| Literature DB >> 32373113 |
Alexey V Sarapulov1,2, Petar Petrov1,2, Sara Hernández-Pérez1,2, Vid Šuštar1, Elina Kuokkanen1, Lena Cords3, Rufus V M Samuel1, Marika Vainio1,2, Marco Fritzsche4,5, Yolanda R Carrasco6, Pieta K Mattila1,2.
Abstract
Efficient generation of antibodies by B cells is one of the prerequisites of protective immunity. B cell activation by cognate antigens via B cell receptors (BCRs), or pathogen-associated molecules through pattern-recognition receptors, such as Toll-like receptors (TLRs), leads to transcriptional and metabolic changes that ultimately transform B cells into antibody-producing plasma cells or memory cells. BCR signaling and a number of steps downstream of it rely on coordinated action of cellular membranes and the actin cytoskeleton, tightly controlled by concerted action of multiple regulatory proteins, some of them exclusive to B cells. Here, we dissect the role of Missing-In-Metastasis (MIM), or Metastasis suppressor 1 (MTSS1), a cancer-associated membrane and actin cytoskeleton regulating protein, in B cell-mediated immunity by taking advantage of MIM knockout mouse strain. We show undisturbed B cell development and largely normal composition of B cell compartments in the periphery. Interestingly, we found that MIM-/- B cells are defected in BCR signaling in response to surface-bound antigens but, on the other hand, show increased metabolic activity after stimulation with LPS or CpG. In vivo, MIM knockout animals exhibit impaired IgM antibody responses to immunization with T cell-independent antigen. This study provides the first comprehensive characterization of MIM in B cells, demonstrates its regulatory role for B cell-mediated immunity, as well as proposes new functions for MIM in tuning receptor signaling and cellular metabolism, processes, which may also contribute to the poorly understood functions of MIM in cancer.Entities:
Keywords: B cell receptor signaling; BCR; I-BAR domain protein; MIM; MTSS1; TLR; actin cytoskeleton; metabolism
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32373113 PMCID: PMC7176992 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2020.00599
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Key reagents table.
| AffiniPure Donkey Anti-Mouse IgM, μ Chain Specific | 715-005-020 | Jackson ImmunoResearch | Stimulatory antibodies |
| AffiniPure F(ab′)2 Fragment Donkey Anti-Mouse IgM | 715-006-020 | Jackson ImmunoResearch | Stimulatory antibodies |
| AF647 AffiniPure F(ab′)2 Fragment Donkey Anti-mouse IgM | 715-606-020 | Jackson ImmunoResearch | Stimulatory antibodies |
| Monobiotinylated Purified Rat anti-mouse Ig κ light chain | 559749 or 21343 | BD Biosciences or Thermo Fisher Scientific | Stimulatory antibodies |
| Purified Rat Anti-Mouse IgM—Clone II/41 (RUO) | 553435 | BD Biosciences | ELISA, capture antibody |
| AffiniPure Goat Anti-Mouse IgG, Fcγ Fragment Specific | 115-005-071 | Jackson ImmunoResearch | ELISA, capture antibody |
| Goat Anti-Mouse IgG1-BIOT | 1071-08 | SouthernBiotech | ELISA, detection antibody |
| Goat Anti-Mouse IgG2b-BIOT | 1091-08 | SouthernBiotech | ELISA, detection antibody |
| Goat Anti-Mouse IgG2c-BIOT | 1078-08 | SouthernBiotech | ELISA, detection antibody |
| Goat Anti-Mouse IgG3, Human/Bovine/Horse SP ads-BIOT | 1103-08 | SouthernBiotech | ELISA, detection antibody |
| Goat Anti-Mouse IgG Fc-BIOT | 1033-08 | SouthernBiotech | ELISA, detection antibody |
| Biotin Rat Anti-Mouse IgM, Clone R6-60.2 (RUO) | 553406 | BD Biosciences | ELISA, detection antibody |
