Integrin-associated protein (CD47) is a multiply membrane spanning member of the immunoglobulin superfamily that regulates some adhesion-dependent cell functions through formation of a complex with alphavbeta3 integrin and trimeric G proteins. Cholesterol is critical for the association of the three protein components of the supramolecular complex and for its signaling. The multiply membrane spanning domain of IAP is required for complex formation because it binds cholesterol. The supramolecular complex forms preferentially in glycosphingolipid-enriched membrane domains. Binding of mAb 10G2 to the IAP Ig domain, previously shown to be required for association with alphavbeta3, is affected by both the multiply membrane spanning domain and cholesterol. These data demonstrate that cholesterol is an essential component of the alphavbeta3/IAP/G protein signaling complex, presumably acting through an effect on IAP conformation.
Integrin-associated protein (CD47) is a multiply membrane spanning member of the immunoglobulin superfamily that regulates some adhesion-dependent cell functions through formation of a complex with alphavbeta3 integrin and trimeric G proteins. Cholesterol is critical for the association of the three protein components of the supramolecular complex and for its signaling. The multiply membrane spanning domain of IAP is required for complex formation because it binds cholesterol. The supramolecular complex forms preferentially in glycosphingolipid-enriched membrane domains. Binding of mAb 10G2 to the IAP Ig domain, previously shown to be required for association with alphavbeta3, is affected by both the multiply membrane spanning domain and cholesterol. These data demonstrate that cholesterol is an essential component of the alphavbeta3/IAP/G protein signaling complex, presumably acting through an effect on IAP conformation.
The plasma membrane contains specialized glycosphingolipid and cholesterol
enriched domains that may regulate cell surface receptor signal transduction via the
segregation of membrane constituents (reviewed in Simons and Ikonen 1997; Hooper 1998; Okamoto et al. 1998). These membrane domains, which can
be purified because of their low density and resistance to solubilization by nonionic
detergents and are therefore called detergent-insoluble glycolipid domains
(DIGs)1, are enriched in glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-linked and
palmitoylated membrane proteins, as well as acylated intracellular signaling molecules.
It has been suggested that these DIGs are especially efficient at initiating signal
transduction. However, the alternative hypothesis, that they represent sites where
signaling molecules can be sequestered away from signaling stimuli, has been advanced as
well (Rodgers and Rose 1996).The integrin-associated protein (IAP, CD47) is a widely expressed 50-kD protein which is
comprised of an extracellular immunoglobulin variable domain, a domain containing five
membrane spanning segments, and a cytoplasmic tail that can exist in four alternatively
spliced forms (Lindberg et al.
1993; Reinhold et al.
1995). IAP was initially identified through copurification with the integrin
αvβ3 from human placenta (Brown
et al. 1990) and was later shown to be identical to CD47 (Lindberg et al. 1994). IAP has a role
in multiple αvβ3-integrin mediated functions, such as binding to
vitronectin (Vn)-coated beads (Lindberg et
al. 1996b), PMN activation by Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD)-containing ligands (Gresham et al. 1992; Senior et al. 1992; Van Strijp et al. 1993; Zhou and Brown 1993), the increase of
intracellular calcium in endothelial cells during adhesion to fibronectin (Schwartz et al. 1993), and integrin
cross-talk (Van Strijp et al.
1993; Blystone et al.
1994). Absence of IAP leads to a host defense defect manifest as increased
susceptibility to Escherichia coli infection because of deficient
leukocyte migration to and activation at the site of infection (Lindberg et al. 1996a). αvβ3-mediated
activation also is lacking in IAP-deficient PMN, demonstrating a requirement for IAP in
this signaling event. Nonetheless, αvβ3-mediated adhesion and spreading
of many cells is normal in the absence of IAP (Lindberg et al. 1993, Lindberg et al. 1996b), suggesting that IAP regulates
only a subset of αvβ3-mediated functions. Furthermore, IAP and
αvβ3 differ from some other supramolecular receptor signaling complexes
because each can be expressed at the plasma membrane without complex assembly,
suggesting that both complexed and independent molecules may exist simultaneously on the
same plasma membrane, thus increasing the potential complexity of mechanisms of
regulation of signaling by IAP and αvβ3.IAP also is a receptor for thrombospondin (TSP), recognizing the FYVVM sequence present
in all TSP isoforms (Gao et al. 1996b).
