From the Department of Pharmacology, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98195
Received for publication, April 9, 2003
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ABSTRACT |
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INTRODUCTION |
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In addition to the JAK/STAT pathway, the SHP-2/Ras/MAPK (ERK1/2) (11), phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K)/Akt (12), and p38 MAPK (13) pathways are also stimulated by IL-6 family cytokines. SHP-2 serves as a LIF-sensitive adaptor molecule for recruitment of downstream signaling molecules via an SH2-mediated interaction with gp130 (14). SHP-2 is thought to couple the IL-6 family cytokines to the MAPK (ERK1/2) cascade (15). The SHP-2 binding site on gp130 is required for both IL-6-mediated ERK1/2 activation and induction of immediate early genes egr-1 and c-fos (16, 17). SHP-2 is also thought to couple IL-6 cytokines to the PI3K/Akt pathway (14, 18). The PI3K/Akt pathway was linked recently to LIF- or IL-6-mediated phosphorylation of Akt/protein kinase B and Bad (19, 20) and subsequent protection against apoptosis. The p38 MAPK has only recently been implicated in IL-6 family cytokine signaling (13, 21, 22). In addition to these pathways, members of the Src family kinases (SFKs) display increased catalytic activity following stimulation of cells with LIF, IL-6, or IL-11 (2325).
The SFKs are non-receptor tyrosine kinases and include eight murine members: Src, Yes, and Fyn, which are expressed ubiquitously, as well as Lyn, Fgr, Lck, Blk, and Hck, which display a more restricted expression (26). LIF-mediated self-renewal of ES cells is accompanied by both the activation of Hck and the recruitment of Hck to gp130. Furthermore, ES cells expressing a constitutively active form of Hck require 15-fold less LIF to maintain pluripotency compared with LIF-stimulated parental ES cells (24). In multiple myeloma (MM) cell lines, IL-6 stimulation increases the activity of Fyn, Hck, and Lyn (23). Recent functional studies in MM cell lines suggest that a novel region of gp130 is involved in both Hck and MAPK activation (27). In 3T3-L1 preadipocytes, IL-11 activates both Src and Yes (25). Although these results suggest a role for SFKs in IL-6 family cytokine signaling, there is no direct evidence that endogenous SFKs either are required for or modulate IL-6 family cytokine-mediated stimulation of signal transduction and subsequent gene induction. In this paper we test the role of endogenous SFKs in IL-6 family cytokine signaling.
Because of the ability of SFK family members to compensate for the loss of another SFK (28, 29), and because of the activation of multiple SFKs by IL-6 family cytokines, we used a system where SFKs are not expressed. SYF cells are a mutant cell line derived from src/yes/fyn triple knock-out mouse embryos and have also been shown to lack expression of Lyn (30). Because the expression of Hck, Lck, Fgr, and Blk is thought to be restricted to cells of hematopoietic lineage, SYF represent a cell line lacking all known murine SFKs (30). We used SYF cells to determine whether the lack of SFKs has an effect on LIF-mediated signaling pathways or LIF-mediated gene induction.
We show here that a loss of expression of all SFKs does not affect canonical LIF-mediated signal transduction pathways. STAT1 and STAT3 display similar cytokine-stimulated responses in SYF and a wild type (WT) control cell line. Activation of the MAPK cascade by LIF appears unchanged by the loss of SFKs. Both the PI3K-sensitive Akt kinase and p38 MAPK are phosphorylated following LIF-stimulation of either SYF or WT cells. In addition, LIF stimulates the expression of the LIF-sensitive genes c-fos, egr-1, and SOCS-3 in both SYF and WT cells. Furthermore, OSM-mediated activation of STAT3, STAT1, MAPK, p38, and Akt is also unaffected in SYF cells. These data demonstrate that LIF-mediated signal transduction and gene induction do not require expression of the SFK gene family.
