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First published online 20 June 2006
doi: 10.1242/jcs.03015
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Research Article |

CNRS FRE2593 CRBM, 1919 route de Mende, 34293 Montpellier CEDEX 05, France
Author for correspondence (e-mail: christine.benistant{at}crbm.cnrs.fr)
Accepted 11 April 2006
| Summary |
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(PLC
), sphingosine kinase and heterotrimeric Gi proteins implicates a PLC
sphingosine-1-phosphateGi pathway for PDGF-induced SFK activation outside caveolae and actin assembly. In addition, the cytoplasmic tyrosine kinase Abl was identified as an important effector of this signalling cascade. We conclude that PDGF may stimulate two spatially distinct pools of SFKs leading to two different biological outcomes: DNA synthesis and dorsal ruffle formation.
Key words: Src, PDGF, Caveolae, DNA synthesis, F-actin cytoskeleton, Abl
| Introduction |
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In addition to mitogenesis, PDGF induces morphological changes leading to lateral ruffles for directed cell migration. This process is driven by cortical actin polymerisation and primarily involves the Rac effector Wave2 for activation of the Arp2/3 complex (Suetsugu et al., 2002b
). Although the molecular mechanism by which growth factors induce cell migration has been extensively studied, the role of SFK has not been unravelled. Several reports favour a model where they play an important role in this process: PDGF activates Src at the cell periphery and this requires small GTPases and an intact cytoskeleton (Sandilands et al., 2004
). Furthermore, knockout of the SFK-binding site in the PDGF receptor
strongly reduces chemotaxis (Rosenkranz et al., 1999
). By contrast, the PDGF migratory response is not affected in cells derived from mice lacking Src, Fyn and Yes. Note that those cells were immortalised by the SV40 large-T antigen (Klinghoffer et al., 1999
), therefore one cannot exclude the fact that the large-T antigen alleviates the need for SFKs for cell migration as reported for mitogenesis (Broome and Courtneidge, 2000
; Furstoss et al., 2002
).
PDGF also induces F-actin circular dorsal ruffle formation. This cellular process has been linked to macropinocytosis (Dharmawardhane et al., 2000
) but recent data indicated an important role for cell migration into the extracellular matrix (Suetsugu et al., 2003
). This cytoskeletal rearrangement is also regulated by cortical actin polymerisation through the activation of the Arp2/3 complex (Suetsugu et al., 2002b
) and involves a Wave1-specific pathway (Suetsugu et al., 2003
). Although Rac plays a central role in lateral lamellipodia extension, Suetsugu and colleagues showed that it also regulates dorsal ruffle formation (Suetsugu et al., 2003
). Interestingly, they suggested that both cellular responses are independent and that the latter involves an additional Rac-independent pathway. Most information on intracellular signals upstream or parallel to Rac has been provided by one group who report the existence of Ras, Rac and Rab5 pathways, all required for ruffle formation (Innocenti et al., 2003
; Lanzetti et al., 2004
; Scita et al., 1999
). In addition, Cbl has also been implicated as a negative regulator of this PDGF response and this effect was dependent upon SFK (Scaife et al., 2003
). This raises the idea that in addition to mitogenesis, SFK could regulate dorsal actinic rearrangement.
How growth factors use SFKs for transmitting various cell responses is largely unknown. Specificity of signal transduction may involve specific substrates. Alternatively, specificity could be achieved spatially through recruitment of a specific pool of SFKs within the cell. SFKs are localised in distinct subcellular compartments including perinuclear membranes, early endosomes and the plasma membrane. Surprisingly, PDGF-induced SFK activation occurs during recruitment to the plasma membrane with maximal activity at the cell periphery (Sandilands et al., 2004
). This suggests that the bulk of SFK signalling is initiated within this region of the cell. Interestingly, several mechanisms have been reported for SFK activation by growth factors: either by a direct interaction with the receptor (Bromann et al., 2004
) or by a transactivation mechanism (Rosenfeldt et al., 2001
). In the case of PDGF, SFKs associate with the receptor by interaction of their SH2 domain (Twamley et al., 1992
) with the phosphotyrosines Y579 and Y581 of the receptor (Mori et al., 1993
). Alternatively, it has been suggested that PDGF can also induce SFK activation through the activation of a pertussis-toxin-sensitive G protein (Chen et al., 1994
; Conway et al., 1999
; Rosenfeldt et al., 2001
). In addition, Spiegel and colleagues proposed that sphingosine 1-phosphate (S1P), a lipid second messenger and ligand for the seven transmembrane receptors of the EDG family (Rosenfeldt et al., 2001
) is involved in this signalling process. According to their model, PDGF induces a PLC
/Ca2+ pathway that allows recruitment of sphingosine kinase to the membrane for S1P production (Olivera et al., 1999
). S1P then binds to the G-protein-coupled EDG1 receptor allowing further activation of SFKs. This signalling crosstalk has been associated with PDGF-induced directed cell movement, although the role of S1P-induced SFK activation was not addressed (Hobson et al., 2001
). The contribution of each mechanism for SFK signalling is however not known, but this would favour a model in which a growth factor activates distinct pools of SFK for signalling.
