From the Departments of Pathology and Immunology and
the § Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Washington
University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri 63110
Received for publication, January 22, 2001
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ABSTRACT |
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Pulmonary surfactant protein D (SP-D), a lung
host defense protein, is assembled as multimers of trimeric subunits.
Trimerization of SP-D monomers is required for high affinity saccharide
binding, and the oligomerization of trimers is required for many of its functions. A peptide containing the Pulmonary SP-D,1 like
other members of the collectin subfamily of C-type lectins, is believed
to play important roles in the innate defense against a variety of
respiratory pathogens (1-3). In addition, recent in vivo
studies strongly suggest that SP-D plays important roles in immune and
inflammatory regulation within the lung and in the regulation of
surfactant homeostasis (4-7).
Most collectins, including SP-D, are assembled as multimers of trimeric
subunits (8, 9). SP-D is predominantly assembled as a dodecamer
consisting of four subunits cross-linked by disulfide bonds. Each SP-D
subunit consists of four major domains: an amino-terminal cross-linking
domain, an uninterrupted triple helical collagen domain, a trimeric
coiled-coil or neck domain (N), and a mannose subtype, C-type lectin
carbohydrate recognition domain (CRD).
Trimerization of SP-D monomers (43 kDa, reduced) is a prerequisite for
high affinity saccharide binding, and the oligomerization of trimeric
subunits is required for many of its known biological activities (10).
A trimeric CRD constitutes a high affinity saccharide-binding site, and
multimers of trimeric subunits are required to mediate bridging
interactions between multivalent particulate ligands, such as bacteria
and viral particles. A mutant form of SP-D that cannot form
amino-terminal disulfide cross-links (RrSP-Dser15,20) is secreted as
trimeric subunits and binds to known saccharide ligands but lacks the
ability to aggregate viral particles or other particulate ligands (11,
12).
SP-D is synthesized and secreted by type II pneumocytes and nonciliated
bronchiolar cells in vivo. However, the ability of isolated
epithelial cells to synthesize and secrete SP-D is rapidly lost during
cell culture. We have, therefore, utilized CHO-K1 cells transfected
with SP-D cDNAs as a model system for studying the assembly and
constitutive secretion of SP-D (11, 13). Biosynthetic studies have
shown that the rate of secretion of wild-type SP-D by CHO-K1 cells is
comparable with that observed for freshly isolated rat type II cells
(13). Furthermore, recombinant wild-type SP-Ds are not distinguishable
from the natural protein by a wide variety of biochemical and
biological criteria (11, 12, 14, 15). In particular, recombinant rat
and human SP-Ds synthesized in the presence of ascorbic acid are
secreted as disulfide-cross-linked dodecamers with normally
hydroxylated and glycosylated, pepsin-resistant, triple helical
collagen domains. These molecules are able to participate in
CRD-dependent interactions with microorganisms and
phagocytic cells.
Subcellular fractionation and pulse-chase experiments using this model
demonstrated that the newly synthesized chains of wild-type recombinant
rat SP-D rapidly associate within the cell to form disulfide-cross-linked trimers with lectin activity (13). These trimeric subunits subsequently undergo a much slower process of subunit
oligomerization with disulfide rearrangement leading to the formation
of disulfide-cross-linked dodecamers. Assembly of dodecamers occurs
within the rough endoplasmic reticulum, with rapid transit through the
Golgi immediately prior to secretion. Thus, trimerization is a rapid
event that appears necessary for the subsequent formation of
disulfide-cross-linked dodecamers.
Other studies have shown that a 35-amino acid polypeptide corresponding
to the sequence immediately carboxyl-terminal to the collagen domain of
human SP-D is sufficient for the stable but reversible association of
the peptides to form trimeric complexes in vitro (16).
This sequence, which lacks cysteine, predicts an Recently, the crystal structure of the neck + CRD domains of human SP-D
was solved (22). The neck region of SP-D is assembled as a trimeric
coiled-coil, like that of the homologous serum mannose-binding lectin
(MBL) (23, 24). The neck region of hSP-D contains approximately eight
Together these observations provide strong circumstantial
evidence that the coiled-coil conformation of the neck domain is sufficient for trimerization of the neck + CRD domains and suggest a
particularly crucial role for the carboxyl-terminal repeat in driving
trimeric assembly of SP-D monomers. However, it is not known whether
these sequences are necessary for the complete intracellular assembly
of disulfide-cross-linked trimeric subunits. In these studies, we
examined the assembly of rSP-D in CHO-K1 transfected with selected neck
domain mutants. In particular, we tested the hypothesis that the
C-terminal heptad repeat of the neck domain plays a critical role in
the assembly of trimeric subunits. We also examined the assembly of a
chimeric protein consisting of the amino-terminal propeptide domain of
type IIA procollagen (25) linked to the neck and CRD domains of SP-D to
determine whether the carboxyl-terminal domains are sufficient to
mediate trimerization of a heterologous amino-terminal,
collagen-containing sequence.
