Rac2 Regulates Neutrophil Chemotaxis, Superoxide Production, and Myeloid Colony Formation through Multiple Distinct Effector Pathways
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免疫学杂志 2005年第8期
Abstract
Polymorphonuclear neutrophils (PMN) are an important component of the innate immune system. We have shown previously that migration and superoxide (O
2) production, as well as some kinase signaling pathways are compromised in mice deficient in the Ras-related Rho GTPase Rac2. In this study, we demonstrate that Rac2 controls chemotaxis and superoxide production via distinct pathways and is critical for development of myeloid colonies in vitro. The Rac2 mutants V36A, F37A, and N39A all bind to both Pak1 and p67phox, yet are unable to rescue superoxide production and chemotaxis when expressed in Rac2–/– PMN. In contrast, the N43A mutant, which binds to Por1 (Arfaptin 2), p67phox, and Pak1, is able to rescue superoxide production but not chemotaxis. The F37A mutant, demonstrated to have reduced binding to Por1, shows reduced rescue of fMLP-induced chemotaxis. Finally, the Rac2Y40C mutant that is defective in binding to all three potential downstream effectors (Pak1, p67phox, and Por1) is unable to rescue chemotaxis, motility, or superoxide production, but is able to rescue defective growth of myeloid colonies in vitro. These findings suggest that binding to any single effector is not sufficient to rescue the distinct cellular phenotypes of Rac2–/– PMN, implicating multiple, distinct, and potentially parallel effector pathways.
Introduction
Rac2 is a hemopoietic-specific member of the small Rho GTPases family. Rho family members regulate actin cytoskeletal organization and gene expression (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7). Despite a high degree of sequence homology with Rac1, Rac2 appears to specifically regulate chemotaxis, endothelial rolling, superoxide production, and kinase activation in neutrophils (1, 2, 3, 8), as shown by studies using mice genetically deficient in Rac2. Rho GTPases cycle between active GTP-bound and inactive GDP-bound forms and typically bind effector proteins only in the active, GTP-bound state. The switch I domain of Rho GTPases (aa 32–40 for Rac and Cdc42) undergoes extensive conformational changes upon GTP-binding, facilitating interaction with downstream effector proteins. For Rac2, the specific effector proteins that regulate motility and chemotaxis, as well as superoxide production in primary cells, are largely unknown, with the exception of the p67phox subunit of the NADPH oxidase.
Neutrophils are highly motile cells. As demonstrated in phagocytic syndromes characterized by defective neutrophil migration, this motility is essential for normal innate immune function. Cell motility is a complex process depending on spatio-temporal regulation of actin assembly and disassembly (9). Rac proteins are believed to regulate actin assembly through Pak1 and Lim-kinase 1 (10). In addition, Por1 regulates membrane ruffling in fibroblasts downstream of Rac1 (11). Finally, Rac antagonistically regulates Rho through Pak1 inhibition of myosin L chain kinase (12, 13) and generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS), at least in nonphagocytic cells (14). Therefore, Pak1, Por1, and even p67phox are potential physiological mediators of Rac function regulating neutrophil motility (Fig. 1).
FIGURE 1. Schematic representation of Rac2 protein and switch I domain effector mutants. F37 and Y40 mutants which interrupt interactions with POR1, PAK, and p67phox which are potential proteins involved in transducing signals downstream of Rac2 are shown (see text and Tables I and II for details). The downstream pathways and critical myeloid functions assayed are shown in the lower part of the figure.
One approach to identify the pathways emanating from Rho GTPases has been the use of mutants disrupting binding to specific effector proteins introduced into heterologous cells (15, 16, 17, 18). This work has shown that generation of specific actin structures and cell cycle progression can be separated from MAPK activation for Rac1 and Cdc42. For instance, codon 37 of Rac1 is implicated in membrane ruffling via partner of Rac1 (Por1) (also called Arfarptin-2) (11, 17) and G1 cell cycle progression. Por1 has been implicated as an important downstream mediator for the induction of membrane ruffles. Codon 40 is critical for activation of the JNK MAPK signaling pathway (15). The mutations at position 40 disrupt binding to Cdc42/Rac interactive binding sequence (19)-containing proteins, as illustrated by defective interactions of Y40C mutants of Rac1 and Cdc42 with Pak1. In Drosophila, expression of Rac1 containing the F37A and the Y40C mutation in a functional Rac1/Rac2 null background is associated with defects in axon growth and branching (20). Rac proteins are also essential regulators of the NADPH oxidase complex, which mediates phagocyte superoxide production (21). Mutation of codon 40 of Rac1 and other mutations within the insert domain and codons 27, 30, and 36 of Rac2 (22, 23, 24, 25, 26) show reduced binding to p67phox or reduced activation of the oxidase complex.
With the exception of studies in Drosophila, most studies to date examining effector domain mutants have used in vitro assays or cellular approaches that require expression of the effector mutant in the context of constitutively activated (ca) 6 forms of Rac. ca forms of Rho GTPases, such as L61 and V12, may themselves behave in a fashion qualitatively different from activated wild-type (wt) proteins (27). In addition, most studies have also been conducted in cell lines, mainly fibroblasts, expressing endogenous Rac1, but not Rac2. In hemopoietic cells, despite a high degree of sequence identity between Rac1 and Rac2, it is now clear that Rac2 is a major GTPase involved in migration and superoxide generation (5, 8). In this sense, hemopoietic cells are unique in that they express both Rac1 and Rac2, but the signaling pathways involved in Rac2-mediated functions are unknown.
In the studies presented here, we investigated the proximal downstream signals of Rac2. We studied the ability of Rac2 switch I domain mutants to rescue Rac2 function in bone marrow cells genetically deficient in Rac2 using physiologically relevant primary cell assays (Fig. 1). We demonstrate that single amino acid changes in the switch I domain of wt Rac2 prevents the rescue of migration and superoxide production defects in Rac2–/– neutrophils even though some of these mutants maintain binding to Pak1, Por1, and p67phox in vitro. Our data indicate mutations in amino acid residues that disrupt binding to Pak1 and Por1 lead to loss of wt Rac2 function in primary neutrophils, that binding to Pak1 or Por1 individually is insufficient to reconstitute Rac2 function in neutrophils, and that activation of the NADPH oxidase likely involves both binding to p67phox and a second pathway. Finally, none of the mutations in the Rac2 switch domain interfered with Rac2-mediated growth factor-induced cell survival and proliferation.
Materials and Methods
Construction of retroviral vectors
An improved bicistronic murine stem cell virus-based vector, MIEG3, expressing enhanced GFP has been described previously (28). This vector contains the encephalomyocarditis virus internal ribosomal entry site in its original viral configuration, resulting in improved GFP translation. The vector-expressing Flag-tagged murine Rac2 (FR2) has also been described previously (29). The amino acid point mutations (Fig. 1) were introduced into this vector by site-directed mutagenesis (QuickChange; Stratagene) in the pBluesript plasmid (Stratagene). The primer sequences are available upon request. The mutated sequences were confirmed by automated nucleotide sequencing and subcloned into MIEG3 using EcoRI and XhoI restriction sites yielding V36A-FR2, F37A-FR2, N39A-FR2, Y40C-FR2, N43A-FR2, and F37A/Y40C-FR2. N-terminal Flag-tagged wt human Por1 (National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) X97567; kindly supplied by L. van Aelst, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, Cold Spring Harbor, NY) (11) was used for PCR amplification and inserted into MIEG3 using EcoRI/XhoI digest for Por1 to generate MIEG3-Por1. wt human Pak1 (NCBI U24152 wt Pak1), ca Pak1 T423E, and dominant-negative (dn) Pak1 (both kindly supplied by J. Chernoff, Fox Chase Cancer Center, Philadelphia, PA) were used for PCR amplification and inserted into MIEG3 using EcoRI for Pak1 and ca Pak1. To generate ecotrophic retroviral supernatant, Phoenix eco cells were obtained from American Type Culture Collection, cultured in DMEM with 4.5 g/L glucose (Invitrogen Life Technologies), supplemented with 100 U/ml penicillin and 100 μg/ml streptomycin (P/S) and 10% FCS (HyClone) and transfected with either FR2 (expressing wt Rac2), MIEG3 (empty vector), or the respective mutant containing plasmids, using either a liposome-based method (lipofectamine; Invitrogen Life Technologies) or Calcium Phosphate Transfection (Sigma-Aldrich), according to the manufacturer’s instructions. Retroviral supernatant was harvested 48–96 h after transfection. MIEG3 was harvested from a stable GP + E86 cell line previously described (29).
Binding of Rac2 mutants to Pak1, p67phox, and Por1
The Rac-binding domain of PAK or Por1 was cloned into pGEX-5X3 (Pharmacia) vector. p67phox-GST was kindly provided by E. Pick (Julius Friedrich Cohnheim-Minerva Center for Phagocytic Research, Sackler School of Medicine, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel). GST-tagged proteins were expressed in BL21 (DE3) and purified using glutathione-agarose beads (Sigma-Aldrich) in a buffer containing 50 mM HEPES (pH 7.3), 200 mM NaCl, 5 mM MgCl2, protease inhibitor mixture (Roche), and 1 mM PMSF. Cell lysates were prepared from NIH3T3 cells transduced with Flag-tagged wt or mutant forms of Rac2. Transduced cells were isolated through FACS via GFP expression. GTPS-loading was performed by successively treating the cell lysates with 2 mM EDTA, 0.1 mM GTPS, and 10 mM MgCl2. The purified GST-fusion proteins were then incubated with the cell lysates containing GTPS-loaded Rac2 on mutants for 2 h at 4°C. After the incubation, the reaction mixture was washed three times with a buffer containing 50 mM HEPES (pH 7.3), 200 mM NaCl, 10 mM MgCl2, and subjected to SDS-PAGE for immunoblot analysis.