Through IAP, TSPs can modulate the function of αvβ3 on endothelial and
melanoma cells (Gao et al. 1996a),
αIIbβ3 on platelets (Chung et
al. 1997), and α2β1 on smooth muscle cells (Wang and Frazier 1998). Recently,
heterotrimeric G proteins have been identified as a third component of the
αvβ3/IAP signaling complex (Frazier et al. 1999), and TSP binding to IAP affects integrin function
through a pertussis-toxin sensitive Gi-dependent mechanism (Gao et al. 1996a). However, the molecular pathway through
which IAP ligation affects the function of αvβ3 or any other integrin
has not been determined. Here, we show that the multimolecular complex among
αvβ3, IAP, and G proteins requires cholesterol for physical assembly and
signal transduction and occurs preferentially in DIGs. Cholesterol interacts with IAP
and affects its antigenicity, presumably inducing a conformation favorable to complex
formation. These data implicate cholesterol as a fourth component of this supramolecular
signaling complex, required for assembly of the proteins into an effective initiator of
signal transduction. Signaling by this multimolecular membrane complex is thus closely
associated with DIGs localization.
Materials and Methods
Cells, Antibodies, and Materials
The C32humanmelanoma cells (American Type Culture Collection) and the humanovarian carcinomaOV10 cells were maintained as described (Gao et al. 1996a; Lindberg et al. 1996b). The following mAbs
were used in this study: 2D3, B6H12, 2B7, 1F7, and 10G2 (anti-IAP, CD47;
Brown et al. 1990);
MAR4 (anti-β1, CD29; PharMingen); 7G2 and 1A2
(anti-β3, CD61; Brown and Goodwin 1988); P1F6
(anti-αvβ5; Wayner et al. 1991); and anti-Gβ (Upstate
Biotechnology Inc.). Vn was prepared as described (Blystone et al. 1994). The amino acid sequence
of the IAP-binding TSP-derived peptide 4N1K peptide is KRFYVVMWKK; it
was synthesized as previously described (Kosfeld and Frazier 1992, Kosfeld and Frazier
1993).
Cell Lysis and Equilibrium Centrifugation
mAbs were iodinated using Iodobeads (Pierce Chemical Co.). Cells were
preincubated with saturating levels of 125I-labeled mAbs in RPMI-1640
with 10% FCS for 30 min on ice, followed by extensive washing to remove excess
antibody. Preliminary experiments including 200-fold excess unlabeled antibody
showed that >98% of the bound radioactivity represented specific
binding. Cells were lysed in 20 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.2, 140 mM NaCl, 2 mM EDTA, 25
μg/ml aprotinin, 25 μg/ml leupeptin, 1 mM PMSF, and 0.5% vol/vol
Brij58 for 10 min on ice, homogenized using 10 strokes of a Dounce homogenizer,
then lysed 20 min more on ice. The resulting lysate was adjusted to 40% wt/wt
sucrose and applied onto a 60% wt/wt sucrose cushion. A sucrose step-gradient
consisting of 25% wt/wt sucrose and 5% wt/wt sucrose were layered on top of the
lysate. Gradients were centrifuged 16–20 h at 170,000 g
at 4°C in a SW55 rotor (Beckman Instruments, Inc.). Fractions (0.5 ml)
were taken from the top of the gradient using an auto densi-flow gradient
harvester (Labconco). The amount of 125I present in each fraction was
measured using a Packard Crystal II γ counter. Sucrose solutions were
made in buffer containing 20 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.2, 140 mM NaCl, and 2 mM EDTA.
Sucrose density was determined by refractive index using a refractometer. The
amount of protein in each fraction was determined using the BCA Protein Assay
Kit (Pierce Chemical Co.).
Isolation of the Supramolecular Complex
Vn or peptides were coupled to 4.5-μm tosyl-activated magnetic beads and
mAb were coupled to sheep anti–mouse 4.5-μm magnetic beads
(Dynal) as described by the manufacturer. Cells were resuspended in HBSS with
0.1 mM MnCl2. Substrate-coated magnetic beads were added to the cells
and the sample was rotated for 15 min at 37°C. Cells bound to the
magnetic beads were collected by placing the sample in a magnet. Lysis buffer
(20 mM Hepes, pH 7.5, 0.1 mM MnCl2, 250 mM sucrose, 25 μg/ml
aprotinin, 25 μg/ml leupeptin, 1 mM PMSF, and 10 mM CHAPS) was added and
the sample was incubated with agitation for 10 min at 37°C. Magnetic
beads were resuspended and incubated 5 min in HBSS with 3 mM MgCl2
and 2.5 units DNase I. 2× SDS-PAGE sample buffer was added and the
samples were heated for 10 min at 65°C. The samples were analyzed by
SDS-PAGE and Western blotting.
