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Brief Definitive Report |
Address correspondence to Anne I. Sperling, Dept. of Medicine, Section of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, MC6026, M624, 5841 S. Maryland Ave. Chicago, IL 60637. Phone: (773) 834-1211; Fax: (773) 702-4736; email: asperlin{at}uchicago.edu
| Abstract |
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Key Words: CD43 CD25 proliferation adhesion SMAC
The online version of this article contains supplemental material.
Abbreviations used in this paper: DO.CD43/, DO.11.10.CD43/; CD16-7, the ectodomain of human CD16 fused to the transmembrane of human CD7; CD16-7-43, the CD16-7 construct fused to the ICD of murine CD43; CD16-7NGG, CD16-7-43 with the ERM binding KRR motif mutated to the ERM nonbinding NGG motif; CD43FL, full-length murine CD43; CD43GPI, the ectodomain of murine CD43 fused to a GPI anchor; CD43NGG, the full-length mCD43 with the ERM binding KRR motif mutated to the ERM non-binding NGG motif; CFSE, carboxyfluorescein diacetate succinimidyl ester 5-(and 6-); C-SMAC, central supramolecular activation cluster; ECD, extracellular domain; ERM, ezrin-radixin-moesin; GPI, glycosylphosphatidylinositol; ICD, intracellular domain.
| Introduction |
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The function of CD43 remains elusive (7). Targeted disruption of CD43 in mice and cell lines leads to increased T cell proliferation and adhesion in vitro (8, 9) and increased immune responses in vivo (10). However, cross-linking CD43 concurrently with TCR ligation induces a dramatic costimulatory response that is independent of CD28 (11). Recently, Onami et al. have suggested that for in vivo CD8 responses, CD43 is costimulatory early in the response but a negative effector molecule later (12).
The prevailing hypothesis in the literature is that CD43 has a negative function due to an effect on cellcell repulsion mediated by its extensive sialylated O-glycans (the "barrier hypothesis"). This hypothesis has been seemingly supported by demonstration that TCR signaling induces selective exclusion of CD43 from the T cell antigenpresenting cell contact site via its interaction with the family of cytoskeletal adaptor proteins, ezrin-radixin-moesin (ERM; 1316). Interestingly, inhibition of CD43 movement leads to decreased IL-2 and IFN-
production (14, 15). Together, these data suggest that CD43 could represent a novel type of cell surface regulatory protein that dampens T cell responses by its physical presence and is specifically removed upon T cell activation.
To directly test whether it is the presence of the CD43ECD in the T cellAPC interaction site that dampens T cell responses, structure/function studies were done. Additionally, ECD-only and intracellular domain (ICD)-only constructs as well as ICD-only constructs mutated at the ERM-binding site were tested. The CD43ECD fusion protein failed to be excluded from the immunological synapse, yet did not interfere with T cellAPC conjugate formation or reduce CD43/ T cell hyperproliferation. However, the ICD of CD43 was sufficient to effectively reverse CD43/ T cell hyperactivation. Interestingly, mutation of the intracellular region construct so that it could not bind ERM proteins or move from the site of TCR signaling further decreased IL-2 production. Thus, our data definitively demonstrates that it is the ICD of CD43, not the ectodomain, which confers negative regulation of T cell activation.
| Materials and Methods |
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Antibodies and Other Reagents.
Affinity-purified anti-CD28 (PV-1; reference 17) and anti-CD3 (1452C11; reference 18) were prepared in our laboratory. mAbs for mouse CD43 (S7), human CD16 (3G8), and mouse CD25 (7D4) were purchased from BD Biosciences. Rabbit antiPKC-
(C-18) was from Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Inc. HRP-conjugated goat antimouse and goat antirabbit Ig were purchased from Bio-Rad Laboratories. FITC or Texas red donkey antirat IgG (mouse adsorbed), Texas red donkey antirabbit Ig (mouse absorbed), and Texas red donkey antigoat Ig were all from Jackson ImmunoResearch Laboratories. The OVA323339 peptide was produced by the University of Chicago Peptide Synthesis Facility.
Production of Primary T Cell Lymphoblasts.
LN T cells from DO.11.10 and DO.CD43/ mice were enriched by nonadherence to nylon wool as previously described (11). The T cells (2 x 105 cells/well) were stimulated with irradiated DBA/2 splenocytes (6 x 106 cells/well) and chicken ovalbumin peptide (OVA323339) at 0.15 µg/ml in complete media (DME media [Life Technologies] supplemented with 5% heat-inactivated FCS, 100 U/ml penicillin, 100 µg/ml streptomycin, 0.29 mM L-glutamine, nonessential amino acids, 10 mM Hepes, and 5 x 105 M ß-mercaptoethanol). After 4 d of culture, 1 ml of complete media was added to each well. T cells were harvested and live cells recovered by Ficoll-Hypaque gradient separation 914 d after initial stimulation.
