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Vol. 10, Issue 1, 179-195, January 1999


*Structural Cell Biology Unit, Department of Medical
Anatomy, The Panum Institute, University of Copenhagen, DK-2200
Copenhagen, Denmark;
Department of Medical Biochemistry,
University of Århus, DK-8000 Århus, Denmark; and
§Institute for Cancer Research, The Norwegian Radium
Hospital, 0310 Oslo, Norway
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ABSTRACT |
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Accumulated data indicate that endocytosis of the glycosylphosphatidyl-inositol-anchored protein urokinase plasminogen activator receptor (uPAR) depends on binding of the ligand uPA:plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1) and subsequent interaction with internalization receptors of the low-density lipoprotein receptor family, which are internalized through clathrin-coated pits. This interaction is inhibited by receptor-associated protein (RAP). We show that uPAR with bound uPA:PAI-1 is capable of entering cells in a clathrin-independent process. First, HeLaK44A cells expressing mutant dynamin efficiently internalized uPA:PAI-1 under conditions in which transferrin endocytosis was blocked. Second, in polarized Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cells, which expressed human uPAR apically, the low basal rate of uPAR ligand endocytosis, which could not be inhibited by RAP, was increased by forskolin or phorbol ester (phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate), which selectively up-regulate clathrin-independent endocytosis from the apical domain of epithelial cells. Third, in subconfluent nonpolarized MDCK cells, endocytosis of uPA:PAI-1 was only decreased marginally by RAP. At the ultrastructural level uPAR was largely excluded from clathrin-coated pits in these cells and localized in invaginated caveolae only in the presence of cross-linking antibodies. Interestingly, a larger fraction of uPAR in nonpolarized relative to polarized MDCK cells was insoluble in Triton X-100 at 0°C, and by surface labeling with biotin we also show that internalized uPAR was mainly detergent insoluble, suggesting a correlation between association with detergent-resistant membrane microdomains and higher degree of clathrin-independent endocytosis. Furthermore, by cryoimmunogold labeling we show that 5-10% of internalized uPAR in nonpolarized, but not polarized, MDCK cells is targeted to lysosomes by a mechanism that is regulated by ligand occupancy.
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INTRODUCTION |
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The urokinase plasminogen activator receptor
(uPAR)1 is a 55- to 60-kDa glycoprotein (Roldan et
al., 1990
) anchored in the membrane by a
glycosyl-phosphatidyl-inositol (GPI) moiety (Ploug et
al., 1991
). uPAR binds pro-urokinase plasminogen activator (pro-uPA), active two-chain uPA, and uPA complexed with plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1) with high affinity
(Kd, ~1 nM). Although first recognized for its
role in regulation of plasmin-mediated pericellular proteolysis (Danø
et al., 1994
), uPAR has recently been identified as a
cellular adhesion receptor for vitronectin (Wei et al.,
1994
) and as a chemokinesis-inducing signaling receptor (Busso et
al., 1994
; Fazioli et al., 1997
). In the cell types examined so far, uPAR associated with uPA is endocytosed slowly like
other GPI-anchored proteins (Cubellis et al., 1990
;
Estreicher et al., 1990
; Lemansky et al., 1990
;
Lisanti et al., 1990
; Keller et al., 1992
). Being
attached to the outer lipid leaflet of the membrane, these proteins
lack cytoplasmic internalization signals, and the endocytic route(s)
taken by GPI-anchored proteins remains poorly understood. However, when
receptor-bound uPA reacts with PAI-1 to form a covalent uPA:PAI-1
complex, a rapid internalization of the complex takes place (Cubellis
et al., 1990
; Olson et al., 1992
). This process
is mediated by interaction of uPA:PAI-1 with members of the low-density
lipoprotein receptor (LDLR) family, including low-density lipoprotein
receptor-related protein (LRP), very-low-density lipoprotein
receptor, and most likely also megalin (Herz et al., 1992
;
Nykjær et al., 1992
; Conese et al., 1995
; Heegaard et al., 1995
), which confer endocytosis through
clathrin-coated pits by virtue of tyrosine-based internalization motifs
in their cytoplasmic tails. As shown for LRP (Olson et al.,
1992
; Conese et al., 1995
; Nykjær et al., 1997
),
but likely also applying for megalin and very-low-density lipoprotein
receptor (Andreasen et al., 1994
; Heegaard et
al., 1995
), internalization of the uPA:PAI-1 complex occurs
concurrently with endocytosis of uPAR itself. Endocytosis of uPA:PAI-1
can be blocked by exogenous addition of receptor-associated protein
(RAP) (Li et al., 1994
; Conese et al., 1995
;
Heegaard et al., 1995
), a 40-kDa intracellular protein that
functions as a chaperone for LRP in the biosynthetic pathway (Bu
et al., 1995
; Willnow et al., 1996
) and blocks
binding of all established ligands, including uPA:PAI-1, to LDLR family
members (Nykjær et al., 1992
; Moestrup et al.,
1993
; Heegaard et al., 1995
).
However, RAP is not able to completely inhibit uPA:PAI-1
internalization, and also, uPA is endocytosed at a low basal level (Cubellis et al., 1990
; Estreicher et al., 1990
;
Conese et al., 1994
). The nature of this RAP noninhibitable
endocytosis of uPAR is unknown, but the cation-independent mannose
6-phosphate receptor (MPR), which was recently shown to bind uPAR
(Nykjær et al., 1998
), may contribute to internalization
through clathrin-coated pits. Also, uPAR has been associated with
detergent-insoluble, glycolipid-rich membrane microdomains (Schnitzer
et al., 1995
; Wei et al., 1996
) and in the
presence of cross-linking antibodies with caveolae (Stahl and Mueller,
1995
), which have both been suggested to participate in endocytosis of
GPI-anchored proteins (Simons and Ikonen, 1997
). At least a fraction of
internalized uPAR and other GPI-linked proteins are recycled to the
cell surface (van den Bosch et al., 1988
; Keller et
al., 1992
; Rijnboutt et al., 1996
; Nykjær et
al., 1997
), although some studies have indicated that a major
proportion is retained intracellularly (Rijnboutt et al.,
1996
). It is not known whether the itinerary of uPAR follows that of
cointernalized LDLR family members.
