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First published online 6 May 2008
doi: 10.1242/jcs.025536
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Research Article |


1 Department of Tumor Biology, The Netherlands Cancer Institute, Plesmanlaan 121, 1066 CX Amsterdam, The Netherlands
2 Department of Pathology, University Medical Center Utrecht, 3584 ZX Utrecht, The Netherlands
3 Department of Biology, McGill University,1205 Dr Penfield Avenue, Montreal, QC H3A 1B1, Canada
4 Department of Cell Biology, Erasmus MC, Dr Molewaterplein 50, 3015 GE Rotterdam, The Netherlands
Author for correspondence (e-mail: m.fornerod{at}nki.nl)
Accepted 7 March 2008
| Summary |
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Key words: Wnt signaling, β-catenin, APC, Axin, LRP5/6
| Introduction |
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(CK1
) and glycogen synthase kinase 3 (GSK3) and the tumor suppressors adenomatous polyposis coli (APC) and axin (Logan and Nusse, 2004
However, our current understanding of Wnt signal transduction and β-catenin processing suffers from significant gaps. In particular, the make-up and subcellular localization of the mature destruction complex is unclear at present. For this reason, the mechanism through which the destruction complex senses ligand engagement at the Frizzled-LRP (lipoprotein receptor-related protein) receptor complex remains unidentified. Recently, increasing evidence suggests that important regulatory steps in the turnover of the destruction complex may take place at the plasma membrane (for a review, see Cadigan and Liu, 2006
). Engagement of the Frizzled (Fz) and LRP5/6 co-receptors on the cell surface by Wnt ligands, results in the phosphorylation of the intracellular domain of LRP5/6 by CK1
and/or GSK3β. Phosphorylated LRP5/6 presents a docking site for axin that is recruited to the plasma membrane in response to Wnt stimulation (Cliffe et al., 2003
; Davidson et al., 2005
; Zeng et al., 2005
) along with other canonical Wnt pathway components including axin, GSK3β and Fz8 (Bilic et al., 2007
). The scaffold protein Dishevelled (Dvl) appears to be required for this translocation (Schwarz-Romond et al., 2007
). Although it remains unproven, it has been hypothesized that cytoplasmic destruction of β-catenin is halted as a result of axin relocation, allowing β-catenin to redistribute to the nucleus.
Nuclear localization of β-catenin is considered to be a hallmark of Wnt activation, yet in many systems it is only incidentally detected in the nucleus (Anderson et al., 2002
; Kobayashi et al., 2000
). The nuclear level of the N-terminally dephosphorylated (or `dephospho') form of β-catenin has been shown to correlate better with Wnt activity (Staal et al., 2002
). Dephospho-β-catenin has been suggested to reflect the de novo translated form of β-catenin, which is involved in signal transduction (Willert et al., 2002
). We set out to optimize experimental conditions for the detection of dephospho-β-catenin in cultured mammalian cell lines. In a series of colon carcinoma cell lines, dephospho-β-catenin often localizes to the plasma membrane. Although we find no correlation with either APC or β-catenin mutation status, the plasma membrane localization of dephospho-β-catenin does correlate with E-cadherin expression. Surprisingly, stimulation of E-cadherin–/– cells with Wnt3A resulted in the appearance of dephospho-β-catenin at the plasma membrane, where it colocalizes with the activated form of LRP6, APC and axin. By unmasking the transcriptionally competent pool of β-catenin, we provide evidence for a key step in β-catenin processing and Wnt signal transduction at the plasma membrane.
