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J Biol Chem, Vol. 273, Issue 51, 34335-34340, December 18, 1998
From the Based on both in vivo and in
vitro studies, we have shown previously that the intracellular
domain of a membrane-bound isoform of the growth factor, neuregulin,
regulates proteolytic release of its extracellular domain ErbB
receptor-activating ligand. To investigate the mechanism(s) involved in
this regulation, a series of intracellular domain mutants were
constructed and tested for susceptibility to proteolytic processing
after transient transfection in COS-7 cells. These studies revealed
that regulation of extracellular domain cleavage by the intracellular
domain is sequence-specific and involves three distinct 30-60-residue
segments. The presence of any two of these three segments is both
necessary and sufficient for proteolytic processing, and resistance to
proteolysis is not due to an alteration in cellular localization or
transport. Evidence was also obtained that regulation of extracellular
domain processing involves initial intracellular domain dimerization.
Thus, with expression of a construct encoding only the intracellular
domain, dimerization could be demonstrated in cross-linking
experiments. Furthermore, resistance to proteolytic processing of a
construct lacking a large portion of the intracellular domain was
rescued with a chimera, in which the intracellular domain was replaced with a spontaneously dimerizing Fc fragment. Taken together these studies indicate that intracellular domain interactions are critically involved in the spacial and temporal control of growth and development by membrane-bound neuregulin isoforms.
Four members of the ErbB superfamily of receptor tyrosine kinases
(also called HER) have been characterized extensively. erbB-1 (receptor
for epidermal growth factor or
EGFR)1 binds several distinct
ligands containing an EGF-like domain and mediates proliferation and
differentiation of normal cells (1). The second member, ErbB-2,
initially characterized as the protooncogene, neu, encodes a
185-kDa protein. This protooncogene is frequently overexpressed in
various carcinomas and is associated with a poor prognosis (2). The
other two members, ErbB-3 and ErbB-4, have been cloned subsequently and
identified based on consensus protein-tyrosine kinase domains and
homology with the other ErbB members (3, 4). Neuregulins (NRGs)
isolated from ras-transformed mouse fibroblasts and human
breast cancer cells, originally called neu differentiation
factor (NDF) or heregulin, were initially identified as putative ErbB
receptor ligands based on their ability to stimulate tyrosine
phosphorylation of ErbB-2 (5, 6). Three other neuregulin homologues
were subsequently isolated from neural sources. One is acetylcholine
receptor-inducing activity from chicken brain, which induces the
synthesis of acetylcholine receptors in skeletal muscle (7). The other
is glial growth factor from the bovine brain, which stimulates Schwann
cell growth (8). The third is sensory and motor neuron-derived factor
(9). Despite their varied functions, all these homologues are derived from a single gene by alternate splicing or by use of several cell
type-specific transcription initiation sites, and all contain an
EGF-like domain required for receptor activation (8). Recent studies
demonstrated that neuregulins bind directly to ErbB-3 and ErbB-4 and
activate receptors through heterodimerization with ErbB-2 (10-15).
Gene inactivation experiments have demonstrated that neuregulins are
essential for early heart and central nervous system development.
Inactivation of both neuregulin alleles results in embryonic lethality
due to maldevelopment of the heart. In these animals, the cardiac
trabeculae fail to form normally, and there is a severe defect in
endocardial cushion development. In addition, neuregulin null mice
display defects of the nervous system including abnormal development of
both Schwann cell precursors and cranial ganglia (16, 17).
The varied biological functions mediated by neuregulins are likely
related to differential tissue expression and structural diversity. At
least 15 distinct isoforms are expressed in different tissues (18).
They can be classified into two major groups based on their domain
structures. One group is comprised of proteins that have an N-terminal
signal peptide, but lack transmembrane and intracellular domains. Thus,
these isoforms, which are largely expressed only in neural cells, are
packaged presumably and subject to regulated release. The other group,
expressed in both neural and mesenchymal cells, are
membrane-associated. In addition to an extracellular segment
(consisting of an Ig-like domain, a glycosylated region, and an
EGF-like domain), these isoforms contain a transmembrane and
intracellular domain.
