Metabolic Activation-related CD147-CD98 Complex*,S

Daosong Xu and Martin E. Hemler{ddagger}

From the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Department of Pathology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115


    ABSTRACT
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 REFERENCES
 
Cell surface CD147 protein promotes production of matrix metalloproteinases and hyaluronan, associates with monocarboxylate transporters and integrins, and is involved in reproductive, neural, inflammatory, and tumor functions. Here we combined covalent cross-linking, mass spectrometric protein identification, and co-immunoprecipitation to show selective CD147 association with three major types of transporters (CD98 heavy chain (CD98hc)-L-type amino acid transporter, ASCT2, and monocarboxylate transporters) as well as a regulator of cell proliferation (epithelial cell adhesion molecule). In the assembly of these multicomponent complexes, CD147 and CD98hc play a central organizing role. RNA interference knock-down experiments established a strong connection between CD147 and CD98hc expression and a strong positive association of CD147 (and CD98hc) with cell proliferation. As the CD147-CD98hc complex and proliferation diminished, AMP-activated protein kinase (a cellular "fuel gauge") became activated, indicating a disturbance of cellular energy metabolism. Our data point to a CD147-CD98 cell surface supercomplex that plays a critical role in energy metabolism, likely by coordinating transport of lactate and amino acids. Furthermore we showed how covalent cross-linking, together with mass spectrometry, can be used to identify closely associated transmembrane proteins. This approach should also be applicable to many other types of transmembrane proteins besides those associated with CD98hc and CD147.


CD147 (extracellular matrix metalloproteinase inducer (EMMPRIN), basigin, neurothelin, tumor cell-derived collagenase-stimulatory factor (TCSF), OX-47, 5A11, CE9, gp42, M6) is a cell surface protein with multiple glycosylated forms (1, 2). CD147 is ubiquitously expressed with highest levels on metabolically active cells, such as lymphoblasts (3), inflammatory cells (4), brown adipocytes (5), and malignant tumors (1). CD147 promotes production of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs)1(1) and hyaluronan (6) and is involved in reproduction, neural function, inflammation, tumor invasion, and human immunodeficiency virus infection (1, 7, 8). As a chaperone for monocarboxylate transporters (MCT1 and MCT4), CD147 enables insertion of MCT1 and MCT4 into cell membranes, which facilitates import and/or export of lactate and pyruvate (9, 10). CD147 also interacts with ß1 integrin (11), cyclophilin A (7), and caveolin-1 (12). Caveolin-1 association appears to restrict CD147 glycosylation and function (2). Consistent with the functional importance of CD147, CD147–/– mice are sterile, have reduced body weight, and show impaired spermatogenesis, sensory, learning, and memory functions. Half of the surviving mice subsequently die of pneumonia (13). In some genetic backgrounds, the majority of mouse embryos lacking CD147 die at around the time of implantation (14).

Emerging proteomic technologies are helping to elucidate cellular protein-protein interaction networks (15, 16). However, elucidation of cell surface transmembrane protein interactions has lagged behind often due to issues involving detergent solubilization. To understand better the remarkably diverse functions of CD147, we sought to identify its major cell surface protein partners. First we used homobifunctional cross-linking agents to stabilize protein interaction networks on intact cells, and then we lysed cells using relatively harsh detergent conditions to disrupt non-cross-linked complexes. Next we immunoisolated cross-linked CD147 complexes and used nanoscale LC-MS/MS to identify all transmembrane proteins in these complexes. Our data point to CD147 interacting not only with monocarboxylate transporters but also with amino acid transporters (CD98 heavy chain (CD98hc)-LAT1 and ASCT2) and a regulator of cell proliferation (EpCAM).

Like CD147, CD98hc (4F2, fusion-regulatory protein-1) also is a multifunctional glycoprotein with a single transmembrane domain, is highly expressed on proliferating cells, and functions as a chaperone for transporters (17, 18). Indeed CD98hc forms disulfide-bonded heterodimers with at least six different light chains (L-type amino acid transporter 1 (LAT1), LAT2, y+LAT1, y+LAT2, Asc-1, and xCT) that serve as amino acid transporters (18). In addition, CD98hc may regulate cell fusion (19) and integrin-dependent adhesion functions (20, 21) while associating either indirectly (22) or directly (23) with ß1 integrins. Our detailed analysis of CD98hc complexes confirmed CD98 association with CD147, monocarboxylate transporters, amino acid transporters (LAT1 and ASCT2), and epithelial cell adhesion molecule (EpCAM). Furthermore RNAi depletion of either CD147 or CD98hc diminished cell surface expression of both molecules and diminished cell proliferation. Together these results point to CD147 and CD98hc playing a central organizing role within a "supercomplex" that is critical for cellular energy metabolism.


    EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 REFERENCES
 
Antibodies—
We used antibodies to CD147 (mAb 8G6; pAb B10 (11)), CD98hc (mAb 4F2 (24); pAb C-20, Santa Cruz Biotechnology), EpCAM (mAb KS1/4, BD Biosciences; pAb H-70, Santa Cruz Biotechnology), ß1 integrin (mAb TS2/16), MHC class I (mAb W6/32), Na/K-ATPase {alpha}1 (mAb C464.4, Santa Cruz Biotechnology), AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) {alpha} and phospho-AMPK{alpha} (Cell Signaling Technology), MCT1 (pAb from Alpha Diagnostics), and ß tubulin (mAb Tub2.1, Sigma). Anti-GFP (mAb 3E6, Qbiogene) was used for immunoprecipitation (IP), and anti-FLAG (mAb M2 and M2-agarose, Sigma) was used for IP and immunoblotting.

Cross-linking and LC-MS/MS—
Intact cells were grown to 90% confluence in five 150-mm plates and then were washed three times with PBS. Cross-linkers DSP or BS3 (Pierce) were added to 1 mM (final concentration) in 20 mM Hepes buffer, pH 7.5, 150 mM NaCl, and 5 mM MgCl2 for 30 min at room temperature or for 1 h at 4 °C before termination with 25 mM glycine (pH 7.5). After washing with PBS, cells were lysed with lysis buffer (25 mM Hepes, pH 7.5, 150 mM NaCl, and 5 mM MgCl2 supplemented with 1% Triton X-100 (Roche Applied Science) with proteinase inhibitor mixture (Roche Applied Science)) at 4 °C for 1 h. Lysate was centrifuged at 20,000 x g for 30 min, and the supernatant was precleared with 2 ml of protein A-agarose for 2 h at 4 °C. After centrifugation (6000 x g for 20 min), the supernatant was mixed with 1 ml of anti-FLAG M2-agarose (Sigma) or mAb 4F2-conjugated beads and shaken overnight at 4 °C overnight. Beads were then washed six times with 30 ml of lysis buffer. Complexes were eluted with 2.5 ml of 100 mM glycine, pH 2.5, and then neutralized with 200 µl of 1 M Tris-HCl, pH 7.5. Concentrated eluate (Centricon, Millipore) was resolved by SDS-PAGE using reducing conditions for BS3-cross-linked samples and non-reducing conditions for DSP-cross-linked samples. All Coomassie Blue-stained bands larger than 40 kDa were excised and sent to the Taplin Biological Mass Spectrometry Facility (Harvard Medical School). For protein identification, excised SDS-polyacrylamide gel bands were chopped into 1-mm3 pieces, and in-gel digestion with trypsin was performed as described previously (25). All data were acquired by nanoscale microcapillary liquid chromatography coupled to a linear ion trap mass spectrometer (ThermoElectron, San Jose, CA) as described previously (26). Briefly a gradient of increasing organic modifier eluted peptides into the mass spectrometer. The instrument was set to cycle between collecting one survey scan followed by five MS/MS scans on the five most abundant ions with dynamic exclusion of ions selected previously. MS/MS spectra were extracted using Bioworks 3.1 and searched with the Sequest (version 27) algorithm against the nonredundant human data base from NCBI, which contained 237,384 sequences. Typical ion trap parameters were used including a peptide tolerance of 2.0 Da, default fragment ion tolerance, variable modification of methionine (+16), no enzyme specificity, and up to three missed cleavages allowed. Peptide matches were deemed correct when two or more high scoring, fully tryptic peptides matched to a protein. Xcorr values of 1.8, 1.8, and 3.0 were used for 1+, 2+, and 3+ peptides, respectively, and no dCorr threshold was used. Peptide matches with three or fewer tryptic matches were manually verified. Also there was no smoothing of data, signal to noise criteria, charge state determination, or peak deisotoping utilized for these experiments.

