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Vol. 59, Issue 3, 557-566, March 2001
Department of Veterinary Science and Center for Molecular Toxicology and Carcinogenesis, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania
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Abstract |
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The aryl hydrocarbon nuclear translocator (ARNT) protein belongs to the family of basic helix-loop-helix (HLH)-periodicity/ARNT/single-minded [Per/ARNT/Sim (PAS)] transcription factors and regulates a range of cellular processes by either homodimerizing or heterodimerizing with other basic HLH-PAS proteins. To date, it has been shown that both the HLH and PAS domains are required for aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR) ARNT heterodimerization and that phosphorylation of ARNT is also required for this heterodimerization. Presently, regulation of ARNT with respect to phosphorylation is poorly understood. In an earlier study, murine ARNT was shown to be a phosphoprotein, to display charge heterogeneity, and to have a shift in its predominant isoforms after heterodimerization with the AhR. It was hypothesized that this shift may represent a change in ARNT phosphorylation status. Metabolic [32P]orthophosphate labeling of human ARNT-transfected COS-1 cells, in conjunction with phosphoamino acid analysis, Edman degradation, and phosphopeptide mapping, demonstrated that ARNT is predominantly phosphorylated on serine residues and that serine 348 (S348) in the PAS domain is phosphorylated. Alanine and glutamic acid substitutions were used to demonstrate that loss of phosphorylation at this site did not influence AhR-mediated xenobiotic response elements-driven or ARNT-mediated class B E-box-driven signaling. Additionally, the phosphorylation pattern of ARNT was unaltered after AhR heterodimerization. Although phosphorylation of S348 did not modulate AhR-ARNT or ARNT-ARNT signaling, phosphorylation of this PAS-region serine residue may be important in other ARNT-mediated gene expression systems.
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Introduction |
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ARNT
is a bHLH factor that contains a highly conserved PAS domain (Hoffman
et al., 1991
) which has been identified in dozens of signal
transduction molecules in animals, plants, and prokaryotes (Gu et al.,
2000
). The formation of ARNT heterodimers involves the HLH and PAS
domains (Reisz-Porszasz et al., 1994
). In response to exposure to
selected polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and halogenated aromatic
hydrocarbons, ARNT forms a heterodimer with the AhR after the
ligand-dependent translocation of AhR to the nucleus (Reyes et al.,
1992
; Hankinson, 1995
). Subcellular fractionation and immunohistochemical studies have shown that the AhR resides in the
cytoplasm bound to two molecules of the 90-kDa heat-shock protein
(Perdew, 1988
) and a single molecule of AhR interacting protein/hepatitus B virus X-associated protein/AhR-activated 9 (AIP/XAP2/ARA9; Carver and Bradfield, 1997
; Ma and Whitlock,
1997
; Meyer et al., 1998
). In contrast to the AhR, ARNT is a
constitutively nuclear protein (Hord and Perdew, 1994
). After
translocation to the nucleus, AhR heterodimerizes with ARNT, and the
AhR-ARNT heterodimer binds to XREs, causing transactivation of genes
encoding xenobiotic metabolizing enzymes (Hankinson, 1995
).
The HIF1
protein is a second bHLH-PAS protein; it is responsible for
sensing the chemical environment and heterodimerizing with ARNT (Gu et
al., 2000
). Through an analogous signal transduction pathway to the
AhR, reduced cellular oxygen tension leads to increased stability of
HIF1
and heterodimerizes with ARNT. Like the AhR, HIF1
is
constitutively cytoplasmic; however, upon stabilization, it
translocates to the nucleus (Guillemin and Krasnow, 1997
). The
HIF1
-ARNT heterodimer binds to hypoxia response elements and
up-regulates genes involved in adaptation to hypoxia (Wang et al,
1995
). The characterization of the HIF1
-ARNT heterodimer established
the role of ARNT as a central dimerization partner with other bHLH-PAS
proteins that are responsible for sensing and adapting to environmental change.