The extracellular domain of the membrane-associated forms can be
proteolytically cleaved to release their ErbB receptor-activating functional peptide (5). Although some NRG isoforms, such as NDF- Membrane-bound NRG isoforms are expressed in mesenchymal cells that are
in juxtaposition to cells expressing ErbB receptors (21). For example,
in the early stage of the developing heart, the membrane-bound forms
are expressed in the endocardial lining, whereas their cognate
receptors are expressed in cardiac myocytes and in cells forming the
endocardial cushion. This suggests that neuregulins function in a
paracrine fashion during the early stages of heart development.
We have found recently, in both in vivo and in
vitro studies, that the NRG intracellular domain is essential for
proteolytic release of the NRG extracellular domain and for
determination of its subcellular localization (22). In this study
genetic disruption of only the intracellular domain of the
membrane-bound NRG isoforms resulted in a similar phenotype of embryo
maldevelopment, to that observed previously with disruption of the
entire gene. This indicates that the NRG intracellular domain is
critical for NRG signaling and raises the following questions: (i) how
do cells cleave the signaling peptide, and (ii) what processes regulate and trigger cleavage/secretion?
To further understand the molecular mechanism involved in these
process, we have investigated the role of the cytoplasmic tail in
regulating proteolytic cleavage/secretion. A series of mutants of the
rat NDF- The results of these studies indicate that discrete segments of the
intracellular domain of the NRG isoform, NDF- Generation of Mutated NDF Constructs--
(i) To construct NDF
mutants encoding proteins in which 30 residues were sequentially
deleted from the C terminus of the intracellular domain, the following
primers were synthesized. Five 3' primers (33-mer) were synthesized
based on the coding sequence at the C-terminal region of the
intracellular domain minus successive 30-residue segments at residues
392, 362, 332, 302, and 272 of NDF- Cell Lines, Transfection, and Cell Culture--
COS-7 cells were
obtained from the American Type Culture Collection (ATCC) and were
cultured in Dubecco's modified Eagle's medium containing 10% fetal
bovine serum. Cells (1 × 106) were plated on 100-cm
dishes and incubated under 5% CO2 for 15 h before
transfection. Transfections were performed with 10 µg of cDNA
using the dextran-DEAE (Life Technologies, Inc.) method as described
previously (23). Before harvesting conditioned medium, Opti-MEM (Life
Technologies, Inc.) containing CaCl2 (110 mg/ml) was used
to replace the Dubecco's modified Eagle's medium/fetal bovine serum,
and the cells were then incubated for a further 12 h. Human breast
cancer cells MCF-7 (ATCC) were cultured in RPMI 1640 medium with 10%
fetal bovine serum. Before being stimulated by the recombinant NDF
protein, the cells were starved for 20 h in RPMI 1640 serum-free medium.
Plasma Membrane Purification--
Transfected 1 × 107 cells were harvested by cold PBS with protease
inhibitors (1 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, 10 µg/ml leupeptin, and 10 µg/ml aprotinin) and homogenized by 15 passes with
a loose fitting Dounce homogenizer, then diluted 10-fold using the PBS.
The homogenate was then centrifuged at 1464 × g for 10 min, and the resulting pellet was resuspended in the PBS and diluted to
give a 6% (w/v) suspension. A volume (10.4) of this was mixed with 1.4 ml of Percoll (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech) in 15-ml Corex tubes and
centrifuged at 34,549 × g for 30 min. Two distinct
layers close to the top of the tube were evident. These were harvested
and washed in 5 volumes of 250 mM sucrose, 50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, and the resulting pellets were
resuspended in the PBS.
