The B cell-specific transmembrane protein RP-105 belongs to the family of Drosophila toll-like proteins which are likely to trigger innate immune responses in mice and man. Here we demonstrate that the Src-family protein tyrosine kinase Lyn, protein kinase C beta I/II (PKCbetaI/II), and Erk2-specific mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase kinase (MEK) are essential and probably functionally connected elements of the RP-105-mediated signaling cascade in B cells. We also find that negative regulation of RP-105-mediated activation of MAP kinases by membrane immunoglobulin may account for the phenomenon of antigen receptor-mediated arrest of RP-105-mediated B cell proliferation.
The B cell-specific transmembrane protein RP-105 belongs to the family of Drosophilatoll-like proteins which are likely to trigger innate immune responses in mice and man. Here we demonstrate that the Src-family protein tyrosine kinase Lyn, protein kinase C beta I/II (PKCbetaI/II), and Erk2-specific mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase kinase (MEK) are essential and probably functionally connected elements of the RP-105-mediated signaling cascade in B cells. We also find that negative regulation of RP-105-mediated activation of MAP kinases by membrane immunoglobulin may account for the phenomenon of antigen receptor-mediated arrest of RP-105-mediated B cell proliferation.
Activation of B cells during adaptive immune responses
requires coordinated signaling through the surface expressed antigen receptor and coreceptors such as CD19,
CD21, or CD22 (1). The combined antigen receptor- and
coreceptor-derived signals define the degree of B cell activation and the strength of humoral immune responses (2).
In contrast to adaptive immune responses, innate immune
responses are antigen receptor-independent and induced by
invariant molecular structures in pathogens (pathogen-associated molecular pattern, PAMPs)1 via pattern-recognition
receptors (PRRs; reference 3). The common feature of B
cell-activating PAMPs such as bacteria cell wall lipopolysaccharide (4), viral hemagglutinins (5, 6), or CpG-rich bacterial DNA (7) lies in their ability to induce polyclonal B cell
activation as defined by strong proliferative responses associated with upregulation of the surface expressed MHC
class II and costimulatory receptor molecules CD80 (B7.1)
and CD86 (B7.2) (8).Responses of this type were found recently to be mediated by a human homologue of the Drosophilatoll protein
(9). The expression of a constitutively active form of humantoll in a monocytic cell line leads to induction of expression of inflammatory cytokines such as IL-1, IL-8, IL-6,
IFN-γ, as well as to the expression of the costimulatory
molecule CD80 (9). Humantoll belongs to the family of
leucine-rich PRRs which also comprises the LPS receptor
CD14 (10) and the toll-like protein RP-105 (11). RP-105
is a 105-kD transmembrane protein expressed on the surface of mature B cells in mice (12) and B lymphocytes and
dendritic cells in humans (13, 14). As in toll protein, the extracellular domain of RP-105 is characterized by the presence of multiple tandemly repeated leucine-rich motifs
separated from the single transmembrane domain by a carboxy-flanking region (11). The similarity between toll and
RP-105 is further strengthened by the presence of conserved cysteine residues in the carboxy-flanking region of
toll and RP-105 (11). These cysteine residues are essential
for the regulation of signal transduction through toll (9)
and, possibly, RP-105.Antibody-mediated cross-linking of RP-105 in vitro induces a strong proliferative response in B cells that can be
inhibited by surface IgM (sIgM) cross-linking (15). Thus,
the simultaneous treatment of B cells with anti-RP-105
and anti-IgM or incubation of anti-RP-105–induced B cell
blasts with anti-IgM leads to cell growth arrest and apoptotic death (15). The described signaling properties of RP-105 suggest a possible role of this protein in regulation of B
cell activation during immune responses and invite questions about the mechanisms of RP-105–mediated signal
transduction. Using a combination of biochemical and genetic approaches we analyzed the mechanism of RP-105–
mediated signaling. Our data demonstrate that the Src-family
protein tyrosine kinase Lyn, protein kinase C β I/II
(PKCβI/II) and Erk2-specific mitogen-activated protein
(MAP) kinase kinase MEK are essential and probably functionally connected elements of the RP-105–mediated signaling cascade. We also find that negative regulation of anti-RP-105–induced activation of MAP kinases by membrane
immunoglobulin may account for the arrest of RP-105–
induced proliferation mediated by the antigen receptor.
