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First published online 13 June 2007
doi: 10.1242/jcs.008607
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Research Article |
1 Department of Growth Factor Division, National Cancer Center Research Institute, 5-1-1 Tsukiji, Tokyo 104-0045, Japan
2 Department of Pharmacology, National Cardiovascular Center Research Institute, 5-7-1 Fujishirodai, Suita, Osaka 565-8565, Japan
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: rsakai{at}gan2.res.ncc.go.jp)
Accepted 28 April 2007
| Summary |
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Key words: Eph, Ephrin, Metalloproteinase, Secretion
| Introduction |
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Some ephrins are cleaved by a protease. When ephrin-A5 binds with EphA3, their complex creates a recognition motif for a disintegrin and metalloproteinase (ADAM)10 membrane metalloproteinase, which allows effective cleavage of the extracellular domain of ephrin-A5 (Hattori et al., 2000
; Janes et al., 2005
). Protease-mediated cleavage also occurs for B-type ephrins; a rhomboid transmembrane serine protease RHBDL2 cleaves the transmembrane domain of ephrin-B3 (Pascall and Brown, 2004
), and ephrin-B1 and ephrin-B2 are processed within the transmembrane region by the presenilin 1 (PS1)-
-secretase system to release an intracellular peptide (Georgakopoulos et al., 2006
; Tomita et al., 2006
).
During the process of screening peptides secreted from pancreas cancer cell lines, we found evidence that the extracellular portion (ectodomain) of ephrin-B1 is secreted. This finding led us to study the mechanism of ephrin-B1 shedding within the ectodomain in cancer cells. In the present study, we show that the C-terminus of ephrin-B1 regulates the exocytosis of MMP-8, a key protease of ephrin-B1 cleavage, in response to the interaction with its receptor EphB2. An accumulating number of reports have shown that increased secretion of metalloproteinases often depends on their transcriptional activation (Chinni et al., 2006
; Raymond et al., 2006
; Reuben and Cheung, 2006
). However, increase of MMP-8 secretion induced by stimulation of ephrin-B1 did not depend on the elevation of MMP-8 expression level, but rather it was suggested to depend on the intracellular signaling mediated by ephrin-B1.
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-chains of type I, II and III collagen and also a wide range of non-collagenous substrates, and plays important roles in inflammation and in cancer progression (Lint and Libert, 2006| Results |
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Cleavage of ephrin-B1 ectodomain is enhanced by interaction with its receptor EphB2, which is regulated by the C-terminus of ephrin-B1
Next, we examined whether the interaction of ephrin-B1 with its receptor EphB2 modifies the cleavage of ephrin-B1. Incubation of SUIT-4 cells with purified EphB2-Fc, a fusion protein of the extracellular domain of EphB2 with the Fc fragment of mouse IgG2b, significantly increased the amount of the 35 kDa fragment of ephrin-B1 in the conditioned medium (Fig. 1C, left). In EphB2-Fc-treated cell extract, a cellular fragment of ephrin-B1, produced by ectodomain shedding, was detected by immunoblotting with an antibody reacting to the C-terminal of ephrin-B1, as a band at 17 kDa (p17; Fig. 1C, right). The accumulation of p17 was also detected in ephrin-B1-expressing cells after contact with cells expressing EphB2. When ephrin-B1-expressing cells were overlayed on EphB2-expressing cells and co-cultured, significant reduction of uncleaved ephrin-B1 together with production of the p17 fragment was observed (Fig. 1D). This result indicates that cleavage of ephrin-B1 is also enhanced when ephrin-B1-expressing cells contact with heterologous cells expressing the EphB2.
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C4 and
C19; the MMP-8 cleavage site at aa 217-218 is intact in these mutants), did not produce the 35 kDa ectodomain fragment in the culture medium upon treatment with EphB2-Fc (Fig. 2A). However, mutation of any of the four tyrosine residues in the cytoplasmic region (4YF) and tyrosines located at the C-terminus of ephrin-B1 (Y343, 344F) did not affect ephrin-B1 cleavage (Fig. 2A). In contrast to the significant reduction of full length wild-type or YF mutants of ephrin-B1 in cell lysates after EphB2-Fc treatment, level of C-terminally truncated ephrin-B1 mutants remained almost unchanged (Fig. 2A, bottom panels). We also observed similar results using PANC-1 cells, and confirmed that expression of
C mutants were localized on cell membrane (data not shown). In addition, treatment with PP2, an inhibitor of Src family kinases, significantly blocked tyrosine phosphorylation of ephrin-B1, but it did not affect cleavage of ephrin-B1 (Fig. 2B). Thus, the C-terminus of ephrin-B1, but not tyrosine phosphorylation of ephrin-B1, is required for induction of the proteolysis of ephrin-B1.