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EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES |
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Cell CultureSYF and WT cells were maintained in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium plus 10% fetal bovine serum. Expression of Src was frequently assessed by Western blot analysis.
Western AnalysisCells were plated on 10-cm dishes,
serum-starved overnight, and stimulated the next day at 80% confluency
with varying concentrations of PDGF, LIF, OSM, or PBS (vehicle). Following
stimulation, medium was aspirated, and cells were rinsed three times in 4 ml
of ice-cold PBS. Cells were then lysed in 100 µl of 4x SDS sample
buffer, scraped, sonicated, cooled, boiled for 5 min, and centrifuged as
described previously (31).
Supernatants were removed, and
50 µg of total cellular proteins were
loaded onto SDS/10% PAGE. Electrophoresis, transfer, probing of membranes with
phosphotyrosine antibodies, visualization with enhanced chemiluminescence, and
stripping of blots were performed as described previously
(15,
31). All other blots were
blocked and probed using 5% non-fat milk in Tris-buffered saline/0.1% Tween.
Film was analyzed as described
(31) except that ratios of
phosphorylated to total protein are represented as either a percentage of the
corresponding PDGF-stimulated ratio or as a percentage of the maximal
LIF-stimulated ratio. Student's t test for independent samples was
used, and only samples with a p value <0.05 were considered
statistically significant.
ImmunoprecipitationCells were stimulated with 100 ng/ml LIF for various amounts of time or PBS (vehicle), rinsed three times in ice-cold PBS, and lysed in 1 ml of elution buffer (1% Triton X-100, 5 mM EDTA, 50 mM NaCl, 50 mM NaF, 2 mM NaOH, 2 mM Na3VO4, 1% aprotinin, 10 mM Tris, pH 7.4, 1 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride), solubilized on ice for 60 min, and centrifuged for 15 min at 4 °C. Supernatants were then immunoprecipitated overnight with 3 µl of anti-SHP-2 antibodies and 30 µl of protein G-agarose beads. After recovery by brief centrifugation, immunocomplexes were washed twice with elution buffer (without Triton-X), and beads were then resuspended in SDS sample buffer and boiled, and supernatants were loaded onto SDS/7% PAGE and analyzed as described above.
Preparation of Nuclear ExtractsFollowing stimulation with LIF or PBS (vehicle), nuclear lysates were obtained as described previously (32). Briefly, cells were rinsed, scraped, and pelleted by centrifugation at 3000 rpm in a tabletop variable-speed microfuge. Next, cells were re-suspended in 400 µl of Buffer A (10 mM HEPES, pH 7.9, 10 mM KCl, 0.1 mM EDTA, 1 mM dithiothreitol, 0.5 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, 100 µM Na3VO4) and incubated on ice for 10 min. Cells were lysed in 0.25% Nonidet P-40, vortexed, and spun at 6000 rpm to pellet the nuclei. The pellet was re-suspended in 50 µl of Buffer B (20 mM HEPES, pH 7.9, 0.4 M NaCl, 1 mM EDTA, 1 mM dithiothreitol, 1 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, 1 µg/ml leupeptin, 1 µg/ml pepstatin, 0.2 µg/ml aprotinin, 100 µM Na3VO4) and incubated on ice for 15 min with frequent vortexing to elute nuclear proteins. Samples were then spun at top speed in a tabletop microfuge at 4 °C for 5 min, and supernatants were snap-frozen and stored at 70 °C. Protein concentration was determined by Bradford assay (33).
Electrophoretic Mobility Shift Assay (EMSA)EMSA was
performed as described previously
(34) with minor modifications.
Briefly, 40 ng of a double-stranded 27-mer corresponding to an optimized high
affinity STAT1/3 DNA binding site of the c-fos promoter (SIE-DNA,
5'-GTGCATTTCCCGTAAATCTTGTCTACA-3') was end-labeled using 20 units
of T4 polynucleotide kinase and 50 µCi of [-32P]ATP.
