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Vol. 19, Issue 1, 414-423, January 2008
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*The Research Institute for Children, Children's Hospital, Department of Pediatrics, New Orleans, LA 70118;
Department of Microbiology, Immunology, and Parasitology, Louisiana State University Health Science Center, New Orleans, LA 70112;
Division of Gastroenterology, Brigham and Women's Hospital and the Department of Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115;
Gastrointestinal Cell Biology, Division of Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition, Children's Hospital and the Department of Pediatrics, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115; ¶Department of Medicine and Medical Genetics, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, WA 98112; and ||Harvard Digestive Diseases Center, Boston, MA 02115
Submitted July 11, 2007;
Revised October 9, 2007;
Accepted November 2, 2007
Monitoring Editor: Keith Mostov
| ABSTRACT |
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receptor FcRn transports immunoglobulin G (IgG) so as to avoid lysosomal degradation and to carry it bidirectionally across epithelial barriers to affect mucosal immunity. Here, we identify a calmodulin-binding site within the FcRn cytoplasmic tail that affects FcRn trafficking. Calmodulin binding to the FcRn tail is direct, calcium-dependent, reversible, and specific to residues comprising a putative short amphipathic
-helix immediately adjacent to the membrane. FcRn mutants with single residue substitutions in this motif, or FcRn mutants lacking the cytoplasmic tail completely, exhibit a shorter half-life and attenuated transcytosis. Chemical inhibitors of calmodulin phenocopy the mutant FcRn defect in transcytosis. These results suggest a novel mechanism for regulation of IgG transport by calmodulin-dependent sorting of FcRn and its cargo away from a degradative pathway and into a bidirectional transcytotic route. | INTRODUCTION |
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The molecular mechanisms that dictate how FcRn traffics IgG in the recycling and transcytotic pathways remain to be elucidated. Both transport pathways are likely regulated by multiple and hierarchically ordered sorting determinants within the receptor. Studies on human and rat FcRn show that basolateral targeting results from motifs present within the cytoplasmic tail (Stefaner et al., 1999
; McCarthy et al., 2001
; Wu and Simister, 2001
; Claypool et al., 2004
). The signals that orchestrate FcRn transport to the apical membrane domain, and back again to the basolateral membrane, or away from the lysosome, are unknown.
Structurally, the extracellular domain of FcRn folds almost exactly like the MHC class I (MHC I) molecule, requiring stable assembly with light chain β2-microglobulin (β2m) for function; but the peptide binding groove apparent in the MHC I heavy chain is closed in FcRn (Huber et al., 1993
; Burmeister et al., 1994
). Another region of this domain functions to bind IgG. Unlike other Fc
receptors, FcRn binds IgG only at acidic pH (pH
6.5) and releases it at neutral pH (pH
7.4) (Rodewald, 1976
; Raghavan et al., 1993
). The amino acid sequence of the FcRn cytoplasmic domain differs significantly from that of MHC I. In FcRn, the cytoplasmic tail contains both dileucine and tryptophan endocytosis motifs and several serine phosphorylation sites that affect the polarity of cell surface expression and intracellular trafficking (Stefaner et al., 1999
; McCarthy et al., 2001
; Wu and Simister, 2001
; Zhao et al., 2003
). To date, no structure–function studies in the FcRn transmembrane domain have been performed.
In this study, we examine the idea that FcRn trafficking may be regulated by calmodulin. Our interest in calmodulin arose from the observation that the membrane-proximal region of the FcRn tail is highly conserved among mammalian species and that it contains an amino acid sequence with the potential to form a short amphipathic
-helix (Figure 1A). Amphipathic
-helices can function as calmodulin-binding motifs (Rhoads and Friedberg, 1997
; Chin and Means, 2000
), and they are recently recognized as domains capable of sensing or perturbing membrane curvature so as to affect protein sorting (McMahon and Gallop, 2005
). Thus, binding to calmodulin may be one way that trafficking of FcRn is physiologically regulated. Here, we show that calmodulin binds directly to the FcRn cytoplasmic tail domain, and that FcRn mutants unable to bind calmodulin exhibit a shorter half-life and attenuated transcytosis across polarized epithelial cells. These results suggest a novel mechanism for sorting FcRn and its cargo between degradative and transcytotic pathways with likely consequences for antigen transport across mucosal surfaces, mucosal immunity, and host defense.
