©1995 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.
Analysis of Ligand Binding to the -Macroglobulin Receptor/Low Density Lipoprotein Receptor-related Protein
EVIDENCE THAT LIPOPROTEIN LIPASE AND THE CARBOXYL-TERMINAL DOMAIN OF THE RECEPTOR-ASSOCIATED PROTEIN BIND TO THE SAME SITE (*)

(Received for publication, May 4, 1995; and in revised form, July 13, 1995)

Morten S. Nielsen (1)(§) Anders Nykjær (1) Ilka Warshawsky (2) Alan L. Schwartz (2) Jørgen Gliemann (1)(§)

From the  (1)Department of Medical Biochemistry, University of Aarhus, DK-8000 Aarhus C, Denmark, and the (2)Edward Mallinckrodt Departments of Pediatrics and Molecular Biology and Pharmacology, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri 63110

ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
FOOTNOTES
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
REFERENCES

ABSTRACT

The endocytic alpha(2)-macroglobulin receptor/low density lipoprotein receptor-related protein (alpha(2)MR/LRP) binds several classes of extracellular ligands at independent sites. In addition, alpha(2)MR/LRP can bind multiple copies of the 39-40-kDa receptor-associated protein (RAP). Both amino-terminal and carboxyl-terminal fragments of RAP exhibit affinity, and the fragments apparently bind to different sites on the receptor. RAP completely inhibits the binding of all presently known extracellular ligands, whereas several ligands such as alpha(2)-macroglobulin and tissue-type plasminogen activator are poor inhibitors of RAP binding. Since RAP is largely an intracellular molecule that normally does not occupy alpha(2)MR/LRP at the cell surface, we hypothesized that an established extracellular ligand might bind to those sites on the receptor capable of binding the RAP fragments. We found complete cross-competition between carboxyl-terminal RAP fragments and fragments of lipoprotein lipase containing the recently identified binding domain for alpha(2)MR/LRP (Nykjær, A., Nielsen, M., Lookene, A., Meyer, N., Røigaard, H., Etzerodt, M., Beisiegel, U., Olivecrona, G., and Gliemann, J.(1994) J. Biol. Chem. 269, 31747-31755). Moreover, the lipoprotein lipase fragment completely inhibited the binding of several alpha(2)MR/LRP ligands in a pattern similar to that of carboxyl-terminal RAP fragments. On the other hand, the amino-terminal RAP fragment was a poor competitor of binding of the lipoprotein lipase fragment, whereas it competed effectively with pro-uPA for binding to the receptor. The results provide evidence that lipoprotein lipase binds to the site on alpha(2)MR/LRP also available for binding of the carboxyl-terminal domain of RAP and suggest that pro-uPA may bind to or overlap the site available for the amino-terminal domain of RAP.


INTRODUCTION

The alpha(2)-macroglobulin receptor/low density lipoprotein receptor-related protein (alpha(2)MR/LRP) (^1)is a 600-kDa endocytic receptor that is translated as a single polypeptide and cleaved in the Golgi network into an 85-kDa membrane-spanning chain and a large extracellular chain that remains attached to the 85-kDa chain via noncovalent linkages. The extracellular chain contains multiple copies of two types of cysteine-rich repeats, the growth factor repeats and the complement-type repeats, that provide binding sites for several structurally unrelated ligands. The complement-type repeats are clustered in four regions containing two, eight, 10, and 11 repeats. The ligands include the receptor-binding form of alpha(2)-macroglobulin (alpha(2)M*), apolipoprotein E-containing lipoproteins, lactoferrin, tissue-type plasminogen activator (tPA), pro-urokinase (pro-uPA), complexes of the type-1 plasminogen activator inhibitor (PAI-1) and tPA as well as uPA, and lipoprotein lipase (LpL), both free and associated with lipoproteins (for reviews, see (1, 2, 3, 4) ). Several ligands do not compete with one another for binding to alpha(2)MR/LRP. For example, alpha(2)M* does not compete with tPA or lactoferrin for binding to alpha(2)MR/LRP(5, 6) , and alpha(2)M* is a poor inhibitor of binding of apolipoprotein E-containing lipoproteins (6, 7, 8) . However, lactoferrin is able to inhibit the binding of apolipoprotein E-containing lipoproteins to alpha(2)MR/LRP, suggesting that these ligands may bind to the same site(6) .

