ARTICLE
INTRODUCTION
The association of the Src family protein tyrosine kinase (PTK) Lck
with the interleukin-2 receptor (IL-2R) beta-chain has been reported by
several groups [1, 2]. Lck interacts with the acidic domain of IL-2R beta-chain,
and this interaction is necessary for Lck activation upon IL-2 stimulation
[1-6]. The serine-rich region of IL-2R beta-chain is also necessary for
Lck activation and the induction of the nuclear proto-oncogenes c-fos
and c-jun [2, 7-9]. However, the actual contribution of Lck to
IL-2-induced proliferation and cell survival is still unclear. An IL-2R
beta-chain mutant lacking the acidic region is able to transmit IL-2-induced
cell proliferation in BAF-B03 cells, indicating that Lck does not play
a vital role in IL-2-mediated B cell proliferation. However, in this cell
system, a constitutively active form of Lck (LckF505) was able to cooperate
with either c-Myc or Bcl-2 in the induction of cell proliferation, suggesting
that Lck has some potential for regulating growth of B cells [10, 11].
Furthermore, BAF-B03/LckF505 cells showed prolonged cell survival upon
growth factor deprivation (EGF), suggesting that Lck might be involved
in the regulation of B cell survival as well [11].
Also, little is known about the role of Lck in the regulation of growth
and survival of T cells. An Lck negative variant of the murine IL-2-dependent
cytotoxic T cell line, CTLL-2, showed only a modestly decreased proliferative
response to IL-2, suggesting that Lck also in T cells might
not play an essential role in IL-2-induced growth [12]. It is, however,
an open question whether other members of the Src kinase family substitute
for Lck when Lck is absent. Upon IL-2 stimulation, only Lck is activated
among the Src kinases family in T cells, however, at least Fyn and Lyn
were activated by IL-2-in an Lck-deficient pro-B-cell line, suggesting
that other members of the Src kinase family can potentially take over
Lck functions in IL-2R signaling [13-15]. Since Lyn is not expressed and
Src is expressed only negligibly, or not at all, in normal T cells, the
best candidate for Lck substitution, in Lck-negative cell lines, is Fyn
[16].
One of the pathways involved in mitogen-mediated proliferation is the
Ras/Raf/mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway. It is believed
that the MAPK pathway is activated by IL-2 through an activation of the
p21 Ras pathway (3,17-19). A study using transfected fibroblasts showed
that the acidic region of the IL-2R beta-chain is indispensable for MAPK
phosphorylation, suggesting that Lck might play a role in IL-2-mediated
MAPK activation [20]. Here, we investigated the role of Lck in IL-2-induced
MAPK activation, proliferation, and cell survival in human T cells. Taking
advantage of an Lck negative T cell line and the newly developed inhibitor
of the Src kinase family, PP1 [21], we also investigated the role of other
members of the Src kinase family when Lck is absent.
METHODS
Cells
A tumor T cell line (MyLa2059) was established from a plaque biopsy
specimen from a patient with mycosis fungoides as described in detail
elsewhere [22, 23]. The tumor cell line used in this study proliferated
beyond 1,000 population doublings. MyLa2059 and Jurkat T leukemia cells
were cultured in RPMI 1640 (Gibco) supplemented with 10% FCS, 2 mM L-glutamine,
100 mug/ml penicillin and 100 mug/ml streptomycin. Antigen specific, human,
CD4+ T cell lines were obtained from healthy donors, and have
been described in detail previously [24].
Antibodies and other reagents
Phospho-specific p44/42 (MAPK/Erk) mAb recognizing only activated Erk
was from New England Biolabs (Beverly, MA, USA). Phospho-specific tyrosine
mAb (4G10) was from Upstate Biotechnology (Lake Placid, NY, USA). Anti-Erk2
pAb and anti-Lck mAb were from Santa Cruz Biotechnology (Santa Cruz, CA,
USA). Recombinant human IL-2 (generous gift from Craig W. Reynolds, National
Cancer Institute, Bethesda, MD) was used at 500 U/ml unless otherwise
indicated. The Src kinase family inhibitor PP1, was from Biomol (Plymouth
Meeting, PA, USA).
