Journal of Histochemistry and Cytochemistry, Vol. 48, 21-34, January 2000, Copyright © 2000, The Histochemical Society, Inc.


ARTICLE

Immunocytochemical Localization of Shc and Activated EGF Receptor in Early Endosomes After EGF Stimulation of HeLa Cells

Morten P. Oksvolda, Ellen Skarpena, Birgitte Lindemana, Norbert Roosb, and Henrik S. Huitfeldta
a Laboratory for Toxicopathology, Institute of Pathology, The National Hospital, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway
b Electron Microscopical Unit for Biological Sciences, Department of Biology, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway

Correspondence to: Henrik S. Huitfeldt, Lab for Toxicopathology, Inst. of Pathology, The National Hospital, U. of Oslo, N-0027 Oslo, Norway.


  Summary
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Summary
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Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
Literature Cited

After binding of epidermal growth factor (EGF), the EGF receptor (EGFR) becomes autophosphorylated via tyrosine. The ligand-activated receptor is internalized by endocytosis and subsequently degraded in the lysosomal pathway. To follow EGFR activation after EGF stimulation, we generated antisera to the EGFR phosphotyrosine sites pY992 and pY1173. The SH2 region of Shc binds to both these sites. Both antisera identified EGFR after EGF binding and did not crossreact with the unactivated receptor. The intracellular distribution of phosphorylated EGFR after ligand binding was traced by two-color immunofluorescence confocal microscopy and immunoelectron microscopy. Before EGF stimulation EGFR was primarily located along the cell surface. When internalization of activated EGFR was inhibited by incubation with EGF on ice, Y992- and Y1173-phosphorylated EGFR were located along the plasma membrane. Ten minutes after internalization at 37C, Y992- and Y1173-phosphorylated EGFR were almost exclusively located in early endosomes, as shown by co-localization with EEA1. Immunoelectron microscopy confirmed that phosphorylated EGFR was located in intracellular vesicles resembling early endosomes. After EGF stimulation, the adaptor protein Shc redistributed to EGFR-containing early endosomes. Our results indicate that EGFR activation of Shc via tyrosine-phosphorylated Y992 and Y1173 occurred in early endocytic compartments, and support a role for membrane trafficking in intracellular signaling. (J Histochem Cytochem 48:21–33, 2000)

Key Words: HeLa cells, EGF receptor, Shc, signal transduction, endosomes, immunofluorescence, immunoelectron microscopy


  Introduction
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Summary
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
Literature Cited

EPIDERMAL GROWTH FACTOR (EGF) and transforming growth factor-{alpha} (TGF{alpha}) both bind to the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) in the plasma membrane. After ligand binding, EGFR dimerizes, its intrinsic tyrosine kinase is activated, and specific tyrosine-containing residues in its cytoplasmic tail become autophosphorylated (Carpenter and Cohen 1990 ; Ullrich and Schlessinger 1990 ). These phosphotyrosine residues serve as docking sites for signal transducers containing Src homology 2 (SH2) or phosphotyrosine binding (PTB) motifs (Pelicci et al. 1992 ; Blaikie et al. 1994 ; Kavanaugh and Williams 1994 ). Several signal transducing pathways are activated. Best characterized is the Ras-Raf-MEK-MAPK pathway, which is initiated by Grb2-Sos or Shc-Grb2-Sos association (Rozakis-Adcock et al. 1992 ; Buday and Downward 1993 ; Batzer et al. 1994 ; Gotoh et al. 1995 ). In addition, phosphatidyl inositol 3-kinase, phospholipase C{gamma}, and signal transduction and activator of transcription (Stat) signaling pathways are initiated from activated EGFR (Margolis et al. 1989 ; Bjorge et al. 1990 ; Ruff-Jamison et al. 1994 ). Different SH2-containing adaptor proteins bind to specific EGFR autophosphorylation sites, but inactivating mutations at the different sites did not dramatically alter the receptor's capacity to associate with SH2-containing proteins (Soler et al. 1994 ). Tyrosine 1173 (Y1173) is the major EGFR autophosphorylation site (Downward et al. 1984 ). EGFR autophosphorylation sites Y1173, Y1148, and Y992 all bind Shc (Batzer et al. 1994 ; Okabayashi et al. 1994 ), which is the major downstream adaptor molecule of EGFR (Soler et al. 1994 ). Y1173 is the major Shc binding tyrosine (Okabayashi et al. 1994 ), whereas Y992 has been described as a minor Shc binding tyrosine (Batzer et al. 1994 ). In addition, Y1148 binds Shc via its PTB domain (Sakaguchi et al. 1998 ).