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| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Antibodies
Human IgG was purchased from Lampire Biological Laboratories (Pipersville, PA), and chicken IgY was from Gallus Immunotech (Wildwood, MO). Mouse anti-GP135 monoclonal antibody (mAb) was a kind gift from Karl Matlin (Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA) originally obtained from George Ojakian (Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, SUNY-Downstate Medical Center, Brooklyn, NY). Rabbit polyclonal antisera raised against a GST-human FcRn cytoplasmic tail fusion protein and mAb 12CA5, reactive against the hemagglutinin (HA) epitope, have been described previously (Claypool et al., 2002
). High-affinity rat anti-HA mAb was purchased from Roche Molecular Biochemicals (Mannheim, Germany). Mouse monoclonal antibodies against β-actin and zona occludens-1, and horseradish peroxidase- and alkaline phosphatase-conjugated secondary antibodies were purchased from Sigma-Aldrich (St. Louis, MO). Two calmodulin antibodies were used, a mouse monoclonal was purchased from Upstate Biotechnology (Chicago, IL) and a rabbit polyclonal antiserum was purchased from Calbiochem (La Jolla, CA). Alexa-conjugated secondary antibodies and phalloidin-Texas Red were from Invitrogen (Carlsbad, CA).
Cell Lines
Madin Darby canine kidney (MDCK) strain II cells expressing wild type (WT) and mutant human FcRn heavy and light chains were cultured as described previously (Claypool et al., 2002
, 2004
). The human intestinal epithelial cell line T84 was a kind gift from Kim Barrett (University of California, San Diego, CA), and it was cultured as described previously (Dickinson et al., 1999
). Mouse myeloma cell line J558L secreting a 5-iodo-4-hydroxy-3-nitrophenacetyl (NIP)-specific mAb containing the human IgG1 Fc domain (Nip-IgG) was cultured and the antibody affinity purified as described previously (Claypool et al., 2004
).
Calmodulin-Sepharose Pull-Down Experiments
Soluble GST or FcRn tail GST-fusion proteins were incubated with calmodulin-Sepharose or unconjugated Sepharose beads in intracellular lysis buffer (150 mM potassium acetate, 5 mM sodium acetate, 2.5 mM magnesium chloride, 2 µg of bovine serum albumin, 0.5% NP-40, and 25 mM HEPES, pH 7.3) containing 2 mM CaCl2 or 10 mM EGTA. Fusion proteins associated with the beads were detected by immunoblot with a rabbit anti-GST-human FcRn cytoplasmic tail antiserum. To test whether binding is reversible, fusion proteins were first bound to calmodulin-Sepharose in the presence of CaCl2 and then washed with lysis buffer containing EGTA. In other experiments, GST-tail fusion proteins were tested for binding to calmodulin-Sepharose in intracellular buffer containing Triton X-100 in lieu of NP-40.
FcRn-Calmodulin Coimmunoprecipitation
T84 cell lysates were equilibrated in intracellular lysis buffer containing 2 mM CaCl2 or 10 mM EGTA and incubated with protein G-Sepharose beads chemically conjugated to a mouse anti-calmodulin mAb, or with a mouse anti-calmodulin mAb and protein G-Sepharose beads. MDCK cells expressing human FcRn were lysed in intracellular lysis buffer as described above and incubated with rabbit anti-calmodulin polyclonal antibodies and protein G-Sepharose beads, or with calmodulin-Sepharose (CaM-Seph) beads. FcRn associated with the beads was detected by immunoblot.
IgG-Sepharose Pull-Down Experiments
IgG-Sepharose affinity isolation of FcRn was performed as described previously (Claypool et al., 2002
).
Selective Cell Surface Biotinylation
Selective cell surface biotinylation was performed as described previously (Claypool et al., 2004
). Total cellular FcRn present in 5 µg of whole cell lysate (representing 1% of the lysate incubated with avidin-agarose beads) and biotinylated FcRn (representing 75% of the sample eluted from the avidin-agarose beads) were detected by immunoblot. Blots were stripped and reprobed for GP135. The mass of FcRn on the apical or basolateral membrane was determined by densitometry and expressed as a percentage of total cellular FcRn.
