(Received for publication, November 2, 1995; and in revised form, December 22, 1995)
From the
A novel member of the interleukin-1 receptor family has been
cloned by polymerase chain reaction using degenerate oligonucleotide
primers derived from regions of sequence conservation, using as
template a yeast artificial chromosome known to contain both
interleukin-1 (IL-1) receptors and T1/ST2. The new receptor, called
IL-1 receptor-related protein or IL-1Rrp, fails to bind any of the
known IL-1 ligands. A chimeric receptor, in which the IL-1Rrp
cytoplasmic domain is fused to the extracellular and transmembrane
regions of the IL-1 receptor, responds to IL-1 following transfection
into COS cells by activation of NFB and induction of IL-8 promoter
function.
The type I interleukin-1 receptor (IL-1RI) ()mediates
the biological effects of interleukin-1, a proinflammatory cytokine.
Recently it has become apparent that the IL-1RI belongs to a family of
homologous proteins (1) . Some family members (T1/ST2 and IL-1R
accessory protein (AcP)) (2, 3) are transmembrane
receptor-like molecules that bear sequence similarity to the IL-1RI in
both their extracellular and cytoplasmic portions. Others (MyD88,
rsc786, and a number of Drosophila proteins, the best
characterized of which is Toll) (4, 5, 6) contain domains homologous to the
cytoplasmic part of the IL-1RI, associated with other, divergent
domains. In some cases this sequence homology also reflects functional
homology(1) .
Having recognized the existence of a family of proteins with homology to the IL-1RI, we sought to ask whether there were other, as yet undetected, members of this family. We used oligonucleotide primers based on sequence motifs conserved within the family to search for new genes by PCR. In this paper we report the cloning and characterization of a novel cDNA bearing strong resemblance to the IL-1RI, T1/ST2, and the IL-1R AcP.
Degenerate oligonucleotides based on the amino acid motifs indicated in Fig. 1and used in the attempt to isolate new IL-1RI family members by PCR had the sequences, 5`-T(A/T)(C/T)(C/G)A(C/T)GC(A/C/G/T)T(A/T)(C/T)(A/G)T-3` (sense oligo) and 5`-TA(A/G/T)AT(A/ G)(A/C)A(A/C/G/T)A(A/G)(C/T)TT-3` (antisense oligo).
Figure 1: Degenerate oligonucleotides, derived from the sequences indicated by the arrows and specified under ``Experimental Procedures,'' served as primers in PCR amplifications using YAC DNA from the human chromosome 2q12 region as template. The amplification products were cloned, and the DNA sequence of one of them, IL-1Rrp, predicted the amino acid sequence shown in the figure. Black and gray shading indicates regions of great and lesser sequence conservation, respectively. The sequence of the IL-1R AcP was not available at the time the experiment was done.
PCR reactions (20 µl) used 0.5 µl of a 16:1 mixture
of Taq (Perkin-Elmer) and Vent (New England Biolabs) DNA
polymerases and contained 200 pmol of each primer, 200 µM dNTPs, and 5-10 µl of human YAC DNA (YAC
C02133(7) ), partially purified by extraction from a
pulse-field gel. Cycle conditions were: 5 min at 94 °C, during
which time the DNA polymerase mixture was added; 40 cycles of 1 min at
94 °C, 3 min at 35 °C, and 1 min at 72 °C; followed by 10
min at 72 °C. The PCR reaction was run on a low melting temperature
agarose gel, and the band containing material between 90 and 150 bp was
cut out and melted, and 5 µl was used as template in a second PCR
reaction performed similarly to the first PCR except that only 20
cycles were run. The reaction was again run on an agarose gel, and the
90-150-bp fraction was eluted, blunt-ended using T4 DNA
polymerase, phosphorylated using T4 polynucleotide kinase, heated for
10 min at 65 °C, ethanol-precipitated, and ligated into pCRScript
(Stratagene) in the presence of SrfI. Ligations were
transformed into Escherichia coli DH10. White colonies were
picked from X-Gal (5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indoyl
-D-galactoside) plates, and their inserts were amplified
by PCR using vector primers and a small amount spotted on nylon
filters, which were subsequently hybridized at 42 °C in aqueous
conditions to a mixture of
P-labeled oligonucleotide
probes derived from the human and murine IL-1RIs (sequences: human,
5`-CCCAACAGTCTTTGGATACAG; mouse, 5`-CTGTTGCCTGAGGTCTTGG). Filters were
washed at 50 °C in 0.3 M NaCl.