| Results |
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In view of the transcriptional activation, we anticipated that in Wnt-stimulated Kep1 cells, dephospho-β-catenin would be mainly nuclear. Surprisingly, stimulation of E-cadherin–/– Kep1 cells with Wnt3A resulted in the appearance of dephospho-β-catenin at the plasma membrane (Fig. 1C, left). Nuclear staining of the ABC antibody was also observed. Note that this was partly aspecific, because some nuclear staining was also observed in unstimulated Kep1 cells and NCI-H28 β-catenin knockout cells (data not shown), which is probably caused by a crossreacting protein (in Fig. 1B marked by an asterisk). As expected, a similar plasma membrane accumulation in response to Wnt stimulation in E-cadherin–/– Kep1 cells was confirmed with antibodies to total β-catenin (see Fig. 3C). The discontinuous punctate plasma membrane labeling of dephospho-β-catenin is strikingly similar to the plasma-membrane-associated puncta described for LRP6-axin (Bilic et al., 2007
) and dishevelled (Dvl) (Schwarz-Romond et al., 2007
) appearing upon Wnt treatment (see below).
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The absence of classical cadherins from Kep1 cells was confirmed using a `pan-cadherin' antibody, which recognizes E, N and P cadherin. This antibody failed to show any membrane staining in Kep1 cells, either before or after Wnt3A stimulation (supplementary material Fig. S2A). We wanted to further rule out the possibility that the recruitment of dephospho-β-catenin to the plasma membrane could be the result of a Wnt-induced upregulation of a cadherin or another membrane protein acting as a cryptic docking site. Therefore, we studied the localization of dephospho-β-catenin in Kep1 cells stimulated with Wnt3A protein in the presence or absence of the transcription inhibitor actinomycin D. Under these conditions, β-catenin was still stabilized and recruited to the plasma membrane (supplementary material Fig. S2B), indicating that this process is independent of the induction of Wnt target genes.
We wished to assess the timing of plasma membrane accumulation of dephospho-β-catenin in comparison to its accumulation in the nucleus. Unfortunately, the 8E7 anti-dephospho-β-catenin antibody crossreacted with a nuclear antigen (see Fig. 1B and Fig. 4E), which precludes assessment of nuclear dephospho-β-catenin at low levels. We therefore used a polyclonal antibody (Upstate 06-734) directed against the consensus GSK3 phosphorylation sites of human β-catenin (residues 29-49), which mainly recognizes the unphosphorylated form of β-catenin (supplementary material Fig. S5). As shown in Fig. 2, Kep1 cells exhibited a significant increase in plasma membrane β-catenin labeling 30 minutes after stimulation with Wnt3A, the shortest time point after which we detected accumulation of β-catenin. Nuclear levels at this early time point showed a slight, but statistically significant, increase over the background signal. We conclude that plasma membrane localization of dephospho-β-catenin is a very early response to Wnt signaling.
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in response to Wnt signaling (Davidson et al., 2005
To further characterize the involvement of the Wnt receptor complex in recruitment of β-catenin, we expressed
N-LRP6, a dominant active LRP6 receptor that mimics Wnt ligand engagement at the receptor complex. We could express this protein in SK-BR-3 cells, a breast cancer cell line with a homozygous deletion of E-cadherin (van de Wetering et al., 2001
), but not in Kep1 cells, because it was not properly presented at the plasma membrane in these cells (data not shown). As shown in Fig. 3D, expression of
N-LRP6 resulted in a prominent plasma membrane localization of dephospho-β-catenin, resembling its appearance in Kep1 cells at the plasma membrane after Wnt stimulation (Fig. 3A,B). This indicates that activation of LRP6 is involved in the E-cadherin-independent plasma membrane recruitment of dephospho-β-catenin in response to Wnt signaling. Expression of
N-LRP6 in SK-BR-3 cells also resulted in colocalization of dephospho-β-catenin with APC (Fig. 3E). We were unable to detect axin in SK-BR-3 cells, possibly because of very low expression levels (data not shown). SK-BR-3 cells were found to be unresponsive to Wnt3A stimulation (data not shown) possibly because these cells lack the appropriate Frizzled receptor for this ligand. We conclude that activation of the Wnt pathway by either Wnt3A or dominant active LRP6 leads to recruitment of axin and/or APC and signaling competent β-catenin to the plasma membrane.