Ligand-bound EGFR is rapidly internalized through receptor-mediated endocytosis and sorted to multivesicular bodies. The receptor either recirculates to the plasma membrane after ligand dissociation or is degraded through the lysosomal pathway (Carpentier et al. 1987 ; Felder et al. 1990 ). Ligand-activated and internalized EGFR appears to be phosphorylated and adaptor protein-associated, but the importance and function of endosomal signal transduction is controversial (Lai et al. 1989 ; Futter et al. 1993 ; Di Guglielmo et al. 1994 ; Nesterov et al. 1994 ; Emlet et al. 1997 ). MAPK activation was strongly inhibited when endocytosis from clathrin-coated pits was arrested in cells transfected with a mutant dynamin (Vieira et al. 1996 ). It was recently shown that expression of mutant dynamin disrupts high-affinity binding of EGF but not ligand-induced recruitment of EGFR to clathrin-coated pits (Ringerike et al. 1998 ). This complicates the interpretation that MAPK inhibition is caused by inhibited endocytosis. There are also indications that signal specificity depends on intracellular processing of the internalized ligand–receptor complex. Skarpen et al. 1998 demonstrated that TGF{alpha} and EGF exert different proliferative effects because TGF{alpha}, but not EGF, dissociates from the receptor at the reduced pH of endosomes.

To elucidate the exact relationship between EGFR phosphorylation, intracellular membrane trafficking, and downstream signaling, it will be necessary to trace the activated receptor and its adaptor proteins along the involved organelles. In this study we applied immunofluorescence and immunoelectron microscopy to determine the intracellular localization of specific EGFR phosphorylation species in HeLa cells. Antisera to the activated form of the two Shc binding autophosphorylation sites Y992 and Y1173 of EGFR were developed. Two-color immunofluorescence confocal microscopy demonstrated that EGFR phosphorylated at these sites was almost exclusively located in EEA1-positive and LAMP-1-negative early endosomes after EGF stimulation. Immunoelectron microscopy confirmed that phosphorylated EGFR was predominantly located in subcellular compartments consistent with early endosomes. In response to EGF stimulation, the adaptor protein Shc redistributed to EEA1-positive vesicles that contained EGFR. These results show that EGFR remained phosphorylated and co-localized with Shc along the endocytic pathway, and demonstrate that two-color immunofluorescence, in combination with confocal laser scan microscopy and immunoelectron microscopy, possesses the necessary resolution and specificity for investigations of intracellular signal transduction.


  Materials and Methods
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Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
Literature Cited

Materials
Receptor grade EGF from mouse submaxillary glands was purchased from Sigma Chemical (St Louis, MO). Sheep antiserum to the intracellular domain of EGFR was obtained from Gibco BRL (Paisley, UK), and rabbit anti-Shc was purchased from Transduction Laboratories (Lexington, KY). Mouse anti-phosphotyrosine (4G10) was obtained from Upstate Biotechnology (Lake Placid, NY). Human anti-EEA1 serum, a kind gift from Dr. H. Stenmark (The Norwegian Radium Hospital; Oslo, Norway), and mouse anti-LAMP-1 (Developmental Studies Hybridoma Bank; University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA) have previously been characterized (Mu et al. 1995 and Chen et al. 1985 , respectively). All FITC- and Texas Red-conjugated donkey antisera to mouse, rabbit, and human IgG and peroxidase-conjugated donkey antisera to sheep and mouse IgG were purchased from Jackson ImmunoResearch Laboratories (West Grove, PA). Gold-conjugated donkey anti-sheep IgG was purchased from Biocell (Cardiff, UK). Protein A–gold was obtained from Dr. J. Slot (Utrecht University; Utrecht, the Netherlands). All other materials were purchased from Sigma unless otherwise noted.

Generation of Antisera to Phosphorylated EGFR
Phosphorylated and nonphosphorylated synthetic peptides corresponding to the two cytoplasmic autophosphorylation sites Y992 and Y1173 of EGFR were generated by Genosys Biotechnology (Pampisford, UK). These sequences are identical in human and mouse. The tyrosine-phosphorylated peptides pY992 and pY1173 (DVVDADEpYLIPQQ and TAENAEpYLRVAP, respectively) were conjugated to keyhole limpet hemocyanin via a C-terminally added cysteine. Peptide conjugates were mixed with Freund's complete adjuvant and injected SC into NZL rabbits (250 µg peptide per animal). After several booster injections, sera were tested by Western blotting of lysates from unstimulated and EGF-stimulated HeLa cells. Both R42/pY1173 (to pY1173) and R46/pY992 (to pY992) antisera were tested for specificity by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and by absorption with their respective peptides.