Materials and Methods
Mice.
The lyn, fyn, and PKCβI/II mice were described
previously (16–18). Lynmice that had developed splenomegaly
were not used. The Blkmice were generated by using ES cells
in which exon 8, encoding the tyrosine kinase domain of Blk was
replaced by neo gene (Texido, G., manuscript in preparation).
The B cells expressing the dominant negative mutant of MEK
(dnMEK) were derived in vivo from chimeric RAG-2–deficient
mice, in which the lymphoid system was reconstituted with the
ES cells carrying multiple copies of the dnMEK transgene under
the control of B cell–specific regulatory elements (Carsetti, R., A.
Tarakhovsky, manuscript in preparation).
Cells and Antibodies.
Unless otherwise indicated tissue culture
media used was RPMI 1640 supplemented with 5% FCS, 2 mM
pyruvate, 2 mM glutamine, and 50 μM β-mercaptoethanol.
Splenic B lymphocytes were purified as described (16, 18). Goat
or rabbit anti–mouseIgM (Jackson ImmunoResearch Laboratories, West Grove, PA) was used for the induction of sIgM-mediated protein tyrosine phosphorylation and Ca2+ mobilization in B
cells. AffiPure goat anti–mouseIgM (2.5 μg/ml; Dianova, Hamburg, Germany), IL-4 (25 U/ml; Genzyme Corp., Boston, MA)
and monoclonal anti-RP-105 antibody (12) were used for the activation of B cells in vitro. Anti-Lyn and anti-Syk polyclonal antisera were generated and used as described (19, 20). Rabbit anti-Shc was a gift from Dr. Mary Crowley (Scripps Institute, La Jolla,
CA). Anti-phosphotyrosine mAb-4G10 was from Upstate Biotechnology Inc. (Lake Placid, NY). Polyclonal anti-Vav, anti-Erk2, anti-JNK1/anti-JNK-2, and anti-p38 antibodies were
obtained from Santa Cruz Biotechnology (Santa Cruz, CA). Culture supernatant of anti-FcγRII-III (mAb2.4G2) was obtained
from cells from American Type Culture Collection (ATCC,
Rockville, MD).
Analysis of B Cell Proliferation and Upregulation of Activation
Markers.
Purified splenic B cells (5 × 106/ml) were cultured for
24 h in 24-well flat-bottom plates in media supplemented with
10% FCS in the absence or presence of anti-RP-105. After incubation, cells were stained with phycoerythrin-conjugated antibodies to B220/CD45R (RA3-6B2), fluorescein-conjugated antibodies to B7.2 (CD86; PharMingen, San Diego, CA), or MHC
class II (M5/114) and analyzed by two-color flow cytometry on a
FACScan® (Becton Dickinson & Co., Sparks, MD). For dose-
dependent proliferative response, purified splenic B cells were
cultured at 2 × 105/well or at 4 × 105/well in 96-well flat-bottom plates for 36 h followed by the addition of [3H]thymidine
(1 μCi/well) for the next 8 h. The cells were harvested on filters
and the incorporation of [3H]thymidine in cell DNA was measured as described (18).
In Vitro Kinase Assays.
After stimulation with anti-IgM or
anti-RP-105, the B cells were lysed and Erk2, JNK1/2 or p38
MAP kinase isoforms were immunoprecipitated from B cell lysates by corresponding polyclonal antibodies (16). Assessment of
MAP kinase isoform activity was carried out as described (21).
The phosphorylation of substrates was quantified by PhosphorImager analysis. After analysis the membranes were reprobed with
antibodies to each respective kinase to confirm equivalent immunoprecipitation in each sample. Lyn immunoprecipitation, immunoblot analysis and determination of Lyn protein kinase activity were carried out as described (22). Immunoprecipitates were
washed with kinase buffer (20 mM Tris, pH7.2, 10 mM MgCl2,
10 mM MnCl2, 0.1% NP-40) and resuspended in 50 μl of the
same buffer containing 0.5 μg of acid-denatured rabbit muscle
enolase (Sigma Chemical Co., St. Louis, MO) and 10 μCi of
γ-[32P]ATP. The phosphorylation reaction was performed at
room temperature and stopped by addition of Laemmli buffer.
