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Key Words: signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 c-myc promoter interleukin 6 gp130
Signal transducers and activators of transcription (STAT)1 proteins have been shown to play pivotal roles in cytokine signaling pathways, which are involved in regulating cell growth and differentiation in systems ranging from Dictyostelium to mammals (1–4). STAT proteins are activated not only by receptor-associated Janus tyrosine kinases (JAK) (5–9), but also by receptor type tyrosine kinases (10–13) and by the oncogenic tyrosine kinases v-src and v-abl (14– 16). The involvement of STAT proteins in cell survival, growth, transformation, and differentiation has been reported in a number of instances. A role for STAT5 has been suggested in IL-2–mediated cell growth signals in murine pro-B BAF/B03 cell lines expressing a variety of mutant IL-2 receptors (17), and it is also partially responsible for IL-3–induced cell growth in a pro-B BAF/B03 cell line (18). STAT3 activity plays a critical role in mediating gp130 signals leading to both growth arrest and macrophage differentiation in M1 leukemic cells (19, 20) as well as to cell survival in BAF/B03 cells stably expressing chimeric gp130 receptors (21). Lymphocytes from mice with a disruption in their stat6 or stat4 genes lose their proliferative responses to IL-4 and IL-12, respectively, indicating critical roles for these STAT molecules in cytokine-induced cell growth (22–26). Moreover, a disruption of the stat3 genes causes embryonic lethality around embryonic day E7.5 (27), suggesting a role for STAT3 in cell proliferation or survival in early embryonic stages. Recently, a comparison of the responses of lymphocytes from normal and gene-disrupted mice deficient in STAT6 or STAT4 led to the suggestion that STAT6 and STAT4 control lymphocyte proliferation by downregulating the levels of p27Kip1 protein (28). However, STAT5a is also involved in IL-2–induced lymphocyte proliferation via induction of the IL-2 receptor
The product of the c-myc gene has been shown to be a critical regulator of cell growth, especially for cell cycle progression from the G1 to S phase (for review see reference 34) and for the induction of cdc25A (35). The c-myc gene is commonly activated during responses to the proliferative signals elicited by extracellular stimuli such as serum, epidermal growth factor, platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) (36), nerve growth factor (37), colony stimulating factor 1 (38), and a variety of cytokines including IL-1, IL-3, GM-CSF, IL-5, IL-2, IL-4, IL-7, IL-6, IL-9, and IL-12 (39–45). Among the molecules known to be involved in growth factor and cytokine signaling, the nonreceptor tyrosine kinases c-src (46), syk (47), and JAK (48–50) have been shown to activate the c-myc gene. Oncogenic nonreceptor tyrosine kinases, v-src and v-abl, bcr-abl, and the oncogenic serine/ threonine kinase v-akt have also been shown to induce c-myc mRNA expression (51–54). STAM (the signal transducing adaptor molecule), which is phosphorylated on tyrosine residues after stimulation with a variety of cytokines such as IL-2, IL-3, GM-CSF, and epidermal growth factor appears to be involved in IL-2– and GM-CSF–induced activation of the c-myc gene promoter (55). However, very little is known about the mechanisms by which these different effector molecules activate the c-myc gene. Only E2F molecules, composed of members of the E2F family and DP1 or DP2, have been identified as the final common target molecules that affect transcriptional activation of the c-myc gene upon stimulation with serum, PDGF (56), v-abl (57–59), bcr-abl (54), and phosphatidyl inositol 3-kinase/c-akt (60, 61).
The IL-6 family of cytokines, which includes IL-6, ciliary nerve trophic factor, leukemia inhibitory factor, oncostatin M, IL-11, and cardiotrophin-1, is variably involved in cell growth, differentiation, and survival in a variety of tissues and cells (62). In particular, IL-6 and IL-11 are potent growth factors for multiple myelomas (63, 64). The receptors for the IL-6 family of cytokines share gp130 as a signal transducing receptor subunit, which is capable of activating a variety of signal transduction pathways, i.e., the STAT3-mediated pathway, the SH2 domain containing phosphatase (SHP)-2/Ras/ mitogen-activated protein kinase–mediated pathway, and other poorly characterized pathways (6). IL-6 is essential for cell growth of regenerating murine hepatocytes after partial hepatectomy, causing the rapid activation of STAT3 and the rapid induction of c-myc mRNA expression (65). Stimulation of gp130 activates STAT3, and induces c-myc mRNA expression and cell proliferation in BAF/B03 cells (21). One of the important questions to be resolved is how cytokines, such as those in the IL-6 family, are capable of inducing the expression of the c-myc gene, which plays an essential role in cell fate, growth, and differentiation. Here, we characterize the signaling pathways leading to the IL-6–induced full c-myc gene activation and show that STAT3 is involved in the rapid activation of the c-myc gene at least partly by directly binding to a site overlapping with the c-myc E2F binding site in the c-myc gene P2 promoter.
