Retinoids Inhibit Interleukin-12 Production in Macrophages through Physical Associations of Retinoid X Receptor and NFkappa B*

Soon-Young NaDagger , Bok Yun Kang§, Su Wol Chung§, Su-Ji HanDagger , Xiaojing Maparallel , Giorgio Trinchieriparallel , Suhn-Young Im**Dagger Dagger , Jae Woon LeeDagger Dagger §§¶¶, and Tae Sung Kim§||

From the Dagger  Department of Biology, § College of Pharmacy, ** Department of Microbiology, Dagger Dagger  Hormone Research Center, and §§ Center for Ligand and Transcription, Chonnam National University, Kwangju 500-757, Korea and the parallel  Wistar Institute, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104

    ABSTRACT
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ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
REFERENCES

Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) increases the production of interleukin-12 (IL-12) from mouse macrophages via a kappa B site within the IL-12 p40 promoter. In this study, we found that retinoids inhibit this LPS-stimulated production of IL-12 in a dose-dependent manner. The NFkappa B components p50 and p65 bound retinoid X receptor (RXR) in a ligand-independent manner in vitro, and the interaction interfaces involved the p50 residues 1-245, the p65 residues 194-441, and the N-terminal A/B/C domains of RXR. Activation of macrophages by LPS resulted in markedly enhanced binding activities to the kappa B site, which significantly decreased upon addition of retinoids, as demonstrated by the electrophoretic mobility shift assays. In cotransfections of CV-1 and HeLa cells, RXR also inhibited the NFkappa B transactivation in a ligand-dependent manner, whereas a mutant RXR lacking the AF2 transactivation domain, which serves as ligand-dependent binding sites for transcription integrators SRC-1 and p300, was without any effect. In addition, coexpression of increasing amounts of SRC-1 or p300 relieved the retinoid-mediated inhibition of the NFkappa B transactivation. From these results, we propose that retinoid-mediated suppression of the IL-12 production from LPS-activated macrophages may involve both inhibition of the NFkappa B-DNA interactions and competitive recruitment of transcription integrators between NFkappa B and RXR.

    INTRODUCTION
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ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
REFERENCES

Interleukin-12 (IL-12),1 a heterodimeric cytokine composed of two disulfide-linked subunits of 35 (p35) and 40 (p40) kDa encoded by two separate genes, was originally identified in the supernatant fluid of Epstein-Barr virus-transformed human B cell lines (1, 2). IL-12 is produced by phagocytic cells and other antigen-presenting cells in response to stimulation by a variety of microorganisms as well as their products (3, 4). IL-12 exerts multiple biological activities mainly through T and natural killer cells by inducing their production of interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma ), which in turn augments their cytotoxicity, and by enhancing their proliferation potential. IL-12 production is critical for the development of T helper type 1 (Th1) cells and the initiation of cell-mediated immune responses (reviewed in Ref. 5). The key role of IL-12 in inflammation as well as the cell-mediated immune responses (6, 7) have raised considerable interest in the mechanisms of IL-12 gene transcription. Inducible expression of IL-12 has been documented in macrophages and dendritic cells after stimulation by microbial antigens or via CD40-CD40L interaction (8, 9). In lipopolysaccharide (LPS)- and IFN-gamma -treated monocytes, the expression of IL-12 p40 has been shown to be primarily regulated at the transcriptional level, which involved at least two transcription factors that belong to the NFkappa B and Ets families (10-12). Expression of IL-12 p35 is also known to be subject to similar transcriptional regulation, although characterized to a much lesser extent than p40 (13, 14).

