(Received for publication, November 26, 1996, and in revised form, February 18, 1997)
From the Small Molecule Drug Discovery Group, Genetics Institute, Inc., Cambridge, Massachusetts 02140
The death domain of the type 1 tumor necrosis factor receptor (TNFR1) mediates interactions with several proteins involved in signaling the downstream effects of TNF. We have used the yeast interaction trap to isolate a protein, MADD, that associates with the death domain of TNFR1 through its own C-terminal death domain. MADD interacts with TNFR1 residues that are critical for signal generation and coimmunoprecipitates with TNFR1, implicating MADD as a component of the TNFR1 signaling complex. Importantly, we have found that overexpression of MADD activates the mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK), and expression of the MADD death domain stimulates both the ERK and c-JUN N-terminal kinase MAP kinases and induces the phosphorylation of cytosolic phospholipase A2. These data indicate that MADD links TNFR1 with MAP kinase activation and arachidonic acid release and provide further insight into the mechanisms by which TNF exerts its pleiotropic effects.
Tumor necrosis factor (TNF)1 is a central player in the regulation of immune responses. Produced mainly by activated macrophages, TNF promotes a wide variety of cellular activities, including the initiation of inflammation, the induction of antiviral responses, and apoptosis. Two receptors for TNF have been cloned, both of which belong to a superfamily of cell surface receptors that includes the Fas antigen and CD40 (1). The TNF receptors share 30% homology in their extracellular domains but are unrelated in their intracellular domains. The intracellular domains of the Fas antigen and the 55-kDa TNF receptor (TNFR1), both of which can trigger apoptosis, share approximately 28% identity in a region known as the death domain (2, 3). This region of TNFR1 has been shown to be necessary and sufficient for signaling cytotoxicity (3, 4).
TNFR1 mediates most of the biological effects of TNF (3, 5-8).
Engagement of this receptor activates a diverse group of intracellular
signaling pathways. Among the early downstream effects of TNF are the
activation of kinases, including members of the MAP kinase family
(9-14), and phospholipases, including cytosolic phospholipase
A2 (cPLA2) (reviewed in Ref. 15). The
activation of cPLA2 results in the release of arachidonic
acid, which is metabolized into the potent proinflammatory mediators
prostaglandins and leukotrienes. TNF also activates several
transcription factors, including NF-B and c-JUN/AP-1, leading to the
up-regulation of a large number of genes involved in the inflammatory
response (16). The signaling elements involved in initiating these
pathways were not discovered until recently, when the yeast two-hybrid system was used to identify proteins that associate directly with TNFR1. Briefly, TRADD (17) is a death domain-containing protein that
interacts directly with the death domain of TNFR1. TRADD is believed to
act as an adaptor protein that recruits two other proteins, TRAF2 and
RIP, to the receptor (18, 19). TRAF2 has been implicated in the pathway
leading to the activation of NF-
B (18, 20), while RIP seems to
mediate both apoptosis and NK-
B activation (19, 21). TRADD also
interacts with MORT1/FADD (22, 23), which in turn associates with the
ICE-like protease MACH/FLICE (24, 25), providing a mechanism by which
TNFR1 activates key downstream mediators of the apoptotic response. The
death domain motif plays a central role in these interactions, mediating associations between TNFR1, TRADD, MORT1/FADD, and RIP.
We have performed a yeast interaction trap screen and isolated a 176-kDa protein called MADD, for AP kinase-ctivating eath omain protein, which also interacts with TNFR1. Here we show that MADD associates with TNFR1 through a death domain-death domain interaction and that overexpression of MADD activates the mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase ERK. Interestingly, expression of a truncated form of MADD, containing the C-terminal death domain, activates both the ERK and JNK MAP kinases and induces the phosphorylation of cPLA2. These data suggest that MADD provides a physical link between TNFR1 and the induction of MAP kinase activation and arachidonic acid release.
