The Journal of Neuroscience, July 2, 2003, 23(13):5425-5436
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Proteolytic Processing of the p75 Neurotrophin Receptor and Two Homologs Generates C-Terminal Fragments with Signaling Capability
Kevin C. Kanning,1,3
Mark Hudson,1
Paul S. Amieux,2
Jesse C. Wiley,1,4
Mark Bothwell,1 and
Leslayann C. Schecterson1
Departments of 1Physiology and Biophysics and
2Pharmacology, 3Neurobiology
and Behavior Graduate Program, and 4Molecular and Cell
Biology Graduate Program, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington
98195
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Abstract
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The 75 kDa neurotrophin receptor (p75NTR) and two neurotrophin
receptor homologs (NRH1, NRH2) constitute a subfamily of the nerve growth
factor/tumor necrosis factor receptor superfamily. NRH1 coexists with
p75NTR in fish, amphibians, and birds but is absent in mammals,
whereas NRH2 exists only in mammals. Unlike p75NTR and NRH1, NRH2
lacks a canonical extracellular ligand binding domain. The similarity of NRH2
to the product of metalloproteinase cleavage of p75NTR prompted us
to examine the cleavage of p75NTR in greater detail.
p75NTR, NRH1, and NRH2 undergo multiple proteolytic cleavages that
ultimately release cytoplasmic fragments. For p75NTR, cleavage in
the extracellular domain by a PMA-inducible membrane metalloproteinase is
followed by cleavage within or near the transmembrane domain, releasing the
intracellular domain into the cytoplasm. This processing resembles the
- and
-secretase-mediated processing of
-amyloid precursor
protein and the similar processing of Notch. Although neurotrophins did not
regulate p75NTR processing, the
-
and
-secretase-mediated cleavage of p75 is modulated by receptor
tyrosine kinases (Trks) TrkA and TrkB but not TrkC. Surprisingly, although
NRH1 and NRH2 also undergo proteolytic cytoplasmic release of intracellular
domains, a different protease mediates the cleavage. Furthermore, whereas the
p75NTR soluble intracellular domain accumulates only in the
presence of proteasome inhibitors, the equivalent fragment of NRH2 is stable
and localizes in the nucleus. Because soluble intracellular domains of
p75NTR and NRH2 were found to activate NF-
B in concert with
TNF receptor associated factor 6 (TRAF6), we propose that cleavage of these
proteins may serve conserved cytoplasmic and nuclear signaling functions
through distinct proteases.
Key words: proteolysis; p75NTR; neurotrophin; Trk; regulated intramembrane proteolysis; RIP; NF-
B
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Introduction
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The 75 kDa neurotrophin receptor (p75NTR)
(Johnson et al., 1986
;
Radeke et al., 1987
) is a
member of the NGF/tumor necrosis factor (TNF) receptor superfamily, which is
defined by an extracellular domain (ECD) containing a repeated cysteine-rich
motif. Apart from a death domain motif present in several family members
including p75NTR (Feinstein et
al., 1995
; Liepinsh et al.,
1997
), there is little homology of intracellular domains (ICDs)
among these receptors. However, two novel genes encode proteins with
substantial sequence homology to p75NTR in cytoplasmic and
transmembrane domains, defining a gene subfamily. We refer to these as
neurotrophin receptor homolog 1 (NRH1) and NRH2
(Hutson and Bothwell, 2001
).
Xenopus NRH1 has also been designated "fullback" (GenBank
accession AF131890
[GenBank]
), and rat NRH2 has been called "PLAIDD," for
"p75-like apoptosis-inducing death domain protein"
(Frankowski et al., 2002
).
p75NTR is activated by all four neurotrophins. p75NTR
is frequently coexpressed with receptor tyroisne kinases (Trks) TrkA, TrkB, or
TrkC neurotrophin receptors, with which it associates
(Wolf et al., 1995
;
Bibel et al., 1999
), and this
association alters the signaling properties of both partners by poorly
understood mechanisms (Roux and Barker,
2002
). p75NTR also associates with NgR, a receptor for
Nogo, myelin associated glycoprotein (MAG), and oligodendrocyte myelin
glycoprotein (OMgp), and mediates the signaling responses to these proteins
(Wang et al., 2002
;
Wong et al., 2002
). Despite
these multiple functions, p75NTR signaling mechanisms are poorly
understood.
Although proteolytic shedding of the p75NTR ECD by Schwann cells
was reported more than a decade ago
(DiStefano and Johnson, 1988
),
the function of shedding remains obscure. DiStefano et al.