The Ephrin-B1 ectodomain is processed by MMP-8
The cleavage of ephrin-B1 was inhibited in PANC-1 cells expressing ephrin-B1, by incubation with the pan-matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) inhibitor GM6001, but not by inhibitors of other proteases including a cysteine protease, a serine protease, an aspartic protease or calpain (Fig. 3A). The amount of cleaved ephrin-B1 ectodomain was increased by treatment of DCI (3,4-dichloroisocoumarin), a serine protease inhibitor and TPCK (N
-tosyl-phe chloromethyl ketone), a chymotrypsin inhibitor of unknown function. As the inhibition of ephrin-B1 cleavage by GM6001 was also confirmed in SUIT-4 cells (data not shown), we further attempted to identify the metalloproteinase responsible. When SUIT-4 cells were treated with natural MMP inhibitors, TIMPs, at low concentration (100 nM), cleavage of ephrin-B1 was most effectively inhibited by TIMP-1 compared with TIMP-2 and TIMP-3 (Fig. 3B). TIMP-3, which is known to inhibit tumor necrosis factor-
converting enzyme (TACE) did not inhibit the cleavage of ephrin-B1 at all at concentrations from 5-250 nM (data not shown), whereas it completely inhibited the cleavage of TNF-
expressed in THP-1 cells at 100 nM (Fig. 3B, right panel). Among inhibitors of several MMPs expressed in SUIT-4 cells, including MMP-1, MMP-2 or 3, MMP-8 and MMP-9, only the inhibitor of MMP-8 blocked the cleavage of ephrin-B1 (Fig. 3C), and this effect was also seen in COS-1 cells and PANC-1 cells expressing ephrin-B1 (data not shown).
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Expression of MMP-8 protein was detected at approximately the same levels in all of the cell lines we examined (Fig. 4A, left), although it was detected at high level when the cells were replated and decreased after the cells reached confluence (Fig. 4A, right). When expression of MMP-8 was reduced in SUIT-4 cells by treatment of cells with siRNA, the amount of processed ephrin-B1 ectodomain in the culture medium was decreased (Fig. 4B). By contrast, overexpression of activated MMP-8 cDNA, in which the propeptide domain was removed, in SUIT-4 cells evidently increased the cleavage of ephrin-B1 (Fig. 4C).
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As some MMPs and their substrates physically associate directly or indirectly and make a protein complex, interaction between MMP-8 and ephrin-B1 was examined (Sawicki et al., 2005
; Yu et al., 2007
). Ephrin-B1 was coprecipitated with MMP-8 from extracts of L ephrin-B1 cells by MMP-8-specific antibodies, but not by control normal rabbit IgG1, indicating that MMP-8 forms a complex with ephrin-B1 (Fig. 4D). However, association of MMP-8 with the receptor EphB2 was not detected (data not shown). These results also suggest that MMP-8 is the key metalloproteinase that cleaves the ephrin-B1 ectodomain.
Stimulation of ephrin-B1 activates secretion of MMP-8, which is regulated by the C-terminus of ephrin-B1
To understand the mechanism of activation of ephrin-B1 cleavage by EphB2, we next examined whether it is accompanied by an increase in MMP-8 expression. The level of intracellular expression of MMP-8 mRNA was not affected by treatment with EphB2-Fc or contact of ephrin-B1-expressing cells with EphB2-expressing cells for 4 hours or longer (Fig. 5A). Moreover, the amount of processed ephrin-B1 ectodomain produced in the medium was not altered by the addition of cyclohexamide or actinomysin D, inhibitors of de novo synthesis of mRNA and proteins, respectively (Fig. 5B). These results indicate that activation of ephrin-B1 cleavage by EphB2 does not depend on the increased amount of MMP-8. In addition, when the de novo synthesis of MMP-8 was blocked, the amount of intracellular MMP-8 protein decreased slightly after 4 hours or longer treatment of ephrin-B1-expressing cells with EphB2-Fc (Fig. 5C), which suggests that stimulation of ephrin-B1 activates extracellular release of MMP-8 protein from the cytoplasm. Actually, the amount of MMP-8 protein in the culture medium was remarkably elevated after incubation of the cells with EphB2-Fc as detected by immunoprecipitation (Fig. 5D).