In addition to heterodimerizing with the AhR and HIF1
, ARNT
heterodimerizes with endothelial PAS domain protein-1 and Sim (Schmidt
et al., 1996
). Endothelial PAS-1-ARNT heterodimers are involved in
response to hypoxia and the Sim-ARNT heterodimer is involved in
mammalian central midline development (Yamaki et al., 1996
). Recently,
an ARNT2 factor has been described that shares 63% identity with ARNT
(Drutel et al., 1996
) and can also heterodimerize with Sim (Michaud et
al., 2000
). ARNT2 has been implicated in nervous system development
(Drutel et al., 1999
) as well as the development of neuroendocrine
lineages (Michaud et al., 2000
). In addition to heterodimerizing with
numerous factors, ARNT is also able to homodimerize; this homodimer can
bind to and activate class B E-box-driven reporter constructs (Gupta
et al., 1993
; Antonsson et al., 1995
). Presently, it is known that
E-box binding factors are important in the regulation of cell
differentiation and proliferation (Jan and Jan, 1993
; Kadesch, 1993
;
Weintraub, 1993
; Dorshkind, 1994
). Although the role of the ARNT
homodimer in developmental processes is unknown, ARNT expression is
important for normal development. Mouse embryos lacking ARNT died after 10.5 days of development (Maltepe et al., 1997
). Lack of ARNT expression resulted in defective angiogenesis of the yolk sack and
branchial arches (Maltepe et al., 1997
). The abnormalities were
characteristic of the angiogenic abnormalities for mice lacking vascular endothelial growth factor (Carmeliet et al., 1996a
; Ferrara et
al., 1996
) or tissue factor (Carmeliet et al., 1996b
).
Phosphorylation of transcription factors is a regulatory mechanism that
can control signal transduction in several potential ways. Protein
phosphorylation can modulate DNA binding activity, translocation to the
nucleus, and protein-protein interactions. A previous investigation
revealed the importance of AhR-ARNT phosphorylation status on
activation of the heterodimer into to its active DNA-binding form
(Pongratz et al., 1991
). It was reported that incubating transformed
cytosolic AhR with acid phosphatase abolished the ability of the
receptor to bind XREs. Currently, it is known that DNA binding by human
and mouse AhR-ARNT heterodimers requires phosphorylation of both
proteins, whereas formation of AhR-ARNT heterodimers requires
phosphorylation of only ARNT (Berghard et al., 1993
). Putative AhR
phosphorylation sites have been localized to two regions in the
C-terminal half of the mouse protein. One putative phosphorylated
region is within or adjacent to a DNA-binding repressor domain, which
prevents constitutive XRE binding by AhR-ARNT complexes (Dolwick et
al., 1993
); a second putative phosphorylated region is located within
the glutamine-rich C terminus (Mahon and Gasiewicz, 1995
). The
phosphorylation status of HIF1
has also been shown to modulate
HIF1
-dependent activity.
Activation of signal transduction by a protein can be controlled at the
structural level as a result of the addition or removal of a phosphate
group(s) (Roach, 1991
). Consequently, an array of phosphorylation sites
could represent a distribution of differentially activated proteins
that vary in their functional abilities. Previously, Tsai and Perdew
(1997)
demonstrated that a shift in pI of ARNT toward the basic
occurs during dimerization with AhR and/or after AhR-ARNT DNA binding.
This shift in pI occurs during dimerization and/or after binding to DNA
and was hypothesized to represent a change in the phosphorylation
status of ARNT. To date, there has been no report characterizing the
functional significance of site-specific phosphorylation sites on ARNT
or the influence of TCDD-dependent heterodimerization with the AhR on
the phosphorylation pattern of ARNT. The current study has identified
an ARNT phosphorylation site in the PAS domain and has examined its
influence on AhR-ARNT signaling and ARNT homodimer signaling.
Additionally, the phosphorylation pattern of ARNT after
heterodimerization with the AhR was examined.
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Experimental Procedures |
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Materials.
The ARNT expression vector pSV-Sport1-hARNT was
obtained from Christopher Bradfield at the University of
Wisconsin (Madison, WI) (Dolwick et al., 1993
). The hARNT/474-Flag
construct was generated by Jo Tsai (Tsai, 1997
) and the pCI/hAhR/Flag
was generated with the same method by M. Pray-Grant in our laboratory.
The Hepa 1 c4 cell line was obtained from Oliver Hankinson (University
of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA). COS-1 cells were
purchased from the American Type Culture Collection (Manassas, VA). FBS was purchased from Hyclone Lab (Logan, UT). Acrylamide, ammonium persulfate, acetonitrile, hydrochloric acid, and 100-µM
thin-layer chromatography plates were purchased from Fisher
(Pittsburgh, PA). Vent DNA polymerase, restriction endonucleases, and
other DNA modifying enzymes were purchased from New England Biolabs (Beverly, MA). [32P]Orthophosphate (370 MBq/ml;
10 mCi/ml) and goat anti-mouse [125I]IgG were
purchased from Amersham Pharmacia Biotech (Piscataway, NJ). pcDNA3
vector was purchased from Invitrogen (Carlsbad, CA). The Vector VIP
substrate kit for immunoblots was purchased from Vector Laboratories
Inc. (Burlingame, CA). Oligonucleotides for polymerase chain
amplifications were purchased from Operon (Alameda, CA). LipofectAMINE
reagent, opti-MEM, and Escherichia coli DH5
were
purchased from Life Technologies (Gaithersburg, MD). Sequelon-AA arylamine disks were purchased from Perseptive Biosystems (Bedford, MA). Nitrocellulose and SDS were purchased from Bio-Rad (Hercules, CA).