Immunoprecipitation and Western Blotting—
Cells grown in 100-mm plates were lysed with 1 ml of lysis buffer for 1 h at 4 °C. Centrifugation and preclearing were carried out as above. For each immunoprecipitation, 2–4 µg of antibody with 50 µl of protein A (or protein G)-agarose beads or 50 µl of FLAG-agarose beads were used with shaking at 4 °C overnight. Beads were then washed three times, and immune complexes were eluted using 60 µl of 1x Laemmli sample buffer (non-reducing) at 100 °C for 2 min. Sample aliquots (20 µl) were resolved using SDS-PAGE, and immunoblotting and flow cytometry were carried out as described previously (11). In some experiments, after blotting, relative band densities were assessed quantitatively using GeneTools version 3 (Syngene Laboratories, Frederick, MD).

Cell Lines—
Human cell lines HT1080 (fibrosarcoma), SW480 (colorectal adenocarcinoma), and MCF7 (breast adenocarcinoma) from ATCC were maintained in Dulbecco’s modified Eagle’s medium supplemented with 10% fetal calf serum and (for MCF7 cells) an additional 10 µg/ml insulin. CD147 and stromal cell-derived factor receptor 1 (SDFR1) (GenBankTM accession number GI:20552516, with 40% sequence identity with CD147) were C-terminally FLAG-tagged, and CD98hc and LAT1 were N-terminally FLAG-tagged and inserted into pcDNA3.1(+) or pLXIZ vectors.

Quantitation of immunoblotted CD147 was carried out using pAb B10. Ectopic CD147-FLAG expression was 1.4-fold higher than endogenous CD147 in HT1080 cells, 1.8-fold higher in HEK293 cells, and 2.1-fold higher in MCF7 cells. Similarly we blotted with anti-FLAG antibody to show that ectopic CD147-FLAG and SDFR1-FLAG were expressed at levels comparable to each other in HT1080, HEK293, and MCF7 cells. We also prepared C-terminal GFP-tagged CD147 and SDFR1 and N-terminal GFP-tagged LAT1 using pEGFP-C3 or pEGFP-N1 vectors (Clontech). Cells were either stably transfected using FuGENE 6 (Roche Applied Science) or infected and then selected using G418 or Zeocin (Invitrogen) for 4–6 weeks.

Oligonucleotides for CD147 and CD98hc RNAi—
Sense and antisense oligonucleotides were cut with BamHI and HindIII, and purified fragments were ligated into RNAi plasmid pSilencer 3.1 H1 Hygro (Ambion) and confirmed by DNA sequencing. The RNAi negative plasmid was from the same kit (Ambion). Cells were transfected with FuGENE 6 (Roche Applied Science). Stable cells were selected for about 4–8 weeks in 200 µg/ml hygromycin (Roche Applied Science). Oligonucleotide sequences used for CD147 and CD98hc RNAi experiments were as follows: CD147 RNAi oligonucleotides, Pair 1: sense, (BamHI) 5'-CG{downarrow}GATCCCGACCTTGGCTCCAAGATACTTCAAGAGAGTATCTTGGAGCCAAGGTCTTTTTGGAAA{downarrow}AGCTTGGGC-3' (Hind III); antisense, (Hind III) 5'-GCCCA{downarrow}AGCTTTTCCAAAAAGACCTTGGCTCCAAGATACTCTCTTGAAGTATCTTGGAGCCAAGGTCGG{downarrow}GATCCGG-3' (BamHI); Pair 2: sense, (BamHI) 5'-CCG{downarrow}GATCCCGGCCGTGAAGTCGTCAGAATTCAAGAGATTCTGACGACTTCACGGCCTT TTTGGAAA{downarrow}AGCTTGGGC-3' (Hind III); antisense, (HindIII) 5'-GCCCA{downarrow}AGCTTTTCCAAAAAGGCCGTGAAGTCGTCAGAATCTCTTGAATTCTGACGACTTCACGGCCGG{downarrow}GATCCGG (BamHI); CD98hc RNAi oligonucleotide sequences, Pair 1: sense, (BamHI) 5'-CCG{downarrow}GATCCCGTGAGTAGAGCCCGAGAAGTTCAAGAGACTTCTCGGGCTCTAACTCATTTTTTGGAAA{downarrow}AGCTTGGGC-3' (Hind III); antisense, (HindIII) 5'-GCCCA{downarrow}AGCTTTTCCAAAAAATGAGTTAGAGCCCGAGAAGTCTCTTGAACTTCTCGGGCTCTAACTCACGG{downarrow}GATCCGG (BamHI); Pair 2: sense, (BamHI) 5'-CCG{downarrow}GATCCCGGATGCATCCTCATTCTTGTTCAAGAGACAAGAATGAGGATG CATCCTTTTTTGGAAA{downarrow}AGCTTGGGC-3' (Hind III); antisense, (HindIII) 5'-GCCCA{downarrow}AGCTTTTCCAAAAAAGGATGCATCCTCATTCTTGTCTCTTGAACAAGAATGAGGATGCATCCGG{downarrow}GATCCGG-3' (BamHI).

Cellular Proliferation Assay and Statistical Analysis—
Cellular proliferation/survival was measured using the 3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide (Roche Applied Science) colorimetric method. Cell suspensions (1 x 104 cells/100 µl) were plated into 96-well plates with four wells for each cell clone in complete medium. Control wells contained either mitomycin C (Sigma) (1, 2.5, or 5 µg/ml) or Dulbecco’s modified Eagle’s medium without serum. The plates were incubated for 3 or 4 days at 37 °C prior to the addition of 3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide solution and measurement of absorbance at 560 nm. Each experiment was repeated three times. The relative proliferation was calculated compared with mean of RNAi control. Data on CD147 and CD98hc expression levels were assessed by flow cytometry. Each experiment was repeated three times. The correlation between CD147 expression and relative proliferation was analyzed using VassarStats statistics (faculty.vassar.edu/lowry/VassarStats.html).


    RESULTS
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 REFERENCES
 
CD147 Protein Partners Identified by LC-MS/MS—
FLAG-tagged CD147 was expressed in HT1080 and MCF7 cells at levels only a little higher (1.4–2.1-fold) than endogenous CD147. Intact HT1080 cells (Fig. 1, left lane) and MCF7 cells (Fig. 1, right lane) were then treated with chemical cross-linkers (non-reducible BS3 or reducible DSP, respectively), cells were lysed in Triton X-100, CD147 complexes were isolated, and then proteins within the indicated gel regions were identified using LC-MS/MS analysis. A summary of results is shown in Table I for CD147 complexes isolated from MCF7 epithelial cells (Experiment I), HT1080 fibrosarcoma cells (Experiment II), or HT1080 co-cultured with MCF7 cells (Experiment III). Proteins identified in all three experiments, besides CD147 itself, were CD98hc and the monocarboxylate transporters MCT1 and MCT4. Proteins appearing in at least one experiment were ASCT2 (neutral amino acid transporter), LAT1 (a CD98 light chain), EpCAM, an additional MCT family protein (MCT8), and ß1 integrin plus others listed in Table I. Use of covalent cross-linkers allowed isolation of CD147 partners under relatively stringent (1% Triton X-100) conditions. For comparison, an additional experiment was carried out using a mild detergent (1% Brij 58) with no cross-linking (Table I, Experiment IV). CD147 complexes again contained CD98hc, ASCT2, and the other proteins listed in Table I, Experiment IV, plus a few additional proteins (not listed) that appeared only under these less stringent conditions. Results such as those seen in Table I were consistently obtained when we isolated CD147 complexes while using anti-FLAG antibody to C-terminal FLAG-tagged CD147. In contrast, monoclonal and polyclonal antibodies to CD147 extracellular domains failed to yield many associated proteins (e.g. see Fig. 5 below, and not shown) presumably because the associated proteins were blocking access of the antibodies to CD147.



