|
|
||||||||
1 From the Vision Research Laboratories, New England Eye Center, Tufts University School of Medicine, the Tufts University Sackler School of Graduate Biomedical Sciences; and the 2 Laboratory for Nutrition and Vision Research, Jean Mayer United States Department of Agriculture-Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging, Tufts University, Boston, Massachusetts.
| Abstract |
|---|
|
|
|---|
METHODS. An established cell culture model was used in which freshly isolated rabbit corneal stromal cells acquire a repair fibroblast phenotype, thereby mimicking injury-induced stromal cell activation.
RESULTS. Transition to the repair fibroblast phenotype during the 72 hours after
initial plating was coincident with progressive UPP induction. Levels
of Ub, Ub-conjugated proteins, ubiquitinylating enzymes E1 and
E2-25K, and 26 S proteasome increased two- to fivefold in activated
stromal cells. These increases were associated with enhanced
(>10-fold) capacity for Ub-dependent proteolysis of
125I-labeled H2A and with progressive (>6-fold) increases
in the UPP substrate, inhibitor of
B
(I
B
). Because I
B
expression is induced by nuclear factor (NF)-
B, this finding
suggests that rates of constitutive NF-
B activation, and thus
I
B
degradation, are elevated in activated stromal cells. Both
freshly isolated and activated stromal cells degraded I
B
in
response to IL-1
; yet, only activated stromal cells maintained
autocrine IL-1
expression after 24 hours. UPP induction was
coincident with a more than 90% loss of tissue transketolase (TKT) and
aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH) class 1. TKT was stabilized during the
repair phenotype transition by proteasome inhibition and was degraded
(>30%/h) by the UPP in cell-free assays.
CONCLUSIONS. Coordinate induction of the UPP during stromal cell activation alters
levels of I
B
and TKT, two UPP substrates that are implicated in
the loss of tissue stasis and corneal clarity after
injury.
| Introduction |
|---|
|
|
|---|
autocrine loop, which maintains synthesis and secretion of the
tissue-remodeling protease, collagenase.2
3
Induction of
the IL-1
autocrine loop is one of many responses of keratocytes to
injury that are mediated through the transcription factor, nuclear
factor (NF)-
B.4
We have proposed that stromal cell
acquisition of competence to activate NF-
B is a critical step in the
loss of corneal stasis and the establishment of the repair fibroblast
phenotype after injury.1
5
Corneal repair fibroblasts are
further distinguished from stromal cell progenitors by the relative
absence of corneal crystallins,6
7
the abundant soluble
proteins that are hypothesized to protect corneal clarity by minimizing
refractive index fluctuations between the cytoplasm and the
extracellular milieu.6
7
8
The specific proteins vary with
species.7
Stromal cell loss of corneal crystallins after
corneal injury may therefore compromise the optical properties of
the cornea.
|
B, and the selective
loss of bulk protein(s)have been individually shown, in physiological
contexts other than wound healing, to be regulated by the ubiquitin
(Ub)-proteasome pathway (UPP).9
10
The UPP is a highly
conserved pathway of selective protein modification (ubiquitinylation)
and degradation. Substrates of the pathway are covalently ligated
(conjugated) at internal lysine(s) to one or more monomers of
ubiquitin, an 8.5-kDa protein, by the sequential activities of three
families of enzymes: adenosine triphosphate (ATP)-dependent
Ub-activating enzymes (E1s), Ub-conjugating enzymes (Ubcs/E2s), and
Ub-isopeptide ligases (E3s). Substrate selectivity is achieved at the
level of Ubcs and E3s. The sequential ligation of multiple Ubs as a
polyubiquitin chain dramatically increases the apparent mass of the
substrate and targets it for rapid degradation by the 26 S proteasome,
a multicatalytic, ATP-dependent protease.11
Ub-dependent
protein degradation rapidly promotes new cellular steady states in
response to changes in the external environment. Thus, the UPP controls
cell cycle by degradation of cyclins and cylin-dependent
kinases,12
activates NF-
Bdependent gene transcription
by degradation of inhibitors of
B (I
Bs),13
and
facilitates cellular remodeling during embryogenesis and terminal
differentiation by degradation of obsolete bulk
proteins.14
15
16
17
18
19
In this study, we used an in vitro rabbit model of the corneal repair
fibroblast transition to investigate UPP dynamics and contribution to
the loss of corneal stasis after injury. In this
model,1
2
3
5
keratocytes that are freshly isolated from
the corneal stroma initially remain quiescent, mimicking the in vivo
setting. However, after exposure to serum, cultured cells begin to
acquire the morphologic and biochemical attributes of repair
fibroblasts.20
21
These attributes are maintained after
serum withdrawal, indicating that the repair phenotype transition is a
differentiation process.1
The capacity to establish the
IL-1
autocrine loop in response to IL-1
is observed after 48
hours, and additional features of the repair phenotype are manifest by
72 hours.3
5
Dynamics of the rabbit corneal
crystallins6
tissue transketolase (TKT) and aldehyde
dehydrogenase class (ALDH) Ihave not been examined in this model.