ELISA
Synthetic peptides were coupled via their carboxyl groups to amino groups of the Covalink microtiter plates (Nunc; Kamstrup, Denmark) by adding sulfo-N-hydroxy-succinimide (sulfo-NHS; Pierce Chemicals, Rockford, IL) and 1-ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl)-carbodiimide (EDC) (Staros et al. 1986 ). The synthetic tyrosine-phosphorylated peptides pY1173 and pY992 and unphosphorylated Y1173 and Y992 were dissolved in 60% dimethylsulfoxide. Dissolved peptides were stored at -20C and diluted in distilled water containing 0.175 mg/ml sulfo-NHS to a peptide concentration of 0.57 mg/ml immediately before use. Covalink microtiter plates were coated with a 1:1 mixture of serially diluted peptide/sulfo-NHS (final concentrations from 208 µM to 4.9 x 10-5 µM in distilled water) and EDC diluted in distilled water (1.2 mg/ml) at room temperature (RT) for 120 min. Rabbit anti-pY992 and anti-pY1173 (R46/pY992 and R42/pY1173, respectively) were diluted 1:10,000 in Covabuffer (PBS containing 2 M NaCl, 0.083 M MgSO4, and 0.05% Tween-20) and incubated with the Covabuffer-washed wells overnight at 4C. The wells were incubated with peroxidase-conjugated donkey anti-rabbit IgG (1:10,000) for 90 min at RT. Antibody binding was detected with a freshly made solution of 2,2'-azino-bis(3-ethylbenz-thiazoline-6-sulfonic acid) (ABTS) containing 77.2 mM Na2HPO4, 61.4 mM citric acid, 400 µM ABTS, and 0.03% hydrogen peroxide (Fluka Chemie; Buchs, Germany).

In a competition assay, Covalink wells coated with pY1173 (0.2 µM) or pY992 (0.1 µM) were incubated with their respective antisera [R42/pY1173 (1:20,000) and R46/pY992 (1:10,000)] preincubated with serial dilutions of pY1173 or pY992 (832 µM-0.2 µM) at RT for 240 min. After overnight incubation, signal development was done as described above. Optical density was measured at 405 nm in a ThermoMax microplate reader (Molecular Devices; Sunnyvale, CA).

Cell Cultures
The human HeLa epidermal carcinoma cell line expressing approximately 1.4 x 105 EGFR per cell (Kinzel et al. 1990 ) was obtained from American Tissue Type Collection (Rockville, MD). Cells were maintained in DMEM (BioWhittaker; Walkersville, MD) supplemented with 5% (v/v) fetal calf serum (BioWhittaker), 2 mM L-glutamine, and 50 ng/ml gentamycin (Gibco BRL). The cells were grown to 60–80% confluence in Petri dishes or flasks (Costar; Cambridge, MA). To synchronize EGFR internalization, tyrosine phosphorylation of the EGFR was induced with EGF (10 nM in Hank's balanced salt solution (Gibco BRL), pH 7.4) on ice for 15 min. Cells were then washed in ice-cold PBS, incubated in prewarmed medium, and chased at 37C for increasing time periods.

Western Blot Analysis
Cells were lysed in Tris–lysis buffer, pH 7.4 [60 mM Tris-HCl, 10% (v/v) glycerol, 3% (w/v) sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS), 1 mM EDTA, 20 µM aprotinin, 20 µM leupeptin, 10 mM ß-glycerophosphate, 0.2 mM 4-(2-aminoethyl)benzenesulfonyl fluoride (AEBSF), and 60 µM sodium orthovanadate]. The samples were sonicated four times for 10 sec and protein concentrations were measured with the DC protein Assay (Bio-Rad; Hercules, CA) and adjusted to equal concentrations in the lysis buffer containing 5% ß-mercaptoethanol and 0.002% bromophenol blue. The samples were then boiled for 5 min and subjected to SDS-PAGE. The Rainbow molecular weight standards (Amersham; Poole, UK) were included. Separated proteins were electrotransferred to nitrocellulose membranes (Micron Separation; Westborough, MA) for subsequent protein detection as described (Laemmli 1970 ; Towbin et al. 1988). Membranes were washed in Tris-buffered saline (TBS), pH 7.6, and preincubated in 5% (w/v) fat-free dry milk in TBS for 30 min. The membranes were incubated overnight at 4C with anti-EGFR (1:20,000), R42/pY1173 (1:5000), R46/pY992 (1:5000), or anti-phosphotyrosine (1:5000). Binding of antibodies was detected with appropriate peroxidase-conjugated donkey or goat anti-IgG antiserum (1:5000) for 90 min. All antibodies were diluted in 1% (w/v) fat-free dry milk in TBS. The filters were washed in TBS before detection by the enhanced chemiluminescence (ECL) method (Amersham) with Hyperfilm (Amersham).