View larger version (27K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
FIG. 1. Representative samples of CD147-associated proteins. HT1080 cells were treated with non-reducible cross-linker BS3, CD147-FLAG complexes were isolated from 1% Triton X-100 lysates, and then samples were resolved using reducing conditions (left lane). MCF7 cells were treated with reducible cross-linker DSP, CD147-FLAG complexes were isolated from 1% Triton X-100 lysates, and samples were resolved using non-reducing conditions (right lane). After staining with Coomassie Blue, the indicated regions were excised for LC-MS/MS analysis. R, reducing; Non-R, non-reducing; H, heavy; L, light.

 

View this table:
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
TABLE I Membrane proteins identified in CD147 and CD98 complexes by LC-MS/MS

Experiment I, MCF7/CD147-FLAG cells, DSP cross-linker. Experiment II, HT1080/CD147-FLAG cells, BS3 cross-linker. Experiment III, HT1080/CD147-FLAG cells were co-cultured with MCF7 cells and then treated with BS3 cross-linker. Experiment IV, MCF7/CD147-FLAG cells, IP: FLAG in 1% Brij 58, no cross-linker. Experiment V, MCF7/CD98hc-FLAG cells, BS3 cross-linking, IP: FLAG in 1% Triton X-100. Experiment VI, MCF7 cells, DSP cross-linking, IP: 4F2 beads in 1% Triton X-100. Experiment VII, MCF7/CD98hc-FLAG cells were co-cultured with HT1080 cells, BS3 cross-linking, IP: FLAG in radioimmune precipitation assay buffer. Molecules with names in bold were validated in independent biochemical co-immunoprecipitation experiments.

 


View larger version (39K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
FIG. 5. Association of CD98hc with EpCAM and ASCT2. A, SW480 cells were lysed in 1% Brij 99. Endogenous EpCAM (mAb KS1/4), CD147 (mAb 8G6), or Na/K-ATPase {alpha}1 (mAb C464.4) was immunoprecipitated and then blotted for endogenous associated CD98hc using pAb C-20. B, SW480 cells were lysed in 1% Brij 99; endogenous CD98hc (lane 2), CD147 (lane 3), EpCAM (lane 4), and Na/K-ATPase {alpha}1 (lane 5) were immunoprecipitated; and samples were blotted for associated EpCAM. C, intact MCF7 cells were treated with cross-linker (1 mM DSP) and lysed in 1% Triton X-100. Endogenous EpCAM, CD147, and Na/K-ATPase were immunoprecipitated and blotted for CD98hc. D, HEK293 cells were lysed in 1% Brij 99 or Brij 97, CD147 (mAb 8G6) and CD98hc (mAb 4F2) were immunoprecipitated, and associated ASCT2-FLAG was detected by blotting with anti-FLAG antibody. IB, immunoblotting; CXL, cross-linking.

 
Confirmation of CD147 Association with CD98hc—
Although suggestive, results in Table I are neither definitive nor quantitative. To firmly establish direct CD147-CD98hc association, we used covalent cross-linking and co-immunoprecipitation. Following either DSP (thiol cleavable) or BS3 (uncleavable) cross-linking, immunoprecipitation of CD147 yielded endogenous CD98hc from MCF7 (Fig. 2A, lanes 2 and 3 ), HT1080 (Fig. 2B, lanes 2 and 3), and HEK293 (Fig. 2C, lanes 4 and 6) cells. No CD98hc was obtained when cross-linker was omitted (Fig. 2, A and B, lanes 1 and 4, and C, lanes 1 and 2) or antibodies to control SDFR1 protein were utilized (Fig. 2, A and B, lanes 4–6, and C, lanes 3 and 5). Monomeric CD98hc appears as two bands (~85 and 92 kDa) likely due to variable glycosylation. The larger size of CD98hc (140–230 kDa) captured in CD147 complexes from uncleavable BS3-cross-linked lanes is consistent with endogenous CD98hc being covalently cross-linked to CD147 (~50 kDa) plus additional components. One likely additional component is the known CD147 partner MCT1. As indicated in Fig. 2D (lane 3), MCT1 (45 kDa) cross-linked to CD147 (50 kDa) yielded a 95-kDa complex plus a larger complex (~140–230 kDa) similar in size to that containing CD98hc. In the absence of cross-linker, MCT1 (~45,000) associated with CD147 in Brij 97 lysate (Fig. 2E) but not in Triton X-100 (not shown).



View larger version (42K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
FIG. 2. Cross-linked CD147 complexes contain CD98hc. A, transfected MCF7 cells were treated with no cross-linker (lanes 1 and 4), DSP (lanes 2 and 5), or BS3 (lanes 3 and 6) and lysed using 1% Triton X-100. CD147 (lanes 1–3) and control SDFR1 (lanes 4–6) were immunoprecipitated using anti-FLAG antibody, and samples were blotted for endogenous CD98hc using pAb C-20. B, transfected HT1080 cells were treated with or without cross-linker (as in A), CD147-FLAG or negative control (SDFR1-FLAG) was immunoprecipitated, and samples were blotted for endogenous CD98hc. C, transfected HEK293 cells were treated with or without cross-linker (as indicated), CD147-FLAG or control SDFR1-FLAG was immunoprecipitated, and samples were blotted blot for endogenous CD98hc. For cells used in A–C, CD147-FLAG and SDFR1-FLAG were expressed at comparable levels as indicated by anti-FLAG blotting (not shown). D, intact HEK293 cells were cross-linked (1 mM BS3) and lysed in 1% Triton X-100, then CD147-FLAG was immunoprecipitated, and samples were blotted for MCT1. E, HEK293 cells were lysed in 1% Brij 97, CD147-FLAG was immunoprecipitated, and samples were blotted for MCT1. CXL, cross-linking; ctrl, control; IB, immunoblotting.

 
In the absence of cross-linker, CD147-CD98hc complexes were also stable in Brij 97 as well as CHAPS and Brij 99 but were almost completely disrupted in Triton X-100 (Fig. 3A). Immunoprecipitation of CD147 yielded CD98hc when the two molecules were co-expressed together in HEK293 cells (Fig. 3B, lane 8) but not when expressed separately and then the cells (Fig. 3B, lane 5) or lysates (lane 4) were mixed. Hence CD147 forms a cis-interacting complex with CD98hc. Negative control SDFR1 did not associate with CD98hc, whereas positive control LAT1 (an established CD98 light chain) did associate with CD98hc (Fig. 3B, lanes 7 and 6, respectively).



View larger version (55K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
FIG. 3. Further characterization of CD147-CD98hc complexes. A, HEK293 cells were lysed in the indicated detergents (each at 1%), CD147-FLAG or negative control SDFR1-FLAG was immunoprecipitated, and samples were blotted for endogenous CD98 using pAb C-20. B, HEK293 cells were lysed in 1% Brij 99; CD147-GFP (lane 8), SDFR1-GFP (lane 7), or LAT1-GFP (lane 6) was immunoprecipitated; and CD98-FLAG (from the same cell lysate) was detected using anti-FLAG antibody. For trans experiments, HEK293 cells (lane 5) or lysates (lane 4) containing CD147-GFP were mixed with cells or lysates containing CD98hc-FLAG. Then CD147-GFP was immunoprecipitated, and CD98-FLAG was detected by blotting (lanes 4 and 5). Also CD98hc-FLAG was blotted from control lysates of HEK293-CD147-GFP cells (lane 1), HEK293-CD98-FLAG cells (lane 2), mixed HEK293-CD147-GFP and HEK-CD98-FLAG cells (lane 3), and HEK293 co-expressing both CD147-GFP and CD98hc-FLAG (lane 9). ctrl, control; IB, immunoblotting; TX-100, Triton X-100.

 
In a reciprocal experiment, CD98hc immunoprecipitation yielded a large complex (170–230 kDa) containing endogenous CD147 when covalent cross-linker (BS3) was added to HEK293 cells prior to Triton X-100 lysis (Fig. 4A, lane 9) but not when BS3 was omitted (lane 8). In mild Brij 99 or CHAPS detergent, CD147 was obtained even without cross-linking (Fig. 4A, lanes 5 and 6). Additional data, involving CD147 domain deletion and swapping, point to CD147 Ig domain 1 being critical for CD98 association (not shown). Immunoprecipitation of CD98hc also yielded MCT1 (Fig. 4C, lanes 5 and 6), which associates directly with CD147 (9), and as we confirmed in Fig. 2, D and E. The association between CD98hc and MCT1 was seen in mild detergents (1% Brij 99 and CHAPS; Fig. 4C, lanes 5 and 6) but not in more stringent detergent conditions (Brij 97; lane 7) under which MCT1 still associated with CD147 (Fig. 2E). Moreover MCT1 was only minimally cross-linked with CD98hc (Fig. 4C, lane 9). Rather most of the MCT1 (45 kDa) was directly cross-linked to CD147 (50 kDa) to yield a heterodimer of ~95 kDa (Fig. 4A, lane 2, and Fig. 2D, lane 3).