(1993
) did not examine the
fate of the predicted membrane-resident C-terminal fragment (m-CTF). However,
the possibility that this fragment may be functionally significant is
suggested by recent findings that a p75NTR splice variant lacking a
neurotrophin-binding domain is functionally important
(von Schack et al., 2001
) and
by the recognition that NRH2 structurally resembles the p75NTR
m-CTF.
The unidentified protease mediating p75NTR ECD shedding is
typical of a class of membrane metalloproteinases, known as
"sheddases," with diverse and important functions
(Hooper et al., 1997
;
Peschon et al., 1998
).
Recently, a novel mode of receptor processing has been recognized-regulated
intramembrane proteolysis (RIP) (Brown et
al., 2000
). Exemplified by Notch, RIP involves receptor cleavage
near the membrane junction of the ECD, typically by a membrane
metalloproteinase of the A disintegrin and metalloproteinase (ADAM) family.
This cleavage triggers a second cleavage within the transmembrane domain,
typically by a presenilin-containing protease complex, releasing the
intracellular domain (ICD), which often traffics to the nucleus as a
transcriptional regulator. By analogy to
-amyloid precursor protein,
another example of RIP, the initial and secondary cleaving activities will be
referred to here as
- and
-secretase.
These considerations led us to investigate whether p75NTR is
subject to RIP and whether NRH1 and NRH2 are processed similarly. We report
here that p75NTR, NRH1, and NRH2 undergo proteolytic processing,
generating soluble ICD fragments. Processing of p75NTR requires
sequential action of
- and
-secretase, whereas similar
processing of NRH1 and NRH2 does not use
-secretase and does not
require previous cleavage by
-secretase. We provide evidence that
soluble ICDs of these receptors may have cytoplasmic and nuclear signaling
functions.
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Materials and Methods
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Vector construction. PIND-hp75 was constructed by digesting a 1.7
kb insert of pBAP-hp75 with SalI and BamHI, blunting the
SalI site by Klenow, and ligating into the vector pIND (Invitrogen,
Carlsbad, CA) via BamHI and a HindIII site that had been
blunted by Klenow fill in. Myc-tagged expression constructs were generated by
subcloning PCR amplified Xenopus NRH1 and mouse NRH2 into the vector
pCS2+MT (Roth et al., 1991
)
via the ClaI site by adding ClaI linkers using the primers
5'-ATC CCA TCG ATA TGG AAA TGA GGG GCC CAC GTT TAA CC and 5'-TTT
AAA TCG ATA CAC CAC AGA GCT GGC ATC ATT TGC GCT for xNRH1 and 5'-ATC CCA
TCG ATA TGC TTT ATA ACG TCA GCA AAG GT and 5'-TTT AAA TCG ATA CAC CAC
CGA GGA GCT CTC AGC TG for mNRH2, creating a C-terminal fusion to six tandem
repeats of the myc epitope. C-terminal green fluorescent protein (GFP) fusions
to NRH1 and NRH2 were made by subcloning via the ClaI sites of the MT
fusions, with mNRH2 subcloned into the ClaI site of pCS2-GFP CE, and
xNRH1 subcloned into the ClaI site of pCS2-GFP-XLT (gifts of R. T.
Moon, University of Washington). C-terminal GFP fusion to human p75 NTR was
created by adding a 3' SpeI linker to human p75 using the
primer 5'-AAA ACT AGT CAC CGG GGA TGT GGC AGT GGA and T7 for a 5'
primer with pCDNA3-hp75 as a template, followed by digestion of the PCR
product with EcoR1 and SpeI and ligating into the
EcoR1XbaI sites of pCS2-GFP XLT. PCMV-FLAG-rp75 ICD was
created by digesting the p75 ICD from pGEX-rp75ICD via EcoR1 (5') and
SalI (3') sites and subcloning into the vector pFLAG-CMV-6c
(Sigma) via EcoR1 and SalI sites, creating a FLAG fusion on the N
terminus of the intracellular domain. PCMV-FLAG-mNRH2 ICD was generated by
subcloning the NRH2 ICD from a GST fusion in pGEX4T1 via the EcoR1 and
SalI sites of pCMV-FLAG-6c (Sigma), creating a FLAG fusion on the N
terminus of the intracellular domain. The original fusion in pGEX4T1 was made
by PCR using the BamH1 linker 5'-ATA GGA TCC AAA TGC TGG CGC
TCA CAT and SalI linker 5'-ATA GTC GAC CGG CAC TCA CAC CAC CGA.
pCDNA-mNRH2L was constructed by subcloning a 1.2 kb insert of mNRH2 from
pBS-mNRH2 via KpnI and NotI and ligating into pCDNA3.