Cholesterol-enriched membrane microdomains (CEMMs) are organelles with specific physical features distinct from the contiguous membrane (Simons and Toomre, 2000
). Caveolae define a subclass of these membrane structures in non-lymphoid cells with a diameter of 50-100 nm and represent the major if not exclusive CEMMs present in fibroblasts. They are composed of caveolins as main structural proteins, cholesterol and sphingolipids, and a number of signalling molecules including growth factor receptors and SFKs (Pike, 2005
). The potential role of non-caveolae CEMMs in signal transduction is the subject of intense debate (Douglass and Vale, 2005
; Munro, 2003
). By contrast, a large body of evidence indicates that caveolae function as lipid scaffolds to regulate signal transduction including cell growth (Pike, 2005
). For example, most PDGFRs expressed in quiescent fibroblasts reside in caveolae and cholesterol present in these structures regulates part of the tyrosine phosphorylation and signalling induced by PDGF (Liu et al., 2000
). Accordingly, caveolin-1 has been identified as an important regulator of cell growth and protein inactivation has been linked to tumorigenesis (Razani and Lisanti, 2001
). Here we show that in addition to mitogenesis, SFKs are also required for PDGF-induced dorsal ruffle formation. We also provide evidence for a spatial regulation of SFK signalling induced by PDGF: a first pool initiated from caveolae and regulated by membrane cholesterol for mitogenesis, and a second pool regulated by a S1P-EDG-Gi protein pathway outside caveolae for F-actin assembly. We conclude that a spatial compartmentalisation mechanism induced by PDGF may allow regulation of SFK signalling leading to distinct biological outcomes: cell growth and morphological change.
| Results |
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A role for caveolae in Src mitogenic signalling
We next examined the intracellular signals affected by membrane cholesterol depletion. CD treatment did not affect receptor activation as assessed by its in vitro kinase activity and tyrosine phosphorylation content (Fig. 2A), confirming that membrane cholesterol does not impact on receptor catalytic activation (Liu et al., 2000
). We also did not observe any change of PDGF-induced Ras and ERK activation (Fig. 2B), suggesting that membrane cholesterol does not impinge on the Ras pathway. Nevertheless, CD induced a substantial increase in basal signals including Ras and ERKs. This may be attributed to the capacity of membrane cholesterol to regulate GTPase-activating proteins and specific phosphatases that ensure low basal signalling (Wang et al., 2003
). Similarly, CD also induces a significant increase in basal phosphotyrosine content as observed when treating cells with the tyrosine phosphatase inhibitor vanadate. This suggests that CD also inhibits tyrosine phosphatases in vivo. In contrast to the Ras pathway, Src signalling was affected by cholesterol membrane depletion: CD reduced PDGF-induced SFK activation and phosphorylation of the Src-substrate Stat3 on Y705 (Fig. 3). Recovery of cells for >2 hours allows replenishment of membrane cholesterol pools (not shown). In these conditions, a substantial SFK activation was obtained, confirming that inhibition was not due to any toxic effect of the drug (Fig. 3A). Myc has been described as a important target gene of SFK signalling during growth-factor stimulation (Bromann et al., 2004
). Accordingly, membrane cholesterol depletion inhibited the increase of Myc mRNA level induced by PDGF. Inhibition was overcome by addition of cholesterol in the medium showing drug specificity (Fig. 3C).