Endocytosis
Endocytosis was performed as described previously (Claypool et al., 2002
, 2004
). Briefly, cells were biotinylated on their basolateral aspect with sulfosuccinimidyl 2-(biotinamido)-ethyl-1,3-dithiopropionate (sulfo-NHS-SS-biotin) at 4°C and either maintained at 4°C for the duration of the experiment or incubated at 37°C for 1, 2, 4, or 8 min and then rapidly cooled to 4°C. Two Transwells per clone were maintained at 4°C as a control (no reduction, time 0) and as a control for reduction (M, mock). Cell surface-associated biotin was stripped by incubation with reduced glutathione at 4°C. After extensive washing to remove glutathione, cells were lysed in radioimmunoprecipitation assay (RIPA) buffer (1 M NaCl, 1 M Tris, pH 8, 10% NP-40, 10% SDS, and 5% sodium deoxycholate) and clarified by centrifugation. Equal quantities of cell lysates (assessed by protein content) were added to avidin-agarose beads and biotinylated FcRn was affinity isolated and measured by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) and immunoblot by using the mAb against the HA tag (12CA5). The mass of biotinylated FcRn was determined by densitometry and expressed as a percentage of biotinylated FcRn at time 0.
Transcytosis
Transcytosis of biotinylated human IgG across T84 cell monolayers was performed as described previously (Dickinson et al., 1999
) with the modification that cells were pretreated with vehicle alone (dimethyl sulfoxide; DMSO) or 30 µM N-(6-aminohexyl)-5-chloro-1-naphthalenesulfonamide (W-7)(Calbiochem) in DMSO for 30 min. Transport of biotinylated IgG was analyzed by avidin-horseradish peroxidase (HRP) immunoblot to detect IgG heavy and light chains. Transcytosis of Nip-IgG across MDCK cell monolayers was performed as described previously (Claypool et al., 2004
). Briefly, cells were pretreated with buffer or buffer containing 30 or 50 µM N-(6-aminohexyl)-1-naphthalenesulfonamide (W-5) or W-7 (Calbiochem) (both dissolved in water) for 30 min before the addition of 60 nM Nip-IgG to the apical or basolateral chamber and incubation at 37°C for 120 min. Transcytosis of NIP-IgG into the contralateral chamber was measured using a NIP-specific enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), and the means ± SEM are plotted. Data are normalized to Nip-IgG transport for untreated control MDCK cells expressing WT FcRn clone 13 (=100%). In each experiment, MDCK cell clones were plated and analyzed in triplicate.
Half-Life of Cell Surface-associated FcRn
MDCK cells expressing FcRn were cultured on 1-cm2 Transwell filters. The basolateral membranes were biotinylated at 4°C and transferred to medium and incubated at 37°C for 0, 6, 12, and 24 h, or for 0, 3, 6, 9, and 12 h. At each time point, cells were lysed in RIPA buffer, and equal quantities of cell lysates (assessed by protein content) were incubated with avidin-agarose beads. FcRn associated with the beads was detected by immunoblot with 12CA5.
Metabolic Labeling
MDCK cells expressing FcRn were cultured on 5-cm2 Transwell inserts. Cells were preincubated in L-methionine- and L-cysteine-free medium (Sigma-Aldrich) and then labeled with [35S]methionine/cysteine (
280 µm/Transwell; EasyTag Express Protein Labeling Mix, PerkinElmer Life and Analytical Sciences, Boston, MA) for 30 min. After labeling, cells were transferred to medium and incubated at 37°C for 0, 6, 12, 24, and 48 h. At each time point, cells were lysed in RIPA buffer, and FcRn was immunoprecipitated from equal quantities of cell lysates (assessed by protein content) with a rat anti-HA mAb and protein G-Sepharose beads. Proteins associated with the beads were separated by SDS-PAGE, and dried gels were exposed to film (Kodak MR; Eastman Kodak, Rochester, NY). Data are normalized to the average mass of 35S-FcRn present at the 6-h interval (45 ± 4.3%) relative to time 0 h (100%).
Immunocytochemistry and Confocal Microscopy
Immunocytochemical detection of FcRn and ZO-1 in MDCK cells expressing FcRn was performed as described previously (Claypool et al., 2004
). Briefly, cells were viewed with a Nikon Eclipse E800 microscope equipped with an MRC-1024 confocal system (Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA). Images were collected with a 20x objective (Plan Apo air, numerical aperture 0.75 dual-frequency interferometric confocal microscope, wd 1.0, infinity/0.17) by using Lasersharp (Bio-Rad) acquisition software. Cells were stained with Alexa-conjugated secondary antibodies or phalloidin-Texas Red and fixed for viewing with ProLong anti-fade mounting medium (Invitrogen). Images were processed with Adobe Photoshop and Adobe Illustrator (Adobe Systems, San Jose, CA).
