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Vol. 13, Issue 3, 767-781, March 2002

and
*Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Department of Pathology, Harvard
Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115; and
Children's Hospital and Department of Pediatrics,
Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115
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ABSTRACT |
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Here we demonstrate that multiple tetraspanin (transmembrane 4 superfamily) proteins are palmitoylated, in either the Golgi or a
post-Golgi compartment. Using CD151 as a model tetraspanin, we
identified and mutated intracellular N-terminal and C-terminal cysteine
palmitoylation sites. Simultaneous mutations of C11, C15, C242, and
C243 (each to serine) eliminated >90% of CD151 palmitoylation.
Notably, palmitoylation had minimal influence on the density of
tetraspanin protein complexes, did not promote tetraspanin localization
into detergent-resistant microdomains, and was not required for
CD151-
3
1 integrin association. However, the CD151 tetra
mutant showed markedly diminished associations with other cell surface
proteins, including other transmembrane 4 superfamily proteins (CD9,
CD63). Thus, palmitoylation may be critical for assembly of the large
network of cell surface tetraspanin-protein interactions, sometimes
called the "tetraspanin web." Also, compared with wild-type CD151,
the tetra mutant was much more diffusely distributed and showed
markedly diminished stability during biosynthesis. Finally, expression
of the tetra-CD151 mutant profoundly altered
3
integrin-deficient kidney epithelial cells, such that they converted from a dispersed, elongated morphology to an epithelium-like cobblestone clustering. These results point to novel biochemical and
biological functions for tetraspanin palmitoylation.
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INTRODUCTION |
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There are at least 21 distinct mammalian
tetraspanins, also known as transmembrane 4 superfamily proteins
(Maecker et al., 1997
; Todd et al., 1998
; Serru
et al., 2000
). Various members of this widely expressed
family have been implicated in infectious disease pathologies (Nakamura
et al., 1995
; Pileri et al., 1998
), neural
functions (Kopczynski et al., 1996
; Banerjee et
al., 1997
; Dijkstra et al., 2000
; Stipp and Hemler,
2000
; Zemni et al., 2000
), cell fusion events (sperm-egg,
osteoclast, myoblast, virus; Imai and Yoshie, 1993
; Tachibana and
Hemler, 1999
; Tanio et al., 1999
; Le Naour et
al., 2000
; Miyado et al., 2000
; Schmid et
al., 2000
), and signaling functions (Berditchevski and Odintsova,
1999
; Odintsova et al., 2000
; Hemler et al.,
1996
). Also, they participate in cell migration (Hemler et
al., 1996
; Maecker et al., 1997
) and show both positive
(Claas et al., 1998
; Testa et al., 1999
) and negative (Dong et al., 1995
; Radford et al.,
1995
; Miyake et al., 2000
) associations with tumor cell
metastasis. Tetraspanin proteins appear not only on the plasma membrane
but also within intracellular vesicles such as lysosomes, endosomes,
and various secretory granules (Hemler et al., 1996
; Maecker
et al., 1997
; Berditchevski and Odintsova, 1999
).
Tetraspanins engage in abundant lateral associations with each other
and with many other types of proteins (Wright and Tomlinson, 1994
;
Hemler et al., 1996
; Maecker et al., 1997
). Within this extensive network, it has been challenging to sort out
those tetraspanin interactions of primary importance. Although some
tetraspanin proteins at least partially codistribute with lipid rafts
(Yashiro-Ohtani et al., 2000
; Claas et al.,
2001
), many associations with other proteins occur independently of
lipid rafts. Use of detergents, such as digitonin (Serru et
al., 1999
) and Brij-96/97 (Imai et al., 1995
;
Berditchevski et al., 1996
), has allowed isolation of
tetraspanin complexes with a size, density, and specificity consistent
with their being discrete, soluble, biochemical entities (Charrin
et al., 2001
; Claas et al., 2001
; Stipp et
al., 2001b
). Compared with other tetraspanin interactions, CD151 associations with
3
1, and to a lesser extent with
6
integrins, are remarkably tight, direct, and stoichiometric
(Yauch et al., 1998
; Serru et al., 1999
; Sterk
et al., 2000
; Yauch et al., 2000
). Also, CD151
markedly influences both
3
1-dependent and
6
1-dependent cell
morphology (Stipp and Hemler, 2000
; Zhang et al., 2002
).
Tetraspanins contain four transmembrane domains, short N- and
C-terminal tails, a short inner loop, and small and large outer loops
(Wright and Tomlinson, 1994
; Maecker et al., 1997
). The structure of a prototype large outer loop (from CD81) has been solved,
revealing five helices, linked by intervening loops and stabilized by
two disulfide bonds (Kitadokoro et al., 2001
). Thus far,
interactions with other proteins have been largely mapped to the large
outer loop of tetraspanins (Matsumoto et al., 1993
; Pileri
et al., 1998
; Nakamura et al., 2000
). For
example, tight association of
3
1 with CD151 depends of regions
within the CD151 large outer loop (Yauch et al., 2000
;
Berditchevski et al., 2001
). Tetraspanin domains responsible
for weaker interactions with other proteins (i.e., those seen in
Brij-96 but not in Triton X-100) have not yet been mapped.
Here we focus on tetraspanin palmitoylation. Acylation of CD9 has been
reported previously (Seehafer et al., 1990
). However, sites
for tetraspanin acylation have not been identified, and the functional
relevance has not been determined. The preferred substrate for protein
S-acylation is palmitoyl CoA (Resh, 1999
). For many
proteins, palmitoylation contributes to membrane targeting and to
localization within organized membrane microdomains (e.g., lipid rafts;
Dunphy and Linder, 1998
; Resh, 1999
). However, for proteins containing
multiple transmembrane domains, several diverse functional effects of
palmitoylation are suggested, but consistent trends have not emerged
(Jin et al., 1999
).
