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Original Article |
b Department of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland 21205
c Department of Cell Biology and Anatomy, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland 21205
d Graduate Program in Immunology, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland 21205
| Abstract |
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Key Words: apoptosis cytotoxic T lymphocyte protease caspase
The highly specific autoantibody response in systemic autoimmune diseases generally predicts the biologic phenotype of the disease, making autoantibodies diagnostically useful 12. Although molecules targeted by the immune system in these diseases are exceptionally diverse in terms of structure, function, and subcellular distribution in healthy cells, they are strikingly redistributed in apoptotic cells, becoming clustered and concentrated in two populations of surface structures on the dying cell 3. It has been proposed that cleavage of proteins might play a role in selecting molecules as autoantigens, perhaps by cleavage-induced revelation of cryptic epitopes 45. In this regard, several of the clustered antigens are substrates for caspases during apoptosis. These include poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP),1 U1-70kD, the catalytic subunit of DNA-dependent protein kinase (DNA-PKcs), the nuclear mitotic apparatus protein (NuMA), nucleolus organizer region (NOR)-90, fodrin, topoisomerase I, signal recognition particle (SRP)-72, and lamin B 678910. However, the autoantigen fragments produced by caspases during all forms of apoptotic death described to date (including thymocyte apoptosis) are all identical, making it likely that caspase-derived fragments have previously been generated during apoptosis and tolerized centrally and peripherally 1112. Furthermore, there are several autoantigens (fibrillarin, centromere protein (CENP)-B, Ku, Ro, and La) that are not cleaved by caspases during apoptosis, indicating that susceptibility to cleavage by caspases is not a general feature of autoantigens (for review see reference 13).
Granzyme B is a serine protease found in the cytoplasmic granules of CTLs and NK cells that plays an important role in inducing apoptotic changes in target cells during granule exocytosis–induced cytotoxicity 141516. This function is achieved partly by catalyzing the cleavage and activation of several caspases, as well as through caspase-independent pathways 17181920. We recently demonstrated that granzyme B (which shares with caspases a requirement for aspartic acid in the substrate P1 position) efficiently cleaves three caspase-3 substrates (DNA-PKcs, NuMA, and PARP), generating novel fragments not generated during any other form of cell death 21. To determine whether the generation of unique autoantigen fragments by granzyme B was a universal feature of autoantigens, we assessed whether a wide range of autoantigens was susceptible to cleavage by granzyme B in vitro and in vivo. These studies demonstrate that despite their diverse structure, distribution, and function, the majority of autoantigens in systemic autoimmune diseases are efficiently cleaved by granzyme B, generating unique fragments. In contrast, granzyme B either does not cleave or does not generate unique fragments in all of the nonautoantigen molecules that we tested. Granzyme B cleavage sites in autoantigens were defined; in all cases, the tetrapeptide sequence immediately adjacent to the cleavage site was highly conserved. Cleavage by granzyme B therefore (a) unites these otherwise unrelated molecules and (b) generates unique fragments of these antigens, strongly suggesting that this protease plays a mechanistic role in selecting the molecules against which autoimmune responses are initiated. These results highlight a potential role for the CTL granule–induced death pathway in initiation and propagation of autoimmunity.
HeLa Cell Culture and Induction of Apoptosis by UVB Irradiation.
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Materials and Methods
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Abstract
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
Isolation of YT cell granule contents (GC) and purification of granzyme B was as described 21. Purified caspase-3 and -8 and CrmA (cytokine response modifier 1) were gifts from Nancy Thornberry (Merck Research Labs., Rahway, NJ). cDNAs for CENP-B, fibrillarin, topoisomerase I, and post meiotic segregation (PMS)1/PMS2 were gifts from Drs. Ann Pluta (University of Maryland, Baltimore, MD), John Aris (University of Florida, Gainesville, FL), Barbara White (University of Maryland, Baltimore, MD), and Bert Vogelstein (Johns Hopkins University), respectively. Autoantibodies to PMS1 and PMS2 are found in 3–5% of patients with autoimmune myositis 22. The patient serum recognizing ribosomal protein P was a gift from Dr. Keith Elkon (The Hospital for Special Surgery, NY, NY). All data shown represent 2–20 separate experiments.