Transduction of Retroviral Constructs into Primary T Cells.
The following vectors were used: full-length murine CD43 (CD43FL); full-length mCD43 with the ERM binding KRR motif mutated to the ERM nonbinding NGG motif (CD43NGG); ectodomain of murine CD43 fused to a GPI anchor (CD43GPI); ectodomain of human CD16 fused to the transmembrane of human CD7 (CD16-7); CD16-7 construct fused to the ICD of murine CD43 (CD16-7-43); and CD16-7-43 with the ERM binding KRR motif mutated to the ERM nonbinding NGG motif (CD16-7NGG). Construction of retroviral vectors and transduction methods have been published previously in detail (14). Briefly, Phoenix packaging cells transfected by calcium phosphate T cells from DO.CD43/ mice were plated on anti-CD3/CD28coated plates. At 48 h after transfection, the virus particles and Phoenix packaging were harvested and inactivated. The Phoenix cells and their virus-containing supernatants were recombined and overlaid onto the activated T cell cultures in the presence of hexadimethrene bromide (Sigma-Aldrich) to enhance the infection. The transduced T cells were used in experiments within 714 d and sorted for CD43 or hCD16 expression using the MoFlo (Cytomation). Transduced cells consistently expressed the transgene at high levels (Fig. S1, available at http://www.jem.org/cgi/content/full/jem.20021602/DC1), and sorting gates were used to ensure similar levels of transgene expression in all populations.
Immunofluorescence Staining and Microscopy.
T cell lymphoblasts were conjugated with OVA323339pulsed A20 (2 µg/ml) and stained for immunofluorescence as described in detail in Allenspach et al. (14). Briefly, conjugates were washed, adhered to poly-L-lysinecoated coverslips, and fixed. Fixation of the GPI-anchored CD43 conjugates was done with 4% PFA/0.1% glutaraldehyde/PBS to fix lipid rafts. The samples were quenched, permeabilized, and blocked. The fixed cells were stained with the primary antibodies, washed, and then stained with the fluorochrome-labeled secondary antibodies. Cells were observed using a 63x Planapo objective and photographed using a Carl Zeiss MicroImaging, Inc. Axiovert equipped with a Micromax cooled CCD camera (Roper). Single images were processed by no-neighbor deconvolution using SlideBook 3.0 (Intelligent Imaging Innovations) to remove out of focus haze. For en face analysis of the T cellAPC interface, z-series images were processed by nearest-neighbor deconvolution and rendered in three dimension using Slidebook.
Flow Cytometry and ELISA.
After sorting, transduced T cells were labeled with 3.33 µM carboxyfluorescein diacetate succinimidyl ester 5-(and 6-) (CFSE; Molecular Probes), and then 105 T cells per well were stimulated with mitomycin Ctreated antigen-pulsed A20 cells (105 cells/well). At day 3, the T cells were recovered and stained with anti-CD43, and flow cytometric analysis was performed. Data were analyzed using CellQuest and Modfit software to determine the percentage of cells in each generation. Expression of CD25 was determined at 24 h activation. Supernatants were collected 24 h after activation and assayed for IL-2 production by ELISA (BD Biosciences).
Heteroconjugate Adhesion Assay.
A20 B lymphoma cells were stained according to manufacturer's instructions with the vital dye PKH26 (Sigma-Aldrich), a membrane marker that fluoresces in the same wavelength as phycoerythrin. The cells were washed, pulsed with OVA peptide as above, and resuspended to 5 x 105 cells/ml. T cells were stained according to manufacturer's instructions with Calcein-AM a cytoplasmic dye (Sigma-Aldrich) that emits in the same wavelength as fluorescein. Prior to mixing the T cells with APCs, the cells were washed once in 5% DMEM and resuspended to 5 x 105 cells/ml. APCs were added at equal volumes to the appropriate T cells. The mixture of cells was centrifuged at 500 rpm for 5 min at 4°C and vortexed for 10 s at setting 4. After agitation, the cell mixtures were incubated in a 37°C water bath for the different times as indicated. The samples were vortexed for 30 s at setting 2 for naive cells and setting 8 for previously activated cells and then immediately fixed with an equal volume of 6% paraformaldehyde in PBS. Conjugates were measured by flow cytometry, and the percent of T cells in conjugates was determined. Triplicate samples were used to determine SDs.