Aliquots of the reaction mix were separated on 10% PAGE,
transferred to nitrocellulose membrane and Lyn-mediated enolase
phosphorylation was quantitated by PhosphorImager analysis.
Flow Cytometry and Calcium Mobilization.
FACS® analysis was
performed on a FACScan® (Becton Dickinson & Co.) and the
data were analyzed using CellQuest v3.1 software (Beckton
Dickinson & Co.). The analysis of Ca2+ mobilization was carried
out as described (21). In some experiments, Fcγ receptors (FcγR)
on B cells were blocked by preincubation of splenocytes with the
anti–FcγRII-III mAb 2.4G2. The stained cells were washed and
resuspended in media/Hepes. After establishing base line fluorescence in the FITC (530 nm) channel, cells were stimulated by addition of anti-IgM or anti-RP-105 and data were collected continuously over a 14-min interval. Results were plotted as the
mean Fluo-3 fluorescence at 20-s intervals.
Results
Early Signaling Events Induced by Anti–RP-105 Antibodies.
Incubation of purified splenic B cells with anti-RP-105 antibody leads to the activation of B cells as determined by
the upregulation of surface MHC class II (Fig. 1, top), the
costimulatory molecule B7.2 (Fig. 1, middle) and a strong
dose-dependent proliferative response (Fig. 1, bottom). The
possible mechanisms of RP-105–mediated B cell activation
were addressed by analyzing RP-105–mediated protein tyrosine phosphorylation and Ca2+ mobilization. Both of
these events are known to precede ligand-induced upregulation of costimulatory molecules and proliferation of B
cells (23, 24).
Figure 1
RP-105–mediated activation of splenic B cells in vitro.
Splenic B cells were purified and stimulated as described in Materials and
Methods. Histograms show the surface expression levels of MHC class II
(top) or costimulatory molecule CD86 (middle) on B cells incubated for 24 h
in the absence (thin line) or presence of anti-RP-105 antibody (5 μg/ml)
(bold line). For the analysis of anti-RP-105–mediated proliferation, purified splenic B cells were cultured either at 2 × 105/well (circles) or at 4 ×
105/well (squares) with the indicated amounts of anti-RP-105 for 36 h.
[3H]thymidine (1 μCi/well) was added 8 h before cell harvesting. The
proliferation of B cells was determined by the analysis of the amount of
[3H]thymidine incorporated into the DNA of stimulated cells.
In contrast to the strong induction of protein tyrosine
phosphorylation in anti-IgM-stimulated cells, the treatment
of B cells with anti-RP-105 at the concentration optimal
for B cell proliferation (5 μg/ml) results in a very modest
increase in tyrosine phosphorylation of proteins with molecular masses ranging from 60 to 95 kD (Fig. 2
a). Moreover, proteins such as Syk, Vav, or Shc, which serve as
common substrates for various receptor-linked protein tyrosine kinases (PTKs; reference 23), do not undergo any
major change in degree of phosphorylation upon RP-105
cross-linking in comparison to the changes seen after treatment with anti-IgM (Fig. 2
b and data not shown).
Figure 2
Induction of protein tyrosine phosphorylation by anti-RP-105. Purified wild-type splenic B cells were stimulated with goat anti-IgM (10 μg/ml) or anti-RP-105 (5 μg/ml) for the indicated periods of
time and cell lysates were prepared. (a) Whole cell lysates (15 μg of protein) were resolved on 10% SDS-PAGE, transferred to nitrocellulose
membranes and phosphorylation of the transferred proteins was determined by incubation of membranes with anti-phosphotyrosine antibody
4G10. The two predominant bands seen in all samples at molecular masses
∼55 kD represent p53/p56. Equal protein loading was verified by reprobing the blots with the anti-Syk antibody. (b and c) Whole cell lysates
were immunoprecipitated with anti-Syk antibody, the immunoprecipitates were resolved on 10% PAGE and the amount (b) and phosphorylation (c) of the immunoprecipitated Syk was analyzed by immunoblotting
with 4G10 mAb. Two protein bands on c reflect a difference in the phosphorylation of Syk.