HeLa cells were passaged in 10% heat-inactivated calf serum using standard tissue culture procedures. To induce apoptosis, cells were incubated with 1,650 J/m2 UVB and incubated overnight 3. In Fig. 1 A, the gel samples used in the lanes marked "Apoptotic Cells" consisted of pooled adherent and floating populations.
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In Vitro Cleavage of [35S]methionine/cysteine-labeled Endogenous Autoantigen Substrates after Immunoprecipitation with Patient Sera.
HeLa cells were labeled for 2 h with [35S]methionine/cysteine, and the lysates were immunoprecipitated with patient sera recognizing histidyl tRNA synthetase, RNA polymerase II large subunit, PMScl, or alanyl tRNA synthetase, followed by protein A–agarose. The beads, containing washed, radiolabeled endogenous proteins were resuspended in buffer A in the presence or absence of granzyme B and incubated for 15 min at 37°C. The following amounts of granzyme B were used: 46 nM histidyl and alanyl tRNA synthetases and 23 nM RNA polymerase II and PMScl. Samples were electrophoresed on 10% SDS-PAGE, and radiolabeled proteins and their fragments were visualized by fluorography.
In Vitro Cleavage of Endogenous and Purified Nonautoantigen Substrates.
HeLa lysates were incubated with granzyme B for 1 h at 37°C and then electrophoresed on 8 or 10% SDS-PAGE and immunoblotted with a rabbit polyclonal antibody to Cdc2p34 (Santa Cruz Biotechnology) or mAbs to vinculin or β-tubulin (Sigma Chemical Co.). Cleavage of purified human lactoferrin, apotransferrin, and thrombin (all from Sigma Chemical Co.) was performed by incubating 20 µg of each substrate in the absence or presence of 30 nM granzyme B for 60 min at 37°C. The reactions were terminated by adding gel application buffer, and the samples were electrophoresed on 10% SDS-PAGE and visualized by Coomassie blue staining. Similar amounts of purified La were well cleaved under identical conditions (data not shown).
Calculation of Catalytic Constant (kcat/Km) Values.
kcat/Km values were determined as described 2123 using endogenous substrates in cell lysates, radiolabeled endogenous immunoprecipitated substrates, or radiolabeled substrates generated by coupled in vitro transcription/translation. The percent cleavage of each substrate was determined by densitometry; these values were fitted to the first order rate equation,
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Confirmation of Granzyme B Cleavage Sites by Mutagenesis of P1 Aspartic Acid Residues.
cDNA clones encoding fibrillarin, La, U1-70kD, Mi-2, PMS1, PMS2, and topoisomerase I were used as templates for mutagenesis by overlap-extension PCR to generate clones containing putative granzyme B site P1 Asp
Ala substitutions 21. [35S]methionine-labeled polypeptides were generated by coupled in vitro transcription/translation and used as substrates for granzyme B cleavage as described above.
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1-antitrypsin, β-tubulin, apotransferrin, C3 (β chain), carbonic anhydrase, CDC2 p34, C-reactive protein, glutathione S-transferase, glycogen phosphorylase, hemoglobin, IgG, lactoferrin, lysozyme, orosomucoid, thrombin
chain, thrombin β chain, and vinculin. Procaspases 3 and 7, which have not been found to be autoantigens during screening of >500 autoimmune sera by immunoblotting (Casciola-Rosen, L., and A. Rosen, unpublished data), are efficiently cleaved by both granzyme B and caspase-8, generating identical fragments 252627. Thus, in addition to the three autoantigens we have previously described as being cleaved by both caspase-3 and granzyme B (DNA-PKcs, NuMA, PARP), these studies identify an additional nine autoantigens that are cleaved by both proteases but at different sites. Furthermore, another nine autoantigens are cleaved exclusively by granzyme B and not by caspases. Therefore, 21 autoantigens targeted across the spectrum of human systemic autoimmune diseases are efficiently cleaved by granzyme B, generating unique fragments not observed during other forms of cell death.