The 39-40-kDa receptor-associated protein (RAP) was first identified as a component copurifying with alpha(2)MR/LRP prepared from human placenta(9, 10, 11) . Subsequent cloning and sequencing (12) revealed that it is the human homologue of mouse heparin binding protein 44 (13) and of rat Heymann nephritis target protein(14) . RAP was first shown to inhibit the binding of alpha(2)M* to the receptor(15) , and several subsequent studies have demonstrated that RAP, surprisingly, is capable of inhibiting the binding and uptake of all known ligands to alpha(2)MR/LRP in vitro and in vivo(1, 2, 3, 4, 16) . On the other hand, most ligands have been reported to compete poorly for binding of RAP to alpha(2)MR/LRP. For instance, tPA and alpha(2)M* at high concentrations cause little inhibition of binding of labeled RAP to the receptor(2, 5) . This lack of reciprocal cross-inhibition is presumably due to the complex mode of binding of RAP to the receptor.

RAP binds with high affinity to alpha(2)MR/LRP, and the capacity of the receptor has been reported to be two (17) or up to six (18) RAP molecules per receptor molecule. Previous studies have identified strong binding of labeled RAP to fragments of alpha(2)MR/LRP containing the cluster of eight complement-type repeats(19, 20) . In addition, most of the above cited extracellular ligands are also bound in this region. Binding of RAP, although weak, has also been observed to a domain containing the cluster of 11 complement-type repeats(20) . It is uncertain whether the stronger binding to the former domain is simply due to a higher affinity or to multiple binding sites within that domain. In addition to alpha(2)MR/LRP, recent results have shown that RAP also binds to the other known members of the LDL receptor family, i.e. gp330/megalin(21, 22) , VLDL receptor(23, 24) , and LDL receptor(25) .

The finding that RAP may function as a universal antagonist has led to the hypothesis that it may modulate the function of LDL receptor family members, particularly alpha(2)MR/LRP. However, whereas alpha(2)MR/LRP is primarily confined to clathrin-coated pits in the plasma membrane and within endosomal vesicles(26, 27) , RAP is largely an intracellular protein located in the endoplasmic reticulum and the Golgi complex(27, 28, 29) . The function of RAP in those compartments is presently unknown, although it has been hypothesized that RAP may prevent binding of other ligands to the multifunctional receptors before they reach the plasma membrane(29, 30, 31) . Consistent with this, RAP is only associated with alpha(2)MR/LRP at the plasma membrane to a small extent, if at all(27, 32) . Furthermore, attempts to detect RAP in conditioned media of cell incubations and in the blood have repeatedly been negative. Since alpha(2)MR/LRP is normally unoccupied by RAP at the cell surface, we considered the possibility that the RAP sites might bind one of the established extracellular ligands. Thus, we decided to investigate whether LpL might bind to those sites since we have previously demonstrated that LpL, like RAP, binds to multiple sites on the receptor(33) , and since it was recently reported that LpL and the carboxyl-terminal folding domain of LpL inhibit binding of RAP to alpha(2)MR/LRP(34) . In the present analysis, we made use of a peptide containing the receptor binding site of LpL(35) . Since amino-terminal and carboxyl-terminal RAP fragments can interact with separate sites on alpha(2)MR/LRP(36) , it became important to analyze the competition of the receptor-binding LpL fragment with both amino-terminal and carboxyl-terminal RAP fragments(37) . We find that the LpL fragment and the carboxyl-terminal RAP fragment exhibit complete reciprocal cross-inhibition and that the LpL fragment can inhibit the binding of several established ligands for alpha(2)MR/LRP.


MATERIALS AND METHODS

alpha(2)MR/LRP and Natural Ligands

Human alpha(2)MR/LRP was prepared from solubilized placental membranes by affinity chromatography using immobilized alpha(2)M*. Elution was in 150 mM NaCl, 5 mM EDTA, 10 mM sodium phosphate, 0.6% 3-[(3-cholamidipropyl)dimethylammonio]-1-propanesulfonic acid, pH 6.0, and RAP was removed from the receptor by incubation with heparin-Sepharose at pH 8.0(15) . Human alpha(2)M was converted to the receptor-binding form (alpha(2)M*) by incubation with 200 mM methylamine for 2 h followed by dialysis (38) . Bovine LpL, prepared as described previously(39) , was a gift from Dr. G. Olivecrona, Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics, University of Umeå, Sweden. Recombinant human pro-uPA was a gift from Dr. J. Henkin (Abbott Company, Abbott Park, IL)(40) . Two-chain active uPA was from Serono, Switzerland, and tPA was from Boehringer-Ingelheim, Germany. Recombinant PAI-1 was produced in Escherichia coli and purified essentially as described by Reily et al.(41) . Complexes of labeled uPA or tPA and PAI-1 were obtained by incubation with a 10-fold molar excess of PAI-1 for 2 h at 20 °C, and SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis showed > 80% of the tracer in the complex form.