Western Blot Analysis--
Western blotting was performed as
reported previously (23) using either plasma membranes prepared as
described previously (24) or conditioned medium that was initially
filtered through a 0.2-µm pore size sterile filter unit (Costar) and
then concentrated up to 50-fold by centrifugation through a Centriplus
10 (Amicon) concentrator. Protein concentration was determined using
the Bradford method (Bio-Rad), and 30 µg of protein were loaded into
each well. Affinity-purified anti-NDF extracellular domain antibody
(1914) (Amgen) or anti-FLAG M2 antibody (IBI) was used as the primary antibody at a final concentration of 2 µg/ml (1:100 dilution), and
anti-rabbit or anti-mouse IgG-conjugated with horseradish peroxidase
(Amersham Pharmacia Biotech) was used as the second antibody (1:3000
dilution). After SDS-PAGE, proteins were electroblotted onto
Immobilon-P (Millipore) and detected using the ECL system (Amersham
Pharmacia Biotech).
p185neu Tyrosine Phosphorylation Assay--
The
conditioned medium from transfected COS-7 cells was filtered through a
0.2-µm pore size sterile filter unit (Costar) and concentrated. The
concentrate was added to individual wells of a 12-well plate containing
2 × 105 MCF-7 human breast cancer cells (ATCC) in
each well. Following a 10-min incubation at 37 °C, the cells were
lysed with 1% Nonidet P-40 lysis buffer that contained 10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.4, 100 mM NaCl, 40 mM NaF, 2 mM sodium othovanadate and the
protease inhibitors phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride (1 mM),
aprotinin (10 µg/ml), and leupeptin (10 µg/ml). The cell lysates
were subjected to enhanced chemiluminescence Western blot analysis with
anti-phosphotyrosine antibody RC-20 at a 1:1000 final dilution
(Transduction Laboratories).
Double Labeling Immunofluorescence and Microscopy--
Cells
transfected with NDF- Bacterial Expression and Chemical Cross-linking--
The
plasmids FLAG-NDF/CT, FLAG-GST/P, and GST/F were transformed into the
Escherichia coli strain, DH5 The intracellular domain of NDF- Unlike the wild-type protein, release of the 43-kDa peptide was not
observed with expression of the two other constructs (Fig. 1b). This was not due to poor transfection or degradation of
the mutated proteins, since their expression could be readily detected by Western blotting of cell lysates (Fig. 1b). In keeping
with these findings, release of the 43-kDa ErbB receptor-activating ligand from the 2c/gst construct could also not be detected in a
functional assay, even though release of the neuregulin ligand from the
wild-type NDF- By SDS-PAGE, the migration of the protein expressed by the C5 mutant is
consistent with the molecular mass of its peptide backbone (30 kDa). In
studies with the inhibitor of N-linked glycosylation, tunicamycin, this was shown to be due to a lack of glycosylation of the
C5-expressed protein (data not shown). The 2c/gst-encoded protein,
however, like the wild-type NDF- Although expression of the cleavage-resistant mutants was apparent in
the cell lysates, additional studies were performed to evaluate their
subcellular localization in more detail. Plasma membrane expression of
the wild-type and 2c/gst constructs was evident from Western blot
analysis of purified plasma membrane (Fig.
2a). However,
immunofluorescence labeling studies of permeabilized cells indicated
that both the wild-type and 2c/gst encoded proteins colocalised
predominantly to the same intracellular organelles rather than in the
plasma membrane (Fig. 2b). Similar intracellular localization was observed for all mutant constructs, i.e.
C1-C5 (data not shown). Since the proteins expressed by the wild-type and mutant (2c/gst, C1, C2, C3) constructs are glycosylated, their intracellular localization is likely mainly in the Golgi, although some
expression in the endoplasmic reticulum cannot be excluded. These
findings are in agreement with those reported by Burgess et
al. (19), which showed little membrane expression of NDF-
Release of the Neuregulin Functional Polypeptide Requires Its
Cytoplasmic Tail*
,
,
,
¶, and
¶
Victor Chang Cardiac Research Institute, St.