We show here that multiple tetraspanin proteins are palmitoylated by a mechanism that requires a functioning Golgi apparatus. Also, we identified and mutated key palmitoylation sites in the CD151 molecule. Notably, loss of these sites had minimal effect on targeting to the cell surface plasma membrane and localization into stabilized membrane microdomains. However, loss of palmitoylation did markedly influence associations with other proteins, subcellular distribution, protein stability during biosynthesis, and cell morphology.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Antibodies, Reagents, and Cells
Monoclonal antibodies used were anti-integrin
1,
TS2/16 (Hemler et al., 1984
); anti-integrin
2,
A2-IIE10 (Bergelson et al., 1994
); anti-integrin
3, A3-IVA5 and A3-X8 (Weitzman et al., 1993
); anti-integrin
6, A6-ELE (Lee et al., 1995
);
anti-CD9, C9-BB (Berditchevski et al., 1996
) and DU-ALL-1
(Sigma, St. Louis, MO); anti-CD63, 6H1 (Berditchevski et
al., 1995
); anti-CD81, M38 (Fukudome et al., 1992
);
anti-CD82, M104 (Fukudome et al., 1992
); anti-CD151, 5C11
(Yauch et al., 1998
); anti-A15/TALLA1, AZM30.4 (Azorsa
et al., 1999
); anti-CD71, OKT9 and HB21 (American Type
Culture Collection, Manassas, VA); and anti-CD147, 8G6 (Berditchevski
et al., 1997
). Also utilized was a rabbit polyclonal
antibody to the cytoplasmic domain of integrin
3A (Dipersio
et al., 1995
). The mAb to
-tubulin (Tub2.1) was from
Sigma, the antibody to caveolin (C13630) was from Transduction
Laboratories (Lexington, KY), and anti-fyn (FYN3) was from Santa Cruz
Biotechnology (Santa Cruz, CA). Monoclonal and polyclonal antibodies
against green fluorescent protein (GFP) were purchased from CLONTECH
(Palo Alto, CA).
L-[35S]methionine/L-[35S]cysteine
and [3H]palmitic acid were purchased from NEN
Bioscience (Boston, MA); brefeldin A, monensin, and nocodazole were
obtained from Sigma, dissolved in dimethyl sulfoxide or ethanol, and
stored at
80°C at 1-2 mg/ml. Sulfo-NHS-LC-biotin and
sulfo-NHS-SS-biotin biotin were obtained from Pierce (Rockford, IL).
All cell lines were grown in DMEM supplemented with 10% fetal calf
serum (GIBCO BRL, Rockville, MD), 10 mM HEPES, and antibiotics.
Mutagenesis and Transfection
Cysteine point mutants were generated from human CD151 cDNA by
polymerase chain reaction and subcloned into EcoRI and
SacII sites of the pEGFP-N1 vector (CLONTECH), yielding a
C-terminal GFP fusion protein. CD151 mutants were also subcloned into
Tag-3B vector via EcoRI and ApaII sites with
N-terminal myc tag (Stratagene, San Diego, CA) or into pcDNA3.1 with
N-terminal myc.His fusion (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA). For transient
transfection, 293 cells were transfected using calcium phosphate. To
establish stable cell lines, MCF-7, MDA-231, and NIH3T3 cells were
transfected using Superfectamine (QIAGEN, Valencia, CA) and selected on
1 mg/ml G418. Much of our prior work on tetraspanins and the initial studies shown here were carried out using A431 cells. However, for
technical convenience, we switched to 293 cells for transient transfections, and we utilized MCF-7 or MDA-231 cells interchangeably for stable transfections. To avoid CD151 background problems, we stably
expressed human CD151 in murine NIH3T3 cells for internalization and
recycling studies and in a murine
3 integrin null kidney epithelial cell line (Wang et al., 1999
) for morphology studies.
Radiolabeling, Surface Labeling, Immunoprecipitation, and Immunoblotting
For 3H labeling, CD151-transfected A431, MDA-231, or 293 cells (at 80-90% confluence) were washed twice in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS), serum-starved for 3-4 h, and then pulsed for 2-3 h in medium containing 0.2-0.3 mCi/ml [3H]palmitic acid plus 5.0% dialyzed fetal bovine serum. To label surface proteins with biotin, semiconfluent cells were cooled on ice, washed three times in PBS, incubated in PBS containing sulfo-NHS-LC-biotin at 0.1 or 0.5 mg/ml for 60 min at 4°C, and then washed with cold PBS containing 300 mM glycine. To determine the half-life of CD151 proteins, semiconfluent stable MDA-231 transfectants were washed twice in PBS and starved in cysteine- and methionine-free media for 1 h. Cells were then pulsed for 1 h in methionine- and cysteine-free media containing 0.5 mCi/ml [35S]methionine/cysteine and 5.0% dialyzed fetal bovine serum. Subsequently, cells were either collected (time 0 after labeling) or chased for the indicated periods of time (see Figure 10) by replacing labeling medium with chasing medium (5.0% dialyzed fetal serum and 25× excess unlabeled L-methionine). Labeled cells were lysed in RIPA buffer (25 mM Tris, 2 mM EDTA, 150 mM NaCl, 0.1% NaN3, pH 7.2, plus 1% Triton X-100, 1% deoxycholate, and 0.1% SDS) and processed for immunoprecipitation.