Tricine, glycine, Tris, and CHAPS were purchased from Research Organics
(Cleveland, OH). The luciferase assay system, sequencing grade trypsin,
and restriction endonucleases were purchased from Promega (Madison,
WI). The bicinchoninic acid protein assay reagents were purchased from
Pierce (Rockford, IL). TCDD was obtained from Steven Safe (Texas A & M
University, College Station, TX). All other chemicals were purchased
from Sigma (St. Louis, MO).
Plasmid Construction.
hARNT/Flag cDNA was
amplified by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) using pSV-Sport1/hARNT as
a template. The forward primer, including the start site (5'-
CCCAAGCTTGGGATGGCGGCGACTACTGCCAACCCC-3') and an ARNT/Flag reverse
primer (5'-
CCGCTCGAGCGGCTACTTGTCATCGTCGTCCTTGTAG- TCTTCTGAAAAGGGGGGAAACAT-3'),
were used to amplify and add a Flag sequence to the 3' terminus of the
hARNT gene using standard PCR techniques. The resulting PCR product was
gel-purified, digested with HindIII and XhoI, and
subcloned into the HindIII/XhoI sites of pcDNA3.
All plasmids were propagated in Escherichia coli strain DH5
. The nucleotide sequence of hARNT/Flag, was confirmed with an
automated DNA sequencer at the DNA Core Facility at Pennsylvania State University.
Site-Directed Mutagenesis. Site-directed mutagenesis of hARNT constructs was performed using the Stratagene Quickchange site-directed mutagenesis procedure, according to the manufacturers instructions. The nucleotide sequence of hARNT mutants was confirmed with an automated DNA sequencer at the DNA core facility at the Pennsylvania State University.
Transient Transfection with hARNT and
[32P]Orthophosphate Labeling of Transfected Cells.
COS-1 cells were cultured in
-MEM supplemented with 10% FBS, 100 IU/ml penicillin, and 0.1 mg/ml streptomycin at 37°C in 95%
air/5% CO2. COS-1 cells (80% confluent) were
transiently transfected with pcDNA3/hARNT/474-Flag or pcDNA3/hARNT/Flag
using the LipofectAMINE procedure. For each transfection, 9 µg of
DNA/30 µl of LipofectAMINE complex was added to cells in a
10-cm2 plate with serum-free opti-MEM. After
8 h of incubation with the DNA-LipofectAMINE complexes, the cells
were rinsed twice with PBS and then incubated with
-MEM supplemented
with 10% FBS, 100 IU/ml penicillin, and 0.1 mg/ml streptomycin
at 37°C for 24 h. Transfected COS-1 cells were rinsed three
times with phosphate-free Eagle's MEM, and then preincubated in
phosphate-free Eagle's MEM supplemented with 10% dialyzed FBS, 100 IU/ml penicillin, and 0.1 mg/ml streptomycin at 37°C. After
the 1-h preincubation, the media was replaced and cells were incubated
with [32P]orthophosphate (1 mCi/ml) for 4 h. After aspirating the [32P]orthophosphate
media, cells were rinsed with PBS, scraped from the dishes, and lysed
with 1% NP-40 in 25 mM MOPS, 2 mM EDTA, 0.02%
NaN3, and 10% glycerol, pH 7.4 (MENG) containing
10 mM sodium pyrophosphate, 20 mM sodium molybdate, 10 mM sodium
fluoride, 0.4 mM sodium vanadate, (MENGPI) and a protease inhibitor
cocktail (2 mM 4-(2-aminoethyl)benzenesulfonyl fluoride, 2 µM
trans-epoxysuccinyl-L-leucylamido(4-guanidino)butane, 2 µM bestatin, 2 µM leupeptin, 2 µM aprotinin, and 2 mM sodium EDTA) over 15 min on ice. The cell homogenate was centrifuged at
105,000g for 1 h and the supernatant was collected for immunoprecipitation.