LRP6-initiated dephospho-β-catenin is transcriptionally significantly more competent than downstream-initiated dephospho-β-catenin
Our data so far are consistent with a model of Wnt signal transduction where, upon Wnt stimulation, de novo synthesized β-catenin is attracted to the Wnt receptor complex together with members of the destruction complex. As Wnt activation results in co-activation of genes by β-catenin in the nucleus, β-catenin is probably released from the membrane complex and routed to the nucleus. In order to test the relevance of membrane association of β-catenin, we compared the activity of β-catenin, either routed or not routed through the Wnt receptor complex. To mimic β-catenin accumulation due to receptor activation, we expressed
N-LRP6 in SK-BR-3 cells. To produce β-catenin accumulation without receptor activation we overexpressed wild-type β-catenin. If the transactivating potential is similar regardless of the source of dephospho-β-catenin, the amount of luciferase output is expected to closely parallel the amount of dephospho-β-catenin generated. As shown in Fig. 4, expression of
N-LRP6 resulted in significant upregulation of a luciferase reporter gene (Fig. 4C). A similar degree of TCF-reporter activation could be produced by transfection of wild-type β-catenin, but this was accompanied by much higher cellular levels of dephospho-β-catenin (Fig. 4D,E). Also, there was no enrichment of dephospho-β-catenin on the plasma membrane under these conditions (Fig. 4B), whereas a prominent plasma membrane localization of the comparatively minor pool of dephospho-β-catenin was induced by
N-LRP6 (Fig. 4A). Thus, in spite of significantly lower cellular levels of dephospho-β-catenin, a similar degree of TCF reporter output can be achieved through LRP6 co-receptor activation.
Supraphysiological levels of exogenous β-catenin are required to mimic Wnt activity in Xenopus embryos
We sought to support these observations in a second model. Wnt signaling activity in the early Xenopus embryo can be readily monitored by the formation of an ectopic body axis. We thus compared the levels of exogenously expressed β-catenin required to induce secondary axes to the levels produced by the endogenous dorsalizing center or by a much stronger activation of the pathway by ectopic Wnt expression (Fig. 5G).
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The endogenous Wnt pathway is active in the blastula (stage 8.5-9.5) and can be detected as nuclear accumulation of β-catenin strongest in the dorsal side, but also spread throughout the prospective mesoderm, whereas the signal remains lower in the ectoderm (Schohl and Fagotto, 2002
; Schohl and Fagotto, 2003
). With 50 pg Wnt8a mRNA, which is in excess of the amount required to induce complete dorsalization, β-catenin nuclear levels were found to be only slightly higher than levels induced by the endogenous pathway (Fig. 5). However, the levels of exogenous β-catenin corresponding to induction of a secondary axis were well beyond physiological levels, both in the cytoplasm and in the nucleus. These observations indicate that exogenous β-catenin is less effective at activating the pathway than endogenous β-catenin regulated by Wnt signals, consistent with the hypothesis that Wnt-induced β-catenin is qualitatively different.
Quantitative differences in dephospho-β-catenin plasma membrane labeling in Wnt-responding tissues in vivo
Our data in the isogenic Kep1 and Kp6 cell lines demonstrate that dephospho-β-catenin is recruited to the plasma membrane in response to Wnt stimulation in an E-cadherin independent fashion. Such an unbiased analysis would not be feasible in other in vitro model systems such as the commonly used colon cancer cell lines where the Wnt pathway is constitutively active and E-cadherin expression varies even amongst subclones of low-expressing cell lines such as LS174T (our unpublished data). We found that in our model system, the increase in dephospho-β-catenin is subtle and not detectable in situ in an E-cadherin+/+ background. However, based on earlier data in the Drosophila system from the Wieschaus lab (see below), we optimized our staining protocol for the detection of dephospho-β-catenin in other systems as well. As a first approach, we double-stained Xenopus embryo sections for total and dephospho-β-catenin (Fig. 6). We detected a clear signal for dephospho-β-catenin at the plasma membrane of mesodermal cells, but less in ectodermal cells (Fig. 6B). Wnt overexpression led to membrane recruitment of dephospho-β-catenin in ectodermal cells (Fig. 6A) and increased membrane staining of total β-catenin. Despite the fact that this model system lacks the advantage of an E-cadherin negative background, the observations in a physiological setting of a quantitative difference in (dephospho-) β-catenin accumulation at the plasma membrane in Wnt-responding versus Wnt-nonresponding cells, are in agreement with the observations in our initial model system. However, to unambiguously assign translocation of Wnt-induced dephospho-β-catenin as E-cadherin independent, an E-cadherin-negative background is required. Note that the results on dephospho-β-catenin plasma membrane accumulation in response to Wnt stimulation in the Xenopus model system parallel earlier data obtained in Drosophila where Wg signaling similarly increases plasma membrane levels of Armadillo (the fly β-catenin homologue) in Wg-responding stripe regions, in addition to elevating cytosolic levels of the protein (Peifer et al., 1994b
). This suggests that an increase in Armadillo at the plasma membrane is also important for endogenous Wg signaling in the fruit fly.