Radiolabeled oligonucleotides were separated from unincorporated nucleotides
using a G-25 Sephadex Quick Spin column. Binding reactions were incubated in
binding buffer (25 mM HEPES, pH 7.9, 50 mM KCl, 0.5
mM EDTA, and 10% glycerol) with 20 fmol of radiolabeled SIE, 10
µg of total nuclear lysate, and 2 µg of poly(dI-dC)-poly(dI-dC). For
supershift analysis 3 µl of either STAT1 or STAT3 antibody was added to
samples. Binding reaction components were added as follows: 1) buffer and
nonspecific DNA, 2) protein extracts, 3) cold competitor
DNA+/ antibodies, 4) probe. Components
13 were preincubated at room temperature for 30 min before addition of
probe. Binding reactions were incubated for 20 min at room temperature and
separated on a 6% polyacrylamide 0.5x Tris borate-EDTA gel pre-run at
150 V for 2 h at 4 °C. Dried gels were exposed to Eastman Kodak Co.
X-omatic film at 70 °C, sandwiched between two Dupont lighting
intensifying screens. Autoradiographic film was scanned and analyzed for
statistical significance as described above.
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RESULTS |
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LIF-stimulated Activation of STAT1 and STAT3 Is Unperturbed in SYF CellsNext we examined whether a loss of expression of SFKs affected LIF-mediated activation of the JAK/STAT pathway. Phosphorylation of Tyr-705 or Tyr-701 of STAT3 or STAT1, respectively, results in SH2-mediated hetero- or homodimerization of STAT1/3, followed by rapid translocation to the nucleus (39, 40). Whole cell lysates were collected from either WT or SYF cells, separated using SDS-PAGE, and analyzed first with antibodies specific for either Tyr-705-phosphorylated STAT3 or Tyr-701-phosphorylated STAT1. Blots were then stripped and re-probed with antibodies specific for either total STAT3 or STAT1. As shown in Fig. 2A, LIF stimulation of either WT or SYF cells resulted in phosphorylation of STAT3 within 5 min. STAT3 phosphorylation remained elevated for 30 min and returned to basal levels 1 h after addition of LIF in both WT and SYF cell lysates. Quantitative analysis of the data (Fig. 2B) is represented as a percentage of maximal LIF-stimulated STAT3 phosphorylation. STAT1 was also transiently phosphorylated following treatment of WT or SYF cells with LIF (Fig. 2C). Although there was a statistically significant difference between LIF-stimulated phosphorylation of STAT1 in WT and SYF cells at 5 min (Fig. 2D), this difference was not seen at later time points. To ensure that there were in fact no minor differences in the ability of LIF to stimulate STAT phosphorylation in SYF cells, we stimulated cells with varying concentrations of LIF (Fig. 2, E and F) and measured STAT activation as described above. LIF-stimulated STAT3 phosphorylation was observed at a concentration of 10 ng/ml in both WT and SYF cells (Fig. 2E). Fig. 2F reveals that WT and SYF cells have a similar sensitivity to LIF as measured by STAT1 phosphorylation in both WT and SYF cells. These data suggest that the activation of the JAK/STAT pathway, in terms of both temporal response and sensitivity to ligand, is unaffected by the loss of SFKs.