Once acquired, the repair fibroblast phenotype is maintained in primary
culture and during subculturing.3
5
In the present study
the repair phenotype transition was coincident with the coordinate
induction of multiple UPP components and with enhanced capacity for
protein ubiquitinylation and Ub-dependent proteolysis. Based on these
findings, we tested the hypothesis that the inability of keratocytes to
establish the IL-1
autocrine loop is due to a deficiency in I
B
degradation. We demonstrated in addition that the loss of TKT during
the repair phenotype transition reflected Ub-dependent proteolysis,
thereby directly implicating the UPP in the loss of corneal clarity
after injury.
| Materials and Methods |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Cell Culture
Stromal cells were obtained from trephined corneas of New
Zealand White rabbits by collagenase digestion, as previously
described.5
All procedures were in accordance with the
ARVO Statement for the Use of Animals in Ophthalmic and Vision
Research. Harvested cells were cultured in MEM containing 10% calf
serum. Freshly isolated (day 0) stromal cells were maintained for up to
5 days in primary culture. Cells were designated as day 1 after 24
hours in culture. Cells that were subcultured after acquiring the
repair fibroblast phenotype were used between the second and fourth
passages. For establishment of the IL-1
autocrine loop, cells were
treated for 24 hours with human IL-1
(10 ng/ml), as previously
described.5
To assess the role of the UPP in TKT turnover,
day-1 cells were cultured for an additional 24 hours (day 2) in
complete medium with the cell-permeable proteasome inhibitor,
clasto-lactacystin ß-lactone, or were sham treated with
dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) carrier (
0.2% final concentration).
Cell proliferation was assessed by cell counts of triplicate wells
using a hemocytometer and by scintillation counting of
[3H]thymidine uptake. Cell counts are expressed
as mean ± SEM.
Preparation of Cell Lysates, Supernatants, and Conditioned Medium
For analysis of levels of Ub, Ub-protein conjugates, E1s, E2s,
and proteasome subunits, cell lysates were prepared by scraping
PBS-washed cells into 150 µl lysis buffer (5 mM Tris-HCl, 4% sodium
dodecyl-sulfate [SDS], 20 mM N-ethylmaleimide, [pH 7.6])
followed by boiling. Insoluble material was removed by centrifugation
(15,000g, 10 minutes 4°C). For analysis of I
B
, TKT,
and IL-1
, cells were solubilized (30 minutes, 4°C) in PBS
containing 1% Nonidet-P40 (NP-40), 0.5% sodium deoxycholate, 0.1%
SDS, 10 µg/ml phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, 20 µg/ml aprotinin,
and 20 mM dithiothreitol (DTT). In some experiments, lysates also
contained phosphatase inhibitors (0.1 mM sodium orthovanadate and 50 mM
NaF). Lysates were boiled after addition of 2x SDS-PAGE loading
buffer.
For cell-free assessment of Ub-dependent proteolytic capacity, stromal cell supernatants containing an active UPP were obtained from scraped cells after resuspension and homogenization by hand in ice-cold 5 mM Tris-HCl-0.5 mM DTT (pH 7.8) and centrifugation (85,000g, 20 minutes, 2°C).
Twenty-four-hour conditioned medium was collected from sham- and
IL-1
treated cultures, and cell debris was removed by
centrifugation (5000g, 2 minutes, 4°C). Cell lysates,
supernatants, and conditioned medium were aliquoted and stored at
-80°C.