The human IL-1Rrp and
human IL-1RI Fc fusion proteins, joining the extracellular portions of
the receptors to the CH2 and CH3 domains of human IgG, were
generated as described(8) . The chimeric receptor containing
the mouse IL-1RI extracellular and transmembrane region and the human
IL-1Rrp cytoplasmic domain was generated as described(1) .
Specifically, amino acids 1-362 of the murine type I IL-1
receptor were fused to amino acids 351-541 of human IL-1Rrp; in
the process, Val-361 of the murine IL-1RI was changed to isoleucine
(which is the amino acid present in the human IL-1RI at this position).
COS cell transfections, NF
B assays, and IL-8 promoter assays were
performed as described(1, 9) .
Restriction digests and Southern blots were performed on IL-1R containing YACs CO2133 and F1150 as described(7) , using PCR probes amplified from human IL-1Rrp cDNA. The 5`-probe was a 258-bp fragment whose 5`-end lies 473 bp downstream of the A of the initiating methionine codon. The 3`-probe was a 345-bp fragment whose 5`-end lies 1500 bp downstream of the A of the initiating methionine codon.
A BIAcore biosensor (Pharmacia Biosensor) was used to examine binding of IL-1 ligands to the human IL-1Rrp Fc fusion protein, essentially as described in detail in Arend et al.(10) . Briefly, a goat anti-human IgG serum covalently coupled to the dextran matrix of a hydrogel chip was used to capture the human IL-1Rrp Fc protein. The appropriate IL-1 ligand, at several different concentrations, was reacted with the captured protein, and the change of mass per unit area over time was measured.
In order to search for novel cDNAs similar to the IL-1RI, we designed PCR primers based on the alignment of IL-1RI family members presented in Mitcham et al.(1) . We chose primers from the first and third conserved regions (Fig. 1; see ``Experimental Procedures'') because those regions offered the highest degree of sequence conservation. In addition, no intron lies between these in the genomic structures of the IL-1RI (7) and fit-1 genes (fit-1 is the rat homologue of T1/ST2)(11) . If other family members were to have the same genomic structure, this would mean that we could predict the size of an expected PCR product from genomic DNA and be less dependent on making the proper selection of mRNA source to use as a PCR substrate.
Initially, appropriate conditions for PCR amplification with the degenerate primers were determined by use of cDNA clones of the human and mouse type I IL-1 receptors and the mouse T1/ST2 receptor-like protein. Using conditions that allowed an amplification product to be obtained from each of these cDNAs, a 500-kilobase human YAC that contained the genes for type I and type II IL-1 receptors as well as the T1/ST2 gene (7) was used as template. PCR amplification produced a band of the expected size from the YAC DNA, which was easily visible on an ethidium bromide-stained gel and which after Southern transfer hybridized to an oligonucleotide probe derived from the human IL-1RI gene. The amplification product was gel-purified and cloned into a plasmid vector. The inserts were then amplified by PCR, spotted onto nitrocellulose, and probed with a mixture of IL-1RI oligonucleotides. Only 5 out of 180 inserts hybridized, and indeed, random DNA sequencing of nine of the non-hybridizing inserts revealed that they derived from yeast DNA. One of the five hybridizing inserts gave a strong hybridization signal, and DNA sequencing revealed it to be amplified from the IL-1RI gene. Of the four weakly hybridizing inserts, three came from yeast DNA, and one (IL-1Rrp) appeared to be a novel gene with significant similarity in the region amplified to the IL-1RI and T1/ST2 proteins (Fig. 1).
The cloned IL-1Rrp PCR fragment was used to probe a cDNA library from human peripheral blood lymphocytes in order to isolate full-length cDNA clones. The human clones were then used to screen a mouse cDNA library from the EL4 T cell line, resulting in the isolation of the murine homologue of IL-1Rrp. The predicted amino acid sequences of mouse and human IL-1Rrp proteins are shown in Fig. 2and compared with the amino sequences of the type I IL-1 receptor, the full-length T1/ST2 protein, and the IL-1R accessory protein. Overall, murine IL-1Rrp is comparably related to murine accessory protein (31% amino acid identity), murine T1/ST2 (30% identity), and murine IL-1RI (27% identity). The cytoplasmic domains show slightly greater sequence conservation (36-44%) than do the extracellular portions (20-27%). The overall amino acid identity between mouse and human IL-1Rrp is 65%. Like all of these family members, the IL-1Rrp protein is predicted to contain a signal peptide, an extracellular segment comprised of three immunoglobulin-like domains, a single transmembrane region, and a cytoplasmic portion of approximately 200 amino acids. Some unusual features of the immunoglobulin-like domains are detailed in the legend to Fig. 2.