Because uPAR internalization, with a few exceptions (Kjøller et
al., 1995
; Limongi et al., 1995
), has mainly been
studied in mesenchymal cells, circulating blood cells, and
undifferentiated epithelial cell types (Conese and Blasi, 1995
), we
decided to investigate uPAR internalization and postendocytic sorting
in Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cells stably transfected with human uPAR cDNA. It is known that human uPAR is expressed apically in
polarized MDCK cells (Limongi et al., 1995
), whereas
caveolae (Vogel et al., 1998
) and MPR (Prydz et
al., 1990
) are basolaterally expressed and separated from uPAR by
tight junctions. For this reason we characterized uPAR internalization
in both polarized MDCK cells and in subconfluent MDCK cells, which by
several criteria had not established full polarity, and therefore
provided an opportunity for interactions between uPAR and putative
endocytosis mediators or other membrane components confined exclusively
to the basolateral cell surface in polarized MDCK cells.
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MATERIALS and METHODS |
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Cell Culture and Transfection
MDCK II cells were maintained in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's
medium (DMEM) supplemented with 5% FCS, 2 mM glutamine, and
antibiotics. uPAR cDNA (a kind gift from Dr. F. Blasi, University of
Milan, Milan, Italy) was inserted into the EcoRI site of the
expression plasmid pTEJ8 (Johansen et al., 1990
) where
transcription is under the control of the ubiquitin promoter. MDCK II
cells were stably transfected with plasmid containing uPAR cDNA or
plasmid alone by the calcium phosphate technique, and clones were
selected for neomycin tolerance in 650 µg/ml G418 (Life Technologies,
Grand Island, NY) and then subcloned once. HeLaK44A
cells (kindly donated by Dr. S.L. Schmid, The Scripps Research Institute, La Jolla, CA) were maintained in DMEM containing 10% FCS, 2 mM glutamine, 400 µg/ml G418, 1 µg/ml tetracycline, and antibiotics.
Reagents and Proteins
Two-chain uPA (Trombolysin; Nordic Health Care, Copenhagen,
Denmark) was inactivated with diisopropyl fluorophosphate (DFP; Sigma, St. Louis, MO) as described (Nykjær et al., 1990
),
except that excess DFP was removed by dialyzation. Human PAI-1 was
recombinantly expressed in Escherichia coli and purified by
gel filtration (G25; Pharmacia Biotech, Uppsala, Sweden) and subsequent
chromatography on ion-exchange (Mono Q-Sepharose) and heparin-Sepharose
columns (Pharmacia Biotech). For complex formation, an excess of
PAI-1 was added to two-chain uPA (trombolysin or ukidan; Serono,
Aubonne, Switzerland), and uPA:PAI-1 complexes were purified by
sequential affinity chromatography on anti-uPA and anti-PAI-1 rabbit
polyclonal antibody-conjugated CNBr-Sepharose columns. Recombinant RAP
was expressed and purified as described previously (Nykjær et
al., 1992
). Briefly, the plasmid containing the RAP cDNA fused to
a hexahistidine sequence was expressed in E. coli BL21DE3
cells and purified on an Ni2+ nitriloacetic column. After a
second purification on a Q-Sepharose column (Pharmacia Biotech), the
purity of RAP was confirmed by SDS-PAGE and staining with Coomassie
Brilliant Blue.
Cell Extraction and Chemical Cross-Linking
Polarized or nonpolarized MDCK cells were washed twice in ice-cold PBS with calcium and magnesium (PBS-CM) and extracted on ice in 1% Triton X-100 (TX-100), 150 mM NaCl, 5 mM EDTA, 25 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.4) (or 2-[N-morpholino]ethanesulfonic acid, pH 6.5) containing 1 mM PMSF, 25 µg/ml leupeptin, and 50 µg/ml pepstatin (Sigma). Extraction volume relative to total cell protein was kept constant, and extracts from each dish were homogenized by pipetting and split in two for a further 10-min incubation on ice or at 37°C, respectively, and subsequently centrifuged for 60,000 × g at 4°C. Equal volumes of supernatant were analyzed by nonreducing SDS-PAGE and Western blotting, using affinity-purified rabbit anti-uPAR antibodies (a gift from Dr. A. Nykjær, University of Århus) followed by HRP-conjugated donkey anti-rabbit antibodies. Signal was detected by enhanced chemiluminiscence (Amersham, Arlington Heights, IL), and densiometric quantitation was performed with a Metamorph imaging system (Universal Imaging, West Chester, PA). Alternatively, cells were preincubated with 1 nM [125I]DFP-uPA at 4°C before cross-linking with 1 mM disuccinimidyl suberate (DSS; Pierce, Rockford, IL) in PBS-CM for 60 min at 4°C. The reaction was quenched by a 15-min incubation with 25 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.1) before extraction in TX-100 as described above.
Iodination of Ligands
Five to 10 µg of two-chain uPA (trombolysin), DFP-uPA, ricin (Sigma), or holo-transferrin (Sigma) were iodinated by the iodogen method. Specific activities ranged from 20 to 50 × 106 cpm/µg of protein. 125I-Labeled uPA:PAI-1 complexes were produced by incubating 5 µg of iodinated two-chain uPA with a 10× molar excess of PAI-1 (Molecular Innovations, Royal Oak, MI) for 90 min at room temperature. Complex formation was always verified by SDS-PAGE and autoradiography; almost all radioactivity was associated with a band of 95 kDa.