Protein Electrophoresis and Immunoblot Analysis
Cell lysates, proteolysis assay mixtures (described later), and
conditioned medium were subjected to reducing SDS-PAGE, and the
electrophoresed proteins were transferred to PVDF membrane. For
detection of monomeric Ub, blots were autoclaved (30 minutes) before
immunodetection. Blots were probed with the following antibodies: (1)
rabbit IgG that recognizes both free and conjugated
ubiquitin22
; (2) rabbit IgG that recognizes the two
isoforms of Ub-activating enzyme, E1A and E1B23
; (3)
rabbit IgG raised against recombinant bovine E2-25K (the latter
generously provided by Cecile Pickart, Johns Hopkins University,
Baltimore, MD); (4) rabbit serum raised against the Trip1 subunit of
the 26 S proteasome (a generous gift of Richard Young, Massachusetts
Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA); (5) rabbit serum raised
against the human 20 S proteasome (generously provided by George
DeMartino, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas,
TX); (6) rabbit IgG raised against a carboxyl-terminal peptide of human
I
B
(number Sc-371; Santa Cruz Biotechnology, La Jolla, CA); (7)
goat IgG that specifically recognizes rabbit IL-1
but not human
IL-1
(Endogen, Woburn, MA), (8) rabbit serum raised against human
TKT, (a generous gift from Joram Piatigorsky, National Eye Institute,
Bethesda, MD); (9) rabbit serum raised against mouse ALDH1 (a generous
gift from Gregg Duester, Burnham Institute, La Jolla, CA); or (10)
appropriate preimmune sera or control IgG. Specific binding was
detected by enhanced chemiluminescence (ECL), visualized by
autoradiography, and quantified by densitometry (Molecular Dynamics,
Sunnyvale, CA).
Cell-Free Proteolysis Assays
125I-labeled histone 2A was incubated (1
hour, 37°C) in ATP-depleted and ATP-supplemented
assays22
containing 6 mg/ml (final concentration)
supernatant from day 1 or subcultured stromal cells. Some
ATP-supplemented assays also contained the proteasome inhibitor MG132
(80 µM final concentration). Proteolysis was quantified by
-counting of acid-precipitable radioactivity. Degradation of TKT by
the UPP of reticulocyte lysate was assessed by incubating 10 µl of
day-1 supernatant (containing
1 µg TKT) with 15 µl ATP-depleted
or ATP-supplemented rabbit reticulocyte lysate. Some ATP-supplemented
assays also contained MG132 (80 µM). Proteolysis was terminated after
1 hour with SDS-PAGE sample buffer, and loss of TKT was assessed by
Western blot analysis using anti-TKT serum.
| Results |
|---|
|
|
|---|
|
|
Elevated Levels of E1s and E2-25K in Corneal Repair Fibroblasts
The initial and obligate enzymatic step in protein
ubiquitinylation is the activation of Ub as a thiolester by the
Ub-activating enzyme, E1. The two E1 isoforms, E1A and E1B, constitute
the nuclear and cytoplasmic E1 pools, respectively,23
24
and they appear to be enzymatically redundant.23
Immunoblots indicate that both day-1 and subcultured stromal cells
contained approximately equimolar amounts of E1A (117 kDa) and E1B (110
kDa; Fig. 3
, top). However, levels of both E1A and E1B were, on average, two times
higher in subcultured cells compared with day-1 cells (Fig. 3
, top;
compare lanes 13 with lanes 46). In conjunction with increased
levels of free Ub (Figs. 2A
2B)
, elevated expression of both E1
isoforms suggests that rates of Ub activation are increased in both the
nucleus and cytoplasm of subcultured cells compared with day-1 cells.
Because activated Ub is required for the activity of all Ub-conjugating
enzymes (Ubcs), elevated levels of E1A and E1B are consistent with the
apparent nonselective increase in Ub-protein conjugates in subcultured
cells (Fig. 2
, and the Discussion section).
Ubcs-E2s catalyze the irreversible transfer of Ub to target proteins, frequently in association with Ub ligases (E3s). Immunoblots confirmed that levels of at least one Ubc (i.e., E2-25K) were higher (range, 2.33.0-fold) in subcultured cells than in day-1 cells (Fig. 3 , lower panel; compare lanes 13 with lanes 46). Enhanced E2-25K activity may contribute to the widespread (i.e., nonselective) increases in Ub-protein conjugates in subcultured cells (see the Discussion section). Antibodies raised against rat Ubc 2, yeast Ubc 3, and rat Ubc 4-1 failed to unambiguously detect their respective rabbit homologues in corneal stromal cells (data not shown).