| C57BL/6 Mouse Immunoglobulin Panel | 5300-01B | SouthernBiotech | ELISA, standard |
| Purified Rat Anti-Mouse CD16/CD32 | 553142 | BD Biosciences | Flow cytometry, Fc-block |
| FITC Rat Anti-Mouse IgG1 | 553443 | BD Biosciences | Flow cytometry, CSR |
| FITC Rat Anti-Mouse IgG2b | 553395 | BD Biosciences | Flow cytometry, CSR |
| FITC Rat Anti-Mouse IgG3 | 553403 | BD Biosciences | Flow cytometry, CSR |
| AffiniPure Goat anti-Mouse IgG2c, FITC-conjugated | 115-095-208 | Jackson ImmunoResearch | Flow cytometry, CSR |
| LPS, Lipopolysaccharides from | L2887-5MG | Sigma-Aldrich | CSR, Metabolism |
| CpG ODN 1826 | tlrl-1826 | Invivogen | Metabolism |
| CD40L, Recombinant Mouse CD40 Ligand/TNFSF5 (HA-tag) | 8230-CL-050 | R&D Systems | CSR |
| IL-4, Recombinant Mouse IL-4 | 404-ML-010 | R&D Systems | CSR, Metabolism |
| IFNγ, Recombinant Mouse IFN-g | 575304 | BioLegend | CSR |
| TGF-β, Recombinant Mouse TGF-beta 1 | 7666-MB-005 | R&D Systems | CSR |
| BD Horizon™ V450 Rat Anti-Mouse IgM Clone R6-60.2 | 560575 | BD Biosciences | Flow cytometry |
| AF488 anti-mouse IgD [11-26c.2a] | 405718 | BioLegend | Flow cytometry |
| AF700 anti-mouse CD19 [6D5] | 115528 | BioLegend | Flow cytometry |
| APC anti-mouse CD19 [6D5] | 115512 | BioLegend | Flow cytometry |
| APC/Cy7 anti-mouse/human CD45R/B220 [RA3-6B2] | 103224 | BioLegend | Flow cytometry |
| APC anti-mouse CD21/CD35 (CR2/CR1) [7E9] | 123412 | BioLegend | Flow cytometry |
| Alexa Fluor® 594 anti-mouse CD23 [B3B4] | 101628 | BioLegend | Flow cytometry |
| PE anti-mouse CD93 (AA4.1, early B lineage) [AA4.1] | 136503 | BioLegend | Flow cytometry |
| PE anti-mouse CD3e [145-2C11] | 100308 | BioLegend | Flow cytometry |
| FITC anti-mouse CD4 [GK1.5] | 100406 | BioLegend | Flow cytometry |
| APC anti-mouse CD5 [53-7.3] | 100626 | BioLegend | Flow cytometry |
| Tom20 (FL-145) | sc-11415 | Santa Cruz Biotechnology | Flow cytometry, metabolism |
| Goat anti-Rabbit IgG (H+L), AF488 | A-11008 | Thermo Fisher Scientific | Flow cytometry, metabolism |
| MTSS1 (P549) Ab | 4385S | Cell Signaling Technology | Immunoblotting |
| MTSS1 (N747) Ab | 4386S | Cell Signaling Technology | Immunoblotting |
| Phospho-Zap-70 (Tyr319)/Syk (Tyr352) Ab | 2701P | Cell Signaling Technology | Immunoblotting, microscopy |
| Syk (D3Z1E) XP Rabbit mAb | 13198S | Cell Signaling Technology | Immunoblotting |
| Phospho-Lyn (Tyr507) Ab | 2731P | Cell Signaling Technology | Immunoblotting |
| Lyn (C13F9) rabbit mAb | 2796S | Cell Signaling Technology | Immunoblotting |
| Phospho-CD19 (Tyr531) Ab | 3571S | Cell Signaling Technology | Immunoblotting |
| CD19 Ab | 3574S | Cell Signaling Technology | Immunoblotting |
| Phospho-PI3 Kinase p85 (Tyr458)/p55 (Tyr199) Ab | 4228S | Cell Signaling Technology | Immunoblotting |
| Phospho-CD19 (Tyr531) Ab | 3571S | Cell Signaling Technology | Immunoblotting |
| Phospho-Akt (Ser473) (193H12) Rabbit mAb | 4058S | Cell Signaling Technology | Immunoblotting |
| Akt1 (C73H10) Rabbit mAb | 2938S | Cell Signaling Technology | Immunoblotting |
| Phospho-NF-kappa-B p65 (Ser536) (93H1) Rabbit mAb | 3033S | Cell Signaling Technology | Immunoblotting |
| NF-κB p65 (D14E12) XP® Rabbit mAb | 8242S | Cell Signaling Technology | Immunoblotting |
| p44/42 MAPK (Erk1/2) Ab | 9102S | Cell Signaling Technology | Immunoblotting |
| Phospho-p44/42 MAPK (Erk1/2) (Thr202/Tyr204) Ab | 9101S | Cell Signaling Technology | Immunoblotting |
| Phospho-Btk (Tyr223) (D1D2Z) Rabbit mAb | 87457 | Cell Signaling Technology | Immunoblotting |
| Peroxidase AffiniPure Goat Anti-Rabbit IgG (H+L) | 111-035-144 | Jackson ImmunoResearch | Immunoblotting |