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| Discussion |
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On the basis of our observations, we propose that upon Wnt stimulation, β-catenin is activated at the plasma membrane in a Wnt-receptor complex, which also contains components of the destruction complex, generating a signaling-competent form. In line with this, Gottardi and Gumbiner have shown that Wnt stimulation generates a monomeric form of β-catenin, which selectively binds TCF and not E-cadherin (Gottardi and Gumbiner, 2004
). The activation step may for example constitute this transition. Plasma membrane activation is not absolutely required for signal transduction, because increasing β-catenin to supraphysiological levels by interfering with its degradation will also lead to transactivation.
Previous work in Xenopus has generated evidence for the idea that β-catenin stability alone may not explain Wnt signaling outcome (Guger and Gumbiner, 2000
; Nelson and Gumbiner, 1999
). Later studies in the fly embryo using hypomorphic Armadillo alleles show that modulation of Wg signaling can occur in the presence of uniformly high levels of Armadillo (Tolwinski et al., 2003
; Tolwinski and Wieschaus, 2001
; Tolwinski and Wieschaus, 2004
). Moreover, studies in cultured mammalian cell lines show that receptor-mediated signal transduction events, such as Wnt stimulation or secreted Frizzled-related protein (sFRP) inhibition, can impinge on Wnt signaling output even when downstream mutations prevent β-catenin breakdown (He et al., 2005
; Suzuki et al., 2004
). We are currently in the process of studying potential post-translational modifications on β-catenin using the E-cadherin–/– Kep1 cell line.
A model of β-catenin activation at the receptor complex would allow β-catenin output to be regulated on a direct stoichiometric `per molecule' basis, in theory allowing one Wnt molecule to liberate a predetermined quanta of signaling-competent β-catenin molecules. If correct, this regulation would be considerably more efficient than the currently proposed models in which Wnt signaling input is titrated against the activity of cytoplasmic degradation complexes to regulate gene expression in the nucleus. Regulation at multiple levels is similarly observed in the Hedgehog signal transduction pathway where stabilization of the transcriptional co-activator does not suffice for full activation (Methot and Basler, 1999
). It is currently not known what mediates this activation step in Hedgehog signal transduction at the plasma membrane (Hooper and Scott, 2005
). Regulation at multiple levels beyond the mere inhibition of proteolysis would allow the Wnt pathway to join other developmental pathways, such as the Hedgehog and Notch signaling pathways, in which the transcriptional co-activator at the plasma membrane receives the permission (`licence') to signal.
| Materials and Methods |
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Cell culture, transfection and reporter assays
SK-BR-3, Kep1 (E-cadherin–/–, p53–/–), Kp6 (E-cadherin+/+, p53–/–), SW480, LS174T, Colo320, HCT15, Colo205 and SW48 were cultured in DMEM supplemented with 10% fetal calf serum and penicillin/streptomycin (Gibco-BRL) and were transfected using Fugene-6 (Roche) as instructed by the supplier. 1x105 cells were transfected with 300 ng TOP/FOP-TK-luc, 1.5 ng pRL-CMV, 325 ng
NLRP6, 50 or 100 ng β-catenin, 10 ng Wnt1 and 50 ng H2B-mRFP. Luciferase reporter activity was measured 24 hours after transfection in SK-BR-3. 24 hours after transfection with Top/Fop-TK-luc, Kep1 cells were stimulated with Wnt3A for 7 hours, after which luciferase activity was measured using the Dual-Luciferase Reporter Assay System (Promega).