Vincent's Hospital, Darlinghurst, New South Wales 2010, Australia, the
¶ School of Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics, The University of
New South Wales, Kensington, New South Wales 2052, Australia, and
§ Amgen, Inc., Thousand Oaks, California 91320
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ABSTRACT
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Procedures
Results
Discussion
References
![]()
INTRODUCTION
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Procedures
Results
Discussion
References
4a,
are more localized in the plasma membrane, others, such as NDF-
2c,
show minimal plasma membrane localization. Both of these are processed
predominantly in intracellular organelles (19). Pulse-chase labeling
studies indicate that processing occurs within 30 min of translation.
Since the cleavage process is regulated in cultured cells by phorbol
esters, cleavage may require a signaling event (19). In addition, it
has been suggested that the efficiency of proteolytic cleavage is
directly proportional to the length of the intracellular domain (20),
which varies among the different isoforms.
2c isoform were constructed, in which either the
intracellular domain was sequentially deleted from the C terminus, or
specific segments of the intracellular domain were deleted. The
constructs were then used to evaluate membrane expression and release
of the 43-kDa functional peptide into the culture medium after
transient expression in COS-7 cells.
2c, regulate cleavage/secretion through a process that likely involves initial intracellular domain-mediated dimer formation.
![]()
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Procedures
Results
Discussion
References
2c (20). Since various amino
acids at the C terminus of TGF-
have been implicated in the
regulation of its proteolytic processing, all NDF mutants were
constructed with a codon for cysteine at their 3'-end. Each of the five
intracellular domain-deleted cDNAs of NDF was amplified using
polymerase chain reaction performed with the 5' primer (T7) encoding
the sequence of pcDNAIII vector (Invitrogen) and one of the 3'
primers, as well as the pcDNAIII-NDF-
2c (NDF-
2c cDNA
inserted in the vector) as a template. Sequential internal deletion
mutants were constructed using overlapping polymerase chain reaction.
(ii) Two NDF cDNA fusion constructs were developed by replacing the
region of the NDF-
2c cDNA encoding the C-terminal 150 residues
of its intracellular domain (amino acids 272-422) with a GST cDNA
fragment (encoding amino acids 5-155 of GST), designated 2c/gst, or by
replacing the 120 residues (amino acids 302-422) of the intracellular
domain with a human IgG1 Fc gene fragment (encoding 235 residues),
designated NDF-
2c/Fc. The GST gene fragment was amplified with
primers: 5'-CCAAAGCTTCATGATCGGCTTCGGCAG (5'-end primer with
a HindIII site, underlined) and
5'-TGCCTCGAGAAAACCAAGAAGCAGCGGCAG (3'-end primer with a
XhoI site, underlined) using pGEX-2T (Amersham Pharmacia
Biotech) as the template. The Fc gene fragment was amplified with
primers: 5'-AAACTCGAGGTTGAGCCCAAATCTTGT (5'-end primer with a XhoI site) and 5'-CACTCTAGATCATTTACCCGGAGACAG
(3'-end primer retaining an XbaI site). (iii) A DNA cassette
encoding the FLAG epitope (IBI) was ligated via an N-terminal
BamHI site of NDF mutant construct, 2c/gst, to give
FLAG-2c/gst or fused to the N-terminal end of the intracellular domain
of NDF-
2c (residue 264) to allow expression of a FLAG-fused
intracellular domain protein, FLAG-NDF/CT. The FLAG-2 (IBI)
vector was used for bacterial expression of the intracellular domain
(FLAG-NDF/CT) and the GST cDNA fragment (FLAG-GST/P). The pGEX
(Amersham Pharmacia Biotech) vector was used to express the full-length
GST (GST/F). All other mutant cDNAs were cloned between the
EcoRI and XhoI sites in the polylinker of the
mammalian expression vector, pcDNAIII, and confirmed by sequencing
prior to transfection.