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DNA Binding Activity of Nuclear STAT-containing Complexes Is Unaltered by the Loss of SFKs in Immortalized Mouse Embryonic FibroblastsAlthough it appeared as though there were no changes in the ability of LIF to stimulate phosphorylation of STATs on tyrosine residues in SYF cells relative to WT cells, there is evidence that DNA binding activity and subsequent transcriptional activation by STATs can be both positively (41) and negatively (42) regulated by serine phosphorylation. To determine whether there were any differences in the ability of STATs to transactivate target genes, we performed EMSA analysis using a double-stranded 27-mer corresponding to a STAT consensus binding site within the c-fos promoter (43), known as the SIE. SIE was radiolabeled and incubated with nuclear extracts from LIF-stimulated SYF or WT cells (Fig. 3, A and C). Fig. 3A shows a time course for STAT binding to SIE. Three complexes, designated previously as SIF-A, SIF-B, and SIF-C, have been shown to bind SIE and represent the STAT3 homodimer, STAT1/3 heterodimer, and STAT1 homodimer, respectively (44). Binding reactions using LIF-stimulated nuclear extracts from either WT or SYF cells reveals three distinct nuclear complexes bound to SIE. The specificity of binding to SIE is shown by a loss of complex formation with the addition of a 100-fold molar excess of unlabeled SIE to stimulated extracts. Supershift analyses with anti-STAT1 and anti-STAT3 antibodies verify that the fastest migrating complex is a STAT1 homodimer, the slowest migrating complex is a STAT3 homodimer, and that the intermediate complex contains both STAT1 and STAT3. Both cell lines display a similar time course (Fig. 3B) and a concentration dependence for LIF stimulation of STAT binding to the SIE (Fig. 3C). These data confirm that the magnitude of LIF-stimulated activation, subsequen ttranslocation, and induction of STAT1 and STAT3 DNA binding activity is equivalent in WT and SYF cells.
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The PI3K-sensitive Akt Kinase Is Phosphorylated in Response to LIF, Independent of SFKsTo rule out the possibility that SFKs couple IL-6 family cytokines to the PI3K pathway, we measured phosphorylation of Akt on Ser-473 in response to treatment of cells with LIF. Maximal activation of Akt by LIF occurred at 15 min after addition of agonist (Fig. 4A) in both WT and SYF cells. As a control for Akt Ser-473 phosphorylation, we stimulated cells with PDGF (Fig. 4B). Quantitative analysis of LIF-mediated Akt activation represented as a percentage of PDGF-stimulated activity shows no difference between LIF coupling to the activation of Akt in SYF or WT cells.
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The p38 MAPK Is Activated by LIF in Both SYF and WT Fibroblastsp38 MAPK was determined to be LIF-sensitive in both WT and SYF cells (Fig. 5A), using SDS-PAGE and a dual-specificity phospho-specific p38 antibody (Thr-180/Tyr-182). Blots were stripped and re-probed for total p38 to control for protein loading. LIF-stimulated p38 phosphorylation can be seen in both cell lines following 15 min of treatment with LIF. PDGF is used as a control for p38 phosphorylation. Quantitative analysis of LIF-mediated p38 activation is represented as a percentage of PDGF-stimulated p38 phosphorylation (Fig. 5B). No difference is seen in the ability of LIF to activate p38 MAPK in SYF or WT cells. These data suggest that LIF signaling to the p38 MAPK pathway is unaffected by the loss of SFKs.
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The LIF-sensitive Genes c-fos, egr-1, and SOCS-3 Are Induced by LIF in SYF CellsChanges in protein expression of LIF-sensitive genes were analyzed to measure the effect of LIF stimulation of signaling pathways in SYF and WT cells. The early immediate genes c-fos, egr-1, and SOCS-3 have all been shown previously (13, 16) to be regulated by LIF. SDS-PAGE was used to assess the protein expression of LIF-sensitive gene products in cell lysates following stimulation of cells with LIF. Blots were re-probed for STAT3 to correct for minor differences in protein loading. LIF-stimulated expression of c-fos, egr-1, and SOCS-3 peaks at 1 h and returns to basal levels by 4 h post-stimulation in both WT and SYF cells (Fig. 6A). In contrast, no changes were seen in the expression of SOCS-1, c-jun, or junB in either cell line following LIF-stimulation.2 Cells were stimulated with varying concentrations of LIF for 1 h to see whether there were minor differences between expression of LIF-sensitive proteins in WT and SYF cells. A dose-dependent increase in expression of c-fos (Fig. 6B) and egr-1 (Fig. 6C) is seen following stimulation of WT or SYF cells with LIF. These data suggest that the loss of SFK gene expression has no overt effect on the ability of LIF to stimulate gene expression.