Alteration of Plasma Membrane Cholesterol Content Using
Methyl-β-Cyclodextrin
Cells were resuspended at 2.5 × 105 cells/ml in RPMI/0.1%
fatty acid-free BSA (Sigma Chemical Co.) with or without 5–15 mM
methyl-β-cyclodextrin (MβCD; Aldrich Chemical Co.) and
incubated 15 min at 37°C. After washing, cells were added to the
prepared tissue culture wells and allowed to spread 30 min to 1 h at
37°C. Cholesterol was reintroduced into cells using 1.33 mg/ml
cholesterol-MβCD inclusion complexes in RPMI/0.1% fatty acid-free BSA,
which results in a 0.1 mM solution of cholesterol (Klein et al. 1995). To quantitate the amount of
cholesterol in membranes after these treatments, cellular lipids were extracted
by the method of Bligh and Dyer
1959, and cholesterol content was assayed by the cholesterol oxidase
method (Wako Chemicals USA). Approximately 30% of cellular cholesterol was
removed in OV10 cells by this treatment.
Preparation of Cholesterol-Methyl-β-Cyclodextrin Inclusion
Complexes
Cholesterol-MβCD inclusion complexes were prepared as described (Klein et al. 1995). In brief, a
solution of 30 mg cholesterol (Sigma Chemical Co.) in 400 μl 2:1 vol/vol
methanol/chloroform was added drop-wise to a stirred solution of 1 g of
MβCD in 11 ml PBS prewarmed in an 80°C waterbath. The solution
was stirred at 80°C until a clear solution resulted. The
cholesterol-MβCD inclusion complexes were used immediately or
freeze-dried. Inclusion complexes of the steroid analogues were made similarly
using 30 mg 5-cholestene-3-one, 20 mg 5-cholestene, or 24.7 mg pregnenolone.
Cell Spreading Assay
IAP-enhanced spreading of C32 cells on suboptimal doses of Vn was performed as
described (Gao et al. 1996a). In
brief, 12-well plates (Costar Corp.) were coated for 2 h at room temperature
with 0.125 μg/ml Vn in HBSS. Plates were blocked with 1% BSA/PBS for 2 h
at room temperature and washed three times with PBS. After MβCD
treatment, C32 cells were plated in HBSS with 1 mM CaCl2 and 1 mM
MgCl2 with or without the addition of 20 μM 4N1K peptide.
MβCD inclusion complexes made with cholesterol or the steroid analogues
were added to some wells. Cells were allowed to spread for 30 min at
37°C.
FACS® Staining
Indirect immunofluorescence was analyzed on OV10 cells with or without
pretreatment with MβCD as described (Rosales et al. 1992). The primary antibodies
used were 10G2, a murine mAb that detects a subset of IAP on some cells (Hermann et al. 1999), and 1F7, a
murine mAb that detects all IAP (Brown
et al. 1990). FITC-labeled antimurine μ chain and antimurine
γ chain (Sigma Chemical Co.) was used to detect cell-bound 10G2 and 1F7,
respectively.
Results
Cholesterol Is Required For IAP/αvβ3/G Protein
Complex
Previous studies using liposomes reconstituted with αvβ3 showed
that lipid composition affected ligand binding by this integrin and that a
cholesterol-containing environment markedly enhanced ligand binding (Conforti et al. 1990). Ligand
binding by αvβ3 also is influenced by IAP (Gresham et al. 1992; Lindberg et al. 1996b).
Because IAP likely contaminated the αvβ3 used to prepare the
liposomes, we determined whether cholesterol affected αvβ3
association with IAP. Trimeric G proteins have been identified as a signal
transduction component associated with IAP and αvβ3 (Frazier et al. 1999).
αvβ3/IAP/G protein complexes were isolated from OV10 cells
expressing both β3 integrin and IAP (Lindberg et al. 1996b), and treated in vitro
with the cholesterol-chelating agent MβCD (Klein et al. 1995; Gimpl et al. 1997; Keller and Simons 1998). Treatment with
MβCD markedly decreased association of both IAP and Gβ with the
purified αvβ3 (Fig. 1 A).
Anti-Gα Western blots showed a similar decrease in Gα
association with αvβ3 (Fig.
1 A). Thus, removal of cholesterol compromised association of
αvβ3 with IAP and trimeric G protein. No caveolin was identified
in these isolated complexes, although OV10 cells do express caveolin (data not
shown). No αvβ3, IAP, or G protein was precipitated with
YIGSR-coated beads (Fig. 1 A). These
control beads bind to a nonintegrin laminin receptor (Graf et al. 1987a) expressed on OV10 cells.Cholesterol also was required for complex assembly in intact cells, since little
associated IAP or G protein was copurified with αvβ3 isolated
from OV10 cells treated with MβCD (Fig.
1 B). Whereas MβCD removes cholesterol from cell membranes,
MβCD–cholesterol inclusion complexes mediate the incorporation
of cholesterol into membranes (Klein,
et al. 1995). Treatment of OV10 cells with MβCD decreased
cell cholesterol content 30–40%; subsequent incubation with
MβCD-cholesterol inclusion complexes restored cellular cholesterol to
basal levels (data not shown). In cells treated first with MβCD to
disassemble the integrin/IAP/G protein signaling complexes and then incubated
with cholesterol-charged MβCD to restore membrane cholesterol,
IAP/αvβ3/G protein complexes were isolated to the same extent as
in untreated cells (Fig. 1 B).To examine the structural requirements for cholesterol in complex formation,
inclusion complexes were made with several cholesterol analogues. Steroids with
minimal structural differences to cholesterol were chosen, all having the
hydrophobic, planar, core ring structure (Fig.