2c and FLAG-2c/gst were plated in two-well
Novex plates (Nunc) and cultured for 24-48 h. After rinsing the cells
with PBS they were fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde plus 0.1% Triton
X-100 at room temperature for 30 min. The fixed cells were then blocked
with 5% skimmed milk in PBS for 30 min, followed by incubation with
anti-NDF intracellular domain antibody F20 (Santa Cruz) or
anti-FLAG M2 antibody (IBI) for 45 min at room temperature. After
washing, anti-rabbit IgG conjugated with fluorescein isothiocyanate
(Silenus Laboratory, Melbourne, Australia) and anti-mouse IgG-TRITC
(Sigma) was added and incubated for another 0.5 h. After washing,
cells were mounted with 1% p-phenylenediamine (1 mg/ml,
Sigma) in glycerol and then covered and sealed. Cells were examined
using a UV fluorescence microscope and photographed with a 40× power objective.
, and expressed by induction
with isopropyl-
-D-thiogalactopyranoside (0.5 mM) at room temperature for 3 h. After centrifugation
of the culture medium at 5000 rpm for 15 min, the resulting pellet was
resuspended in cold PBS with protease inhibitors (1 mM
phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, 10 µg/ml leupeptin, and 10 µg/ml
aprotinin) and sonicated for 6 min. The sonicated mixture was
centrifuged at 14,000 rpm for 30 min and the supernatant fraction
harvested. The supernatant fraction was subjected to cross-linking with
1 mM bis-sulfosuccinimidyl substrate (Pierce) at 4 °C
for 1 h and then incubated with 10 mM Tris, pH 7.5, for 15 min to stop the reaction. COS-7 cells, transfected with
FLAG-NDF/CT, were washed twice with cold PBS, scraped into 1 ml of PBS
with protease inhibitors, and sonicated for 1 min to prepare the
supernatant for cross-linking. The reaction mixture was subjected to
Western blotting.
![]()
RESULTS
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Procedures
Results
Discussion
References
2c is comprised of 159 residues. We have demonstrated previously that a deletion mutant
(C5, Fig. 1), which lacks
almost the entire intracellular domain (i.e. the C-terminal
150 amino acids), is resistant to extracellular domain proteolytic
cleavage. To evaluate if extracellular domain cleavage requires a
specific sequence of the cytoplasmic domain or is merely dependent on
the length of the C-terminal tail, an additional construct was
developed in which the terminal 150 residues were replaced by an
unrelated 150-residue stretch of the GST protein (Fig. 1a).
This construct, 2c/gst, the wild-type construct NDF-
2c, and the
previously developed C5 construct were then evaluated for cleavage
after expression of each construct in COS-7 cells. As shown in Fig.
1b, cleavage of the wild-type protein resulted in the
release of a 43-kDa extracellular domain polypeptide into the culture
medium. Despite a calculated molecular mass of only 26,000 Da for this
ErbB-activating peptide, as reported previously (19, 20), glycosylation
results in its migrating as a molecular mass = 43 kDa species by
SDS-PAGE.

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Fig. 1.
Requirement of the intracellular domain for
the release of the extracellular domain of NDF-
2c. a,
schematic representations of wild-type and C-terminal deleted
(C5) constructs or a construct (2c/gst), in which
the C-terminal 150 residues of NDF-
2c were replaced by 150 residues
of glutathione S-transferase. Boxes represent the
major structural motifs of NDF-
2c: an immunoglobulin-like domain
(Ig), a glycosylated region (Gly), an EGF-like
domain (EGF), a transmembrane domain (TM), and a
cytoplasmic tail (CT). The arrow indicates the
proteolytic cleavage site. b, Western blot analysis of
conditioned media and cell lysates from COS-7 cells transfected with
indicated constructs. Cells were transfected and cultured for 48 h
and then conditioned medium and cells were harvested for Western blot
analysis, as detailed under "Experimental Procedures." The
migration of prestained molecular mass standards is indicated by the
arrows on the left. c,
stimulation of tyrosine phosphorylation of p185neu, the ErbB
receptor by recombinant NDF proteins. Conditioned medium from
untransfected COS-7 was used as a negative control and bacterial
expressed EGF-like domain protein as a positive control.