Activation of B cells by various agonists such as anti-IgM,
CD40 ligand, or anti-CD38 is accompanied by Ca2+ mobilization from intracellular stores (25–27). In sharp contrast to
the rapid rise in cytosolic Ca2+ concentration induced by
anti-IgM, the incubation of B cells with anti–RP-105 causes
a very slow and gradual increase in cytosolic Ca2+ concentration (Fig. 3
a). Although blockade of FcγR dramatically
increases the duration of anti-IgM–induced Ca2+ mobilization, this treatment has essentially no effect on anti-RP-105–
induced Ca2+ mobilization (Fig. 3
a). These data indicate
that the FcγR does not regulate anti-RP-105–induced Ca2+
mobilization. The role of Ca2+ in RP-105–mediated B cell
activation was further addressed by analyzing the effect of
cyclosporin A (CsA) on anti-RP-105–induced proliferation.
This drug inhibits the Ca2+-dependent phosphatase calcineurin which controls the phosphorylation and, therefore,
nuclear translocation of transcription factor NF-AT in lymphocytes (28, 29). Despite the striking differences in kinetics
and amplitude of Ca2+ mobilization induced by anti-RP-105 and anti-IgM, the anti-RP-105–induced proliferation of
B cells is inhibited by CsA with the same efficiency as the
proliferation of B cells induced by anti-IgM in combination
with IL-4 (Fig. 3
c). These data suggest that Ca2+-dependent
calcineurin activation plays an essential role in the induction
of B cell proliferation by anti-RP-105.
Figure 3
Ca2+ mobilization is essential for anti-RP-105–induced B cell proliferation. (a) Purified splenic B cells were stimulated with rabbit anti-IgM
(10 μg/ml) or anti-RP-105 (5 μg/ml) (either with or without prior blocking of FcγR with anti-FcγRII-III-mAb). Mobilization of intracellular Ca2+
was analyzed by flow cytometry as described in Materials and Methods. Antibodies were added at the time points indicated by the arrow. Closed symbols
represent cells stimulated with rabbit anti-IgM (diamonds and triangles, with or without prior blocking of FcγR, respectively); open symbols represent
stimulation with anti-RP-105 (circles and squares, with or without prior blocking of FcγR, respectively). (b) Splenic B cells were stimulated with anti-IgM
(10 μg/ml), anti-RP-105 (5 μg/ml) or anti-IgM in combination with anti-RP-105 (at the concentrations mentioned above) and calcium mobilization
was analyzed. Closed triangles represent stimulation with anti-IgM alone, open circles represent stimulation with anti-RP-105 alone, and open squares
with crosses represent stimulation with both anti-IgM and anti-RP-105. (c) Inhibition of the RP-105–induced B cell proliferation by cyclosporin A
(CsA). B cells (5 × 105/well) were stimulated with anti-IgM (2.5 μg/ml) and IL-4 (25 U/ml; squares) or with anti-RP-105 (5 μg/ml) (circles) in the presence or absence of the indicated concentrations of CsA for 36 h. Cyclosporin A (Sigma Chemical Co.) was dissolved at 2.5 mg/ml in ethanol and then
further diluted in culture medium. Each symbol shows the degree of inhibition (%) of [3H]thymidine incorporation into the DNA of stimulated purified
splenic B cells in the presence of CsA. Representative result from one of three independent experiments is shown. The triplicate values for proliferation
were as follows: unstimulated B cells 2,978 ± 126; B cells stimulated with: anti-IgM plus IL-4 5,625 ± 583; anti-RP-105 26,537 ± 2,203 cpm.
Engagement of various surface-expressed B cell receptors
such as the antigen receptor, the CD19/CD21 complex,
CD22, or CD40 leads to the activation of MAP kinases
ERK2, SAPK/JNK, and p38 (1, 30). Treatment of B cells
with anti-RP-105 results in a dose-dependent activation of
these MAP kinase isoforms (Fig. 4, a–c, lanes 1, 3–5). Activation of Erk2 and p38 reaches a maximum within 15 min
of RP-105 treatment and diminishes at 45 min, whereas
JNK1/2 shows sustained activation (Fig. 5, a–c, left). Averaged over multiple experiments, activation of MAPK isoforms was much stronger after anti-RP-105 treatment than
after anti-IgM stimulation (Table 1). However, the kinetics
of activation of MAPK isoforms by anti-RP-105 is slower
as compared with the previously reported anti-IgM–
induced MAPK activation (16). Although anti-IgM treatment of B cells leads to maximal induction of Erk2 activity
within 3–5 min, the maximal Erk2 activation by anti-RP-105 requires ∼15 min (Fig. 5, a–c, left).