Expression and Purification of Recombinant Proteins

The construct H(6)FX-LpL-(378-448), containing the hexahistidine-Factor X substrate sequence MGSH(6)SIEGR and amino acids 378-448 of human LpL, was prepared as described by Nykjær et al.(35) using pUC18 containing full-length human LpL cDNA (courtesy of Dr. R. Lawn, Stanford University Medical Center and Dr. M. Hayden, University of British Columbia) as a template for Taq polymerase (Pharmacia Biotech Inc.). The NH(2)-terminal primer was 5`-CACGGATCCATCGAGGGTAAGTTGAAGCTCAAATGGAAG; the COOH-terminal primer was TTCAAGCTTAGCCTGACTTCTTATTCAG-3`. Using these primers, a BamHI site was generated upstream to the LpL sequence, and a stop codon followed by a HindIII site was generated downstream. The polymerase chain reaction product was cut, purified on a low melting 0.8% agarose gel, and subcloned into the E. coli T(7) expression vector(42) . The same procedure was used for construction of H(6)FX-LpL-(347-448), except that the NH(2)-terminal primer was 5`-CACGGATCCATCGAGGGTAGGAGTGAGAACATCCCATTC. Both polymerase chain reaction constructs were sequenced to verify the cDNA sequence (43) . The LpL-(378-448) and LpL-(347-448) fragments were expressed in E. coli DH1 cells and purified on a Ni nitrilotriacetic acid column(44) . In some experiments we used the previously described (35) CMLCH(6)FX-LpL-(378-448) construct containing a 150-amino acid fusion partner (i.e. the NH(2)-terminal 30 amino acids of the C phage protein plus the 116 NH(2)-terminal amino acids of chicken myosin light chain). Separate experiments showed that the fusion proteins containing LpL-(378-448) and LpL-(347-448) had the same inhibitory potencies on the binding of LpL to alpha(2)MR/LRP(35) .

Fusion proteins of glutathione S-transferase with RAP or RAP fragments (GST-RAP constructs) were expressed and purified as described previously(37) . Briefly, polymerase chain reaction was used to amplify specific sequences of the RAP cDNA, which were ligated into the pGEX2T expression vector. Proteins expressed in E. coli were isolated and purified via affinity chromatography on glutathione-agarose. RAP-(1-114) and RAP-(115-319) were purified from the thrombin-treated GST constructs as described previously(37) . Detailed characterization of all constructs has been described(36, 37, 45) . The purity of all recombinant proteins was confirmed by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and staining with Coomassie Brilliant Blue.

In some experiments, we used recombinant human RAP with the fusion tail (H(6)FX) cleaved off by factor X(a)(44) as the labeled species. Separate experiments showed that the affinities for binding of human RAP and rat RAP without fusion proteins to purified alpha(2)MR/LRP were indistinguishable. In addition, the concentrations of rat RAP and GST-RAP required to cause half-maximal inhibition of binding of I-labeled human RAP were similar, with EC values ranging between 0.1 nM and 0.4 nM.

Protein Iodinations

All proteins were I-iodinated to specific activities of approximately 5 times 10 Bq/mol as described previously (33, 35, 40) using chloramine T as the oxidizing agent.

Incubations

Incubation of labeled alpha(2)MR/LRP with GST-RAP constructs immobilized onto polyvinylidene difluoride membranes using a Bio-Rad vacuum slot blotter, was performed as described (33) using 140 mM NaCl, 10 mM Hepes, 2 mM CaCl(2), 1 mM MgCl(2), 1% bovine serum albumin (buffer A), pH 7.8. Following autoradiography, the relative amount of bound tracer was measured by laser scanning densitometry using a 2202 Ultroscan instrument (LKB, Sweden). alpha(2)MR/LRP was immobilized in Maxisorp, and LpL was immobilized in Polysorp microtiter wells (NUNC, Denmark) as described (35) , and the LpL fragment was immobilized using Covalink microtiter wells (NUNC, Denmark). After wash and blocking with 5% bovine serum albumin, the solid phase assays were performed by incubation for 16 h at 4 °C in buffer A. Finally, following a wash with 2 times 200 µl of incubation buffer, radioactivity bound to the well was removed by the addition of 2 times 200 µl of 10% SDS and counted. COS-1 cells (American Type Culture Collection CRL 1650) were incubated in monolayers (about 3.5 times 10^5 cells/well) essentially as described previously for adherent choriocarcinoma cells(46) . Degradation of labeled ligand was assessed by measuring radioactivity in the medium soluble in 12% trichloroacetic acid. After washes, the cells were lysed in 1 M NaOH and assayed for cell-associated radioactivity.


