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BRIEF DEFINITIVE REPORT |
CORRESPONDENCE Thomas Brunner: tbrunner{at}pathology.unibe.ch
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A. Fuhrer's present address is Institute of Physiology, University of Zurich, 8057 Zurich, Switzerland.
Liver receptor homologue-1 (LRH-1, NR5A2) is a nuclear receptor with sequence homology to steroidogenic factor-1 (SF-1, NR5A1) (for review see reference 1). In addition to their homology, SF-1 and LRH-1 bind to identical DNA consensus sequences and are able to bind phospholipids (15). Apart from these shared properties, LRH-1 and SF-1 have a quite differential tissue expression pattern and thus likely different functions. SF-1 expression is confined to steroidogenic tissues and the hypothalamopituitaryadrenal axis, where it regulates development, differentiation, steroidogenesis, and sexual determination (1). Although SF-1 is abundantly expressed in the adrenals, it is absent in the intestinal mucosa. In contrast, LRH-1 is expressed in intestine, liver, exocrine pancreas, and the ovary where it plays an important role in development, reverse cholesterol transport, bile acid homeostasis, and steroidogenesis (1). In the intestinal mucosa, LRH-1 is predominantly expressed by crypt cells, where it regulates the expression of cyclin D1 and E1 and thereby promotes epithelial cell proliferation and crypt cell renewal (6). Consequently, LRH-1 has also been implicated in the development of colon carcinomas (7).
Glucocorticoids are steroids with important immunoregulatory functions (8). Endogenous glucocorticoid synthesis is substantially regulated by the transcriptional control of steroidogenic enzymes of the cytochrome P450 gene family (CYP genes). Previous studies have shown that the nuclear receptors SF-1 and LRH-1 are potent regulators of some of these genes in the adrenals and ovaries (1, 912). Although the adrenals are the most important source of glucocorticoids, there is increasing evidence for extra-adrenal glucocorticoid synthesis in other organs and tissues (1315). We have recently identified the intestinal epithelium as a potent source of extra-adrenal glucocorticoid synthesis (16). Intestinal glucocorticoid production is induced upon immunological stress through the induction of steroidogenic enzymes. Importantly, intestinal glucocorticoids mediate an important regulatory feed-back loop and critically regulate intestinal immune responses. In the absence of intestinal glucocorticoids, antigen-specific T cells become overactivated during viral infections, indicating an immunosuppressive role of locally produced glucocorticoids (16).
The factors that regulate intestinal glucocorticoid synthesis are unknown thus far. As LRH-1 and steroidogenic enzyme expression is confined to the crypt cells of the intestinal mucosa (6, 16), we investigated the role of LRH-1 in the regulation of intestinal glucocorticoid synthesis. We show here that LRH-1 expression is induced in the intestine upon immune stimulation and parallels the induction of the genes of the steroidogenic enzymes CYP11A1 and CYP11B1. Overexpression of LRH-1 in murine intestinal epithelial cells strongly induces the transcriptional activation of these genes and promotes the synthesis of corticosterone. Importantly, LRH-1 is critical for intestinal glucocorticoid synthesis in vivo, as LRH-1 halplo-insufficiency abrogates immune cellinduced expression of CYP11A1 and CYP11B1 and associated corticosterone synthesis in the intestinal mucosa. This report demonstrates for the first time that LRH-1 is involved in glucocorticoid synthesis. As SF-1 expression is absent in the intestinal epithelium, we propose that LRH-1 has a unique role in the regulation of extra-adrenal glucocorticoid synthesis and immune regulation in the intestinal mucosa.
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RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
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ABSTRACT
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
REFERENCES
LRH-1 expression is induced upon T cell activation in the intestinal mucosa
LRH-1, but not SF-1, has been previously reported to be abundantly expressed in intestinal crypt cells (6). As the same cells also express steroidogenic enzymes and produce the bioactive glucocorticoid corticosterone (16), we aimed at investigating the role of LRH-1 in intestinal glucocorticoid synthesis. Intestinal steroidogenic enzyme expression and glucocorticoid synthesis is induced upon injection of an agonistic T cellactivating anti-CD3 antibody (16). We thus analyzed the expression of LRH-1 in the small intestinal tissue from control and anti-CD3treated mice, and compared it to that in adrenal glands. As described previously, LRH-1 expression levels in the adrenal glands were found to be very low (1). In marked contrast, even basal levels of LRH-1 in the intestine were >200 times higher than those found in adrenals. Interestingly, injection of anti-CD3 resulted in an additional threefold induction of intestinal LRH-1 levels (Fig. 1).