Granzyme B Cleavage Fragments Are Generated During CTL Granule–mediated Target Cell Death.
To confirm that similar autoantigen fragments are generated in intact cells during granule-induced cell death, we exposed K562 cells to YT cell GC and analyzed the biochemical status of the autoantigens by immunoblotting. In those cases where autoantigens are substrates for both caspases and granzyme B, signature fragments of both proteases were generated (U1-70kD, topoisomerase I, PARP [Fig. 5], La, Mi-2, and Ki-67 [data not shown]). The amount of granzyme B–specific fragments generated was enhanced in the presence of 100 µM Ac-DEVD-CHO, a caspase inhibitor (see below). Autoantigens known to be cleaved only by granzyme B were also cleaved in the K562/YT granule system; the granzyme B–specific fragments of Ku-70, RNA polymerase II large subunit (Fig. 5), and PMS1 (data not shown) were generated.
We next determined whether autoantigens cleaved by granzyme B in vitro are cleaved during killing of Fas-negative target cells by LAK cells. Granzyme B–specific fragments of Mi-2, topoisomerase I, U1-70kD, and SRP-72 (Fig. 6), as well as PMS1, Ku-70, and La (data not shown), are generated during this form of cell death. For the antigens shown in Fig. 6, which are directly cleaved by both caspase-3 and granzyme B, the amounts of granzyme B–specific fragments are determined by the relative efficiency of cleavage by the two proteases (Table ). Thus, granzyme B–mediated cleavage of topoisomerase I is
50-fold more efficient than cleavage by caspase-3, and granzyme B–specific fragments are the most prominent (Fig. 6, lane 3; note that in lanes 3 and 4, the majority of topoisomerase is in the 98-kD granzyme B–cleaved form). Where the efficiency of substrate cleavage by granzyme B and caspase-3 are similar (e.g., DNA-PKcs and Mi-2), both caspase- and granzyme B–specific fragments are generated. Inhibition of caspases abolishes the caspase-specific fragments only. In contrast, where substrates are cleaved
200-fold more efficiently by caspase-3 than by granzyme B (PARP, U1-70kD), no granzyme B–specific fragments were observed in the intact cell killing assay unless caspases were inhibited by adding Ac-DEVD-CHO (Fig. 6; compare lanes 3 and 4).
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Granzyme B Cleaves Autoantigens at Highly Conserved Sites.
The specificity of granzyme B has recently been defined using a positional scanning combinatorial tetrapeptide library 2930. The protease has a preference for I, V, or L in P4, E, G, or S in P3, and P, S, N, A, Q, H, T, V, E, or D in P2, with a near absolute preference for D in P1. This specificity and the sizes of the fragments generated by granzyme B cleavage were used to predict cleavage sites. Using site-directed mutagenesis to make a series of P1 Asp
Ala substitutions in several of the granzyme B substrates, we addressed the effects of mutation on the efficiency of cleavage by the protease and thus defined the granzyme B cleavage sites in fibrillarin, Mi-2, topoisomerase I, PMS1, PMS2, La, and U1-70kD (Table ; Fig. 8 contains representative examples). The granzyme B cleavage sites in PARP and DNA-PKcs were defined previously 2131. In every case, the cleavage site sequence is in accord with the specificity determined by the combinatorial library. The P2 and P3 residues in these cleavage sites were quite restricted, with prominent representation of P, A, and S in P2 and G, E, T, D, and S in P3. Interestingly, many of these residues are preferred by granzyme B but not by group III caspases 29. Using fragment sizes to predict likely granzyme B cleavage sites in other autoantigens, we readily identified probable cleavage sites in these proteins (Table ). Other than the consensus tetrapeptide sequence preceding the cleavage site in these autoantigens, there were no obvious similarities in primary sequence either upstream or downstream of this site. Interestingly, several granzyme B substrates also have consensus tetrapeptide sequences that are not cleaved, indicating that additional conformational information influences susceptibility to cleavage at these sites.
Autoantigens That Are Cleaved by Granzyme B Are Not Substrates for Caspase-8.