Screening was based on the methods of Gyuris et al. (31). Briefly, the death domain of TNFR1 (amino acids 326-413; TNFR1-DD) was subcloned into pEG202, resulting in a DNA-binding fusion between the bacterial repressor LexA and the TNFR1 death domain. One million transformants from U937 or WI38 cDNA libraries in pJG4-5 (encoding proteins fused to the B42 transcriptional activation domain; see Ref. 26) were screened for TNFR1-DD binding proteins, using an EGY48 yeast reporter strain containing chromosomal lexAop-leu2 and carrying lexAop-lacZ on the plasmid pSH18-34.
Mutagenesis and Plasmid ConstructionTNFR1-DD was obtained
by PCR using four oligonucleotides encoding overlapping TNFR1-DD
sequences. TNFR1-DD was subcloned into pEG202 for screening and M13mp18
(27) for mutagenesis. For mutagenesis, each of five death domain
residues was mutated individually to alanine using the Muta-Gene M13
mutagenesis kit (Bio-Rad), and the mutations were confirmed by
sequencing. The mutated fragments were subcloned into the pEG202 vector
for testing in the yeast interaction trap. The death domains of Fas
(amino acids 213-299), MADD (amino acids 1281-1356), TRADD (amino
acids 222-289), and the intracellular domains of TNFR1 (amino acids
204-426) and TNFR2 (amino acids 288-461) were obtained by PCR and
confirmed by sequencing. 15DD (amino acids 1396-1588) was
constructed by digesting 15TU with EcoRV and
XhoI, converting the EcoRV site to
EcoRI with a linker and subcloning into pJG4-5 as an
EcoRI-XhoI fragment. Vectors FLAG-15TU and
FLAG-MADD were constructed by cloning NotI/SalI fragments of the respective cDNAs into the mammalian expression vector pED-FLAG, a variant of pED (28) containing the FLAG peptide DYKDDDDK. A NotI fragment of MADD was subcloned into pED to
generate pED-MADD.
Human tissue and
cell line blots (CLONTECH, Palo Alto, CA)
containing 2 µg/lane of poly(A)+ mRNA were probed
with the partial MADD cDNA 27TU. Hybridization was performed at
65 °C in 5 × Denhardt's solution, 5 × SSC, 0.1% SDS,
and 50 µg/ml tRNA from yeast. Washing was at 65 °C in 0.2 × SSC and 0.1% SDS. To obtain the gene encoding full-length MADD, a
poly(dT)-primed U937 cDNA library was probed with the partial clone
27TU, yielding a clone of 4.2 kilobase pairs (clone 4a). A 1.5-kilobase
fragment corresponding to the 5 region of clone 4a was used to screen
a U937 random-primed cDNA library, yielding a cDNA (clone 15)
that overlapped clone 4a by 400 base pairs. A PCR fragment encoding the
5
end of MADD was isolated using a method for the rapid amplification
of cDNA ends (RACE) (Marathon kit, CLONTECH),
with an oligonucleotide corresponding to sequence from the 5
end of
clone 4a. This PCR fragment was used to screen a MADD-specific
primer-extended U937 library to obtain a cDNA corresponding to the
PCR fragment. Ligation of this 5
cDNA to clones 15 and 4a yielded
a gene encoding full-length MADD.
MADD polyclonal antibodies 6007 and 6008 were raised in rabbits by immunization using the partial MADD clone 27TU to express a fusion protein with maltose binding protein (vector pMAL, New England Biolabs, Beverly, MA) (MBP-27TU). TNFR1 antibody 4013 was produced by immunizing rabbits with the death domain of human TNFR1 expressed as glutathione S-transferase fusion protein (vector pGEX, Pharmacia Biotech Inc.) (GST-DD). cPLA2 polyclonal antibody 7905 was generated against cPLA2 produced in Escherichia coli, as described previously (29). MBP antibody was purchased from New England Biolabs, HA antibody 12CA5 from Boehringer Mannheim, and FLAG antibody M2 from Kodak.