Animals and generation of in vitro-differentiated neutrophils
Rac2–/– mice (B6.129Rac2tmmddw) and their normal littermates have been described previously (1). The animals had been backcrossed into C57BL6 mice for >12 generations. Six- to 8-wk-old Rac2–/– or wt littermates were treated with 150 mg/kg 5-fluouracil (American Pharmaceutical Partners) i.p. 48 h before harvesting bone marrow. The mononuclear cell fraction was isolated by density gradient centrifugation (histopaque–1083; Sigma-Aldrich) for 30 min at 1500 rpm at room temperature, prestimulated with recombinant rat stem cell factor (rrSCF), recombinant human granulocyte CSF (rhuG-CSF), and recombinant human megakaryocyte growth and development factor (rhuMGDF, all 100 ng/ml; Amgen), for 48 h in IMDM (Invitrogen Life Technologies) supplemented with 10% FCS and P/S. Cells were transduced twice with retroviral supernatants on fibronectin (CH296; Takara Bio)–coated nontissue cultured cell culture dishes treated as previously described (30). Transduced cells were further expanded in rrSCF, rhuG-CSF, and recombinant murine IL-3 (rmIL-3, 100 U/ml; PeproTech) for 5 days. In some experiments, rhuMGDF (100 ng/ml) was used instead of rmIL-3. Transduced cells were sorted 4 days after transduction on the basis of the GFP expression by high- speed cell sorting (FACS Diva; BD Biosciences) and the isolated cells were then cultured with rrSCF, rhuG-CSF, and rmIL-3 or rhuMGDF for additional 6–8 days. The resulting culture contained >70% neutrophils, as determined by modified Giemsa staining (DiffQuick; Dade Behring).
Colony formation
Eighteen to 24 h after sorting, 1 x 104 cells were seeded into 1 ml of methylcellulose assay (H4100; Stem Cell Technologies) in IMDM, supplemented with 30% FCS, 2 mM Glutamine (Invitrogen Life Technologies), 2% P/S, 10–4 M 2-ME (Sigma-Aldrich), and 5 ng/ml recombinant murine granulocyte-macrophage CSF (rmGM-CSF; PeproTech). Cultures were performed in duplicate, incubated at 37°C with 5% CO2, and colonies were scored 8–10 days after plating using an inverted microscope. Each individual experiment was performed in triplicate.
Neutrophil chemotaxis
Neutrophil migration was performed as described previously (1). Cells (1 x 105 per ml) were placed in 50 μl of HBSS (Invitrogen Life Technologies) supplemented with 7.5 mM glucose, 0.5 mM CaCl2, and 0.9 mM MgCl2 in the top well of a Boyden Chamber (Neuroprobes) with a 3-μm porous membrane. fMLP (1 μM; Sigma-Aldrich) was used as the chemoattractant and placed in the lower chamber. After 45–60 min of incubation at 37°C, migrated neutrophils adherent to the lower side of the membrane were stained using a modified Giemsa staining (DiffQuik). All cells in three or four randomly chosen fields (x400 magnification) were counted. For each experiment, three replicates were performed.
NBT and oxygen radicals chemiluminescence assay
Superoxide production in the transduced and differentiated myeloid cells was determined by the NBT test as described previously (31). Briefly, neutrophils (1 x 104) were seeded and allowed to adhere to chamber slides in IMDM for 1 h at 37°C. Subsequently, the cells were stimulated with 10 μM fMLP (Sigma-Aldrich) in saturated NBT solution for 20 min at 37°C. After a wash with cold PBS, the cells were fixed with methanol and counterstained with Safranin O (Sigma-Aldrich). The neutrophils were examined by light microscopy to assay for dark purple deposits. The percentage of NBT+ cells was determined by evaluating 200 cells in duplicate. For quantitative assay, chemiluminescent isoluminol was used as reported previously (32, 33). Briefly, 1 x 105 cells suspended in 50 μl of PBS supplemented with 0.9 mM CaCl2, 0.5 mM MgCl2, and 7.5 mM glucose (PBSG) were added to each well of a 96-well plate with 80 μl of 125 μM isoluminol in PBSG, 40 μl of 100 U/ml HRP (Roche) in 0.9% NaCl, and either 5 μl of 3 mg/ml superoxide dismutase or PBSG. After cells were incubated at 37°C for 10 min, 25 μl of 1.6 μg/ml PMA (final concentration 0.2 μg/ml) in PBSG or 25 μl of PBSG were added into each well manually before starting assay, and chemiluminescence was detected in total 200-μl suspension on a 96-well plate using an Lmax microplate luminometer (Molecular Devices). The data are expressed as relative luminescence units by long kinetic mode for over 30 min, and the relative total amount of superoxide produced was determined using SoftMax PRO software (Molecular Devices). Under these conditions, 97.5% of chemiluminescence was inhibited by superoxide dismutase.
Immunoblot
Neutrophils (1–2 x 105) were lysed in a buffer containing 10 mM K2HPO4, 1 mM EDTA, 5 mM EGTA, 10 mM MgCl2, 1 mM Na3VO4, 50 mM sodium -glycerophosphate (all Sigma-Aldrich), 10 μg/ml aprotinin, 10 μg/ml leupeptin, and 1 μg/ml pepstatin A (all from Roche). Lysates were clarified by centrifugation at 14,000 x g, at 4°C for 30 min. Lysates were separated by SDS-PAGE and immunoblotting was performed after transfer to nitrocellulose membranes (Millipore). Immunoblots used anti-Flag Ab (Sigma-Aldrich), anti-Rac Ab (BD Transduction Laboratories), or anti-PAK Ab (Cell Signaling Technology).
Statistics
The one-tailed t test was used for statistical analysis with p < 0.05 considered significant.
Results
Binding of Rac2 mutants to Pak1, p67phox, and Por1 and induction of membrane ruffling
Pak1, p67phox, and Por1 are intensively studied downstream effectors of Rac1, a Rho GTPase highly homologous to Rac2. Binding of Rac to p67phox in the assembled NADPH oxidase complex is essential for oxidase activity (34), and Pak1 and Por1 may contribute to signals transduced via Rac2 in terminally differentiated neutrophils. To more fully examine the potential role(s) of Rac2 interactions with effectors in neutrophil functions, we studied switch I domain mutants in wt Rac2 expressed in Rac2-deficient primary neutrophils. As few data are available studying interaction of Rac2 switch I domain mutants with these effector proteins, we first performed pull-down assays of these mutants with GST-Pak1, GST-p67phox, and GST-Por1 to determine the extent of protein binding of these effectors to Rac2 (Fig. 2 and summarized in Table I). Binding of Rac2 or mutants of the switch I domain was confirmed by anti-Flag immunoblotting. The effector domain is highly conserved between Rac2 and Rac1. Thus, as expected, wt Rac2 demonstrates binding to Pak1, p67phox, and Por1 (Fig. 2). As previously reported for Rac1 and Cdc42 (15), the Rac2Y40C mutant does not bind to Pak1. The Rac2Y40C mutant also does not bind to p67phox in this in vitro assay, a result similar to that reported previously for the Y40K mutant of Rac1 (15). Residues V36, F37, and N39 have been implicated in binding of Rac1 to Por1 (Arfaptin2) (35). Although F37A and Y40C mutation in Rac2 leads to loss of binding to Por1, the V36A, N39A, and the N43A mutations do not prevent binding to Por1. Loss of binding to Por1 correlated with the inability to potentiate membrane ruffling of these mutants as analyzed after stimulation with platelet-derived growth factor in NIH3T3 cells (data not shown). As previously reported for Rac1, Rac2F37A, Rac2V36A, Rac2N39A, and Rac2N43A, mutants also show binding to p67phox at levels equal to and greater than wt Rac2.
FIGURE 2. Determination of binding specificity of Rac2 mutants to various effectors. Cell lysates were prepared from NIH3T3 cells transduced with Flag-tagged wt Rac2 (Rac2) or mutant Rac2 cDNAs and pull-down assays were performed with PAK-GST, Por1-GST, or p67phox-GST, as described in Materials and Methods. Before the pull-down assays, the lysates were treated in a buffer containing 0.1 mM GTPS to increase the amount of GTP-bound Rac2 in the lysates. GST-bound proteins were purified and analyzed by Western blot using anti-Flag mAb. Binding of GDP-loaded Rac2 p67phox-GST is shown as a comparison.
Table I. Summary of Rac2 mutant effects on neutrophil function and effector binding
Expression of wt and mutant Rac2 in transduced neutrophils
Neutrophils differentiated in vitro after retroviral transduction of Rac2-deficient myeloid progenitor cells express the mutant Rac2 proteins V36A, F37A, N39A, Y40C, F37A/Y40C, and N43A at levels equal to wt Rac2 (FR2) as judged both by immunoblotting with anti-Flag Ab and by the intensity of GFP expression using flow analysis. Expression of transgenes was 2- to 3-fold higher than endogenous Rac2 as judged by immunoblotting with anti-Rac2 Ab (data not shown), as previously seen using this vector system (8).