Site-directed Mutagenesis of rSP-D--
Site-directed
mutagenesis was performed by the PCR overlap extension method using a
full-length rat SP-D cDNA (11, 13). Briefly, forward and reverse
primers containing the desired substitutions or splice junctions were
synthesized (Washington University School of Medicine, Oligonucleotide
Synthesis Center) (see Fig. 1 and Table
I). PCRs were performed using ~200 ng
of ScaI-linearized rSP-D/pGEM-3Z template in reaction buffer
containing 2 mM MgCl2, 2 mM DTT,
and 5 units of Pwo DNA polymerase (Roche Molecular
Biochemicals). Separate reactions containing the required primer pairs
(Table I, PCR1 and PCR2) were performed for ~25 cycles at an
annealing temperature of 52 °C. The products were then gel-purified,
and the final reaction with the outside primers (Table I, PCR3) was performed for 30 cycles at an annealing temperature of 55 °C. The
resulting DNA was purified using QIAquick Gel Extraction Kit (Qiagen),
digested with EcoRI, and subcloned into pGEM-3Z. Clones were
sequenced to verify the presence of the desired mutations and the
absence of any additional mutations.
A chimeric cDNA encoding the entirety of the human type IIA
procollagen amino-terminal peptide and the neck and CRD domains of rat
SP-D was constructed by overlap extension (Table I). cDNA encoding
full-length IIA aminopropeptide (exons 1-8) of human type IIA
procollagen was amplified by reverse transcription-PCR from RNA
isolated from normal adult articular chondrocytes grown in culture.
Specific upstream and downstream primers
(5'-TAAGGATCCGCGGTGAGCCATGATTCGCCTCGGG GCTCCCCAGTC -3';
5'-CCGTCTAGACTACATTGGTCCTTGCATTACTCCCAACTGG-3') were designed using the
human pro- Expression of Rat SP-D cDNA Mutants in CHO-K1--
Mutated
rSP-D cDNAs and chimeric sequences were excised from pGEM-3Z with
EcoRI and subcloned into the corresponding site within the
multiple cloning site of pEE14 (14). Restriction mapping and/or DNA
sequencing were used to determine the orientation of the subclones.
Transfection of pEE14 constructs into CHO-K1 cells and selection of
stably expressing cell lines was performed as previously described
(14). To collect secreted recombinant proteins for isolation and
structural analysis, 50 confluent 100-mm plates were incubated for
24 h in serum-free Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium
supplemented with 50 µg/ml fresh ascorbic acid. Conditioned medium
containing secreted recombinant proteins was collected, and any
insoluble material cellular was removed by centrifugation for 20 min at
10,000 × g at 4 °C. Phenylmethanesulfonyl fluoride
was added to a final concentration of 0.1 mM. Proteins were
identified by direct enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and characterized by immunoblotting using a polyclonal antibody to rat SP-D
(26).
Transient Transfection Assays--
CHO-K1 cells were transferred
to six-well plates at 0.5 × 106 cells/well in
Glascow's minimum essential medium and allowed to grow to ~50%
confluence. The cells were then transfected with 3 µg of purified DNA
in Glascow's minimum essential medium in the presence of 10 µl of
LipofectAMINE (Life Technologies, Inc.) and in the absence of serum,
antibiotics, or phenol red. Incubations were performed for 24 h.
The cells were washed twice with Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium
and then incubated for 16-24 h in the presence of fresh ascorbic acid
(50 µg/ml). The medium was collected and clarified by brief
centrifugation, and phenylmethanesulfonyl fluoride was added to a final
concentration of 0.1 mM. For some experiments
characterizing the mutants, 10 mM iodoacetamide was also
added to prevent disulfide bond formation between unpaired sulfhydryls
present in the incompletely oligomerized proteins. For immunoblotting,
35 µl out of a total volume of 1 ml was resolved on a 0.75-mm
minigel. To examine intracellular proteins by immunoblotting, cells
from each well were harvested directly into 500 µl of SDS-PAGE sample
buffer and immediately boiled to inactivate proteases. Samples were
briefly stored at Metabolic Labeling of Transfected Cells--
Nearly confluent
cell cultures were briefly washed in fresh serum-free Dulbecco's
modified Eagle's medium and then incubated for 16 h in
Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium containing 1% (v/v) dialyzed
fetal calf serum, 50 µg/ml ascorbic acid, and 5 µCi/ml L-[14C]proline (283 mCi/mmol; PerkinElmer
Life Sciences). The medium was harvested as described under
"Transient Transfection Assays," and secreted recombinant protein
was isolated from the culture medium by gel filtration chromatography.
Liquid scintillation counting was used to monitor the elution of
radiolabeled proteins. Aliquots of the fractions were examined by
SDS-PAGE and autoradiography.