Online Supplemental Material.
Fig. S1 shows that the T cell transduced with CD43 mutant constructs expresses equal levels of the control and mutant proteins. Fig. S2 shows a second T cellAPC conjugate similar to Fig. 2 A that demonstrates that CD43GPI is located throughout the immunological synapse including the C-SMAC. Online supplemental material is available at http://www.jem.org/cgi/content/full/jem.20021602/DC1.
| Results and Discussion |
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shows that CD43GPI is present in the PKC-
rich central supramolecular activation cluster (C-SMAC) region where sustained TCRMHC interactions are proposed to occur. The production of a mutant CD43 molecule that contains no transmembrane or cytoplasmic region, which through its GPI linkage actually moves the ectodomain of CD43 toward the T cellAPC contact site, allowed for a direct test of the "barrier hypothesis." If this hypothesis is correct, then the CD43GPI mutant that places CD43 in the T cellAPC contact site should decrease T cell function. Yet, no significant differences between the adhesive capabilities of CD43/ and CD43GPI-transduced T cells could be discerned (Fig. 2 B). Both populations formed equal numbers of conjugates with OVA peptidepulsed APC at all time points examined. Thus, the theory that CD43 must be removed from the interaction site to facilitate T cellAPC adhesion is not supported by our data. Further, if the barrier hypothesis was correct, GPI-linked CD43 should have had a greater tendency to inhibit T cell activation than CD43FL which is actively moved to the distal pole complex. Again, our data does not support this hypothesis. Transduction of CD43FL into CD43/ T cells diminished proliferation and CD25 expression, whereas transduction of the CD43GPI molecule had no effect on the hyperproliferation of CD43/ T cells (Fig. 3). Thus, we have directly disproven the size-exclusion barrier hypothesis.
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Our data on T cell proliferation suggest that the ectodomain is not involved in the regulatory function of CD43. However, Delon et al. found that overexpression of the CD43NGG in WT T cells actually inhibited IL-2 production (15). The authors proposed that this was due to the inability of these cells to move the large highly glycosylated CD43 ectodomain from the T cellAPC contact site. To address the apparent contradiction between our data and those of Delon et al., we investigated the role of CD43 exclusion on IL-2 production. First, we investigated whether, similar to the data in Delon et al., transduction of the CD43NGG mutant into CD43/ T cells inhibited IL-2 production. As seen in Fig. 4 C, upon restimulation less IL-2 was produced by the CD43NGG T cells than the CD43FL T cells. However, CD43/ T cells transduced with CD16-7NGG also produced significantly less IL-2 upon restimulation than those transduced with moveable CD16-7-43 (Fig. 4 D). Thus, our data does not support the interpretation of Delon and colleagues that CD43 regulation of IL-2 production is due to a steric interference of T cell interactions by the CD43 ectodomain, since decreased IL-2 production required only the presence of the CD43 ICD in the contact site. Further, our findings suggest that although CD43 regulation of T cell proliferation and IL-2 are both mediated through intracellular events, moving the cytoplasmic region from the interaction site is only required for some of its functions.
In conclusion, our study provides definitive evidence against the barrier hypothesis for CD43 function. Our data clearly demonstrate that the CD43 intracellular region is necessary and sufficient for CD43 function, and we could find no evidence for any effect of the extracellular region. It remains to be determined how CD43 actually down-regulates T cell activation. Previously, CD43 has been shown to be phosphorylated on resting T cells, and this phosphorylation increases upon T cell activation (23). We propose that changes in CD43 phosphorylation may lead to signaling events that regulate adhesion and activation. Studies are underway in our laboratory to address this hypothesis. Furthermore, the role of the CD43 ectodomain remains to be explored. Several groups have identified potential CD43 ligands (7, 24, 25), and engagement of these CD43 ligands may provide positive costimulatory signals to the T cell (11, 12). It is also possible that the CD43 ectodomain functions as a soluble molecule. In fact, soluble CD43 ectodomain has been found at substantial levels in human sera (26), and recent work has shown a novel role for soluble CD43 in promoting stable interaction of mycobacteria with receptor on the macrophage, enabling the cells to respond by producing TNF-
(27). Thus, further studies are required to determine the distinct functions of the extracellular, transmembrane, and cytoplasmic domains of CD43.
| Acknowledgments |
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This work was supported by National Institutes of Health grants R01 AI44932 (to A.I. Sperling) and R01 AI50098 (to J.K. Burkhardt).
Submitted: 10 September 2003
Accepted: 23 March 2004
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