Statistics
Data were analyzed for statistical significance by single-factor analysis of variance (Microsoft, Redmond, WA).
| RESULTS |
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R299-S303; Del). These mutations will disrupt the charge distribution in the
-helix or delete it entirely. A fourth fusion protein was constructed as a negative control to contain a single amino acid substitution replacing alanine for serine at position 303 (S303A). This substitution is predicted to have no effect on the amphipathic nature of the helix.
In initial studies, the WT FcRn-tail GST-fusion protein or GST alone were incubated with CaM-Seph in the presence or absence of calcium (Ca2+) and tested for binding by SDS-PAGE and immunoblot by using a rabbit polyclonal antiserum raised against a GST-human FcRn cytoplasmic tail fusion protein. This antiserum also detects full-length FcRn expressed in T84 and MDCK cells (Supplemental Figure 1; Claypool et al., 2002
). We find that CaM-Seph beads bound to the WT FcRn-tail GST-fusion protein, but not to GST alone (Figure 2A, lanes 3–6), and only in the presence of Ca2+ (Figure 2A, compare lane 5 with 6). Unconjugated Sepharose beads (Seph) did not bind to either GST or the WT FcRn-tail GST-fusion protein (Figure 2A, lanes 7 and 8). A second study shows that although the CaM-Seph beads bound to the WT FcRn-tail GST-fusion protein and the S303 mutant GST-fusion protein in the presence of Ca2+ (Figure 2B, lanes 1, 2, 7, and 8), the beads did not bind to the Del, R299A, or R300A mutant GST-fusion proteins (Figure 2B, lanes 3–6, 9, and 10). This is true for GST-fusion proteins solubilized in both NP-40- (Figure 2, A and B) and Triton X-100–based buffers (Supplemental Figure 2). To test whether calmodulin binding to the FcRn tail could be reversed upon removal of Ca2+, we first incubated the GST-fusion proteins with CaM-Seph in the presence of Ca2+ to allow binding, and then we washed the beads in buffer containing Ca2+ or EGTA. As before, both the WT and S303A GST-fusion proteins bound CaM-Seph in the presence but not in the absence of Ca2+ (Figure 2C, lanes 4, 5, 8, and 9), and the Del mutant did not bind CaM-Seph (Figure 2C, lane 7). Chelating Ca2+ with EGTA completely reversed the binding of WT and S303A GST-fusion proteins to CaM-Seph (Figure 2C, lanes 6 and 10). Thus, calmodulin binding to the FcRn tail is direct, specific to the membrane-proximal region of the FcRn tail, dependent on the presence of Ca2+, and reversible.
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To show that canine calmodulin can bind to the human FcRn cytoplasmic tail, detergent lysates of MDCK cells expressing WT FcRn were incubated with rabbit anti-calmodulin polyclonal antibodies, and immune complexes were precipitated with protein G-Sepharose and analyzed by immunoblot. Antibodies against calmodulin coimmunoprecipitated a small amount of FcRn from MDCK cell lysates in the absence of added Ca2+ and significantly more FcRn when Ca2+ was added to lysates (Figure 3D, compare lanes 2 and 3). Binding of canine calmodulin to FcRn was inhibited when EGTA was added to the detergent lysates (Figure 3D, lane 4). Similar results were obtained using calmodulin-Sepharose beads (data not shown). Thus, consistent with our in vitro results, canine calmodulin can bind human FcRn and this is Ca2+-dependent.
Next, we measured the effect of the FcRn tail mutations on IgG transcytosis by using a recombinant humanized monoclonal IgG specific for the small hapten NIP as the FcRn ligand (Nip-IgG) (Claypool et al., 2004
). In this assay, Nip-IgG is applied to apical or basolateral surfaces of MDCK monolayers, and transepithelial transport is measured in the contralateral reservoir by NIP-specific ELISA. Specificity for receptor-mediated transcellular transport is demonstrated by the addition of excess rabbit IgG that competes for binding to FcRn (Supplemental Figure 3). MDCK cells expressing FcRn mutants that cannot bind calmodulin (R299A and R300A), or that lack the cytoplasmic tail altogether (Tail-), transport Nip-IgG in both directions two- to fivefold less efficiently than MDCK cells expressing WT FcRn (Figure 3, E and F, and Supplemental Figure 3). Two independently derived clones expressing WT or each of the FcRn mutants gave the same results, showing that nonspecific clonal variations between cell lines cannot explain the defect in IgG transport (Figure 3, E and F). Remarkably, point mutations in the calmodulin-binding domain diminished Nip-IgG transport to nearly the same degree as deletion of the cytoplasmic tail altogether. MDCK cells that express human β2m in the absence of FcRn heavy chain do not transport Nip-IgG in either direction, indicating that Nip-IgG transport is FcRn dependent (data not shown) (Claypool et al., 2002
).