Immunocytochemistry and Confocal Microscopy
Cells incubated with EGF and chased for different time periods were fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde in PBS for 20 min at RT and exposed to 0.2% Triton X-100 in PBS for 10 min at 4C. The cells were washed in PBS, rinsed in distilled water, and air-dried before incubation with primary and secondary antibodies diluted in PBS containing 1% BSA (overnight and 30 min, respectively). Combinations of Texas Red- or FITC-conjugated donkey species-specific antisera to IgG of the appropriate species were utilized. To control the specificities of the immunostaining procedures, one or the other of the primary antisera was replaced with normal serum from the appropriate species. In addition, R42/pY1173 and R46/pY992 were preabsorbed with their respective immunogens and tested for immunofluorescence reactivity. The samples were mounted using the Dako fluorescent mounting medium (Dako; Carpinteria, CA). Cells were examined with a Nikon Labophot microscope (Nikon; Tokyo, Japan) equipped with an epifluorescence attachment and a Bio-Rad MRC 600 confocal laser scan unit with a krypton/argon laser, a K1 double dichroic excitation filter block, and a K2 dichroic emission filter block (Bio-Rad). This equipment allowed simultaneous detection of FITC and Texas Red fluorescence. All pictures were taken with pinhole size 5/15 and Kalman filtration using 30 scans per picture, with a PlanApo x60/1.4 objective. A Polaroid freeze-frame unit (Polaroid; Cambridge, MA) was used for image recording.

Immunoelectron Microscopy
Cells incubated with EGF on ice and chased for increasing time periods were fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde and 0.2% glutaraldehyde in Sorensen phosphate buffer (pH 7.4) for 120 min at RT. Cells were collected with a cell scraper and centrifuged at 1000 rpm for 5 min. The pellets were resuspended in Sorensen phosphate buffer before centrifugation at 6000 rpm for 10 min. The cell pellets were infused with 15% polyvinylpyrrolidone and 1.7 M sucrose in PBS (pH 7.4) for 1 hr, cut into approximately 1-mm3 cubes, and frozen in liquid nitrogen. Sections (60–80 nm thick) were cut at -120C on a Leica Ultracut microtome (Leica; Vienna, Austria) using a diamond knife. Sections were transferred to carbon-coated copper grids and further processed for immunocytochemical labeling as described by Griffiths 1993 , with some modifications. Sections were incubated with PBS containing 1% BSA for 15 min before labeling with anti-EGFR (1:80), R42/pY1173 (1:100), or anti-Shc (1:500) for 20 min. Protein A–gold (10 nm) was used for detection of R42/pY1173 and anti-Shc, and gold-conjugated anti-sheep IgG (15 nm) was used for immunodetection of anti-EGFR. For simultaneous labeling of Shc and EGFR, labeling was done first with anti-Shc followed by protein A–gold (10 nm). The sections were fixed as described above before labeling with anti-EGFR followed by gold-conjugated (15 nm) anti-sheep IgG. All antibodies and protein A–gold were diluted in PBS containing 1% BSA. As a control, incubation of sections with protein A–gold or gold-conjugated anti-sheep IgG alone was done. Two independent samples for each time point were examined in three different sections from each sample. Approximately 30 cells were examined per sample. Sections were viewed in a JEOL 1200-EX transmission electron microscope at 80 kV.


  Results
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Summary
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
Literature Cited