PCDNA3-rNRH2 sec was created by subcloning the rNRH2 sec cDNA from clone
jlrIc9b4 in pMet7 into pCDNA3.1 via BamH1 and NotI sites. PRK-TNF
receptor associated factor 6 (TRAF6) was a gift of David Goeddel (Tularik,
Inc., San Francisco, CA); PCDNA3-rat p75 NTR, pGEX-rp75 ICD, pCMV5-rTrkA and
pCMV5-rTrkB were gifts of Moses Chao (Skirboll Institute, New York
University). PMEXrTrkC was a gift of Pantelis Tsoulfas (University of
Miami, Miami, FL). Xenopus NRH1 used for subcloning was clone 26E7.1,
obtained from C. Niehrs (Max Plank Institute, Heidelberg, Germany).
Full-length mouse NRH2L cDNA (clone jtmxa18f2) and rat
NRH2S (clone jlrIc9b4) were a gift of Millenium Pharmaceuticals
(Cambridge, MA).
Generation of Ponasterone A-inducible stable cell lines. Human
p75NTR cloned into the pIND vector (Invitrogen) was transfected
into EcR293 cells [human embryonic kidney (HEK) 293 cells stably transfected
with the ecdysone receptor (Invitrogen)] and put under selection using both
500 µg/ml Zeocin and 500 µg/ml geneticin (G418). Individual clones were
isolated and expanded and then assayed for low basal expression and high
inducible expression of p75NTR using Ponasterone A (Invitrogen).
All experiments reported here were done using p75 clone 5. pIND stable cell
line culture media was supplemented with 200 µg/ml geneticin, and
expression was routinely induced using 5 µM Ponasterone A.
Cell culture, treatments, and transfection. COS, HEK293, RN22F,
and pIND-p75 cells were routinely cultured in pH 7.2 DMEM (Invitrogen)
containing 10% fetal bovine serum (Hyclone, Logan, UT) and 1%
penicillin/streptomycin (Invitrogen) at 37°C. CHO-DG44 cells expressing
human BDNF were cultured in DMEM/F12 supplemented with 10 µg/ml
transferrin, 10 µg/ml insulin, and 10 nM selenium. Culture
supernatant was fractioned on Hi-Trap SP and Sephacryl S200 (Amersham
Biosciences, Piscataway, NJ), yielding homogeneously pure proBDNF. For
inducible p75NTR expression, pIND cells at 5060% confluency
were induced with 5 µM Ponasterone A for 24 hr before
treatments. In cleavage experiments, cells were pretreated for 90 min with 10
µM GM6001 (Calbiochem, San Diego, CA), 25 µM TAPI
(Peptides International), 210 µM DAPT (gift of M. Wolfe,
Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA), 1 µM Epoxomycin
(Calbiochem), 5 µM
-clasto-lactacystin
(Calbiochem), 1 µM calpastatin (Calbiochem), 26 µM
SB203580 (Calbiochem), 100 µM PD98059 (Calbiochem), 100
nM K252a (Calbiochem), or DMSO vehicle control. Cells were
stimulated for 40 min with 100 ng/ml PMA (Sigma, St. Louis, MO), 100 ng/ml
human NGF (gift of Genentech, San Francisco, CA), human BDNF and NT-3 (gifts
of Regeneron), human proNGF (10 ng/ml) (gift of B. Hempstead, Cornell
University, New York, NY), or human proBDNF (60 ng/ml) (purified in our
laboratory). Cells were then washed one time with cold PBS on ice, lysed in 20
mM Tris 7.6, 1 mM EDTA, 0.5 mM EGTA, 1%
Triton X-100, 250 mM sucrose, and 1x protease inhibitor
mixture (Sigma), and centrifuged 10 min at 16,000 x g;
supernatants were quantified by Bradford assay for use in SDS-PAGE. For
transient transfections, HEK293 cells were plated at 7080% confluency
on 35 mm plates and transfected with Lipofectamine 2000 (Invitrogen) using 4
µg of total DNA per well. In cotransfections of p75 and Trk, each 35 mm
plate received 2 µg of pCDNA3-hp75 and 2 µg of the respective Trk
expression vector. For inhibiting N-linked glycosylation, cells were cultured
24 hr in the presence of 10 µg/ml tunicamycin (Sigma) and then lysed as
described. Primary cultures of Schwann cells were done using Schwann cells
derived from a mixed primary culture of postnatal day (P) 1 rat trigeminal
ganglia, grown on glass coverslips coated with poly-D-lysine and
rat laminin (Sigma), cultured in Ham's F12 Media (Invitrogen) containing 10%
heat-inactivated fetal bovine serum (Hyclone), 1% penicillin/streptomycin,
supplemented with 50 ng/ml NGF. Schwann cells were transfected in 12-well
plates using Lipofectamine 2000 and 1.5 µg of DNA per well.