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C4 and
C19) (Fig. 5F, left). Consistently, the total amount of MMP-8 protein in the culture medium from cells expressing wild-type ephrin-B1 was higher than in the medium from
C4 ephrin-B1-expressing cells (Fig. 5F, right). These results suggest that stimulation of ephrin-B1 by EphB2 upregulates the process of MMP-8 exocytosis, and the C-terminus of ephrin-B1 regulates this event.
Stimulation of ephrin-B1 by EphB2 induces activation of Arf1 GTPase
To further confirm that activation of MMP-8 secretion is involved in the elevated ephrin-B1 cleavage in response to stimulation with EphB2, the cells were treated with brefeldin A, an inhibitor of membrane trafficking through the Golgi, which blocks the secretion of proteins (Tamaki and Yamashina, 2002
). EphB2-stimulated cleavage of ephrin-B1 was apparently reduced by brefeldin A treatment (Fig. 6A). As a mode of action of brefeldin A is to inhibit activation of ADP ribosylation factor 1 (Arf1), a ras family GTPase, by blocking of the exchange reaction from Arf1-GDP to Arf1-GTP (Niu et al., 2005
; Zeeh et al., 2006
), we further examined the activity of Arf1 in ephrin-B1-expressing cancer cells. To examine the amount of activated, GTP-bound Arf1, a pull-down approach was performed with an adaptor protein GGA3, which specifically binds to GTP-bound Arfs (Dell'Angelica et al., 2000
). As a control experiment, we confirmed that constitutively activated Arf1 (Q71L), but not a dominant negative mutant of Arf1 (T31N) was coprecipitated with GST-tagged GGA3 (Fig. 6B, right panel). Incubation of SUIT-4 cells with EphB2-Fc increased the amount of Arf1-GTP coprecipitated with GST-tagged GGA3 (Fig. 6B). Similar results were also observed in PANC-1 cells expressing ephrin-B1, whereas treatment with EphB2-Fc did not affect activation of Arf1 in parent PANC-1 cells, which express ephrin-B1 in trace amounts (Fig. 6B). The amount of Arf1-GTP was also increased by EphB2-Fc treatment of Capan-1 cells expressing wild-type ephrin-B1 or ephrin-B1 4YF mutant, but not in cells expressing
C4 ephrin-B1 (Fig. 6C). These results suggest that stimulation of ephrin-B1 by EphB2 activates Arf1, and the signaling mediated by the C-terminus of ephrin-B1 is involved in this pathway. Furthermore, treatment of cells with brefeldin A, or overexpression of dominant negative mutant of Arf1, Arf1 T31N, decreased the secretion of MMP-8 in Capan-1 cells, indicating that Arf1 regulates the secretion of MMP-8 (Fig. 6D).
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The C-terminus of ephrin-B1 is involved in the invasion by cancer cells
To investigate the biological implication of metalloproteinase activation caused by ephrin-B1-mediated signaling, we examined changes in the invasiveness of ephrin-B1-expressing cells with or without stimulation by EphB2 using an in vitro cell invasion assay. The invasion of collagen by Capan-1 cells was promoted by expression of ephrin-B1 and treatment of the cells with EphB2-Fc, and this invasion was inhibited by the addition of an MMP-8 inhibitor (Fig. 7A). On the other hand, the invasion by Capan-1 cells expressing
C4 ephrin-B1, or by parent Capan-1 cells was not significantly promoted by EphB2-Fc treatment (Fig. 7A).
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C4 ephrin-B1 (PANC-1
C4) were established to compare their invasiveness with that of parent PANC-1 cells. Expression of wild-type or mutated ephrin-B1 did not affect BrdU incorporation into cells grown under normal two-dimensional cell culture conditions (data not shown). When these cells were injected intraperitoneally into nude mice, PANC-1 ephrin-B1 cells formed many tumor nodules in the mesenteric sheets and also in the peritoneal cavity, including the rectouterine region. By contrast, in mice injected with parent PANC-1 cells or PANC-1
C4 cells, such tumors in mesentery sheets were fewer and smaller, and the total tumor volume involving the rectouterine region was much less (Fig. 7B,C, Table 1). The cells composing the mesenteric sheets express cognate receptors for ephrin-B1, EphB2 and EphB4 (see Fig. S1 in supplementary material). These results indicate that ephrin-B1 actually promotes cancer cell invasion, which requires the C-terminus of ephrin-B1. EphB2 and EphB4 expressed in cells of the mesenteric sheet might act as interaction partners for ephrin-B1 present on PANC-1 cells.