In Vitro Transformation of AhR with TCDD. AhR can be induced to form a heterodimer with ARNT when treated with TCDD in vitro as well as in vivo. To examine the influence of hAhR heterodimerization on the phosphorylation pattern of hARNT, COS-1 cells (80% confluent) in 10-cm2 plates were cotransfected with 4.5 µg of pSV-Sport1/hARNT and 4.5 µg of pCI/hAhR/Flag or, as a reference control, with 9 µg of pcDNA3/hARNT/Flag using the LipofectAMINE procedure. Twenty-four hours after transfection, cells were washed three times with phosphate-free Eagle's MEM, and then preincubated in phosphate-free Eagle's MEM supplemented with 10% dialyzed FBS, 100 IU/ml penicillin, and 0.1 mg/ml streptomycin at 37°C. After the 1-h preincubation, the media were replaced and cells were incubated with [32P]orthophosphate (1 mCi/ml) for 4 h. During the final 1 h of the [32P]orthophosphate labeling, COS-1 cells cotransfected with hAhR/Flag and hARNT were treated with 10 nM TCDD (dissolved in DMSO, 1 µg/ml) and cells transfected with ARNT/Flag alone were treated only with carrier (DMSO, 1 mg/ml). After aspirating the [32P]orthophosphate media, cells were rinsed with PBS, and lysed in MENGPI/1% NP-40 containing 1× protease inhibitor on ice for 15 min with frequent vortexing. To isolate nuclei, the MENGPI/1% NP-40 lysate was centrifuged at 1,000g at 4°C for 15 min. Nuclei were washed three times with MENGPI before extraction with 500 mM NaCl, in MENGPI for 1 h on ice. Lysed nuclei were centrifuged at 105,000g at 4°C for 1 h and the supernatant was taken as the high-salt nuclear extract for coimmunoprecipitation. In the control experiment, the MENGPI/1% NP-40 lysate was centrifuged at 105,000g at 4°C for 1 h and the supernatant was collected for immunoprecipitation.
Immunoprecipitation and Gel Purification of Radiolabeled hARNT. Nuclear extracts form COS-1 cells cotransfected with hAhR/Flag and hARNT were coimmunoprecipitated with 50 µl of anti-Flag M2 mAb affinity gel. Similarly, cytosolic lysates from hARNT/474-Flag and hARNT/Flag-transfected COS-1 cells were immunoprecipitated with 50 µl of anti-Flag M2 mAb affinity gel. The final buffer composition during immunoprecipitation of hARNT/Flag was MENGPI, 1% CHAPS, and 250 mM NaCl, pH 7.4, and 1× protease inhibitor cocktail. The final buffer composition during immunoprecipitation of the hAhR/Flag-hARNT complexes extracted from nuclei was MENGPI, 250 mM NaCl, pH 7.4, and 1× protease inhibitor cocktail. In separate experiments, designed to demonstrate the specificity of the Flag-tagged hARNT proteins for the anti-Flag M2 mAb affinity gel, the gel was preincubated for several hours with 90 nmol of the Flag peptide (DYKDDDK) before the cell lysate was added. Immunoprecipitations were run overnight on ice. The immunoprecipitations were washed twice with 1 ml of MENGPI + 500 mM NaCl. For cytosolic extracts, the gel was then incubated with MENGPI + 500 mM NaCl + 2% NP-40 + 0.5% SDS for 1 h, with rocking on ice, and washed twice with MENGPI before gel purification by SDS-PAGE on an 8% Tricine gel. For nuclear extracts, the gel was incubated for 1 h with MENGPI + 500 mM NaCl, and then washed twice with MENGPI before SDS-PAGE on an 8% Tricine gel. Gels were transferred to nitrocellulose at 15 V for 3 h at 4°C in a Genie Blotting unit (Idea Scientific, Minneapolis, MN).
Phosphopeptide Mapping and Phosphoamino Acid Analysis of
hARNT.
For phosphopeptide mapping, polyacrylamide gels containing
radiolabeled hARNT/Flag were transferred to nitrocellulose.
After autoradiography, the hARNT/Flag band was excised from the
membrane, transferred to a microcentrifuge tube, washed five times with 1 ml of water, and immediately blocked with 0.5%
polyvinylpyrrolidone-360 in 100 mM acetic acid for 30 min at 37°C.
