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Cathepsin L Regulates CD4+ T Cell Selection Independently of Its Effect on Invariant Chain : A Role in the Generation of Positively Selecting Peptide Ligands
2 Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, WA 98195
3 Medizinische Molekularbiologie, Abteilung Heamatologie-Onkologie, Klinikum der Albert Ludwigs Universitat Freiburg, 79106 Freiburg, Germany
Address correspondence to A. Rudensky, Department of Immunology, UW I 604 J, 1959 NE Pacific St., Seattle, WA 98195-7370. Phone: 206-685-9310; Fax: 206-685-3612; E-mail: aruden{at}u.washington.edu
| Abstract |
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Key Words: cathepsin positive selection CD4 T cells invariant chain epitope generation
| Introduction |
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MHC class II heterodimers are assembled in the endoplasmic reticulum with the assistance of the chaperone molecule invariant chain (Ii) (6, 7). The class IIassociated Ii peptide (CLIP) region of Ii interacts with the MHC class II peptide binding groove to prevent inappropriate peptide loading (8, 9) and signals in the cytoplasmic tail of Ii target the IiMHC class II complex to the endosomal pathway (10, 11). Entry of the IiMHC class II complex into the endocytic pathway exposes Ii to endosomal proteases known as cathepsins (12, 13). Cathepsins degrade Ii in a step-wise manner, leaving CLIP associated with the MHC class II heterodimer. Cathepsins have also been implicated in generation of the antigenic peptide fragments presented in the context of MHC class II molecules (1417), although the extent to which individual enzymes play a role in this process in different APCs remains to be defined. Exchange of CLIP for this diverse array of peptides is catalyzed by the MHC class IIlike protein HLA-DM (H-2M in mice; 1820) and precedes transport of the peptideMHC class II complex to the cell surface.
Recent studies in knockout animals have shown that the lysosomal cysteine proteases cathepsin S (catS) and cathepsin L (catL) are differentially expressed and play an important role in MHC class II presentation by discrete populations of APCs (2124). CatL activity is detected in cTECs, catS activity is observed in B cells and dendritic cells while both enzymes are expressed by macrophages. Analysis of distinct subsets of APCs from catS-/- and catL-/- animals indicated these enzymes mediate the late stages of Ii degradation and are critical for presentation of peptide in the context of MHC class II (21, 23, 24). In catL-/- mice the MHC class II presentation defect results in severely impaired selection of CD4+ T cells (21) and has thus far been interpreted to be due to the critical role played by catL in Ii cleavage. However, it is difficult to determine whether catL is also directly involved in other processes impacting MHC class II presentation, e.g., epitope generation or accessory molecule degradation, as presentation of peptides in the context of I-Ab molecules is severely impaired by Ii defects (25, 26). To circumvent this problem, in the studies described here, we used mice deficient in both catL and Ii to determine whether catL impacts MHC class II presentation independently of its effect on Ii processing.
Studies comparing mice deficient in both Ii and H-2M with Ii single knockout animals have shown that there is a substantial decrease in the number of CD4+ T cells selected if the diversity and level of expression of endogenous peptideMHC class II complexes is significantly reduced (3, 2729). By measuring CD4+ T cell numbers in catL-deficient mice, we have analyzed the role played by catL in generating the positively selecting cTEC MHC class II peptide epitopes. We show that catL is required to mediate efficient positive selection of MHC class II restricted TCR transgenic thymocytes and that CD4+ T cell selection is impaired equally in catL deficient mice of both the I-Ab (Ii degradation dependent) and I-Aq haplotype (Ii degradation independent). Most significantly, we demonstrate that in animals deficient in both catL and Ii the low level of CD4+ T cell selection observed in catL and Ii single knockout animals is further reduced, almost to the background level detected in MHC class IIdeficient animals. These results indicate a role for catL in MHC class II presentation that is independent of its effect on Ii cleavage. We further provide evidence to suggest that positive selection of an altered T cell repertoire occurs in the absence of catL, and thus we hypothesize this enzyme is involved in generating the positively selecting peptide ligands in cTECs.
| Materials and Methods |
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Antibodies.