Upregulation of Capacity for Ub-Dependent Proteolysis in Corneal
Repair Fibroblasts
We assessed relative levels of the 26 S proteasome in cell lysates
of day-1 and subcultured corneal stromal cells by determining relative
levels of 26 S proteasome subunits. Immunoblots were probed with an
antibody to Trip1-SUG1-p45,25
an ATPase component of the
26 S proteasome, or with serum that recognizes a common
32-kDa
subunit of the 20 S proteasome core particle.26
Levels of
these proteasome subunits were elevated 3.1- to 5.3-fold and 3.5- to
4.2-fold, respectively, in subcultured compared with day-1 cells (Fig. 4A ; compare lanes 3 and 4 with lanes 1 and 2). These results indicate
that levels of the 26 S proteasome were elevated in subcultured corneal
stromal cells compared with day-1 cells.
|
10% per hour) by an
ATP-dependent mechanism (Fig. 4B)
. This ATP-dependent degradation was
completely abrogated by the proteasome inhibitor, MG132, thereby
confirming that H2A proteolysis was Ub dependent. These results
demonstrate that the capacity for protein degradation by the UPP is
enhanced in corneal stromal cells that have made the transition to the
repair fibroblast phenotype. This enhanced proteolytic capacity is
consistent with elevated levels of 26 S proteasomes in these cells
(Fig. 4A) and probably also reflects increased cellular capacity for
protein ubiquitinylation (Figs. 2
3)
.
Dynamics of I
B
during the Repair Phenotype Transition and in
Response to Il-1
Release of the transcription factor NF-
B to the nucleus
requires the phosphorylation and Ub-dependent degradation of
inhibitor(s) of
B, the I
Bs.13
In a surprising
observation, steady state levels of I
B
became progressively
elevated during the repair phenotype transition (Fig. 5A
). I
B
levels increased 2.3- to 4.0-fold between days 1 and 2
(Fig. 5A
; compare lanes 1 and 2) and continued to increase
(1.62.2-fold) between days 2 and 3 (Fig. 5A
; compare lanes 2 and 3).
These elevated levels of I
B
were maintained when cells were
subcultured (described later). As previously reported,5
subcultured cells did not express elevated levels of p50 or p65 NF-
B
subunits (data not shown). Thus, constitutive levels of I
B
increased substantially in the absence of increased p50-p65.
|
B
with the acquisition of
competence for IL-1
dependent NF-
B activation, we evaluated the
capacity for IL-1
induced I
B
degradation in day-1 and
subcultured stromal cells. Cells were treated either with IL-1
(10
ng/ml, 30 minutes) or with buffer (sham) and were then harvested for
immunoblot analysis in the presence of phosphatase inhibitors. Both
native I
B
and constitutively phosphorylated I
B
were
detected in day-1 cultures, with phosphorylated I
B
the more
prevalent species (Fig. 5B
, lanes 1 and 2). Treatment with IL-1
resulted in rapid loss of more than 90% of I
B
(Fig. 5B
; compare
lanes 3 and 4 with lanes 1 and 2). Levels of phosphorylated I
B
were preferentially diminished compared with levels of native I
B
,
consistent with phosphorylation-dependent targeting of I
B
for
degradation. However, consistent with previous studies,5
day-1 cells failed to express IL-1
24 hours after exposure to
exogenous IL-1
(Fig. 5C
, lanes 1 and 2). Thus, day-1 cells initially
activated NF-
B in response to IL-1
, but did not establish a
persistent IL-1
autocrine loop.