View larger version (71K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
FIG. 4. CD98hc (and LAT1) co-precipitate CD147 (and MCT1). A, HEK293 cells expressing CD98hc-FLAG (lanes 1, 2, and 5–9) or FLAG vector alone (lanes 3 and 4) were lysed using Triton X-100 (lanes 1, 2, 4, 8, and 9), Brij 99 (lanes 3 and 5), CHAPS (lane 6), or Brij 97 (lane 7). A portion of cells (used for lanes 2 and 9) was treated with BS3 cross-linker. Following immunoprecipitation of CD98hc-FLAG or vector control FLAG using anti-FLAG antibody, samples were blotted for CD147. CD147(HG), high glycosylated form; CD147(LG), low glycosylated form (2). Note that the membrane used in A was first used in C and then stripped and reprobed with anti-CD147 antibody B10. B, LAT1-FLAG was immunoprecipitated from HEK293 cells (lysed in Brij 99 or CHAPS), and samples were blotted for CD147. C, CD98hc immunoprecipitates (prepared as in A) were blotted for MCT1. neg.ctrl, negative control; ctrl, control.

 
Associations Mediated through CD98hc—
It seemed possible that some potential CD147 partners from Experiments I–IV of Table I (e.g. LAT1, EpCAM, and ASCT2) could be more proximal to CD98 than CD147. To explore this further, we identified CD98hc partners when CD147 expression was minimal. To achieve this, we used CD98hc-FLAG-expressing MCF7 cells with low endogenous levels of CD147 as detected by flow cytometry and by Western blotting (not shown). After cross-linking of intact cells with either BS3 or DSP, cells were lysed in Triton X-100, and we isolated CD98hc-FLAG complexes (Table I, Experiments V and VII) or endogenous CD98hc complexes (Experiment VI) from MCF7 cells alone (Experiments V and VI) or after co-culture with HT1080 cells (Experiment VII). Again LC-MS/MS analyses revealed the presence of LAT1, EpCAM, and ASCT2 plus CD98hc itself. Despite elevated CD147 expression in HT1080 cells, HT1080 CD147 was not identified among the protein partners of MCF7 CD98hc (Experiment VII), consistent with CD98hc and CD147 not interacting in trans (as established in Fig. 3B). For some proteins listed in Table I (CD71 and Na/K-ATPase) we could not confirm CD98hc (or CD147) association in subsequent biochemical experiments (e.g. see Fig. 5, A–C). These and other proteins appearing twice or less in seven experiments (Table I, bottom) were not studied further.

LAT1, a Na+-independent transporter for large, neutral amino acids, naturally and directly associates with CD98hc via a disulfide bond (27). Although LAT1 immunoprecipitation did yield CD147 from mild Brij 99 and CHAPS lysates (Fig. 4B), LAT1 did not co-immunoprecipitate CD147 in more stringent detergent conditions (Triton X-100 and Brij 97) either with or without cross-linking (not shown). These results are consistent with a CD147-CD98hc-LAT1 linkage. Confirming results in Table I (Experiments V–VII), CD98hc from SW480 cells also co-immunoprecipitated (Fig. 5A, lane 2) with EpCAM, an epithelial cell surface protein involved in tumor proliferation (28, 29). Conversely immunoprecipitation of endogenous CD98hc from SW480 cells yielded endogenous EpCAM (Fig. 5B, lane 2). EpCAM-CD98hc complexes were stable in 1% Brij 99 (Fig. 5, A and B) and CHAPS and Brij 97 (data not shown) but not in Triton X-100 (Fig. 5C, lane 4) unless captured using the covalent cross-linker DSP (Fig. 5C, lane 1). In each of these experiments, antibody (mAb 8G6) to endogenous CD147 failed to yield much CD98 (Fig. 5, A, lane 1, and C, lane 2) or EpCAM (Fig. 5B, lane 3) at least partly because the 8G6 epitope (on extracellular Ig domain 1) is blocked by CD147-associated proteins (not shown). Although Na/K-ATPase {alpha}1 was prominently expressed in SW480 cell lysates, an antibody (mAb C464.4) to that protein yielded minimal CD98 or EpCAM and hence was used as a negative control in Fig. 5, A–C. As an additional negative control, anti-ß1 integrin mAb TS2/16 also failed to yield EpCAM from SW480 cells.

Another protein in Table I, associating with both CD147 and CD98hc, is the neutral amino acid transporter ASCT2 (30). Confirming this result, CD98hc immunoprecipitation from HEK293 cells yielded ASCT2 in both Brij 99 and Brij 97 cell lysates (Fig. 5D, lanes 4 and 5). However, immunoprecipitation with anti-CD147 mAb 8G6 failed to yield ASCT2 (Fig. 5D, lanes 2 and 3) again because the 8G6 epitope is likely blocked. Treatment of HEK293 cells with DSP cross-linker prior to lysis allowed immunoprecipitation of endogenous CD98 and recovery of ASCT2 even in 1% Triton X-100 (not shown).

Correlation between CD147, CD98hc Expression, and Cell Proliferation—
To explore further the CD147-CD98hc supercomplex, we used RNAi to knock down either CD147 or CD98hc. CD147 was reduced up to 80% in HEK293 cells as seen by immunoblotting (Fig. 6A) and flow cytometry (Fig. 6B, top panel). The same RNAi that diminished CD147 also reduced CD98hc expression (Fig. 6B, lower panel). Conversely knock-down of CD98hc caused a loss of CD147. Indeed cell surface expression data for 14 different CD147-depleted clones and 13 different CD98hc-depleted clones each showed strikingly parallel effects on both CD147 and CD98hc expression (Fig. 7A). Levels of other prominent cell surface proteins (ß1 integrin and MHC class I) were unaffected by CD147 or CD98hc depletion (not shown).



View larger version (40K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
FIG. 6. Interdependent expression of CD147 and CD98hc. A, lysates from CD147 RNAi-depleted HEK293 clones were blotted for CD147 and ß tubulin. B, CD147-depleted HEK293 cells (clone 97-9) were analyzed by flow cytometry for CD147 (mAb 8G6, upper panel) and CD98 (mAb 4F2, lower panel). Negative control cells (dotted lines) were treated with non-depleting control RNAi. IB, immunoblotting; neg ctrl, negative control.

 


View larger version (28K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
FIG. 7. Functional co-regulation of CD147 and CD98hc. A, cell surface expression levels (in mean fluorescence intensity units) are plotted for CD98hc (y axis) and CD147 (x axis) for each clone of CD147 and CD98 RNAi-depleted cells. B, relative proliferation rates for CD147-depleted clones are plotted versus cell surface CD147 expression levels. For each result, n = 3, and S.E. ≤ 5% of mean proliferation rate. Relative proliferation rates are shown relative to RNAi negative control rates. C, CD147-depleted HEK293 clones were lysed in radioimmune precipitation assay buffer with proteinase inhibitor mixture supplemented with 2 mM PMSF, 1 mM Na3VO4, 1 mM NaF and then detected for expression of phosphorylated AMPK{alpha} and total AMPK{alpha}. Band densities were determined using GeneTools version 3 (Syngene Laboratories). Each band in the phospho-AMPK (P-AMPK) blot (upper panel) was normalized relative to total AMPK (lower panel). These values were then standardized relative to the negative control lane to yield the numbers shown below the lower panel. ctr, control; neg.ctrl, negative control.

 
Although there was no obvious morphological abnormality in CD147- and CD98hc-depleted HEK293 cells, they did show markedly decreased proliferation in proportion to diminished CD147 expression (Fig. 7B). Serum starvation and mitomycin C treatment likewise impaired HEK293 cell proliferation but without altering CD147 and CD98hc expression levels (not shown). Hence diminished CD147 and CD98hc levels are a cause rather than a consequence of diminished proliferation. Although cell proliferation and CD147-CD98hc complex levels diminished in parallel, activation of AMPK showed an inversely proportional increase (Fig. 7C). Activation of this cellular energy sensor, which is triggered by a high AMP/ATP ratio (29), is indicative of impaired energy metabolism.