Figure 2: Comparison of the predicted amino acid sequences of human and mouse IL-1Rrp with the sequences of murine IL-1 receptor(12) , T1/ST2(2) , and AcP(3) . The alignment was initially performed using the UWGCG program Pileup (13) and subsequently optimized subjectively by the authors. The predicted signal peptides are underlined, as well as being separated from the postulated extracellular regions by a space. The predicted transmembrane regions are doubly underlined and separated by spaces on either side from the postulated extracellular and cytoplasmic domains. Asterisks mark the positions of the cysteines predicted to form the typical intradomain disulfide bonds of the three Ig domains of the extracellular region. Black and gray shading indicates regions of great and lesser sequence conservation, respectively. The human IL-1Rrp sequence is derived from three cDNA clones from a peripheral blood lymphocyte library and four PCR clones from the epidermal carcinoma line KB. The codon for alanine 317 is polymorphic, being present in the PBL clones and two of the KB clones and absent from the other two KB clones. It is also absent from the two mouse clones derived from an EL4 T cell library. The IL-1Rrp sequences can be retrieved from GenBank using accession numbers U43672 (human) and U43673 (murine). Detailed comparison of the IL-1Rrp sequences with those of other family members reveals great overall similarity but some interesting changes. For example, all of the IL-1R-like proteins (including the type II IL-1 receptor(14) ) have a proline following the first cysteine of the typical intraimmunoglobulin domain cysteine pair in the first two of the three Ig domains; these prolines are missing in mouse and human IL-1Rrp. Second, like all IL-1R-like proteins except T1/ST2 (but including the type II IL-1R), mouse and human IL-1Rrp have a cysteine residue just a few residues C-terminal to the point of signal peptide cleavage. However, unlike the type I and type II IL-1R and the AcP, they do not have a corresponding cysteine 8 residues C-terminal to the second ``Ig'' cysteine of the first domain. (Human, but not mouse, IL-1Rrp does have two additional cysteines lying between the ``Ig'' cysteines of the first domain.) Third, like all family members except the type II IL-1R, the IL-1Rrp proteins have an extra cysteine pair in the second Ig domain. Finally, human IL-1Rrp lacks the typical ``Ig'' tryptophan in the second domain, and human and mouse IL-1Rrp both lack the second cysteine of the typical intradomain cysteine pair in the first domain.
RNA analysis by Northern blot indicates that the IL-1Rrp mRNA is widely but not universally expressed (Fig. 3). A single hybridizing band, migrating with or slightly faster than 28 S rRNA, was found in spleen, thymus, leukocyte, liver, lung, heart, small and large intestine, prostate, and placenta, and not in brain, skeletal muscle, kidney, and pancreas. There was perhaps a weak signal in testis and ovary. Southern blot analysis of YAC DNA (data not shown) indicates that the human IL-1Rrp gene is tightly linked to the T1/ST2 gene, telomeric to the type I and type II IL-1R genes (see (7) ). The relative orientation of IL-1Rrp with respect to either T1/ST2 or the IL-1Rs is still unknown.
Figure 3:
RNA
analysis of IL-1Rrp expression. Northern blots (purchased from
Clontech), stated to contain 2 µg of human poly(A) RNA in each lane, were probed overnight with a
P-labeled antisense IL-1Rrp riboprobe at 63 °C in 0.75 M NaCl, 50% formamide and washed at 63 °C in 0.3 M NaCl. To ascertain evenness of loading as well as effectiveness of
rRNA removal, the filters were subsequently probed for
glyceraldehyde-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) and 28 S
rRNA.
Since IL-1Rrp resembled the IL-1RI and
IL-1RII in its extracellular portion, we examined its ability to bind
to IL-1 family members (IL-1, IL-1
, and IL-1ra). The
extracellular portion of IL-1Rrp was fused to the Fc portion of human
IgG
, and the fusion protein was immobilized on a BIAcore
chip by means of antibodies directed against the Fc moiety. The chip
was then incubated in turn with each of the three IL-1s. Good binding
was seen with each of IL-1
, IL-1
, and IL-1ra to a human type
I IL-1R Fc fusion construct used as a positive control (Fig. 4, left panel; data not shown). However, no binding was detected
to the IL-1Rrp fusion protein for any of the IL-1s (Fig. 4, right panel; data not shown). We conclude that despite its
sequence resemblance, IL-1Rrp is not an IL-1 receptor.