The following antibodies directed toward mouse cell surface antigens were purchased from BD PharMingen: FITC-conjugated anti-CD4, FITC-conjugated anti-Vß5, FITC-conjugated anti-CD11c, PE-conjugated anti-CD8
, PE-conjugated anti-Vß6, PE-conjugated BP-1, PerCP-conjugated anti-CD4. Horseradish peroxidase (HRP)-conjugated donkey antirabbit IgG was purchased from Amersham Pharmacia Biotech and HRP-conjugated mouse antirat IgG was purchased from Accurate Chemical and Scientific Corp. The polyclonal rabbit antiserum to mouse catL was a gift of A. Erickson (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC). IN-1 (anti-Ii), M5/114 (anti-I-Ab,d,q, anti-Ed,k), and biotin conjugated Y3P (anti-I-Ab) have been described previously (21, 23, 3133).
Bone Marrow Chimeras.
Bone marrow cells were obtained from the femoral and tibial bone donors, pooled and washed with supplemented RPMI. T cells were depleted by incubating the cells in a 1:1 mixture of anti-CD4 (GK1.5) and anti-CD8 (3.168.8) Ab supernatants, followed by treatment with low-toxin rabbit complement (Cedarlane). The cells were washed in supplemented RPMI, resuspended in PBS at the required cell density, and 0.2 ml cell suspension was injected intravenously into the recipient. Host animals were administered a lethal dose of irradiation (950 rads) 24 h before bone marrow transplantation. Mice were maintained on water containing neomycin (25 µg/ml) and polymyxin B (13 µg/ml) from irradiation until the experiment was terminated. Mice were killed for analysis 68 wk after bone marrow transplantation.
Enrichment for cTECs and Flow Cytometry.
Enrichment for cTECs was performed as described previously (21). Briefly, thymi from 68-wk-old mice were mechanically disrupted and dissociated with an enzyme mixture containing collagenase (1 mg/ml), dispase (1 mg/ml), and DNase1 (50 µg/ml; all Roche Molecular Biochemicals). The cell suspension was further enriched for cTECs by centrifugation over a discontinuous Percoll gradient. Low density fractions were harvested and cTECs identified by flow cytometry as BP-1hiCD11c-CD4-.
The cell surface phenotype of splenocytes, thymocytes, and cTECs from chimeric and knockout animals was determined by four color flow cytometry. Single cell suspensions were depleted of erythrocytes and
1 x 106 cells were incubated in the presence of conjugated antibodies. Binding of biotin conjugated antibodies was detected by allophycocyanin-conjugated streptavidin (BD PharMingen). Data was collected using a FACSCaliburTM flow cytometer (Becton Dickinson) and analyzed using CELL QuestTM software (Becton Dickinson). Typically 50,000 events were recorded for splenocyte analysis and 100,000 events for thymocyte and cTEC analysis.
Immunoblotting and Immunoprecipitation.
Thymic stroma was washed in PBS and lysed in cell lysis buffer (0.5% NP-40, 0.15 M NaCl, 5 mM EDTA, 50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.2) supplemented with a cocktail of protease inhibitors (Roche Molecular Biochemicals). Debris was removed by centrifugation at 8,000 rpm for 10 min and the lysates analyzed for protein content using Coomassie® Plus Protein Assay Reagent (Pierce Chemical Co.). Lysate samples containing the indicated amount of total protein were boiled for 5 min in SDS-reducing buffer and separated by 12% SDS-PAGE. The proteins were electrophoretically transferred onto nitrocellulose membrane and this was probed using the indicated primary Ab. Binding was detected using the appropriate HRP-conjugated secondary Ab diluted 1:1,500 and visualized by chemiluminescence (ECL; Amersham Pharmacia Biotech).
For immunoprecipitation, thymic stroma was lysed in 1% NP-40, 0.01 M Tris pH 7.3, 0.15 M NaCl supplemented with a cocktail of protease inhibitors and then assayed for protein content, as described above. Lysate aliquots containing 100 µg of total protein were precleared with protein G-sepharose (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech) and with 18 µg normal rat IgG (Caltag Laboratories Inc.) before precipitation of MHC class II molecules using the Ab M5/114. Precipitated proteins were boiled in SDS-reducing buffer, separated by 12% SDS-PAGE, transferred electrophoretically onto nitrocellulose, and immunoblotted as described above.
Cysteine Protease Active Site Labeling.