Maltosyl-Agarose Chromatography--
Secreted recombinant
proteins containing the SP-D CRD were isolated from the culture
medium using maltosyl-agarose affinity chromatography as previously
described. The medium was dialyzed extensively against 0.15 M NaCl, 50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.5 (TBS), containing 10 mM EDTA, recalcified immediately before
chromatography, and applied to a column of maltosyl-agarose
equilibrated with TBS containing 20 mM CaCl2.
Bound proteins were resolved by SDS-PAGE and visualized by silver
staining, immunoblotting, or autoradiography as appropriate.
Gel Filtration under Nondenaturing Conditions--
Proteins were
concentrated by maltosyl-agarose chromatography and subsequently
characterized by gel filtration chromatography under nondenaturing
conditions on A15m (27). For some experiments characterizing
incompletely oligomerized proteins, an A5m column was used. The gel
filtration columns were calibrated with blue dextran, purified rat SP-D
dodecamers, thyroglobulin, rat SP-D trimeric subunits (RrSP-Dser15,20),
bovine serum albumin, and lysozyme. The state of oligomerization of
SP-D dodecamers and trimeric subunits was originally established by
ultrastructural and biochemical analysis of natural and recombinant
SP-D proteins resolved under identical conditions (27). Eluted proteins
were resolved by SDS-PAGE and visualized by silver staining or
autoradiography as required. Yields were calculated based on the
recovery of purified protein. Proteins were quantified using a
dye-binding assay with bovine serum albumin as a standard.
Purification of IIA Aminopropeptide--
Approximately 100 µg
of IIA/SPD fusion protein was digested overnight at 37 °C with
recombinant human matrix metalloproteinase 9 (MMP-9; a gift from Dr. R. Senior, Department of Internal Medicine, Washington University, St.
Louis) at an enzyme/substrate ratio of 1:100. MMP-9 cleaves within exon
8 of the IIA propeptide on either side of Gln182 and
Met199 (see Fig.
8).2 The IIA propeptide was
separated from the neck + CRD fragments by maltosyl-agarose chromatography.
Immunoblotting--
Immunoblotting of the SP-D mutants was
performed using rabbit anti-rat SP-D and an indirect, biotinylated
secondary antibody/streptavidin-peroxidase detection system (27).
Immunoblotting of collagenase digests of rat SP-D has shown that the
anti-rat polyclonal antibody preferentially binds to the
carboxyl-terminal domain. The IIA domain was detected using rabbit
anti-human type IIA procollagen, which recognizes the cysteine-rich
domain encoded by exon 2 of the type II aminopropeptide (42). Bound
antibodies were detected using a goat anti-rabbit IgG-horseradish
peroxidase secondary antibody and SuperSignal® chemiluminescent
substrate (Pierce).
Chemical Cross-linking of IIA Propeptide and IIA/SP-D
Chimera--
Covalent cross-linking was performed using
bis-(sulfosuccinimidyl)suberate (Pierce). Briefly, increasing amounts
of bis-(sulfosuccinimidyl)suberate (0, 1, 5, 10, and 20 mM final concentration) were added to IIA propeptide (0.1 µg), IIA/SPD fusion protein (1 µg), or the IIA propeptide secreted
by HEK 293 cells stably transfected with a cDNA encoding the IIA
propeptide sequence. Reactions were performed for 1 h at room
temperature and terminated by the addition of SDS-PAGE loading buffer
containing Tris-HCl (0.5 M). Samples were boiled for 5 min
prior to SDS-PAGE in the absence of sulfhydryl reduction. Silver
staining or immunoblotting was used to identify the cross-linked proteins.
For these studies, we examined the assembly of recombinant mutant
RrSP-D proteins containing deletions or substitutions within the neck
domain. In particular, we compared the structure of wild type and
mutant SP-D by CHO-K1 cells transiently or stably transfected with the
wild type and mutant cDNAs. A mammalian expression system is
essential for such studies. Prokaryotic and insect cells do not support
normal post-translational modification and folding of the collagen
domain. In order to simplify the analysis, we utilized rat SP-D
cDNAs because the secreted protein is almost exclusively assembled
as dodecamers (14). By contrast, the human SP-D cDNA is secreted as
a mixture of dodecamers, higher order oligomers, and trimeric species
(15).
As shown in Fig. 1, the primary sequence
of the neck domain is very highly conserved among all known SP-D
proteins. There is nearly complete conservation of residues predicted
to contribute to the formation of a stable -helical neck region can spontaneously trimerize in vitro. However, it is not known
whether this sequence is necessary for the complete cellular assembly of disulfide-cross-linked, trimeric subunits and dodecamers. For the
present studies, we synthesized mutant cDNAs with deletions or
site-directed substitutions in the neck domain of rat SP-D, and
examined the assembly of the newly synthesized proteins after transfection of CHO-K1 cells. The neck domain contains three
"classical" heptad repeat motifs with leucine residues at the
"d position," and a distinctive C-terminal repeat
previously suggested to drive trimeric chain association. Deletion
of the highly conserved core of the latter repeat (FSRYLKK) did not
interfere with the secretion of dodecamers with lectin
activity. By contrast, deletion of the entire neck domain or deletion
of one or two amino-terminal repeats resulted in defective molecular
assembly. The secreted proteins eluted in the position of monomers by
gel filtration under nondenaturing conditions. In addition, the neck + carbohydrate recognition domain of SP-D was necessary and
sufficient for the trimerization of a heterologous collagen sequence
located amino-terminal to the trimeric coiled-coil. These studies
provide strong evidence that the amino-terminal heptad repeats of the
neck domain are necessary for the intracellular, trimeric association
of SP-D monomers and for the assembly and secretion of functional dodecamers.