To test these results in another way, we examined the effect of pharmacologic inhibition of calmodulin using the small molecule W-7. Treatment of MDCK cell monolayers with W-7 (30 and 50 µM) reduced apical-to-basolateral Nip-IgG transcytosis by WT FcRn by
2-fold compared with untreated control cells (Figure 3G). The compound W-5 (50 µM), a less-potent analog of W-7, also reduced apical-to-basolateral Nip-IgG transcytosis (Supplemental Figure 4). To show specificity for calmodulin binding to FcRn, we applied W-7 to MDCK cells expressing FcRn mutants with inactivating mutations in the FcRn-calmodulin binding domain or lacking the cytoplasmic tail altogether. As before, W-7 inhibited Nip-IgG transport by WT FcRn, but had no effect on Nip-IgG transport by the R299A, R300A, and tailless FcRn mutants, consistent with an effect of W-7 on calmodulin binding to FcRn (Figure 3H). Thus, transport of IgG by FcRn in the transcytotic pathway is a function of the FcRn cytoplasmic tail, with strong dependence on the membrane-proximal domain that binds calmodulin.
Effect of Calmodulin on FcRn Cell Surface Polarity, Endocytosis, and Lysosomal Transport
We next tested for effects of mutations in the membrane-proximal region of the FcRn tail on the steady-state distribution of FcRn in polarized MDCK monolayers. The majority of WT FcRn (90–95%) resides in an intracellular compartment(s) below the apical plasma membrane, but the receptor occurs on the cell surface at steady state in small quantities. We have shown previously by selective cell surface biotinylation that the fraction of FcRn on the cell surface is strongly polarized to the basolateral membrane in MDCK cells. Targeting to the basolateral membrane must be a function of the FcRn cytoplasmic tail because the tailless FcRn mutant distributes nearly equally between both membrane domains (Claypool et al., 2004
). Here, we find that like WT FcRn, both the R299A and R300A FcRn mutants localize predominantly to an intracellular compartment(s) as assessed by confocal microscopy of MDCK monolayers stained for FcRn, F-actin, and ZO-1 (Figure 4A). Selective cell surface biotinylation of apical or basolateral membranes shows that most of the FcRn on the cell surface is localized to the basolateral membrane (Figure 4, B and C). Tailless FcRn is also localized to a compartment(s) inside the cell, but unlike WT FcRn and the R299A and R300A FcRn mutants, the fraction on the cell surface is evenly distributed between the apical and basolateral membranes, consistent with our previous results. To show that the intercellular junctions and cell surface polarity of the MDCK cell monolayers were maintained during these experiments, we examined the cell surface polarity of the apical membrane protein GP135. GP135 remained restricted to the apical membrane domain as predicted. Cell lysates were analyzed for β-actin by immunoblot to demonstrate that equal quantities of cell lysates (assessed by protein content) were used in the avidin-agarose pull-downs (Figure 4B). Thus, the bulk of the R299A and R300A FcRn mutants distribute across polarized MDCK monolayers like WT FcRn, residing mostly within an intracellular compartment(s) at steady state. Unlike the tailless FcRn mutant, however, the point mutations in the membrane proximal calmodulin-binding domain of FcRn must leave intact the regions of the FcRn cytoplasmic tail that dictate polarized sorting to the basolateral membrane.
Endocytosis of WT and mutant FcRn was examined using a cleavable biotin-linker to label cell surface FcRn at 4°C. After warming the MDCK cell monolayers for the indicated times, biotin was cleaved from cell surface proteins and the mass of internalized FcRn labeled with biotin was measured in total cell lysates by affinity precipitation with streptavidin beads, SDS-PAGE, and immunoblot for FcRn with the anti-HA antibody (Figure 5). These studies show that the R299A and R300A calmodulin-binding mutants of FcRn entered MDCK cells as efficiently as WT FcRn. Endocytosis of the tail-minus FcRn mutant, however, was strongly inhibited, consistent with loss of the dileucine and tryptophan endocytosis motifs contained within the tail-domain.
