein levels by overexpressed MK3. The lysates were immunoblotted for phosphorylated and total Hsp25 and p38-alpha and for phosphorylated MK2/3. As an expression control the lysates were immunoblotted for MK2, MK3, and GFP. (B) Cell lysates were incubated in vitro with recombinant Hsp25 and [ -33P]ATP, and Hsp25 phosphorylating activity was detected by phosphorimaging.
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) and csf2 (GM-CSF) whose mRNA levels in the presence of ActD increased by more than fivefold in MK2- or MK3-rescued cells. Of note, we also identified other unstable transcripts, such as c-jun or Nfkbia (I
B-
) that were either not stabilized or only very weakly stabilized by MK3 or MK2 (Fig. 6B). From this experiment it would seem that the ability of MK2 or MK3 to stabilize a subgroup of LPS-induced genes is largely redundant. This observation is confirmed by real-time PCR (Fig. 6B) and analysis of protein levels of CXCL1 (Fig. 6C). We measured CXCL1 in the cell culture supernatant of MK2-deficient MEFs transduced with constructs coding for MK2, MK3, catalytically dead MK2-K76R, and GFP by ELISA. In MK2-deficient macrophages, there is LPS-induced production of CXCL1 protein, which is not detectable by ELISA before LPS treatment. In parallel to the stabilization of CXCL1 mRNA seen in Fig. 6A and B, both MK2 and MK3 are also able to increase CXCL1 production by MEFs (Fig. 6C). In contrast, the catalytically dead mutant of MK2 and GFP expression alone do not increase CXCL1 production, indicating a specific stimulatory effect of MK2 and MK3 catalytic activities on LPS-induced CXCL1 production by either their mRNA-stabilizing properties (Fig. 6A) or by translational stimulation. The influence of MK3 or MK2 on translation of specific mRNAs, such as TNF mRNA (25), cannot be measured using this experimental approach. Generation and analysis of the MK2/MK3 double knockout. To further understand the biological significance of MK3 as well as the redundancy and compensation between MK2 and MK3, we crossed MK2- and MK3-deficient mice to establish the MK2/3 double-KO (DKO) strain. Unexpectedly, MK2/3-deficient animals show no defect in embryonic development, are viable, fertile, and, as far as we can judge, behave normally, indicating that there is no significant compensation between MK2 and MK3 necessary for development. In an MK2+/ x MK3+/ crossing, 6 of 82 F1 animals are DKO, indicating no significant deviation from Mendelian ratio (1 out of 16 expected). Here we further analyzed MK2/3-deficient animals in regard to stabilization of p38 as well as TTP stabilization and TNF production in response to LPS.
It is already known that in several tissues, the absence of MK2 leads to a significant reduction of p38
protein level due to the missing MK2/p38
stabilizing complex formation (4, 17, 21, 34). In lung and heart tissue as well as in spleen cells, p38 protein levels are further reduced in the absence of both MK2 and MK3 (Fig. 7A). This indicates that MK3 is also able to form a stabilizing complex with p38, at least in the absence of MK2.
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FIG. 7. Analysis of MK2/MK3 DKO mice. (A) Western blot detection of p38 MAPK levels in total lysates from MK2/MK3 DKO and, as controls, in MK2- and MK3-single knockout and WT mouse tissues. (B) Peritoneal-derived macrophages were stimulated with 1 µg/ml LPS for the times indicated. The TTP level in total lysates from WT, MK2/, MK3/, and MK2/MK3 DKO cells was analyzed by Western blotting. (C) TNF ELISA of macrophage culture supernatants. BMDMs were cultivated for 7 days, harvested, and counted, and equal numbers of cells were transferred to a 96-well plate. Cells were induced with 1 µg/ml LPS or left untreated as control for 2 and 6 h. TNF levels in the supernatants were measured by ELISA. For each genotype, three independent measurements were made; average and standard deviations are shown. The experiment is representative of two similar experiments.
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The most prominent phenotype of MK2-deficient animals is their increased survival of endotoxic shock due to impaired TNF production (16). We analyzed TNF production of BMDM cultures derived from mice of the different genotypes. As expected, TNF production of MK2-deficient BMDMs is reduced about fivefold (Fig. 7C). In contrast, MK3-deficient macrophages show only a slight and not statistically significant reduction in TNF production. Interestingly, TNF production of DKO macrophages is further and significantly reduced compared to MK2-deficient cells, supporting the notion that MK3 can contribute to regulation of TNF biosynthesis.
Finally, we analyzed in vivo TNF production and TTP protein expression in LPS-challenged mice. Five animals of each genotype were injected with LPS, and after 90 min the TNF level in serum was determined by ELISA, and TTP level in spleen of two randomly chosen animals of each genotype was analyzed by Western blotting (Fig. 8 A and B). TNF production is significantly further impaired in DKO animals compared to MK2-deficient mice (single-sided t test, P = 0.03). Furthermore, semiquantitative detection of TTP protein in the spleen by Western blotting also supports the notion that TTP levels are further reduced in DKO compared to MK2-KO mice. These findings are consistent with the results obtained for macrophages in vitro.