INTRODUCTION
TOP
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES
-helical
coiled-coil containing four uninterrupted heptad repeats with
hydrophobic residues in a 3-4-3-4 spacing. When cDNAs encoding the
contiguous neck + CRD domains are expressed in bacteria as glutathione
S-transferase fusion proteins, the recombinant proteins are
isolated as trimeric CRDs (17, 18). Such fusion proteins show lectin
activity and demonstrate some of the CRD-dependent activities of the intact protein, including chemotactic activity (19)
and certain antimicrobial activities in vitro (20) and in vivo (21).
-helical turns prior to helix termination at Pro235 (see
Fig. 1). Residues Val204, Leu207,
Val211, Leu214, Val218,
Leu221, Phe225, and Tyr228 of hSP-D
are buried within the coiled-coil at the a and d
positions of the repeats. Of particular interest is the
carboxyl-terminal repeat, which contains aromatic side chains in two
consecutive core positions (Phe225 at the a
position and Tyr228 at the d position). For
several reasons, the authors suggested that the aromatic residues,
particularly the aromatic ring of the buried tyrosine, are instrumental
in driving the oligomerization of the coiled-coil to an exclusively
trimeric assembly (22).
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
TOP
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES
1 type II collagen gene sequence (L10347).
20 °C pending SDS-PAGE and immunoblotting.
RESULTS
TOP
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES
-helical coiled-coil,
including the distinctive aromatic residues (Phe225 and
Tyr228) of the C-terminal heptad repeat. Deletion analysis
was first used to examine the functional role of the neck as well as
the contributions of specific sequences within the neck domain.
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Fig. 1.
The schematic diagram at the top
of the figure illustrates the relative size and position of key
domains of SP-D. These include the amino-terminal cross-linking
domain (N), collagen domain, linking or neck domain
(L), and CRD. Each molecule of rat SP-D consists of four,
homotrimeric subunits. The positions of intrachain bonds within the CRD
are illustrated. The neck regions of several collectins are aligned,
and the positions of key residues in the four heptad repeats are
identified. Note the complete conservation of hydrophobic residues in
the d position. The bottom identifies regions
deleted or mutated in the various rat SP-D constructs.
Deletion of the Neck Domain Results in the Secretion of Monomers That Do Not Bind to Maltosyl-agarose-- We initially examined the importance of the neck domain for SP-D secretion and assembly by stably expressing a deletion mutant extending from the C-terminal end of the collagen domain through Lys230 (RrSP-Dd203-230). This site of termination corresponds to the last residue encoded by exon 7 of the human gene (28) and position f of the C-terminal heptad repeat of the neck domain.
Both transient and stable transfections gave recoveries of medium
protein comparable with that obtained for parallel transfections using
the wild-type rSP-D cDNA (data not shown; see also Fig. 6).
Analysis of the secreted protein by SDS-PAGE and immunoblotting showed
a major band migrating near the position of wild-type monomers in the
absence of sulfhydryl reduction (Fig. 2,
lane 2). Disulfide-cross-linked trimers that characterize
secreted wild-type dodecamers were not seen; however, less intense
bands with the expected mobility of dimers were observed (Fig. 2,
lane 2, arrow D). When examined by SDS-PAGE in
the presence of dithiothreitol, a single component was observed; this
species migrated slightly more slowly than the unreduced protein (not
shown, but see below). In subsequent experiments, we found that the
proportion of the cross-linked components was reduced by the addition
of iodoacetamide to the culture medium prior to SDS-PAGE (data not
shown). Because untrimerized, mutant monomers must contain free
sulfhydryls in their amino-terminal domains, cross-linking probably
occurs when the protein is concentrated in the stacking gel.
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In order to assess the lectin activity of the protein, conditioned
medium was applied to maltosyl-agarose. Secreted wild-type SP-D or
trimeric subunits of SP-D (e.g. RrSP-Dser15,20) bind tightly and are recovered following elution with EDTA or competing sugar. However, in preliminary experiments, essentially no protein was recovered in the EDTA-eluate, and the assessment of the unbound fractions was complicated by the presence of serum proteins. We therefore monitored the elution of the protein by immunoassay. As shown
in Fig. 3, essentially all of the
immunoreactive RrSP-Dd203-230 was unbound and recovered in the
wash.