Radioligand Assays
Polarized or nonpolarized MDCK cells, cultured in 6 or 12 wells, were washed twice in HEPES-buffered DMEM supplemented with 2 mM glutamine and 0.2% BSA (DMEM-BSA) and then incubated with [125I]DFP-uPA or [125I]uPA:PAI-1 at a concentration of 500 pM, with or without 100 nM RAP, for 90 min at 4°C. Cells were washed three times on ice with DMEM-BSA and then incubated at 37°C, with or without 100 nM RAP as appropriate. At the times indicated, medium was removed, and trichloroacetic acid (TCA)-soluble and -insoluble counts determined by precipitation with ice-cold 20% TCA containing 3 mg/ml BSA (final concentrations) for 5-10 min on ice. Cell surface-associated ligand was dissociated with ice-cold 100 mM NaCl, 50 mM glycine-HCl (pH 2.8) for 5 min before lysing cells in 1 M NaOH at room temperature. All fractions were then counted in an LKB-Wallac (Gaithersburg, MD) gamma counter. Nonspecific binding was assessed in the presence of 200 nM uPA and was typically between 4 and 15%. When internalization of RAP was measured, cells were preincubated with 1 nM [125I]RAP in the cold and then chased at 37°C for 7 min. After washing, surface-associated and intracellular ligand was recovered in the supernatant and pellet, respectively, after incubation with 0.25% pronase (Sigma) in PBS-CM for 1 h at 4°C. When recycling of uPAR ligands was examined, cells grown in 24 wells were allowed to internalize prebound [125I]DFP-uPA or [125I]uPA:PAI-1 for 10 min at 37°C, in the presence of 0-100 nM RAP as specified, and then acid washed twice for 2 min each on ice to remove ligand remaining on the surface. Control experiments showed that acid treatment stripped 95-98% of surface-bound ligand. Subsequently cells were washed once in DMEM-BSA and returned to 37°C in DMEM-BSA supplemented with 0-100 nM RAP for a further 40 min. To prevent reinternalization of recycled radioligand, 100 nM unlabeled uPA was included in the chase medium. Subsequently, distribution of ligand in medium, acid wash, and alkalic lysate was determined as described above. Nonspecific binding was determined in the presence of 200 nM unlabeled ligand and values corrected accordingly.
Radioligand Uptake in the HeLaK44A Mutant Dynamin-expressing Cell Line
HeLaK44A cells containing a dominant negative mutant
of dynamin under the control of a tetracycline-responsive element
(Damke et al., 1994
) were cultured for 3 d before
experiments with (wild-type dynamin expression) or without (mutant
dynamin expression) 1 µg/ml tetracyclin. Cells were incubated in
DMEM-BSA for 15 min at 37°C, and then iodinated ligands (~150 ng/ml
holo-transferrin, 200 ng/ml ricin, or 3 nM uPA:PAI-1) were added, and
incubation continued for a further 5 min. Cell surface-associated and
intracellular counts were then determined as described above, except
that surface-bound ricin was removed by incubation in 0.1 M lactose at
4°C for 1 h. Nonspecific binding was determined in the presence
of a 100-200 M excess of cold ligand, and values were corrected accordingly.
Cell Surface Labeling with Biotin
Nonpolarized MDCK cells were incubated twice for 10 min each in PBS-CM on ice and then surface biotinylated twice for 20 min each with 0.5 mg/ml NHS-SS-biotin (Sigma) in PBS-CM at 4°C. After a 10-min incubation in ice-cold DMEM-BSA, cells were then chased in DMEM-BSA at 37°C for the indicated times. Subsequently, cells were washed twice in ice-cold PBS-CM with 10% FCS and then treated with 50 mM mercaptoethane sulfonic acid (Sigma), 100 mM NaCl, 2.5 mM CaCl2, 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.7) three times for 20 min each on ice to remove biotin remaining on the cell surface. After a final 10-min incubation in 5 mg/ml iodoacetamide in PBS-CM with 1% BSA, cells were extracted in TX-100 (pH 7.4) as described above. Clarified extracts were then precleared with protein A-Sepharose beads (Sigma) and immunoprecipitated with affinity-purified anti-uPAR rabbit antibodies overnight at 4°C. Beads were washed twice in extraction buffer and then boiled in SDS sample buffer before separation by 10% SDS-PAGE and transfer to nitrocellulose membranes. After extensive blocking in 3% BSA, 0.1% Tween 20 in PBS, membranes were incubated with HRP-conjugated streptavidin (Amersham) before thorough washing and signal development by ECL.
Immunofluorescence
Nonpolarized MDCK cells cultured overnight in two- or
eight-chamber slides (Nunc, Roskilde, Denmark), or filter-grown (Costar Transwells, Cambridge, MA), polarized MDCK cells were incubated for
18 h in normal growth medium containing 100 µg/ml leupeptin and
67 µg/ml pepstatin and either 100 nM DFP-uPA or 100 nM uPA:PAI-1. Cells were then fixed in 2% formaldehyde in phosphate buffer (pH 7.2)
overnight at 4°C, washed thoroughly, and nonspecific binding blocked
by 5% normal goat serum in PBS containing 0.1% TX-100 or 0.2%
saponin for permeabilization. Cells were incubated with the monoclonal
anti-uPAR antibody R2 (kindly provided by Dr. E.Rønne, The Finsen
Institute, Copenhagen, Denmark; Rønne et al., 1991
) for 45 min, washed twice for 5 min each in PBS, and then incubated with Texas
Red-conjugated goat anti-mouse antibodies (Southern Biotechnology,
Birmingham, AL) for 30 min before wash and a secondary immunolabeling
step with rabbit polyclonal antibodies raised against LAMP-1 (a kind
gift from Dr. S. Carlsson, University of Umeå, Umeå, Sweden) followed
by FITC-conjugated goat anti-rabbit antibodies. Finally slides were
rinsed briefly in distilled water and mounted in Fluoromount G
(Southern Biotechnology) containing 2.5 mg/ml N-propyl-galleate (Sigma). Controls included omission of
primary antibodies or the use of irrelevant antibodies and produced
only low levels of staining. Slides were examined with a Zeiss LSM 510 confocal laser scanning microscope using a C-Apochromat 63×, 1.2 water
immersion objective (Carl Zeiss, Thornwood, NY), and the 543-nm line of
the helium-neon laser or the 488-nm line of the argon laser for
excitation of Texas Red and FITC, respectively. Each fluorophore was
scanned independently and saved as a 1024 × 1024-pixel image at
8-bit resolution before merging of channels and import into Adobe
Photoshop (Adobe Systems, Mountain View, CA) for compilation and direct printing.