The membrane was then washed five times with 1 ml of water and then
once with freshly made 0.05 M ammonium bicarbonate. The membrane was
resuspended in 200 µl of 0.05 M ammonium bicarbonate and 10 µg of
tosylphenylalanine chloromethyl ketone-treated trypsin was added and
incubated at 37°C for 16 h. At the end of the digestion, 300 µl of water was added to the digestion, the membrane was vortexed for
30 s, the digestion was centrifuged at 10,000g for 10 min, transferred to a new microcentrifuge tube, and the digestion was
dried in a speed-vac. The dried sample was resuspended in 300 µl of
electrophoresis buffer I, pH 1.9 (15% acetic acid, 5% formic acid),
dried, resuspended in 10 µl of pH 1.9 buffer, and spotted onto a 20- × 20-cm cellulose TLC plate and electrophoresed at 1.2 kV for 35 min
with a Hunter Thin Layer Electrophoresis System model HTLE-7000 (CBS
Scientific, INC., Del Mar, CA). Plates were then air-dried, subjected
to ascending chromatography in the second dimension for 16 h in
phosphochromatography buffer (37.5% n-butanol, 25%
pyridine, 7.5% acetic acid, and 30% deionized water), air dried, and
exposed to film (Boyle et al., 1991
). Phosphopeptides were visualized
by autoradiography at
80°C using an intensifying screen.
80°C using an
intensifying screen. For the analysis of individual phosphopeptides,
the phosphopeptide was scraped from the TLC plate and eluted from the
cellulose as described by Boyle et al. (1991)
80° using an intensifying screen.
Phosphate Release by Manual Edman Degradation.
To determine
the number and position of phosphorylated residues of a selected
phosphopeptide, manual Edman degradation was performed by the method of
Sullivan and Wong (1991)
. Phosphopeptides were scraped from that TLC
plate and eluted from the cellulose as described by Boyle et al.
(1991)
, dried down, dissolved in 25 µl of 50% acetonitrile, and
covalently linked to an arylamine-Sequelon disk. The disk was then
subjected to Edman degradation by treatment for 10 min at 50°C with
0.5 ml of coupling reagent
[methanol/water/triethylamine/phenylisothiocyanate; 7:1:1:1
(v/v/v/v)], followed by six washes with 1 ml of methanol, and reheated
at 50°C for 6 min with 0.5 ml of trifluoroacetic acid to cleave the
N-terminal residue. The disk was then washed with 1 ml of
trifluoroacetic acid and 42.5% phosphoric acid (9:1) and combined with
the 0.5 ml of trifluoroacetic acid. The combined disk washes were dried
under a stream of nitrogen, 10 ml of scintillation cocktail was added,
and then they were quantitated for 32P. The disk
was subsequently washed five times with 1 ml of methanol before the
next cycle was started.
Functionality of hARNT Mutants and Protein Expression.
Comparison of the ability of hARNT and hARNT mutants to
trans-activate XRE-driven luciferase activity was made in
ARNT-deficient Hepa-1 c4 cells using the LipofectAMINE procedure.
Hepa-1 c4 cells (80% confluent) in six-well plates were cotransfected
with 2.5 ng of pSV-Sport1/hARNT, 100 ng of pGudLuc 6.1, 100 ng of
pSV-
-galactosidase, and the total amount of DNA was equalized to 1.5 µg with pSV-Sport1. Control transfections contained 100 ng of pGudLuc
6.1, 100 ng of pSV-
-galactosidase, and the total amount of DNA was
equalized to 1.5 µg with empty pSV-Sport1. Twenty-four hours after
transfection, cells were incubated with either DMSO (1 µl/ml) or 10 nM TCDD (1 µl/ml) for 8 h. At the end of the exposure period,
cells were lysed with a lysis buffer (containing 25 mM Tris-phosphate,
2 mM dithiothreitol, 2 mM CDTA, 10% glycerol, and 1% Triton X-100) and assayed for luciferase activity using the Promega luciferase assay
system. Luciferase activity was measured with a Turner Instruments TD-20e luminometer (Sunnyvale, CA) and is expressed as RLUs. Luciferase activity was normalized against
-galactosidase activity and hARNT expression levels.