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| Discussion |
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Regulation of the secretion of MMP-8 enables ephrin-B1 signaling to play an important role in regulating MMP-8 activity. Like other soluble MMPs, MMP-8 is proteolytically activated extracellularly by removal of its propeptide domain, and physiologically relevant level of MMP protease activity requires efficient release of the protease to the cellular surface (Sternlicht and Werb, 2001
). Although the molecular mechanism of the MMP-8 secretory pathway is not well understood, our data indicate that signaling mediated by the carboxyl-terminal region of ephrin-B1 is involved. Notably, removal of the C-terminus of ephrin-B1 resulted in significant reduction of MMP-8 secretion and cleavage of the extracellular domain of ephrin-B1. In addition, the C-terminus of ephrin-B1 regulates the signal leading to activation of Arf1, a critical regulator of membrane traffic in the secretory pathway and one target of brefeldin A (Tamaki and Yamashina, 2002
; Donaldson et al., 2005). Arf1 GTPase regulates the membrane association of coat proteins involved in intracellular membrane trafficking, which is critical for the vesicle transport of secretory proteins at the Golgi (Donaldson et al., 2005). Actually we observed that treatment of cells with brefeldin A, or expression of Arf1 T31N inhibited the secretion of MMP-8. Therefore, as one possibility, secretion of MMP-8 is upregulated by activation of Arf1 GTPase through ephrin-B1 signaling, although the molecular mechanisms connecting ephrin-B1 and Arf1 are still not well understood. As ephrin-B1 has a docking site for the PDZ domain at the C-terminus, some protein containing PDZ domains may be involved in this pathway. As a consequence, the increase of secreted MMP-8 may trigger the degradation of extracellular matrix and the cleavage of ephrin-B1 as a possible feedback mechanism (Fig. 8). In our preliminary observations, Arf1 activation occurs as fast as 10 minutes after stimulation with EphB2-Fc, and some increase of MMP-8 in the culture medium was detected from 0.5 hours after addition of EphB2-Fc. By contrast, the cleavage of ephrin-B1 was observed at 1 hour, but not at 10 minutes after stimulation with EphB2-Fc, by immunoblotting of a cleaved C-terminal fragment of ephrin-B1, p17, in cell lysates (data not shown). Although we cannot determine the precise time point of MMP-8 secretion because of the limitation of the antibody's sensitivity, these observations are compatible with the model that ephrin-B1 reverse signaling induces Arf1 activation, which leads to MMP-8 release and ephrin-B1 cleavage. As extracellular activation of MMPs can be triggered by activation of other MMPs, there is the possibility that ephrin-B1-mediated signaling may synergistically promote activity of several MMPs. In addition, Arf1 GTPase may involve the intracellular transport of not only MMP-8, but also several other MMPs. Whether metalloproteinases other than MMP-8 are also upregulated by EphB2 stimulation of ephrin-B1 should also be investigated.
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We show that the 35 kDa ephrin-B1 fragment in the culture medium of SUIT-4 cells was generated by cleavage at aa 218. From the experiments using natural inhibitors of metalloproteinases, TIMP-1 but not TIMP-2 and TIMP-3 effectively blocked the cleavage of ephrin-B1. Among these TIMPs, TIMP-3 most effectively inhibits the function of ADAM family metalloproteinase, including ADAM-17 (TACE), ADAM-10 and ADAM-TS4 (Amour et al., 2000
; Brew et al., 2000
; Hashimoto et al., 2001
). In addition, membrane-type metalloproteinases (MT-MMPs) are preferentially inhibited by TIMP-2 and TIMP-3, but not by TIMP-1 (Brew et al., 2000
). Our observation that cleavage of ephrin-B1 was most effectively inhibited by TIMP-1, but not by TIMP-2 or TIMP-3 suggests that it is unlikely that those members of the ADAMs family are critically involved. However, we cannot exclude that TIMP-3-independent ADAM metalloproteinases may contribute to the processing of ephrin-B1. Together with the observation that ephrin-B1 cleavage was at least partially inhibited by RNA interference of MMP-8, and it was increased by overexpression of MMP-8, our results suggest that MMP-8 is the key metalloproteinase that cleaves ephrin-B1 ectodomain.