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We next evaluated the impact of membrane cholesterol and dominant-negative Cav-3DGV on Src mitogenic function. The group of Kazlauskas suggested that in a discontinuous stimulation assay, the two pulses of PDGF signalling use different intracellular messengers for mitogenesis (Jones and Kazlauskas, 2001
). Interestingly, microinjection experiments indicated that SFKs are required for the first 8-10 hours of continuous PDGF stimulation (Roche et al., 1995
; Twamley-Stein et al., 1993
), suggesting that SFK are required for both early and late signalling. Inactivation of SFK by the specific inhibitor SU6656 during the initial phase was sufficient to inhibit DNA synthesis (Fig. 3D, left panel). The short treatment did not affect the capacity of PDGF to activate SFKs during the second pulse of stimulation (Fig. 3D, right panel). Therefore, SFKs may be required for the early events of mitogenic signalling. We then searched for a functional link between membrane cholesterol and the Src pathway. To this end, cells were transfected with a Myc-expressing construct, synchronised in G0, treated with CD and stimulated with two pulses of PDGF for cell-cycle re-entry. Green fluorescent protein (GFP) was co-expressed as a marker to visualise transfected cells. As shown in Fig. 3E, CD pretreatment did not inhibit mitogenesis of Myc-expressing cells but did affect control cells. Under our conditions, Myc did not induce DNA synthesis in the absence of growth factor; furthermore, the observed effect was specific to this transcription factor, because forced expression of Fos did not give substantial rescue. By contrast, Fos overcame inhibition induced by the dominant-negative RasN17 mutant showing specificity (Barone and Courtneidge, 1995
) (Fig. 3F). The involvement of caveolae in this response was next confirmed by expressing the Cav3-DGV construct. As observed with CD, Myc co-expression bypassed the G1 block induced by this mutant (Fig. 3F). Similar results were obtained when overexpressing caveolin-1 (not shown). Altogether these data strongly suggest that caveolae regulate Src-induced Myc induction for cell-cycle progression.
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SFKs regulate PDGF-induced actin dorsal ruffles outside caveolae.
We next searched a role for SFKs in PDGF-receptor signalling outside caveolae. In addition to mitogenesis, PDGF induces morphological changes for cell migration and/or invasion. These include formation of lamellipodia and dorsal ruffles (Buccione et al., 2004
). We found that the latter required SFKs: 40% of the cells formed dorsal ruffles within 10 minutes of PDGF simulation and this response was inhibited by the SFK inhibitor SU6656 or expression of the kinase-dead mutants SrcK and FynK (Fig. 5A). It should be noticed that the inhibitory effect obtained with both dominant-negative constructs indicates that Src and Fyn may have overlapping functions. We next analysed whether the SH2 and SH3 domains of the kinase were necessary for signalling. SrcK with inactive SH3 (SrcSH3*K) or SH2 domain (SrcSH2*K) were found inhibitory unlike SrcK allele with both SH2 and SH3 inactivation (SrcSH3*SH2*K). We concluded that both SrcSH2 and SrcSH3 domains are required for signalling leading to dorsal ruffles. In contrast to SFK, the ERK pathway may not be used by PDGF for this morphological response because the MEK inhibitor U0126 had no effect (Fig. 5A). The influence of caveolae was next examined on this cellular response. CD reduced actin stress fibres of quiescent cells in agreement with a role on cytoskeleton rearrangement (Kwik et al., 2003
). However membrane cholesterol depletion by treating cells with CD or CO, or growing cells in LPDS medium had no effect on dorsal ruffle formation (Fig. 5B). Similarly, no effect was observed when overexpressing caveolin-1 and Cav-3DGV constructs (Fig. 5B). We concluded that morphological signals leading to F-actin assembly are not regulated by caveolae.