RESULTS

The Receptor-binding Fragment of LpL Inhibits Binding of RAP to alpha(2)MR/LRP

Since ligands that bind to the same site must cross-compete and since it is established that RAP can inhibit the binding of LpL (33, 47, 48) and its receptor-binding fragment (35) to alpha(2)MR/LRP, we first examined whether the LpL fragment could inhibit the binding of RAP to the purified receptor. As shown in Fig. 1A, the LpL fragment (amino acids 378-448) completely inhibited the binding of I-labeled RAP to purified alpha(2)MR/LRP immobilized in microtiter wells. The inhibitory potency of dimeric LpL was higher than that of the fragment, in agreement with previously reported binding affinities(35) . Fig. 1B shows that the LpL fragment completely inhibited the binding of I-alpha(2)MR/LRP to immobilized LpL, confirming that the fragment contained the only site in LpL for interaction with the receptor. Next, we used COS-1 cells, previously shown to express large amounts of alpha(2)MR/LRP(40, 49) , to investigate the inhibitory activity in cells. As shown in Fig. 2, the LpL fragment completely inhibited the binding (upper panel) and degradation (lower panel) of I-RAP in these cells. The LpL fragment was used in subsequent experiments in order to minimize possible steric hindrance for binding of other ligands to alpha(2)MR/LRP when using dimeric LpL.


Figure 1: Competition by LpL and the receptor-binding fragment of LpL for binding of RAP to immobilized alpha(2)MR/LRP. A, purified alpha(2)MR/LRP (about 100 fmol/well) was immobilized in microtiter wells, and incubations (100 µl) were performed for 16 h at 4 °C with about 10 pMI-labeled human RAP (40,000 cpm/ml) and varying concentrations of dimeric bovine LpL (--) or the fragment of human LpL containing amino acids 378-448 (LpL-(378-448)) (bullet--bullet). Fifty percent of the added I-RAP was bound to the immobilized receptor in the absence of unlabeled competitor, and this maximal binding was set at 100%. The blank value (<1% bound tracer) determined in the presence of 10 mM EDTA was subtracted from all other values. B, bovine LpL (about 10 fmol/well) was immobilized in microtiter wells and incubated (16 h, 4 °C) with about 10 pMI-alpha(2)MR/LRP and varying concentrations of LpL-(378-448). Fifty-five percent of the added I-alpha(2)MR/LRP was bound to the immobilized LpL in the absence of unlabeled competitor and was set at 100%. The blank value (<1% bound tracer) was subtracted from all other values. The results show the mean values of triplicates ± 1 S.D.




Figure 2: Competition by the receptor-binding LpL fragment for binding and degradation of RAP in cells. Upper panel, COS-1 cells (3.5 times 10^5 cells/well) were incubated with about 20 pMI-RAP for 16 h at 4 °C without additions, with 400 nM unlabeled RAP, or with 2 µM LpL-(347-448). The results show the cell-bound I-RAP in percentage of the amount of tracer added to the incubations. Lower panel, COS-1 cells (3.5 times 10^5 cells/ml) were incubated for 4 h at 37 °C with additions as described in the upperpanel, followed by measurement of the cell-bound (openbars), trichloroacetic acid-precipitable (hatchedbars), and trichloroacetic acid-soluble radioactivity (filledbars) in the incubation medium. The results are the mean values of triplicate incubations ± 1 S.D.



The Pattern of Inhibition Is Similar to That of Carboxyl-terminal RAP Fragments

Since previous results have demonstrated independent receptor binding sites within the amino-terminal (amino acids 1-114) and the carboxyl-terminal (amino acids 115-319) regions of the RAP molecule(37) , the question arose as to whether LpL might compete with binding of either the amino-terminal or the carboxyl-terminal RAP fragments. As shown in Fig. 3, the LpL fragment in fact blocked the binding of I-labeled alpha(2)MR/LRP to immobilized fusion proteins (GST-RAP constructs) containing RAP-(1-114) or RAP-(115-319) and to constructs containing truncated variants of the carboxyl-terminal RAP fragment. GST-RAP-(1-100) was included as a negative control since this fragment has been reported not to bind to the receptor(37) . These experiments might suggest that the LpL fragment interacts directly with all sites on alpha(2)MR/LRP available for binding of different domains in RAP. However, since the amino- and carboxyl-terminal RAP fragments compete with one another for binding to the different sites on cellular alpha(2)MR/LRP(36) , it seemed possible that LpL might bind predominantly to one of the sites on the receptor molecule.