Figure 4:
Biosensor analysis demonstrating easily
measurable binding of human IL-1 to a human IL-1RI Fc fusion
protein (left panel) but no detectable binding to a comparable
human IL-1Rrp Fc fusion protein (right panel). Similar results
were obtained using human IL-1
and human IL-1ra as ligands (data
not shown). 1, 10, and 100 nM refer to the ligand
concentration used in generating each of the curves. The left arrow indicates the time of addition of ligand, while the right
arrow indicates the start of the buffer wash. RU,
resonance units.
In order to
ask about the signal transduction capability of the IL-1Rrp cytoplasmic
domain, we constructed a chimeric receptor containing the extracellular
and transmembrane portions of the mouse type I IL-1 receptor fused to
the cytoplasmic portion of the human IL-1Rrp. The chimeric receptor was
expressed in COS cells, and the ability of IL-1 to activate the
transcription factor NFB was examined. A polyclonal serum raised
to the human IL-1 receptor was used to block the endogenous
(cross-reactive) monkey IL-1R, without affecting IL-1 binding to the
transfected murine IL-1R receptor chimera(1) . In Fig. 5A, it can be seen that the IL-1Rrp cytoplasmic
domain is capable of inducing NF
B DNA binding ability in response
to IL-1 stimulation of the chimeric receptor molecule. The induction is
comparable in magnitude with that mediated via a transfected murine
IL-1R. Parenthetically, it is unclear why such a chimera is functional,
although a similar chimera between the IL-1R extracellular domain and
the T1/ST2 cytoplasmic domain also signals in response to
IL-1(1) . One possibility is that subsequent to ligand binding,
the chimeric receptor associates with the IL-1R AcP and that the AcP
cytoplasmic domain is then capable of performing the same role in
IL-1Rrp signaling as it does in IL-1 signaling.
Figure 5:
A, NFB gel shift assay. COS cells
were transfected with receptor constructs, treated with blocking
antibody to the primate IL-1 receptor, and stimulated (30 min, 1 ng/ml)
with human IL-1
as indicated. Nuclear extracts were incubated with
P-labeled NF
B oligonucleotides and electrophoresed.
Cassette vector refers to the expression vector containing the
extracellular and transmembrane portions of the murine IL-1R but no
cytoplasmic domain. The arrow points to the position of the
induced NF
B complex with DNA. B, IL-8 promoter assay. COS
cells were transfected with the indicated receptor plasmid together
with a reporter plasmid containing the IL-8 promoter driving expression
of the IL-2 receptor
chain cDNA. Twenty-four hours later, the
cells were stimulated overnight, in the presence of blocking antibody
to the primate IL-1 receptor, with medium (solid bars) or 1
ng/ml IL-1
(hatched bars). They were then incubated with
mouse monoclonal antibody 2A3 against IL-2R
followed by
I-labeled goat anti-mouse Ig serum and counted. The
blocking antibody to the primate IL-1 receptor was a 1/100 dilution of
sheep anti-human IL-1RI serum P3(1) , which at this
concentration blocks binding of IL-1 to the endogenous COS cell IL-1
receptors but has no effect on binding to the transfected mouse IL-1RI
extracellular region.
The signaling
capability of IL-1Rrp was also examined in a second assay, namely
stimulation of transcription from the IL-8 promoter. A reporter plasmid
carrying a partial human IL-8 promoter fused to the coding region of
the human IL-2 receptor chain was transfected into COS cells
along with the IL-1R/IL-1Rrp receptor chimera. The cells were then
stimulated with human IL-1
, and expression of IL-2R
on the
cell surface was measured. Transcription of the reporter construct can
be induced by IL-1 stimulation of the IL-1Rrp-containing chimera to
about half the level mediated by an intact mouse IL-1RI (Fig. 5B).
In a third assay, the IL-1R/IL-1Rrp
chimera was transfected into KB human epidermal carcinoma cells. In the
presence of the polyclonal antiserum to block human IL-1 receptors,
IL-1 stimulation of the IL-1Rrp chimera resulted in the synthesis of
prostaglandin E (data not shown). Thus, the IL-1Rrp
cytoplasmic portion was capable of eliciting a broad spectrum of
responses, comparable with those induced via the IL-1RI.
There are now three proteins known to be homologous to the type I IL-1 receptor throughout their entire length: T1/ST2(2) , IL-1R AcP(3) , and IL-1Rrp. The chromosomal map position of the AcP is not known. The others all cluster at human chromosome 2q12-13 ( (7) and this study), as does the type II IL-1R, which has only a very short cytoplasmic domain but is homologous to the others in its extracellular portion. Whether IL-1Rrp has a ligand of its own or functions instead as a subunit of a heteromeric receptor as AcP is proposed to do is a question that remains to be answered.