The transcription factor NFkappa B is important for the inducible expression of a wide variety of cellular and viral genes (reviewed in Ref. 15). NFkappa B is composed of homo- and heterodimeric complexes of members of the Rel (NFkappa B) family of polypeptides. In vertebrates, this family comprises p50, p65 (RelA), c-Rel, p52, and RelB. These proteins share a 300-amino acid region, known as the Rel homology domain, which binds to DNA and mediates homo- and heterodimerization. This domain is also a target of the Ikappa B inhibitors, which include Ikappa Balpha , Ikappa Bbeta , Ikappa Bgamma , Bcl-3, p105, and p100 (16). In the majority of cells, NFkappa B exists in an inactive form in the cytoplasm, bound to the inhibitory Ikappa B proteins. Treatment of cells with various inducers results in the degradation of Ikappa B proteins. The bound NFkappa B is released and translocates to the nucleus, where it activates appropriate target genes.

The nuclear receptor superfamily is a group of ligand-dependent transcriptional regulatory proteins that function by binding to specific DNA sequences named hormone response elements in the promoters of target genes (reviewed in Ref. 17). The superfamily includes receptors for a variety of small hydrophobic ligands such as steroids, T3, and retinoids, as well as a large number of related proteins that do not have known ligands, referred to as orphan nuclear receptors. In particular, at least six distinct receptors have been extensively characterized for retinoids; retinoic acid receptor (RAR) alpha , beta , and gamma  and retinoid X receptor (RXR) alpha , beta , and gamma  (reviewed in Ref. 18). Functional analysis of nuclear receptors has shown that there are two major activation domains. The N-terminal domain (AF1) contains a ligand-independent activation function, whereas the extreme C-terminal region of the ligand binding domain (AF2) exhibits ligand-dependent transactivation and undergoes an allosteric change upon ligand binding. The AF2 region plays a critical role in mediating transactivation by a ligand-dependent interaction with transcription coactivators such as functionally conserved proteins CREB-binding protein (CBP) and p300 (reviewed in Ref. 19) and SRC-1 (20). Accordingly, deletion or point mutations in this region impair transcriptional activation without changing ligand and DNA binding affinities (21-23). CBP/p300 and SRC-1 have also been shown to be essential for the activation of transcription by a large number of regulated transcription factors, including CREB, NFkappa B, STATs, SRF, p53, and AP-1 (19, 24-27). Based on this broad spectrum of action, these coactivator proteins were termed transcription integrators.

Interestingly, members of steroid receptors including glucocorticoid receptor (28, 29), estrogen receptor (30, 31), progesterone receptor (32), and androgen receptor (33), have been shown to inhibit NFkappa B activity and can physically interact with NFkappa B in vitro. Since RelA represses ligand-dependent activation of steroid receptor-regulated promoters, a mutually inactive complex formed by a direct protein-protein interaction of steroid receptors and RelA has been proposed.

In this report, we found that retinoids inhibit the LPS-stimulated production of IL-12 from mouse macrophages through direct physical interactions of retinoid receptors with NFkappa B, like steroid receptors. The experimental results indicated that retinoid-mediated suppression of the IL-12 production from LPS-activated macrophages may involve both inhibition of the NFkappa B-DNA interactions and competitive recruitment of CBP/p300 and SRC-1 between NFkappa B and RXR.

    EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES

Mice, Cell Lines, Culture Medium, and Transient Transfection-- Female DBA/2 mice were obtained from Japan SLC, Inc. (Tokyo, Japan) and used at 6-10 weeks of age. RAW264.7 cells were cultured in RPMI 1640 supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum (FBS) at 37 °C in a 5% CO2 humidified air atmosphere. CV-1 cells as well as spleen cell populations and macrophages from mice were maintained in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium (DMEM) containing 10% FBS and antibiotics (Life Technologies, Inc.). For transfections, cells were grown in 24-well plates with medium supplemented with 10% FBS for 24 h and transfected with indicated plasmid in the presence of Superfect according to the manufacturer's protocol (Qiagen). After 12 h, cells were washed and refed with DMEM containing 10% FBS. Cells were harvested 24 h later, luciferase activity was assayed as described (34), and the results were normalized to LacZ expression. Similar results were obtained in more than two separate experiments.