-galactosidase, and either 0.4 µg of pMyc0E1bLuc or 0.4 µg
of pMyc3E1bLuc were cotransfected into six-well plates using the
LipofectAMINE procedure. The pMyc0E1bLuc and the pMyc3E1bLuc reporter
constructs consist of zero and three E-boxes, respectively, located 5'
to the luc+ gene; construction of these plasmids (gifts from
R. Davis, University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester,
MA) was described previously (Gupta et al., 1993
-galactosidase and were equalized to
1.5 µg of DNA with pSV-Sport1. Thirty-two hours after transfection,
cell lysates were used to measure luciferase activity using the Promega
luciferase assay system. Luciferase activity is expressed as RLUs and
was normalized against
-galactosidase activity.
Statistical Analyses.
Values are reported as means ± S.E.M. ANOVA with Duncan's multiple range test were performed to test
for differences between treatment groups (
= 0.05). All
statistical tests were performed with SAS (ver. 8; SAS Institute, Cary,
NC) on an IBM microcomputer.
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Results |
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hARNT Is a Phosphoprotein.
Flag-tagged truncated hARNT
containing the N-terminal 474 amino acid residues (hARNT/474-Flag), as
well as a Flag-tagged full-length hARNT (hARNT/Flag) (Fig.
1A) in transfected COS-1 cells incubated with [32P]orthophosphate, demonstrated that
hARNT is a phosphoprotein and that anti-Flag M2 affinity gel
specifically immunoprecipitates each of these Flag-tagged proteins
(Fig. 1B and 1C). Phosphoamino acid analysis was performed to determine
whether hARNT is phosphorylated on serine, threonine, and tyrosine
residues. This analysis demonstrated that both hARNT/474-Flag and
hARNT/Flag are predominantly phosphorylated on serine residues (Fig.
1D).
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The Phosphorylation Pattern of hARNT Is Unaltered after hAhR
Heterodimerization.
To assess the influence of heterodimerization
with the AhR on the phosphorylation pattern of ARNT, COS-1 cells were
either cotransfected with hAhR/Flag and hARNT and treated with 10 nM TCDD in DMSO or transfected with hARNT/Flag alone and treated only with
DMSO. Twenty-four hours after transfection, COS-1 cells were
[32P]orthophosphate-labeled for 4 h. COS-1
cells cotransfected with hAhR/Flag and hARNT were treated with 10 nM
TCDD during the final 1 h of
[32P]orthophosphate labeling and the
hAhR/Flag-hARNT complex was coimmunoprecipitated with anti-Flag M2 mAb
affinity gel from nuclear extracts. In the reference control, COS-1
cells transfected with hARNT/Flag alone were treated with DMSO during
the final 1 h of [32P]orthophosphate
labeling and hARNT/Flag was immunoprecipitated with anti-Flag M2
affinity gel from cytosolic lysate. Two-dimensional phosphopeptide maps
were then generated to compare the phosphorylation pattern of hARNT
heterodimerized with the hAhR or in its unheterodimerized form. Based
on visual analysis of two-dimensional phosphopeptide maps, it seems
that the phosphorylation pattern of hARNT was unaltered whether it was
heterodimerized with the hAhR or not (Fig.
2). However, because a stoichiometric
comparison was not made between phosphopeptides on these two maps,
differences between the stoichiometry of particular hARNT sites in
unknown.
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Serine 348 Is Phosphorylated.
Solid-phase sequencing of
tryptic phosphopeptides isolated from a two-dimensional phosphopeptide
map of hARNT/474-Flag (Fig. 3A) revealed
that the predominant tryptic phosphopeptides were labeled either three
or six amino acid residues away from the N terminus (Figs. 3B-I). The
hARNT/474-Flag construct was chosen because it expresses the N-terminal
amino acid sequence through the end of the PAS domain. Table
1 summarizes the list of candidate hARNT
tryptic peptides that have a serine residue at either three or six
amino acid residues from the N terminus. Site-directed mutagenesis was
used to change each of these candidate serines to an alanine in the
hARNT/474-Flag and hARNT/Flag cDNAs. This screening procedure revealed
that serine 348 (S348) is phosphorylated in the hARNT/474-Flag
construct (Fig. 4A) and in the
full-length hARNT/Flag construct (Fig. 4B). In addition, this screening
procedure indicated that not any of the other candidate serine residues in Table 1 are phosphorylated. Figure 4A illustrates the disappearance of a cluster of phosphopeptides on the hARNT/474-Flag S348A map. This
cluster of missing phosphopeptides on the hARNT/474-Flag map may
represent incomplete digestion products that each contain S348.
Alternatively, the cluster may represent different oxidation states of
either the cysteine residue and/or methionine residue in the tryptic
peptide, which contains S348. This cluster was not apparent in the
hARNT/Flag map; rather, the S348 containing peptide migrated as a
single peptide evidenced by the disappearance of a single spot (Fig.