Compared with day-1 cells, subcultured cells contained increased
steady state levels of I
B
(Fig. 5B
; compare lanes 5 and 6 with
lanes 1 and 2). This result confirmed our observation that I
B
levels increased during the repair phenotype transition (Fig. 5A)
. In
contrast with day-1 cells, only a small proportion of I
B
in
subcultured cells was phosphorylated (Fig. 5B
; compare lanes 5 and 6
with lanes 1 and 2). Exposure of subcultured cells to IL-1
resulted
in almost total loss of both forms of I
B
(Fig. 5B ;
compare lanes 7 and 8 with lanes 5 and 6). These results
suggest an association between upregulated UPP function (Figs. 2
3
4) and the capacity of repair fibroblasts to efficiently degrade
elevated levels of I
B
in response to IL-1
(Fig. 5B)
. In
contrast to day-1 cells (Fig. 5C
, lanes 1 and 2), subcultured cells
expressed IL-1
protein 24 hours after exposure to IL-1
(Fig. 5D
,
lanes 3 and 4), thereby confirming their acquisition of competence for
the IL-1
autocrine loop.
Loss of TKT during the Repair Phenotype Transition: Evidence for
TKT Degradation by the UPP
Day-1 cells contain abundant levels of
70-kDa and
50-kDa
proteins, which are almost entirely absent from subcultured cells (Fig. 6A ; compare lanes 1 and 2 with lanes 3 and 4). The molecular masses of
these two proteins suggest that they were TKT (69 kDa) and ALDH1 (54
kDa), abundant water-soluble proteins that are lost from the rabbit
corneal stroma after injury.6
Immunoblots confirmed that
the abundant
70 kDa and
50 kDa proteins in day-1 cells were TKT
and ALDH1, respectively, and that neither protein was detectable in
subcultured corneal stromal cells (Fig. 6B)
. TKT levels declined 77%
on average (range, 72%83%) either between days 1 and 2 (Fig. 6C
,
left) or between days 2 and 3 (Fig. 6C
, right). TKT levels continued to
diminish, so that by day 5, levels were reduced by more than 90%,
compared with day-1 levels (data not shown). These results establish
that TKT levels declined in vitro coincident with transition of stromal
cells to the repair fibroblast phenotype and coincident with UPP
upregulation (Figs. 2
3
4)
.
|
To investigate the potential role of the UPP in TKT regulation, we assessed TKT loss in stromal cell cultures that were cultured in the presence and absence of the cell-permeable proteasome inhibitor, clasto-lactacystin ß-lactone. In the absence of proteasome inhibitor, TKT levels dropped approximately 50% between days 1 and 2 (Fig. 7A , compare lanes 1 and 2). Treatment of cells with 5 µM or 10 µM clasto-lactacystin ß-lactone significantly increased TKT levels in day-2 cultures (Fig. 7A ; compare lane 2 with lanes 3 and 4). Treatment of day-1 cells with 1 µm clasto-lactacystin ß-lactone did not significantly stabilize TKT in day-2 cells (Fig. 7A ; compare lanes 2 and 5). Moreover, whereas levels of Ub-protein conjugates were stabilized at a threefold or more increase in cells treated with 5 µM or 10 µM lactone, Ub-protein conjugates were stabilized at only a 1.3-fold increase in cells treated with 1 µM lactone (data not shown). Together, these results implicate proteasome activity and degradation of Ub-protein conjugates in the loss of TKT during the repair phenotype transition in vitro (Figs. 6A 6B) . Note also that TKT levels in day-2 cultures that were treated with either 5 or 10 µM lactone were enhanced over levels detected in day-1 cultures (Fig. 7A , compare lane 1 with lanes 3 and 4). This result indicates that proteasome-dependent degradation of TKT occurs in day-1 cultures as well.
|
| Discussion |
|---|
|
|
|---|
B
and TKT, UPP substrates that are mechanistically
implicated in the loss of corneal transparency after injury (discussed
later). These results suggest that the UPP is a positive regulator of
the repair phenotype transition and its sequelae in the injured cornea.
To our knowledge, the present study is the first published analysis of
UPP function during acquisition of a repair phenotype. Our demonstration of enhanced levels of Ub in repair fibroblasts confirms prior reports of injury- and/or disease-induced Ub gene induction in corneal and cutaneous fibroblasts in vivo.27 28 29 The present study extends these earlier reports, in that Ub induction was coincident with enhanced protein ubiquitinylation and Ub-dependent proteolysis, and in that biochemical mechanisms to account for these increased activities were elucidated. Specifically, enhanced protein ubiquitinylation reflected elevated levels of Ub-activating enzymes (E1s) and Ub-conjugating enzymes (E2s), and increased capacity for Ub-dependent proteolysis reflected enhanced expression of 26 S proteasomes. Increased Ub-conjugating and proteolytic activities in repair fibroblasts could also reflect increased activity of Ub-protein ligases (E3s),15 30 reduced rates of conjugate disassembly by deubiquitinylating enzymes,31 or increased substrate availability.