Cryoimmunogold Electron Microscopy and Preembedding Labeling
To analyze the distribution of uPAR after a single round of
endocytosis, polarized or subconfluent MDCK cells were preincubated for
1-2 h in DMEM-BSA with leupeptin and pepstatin before saturation of
uPAR with 10 nM DFP-uPA or uPA:PAI-1 (produced from PAI-1 recombinantly expressed in yeast, kindly donated by Dr. P. Andreasen, University of
Århus) at 4°C. Cells were washed once and then incubated in DMEM-BSA
with lysosomal inhibitors for 150 min, an interval that was inferred
from fluorescence experiments to correspond to near total cell surface
clearance of uPA:PAI. Alternatively, nonpolarized MDCK cells were
incubated with cationized 20-nm gold for 5 h and chased for 2 h in DMEM-BSA alone and then for a further 3 h in DMEM-BSA
containing 10 µg/ml cycloheximide (Sigma) and 50 nM DFP-uPA or
uPA:PAI-1. Cells were then washed and fixed in 2% formaldehyde/0.1% glutaraldehyde in 0.2 M HEPES (pH 7.4) at 4°C overnight. Cell samples
were embedded in 10% gelatin and infiltrated sequentially with 2.1 and
2.3 M sucrose before freezing in liquid nitrogen. Cryosections (~80
nm) were cut at
110°C with a Reichert Ultracut cryoultramicrotome (Leica, Glostrup, Denmark) and transferred to
Formvar carbon-coated copper grids with 2.3 M sucrose or 2% methylcellulose:2.3 M sucrose (1:1). Single or double immunolabeling was performed essentially as described (Slot et al., 1991
)
with polyclonal antibodies to uPAR, MPR-300 (a kind gift from Dr. K. von Figura, University of Göttingen, Göttingen, Germany),
and LAMP-1 followed by 10 or 15 nm of colloidal gold-conjugated protein A (purchased from Dr. G. Posthuma, Department of Cell Biology, Medical
School, Utrecht University, Utrecht, The Netherlands) as
appropriate. Finally grids were contrasted in methylcellulose containing 0.3% uranyl acetate and examined in a JEOL (Tokyo, Japan)
100CX or Philips (Eindhoven, The Netherlands) CM100 electron microscope. For preembedding labeling, nonpolarized MDCK cells were
incubated in DMEM-BSA with 1.5 µg/ml anti-uPAR polyclonal antibodies
for 60 min at 4°C, followed by washing and incubation with 10 nm of
gold-conjugated goat anti-rabbit antibodies (10 µg/ml) for a further
60 min. After final washing, cells were fixed in 2% formaldehyde/0.1%
glutaraldehyde in 0.1 M phosphate buffer (pH 7.2) and Epon embedded
using standard techniques.
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RESULTS |
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uPAR Expression in Polarized and Nonpolarized MDCK cells
MDCK II cells were stably transfected with human uPAR cDNA, and a
clone (clone 3.2) with moderate expression of uPAR was selected for
most experiments (unless otherwise indicated). By Western blotting with
affinity-purified rabbit antibodies, uPAR was visible as two bands
(Figure 1A) corresponding to full-length
uPAR and a faster-migrating, cleaved form of uPAR lacking the
N-terminal ligand-binding domain. Cleavage, which is promoted by
several proteases, including uPA itself, has been observed in
neoplastic tissue as well as in cultured cell types (Solberg et
al., 1994
; Høyer-Hansen et al., 1997
) and also in MDCK
cells (Limongi et al., 1995
). In agreement with this,
[125I]DFP-uPA ligand blotting showed only specific
binding to full-length uPAR (Figure 1A, lanes 2 and 3). Additionally,
uPAR was almost totally releasable with
phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C at 37°C,
indicating that uPAR was correctly anchored in the membrane by a GPI
moiety.
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MDCK cells grown to confluency on plastic culture ware formed polarized
monolayers with apical microvilli and tight junctions that totally
excluded the dye ruthenium red from the intercellular space (Figure
1B). Under these conditions uPAR was exclusively expressed at the
apical domain of the cells (Figure 1C) as expected, because GPI
anchoring confers apical sorting of proteins in most epithelial cell
types (Lisanti et al., 1990
; Lisanti and Rodriquez-Boulan, 1990
; Simons and Ikonen, 1997
). When MDCK cells were seeded at low
density and cultured overnight, they were aggregated but well spread.
At the ultrastructural level tight junctions were sparse, and most cell
surfaces were accessible to ruthenium red; furthermore, uPAR localized
with transferrin receptors, MPR, and caveolae (see below) on the dorsal
and lateral surfaces of the cells, indicating that full polarity had
not been established. For simplicity these cells will henceforth be
referred to as nonpolarized MDCK cells.
Polarized and Nonpolarized MDCK Cells Internalize uPAR Ligands by Different Mechanisms
When we analyzed endocytosis of iodinated uPAR ligands from the
apical domain of polarized MDCK cells (Figure
2, A-C), our results agreed well with
data derived for fibroblastic and monocytic cell lines (Cubellis
et al., 1990
; Olson et al., 1992
; Conese and
Blasi, 1995
). Thus the fraction of internalized DFP-uPA reached a low
steady-state level of ~20%, whereas uPA:PAI-1 was rapidly cleared
from the cell surface and degraded. This rapid uptake was completely
blocked by the presence of 100 nM RAP in the medium, and under these
conditions uPA:PAI-1 internalization was almost identical to that of
DFP-uPA (Figure 2, compare A and C).