Figure 4
The dose-dependent activation of MAP kinase isoform by
RP-105 and anti-IgM–mediated negative regulation of RP-105–mediated MAPK activation. Purified splenic B cells from wild-type C57BL/6
and lyn mutant mice (4 × 106 cells/ml of media) were stimulated for
15 min with anti-IgM, anti-RP-105 at the indicated concentrations or
with the combination of both. The cell lysates (50 μg of protein) were
immunoprecipitated with anti-Erk2 (a), anti-JNK1/2 (b), or anti-p38 (c),
and the immunoprecipitates were used for in vitro kinase assays (see Materials and Methods). Phosphorylated substrates were resolved on a 10%
PAGE and quantitated by PhosphorImager analysis. The n-fold activation
was determined relative to the levels of MAP kinase activity in unstimulated cells.
Figure 5
The kinetics of RP-105–mediated activation of MAPK
isoforms in wild-type and lyn−/−
B cells. Purified splenic B cells
from wild type C57BL/6 and
lyn mice (4 × 106 cells/ml of
media) were stimulated with anti-IgM (10 μg/ml) or anti-RP-105
(5 μg/ml) for the indicated periods
of time and cell lysates were prepared. Immunoprecipitations and
determination of Erk2 (a), JNK1/2
(b), and p38 (c) kinase activities
were carried out as described for
Fig. 4.
Table 1
Activation of MAPK Isoforms in Wild-type and lyn−
/−
B Cells
Genotype
Stimulus
n-Fold activation compared
to unstimulated cells
MAPK isoform
Erk2
JNK1/2
p38
C57BL/6
anti-RP-105
21 ± 6
10 ± 2
6 ± 1
anti-IgM
6 ± 2
3 ± 0.8
3 ± 1
Lyn−/−
anti-RP-105
6 ± 1
3 ± 0.8
2 ± 0.2
anti-IgM
23 ± 9
14 ± 3
4 ± 1
Enzymatic activation of MAPK isoforms was determined after 15 min
of B cell stimulation as described in the legend to Fig. 5. Enzymatic activity in resting wild-type cells was given an arbitrary value of 1. In each
experiment splenic B cells isolated from at least four mice were used.
The n-fold induction of kinase activity (mean ± standard error) from
three to five separate experiments are presented.
The Essential Roles of Lyn, PKCβI/II, and MAP Kinase
Kinase in Anti-RP-105–induced B Cell Proliferation.
The low
level of anti-RP-105–induced protein tyrosine phosphorylation does not exclude the involvement of PTKs in RP-105–mediated signaling. Indeed, the dramatic reduction of
anti-RP-105–induced proliferation of xid B cells demonstrates the essential role of protein tyrosine kinase Btk in
RP-105–mediated signaling (12). The activation of Btk is
partially regulated by Src-family PTKs (31, 32). In B cells
the Src-family kinases are represented mostly by Blk, Fyn
and Lyn (33–35). The role of Src-family PTKs in RP-105–
mediated signaling was addressed by analyzing anti-RP-105–induced activation of B cells deficient for Blk, Fyn, or
Lyn. RP-105–induced proliferation is unaltered in Blk-
and Fyn-deficient B cells (Fig. 6). In sharp contrast to Blk-
and Fyn-deficient B cells, the proliferative responses of
Lyn-deficient B cells are dramatically reduced as compared
with responses of the wild-type (Fig. 6). The surface expression levels of RP-105 in Lyn-deficient B cells are similar to
those in wild-type B cells (data not shown), excluding that
reduction of RP-105 signaling is due to the downregulation
of RP-105 expression in the absence of Lyn.