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FIG. 8. Analysis of MK2/MK3 DKO mice in a septic shock in vivo model. Five animals of each genotype were injected intraperitoneally with LPS (5 mg per kg of body weight) diluted in PBS. Ninety minutes after injection mice were sacrificed, and serum and spleen were immediately isolated. (A) TNF level in serum was quantified by ELISA. A statistically significant difference between MK2/ and DKO is indicated (single-sided t test, P = 0.03). (B) Spleen cell lysates were prepared using kinase assay lysis buffer and analyzed by Western blotting against TTP.
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Therefore, we decided to analyze the role of MK3 in an MK2-deficient background by analyzing how ectopic expression of MK2 and MK3 can rescue MK2 deficiency and by comparing the effects of the MK2 knockout and MK2/MK3 double knockout. We demonstrate that both MK2 and MK3 expression can rescue Hsp25 phosphorylation depending on the catalytic activity of the enzyme, while MK2 and MK3 stabilize p38 to a similar degree as the catalytically inactive mutant of MK2, confirming the idea that binding between both proteins leads to stabilization (17, 34). Furthermore, stabilization of the same group of LPS-responsive fibroblast transcripts is obtained with ectopic MK2 and MK3, while other transcript stabilities are not changed by both enzymes. It is still open whether the transcript-stabilizing properties of both enzymes in this experimental system result from their catalytic activity or from their stabilization of p38. However, CXCL1 production of these cells can only be significantly increased by catalytically active MK2 and MK3. ARE-containing transcript stability has been previously assessed in a human system by microarray analysis (11). The study identified several p38 MAPK-stabilized ARE-containing transcripts by means of the p38 inhibitor SB203580. In the experiment shown in Fig. 6, p38 MAP-stabilized mRNAs can be rescued by MK2 or MK3 (e.g., cxcl1 and Gro
) or remain unstable after ActD treatment independent of MK2/MK3 (e.g., JUN B). Although both studies use different experimental designs and cell systems, i.e., pharmacological inhibition of p38 MAPK in a monocytic cell line (THP-1) versus reconstituted MK2-deficient embryonic fibroblasts as shown here, these results suggest that MK2 or MK3 targets a subset of ARE-containing inflammatory mRNAs that are stabilized by the p38 MAPK pathway.
Comparing the MK2 knockout with the MK2/3 double knockout, we could show that MK3 stabilizes the remaining p38 level in the MK2-deficient background and that the role of MK3 in TTP and TNF regulation is qualitatively indistinguishable from the role of MK2. Taking into account that MK2 is an established therapeutic target of inflammatory diseases, such as rheumatoid arthritis (14), and that small-molecule MK2 inhibitors are under investigation, the finding that MK3 is indistinguishable from MK2 in its inflammatory function would favor MK2/3 dual inhibitors.
The fact that MK2/3-deficient DKO mice are viable and show no obvious defects in embryonic development was unexpected. We anticipated that MK2 and MK3 mutually compensate each other in development, since both enzymes were described to functionally interact with components of the developmentally relevant polycomb complex involved in chromatin remodeling (26, 37, 40); thus, we expected significant defects in the absence of both enzymes. Possibly a more detailed analysis of, e.g., stem cell development in these animals may be necessary to identify minor but physiologically relevant effects. The further reduction of p38 expression in MK2/3 DKO compared to MK2-deficient tissue is also remarkable. However, the remaining level of p38 is obviously sufficient to compensate the effects of embryonic lethality and placental development described for the p38 knockout mice (1, 2, 35). This is similar to the finding that hypomorphic alleles of another protein kinase, PDK1, which lead to expression of only 10% of the kinase, can rescue embryonic lethality of that enzyme (18) and is supported by the observation that arsenite-stimulated ATF1/CREB phosphorylation by the p38 downstream kinases MSK1/2 is not significantly reduced in MK2/3 DKO cells (N. Ronkina, A. Kotlyarov, and M. Gaestel, unpublished data).
From our comparison of MK2 and MK3 here as well as from comparison of their catalytic activities and substrate specificities (7), their regulation of subcellular localization (8, 26, 36), and their mode of activation by p38
/ß (7), no significant difference in the functions of both enzymes can be detected so far. This is reminiscent of the situation of p38
and p38ß, where p38
displays the major activity and p38ß activity is minor and dispensable for signaling of the p38 pathway (3). In both cases, it is still enigmatic why both related enzymes have been stably maintained during evolution. MK2 and MK3 are both present in birds and mammals, while only one MK2/3 molecule is found in the lower vertebrates (12). It may well be that there is an exemption from coexpression of both enzymes in one tissue or cell type not tested so far, making only the expressed enzyme essential in these cells. Deletion of the enzyme from these potential cells in mice obviously does not lead to a noticeable phenotype; however, we cannot exclude the possibility that the effect of such specific MK3 function could be detected during a detailed and comprehensive analysis of the MK3-deficient animals. Another possibility could be the activation of one of the two enzymes by an alternative mechanism, activator, and pathway, which is distinct from the p38 pathway and responds to other signals (e.g., of specific Toll-like receptors) and stimuli. However, this pathway and its physiological function are still to be identified.
This work was supported by Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft grant GA453/10-1 and by the European Community grant RTN-HPRN-CT-2002-00255.
Published ahead of print on 9 October 2006. ![]()
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MAP kinase in placental but not embryonic cardiovascular development. Mol. Cell 6:109-116.[CrossRef][Medline]
results in embryonic lethality: characterization of the kinase dependence of stress responses of enzyme-deficient embryonic stem cells. J. Exp. Med. 191:859-870.This article has been cited by other articles:
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