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Because monomers do not bind efficiently to
maltosyl-agarose, our data suggested the absence of trimeric
subunits, rather than the production of trimers lacking disulfide
cross-links in their amino-terminal domains. To examine the extent of
noncovalent oligomerization, we performed gel filtration chromatography
under nondenaturing conditions on A15m- or A5m-agarose. For these
studies, we directly applied metabolically labeled proteins in dialyzed conditioned medium to the column. This approach was used to circumvent the need to concentrate the medium and to preclude interference by
serum proteins expected to elute near the recombinant protein. As
predicted, radiolabeled RrSP-Dd203-230 eluted late and within the
included volume, after the position of elution of authentic trimeric
subunits and slightly earlier than bovine serum albumin (68 kDa) (Fig.
4A). Although the theoretical
molecular mass of monomers is ~40 kDa, even non-triple helical
collagenous sequences assume a more extended conformation in solution
and have a higher hydrodynamic radius than globular proteins of
comparable mass. However, given the absence of corresponding dimeric
standards, the elution profile alone does not allow us to definitely
distinguish between monomers or dimers. As indicated above, these
preparations also contained a small fraction of disulfide-cross-linked
dimers (Fig. 4A, fractions 62-66). These species
were resolved from the monomer peak and eluted between authentic
trimers and BSA. Comparable results were obtained using less porous A5m
gel beads (data not shown). Thus, the data are most consistent with a
predominance of monomers that lack the ability to bind to
maltosyl-agarose.
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As suggested by SDS-PAGE of the fractions that bound to maltosyl-agarose, purified monomers migrated more slowly in the presence of dithiothreitol, consistent with the presence of intrachain disulfide bonds within the CRD (Fig. 4B). Interestingly, the reduced protein did not migrate more rapidly than the wild-type protein. Given that the sequence of protein was reconfirmed by cDNA sequencing, we suspect that this in part reflects overhydroxylation and/or glycosylation of the unfolded collagen domains. It is well established that mutations in matrix collagens that interfere with helix formation are associated with overhydroxylation of hydroxyproline and hydroxylysine residues and a decreased mobility on SDS-PAGE (29). However, differences in SDS binding could also play a role.
Deletion of the C-terminal Heptad Repeat Does Not Alter the
Assembly of Trimeric Subunits or Dodecamers--
Given the importance
of the neck domain for trimeric assembly, we initially focused our
attention on the distinctive C-terminal heptad repeat. As indicated in
the Introduction, Hakansson et al. (22) previously suggested
that this region, and the conserved aromatic residues in particular,
are critical for trimerization. We therefore expressed a more limited
deletion (RrSP-Dd225-230) containing the carboxyl-terminal heptad
repeat. As for the full neck deletion, stably or transiently
transfected cells efficiently secreted the mutant. However, in contrast
with RrSP-Dd203-230, RrSP-Dd225-230 bound efficiently to
maltosyl-agarose, migrated near the position of RrSP-D trimers in the
absence of reduction (Fig.
5A), and eluted from A15m gel
filtration columns in the position of wild-type dodecamers (Fig.
5B). Substitutions of serine for Phe225 and/or
Tyr228 (RrSP-Dser225, RrSP-Dser228, RrSP-Dser225,228) gave
identical results (data not shown). Thus, this heptad repeat is not
critical for stable oligomerization or trimeric assembly. In addition, the findings are consistent with the previously cited published data
indicating that sequences amino-terminal to the CRD are not required
for the acquisition of C-type lectin activity.
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Transient transfection assays indicated that the protein was expressed
at levels comparable with wild type (e.g. see Fig. 6, compare lanes 1 and 2, below). However, recoveries following saccharide
affinity chromatography and gel filtration chromatography were
sometimes lower than for the wild-type protein or other mutants. In
addition, we often observed the appearance of bands and immunoreactive components of lower apparent molecular mass on SDS-PAGE following maltosyl-agarose chromatography (Figs. 5A and
5B). Thus, the mutation may render the protein more
susceptible to proteolytic degradation under our usual conditions of
protein isolation; however, additional studies are required.
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The Amino-terminal Heptad Repeats of the Neck Domain Are Required for the Formation of Trimeric Subunits and Dodecamers-- Given the unexpected findings for RrSP-Dd225-230, we next focused our attention on the first three heptad repeats and generated constructs with deletions involving the first and second (RrSP-Dd207-214) and second and third (RrSP-Dd214-221) repeats. The deletion of residues 214-221 almost totally eliminated predicted coil-coil structure using the Coils software on the ISREC server when analyzed with the minimum window of 14 residues, and the deletion of residues 207-214 showed a major, but less marked, decrease in predicted coiled-coil formation.