    DISCUSSION
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 REFERENCES
 
The CD147-CD98 Complex—
Striking similarities between the MCT-CD147 and CD98hc-LAT1 complexes have previously been noted. Both CD147 and CD98hc 1) are cell surface glycoproteins with a single transmembrane domain, 2) are highly expressed on activated or proliferating cells, 3) associate directly with transporters containing several transmembrane domains, and 4) are required to bring those transporters (MCTs or LAT1 and related molecules) to the cell surface (9, 10, 18, 27). Now our results reveal the existence of a novel MCT-CD147-CD98hc-LAT1 transporter complex, which also includes another amino acid transporter (ASCT2) as well as a protein (EpCAM) previously linked to epithelial cell proliferation. At the core of this complex is the interaction between CD147 and CD98hc. This interaction is direct (as seen using two different covalent cross-linking agents), was reciprocally demonstrated, was captured on the surface of multiple intact cell lines, and was shown to occur in cis rather than in trans.

The close association between CD147 and MCT proteins (10) is confirmed by our covalent cross-linking of CD147 and MCT1 (Fig. 2D). However, although we did see association of MCT with CD98hc under mild detergent conditions (1% Brij 97 and CHAPS), we did not observe direct MCT-CD98hc cross-linking. CD98hc does associate directly, via a disulfide linkage, with LAT1 (31). However, although we did see association of LAT1 with CD147 under mild detergent conditions, we did not observe direct CD147-LAT1 cross-linking. Furthermore a CD98hc-C109S mutant, which lacks LAT1 light chain association (22, 32), retained CD147 association (not shown). These results support an MCT-CD147-CD98hc-LAT1 arrangement in which the MCT-CD147 and CD98-LAT1 heterodimers are linked via direct CD147-CD98hc contact (Fig. 8).



View larger version (44K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
FIG. 8. Model of the CD147-CD98hc supercomplex. Results in Figs. 2 and 4 support a direct association between CD147 and CD98hc. Also CD147 associates directly with MCT1 and MCT4 (Ref. 10 and Fig. 2D), CD98hc associates directly with LAT1 (31), and EpCAM associates directly with CD98hc (see text). Although Experiment I (in Table I) suggested that LAT1 and EpCAM could also directly contact CD147, this possibility was not confirmed in further experiments. Experiments in Table I suggested that ASCT2 could contact both CD147 and CD98. Results from subsequent experiments currently favor a CD98hc contact, but an ASCT2-CD147 contact remains a possibility.

 
Functions of CD147-CD98hc Complexes—
RNAi-mediated depletion of either CD147 or CD98hc resulted in parallel diminution of both components as well as activation of AMPK and decreased cell proliferation. We suggest that decreased cell proliferation is likely achieved through a regulatory pathway involving the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) kinase (33, 34). Without CD147, cellular metabolism of lactate and pyruvate should be impaired because MCT1 and MCT4 do not insert into cell membranes properly (9, 10). Without CD98hc, LAT1 family transporters are mostly trapped inside of cells, and amino acid transport should be impaired (27, 35). Diminished intracellular levels of nutrients such as amino acids, glucose, pyruvate, and lactate should lead to impaired energy metabolism and a high AMP/ATP ratio, thereby triggering phosphorylation and activation of AMPK (36), which we did indeed observe. Decreased cellular nutrients and activated AMPK are both known to cause diminished activity of the serine/threonine kinase mTOR. This key regulatory "rheostat" in cells responds to environmental nutrient signals by regulating cell growth and proliferation at least in part by affecting protein biosynthesis (37).

Why are expression levels of CD147 and CD98hc regulated in parallel? One possibility is that expression of one component may facilitate expression of the other in the context of a MCT-CD147-CD98hc-LAT1 complex. For example, co-expression could boost the overall biosynthetic assembly of these complexes and/or could exert a stabilizing effect on each component once they reach the cell surface. Consistent with this "facilitated co-expression" idea, CD147 (1, 35), and CD98hc (3841) are each up-regulated on tumor cell lines and other types of metabolically activated cells. Another possibility is that CD147 and CD98hc proteins are co-regulated at the transcriptional or translational level. In the preceding paragraph, we emphasized how decreased levels of CD147 and CD98hc could cause changes in AMPK and mTOR pathways, leading to diminished proliferation. However, diminished expression of CD147 and CD98hc could also be a consequence of altered AMPK and mTOR pathways. In this regard, down-regulation of mTOR activity can lead to decreased cell surface expression of CD98hc/4F2 and glucose transporter Glut1 (42), which is a molecule that can be co-regulated with MCT1 (43). Hence RNAi-dependent depletion of either CD147 or CD98hc could lead to decreased mTOR phosphorylation, resulting in decreased expression of both molecules. This regulation must be somewhat specific because levels of other highly expressed cell surface molecules (ß1 integrins and MHC class I) were not affected by removal of either CD147 or CD98hc.

With the discovery of MCT-CD147-CD98hc-LAT1 complexes, we are now better able to understand a few observations that previously suggested a functional link between CD147 and CD98hc. In studies involving human immunodeficiency virus gp160-mediated cell fusion and monocyte cell fusion, antibodies to CD98hc and CD147 had cross-regulatory effects (44). In studies of T lymphocyte costimulation by U937 cells (45) and dendritic cells (46), antibodies to CD147 and CD98hc were among the few antibodies to have inhibitory effects. In another study involving U937 cells, anti-CD147 antibodies inhibited homotypic aggregation that was stimulated by an anti-CD98 antibody (47). Our results might now also help to explain how CD98hc/4F2hc could unexpectedly facilitate transport of pyruvate (48), which is typically a substrate for MCT1 and MCT4.

Other Molecules Associated with CD147 and CD98hc—
Although EpCAM had not previously been shown to associate with either CD147 or CD98hc, we observed such an association in four separate mass spectrometry experiments and confirmed association with CD98hc in reciprocal co-immunoprecipitation and covalent cross-linking experiments. Like CD147 and CD98hc, EpCAM is also a cell surface glycoprotein that is highly expressed on most malignant epithelial cells. In this regard, EpCAM is being tested as a therapeutic target in antitumor clinical trials (28, 29). Another molecule, ASCT2 (ALC1A5, adipocyte amino acid transporter, hATB0), was also found to associate with CD147 and CD98hc as seen in five mass spectrometry experiments (Table I). ASCT2 association with CD98hc was confirmed by co-immunoprecipitation and covalent cross-linking experiments. ASCT2 contains eight transmembrane domains and acts as transporter for neutral amino acids (49). As seen for CD98hc (50, 51), ASCT2 also may contribute to cancer progression (52) consistent with tumors having an increased need for amino acid transport. Both EpCAM and ASCT2 showed preferential association with CD98hc over CD147 and thus are placed in contact with CD98hc in Fig. 8. However, it is possible that EpCAM and ASCT2 could also contact CD147 as suggested by results in Table I. Further experiments will be needed to resolve this issue.

Various ß1 integrins have been shown previously to associate with CD147 (11) and with CD98 either directly (23) or indirectly (22). Indeed we did obtain evidence for ß1 integrin association but in only one of seven mass spectrometry experiments. Also RNAi-mediated knock-down of CD147 and CD98hc did not decrease the levels of ß1 integrins on the cell surface. Hence integrins were not emphasized in this study. Nonetheless it is possible that independently identified integrin-EpCAM (53), integrin-CD147 (11), and integrin-CD98hc complexes (22, 23) may be at least partially overlapping.

Association of CD147 with caveolin-1 has a negative effect on CD147 multimerization, glycosylation, and MMP induction. The smaller, less glycosylated form of CD147 preferentially associated with caveolin-1 with Ig domain 2 of CD147 being required (2, 12). In contrast, the larger, highly glycosylated form of CD147 associated with CD98hc with Ig domain 1 of CD147 being required. Hence the CD147-CD98hc complex is distinct from complexes containing CD147 and caveolin-1. It is notable that the highly glycosylated form of CD147, which associates with CD98hc, is also involved in induction of MMPs (54, 55). However, a functional link between CD98hc and MMP induction has yet to be established.