Immunoprecipitation and Western blotting
Following treatment with or without rIL-2 and with or without PP1, the
cells (2 x 106 MyLa2059 or 1 x 107 CD4+
T cells) were rapidly pelleted, and the reaction stopped by lysing the
cells in ice-cold lysis buffer (1% NP-40, 20 mM Tris-HCL pH 8.0, 137 mM
NaCl, 10% glycerol with the following inhibitors: 1 mM PMSF, 5 mM EDTA,
1 mM Na3VO4, 10 mug/ml aprotinin, 10 mul/ml IAA,
10 mM NaF). Total cell lysate proteins were subjected to 10% SDS-PAGE
and transferred onto nitrocellulose membranes. Blots were evaluated using
enhanced chemiluminescence (ECL), stripped, and reprobed according to
the manufacturer´s manual (Amersham).
Isolation of RNA and RT-PCR
Total cellular RNA from MyLa2059 cells and Jurkat cells was isolated
by a modification of the procedure of Sambrook et al. [25, 26].
Purified RNA was reverse transcribed using cloned Moloney murine leukemia
virus reverse transcriptase and either the Lck specific "downstream2"
primer 5´-CTTGTCGAATTCGAAGTCCCGGACCGACAGTGA-3´ (incl. EcoRI
site), the Lck specific "downstream4" primer 5´-CTTGTCGAATTCTCAAGGCTGAGGCTGGTACTG-3´
(incl. EcoRI site), or the control CD3-gamma specific "downstream" primer
5´-TGAGTCGAATTCGGATCCTCAATTCCTCCTCAACTG-3´ (incl. EcoRI and
BamHI sites). The resulting cDNA was amplified by PCR using recombinant
Taq DNA polymerase and either the Lck specific "upstream2" primer 5´-CTTCATTCTAGACTCCCGGGCTGGGCAGGGACC-3´
(incl. XbaI site), the Lck specific "upstream4" primer 5´-CTTCATTCTAGATTCACCATCAAGTCAGATGTG-3´
(incl. XbaI site), or the control CD3-g specific "upstream" primer 5´-CAAGGACCCTGCAGGGATGTATCA-3´.
This potentially creates fragments with the size of 555 (up/down 2), 306
(up/down 4), or 339 (CD3-gamma) nucleotides. The samples were analysed
in a 1% agarose gel.
Plasmids
The cDNA for Lck was cloned into the pEF vector as described previously
[27].
Stable transfection
MyLa2059 cells (20 x 106) were transfected with 25 mug Lck
cDNA in pEF vector by electroporation at 960 FF and 240 V. Two days after
electroporation, cells were pelleted and resuspended in normal growth
medium with the addition of 1.5 mg/ml Geneticin (G-418, Gibco) to a concentration
of 5 x 104 cells/ml. 200 mul was added to flat-bottom, microtiter
wells (NUNC, Denmark). Media including G-418 was added on days 5 and 10.
Surviving transfectants were grown in normal growth medium with the addition
of 1 mg/ml G-418 and tested for Lck expression by Western blot.
Proliferation assay
104 human CD4+ T cells were incubated for 1, 3,
or 5 days as triplicates, with or without PP1 (10 muM) and with or without
500 U/ml IL-2, in flat-bottom, microtiter wells (Falcon 3072, BD) in culture
medium with 10% heat-inactivated, filtered, pooled human serum. Twelve
hours before harvest, [3H]thymidine [1.0 muCi per well (1 muCi
= 37 kBq)] was added, the cells harvested onto glass fiber filters, and
[3H]thymidine incorporation was measured.
Quantification of apoptotic cells
Apoptotic cells were quantified by the use of the DNA binding dye 7-amino-actinomycin
D (7-AAD Sigma). 106 cells were stimulated with 1) increasing
concentrations of inhibitor (PP1) and with or without IL-2 for 3 days
or 2) with increasing concentration of IL-2 and with or without PP1 for
3 days, harvested, washed once with PBS, resuspended in 0.5 ml 0.05% saponin
in PBS, and pelleted. The cells were resuspended in 0.5 ml 4 mug/ml 7-AAD
in 0.05% saponin in PBS and incubated at room temperature, in the dark.
Untreated cells were used to set gates for viable cells with 2N-4N DNA,
for apoptotic cells with subnormal DNA content, and for exclusion of debris.