APC antibodies
Domains of mouse APC, termed APC-A (amino acids 788-1038), APC-B (amino acids 2170-2394), and APC-C (amino acids 2644-2845), were fused to GST and purified in bacteria. Rabbit polyclonal antisera were prepared as described (Hoogenraad et al., 2000
). Rat monoclonal antibodies against APC were generated by Absea (China) using the same GST fusion proteins. Hybridomas were first tested for specific recognition of the respective GST fusion proteins. Positive clones (51 hybridomas for APC-A, 44 hybridomas for APC-B, and 58 hybridomas for APC-C) were subsequently tested on western blot for recognition of eCFP-tagged APC domains and by immunofluorescence for detection of endogenous APC. We screened nine rabbit polyclonals against the A, B and C domains, but none of the rabbit polyclonal antibodies were monospecific (data not shown). We subsequently screened 51 antibody-producing rat hybridomas for APC-A (amino acids 788-1038), 44 hybridomas for APC-B (amino acids 2170-2394) and 58 hybridomas for APC-C (amino acids 2644-2845). Two rat monoclonal antibodies (13F7, APC-A-derived, and 3E7, APC-B-derived) detected both overexpressed, eCFP-tagged APC (supplementary material Fig. S3C), as well as endogenous APC on western blots (supplementary material Fig. S3D). These antibodies also recognized GFP-tagged full-length APC in transfected COS-1 cells (data not shown) and endogenous APC in different cell lines (supplementary material Fig. S3D and data not shown). As 3E7 recognized clusters of full-length APC in MDCK cells, and not in SW480 cells that contain truncated APC (supplementary material Fig. S3E,F), we conclude that 3E7 detects endogenous APC in immunofluorescence studies.
Other antibodies and reagents
Further antibodies used were against β-catenin (C19220) (Transduction Labs) and H-102 (Santa Cruz), active β-catenin (ABC 8E7), actin (Ab-1, Oncogene), N-axin (Fagotto), E-cadherin (C20820, Transduction Labs), pan-cadherin (C3678, Sigma), Tp1479 LRP6 (Niehrs), M2 mAb Flag (Sigma). Purified recombinant Wnt3A was a kind gift from R. Nusse (Stanford, CA) or obtained from R&D Systems. 4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) and actinomycin D were obtained from Sigma.
Plasmids
Top/Fop-TK, pRL-CMV and pRK5SK-β-catenin were described before (Hendriksen et al., 2005
) and
N-LRP6 was a kind gift from H. Clevers (Hubrecht Laboratory, Utrecht, The Netherlands).
Western blotting
Proteins were analyzed by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (25 µg per lane) and Western blotting using Immobilon-P transfer membrane (Millipore). Aspecific sites were blocked with 5% skimmed milk (Oxio, Hampshire, England) at room temperature for 1 hour. Note that detection of dephospho-β-catenin with the ABC antibody was inhibited by certain brands/lots of skimmed milk. Primary antibodies were incubated in 1% skimmed milk for 2 hours at room temperature in the following dilutions: E-cadherin 1:1500; β-Catenin mAb C19220 1:5000, ABC (8E7) 1:500; dephospho-β-catenin Upstate 06-734, 1:1000; Actin 1:5000; mFLAG M2 1:500. Blots were washed with phosphate-buffered saline (PBS)/0.05% Tween 20. Enhanced chemiluminescence (Amersham) was used for detection of proteins.