Thymic stromal lysate aliquots, prepared as described above, containing 100 µg total protein were incubated for 2 h at 37°C in the presence of 0.25 µM cysteine protease inhibitor Bio-Tyr-Ala-FMK. This biotinylated inhibitor is an analogue of the previously described Cbz-125I-Tyr-Ala-CN2 (34) and it binds irreversibly to the active site cysteine of the enzyme via a thioester bond. Lysates were boiled in SDS-reducing buffer, separated by 12% SDS-PAGE, transferred onto nitrocellose, and immunoblotted as described above, using streptavidin-conjugated HRP.
| Results |
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We transferred bone marrow from either a MHC class IIrestricted TCR transgenic mouse (TCli) or a MHC class Irestricted TCR transgenic mouse (OT-1) into lethally irradiated catL-/- or wild-type mice. The TCR transgenic donors were on a RAG-/- background to prevent endogenous
-chain rearrangement during selection. Chimerism was >92% in all animals analyzed (data not shown). Analysis of splenocytes and thymocytes from TCli bone marrow recipients indicated that selection of the transgenic T cells (CD4+ Vß6+) was almost completely abrogated in catL deficient recipients (Fig. 1
A). Selection of OT-1 TCR transgenic T cells (CD8+ Vß5+), however, occurred normally in catL-/- hosts (Fig. 1 B). This observation that transgenic CD4+ T cells cannot be positively selected by the catL-deficient thymic environment while selection of CD8+ T cells is not impaired, indicates that catL is not essential for maintenance of a viable positive selection environment but that its effect is specific for CD4+ T cells. Thus, this result suggests the MHC class II peptide repertoire expressed at the surface of catL-/- cTECs is altered such that it cannot support efficient selection of CD4+ T cells that develop in wild-type mice.
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BL6) mice was 23-fold greater than in (BL6
BL6) chimeras, while (Aß-/-
catL-/-) mice exhibited a 515-fold increase over (BL6
catL-/-) chimeras (Fig. 2)
. The relative increase in the percentage of CD4 single-positive thymocytes in Aß-/- bone marrow recipients, when compared with BL6 recipients, correlates directly with the proportion of MHC class IIrestricted thymocytes undergoing negative selection (35). Therefore, our observation that CD4 single-positive thymocyte accumulation is enhanced in (Aß-/-
catL-/-) mice compared with (Aß-/-
BL6) controls implies that the degree of negative selection in catL-deficient animals is substantially greater than in wild-type mice. This result suggests that the MHC class II peptide repertoire of catL-/- mice elicits positive selection of an altered T cell repertoire and thus, further supports our hypothesis that the MHC class II peptide repertoire is altered in the absence of catL.
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Thymic stromal cell lysates from I-Ab and I-Aq catL-/-, catL+/-, and catL+/+ animals were analyzed by immunoprecipitation with the anti-I-Ab,d,q Ab M5/114 and subsequent immunoblotting with the Ii-specific Ab IN-1 (Fig. 3
A). Thymic stroma from Ii-deficient animals was used as a negative control. The level of MHC class II association with p12 Ii fragments was substantially greater for the I-Ab haplotype than the I-Aq haplotype, both in wild-type and catL deficient animals (Fig. 3 A). Reprobing the immunoblot with rabbit anti-sera specific for the cytoplasmic tails of the MHC class II
and ß chains indicated equivalent amounts of I-Ab and I-Aq had been precipitated (data not shown). These observations indicate cTECs exhibit the same difference in haplotype dependence upon Ii degradation as has previously been reported for bone marrow derived APCs (23).
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70%, as has previously been reported (21, 25, 26). This reduction in the efficiency of selection in the absence of both catL and Ii, when compared with single knockout littermates, indicates that these two molecules have distinct roles in regulating positive selection. Further analysis of these mice indicates that the early stages of thymocyte maturation occur normally in the absence of either catL or Ii, or both, as total thymus cellularity, numbers of double positive thymocytes and their level of expression of CD69 was comparable in these mice and wild type animals (Fig. 4, A and C). Furthermore, the proportion of HSA low cells amongst the CD4 single-positive thymocytes was the same for all the mice (data not shown). In addition, the percentage of CD8+ T cells was the same in wild-type, catL-/-Ii+/-, and catL-/-Ii-/- spleen and thymus, while in MHC class IIdeficient animals and catL+/-Ii-/- mice the percentage of these cells was increased (Fig. 4, A and B).