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/Ca2+-dependent pathway (Olivera et al., 1999
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Finally, we examined the requirement for Src mitogenic substrates Shc, Stat3 and Abl for ruffle formation. Although non-phosphorylatable alleles of Shc (Shc2Y2F/R394F) and Stat3 (Stat3Y705F) were dominant negative for mitogenesis (Blake et al., 2000
; Boureux et al., 2005
; Bowman et al., 2001
) they did not influence dorsal ruffle formation (Fig. 8A). Nevertheless, kinase inactive forms of Abl, AblK and AblPPK, still reduced the PDGF response (Fig. 8A) in agreement with previous reports (Furstoss et al., 2002
; Plattner et al., 1999
). Therefore SFKs may use both common and specific substrates for dorsal ruffle formation and DNA synthesis. We have previously shown that Abl phosphorylation by SFKs is involved in kinase activation for dorsal ruffle formation (Furstoss et al., 2002
). Whether S1P signalling impacts on PDGF-induced Abl activation was also analysed. To this end, Abl outside caveolae was immunoprecipitated from a Triton X-100-extracted cell lysate and assayed for in vitro kinase assay using Crk as a specific substrate. We found that PDGF induced a 2.5-fold increase in Abl catalytic activity as previously reported (Plattner et al., 1999
). In addition, treatment of cells with DMS, PTx or a low dose of the PLC inhibitor U73122, all impaired Abl activation. By contrast, they did not affect phosphorylation of the SFK mitogenic substrate Stat3 on Y705 showing specificity (Fig. 8B). Taken together, these results are consistent with a model where Abl is a downstream element of the S1P signalling pathway for dorsal ruffle formation.
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| Discussion |
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This report also unravels a previously unappreciated function for SFKs in PDGF-induced actin dorsal ruffles. This morphological change has been related to macropinocytosis and protease-dependent cell migration (Suetsugu et al., 2003
) suggesting a function for SFKs in those cell responses. In addition our data indicate that PDGF uses a distinct pool of SFKs for this cytoskeleton rearrangement. The latter is localised outside caveolae and is probably associated with actinic structures. Accordingly this pool could be characterised biochemically following fractionation assays indicating that it may be poorly solubilised in standard lysis conditions. This would explain why SFKs were thought to be solely activated by receptor association (Mori et al., 1993
). Furthermore, activation of this population may be dependent on the capacity of cells to generate dorsal ruffles. For example Ph cells used by DeMali and Kazlauskas (DeMali and Kazlauskas, 1998
) do not form dorsal ruffles (not shown) and most SFK was found activated by receptor association. Our report also proposes a molecular mechanism for activation of this pool of Src kinases, which implicates an S1P-EDG-Gi-SFK signalling cassette as proposed for lamellipodia extension (Rosenfeldt et al., 2001
). Therefore, a similar mechanism may exist for dorsal ruffle formation. PDGF-induced S1P formation involves a PLC
-dependent pathway and indeed a low dose of PLC inhibitor was sufficient to inhibit SFK activation by PDGF outside caveolae. This raises the idea that SFKs are activated through both the association with the receptor and a PLC
-dependent mechanism (a model is shown in Fig. 9). It should be noted that the molecular mechanism for directed ruffle formation (lateral or dorsal) has not yet been established.
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-dependent pathway for full catalytic activation (Plattner et al., 2003
induces Abl activation is not well understood, but Pendergast et al. surmised the existence of a phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate-binding protein for Abl inhibition (Plattner et al., 2003
to regulate Abl catalytic activity in vivo. How Abl transmits the morphological signal for ruffle formation is not known but several substrate candidates have been identified: these include Wave1, adaptor proteins (Nck, CrkII, Abi1/2), PSTPIP and the Rac activator SOS (Leng et al., 2005
In summary, our data identify a new mechanism for Src mitogenic regulation in caveolae and a Src signalling cascade outside these organelles that mediates PDGF-induced ruffle formation. Except for Abl, none of the Src mitogenic substrates impact on dorsal cytoskeleton rearrangement. Conversely, none of the S1P signalling proteins have an important role in PDGF mitogenic response (Rosenfeldt et al., 2001
) (and data not shown). The fact that Abl was used for both cell responses suggests that like Src, two distinct pools of the kinase may be used by the receptor as recently revealed by FRET analysis (Ting et al., 2001
). Finally, our results provide strong evidence for a spatial compartmentalisation mechanism for the regulation of SFK signalling leading to distinct biological outcomes: cell growth and morphological change.