1 C). 5-cholestene lacks the 3β-hydroxyl group. Pregnenolone
contains a methyl ketone group instead of the aliphatic tail. A carbonyl
replaces the 3β-hydroxyl group in 5-cholestene-3-one. These compounds
yield an equilibrium between MβCD-complexed steroid and steroid
incorporated into the plasma membrane, similar to what is observed with
cholesterol itself (Klein et al.
1995). Neither 5-cholestene nor pregnenolone was able to restore
association of IAP/αvβ3/G protein complexes in MβCD
treated cells (Fig. 1 D). However,
5-cholestene-3-one was even better than cholesterol (∼2.3-fold better by
densitometry) in restoring the IAP/αvβ3 association. Thus, there
is structural specificity in the lipid requirement for complex formation, with
both the aliphatic tail and an oxygen in the 3 position of the cholestene ring
apparently required.
Cholesterol Is Required for IAP-αvβ3 Signaling
To determine the role for the cholesterol-dependent supramolecular complex in
IAP/αvβ3 signaling, we examined the role of the complex in TSP
modulation of αvβ3 function in C32 cells. This is an excellent
model to test signaling by the complex since the COOH-terminal domain of TSP
(TSP-1) has been shown to modulate αvβ3 integrin-mediated
adhesion and spreading of these cells through interaction with IAP, and this
effect requires activation of a heterotrimeric G protein (Gao et al. 1996a; Frazier et al. 1999). Moreover, cholesterol
depletion resulted in no loss of viability and no obvious morphologic change in
these cells (data not shown). Only when C32 cells were treated with the
IAP-binding agonist peptide from TSP-1 (4N1K; Kosfeld and Frazier 1993; Gao et al. 1996b) did they spread
on surfaces coated with low concentrations of Vn (Fig. 2A and Fig. B;
Gao et al. 1996b), an effect
abolished by cholesterol chelation with MβCD (Fig. 2 C). Cholesterol repletion using MβCD
inclusion complexes restored IAP-dependent spreading (Fig. 2 D). In contrast, MβCD had no effect on C32
spreading on high density Vn (Fig. 2E and
Fig. F), which is known to be
IAP-independent (Gao et al.
1996a). None of the cholesterol analogues were able to restore
4N1K-induced spreading in MβCD treated cells (Fig. 2, G–I). The failure of 5-cholestene-3-one,
which restores complex formation, to restore TSP induction of C32 cells
spreading, resulted from a general inhibition of cell spreading by this
cholesterol analogue, since C32 spreading on high concentration Vn was inhibited
in cells repleted with this cholesterol analogue (data not shown). In contrast,
neither 5-cholestene nor pregnenolone affected C32 spreading on high Vn
substrates. Thus, cholesterol is required for cooperation between IAP and
αvβ3 in C32 cells, but not for cell spreading in general.While cell spreading in response to 4N1K likely requires IAP-dependent signal
transduction, the biochemical mediators of this signaling are not known (Gao et al. 1996a). Therefore, we
measured 4N1K-mediated inhibition of adenylate cyclase in prostaglandin
E1 (PGE1)-treated resting platelets, an event known to require
heterotrimeric G protein signaling (Frazier et al. 1999). 4N1K caused an 80% decrease in cAMP levels in
platelets (81.4 ± 5.2 fmol/2 × 107 cells to 16.0
± 3.2). In MβCD-treated platelets, the cAMP was unchanged by
4N1K (33.4 ± 3.3 fmol without and 31 ± 3.2 with 4N1K). Repletion
of cholesterol in MβCD-treated platelets allowed 4N1K to again induce a
drop in cAMP to 18 ± 2.4 fmol, not different from the cAMP in
4N1K-treated platelets without cholesterol perturbation. The reason that
MβCD caused a decrease in the basal level of cAMP in resting platelets
is unknown, but may reflect a failure of PGE1 signaling, since it binds to a
seven transmembrane Gs-coupled receptor that likely resides in DIGs (Kerins et al. 1991; Woodward et al. 1997). Removal
of cholesterol did not abolish all cell signaling since tyrosine phosphorylation
in response to both 4N1K treatment and adhesion to high concentrations of Vn was
normal in MβCD treated cells (Fig.
2 J). Thus, while cholesterol depletion by MβCD does not
affect integrin-dependent tyrosine phosphorylation, it does block 4N1K-initiated
spreading and signaling, which are dependent on heterotrimeric G proteins.