In Vitro Binding AssaysGST-DD and MBP-27TU were expressed in bacteria and purified as described by the manufacturer. 3 µg of MBP-27TU (or MBP alone) was mixed with 3 µg of GST-DD (or GST alone) immobilized on glutathione-agarose beads and incubated for 2 h in binding buffer (20 mM Tris-Cl, pH 7.5, 0.2% Triton X-100, 140 mM NaCl, 0.1 mM EDTA, 10 mM dithiothreitol, 5% (v/v) glycerol). The beads were washed four times with binding buffer, and bound and unbound proteins were immunoblotted with anti-MBP antibody. Filters were developed by chemiluminescence (Amersham Corp.).
ImmunoprecipitationsTo immunoprecipitate endogenous MADD,
cells were lysed by a 10-min incubation in lysis buffer T (20 mM Tris-Cl, pH 7.5, 1% Triton X-100, 137 mM
NaCl, 25 mM -glycerophosphate, 2 mM EDTA, 1 mM Na3VO4, 2 mM sodium
pyrophosphate, 10% (v/v) glycerol, 10 µg/ml leupeptin, and 2 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride), and the lysates were
centrifuged at 15,000 × g for 10 min. MADD was precipitated with 20 µl of anti-MADD antibody 6008 and protein A-Sepharose (Pharmacia). Immunoprecipitates were washed three times
with lysis buffer T and the proteins separated by SDS-polyacrylamide gel eletrophoresis. Immunoblotting was performed as above, using anti-MADD antibody 6007. To monitor coimmunoprecipitation between TNFR1
and MADD, FLAG-MADD was transfected into COS cells using the
DEAE-dextran method (30). Two days after transfection, cells were
starved for 1 h in Dulbecco's modified Eagles's medium
containing 0.1% bovine serum albumin and treated for 15 min with 50 ng/ml human recombinant TNF (Genzyme, Cambridge, MA). Lysis,
immunoprecipitation, and immunoblotting were performed as described
above, using 20 µl of anti-TNFR1 antibody 4013 for
immunoprecipitation and 1 µg/ml anti-FLAG antibody for
immunoblotting. Anti-mouse HRP was used as second antibody (Amersham
Corp.).
COS cells were cotransfected using the
DEAE-dextran method with 2-3 µg of HA epitope-tagged kinase and
10-15 µg of either pED-FLAG, FLAG-15TU, or pED-MADD. Two days after
transfection, cells were treated with varying concentrations of TNF and
lysed as described above. HA-tagged kinase was immunoprecipitated from the supernatant using anti-HA antibody. Kinase assays were performed for 30 min at 30 °C in kinase buffer (25 mM Hepes, pH
7.4, 20 mM MgCl2, 0.1 mM
Na3VO4, 2 mM dithiothreitol)
containing 50 µM ATP, 5 µCi of
[-32P]ATP (3000 Ci/mmol, Amersham Corp.) and 1-2 µg
of either myelin basic protein (Sigma) (for ERK assays) or a GST fusion
with the N terminus of c-JUN (amino acids 1-79) (for JNK assays) as
substrate. Samples were analyzed by autoradiography following
electrophoresis.
COS cells were
cotransfected by DEAE-dextran with 2 µg of pmt-2EMC-cPLA2
(29) and 10 µg of pED-FLAG or FLAG-15TU. Two days after transfection,
cells were starved and TNF-treated as above and collected directly into
2 × sample buffer (126 mM Tris-Cl, pH 6.8, 1.4 M -mercaptoethanol, 20% (v/v) glycerol, 4% SDS, 0.04% bromphenol blue) for SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis.
Immunoblotting for cPLA2 was performed as described above,
using polyclonal antibody 7905.
The yeast interaction trap system (31) was used to
identify proteins that interact with the death domain of the type 1 tumor necrosis factor receptor. The TNFR1 death domain (amino acids 326-413; TNFR1-DD) was fused to the C-terminal end of the LexA DNA
binding domain as a "bait" in the interaction trap screen. This
construct was cotransformed into yeast along with a U937 cDNA
library in which each cDNA was expressed as a fusion with the B42
transcriptional activation domain under the control of the GAL4
promoter. Approximately one million transformants were screened for
their ability to express -galactosidase and grow in the absence of
leucine. 63 of the 340 LEU+/LacZ+ colonies
isolated in the screen demonstrated a galactose-dependent phenotype. Fourteen of these, representing nine independent cDNAs, bound TNFR1-DD selectively, as assessed by comparing the interaction with TNFR1-DD to an unrelated bait, Bicoid.