For immunoprecipitation, cells were lysed in RIPA or in 25 mM HEPES,
150 mM NaCl, 5 mM MgCl2, 20 µg/ml aprotinin, 10 µg/ml leupeptin, 1 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, 2 mM NaF, 10 mM sodium pyrophosphate, and 10 mM
Na3VO4 buffer containing
1% detergent (Triton X-100,
3-[{cholamidopropyl}dimethylammonio]-1-propanesulfonic acid,
Brij-99, or Brij-96). After 1 h at 4°C, insoluble material was
removed by centrifugation at 16,000 × g (25 min,
4°C) and supernatants were cleared with protein A- or G-Sepharose
(Roche Molecular Biochemicals, Indianapolis, IN). Specific antibodies were then incubated for 1 h at 4°C, followed by overnight
incubation with protein A- or G-Sepharose (Roche Molecular
Biochemicals). Immune complexes were collected by
centrifugation, washed three to five times in lysis buffer, and then
analyzed by SDS-PAGE (usually 10 or 12% acrylamide) under nonreducing
conditions. Gels were either treated with fluorographic reagents,
dried, and exposed to BioMax MR film (Kodak, Rochester, NY) for 14-21
d at
80°C or transferred onto polyvinylidene difluoride (PVDF)
membrane and exposed to BioMax MS film using BioMax TRANSCREEN LE
Intensifying Screen (Kodak) for 4-14 d at
80°C.
For immunoblotting, proteins resolved by SDS-PAGE were
transferred to a nitrocellulose membrane and then incubated with
primary antibodies and horseradish peroxidase-conjugated secondary
antibody (Sigma) as described by Yauch et al. (2000)
with
Extravidin (Sigma) coupled to horseradish peroxidase to detect
biotinylated proteins. Blots were visualized by chemiluminescence.
Sucrose Gradients, Internalization, and Recycling
Sucrose gradient analyses were carried out essentially as
described by Claas et al. (2001)
. In brief, cell lysates
were sheared through hypodermic needles (5 × 16G11/2, 10 × 26G1/2). A total of 1 ml of lysate (derived from 2 × 107 cells) was then mixed with an equal volume of
90% sucrose and overlaid with 2 ml of 35% sucrose and 1 ml of 5%
sucrose (prepared in 2-[N-morpholino]ethanesulfonic acid
buffer without detergent). Samples were subsequently centrifuged at
200,000 × g for 16-18 h at 4°C in an SW55 rotor
(Beckman, Palo Alto, CA), and fractions of 400 µl each were collected
from the top of the gradient. All lysis and gradient procedures were
carried out at 4°C.
Internalization and recycling of surface CD151 proteins were assessed
as described by Fabbri et al. (1999)
. In brief,
semiconfluent NIH 3T3 cells stably transfected with myc-tagged CD151
were washed twice in PBS, cooled on ice, and labeled with 0.5 mg/ml
sulfo-NHS-SS-biotin for 1 h at 4°C. Labeled cells were then
washed three times in ice-cold serum-free DMEM and incubated at 37°C
in serum-free DMEM for at the indicated periods of
internalization time. Cells were then cooled on ice, washed, and
treated with reducing solution containing 42 mM glutathione, 75 mM
NaCl, 1 mM EDTA, 1% bovine serum albumin, and 75 mM NaOH. Treated
cells were subsequently washed and lysed in RIPA.
For analysis of recycling, duplicate cell samples were
sulfo-NHS-SS-biotin labeled and subjected to internalization for 1 h (as described above). After treatment with reducing solution, cells
were further incubated at 37°C for 30 min to allow recycling to the
surface. Samples were then treated with or without reducing solution
before being lysed in RIPA buffer. Densitometric assessment of
-tubulin was used for normalizing the loading of samples. All
densitometry was carried out using an Alpha Imager 2000 (Alpha Innotech, San Leandro, CA). Results shown in Figures 1-12 were
highly reproducible in multiple experiments.
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RESULTS |
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Palmitoylation of Tetraspanins and Associated Proteins
To assess palmitoylation of tetraspanin proteins, we labeled A431
cells or transiently transfected 293 cells with
[3H]palmitate for 2-3 h and then prepared
lysates using stringent detergent conditions (1% Triton X-100, 1.0%
deoxycholate, 0.1% SDS). On immunoprecipitation, the tetraspanin
proteins CD9, CD82, and CD81 showed strong 3H
labeling, CD151 and A15 showed moderate labeling, and CD63 showed a
lower level of labeling (Figure 1). In
control experiments, known palmitoylated proteins (caveolin and fyn)
were clearly labeled, whereas a cell surface protein lacking
palmitoylation sites (CD147) was not labeled (Figure 1). As determined
by immunoblotting and flow cytometry, all proteins
analyzed are well expressed in either A431 cells or 293 cell
transfectants (Yang, Claas, Kraeft, Chen, Wang, Kreidberg, and Hemler,
unpublished results). High molecular weight proteins appearing in CD151
and caveolin lanes are likely because of protein multimerization.