Both constructs were initially examined in transient transfection assays. The cells were transfected with identical amounts of cDNA, and identical amounts of conditioned medium were analyzed by immunoblotting. As shown in Fig. 6, the accumulation of RrSP-Sd207-214 and RrSP-Dd214-221 was comparable with wild-type RrSP-D, consistent with similar rates of secretion, and comparable amounts of immunoreactive protein were also observed in the cell lysates (data not shown). When the two mutants were examined by SDS-PAGE in the absence of sulfhydryl reduction followed by immunoblotting, both showed a predominance of monomers, with only minor bands migrating in the positions of disulfide-cross-linked dimers (Fig. 6, lanes 7 and 8). Comparable results were obtained for a construct with a deletion involving the first three repeats (RrSP-Dd207-221) (data not shown). By contrast, parallel transient transfections with wild-type RrSP-D gave the expected disulfide-cross-linked trimers (Fig. 6, lane 6).
To further confirm the state of multimerization of these proteins,
clones stably expressing one of these deletion mutants, RrSP-Dd207-214, were isolated. Although the protein could be
visualized by silver staining, immunoblotting was again used to limit
the confounding effects of contaminating serum proteins. As for the full neck deletion, the secreted protein did not bind to
maltosyl-agarose (Fig. 7A) and
eluted from A15m after trimers (Fig. 7B), near the position
of RrSP-Dd203-230.
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Production of a Chimeric Protein Containing a Heterologous Collagen Domain-- The amino-terminal propeptide domains of the interstitial collagens contain a short, triple helical collagen domain (30). Folding of this helical domain is believed to require the prior folding of the major collagen helix, which in turn depends on the noncollagenous, carboxyl-terminal propeptide domains for the correct alignment of chains and subsequent helix formation (29, 31, 32). Once formed, the triple helix of the propeptide is likely to be stable, given that trimeric, amino-terminal type I and type II propeptides have been isolated from developing bone (34, 35). Consistent with this generalization, the amino-terminal propeptide of type IIA procollagen contains a short, interrupted, triple-helical collagen domain encoded by exons 3-7 (30), and recombinant IIA propeptides expressed in bacterial or eukaryotic systems in the absence of the major collagen helix and carboxyl-terminal propeptide are recovered as monomers or dimers.3
The deletion analysis of the neck domain of SP-D indicates that more
than two complete heptad repeats are necessary for the formation of
trimeric subunits and dodecamer assembly. However, as indicated under
"Discussion," the mechanism of trimeric association is quite varied
among collagenous proteins. In order to determine whether the
carboxyl-terminal domains of SP-D are sufficient for trimerization of
an amino-terminal, collagen-containing sequence, we constructed a
chimera consisting of the amino-terminal propeptide of type IIA
procollagen and the neck + CRD domain of SP-D utilizing the normal exon
boundaries (Fig. 8).
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The chimeric protein was efficiently secreted by transiently or stably transfected cells and was readily isolated from the culture medium of stably transfected cells by saccharide affinity chromatography (data not shown). When examined by SDS-PAGE, the chimera migrated at a position appropriate for its predicted molecular mass (~45 kDa, unreduced). In the presence of sulfhydryl reduction, the protein showed a decrease in mobility consistent with the presence of intrachain disulfide bonds in the CRD and exon 2 of the IIA propeptide. In addition, immunoblotting demonstrated reactivity with antibodies to exon 2 of the propeptide, and with antibody to rat SP-D (see below).
The SP-D Neck Domain Is Sufficient for Trimerization of a
Heterologous Collagenous Peptide--
When chromatographed on A15m,
the intact chimera eluted slightly later than trimeric standards,
consistent with a trimeric assembly (data not shown). However, to
determine whether the IIA propeptide domain is itself trimerized in the
secreted chimera, we digested the intact protein with MMP-9 in
order to separate the IIA propeptide from the SP-D neck + CRD domains
(see Fig. 8). MMP-9 cleavage sites within the telopeptide domain of the IIA propeptide have been recently
established,4 and our
previous studies have shown that RrSP-D is not a substrate for this
protease (11). Following incubation with MMP-9, the digest was applied
to maltosyl-agarose. As expected, fragments immunoreactive with
anti-rSP-D bound to the column (Fig. 9,
compare lanes 2, 4, and 5), whereas
fragments reactive with anti-IIA were recovered in the wash (Fig. 9,
lanes 1 and 3). Amino-terminal sequencing of the
two bound fragments demonstrated cleavage immediately carboxyl-terminal
to the collagen sequence of IIA and immediately amino-terminal to the
neck domain of SP-D (Fig. 8), at Gln182 and
Met199, as numbered from the first residue of the IIA
propeptide.