Neutrophil chemotaxis does not depend on Pak1 or Por1
Rac2-deficient neutrophils have a well-described defect in directed migration after stimulation with chemoattractants such as fMLP (1, 8, 28). Migration depends on a complex spatio-temporal change in actin assembly and disassembly, which is thought to be regulated at least in part by Rac, Pak1, Lim-kinase 1, and cofilin (10). In addition, Por1-Rac1 direct interaction has been implicated in actin rearrangement leading to membrane ruffling in fibroblasts (11). As seen in Fig. 3a, when compared with wt Rac2 and empty vector (MIEG3), neither the F37A nor Y40C mutants are able to rescue chemotaxis. Furthermore, neither N43A or V36A Rac2 mutants, each of which retain the capacity to bind to both Pak1 and Por1, rescue chemotaxis when expressed in Rac2–/– neutrophils. These data indicate that binding of Rac2 to either Pak1 or Por1, while potentially necessary, is not sufficient to regulate neutrophil migration. To substantiate these findings, wt Por1 and ca Pak1 were expressed in wt and Rac2–/– neutrophils. Expression ca Pak1 was 5- to 10-fold higher than endogenous Pak1. wt Por1 was detected by anti-Flag Ab (Fig. 3b). As seen in Fig. 3c, neither ca Pak1 nor wt Por1 affected wt neutrophil migration (Fig. 3c). Furthermore, none of those proteins rescue chemotaxis of Rac2–/– neutrophils (Fig. 3c). These data indicate that neither Por1 nor Pak1 alone in the absence of Rac2 mediate neutrophil chemotaxis.
FIGURE 3. Chemotaxis of transduced and in vitro generated neutrophils. A, Neutrophils derived from wt or Rac2–/– mouse bone marrow were analyzed for migration in Boyden chambers in response to 1 μM fMLP, as described in Materials and Methods. For each experiment, three replicates were performed and for each bone marrow harvest, at least three individual assays have been performed. The number of migrating cells on the filter was determined by counting four random x400 microscopic fields. Data are depicted as mean migrated cells per x400 magnification field ± SEM from three to nine individual experiments. *, Significance (p < 0.05) between wt Rac2 (FR2) expressed in Rac2–/– cells and indicated mutant or vector control. For N43A, p = 0.55. B, Immunoblot of ca Pak1 (upper panel) or flag-tagged POR1 (lower panel) in transduced wt (Rac2+/+) or Rac2–/– neutrophils. -Actin was used as a loading control. C, Chemotaxis of neutrophils derived from wt or Rac2–/– mice expressing Pak1 or Por1 cDNAs. n = 3–8, mean ± SEM. p-Values are not significant for any values except wt Rac2 vs MIEG3 (empty vector) in Rac2–/– cells where p < 0.05.
Binding of Rac2 to p67phox and Pak1 is not sufficient for generation of superoxide
As noted previously, Rac2–/– neutrophils display a defect in superoxide generation in response to some agonists, including fMLP. In vitro cell-free assays indicate that superoxide generation in neutrophils depends on binding of a Rac protein (either Rac1 or Rac2) to p67phox. To determine the role of Rac2 binding to p67phox in generation of superoxide in Rac2–/– neutrophils, superoxide generation was stimulated with PMA and analyzed quantitatively in neutrophils derived from myeloid progenitor cells transduced with each Rac2 mutant or wt Rac2. Despite the observation that the F37A and N39A mutants retain the capacity to bind to p67phox in vitro, these mutants do not rescue superoxide generation when expressed in Rac2–/– cells (Fig. 4a). As noted above, the F37A and N39A also bind Pak1, and N39A but not F37A can bind Por1. Thus, the N39A mutant retains in vitro binding to p67phox, Pak1, and Por1, but is unable to rescue superoxide production in Rac2–/– neutrophils. In direct contrast, Rac2–/– neutrophils expressing N43A Rac2, which binds p67phox, Pak1, and Por1, demonstrate superoxide production similar to Rac2–/– neutrophils expressing wt Rac2. These data indicate that Rac2 binding to Pak1, p67phox, or Por1 alone is not sufficient to effect superoxide formation in neutrophils. In addition, the V36A and N43A mutants bind equally well to Pak1, Por1, and p67phox (Fig. 2), but only N43A supports superoxide production (Table I and Fig. 4a). Interestingly, expression of ca Pak1 increases baseline as well as fMLP-stimulated superoxide production in Rac2–/– neutrophils but is unable to substitute fully for wt Rac2 (Fig. 4b). Expression of wt Por1 does not affect superoxide production (Fig. 4b). Taken together, these data suggest that Rac2 regulates one or more pathways involved in activation of superoxide production that are independent of p67phox.
FIGURE 4. Superoxide production in transduced and in vitro generated neutrophils. Neutrophils derived from wt or Rac2–/– mouse bone marrow were analyzed for superoxide generation after stimulation with PMA using quantitative measurements (A) or NBT test (B). The response to each stimulus is compared with the background spontaneous activity (see text). A, 1 x 105 cells were stimulated with 0.3 μg/ml PMA in PBSG in the presence of isoluminol, HRP. The signal was read for 30 min at 37°C in a luminescence reader. Data are depicted as mean relative luminescence units ± SEM from 4 to 12 individual experiments. *, Significance (p < 0.05) between FR2 (wt Rac2) expressed in Rac2–/– cells and the indicated mutant. B, Cells were stimulated by either unstimulated () or stimulated with 10–6 mol/liter fMLP (). The percentage of NBT+ cells was determined by evaluating 200 cells in triplicate. In these assays, as previously noted by us (3 ), there is a degree of spontaneous oxidase activity, which may be increased due to the in vitro culture conditions. p-Values are not significant for any values except wt Rac2 vs MIEG3 (empty vector) in Rac2–/– cells where p < 0.05.
p160rock and Rac2 regulate chemotaxis in a combinatorial fashion, but p160rock is not involved in superoxide generation
p160rock has been previously described primarily as an effector for Rho. One report has demonstrated that Rac1 binding to p160rock is associated with membrane ruffling (15). Therefore, we investigated the effect of a specific p160rock inhibitor on chemotaxis and superoxide production in wt and Rac2–/– neutrophils expressing each Rac2 mutant described above. As shown in Fig. 5a, pharmacological inhibition of p160rock in wt neutrophils significantly reduces chemotaxis, shown by a 50% loss of fMLP-induced chemotaxis. In Rac2–/– neutrophils or Rac2–/– neutrophils expressing wtRac2, F37A, Y40C, or F37A/Y40C Rac2 mutants, inhibition of p160rock leads to a further reduction in chemotaxis. These data suggest that p160rock is not a direct downstream effector of Rac2 but likely acts in parallel to Rac2, mediating neutrophil chemotaxis. Finally, we studied the effect of the p160rock inhibitor on the generation of superoxide in wt neutrophils or neutrophils expressing wt or Rac2 mutants generated in vitro. As shown in Fig. 5b, the p160rock inhibitor has no significant effect on PMA-induced superoxide generation in any of these cells, indicating that Rho-p160rock activation is not necessary for generation of superoxide in neutrophils.
FIGURE 5. Chemotaxis and superoxide generation of transduced and in vitro generated neutrophils in the presence of p160rock inhibitor. Neutrophils derived from wt or Rac2–/– mouse bone marrow were analyzed for migration (A) and generation of superoxide (B) (as in Figs. 3 and 4) in the absence () or presence () of 1 mM p160rock inhibitor Y-27632 (Calbiochem). Cells were preincubated for 30 min at 37°C. A, Chemotaxis assays, two experiments with similar results have been performed. B, Superoxide generation data are depicted as mean ± SEM from six individual experiments. *, Significance (p < 0.05) between wt Rac2 and indicated mutants expressed in Rac2–/– cells vs MIEG3 (empty vector) without inhibitor; #, significance in the presence of inhibitor.
Growth of myeloid colonies is not affected by switch I mutants
Rac1, like other Rho GTPases, has been implicated in the induction of the expression of cyclin D1 (17, 36) and regulators of cell proliferation. We have previously shown that Rac1 and Rac2 separately regulate growth of hemopoietic progenitor cells via cell proliferation and survival, respectively (5). Therefore, we investigated growth of hemopoietic progenitor colonies in semisolid medium as a quantitative assay of myeloid cell proliferation. Colony growth in response to a single cytokine, GM-CSF, is partially dependent on Rac2 activity, because bone marrow cells derived from Rac2–/– mice demonstrate a 40% reduction in colony formation (Fig. 6). Retroviral-mediated expression of wt Rac2 completely rescues this defective colony formation. Surprisingly, the expression of F37A, Y40C, and F37A/Y40C Rac2 mutants rescues myeloid colony growth to the same extent as wt Rac2 (Fig. 6). Indeed, overexpression of Rac2 mutants enhances colony formation in wt cells between 20 and 50% (data not shown) as previously described for wt Rac2 in myeloid progenitor cells (4).
FIGURE 6. Myeloid colony formation in response to GM-CSF. Transduced and GFP+ sorted bone marrow cells were grown in 1 ml of methylcellulose supplemented with 5 ng/ml rmGM-CSF, as described in Materials and Methods. Cultures were performed in duplicate, incubated at 37°C with 5% CO2 and colonies were scored 8–10 days after plating using an inverted microscope. Data are normalized to colony growth of bone marrow derived from wt mice transduced with MIEG3 (empty vector), set at 100%, and depicted as mean ± SEM from three individual experiments performed in triplicate. **, p < 0.05, Rac2–/– transduced with wt Rac2 or noted mutants vs Rac2–/– cells transduced with empty vector; *, p < 0.05 for Rac2–/– transduced with empty vector vs wtRac2 and indicated mutants.