Figure 3: Competition by the LpL fragment for binding of alpha(2)MR/LRP to amino- and carboxyl-terminal RAP fragments. About 25 pmol of the indicated GST-RAP constructs were slot-blotted onto polyvinylidene difluoride membranes and incubated for 16 h at 4 °C with about 30 pMI-alpha(2)MR/LRP (100,000 cpm/ml) in the absence or presence of 1.4 µM LpL-(347-448), followed by autoradiography. The binding of I-alpha(2)MR/LRP to the various constructs was measured by laser scanning densitometry, and the results of this and analogous experiments are summarized in Table 1. The weak residual reaction observed with GST-RAP-(1-100) and with all GST-RAP constructs in the presence of LpL-(347-448) was not different from that observed with polyvinylidene difluoride membranes in the absence of GST-RAP constructs.





To answer this question, we first analyzed the abilities of the GST constructs containing the amino-terminal and the carboxyl-terminal RAP fragments, and their truncated variants, to compete with binding of I-labeled full-length RAP to immobilized alpha(2)MR/LRP. As shown in Table 1, unlabeled GST-RAP-(115-319) was nearly as effective a competitor as unlabeled GST-RAP-(1-319). The truncated variants of the carboxyl-terminal RAP fragment, e.g. RAP-(187-319), also competed effectively, with EC values of approximately 2 nM. On the other hand, the NH(2)-terminal fragment and its truncated variants, which bound to the receptor approximately as effectively as GST-RAP-(187-319), were poor competitors for binding of I-labeled full-length RAP, with EC values of 200 nM or higher. Since the LpL fragment and the carboxyl-terminal RAP fragment both competed effectively with full-length RAP for binding to alpha(2)MR/LRP, the possibility arose that they might bind to the same site on the receptor.

To further test this hypothesis, the amino- and carboxyl-terminal GST-RAP fragments were I-labeled and incubated with alpha(2)MR/LRP immobilized in microtiter wells. Table 2shows that the binding of I-labeled GST-RAP-(1-114) was effectively competed for by unlabeled GST-RAP-(1-114) and, as expected, by the carboxyl-terminal fragments. In fact, the inhibitory potencies of GST-RAP-(115-319) and GST-RAP-(187-319) toward binding of I-labeled GST-RAP-(1-114) on the one hand, and I-labeled GST-RAP-(115-319) on the other, were of similar magnitudes. By contrast, GST-RAP-(1-114) was a poor inhibitor of binding of the I-labeled carboxyl-terminal RAP fragments. Thus, the receptor-binding fragment of LpL showed a pattern similar to the carboxyl-terminal RAP fragments in the sense that the inhibitory potencies were similar toward binding of the labeled amino- and carboxyl-terminal fragments. In additional experiments, the LpL fragment was immobilized in microtiter plates and incubated with I-labeled alpha(2)MR/LRP with or without GST-RAP-(115-319) or GST-RAP-(1-114), or the corresponding RAP fragments produced by thrombin cleavage of the GST constructs. As shown in Fig. 4, the inhibitory potencies of GST-RAP-(115-319) and RAP-(115-319) were similar to that of RAP, although the GST moiety appeared to cause a slight increase in the inhibitory potency of the carboxyl-terminal domain. The potency of GST-RAP-(1-114) was lower than that of GST-RAP-(115-319), and RAP-(1-114) caused inhibitions only at very high concentrations (i.e. its inhibitory potency was much lower than that of RAP-(115-319)). We conclude from the combined data that the receptor-binding domain of LpL and the carboxyl-terminal RAP fragment cross-compete, indicating that they bind to the same or strongly overlapping sites on alpha(2)MR/LRP. In addition, like the carboxyl-terminal RAP fragment(36) , the LpL fragment is an effective competitor for binding of the amino-terminal RAP fragment to the receptor, whereas the amino-terminal RAP fragment is a poor competitor for binding of both the carboxyl-terminal RAP fragment and the LpL fragment.




Figure 4: Competition by carboxyl- and amino-terminal RAP fragments for binding of alpha(2)MR/LRP to the LpL fragment. LpL-(348-478) was immobilized in microtiter wells (about 500 fmol/well) and incubated for 16 h at 4 °C with about 30 pMI-alpha(2)MR/LRP (100,000 cpm/ml) in the absence or presence of the indicated concentrations of unlabeled RAP (leftpanel), RAP-(115-319) (middlepanel), and RAP-(1-114) (rightpanel) or the GST-constructs of the RAP fragments (filled bars). The binding of I-alpha(2)MR/LRP in the absence of unlabeled competitor (maximal binding) was set at 100% and ranged in individual experiments from 11 to 25% of the added tracer. The bars represent the mean values of triplicates.