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Chemical cross-linking of the isolated IIA fraction showed the
generation of covalent dimers and trimers on SDS-PAGE (Fig. 10). The
concentration-dependent appearance of trimers (arrow T), through a dimeric intermediate, indicates cross-linking of the subunits
of a noncovalent homotrimer. The identity of the major species shown
was further confirmed by immunoblotting. As expected, the intact
chimera was assembled as a trimer, whereas a human recombinant IIA
propeptide did not show evidence of dimers or trimers at these
concentrations of cross-linking agent (data not shown). A more detailed
structural characterization of the propeptide is in progress. However,
preliminary CD analysis of the chimera, with or without prior bacterial
collagenase digestion, demonstrated a spectral profile indicative of a
collagen triple helix.5
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These studies provide the first direct evidence that specific subsequences within the neck domain are required for the trimerization of SP-D monomers and their subsequent intracellular oligomerization to form disulfide-cross-linked dodecamers. Trimeric assembly was blocked by deletion of the neck domain sequences and almost totally abrogated by more limited deletions confined to the amino-terminal heptad repeats. A 7-amino acid deletion involving two consecutive repeats interfered with the formation of disulfide-cross-linked trimers, and the secreted species consisted of monomers that lack the ability to bind to maltosyl-agarose.
As indicated in the Introduction, Hakansson et al. (22) suggested that the aromatic residues in the carboxyl-terminal repeat, in particular the aromatic ring of Tyr228, are required to drive oligomerization to a trimeric assembly. This suggestion was in part based on the reported effects of exogenous benzene on the oligomerization of an engineered GCN4 leucine zipper protein. Nevertheless, deletion of the core of this repeat or more limited substitutions of serine for Phe225 and/or Tyr228 did not interfere with assembly of trimers, oligomerization to form dodecamers, or the ability to bind to maltosyl-agarose. Experiments designed to further assess the functional activity of the mutant and the role of this highly conserved sequence are in progress.
Given the predicted marked perturbation in protein structure, we anticipated that proteins with neck deletions might not be secreted. Nevertheless, the mutants were efficiently secreted into the medium (Fig. 6), and immunoblots showed comparable signals for SP-D in lysates of wild-type cells and those transfected with the neck deletion constructs (data not shown). It is unlikely that the cells are generally defective in their capacity to retain or degrade abnormal proteins. Our previous studies have shown that the substitution of serine for Cys15 or for Cys20 results in cellular retention and the absence of detectable protein in the culture medium (13). In addition, the prevention of collagen hydroxylation with 2,2'-dipyridyl inhibits the assembly and secretion of RrSP-D by the CHO-K1 cells, as observed for the secretion of natural SP-D by freshly isolated type II cells.
The failure of the full neck (RrSP-Ddel203-230) and amino-terminal
neck deletion (RrSP-Ddel207-214) mutants to efficiently bind to
maltosyl-agarose could theoretically reflect a loss of lectin activity
secondary to subtle perturbations in CRD structure but more likely
reflects differences in CRD valency. Both preparations contained a
small subpopulation of dimeric molecules that bound to
maltosyl-agarose. Furthermore, protease digestion studies of cell-free
translated C-type lectins have shown that the CRD domains are
self-folding modules and that the exon boundary coincides with the
amino-terminal extent of the functional CRD (36). Last, monomeric forms
of wild-type C-type lectins show a markedly reduced ability to interact
with their ligands. For example, the Kd for the
interaction of a single C-type CRD with a monosaccharide ligand is on
the order of 103 M, whereas the
binding of collectin trimers and dodecamers to polyvalent ligands is on
the order of 10
8 to
10
11 M, respectively (8).
Most but not all collagenous sequences, including the interstitial fibrillar collagens and type IV collagen, require additional, globular sequences C-terminal to the triple helical domain to mediate chain association (29, 31, 32, 37). By contrast, the trimeric assembly of type XII collagen is dependent on the collagen domain (38), and chain association for XIII collagen, a membrane-associated collagen, occurs amino-terminal to the collagen domain (39). It is likely that members of the macrophage scavenger receptor family also undergo chain association in their amino-terminal coiled-coil domains (40). Previous studies have shown that deletion of the entire collagen domain of rat SP-D results in the secretion of trimers cross-linked at their amino termini (41); however, the contributions of the amino- and carboxyl-terminal domains were not directly examined. Furthermore, the neck + CRD domains of RrSP-D isolated following digestion with bacterial collagenase (i.e. lacking both the collagen and amino-terminal domains) consisted of monomers rather than stable trimers (41).
In order to determine whether the SP-D carboxyl-terminal domain is sufficient for trimerization of a collagen sequence, we utilized a chimera consisting of the amino-terminal propeptide domain of type II procollagen and the neck + CRD domains of SP-D. This unconventional approach was chosen for several reasons. First, the major SP-D epitopes are located within the CRD, and we have no antibodies reactive with the relatively nonimmunogenic, amino-terminal peptide or collagen domains of rat SP-D. Second, a cDNA encoding the human type IIA propeptide sequence and antibodies reactive with the exon 2 sequence of the IIA propeptide are currently available (42, 43). Third, preservation the SP-D CRD provides a means for rapidly purifying the chimera by saccharide affinity chromatography. Fourth, preliminary studies showed that the isolated IIA propeptide does not spontaneously trimerize in HEK 292 cells, although these cells can support the secretion of triple helical collagens (44). Last, the propeptide contains at least one site for MMP-9 cleavage carboxyl-terminal to the IIA collagen domain (Fig. 6).6 Notably, fusion of the IIA propeptide to the SP-D "trimerization domain" allowed the formation of propeptide trimers.