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The IL-6 Cytokine Family Member Oncostatin M Also Retains Normal Signal Transduction in SYF CellsAlthough LIF and OSM both utilize the gp130 signal transducer, their ligand-binding receptor subunits are products of distinct genes. LIF stimulates the formation of a LIF receptor·gp130 complex, whereas stimulation of cells with OSM results in an OSM receptor·gp130 receptor complex. We found that not only do both WT and SYF cells respond to OSM but also that their respective responses to OSM are identical to LIF-stimulated responses in both cell lines (Fig. 7). LIF and OSM stimulated phosphorylation of STAT3, STAT1, MAPK, p38, and Akt in both WT and SYF cells. PDGF-stimulated lysates were used as a control. Blots were stripped and re-probed to confirm equal protein loading.2 These data show that multiple members of the IL-6 family of cytokines can signal in the absence of SFKs.
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DISCUSSION |
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The SFKs were first implicated in IL-6 cytokine signal transduction in human endothelial cells in which OSM stimulation in vitro leads to increased activity of Yes and Fyn (45). Next it was discovered that LIF-stimulated ES cells display both increased Hck tyrosine kinase activity in vitro and a stimulation-dependent biochemical association between gp130 and Hck (24). Furthermore, ES cells expressing a constitutively active Hck required 15-fold less LIF to maintain pluripotency compared with LIF-stimulated parental ES cells. These data suggested that increased Hck activity might amplify the endogenous response to LIF. Using chimeric granulocyte colony-stimulating factor receptor/gp130 receptors expressed in transiently transfected ES cells, Ernst et al. (46) were able to implicate a region of gp130 in granulocyte colony-stimulating factor-stimulated activation of Hck. Subsequent studies revealed that a dominant negative STAT3 could shunt ES cells onto a path toward differentiation (47), whereas suppression of SHP-2 or ERK activation resulted in maintenance of ES cell pluripotency (48). Collectively, these results suggested that Hck might lie either upstream of LIF-stimulated STAT3 activation or upstream of MAPK inhibition. Multiple myeloma cell lines display an analogous increased catalytic activation of SFKs and a biochemical association of SFKs with gp130 following stimulation with IL-6 (23). Most recently, using a erythropoietin receptor/gp130 chimeric receptor and overexpressed Hck, Schaeffer et al. (27) implicated a region of gp130 as a positive regulator of Hck, as well as MAPK. However, this region of gp130 was unable to account for all gp130-mediated activation of MAPK, consistent with SHP-2 acting as a regulator of LIF-mediated MAPK activation. As the chimeric receptor mutation of Schaeffer et al. (27) created a gp130 deletion of substantial size (41 amino acids), it is not clear how the subsequent loss of activation of MAPK and Hck are related. Interestingly, we were unable to find any effect of a loss of SFK expression on MAPK or STAT3 signaling in SYF cells, suggesting that the loss of MAPK activation in MM cells transfected with the gp130 deletion mutant chimeric receptor may be because of uncoupling of agonist-induced MAPK activation that is independent of SFKs. Alternatively, mechanisms of coupling to MAPK activation by IL-6 cytokines may differ in a cell type-specific fashion.