Immunofluorescence and confocal microscopy
For immunofluorescence, cells were grown on glass coverslips coated with fibronectin (Sigma) and fixed in 3.7% formalin in PBS for 10 minutes and permeabilized for 5 minutes in 0.2% Triton-PBS. For antigen retrieval, cells were incubated in 10 mM citric acid buffer pH 6 at 95°C for 20 minutes and blocked in 5% BSA/PBS at room temperature for 10 minutes. Primary antibodies were incubated for 2 hours in 1% purified BSA/PBS using the following dilutions; ABC (8E7) 1:200; total β-catenin C19220 1:250; total β-catenin H102 1:65; dephospho-β-catenin Upstate 06-734, 1:200; N-axin 1:50; N-APC 1:100; APC 3E7 1:100; p-LRP6 1:250; LRP6 1:300; pan-cadherin 1:5000. Cells were shortly washed in PBS and incubated in fluorescently conjugated secondary antibodies (Molecular Probes) and DAPI in 1% BSA-PBS for 30 minutes, washed shortly in PBS and mounted in Mowiol. Images were recorded using a Leica NT, SP2 or SP2 AOBS confocal microscope.
In situ quantification
Kep1 cells were grown on coverslips to 40-50% confluency and induced with Wnt3A-conditioned medium for 30-240 minutes. Cells were fixed and immunostained as described, using the antibody Upstate 06-734 directed against the consensus GSK3 phosphorylation site of human β-catenin (amino acids 29-49), which mainly recognizes the unphosphorylated form (supplementary material Fig. S5) at 5 µg/ml for 1 hour. Cells were stained with Alexa Fluor 488-linked secondary antibody and counterstained with DAPI. Images were acquired as described using a 63x oil objective at 1024x1024 pixel resolution. Random fields from duplicate experiments were selected and imaged using an eight-slice Z-series (pinhole 1.00 airy units) totalling 2 µm in depth. Projected Z-series were quantified in ImageJ. Images displayed uniform background levels (11.0±0.1). Per condition, all cells from three fields were quantified (100-130 cells). Plasma membrane signals were recorded as mean pixel intensities over 3 µm of highest staining membrane. Nuclear signals were recorded as mean pixel intensity from a 25 µm2 nuclear area. Mean pixel values were background and base line (median of t=0) subtracted. Statistical analysis was done in R. P values were derived from Mann-Whitney tests.
Embryo injections and immunofluorescence
Four-cell-stage embryos were injected in one ventral blastomere with 25 or 50 pg Wnt8 mRNA or 1000 pg myc-tagged β-catenin mRNA as previously described (Fagotto et al., 1996
). Stage 9 embryos were fixed in 3-4% paraformaldehyde and sections were prepared and stained as previously described (Schohl and Fagotto, 2002
). Antibodies used were total anti-β-catenin H102 diluted 1:50, ABC 1:250, and secondary goat Alexa Fluor 546 or 488 anti-rabbit/anti-mouse (Molecular Probes). Images were recorded with a Leica microscope using a narrow Cy3 filter and a 20x oil-immersion objective.
Immunohistochemistry
Sections (4 µm) were deparaffinized and antigen retrieval was carried out by boiling for 10 minutes in 10 mM Tris-HCl, 1 mM EDTA (pH 9). Subsequently slides were immersed in 0.3% hydrogen peroxide in methanol for 30 minutes and nonspecific binding was blocked with 5% normal goat serum for 1 hour at room temperature. The sections were incubated for 1 hour at room temperature in primary antibodies against total β-catenin (C19220 Transduction Labs) and active β-catenin (ABC 8E7). The ultravision antipolyvalent HRP detection system (Lab Vision, Fremont, CA) was used to visualize antibody-binding sites with 3,3'-diaminobenzidine as a chromogen. Sections were counterstained with hematoxylin.
| Acknowledgments |
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| Footnotes |
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* These authors contributed equally to this work ![]()
Present address: Hubrecht Institute, Uppsalalaan 8, 3584 CT Utrecht, The Netherlands ![]()
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