Monoclonal Antibodies (mAbs), Cytokines, and Reagents-- Anti-IL-12 p40 mAbs C17.8 and C15.6 were purified from ascitic fluid by ammonium sulfate precipitation followed by DEAE-Sephagel chromatography (Sigma). Anti-IL-12 p35 mAb Red-T/G297-289, anti-IL-10 mAbs JES-2A5 and SXC-1, as well as recombinant mIL-10 were obtained from PharMingen (San Diego, CA). Recombinant murine IL-12 was generously provided by Dr. Stanley Wolf (Genetics Institute, Cambridge, MA). Retinoids (9-cis-RA, TTNPB, and LG69) and LPS (from E. coli 0111:B4) were purchased from Sigma.

Plasmids-- The -689/+98 fragment of mIL-12 p40 promoter from pXP2 (11) was subcloned into KpnI/XhoI sites of pGL3-basic luciferase vector (Promega Co., Madison, WI). All the deletion mutants were generated by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) using an upstream primer containing BamHI site. A linker-scanning mutant was generated by a two-step PCR procedure with overlapping internal primers that contain mutated sequences for the NFkappa B site. A vector expressing Gal4/p65 fusion protein was constructed by subcloning an appropriate p65 PCR fragment into EcoRI/XhoI sites of pCMXGal4/N (35). Mammalian expression vectors for SRC-1, p300, p50, p65, RXRalpha and RXRDelta AF2, the reporter constructs TREpal-LUC and kappa B-LUC, and the transfection indicator construct pRSV-beta -gal were as described previously (25-27).

Preparation of Splenic Macrophages Stimulated with LPS-- Spleen cells were cultured at 106 cells/ml for approximately 3 h at 37 °C. The non-adherent cells were removed by washing with warm DMEM until visual inspection revealed a lack of lymphocytes (>98% of the cell population). The adherent cells were removed from plates by incubating for 15 min with ice-cold phosphate-buffered saline solution and rinsing repeatedly. The isolated adherent cell population was stimulated with 5 µg/ml LPS in the absence or presence of retinoids at 10-8, 10-7, and 10-6 M at 1 × 105 cells/well in 96-well culture plates for 48 h.

Cytokine Assays-- The quantities of IL-12 p40, IL-12 p70, and IL-10 in culture supernatants were determined by a sandwich enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay using mAbs specific for each cytokine, as described previously (36). The mAbs for coating the plates and the biotinylated second mAbs were as follows: for IL-12 p40, C17.8 and C15.6; for IL-12 p70, Red-T/G297-289 and C17.8; for IL-10, JES-2A5 and SXC-1. Standard curves were generated using recombinant cytokines. The lower limit of detection was 30 pg/ml for IL-12 p40, 50 pg/ml for IL-12 p70, and 0.2 ng/ml for IL-10.

Electrophoretic Mobility Shift Assay-- The nuclear extracts were prepared from the cells, as described previously (37). An oligonucleotide containing an NFkappa B-binding site within the Ig kappa -chain (5'-CCG GTT AAC AGA GGG GGC TTT CCG AG-3') was used as a probe. Labeled oligonucleotides (10,000 cpm) were incubated for 30 min at room temperature, along with 10 µg of nuclear extracts, in 20 µl of binding buffer (10 mM Tris·HCl, pH 7.6, 500 mM KCl, 10 mM EDTA, 50% glycerol, 100 ng of poly(dI-dC), and 1 mM dithiothreitol). The reaction mixture was analyzed by electrophoresis on a 4% polyacrylamide gel in 0.5× Tris borate buffer. Specific binding was confirmed by competition experiments with a 50-fold excess of unlabeled, identical oligonucleotides or cAMP response element-containing oligonucleotides.

Statistical Analysis-- Student's t test was used to determine the statistical differences between various experimental and control groups. A p value of <0.01 was considered as significant.