Characterization of Antisera to Phosphorylated EGFR
The specificities of antisera R42/pY1173 and R46/pY992 to EGFR peptide sequences containing phosphorylated or nonphosphorylated tyrosine were examined by ELISA. Covalink wells were coated with serial dilutions of phosphorylated peptides (pY1173 or pY992) or their corresponding nonphosphorylated peptides (Y1173 or Y992) and incubated with antisera R42/pY1173 (Figure 1A) or R46/pY992 (Figure 1B), followed by peroxidase-conjugated antibodies to rabbit IgG and a peroxidase substrate. ELISA demonstrated that both antisera were highly specific for their corresponding phosphorylated peptide sequences compared to both their phosphorylated and unphosphorylated counterparts (Figure 1). To further characterize the R42/pY1173 antiserum, we performed competition assays. Serial dilutions of pY1173 and pY992 peptides were preincubated with R42/pY1173 or R46/pY992 antiserum before incubation with Covalink wells coated with pY1173 and pY992, respectively. The data showed that the R42/pY1173 antiserum had more than 100-fold higher affinity to the pY1173 phosphopeptide compared to pY992 (Figure 2A). The R46/pY992 had approximately 1500-fold higher affinity to the pY992 phosphopeptide than to pY1173 (Figure 2B). When utilized in Western blotting, both antisera revealed a single 170-kD band corresponding to EGFR in EGF-exposed HeLa cells but not in unstimulated cells. Therefore, the antisera were specific for the phosphotyrosine-containing autophosphorylation sites Y1173 and Y992 of EGFR.



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Figure 1. ELISA of R42/pY1173 (A) and R46/pY992 (B) immunoreactivity as a function of peptide coat concentrations of Y992, Y1173, pY992, or pY1173. Serial dilutions of peptides were used as coat before incubation with R42/pY1173 or R46/pY992, followed by peroxidase-conjugated anti-rabbit IgG. Optical density (OD) was measured at 405 nm after signal development.



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Figure 2. ELISA competition assay. Immunoreactivity of R42/pY1173 and R46/pY992 as a function of the concentration of blocking peptide pY992 or pY1173. Wells coated with pY1173 (A) or pY992 (B) were incubated with their respective antiserum preincubated with serial dilutions of pY992 or pY1173. Signal development and measurement was done as described in Figure 1. Averages (±SD) of three experiments are shown.

Expression and Tyrosine Phosphorylation of EGFR after EGF Stimulation
To follow the time course of EGFR phosphorylation after ligand binding and internalization, cell lysates from EGF-stimulated HeLa cells chased for 10 min, 30 min, and 120 min were analyzed by SDS-PAGE and immunoblotting. Western blotting revealed that the total amount of EGFR was downregulated after EGF stimulation (Figure 3A). Immunoblotting with R42/pY1173 and R46/pY992 antisera showed little or no reactivity in lysates of unstimulated HeLa cells, whereas both antisera showed strong reactivity with a single 170-kD band corresponding to EGFR after EGF stimulation (Figure 3B and Figure 3C, respectively). The two SH2 binding sites Y992 and Y1173 were strongly phosphorylated 10 min after EGF stimulation, and both sites were dephosphorylated after a 120-min chase. To further verify the specificity of R42/pY1173 and R46/pY992, we compared the immunoreactivity of these antisera with an antibody to phosphotyrosine (4G10). Immunoblotting was performed on lysates from control and EGF-stimulated HeLa cells. The mouse anti-phosphotyrosine antibody detected several bands after EGF stimulation, whereas the R42/pY1173 and R46/pY992 antisera detected only one band representing phosphorylated EGFR (compare Figure 3D with Figure 3B and Figure 3C). Although the initial tyrosine phosphorylation signal detected with R42/pY1173 and R46/pY992 was stronger than the EGFR phosphorylation detected by 4G10, the latter appeared to last longer.



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Figure 3. Western blot analysis of HeLa cell lysates. Control and EGF-stimulated cells were harvested at indicated time points after EGF stimulation. Downregulation of EGFR in response to EGF was detected with anti-EGFR (A). Tyrosine-phosphorylation of EGFR was detected with antiserum R42/pY1173 (B) and antiserum R46/pY992 (C). Blotting with anti-phosphotyrosine is shown in D. Molecular weight standards in kD are shown at left.

Trafficking of EGFR Through the Degradative Pathway
The intracellular localization of total EGFR and tyrosine-phosphorylated EGFR before and after EGF stimulation was investigated by two-color indirect immunofluorescence microscopy and confocal laser scan microscopy. In unstimulated cells, EGFR was predominantly located along the plasma membrane (Figure 4A). After EGF stimulation and a 10-min chase, EGFR had translocated to cytoplasmic vesicles (Figure 4B). Staining with the R42/pY1173 or R46/pY992 antiserum showed an EGF-dependent redistribution of activated EGFR. In EGF-stimulated cells on ice without chase, both Y1173- and Y992-phosphorylated EGFR were located along the plasma membrane (Figure 4C and Figure 4E, respectively). After a 10-min chase, EGFR containing pY1173 or pY992 had translocated to cytoplasmic vesicles (Figure 4D and Figure 4F, respectively). Two-color immunostaining combining anti-EGFR and anti-EEA1 (Figure 5A and Figure 5B, respectively) or anti-LAMP-1 (Figure 5C and Figure 5D, respectively) revealed that these vesicles were predominantly early endosomes. When anti-EEA1 and anti-LAMP-1 were combined, a minimal overlap was seen (Figure 5E and Figure 5F, respectively).