In 3T3-L1 mouse preadipocytes Fyn has been shown to co-precipitate with Grb2 and JAK2 in an IL-11-dependent fashion. Furthermore, Fyn is tyrosine-phosphorylated in response to IL-11 stimulation (49). Yes and Src also appear to be activated in 3T3-L1 cells following IL-11 stimulation (25), and Yes appears to co-precipitate with JAK2 in a stimulation-dependent fashion (50). These data argue for both physical association of SFKs with gp130 and activation of SFKs following treatment of 3T3-L1 cells with IL-11. Although ES cells, MM cell lines, and 3T3-L1 preadipocytes display increased activity of SFKs following stimulation with LIF, IL-6, or IL-11, respectively, the consequences of IL-6 family cytokine-stimulated increases in SFK activity remains unclear. There is no direct evidence linking IL-6 family cytokine-mediated stimulation of endogenous SFKs with downstream effectors and no direct evidence of cellular consequences specific to endogenous SFKs on IL-6 cytokine-mediated gene induction. Our findings show that the absence of SFKs has no effect on known IL-6 cytokine family signaling pathways or gene induction.
Although most cellular responses mediated by SFKs are dependent upon the catalytic activity of SFKs, both the SH2 and SH3 domains found in SFKs have been implicated in catalytic region-independent functioning of SFKs as a scaffolding protein (6567). Furthermore, Hck-mediated activation of STAT3 has been shown recently (51) to require the SH3 domain of Hck. Thus, although SFK inhibitors that abrogate kinase activity are highly useful in the study of SFK function, they may not be able to inhibit all functions of SFKs. Unlike the use of inhibitors of SFK catalytic activity, which only addresses the role of catalytic activity of SFKs, SYF cells should also elucidate any scaffolding functions of SFKs. Thus, the lack of an observable deficit in LIF-mediated signaling and gene induction in SYF cells suggests that both SFK scaffolding and catalytic functions are not required for cellular responses to LIF.
There is evidence that both overexpression of SFKs or expression of constitutively active v-Src can lead to activation of both STAT3 (5153) and STAT1 (54, 55). The fact that no deficit is seen in STAT3 or STAT1 phosphorylation in LIF-stimulated SYF cells suggests that SFK-mediated activation of STATs is not required for IL-6 family cytokine-driven STAT activation and subsequent gene induction. The regulation of STAT activation by c-Src may be specific to other signaling systems, such as G protein-coupled-receptors and receptor tyrosine kinases, whereas the activation of STAT by v-Src may be specific to cellular transformation such as that seen in oncogenesis (56). The G protein-coupled receptor family member angiotensin II receptor couples to STAT1 via Fyn (57) and STAT3 via Src (58). Upon binding of epidermal growth factor to the receptor tyrosine kinase ErbB, the resultant receptor-mediated STAT activation is Src-dependent (59), whereas STAT activation by basic fibroblast growth factor signaling through the receptor tyrosine kinase fibroblast growth factor receptor is inhibited by the SFK-selective inhibitor PP1 (60). Our results suggest that the effects on STATs downstream of cytokine stimulation seen with viral forms of SFKs are not relevant to normal cytokine signaling, a view that is supported by findings in v-Src-transformed NIH3T3 cells (61). The JAK inhibitor SOCS-1 is capable of inhibiting cytokine-induced JAK/STAT activation; however, SOCS-1 cannot inhibit v-Src-induced JAK/STAT activation. v-Src has been shown to phosphorylate a chimeric granulocyte colony-stimulating factor/gp130 receptor on Tyr-759, the SHP-2 docking site on gp130 (62); however, we saw no effect on tyrosine phosphorylation of SHP-2 or subsequent activation of MAPK in SYF cells following LIF stimulation. v-Src has also been shown to induce c-fos expression via the SIE of the c-fos promoter (63). We did not detect a deficit in LIF-mediated c-fos induction or SIE binding in SYF cells, supporting the conclusion that the effects of overexpression of v-Src are unrelated to normal IL-6-cytokine-mediated signaling and gene induction.
Experiments in white blood cells have elucidated a requirement for SFKs in p38 activation by cell surface receptors. SFKs have been implicated in bacterial tripeptide fMet-Leu-Phe-induced p38 MAPK-dependent activation of chemoattractant-induced degranulation of neutrophils (64), whereas pretreatment of monocytes with the SFK inhibitor PP2 completely inhibits soluble E-selectin-induced chemotaxis (65). These observations, along with our observation that p38 MAPK is phosphorylated in WT fibroblasts following stimulation with LIF, led us to investigate whether there was any effect of a loss of SFK expression on LIF-mediated p38 MAPK activation in SYF cells. We found no evidence that SFKs are involved in LIF- or OSM-stimulated p38 activation.