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12 h), the cell surface fraction of R299A (t1/2
9 h), R300A (t1/2
5 h), and tailless (t1/2
10 h) FcRn mutants were always less (Figure 6B), suggesting more rapid degradation.
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To confirm specificity for calmodulin-binding to FcRn in lysosomal transport by another method, we again used the small molecule W-7 to inhibit calmodulin function (Figure 6E). Here, we find that treatment of MDCK monolayers expressing WT FcRn with W-7 caused a marked (
50%) reduction in the mass of cell surface biotin-labeled-FcRn after 3-h chase, consistent with a dependency for FcRn binding to calmodulin in this pathway. However, unlike our results in the transcytosis studies, treatment with W-7 also affected degradation of the tailless mutant FcRn that cannot bind calmodulin. This result suggests a generalized or nonspecific effect of longer treatments with W-7 on lysosomal transport (or function) in MDCK cells, and precludes testing the hypothesis by this approach.
Ca2+-dependent Binding of Calmodulin to FcRn and Regulation of IgG Transcytosis in Human Intestinal T84 Cells
To see whether our results might be applied as a general rule, we tested for interaction between calmodulin and FcRn in the human intestinal cell line T84. T84 cells form polarized epithelial barriers, express endogenous FcRn, and transport IgG across the monolayer by FcRn-dependent transcytosis (Dickinson et al., 1999
). To test for FcRn binding, an anti-calmodulin mouse mAb (CaM mAb) was used to immunoprecipitate calmodulin from detergent lysates of T84 cells in the presence or absence of Ca2+. For these biochemical studies, we used retrovirus transfected T84 cell clones overexpressing the human FcRn
chain (T84-FcRn) (Figure 7A). The immunoprecipitates from total cell lysates were analyzed for FcRn by immunoblot by using a rabbit antibody raised against the WT GST-FcRn tail fusion protein, and which specifically binds to the tail domain of FcRn as assessed in both T84 and MDCK cells expressing the receptor (Supplemental Figure 1) (Claypool et al., 2004
). The CaM mAb immunoprecipitated FcRn in the presence but not in the absence of Ca2+ (Figure 7B, compare lanes 1 and 2 with lane 3), suggesting a physical interaction between the two molecules. To test this result in another way, we used CaM-Seph beads. As in the coimmunoprecipitations studies, CaM-Seph beads bound FcRn from T84-FcRn lysates in the presence but in not the absence of Ca2+ (Figure 7C, compare lanes 4 and 6). Excess soluble calmodulin in the presence of Ca2+ competed for FcRn binding and inhibited FcRn binding to the CaM-Seph beads, as predicted for a specific binding reaction (Figure 7C, compare lanes 4 and 8). Thus, in the presence of Ca2+, endogenous calmodulin specifically binds FcRn expressed in T84 cells, consistent with a regulatory role for calmodulin in FcRn function.
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| DISCUSSION |
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In both the transcytosis and half-life assays for FcRn function, we find that single inactivating amino acid substitutions within the FcRn calmodulin-binding domain cause the same or similar degrees of inhibition as deletion of the entire FcRn cytoplasmic tail. Thus, with respect to transcytosis, the calmodulin-binding domain has a dominant effect over the other sorting motifs contained within the cytoplasmic tail. This is not true, however, for the sorting motifs that dictate the polarity of cell surface expression at steady state. Here, the basolateral predominance of cell surface expression for the calmodulin-binding mutants is maintained like WT FcRn. Endocytosis motifs are also not affected. We also note that mutant FcRn R299A, R300A, and tailless FcRn remain capable of transporting IgG across the epithelial monolayer, although much less efficiently than the WT receptor. Thus, the FcRn cytoplasmic tail is ultimately dispensable for transcytosis, at least in cell culture models. These results are consistent with a previous study on rat FcRn expressed in rat inner medullary collecting duct cells (McCarthy et al., 2001
). In this cell type, tailless rat FcRn was able to mediate basolateral-to-apical transcytosis of IgG, although transcytosis in the opposite direction was inhibited. In our study, tailless human FcRn displays a strong defect in transcytosis of IgG in both directions across MDCK cells.