Antibodies. Rabbit polyclonal antisera 9992 against the
intracellular domain of p75NTR was a gift of Moses Chao. For
generation of an antibody against the NRH2 intracellular domain, Alpha
Diagnostic International (San Antonio, TX) synthesized the peptide
CQAEAVETMAC-DQMPAYTLLRNW, which was coupled to KLH and used to immunize
rabbits. On the basis of high ELISA score, serum from rabbit 5592 was selected
for affinity purification against the immunizing peptide covalently coupled to
agarose. The monoclonal anti-myc antibody 9E10 was purified from hybridoma
culture supernatant using protein G-Sepharose. Trk expression was monitored
with the anti-pan Trk antibody sc-139 (Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Santa Cruz,
CA.)
Western blotting. Cell lysate (320 µg) was separated by
SDS PAGE using 420% acrylamide gradient gels (Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA).
For detection of p75 with 9992 antisera, protein was transferred
electrophoretically using the semidry transfer method to polyvinylidene
difluoride membrane, Immobilon P (Millipore, Bedford, MA). Membranes were then
blocked in 1% nonfat dry milk in TBST (20 mM Tris, 137
mM NaCl, pH 7.4, 0.05% Tween 20). Incubation in a 1:5000 dilution
of 9992 antisera specific for the intracellular domain p75 (compliments of
Moses Chao) in blocking buffer was performed overnight at 4°C. Membranes
were washed once in high-salt TBS (500 mM NaCl) with 0.05% Tween 20
followed by multiple washes in TBST. Secondary goat anti-rabbit HRP-conjugated
antibody (Jackson Laboratories) was diluted 1:20,000 in blocking buffer and
incubated with the membranes for 1 hr at room temperature. Membranes were then
washed as before and developed using ECL (Amersham Biosciences). For NRH1 and
NRH2, immunoblotting followed the same procedure except that proteins were
transferred to Protran nitrocellulose (Schleicher and Schuell, Keene, NH), and
myc-tagged proteins were detected using 0.5 µg/ml mouse monoclonal anti-myc
antibody. Untagged NRH2 was detected using 1 µg/ml rabbit polyclonal
antisera 5592.
Cell fractionation. After the indicated treatments, cells were
lysed in buffer containing (in mM): 10 HEPES, 10 NaCl, 1
KH2PO4, 5 NaHCO3, 5 EDTA, and 1x
protease inhibitor mixture, and homogenized by passage through a 22 ga needle.
Nuclei were spun down at 325 x g for 10 min, and the resulting
supernatant was then microfuged at 16,000 x g for 30 min at
4°C. The supernatant was removed (cytosol), and buffer containing 1%
Triton X-100 was added to the pellet (membrane). Nuclear proteins were
extracted in high salt buffer with (in mM): 10 HEPES, 0.5
MgCl2, 420 NaCl, 0.2 EDTA, 25% glycerol, and protease
inhibitors.
Affinity precipitation of biotinylated cell-surface proteins.
Plates (10 cm) of COS cells were transfected by calcium phosphate with
mNRH2-MT for 24 hr, washed three times in ice-cold PBS, pH 8.0, placed on ice,
and covered with either 2 ml cold PBS containing 1 mg/ml freshly prepared
EZ-Link Sulfo-NHS-LC-Biotin (Pierce, Rockford, IL) or PBS alone. Cells were
incubated 30 min on ice and then washed one time with 100 mM
glycine, followed by three washes of cold PBS. Cells were then lysed in 1 ml
lysis buffer [1% NP-40, 0.5% deoxycholate, 50 mM Tris, pH 7.5, 150
mM NaCl, 1 mM EDTA, 1 mM EGTA, 1x
protease inhibitor mixture (Sigma)]. For affinity precipitation, 500 µl of
the lysate was incubated with 30 µl ultralink-neutravidin beads (Pierce)
for 1 hr at 4°C, followed by four washes in cold lysis buffer. Pelleted
beads were then resuspended in 30 µl SDS loading buffer for analysis by
PAGE. Affinity-precipitated proteins were detected by Western blot using the
9E10 monoclonal anti-myc antibody, stripped, and reprobed with goat
anti-pyruvate kinase (Rockland, Gilbertsville, PA).