The appearance of MCT1 and MCT4 in Table I was not unexpected because both were previously shown to associate with CD147 (10). MCT8, a thyroid hormone transporter and another member of the MCT family, also appeared as a potential partner for CD147 in Table I. This result still needs further biochemical confirmation. However, if an MCT8-CD147-CD98hc-LAT1 connection does truly occur, it would be highly relevant toward the understanding of how thyroid hormone might be transported by both the CD98hc-LAT1 complex (56, 57) and the CD147-MCT8 complex (58, 59). Among the six known light chains that associate with CD98hc (18, 35), only the neutral amino acid transporter LAT1 appeared in Table I. It remains to be seen whether any of the other light chains might also appear in complexes with CD147.

Technical Considerations—
Comprehensive proteomic technologies have produced a remarkable compilation of networks of potential protein-protein interactions (15, 16). However, within such networks, interactions among transmembrane proteins tend to be under-represented because it is difficult to recapitulate hydrophobic interaction conditions on a massive scale in vitro. Furthermore commonly used detergents such as Triton X-100 disrupt many functionally significant interactions. On the other hand, use of milder detergents may increase the recovery of functionally important complexes but at the same time can yield an unacceptable level of nonspecific, background interactions due to incomplete solubilization. To solve this problem, here we treated intact cells with covalent cross-linkers to capture existing interactions among transmembrane proteins. Thus we were able to use relatively stringent (1% Triton X-100) lysis and washing conditions to decrease levels of background proteins while retaining protein associations that otherwise would have been disrupted. In this way, we were able to discover several new interactions involving CD147 and CD98hc that had not been seen previously.

Antibodies to CD98hc and CD147 extracellular domains were of little use in isolating MCT-CD147-CD98hc-LAT1 complexes presumably because extracellular epitopes on these molecules were blocked by associated proteins. In this regard, the anti-CD147 mAb 8G6 epitope maps to the same region of CD147 (Ig domain 1) needed for CD98hc association. Instead we relied on antibodies to intracellular, C-terminal FLAG- and GFP-tagged forms of CD147 and CD98hc. One disadvantage to this approach is that anti-FLAG detection is extremely non-linear, thus making estimation of stoichiometry very imprecise. Nonetheless we did estimate (after correction for antibody detection efficiency) that at least 20–30% of CD147 and 20–30% of CD98 may be complexed with each other. In the case of EpCAM association, the epitope on CD98hc recognized by mAb 4F2 was not blocked, and we were able to recover ~30% of EpCAM in a complex with CD98hc.

Does our technical approach lead to the identification of proteins, captured by covalent cross-linking, simply because they are very abundant on the cell surface? Indeed we suspect that some highly abundant proteins listed at the bottom of Table I (e.g. transferrin receptor/CD71, CD44, and HLA class I) might appear because they were trapped among the others. Consistent with this interpretation, subsequent co-immunoprecipitation experiments did not support specific interactions with either CD147 or CD98hc. In contrast, interactions involving proteins listed at the top of Table I were confirmed in separate biochemical experiments. Furthermore to minimize concerns regarding high expression levels, ectopic CD147 was expressed at levels only 1.4–2.1-fold above endogenous CD147. Also many experiments utilized endogenous CD98hc, CD147, EpCAM, ASCT2, LAT1, and MCT proteins rather than ectopically overexpressed proteins. As further evidence of specificity, we carried out several additional mass spectrometry experiments aimed at isolating protein partners for other abundant cell surface proteins (laminin-binding integrins, EWI-2 protein, and tetraspanins). The dozens of potential protein partners identified in those experiments did not include CD147, MCT proteins, CD98hc, amino acid transporters, or EpCAM (not shown).

In conclusion, we have combined covalent cross-linking and mass spectrometry to discover novel physical associations among molecules involved in cell proliferation and transport. Functional co-regulation of cell surface CD98hc-LAT1 and CD147-MCT protein complexes is consistent with their physical association and demonstrates their joint role in cellular energy metabolism. The presence of additional transporter (ASCT2) and proliferation-related (EpCAM) components suggests the existence of a transmembrane protein supercomplex, which provides a novel physical framework for understanding functional connections among these diverse molecules.


    ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
 
We thank Dr. Tatiana Kolesnikova for antibodies and cDNAs for wild type and mutant CD98. We thank Dr. Wei Tang for CD147 cDNA and antibodies.


   FOOTNOTES
 
Received, December 16, 2004, and in revised form, April 12, 2005.

Published, MCP Papers in Press, May 18, 2005, DOI 10.1074/mcp.M400207-MCP200

1 The abbreviations used are: MMP, matrix metalloproteinase; AMPK, AMP-activated protein kinase; BS3, bis(sulfosuccinimidyl)suberate; hc, heavy chain; DSP, dithiobis(succinimidylpropionate); EpCAM, epithelial cell adhesion molecule; LAT, L-type amino acid transporter; mAb, monoclonal antibody; pAb, polyclonal antibody; MHC, major histocompatibility complex; MCT, monocarboxylate transporter; mTOR, mammalian target of rapamycin; RNAi, RNA interference; SDFR1, stromal cell-derived factor receptor 1; GFP, green fluorescent protein; HEK, human embryonic kidney; IP, immunoprecipitation. Back

* This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grant CA102034. The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact. Back

S The on-line version of this article (available at http://www.mcponline.org) contains supplemental material. Back

{ddagger} To whom correspondence should be addressed: Dana-Farber Cancer Inst., Rm. D-1430, 44 Binney St., Boston, MA 02115. Tel.: 617-632-3410; Fax: 617-632-2662; E-mail: Martin_hemler{at}dfci.harvard.edu


    REFERENCES
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 REFERENCES
 

  1. Toole, B. P. (2003) Emmprin (CD147), a cell surface regulator of matrix metalloproteinase production and function. Curr. Top. Dev. Biol. 54, 371 –389[CrossRef][Medline]

  2. Tang, W., Chang, S. B., and Hemler, M. E. (2004 ) Links between CD147 function, glycosylation, and caveolin-1. Mol. Biol. Cell 15, 4043 –4050[Abstract/Free Full Text]

  3. Koch, C., Staffler, G., Huttinger, R., Hilgert, I., Prager, E., Cerny, J., Steinlein, P., Majdic, O., Horejsi, V., and Stockinger, H. (1999) T cell activation-associated epitopes of CD147 in regulation of the T cell response, and their definition by antibody affinity and antigen density. Int. Immunol. 11, 777 –786[Abstract/Free Full Text]

  4. Betsuyaku, T., Tanino, M., Nagai, K., Nasuhara, Y., Nishimura, M., and Senior, R. M. (2003 ) Extracellular matrix metalloproteinase inducer is increased in smokers’ bronchoalveolar lavage fluid. Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med. 168, 222 –227[Abstract/Free Full Text]

  5. Nehme, C. L., Fayos, B. E., and Bartles, J. R. (1995) Distribution of the integral plasma membrane glycoprotein CE9 (MRC OX-47) among rat tissues and its induction by diverse stimuli of metabolic activation. Biochem. J. 310, 693 –698[Medline]

  6. Marieb, E. A., Zoltan-Jones, A., Li, R., Misra, S., Ghatak, S., Cao, J., Zucker, S., and Toole, B. P. (2004 ) Emmprin promotes anchorage-independent growth in human mammary carcinoma cells by stimulating hyaluronan production. Cancer Res. 64, 1229 –1232[Abstract/Free Full Text]

  7. Pushkarsky, T., Zybarth, G., Dubrovsky, L., Yurchenko, V., Tang, H., Guo, H., Toole, B., Sherry, B., and Bukrinsky, M. (2001) CD147 facilitates HIV-1 infection by interacting with virus-associated cyclophilin A. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 98, 6360 –6365[Abstract/Free Full Text]

  8. Dumitrescu, A. M., Liao, X. H., Best, T. B., Brockmann, K., and Refetoff, S. (2004 ) A novel syndrome combining thyroid and neurological abnormalities is associated with mutations in a monocarboxylate transporter gene. Am. J. Hum. Genet. 74, 168 –175[CrossRef][Medline]

  9. Kirk, P., Wilson, M. C., Heddle, C., Brown, M. H., Barclay, A. N., and Halestrap, A. P. (2000) CD147 is tightly associated with lactate transporters MCT1 and MCT4 and facilitates their cell surface expression. EMBO J. 19, 3896 –3904[Abstract/Free Full Text]