| Peroxidase AffiniPure Goat Anti-Mouse IgG, Fcγ Specific Ab | 115-035-071 | Jackson ImmunoResearch | Immunoblotting |
| Donkey Anti-Rabbit IgG Ab, IRDye 800 CW conjugated | 926-32213 | LI-COR Biosciences | Immunoblotting |
| AF555 Phalloidin | A34055 | Thermo Fisher Scientific | Microscopy |
| AF647 anti-mouse/human CD45R/B220 Ab | 103229 | BioLegend | Microscopy |
| Anti-Phosphotyrosine Ab, clone 4G10® | 05-321 | Merck Miilipore | Microscopy |
| FITC Rat Anti-Mouse IgG2b | 553395 | BD | Microscopy |
| CXCL13 | 250-24-5 μg | PeproTech | Microscopy, SLB |
| AlexaFluor 488 Mouse Anti-Btk (pY223)/Itk (pY180) | 564847 | BD Biosciences | Microscopy |
| Donkey anti-rabbit IgG, AF488 conjugate | A-21206 | Thermo Fisher Scientific | Microscopy |
Figure 1Largely normal B cell development and composition of B cell compartments in the bone marrow, spleen, and peritoneal cavity of MIM−/− mice. (A) Equal numbers of WT and MIM-KO splenic B cells were lysed and analyzed by immunoblotting with MTSS1 antibodies [4385S (Ab #1), 4386S (Ab #2), Cell Signaling Technology]. Arrowhead indicates the position of the band corresponding to MIM. (B) Bone marrow, spleen, and peritoneal cavity cell populations from WT and MIM−/− mice were extracted for analysis by flow cytometry (C–G) using the gating strategy shown in Supplementary Figures S1, S2. Data of three to six independent experiments are shown as mean ± SEM. (C) Percentages of total CD19+, CD19+ IgM+, and CD19− CD117+ cells in the bone marrow. (D) Percentages of B cell precursor and mature recirculating B cell populations in the bone marrow. Progression through consecutive B cell developmental stages was analyzed based on the major surface phenotypic markers shown in the schematic below. Percentage of corresponding bone marrow populations are shown as mean ± SEM. (E) Percentages of CD19+ B cells and total (upper panel) as well as CD4+ and CD8+ T cell populations (lower panel) in the spleen. (F) Percentages of major B cell subsets in the spleen. T1–3 (transitional 1–3), Fo (follicular), MZ (marginal zone) B cells are analyzed. (G) Percentages of CD23−CD5+ (B1a), CD23−CD5− (B1b), and CD23+CD5− (B2) B cells in the peritoneal cavity. Mean ± SEM is shown. *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01.
Figure 2MIM deficiency leads to impaired B cell receptor signaling in response to surface-bound antigen. (A) Flow cytometry analysis of Ca2+ mobilization in response to BCR stimulation in solution. Splenic B cells from WT or MIM-KO mice were labeled with Fluo-4 and Fura Red and stimulated with 10, 5, 2.5, or 1 μg/ml anti-IgM antibodies. Time of anti-IgM antibody addition is indicated by an arrow. Data are presented as a ratio of Fluo-4 to Fura Red median fluorescence intensity. Mean values of three to five independent experiments are shown. (B) Splenic B cells were stimulated on surfaces coated with 5 μg/ml anti-IgM antibodies for 0, 3, 7, and 15 min and lysed. Lysates were subjected for immunoblotting for phosphorylated forms of different BCR signaling effector proteins. Unphosphorylated forms of the corresponding proteins were used as loading control, except for pCD19, pBtk, and pPI3K, where NF-κB p65, Syk or Akt were used as loading controls. (C) Quantification of the data in (B). Data are presented as ratios of phosphorylated forms to total protein levels and normalized to the level of WT at 0 min. Data are from four to eight independent experiments. Mean ± SEM is shown. *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01, ***p < 0.001.