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As seen in less stringent lysis conditions (1% Brij-96), palmitoylated
tetraspanin proteins associated with other palmitoylated proteins. For
example, 3H-labeled CD9 (Figure
2, lane d) was coprecipitated with
labeled proteins resembling CD151 and CD82 (Figure 2, lanes e and f), whereas unknown labeled proteins of ~50 and 60 kDa were also
associated with CD9 (Figure 2, lane d). CD63 (Figure 2, lanes g and n)
showed no obvious associations with other labeled proteins. Also,
immunoprecipitation of
3 integrin yielded labeled proteins
resembling CD9 and CD151, as well as unknown proteins of ~50 and 60 kDa (Figure 2, lane b). In contrast, immunoprecipitation of
6
integrin yielded only labeled CD151 (Figure 2, lane c). In a
control experiment,
2 integrin showed no association with
labeled proteins (Figure 2, lanes a and h), consistent with its failure
to associate with tetraspanins under these conditions (Berditchevski
et al., 1996
; Yauch et al., 1998
). From Triton
X-100 lysates, labeled CD9, CD151, CD82, and CD63 were isolated in the
absence of labeled associated proteins (Figure 2, lanes k-m). The
labeled protein of ~50 kDa in the CD151 lane (Figure 2, lane l) is
likely to be a CD151 dimer. Because CD151 associates tightly with
3
1 (Yauch et al., 1998
), immunoprecipitation of
3
integrin yielded labeled CD151, even under Triton X-100
conditions (Figure 2, lane I).
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Palmitoylation Is Inhibited by Brefeldin A
On treatment of A431 cells with the Golgi-disrupting agent
brefeldin A (Dinter and Berger, 1998
), palmitoylation of both CD9 and
CD151 was substantially inhibited, as seen by diminished
3H labeling (Figure
3, top). In contrast, treatment with
nocodazole or monensin had little effect on palmitoylation of these
proteins. Levels of CD9 protein (Figure 3, bottom left) were not
altered by treatment with brefeldin A, nocodazole, or monensin.
Immunoprecipitation of CD151 revealed not only diminished CD151
labeling but also a decrease in associated labeled CD9 (Figure 3, top
right). In addition, brefeldin A treatment caused a marked decrease in
the amount of CD151-associated CD9 protein (Figure 3, middle right). In
a control experiment, levels of tightly associated
3
integrin were not decreased in CD151 immunoprecipitates.
Together these experiments indicate that tetraspanin palmitoylation
requires trafficking through Golgi but not microtubule- or
endosome-dependent trafficking. Also, the decrease in CD151-CD9
association raises the possibility that tetraspanin palmitoylation
could be required for tetraspanin-tetraspanin association (see below).
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Removal of Palmitoylation by Site-directed Mutagenesis
To gain more insight into the role of tetraspanin palmitoylation,
we identified and mutated palmitoylation sites, using CD151 as a
prototype tetraspanin protein. For transmembrane proteins, palmitoylation typically occurs on intracellular cysteine residues, proximal to transmembrane domains (Resh, 1999
). Indeed, CD151 contains
at least four cysteine residues (C11, C15, C241, C242) proximal to
either TM1 or TM4 (Figure 4A). CD151
mutants were fused with a C-terminal GFP and transiently transfected
into 293 cells. As indicated (Figure 4B), a C11/15S double mutation
eliminated ~55% of [3H]palmitate labeling,
whereas C11S and C15S single mutations eliminated ~15 and 40%,
respectively. Another double mutation (C242/243S) eliminated ~30% of
the labeling. In a separate experiment, the C11/15S double mutation
again eliminated nearly 50% of the labeling, whereas a C11/15/242/243S
tetra mutant lost >90% of the [3H]palmitate
labeling (Figure 4C). Within stable MDA-231 cell transfectants, palmitoylation was again >90% diminished in the tetra-CD151 mutant compared with wild-type CD151 (Yang, Claas, Kraeft, Chen, Wang, Kreidberg, and Hemler, unpublished results). Residual
3H labeling could be due to additional
palmitoylation sites in CD151, such as C79 and C80 near the C-terminal
end of TM2 (Figure 4A). However, mutations of these cysteine residues
resulted in loss of CD151 expression, thus preventing evaluation of
palmitoylation. In conclusion, the majority of CD151 palmitoylation is
dependent on cysteine residues 11, 15, 241, and 242.
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Initial Characterization of Palmitoylation-deficient CD151 Mutant
Many properties of the tetra-CD151 mutant were either unaltered or
minimally altered. As described elsewhere, tetraspanin protein
complexes may have a lower density than the majority of other
transmembrane proteins (Claas et al., 2001
; Stipp et
al., 2001b
). Indeed, we have utilized a sucrose density
gradient (Figure 5) to confirm that
wild-type CD151 has a lower density than typical transmembrane
proteins, here represented by the transferrin receptor (CD71).
Importantly, the density of the tetra-CD151 mutant was not markedly
altered compared with wild-type CD151. Both peaks were centered in
fractions 8 and 9, although the mutant did show a slightly broader peak
distribution (fractions 7-11). As shown in other experiments, the
tetra-CD151 mutant retained distinct epitopes recognized by mAb 5C11,
1A5, and TS151r (Yang, Claas, Kraeft, Chen, Wang, Kreidberg, and
Hemler, unpublished results, and see below). In addition, the relative
size of tetra-CD151-GFP was unaltered compared with wild-type CD151-GFP
(Figures 4, B and C, and 6). Thus, the tetra mutant appears to remain
structurally sound, despite mutation of cysteine residues 11, 15, 241 and 242.
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Because acylation often renders proteins more resistant to detergent
extraction (Dinter and Berger, 1998
; Resh, 1999
), we hypothesized that
wild-type CD151 might be more difficult to extract than tetra-CD151.