In addition to an extracellular 35 kDa peptide derived from the N-terminal of ephrin-B1, stimulation of ephrin-B1-expressing cells with EphB2-Fc resulted in the production of a 17 kDa intracellular fragment (p17) derived from the C-terminus of ephrin-B1. As detection of p17 was abolished in L cells expressing the ephrin-B1 4A mutant (data not shown), p17 was generated by cleavage of ephrin-B1 within the extracellular domain at aa 218. Ephrin-B1 and ephrin-B2 are cleaved within the transmembrane region by presenilin-dependent
-secretase, which releases an approximately 12 kDa intracellular fragment (Georgakopoulos et al., 2006
; Tomita et al., 2006
). Although p17 may be further processed by
-secretase and produce a small intracellular peptide, we did not detect such a product, possibly because of its rapid degradation or cell type-dependent differences in protease activity.
One possible function of ephrin-B1-mediated MMP-8 secretion is processing of ephrin-B1 and downregulation of EhpB2-stimulated ephrin-B1 intracellular signaling. Unlike wild-type ephrin-B1 protein,
C ephrin-B1 protein was not reduced after EphB2-Fc treatment, which seems to suggest that cleavage of ephrin-B1 contributes to the down regulation of ephrin-B1 after stimulation. However, recent reports show the trans-endocytosis of ephrin-B1 after engagement with EphB receptors, which regulates ephrin-B-mediated cell repulsion (Zimmer et al., 2003
; Marston et al., 2003
; Parker et al., 2004
). We also observed that ephrin-B1 4A, which also triggers Arf1 activation and release of MMP-8, but is resistant to cleavage, was degraded and decreased in amount after stimulation with EphB2-Fc almost to the same degree with wild-type ephrin-B1 (data not shown). Because the C-terminus of ephrin-B1 may also modify its endocytosis, we cannot conclude at present that ephrin-B1 cleavage greatly affects the stability and turnover of the EphB-ephrin-B1 complex on the cell surface. Rather, the biological significance of ephrin-B1-mediated MMP-8 secretion is considered to be the promotion of the invasion potential of cancer cells via degradation of surrounding extracellular matrix. However, addition of the 35 kDa ephrin-B1 ectodomain prepared from conditioned medium of ephrin-B1 expressing COS-1 cells inhibited the motility of EphB2-expressing cells, similar to the effect of unclustered ephrin-B1-Fc, indicating the possible biological effect of secreted fragments on cell movement, whereas it did not affect cell proliferation (see Fig. S2 in supplementary material).
The potential significance of ephrin-B1 in cancer cell invasion is supported by our finding that ephrin-B1-mediated collagen invasion by Capan-1 cells was related to MMP-8. The inability of
C-ephrin-B1 to promote collagen invasion in the same assay revealed that signaling through C-terminus of ephrin-B1 affects the invasion ability of cancer cells. In addition, expression of ephrin-B1 in the pancreas cancer cells, PANC-1, promoted the dissemination of intraperitoneally injected cells into the mesentery and peritoneal cavity where they formed tumor nodules, demonstrating for the first time that ephrin-B1 actually promotes cancer cell invasion in vivo. Overexpression of B-type ephrins in cancer cells would affect cell-cell adhesion by their interaction with cell adhesion proteins such as claudin (Tanaka et al., 2005
). Ephrin-B1-mediated intracellular signaling also results in aberrant activation of RhoA and Rac1 (Tanaka et al., 2003
; Tanaka et al., 2004
; Lee et al., 2005
). Together, events such as these would result in increased cell motility. These findings in conjunction with the ephrin-B1 induction of MMP-8 secretion, indicate that ephrin-B1 overexpression would result in an enhanced potential for invasion of surrounding tissues. For example, both MMP-8 and ephrin-B1 are frequently expressed in ovarian cancers, and their expression correlates with tumor grade and a poor prognosis (Castellvi et al., 2006
; Varelias et al., 2002
). Ephrin-B1 could also be involved in invasion of cancer cells circulating in the blood into sheets of endothelial cells which express EphB receptors and play a role in extravasation and metastasis. The inhibition of a specific cellular signal originating in ephrin-B1 stimulation may be a good candidate for regulating tumor invasion.