Northern Blot Analysis.
Plasmid Construction.
Site-directed Mutagenesis by PCR.
Transient Transfection Assay.
Electromobility Shift Assay (EMSA).
chain, as shown by comparing lymphocytes from STAT5a null mice with those from normal mice (29). Regarding the roles of STAT proteins in oncogenesis, STAT1 activation is correlated with cellular transformation by Eyk (30), and recently STAT3 was shown to be involved in the transformation of NIH3T3 cells by v-src (31, 32). In other cases, STAT1 protein plays a role in IFN-
–induced growth arrest and apoptosis (33). All of these indicate the complexity of the multiple roles of STAT family proteins. However, regarding the roles for STAT family proteins in cell proliferation, there is no report showing a linkage between STAT proteins and the direct regulation of genes critically involved in the cell cycle progression or in cellular transformation.
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Materials and Methods
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Abstract
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
Cell Lines and Cell Culture.
The murine proB cell line BAF/ B03 cells were maintained in RPMI 1640 medium (GIBCO BRL) supplemented with 10% FCS, 0.1 ng/ml recombinant mouse IL-3, 100 U/ml penicillin, and 100 µg/ml streptomycin in a humidified atmosphere with 5% CO2. BAF transformants expressing the chimeric receptors containing the extracellular domain of the granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) receptor (G-CSFR) and the transmembrane and cytoplasmic domains of gp130 have been described previously (21). A cell sorter (FACScan®; Becton Dickinson) was used to check the expression levels of the chimeric receptors which were labeled with an anti– G-CSFR antibody. One representative clone for each type of transformant (BAF-G277, BAF-G133, BAF-G68, BAF-G133F2, and BAF-G133F3) expressing similar levels of the chimeric receptors was used in this study. To make stable BAF-G133 transformants expressing the dominant-negative STAT3s, 50 µg of each expression vector encoding either the dominant-negative STAT3F or STAT3D (pCAGGS-Neo hemagglutinin [HA]Stat3D and pCAGGS-Neo HAStat3F) along with 5 µg of pMIK-Hyg was transfected by electroporation, and the transformants were selected with 200 µg/ml hygromycin. The expression levels of STAT3D and STAT3F were analyzed by immunoblotting with an anti-HA mAb, (12CA5; Boehringer Mannheim). The KT-3 human T cell lymphoma cells were grown in RPMI 1640 medium supplemented with 10% FCS and 10 ng/ml recombinant human IL-6. The human HepG2 hepatoma cells were grown in DME (GIBCO BRL) supplemented with 10% FCS and antibiotics.
Total RNA was extracted using the TRIzol reagent (GIBCO BRL) according to the procedure recommended by the manufacturer. Total RNA (20 µg per sample) was separated by electrophoresis in 1% agarose formaldehyde gels and transferred to Hybond N+ (Amersham Corp.) nylon membranes. Membranes were hybridized overnight at 65°C with 32P-labeled cDNA fragments, washed three times with 0.1x SSC, 0.1% SDS at 58°C for 20 min, and subjected to autoradiography. The amount of loaded RNA was verified with the levels of CHO-B mRNA intensity. The probes used here were the human c-myc cDNA (2.0 kb, EcoRV-EcoRI fragment), junB (2.1 kb, EcoRI fragment), and CHO-B (0.6 kb, EcoRI-BamHI fragment).