  10. Halestrap, A. P., Meredith, D. (2004 ) The SLC16 gene family—from monocarboxylate transporters (MCTs) to aromatic amino acid transporters and beyond. Pfluegers Arch. 447, 619 –628[CrossRef][Medline]

  11. Berditchevski, F., Chang, S., Bodorova, J., and Hemler, M. E. (1997) Generation of monoclonal antibodies to integrin-associated proteins: evidence that {alpha}3ß1 complexes with EMMPRIN/basigin/OX47/M6. J. Biol. Chem. 272, 29174 –29180[Abstract/Free Full Text]

  12. Tang, W., and Hemler, M. E. (2004 ) Caveolin-1 regulates matrix metalloproteinases-1 induction and CD147/EMMPRIN cell surface clustering. J. Biol. Chem. 279, 11112 –11118[Abstract/Free Full Text]

  13. Naruhashi, K., Kadomatsu, K., Igakura, T., Fan, Q. W., Kuno, N., Muramatsu, H., Miyauchi, T., Hasegawa, T., Itoh, A., Muramatsu, T., and Nabeshima, T. (1997) Abnormalities of sensory and memory functions in mice lacking Bsg gene. Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 236, 733 –737[CrossRef][Medline]

  14. Chen, S., Kadomatsu, K., Kondo, M., Toyama, Y., Toshimori, K., Ueno, S., Miyake, Y., and Muramatsu, T. (2004 ) Effects of flanking genes on the phenotypes of mice deficient in basigin/CD147. Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 324, 147 –153[CrossRef][Medline]

  15. Giot, L., Bader, J. S., Brouwer, C., Chaudhuri, A., Kuang, B., Li, Y., Hao, Y. L., Ooi, C. E., Godwin, B., Vitols, E., Vijayadamodar, G., Pochart, P., Machineni, H., Welsh, M., Kong, Y., Zerhusen, B., Malcolm, R., Varrone, Z., Collis, A., Minto, M., Burgess, S., McDaniel, L., Stimpson, E., Spriggs, F., Williams, J., Neurath, K., Ioime, N., Agee, M., Voss, E., Furtak, K., Renzulli, R., Aanensen, N., Carrolla, S., Bickelhaupt, E., Lazovatsky, Y., DaSilva, A., Zhong, J., Stanyon, C. A., Finley, R. L., Jr., White, K. P., Braverman, M., Jarvie, T., Gold, S., Leach, M., Knight, J., Shimkets, R. A., McKenna, M. P., Chant, J., and Rothberg, J. M. (2003) A protein interaction map of Drosophila melanogaster. Science 302, 1727 –1736[Abstract/Free Full Text]

  16. Li, S., Armstrong, C. M., Bertin, N., Ge, H., Milstein, S., Boxem, M., Vidalain, P. O., Han, J. D., Chesneau, A., Hao, T., Goldberg, D. S., Li, N., Martinez, M., Rual, J. F., Lamesch, P., Xu, L., Tewari, M., Wong, S. L., Zhang, L. V., Berriz, G. F., Jacotot, L., Vaglio, P., Reboul, J., Hirozane-Kishikawa, T., Li, Q., Gabel, H. W., Elewa, A., Baumgartner, B., Rose, D. J., Yu, H., Bosak, S., Sequerra, R., Fraser, A., Mango, S. E., Saxton, W. M., Strome, S., Van Den, H. S., Piano, F., Vandenhaute, J., Sardet, C., Gerstein, M., Doucette-Stamm, L., Gunsalus, K. C., Harper, J. W., Cusick, M. E., Roth, F. P., Hill, D. E., and Vidal, M. (2004 ) A map of the interactome network of the metazoan C. elegans. Science 303, 540 –543[Abstract/Free Full Text]

  17. Deves, R., and Boyd, C. A. (2000) Surface antigen CD98(4F2): not a single membrane protein, but a family of proteins with multiple functions. J. Membr. Biol. 173, 165 –177[CrossRef][Medline]

  18. Verrey, F., Closs, E. I., Wagner, C. A., Palacin, M., Endou, H., and Kanai, Y. (2004 ) CATs and HATs: the SLC7 family of amino acid transporters. Pfluegers Arch. 447, 532 –542[CrossRef][Medline]

  19. Tsurudome, M., and Ito, Y. (2000) Function of fusion regulatory proteins (FRPs) in immune cells and virus-infected cells. Crit. Rev. Immunol. 20, 167 –196[Medline]

  20. Miyamoto, Y. J., Mitchell, J. S., and McIntyre, B. W. (2003 ) Physical association and functional interaction between beta1 integrin and CD98 on human T lymphocytes. Mol. Immunol. 39, 739 –751[CrossRef][Medline]

  21. Fenczik, C. A., Zent, R., Dellos, M., Calderwood, D. A., Satriano, J., Kelly, C., and Ginsberg, M. H. (2001) Distinct domains of CD98hc regulate integrins and amino acid transport. J. Biol. Chem. 276, 8746 –8752[Abstract/Free Full Text]

  22. Kolesnikova, T. V., Mannion, B. A., Berditchevski, F., and Hemler, M. E. (2001 ) ß1 integrins show specific association with CD98 protein in low density membranes. BMC Biochem. 2, 10[CrossRef][Medline]

  23. Zent, R., Fenczik, C. A., Calderwood, D. A., Liu, S., Dellos, M., and Ginsberg, M. H. (2000) Class- and splice variant-specific association of CD98 with integrin ß cytoplasmic domains. J. Biol. Chem. 275, 5059 –5064[Abstract/Free Full Text]

  24. Hemler, M. E., and Strominger, J. L. (1982 ) Characterization of antigen recognized by the monoclonal antibody (4F2): different molecular forms on human T and B lymphoblastoid cell lines. J. Immunol. 129, 623 –628[Abstract/Free Full Text]

  25. Shevchenko, A., Wilm, M., Vorm, O., and Mann, M. (1996) Mass spectrometric sequencing of proteins silver-stained polyacrylamide gels. Anal. Chem. 68, 850 –858[CrossRef][Medline]

  26. Peng, J., and Gygi, S. P. (2001 ) Proteomics: the move to mixtures. J. Mass Spectrom. 36, 1083 –1091[CrossRef][Medline]

  27. Mastroberardino, L., Spindler, B., Pfeiffer, R., Skelly, P. J., Loffing, J., Shoemaker, C. B., and Verrey, F. (1998) Amino-acid transport by heterodimers of 4F2hc/CD98 and members of a permease family. Nature 395, 288 –291[CrossRef][Medline]

  28. Armstrong, A., and Eck, S. L. (2003 ) EpCAM: a new therapeutic target for an old cancer antigen. Cancer Biol. Ther. 2, 320 –326[Medline]

  29. Di Paolo, C., Willuda, J., Kubetzko, S., Lauffer, I., Tschudi, D., Waibel, R., Pluckthun, A., Stahel, R. A., and Zangemeister-Wittke, U. (2003) A recombinant immunotoxin derived from a humanized epithelial cell adhesion molecule-specific single-chain antibody fragment has potent and selective antitumor activity. Clin. Cancer Res. 9, 2837 –2848[Abstract/Free Full Text]

  30. Utsunomiya-Tate, N., Endou, H., and Kanai, Y. (1996 ) Cloning and functional characterization of a system ASC-like Na+-dependent neutral amino acid transporter. J. Biol. Chem. 271, 14883 –14890[Abstract/Free Full Text]

  31. Verrey, F., Meier, C., Rossier, G., and Kuhn, L. C. (2000) Glycoprotein-associated amino acid exchangers: broadening the range of transport specificity. Pfluegers Arch. 440, 503 –512[CrossRef][Medline]

  32. Pfeiffer, R., Spindler, B., Loffing, J., Skelly, P. J., Shoemaker, C. B., and Verrey, F. (1998 ) Functional heterodimeric amino acid transporters lacking cysteine residues involved in disulfide bond. FEBS Lett. 439, 157 –162[CrossRef][Medline]

  33. Dennis, P. B., Jaeschke, A., Saitoh, M., Fowler, B., Kozma, S. C., and Thomas, G. (2001) Mammalian TOR: a homeostatic ATP sensor. Science 294, 1102 –1105[Abstract/Free Full Text]

  34. Rohde, J., Heitman, J., and Cardenas, M. E. (2001 ) The TOR kinases link nutrient sensing to cell growth. J. Biol. Chem. 276, 9583 –9586[Abstract/Free Full Text]