Similarly, infection of mice with the lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus caused an up-regulation of intestinal LRH-1 and CYP11B1 expression (Fig. S1, available at http://www.jem.org/cgi/content/full/jem.20060357/DC1).
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Mutation of the LRH-1 response element inhibits LRH-1induced CYP11A1 and CYP11B1 promoter activity
This induction of CYP11A1 and CYP11B1 transcription is likely the effect of direct binding to the promoter of these genes as putative LRH-1/SF-1 consensus sequences have been identified in both the CYP11A1 and CYP11B1 promoters (9, 11, 18, 19). To confirm the importance of these response elements in the LRH-1mediated induction of CYP11A1 and CYP11B1 promoter activity, we mutated the predicted proximal response element in the two promoter reporter constructs. In agreement with the notion that LRH-1 directly acts on these promoters via binding to these response elements, we observed an almost complete inhibition of LRH-1induced CYP11A1 and CYP11B1 promoter activity (Fig. 3).
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LRH-1 likely regulates intestinal glucocorticoid synthesis not only at the level of CYP11A1 and CYP11B1 transcription. As LRH-1 and SF-1 have an overlapping target pattern, it is expected that also the expression of other steroidogenic enzymes may be regulated, directly or indirectly, by LRH-1. In addition, as SF-1 controls the availability of cholesterol by inducing the expression of steroidogenic acute regulatory protein (StAR), LRH-1 may similarly regulate steroid synthesis at the substrate level (cholesterol). A recent finding by Kim et al. supports this idea by demonstrating a role for LRH-1 in StAR expression in granulosa cells (22).
LRH-1 not only plays a critical role in the regulation of extra-adrenal intestinal glucocorticoid synthesis but also promotes intestinal epithelial cell renewal (i.e., by inducing the expression of the cell cycle proteins cyclin D1 and E1) (6). Although epithelial cell renewal and glucocorticoid synthesis have little in common at a first glance, there may be a link between these two LRH-1regulated processes. Strong T cell activation and associated immunological responses in the intestinal mucosa lead to the release of proinflammatory cytokines, such as IFN
and TNF
, which impair the intestinal epithelial barrier function (26). Similarly, T cellmediated cytotoxicity can cause epithelial cell apoptosis (27) and thereby also leads to increased permeability of the epithelial layer. The resulting leakiness of the epithelial layer usually results in an increased stimulation of immune cells by luminal bacterial products, which further accelerates destructive inflammatory responses in the gut. Induction and activation of LRH-1 may not only reduce the epithelial layer leakiness and stimulation of immune cells by increasing epithelial cell renewal but may also control immune cell activation by the regulating intestinal glucocorticoid synthesis. We therefore suggest that LRH-1 plays an important role in the regulation of intestinal immune homeostasis.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Plasmids.
The expression construct for wild-type murine LRH-1 (pCMX-LRH-1) has been described previously (28). For the cloning of the dominant negative expression vector for murine LRH-1 (DN-LRH-1), cDNA sequences corresponding to aa 1282 of mouse LRH-1 were PCR-amplified with primers 5'-GGAATTCTTCGCTAAGAATGTCTGCTAGT-3' and 5'-GGAATTCTCAGTGACCATAGGGTTGGTAACCA-3' from pCMX-LRH-1 and the amplification product was subsequently cloned into the EcoRI site of pCMX. For the promoter reporter constructs, 1.7 kb of the 5'-flanking region of the murine CYP11A1 (accession no. 13070) and CYP11B1 (accession no. NT 082172.1) genes were amplified by PCR from C57BL/6 genomic DNA using specific primers (CYP11A1 fw 5'-GCAAGGATCCTTCCTTCTCACAATCCTAAG-3', rev 5'-GATCGTCGACAGTCTTTTAGCCAGCATAC-3'; CYP11B1 fw 5'-CTAAGGATCCGTGATTCTCTGATGGTCTCT -3', rev 5'-CCTTGTCGACTTGTCATCTTCCTCTCTTCC-3') and cloned into the HsLuc luciferase reporter construct (29) using BamHI and SalI restriction sites.