Discussion
Previous studies have identified Pak1, Por1, and p67phox among molecules binding to Rac1 and transmitting important downstream signals for actin remodeling, signal transduction, and generation of oxygen radicals. Rac mutants disrupting binding to these three proteins have been instrumental in these studies (15, 16, 17, 18). However, the physiological relevance of findings reported in some of these studies remains unclear because most have relied on biochemical analysis in cell-free systems, used fibroblasts as a model system or utilized effector mutants expressed in the background of ca Rac1 mutants (e.g., V12 or Q61 Rac-activated mutants) (Table II). All of these model systems have potential drawbacks. For instance, the ca mutants of Rho GTPases, such as V12 and Q61, have been shown to behave in ways distinct from wt proteins (27) (Y. Gu and D. A. Williams, unpublished results). In the studies presented here, we use primary murine neutrophils as a model system and express Rac2 mutants in a Rac2 null background, eliminating the need for ca mutants. Thus, these studies are conducted in a physiologically relevant model system. We focused our studies on motility and superoxide generation, both critical neutrophil functions.
Table II. Comparison of effectors mutants in Rac2 to literaturea
Rac proteins have been shown to regulate actin assembly via Pak1, while Por1 is involved in Rac1-mediated membrane ruffling in fibroblasts. Rac-dependent activation of Pak1 antagonizes Rho through inhibition of myosin L chain kinase and generation of ROS. Thus all three effectors, Pak1, Por1, and p67phox, are potential mediators of Rac-regulated neutrophil motility. Our data indicate that binding of none of these potential effectors alone, at least as defined by in vitro binding assays, is sufficient to reconstitute Rac2-mediated migration in neutrophils. This result could also reflect differences in interactions of Rac2 mutants with effectors in vitro compared with binding in the more physiologic setting of primary neutrophils. However, the expression of dn Por1 and dn Pak1 did not influence chemotaxis in Rac2 wt neutrophils (A. Koorneef and D. A. Williams, unpublished results), further suggesting that multiple parallel pathways play physiological roles in neutrophil chemotaxis. Thus, neutrophil locomotion following chemotactic stimulus appears to require several pathways that are regulated in parallel through Rac2.
Rac2 is also required in neutrophils to generate ROS via the NADPH oxidase complex. Activation of the phagocyte NADPH oxidase presumably requires assembly of cytochrome b with p47phox, p67phox, and Rac2 at the membrane. Interaction of Rac with p67phox is required for the reduction of molecular oxygen (21). Our findings suggest Rac2 activates the NADPH oxidase complex by a second or several p67phox-independent pathways. Mutations in Rac2 that abolish binding to p67phox, as in the case of the Y40C mutant, clearly affect the capacity of Rac2 to mediate superoxide generation in Rac2–/– neutrophils. However, binding of Rac2 to p67phox, as shown by the F37A and N39A Rac2 mutants, is not sufficient to restore the capacity of Rac2 to rescue superoxide production in Rac2–/– neutrophils. Because the N39A Rac2 mutant also appears to bind to Pak1 and Por1, Rac2/Pak1 and Rac2/Por1 interactions are also apparently not sufficient to mediate full activation of the NADPH oxidase via Rac2. Supporting this view, expression of dn Por1 or dn Pak1 did not influence superoxide production in wt neutrophils (A. Koorneef and D. A. Williams, unpublished results). However, we cannot rule out the possibility that switch I mutants may bind effectors but fail to activate specific effectors in the physiologic setting, which would complicate our interpretation of these data (37). Indeed, while previous studies have demonstrated that Rac2V36R both binds to p67phox and activates NADPH oxidase in a cell-free NADPH oxidase assay (Table II) (23), our study shows that V36A in wt Rac2 background binds p67phox but does not rescue superoxide generation in Rac2–/– neutrophils. This difference may be attributed to the specific amino acid substitution (A vs R), or to the difference in expression of the position mutant in an activated vs wt Rac2 background, or to a role of Rac2V36 for regulating NADPH oxidase activity in intact cells.
Rho GTPases have been implicated in cell proliferation via regulation of G1 entry. Most studies examining the effects of Rho GTPases on cell proliferation have used quiescent fibroblasts, where dn mutants or Rho-specific toxins have been shown to block cell cycle entry (38). Rho regulates cyclin D1 expression during cell cycle progression via antagonism of Rac1 and Cdc42 (36). Rac mutants Rac12V35S, 37L, 40H, Rac161L40C, and 43D have been shown to be defective in activating cyclin D1 transcription in luciferase promoter assays and this phenotype was correlated with Pak1 binding (Table II) (17). In addition, Rac161LY40C but not F37A is able to induce G1 cell cycle progression in fibroblasts (15). To further understand the role of Rac in cell proliferation, we examined the effects of expression of effector domain mutants in the growth of primary bone marrow derived myeloid colonies. We demonstrate that defective binding of Pak1, Por1, and p67phox do not effect the growth of primary bone marrow cells in response to GM-CSF. Although loss of Rac2 leads to an 50% reduction in colony formation, retroviral re-expression of wt Rac2 but also Rac2F37A, Rac2Y40C, and Rac2F37A/Y40C enhanced colony formation by 20–50%. This indicates that colony formation in response to GM-CSF alone via Rac2 is dependent on a domain very likely located outside the switch I domain, as most of the downstream effector protein interactions are disrupted by mutations of either F37 or Y40 residue. These affects may be agonist and/or lineage-specific and we cannot rule out the possibility that the role of effector domain mutants may be masked, even in primary cells, by the overexpression of the mutants.
p160rock is a downstream effector of Rho involved in actin myosin dynamics. Lamarche et al. (15) suggested that p160rock is also a Rac1 effector mediated via codon 37. In primary neutrophils expressing Rac2 F37A and Y40C mutants, addition of a specific p160rock inhibitor leads to a further inhibition on chemotaxis but no effect on superoxide production. These data suggest that p160rock and Rac2 may act via parallel pathways to effect chemotaxis, but p160rock appears not to be involved in superoxide production. The data also might suggest a role for RhoA in neutrophil migration and further emphasizes the nonepistatic relationship of chemotaxis and superoxide generation in neutrophils.
Similar to previous reports investigating downstream effector proteins of Rac1 (11, 15, 17), the Rac2Y40C mutant does not bind to Pak1, and the Rac2F37A mutant does not bind Por1. Interestingly, in contrast to a Rac1V12H40 mutant (16), the Rac2Y40C mutant also does not significantly bind Por1 (Table II). Furthermore, Rac2Y40C does not bind p67phox. Lamarche et al. (15) described binding of the Rac161LY40C mutant to p67phox, but both they and Diekman et al. (22) showed loss of binding for the Rac161LY40K mutant. The Rac1Y40 residue is not part of the protein-protein interface with p67phox, as recently shown by crystallographic analysis (40). Mutations of codon 40 must therefore contribute to loss of binding through either destabilization of the native protein conformation or through conformational changes around the effector region (40). These changes might differ between ca forms of the Rac GTPase (vs wt Rac2 as used in the experiments described in this study) and/or between Rac1 and Rac2. In addition, specific mutants could theoretically lead to dn activity, as suggested but not proven by the reduced superoxide generation of the N39A mutant in Rac2–/– cells. Of interest, mutating V36A, N39A, and N43A does not change the binding of Rac2 to Pak1, Por1, and p67phox.
In summary, we established a model system to study, in a physiologically relevant fashion, the proximal Rac2 signal transduction pathways using Rac2 switch I domain mutants expressed in neutrophils genetically deficient in wt Rac2. Our findings indicate that Rac2 regulates neutrophil motility as well as superoxide generation by several parallel and obligate pathways. Expression of mutants that preserve binding to p67phox, Por1, and Pak1 did not rescue chemotaxis or superoxide production in Rac2–/– neutrophils. Finally, Pak1, Por1, and p67phox, as well as other potential effector proteins using signals transduced via the switch I domain, are dispensable for cell growth in response to GM-CSF. Thus, Rac2 function in neutrophils is likely mediated through additional as yet unidentified molecules. Although in vitro binding (as used in this study) and activation studies may not be fully predictive of physiological interactions in intact neutrophils, these data underscore the utility of genetic systems to dissect the functions of Rho GTPases in hemopoietic cells.
Disclosures
The authors have no financial conflict of interest.
Acknowledgments
We thank Amgen and Takara Bio for reagents, Gary Bokoch for Abs, and Linda van Aelst and Jonathan Chernoff for plasmids. We thank members of our laboratories for helpful discussions and Keisha Steward for administrative assistance.
Footnotes
The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore be hereby marked advertisement in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
1 This work was supported by National Institutes of Health RO1 DK62757 (to D.A.W.), P01 HL69974 (to M.C.D. and D.A.W.), and the Riley Children’s Foundation (to M.C.D.).
2 D.C. and A.Y. contributed equally to this study.
3 Current address: Research Institut for Molecular Pharmacology, Department of Molecular Genetics-Molecular Hematopoiesis, Berlin, German.
4 Current address: Effector Cell Institute, Research Center for Advanced Science and Technology, University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan.
5 Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. David A. Williams, Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center, 3333 Burnet Avenue, Mail Location 7013, Cincinnati, OH 45229. E-mail address: David.Williams{at}cchmc.org
6 Abbreviations used in this paper: ca, constitutively active; wt, wild type; rrSCF, recombinant rat stem cell factor; rhuG-CSF, recombinant human granulocyte CSF; rhuMGDF, recombinant human megakaryocyte growth and development factor; rmIL-3, recombinant murine IL-3; ROS, reactive oxygen species; dn, dominant negative.