Figure 6
Proliferative responses of blk−/−, fyn−/−, lyn−/−, PKCβI/
II−/−, and dnMEK B cells to anti-RP-105. Splenic B cells isolated from
wild-type control mice (open symbols) or mutant mice (filled symbols) were
cultured in the absence (triangles) or presence (circles) of anti-RP-105 (5
μg/ml). Each symbol represents the mean value of triplicate measurements in individual experiments. For the analysis of blk−/−, PKCβI/II−/−,
and dnMEK, 129/Sv mice-derived B cells were used as a control. The
C57BL/6 mice-derived B cells were used as a control for the analysis of
responses of lyn B lymphocytes.
In view of the essential role of Lyn in RP-105–mediated
B cell proliferation, the activation of Lyn by anti-RP-105
was analyzed by a sensitive immunocomplex kinase assay
(22). Incubation of wild-type B cells with anti-RP-105 or
anti-IgM results in increase of protein tyrosine kinase activity
of Lyn as determined by phosphorylation of the exogenous
substrate enolase and increase of Lyn autophosphorylation
(Fig. 7
a). The kinase activity of Lyn in anti-IgM–treated B
cells reaches the maximum after 1 min and declines to the
basal level of activity after 15 min of incubation (Fig. 7
a). In
contrast, the activation of Lyn by RP-105, although not as
high as in anti-IgM–treated cells, remains constant for 30
min at least (Fig. 7). Notably, the amounts of immunoreactive Lyn did not vary between the samples (Fig. 7
b).
Figure 7
Anti-RP-105–induced activation of Lyn kinase. Purified
splenic B cells from wild-type C57BL/6 mice were treated with either
goat anti-IgM (10 μg/ml) or anti-RP-105 (5 μg/ml) for the indicated
periods of time. 50 μg of lysate protein were used for anti-Lyn immunoprecipitation/immune complex kinase assay with enolase added as an exogenous substrate (see Materials and Methods). (a) The products of the in
vitro kinase reactions were resolved on a 10% PAGE and relative phosphorylation of enolase (normalized to unstimulated cells) was quantitated
by PhosphorImager analysis. (b) The amount of Lyn in whole cell lysates
(15 μg) was determined by immunoblot analysis with anti-Lyn antibody.
The defect of anti-RP-105–induced activation of Lyn-deficient B cells and the previously described impairment
of anti-RP-105–induced proliferation of xid B cells (12)
suggest a functional link between Lyn and Btk within the
RP-105–dependent signaling cascade. In B lymphocytes
and mast cells Btk appears to be associated with protein kinase C β I/II (PKCβI/II) (36). The physiological importance of Btk-PKCβI/II interaction in B cell function is
underscored by the demonstration of essentially identical
profiles of B cell signaling defects in PKCβI/II-deficient
and xid B cells (18). To determine whether PKCβI/II plays
a role in RP-105–mediated B cell activation, the anti-RP-105–induced proliferation of PKCβI/II-deficient B cells
was analyzed. The PKCβI/II-deficient B cells express RP-105 at levels similar to those in control B lymphocytes (data
not shown). Similar to xid B cells, which do not proliferate
in response to anti-RP-105 (12), treatment of PKCβI/II-deficient B cells with anti-RP-105 does not induce detectable proliferative responses (Fig. 6).Activation of MAP kinase isoforms by anti-RP-105 and
impaired RP-105–mediated activation of Lyn-deficient,
xid, or PKCβI/II-deficient B cells suggests a link between
the Lyn-Btk/PKCβI/II signaling chain and MAP kinases
in the RP-105–dependent signaling cascade. Indeed, the
treatment of Lyn-deficient B cells with anti-RP-105 is accompanied by a significantly weaker activation of MAP kinase isoforms as compared with wild-type B cells (Fig. 5
and Table 1). A similar result was obtained by the analysis
of anti-RP-105–induced MAP kinase activation in xid B
cells (data not shown). The role of MAP kinases in anti-RP-105–induced B cell activation was further addressed by
the analysis of anti-RP-105–induced proliferation of splenic
B cells expressing the dominant-negative form of MAP kinase kinase (MEK; Carsetti, R., and A. Tarakhovsky,
manuscript in preparation). B cells expressing the dominant
negative mutant of MEK (dnMEK) were derived in vivo
from chimeric RAG-2–deficient mice in which the lymphoid system was reconstituted by ES cells carrying multiple copies of the dnMEK transgene under the control of B
cell–specific regulatory elements (Carsetti, R., and A. Tarakhovsky, manuscript in preparation). Expression of dnMEK
in B cells suppresses the activation of MAP kinase by stimuli such as anti-IgM or phorbol ester in combination with
ionomycin (Carsetti, R., and A. Tarakhovsky, manuscript
in preparation). Incubation of dnMEK-expressing B cells
with anti-RP-105 antibody at a concentration inducing
strong proliferation of wild-type control B cells does not induce the proliferation of transgenic B cells (Fig. 6).