Inhibitors of SFKs PP1 and PP2 have been shown to inhibit prolactin-stimulated Akt phosphorylation on Ser-473 in W53 cells (66). We saw no deficit in the ability of LIF to stimulate Akt phosphorylation in SYF cells compared with WT cells. Recent evidence suggests that LIF (67) and IL-6 can activate p70S6K (68); however, we did not see any activation of p70S6K by LIF in WT or SYF cells using a phospho-Ser-411-specific antibody.2 Based on our results, we would not expect to see a difference, because IL-6-mediated induction of p70S6K is PI3K- and MAPK-sensitive, and we saw no effects on either signaling pathway in SYF cells. Shc has been shown recently (69) to be a direct effector molecule of SFKs; however, as Shc is primarily thought to couple IL-6 family cytokine receptors to MAPK (70), and we did not observe a MAPK deficit, it does not appear that this is a mechanism utilized by OSM or LIF in WT or SYF cells.
Because of the redundant nature of SFKs and the activation of multiple SFKs by multiple IL-6 family cytokines, we chose to study a system where SFKs are not expressed. This allowed us to ask whether any SFKs are required for LIF-mediated signaling and gene induction. Although the SYF cells are an immortalized cell line, simian virus 40 large T antigen is thought to immortalize cells via changes to the cyclin D1-dependent cell cycle regulatory pathway (71) and does not effect STAT activation (72). It is possible that there may be a redundancy in IL-6 cytokine signaling that would prevent observable effects of a loss of SFKs on the actions of LIF. For example, there is evidence that LIF activation of MAPK in 3T3-L1 cells occurs by protein kinase C-dependent and -independent pathways (67). However, our data show that SFKs are not required for known LIF-mediated signaling mechanisms or gene induction. The ability of OSM to signal in SYF cells suggests that multiple members of the IL-6 family can elicit a response in cells without SFKs.
In conclusion, we have shown that the absence of SFKs does not affect canonical LIF-mediated signal transduction and gene induction. Previous work implicating SFKs in IL-6 family cytokine signaling has utilized the expression of viral forms of SFKs or has shown increased catalytic activity of SFKs following stimulation of cells with IL-6 family cytokines; however, no previous study has revealed any requirement of SFKs for signaling or gene induction. This work is the first to test the effect of removing all expressed members of the Src family of kinases on IL-6 family cytokines in a cellular context. Our results show that SFKs are not required for signal transduction or gene induction by IL-6 family cytokines.
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FOOTNOTES |
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To whom correspondence should be addressed: Dept. of Pharmacology, University
of Washington, Box 357750, Seattle, WA 98195-7750. Tel.: 206-543-9457; Fax:
206-616-4230; E-mail:
nathanso{at}u.washington.edu.
1 The abbreviations used are: IL, interleukin; LIF, leukemia inhibitory
factor; OSM, oncostatin M; ES, embryonic stem; gp130, glycoprotein 130; JAK,
Janus kinase; STAT, signal transducers and activators of transcription; SOCS,
suppressor of cytokine signaling; SHP, protein tyrosine phosphatase; ERK,
extracellular signal-regulated kinase; PI3K, phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase;
SH, Src homology; MM, multiple myeloma; WT, wild type; PDGF, platelet-derived
growth factor; SIE, sis-inducible element; PBS, phosphate-buffered saline;
EMSA, electrophoretic mobility shift; SIF, sis-inducible factor; MAPK,
mitogen-activated protein kinase; SFK, Src family of kinases.
2 G. S. L. and N. M. N., unpublished observations.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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REFERENCES |
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