IAP/αvβ3/G Protein Complex Requires the IAP Multiply Membrane
Spanning Domain and Extracellular Domain
To determine how cholesterol affected assembly of the supramolecular signaling
complex, we determined the role of the IAP multiply membrane spanning (MMS)
domain and extracellular domain in complex formation. αvβ3
integrins were isolated from transfected OV10 cells expressing normal IAP, IAP
in which the MMS domain had been replaced either by a single pass CD7
transmembrane domain (IAP/CD7) or by a glycan phosphoinositol anchor (IAP/GPI),
or IAP in which the extracellular domain of IAP was replaced with a FLAG epitope
(MC2). The IAP Ig domain was expressed equivalently on OV10 cells transfected
with each of the Ig domain-expressing constructs (Lindberg et al. 1996b) and the MMS domain was
equivalently expressed in wild-type and IAP/MC2 transfected cells, as assessed
by antibody against the IAP cytoplasmic tail (data not shown). While the complex
was easily isolated using either the αvβ3 ligand Vn or
anti-β3 mAb (1A2) from cells expressing normal IAP, minimal IAP or G
protein was copurified with integrin from cells expressing either IAP/CD7,
IAP/GPI, or IAP/MC2 (Fig. 3). Furthermore,
the IAP MMS domain influenced cholesterol association with αvβ3,
since there was 1.7 ± 0.85-fold (P < 0.03,
n = 4) more cholesterol associated with anti-β3 1A2
immunoprecipitates from OV10 cells expressing IAP than from cells deficient in
IAP. In addition, there was 2.1 ± 0.46-fold (P
< 0.03, n = 3) more cholesterol associated with
anti-IAP immunoprecipitates from OV10 cells expressing wild-type IAP than from
cells expressing either IAP/GPI or IAP/CD7. Thus, both the MMS and the Ig
domains of IAP are required for complex assembly, and the MMS domain enhances
cholesterol association with the αvβ3 integrin.
Figure 3
Requirement of the IAP MMS domain for supramolecular complex formation.
αvβ3 was isolated from OV10 cells expressing wild-type IAP,
IAP/CD7, IAP/GPI, or IAP/MC2 using beads coated with the αvβ3
ligand Vn or the anti-β3 mAb 1A2. Samples were analyzed by SDS-PAGE and
Western blotting using the β3 specific mAb 7G2, the IAP specific mAb
B6H12, or rabbit antibodies specific for Gβ. mAb 131, specific for the
cytoplasmic tail of IAP, was used to probe for IAP/MC2. Similar results were
obtained using beads coated with the β3 ligand, RGDS (data not
shown).
IAP/αvβ3/G Protein Complex Is Preferentially Formed in
DIGs
Because cholesterol and heterotrimeric G proteins are concentrated in DIGs in
many cell types (Brown and Rose
1992; Sargiacomo et al. 1993), it was possible that the IAP-dependent
signaling complex was preferentially formed in these domains. Sucrose density
ultracentrifugation demonstrated that both αvβ3 and IAP were
enriched in DIGs, which are found at the interface of the 25 and 5% sucrose
layers (Fig. 4, fractions 7–9).
Approximately half of IAP (Fig. 4 A) was
isolated in this low density membrane fraction, together with about one-fourth
of the αvβ3 (Fig. 4 B). In
contrast, the closely related αvβ5 integrin localized
predominantly to the bulk membranes (Fig. 4
C, fractions 2–4), together with >95% of total cellular protein
(Fig. 4 D). To determine whether
complex formation occurred preferentially among the IAP, αvβ3,
and G proteins in DIGs, αvβ3 was purified from individual
fractions of the sucrose gradient and coassociation of αvβ3,
IAP, and heterotrimeric G proteins determined (Fig. 4 E). Together with 15% of the bead-bound αvβ3
(as determined by densitometry), ∼40% of the associated IAP and
Gβ were coprecipitated in the DIGs. This represents a minimum estimate
of DIGs-associated complex, since the purification procedure was presumably not
100% efficient. Thus, αvβ3 in DIGs was at least four times more
likely to be involved in complex formation than αvβ3 in the bulk
membrane fractions of the cell, demonstrating a preferential association of the
complex with DIGs. To determine whether complex formation was required for
localization of IAP or αvβ3 to DIGs, fractionation studies were
performed on cells lacking IAP or αvβ3. In OV10,
αvβ3 localized to DIGs similarly whether or not IAP was present
(Fig. 4 B). In the Jurkat T lymphoid
line, which expresses little if any αvβ3 (Reinhold et al. 1997) and as a consequence
have no detectable αvβ3/IAP complex, >60% of the IAP was
in low density fractions (data not shown). Thus, IAP and αvβ3
localize to DIGs independent of complex formation. It is already known that
trimeric G proteins localize to DIGs because of acylation and/or interaction
with caveolin (Sargiacomo et al.