Figure 3MIM−/− B cells show diminished spreading and signaling on antigen-coated glass, but gather normal levels of antigen on supported lipid bilayers. (A) Scanning electron micrographs of WT and MIM-KO splenic B cells at resting state, let to adhere on CellTak-coated coverslips, or let to spread and get activated on coverslips coated with 5 μg/ml anti-IgM for 10 min. Scale bar, 1 μm. (B) Splenic B cells were stimulated on coverslips coated with 7.5 μg/ml anti-IgM antibodies for 10 min, fixed, permeabilized, and stained with phalloidin (F-actin) and anti-phospho-Tyrosine antibodies (pTyr). Samples were imaged with TIRF microscopy. Representative images showing cell spreading and F-actin staining, are shown (upper left). Area of spreading was analyzed by signal thresholding in pTyr channel (lower left panels), and pTyr (upper right panels) and F-actin (lower right panels) intensities inside cell perimeter were quantified using ImageJ. Mean (MFI) and total (total) fluorescence intensities of pTyr and F-actin stainings are shown, and the mean fluorescence intensity is presented both as pairwise comparison of geometric means of individual experiments (on the left) and as scatter plots of random sampling of 92 cells from each of three to four individual experiments (middle). Mean ± SEM is shown. Scale bar, 5 μm. (C) Splenic B cells were stimulated on coverslips coated with 5 μg/ml anti-IgM antibodies for 3, 5, 7, 10, and 15 min, fixed, permeabilized, and stained with phalloidin (F-actin) and anti-phospho-Btk (pBtk) or anti-phospho-Syk (pSyk) antibodies. Samples were imaged with spinning disk confocal microscopy. Area of spreading was analyzed by signal thresholding in phalloidin channel, and pBtk or pSyk mean fluorescence intensities (MFI) inside cell perimeter were quantified using ImageJ and normalized to non-activated cells (time 0 min). Normalized MFI of pBtk and pSyk, and spreading area based on F-actin are shown. Data are shown as mean ± SEM of four independent experiments (~25–150 cells per condition per experiment). WT and KO cells were compared using unpaired t-test. (D) Intracellular Ca2+-flux was analyzed in splenic WT and MIM-KO B cells loaded with Fluo-4 and stimulated with anti-kappa light chain antibodies tethered on supported lipid bilayers (SLB). A spinning disk confocal microscope was used to record the Fluo-4 intensity and the intracellular Ca2+ levels were quantified with CalQuo2 software. Representative images of stimulated B cells, 85 s after injection into the chamber, are shown (upper panel). Mean percentages of non-triggering cells and cells with single peak or oscillatory responses are shown (lower panel). Data of three independent experiments. Scale bar, 100 μm. (E) Splenic WT and MIM-KO B cells were stimulated with monobiotinylated anti-kappa light chain antibodies tethered via AF647-labeled streptavidin on SLBs. A laser scanning confocal microscope was used to detect IRM signal (panels on the left) corresponding to the area of contact and to measure the amount of antigen collected in the synapse from the AF647 signal (panels on the right). The data were quantified for cell area (graphs on the left), antigen area, and antigen fluorescence intensity (graphs on the right) during synapse formation (0–7 min) by tracking individual cells from live cell imaging movies, and in the mature synapse (>10 min) by taking snapshots from several fields of views after movie acquisition. Data are from three to four independent experiments (~25–30 cells per condition in the movie, ~400–450 cells in the snapshots). Data were compared using unpaired t-test. Mean ± SEM is shown. Scale bar, 1 μm. **p < 0.01, ***p < 0.001, ****p < 0.0001.
Figure 4MIM-deficiency results in impaired IgM response and reduced levels of total IgGs during T cell-independent immune response. (A) Basal antibody levels of major immunoglobulin subclasses were measured from 17 to 18 WT and MIM KO mice. (B) A schematic representation of T cell-independent (TI) immunization study. (C,D) The antibody responses of immunized WT and MIM-KO mice were followed from serum samples as in (B). NP-specific and total antibody levels of (C) IgM and (D) IgG immunoglobulin isotypes were measured with ELISA. Seven to eight mice per group. Mean ± SEM is shown. *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01.
Figure 5MIM-deficient B cells show increased metabolic activity upon stimulation with Toll-like receptor ligands LPS and CpG. (A) Oxygen consumption rate (OCR) profiles of WT and MIM-KO splenic B cells stimulated with IL-4, anti-IgM + IL-4, LPS, CpG, anti-IgM + LPS, or anti-IgM + CpG for 24 h were measured in a Seahorse XF Cell Mito Stress Test assay. The different steps of the assay are depicted in the graph on the left showing mean ± SEM. Comparisons of baseline mitochondrial respiration as well as maximum and spare respiratory capacities, extracted from the assay, are shown in the graphs in the middle, and quantification of the ratio of OCR to extracellular acidification rate (ECAR) at the baseline is shown on the right. Data presented as mean of four to eight independent experiments. Mean ± SEM. (B,C) Splenic B cells, either left unstimulated (B) or stimulated with LPS or CpG for 24 h (C), were loaded with TMRE to probe for the mitochondrial membrane potential, or stained with anti-Tom20 antibodies to derive total mitochondrial mass. The samples were analyzed by flow cytometry. Data of three independent experiments. Mean ± SEM. *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01.