In addition to the granule exocytosis pathway, CTLs can also induce target cell proteolysis and apoptosis through ligation of target cell Fas by CTL Fas ligand 32. As caspase-8 is prominently activated when CTLs induce target cell death through the Fas pathway 33 and because group III caspases have a very similar substrate specificity to granzyme B 29, we determined if caspase-8 could generate the same proteolytic fragments of endogenous autoantigens in cell lysates that are generated by granzyme B. As caspase-8 efficiently activates precursor effector caspases in cell lysates (which in turn efficiently cleave downstream substrates), we first irreversibly inactivated these caspase precursors with IAA. Exogenous caspase-8 was then added in the presence of excess DTT, and substrate cleavage was assayed by immunoblotting. We initially confirmed that caspase-8 was active in the lysate system by using a coupled proteolysis system to demonstrate cleavage of downstream caspase-3 substrates (see Materials and Methods; Fig. 9). None of the autoantigens cleaved by granzyme B was cleaved by caspase-8; data for Mi-2, topoisomerase I, Ku-70, and RNA polymerase II large subunit are shown in Fig. 9.
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Interestingly, the autoantigens susceptible to cleavage by granzyme B include antigens that are targeted across the spectrum of autoimmune rheumatic diseases. The striking correlation of specific autoantibody response with unique biologic phenotype (e.g., Mi-2 in dermatomyositis and topoisomerase I in diffuse scleroderma) raises the question of how this disease specificity arises if a common mechanism (CTL granule–induced death) is responsible for targeting of this group of molecules. Although this remains unclear, the immunizing tissue and initiating stimulus may play important roles in focusing subsequent, self-sustaining injury.
Several of the cleaved molecules (PARP, U1-70kD, Ki-67, SRP-72, topoisomerase I [Fig. 1 A], DNA-PKcs, NuMA [reference 21], Mi-2, La, PMS1, PMS2, and NOR-90 [data not shown]) are also cleaved by effector caspases during apoptosis but at different sites in each case. Frequently, the granzyme B and caspase-3 cleavage sites are close to each other in the primary sequence. The striking linkage of susceptibility to cleavage by both caspases and granzyme B in these substrates (but at different sites) suggests that the two different families of apoptotic proteases recognize two distinct structural features of a common motif that have been targeted during independent evolution of the apoptotic cysteine and serine protease families. The likelihood that a functional motif has been targeted by the apoptosis-specific proteases is further underscored by the observation that the granzyme B cleavage sites in several molecules (e.g., fibrillarin, PARP, and PMS1) are highly conserved, even in drosophila and yeast. This striking conservation of sequence at granzyme B cleavage sites in organisms in which CTLs have not yet evolved implies that an important, as yet undefined function is served by these regions that is altered by proteolysis. This new, extended family of granzyme B substrates therefore provides a powerful tool with which to explore the evolution and biological functions of the aspartic acid–specific apoptotic proteases and the specific mechanisms underlying CTL granule–induced cell death.
Granzyme B Cleavage Sites in Autoantigens Contain Amino Acids in P2 and P3 Positions That Are Preferred by Granzyme B but Are Not Tolerated by Group III Caspases.
Using a combinatorial scanning tetrapeptide library, the specificity of granzyme B and caspases has recently been determined 2930 and divides the caspases into three distinct groups. Group II caspases have a DXXD specificity and act downstream in apoptosis as effector proteases, cleaving substrates that have homeostatic and structural functions 34. In contrast, the group III caspases prefer tetrapeptide substrates with I, V, or L in P4, E, D, or Q in P3, and H, I, T, W, or V in the P2 position 29. Whereas granzyme B has a similar specificity to the group III caspases, it has a broader substrate specificity in the P3 and P2 positions. Thus, granzyme B will robustly cleave substrates containing G or S in P3 (not tolerated by group III caspases) and prefers P, A, N, and Q in P2 (none of which are tolerated by group III caspases). Interestingly, 10 of 11 proven granzyme B cleavage sites in autoantigens contain residues that are preferred by granzyme B but are poorly tolerated by group III caspases (molecules contain P [7], A [2], or S [1] in the P2 position; four cleavage sites also contain G or S in P3; Table ). Consistent with this observation is the demonstration that none of these substrates could be cleaved by caspase-8 (Fig. 9). In contrast, procaspase-3 and -7, which are not autoantigens, are efficiently cleaved by both caspase-8 and granzyme B at the same sites, generating identical fragments 33. This marked skewing of granzyme B cleavage sites in autoantigens away from P2 and P3 residues that are preferred by both granzyme B and group III caspases strongly suggests that unique cleavage by granzyme B plays a role in selection of targets in this spectrum of autoimmune disease.