The Amino-terminal RAP Fragment May Bind Near the Site for pro-uPA in alpha(2)MR/LRP

In the course of these analyses we also examined the ability of the amino- and carboxyl-terminal GST-RAP constructs to inhibit the binding of other ligands, and we chose pro-uPA, since the pattern of inhibition has already been established for alpha(2)M* and tPA. As shown in Table 1, GST-RAP-(1-114) and its truncated variants were effective inhibitors of I-pro-uPA binding to immobilized alpha(2)MR/LRP. In fact, similar EC values were found for inhibition of binding of I-pro-uPA (Table 1) and of I-labeled GST-RAP-(1-114) (Table 2) when using unlabeled GST-RAP-(1-114) as the competitor. In addition, we found that pro-uPA inhibited binding of I-RAP-(1-114) with an EC value of about 62 nM (data not shown), supporting the notion that pro-uPA and RAP-(1-114) may bind to overlapping sites on the receptor. As demonstrated for binding of I-labeled full-length RAP and I-RAP-(1-114), the carboxyl-terminal RAP fragments were potent inhibitors of I-pro-uPA binding to alpha(2)MR/LRP (Table 1). Surprisingly, this included RAP-(187-311), which is noninhibitory toward binding of alpha(2)M* and tPA(35) . In other experiments (not shown) we found that RAP-(187-311) was also able to almost completely inhibit the binding of the uPAbulletPAI-1 complex.

The LpL Fragment Inhibits Binding of Other Established alpha(2)MR/LRP Ligands

Since RAP inhibits the binding of all known ligands, and since LpL competes effectively for binding of both the carboxyl- and amino-terminal RAP fragments, it was expected that LpL should inhibit the binding of several ligands. Fig. 5A shows that the LpL fragment containing the receptor-binding domain was capable of blocking the binding of labeled pro-uPA, the uPAbulletPAI-1 complex, and alpha(2)M*. As shown in Fig. 5B, the LpL fragment did not inhibit binding of tPA. Interestingly, the LpL fragment inhibited the binding of the tPAbulletPAI-1 complex, suggesting that the major epitope for binding to alpha(2)MR/LRP is in the PAI-1 moiety of the complex (Fig. 5B). On the other hand, full-length LpL did inhibit tPA binding (Fig. 1B), and a similar result (not shown) was obtained when the LpL fragment was coupled to a large fusion partner consisting of the NH(2)-terminal 30 amino acids of the CII phage protein plus the 116 NH(2)-terminal amino acids of chicken myosin light chain(35) . This inhibition is therefore most likely caused by steric hindrance. This notion was further supported by the finding (not shown) that tPA inhibited binding of I-alpha(2)MR/LRP to the immobilized LpL fragment by up to 80%, although with a very low potency (EC > 500 nM), consistent with a steric hindrance when compared with a K(d) of 12 nM for tPA binding to the purified receptor(50) .


Figure 5: Inhibition by the LpL fragment and LpL of the binding of established alpha(2)MR/LRP ligands. A, alpha(2)MR/LRP immobilized in microtiter wells was incubated for 16 h at 4 °C with I-pro-uPA (--), I-uPAbulletPAI-1 (bullet--bullet), and I-alpha(2)M* (circle--circle), all at approximately 10 pM, and varying concentrations of LpL-(378-448). The amount of immobilized receptor was about 150 fmol/well when using I-pro-uPA and I-alpha(2)M*, and about 15 fmol/well when using I-uPAbulletPAI-1. The amount of tracer bound in the absence of unlabeled competitor was 12% for I-alpha(2)M*, 15% for I-uPAbulletPAI-1, and 5% for I-pro-uPA. The binding of each of the tracers in the absence of the LpL fragment was set at 100%. The calculated EC values for the LpL fragment were as follows: I-uPA, 54 nM; I-uPAbulletPAI-1, 35 nM; I-alpha(2)M*, 214 nM. B, the experiment was performed as in panelA using I-tPA (bullet, circle) or the I-tPAbulletPAI-1 complex (--). The amount of immobilized receptor was about 150 fmol/well when using tPA and about 15 fmol/well when using the tPAbulletPAI-1 complex. The amount of tracer bound in the absence of competitor was 5% for I-tPA and 19% for I-tPAbulletPAI-1. The competitor was either bovine LpL (opensymbols) or LpL-(378-448) (closedsymbols). The results are the means of triplicate values.