| Materials and Methods |
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C4 and
C19, truncation of four or 19 aa residues at the C-terminus, respectively) were generated using PCR-based techniques. Alanine substitution of four aa in the extracellular domain (aa 216-219) of ephrin-B1, ephrin-B1 4A, was performed using the Altered Sites Mutagenesis System (Promega). Generation of Ephrin-B1 with mutations of four tyrosine residues in the cytoplasmic domain (Y313, 317, 324, 329) and ephrin-B1 4YF, have been described previously (Tanaka et al., 2005
Cell culture, transfection and retrovirus infection
SUIT-4 (Kawano et al., 2004
) and the other pancreas carcinoma cell lines were cultured in RPMI1640 supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum. Mice fibroblast L cells and COS-1 cells were cultured in DMEM with 10% fetal bovine serum. For transient expression assays, COS-1 cells and SUIT-4 cells were transfected with plasmid DNA using Lipofectamine 2000 reagent (Invitrogen). Recombinant retroviral plasmid, pDON-AI was cotransfected with pCL-10A1 retrovirus packaging vector (IMGENEX) into 293gp cells to allow the production of retroviral particles. Capan-1 cells were infected with retroviruses for transient expression of ephrin-B1 or Arf1 mutants, and used for experiments 48 hours after infection. For some experiments, Capan-1 cells stably expressing wild-type ephrin-B1 were established after retrovirus infection through the selection in medium containing G418 (600 µg/ml). L cells stably expressing ephrin-B1 or EphB2 were established as described and cultured in medium containing hygromycin B at a concentration of 400 µg/ml (Tanaka et al., 2005
). PANC-1 cells stably expressing ephrin-B1 were established through selection in medium containing puromycin at a concentration of 2 µg/ml for 2-3 weeks. Well isolated colonies were characterized further.
In vitro siRNA treatment
Stealth siRNA (Invitrogen) of MMP-8 was synthesized as follows. Sense: 5'-AAGGCAUGAGCAAGGAUUCCAUUGG-3'; antisense: 5'-CCAAUGGAAUCCUUGCUCAUGCCUU-3'. The control siRNA (scramble II duplex: 5'-GCGCGCUUUGUAGGAUUCGdTdT-3') was purchased from Dharmacon. SiRNAs were incorporated into cells using LipofectamineTM 2000 according to the manufacturer's instructions (Invitrogen). Assays were performed 72 hours post treatment.
Peptidomic analysis of secretory proteins
SUIT-4 cells were cultured in serum-free RPMI1640 medium and the conditioned medium was collected. Cleared supernatant was loaded onto a SepPak C18 cartridge (Waters) for peptide extraction. Peptides bound to the cartridge were eluted with 0.1% trifluoroacetic acid (TFA)/60% acetonitrile (ACN) and lyophilized. The resultant sample was reconstituted with the same solvent and applied to an HPLC gel filtration column (Pharmacia). Fractions containing peptides with a molecular mass below 8,000 Da were subjected to reductive alkylation as described previously (Sasaki et al., 2002
) and desalted with an Empore disk cartridge (3M). The desalted material was separated with a 75 mm x 100 mm C18 column (LC Packings, Sunnyvale, CA) before matrix assisted laser desorption ionisation (MALDI)-MS/MS analysis using an Ultimate HPLC pump and gradient programmer (LC Packings). The solvent system was 5% acetonitrile (ACN) (solvent A) and 95% ACN (solvent B); both contained 0.1% TFA. A linear gradient from 5% B to 60% B over 50 minutes was used. Eluates were spotted at 20-second intervals using Probot (LC Packings) on a MALDI target plate. Mass spectra were obtained in reflector mode on a (MALDI-TOF/TOF 4700 mass spectrometer (Applied Biosystems). Ion signals above S/N 25 observed in the MSMS spectra were selected for MSMS ion search against human entries in the NCBI nr database using the Mascot (Matrix Science) search algorithm with no enzyme specification, with the mass tolerance of precursor ions and product ions set at 100 ppm and 0.25 Da, respectively.