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When endocytosis was examined in nonpolarized MDCK cells, marked
differences to apical uptake were evident. At steady state, approximately twice as much DFP-uPA was present intracellularly, and
strikingly, 100 nM RAP caused only a minor decrease in uPA:PAI-1 internalization. No further decrease was seen when higher
concentrations of RAP were used. Importantly, also in nonpolarized
cells both DFP-uPA and uPA:PAI-1 were specifically ligated to uPAR and
did not bind alternative basolateral receptors to any appreciable extent, as radioligand binding to mock-transfected cells was
negligible. We also tested whether a 200 M excess of unlabeled ligand
would interfere with uptake of prebound [125I]uPA:PAI-1
(Figure 3A). In polarized cells this
decreased uPA:PAI-1 internalization almost to the same extent as RAP,
but again uptake was unaffected in nonpolarized cells. Notably,
uPA:PAI-1 endocytosis was higher than ricin uptake, indicating that
uPA:PAI-1 internalization did not just represent turnover of bulk
membrane (Figure 3A). Although uPA:PAI-1 was endocytosed with
comparable efficiency in polarized and nonpolarized cells,
internalization efficiency of RAP was decreased in nonpolarized MDCK
cells (Figure 3B).
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uPAR Can Be Internalized by a Clathrin-independent Mechanism in MDCK and HeLaK44A Cells
GPI-anchored proteins have been reported to be excluded from
coated pits (Bretscher et al., 1980
) and have been
associated with caveolae and uncoated invaginations of the plasma
membrane in nonepithelial cell types (Rothberg et al., 1990
;
Stahl and Mueller, 1995
; Keller and Simons, 1998
), suggesting
clathrin-independent mechanisms of endocytosis. When the surface
distribution of uPAR in polarized MDCK cells challenged with uPA:PAI-1
was analyzed by postfixation immunogold labeling, clathrin-coated pits
containing uPAR could be readily observed (Figure
4, A-C), in agreement with the
observation that apical internalization of uPA:PAI-1 is RAP inhibitable
and therefore most likely mediated by members of the LDLR family, which
localize in coated pits (Kerjaschki and Farquhar, 1983
; Chen et
al., 1990
; Moestrup et al., 1990
; Bu et al.,
1994
). More importantly, however, we found that in nonpolarized MDCK cells, uPAR with or without bound uPA:PAI-1 was largely excluded from
clathrin-coated pits. Even in MDCK clone 8.1 cells (Figure 4, D-F)
with very strong expression of uPAR (eight times more than clone 3.2 used for all other experiments), only 0.8% of the total surface
labeling for unoccupied uPAR was present in coated pits (Table
1). In nonpolarized MDCK cells incubated
with uPA:PAI-1 (Figure 4, G-J) 1.1% of uPAR surface labeling could be
found in coated pits. Because we estimated that ~1.3% of the surface
area of nonpolarized MDCK cells was occupied by coated pits, it is concluded that uPAR with or without bound uPA:PAI-1 was largely excluded, or at least not concentrated, in coated pits. Additionally, localization in caveolae was very rarely observed but could readily be
induced by prefixation cross-linking with antibodies (Figure 4, J and
K), as also reported by others (Mayor et al., 1994
).
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Attempts to block the clathrin-coated pit pathway by cytosol
acidification with 10 mM acetic acid (Sandvig et al., 1987
)
had no effect on uPA:PA-1 internalization in polarized or nonpolarized MDCK cells, likely because acidity in itself may cause immobilization of GPI-anchored proteins (Hannan et al., 1993
). Consistent
with this, a higher proportion of uPAR was present in the
detergent-insoluble fraction when TX-100 extraction was performed at
slightly acidic pH (see below), as established for other GPI-anchored
proteins (Sargiacomo et al., 1993
; Gorodinsky and Harris,
1995
). To establish whether uPAR is capable of entering cells through a
clathrin-independent pathway, we therefore used the
HeLaK44A cell line, which carries a dominant negative
mutant of dynamin under the control of a tetracycline-responsive system
(Damke et al., 1994
). When K44A-dynamin is expressed,
budding of clathrin-coated vesicles from the plasma membrane is
inhibited. As determined by immunofluorescence, HeLaK44A
cells express transferrin receptors at a high level and uPAR at
moderate levels, and control cells expressing wild-type dynamin preferentially internalize [125I]uPA:PAI-1 relative to
[125I]DFP-uPA (our unpublished results). When ligand
uptake was examined in K44A-dynamin-expressing cells, transferrin
endocytosis, which occurs mainly through clathrin-coated pits, was
reduced to 12% normalized to control cells. In contrast,
internalization of ricin, serving as a general membrane marker, or
uPA:PAI-1 was only slightly decreased (Figure
5).
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We next took advantage of the fact that clathrin-independent
endocytosis from the apical domain of polarized MDCK cells is up-regulated by activators of adenylate cyclase and protein kinase C
(Eker et al., 1994
; Holm et al., 1995
). Figure
6 shows that forskolin or phorbol
12-myristate 13-acetate selectively increased LDLR family
member-independent internalization of uPAR because endocytosis of
DFP-uPA, or uPA:PAI-1 in the presence of RAP, was increased, whereas
uPA:PAI-1 alone was internalized to the same extent as in untreated
control cells.