DISCUSSION

The present results show that the binding of RAP can be completely inhibited by peptides containing the receptor-binding domain of LpL. This strongly suggests interaction of the LpL fragment with an important site on the receptor also available for binding of RAP. In addition, the peptide blocked the alpha(2)MR/LRP-mediated uptake of RAP in cells. Furthermore, it became important to determine the site specificity in view of the separate sites on the receptor for binding of amino and carboxyl-terminal RAP fragments(36) . Since amino-terminal RAP fragments were poor competitors for binding of both carboxyl-terminal RAP fragments and the LpL fragment, whereas carboxyl-terminal RAP fragments and the LpL fragment cross-competed completely, the data indicate binding of LpL and the carboxyl-terminal RAP fragment to the same site or to strongly overlapping sites.

The COOH-terminal regions of LpL and RAP exhibit about 29% sequence identity when allowing for several gaps(34) , but sequence alignment provides no immediate clue as to where interaction with the receptor may occur. Positively charged residues have been shown to be important for binding of several ligands to alpha(2)MR/LRP(2, 51) , and both the LpL fragment and the carboxyl-terminal RAP fragment contain clusters of basic residues. We suggest that both fragments achieve affinity by interacting with the receptor via two patches containing such clusters. For the LpL fragment, these may include residues 379-383 (KLKWK in human LpL) and residues 403-407 (KIRVK in human LpL), the former being supported by the observation that amino acids 378-391 are necessary for binding (35) and the latter by mutational studies(34, 35) . For binding of the RAP fragment, it is likely that amino acids 200-203 (RLRR in rat and human RAP) (37) participate in the binding together with several more COOH-terminally located basic residues (e.g. Lys, Lys, Lys, Lys, Lys, Lys, Lys in the rat sequence). The COOH-terminal residues 312-319 are important determinants for the inhibitory pattern since RAP-(187-311) is noninhibitory toward alpha(2)M* and tPA binding (37) even though it binds to alpha(2)MR/LRP and inhibits pro-uPA binding with about the same affinity as RAP-(187-319) (Table 1). Further COOH-terminal truncation including residue 305 results in loss of binding affinity ((37) , Table 1). This may be due to a disruption of the structure of the carboxyl-terminal domain, although the possibility of direct participation of residues 305-311 in the binding cannot be excluded.

RAP binds strongly to the domain on alpha(2)MR/LRP containing a cluster of eight complement-type repeats (cluster 2) and more weakly to the cluster containing 11 complement-type repeats (cluster 4)(20) . Unfortunately, it is not known whether the strong binding to the cluster 2 domain is due to high affinity or to a large number of sites. The finding of Iadonato et al.(18) that the calculated number of RAP sites on alpha(2)MR/LRP of hepatoma cells is about 6 times higher than the number of tPA sites argues for the presence of multiple RAP sites in the cluster 2 domain. Within the RAP sites, nonreciprocal inhibition occurs between RAP fragments since RAP-(115-319) inhibits binding of RAP-(1-114), whereas the reverse inhibition is incomplete and only occurs with a very low inhibitory potency. This pattern may be explained by a close juxtaposition of the sites for binding of the carboxyl- and amino-terminal RAP domains, with steric hindrance for binding of the latter provided by residues in the former. Such a model may also explain the ability of the carboxyl-terminal RAP fragment to inhibit the binding of pro-uPA as a putative ligand for the site on alpha(2)MR/LRP that binds the amino-terminal RAP domain. Interestingly, the bulky GST moiety can induce or strengthen the inhibitory properties of the amino-terminal RAP domain ((37) , Fig. 4), probably due to steric hindrance of ligand binding to neighboring sites.

It is established that alpha(2)M*, tPA, pro-uPA, and complexes of PAI-1 and uPA or tPA bind in the region containing the cluster 2 domain(19, 20, 52) . The inhibition of alpha(2)M* and tPA by carboxyl-terminal RAP fragments is most likely due to steric hindrance. Residues 312-319 appear particularly important for the pattern of inhibition since RAP-(187-311) is noninhibitory toward binding of alpha(2)M* and tPA and since the removal of even a single residue (leucine 319) alters the inhibitory pattern without changing the binding affinity(45) . Residues 312-319 should therefore be important for the putative function of RAP in preventing binding of coexpressed ligands in the endoplasmic reticulum of e.g. hepatocytes(29, 30, 31) . The LpL fragment appears to inhibit ligand binding in a manner similar to that of the carboxyl-terminal RAP fragment with deleted leucine 319, i.e. inhibition of alpha(2)M* binding but not tPA binding(45) . It is remarkable that LpL itself (Fig. 5B) and the LpL fragment combined with a large fusion partner inhibit tPA binding as well.