Immunoprecipitation and immunoblotting
Cell lysates were prepared with protease inhibitors in PLC buffer [50 mM HEPES (pH 7.5), 150 mM NaCl, 1.5 mM MgCl2, 1 mM EGTA, 10% glycerol, 100 mM NaF, 1 mM Na3VO4 and 1% Triton X-100]. To precipitate the proteins, 1 µg of monoclonal or affinity purified polyclonal antibody was incubated with 500 µg of cell lysate for 2 hours at 4°C, and then precipitated with protein G agarose for 1 hr at 4°C. Immunoprecipitates were extensively washed with PLC buffer, separated by SDS-PAGE, and immunoblotted. In some experiments, TrueBlot anti-rabbit IgG (eBioscience), which does not react to the denatured rabbit IgG, was used as the secondary antibody of the immunoblotting. For detection of MMP-8, rabbit polyclonal antibody was basically used in this study, however, almost the same results were obtained by using mouse monoclonal antibody.
RT-PCR
Total RNA was prepared from cultured cells by Isogen (Nippon Gene) according to the manufacturer's instructions and treated with DNase I. cDNA was synthesized from 2 µg of total RNA, and polymerase chain reactions (PCR) were performed in a 25 µl reaction volume at an annealing temperature of 55°C. The linear area of the PCR for each reaction was defined; 15 cycles for GAPDH and 25 cycles for MMP-8. Specific primers for MMP-8 and GAPDH have been described previously (Wahlgren et al., 2001
; Woo et al., 2003
); the expected PCR products were 352 bp and 300 bp, respectively. PCR products were subjected to electrophoresis on 2% agarose gels, and DNA was visualized by ethidium bromide staining.
Metabolic labeling
Cells cultured in 60 mm diameter dishes were preincubated in methionine-free DMEM (Sigma) for 1 hour, then cultured in 1.5 ml of methionine-free medium containing 0.15 mCi of [35S]methionine (Amersham) for a further 4 hours. The cells were rinsed extensively and incubated in medium supplemented with EphB2-Fc or control Fc at 4 µg/ml for 2 hours. MMP-8 in the conditioned medium was purified by immunoprecipitation using an anti-MMP-8 polyclonal antibody and separated on SDS-PAGE. The gel was dried and subjected to autoradiography. The results were visualized with a Bio Imaging Analyzer (BAS1000; Fuji).
In vitro cleavage of ephrin-B1
Purified MMP-1 and MMP-8 were activated prior to use by treatment with 2 mM p-aminophenylmercuric acetate for 90 minutes at 37°C and dialyzed against 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5) containing 150 mM NaCl, 5 mM CaCl2 and 50 µM ZnCl2. Activated enzymes (10 nM, each) were incubated with ephrin-B1-Fc (2 µM) in 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5) containing 150 mM NaCl, 5 mM CaCl2, 50 µM ZnCl2 and 0.05% SDS at 37°C for 1 hour, separated by SDS-PAGE, and immunoblotted with anti-Fc of mouse IgG.
Arf1-GTP pull-down assay
To assess the amount of activated Arf1-GTP in cells, we performed a pull-down assay by using a GST-GGA3 construct (Dell's Angelica et al., 2000
). Briefly, cells were left untreated or treated with EphB2-Fc (4 µg/ml) for 20 minutes. Cell lysates were prepared in lysis buffer [50 mM HEPES (pH 7.5), 150 mM NaCl, 10 mM MgCl2, 10% glycerol, 100 mM NaF, 1 mM Na3VO4 and 1% Triton X-100], and then incubated with gluthathione-Sepharose beads containing a GST-GGA3 fusion protein for 45 minutes at 4°C. Precipitates were washed four times in the same buffer, and the precipitated Arf1 was detected by immunoblotting.
In vivo tumor invasion assay
The animal experimental protocols were approved by the Committee for Ethics of Animal Experimentation, and the experiments were conducted in accordance with the guidelines for Animal Experiments of the National Cancer Center. Peritoneal dissemination of tumors was tested by intraperitoneal injection of 1x107 PANC-1 cells suspended in 0.3 ml of RPMI1640 medium into 6-week-old BALB/c nude mice (CLEA Japan, Inc.). The mice were sacrificed 8 weeks after injection, and peritoneal dissemination was evaluated. To examine expression of Eph receptors in mesentery-derived cells, the mesenteric sheets were cut along the streak of arteries as described previously (Akedo et al., 1986
). The cells were collected from dissected sheets by incubating at 37°C for about 20 minutes in 0.25% trypsin in PBS.
| Acknowledgments |
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| Footnotes |
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