RESULTS
Inhibition of proliferation, but not survival
signals, by the Src kinase family inhibitor PP1
Human CD4+ T cell lines were incubated with or without IL-2
and/or PP1 for up to 5 days. The proliferation was measured at days 1,
3, and 5, by adding [3H]thymidine twelve hours before the cells
were harvested. As expected, IL-2-induced an almost exponential growth
of IL-2 responsive CD4+ T cells (Figure
1A). The Src kinase inhibitor, PP1, induced a substantial inhibition
of IL-2-driven proliferation. Thus, PP1 induced approximately 50% inhibition
of [3H]thymidine uptake in all of the five CD4+
T cell lines tested (Figure 1A,
and data not shown). The inhibition was concentration-dependent reaching
a maximal effect (i.e. 50% inhibition) at PP1 concentrations at
and above10 muM (Figure 1A and
data not shown), which was in accordance with the reported concentrations
required for maximal inhibition of Lck activity in intact T cells [21].
Besides the proliferative signals, IL-2 triggers anti-apoptotic (survival)
signals. Therefore, we investigated whether PP1 inhibited IL-2-mediated
T cell survival or whether apoptosis/survival and proliferation were regulated
differently by PP1. As shown in Figure
1B, approximately 75% apoptosis was observed in T cell cultures incubated
for 48 hours without IL-2. As expected [28], IL-2-induced a drop in apoptosis
to levels below 50% (Figure 1B),
i.e. IL-2-induced a 40-50% rescue from apoptosis in these CD4+
T cell lines. Addition of PP1 had no effect on the level of apoptosis
in either medium or IL-2-treated T cells (Figure
1B). Since low concentrations of IL-2 can induce cell survival without
proliferation, we addressed whether cell survival at suboptimal IL-2 concentrations
was sensitive to inhibition by PP1. Accordingly, cells were incubated
with or without PP1 and increasing concentrations of IL-2 prior to flow
cytometric analysis of cell survival. As shown in Figure
1C, PP1 had no effect on IL-2-mediated cell survival even at
concentrations (20 U/ml) which induce cell survival and where the proliferation
was substantially reduced (Figure
1C and data not shown). As Lck is the principal members of the Src
kinase family activated upon IL-2 stimulation, these findings suggest
that Lck is involved in the IL-2-induced proliferation, but not cell survival,
of human CD4+ T cells. The tumor T cell line (MyLa2059) proliferate
independently of IL-2, thus we cannot use this cell line to support the
above results seen in normal T cells.
PP1 has little effect on IL-2-induced MAPK
activation
As MAPK activation is important for induction of proliferation by IL-2,
we investigated whether PP1 would have the same effect on MAPK activation
as on proliferation. CD4+ T cells were incubated with 0, 2,
or 10 muM PP1 over-night followed by 5 min of stimulation with medium
or IL-2. As seen in Figure 2
(top panel), 2 muM PP1 had no effect on IL-2-induced MAPK phosphorylation/activation,
whereas 10 muM weakly inhibited the MAPK activation. The control blot
(middle panel) showed the same amount of Erk protein in every sample,
and the phospho-specific tyrosine blot (bottom panel) showed inhibition
of several IL-2-induced phospho-tyrosine proteins by PP1 (10 muM more
effectively than 2 muM), indicating that PP1 was working satisfactorily.
To exclude the possibility that residual activity of Lck caused the MAPK
activation, we performed similar experiments with PP1 at concentrations
up to 50 muM, but even at these supraoptimal concentrations, PP1 had no
effect on MAPK activation (data not shown). Taken together, the findings
suggest that the inhibition of proliferation by PP1 is not caused by inhibition
of MAPK.
The mycosis fungoides tumor T cell line, MyLa2059,
is Lck negative
Upon testing the mycosis fungoides tumor T cell line, MyLa2059, we were
unable to detect Lck protein by Western blotting (Figure
3A, lane 2), and therefore we investigated whether any Lck RNA was
expressed at all in this line. Total RNA was purified followed by RT-PCR
with the relevant primers (see methods). As shown in Figure
3B, both Jurkat and MyLa2059 cells expressed CD3-gamma chain RNA (lane
3 and 6) (339 bp fragment). By using two different primer sets we looked
for Lck RNA, and two bands at the correct size appeared when testing the
Jurkat cells (lane 1 and 2) (555 and 306 bp fragments), but not when testing
the MyLa2059 cells (lane 4 and 5). This indicates that the MyLa2059 cell
line does not express any Lck RNA.