To ensure that our results could be interpreted as indicating that catL can effect cTEC MHC class II presentation independently of its role in Ii processing, we wished to determine whether expression of catL was altered by the presence or absence of Ii. Low levels of catL activity can be detected in thymocytes (unpublished data) and thus we analyzed catL expression in thymic stromal cells isolated from RAG-/- and RAG-/-Ii-/- mice. CatL-/- thymic stroma was used as a negative control. Mature catL protein could be detected in the absence of Ii at a level comparable to that observed in Ii-sufficient cells (Fig. 5 A). Equal protein loading was confirmed by probing the same membranes for actin (data not shown). To determine whether the catL protein detected by immunoblotting was active, thymic stromal cell lysate was incubated in the presence of the irreversible cysteine protease inhibitor Bio-Tyr-Ala-FMK (Fig. 5 B). There was no significant difference in the level of catL activity detected in the presence or absence of Ii, indicating that in thymic epithelial cells catL activity is not substantially altered by a defect in Ii. This result differs from a recently published report in which it was shown that in bone marrow derived macrophages the p41 isoform of Ii is required for catL activity (36).
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| Discussion |
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Selection of thymocytes expressing a MHC class IIrestricted transgenic TCR was shown to be completely abrogated in catL-/- mice. In contrast, selection of both CD8+ TCR transgenic T cells and polyclonal CD8+ T cells occurred normally. These results indicate that the catL defect in T cell selection is specific for CD4+ T cells and that the general ability of cTECs to mediate positive selection is not impaired. The observation that thymic architecture is normal in catL deficient mice further suggests that thymic function is not globally affected by the absence of catL (21, 39). Selection of CD4+ TCR transgenic thymocytes is completely blocked in catL-/- mice while selection of polyclonal CD4+ T cells is not completely abrogated. Therefore, we believe that it is highly unlikely that catL regulates expression of an unknown molecule(s) required for CD4+ T cell selection, as has been suggested by others (4), implying that the effect of catL must be mediated via cTEC MHC class II presentation. Furthermore, we have detected no significant difference in the levels of MHC class II expressed at the surface of wild type and catL-/- cTECs (21; Fig. 5), indicating that the defect in CD4+ T cell selection in catL deficient mice is not a result of quantitative differences in the cTEC MHC class II expression levels. The above data provide indirect evidence of a qualitative difference in MHC class II presentation by catL-deficient cTECs. Further support for such an assertion comes from our results implying that an altered T cell repertoire is selected in catL-/- mice relative to BL6 controls. Thus, we suggest that our data provide support for the hypothesis that the defect in CD4+ T cell selection observed in catL-/- mice is due to expression of an altered cTEC MHC class II peptide repertoire.
Our data provide the first evidence that catL plays a role in CD4+ T cell selection that is distinct from its function as the key regulator of Ii degradation in cTECs. It is therefore likely that catL regulates the MHC class II presentation pathway, and hence CD4+ T cell selection, in several ways, only one of which is through Ii cleavage. Taken together with our results suggesting that the selection defect in catL-/- mice is a result of an altered MHC class II peptide repertoire, this has lead us to propose that catL plays a direct role in generating the MHC class II bound peptides involved in positive selection. Although, we have not formally ruled out the possibility that catL may act upon an accessory molecule, other than Ii, involved in CD4+ T cell development, in view of the available data we consider this unlikely. We believe therefore, that our observations imply catL plays a direct role in generating cTEC MHC class II peptide epitopes.
A role for catL in generating MHC class II peptide epitopes allows the defect in CD4+ T cell selection observed in catL-/- mice to be explained in two nonmutually exclusive ways. In the absence of catL the diversity of the cTEC MHC class II peptide repertoire may be diminished, resulting in inefficient positive selection of CD4+ thymocytes, as has been observed in H-2M-/- mice (20). In addition, catL-/- cTECs may express a novel set of peptide epitopes which support positive selection of an altered T cell repertoire. Such positively selected cells would then be subject to negative selection on bone marrowderived APCs which express catS and not catL, and therefore, display a normal MHC class II peptide repertoire. Our observation that the increase in the proportion of CD4 single positive thymocytes in the absence of negatively selecting MHC class II+ bone marrowderived APCs was substantially greater in catL-/- mice (515-fold increase) than BL6 controls (23-fold increase), provides some evidence to suggest that at least part of the defect in CD4+ T cell selection in catL-/- mice occurs as a result of positive selection of an altered T cell repertoire. In addition, we observed that the decrease in CD4+ T cells in catL-/- mice was accompanied by no change in the percentage of CD8+ T cells when compared with wild-type animals. In mice deficient in either MHC class II or Ii the decrease in CD4+ T cells was, however, concomitant with an increase in CD8+ T cells. The level of MHC class II and the diversity of the peptides expressed by these molecules is dramatically decreased on both positively selecting cTECs and negatively selecting bone marrowderived APCs in mice deficient in Ii or MHC class II, while in catL-/- mice the MHC class II peptide repertoire is altered only on cTECs. We suggest therefore, that in the absence of catL, any positively selected thymocytes expressing MHC class IIrestricted TCRs are efficiently negatively selected by the bone marrowderived APCs. In contrast, in Ii and MHC class II deficient mice neither positive or negative selection can be mediated efficiently allowing a proportion of the cells expressing MHC class IIrestricted TCRs to engage MHC class I molecules with sufficient avidity to be selected as CD8+ T cells. Similarly, both (Aß-/-
wt) and (Aß-/-
catL-/-) chimeras, mice which lack the ability to mediate negative selection of MHC class IIrestricted thymocytes, exhibited an increase in the proportion of CD8 single-positive thymocytes compared with animals eliciting normal levels of negative selection (data not shown). We suggest these data indicate that while the efficiency of positive selection may be decreased in the absence of catL, a significant proportion of the defect in CD4+ T cell selection in catL-deficient mice is a result of positive selection of an altered T cell repertoire on an altered MHC class II peptide repertoire.