  35. Verrey, F. (2003) System L: heteromeric exchangers of large, neutral amino acids involved in directional transport. Pfluegers Arch. 445, 529 –533[CrossRef][Medline]

  36. Carling, D. (2004 ) The AMP-activated protein kinase cascade—a unifying system for energy control. Trends Biochem. Sci. 29, 18 –24[CrossRef][Medline]

  37. Fingar, D. C., and Blenis, J. (2004) Target of rapamycin (TOR): an integrator of nutrient and growth factor signals and coordinator of cell growth and cell cycle progression. Oncogene 23, 3151 –3171[CrossRef][Medline]

  38. Cotner, T., Williams, J. M., Christenson, L., Shapiro, H. M., Strom, T. B., and Strominger, J. L. (1983 ) Simultaneous flow cytometric analysis of human T cell activation antigen expression and DNA content. J. Exp. Med. 157, 461 –472[Abstract/Free Full Text]

  39. Yoon, J. H., Kim, Y. B., Kanai, Y., Endou, H., and Kim, D. K. (2003) Sequential increases in 4F2hc expression during DMBA-induced hamster buccal pouch carcinogenesis. Anticancer Res. 23, 3877 –3881[Medline]

  40. Nawashiro, H., Otani, N., Shinomiya, N., Fukui, S., Nomura, N., Yano, A., Shima, K., Matsuo, H., and Kanai, Y. (2002 ) The role of CD98 in astrocytic neoplasms. Hum. Cell 15, 25 –31[Medline]

  41. Diaz, L. A., Jr., and Fox, D. A. (1998) A role for CD98 in cellular activation. J. Biol. Regul. Homeost. Agents 12, 25 –32[Medline]

  42. Edinger, A. L., and Thompson, C. B. (2002 ) Akt maintains cell size and survival by increasing mTOR-dependent nutrient uptake. Mol. Biol. Cell 13, 2276 –2288[Abstract/Free Full Text]

  43. Maurer, M. H., Canis, M., Kuschinsky, W., and Duelli, R. (2004) Correlation between local monocarboxylate transporter 1 (MCT1) and glucose transporter 1 (GLUT1) densities in the adult rat brain. Neurosci. Lett. 355, 105 –108[CrossRef][Medline]

  44. Mori, K., Nishimura, M., Tsurudome, M., Ito, M., Nishio, M., Kawano, M., Kozuka, Y., Yamashita, Y., Komada, H., Uchida, A., and Ito, Y. (2003 ) The functional interaction between CD98 and CD147 in regulation of virus-induced cell fusion and osteoclast formation. Med. Microbiol. Immunol. (Berl.) 193, 155 –162[Medline]

  45. Stonehouse, T. J., Woodhead, V. E., Herridge, P. S., Ashrafian, H., George, M., Chain, B. M., and Katz, D. R. (1999) Molecular characterization of U937-dependent T-cell co-stimulation. Immunology 96, 35 –47[CrossRef][Medline]

  46. Woodhead, V. E., Stonehouse, T. J., Binks, M. H., Speidel, K., Fox, D. A., Gaya, A., Hardie, D., Henniker, A. J., Horejsi, V., Sagawa, K., Skubitz, K. M., Taskov, H., Todd, R. F., III, van Agthoven, A., Katz, D. R., and Chain, B. M. (2000 ) Novel molecular mechanisms of dendritic cell-induced T cell activation. Int. Immunol. 12, 1051 –1061[Abstract/Free Full Text]

  47. Cho, J. Y., Fox, D. A., Horejsi, V., Sagawa, K., Skubitz, K. M., Katz, D. R., and Chain, B. (2001) The functional interactions between CD98, ß1-integrins, and CD147 in the induction of U937 homotypic aggregation. Blood 98, 374 –382[Abstract/Free Full Text]

  48. Yao, S. Y., Muzyka, W. R., Cass, C. E., Cheeseman, C. I., and Young, J. D. (1998 ) Evidence that the transport-related proteins BAT and 4F2hc are not specific for amino acids: induction of Na+-dependent uridine and pyruvate transport activity by recombinant BAT and 4F2hc expressed in Xenopus oocytes. Biochem. Cell Biol. 76, 859 –865[CrossRef][Medline]

  49. Kanai, Y., Hediger, M. A. (2004) The glutamate/neutral amino acid transporter family SLC1: molecular, physiological and pharmacological aspects. Pfluegers Arch. 447, 469 –479[CrossRef][Medline]

  50. Hara, K., Kudoh, H., Enomoto, T., Hashimoto, Y., and Masuko, T. (1999 ) Malignant transformation of NIH3T3 cells by overexpression of early lymphocyte activation antigen CD98. Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 262, 720 –725[CrossRef][Medline]

  51. Hara, K., Kudoh, H., Enomoto, T., Hashimoto, Y., and Masuko, T. (2000) Enhanced tumorigenicity caused by truncation of the extracellular domain of GP125/CD98 heavy chain. Oncogene 19, 6209 –6215[CrossRef][Medline]

  52. Li, R., Younes, M., Frolov, A., Wheeler, T. M., Scardino, P., Ohori, M., and Ayala, G. (2003 ) Expression of neutral amino acid transporter ASCT2 in human prostate. Anticancer Res. 23, 3413 –3418[Medline]

  53. Schmidt, D. S., Klingbeil, P., Schnolzer, M., and Zoller, M. (2004) CD44 variant isoforms associate with tetraspanins and EpCAM. Exp. Cell Res. 297, 329 –347[CrossRef][Medline]

  54. Guo, H., Zucker, S., Gordon, M. K., Toole, B. P., and Biswas, C. (1997 ) Stimulation of matrix metalloproteinase production by recombinant extracellular matrix metalloproteinase inducer from transfected Chinese hamster ovary cells. J. Biol. Chem. 272, 24 –27[Abstract/Free Full Text]

  55. Sun, J., and Hemler, M. E. (2001) Regulation of MMP production through homophilic CD147/EMMPRIN interaction. Cancer Res. 61, 2276 –2281[Abstract/Free Full Text]

  56. Friesema, E. C., Docter, R., Moerings, E. P., Verrey, F., Krenning, E. P., Hennemann, G., and Visser, T. J. (2001 ) Thyroid hormone transport by the heterodimeric human system L amino acid transporter. Endocrinology 142, 4339 –4348[Abstract/Free Full Text]

  57. Ritchie, J. W., and Taylor, P. M. (2001) Role of the System L permease LAT1 in amino acid and iodothyronine transport in placenta. Biochem. J. 356, 719 –725[CrossRef][Medline]

  58. Friesema, E. C., Ganguly, S., Abdalla, A., Manning Fox, J. E., Halestrap, A. P., and Visser, T. J. (2003 ) Identification of monocarboxylate transporter 8 as a specific thyroid hormone transporter. J. Biol. Chem. 278, 40128 –40135[Abstract/Free Full Text]

  59. Friesema, E. C., Grueters, A., Biebermann, H., Krude, H., von Moers, A., Reeser, M., Barrett, T. G., Mancilla, E. E., Svensson, J., Kester, M. H., Kuiper, G. G., Balkassmi, S., Uitterlinden, A. G., Koehrle, J., Rodien, P., Halestrap, A. P., and Visser, T. J. (2004) Association between mutations in a thyroid hormone transporter and severe X-linked psychomotor retardation. Lancet 364, 1435 –1437[CrossRef][Medline]





This Article
Abstract
Full Text (PDF)
Supplemental Data
All Versions of this Article:
M400207-MCP200v1
4/8/1061    most recent
Submit a response
Purchase Article
View Shopping Cart
Alert me when this article is cited
Alert me when eLetters are posted
Alert me if a correction is posted
Citation Map
Services
Email this article to a friend
Similar articles in this journal
Similar articles in PubMed
Alert me to new issues of the journal
Download to citation manager
Glossary
Copyright Permissions
Google Scholar
Articles by Xu, D.
Articles by Hemler, M. E.
Articles citing this Article
PubMed
PubMed Citation
Articles by Xu, D.
Articles by Hemler, M. E.


HOME HELP FEEDBACK SUBSCRIPTIONS ARCHIVE SEARCH TABLE OF CONTENTS
 All ASBMB Journals   Journal of Biological Chemistry 
 Journal of Lipid Research   Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education