PHXL (55), a gift from Dr. K. Sugamura and T. Arita (Tohoku University School of Medicine, Sendai, Japan), is a luciferase reporter plasmid containing the human c-myc gene with the region spanning from –2309 to +532 bp relative to the transcription initiation site of the P1 promoter. This construct was called –2309/+532 Luc in this paper for simplification. A series of 5' deletion mutants were made as follows. To make –1398/+532 Luc and –349/+532 Luc, respectively, fragments extending from a BglII site in the PHXL multicloning site to a SpeI or PvuII site in the c-myc promoter were deleted. The resultant constructs were then made blunt-ended and religated. For –101/ +532 Luc and +68/+532 Luc, SmaI and the XhoI fragments, respectively, were deleted from PHXL. To make +102/+532 constructs, the region containing +102/+532 was amplified by PCR using the oligonucleotides 5'-AACTCGAGAAAAAGAACGGAGGGAGGGA-3' and 5'-GCCGGGCCTTTCTTTATGTT-3' as primers. The XhoI-HindIII fragment of the PCR product was subcloned into the XhoI, HindIII site of PHXL, from which the longer XhoI-HindII fragment, containing the c-myc region upstream of the HindIII site had been deleted. To make 3 x c-myc E2F Luc and 3 x adenovirus (Ad) E2 E2F Luc, three repeats of c-myc E2F and Ad type 5 E2 E2F oligonucleotides were inserted in front of the minimal mouse junB promoter Luc (66, 67). The sequences of the oligonucleotides were as follows: c-myc E2F 5'-TTGGCGGGAAAAA-3' and Ad E2 promoter E2F 5'-GTTTCGCGCC-CTTTCTCAA-3' (68) with an additional SalI and KpnI site at each end.
Mutations were introduced in the c-myc E2F binding site in the context of the intact c-myc promoter with the upstream region to –2309 bp (–2309/+532 mE2F Luc) and with that to –101 bp (–101/+532 mE2F Luc) by the overlap extension technique, using PCR. The primers used for these mutations were 5'-AGGCTTGGAAGTTAAAAGAACGGAGGGAGGATC-3', 5'-TTTAACTTCCAAGCCTC-TGAGAAGCCCTG-3', and reverse and universal primers for pBluescriptII (Stratagene). The underlined bases are the mutated ones. pBluescriptII containing the XhoI-HindIII fragment of the c-myc promoter was used as a template. After the PCR products were subcloned into pBluescriptII SK+ (Stratagene), their sequences were verified by DNA sequencing. The PCR product digested with XhoI and HindIII was then inserted at the proper position of –2309/+532 Luc and –101/+532 Luc to make –2309/+532 mE2F Luc and –101/+532 mE2F Luc.
For transfection experiments, HepG2 cells were transfected with DNA mixtures using the calcium phosphate coprecipitation method. Typically, 1.2 µg of one of the reporter plasmids containing the firefly luciferase gene, and 1 µg of pEFLacZ, a pEF-BOS expression vector containing the β-lacZ gene encoding β-galactosidase as an internal control for transfection efficiency, were used. 3 µg of either pCAGGS-Neo, an expression vector without an insert (control), or pCAGGS-NeoHAStat3F, an expression vector containing a cDNA encoding HA-STAT3F (20) was cotransfected in some experiments. Cells were incubated with DNA precipitates for 12 h, washed with PBS, fed with DME containing 0.1% FCS for 20–24 h, and stimulated with 100 ng/ml of IL-6 for the last 6 h. Approximately 42 h after transfection, cells were collected in 120 µl lysis buffer and subjected to assays for luciferase and β-galactosidase activity as described (69).