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Figure 4. Immunocytochemical localization of EGFR in unstimulated cells (A), and activated EGFR in EGF-stimulated cells on ice without chase (C,E) and EGFR, and activated EGFR in EGF-stimulated cells chased for 10 min (B,D,F, respectively). Staining with anti-EGFR in unstimulated cells revealed a predominantly plasma membrane localization of total EGFR (A). Staining with R42/pY1173 (C) and R46/pY992 (E) in EGF-stimulated cells on ice without chase resulted in plasma membrane localization of activated EGFR. After a 10-min chase, EGFR, Y1173-, and Y992-phosphorylated EGFR were redistributed to vesicles throughout the cytoplasm (B,D,F, respectively). Bar = 10 µm.



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Figure 5. Characterization of the EGFR-containing compartment of EGF-stimulated cells chased for 10 min by two-color immunofluorescence confocal microscopy. Combination of anti-EGFR (A) and anti-EEA1 (B) revealed that EGFR had reached early endosomes 10 min after EGF stimulation. Double staining for EGFR (C) and LAMP-1 (D) demonstrated minimal co-localization between EGFR and LAMP-1. Combination of anti-EEA1 (E) and anti-LAMP-1 (F) revealed a minimal degree of co-localization between these two markers. Bar = 10 µm.

Early Endosomes Contain Y992- and Y1173-phosphorylated EGFR
In unstimulated cells, immunofluorescence staining was not observed with antisera R42/pY1173 and R46/pY992 (Figure 6A, green). Furthermore, the unactivated EGFR was predominantly localized along the plasma membrane (Figure 6A, red). After EGF stimulation on ice and a 10-min chase period, both R42/pY1173 and anti-EGFR showed strong immunofluorescence staining in the same cytoplasmic vesicles (Figure 6B). Two-color immunofluorescence demonstrated that the majority of vesicles containing Y1173- and Y992-phosphorylated EGFR co-localized with the early endosome marker EEA1 (Figure 6C, Figure 7A, and Figure 7B). Only a small fraction of late endosomes and lysosomes detected with anti-LAMP-1 showed staining for pY1173-phosphorylated EGFR (Figure 6D). No difference was observed between the immunofluorescence staining patterns of R42/pY1173 and R46/pY992.



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Figure 6. Localization and phosphorylation of EGFR by two-color immunofluorescence confocal microscopy. Unstimulated cells were stained with anti-EGFR (Texas Red) and R42/pY1173 (FITC). EGFR was localized along the plasma membrane (red emission), whereas immunofluorescence staining from pY1173 (green emission) was not detected (A). Confocal laser scanning images representing red and green emission were overlaid. Cells stimulated with EGF and chased for 10 min were stained as described above. Overlaying of confocal images representing EGFR (Texas Red) and pY1173-phosphorylated EGFR (FITC) demonstrated co-localization of these markers in cytoplasmic vesicles (yellow, B). In EGF-stimulated cells chased for 10 min, staining with R42/pY1173 (FITC) and anti-EEA1 (Texas Red) showed Y1173-phosphorylated EGFR in early endosomes, as indicated by a yellow vesicular staining pattern (C). At the same time point, R42/pY1173 and anti-LAMP-1 demonstrated that the majority of late endosomes and lysosomes did not contain Y1173-phosphorylated EGFR (D). Bar = 10 µm.



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Figure 7. Two-color immunodetection of Y992-phosphorylated EGFR and EEA1 after EGF stimulation followed by a 10-min chase period. Staining with R46/pY992 (A) co-localized with EEA1 (B), indicating that the majority of Y992-phosphorylated EGFR is contained in early endosomes 10 min after EGF administration. Bar = 10 µm.

Shc Redistribution to Early Endosomes
To see if the tyrosine-phosphorylated EGFR in endosomes co-localized with downstream transducers, we performed two-color immunocytochemistry for EGFR and Shc. In unstimulated cells, diffuse cytoplasmic localization of Shc was observed, usually not overlapping with EGFR (Figure 8A). After EGF stimulation and EGFR internalization for 10 min, Shc showed redistribution to EGFR-containing cytoplasmic vesicles (Figure 8B). Redistribution of Shc to early endosomes was confirmed by two-color immunostaining with antiserum to EEA1 (Figure 8C). Minimal co-localization of Shc and LAMP-1 confirmed a predominantly early endosomal localization of Shc (Figure 8D).