    RESULTS

Retinoids Inhibit IL-12 Production from LPS-activated Macrophages-- We examined the effect of various retinoids including 9-cis-RA, TTNPB, and LG69 on the production of IL-12 by primary macrophages stimulated with LPS. 9-cis-RA is a pan-agonist for both RARs and RXRs, whereas TTNPB and LG69 are specific agonists for RARs and RXRs, respectively (38). LPS readily induced production of IL-12 heterodimer as well as the p40 subunit, as expected. However, retinoids inhibited this LPS-induced IL-12 production in a dose-dependent manner (Fig. 1). Interestingly, 9-cis-RA and LG69 were significantly more effective than TTNPB (p < 0.01 at 10-6 M RA). In contrast, treatment with retinoids did not influence IL-10 production from LPS-stimulated macrophages, suggesting that the retinoid effects were not the result of a general dampening of cellular activation.


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Fig. 1.   Inhibition of IL-12 production in primary macrophages by retinoids. Macrophages were stimulated with LPS (5 µg/ml) in the absence or presence of different concentrations of retinoids. Cytokine levels were evaluated by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, and results are presented as mean ± standard deviations of the percentage response of cytokine production of retinoid-treated macrophages compared with untreated control macrophages stimulated with LPS. Mean cytokine levels in the absence of retinoids were as follows: IL-12 p70, 650 pg/ml; IL-12 p40, 1.9 ng/ml; IL-10, 1.2 ng/ml. Closed square, open square, and closed triangle indicate the IL-12 p70 heterodimer, IL-12 p40, and IL-10, respectively.

Retinoids Inhibit NFkappa B-mediated Activation of IL-12 p40 Promoter by LPS-- An IL-12 p40 subunit was known as the highly inducible and tightly regulated component of IL-12 (5). To identify the region involved in these retinoid actions, we generated a series of luciferase reporter constructs containing the p40 promoter sequences from positions -689, -231, and -185 to +98 relative to the transcription initiation site (Fig. 2A). Mouse RAW264.7 monocytic cells were transfected with each of these constructs and stimulated with LPS either in the absence or presence of retinoids, and the luciferase activity was determined. All of these constructs showed strong stimulation with LPS in the absence of retinoids but impaired stimulation with retinoids (Fig. 2B). In particular, deleting sequences to -185 (p40/185) did not diminish the LPS-dependent promoter activities and the inhibitory effect of retinoids was still observed, suggesting that the target site for retinoids should reside within this region. To directly test the role of a kappa B site found between -121 and -131 of the p40 promoter in the retinoid-mediated inhibitory actions, we introduced a linker scanning mutation into the kappa B site within the context of the -689/+98 construct (p40/LS). The LPS-dependent promoter activation was still observed with p40/LS, although significantly reduced (Fig. 2B), consistent with the previous findings in which the kappa B site was shown to be important for the LPS induction of p40 promoter (10). However, addition of retinoids to LPS-stimulated cells did not have any repressive effects with p40/LS, clearly indicating that the inhibitory effect of retinoids on IL-12 production was mediated through the kappa B site.


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Fig. 2.   Analysis of retinoid-mediated transcriptional repression of p40 promoter constructs activated by LPS. A, schematic representation of the mouse p40 promoter constructs as well as a linker-scanning mutant for NFkappa B site are as shown, along with Ets and NFkappa B binding sites. The nucleotide sequence numbers for each construct are shown. B, transient transfection of RAW264.7 cells with the p40 promoter constructs, followed by stimulation with LPS either in the absence or presence of 10-7 M retinoids. The results are expressed as induction (n-fold) over the value obtained with the unstimulated RAW264.7 cells transfected with the -689/+98 construct, which was given an arbitrary value of 1. Closed, open, striped, checked, and stippled boxes indicate no LPS added, 5 µg/ml LPS, 5 µg/ml LPS plus 10-7 M 9-cis-RA, 5 µg/ml LPS plus 10-7 TTNPB, and 5 µg/ml LPS plus 10-7 LG69, respectively. The data are representative of three similar experiments.