EMSAs were performed according to the procedure published previously (70). The oligonucleotides used as probes or competitors for the EMSA were as follows: c-myc E2F, 5'-GACGCTTGGCGGGAAAAAG-3' and 5'-GGCTT-TTTCCCGCCAAG-3'; Ad E2 E2F, 5'-GACGTT-TCGCGCCCTTTCT-3' and 5'-GGAGAAAGGGCGCGAAA-3' (68); STAT5, 5'-GCGAGATTTCTAGGAATTCAAT-3' and 5'-GGATTG-AATTCCTAGAAATCT-3' (71). The acute phase response elements (APRE) were synthesized as reported previously (70). Nuclear extracts (10 µg) were incubated in a final volume of 20 µl (10 mM Hepes, pH 7.9, 80 mM NaCl, 10% glycerol, 1 mM dithiothreitol, 1 mM EDTA, and 100 µg/ml poly[dI-dC] poly[dI-dC]) with each 32P-labeled probe (10,000 cpm, 0.5–1 ng) for 20 min at room temperature. The protein–DNA complexes were resolved on a 4.5% nondenaturing polyacrylamide gel containing 2.5% glycerol in 0.25x TBE (1x TBE is 0.13 M Tris base, 0.12 M boric acid, and 2.0 mM EDTA, pH 8.8) at room temperature and autoradiographed. For competition analysis, extracts were preincubated with a 50- or 250-fold molar excess of cold oligonucleotides for 5 min before the addition of labeled oligonucleotide. For antibody interaction studies, antiserum or a mAb specific to each STAT family member was included in the binding reaction during a 30-min preincubation on ice. The antibodies used were anti-STAT1 mAb recognizing the STAT1 NH2 terminus from Transduction Laboratories (anti-ISGF3 G16920); anti-STAT3 polyclonal antibody recognizing the COOH terminus of STAT3 (70); and anti-STAT5 polyclonal antibody recognizing both STAT5a and STAT5b (sc-835X; Santa Cruz Biotechnology).
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Results
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Abstract
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
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gp130-mediated Rapid Activation of the c-myc Gene without Requiring De Novo Protein Synthesis.
We first characterized the nature of the gp130-mediated c-myc mRNA induction in BAF-G277, a BAF-B03 pro-B cell line expressing the chimeric receptor containing the extracellular domain of the G-CSF receptor and the transmembrane and cytoplasmic domains of gp130 (21). Total RNA was obtained from BAF-G277 cells which had been deprived of IL-3 for 12 h and then stimulated with 100 ng/ml of G-CSF for up to 15 h. The levels of mRNAs for the c-myc gene and a housekeeping gene, CHO-B, are shown (Fig. 1 A). The c-myc mRNA levels normalized with those of CHO-B were plotted (Fig. 1 B). G-CSF increased immediately the levels of c-myc mRNA by around sixfold with a peak at 1 h after stimulation, followed by a gradual decrease until 12 h and a slight increase at 15 h (Fig. 1 A, lanes 1–7; Fig. 1 B). This induction is due to the activation of the chimeric receptor since G-CSF did not increase c-myc mRNA level in the parental BAF/B03 cells (Fig. 1 A, lanes 8–10). Pretreatment of BAF-G277 with cycloheximide did not inhibit but rather enhanced the c-myc mRNA level at 1 h after stimulation with G-CSF, indicating that at least the initial phase of c-myc mRNA induction by gp130-mediated signals did not require de novo protein synthesis in BAF-G277 cells (Fig. 1 C, lanes 1–4).
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2.5–3-fold in HepG2 at 1 h after stimulation (Fig. 4 A), as for BAF-G277. We then took advantage of the easy transfectability of HepG2 cells to test if IL-6 can activate the c-myc gene promoter. First we transiently transfected HepG2 cells with a luciferase gene construct containing the human c-myc gene with the region spanning from –2.3 kb to +530 bp relative to the P1 initiation site, and tested for IL-6 responsiveness. As shown in Fig. 4 B, IL-6 increased the reporter gene expression by
3.0-fold. This activation of the c-myc promoter–driven transcription was effectively inhibited by the dominant-negative STAT3F, indicating that a STAT3-responsive element(s) resides in the upstream or promoter region of the c-myc gene. Fig. 4 C also shows that only the chimeric receptors containing the gp130 region capable of activating STAT3, that is, G277, G133, and G133F2, but not G133F3 or G68, could activate the c-myc promoter driven–reporter gene expression, fully consistent with the c-myc mRNA expression pattern observed in BAF transformants. However, this does not rule out the possible involvement of other region(s) outside the upstream and promoter region of the c-myc gene used in this study. Enhancement of induction was observed with the G133F2 expression vector. This may be explained by an inhibitory effect of SHP-2, which is activated through the tyrosine phosphorylation module at Y759, on the STAT3 activity (74).