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Internalized uPAR Is Detergent Insoluble in Nonpolarized MDCK Cells
The mechanism of internalization of GPI-anchored proteins is still
poorly characterized but may be related to the ability of GPI-anchored
proteins to associate with membrane microdomains rich in
glycosphingolipids and cholesterol (Simons and Ikonen, 1997
). These
glycolipid domains are soluble in the detergent TX-100 at 37°C but
insoluble at 0-4°C (Brown and Rose, 1992
). When polarized and
nonpolarized MDCK cells were extracted with 1% TX-100 on ice, a
significantly higher fraction of the total amount of uPAR
(corresponding to extraction at 37°C) was detergent soluble in
polarized cells (Figure 7A).
Densitometric analysis showed that on average 67 ± 10% versus
31 ± 4% (mean ± SD; n = 5) of uPAR was detergent soluble at 0°C in polarized and nonpolarized cells, respectively. This difference in partitioning was also evident when radiolabeled DFP-uPA was cross-linked to uPAR with the bifunctional reagent DSS.
Cross-linked uPAR:DFP-uPA complexes migrated at the expected ~100 kDa
(Figure 7B), and identity was verified by Western blotting with
anti-uPAR antibodies. Densitometry showed that 39 versus 14% (n = 2) of cross-linked uPAR was detergent soluble in polarized and
nonpolarized cells, respectively. Although the absolute fractions of
detergent-soluble uPAR were substantially lower than assessed by
Western blotting, both experimental conditions yielded an ~2.5-fold higher solubility of uPAR in polarized cells. When extraction was
performed at pH 6.5, the fraction of detergent-soluble uPAR decreased
in both polarized and nonpolarized MDCK cells (shown for polarized
cells in Figure 7C; compare with Figure 7A). Irrespective of pH,
detergent insolubility of uPAR required cholesterol, because 0.2%
saponin (Cerneus et al., 1993
; Rijnboutt et al.,
1996
; Naslavsky et al., 1997
) completely solubilized uPAR
(Figure 7C). Also, caveolin was enriched in the detergent-resistant
fraction and solubilized by saponin. It has been reported that only the
detergent-soluble plasma membrane pool of the folate receptor or
alkaline phosphatase is internalized (Cerneus et al., 1993
;
Rijnboutt et al., 1996
). To address this question we used a
surface-labeling protocol with a reduction-sensitive biotin analogue.
Nonpolarized MDCK cells were surface biotinylated on ice and
subsequently chased at 37°C before reduction of remaining cell
surface biotin with a membrane-impermeable reducing agent. As shown in
Figure 7D, the low degree of detergent solubility of cell
surface-resident uPAR was retained also in intracellular locations.
|
Postendocytic Sorting of uPAR in Polarized and Nonpolarized MDCK Cells Is Different
Like other GPI-anchored proteins (van den Bosch et al.,
1988
; Keller et al., 1992
), the majority of endocytosed uPAR
recycles to the cell surface in nonepithelial cells after
receptor-ligand dissociation (Nykjær et al., 1997
).
However, when nonpolarized MDCK cells were incubated overnight with 100 nM uPA:PAI-1, a marked accumulation of uPAR was evident in
LAMP-1-positive lysosomes (Figure 8,
D-F). This lysosomal localization, although much less pronounced, was
evident after 2 h of chase. In contrast, cells incubated
with DFP-uPA showed little lysosomal labeling for uPAR (Figure 8,
A-C), similarly to control cells incubated without ligand. In
polarized MDCK cells, confocal imaging demonstrated uPAR localization
on the apical plasma membrane and in a subapical compartment
morphologically compatible with the apical recycling compartment
(Cardone et al., 1994
; Zacchi et al., 1998
).
However, colocalization of uPAR and LAMP-1 was not observed to any
appreciable degree (Figure 8, G-I). These findings were confirmed by
cryoimmunogold labeling. In polarized MDCK cells challenged with
uPA:PAI-1, ~85% of total uPAR la-beling was localized on the apical
cell surface (Figure 9, A and B).
Intracellularly, labeling was mostly present in small apical endosomes,
likely associated with the apical recycling compartment, and in
some cell profiles this localization was pronounced (Figure 9B). To a
lesser degree, labeling of multivesicular bodies (Figure 9A) also was
evident, but very little labeling in dense-core lysosomes was noted
(our unpublished results).
|
|
These results indicate that uPA:PAI-1 specifically promoted partial
lysosomal targeting of uPAR in nonpolarized cells. To quantitate this
phenomenon we used two independent cryolabeling protocols. In the
first, nonpolarized MDCK cells endocytosed prebound DFP-uPA or
uPA:PAI-1 for 150 min, which roughly corresponds to cell surface
clearance of uPA:PAI-1 as assessed by radioligand (Figure 2) and
immunofluorescence experiments. Distribution of uPAR on the cell
surface, in endosomes, and in lysosomes was then quantitated by double
labeling with uPAR and MPR or LAMP-1 antibodies, respectively (Table
2). In nonpolarized MDCK cells, surface
labeling of uPAR was mainly on the dorsal cell surface and was evenly
distributed with no indication of clustering (Figure 9C). In cells
preincubated with either DFP-uPA or uPA:PAI-1, intracellular uPAR
labeling was observed in multivesicular bodies, tubulovesicular
elements (Figure 9E), and vacuoles that did not colabel for either MPR or LAMP-1, and in endosomes and lysosomes where colocalization with MPR
and LAMP was evident (Figure 9, D-G). Most markedly, uPA:PAI-1
increased localization of uPAR in MPR and LAMP-1-containing compartments approximately twofold over DFP-uPA-treated cells (see
Table 2).
|
In an alternative approach, nonpolarized MDCK cells were
preloaded with 20-nm cationized gold and then chased for 3 h in
the presence of saturating concentrations of DFP-uPA or uPA:PAI-1 in
the incubation medium. Cryosections were subsequently single labeled
with anti-uPAR antibodies, and the distribution in lysosomes, operationally defined by their abundant content of cationized gold
particles and aggregates (van Deurs et al., 1995
),
endosomes, and cell surface was determined (summarized in Table
3). Again, an increase in uPAR labeling
in a subset of late and terminal compartments was seen in uPA:PAI-1-
relative to DFP-uPA-treated cells (Figure 9, H and I).