Two of these clones were partial cDNAs encoding portions of a protein we have termed MADD. These partial clones, called 27TU and 15TU, encoded polypeptides of 607 and 320 amino acids, respectively. A partial MADD cDNA encoding a polypeptide of 410 amino acids was also isolated from a similar screen performed with a WI38 library (not shown). The yeast interaction trap was used to investigate the specificity of the interaction between TNFR1-DD and 27TU/15TU. As shown in Table I, both 27TU and 15TU interacted strongly with the death domain of TNFR1, although neither interacted with the death domain of the Fas antigen. Both clones bound the intracellular domain of TNFR1 but not the type 2 TNF receptor.
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In an effort to determine the amino acids within TNFR1-DD involved in this interaction, five of the six death domain residues previously shown to be critical for signaling TNF-induced cytotoxicity (3) were mutated individually to alanine. When assayed in the interaction trap, both N- and C-terminal mutations were found to affect MADD binding (Table I). Several other unrelated clones isolated in the screen did not show differential interaction (data not shown). The interaction of MADD with the death domain of TNFR1, and specifically with several critical signaling residues, supports the relevance of MADD in TNF signaling.
MADD Encodes a Protein of 1588 Amino Acids That Interacts with TNFR1 through a C-terminal Death DomainNorthern analysis
revealed MADD mRNA to be expressed in a wide variety of tissues and
cell lines as a 7-kilobase transcript (Fig. 1). A
full-length MADD cDNA was assembled from partial clones isolated in
three library screens. The open reading frame of MADD encodes a novel
protein containing 1588 amino acids, with a predicted molecular mass of
176.4 kDa (Fig. 2A). Examination of the MADD sequence revealed several interesting features (Fig. 2B).
The most striking is a C-terminal region that bears significant
homology to the death domain of TNFR1. In addition, like other death
domain-containing proteins (32), MADD contains regions rich in serine
and threonine residues. Approximately 25% of the residues in these
clusters are serine or threonine. The N terminus of MADD contains a
consensus leucine zipper sequence (33), suggesting a mechanism by which MADD might dimerize or interact with other proteins.
Death domains mediate interactions between several proteins involved in
TNF signaling. To examine the homology between the death domains of
MADD and TNFR1, these sequences were aligned with each other and with
Fas and TRADD (Fig. 3). The death domain of MADD is 17%
identical to that of TNFR1, 12% identical to Fas, and 14% to TRADD.
If conservative amino acid changes are considered, the degree of
similarity between MADD and TNFR1, Fas, and TRADD increases to 30, 29, and 22%, respectively. For comparison, TNFR1 and Fas are 21%
identical and 35% similar by this alignment. The six residues
previously reported to be critical for TNFR1 signaling are indicated
with asterisks. MADD is identical to TNFR1 at three of these
positions.
To detect endogenous MADD, a fusion protein between partial clone 27TU
and maltose binding protein (MBP-27TU) was used as antigen to generate
polyclonal antibodies 6007 and 6008. MADD was immunoprecipitated from
various cell lines with antibody 6008 and detected by immunoblotting
with antibody 6007. As shown in Fig. 4, MADD is widely
expressed and migrates as a protein of approximately 200 kDa, similar
to overexpressed MADD (see Fig. 5 C). The
100-kDa band is nonspecific and the additional bands (at 170 and 85 kDa) immunoprecipitated from U937 cells represent degradation products
of MADD (as judged by immunoprecipitation with preimmune antiserum,
data not shown).