Received for publication September 23, 2004. Accepted for publication January 7, 2005.
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Polymorphonuclear neutrophils (PMN) are an important component of the innate immune system. We have shown previously that migration and superoxide (O
2) production, as well as some kinase signaling pathways are compromised in mice deficient in the Ras-related Rho GTPase Rac2. In this study, we demonstrate that Rac2 controls chemotaxis and superoxide production via distinct pathways and is critical for development of myeloid colonies in vitro. The Rac2 mutants V36A, F37A, and N39A all bind to both Pak1 and p67phox, yet are unable to rescue superoxide production and chemotaxis when expressed in Rac2–/– PMN. In contrast, the N43A mutant, which binds to Por1 (Arfaptin 2), p67phox, and Pak1, is able to rescue superoxide production but not chemotaxis. The F37A mutant, demonstrated to have reduced binding to Por1, shows reduced rescue of fMLP-induced chemotaxis. Finally, the Rac2Y40C mutant that is defective in binding to all three potential downstream effectors (Pak1, p67phox, and Por1) is unable to rescue chemotaxis, motility, or superoxide production, but is able to rescue defective growth of myeloid colonies in vitro. These findings suggest that binding to any single effector is not sufficient to rescue the distinct cellular phenotypes of Rac2–/– PMN, implicating multiple, distinct, and potentially parallel effector pathways.
Introduction
Rac2 is a hemopoietic-specific member of the small Rho GTPases family. Rho family members regulate actin cytoskeletal organization and gene expression (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7). Despite a high degree of sequence homology with Rac1, Rac2 appears to specifically regulate chemotaxis, endothelial rolling, superoxide production, and kinase activation in neutrophils (1, 2, 3, 8), as shown by studies using mice genetically deficient in Rac2. Rho GTPases cycle between active GTP-bound and inactive GDP-bound forms and typically bind effector proteins only in the active, GTP-bound state. The switch I domain of Rho GTPases (aa 32–40 for Rac and Cdc42) undergoes extensive conformational changes upon GTP-binding, facilitating interaction with downstream effector proteins. For Rac2, the specific effector proteins that regulate motility and chemotaxis, as well as superoxide production in primary cells, are largely unknown, with the exception of the p67phox subunit of the NADPH oxidase.
Neutrophils are highly motile cells. As demonstrated in phagocytic syndromes characterized by defective neutrophil migration, this motility is essential for normal innate immune function. Cell motility is a complex process depending on spatio-temporal regulation of actin assembly and disassembly (9). Rac proteins are believed to regulate actin assembly through Pak1 and Lim-kinase 1 (10). In addition, Por1 regulates membrane ruffling in fibroblasts downstream of Rac1 (11). Finally, Rac antagonistically regulates Rho through Pak1 inhibition of myosin L chain kinase (12, 13) and generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS), at least in nonphagocytic cells (14). Therefore, Pak1, Por1, and even p67phox are potential physiological mediators of Rac function regulating neutrophil motility (Fig. 1).
FIGURE 1. Schematic representation of Rac2 protein and switch I domain effector mutants. F37 and Y40 mutants which interrupt interactions with POR1, PAK, and p67phox which are potential proteins involved in transducing signals downstream of Rac2 are shown (see text and Tables I and II for details). The downstream pathways and critical myeloid functions assayed are shown in the lower part of the figure.
One approach to identify the pathways emanating from Rho GTPases has been the use of mutants disrupting binding to specific effector proteins introduced into heterologous cells (15, 16, 17, 18). This work has shown that generation of specific actin structures and cell cycle progression can be separated from MAPK activation for Rac1 and Cdc42. For instance, codon 37 of Rac1 is implicated in membrane ruffling via partner of Rac1 (Por1) (also called Arfarptin-2) (11, 17) and G1 cell cycle progression. Por1 has been implicated as an important downstream mediator for the induction of membrane ruffles. Codon 40 is critical for activation of the JNK MAPK signaling pathway (15). The mutations at position 40 disrupt binding to Cdc42/Rac interactive binding sequence (19)-containing proteins, as illustrated by defective interactions of Y40C mutants of Rac1 and Cdc42 with Pak1. In Drosophila, expression of Rac1 containing the F37A and the Y40C mutation in a functional Rac1/Rac2 null background is associated with defects in axon growth and branching (20). Rac proteins are also essential regulators of the NADPH oxidase complex, which mediates phagocyte superoxide production (21). Mutation of codon 40 of Rac1 and other mutations within the insert domain and codons 27, 30, and 36 of Rac2 (22, 23, 24, 25, 26) show reduced binding to p67phox or reduced activation of the oxidase complex.
With the exception of studies in Drosophila, most studies to date examining effector domain mutants have used in vitro assays or cellular approaches that require expression of the effector mutant in the context of constitutively activated (ca) 6 forms of Rac. ca forms of Rho GTPases, such as L61 and V12, may themselves behave in a fashion qualitatively different from activated wild-type (wt) proteins (27). In addition, most studies have also been conducted in cell lines, mainly fibroblasts, expressing endogenous Rac1, but not Rac2. In hemopoietic cells, despite a high degree of sequence identity between Rac1 and Rac2, it is now clear that Rac2 is a major GTPase involved in migration and superoxide generation (5, 8). In this sense, hemopoietic cells are unique in that they express both Rac1 and Rac2, but the signaling pathways involved in Rac2-mediated functions are unknown.
In the studies presented here, we investigated the proximal downstream signals of Rac2. We studied the ability of Rac2 switch I domain mutants to rescue Rac2 function in bone marrow cells genetically deficient in Rac2 using physiologically relevant primary cell assays (Fig. 1). We demonstrate that single amino acid changes in the switch I domain of wt Rac2 prevents the rescue of migration and superoxide production defects in Rac2–/– neutrophils even though some of these mutants maintain binding to Pak1, Por1, and p67phox in vitro. Our data indicate mutations in amino acid residues that disrupt binding to Pak1 and Por1 lead to loss of wt Rac2 function in primary neutrophils, that binding to Pak1 or Por1 individually is insufficient to reconstitute Rac2 function in neutrophils, and that activation of the NADPH oxidase likely involves both binding to p67phox and a second pathway. Finally, none of the mutations in the Rac2 switch domain interfered with Rac2-mediated growth factor-induced cell survival and proliferation.
Materials and Methods
Construction of retroviral vectors
An improved bicistronic murine stem cell virus-based vector, MIEG3, expressing enhanced GFP has been described previously (28). This vector contains the encephalomyocarditis virus internal ribosomal entry site in its original viral configuration, resulting in improved GFP translation. The vector-expressing Flag-tagged murine Rac2 (FR2) has also been described previously (29). The amino acid point mutations (Fig. 1) were introduced into this vector by site-directed mutagenesis (QuickChange; Stratagene) in the pBluesript plasmid (Stratagene). The primer sequences are available upon request. The mutated sequences were confirmed by automated nucleotide sequencing and subcloned into MIEG3 using EcoRI and XhoI restriction sites yielding V36A-FR2, F37A-FR2, N39A-FR2, Y40C-FR2, N43A-FR2, and F37A/Y40C-FR2. N-terminal Flag-tagged wt human Por1 (National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) X97567; kindly supplied by L. van Aelst, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, Cold Spring Harbor, NY) (11) was used for PCR amplification and inserted into MIEG3 using EcoRI/XhoI digest for Por1 to generate MIEG3-Por1. wt human Pak1 (NCBI U24152 wt Pak1), ca Pak1 T423E, and dominant-negative (dn) Pak1 (both kindly supplied by J. Chernoff, Fox Chase Cancer Center, Philadelphia, PA) were used for PCR amplification and inserted into MIEG3 using EcoRI for Pak1 and ca Pak1. To generate ecotrophic retroviral supernatant, Phoenix eco cells were obtained from American Type Culture Collection, cultured in DMEM with 4.5 g/L glucose (Invitrogen Life Technologies), supplemented with 100 U/ml penicillin and 100 μg/ml streptomycin (P/S) and 10% FCS (HyClone) and transfected with either FR2 (expressing wt Rac2), MIEG3 (empty vector), or the respective mutant containing plasmids, using either a liposome-based method (lipofectamine; Invitrogen Life Technologies) or Calcium Phosphate Transfection (Sigma-Aldrich), according to the manufacturer’s instructions. Retroviral supernatant was harvested 48–96 h after transfection. MIEG3 was harvested from a stable GP + E86 cell line previously described (29).
Binding of Rac2 mutants to Pak1, p67phox, and Por1
The Rac-binding domain of PAK or Por1 was cloned into pGEX-5X3 (Pharmacia) vector. p67phox-GST was kindly provided by E. Pick (Julius Friedrich Cohnheim-Minerva Center for Phagocytic Research, Sackler School of Medicine, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel). GST-tagged proteins were expressed in BL21 (DE3) and purified using glutathione-agarose beads (Sigma-Aldrich) in a buffer containing 50 mM HEPES (pH 7.3), 200 mM NaCl, 5 mM MgCl2, protease inhibitor mixture (Roche), and 1 mM PMSF. Cell lysates were prepared from NIH3T3 cells transduced with Flag-tagged wt or mutant forms of Rac2. Transduced cells were isolated through FACS via GFP expression. GTPS-loading was performed by successively treating the cell lysates with 2 mM EDTA, 0.1 mM GTPS, and 10 mM MgCl2. The purified GST-fusion proteins were then incubated with the cell lysates containing GTPS-loaded Rac2 on mutants for 2 h at 4°C. After the incubation, the reaction mixture was washed three times with a buffer containing 50 mM HEPES (pH 7.3), 200 mM NaCl, 10 mM MgCl2, and subjected to SDS-PAGE for immunoblot analysis.