The FcRn cytoplasmic tail and the calmodulin-binding domain seem to confer upon FcRn the characteristic of a prolonged half-life. Because we have studied cell surface FcRn fully processed through the biosynthetic pathway, the effect on half-life most likely has to do with sorting motifs in the FcRn cytoplasmic tail that direct FcRn and its cargo away from the late endosome/lysosome after endocytosis. Mutations in the calmodulin-binding domain, however, do not affect the steady-state distribution of FcRn in polarized epithelial cells, whereas with WT FcRn, the bulk of mutant receptors (R299A, R300A, and tailless FcRn) are found in intracellular compartments, possibly representing the recycling or common endosome (Ober et al., 2004
; Ward et al., 2005
). Thus, we propose that the site of action for calmodulin binding to FcRn occurs in this intracellular compartment where the degradative and transcytotic pathways are related by this sorting step.
Calmodulin has diverse effects on membrane dynamics and seems to affect transferrin receptor (TfnR) recycling (Hunt and Marshall-Carlson, 1986
; Grasso et al., 1990
; Sainte-Marie et al., 1997
; Huber et al., 2000
) and trafficking of the polymeric immunoglobulin receptor (pIgR) (Apodaca et al., 1994
; Hunziker, 1994
) in ways similar to that found for FcRn. Calmodulin binds directly to the membrane-proximal 17-amino-acid segment of the pIgR cytoplasmic tail, and it is possible this affects receptor trafficking in the transcytotic pathway, as proposed here for FcRn; but this has not yet been tested at the molecular level (Chapin et al., 1996
). The way calmodulin affects TfnR trafficking is indirect, by acting via a Ca2+-independent reaction on the unconventional myosin Myr4 (Huber et al., 2000
).
How might calmodulin work to affect structure and function of FcRn in polarized epithelial cells? Recent studies show that amphipathic
-helices similar to the calmodulin-binding domain in FcRn, and to motifs found in Epsin and Sar1, can partially integrate into cell membranes so as to induce or sense membrane curvature and thus affect membrane dynamics (Ford et al., 2002
; Lee et al., 2005
; McMahon and Gallop, 2005
). This is also true of the huntingtin protein that contains a motif with a predicted amphipathic
-helix capable of inserting into lipid bilayers to anchor the protein to specific membrane domains (Kegel et al., 2005
). Amphipathic
-helices can exhibit specific affinities for different membrane phospholipids, which may provide additional specificity to domain function (Nakanishi et al., 2004
). Here, we identify a putative amphipathic
-helix in FcRn located immediately adjacent to the membrane, where it could, as in these other proteins, reversibly integrate into the membrane so as to affect membrane dynamics and receptor sorting. Calmodulin binding to this domain would be predicted to reversibly mask the
-helix and allow for this function to be physiologically regulated.
Another way calmodulin binding to the FcRn tail might affect FcRn function could be by masking sites for cycles of phosphorylation and dephosphorylation. In FcRn, a serine residue lies within the basic region of the putative amphipathic
-helix where calmodulin binds, and other potential phosphorylation sites for calmodulin-dependent kinase II, casein kinase I, and protein kinases A or C are located nearby. Among other ways phosphorylation can affect membrane transport, phosphorylation and dephosphorylation cycles on residues located in or near the basic region of such amphipathic
-helices would alter the electrical potential of these protein surfaces so as to affect membrane association and domain function. The myristoylated alanine-rich C kinase substrate protein (MARCKS) is a good example of this mechanism where the basic region of the amphipathic domain in MARCKS binds calmodulin in the presence of Ca2+ (Graff et al., 1989
; McIlroy et al., 1991
; Taniguchi and Manenti, 1993
), and this is regulated by phosphorylation (Swierczynski and Blackshear, 1996
).
Thus, based on our results, we propose that calmodulin binding to the membrane-proximal region of the FcRn cytoplasmic tail provides a physiologically reversible "molecular switch" for regulating the trafficking of FcRn and its ligand IgG away from the degradative lysosomal pathway and into the transcytotic pathway of polarized epithelial cells.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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| Footnotes |
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Address correspondence to: Wayne I. Lencer (wayne.lencer{at}childrens.harvard.edu)
Abbreviations used: β2m, β-2-microglobulin; CaM, calmodulin; CaM-Seph, calmodulin-Sepharose; GST, glutathione transferase; HA, influenza hemagglutinin epitope; Ig, immunoglobulin; mAb, monoclonal antibody; MDCK, Madin-Darby canine kidney; NIP, 5-iodo-4-hydroxy-3-nitrophenylacetyl.
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