Coordinate induction of multiple (yet variable) UPP components is observed in response to stress,32 33 during development and differentiation,14 15 16 17 18 19 34 35 36 37 and in certain pathologic states.30 38 39 Although E1 enzyme activity is posttranslationally upregulated during lens epithelial cell recovery from peroxide stress,40 significant upregulation of E1 protein levels appears to be a unique feature of developmental transitions (Annette Baich and Martin Obin, unpublished data).30 40 Similarly, E2-25K is developmentally regulated,14 35 but is not generally induced by stress or disease.41 Induction of E1 and E2-25K may therefore define the repair phenotype transition as a developmental progression and distinguish it from a stress response. At present, the molecular mechanisms controlling the coordinate induction of multiple, yet distinct sets of UPP genes remain unelucidated.
E2-25K is additionally noteworthy because of its substrates. E2-25K
ligates Ubn+1 to Ubn,
thereby catalyzing the synthesis of unanchored polyUb
chains.42
These chains are competent intermediates for en
masse conjugation to protein substrates.42
E2-25K could
therefore promote rapid and global increases in high-mass Ub-protein
conjugates in repair fibroblasts by generating preformed polyUb chains
for ligation to cell proteins by other E2s and E3s. E2-25K can also
ubiquitinylate p105, the precursor of the p50 subunit of
NF-
B.43
Ubiquitinylation targets p105 for
proteasome-dependent endoproteolytic cleavage, which generates p50.
This observation suggests potential associations among E2-25K
induction, enhanced expression of p50, and the acquisition of
competence to activate NF-
B by repair fibroblasts5
(discussed later). However, p50 levels did not appear to increase
during the repair fibroblast transition, an observation that argues
against upregulated E2-25Kdependent processing of p105 in repair
fibroblasts. Because Ubcs are typically rate-limiting for
ubiquitinylation,19
our proteolysis data suggest that Ubcs
other than E2-25K are also likely to be upregulated in repair
fibroblasts. Specifically, the enhanced capacity for Ub-dependent
proteolysis of 125I-H2A suggests that repair
fibroblasts contain elevated levels of Ubc2 and/or UbcH7, the Ubcs that
catalyze H2A polyubiquitinylation in vitro.44
The transcription factor NF-
B regulates many cell processes that can
disrupt corneal structure, including proliferation, apoptosis, and the
expression of inflammatory and degradative proteins.4
Consequently, the resistance of corneal stromal cells to NF-
B
activation has been proposed as an important mechanism protecting
corneal stasis and function.1
5
Our interest in I
B
derives from its role as an inhibitor of NF-
B nuclear translocation
and from the essential role of Ub-dependent I
B
degradation in
NF-
B activation.13
In the present study , we identified
increases in I
B
levels as an early event (day 2) in the repair
phenotype transition and sustained increases in I
B
levels as a
phenotypic marker of repair fibroblasts (Figs. 5A
5B)
. Because the
I
B
gene is itself induced by NF-
B,45
this finding
suggests that NF-
B activation, and thus I
B
degradation, are
constitutively upregulated in repair fibroblasts. Constitutive
upregulation of I
B
degradation induces NF-
B-dependent I
B
expression during the differentiation of pre-B cells to mature B
cells.46
Constitutive degradation of I
B
entails
phosphorylation, putative ubiquitinylation by an as yet unidentified
E2-E3 complex, and degradation by the proteasome.47
Therefore, upregulated UPP activities provide a mechanism to explain
both the elevated levels of total I
B
and the relatively low
levels of phosphorylated I
B
in repair fibroblasts. Upregulated
proteolysis of I
B
by cytosolic calpain(s)48
could
similarly regulate I
B
expression.
Acquisition of competence to efficiently activate an NF-
Bdependent
IL-1
autocrine loop (p50-p65) has been proposed as a critical step
in the loss of corneal stasis after injury.3
5
In previous
work we reported the inability of day-1 stromal cell cultures to
establish the IL-1
autocrine loop in response to exogenous IL-1
.