|
RAP Interferes with Intracellular Sorting of uPAR
When the fate of DFP-uPA or uPA:PAI-1 internalized during a 10-min
pulse was examined, a three- to fourfold higher fraction of DFP-uPA
could be recovered as free ligand in the medium or on the cell surface
compared with uPA:PAI-1 (Figure 10),
indicating recycling of uPAR-DFP-uPA. Conversely, degradation of
uPA:PAI-1 was threefold higher than for DFP-uPA. Because uPA:PAI-1
seemingly directed sorting to lysosomes (Figures 8 and 9) but not
endocytosis (Figures 2 and 3) of uPAR in nonpolarized cells, we
speculated that intracellular pools of RAP-binding internalization
coreceptors might be involved in this sorting. RAP included in the
incubation medium throughout the experiment caused the fraction of
degraded uPA:PAI-1 to decrease, and the fraction recycled to increase
in a dose-dependent manner (Figure 10B). This effect was apparent also
in polarized MDCK cells (Figure 10A). Degradation of DFP-uPA was
moderately decreased by RAP, but no effect on the fraction recycled was
observed.
|
| |
DISCUSSION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Clathrin-independent Internalization of uPAR
Our results demonstrate that uPAR can be internalized by
different mechanisms, including clathrin-independent endocytosis. The
most direct evidence is the continued internalization of uPA:PAI-1 in
HeLaK44A cells, in which clathrin-coated pit endocytosis is
blocked after expression of the dynamin mutant. In the case of
polarized MDCK cells this mechanism, corresponding to the low RAP
noninhibitable internalization of uPAR ligands from the apical domain
(Figure 2, A and C), is of minor importance in internalization of
uPA:PAI-1 (Figure 2B), which is rapidly endocytosed through
clathrin-coated pits, likely after association of uPAR-uPA:PAI-1 with
internalization receptors of the LDLR family (Andreasen et
al., 1994
; Conese et al., 1995
; Heegaard et
al., 1995
). However, it could be selectively up-regulated by
activators of adenylate cyclase and protein kinase C, which have been
demonstrated to selectively up-regulate apical clathrin-independent
internalization in MDCK cells (Eker et al., 1994
; Holm et al., 1995
). In contrast, the RAP
noninhibitable internalization in nonpolarized MDCK
cells was approximately twofold higher, and even
uPA:PAI-1 was preferentially endocytosed through this pathway.
Internalization of uPAR was significantly higher in nonpolarized MDCK
cells than reported for most GPI proteins (Lemansky et al.,
1990
; Lisanti et al., 1990
; Keller et al., 1992
; Cerneus et al., 1993
) but comparable to endocytosis of
5'-nucleotidase (van den Bosch et al., 1988
).
Internalization of prebound [125I]uPA:PAI-1 was not
inhibited by an excess of unlabeled ligand, and together with the high
internal steady-state fraction of DFP-uPA, the results indicate that
uPAR to a large degree was endocytosed by a ligand-independent
mechanism. Notably, uPA:PAI-1 endocytosis could not be accounted for by
bulk membrane internalization, because it was higher than ricin uptake,
indicating that endocytosis was facilitated. It is possible that MPR,
which directly binds uPAR independently of uPA or uPA:PAI-1 occupancy
(Nykjær et al., 1998
), contributes to this uptake by
mediating ligand-independent endocytosis of uPAR through
clathrin-coated pits, but for reasons mentioned below we favor a
predominant clathrin-independent mechanism of uPAR internalization also
in nonpolarized cells.
Our data do not allow us to conclude whether the mechanisms
responsible for the clathrin-independent endocytosis in nonpolarized cells or from the apical domain of polarized cells, respectively, are
identical. However, several factors could contribute to a greater
significance of a clathrin-independent internalization mechanism in
nonpolarized cells. First, clathrin-independent endocytosis relative to
clathrin-dependent endocytosis is more significant on the basolateral
domain of MDCK cells (Eker et al., 1994
), which the plasma
membrane of nonpolarized cells may share properties with. Second,
signal-mediated concentration and internalization of transmembrane
receptors and their ligands through clathrin-coated pits is decreased
approximately 50% in low-density relative to high-density cell
cultures (Hansen et al., 1992
), and a similar decrease in
the internalization index of RAP was noted in nonpolarized MDCK cells.
Third, the higher detergent insolubility of uPAR in nonpolarized cells
could possibly reflect localization in glycolipid- and cholesterol-rich
membrane microdomains, also termed rafts (Simons and Ikonen, 1997
),
which are known to include GPI-anchored proteins. Quantitation of the
surface distribution of uPAR in nonpolarized cells showed that uPAR
regardless of uPA:PAI-1 occupancy was largely excluded from
clathrin-coated pits, as observed for other raft-associated proteins
(Bretscher et al., 1980
; Roth et al., 1986
;
Keller et al., 1992
; Scheiffele et al., 1997
).
Only ~1% of uPAR labeling was present within coated pits, which
themselves constituted 1.3% of the total surface area, giving a less
than onefold concentration. For comparison the transferrin receptor is
concentrated 5- to 10-fold in coated pits (Hansen et al.,
1992
). Most likely, raft association restricts uPAR-uPA:PAI-1
interaction with internalization coreceptors, further diminishing the
overall contribution of the clathrin-coated pit pathway in uPAR
endocytosis. Alternatively, presence of uPAR in detergent-resistant
membrane domains might, per se, predispose to selective internalization through a clathrin-independent pathway in nonpolarized MDCK cells. Interestingly, the internalized fraction of uPAR was mainly detergent insoluble. Our results are in contrast with reported data on alkaline phosphatase and folate receptor, which are almost completely detergent soluble in intracellular locations (Cerneus et al., 1993
;
Rijnboutt et al., 1996
).