However for wild-type and tetra CD151, initial detergent extraction
experiments showed essentially identical high yields from transfected
MDA-231 cells upon lysis using 1% Triton X-100,
3-[{cholamidopropyl}dimethylammonio]-1-propanesulfonic acid, or
Brij-96 for at least 30 min (Yang, Claas, Kraeft, Chen, Wang,
Kreidberg, and Hemler, unpublished results). When MDA-231 cells were
rocked gently in 1% Brij-96 for short intervals (5-10 min),
surprising differences in extractability emerged. After 5 min, nearly
50% of wild-type CD151 was extracted (Figure
6A, lanes a and b), whereas the majority
of the tetra mutant remained insoluble rather than becoming more
soluble (Figure 6A, lanes c and d). Differences were less obvious after
10 min, but again, wild-type CD151 showed more solubility (lane g > h) compared with the tetra mutant (lane i < j). Wild-type
CD151-GFP and endogenous CD151 in MDA-231 cells were very similar in
terms of showing 1% Brij-96 detergent extractability (Figure 6B, lanes
a-d), indicating that the GFP tag itself is not affecting the results.
More importantly, the tetra-CD151 mutant was again more resistant to
1% Brij-96 extraction for 10 min (Figure 6B, lanes e and f). For
wild-type CD151 (either endogenous or GFP tagged) in 5- to 10-min
extraction experiments, the mean ratio of soluble to insoluble was
1.6 ± 0.4 (N = 4). In contrast, for tetra-CD151 that ratio
was 0.9 ± 0.3 (N = 3), as determined using densitometry.
Another tetraspanin protein (CD9) was equally soluble in 1% Brij-96 in
all cases (Figure 6A, bottom), whereas wild-type and mutant CD151 were
equally insoluble in 1% Brij-99 (Yang, Claas, Kraeft, Chen, Wang,
Kreidberg, and Hemler, unpublished results). The shift toward
diminished detergent extractability seen for tetra-CD151 suggests that
palmitoylation of this protein is not contributing to formation of
stable, detergent-resistant, CD151-lipid microdomains.
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CD151 Association with Other Proteins
A hallmark of tetraspanins is their ability to form complexes with
several other transmembrane proteins (Wright and Tomlinson, 1994
;
Hemler et al., 1996
; Maecker et al., 1997
). For
example, in 1% Brij-96 lysate from MDA-431 cells, wild-type CD151
associated with cell surface biotin-labeled
3
1 and
6
4
integrins, as well as with unknown proteins of ~95, 90, 75, and 68 kDa (Figure 7A, lane b). In
contrast, tetra-CD151 showed markedly diminished association with the
unknown proteins of ~95, 90, and 75 kDa, even though tetra-CD151-GFP
itself was amply present on the cell surface (Figure 7A, lane c).
Extended exposure of the lower portion of Figure 7A revealed that
association with surface-labeled CD9 was also markedly diminished for
tetra-CD151 (compare lanes b* and c*). In a separate experiment, the
tetra-CD151 mutant showed markedly diminished levels of total
associated CD9 (Figure 7B, lane c) and CD63 (Figure 7B, lane h). In
control experiments, patterns of proteins associated with CD81 (and
levels of CD81 itself) were essentially identical whether derived
from CD151 wild type or tetra transfectants (Figure 7, A, lanes d, e,
d*, and e*, and B, lanes d and e).
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Because CD151 extracellular domains interact with
3 and
6
integrins (Yauch et al., 2000
; Yang, Claas, Kraeft,
Chen, Wang, Kreidberg, and Hemler, unpublished results), we predicted
that loss of palmitoylation should not abolish these interactions. Indeed, the CD151-tetra mutant retained abundant association with surface-labeled
3
1 integrin in MDA-231 cell Brij-96
lysates (Figure 7A, lanes b and c). Analysis of
35S-labeled
3 coprecipitated with CD151 in
RIPA detergent conditions again revealed minimal, if any, loss of
association for the tetra-CD151 mutant (Figure 7C, top). Association
with
6
4 was also retained, although it was ~30% diminished,
based on quantitation of
4 levels (Figure 7A, lanes b and c). We
conclude that mutation of CD151 palmitoylation sites has little effect
on strong CD151 associations with
3, only a marginal effect on the
slightly weaker
6 integrin interaction (seen in Triton
X-100), but a marked effect on associations with several other proteins.
Tetra-CD151 Mutant Shows Altered Cellular Distribution
As seen by confocal microscopy, a substantial portion of wild-type
CD151-GFP in MCF-7 cells appeared in perinuclear aggregates (Figure
8, D-F). In contrast, the tetra-CD151
mutant appeared to be more homogeneously dispersed throughout MCF-7
cells (Figure 8, G-I). A C15S-CD151-GFP single mutant showed a
partially dispersed punctate distribution in the surface of MCF-7 cells
(Figure 8B), whereas a C242/243S double mutant (Figure 8C) showed
little change in CD151 distribution compared with wild type (Figure 8,
D-F). In cells transfected with vector alone, GFP fluorescence was
more homogenously distributed, in a pattern of small dots, typical of
intracellular protein distribution. Consistent results were obtained
for all focal planes examined. Similar subcellular localization differences were observed when CD151-GFPs were expressed in MDA-231 cells (Yang, Claas, Kraeft, Chen, Wang, Kreidberg, and Hemler, unpublished results). Together, these data suggest that palmitoylation of CD151, especially at the N terminus, markedly influences
intracellular distribution. The presence of a GFP tag on the carboxyl
termini of our CD151 proteins could itself alter CD151 distribution.
However, the perinuclear staining pattern seen here for wild-type
CD151-GFP strongly resembles the staining pattern seen elsewhere for
endogenous CD151 in permeabilized endothelial cells (Sincock et
al., 1999
). Thus, CD151 distribution may not be unduly influenced
by the presence of a GFP tag.