1993; Couet et al.
1997; Mumby
1997). Thus, each of the three protein components of the complex is
targeted to DIGs independent of complex formation, suggesting that DIGs are the
membrane sites where these signaling complexes form.
Figure 4
DIGs localization of components of the signaling complex. Specific radioactivity
in sucrose density fractions obtained from OV10 cells labeled with
125I mAbs specific for IAP (mAb 2B7; A),
αvβ3 (mAb 1A2; B), or αvβ5 (mAb
P1F6; C) are shown. Data is presented as a percentage of the total input
counts in each fraction. In B, distribution of radioactivity in cells with and
without IAP are compared. D, Distribution of total protein, measured by the BCA
assay. The sucrose concentration is highest in fraction 1 and least in fraction
10. P denotes radioactivity or protein in the pellet. DIGs migrate to the
interface of the 25 and 5% sucrose solutions (fraction 7–9), while the
vast majority of membrane protein is contained within the 40% sucrose fractions.
Data is representative of three or more experiments. E and F,
αvβ3 was immunoprecipitated with mAb 1A2 from each fraction of a
sucrose density gradient prepared with unlabeled OV10 cells expressing wild-type
IAP. The samples were analyzed by SDS-PAGE and Western blotting using
anti-β3 mAb 7G2 and anti-IAP mAb B6H12 (E) or anti-β3 and rabbit
antibodies specific for Gβ (F).
DIGs Localization Is Not Sufficient for Complex Formation
To determine the effect of cholesterol removal on localization of the protein
components of the complex to DIGs, OV10 were treated with MβCD before
sucrose density gradient centrifugation. The localization of IAP was minimally
affected by MβCD treatment (Fig. 5
A). However, both αvβ3 (Fig.
5 B) and Gβ (Fig. 5 C)
localization were substantially diminished (Fig.
5 D). To determine if DIGs localization of each of the components was
sufficient for complex formation, the membrane localization of IAP/CD7 (Fig. 5 E) and IAP/GPI (Fig. 5 F), both of which failed to form complexes, was
determined. While less IAP/CD7 was in DIGs, IAP/GPI localized to the DIGs to a
similar extent to wild-type IAP (see Fig. 4
A and 5A). This is consistent with the known propensity of GPI-linked proteins
to be enriched in DIGs (Brown and
Rose 1992; Sargiacomo et al. 1993; Friedrichson and Kurzchalia
1998; Varma and
Mayor 1998). Since complexes did not form in cells expressing IAP/GPI
(Fig. 3) despite the ability of the IAP
Ig domain to mediate interaction with αvβ3 (Lindberg et al. 1996b), this result
demonstrates that localization of the IAP Ig domain to DIGs is not sufficient
for complex formation and that the MMS domain of IAP must serve another function
in complex formation. Furthermore, this experiment demonstrates that the
protocol for isolating the αvβ3/IAP/G protein complex does not
simply nonspecifically copurify all proteins found in DIGs. However, DIGs
localization of each component of the complex may be necessary for complex
formation. Since cholesterol is an essential component of the complex, DIGs
localization may provide a mechanism for focusing the proteins of the complex at
a site where an adequate concentration of cholesterol exists for complex
assembly.
Figure 5
Effect of cholesterol depletion on DIGs localization of signaling components.
A–D, OV10 cells expressing IAP treated with or without 10 mM
MβCD before Brij lysis and sucrose density centrifugation. Distribution
of 125I-labeled anti-IAP mAb 2B7 (A) or anti-β3 mAb 1A2 (B)
was determined as described in Fig. 4. C,
Bulk membranes (fractions 2–4 combined from a sucrose gradient) and DIGs
containing fractions (fractions 7–9 combined) were analyzed by SDS-PAGE
and Western blotting using rabbit antibodies specific for Gβ after
sucrose density fractionation of unlabeled cells. D, The percent of IAP,
β3, and Gβ remaining in the DIGs-containing fractions
7–9 after MβCD treatment. Percentage of total counts was used to
determine the amount of IAP or β3 present, and densitometry of Western
blots was used to determine the amount of Gβ present. E and F,
Distribution of IAP Ig domain-expressing molecules after sucrose density
centrifugation of Brij-lysed OV10 cells expressing IAP/GPI (E) or IAP/CD7 (F)
was determined as described in Fig. 4.