Animals and generation of in vitro-differentiated neutrophils
Rac2–/– mice (B6.129Rac2tmmddw) and their normal littermates have been described previously (1). The animals had been backcrossed into C57BL6 mice for >12 generations. Six- to 8-wk-old Rac2–/– or wt littermates were treated with 150 mg/kg 5-fluouracil (American Pharmaceutical Partners) i.p. 48 h before harvesting bone marrow. The mononuclear cell fraction was isolated by density gradient centrifugation (histopaque–1083; Sigma-Aldrich) for 30 min at 1500 rpm at room temperature, prestimulated with recombinant rat stem cell factor (rrSCF), recombinant human granulocyte CSF (rhuG-CSF), and recombinant human megakaryocyte growth and development factor (rhuMGDF, all 100 ng/ml; Amgen), for 48 h in IMDM (Invitrogen Life Technologies) supplemented with 10% FCS and P/S. Cells were transduced twice with retroviral supernatants on fibronectin (CH296; Takara Bio)–coated nontissue cultured cell culture dishes treated as previously described (30). Transduced cells were further expanded in rrSCF, rhuG-CSF, and recombinant murine IL-3 (rmIL-3, 100 U/ml; PeproTech) for 5 days. In some experiments, rhuMGDF (100 ng/ml) was used instead of rmIL-3. Transduced cells were sorted 4 days after transduction on the basis of the GFP expression by high- speed cell sorting (FACS Diva; BD Biosciences) and the isolated cells were then cultured with rrSCF, rhuG-CSF, and rmIL-3 or rhuMGDF for additional 6–8 days. The resulting culture contained >70% neutrophils, as determined by modified Giemsa staining (DiffQuick; Dade Behring).
Colony formation
Eighteen to 24 h after sorting, 1 x 104 cells were seeded into 1 ml of methylcellulose assay (H4100; Stem Cell Technologies) in IMDM, supplemented with 30% FCS, 2 mM Glutamine (Invitrogen Life Technologies), 2% P/S, 10–4 M 2-ME (Sigma-Aldrich), and 5 ng/ml recombinant murine granulocyte-macrophage CSF (rmGM-CSF; PeproTech). Cultures were performed in duplicate, incubated at 37°C with 5% CO2, and colonies were scored 8–10 days after plating using an inverted microscope. Each individual experiment was performed in triplicate.
Neutrophil chemotaxis
Neutrophil migration was performed as described previously (1). Cells (1 x 105 per ml) were placed in 50 μl of HBSS (Invitrogen Life Technologies) supplemented with 7.5 mM glucose, 0.5 mM CaCl2, and 0.9 mM MgCl2 in the top well of a Boyden Chamber (Neuroprobes) with a 3-μm porous membrane. fMLP (1 μM; Sigma-Aldrich) was used as the chemoattractant and placed in the lower chamber. After 45–60 min of incubation at 37°C, migrated neutrophils adherent to the lower side of the membrane were stained using a modified Giemsa staining (DiffQuik). All cells in three or four randomly chosen fields (x400 magnification) were counted. For each experiment, three replicates were performed.
NBT and oxygen radicals chemiluminescence assay
Superoxide production in the transduced and differentiated myeloid cells was determined by the NBT test as described previously (31). Briefly, neutrophils (1 x 104) were seeded and allowed to adhere to chamber slides in IMDM for 1 h at 37°C. Subsequently, the cells were stimulated with 10 μM fMLP (Sigma-Aldrich) in saturated NBT solution for 20 min at 37°C. After a wash with cold PBS, the cells were fixed with methanol and counterstained with Safranin O (Sigma-Aldrich). The neutrophils were examined by light microscopy to assay for dark purple deposits. The percentage of NBT+ cells was determined by evaluating 200 cells in duplicate. For quantitative assay, chemiluminescent isoluminol was used as reported previously (32, 33). Briefly, 1 x 105 cells suspended in 50 μl of PBS supplemented with 0.9 mM CaCl2, 0.5 mM MgCl2, and 7.5 mM glucose (PBSG) were added to each well of a 96-well plate with 80 μl of 125 μM isoluminol in PBSG, 40 μl of 100 U/ml HRP (Roche) in 0.9% NaCl, and either 5 μl of 3 mg/ml superoxide dismutase or PBSG. After cells were incubated at 37°C for 10 min, 25 μl of 1.6 μg/ml PMA (final concentration 0.2 μg/ml) in PBSG or 25 μl of PBSG were added into each well manually before starting assay, and chemiluminescence was detected in total 200-μl suspension on a 96-well plate using an Lmax microplate luminometer (Molecular Devices). The data are expressed as relative luminescence units by long kinetic mode for over 30 min, and the relative total amount of superoxide produced was determined using SoftMax PRO software (Molecular Devices). Under these conditions, 97.5% of chemiluminescence was inhibited by superoxide dismutase.
Immunoblot
Neutrophils (1–2 x 105) were lysed in a buffer containing 10 mM K2HPO4, 1 mM EDTA, 5 mM EGTA, 10 mM MgCl2, 1 mM Na3VO4, 50 mM sodium -glycerophosphate (all Sigma-Aldrich), 10 μg/ml aprotinin, 10 μg/ml leupeptin, and 1 μg/ml pepstatin A (all from Roche). Lysates were clarified by centrifugation at 14,000 x g, at 4°C for 30 min. Lysates were separated by SDS-PAGE and immunoblotting was performed after transfer to nitrocellulose membranes (Millipore). Immunoblots used anti-Flag Ab (Sigma-Aldrich), anti-Rac Ab (BD Transduction Laboratories), or anti-PAK Ab (Cell Signaling Technology).
Statistics
The one-tailed t test was used for statistical analysis with p < 0.05 considered significant.
Results
Binding of Rac2 mutants to Pak1, p67phox, and Por1 and induction of membrane ruffling
Pak1, p67phox, and Por1 are intensively studied downstream effectors of Rac1, a Rho GTPase highly homologous to Rac2. Binding of Rac to p67phox in the assembled NADPH oxidase complex is essential for oxidase activity (34), and Pak1 and Por1 may contribute to signals transduced via Rac2 in terminally differentiated neutrophils. To more fully examine the potential role(s) of Rac2 interactions with effectors in neutrophil functions, we studied switch I domain mutants in wt Rac2 expressed in Rac2-deficient primary neutrophils. As few data are available studying interaction of Rac2 switch I domain mutants with these effector proteins, we first performed pull-down assays of these mutants with GST-Pak1, GST-p67phox, and GST-Por1 to determine the extent of protein binding of these effectors to Rac2 (Fig. 2 and summarized in Table I). Binding of Rac2 or mutants of the switch I domain was confirmed by anti-Flag immunoblotting. The effector domain is highly conserved between Rac2 and Rac1. Thus, as expected, wt Rac2 demonstrates binding to Pak1, p67phox, and Por1 (Fig. 2). As previously reported for Rac1 and Cdc42 (15), the Rac2Y40C mutant does not bind to Pak1. The Rac2Y40C mutant also does not bind to p67phox in this in vitro assay, a result similar to that reported previously for the Y40K mutant of Rac1 (15). Residues V36, F37, and N39 have been implicated in binding of Rac1 to Por1 (Arfaptin2) (35). Although F37A and Y40C mutation in Rac2 leads to loss of binding to Por1, the V36A, N39A, and the N43A mutations do not prevent binding to Por1. Loss of binding to Por1 correlated with the inability to potentiate membrane ruffling of these mutants as analyzed after stimulation with platelet-derived growth factor in NIH3T3 cells (data not shown). As previously reported for Rac1, Rac2F37A, Rac2V36A, Rac2N39A, and Rac2N43A, mutants also show binding to p67phox at levels equal to and greater than wt Rac2.
FIGURE 2. Determination of binding specificity of Rac2 mutants to various effectors. Cell lysates were prepared from NIH3T3 cells transduced with Flag-tagged wt Rac2 (Rac2) or mutant Rac2 cDNAs and pull-down assays were performed with PAK-GST, Por1-GST, or p67phox-GST, as described in Materials and Methods. Before the pull-down assays, the lysates were treated in a buffer containing 0.1 mM GTPS to increase the amount of GTP-bound Rac2 in the lysates. GST-bound proteins were purified and analyzed by Western blot using anti-Flag mAb. Binding of GDP-loaded Rac2 p67phox-GST is shown as a comparison.
Table I. Summary of Rac2 mutant effects on neutrophil function and effector binding
Expression of wt and mutant Rac2 in transduced neutrophils
Neutrophils differentiated in vitro after retroviral transduction of Rac2-deficient myeloid progenitor cells express the mutant Rac2 proteins V36A, F37A, N39A, Y40C, F37A/Y40C, and N43A at levels equal to wt Rac2 (FR2) as judged both by immunoblotting with anti-Flag Ab and by the intensity of GFP expression using flow analysis. Expression of transgenes was 2- to 3-fold higher than endogenous Rac2 as judged by immunoblotting with anti-Rac2 Ab (data not shown), as previously seen using this vector system (8).