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Additional Consequences Tetra-CD151 Mutation
We hypothesized that altered protein complex formation (Figure 7)
and altered subcellular localization (Figure 8) might be associated
with changes in internalization or recycling of cell surface CD151.
Hence, we labeled CD151-transfected NIH3T3 cells with sulfo-NHS-SS
biotin (to create a reducible biotin-cell linkage) and determined the
time course for accumulation of internalized CD151 (defined as CD151
becoming inaccessible to biotin release upon reduction). As indicated,
both wild-type CD151 (Figure 9A, lanes
c-f, top) and tetra-CD151 (lanes g-j) accumulated inside of cells,
with peak levels observed at ~30 min. We saw no evidence that
internalization of tetra-CD151 was impaired. Similar amounts of
biotin-labeled wild-type and tetra-CD151 were present at the start of
the experiment (Figure 9A, lanes a and b). Immunoblots of
tubulin indicate that similar amounts of lysate were sampled at each
time point.
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Next, we considered that, if internalization was not deficient, perhaps
recycling back to the cell surface might be accelerated for
tetra-CD151. Hence, intracellular pools of labeled CD151 were allowed
to accumulate for 60 min, and cell surface biotin was removed by
treatment with reducing agent. Another 30-min incubation was then
carried out, and the total labeled CD151 remaining was determined
(Figure 9B, lanes l and o). In addition, levels of internal, labeled
CD151 that had not recycled (not accessible to biotin removal) were
also determined (Figure 9B, lanes m and p). From densitometry
measurements, we estimate that wild-type CD151 underwent 78% recycling
([1
m/l] × 100), whereas tetra-CD151 showed 69% recycling
([1
p/o] × 100). Also, from diminution of the total biotin
signal >30 min (during the recycling experiment), we estimate that
wild-type CD151 was 45% degraded ([1
l/k] × 100), whereas
tetra-CD151 was 43% degraded ([1
o/n] × 100). In
conclusion, results from Figure 9 and from another independent experiments (Yang, Claas, Kraeft, Chen, Wang, Kreidberg, and
Hemler, unpublished results) indicate that wild-type and tetra-CD151 on the cell surface are very similar in terms of internalization, recycling, and degradation.
Finally, we considered that differences in distribution (between tetra-
and wild-type CD151) might be explained by differences in biosynthesis.
To test this, stably transfected MDA-231 cells were pulse-labeled for
30 min with, and then chased with, unlabeled methionine for varying
intervals. As indicated in Figure 10, A and B, the appearance of mature wild-type CD151 peaked at ~6 h and
then slowly disappeared, such that it was 50% gone in ~22 h. In
contrast, mature tetra-CD151 was already substantially diminished by
2 h, with a half-life of only ~4-5 h. In addition, compared with wild type CD151, tetra-CD151 showed a greater accumulation of
relatively transient immature forms at early time points (Figure 10A),
including one form (~47 kDa) not seen at all during wild-type CD151
biosynthesis. In a separate [35S] methionine
pulse-chase experiment, wild-type-CD151-GFP and endogenous CD151 showed
comparable stability in MDA-231 cells (50% gone in ~ 24 h,
Yang, Claas, Kraeft, Chen, Wang, Kreidberg, and Hemler, unpublished
results). Thus, again the GFP tag itself is not markedly altering CD151
properties. In conclusion, newly synthesized, mature CD151 is less
stable if it lacks palmitoylation sites.
|
Morphological Consequences of Altered CD151 Palmitoylation
Unfortunately, high background levels of endogenous wild-type
CD151 have prevented assessment of the broader biological effects of
expressing palmitoylation-deficient mutant CD151 in many cell types.
Because the presence of
3
1 integrin can bring more CD151 to the surface (Yauch et al., 1998
), background problems are
especially obvious in cells strongly positive for
3
1. To
circumvent this problem, wild-type and tetra-CD151 were expressed in
the B12 murine kidney epithelial cell line derived from an
3
integrin-deficient mouse (Wang et al., 1999
). The
tetra-CD151 and wild-type CD151 were expressed at comparable levels
both in terms of total expression (Figure
11A, left) and cell surface expression
(Figure 11A, right). As indicated in Figure 11B, subconfluent B12 cells
expressing tetra-CD151 (right) looked very different from cells
containing either GFP alone (left) or wild-type CD151-GFP (middle). In
particular, the former cells displayed a characteristic epithelium-like
cobblestone pattern, whereas the latter were well dispersed and more
elongated. Similar results were obtained whether the B12 cells were
plated on tissue culture plastic for 24 h (Figure 11B) or on
laminin-5 (Yang, Claas, Kraeft, Chen, Wang, Kreidberg, and Hemler,
unpublished results). However when the cells were plated for 24 h
on fibronectin, an epithelial morphology was not observed and the
presence of tetra-CD151 had no obvious morphological consequences
(Yang, Claas, Kraeft, Chen, Wang, Kreidberg, and Hemler, unpublished
results).