Physical Interaction of Retinoid Receptors with NFkappa B-- With the precedent of direct physical interactions of NFkappa B with steroid receptors (28-33), we hypothesized that associations of NFkappa B with retinoid receptors may have led to the NFkappa B-inhibitory action of retinoids. Indeed, in vitro translated, labeled RXR interacted with GST fusions to the NFkappa B components p50 and p65 but not with GST alone, in a ligand-independent manner (Fig. 3A). Similarly, RXRDelta AF2, deleted for the C-terminal AF2 domain (39), and RXR-ABC containing only the N-terminal A/B/C domains also interacted with GST fusions to p50 and p65. In contrast, RXR-LBD, which contains only the hinge and ligand binding domains, did not bind any of these GST proteins. The RXR interaction domains were also mapped to the p50 residues 1-245 and the p65 residues 194-441 by using a series of C-terminal deletions introduced into p50 and p65 (Fig. 3B). Similarly, RAR also interacted with the p50 residues 1-245 and the p65 residues 194-441 (data not shown).


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Fig. 3.   Interactions of RXR with p50 and p65 in vitro. A, RXR, RXRDelta AF2, RXR-LBD, and RXR-ABC were labeled with [35S]methionine by in vitro translation and incubated with glutathione beads containing GST alone or GST fusions to p50 and p65, either in the absence or presence of 10-7 M 9-cis-RA, as indicated. Beads were washed, and specifically bound material was eluted with reduced glutathione and resolved by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Approximately 10-20% of total input was typically retained. B, schematic representations of p65 and p50 and their deletion constructs. The Rel homology domains are indicated in stripes, and the amino acid residues are as indicated. C, the full-length p50 and p65 and their deletions were labeled with [35S]methionine by in vitro translation and incubated with glutathione beads containing GST alone or GST fusions to RXR, either in the absence or presence of 10-7 M 9-cis-RA, as indicated.

NFkappa B Binding to the kappa B Site Inhibited by Retinoid-- Steroid receptors have been shown to inhibit NFkappa B binding to kappa B sites in a ligand-dependent manner (28-33). To examine whether retinoid-mediated inhibition of the NFkappa B transactivation also exploits similar mechanisms, we analyzed the kappa B binding activity present in nuclear extract of unstimulated or LPS-stimulated primary macrophages, either in the absence or presence of retinoids. As expected, nuclear extracts from LPS-stimulated macrophages exhibited strong kappa B binding activity in the electrophoretic mobility shift assays using a labeled oligonucleotide containing a consensus Ig-kappa B site (40) (Fig. 4A). The binding was specific as it was competed with an unlabeled, identical oligonucleotide, but not with unrelated, nonspecific oligonucleotide, and was absent with nuclear extracts from nonstimulated cells. Similar to steroid receptors, nuclear extracts from macrophages stimulated by LPS in the presence of various retinoids showed much diminished kappa B binding activities in a retinoid-dose dependent manner (Fig. 4A). To rule out the possibility that these inhibitory actions of retinoids are the results of retinoid-directed gene expressions of a third component, retinoids were directly added to the binding reactions, along with nuclear extracts from LPS-stimulated macrophages. In these experiments, the kappa B binding activities decreased in a retinoid-dose dependent manner, suggesting that the retinoid-bound receptor may directly modulate the NFkappa B-DNA interactions by forming a complex with NFkappa B that is unable to bind kappa B sites (Fig. 4B).


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Fig. 4.   Retinoid-mediated inhibition of kappa B binding by NFkappa B. A, nuclear extracts prepared from macrophages stimulated by LPS either in the absence or presence of retinoids (10-7 and 10-8 M each) were examined for kappa B binding activity in the electrophoretic mobility shift assays using a labeled oligonucleotide containing a consensus Ig-kappa B site, as indicated. S and NS indicate the presence of an unlabeled, identical oligonucleotide and nonspecific oligonucleotide, respectively. The specific NFkappa B complexes are as indicated. B, retinoids were directly added to nuclear extracts prepared from macrophages stimulated by LPS in the absence of retinoids, and kappa B binding activity was examined in the electrophoretic mobility shift assays. Increasing amounts of 9-cis-RA (10-8, 10-7, 10-6, and 10-5 M) or carrier (ethanol) were used as indicated.