Neutrophil chemotaxis does not depend on Pak1 or Por1
Rac2-deficient neutrophils have a well-described defect in directed migration after stimulation with chemoattractants such as fMLP (1, 8, 28). Migration depends on a complex spatio-temporal change in actin assembly and disassembly, which is thought to be regulated at least in part by Rac, Pak1, Lim-kinase 1, and cofilin (10). In addition, Por1-Rac1 direct interaction has been implicated in actin rearrangement leading to membrane ruffling in fibroblasts (11). As seen in Fig. 3a, when compared with wt Rac2 and empty vector (MIEG3), neither the F37A nor Y40C mutants are able to rescue chemotaxis. Furthermore, neither N43A or V36A Rac2 mutants, each of which retain the capacity to bind to both Pak1 and Por1, rescue chemotaxis when expressed in Rac2–/– neutrophils. These data indicate that binding of Rac2 to either Pak1 or Por1, while potentially necessary, is not sufficient to regulate neutrophil migration. To substantiate these findings, wt Por1 and ca Pak1 were expressed in wt and Rac2–/– neutrophils. Expression ca Pak1 was 5- to 10-fold higher than endogenous Pak1. wt Por1 was detected by anti-Flag Ab (Fig. 3b). As seen in Fig. 3c, neither ca Pak1 nor wt Por1 affected wt neutrophil migration (Fig. 3c). Furthermore, none of those proteins rescue chemotaxis of Rac2–/– neutrophils (Fig. 3c). These data indicate that neither Por1 nor Pak1 alone in the absence of Rac2 mediate neutrophil chemotaxis.
FIGURE 3. Chemotaxis of transduced and in vitro generated neutrophils. A, Neutrophils derived from wt or Rac2–/– mouse bone marrow were analyzed for migration in Boyden chambers in response to 1 μM fMLP, as described in Materials and Methods. For each experiment, three replicates were performed and for each bone marrow harvest, at least three individual assays have been performed. The number of migrating cells on the filter was determined by counting four random x400 microscopic fields. Data are depicted as mean migrated cells per x400 magnification field ± SEM from three to nine individual experiments. *, Significance (p < 0.05) between wt Rac2 (FR2) expressed in Rac2–/– cells and indicated mutant or vector control. For N43A, p = 0.55. B, Immunoblot of ca Pak1 (upper panel) or flag-tagged POR1 (lower panel) in transduced wt (Rac2+/+) or Rac2–/– neutrophils. -Actin was used as a loading control. C, Chemotaxis of neutrophils derived from wt or Rac2–/– mice expressing Pak1 or Por1 cDNAs. n = 3–8, mean ± SEM. p-Values are not significant for any values except wt Rac2 vs MIEG3 (empty vector) in Rac2–/– cells where p < 0.05.
Binding of Rac2 to p67phox and Pak1 is not sufficient for generation of superoxide
As noted previously, Rac2–/– neutrophils display a defect in superoxide generation in response to some agonists, including fMLP. In vitro cell-free assays indicate that superoxide generation in neutrophils depends on binding of a Rac protein (either Rac1 or Rac2) to p67phox. To determine the role of Rac2 binding to p67phox in generation of superoxide in Rac2–/– neutrophils, superoxide generation was stimulated with PMA and analyzed quantitatively in neutrophils derived from myeloid progenitor cells transduced with each Rac2 mutant or wt Rac2. Despite the observation that the F37A and N39A mutants retain the capacity to bind to p67phox in vitro, these mutants do not rescue superoxide generation when expressed in Rac2–/– cells (Fig. 4a). As noted above, the F37A and N39A also bind Pak1, and N39A but not F37A can bind Por1. Thus, the N39A mutant retains in vitro binding to p67phox, Pak1, and Por1, but is unable to rescue superoxide production in Rac2–/– neutrophils. In direct contrast, Rac2–/– neutrophils expressing N43A Rac2, which binds p67phox, Pak1, and Por1, demonstrate superoxide production similar to Rac2–/– neutrophils expressing wt Rac2. These data indicate that Rac2 binding to Pak1, p67phox, or Por1 alone is not sufficient to effect superoxide formation in neutrophils. In addition, the V36A and N43A mutants bind equally well to Pak1, Por1, and p67phox (Fig. 2), but only N43A supports superoxide production (Table I and Fig. 4a). Interestingly, expression of ca Pak1 increases baseline as well as fMLP-stimulated superoxide production in Rac2–/– neutrophils but is unable to substitute fully for wt Rac2 (Fig. 4b). Expression of wt Por1 does not affect superoxide production (Fig. 4b). Taken together, these data suggest that Rac2 regulates one or more pathways involved in activation of superoxide production that are independent of p67phox.
FIGURE 4. Superoxide production in transduced and in vitro generated neutrophils. Neutrophils derived from wt or Rac2–/– mouse bone marrow were analyzed for superoxide generation after stimulation with PMA using quantitative measurements (A) or NBT test (B). The response to each stimulus is compared with the background spontaneous activity (see text). A, 1 x 105 cells were stimulated with 0.3 μg/ml PMA in PBSG in the presence of isoluminol, HRP. The signal was read for 30 min at 37°C in a luminescence reader. Data are depicted as mean relative luminescence units ± SEM from 4 to 12 individual experiments. *, Significance (p < 0.05) between FR2 (wt Rac2) expressed in Rac2–/– cells and the indicated mutant. B, Cells were stimulated by either unstimulated () or stimulated with 10–6 mol/liter fMLP (). The percentage of NBT+ cells was determined by evaluating 200 cells in triplicate. In these assays, as previously noted by us (3 ), there is a degree of spontaneous oxidase activity, which may be increased due to the in vitro culture conditions. p-Values are not significant for any values except wt Rac2 vs MIEG3 (empty vector) in Rac2–/– cells where p < 0.05.
p160rock and Rac2 regulate chemotaxis in a combinatorial fashion, but p160rock is not involved in superoxide generation
p160rock has been previously described primarily as an effector for Rho. One report has demonstrated that Rac1 binding to p160rock is associated with membrane ruffling (15). Therefore, we investigated the effect of a specific p160rock inhibitor on chemotaxis and superoxide production in wt and Rac2–/– neutrophils expressing each Rac2 mutant described above. As shown in Fig. 5a, pharmacological inhibition of p160rock in wt neutrophils significantly reduces chemotaxis, shown by a 50% loss of fMLP-induced chemotaxis. In Rac2–/– neutrophils or Rac2–/– neutrophils expressing wtRac2, F37A, Y40C, or F37A/Y40C Rac2 mutants, inhibition of p160rock leads to a further reduction in chemotaxis. These data suggest that p160rock is not a direct downstream effector of Rac2 but likely acts in parallel to Rac2, mediating neutrophil chemotaxis. Finally, we studied the effect of the p160rock inhibitor on the generation of superoxide in wt neutrophils or neutrophils expressing wt or Rac2 mutants generated in vitro. As shown in Fig. 5b, the p160rock inhibitor has no significant effect on PMA-induced superoxide generation in any of these cells, indicating that Rho-p160rock activation is not necessary for generation of superoxide in neutrophils.
FIGURE 5. Chemotaxis and superoxide generation of transduced and in vitro generated neutrophils in the presence of p160rock inhibitor. Neutrophils derived from wt or Rac2–/– mouse bone marrow were analyzed for migration (A) and generation of superoxide (B) (as in Figs. 3 and 4) in the absence () or presence () of 1 mM p160rock inhibitor Y-27632 (Calbiochem). Cells were preincubated for 30 min at 37°C. A, Chemotaxis assays, two experiments with similar results have been performed. B, Superoxide generation data are depicted as mean ± SEM from six individual experiments. *, Significance (p < 0.05) between wt Rac2 and indicated mutants expressed in Rac2–/– cells vs MIEG3 (empty vector) without inhibitor; #, significance in the presence of inhibitor.
Growth of myeloid colonies is not affected by switch I mutants
Rac1, like other Rho GTPases, has been implicated in the induction of the expression of cyclin D1 (17, 36) and regulators of cell proliferation. We have previously shown that Rac1 and Rac2 separately regulate growth of hemopoietic progenitor cells via cell proliferation and survival, respectively (5). Therefore, we investigated growth of hemopoietic progenitor colonies in semisolid medium as a quantitative assay of myeloid cell proliferation. Colony growth in response to a single cytokine, GM-CSF, is partially dependent on Rac2 activity, because bone marrow cells derived from Rac2–/– mice demonstrate a 40% reduction in colony formation (Fig. 6). Retroviral-mediated expression of wt Rac2 completely rescues this defective colony formation. Surprisingly, the expression of F37A, Y40C, and F37A/Y40C Rac2 mutants rescues myeloid colony growth to the same extent as wt Rac2 (Fig. 6). Indeed, overexpression of Rac2 mutants enhances colony formation in wt cells between 20 and 50% (data not shown) as previously described for wt Rac2 in myeloid progenitor cells (4).
FIGURE 6. Myeloid colony formation in response to GM-CSF. Transduced and GFP+ sorted bone marrow cells were grown in 1 ml of methylcellulose supplemented with 5 ng/ml rmGM-CSF, as described in Materials and Methods. Cultures were performed in duplicate, incubated at 37°C with 5% CO2 and colonies were scored 8–10 days after plating using an inverted microscope. Data are normalized to colony growth of bone marrow derived from wt mice transduced with MIEG3 (empty vector), set at 100%, and depicted as mean ± SEM from three individual experiments performed in triplicate. **, p < 0.05, Rac2–/– transduced with wt Rac2 or noted mutants vs Rac2–/– cells transduced with empty vector; *, p < 0.05 for Rac2–/– transduced with empty vector vs wtRac2 and indicated mutants.