Moreover, it was suggested that this inability to establish the IL-1
autocrine loop is due to a deficiency in NF-
B
activation.5
Based on the downregulated UPP activities in
day-1 cells, we hypothesized that this deficiency in NF-
B activation
reflects deficiency in ubiquitinylation and/or Ub-dependent proteolysis
of I
B
. Deficiency in I
B
ubiquitinylation has recently been
shown to constitutively downregulate NF-
Bdependent inflammatory
responses of intestinal epithelial cells.49
However, our
data demonstrate that day-1 cells rapidly degrade I
B
in response
to IL-1
(Fig. 5B) . Quiescent corneal stromal cells therefore possess
a functional pathway for IL-
induced I
B
degradation, including
the I
B kinase (IKK) and
Ubc5/E3RSI
B
complexes,13
valosin-containing protein,50
the 26 S proteasome, and perhaps calpain.51
Moreover, in data not shown, we demonstrated that day-1 cells
efficiently degraded the I
B
, which was rapidly induced by NF-
B
activation, thereby reestablishing steady state levels of
NF-
Bassociated I
B
. Thus, day-1 cells appear competent to
proteolytically regulate I
B
in response to IL-1
. Yet, in
contrast to repair fibroblasts, day-1 cells failed to synthesize
IL-1
when assayed 24 hours after IL-1
induced NF-
B
activation.(Fig. 5C)
. Together, these observations indicate that the
inability of keratocytes to establish the IL-1
autocrine loop
reflects an inability to maintain persistent IL-1
synthesis in
response to IL-1
. This conclusion is supported by the observation
that levels of IL-1
mRNA are elevated in day-1 cells 2 hours after
IL-1
treatment, but are undetectable after 24 hours.5
Future studies in our cell culture model will examine stromal cell
mechanisms that inhibit or promote persistent induction of IL-1
in
response to IL-1
.
Developmental transitions require molecular and structural reorganization of cells, and this reorganization is accomplished in part through programmed protein degradation.15 17 19 35 The present study demonstrated for the first time that TKT is lost during the repair phenotype transition in vitro (Figs. 6A 6B 6C) , consistent with whole-animal studies.6 This result further validates the in vitro rabbit model of keratocyte activation. Notably, TKT loss in vitro reflects degradation by the proteasome (Fig. 7A) and, based on cell-free studies of TKT proteolysis (Fig. 7B) , is likely to be Ub dependent. These data identify TKT as a highly regulated proteasome substrate and mechanistically implicate the UPP in TKT loss in the corneal stroma after injury.
Loss of TKT (and ALDH1) from the injured cornea in vivo is believed to compromise corneal clarity by promoting backscattering of light in migrating keratocytes and myofibroblasts.6 8 In addition to its proposed role as a corneal crystallin,7 the metabolic function of TKT in the pentosephosphate pathway suggests that TKT loss after wounding may also predispose corneal cells to oxidative damage, further compromising corneal integrity. Noteworthy in this regard is the report that in vivo abrogation of TKT enzyme activity by thiamine depletion leads to lens fiber cell degeneration and cataract, presumably as a consequence of oxidative stress.52 Irrespective of how TKT promotes corneal clarity, our data suggest that TKT levels, and thus corneal transparency, are directly regulated by the UPP, presumably in conjunction with downregulated TKT transcription.
In summary, we showed that the UPP was coordinately induced during the
corneal repair phenotype transition and we have suggested how UPP
upregulation alters levels of I
B
and TKT, two UPP substrates that
are implicated in the loss of corneal clarity after injury. Elucidation
of the molecular mechanisms regulating the coordinate induction of
multiple yet distinct sets of UPP genes will enhance our understanding
of the corneal wound response and should provide insight into the
molecular basis of tissue stasis in the cornea and
elsewhere.53
| Acknowledgements |
|---|
| Footnotes |
|---|
Submitted for publication November 27, 2000; accepted February 7, 2001.
Commercial relationships policy: N.
The publication costs of this article were defrayed in part by page
charge payment. This article must therefore be marked
"advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C.
1734
solely to indicate this fact.
Corresponding author: Martin Obin, JMUSDA-HNRCA at Tufts University, 711 Washington St., Boston, MA 02111. mobin{at}hnrc.tufts.edu
| References |
|---|
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B activity Annu Rev Immunol 18,621-663[Medline][Order article via Infotrieve]
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