The predicted LRH-1/SF-1 core binding sites (AGGTCA) (19) at positions 138 and 221 of the CYP11A1 and the CYP11B1 promoter, respectively, were mutated (to taaTCA) by site-directed mutagenesis using a mutagenesis kit (Quick Change; Stratagene) and the following primers: mut mCYP11A1 fw 5'-GGGtaaTCACCG-3', mut mCYP11A1 rev 5'-CGGTGAttaCCC-3'; mut mCYP11B1 fw 5'-ACCTGAaatCAG-3', mut mCYP11B1 rev 5'-CTGattTCAGGT-3'.
CYP11A1 and CYP11B1 promoter assay.
CYP11A1 or CYP11B1 wild-type and mutated reporter constructs, and ß-galactosidase expression vector for transfection control, were cotransfected into mICcl2 cells using the calcium phosphate precipitation method. In some experiments, cells were cotransfected with different amounts of a wild-type or dominant negative murine LRH-1 expression vector. After overnight transfection, cells were washed and cultured for 16 h before lysis of the cells. ß-galactosidase and luciferase activity assays were performed as described previously (30).
Induction and measurement of intestinal glucocorticoid synthesis.
Intestinal glucocorticoid synthesis was induced as previously described (16). In brief, age- and sex-matched wild-type LRH+/+ mice or heterozygous LRH-1+/ mice in the C57BL/6 background (6, 7) were injected i.p. with either PBS or 50 µg of antimouse CD3 antibody i.p. After 4 h, mice were killed and small intestinal tissue was isolated and cultured in the presence or absence of the glucocorticoid synthesis inhibitor metyrapone (200 µg/ml) for 6 h. After that, cell-free supernatant was harvested and corticosterone was measured by RIA. Results were expressed as the difference between samples cultured without metyrapone and samples cultured with metyrapone (metyrapone-inhibitable corticosterone synthesis) to correct for variable contamination with serum glucocorticoids. All animal experiments have been reviewed and approved by the review board of the State of Bern.
In some experiments, control or LRH-1transfected mICcl2 cells were cultured for 16 h and corticosterone in cell-free supernatant was measured by RIA.
Detection of CYP11A1, CYP11B1, and LRH-1 mRNA by real-time RT-PCR.
Small and large intestinal tissue from PBS or anti-CD3injected LRH-1+/+ or LRH-1+/ mice, or control or LRH-1transfected mICcl2 cells were lysed in TRI reagent (Sigma-Aldrich) and RNA was isolated. RNA was DNase treated and 2 µg of RNA were reverse transcribed using a Taqman Gold RT kit obtained from Applied Biosystems. Real-time PCR was performed in an Applied Biosystems Real-time PCR 7500 machine using SYBR green and the following primers: mCYP11A1 forward 5'-CCAGCCCAACATTACCGAGAT-3', reverse 5'-GACTTCAGCCCGCAGCAT-3'; mCyp11B1 forward 5'-CAATAGAAGCTAGCCACTTTGT-3', reverse 5'-AGGGTGTGGAGGAACTTCAG-3'. For mLRH-1 and the house-keeping gene GAPDH amplification Quantitec primer assays obtained from QIAGEN were used. GAPDH was used to normalize CYP11A1, CYP11B1, and LRH-1 expression levels.
Statistical analysis.
In some experiments, differences between groups were analyzed by unpaired Student's t test. Values of P < 0.05 were considered significant.
Online supplemental material.
Fig. S1, describing viral infection- induced LRH-1 and CYP11B1 expression, is available at http://www.jem.org/cgi/content/full/jem.20060357/DC1.
| Acknowledgments |
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This work was supported by research grants from the Swiss National Science Foundation (no. 31-65021.01 and 310000-110030) and the Crohn's and Colitis Foundation of America (1441) (to T. Brunner), and INSERM, CNRS, Hopitaux Universitaires de Strasbourg, ARC, and ACI-MRT (to K. Schoonjans).
The authors have no conflicting interests.
Submitted: 14 February 2006
Accepted: 31 July 2006
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