| Materials and Methods |
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Cell culture, transfection and immunofluorescence
NIH 3T3 cells were cultured and transfected as described (Furstoss et al., 2002
). Cells were serum starved for 30 hours according to the protocol described (Jones and Kazlauskas, 2001
), then treated as recorded elsewhere (Smart and Anderson, 2002
) and stimulated as described in Fig. 1A or as otherwise indicated. Cholesterol-depleting drugs were removed before stimulation. Other drugs such as SU6656, U0126, U73122, U73343, DMS and PTx (500 ng/ml) were left in the medium during stimulation. In chronic cholesterol-depletion experiments, cells were grown in 5% LPDS in the presence or absence of soluble cholesterol (25 µM) for 30 hours and serum starved (0.25% LPDS) for 24 hours before stimulation. BrdU was added to the medium to monitor S-phase entry. Cells were then fixed and analysed for transfected construct expression and BrdU incorporation by immunofluorescence as described (Roche et al., 1995
). Circular ruffle formation analysis was performed (Furstoss et al., 2002
). The percentage of transfected cells that incorporated BrdU was calculated using the following formula: % of BrdU-positive cells = (number of BrdU-positive transfected cells)/(number of transfected cells) x100. The percentage of transfected cells that have formed dorsal ruffles was calculated using the following formula: % of cells with dorsal ruffle = (number of ruffle-positive transfected cells)/(number of transfected cells) x100. For each coverslip, about 150-200 cells were analysed. For each cell, the % of active Src present at the cell periphery = relative Src signal x [(pY416Src signal at the cell periphery)/(pY416Src signal of the cell)] x100. Images were recorded with a motorised DMRA microscope (Leica Microsystem) using a 63x plasmapochromatic oil-immersion objective (NA 1.32). Acquisition was performed with a coolsmap HQ camera (Photometrics) driven by the Metamorph 6.2r4 acquisition software (Molecular Devices).
Biochemistry
Cells were lysed in lysis buffer (1% NP40) or RIPA buffer (1% Triton X-100, 1% deoxycholate) as described (Furstoss et al., 2002
) except for isopicnic gradient fractionation. Immunoprecipitation, re-immunoprecipitation, western blotting and in vitro kinase assays were performed as decribed (Furstoss et al., 2002
; Kypta et al., 1990
) and quantified using ImageQuant TL software (Molecular Dynamics). RasGTP was precipitated using GST-Ral GDS-Ras binding domain (Busca et al., 2000
). Fractionation experiments were performed essentially as described (Anderson, 1998
) with minor modifications. Briefly, 108 cells were incubated with vehicle or 25 ng/ml PDGF for 10 minutes at 37°C, rinsed with PBS, scraped in ice-cold PBS-containing 1 mM vanadate and pelleted. Pellets were next suspended in ice-cold 2x lysis buffer containing 1% Triton X-100, 10 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5), 150 mM NaCl, 5 mM EDTA, 75 U/ml aprotinin and 1 mM vanadate, for 20 minutes. Cell suspension was homogenised in a tight-fitting Dounce homogeniser with 10 strokes and centrifuged for 5 minutes at 1300 g to remove nuclei and large cellular debris. The supernatant was subjected to (5.0-42.5%, w/v) sucrose gradient centrifugation in 4 ml tubes. Nine fractions were collected from the top to the bottom of the gradient. In some experiments, fractions 2-4 were pooled and diluted fivefold in 25 mM MOPS (pH 6.5), 150 mM NaCl containing 1% Triton X-100 and centrifuged at 50,000 g for 30 minutes at 4°C. Pellets were then suspended in dissociation buffer containing 10 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5), 150 mM NaCl, 5 mM EDTA, 0.5 mM EGTA, 1 mM vanadate, 50 mM NaF, 75 U/ml aprotinin, 1% NP 40 and 60 mM octylglucoside and incubated for 1 hour on ice before SFK immunoprecipitation with cst1 antibody. Fractions 7-9 were pooled and diluted fivefold in lysis buffer before SFK immunoprecipitation. Cholesterol content in cholesterol-enriched fractions was assessed using the Amplex® Red cholesterol assay kit from Molecular Probes.
Myc mRNA level was measured both by northern blotting (Furstoss et al., 2002
) and using real-time quantitative PCR as described (Puceat et al., 2003
). After reverse transcription, 10 ng cDNA was used for real-time quantitative PCR, performed with a light cycler and the SYBR Green fast start kit (Roche). The following primers were used: Myc forward 5'-CGGAGGAAAACGACAAGAGG-3' and reverse 5'-GTGCTCGTCTGCTTGAATGG-3'; ß-tubulin forward 5'-CGGACAGTGTGGCAACCAGATCGG-3' and reverse 5'-TGG CCAAAAGGACCTGAGCGAACGG-3'. Data were normalised using RT-PCR of the ß-tubulin mRNA as an index of cDNA content after reverse transcription.
| Acknowledgments |
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| Footnotes |
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