An Inhibitory Complex of NFkappa B-RXR-- To test if this retinoid-mediated inhibition of NFkappa B activities in macrophages are generally observed in other cell types, we employed a reporter construct kappa B-LUC, previously characterized to efficiently mediate the NFkappa B-dependent transactivations in various cell types, that consists of a minimal promoter from the IL-2 gene and four upstream kappa B sites from the IL-6 gene (41). Cotransfection of CV-1 cells with RXR had a minimal effect on the p65-induced reporter gene expression in the absence of retinoids. In the presence of retinoids, however, increasing amounts of cotransfected RXR inhibited the reporter gene expression in an RXR dose-dependent manner (Fig. 5A). Similar results were also obtained with the LPS- or TNFalpha -induced level of transactivations in various cell types, including HeLa cells (data not shown). Similarly, cotransfection of increasing amounts of p50 or p65 also inhibited the 9-cis-RA-dependent transactivation by RXR (Fig. 5B). These results suggest that the interactions of NFkappa B-RXR may lead to a formation of transcriptionally inactive complex in vivo, regardless of the nature of DNA binding sites.


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Fig. 5.   Transcriptionally inhibitory complex of NFkappa B and RXR. A, CV-1 cells were transfected with p65 (50 ng) and increasing amounts of RXR (10, 50, 100, and 200 ng) expression vectors along with a reporter gene kappa B-LUC in the absence or presence of RA. Closed, open, striped, and checked boxes indicate no hormone added and the presence of 10-7 M 9-cis-RA, 10-7 M TTNPB, and 10-7 M LG69, respectively. B, CV-1 cells were transfected with increasing amounts of p50 or p65 expression vectors (10, 50, 100, 200, and 300 ng) along with TREpal-LUC, as indicated. Normalized luciferase expressions from triplicate samples are presented relative to the LacZ expressions, and the standard deviations are less than 5%.

The C-terminal AF2 Domain Is Involved with NFkappa B Inhibition-- Interestingly, cotransfection of CV-1 cells with RXRDelta AF2, a mutant RXR lacking the C-terminal AF2 domain, moderately enhanced the reporter gene expression in the absence of retinoids, whereas it appeared unable to inhibit the NFkappa B transactivation in the presence of 9-cis-RA (Fig. 6A). The AF2 domain serves as ligand-dependent binding sites for a number of transcription coactivator molecules such as SRC-1 (20) and CBP (19), which were also shown to function as transcription coactivators for NFkappa B (25, 42, 43). Thus, competition for limiting amounts of SRC-1 and p300 could account for the mutual inhibitions between NFkappa B and liganded RXR. Indeed, the inhibitory effects of NFkappa B by liganded RXR were largely relieved upon addition of increasing amounts of SRC-1 and p300 expression vectors (Fig. 6B). Similar results were also obtained with NFkappa B-mediated inhibition of the RXR transactivation (data not shown).


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Fig. 6.   Involvement of the AF2 domain in retinoid-directed repression. A, CV-1 cells were transfected with p65 (50 ng) and increasing amounts of RXRDelta AF2 (0, 10, 50, and 100 ng) expression vectors along with a reporter gene kappa B-LUC. B, CV-1 cells were transfected with p65, RXR, and increasing amounts of SRC-1 or p300 expression vectors (0, 100, and 200 ng) along with kappa B-LUC, as indicated. Normalized luciferase expressions from triplicate samples are presented relative to LacZ expression, and the standard deviations are less than 5%. Closed and open boxes indicate no hormone added and the presence of 10-7 M 9-cis-RA, respectively.