The mechanisms by which the carboxyl-terminal domains of other collagenous proteins promote the trimerization of collagen domains are poorly understood. Although coiled-coils contribute to the trimerization of several different classes of proteins (45), they may also contribute to the trimerization of several different classes of collagenous proteins including the collagenous C-type lectins and macrophage scavenger receptors (40). The neck domain of bovine conglutinin, which is evolutionarily derived from SP-D, can trimerize in vitro (46), and a similar trimeric coiled-coil is present in the mannose-binding lectin (24). In addition, deletions that include the neck region of SP-A prevent the normal oligomerization and secretion of recombinant SP-A by COS-7 cells (47).
The current studies show that more than two heptad repeats are required
for the formation of a stable trimeric SP-D subunit, consistent with
the observation that most stable coiled-coils contain four or more
repeats. However, given that RrSP-Ddel225-230 forms cross-linked
multimers of trimeric subunits, the mechanism that determines trimeric
versus dimeric assembly remains uncertain. Frank et
al. (40) recently suggested that proteins containing dimeric or
trimeric coiled-coils contain specific "trigger sequences" that
facilitate chain association. For example, a consensus
(I/V/L)N(D/E)IN(R/K)N or
(I/V/L)(D/E)XIX(R/K)N was identified in
the macrophage scavenger receptor and certain other proteins with
trimeric coiled-coils. However, such a sequence is not present in the
neck region of SP-D. Earlier studies by Harbury emphasized the
potential importance of -branched side chains at the a
position in the formation or stabilization of trimeric coiled-coils
(48, 49). Given the frequent occurrence of valine in the a
and d positions of the human neck domain, Hoppe et
al. (16) suggested that this might drive trimerization. However,
as shown in Fig. 1, rat SP-D, unlike human SP-D, contains no branched
amino acids at these positions.
Together, the available data suggest that the primary role of the neck domain in molecular assembly is to align the collagen chains and thereby facilitate nucleation events suitable for the subsequent "zipper-like" folding of the collagen helix (50). In this regard, it was recently shown that triple helix of type III procollagen can fold when the carboxyl-terminal propeptide is replaced with a transmembrane domain (51). At least in the case of SP-D, the trimerization and collagen domains need not be contiguous, given that 30 amino acids separate these domains in the IIA/SP-D chimera. Because deletion of the neck domain of SP-D prevents the formation of trimeric subunits as well as the association of trimeric subunits to form functional dodecamers, we infer that defective folding of the collagen triple helix prevents the formation of intra- and intersubunit disulfide cross-links by limiting the interaction of the amino-terminal peptides. By contrast, in the complete absence of the collagen domain, trimerization of the neck domain is sufficient for the trimerization of the contiguous amino-terminal peptide domain but insufficient for the association of trimeric subunits to form stable dodecamers (41).
In summary, our studies provide strong evidence that the amino-terminal
heptad repeats of the coiled-coil domain of the neck region of SP-D are
necessary, and possibly sufficient, for the assembly of trimeric
subunits with triple helical collagen domains. Given the ability to
express IIA/SP-D chimeras, we will be able to efficiently isolate and
characterize mutant proteins lacking all or part of the lectin domain.
Such constructs should allow us to further define the minimal sequences
required for trimeric assembly. Knowledge of the structural
requirements for collectin oligomerization will assist with the
development of recombinant collectins with novel or enhanced functional
properties (33, 52).
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FOOTNOTES |
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* This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grants HL-29594 (to E. C.), HL-44015 (to E. C.), and AR-36994 (to L. S.).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.
¶ To whom correspondence should be addressed: Dept. of Pathology and Immunology, Barnes-Jewish Hospital, North, Surgical Pathology Mailstop #90-31-649, 216 S. Kingshighway Blvd., Rm. 2457, St. Louis, MO 63110. Tel.: 314-454-8462; Fax: 314-454-5505; E-mail: crouch@path.wustl.edu
Published, JBC Papers in Press, March 9, 2001, DOI 10.1074/jbc.M100597200
2 N. Fukui, A. McAlinden, and L. Sandell, unpublished observations.
3 A. McAlinden and L. Sandell, unpublished observations.
4 N. Fukui, A. McAlinden, and L. Sandell, unpublished data.
5 J. G. Bann, unpublished data.
6 N. Fukui, A. McAlinden, and L. Sandell, unpublished data.
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ABBREVIATIONS |
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The abbreviations used are: SP-D, surfactant protein D; CRD, carbohydrate recognition domain; MBL, mannose-binding lectin; rSP-D, recombinant SP-D; PCR, polymerase chain reaction; DTT, dithiothreitol; PAGE, polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis.
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