Generation of Granzyme B–specific Autoantigen Fragments Is Favored when Caspases Are Inhibited.
We have previously demonstrated that DNA-PKcs, NuMA, and PARP are cleaved by both caspase-3 and granzyme B and that the most prominent fragments generated in lysates and intact cells reflect the relative cleavage efficiencies of the two proteases 21. The studies reported here extend those observations to numerous additional autoantigens (Mi-2, Ki-67, U1-70kD, topoisomerase I, and SRP-72; Fig. 1 A and Fig. 6). Where cleavage of a substrate by granzyme B is equal to or more efficient than that by caspase-3, granzyme B–specific fragments are generated in the LAK/K562 system (e.g., DNA-PKcs, Mi-2, and topoisomerase I; Table ). In contrast, where cleavage by granzyme B is less efficient than cleavage by caspases (e.g., PARP, U1-70kD, SRP-72, and topoisomerase I [72- and 74-kD fragments]), effective generation of the granzyme B–specific fragments is only seen in intact cells when caspase activity is inhibited. This observation focuses attention on defining potential immunizing microenvironments and proimmune insults in which such circumstances may arise in vivo. Relevant possibilities include conditions where viral or endogenous caspase inhibitors are expressed 353637383940, as well as in long-lived cells or tumor cells that express low levels of specific effector caspases 4142.
CTL Granule–induced Death and Autoimmunity.
Human systemic autoimmune diseases represent a highly complex disease spectrum, with numerous variables affecting individual susceptibility, initiation, and tissue targets. By demonstrating that the autoantigens targeted across the spectrum of these diseases are unified by their susceptibility to efficient cleavage by granzyme B, with the generation of unique fragments not produced during any other form of cell death, these studies focus attention on the role of the CTL granule pathway in initiation of autoimmunity. Where substrates are cleaved by both caspases and granzyme B, effective generation of unique granzyme B fragments is dependent upon relative inhibition of the caspases (Fig. 6; reference 21). We therefore propose that during proimmune 43 intracellular infections occurring in a microenvironment in which caspase activity is under relative inhibition, production of unique granzyme B fragments is favored. In susceptible individuals in whom clearance of apoptotic material might be impaired 4445, suprathreshold amounts of these fragments accumulate and are effectively captured and presented by dendritic cells 46474849. The resulting immune response is directed against products of CTL granule–induced death, generating an autoamplifying injury characteristic of these self-sustaining diseases. The recent observation of tumor-specific CTLs in paraneoplastic cerebellar degeneration suggests that such a mechanism may be more broadly applicable to other autoimmune syndromes 50.
| Acknowledgments |
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These studies were supported by National Institutes of Health grants AR44684 (to L. Casciola-Rosen), DE12354 (to A. Rosen), and 5T32-AI07247 (to D. Ulanet and W.B. Wong), the SLE Foundation, the Scleroderma Research Foundation, and the Schauman Lupus Research Fund. A. Rosen is a Pew Scholar in the Biomedical Sciences and is supported by a Burroughs Wellcome Fund Translational Research award. F. Andrade is supported by a Fulbright/Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnologia, Mexico scholarship.
Address correspondence to Antony Rosen, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, 720 Rutland Ave., Ross 1059, Baltimore, MD 21205. Phone: 410-955-0139; Fax: 410-955-0964; E-mail: arosen@jhmi.edu
Submitted: 21 May 1999
Revised: 19 July 1999
Accepted: 20 July 1999
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