2c construct was readily apparent with this assay
(Fig. 1c). These data indicate that a specific sequence of
the intracellular domain rather than amino acid length, per se, is involved in the proteolytic cleavage.
2c, was glycosylated as evidenced by
the finding that it migrated at a considerably higher apparent
molecular mass (65 kDa) than that calculated for its peptide backbone
(46 kDa).
2c compared with another isoform, NDF-
4a.

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Fig. 2.
Membrane expression and immunocytochemistry
of NDF-
2c, C5, or 2c/gst in transfected cells. a,
purified membrane proteins from NDF-
2c (2c), the
cytoplasmic domain deletion mutant (C5), or the
deletion/substitution mutant 2c/gst-transfected cells were analyzed by
Western blotting with an anti-neuregulin antibody. The migration
position of molecular mass markers is shown on the left.
b, immunofluorescent staining of the NDF-
2c and
FLAG-2c/gst proteins. NDF-
2c and FLAG-2c/gst constructs were
co-transfected in COS-7 cells, and expression of their encoded proteins
was detected with an anti-NDF-intracellular domain or anti-FLAG
antibody, respectively.
To further define the regions within the cytoplasmic domain that are
involved in regulating cleavage, a series of C-terminal intracellular
domain deletions of NDF-
2c was constructed, as shown in Fig.
3a. Compared with the
full-length construct (NDF-
2c), these deletion mutants were
truncated successively by 30 amino acids. Thus, construct C1 lacked 30 residues and construct C5 lacked 150 residues at the C terminus of the
intracellular domain. As shown in Fig. 3b, the proteins
expressed in cells transfected with either of the first two deletion
mutants, C1 and C2, behaved similarly to the wild-type NDF-
2c
protein, since release of the expected 43-kDa functional peptide was
readily apparent. In contrast, secretion of the 43-kDa peptide by the
C3-, C4-, or C5-encoded protein was either only barely detectable or
absent. Since expression of these mutant proteins was evident by
Western blotting of cell lysates (Fig. 3c), it is likely
that the various truncations did not alter transcription or translation
or reduce transfection efficiency. Taken together, these findings
suggest that a 30-amino acid (residues 332-362) segment is required
for cleavage.
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To more precisely identify the segments of the C-terminal tail involved
in regulating proteolytic processing, six additional mutant constructs
were evaluated (Fig. 4). Construct
2c
332-362, in which the 30 residues distinguishing the mutants C2
and C3 were deleted, but the remainder of the C-terminal tail
(i.e. residues 362-422) was kept intact, surprisingly
showed intact proteolytic cleavage. Thus, the 30-residue segment
involving amino acids 332-362 is required for cleavage when the
remainder of the C-terminal tail (aa 362-422) is also lacking as is
construct, C3. However, cleavage was not observed with two other
constructs, 2c
272-362 or C2
272-332 (constructed based on C2 in
Fig. 3). The former retains only the C-terminal 60 amino acids (aa
362-422), whereas the latter lacks the C-terminal tail but retains the
30-residue segment aa 272-332. Thus, although the 30-residue segment,
aa 332-362, and the C-terminal tail, aa 362-422, are necessary for cleavage, neither alone is sufficient. Rather an additional cytoplasmic region between aa 272-332 is also required. This conclusion is also
evident from studies with two additional mutants, 2c
302-362 and
C2
302-332. In these mutants, the C-terminal tail segment (aa
362-422) or the 30-residue segment (aa 332-362) were separately attached to a construct truncated at residue 302. Since cleavage was
evident with both these constructs, the cytoplasmic region defined
above (i.e. aa 272-332) as being required for cleavage can
be narrowed down to a segment involving only residues 272-302. However, deletion of only these 30 residues (construct 2c
272-302) again did not affect cleavage.