Lck is not essential for IL-2-induced MAPK
activation in MyLa2059 cells
To further investigate whether Lck is necessary for IL-2-induced MAPK
activation, we took advantage of the Lck negative MyLa2059 cell line.
Non-malignant CD4+ T cells and MyLa2059 cells were stimulated
with medium or IL-2 for up to 20 min and cell lysates were tested for
phospho-specific p44/42 (Erk) by Western blotting. In CD4+
T cells, the MAPK activation peaked at 3 min, whereas the activation peaked
at 5 min using MyLa2059 cells (Figure
4A upper panel, lane 3 and 10). Furthermore, at all other time intervals
the kinetics in the MyLa2059 cells were sligthly delayed compared with
CD4+ T cells. As seen from the bottom panel, the Erk level
is comparable in all lanes. This indicates that Lck is not essential for
IL-2-induced MAPK activation in MyLa2059 cells. To investigate whether
other Src kinase family members had substituted for Lck and possibly caused
the delay in the kinetics of MAPK activation, MyLa2059 cells were incubated
with medium or PP1 overnight, followed by medium or IL-2 stimulation for
5 min (Figure 4B). Phospho-specific
p44/42 blot showed that PP1 had no effect on MAPK activation, suggesting
that Lck and other Src kinases are not essential for IL-2-induced MAPK
activation in MyLa2059 cells, which agrees with the results shown in Figure
2. Furthermore, the phosphotyrosine blot (lower panel) showed that
IL-2-induced tyrosine phosphorylation of the proteins around 40 kDa, 55
kDa, 85 kDa, and 110 kDa was unaffected by PP1, which was not the case
for normal T cells (Figure 2,
lower panel). This suggests that Fyn or another Src kinase family members
might not substitute for Lck in MyLa2059 cells and that a PP1 insensitive
kinase might partly substitute for Lck in MyLa2059 cells.
Reintroducing Lck into MyLa2059 cells had
no effect on MAPK activation
To investigate whether the delay in MAPK activation observed in MyLa2059
cells was due to the Lck deficiency, Lck was stably transfected into MyLa2059
cells (MyLa2059-Lck). MyLa2059 and MyLa2059-Lck cells were stimulated
with medium or IL-2 for 5 min and the cell lysate was tested for the presence
of Lck by Western blotting. As shown in Figure
5A, Lck was only expressed in MyLa2059-Lck cells, and furthermore,
the slowly migrating Lck was dominant after IL-2 stimulation. Next, we
compared the kinetics of MAPK activation between MyLa2059 and MyLa2059-Lck
cells. Again the cells were stimulated with IL-2 for up to 20 min, and
the cell lysate was subjected to phospho-specific p44/42 by Western blotting.
The blot showed no difference in MAPK activation between MyLa2059 and
MyLa2059-Lck cells, indicating that the delay in MAPK activation observed
in MyLa2059 cells was not caused by Lck deficiency (Figure
5B).
DISCUSSION
Among the Src kinase family, mainly Lck and Fyn are expressed in T cells,
and only Lck seems to be involved in IL-2R signaling. It has been suggested
that Lck is involved in IL-2-induced proliferation and cell survival,
but studies with Lck negative cell lines or cell lines where the acidic
domain of the IL-2R beta-chain (Lck-binding) has been removed, argue against
a role for Lck in IL-2-induced proliferation. Thus, we decided to look
further into the role of Lck in IL-2-induced proliferation and cell survival
using human CD4+ T cell lines from healthy donors. When using
the Src kinase family inhibitor, PP1, the IL-2-induced proliferation was
reduced by up to 50% in CD4+ T cells, indicating that Lck is
somehow involved in IL-2-induced proliferation. The inhibition of proliferation
by PP1 was concentration-dependent, reaching a maximal effect at 10 muM,
suggesting that 10 muM PP1 is enough to block the Src kinase family activity.
When looking at cell survival, IL-2-induced a 40-50% rescue from apoptosis
in CD4+ T cells at a concentration of 500 U/ml. Unexpectedly,
PP1 had no effect on cell survival at any IL-2 concentration, indicating
that Lck is not involved in cell survival of non-cancerous CD4+
T cells. This does not agree with findings in pre-B cell lines by Miyazaki
et al., but they used a BAF-B03 derived cell line with stable expression
of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) and an active form of Lck [11].