4B). Changing S348 to a threonine (S348T) did not restore
phosphorylation of the missing peptide (Fig. 4B). Phosphoamino acid
analysis of the tryptic phosphopeptide that contains S348 demonstrated
that this phosphopeptide is exclusively phosphorylated on serine (Fig.
4C).
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Functionality of Mutant hARNT cDNAs Expressed in Cell Lines.
Phosphorylation of a protein causes an increase in negative charge.
Consequently, it is possible that the effects of phosphorylation on
protein function could be reproduced experimentally by the addition of
a negative charge at the phosphorylation site. To test this hypothesis,
we constructed hARNT expression vectors in which S348 was changed to
either the neutrally charged alanine residue (S348A) or the negatively
charged glutamic acid residue (S348E) to assess the functional role of
phosphoserine 348. Therefore, a comparison between the activity of
S348A and S348E can provide a basis for determining whether a
phosphorylation site has a positive or negative functional role. Hepa-1
c4 cells were used for this comparison because they do not express ARNT
at the protein level. Figure 5A shows
that both S348A and S348E mutated hARNT proteins trans-activated XRE driven reporter activity in Hepa-1 c4
cells, in the presence and absence of TCDD, to an equal level as S348. Figure 5B shows the protein expression level of each of the transfected hARNT constructs in Hepa-1 c4 cells. XRE driven reporter activity was
normalized against hARNT expression levels and
-galactosidase activity. Western blot analysis confirmed that mock-transfected Hepa-1
c4 cells did not express detectable levels of ARNT and that each of the
transfected hARNT constructs express at similar levels when normalized
to p50 expression levels.
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Discussion |
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An earlier investigation in our laboratory characterized the level
of charge heterogeneity displayed by mARNT (Tsai and Perdew, 1997
). A
comparison between mARNT as a monomer and mARNT heterodimerized with
the murine AhR, demonstrated that a significant shift in the pI of ARNT
occurs just before or after heterodimerization in the nucleus. A
movement of the predominant ARNT isoforms toward the basic end
characterized this shift in charge heterogeneity. Furthermore, this
shift in charge heterogeneity was believed to be related in part to a
change in ARNT phosphorylation or an alteration in another type of
secondary modification. For example, one type of modification that
could influence ARNT charge heterogeneity is glycosylation, which can
block phosphorylation of specific sites. Previously, it was shown that
the bHLH protein c-Myc can be either phosphorylated or glycosylated at
threonine 58, which is located in the trans-activation
domain (Gupta et al., 1993
; Chou et al., 1995
). Additionally, it was
determined that phosphorylation of threonine 58 can regulate c-MYC
signaling (Gupta et al., 1993
). Consequently, it was proposed that
reciprocal glycosylation and phosphorylation at threonine 58 could play
an important role in the regulation of c-MYC activity. Whether hARNT
residues can be glycosylated is unknown. However, the possibility
exists that glycosylation could potentially influence ARNT charge
heterogeneity, phosphorylation status, and activity. Presently, the
significance of the aforementioned shift in ARNT charge heterogeneity
after heterodimerization with the AhR is unknown. Despite the shift in
ARNT charge heterogeneity after heterodimerization with the AhR,
heterodimerization does not seem to influence the general phosphorylation pattern of hARNT (Fig. 2). However, because the stoichiometry of each hARNT phosphorylation site was not assessed, it
is unknown whether heterodimerization with the AhR significantly influences the stoichiometry of individual phosphorylation sites.
An earlier study that investigated the functional role of
phosphorylation in the interaction between AhR and ARNT demonstrated that phosphorylation of ARNT is required for formation of the AhR-ARNT
heterodimer (Berghard et al., 1993
). In a later study, it was shown
that the HLH and PAS domains of ARNT mediate dimerization (Reisz-Porszasz et al., 1994
). Taken together, the results from these
two studies merited our use of the truncated hARNT/474-Flag construct
to search for a phosphorylation site(s) that may be involved in ARNT
heterodimerization and homodimerization. Phosphoamino acid analysis
indicated that hARNT/474-Flag is phosphorylated exclusively on serine
residues and that hARNT/Flag is phosphorylated almost exclusively on
serine residues. Solid-phase sequencing of tryptic phosphopeptides
isolated from two-dimensional maps of hARNT/474-Flag identified five
candidate serine containing tryptic peptides located in the PAS domain
and identified one candidate serine containing peptide located in the
distal end of the HLH region (Table 1). By changing each of these
candidate serine residues to alanine residues, we were able to identify S348 as a phosphorylation site and verify that the other five candidate
sites were not phosphorylated. The functional role of S348 was assessed
with two ARNT signaling pathways. The first signaling pathway examined
the role of S348 in AhR-ARNT signaling by comparing the ability of
S348, S348A, and S348E to trans-activate XRE-driven
luciferase activity in an ARNT-deficient cell line. The second
signaling pathway examined the role of S348 on ARNT-ARNT homodimer
signaling by comparing the ability of S348, S348A, and S348E to
trans-activate class B E-box-driven luciferase activity in
the ARNT deficient cell line and COS-1 cells. These analyses have
demonstrated that phosphorylation of S348 apparently does not influence
ARNT heterodimerization or homodimerization and therefore does not
influence AhR-hARNT or hARNT homodimer mediated gene expression.