Counterregulation by sIgM of RP-105–mediated MAP Kinase
Activation and Calcium Mobilization.
In spite of the strong
proliferation-inducing potential of anti-RP-105, the simultaneous antibody-mediated ligation of sIgM and RP-105 in
vitro leads to B cell growth arrest and death (15). The degree of MAP kinase activation and/or changes in the pattern of activated MAPK isoforms induced by engagement
of various receptor molecules define the fate of responding
cells (37). To determine whether the negative regulation of
RP-105 signaling by sIgM could be detected at the level of
MAP kinase isoform activation, purified splenic B cells
were incubated with variable amounts of anti-RP-105 in
the presence or absence of anti-IgM. Antibody-mediated
cross-linking of RP-105 results in a dose-dependent increase of the activities of Erk2, JNK1/2, and p38 (Fig. 4).
The level of MAP kinase isoform activation by anti-RP-105 at a concentration optimal for B cell proliferation (5
μg/ml) is significantly higher than that induced by anti-IgM. However, simultaneous incubation of B cells with
anti-RP-105 and anti-IgM reduces the amplitude of MAP
kinase isoform activation to levels characteristic for anti-IgM–induced MAP kinase activation alone (Fig. 4). The
dominance of antigen receptor-mediated signaling is similarly observed in lyn B cells, where low levels of anti-RP-105–induced MAPK activation become significantly
higher upon costimulation with anti-IgM (Fig. 4).The negative regulation of RP-105 signals by signals
through the antigen receptor were also seen at the level of
Ca2+ mobilization. Coincubation of B cells with anti-IgM
and RP-105 induced a Ca2+ mobilization response that is
indistinguishable from Ca2+ mobilization in cells treated
with anti-IgM alone (Fig. 3
b).
Discussion
This study advances the understanding of two questions
regarding the activation of B cells by RP-105. First, can a
biochemical pathway of RP-105–mediated intracellular
signaling be identified? Second, what is the mechanism of
negative regulation of RP-105–mediated B cell activation
by the antigen receptor? Using genetic and biochemical approaches we revealed a critical role of Lyn in RP-105–
mediated B cell activation. Lyn is one of the most abundant
Src-family PTKs in B cells and is known to be associated
with the antigen receptor and the CD19 coreceptor (38,
39). Although an association of Lyn with RP-105 has not
been detected (Miyake, K., unpublished observation), the
rapid though modest increase of kinase activity of Lyn
upon anti-RP-105 treatment suggests a proximal location
of Lyn with regard to the putative RP-105 signaling complex. The activation of Lyn kinase by RP-105 does not result in a significant increase of the tyrosine phosphorylation
of various other cellular proteins in the activated cells. This
result is not completely unexpected in view of the minimal
changes in tyrosine phosphorylation of various proteins in
anti-IgM–stimulated Lyn-deficient B cells as compared
with wild-type B cells (16). Hence, both in B cell antigen
receptor- and RP-105–dependent signaling pathways Lyn
might be responsible for the phosphorylation of substrates
the expression and/or degree of phosphorylation of which
do not allow their detection by anti-phosphotyrosine immunoblot analysis of crude cell lysates.The defective RP-105–mediated activation of Lyn-deficient and xid B cells suggests a possible link between Lyn
and Btk in the RP-105 signaling cascade. Among the Src-family PTKs expressed in B cells, Lyn seems to play a leading role in antigen receptor-mediated phosphorylation and
activation of Btk (31). The lack of effect of Blk and Fyn on
RP-105–induced B cell activation suggests that among the
three major Src-family PTKs in B cells Lyn is likely to be
responsible for Btk activation by RP-105.As with Lyn-deficient and xid B cells, PKCβI/II-deficient cells cannot be successfully activated by anti-RP-105.