The NFkappa B-inhibitory Actions of Retinoids Independent of kappa B Sites-- Since the RXR binding sites involved the DNA binding Rel domain of both p50 and p65 (Fig. 3), we tested whether the NFkappa B-inhibitory actions of retinoids require kappa B site bindings. Thus, we expressed a Gal4 fusion protein to p65 (Gal4/p65) in CV-1 cells, along with a reporter construct controlled by upstream Gal4 sites (35). Consistent with previous findings (44), Gal4/p65 directed a strong activation of the reporter gene expression (Fig. 7). Cotransfection of increasing amount of RXR expression vector was without any significant effects in the absence of retinoids. In contrast, however, liganded RXR directed inhibition of the Gal4/p65 transactivation in an RXR dose-dependent manner (Fig. 7). These results, along with the results shown in Fig. 6, suggest that the inhibitory actions of retinoids can also operate without kappa B site bindings and involve the AF2-dependent factors.


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Fig. 7.   Retinoid-mediated transrepression of p65 in the absence of kappa B binding. CV-1 cells were transfected with Gal4/p65 and RXR expression vectors along with a reporter gene Gal4-LUC, as indicated. Normalized luciferase expressions from triplicate samples are presented relative to LacZ expression, and the standard deviations are less than 5%. Closed and open boxes indicate no hormone added and the presence of 10-7 M 9-cis-RA, respectively.


    DISCUSSION

Inhibiting the action of IL-12 has been shown to prevent development and progression of disease in experimental models of autoimmunity (45). These findings have raised great interest in identifying inhibitors of IL-12 production for the treatment of Th1-mediated diseases such as type-1 diabetes, multiple sclerosis, rheumatoid arthritis, inflammatory bowel disease, and acute graft-versus-host disease. Recently, corticosteroids have been shown to enhance the capacity of macrophages to induce IL-4 synthesis in CD4+ T cells by inhibiting IL-12 production (46). In addition, captopril and lisinopril, angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors, were also shown to suppress IL-12 production from human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (47). Phosphodiesterase inhibitor pentoxifylline (48) and thalidomide (49) inhibited IL-12 production from human monocytes by a mechanism independent of known endogenous inhibitors of IL-12 production such as IL-10, transforming growth factor-beta , or prostaglandin E2. beta 2-Adrenergic compounds including salbutamol inhibited IL-12 production from human monocytes or dendritic cells by increasing intracellular cAMP levels, leading to inhibition of the development of Th1 cells while promoting Th2 cell differentiation (50). Interestingly, 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 was also shown to inhibit IL-12 production, presumably by down-regulating the NFkappa B activities from human IL-12 p40 gene (51).

In this report, we added retinoids to the list of hydrophobic compounds that inhibit production of IL-12 through specific nuclear receptors (17), together with corticosteroids (46) and 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 (51) (Fig. 1). As was the case with corticosteroids and 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3, this inhibition was also mapped to a region in the p40 promoter containing a binding site for NFkappa B (Fig. 2) and may involve direct physical interactions of retinoid receptors with NFkappa B (Fig. 3). However, it is interesting to note that NFkappa B constitutively interacted with RXR (Fig. 3), whereas the inhibitory actions were absolutely ligand-dependent (Figs. 1, 2, and 5). Thus, NFkappa B may exist constitutively associated with RXR in vivo, and this complex becomes transcriptionally inactive upon addition of retinoids, in which ligand-dependent interactions with transcription coactivators may play important roles (as summarized in Fig. 8). This notion is consistent with the inability of the AF2-mutant RXR to inhibit the NFkappa B transactivation as well as derepression of the inhibitory actions by coexpressed SRC-1 and p300 (Fig. 6). However, it is not certain whether these coactivators remain complexed with NFkappa B in the presence of liganded RXR. In addition, retinoids also inhibited the kappa B binding activities of NFkappa B in vitro (Fig. 4), suggesting that the liganded RXR/NFkappa B complex is unable to recognize kappa B sites. However, it is not currently known why this liganded RXR/NFkappa B complex loses its ability to bind kappa B sites. It is possible that conformational change brought into this complex, along with the transcription coactivators SRC-1 and CBP/p300, upon addition of retinoids may become propagated to the Rel homology domain of NFkappa B, resulting in inability to bind kappa B sites. However, the inhibitory actions of retinoids can also operate in the absence of kappa B site bindings by NFkappa B, as demonstrated by the results shown in Fig. 7, in which transactivation mediated by Gal4/p65 was shown to be inhibited by retinoids. Overall, these results are similar to previously described results with steroid receptors (28-33), in which the mutual inhibitions between GR and RelA involved the DNA and the ligand binding domains of the GR (Fig. 3). Since the NFkappa B interactions were subsequently mapped to the DNA binding C domain of the GR, the requirement for the GR LBD may have also reflected the importance of the AF2-dependent transcription coactivators (i.e. SRC-1 and CBP/p300).