Although not proven, the present data suggest that pro-uPA may bind to the sites available for the amino-terminal RAP domain. In addition, complexes such as uPAbulletPAI-1 with binding patches both in the uPA and the PAI-1 moieties (40) may bind in a mixed fashion involving multiple sites on alpha(2)MR/LRP that can also interact with amino- or carboxyl-terminal RAP fragments. Thus, alpha(2)MR/LRP deserves designation as a ``molecular flypaper'' even though this term was first coined for another important endocytic receptor, the macrophage scavenger receptor, that binds a multitude of negatively charged ligands(1) .

RAP also binds to the homologous giant receptor gp330/megalin(21, 22) , also known to bind lipoprotein lipase(6, 53) . It is therefore anticipated that the LpL fragment should block the binding of RAP to gp330, and this result (^2)has in fact been obtained in experiments analogous to that shown in Fig. 1A. In addition, RAP has recently been shown to bind to the smaller members of the LDL receptor family, the VLDL receptor that binds RAP with high affinity(23, 24) , and the LDL receptor that exhibits somewhat lower binding affinity(25) . It is therefore probable that these receptors bind LpL as well.

Since RAP normally occupies these receptors expressed at the cell surface to at most only a small extent(27, 32) , we suggest that LpL is one of the natural extracellular ligands for the multiple sites on alpha(2)MR/LRP that also bind carboxyl-terminal RAP fragments. Physiologically, this may imply that binding to the receptor is strengthened when multiple copies of a ligand, which binds with moderate affinity as a single entity, are assembled on a particle. This may apply to LpL-lipoprotein complexes assembled on cell surface proteoglycans(35, 54) . Since efficient apolipoprotein E-mediated binding of lipoproteins to alpha(2)MR/LRP appears to require multiple copies of the apolipoprotein on the particle(6, 55) , it will be important to determine whether apolipoprotein E may also bind to multiple RAP sites in alpha(2)MR/LRP. In addition, complexes of molecules (e.g. protease-inhibitor complexes) can achieve high affinity for binding to alpha(2)MR/LRP even though the individual components bind with low affinities. As an example, uPA binds with low affinity (via at least two binding patches) as does PAI-1, whereas the affinity of the uPAbulletPAI-1 complex is much higher whether bound to the cell surface urokinase receptor or free in solution(40) . Binding of uPAbulletPAI-1 complexes may in part occur at sites that also bind RAP, a hypothesis further supported by the finding that uPAbulletPAI-1 complexes can inhibit binding of RAP by at least 80%. (^3)In addition, we find that whereas tPA is not inhibited by the LpL fragment, the binding of tPAbulletPAI-1 complex is inhibited (Fig. 4B), suggesting that important binding of the PAI-1 moiety in the tPAbulletPAI-1 complex may occur to RAP sites.

In conclusion, we have provided evidence that LpL and the carboxyl-terminal RAP fragment bind to the same sites on alpha(2)MR/LRP, whereas pro-uPA and the amino-terminal RAP fragment may bind to the same or strongly overlapping sites. We suggest that LpL is one of the natural extracellular ligands for the RAP sites and that interaction with the multiple sites on the receptor strengthens the binding of complex ligands such as lipoproteins.


FOOTNOTES

*
This work was supported by grants from the Danish Biotechnology Program, Danish Medical Research Foundation, Danish Heart Foundation, and Danish Cancer Society (to J. G.), the Michaelsen Foundation and Lysgaard Foundation (to A. N.), and by National Institutes of Health Grants HL52040 and HL53280 (to A. L. S.) The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore by hereby marked ``advertisement'' in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.

§
To whom correspondence should be addressed: Dept. of Medical Biochemistry, University of Aarhus, Ole Worms Alle, Bldg. 170, DK-8000 Arhus C, Denmark. Tel.: 45-89-422880; Fax: 45-86-131160.

(^1)
The abbreviations used are: alpha(2)MR/LRP, alpha(2)-macroglobulin receptor/low density lipoprotein receptor-related protein; RAP, alpha(2)MR/LRP-associated protein; LpL, lipoprotein lipase; alpha(2)M*, receptor-binding form of alpha(2)-macroglobulin; uPA, urokinase-type plasminogen activator; tPA, tissue-type plasminogen activator; PAI-1, type-1 plasminogen activator inhibitor; LDL, low density lipoprotein; VLDL, very low density lipoprotein; GST, glutathione S-transferase.

(^2)
M. S. Nielsen and J. Gliemann, unpublished observation.

(^3)
A. Nykjær, unpublished observation.


ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

We thank G. Olivecrona for providing bovine LpL and Christian Jacobsen for performing the laser scanning densitometry. We thank Jan Stagsted for valuable suggestions. We thank Inger Juncker and Lisbeth Flyvbjerg for excellent technical assistance.


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