Cholesterol Affects IAP Expression of the 10G2 Epitope
A previous study suggested that the interaction between IAP and
αvβ3 could occur through the IAP Ig domain (Lindberg et al. 1996b). Thus, it was possible
that cholesterol interaction with the IAP MMS domain could affect the IAP
conformation to facilitate complex formation. To determine whether any
cholesterol-dependent conformation of IAP could be discovered,
FACS® analysis was performed with 10G2, a mAb that
recognizes only a subset of IAP on many cells (Hermann et al. 1999). 10G2 recognizes the IAP
Ig domain, as demonstrated by ELISA and Western blotting with purified Ig domain
(data not shown). On OV10 cells, 10G2 recognized wild-type IAP approximately
fourfold better than IAP/CD7 and did not bind IAP/GPI at all (Fig. 6, top). This difference in detection
was not due to differences in expression, as detected by the conventional
anti-IAP mAb B6H12, which detects equivalent expression of the three constructs
(Lindberg et al.
1996b; data not shown). When OV10 expressing wild-type IAP were
treated with MβCD, 10G2 binding increased another sixfold (Fig. 6, middle). Repletion of cellular
cholesterol with MβCD/cholesterol complexes returned 10G2 binding to the
level of untreated cells. MβCD did not affect 10G2 binding to IAP/CD7 or
IAP/GPI (data not shown). Furthermore, MβCD did not affect the binding
of the anti-IAP mAbs 2D3 or 2B7 (Fig. 6,
bottom). These data demonstrate that the availability of the 10G2 epitope on the
IAP Ig domain on OV10 cells is markedly influenced by the MMS domain and is
significantly modulated by cholesterol. Its ability to modulate 10G2 binding to
the Ig domain suggests that cholesterol binding to the IAP MMS domain affects
IAP conformation.
Figure 6
Binding of mAb 10G2 to IAP. Top, OV10 cells expressing IAP, IAP/GPI, or IAP/CD7
were incubated with the mAb 10G2. FACS® analysis with
anti-IAP mAb B6H12 showed that both IAP/GPI and IAP/CD7 were expressed at a
level at least equivalent to that of wild-type IAP (mean channel fluorescence
wild-type IAP, 3.8 ± 0.1; IAP/GPI, 6.1 ± 0.3;
IAP/CD7, 11.7 ± 1.4; Lindberg et al. 1996b; data not
shown). Middle, 10G2 binding was determined on buffer-treated OV10,
cholesterol-depleted OV10, and cholesterol-repleted OV10 expressing wild-type
IAP. Bottom, Binding of conventional anti-IAP mAb 2D3 and 2B7 (Brown et al. 1990) was determined
on buffer-treated and MβCD-treated OV10 expressing wild-type IAP.
Discussion
IAP is a plasma membrane protein first isolated by copurification with αv
integrins. Subsequent studies have demonstrated a functional association of IAP with
β3 integrins in leukocytes and endothelial cells (Senior et al. 1992; Schwartz et al. 1993; Van Strijp et al. 1993; Zhou and Brown 1993) and
coimmunoprecipitation of IAP with αvβ3 from several cells and
tissues (Brown et al. 1990).
Moreover, IAP is required for Vn bead binding by both αvβ3 and
αvβ5 integrins in OV10 cells (Lindberg et al. 1996b). However, IAP appears to
be unnecessary for adhesion of these same cells to Vn-coated surfaces and
IAP-deficientmice develop normally, in contrast to αv-deficient mice,
demonstrating that IAP is not absolutely required for αv integrin function.
This has led to the hypothesis that IAP and αvβ3 form a signaling
complex in at least some cells that can influence specific cell functions. Recently,
association of αvβ3 and IAP with trimeric G proteins has been
demonstrated (Frazier et al.
1999), suggesting a mechanism by which the αvβ3/IAP complex
may signal. However, the molecular mechanisms involved in association of
αvβ3 with IAP or of this membrane complex with G proteins have not
been resolved.An unusual feature of IAP is its MMS domain, which could allow for enhanced
interactions with and regulation by membrane lipids. To determine whether this was
the case, we examined whether cholesterol was required for association of IAP with
αvβ3 integrin and with trimeric G proteins. Although the removal of
cholesterol with MβCD has been shown to disrupt receptor signaling in a
variety of cells (Fernandez-Ballester et al. 1994; Gimpl et al. 1997; Xavier et al. 1998; Zhang et al. 1998; Sheets et al. 1999a), a specific role for
cholesterol in the formation of supramolecular receptor complexes or in regulation
of integrin function has not been demonstrated previously. We found that cholesterol
is required both for maintenance of complexes in cells and for maintenance of
isolated complexes in vitro. Thus, cholesterol is the fourth molecular and first
described nonprotein component of this signaling complex. Likely, the cholesterol
interacts with the IAP MMS domain, since replacement with a single transmembrane
domain in IAP/CD7 or with a GPI-anchor in IAP/GPI abolished complex formation as
efficiently as cholesterol removal. Moreover, removal of cholesterol or replacement
of the MMS domain with CD7 also abolished functional responses to IAP ligation in
Jurkat T cells and murine fibroblasts (unpublished data). Thus, cholesterol is
required not only for physical association of IAP with integrins and G proteins, but
for integrin-independent functions of IAP as well.Recently, the understanding has emerged that there are distinct domains within the
lipid bilayer in which specific lipids are concentrated (Brown and Rose 1992; Sargiacomo et al. 1993). Because they can be