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Figure 8. Localization of Shc by two-color immunofluorescence and confocal microscopy. In unstimulated cells, EGFR immunofluorescence staining (Texas Red) was found along the plasma membrane, whereas Shc showed a predominantly cytoplasmic immunostaining (FITC, A). After 10-min chase of EGF-stimulated cells, combination of anti-EGFR (Texas Red) and anti-Shc (FITC) demonstrated that the receptor was internalized to cytoplasmic vesicles and co-localized with Shc, as indicated by yellow color (B). At the same time point, immunostaining with anti-Shc (FITC) and anti-EEA1 (Texas Red) revealed that Shc was recruited to early endosomes, as shown by yellow color (C). Combination of anti-Shc (FITC) and anti-LAMP-1 (Texas Red) revealed that most Shc-containing vesicles were LAMP-1-negative (green). Only a small fraction of the Shc-containing vesicles were LAMP-1-positive late endosomes or lysosomes, as indicated by yellow color (D). Bar = 10 µm.

Detection of Phosphorylated EGFR in Vesicles by Immunoelectron Microscopy
To confirm intravesicular localization of autophosphorylated EGFR, we performed gold-immunolabeling electron microscopy using sheep anti-EGFR and R42/pY1173 antisera. In unstimulated cells, EGFR was predominantly found in clusters along the non-clathrin-coated plasma membrane (Figure 9A). After a 10-min and 30-min chase of EGF-stimulated cells, EGFR was observed in vesicular structures resembling early endosomes (Figure 9B) and in multivesicular endosomes (Figure 9C), respectively. After a 10-min chase period, Y1173-phosphorylated EGFR was predominantly found along membranes surrounding electron-lucent vesicular or cistern-shaped structures, which presumably represented early endosomes (Figure 9D). EGFR pY1173 was also detected at internal membrane structures of compartments resembling early endosomes (Figure 9E). To assess whether the EGFR downstream adaptor protein Shc was located in EGFR-containing compartments after the 10-min chase period, we performed double staining for EGFR and Shc. In unstimulated cells, Shc was found throughout the cytosol and no clear association with vesicular membrane structures was seen (Figure 9F). In EGF-stimulated cells chased for 10 min, Shc was associated with EGFR-containing vesicular membrane structures that resembled early endosomes. It was found predominantly in the outer membrane and in membrane structures, which presumably represented endosomal membrane tubules (Figure 9G).



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Figure 9. Localization of EGFR and tyrosine-phosphorylated EGFR by immunoelectron microscopy. Bound anti-EGFR and R42/pY1173 were traced with 15-nm and 10-nm gold, respectively, and anti-Shc with 10-nm gold. In unstimulated cells, EGFR was predominantly detected in clusters along the non-clathrin-coated plasma membrane (A). After 10- and 30-min chase of EGF-stimulated cells, EGFR was found in vesicular structures resembling early endosomes (B) and multivesicular compartments (C), respectively. EGFR pY1173 was located in the outer membrane (D) as well as at internal membrane structures (E) of these compartments after 10-min chase following EGF stimulation. In control cells, Shc was distributed throughout the cytosol (F). Shc (10 nm) and EGFR (15 nm) were found co-localized in vesicular compartments of EGF-stimulated cells chased for 10 min (G). Shc was predominantly seen in the outer membrane of vesicles and in membrane structures close to these compartments (small arrowhead, uppermost). Small arrowheads, Shc; large arrowhead, EGFR. Bars = 200 nm.


  Discussion
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Summary
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
Literature Cited

In this study we demonstrated, by immunocytochemistry and immunoelectron microscopy, that after EGF stimulation of HeLa cells, Y1173- and Y992-phosphorylated EGFR translocated from the plasma membrane to cytoplasmic vesicles. Co-localization with the early endosome marker EEA1 identified the main autophosphorylated EGFR-containing compartment as early endosomes. This was consistent with the ultrastructural morphology of vesicles containing autophosphorylated EGFR. The adaptor protein Shc simultaneously redistributed to EGFR–containing endosomes. These findings imply that the activated EGFR-Shc complexes, which initiate MAPK activation, are located predominantly along the endocytic pathway.