Discussion
Previous studies have identified Pak1, Por1, and p67phox among molecules binding to Rac1 and transmitting important downstream signals for actin remodeling, signal transduction, and generation of oxygen radicals. Rac mutants disrupting binding to these three proteins have been instrumental in these studies (15, 16, 17, 18). However, the physiological relevance of findings reported in some of these studies remains unclear because most have relied on biochemical analysis in cell-free systems, used fibroblasts as a model system or utilized effector mutants expressed in the background of ca Rac1 mutants (e.g., V12 or Q61 Rac-activated mutants) (Table II). All of these model systems have potential drawbacks. For instance, the ca mutants of Rho GTPases, such as V12 and Q61, have been shown to behave in ways distinct from wt proteins (27) (Y. Gu and D. A. Williams, unpublished results). In the studies presented here, we use primary murine neutrophils as a model system and express Rac2 mutants in a Rac2 null background, eliminating the need for ca mutants. Thus, these studies are conducted in a physiologically relevant model system. We focused our studies on motility and superoxide generation, both critical neutrophil functions.
Table II. Comparison of effectors mutants in Rac2 to literaturea
Rac proteins have been shown to regulate actin assembly via Pak1, while Por1 is involved in Rac1-mediated membrane ruffling in fibroblasts. Rac-dependent activation of Pak1 antagonizes Rho through inhibition of myosin L chain kinase and generation of ROS. Thus all three effectors, Pak1, Por1, and p67phox, are potential mediators of Rac-regulated neutrophil motility. Our data indicate that binding of none of these potential effectors alone, at least as defined by in vitro binding assays, is sufficient to reconstitute Rac2-mediated migration in neutrophils. This result could also reflect differences in interactions of Rac2 mutants with effectors in vitro compared with binding in the more physiologic setting of primary neutrophils. However, the expression of dn Por1 and dn Pak1 did not influence chemotaxis in Rac2 wt neutrophils (A. Koorneef and D. A. Williams, unpublished results), further suggesting that multiple parallel pathways play physiological roles in neutrophil chemotaxis. Thus, neutrophil locomotion following chemotactic stimulus appears to require several pathways that are regulated in parallel through Rac2.
Rac2 is also required in neutrophils to generate ROS via the NADPH oxidase complex. Activation of the phagocyte NADPH oxidase presumably requires assembly of cytochrome b with p47phox, p67phox, and Rac2 at the membrane. Interaction of Rac with p67phox is required for the reduction of molecular oxygen (21). Our findings suggest Rac2 activates the NADPH oxidase complex by a second or several p67phox-independent pathways. Mutations in Rac2 that abolish binding to p67phox, as in the case of the Y40C mutant, clearly affect the capacity of Rac2 to mediate superoxide generation in Rac2–/– neutrophils. However, binding of Rac2 to p67phox, as shown by the F37A and N39A Rac2 mutants, is not sufficient to restore the capacity of Rac2 to rescue superoxide production in Rac2–/– neutrophils. Because the N39A Rac2 mutant also appears to bind to Pak1 and Por1, Rac2/Pak1 and Rac2/Por1 interactions are also apparently not sufficient to mediate full activation of the NADPH oxidase via Rac2. Supporting this view, expression of dn Por1 or dn Pak1 did not influence superoxide production in wt neutrophils (A. Koorneef and D. A. Williams, unpublished results). However, we cannot rule out the possibility that switch I mutants may bind effectors but fail to activate specific effectors in the physiologic setting, which would complicate our interpretation of these data (37). Indeed, while previous studies have demonstrated that Rac2V36R both binds to p67phox and activates NADPH oxidase in a cell-free NADPH oxidase assay (Table II) (23), our study shows that V36A in wt Rac2 background binds p67phox but does not rescue superoxide generation in Rac2–/– neutrophils. This difference may be attributed to the specific amino acid substitution (A vs R), or to the difference in expression of the position mutant in an activated vs wt Rac2 background, or to a role of Rac2V36 for regulating NADPH oxidase activity in intact cells.
Rho GTPases have been implicated in cell proliferation via regulation of G1 entry. Most studies examining the effects of Rho GTPases on cell proliferation have used quiescent fibroblasts, where dn mutants or Rho-specific toxins have been shown to block cell cycle entry (38). Rho regulates cyclin D1 expression during cell cycle progression via antagonism of Rac1 and Cdc42 (36). Rac mutants Rac12V35S, 37L, 40H, Rac161L40C, and 43D have been shown to be defective in activating cyclin D1 transcription in luciferase promoter assays and this phenotype was correlated with Pak1 binding (Table II) (17). In addition, Rac161LY40C but not F37A is able to induce G1 cell cycle progression in fibroblasts (15). To further understand the role of Rac in cell proliferation, we examined the effects of expression of effector domain mutants in the growth of primary bone marrow derived myeloid colonies. We demonstrate that defective binding of Pak1, Por1, and p67phox do not effect the growth of primary bone marrow cells in response to GM-CSF. Although loss of Rac2 leads to an 50% reduction in colony formation, retroviral re-expression of wt Rac2 but also Rac2F37A, Rac2Y40C, and Rac2F37A/Y40C enhanced colony formation by 20–50%. This indicates that colony formation in response to GM-CSF alone via Rac2 is dependent on a domain very likely located outside the switch I domain, as most of the downstream effector protein interactions are disrupted by mutations of either F37 or Y40 residue. These affects may be agonist and/or lineage-specific and we cannot rule out the possibility that the role of effector domain mutants may be masked, even in primary cells, by the overexpression of the mutants.
p160rock is a downstream effector of Rho involved in actin myosin dynamics. Lamarche et al. (15) suggested that p160rock is also a Rac1 effector mediated via codon 37. In primary neutrophils expressing Rac2 F37A and Y40C mutants, addition of a specific p160rock inhibitor leads to a further inhibition on chemotaxis but no effect on superoxide production. These data suggest that p160rock and Rac2 may act via parallel pathways to effect chemotaxis, but p160rock appears not to be involved in superoxide production. The data also might suggest a role for RhoA in neutrophil migration and further emphasizes the nonepistatic relationship of chemotaxis and superoxide generation in neutrophils.
Similar to previous reports investigating downstream effector proteins of Rac1 (11, 15, 17), the Rac2Y40C mutant does not bind to Pak1, and the Rac2F37A mutant does not bind Por1. Interestingly, in contrast to a Rac1V12H40 mutant (16), the Rac2Y40C mutant also does not significantly bind Por1 (Table II). Furthermore, Rac2Y40C does not bind p67phox. Lamarche et al. (15) described binding of the Rac161LY40C mutant to p67phox, but both they and Diekman et al. (22) showed loss of binding for the Rac161LY40K mutant. The Rac1Y40 residue is not part of the protein-protein interface with p67phox, as recently shown by crystallographic analysis (40). Mutations of codon 40 must therefore contribute to loss of binding through either destabilization of the native protein conformation or through conformational changes around the effector region (40). These changes might differ between ca forms of the Rac GTPase (vs wt Rac2 as used in the experiments described in this study) and/or between Rac1 and Rac2. In addition, specific mutants could theoretically lead to dn activity, as suggested but not proven by the reduced superoxide generation of the N39A mutant in Rac2–/– cells. Of interest, mutating V36A, N39A, and N43A does not change the binding of Rac2 to Pak1, Por1, and p67phox.
In summary, we established a model system to study, in a physiologically relevant fashion, the proximal Rac2 signal transduction pathways using Rac2 switch I domain mutants expressed in neutrophils genetically deficient in wt Rac2. Our findings indicate that Rac2 regulates neutrophil motility as well as superoxide generation by several parallel and obligate pathways. Expression of mutants that preserve binding to p67phox, Por1, and Pak1 did not rescue chemotaxis or superoxide production in Rac2–/– neutrophils. Finally, Pak1, Por1, and p67phox, as well as other potential effector proteins using signals transduced via the switch I domain, are dispensable for cell growth in response to GM-CSF. Thus, Rac2 function in neutrophils is likely mediated through additional as yet unidentified molecules. Although in vitro binding (as used in this study) and activation studies may not be fully predictive of physiological interactions in intact neutrophils, these data underscore the utility of genetic systems to dissect the functions of Rho GTPases in hemopoietic cells.
Disclosures
The authors have no financial conflict of interest.
Acknowledgments
We thank Amgen and Takara Bio for reagents, Gary Bokoch for Abs, and Linda van Aelst and Jonathan Chernoff for plasmids. We thank members of our laboratories for helpful discussions and Keisha Steward for administrative assistance.
Footnotes
The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore be hereby marked advertisement in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
1 This work was supported by National Institutes of Health RO1 DK62757 (to D.A.W.), P01 HL69974 (to M.C.D. and D.A.W.), and the Riley Children’s Foundation (to M.C.D.).
2 D.C. and A.Y. contributed equally to this study.
3 Current address: Research Institut for Molecular Pharmacology, Department of Molecular Genetics-Molecular Hematopoiesis, Berlin, German.
4 Current address: Effector Cell Institute, Research Center for Advanced Science and Technology, University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan.
5 Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. David A. Williams, Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center, 3333 Burnet Avenue, Mail Location 7013, Cincinnati, OH 45229. E-mail address: David.Williams{at}cchmc.org
6 Abbreviations used in this paper: ca, constitutively active; wt, wild type; rrSCF, recombinant rat stem cell factor; rhuG-CSF, recombinant human granulocyte CSF; rhuMGDF, recombinant human megakaryocyte growth and development factor; rmIL-3, recombinant murine IL-3; ROS, reactive oxygen species; dn, dominant negative.
Received for publication September 23, 2004. Accepted for publication January 7, 2005.
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