Miyazaki et al. observed that BAF-B03 cells deprived of EGF survived
for a longer time compared with the same cell line without active Lck,
suggesting that Lck activation results in the suppression of apoptosis.
The two distinct results may be explained by the different cell types
and different signaling pathways, or by the fact that we have used a "negative"
approach using an inhibitor of Lck and other members of the Src kinase
family, whereas Miyazaki et al. used a "positive" approach with
transfection of a constitutivly active Lck.
As MAPK activation is important for cell proliferation,
and an association between Lck and MAPK upon IL-2 stimulation has been
reported [29], we investigated whether the involvement of Lck in proliferation
was mediated through the MAPK pathway. Our results showed only a slight
inhibition of IL-2-induced MAPK activation when CD4+ T cells
were pre-incubated with PP1. The phosphotyrosine blot showed that PP1
did not block IL-2-induced protein phosphorylation of all the induced
proteins. To investigate whether residual Lck activity was responsible
for MAPK activation, we included higher concentrations of PP1, but even
at supraoptimal concentrations PP1 had no or little effect on MAPK activation
in human T cells. In order to confirm this observation in another system,
we took advantage of the tumor T cell line, MyLa2059, which we found was
Lck negative. When comparing the MAPK activation in CD4+ T
cells and MyLa2059 cells, the activation in MyLa2059 cells was a little
delayed, but otherwise normal, indicating that Lck is not a prerequisite
for IL-2-induced MAPK activation in human T cells. As Fyn was activated
by IL-2-in an Lck-deficient pro-B-cell line, the delay could be explained
by Fyn substituting for Lck [13]. To address this, we tested the MAPK
activation in MyLa2059 cells after pre-incubation with PP1, and found
that PP1 had no effect on IL-2-induced MAPK activation. Furthermore, the
phosphotyrosine blot of MyLa2059 cells (Figure
4B, lower panel) showed that among the IL-2 phosphotyrosine-induced
proteins, only the proteins around 150 kDa were inhibited by PP1. The
proteins at about 40 kDa, 55 kDa, 85 kDa, and 110 kDa were unaffected
by PP1, which was not the case for normal T cells (Figure
2, lower panel), suggesting that PP1-sensitive members of the Src
kinase family (incl. Fyn) are not substituting for Lck in IL-2-induced
MAPK activation. We also investigated whether the delay in IL-2-induced
MAPK activation seen in MyLa2059 cells compared to normal T cells, was
Lck-dependent. Thus, a MyLa2059 cell line was stably transfected with
Lck. However, the MAPK activation was unchanged compared to non-transfected
MyLa2059 cells. This supports the conclusion above that Lck is not involved
in IL-2-induced MAPK activation in T cells.
The pathways leading to IL-2-induced proliferation in T cells are very
obscure. Miyazaki et al. suggested that activated Lck could promote
cell cycle progression in the absence of cytokines when coexpressed with
either c-Myc or Bcl-2 [11]. This indicates that Lck might work through
pathways involving c-Myc and/or Bcl-2, but the exact nature of these pathways
have still to be elucidated.
CONCLUSION
In conclusion, our results indicate that Lck is involved in IL-2-induced
proliferation, but not cell survival, in human T cells through a MAPK-independent
pathway.
Abbreviations
MAPK Mitogen activated protein kinase
IL-2 Interleukin-2
PTK Protein tyrosine kinase
EGF Epidermal growth factor
Acknowledgements. We are very grateful to Gitte Kølander
for technical assistance. This work was supported in part by the University
of Copenhagen (Ph.D. programme for JB), the Danish Medical Research Council,
the Danish Biotechnological Center for Cellular Communication (CCC), the
Danish Allergy Research Center, the Novo Nordic Foundation, the Danish
Medical Association Research Foundation (Lægeforeningens Forskningsfond),
the Weimann Foundation (MN grant), the Beckett Foundation, the Danish
Cancer Research Foundation (Dansk Kræftforsknings fond), the Carlsberg
Foundation, and the Danish Cancer Society (Kræftens Bekæmpelse).
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