It has been proposed that caveolae are functionally and morphologically
specialized rafts (Parton and Simons, 1995
), which are able to
mediate the selective internalization of some GPI-anchored proteins and
glycolipids (Rothberg et al., 1990
; Keller et
al., 1992
; Parton, 1994
; Parton et al., 1994
). However,
although uPAR in nonpolarized MDCK cells readily clustered in caveolae
in the presence of cross-linking antibodies, as reported for other
GPI-anchored proteins (Mayor et al., 1993
; Parton et
al., 1994
), postfixation labeling showed only rare localization of
uPAR in invaginated caveolae. In addition, clathrin-independent uptake
in HeLaK44A cells or from the apical domain of MDCK cells
was almost certainly not related to caveolae because of the very low
level of caveolin and caveolae in HeLaK44A cells (our
unpublished observations) and the basolateral expression of caveolae in
polarized MDCK cells (Vogel et al., 1998
).
Postendocytic Sorting of uPAR
In fibroblasts, uPAR has been shown to recycle to the cell
surface (Nykjær et al., 1997
), and slow recycling has also
been established for other GPI proteins (van den Bosch et
al., 1988
; Keller et al., 1992
; Shyng et
al., 1993
). In polarized MDCK cells, uPAR was recycled with high
efficiency. Even after extended incubation periods in the presence of
uPA:PAI-1, very little or no lysosomal accumulation of uPAR was
revealed by morphological techniques. In contrast, by cryoimmunogold
labeling protocols we estimate that 5-10% of internalized uPAR is
sorted to lysosomes in nonpolarized MDCK cells per round of
endocytosis, significantly decreasing the half-life of uPAR. It has
been suggested that GPI-anchored proteins are recycled with slower
kinetics than transmembrane receptors and bulk membrane because the GPI
anchor confers cholesterol-dependent retention in early endosomes
(Maxfield and Mayor, 1997
). Also, sphingomyelin, which is enriched in
detergent-insoluble glycolipid-rich membrane microdomains (Brown and
Rose, 1992
), is sorted to lysosomes in dedifferentiated HT29 epithelial
cells but trafficks identically with transferrin receptor in
differentiated clones (Kok et al., 1991
). These results
indicate that lipid sorting can occur in the endocytic pathway and,
taken together with the detergent insolubility of endocytosed uPAR,
suggest that lysosomal targeting of uPAR in nonpolarized MDCK cells
could be a consequence of raft-mediated retention of uPAR in maturing endosomes.
Surprisingly, however, although uPAR internalization in
nonpolarized cells was largely constitu-tive, lysosomal sorting of uPAR
required uPA:PAI-1 and was partially interfered with by RAP, indicating
that postendocytic sorting of uPAR was a ligand-regulated event. This
is not compatible with a raft-based sorting mechanism, because sorting
would be a function of lipid anchoring and would therefore be expected
to cause lysosomal targeting of uPAR, irrespective of the nature of the
ligand. Megalin and LRP are reycling receptors such as the LDLR itself,
but at ultrastructural resolution both receptors have been identified
in late endosomes and/or lysosomes (Bu et al., 1994
;
Christensen et al., 1995
; Czekay et al., 1997
). Interestingly, the endocytic itinerary of megalin is also regulated in
a ligand-dependent manner (Czekay et al., 1997
). Although
megalin-lipoprotein lipase complexes dissociated in early endosomes,
and megalin was recycled from this compartment, megalin-RAP travelled
to late endosomes before dissociation and recycling of megalin. We
therefore propose that uPA:PAI-1 may cause a similar trafficking of
RAP-binding internalization receptors in nonpolarized MDCK cells and as
a consequence mediate a translocation of uPAR to later endocytic compartments. Such a mechanism does not exclude incorporation of uPAR
into detergent-resistant membrane domains in late endocytic compartments, perhaps assisted by the low pH in these compartments. It
is known that the scrapie isoform of the GPI-anchored prion protein,
which is localized mainly in late endosomes and lysosomes, is present
in detergent-insoluble membrane domains (Vey et al., 1996
),
and recently it was shown that the internal membranes of late endosomes
contain large amounts of a unique lipid that is involved in sorting of
MPR to the TGN (Kobayashi et al., 1998
).
| |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
We thank Ulla Hjortenberg, Mette Ohlsen, Keld Ottesen, and Kirsten Pedersen for expert technical assistance and Fritz von Bülow for help with the confocal and electron microscopes. Anders Nykjær is greatly acknowledged for discussions and help in synthesis of uPA:PAI-1 complexes, Erik Ilsø Christensen for constructive criticism of the manuscript, and Ulla Vogel for help in plasmid construction and transfection. Pernille Vejbjerg is thanked for encouragement and helpful suggestions. This work was supported by the Danish Cancer Society, the Danish Medical Research Council, the Novo Nordisk Foundation, the Human Frontier Science Program (grant RG404/96 M) and a NATO Collaborative Research grant (CRG 900517) (to B.v.D. and K.S.).
| |
FOOTNOTES |
|---|
Corresponding author. E-mail address:
f.vilhardt{at}mai.ku.dk.
| |
ABBREVIATIONS |
|---|
Abbreviations used: DFP, diisopropyl fluorophosphate; DMEM, Dulbecco's modified Eagles's medium; DSS, disuccinimidyl suberate; GPI, glycosylphosphatidyl-inositol; LDLR, low-density lipoprotein receptor; LRP, low-density lipoprotein receptor-related protein; MDCK, Madin-Darby canine kidney; MPR, mannose 6-phosphate receptor; PAI, plasminogen activator inhibitor; PBS-CM, PBS with calcium and magnesium; RAP, receptor-associated protein; TCA, trichloroacetic acid; TX-100, Triton X-100; uPA, urokinase plasminogen activator; uPAR, urokinase plasminogen activator receptor.
| |
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