|
| |
DISCUSSION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Initial Characterization of Tetraspanin Palmitoylation
Our results establish that all tetraspanin proteins tested (CD9,
CD63, CD81, CD82, CD151, A15/Talla1) are palmitoylated. Palmitoylation of CD151 utilizes intracellular membrane proximal cysteines as determined by site-directed mutagenesis. The CD151 residues most critical for palmitoylation (C15, C241, C242) are conserved in a subset
of other tetraspanin proteins (Figure
12). Two others (CD63 and A15/Talla1)
have C-terminal cysteines that align precisely with C241, C242; six of
nine other tetraspanins have an N-terminal cysteine aligning with C15
in CD151. Indeed, both CD63 and A15/Talla1 (which align best with
CD151) are palmitoylated, although others (e.g., CD9, CD82) are also
well palmitoylated. As seen previously for the palmitoylation of
membrane proximal cysteines, exact positioning relative to
transmembrane domains may not be that critical (Resh, 1999
). Although
N-terminal and C-terminal cysteines account for most of the CD151
palmitoylation, it remains possible that additional cysteines proximal
to the short intracellular loop (positions marked with asterisks in
Figure 12) could also contribute. Although we could not express
CD151-containing C79S and C80S mutations, preliminary mutagenesis
experiments revealed that cysteines proximal to transmembrane domains 2 and 3 do make a substantial contribution to CD9 palmitoylation (Yang,
Claas, Kraeft, Chen, Wang, Kreidberg, and Hemler, unpublished results).
|
Brefeldin A inhibition results argue strongly that CD151 and CD9
must traffic through the Golgi apparatus to become palmitoylated. Indeed, brefeldin A inhibition results provide ample precedent for
palmitoylation of other proteins requiring a functioning Golgi (Gonzalo
and Linder, 1998
; Parat and Fox, 2001
). Monensin, an agent that
increases the luminal pH of acidic organelles and inhibits endosomal
and lysosomal trafficking (Dinter and Berger, 1998
), failed to block
CD151 or CD9 palmitoylation. Thus, tetraspanins are likely to acquire
palmitoylation before trafficking to those organelles. Nocodazole also
failed to block palmitoylation of CD9 and CD151, indicating that
microtubule-dependent trafficking functions (Dinter and Berger, 1998
)
are not needed for tetraspanin palmitoylation.
For several reasons, [3H]palmitate labeling is
likely to occur via S-acylation rather than
N-acylation. First, the majority of labeling is lost upon
mutation of cysteine residues. Second, palmitate is not utilized by the
enzymes responsible for N-acylation (Resh, 1999
). Third,
whereas N-acylation occurs cotranslationally (Resh, 1999
),
labeling seen here is posttranslational (e.g., as evidenced by
brefeldin A inhibition).
Despite the mutation of four cysteines to serine, CD151 remained
structurally sound by several criteria. The CD151-tetra mutant retained
at least three distinct cell surface epitopes and was unaltered with
respect to size, density, internalization, or recycling. Also, the very
robust association of CD151 with
3
1 integrin (Yauch
et al., 1998
) was retained. For that strong interaction, previously mapped to the large extracellular loop of CD151 (Yauch et al., 2000
), additional contributions due to
palmitoylation are apparently not necessary. Interaction of CD151 with
6
4 integrin was also largely maintained for the
CD151-tetra mutant. However, with
6 integrins interacting a
bit more weakly than
3
1 with CD151 (Yauch et al.,
1998
, 2000
), a contributory role for palmitoylation begins to become evident.
Functional Consequences of CD151 Palmitoylation
Whereas CD151 interactions with
3 and
6
integrins are retained in detergents such as Triton-X100 and
digitonin, interactions with other proteins are lost unless a milder
detergent such as Brij-96 is utilized (Yauch et al., 1998
;
Serru et al., 1999
). It is these weaker interactions with
other tetraspanins (CD9, CD63), and with unknown proteins (95, 90, and
75 kDa), that are markedly diminished when CD151 palmitoylation sites
are mutated. Thus, we suggest that tetraspanin palmitoylation may
contribute to stabilization of the large assembly of tetraspanin
interactions sometimes called the "tetraspanin web" (Imai and
Yoshie, 1993
; Rubinstein et al., 1996
; Hammond et
al., 1998
; Hemler, 1998
). Conceivably, because we are only
ablating palmitoylation of CD151, but not palmitoylation of associated
tetraspanins or other proteins, we could be underestimating the
contribution of palmitoylation to tetraspanin complex formation. Future
studies will be needed to determine whether palmitoylation of multiple
components within tetraspanin complexes will have effects that are
additive or possibly even synergistic. Of particular interest will be
phosphatidylinositide 4-kinase, a palmitoylated enzyme (Barylko
et al., 2001
) that associates strongly with specific
tetraspanins (Yauch and Hemler, 2000
).
Mutation of cysteines to serines could have effects that extend beyond loss of palmitoylation. Thus, it is helpful to have confirmatory results from at least one experiment that does not involve mutagenesis. In this regard, treatment of A431 cells with brefeldin A caused simultaneous decreases in palmitoylation of endogenous CD151, CD9, and CD151-CD9 association. This result is consistent with the mutagenesis results and suggests that impaired protein association properties of CD151 mutants are indeed mostly due to removal of palmitoylation.