As discussed above, the death domain is a protein-protein interaction
motif found in several proteins implicated in TNFR1 signaling. Both
27TU and 15TU contain this motif, suggesting a mechanism by which they
bind the death domain of TNFR1. To investigate whether the death domain
of MADD was indeed sufficient for interaction with the death domain of
TNFR1, a fragment encoding the 76-amino acid region of death domain
homology, residues 1281-1356, was tested in the interaction trap for
binding to TNFR1-DD. A death domain deletion mutant of clone 15TU
(15DD) was used as a control. As shown in Table II,
the MADD death domain is sufficient for interaction with the death
domain of TNFR1. Conversely, deletion of the death domain abolishes the
ability of 15TU to interact. These data establish that the MADD death
domain mediates association with TNFR1. Interestingly, the MADD death
domain also mediated interaction with itself, as well as with the death
domain of TRADD (Table II). In contrast, no interaction was detected
with the death domain of Fas. The observation that MADD can associate
with TNFR1 and TRADD, but not with Fas, is consistent with the
possibility that MADD is a component of the TNFR1 signaling
complex.
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To confirm the association between MADD and TNFR1, in vitro
binding experiments were performed (Fig. 5, A and
B). The death domain of TNFR1 was expressed as a fusion
protein with glutathione S-transferase (GST-DD) and tested
for interaction with MBP-27TU. GST or GST-DD immobilized on
glutathione-agarose beads was incubated with purified MBP-27TU or MBP
alone. Immunoblotting with -MBP antibody revealed that MBP-27TU
bound to GST-DD (Fig. 5A) but not GST, nor did MBP associate
with GST-DD.
To test whether MADD associated with TNFR1 in mammalian cells, COS cells were transfected with a plasmid encoding full-length MADD fused at its N terminus to the FLAG epitope (FLAG-MADD). Endogenous TNFR1 was immunoprecipitated using a polyclonal antibody to TNFR1, and the immunoprecipitates were immunoblotted with anti-FLAG antibody. As shown in Fig. 5C, MADD coimmunoprecipitated with TNFR1 immune, but not preimmune, serum. Proteins immunoprecipitated from cells transfected with the pED-FLAG vector (V) showed no immunoreactivity to the FLAG epitope. The coimmunoprecipitation of MADD and TNFR1 was observed in both untreated and TNF-treated cells, suggesting that MADD is constitutively associated with TNFR1.
MADD Clones Activate MAP Kinase and Induce the Phosphorylation of cPLA2An important signaling pathway in the cellular
response to TNF is the activation of the MAP kinases ERK and JNK. These
enzymes phosphorylate and activate several transcription factors,
including AP-1 (34), ATF2 (35), and ELK-1 (36), leading to the
increased transcription of a number of genes involved in inflammation
(37-39). ERK has also been shown to activate cPLA2 by
phosphorylation, leading to the release of arachidonic acid (40). To
explore whether MADD might be involved in these signaling pathways, we tested whether overexpression of this protein stimulated MAP kinase activity. COS cells were cotransfected with HA-epitope tagged ERK2 or
JNK1 and cDNAs encoding either intact MADD or partial clone 15TU.
After transfection, MAP kinase was immunoprecipitated with anti-HA
antibody, and its activity was assessed using myelin basic protein or
GST-c-JUN (amino acids 1-79) as substrates for ERK and JNK,
respectively. As shown in Fig. 6A, MADD
expression stimulated both basal and TNF-induced ERK activity.
Immunoblotting of lysates from vector- and MADD-transfected cells with
anti-HA antibody confirmed equivalent HA-ERK expression (not shown).
Expression of 15TU caused an even greater activation of ERK (Fig.
6B). In addition, 15TU induced a significant activation of
JNK even in the absence of TNF, although the stimulation was less
robust than that seen with ERK. Expression of intact MADD at levels
comparable to 15TU did not stimulate JNK activity (data not shown),
possibly because a more modest stimulation would be difficult to detect in this assay. Transfection of the vector (V) or clones
unrelated to MADD (not shown) had no effect. The ability of MADD clones to activate ERK and JNK indicates that MADD plays a role in the signaling pathway(s) between TNFR1 and the MAP kinase family of enzymes.