The ability of Btk to bind PKCβI/II and the virtual identity of immunodeficiency syndromes in xid and PKCβI/II-deficient mice (18) strongly support the existence of a Btk/
PKCβI/II signaling module and its importance for B cell activation. In B cells, PKCβI/II together with PKCα represent the subfamily of PKCs the activation of which is dependent on Ca2+ and diacylglycerol (40). Importantly, PKCβI/II
appears to be activated by significantly lower concentrations
of Ca2+ than PKCα (41, 42). Therefore, it seems likely that
the very slow and gradual Ca2+ mobilization induced by
anti-RP-105 would be sufficient to induce the activation of
PKCβI/II, but not to induce the activation of PKCα. This
hypothesis is currently under investigation.Several lines of evidence support the importance of MAP
kinase in RP-105–mediated activation of B cells. First, the
activation of B cells by RP-105 leads to activation of MAP
kinase isoforms Erk2, p38, and Jun kinase (JNK1/2). Second, anti-RP-105 fails to induce proliferation of B cells expressing the dominant negative form of Erk-specific (43,
44) MAPK kinase (MEK). The impaired RP-105–mediated activation of all three MAP kinase isoforms in the absence of Lyn and our preliminary data on the lack of MAP
kinase activation in xid B cells support a possible connection between the RP-105 and MAP kinase signaling cascades via the Lyn-Btk/PKCβI/II module.The similarity between toll and RP-105 as well as the
ability of anti-RP-105 antibody to induce polyclonal activation of B cells in vitro supports a possible involvement of
RP-105 in the regulation of innate immune responses. The
activation of lymphocytes during innate immune response
plays an important role in the efficient recruitment of activated B cells into antigen-driven adaptive responses (3).
However, it seems conceivable that the switch from innate
to adaptive immune responses may require the existence of
mechanisms promoting antigen-specific responses at the
expense of polyclonal B cell activation. In this study we
have tried to address the mechanism of negative regulation
of RP-105–mediated B cell activation by antigen receptor-derived signal(s). Involvement of Lyn, Btk, PKCβI/II, and
MAP kinases in both sIgM- and RP-105–mediated activation implies the existence of a signaling pathway(s) common for both of the receptors. In contrast to Btk and
PKCβI/II, which both play positive roles in anti-RP-105–
and IgM-mediated B cell activation, Lyn appears to have
different functions in sIgM- and RP-105–mediated signaling. Although the sIgM-mediated MAP kinase activation is
negatively controlled by Lyn (16), the presence of Lyn is
essential for RP-105–induced MAP kinase activation. The
relatively stronger activation of Lyn kinase by anti-IgM
than by anti-RP-105 may reflect more efficient recruitment of Lyn to the B cell antigen receptor (BCR) complex
as compared with the putative RP-105 signaling complex.
In such a case the simultaneous ligation of BCR and RP-105 will reduce the amount of Lyn that could be used by
RP-105 signaling complex and block the RP-105–induced
MAP kinase activation. This, in turn, may lead to the onset
of the antigen receptor-specific pattern of MAP kinase activation and reprogramming of B cell responses. Assuming
that RP-105 activation in vivo is regulated by specific
ligand(s), the antagonistic relation between antigen receptor-
and RP-105–mediated signaling predicts a temporal and/or
spatial separation of putative RP-105 ligand- and antigen–
induced B cell activation during immune responses.
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Authors: M W Appleby; J D Kerner; S Chien; C R Maliszewski; S Bondada; R M Perlmutter; S ] Bondadaa S [corrected to Bondada Journal: J Exp Med Date: 1995-09-01 Impact factor: 14.307
Authors: Jessica L Allen; Leah M Flick; Senad Divanovic; Shaun W Jackson; Richard Bram; David J Rawlings; Fred D Finkelman; Christopher L Karp Journal: J Immunol Date: 2012-01-30 Impact factor: 5.422
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Authors: G Texido; I H Su; I Mecklenbräuker; K Saijo; S N Malek; S Desiderio; K Rajewsky; A Tarakhovsky Journal: Mol Cell Biol Date: 2000-02 Impact factor: 4.272