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Taken together, these studies indicate that two of the three cytoplasmic segments, involving residues 272-302, 332-362, and 362-422 are both necessary and sufficient to allow extracellular domain cleavage.
To test if these segments regulate cleavage by mediating
protein/protein interactions, chemical cross-linking experiments were
performed using a construct encoding only the NDF intracellular domain
(NDF/CT, aa 272-422) following expression in E. coli. As shown in Fig. 5a, after
treatment with a cross-linking reagent, a protein complex with twice
the molecular weight of the intracellular domain was detected by
Western blot assay. By contrast, this protein complex was barely
detectable in samples not treated with the cross-linking reagent. The
same results were observed after expression of the NDF-
2c C-tail in
COS-7 cells (Fig. 5a), and dimer formation was observed with
cross-linking even when cells were transfected with lower amounts of
the NDF/CT-containing plasmid that resulted in low level expression of
the encoded protein (data not shown). These data, therefore, indicate
that regulation of extracellular domain cleavage may involve initial
dimerization.
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Although previous studies demonstrated that full-length GST forms stable dimers in vitro (25), this may not be the case for the truncated GST protein (residues 5-155) used in the 2c/gst construct, since cleavage/secretion was not observed with expression of this construct (Fig. 1). To confirm this conclusion, a full-length GST construct (GST/F), or the truncated GST sequence (GST/P, residues 5-155) used in the 2c/gst construct (the latter containing an N-terminal FLAG epitope), was expressed in E. coli and the resulting expressed proteins subjected to SDS-PAGE and Western blot analysis, before and after cross-linking. As shown in Fig. 5b, although dimerization was readily apparent with the cross-linked GST/F protein, the GST/P protein was resistant to dimerization. To further test whether dimerization regulates NRG cleavage/secretion, an additional construct (C4/Fc) was developed (Fig. 6a). In this construct, an Fc fragment from human IgG1 was attached to the C terminus of the deletion mutant, C4, which in the absence of the Fc fragment does not support proteolytic cleavage of extracellular domain. Fc fragments dimerize spontaneously through hydrophobic packing, and under nonreducing conditions, dimerization can be detected due to disulfide bond formation. As shown in Fig. 6, cleavage was observed with expression of the C4/Fc construct but not with the C4 construct, and in vitro dimer stabilization by disulfide bond formation could be demonstrated only for the C4/Fc construct.
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DISCUSSION |
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Members of the EGF family include EGF, TGF-
, heparin-binding
EGF, amphiregulin, and viral growth factors (26). These polypeptides are synthesized as precursor proteins consisting of an N-terminal signal peptide, a six-cysteine-containing EGF-like domain, a
hydrophobic transmembrane domain, and a cytoplasmic domain. Functional
peptides that activate their cognate target receptors can be released
from the extracellular domains of these proteins by proteolytic
cleavage. Since cleavage/release can be stimulated by the activation of cellular signaling pathways (20, 27-29), it is likely that spatial and
temporal control of proteolytic cleavage is an important and common
mechanism for regulating growth and development. In the case of
TGF-
, there is evidence that the proteolytic cleavage from its
membrane-bound precursor is regulated by the cytoplasmic tail, and, in
particular, by the nature of the C-terminal amino acid (29, 30).
In this study, we systematically analyzed the involvement of the
intracellular domain of neuregulins in the regulation of extracellular
domain cleavage by constructing a series of NDF-
2c mutants, which
were then characterized after transient expression in a model cell
culture system. Despite the heterologous nature of this system, it
allows proteolytic release of the expected 43-kDa functional peptide
from the full-length wild-type precursor neuregulin protein and has
been used successfully to evaluate the cleavage/release mechanism of
other proteins (27-30).