In many cell types, treatment with TNF results in the phosphorylation
of cPLA2, a critical step in the activation of this enzyme
(41). One of the kinases that can phosphorylate and activate cPLA2 is ERK (40). To test whether MADD might be involved
in the signaling pathway leading to cPLA2 phosphorylation,
perhaps as a consequence of its ability to activate ERK, we tested
whether overexpression of the partial MADD clone 15TU induced the
phosphorylation of cPLA2. After cotransfection with
cPLA2 and 15TU, COS cells were treated with TNF and the
lysates immunoblotted for cPLA2. As phosphorylation
significantly reduces the electrophoretic mobility of
cPLA2, the phosphorylation state of cPLA2 can
be assessed by observing the ratio between the upper and lower bands
(42). As shown in Fig. 7, in cells transfected with the
vector (V), the majority of cPLA2 was
dephosphorylated and became phosphorylated with increasing TNF
treatment. Quantitation by phosphoimage analysis revealed the
percentage of cPLA2 in the upper band to be 35, 66, 92, and
100% at 0, 0.4, 2, and 10 ng/ml TNF, respectively. In contrast,
cPLA2 was heavily phosphorylated in cells expressing 15TU,
with 86% of the cPLA2 found in the upper band even in the absence of TNF. The induction of cPLA2 phosphorylation by
15TU suggests that MADD may be involved in the activation of the
arachidonic acid cascade by TNF.
We have identified a protein, MADD, that provides a link between TNFR1 and the activation of MAP kinases and cPLA2. Like TRADD, MADD and TNFR1 associate through a protein-protein binding motif known as the death domain. The interaction between MADD and TNFR1 was first described in the yeast interaction trap and was also demonstrated in in vitro binding experiments using purified proteins. This association was confirmed in mammalian cells by the coprecipitation of MADD with endogenous TNFR1. Two additional lines of evidence implicate MADD as a TNFR1 signaling protein. First, mutation of TNFR1-DD at residues critical for the activation of downstream signaling pathways decreased the ability of MADD to associate, suggesting that the sites of MADD interaction correspond to important signaling residues. Second, and most importantly, overexpression of MADD mimics TNF-induced MAP kinase activation. This effect appears to be mediated through the death domain, as 15TU induced the activation of both ERK and JNK as well as cPLA2 phosphorylation. MADD is the only TNFR1-associated protein reported to activate all of these signaling pathways.
MADD is a 176-kDa protein that interacts with TNFR1 through their respective C-terminal death domains. The death domain is a familiar protein-protein interaction motif in TNF signaling (43), mediating associations between TNFR1, TRADD, MORT1/FADD, RIP, and now MADD. Like other death domains, the death domain of MADD mediates self-interaction as well as interaction with other proteins. This region does not allow indiscriminant binding, however, as evidenced by the ability of MADD to interact with TRADD but not Fas. The interaction of MADD with TNFR1 and TRADD, but not Fas, suggests that MADD is specific to the TNFR1 signaling complex. Interestingly, the N terminus of MADD contains a well-conserved leucine zipper sequence, suggesting a mechanism by which MADD might interact with downstream effector proteins.
MADD coprecipitated with TNFR1 in a TNF-independent manner, suggesting that MADD is constitutively associated with the receptor. However, MADD may exist in an inactive form in the absence of TNF and be activated upon TNF binding, perhaps by aggregation or post-translational modification. Consistent with the latter possibility, MADD is heavily phosphorylated on serine residues.2 We have also found that the high molecular weight band observed upon immunoblotting of 15TU (Fig. 7B) is due to ubiquitination (as assessed by immunoblotting with anti-ubiquitin antibody, not shown). Whether these modifications regulate MADD activity is under investigation. It should be noted that it is also possible that MADD association with the receptor is TNF-dependent under physiological conditions but that the TNFR1 antibody used for immunoprecipitation mimics TNF treatment by inducing aggregation of the receptor.