purified and studied due to their low density and relative resistance to
solubilization by some detergents, domains enriched in glycosphingolipids and
cholesterol are the best characterized (Brown and Rose 1992; Sargiacomo et al. 1993). These domains are
called DIGs, GEMs (for glycosphingolipid-enriched membranes), or rafts, to reflect
these properties. In addition to lipids, these domains are enriched in specific
integral membrane proteins, of which caveolin is the best known (Kurzchalia et al. 1992). However,
it is now clear that caveolin is not required for organization of the domains and
DIGs can exist even in cells lacking caveolin (Fra et al. 1994). In addition to caveolin, DIGs contain
disproportionately high concentrations of GPI-linked membrane proteins, as well as a
variety of cytoplasmic proteins that associate with the plasma membrane through
lipid modifications, including NH2-terminal myristoylation and/or
palmitoylation (Simons and Ikonen
1997). In this latter category are a variety of signal transduction
molecules, such as heterotrimeric G proteins and some src family kinases, which have
been shown to localize to these domains (Xavier et al. 1998). However, the significance of domain localization is
somewhat controversial. While specialization of these domains as sites for
initiation of signal transduction has been proposed (Field et al. 1995; Xavier et al. 1998; Zhang et al. 1998), so has the opposite, that these
are sites where signal transduction proteins can be sequestered in inactive form
(Rodgers and Rose
1996).IAP and αvβ3 both preferentially localize to DIGs and their
association is greatly enhanced in these domains. This may imply that the functional
signaling complex localizes to these membrane domains and that DIGs are essential
for signal propagation across the membrane, perhaps because of proximity to other
cytoplasmic molecules required for the signaling cascade. Alternatively, the
localization to DIGs may simply reflect the tight association with cholesterol that
apparently characterizes the complex. However, it is clear that localization to DIGs
is not sufficient for stable physical association, since IAP/GPI, which localizes to
DIGs equally as well as wild-type IAP does not participate in complex formation.
Moreover, removal of cholesterol fails to disrupt localization of IAP to DIGs, even
though the functional association among integrin, IAP, and G proteins is disrupted,
and IAP no longer functions in integrin-mediated spreading. It is possible that a
particularly tight or specific association of IAP with cholesterol would require
more extensive depletion of cholesterol than is achieved with 10 mM MβCD to
affect localization.It is interesting that localization of IAP to DIGs and formation of stable complexes
with αvβ3 and G proteins appears not to be required for IAP
enhancement of αv integrin bead binding, since both IAP/CD7 and IAP/GPI can
mediate this effect of IAP (Lindberg et
al. 1996b). This suggests that IAP's regulation of αvβ3
ligand binding does not depend on its signaling capacity, but relies instead on
direct interaction of its Ig domain with αv integrins, potentially altering
the Vn-binding ability of these integrins. It is possible that this effect of IAP
does not require stable association with the integrin and that once Vn binding is
activated, the αvβ3 integrin can bind ligand tightly without IAP
(Orlando and Cheresh
1991). Nonetheless, these experiments suggest that the IAP Ig domain is
an important component of the interaction of IAP with αvβ3.
Consistent with this, no complex formation can be demonstrated in cells transfected
with a chimeric molecule in which the IAP Ig domain has been replaced with an
irrelevant domain. Based on these observations, we propose a model in which the
conformation of IAP is influenced by the MMS domain and further influenced by the
tight binding of cholesterol to the MMS domain. This is consistent with the pattern
of binding of the 10G2 mAb to OV10-expressed IAP, for which the MMS domain is
required and mAb binding enhanced by cholesterol removal. In this model, the
cholesterol-replete conformation of IAP can interact with αvβ3, and
for this, the Ig domain is required. This entity, in turn, associates with the
trimeric G protein to form the complete signaling complex. Since there is
specificity in the ability of cholesterol analogues to mediate
IAP-αvβ3 complex formation, it will be interesting to determine
whether the failure of some analogues to mediate complex formation reflects failure
to interact with IAP or failure to induce the change in IAP conformation and
function.In summary, we have demonstrated that cholesterol has a critical role in assembly of
the αvβ3/IAP/G protein signaling complex. This is a novel role for a
membrane lipid and suggests a new and direct mechanism for regulation of signal
transduction by supramolecular complexes in the plasma membrane. It has been shown
that cell activation signals can regulate the association of the high affinity
Fc∈ receptor with DIGs (Sheets et
al. 1999b). It is possible that IAP association with these cholesterol
rich domains also is regulated and that this, in turn, affects formation and
maintenance of the signaling complex containing αvβ3 and
heterotrimeric G proteins.
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