Evidence that the C-terminal domain of NDF-
2c regulates proteolytic
cleavage in a sequence-specific manner, is the finding that the 2c/gst
fusion protein, which contained an intracellular domain of the same
length as the wild type NDF-
2c protein, was resistant to proteolytic
cleavage. Furthermore, studies with additional C-terminal truncation
mutants indicate that while deletion of the terminal 30 or 60 intracellular domain amino acids is tolerated, deletion of more than 60 residues significantly reduces proteolytic cleavage. Thus, a region of
the intracellular domain between amino acids 332 and 362 appears to be
critical for correct proteolytic processing of membrane-bound
neuregulin precursor proteins. As all constructs contained a C-terminal
cysteine, involvement of the intracellular domain of NDF-
2c in the
release of its functional peptide differs from that of TGF-
, where
the presence of an hydrophobic amino acid appears to be critical for
proteolytic cleavage (29). This finding is not entirely unexpected,
since there are other differences between TGF-
and NRGs. NRGs have a
much longer cytoplasmic tail than TGF-
, which is highly conserved
between species. In addition to the 332-362 segment, two other regions
(residues 272-302 and 362-422) were subsequently shown to also be
involved in cleavage/release. Moreover, any two of these three
functional regions were shown to be sufficient for cleavage. By
evaluating intracellular localization, we also demonstrated that
failure to observe proteolysis is not due to impaired intracellular
transport. Thus, extracellular proteolytic cleavage of NRG is regulated
by its intracellular domain in a sequence-specific manner and may
differ for the various NRG isoforms to provide specificity of responses
to different biological stimuli. A concern regarding the above results
is whether membrane insertion, protein orientation, or intracellular
transport is altered with any of the mutants. Since NDF contains a
cryptic internal signal sequence (the signal sequence is located within
the transmembrane domain), membrane insertion or protein orientation of
NDFs is determined by the transmembrane domain and by a limited number of charged residues flanking the transmembrane domain. Since the shortest mutant construct, C5, still contains nine residues C-terminal to the transmembrane-domain, it is unlikely that membrane insertion and
orientation were altered with this or other C-terminally deleted constructs. In addition, the identical subcellular localization of both
the wild-type NDF-
2c and 2c/gst proteins suggests that altered
protein transport cannot account for the impaired cleavage/secretion of
these mutants.
We further show that regulation of extracellular domain cleavage may involve initial intracellular domain dimerization. Thus, when expressed alone, the NDF intracellular domains can be dimerized by treatment with a cross-linking reagent. In addition, susceptibility to cleavage can be restored by providing a heterologous intracellular domain that dimerizes spontaneously.
Taken together, our data suggest that the spatial and temporal control
of growth and development by membrane-bound neuregulin isoforms
involves proteolytic cleavage of the extracellular domain and that this
cleavage is regulated by initial intracellular domain dimerization.
Such intracellular domain interactions may be initiated by activation
of cellular signaling pathways to provide a unique inside-out signaling system to regulate NDF proteolytic
cleavage and, thus, activation of ErbB receptors.
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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We thank Drs. Glenn Smith and Rodney Fiddles (Garvan Medical Research Institute, Sydney, Australia) for providing the human IgG1 constant gene and recombinant human EGF-like domain (rEGF) protein. We also thank Elaine Martin and Veronica Hammond for expert secretarial assistance.
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FOOTNOTES |
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* This work was supported in part by Grant 970981 (to M. Z. and R. M. G.) from the National Health and Medical Research Council, Australia and Grant G96S4580 (to M. Z., and R. M. G.) from the National Heart Foundation, Australia.The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
To whom correspondence should be addressed: Victor Chang
Cardiac Research Institute, 384 Victoria St., level 6, Darlinghurst, NSW 2010, Australia. Fax: 61-2-9295-8501; E-mail:
m.zhou{at}victorchang.unsw.edu.au.
The abbreviations used are: EGF, epidermal growth factor; NDF, neu differentiation factor; TGF, transforming growth factor; PAGE, polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis; GST, glutathione S-transferase; NRG, neuregulin; PBS, phosphate-buffered saline; aa, amino acids.
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