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Fig. 8.   A model for the NFkappa B-RXR interactions. NFkappa B may constitutively bind RXR through the N-terminal ABC domains of RXR and the Rel homology domain of p50 and p65 in vivo. Retinoid binding may lead to two changes within this complex, which might be responsible for formation of ligand-dependent inhibitory complex between NFkappa B and RXR. First, retinoids bind and induce significant conformational change with RXR, leading to inhibition of the NFkappa B-kappa B site interactions. Second, SRC-1 and CBP/p300 may constitutively bind NFkappa B but recognize RXR only in the presence of ligand.

The retinoid receptor-NFkappa B interactions are likely to have wide implications in various aspects of retinoid and NFkappa B biology, not limited to the regulation of IL-12 production in macrophages described in this study. Both retinoids and NFkappa B have been shown to be involved with a wide variety of biological processes, including immunomodulation, embryonic development, spermatogenesis, and inhibition of cancer cell proliferation (reviewed in Ref. 52). In particular, this negative cross-talk could be relevant for tumor inhibitory actions of retinoids. Several lines of evidence suggested that constitutive activation of NFkappa B contributes to the malignant phenotype of tumor cells. A naturally occurring splice variant of RelA was shown to transform Rat-1 cells (53), whereas antisense oligonucleotides to RelA were shown to inhibit proliferation and tumorigenicity of several tumor cell lines, including the human breast cancer cell lines MCF7 and T47D (54). In addition, activation of NFkappa B through the disruption of Ikappa Balpha regulation was shown to result in malignant transformation (55).

In conclusion, we have shown that retinoid receptors form a transcriptionally inhibitory complex with NFkappa B. With the NFkappa B transactivation, in particular, this retinoid-mediated inhibitory action appeared to involve inhibition of the NFkappa B-DNA interactions as well as competitive recruitment of transcription integrators between NFkappa B and RXR. This transrepression between NFkappa B and retinoid receptors could play an important role in a large variety of biological processes.

    ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

We thank Drs. Stanley Wolf and Yong Kyung Choe for reagents.

    FOOTNOTES

* This work was supported in part by grants from the Korea Science and Engineering Foundation (HRC) and from the Korean Research Foundation (to T. S. K. and S.-Y. I.).The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.

Recipient of an intern fellowship from the Korean Ministry of Science and Technology.

¶¶ Supported by the National Creative Research Initiative from the Korean Ministry of Science and Technology.

|| To whom correspondence should be addressed. Tel.: 82-62-530-2935; Fax: 82-62-530-2949; E-mail: taekim{at}chonnam.chonnam.ac.kr.

    ABBREVIATIONS

The abbreviations used are: IL, interleukin; Th1, T helper type 1; LPS, lipopolysaccharide; RAR, retinoic acid receptor; RXR, retinoid X receptor; mAb, monoclonal antibody; 9-cis-RA, 9-cis-retinoic acid; TTNPB, (E)-4-[2-(5,6,7,8-tetrahydro-5,5,8,8-tetramethyl-2-naphthylenyl)-1-propenyl]benzoic acid; PCR, polymerase chain reaction; GST, glutathione S-transferase; FBS, fetal bovine serum; DMEM, Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium; CBP, CREB-binding protein; GR, glucocorticoid receptor; LBD, ligand-binding domain.

    REFERENCES
TOP
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
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