As discussed above, overexpression of TRADD, through its recruitment of
MORT1/FADD, TRAF2 and RIP, induces signaling pathways leading to the
initiation of the apoptotic response and the activation of NF-B. No
obvious effect on NF-
B or cell death was observed upon expression of
either full-length or partial MADD clones (data not shown). In addition
to these downstream events, TNF has been reported to elicit several,
more immediate, cellular responses. The activation of kinases,
including the MAP kinases ERK, JNK and p38, and phospholipases,
including phospholipase C, neutral and acidic sphingomyelinase and
cPLA2, are some of the significant early events in TNF
signaling. Overexpression of intact MADD stimulates ERK activity. As
mentioned above, this effect is retained in 15TU, a deletion mutant
primarily comprised of the death domain. The observation that 15TU
activated ERK more potently than did MADD suggests that the N terminus
of MADD functions as a negative regulatory domain. 15TU was also
observed to induce cPLA2 phosphorylation and JNK
activation. Interestingly, although TRAF2 and RIP have recently been
shown to stimulate JNK activity, none of the signaling proteins in the
TNF receptor complex was able to activate ERK when overexpressed (44).
These data, taken together, suggest that MADD is involved in the
pathway linking TNFR1 to MAP kinase activation and may play a central
role in the stimulation of ERK activity by TNF.
The observation that expression of 15TU is sufficient to stimulate MAP kinase activity suggests that effector proteins for this pathway bind to the MADD death domain. Many proteins involved in the activation of ERK and JNK have been described including the small GTP-binding proteins, such as RAS, CDC42, and RAC (45-49). Examining the relationship between MADD, the small G proteins, and the other proteins in the TNFR1 signaling complex will provide a better understanding of the mechanism(s) by which MADD regulates TNF-induced MAP kinase activation.
As discussed above, phosphorylation of cPLA2 stimulates the intrinsic enzymatic activity of this enzyme (40), leading to the release of arachidonic acid. This phosphorylation can be mediated by ERK (40) and possibly other kinases (50-52). The ability of 15TU to induce cPLA2 phosphorylation may result from its activation of ERK. The induction of cPLA2 phosphorylation by the MADD death domain implicates MADD as a potential regulator of TNF-stimulated arachidonic acid release. Interestingly, in addition to its role in inflammation, cPLA2 has been implicated in TNF-induced apoptosis (53). The activation of JNK has also been proposed to be important in this process (54). The observation that 15TU stimulates both JNK activity and cPLA2 phosphorylation without triggering apoptosis, however, suggests that the activation of other components, such as MACH/FLICE, are required for initiation of this pathway. This is consistent with recent findings demonstrating that JNK activation is insufficient for triggering apoptosis (44).
The identification of MADD adds a new member to the group of death
domain-containing proteins in the TNFR1 signaling complex. Clearly,
death domains play a central role in regulating the diverse signaling
cascades that are initiated when TNF binds its receptor. The death
domain of TRADD mediates the recruitment of both RIP and MORT1/FADD to
TNFR1, which (with TRAF2) signals the activation of NF-B and the
initiation of apoptosis. The effect of MADD expression, in contrast,
implicates this protein in the pathway(s) leading to the activation of
MAP kinases, particularly ERK, and the release of arachidonic acid.
These data, taken together, support the concept that individual death
domains mediate signaling through distinct intracellular pathways. The
recruitment of this diverse group of proteins to the TNFR1 signaling
complex provides a mechanism by which TNF exerts such pleiotropic
effects.
The nucleotide sequence(s) reported in this paper has been submitted to the GenBankTM/EMBL Data Bank with accession number(s) U77352[GenBank].
We are very grateful to Ron Kriz for the construction of cDNA libraries, Kevin Bean and Kerry Kelleher for extensive DNA sequencing, and Wei Cao for technical assistance. We also thank John Knopf, Roger Davis, and James Clark for helpful discussions and Hsiang-Ai Yu for help with the death domain alignment. We also appreciate receiving GST-c-JUN-(1-79), HA-ERK, and HA-JNK constructs from Roger Davis and anti-ubiquitin antibody from Arthur Haas.