In contrast to the study by Berghard et al. (1993)
, which compared a
phosphorylated form of ARNT with a dephosphorylated form of ARNT
through the use of alkaline phosphatase, the results of the present
study were generated by examining the role of a single phosphorylation
site in a functional domain. Therefore, it is difficult to draw a
comparison between the results from the present study with those of
Berghard et al. (1993)
. However, an unpublished result from our
laboratory demonstrated that the phosphatase inhibitor okadaic acid
increased hARNT-hARNT-mediated E-box activity by 2-fold in hARNT
transfected COS-1 cells. This 2-fold increase in E-box activity was
accompanied by a greater than 10-fold increase in
[32P]orthophosphate incorporation into hARNT
without influencing hARNT expression levels in COS-1 cells. The results
from our laboratory, along with the results of Berghard et al. (1993)
,
suggest that overall phosphorylation status, or a cluster of sites,
rather than site-specific phosphorylation, may be crucial in the
regulation of ARNT-mediated signaling.
This study has shown that although hARNT is a phosphoprotein, the phosphorylation of a PAS-region serine residue does not modulate AhR-ARNT and ARNT-ARNT mediated signaling. In addition, the phosphorylation pattern of hARNT seems to be unaltered whether it is a monomer or dimerized with the hAhR. Although phosphorylation of S348 was shown not to modulate AhR and ARNT-ARNT signaling, the phosphorylation status of S348 may play a functional role with other ARNT dimerization partners in their respective systems. Future investigations will identify phosphorylation sites distal to the PAS domain and determine whether S348 plays a functional role in combination with these other hARNT phosphorylation sites in ARNT-mediated signaling systems.
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Footnotes |
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Received August 9, 2000; Accepted November 20, 2000
This work was supported by the National Institute of Environmental Health Science Grants ES04869, ES09272, and ES05863.
Send reprint requests to: Dr. Gary H. Perdew, Center for Molecular Toxicology, Department of Veterinary Science, Pennsylvania State University, 226 Fenske Lab, University Park, PA 16802. E-mail: ghp2{at}psu.edu
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Abbreviations |
|---|
ARNT, aryl hydrocarbon receptor nuclear
translocator protein;
bHLH, basic helix-loop-helix;
HIF-1
, hypoxia
inducible factor 1
;
PAS, Per/ARNT/Sim (periodicity/aryl hydrocarbon
receptor nuclear translocator/single-minded);
HLH, helix-loop-helix;
AhR, aryl hydrocarbon receptor;
XRE, xenobiotic response element;
Sim, single-minded;
TCDD, 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin;
hAhR, human aryl
hydrocarbon receptor;
hARNT, human aryl hydrocarbon receptor nuclear
translocator;
FBS, fetal bovine serum;
MEM, minimum essential medium;
PCR, polymerase chain reaction;
NP-40, nonidet P-40;
MENG, MOPS/EDTA/NaN3/glycerol;
MOPS, 3-(N-morpholino)propanesulfonic acid;
MENGPI, MENG
containing sodium pyrophosphate, sodium molybdate, sodium fluoride, and
sodium vanadate;
DMSO, dimethyl sulfoxide;
mAb, monoclonal antibody;
CHAPS, 3-[(3-cholamidopropyl)dimethylammonio]-1-propanesulfonate;
PAGE, polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis;
TLC, thin-layer
chromatography;
CDTA, trans-1,2-diaminocyclohexane-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic
acid;
RLUs, relative light units;
ANOVA, analysis of variance;
mARNT, murine aryl hydrocarbon receptor nuclear translocator.
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References |
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