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2-macroglobulin, a typical STAT binding site (compare lane 2 with lane 4 in Fig. 7 C), suggesting that these inducible complexes with c-myc E2F probe are dimers of STAT3, STAT3/STAT1, and STAT1, although c-myc E2F probe has less affinity than APRE probe. These inducible complexes of STAT1 and 3 with the c-myc E2F probe were competed by an oligonucleotide containing APRE (Fig. 7 D, lanes 7 and 8) five times as efficiently as by a control c-myc E2F oligonucleotide (Fig. 7 D, lanes 3 and 4), but not by the typical E2F binding site, TTTCGCGC, taken from the adenovirus E2 promoter (Fig. 7 D, lanes 5 and 6). These results suggested that activated STAT proteins may directly bind to the c-myc E2F site with around fivefold less affinity than to APRE and that in spite of the low affinity to the c-myc E2F site, the binding activities of STAT proteins were much stronger than those of E2F-containing complexes.
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Cytokine Signals Regulating c-myc Expression.
Upon binding to a ligand, most cytokine receptors initiate a variety of signaling pathways by activating JAK tyrosine protein kinases (6, 84, 85). Some signaling pathways appear to activate the c-myc gene. For instance, IL-2 has been shown to activate the c-myc gene through at least three distinct pathways, the tyrosine kinase syk (47), STAM (55), and phosphatidyl inositol 3–kinase/Akt, protein kinase B (60, 61). The last pathway was shown to increase the E2F activity by phosphorylating and removing pRb from E2F (61). As for the STAT proteins, STAT5, activated by IL-2 or by IL-3R βc, has been shown not to be responsible for c-myc mRNA induction (18, 86, 87). Mui et al. showed that carboxy-terminally truncated dominant-negative STAT5 inhibited the IL-3–induced mRNA expression for the cis and pim-1 genes but not that of the c-myc gene (18). The absence of a role for STAT5 in c-myc activation is consistent with our result showing that STAT5 does not bind to the c-myc E2F site (Fig. 8). This is quite a contrast to the critical role for STAT3 in activation of the c-myc gene through gp130 signaling, and shows that each STAT molecule has different target genes. Although STAT1 can bind to the STAT binding site overlapping with E2F site in the c-myc promoter, the contribution of STAT1 in IL-6–induced or gp130-mediated c-myc gene activation may not be important considering the following observations. First, the amount of STAT1 is much smaller than that of STAT3 in BAF-G277 cells. Second, two types of dominant-negative STAT3 efficiently inhibited the gp130-mediated c-myc mRNA induction in BAF-G133 cells. Third, dominant-negative STAT3, but not dominant-negative STAT1 (data not shown), inhibited IL-6–induced activation of the c-myc gene promoter activity in HepG2 cells (Fig. 4 B). Our results indicate that different cytokine receptor systems have their own strategy to cause the similar outcomes, survival of cells and induction of the genes required for cell cycle progression, including the c-myc gene. It is also noteworthy that STAT3 activates the c-myc gene in some cells shown here but in other cells, e.g., M1 leukemic cells, the same STAT3 is involved in repression of c-myc gene expression with slower kinetics (20). The role of STAT1 in regulating the c-myc gene expression in response to other cytokines, including IFN
, should be examined carefully in this context.
This is the first report showing the linkage between STAT family proteins and c-myc gene activation. This result implies that other growth factor receptors, or nonreceptor type tyrosine kinases, or oncogene products that are capable of activating STAT3 also induce c-myc mRNA expression, at least in part through STAT3 activation.
| Acknowledgments |
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This work was supported by Grants-in-Aid for COE Research, Scientific Research (B), and on Priority Areas from the Ministry of Education, Science, Sports, and Culture in Japan, the Special Coordination Fund from the Science and Technology Agency of the Japanese Government, the Osaka Foundation for Promotion of Clinical Immunology, and the Ryoichi Naito Foundation for Medical Research.
Submitted: 18 August 1998
Revised: 26 October 1998
1 Abbreviations used in this paper: Ad, adenovirus; APRE, acute phase response element; EMSA, electromobility shift assay; G-CSF, granulocyte colony-stimulating factor; G-CSFR, G-CSF receptor; HA, hemagglutinin; JAK, Janus tyrosine kinases; PDGF, platelet-derived growth factor; pRb, products of the retinoblastoma gene; SHP-2, SH2 domain containing phosphatase; STAT, signal transducers and activators of transcription.
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