One consequence of altered CD151 connection to the tetraspan web may be
an altered subcellular distribution. Localization into endosomal and
lysosomal type vesicles has been previously demonstrated for CD151 and
other tetraspanins (Metzelaar et al., 1991
; Escola et
al., 1998
; Berditchevski and Odintsova, 1999
; Sincock et
al., 1999
). Consistent with this, wild-type CD151 within intracellular vesicles in MCF-7 cells showed colocalization with rab 4, rab5, and rab 11 (endosomal markers) and CD63 (a lysosomal marker;
Yang, Claas, Kraeft, Chen, Wang, Kreidberg, and Hemler, unpublished
results). Our results now suggest that CD151 requires palmitoylation
for endosomal/lysosomal localization. Altered tetra-CD151 localization
could not be explained by altered CD151 internalization or altered
recycling back to the cell surface. Instead, we suggest that loss of
targeting of mutant CD151 from the Golgi to endosomal and lysosomal
compartments may be due to loss of CD151 association with other
proteins (such as CD63) that are required to actively assist in
targeting. In addition, the absence of palmitoylation (and absence of
key associated tetraspan web proteins) may make mutant CD151 more
susceptible to degradation, as it begins to travel from the Golgi to
other intracellular compartments; whereas it may escape degradation
while trafficking to the plasma membrane. This suggestion is supported
by our findings that newly synthesized, mature mutant CD151 has a
markedly decreased half-life, whereas mutant CD151 on the cell surface
does not show enhanced degradation. Notably, palmitoylation of lymphoma
proprotein convertase (van de Loo et al., 2000
) and human
A1 adenosine receptor (Gao et al., 1999
) may also prolong the half-life of those newly synthesized proteins.
CD151 palmitoylation deficiency also can have a dramatic influence on
cell morphology. Within the murine B12 kidney epithelial cell line,
mutant human CD151 caused a switch from an elongated, dispersed cell
morphology toward a cobblestone, epithelial type morphology. In
contrast, expression of wild-type human CD151 had little effect. We
suspect that tetra-CD151 is having a dominant negative effect on
endogenous murine CD151. Because no
3 is present in the B12 cells
and CD151 associates well with
6
4 integrin in epithelial
cells (Sterk et al., 2000
), mutant CD151 may be influencing
6
4 function, possibly by altering its connection to the
tetraspanin web. Our finding that tetra-CD151 altered cell morphology
when cells were plated on laminin-5 (an
6
4 ligand), but not on
fibronectin, supports a functional connection with
6
4. Notably,
6
4 is well established to play a key role in the transition
between organized epithelium and disorganized, invasive cells (Weaver
et al., 1997
; Mercurio et al., 2001
). Specific details regarding the mechanism of mutant CD151-induced morphological changes will be addressed in a separate manuscript.
CD151 Palmitoylation and Membrane Targeting
Palmitoylation promotes membrane targeting for many cytosolic
proteins but not usually for proteins with multiple transmembrane domains (Dunphy and Linder, 1998
). As we show here, palmitoylation is
likewise not needed for membrane targeting of tetraspanin protein CD151. Within cellular membranes, palmitoylation of src family kinases,
G proteins, and several other proteins facilitates localization into
detergent insoluble, low-density complexes, sometimes called lipid
rafts (Dunphy and Linder, 1998
). Tetraspanins typically have a lower
density than most other cellular proteins and also may associate with
lipid raft-like microdomains (Yashiro-Ohtani et al., 2000
;
Claas et al., 2001
). Thus, we hypothesized that tetraspanin
palmitoylation could promote assembly of low-density lipid-containing
microdomains with diminished detergent solubility. However with loss of
CD151 palmitoylation, we observed minimal changes in density.
Furthermore, the CD151-tetra mutant displayed detergent extractability
that was diminished rather than enhanced. Thus, loss of CD151-tetra
mutant associations with other proteins is clearly not due to loss of
raft-like properties. Consistent with this, we observed previously that
many tetraspanin (CD9 and CD81) associations with other proteins are
not dependent on a raft-like microenvironment (Claas et al.,
2001
; Stipp et al., 2001b
). Why is CD151 detergent
extractability diminished with loss of palmitoylation? We speculate
that, in the absence of association with other transmembrane proteins,
CD151 by default may become more associated with itself, and/or more
anchored to the cortical actin cytoskeleton (Berditchevski and
Odintsova, 1999
), and thus less extractable. In this regard, CD81
structural studies suggest that the large extracellular loop contains
inherent dimerization capability (Kitadokoro et al., 2001
).
Summary and Conclusions
Aside from early studies demonstrating that CD9 is palmitoylated
(Seehafer et al., 1990
), tetraspanin palmitoylation has not been addressed and functional consequences not established. In this
first detailed study of tetraspanin palmitoylation, we have identified
critical sites and begun to show that palmitoylation is indeed
functionally relevant. Although not very important for conferring
raft-like properties on tetraspanin complexes (e.g., lower density,
detergent insolubility), palmitoylation nonetheless may have a major
role in assembling the tetraspanin web. Furthermore, we provide the
first evidence that tetraspanin palmitoylation may selectively
influence subcellular compartmentalization, stability of newly
synthesized protein, and epithelial cell morphology. Given the
conserved nature of tetraspanin palmitoylation sites, many of the
conclusions from this study of CD151 should be applicable to other tetraspanins.
| |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
We thank Dr. Alex Kazarov (Dana-Farber Cancer Institute) for advice and assistance with cDNA constructions, and we thank Dr. Siew Heng Wong (Institute of Molecular and Cell Biology, Singapore) for advice regarding protein trafficking. This work was supported by National Institutes of Health grants CA-86712 and CA-42368 (to M.E.H.).
| |
FOOTNOTES |
|---|
Corresponding author. E-mail address:
MartinHemler{at}DFCI.Harvard.EDU.
Article published online ahead of print. Mol. Biol. Cell 10.1091/mbc.01-05-0275. Article and publication date are at www.molbiolcell.org/cgi/doi/10.1091/mbc.01-05-0275 .
| |
ABBREVIATIONS |
|---|
Abbreviations used: GFP, green fluorescent protein; PBS, phosphate-buffered saline; PVDF, polyvinylidene difluoride.
| |
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