Phosphotyrosine-specific antisera against two of the autophosphorylation sites of EGFR were developed for this study. The antisera recognized their respective tyrosine-phosphorylated peptides with much higher affinity than their unphosphorylated counterparts or the noncorresponding phosphorylated peptides. By Western blotting, phosphorylated EGFR was not detected in unstimulated cells, whereas strong immunoreactivity was found after EGF stimulation. Two-color immunofluorescence combined with confocal laser scanning microscopy offered the necessary resolution and specificity to study the intracellular distribution of signal transducers and their relation to specific intracellular organelles. We found that ligand-activated EGFR appeared to be phosphorylated at Y992 and Y1173 and co-localized with its main downstream signal transducer, the adaptor protein Shc, in early endosomes. Localization of tyrosine-phosphorylated EGFR in a small fraction of LAMP-1-positive organelles suggested that EGFR remained phosphorylated further down the lysosomal pathway, presumably in late endosomes or in an intermediate compartment.

The EGFR autophosphorylation sites Y1173 and Y992 chosen for these studies are both binding domains for Shc. It is not known whether EGFR phosphorylated at these different sites is sorted identically on internalization. Because it has been shown that, on average, each EGFR protein is tyrosine-phosphorylated at one site (Emlet et al. 1997 ), it is possible that different phosphorylation species are sorted to different intracellular compartments or show different activation or internalization kinetics. Recently, Emlet et al. 1997 demonstrated that Y992-phosphorylated EGFR exhibited a slower rate of endocytosis than the general pool of activated EGFR in A431 cells. In this study we found no difference in the phosphorylation or internalization pattern between EGFR phosphorylated at Y992 and Y1173 10 min after EGF stimulation. A431 cells internalize EGFR more slowly than HeLa cells do (Carpentier et al. 1982 ; Wiley and Cunningham 1982 ), and different internalization of Y992- and Y1173-phosphorylated EGFR may be found at earlier time points in HeLa cells.

Endocytic internalization and intracellular membrane routing of activated receptors may be significant for signal transduction and specificity. Autophosphorylation sites are important for proper endocytosis of receptor tyrosine kinases, and individual sites may determine specific routing of the receptor (Sorkin et al. 1991 ; Joly et al. 1995 ; Wang and Moran 1996 ; Emlet et al. 1997 ). Membrane fractionation studies of rat liver have demonstrated that a complex of EGFR and the signal mediators Shc, Grb2, and the Ras guanine exchange factor Sos are enriched in endosomes as a consequence of EGF stimulation (Di Guglielmo et al. 1994 ). This is in accordance with studies in HeLa cells showing that MAPK activation after EGF stimulation is severely inhibited in cells transfected with a mutant nonfunctional dynamin gene (Vieira et al. 1996 ). Recently, it has been shown that transfection with the mutated dynamin gene leads to severe downregulation of high-affinity EGFR, implying that this mutant may endure MAPK inhibition by other mechanisms than depleted endocytosis (Ringerike et al. 1998 ). EGF and TGF{alpha} convey different proliferative effects due to different sorting of the internalized ligand-bound EGFR (Skarpen et al. 1998 ). Two-color immunofluorescence procedures combining antibodies to activated signal transducers and specific organelle markers will be helpful in investigations of the membrane trafficking of signaling complexes.

By immunoelectron microscopy, we detected tyrosine-phosphorylated EGFR in the outer membrane as well as in internal membrane structures of vesicles. According to Marsh et al. 1986 and Gruenberg et al. 1989 , the early endosomes represent a network of tubular and tubulovesicular structures. Therefore, EGFR signaling may also occur from apparently internal endosomal membrane structures. Alternatively, the internal endosomal membrane structures may be small vesicles trapped in the lumen of endosomes without any communication with the cytoplasm. The tyrosine-phosphorylated EGFR and attached downstream signal mediators may thus be sequestered and processed for lysosomal degradation even in a biochemically active form.

The specificity and functional consequences of enzyme and gene activation may rely not only on the receptor's ability to activate different downstream signaling cascades but also on the processing of internalized signaling complexes through endocytosis. In this study we have demonstrated that EGFR phosphorylated at residue Y992 or Y1173 were internalized, and recruited Shc to early endosomes and possibly to a later compartment in response to EGF. This supports a role for membrane trafficking in EGFR signaling.


  Acknowledgments

Supported by the Norwegian Cancer Society and by the Research Council of Norway.

We thank Helga Grøsvik, Lene Wierød, and the staff at the Electron Microscopy Laboratory for helpful technical assistance, and Paula De Angelis for critically reading the manuscript. Discussions with Espen Stang, Oistein Ihle and David R. Emlet were very much appreciated.

Received for publication February 8, 1999; accepted August 24, 1999.


  Literature Cited
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Summary
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
Literature Cited

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