Expression of catL in thymic APCs is limited to cTECs, as the bone marrowderived APCs that mediate negative selection express only catS (21). Therefore, as we propose that catL plays a role in generating the peptide epitopes bound to cTEC MHC class II molecules, it is possible that the MHC class II peptide repertoire of the cells eliciting positive and negative selection is not completely overlapping, as has previously been suggested by others (40). The extent to which the positively and negatively selecting peptide repertoires differ is however, likely to be limited, as our recent in vitro studies have shown that the majority of peptides bound to MHC class II molecules isolated from a fibroblast cell line engineered to express either catS or catL are identical (41). A small subset of peptides regulated specifically by either catS or catL was identified, although whether these or other disparately generated peptides are expressed in vivo at physiologically significant levels has not been determined. Therefore, elucidating the mechanisms regulating MHC class II peptide generation in different APCs is pivotal to furthering our understanding of thymocyte selection.
The precise mechanisms by which MHC class II bound peptides are generated, in distinct APCs, are ill-defined and our data provide the first description of an enzyme regulating this process in vivo. In vitro assays using purified proteases and substrates have previously indicated a role for two other cathepsins, cathepsin D (catD) (15, 16) and cathepsin E (17), in Ag degradation before MHC class II presentation. Analysis of catD-/- APCs, however, demonstrated that this enzyme is dispensable for such presentation in vivo (42, 43). Asparagine endopeptidase (AEP) has been shown to be a key enzyme in generation of MHC class II-bound peptides derived from the microbial Ag tetanus toxin C (44, 45). However, the in vivo importance of this enzyme remains to be determined.
Recently published data have shown that catL activity in bone marrowderived macrophages requires the presence of the p41 isoform of Ii (35). We show here, however, that in thymic stromal cells the level of mature catL protein is not significantly decreased in the absence of Ii. Furthermore, catL activity detected in these cells in the absence of Ii, was comparable to that in wild-type cells. Our observation that cTEC expression of catL is not significantly altered by the absence of Ii is consistent with previously published reports that mice lacking the p41 isoform of Ii exhibit no defect in positive selection (46, 47). Similarly, we have observed no change in the level of catL expressed in thioglycollate elicited peritoneal macrophages isolated from Ii sufficient and deficient mice (unpublished data). One potential explanation for the discrepancy between these data is that catL dependence upon p41 was observed in cells differentiated to become APCs in vitro, while no such requirement has been detected in ex vivoderived cells.
In conclusion, we have shown that the defect in T cell selection in catL knockout mice is not a global effect on the positively selecting thymic environment but that it is specific for CD4+ T cells. This effect on CD4+ T cell selection was not mediated by quantitative differences in the level of MHC class II expressed by cTECs and appears to mediate selection of an altered T cell repertoire susceptible to extensive negative selection on bone marrowderived APCs; thus implicating catL as pivotal in determining qualitative differences in MHC class II presentation, i.e., the diversity of the positively selecting MHC class II peptide repertoire. The mechanism by which catL determines the repertoire of peptides bound to MHC class II may in part be via its role in late stage Ii degradation. However, we show here that catL also regulates CD4+ T cell selection in an Ii independent manner, and suggest this protease may play a direct role in generating the cTEC MHC class II peptide epitopes eliciting positive selection.
| Acknowledgments |
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Submitted: November 14, 2001
Revised: March 19, 2002
Accepted: April 8, 2002
| Footnotes |
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