Luciferase assays. For luciferase assays, HEK293 cells in 24-well
plates were transfected with Lipofectamine 2000 in complete media with 1050 ng
total DNA per well. Each well contained 200 ng of pNfKB-luciferase reporter
(Stratagene, La Jolla, CA), 50 ng EF1-LACZ for normalization, 750 ng of pCDNA3
empty vector, full-length rp75NTR, mNRH2, FLAG-rp75 ICD, or FLAG-mNRH2 ICD,
and either 50 ng of TRAF6 or pCDNA3 empty vector. Cells were harvested for
luciferase assay 24 hr after transfection. Data represent the averages of
triplicate wells per condition, normalized for transfection efficiency.
Statistical significance was determined using a two-tailed Student's
t test. The data are means ± SD of triplicate assays
normalized to EF1
promoter-driven LacZ expression.
Immunohistochemistry. Bisected embryonic day (E) 20 rat embryos
were immersion fixed in Methacarnoy's fixative (10% chloroform, 60% methanol,
30% acetic acid), embedded in paraffin, and sectioned at 10 µM.
Slides were deparaffinized in three changes of Xylene; endogenous peroxidase
was blocked with 0.75% H2O2 in MeOH; slides were
hydrated to DH2O and 0.1 M PBS, pH 7.4. Slides were
incubated briefly in 5% bovine serum albumin in PBS before overnight
incubation at 4°C in primary antibody (rabbit 5592 anti-NRH2 or rabbit
9992 anti-p75NTR) diluted to 2 µg/ml. Slides were rinsed thoroughly in PBS
after primary antibody incubation. Slides were then incubated with
biotinylated goat anti-rabbit (Vector Laboratories, Burlingame, CA) at 1:500
for one hr, rinsed in PBS, incubated with streptavidin-HRP (Zymed
Laboratories, San Francisco, CA) at 1:800 for 1 hr, rinsed in PBS, followed by
rinsing in 0.05 M Tris buffer, pH 7.6. Finally, slides were
incubated in a diaminobenzidine (DAB) solution (0.074% 3,3'DAB in 0.05
M Tris buffer with 0.03% H2O2) for
1015 min at room temperature. Slides were thoroughly rinsed, lightly
stained with methyl green, dehydrated, cleared, and coverslipped with
Permount. Bright-field images were collected on a Leitz ortholux 2 microscope
using a Kodak DC290 digital camera.
Immunocytochemistry. Cultured cells were fixed in 4% PFA for 30
min at room temperature, rinsed in PBS/10 mM glycine/0.1% Triton
X-100 for 20 min, and permeabilized with three additional 10 min washes in
PBS/0.25% Triton X-100 (PBST). Blocking was done in 10% donkey serum for 1 hr
at room temperature, followed by a 3 hr incubation with primary antibody (2
µg/ml 5592 anti-NRH2) diluted in blocking serum. Cells were rinsed three
times for 10 min in PBST, and then incubated with 1:500 dilution of
Cy3-conjugated donkey anti-rabbit antisera (Jackson ImmunoResearch, West
Grove, PA) for 45 min at room temperature. Cells were incubated 15 min in a
PBS wash containing 1 µg/ml 4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI),
washed three times for 10 min in PBS, and coverslipped with Vectashield
(Vector Laboratories). Cells transfected with GFP-tagged constructs were
washed one time in cold PBS and fixed in 4% PFA at room temperature for 20
min, washed in PBST, nuclei stained with 1 µg/ml DAPI, washed three times
for 10 min in PBST, and coverslipped using Vectashield. Confocal images were
collected on a Leica TCS SP/MP confocal multiphoton system using a PL APO
100.0x oil immersion objective.
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Results
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Structural relationships between p75NTR and homologs
Expressed sequence tag (EST) and genomic databases from various species
contain sequences representing two homologs of p75NTR, which we
designate NRH1 and NRH2. Alignment of the sequences of these homologs reveals
extensive similarity in the transmembrane and cytoplasmic domains
(Fig. 1A). For
comparison, whereas NRH subfamily members share roughly 30% sequence identity
in their intracellular domains across species, the human p75NTR ICD
is only 13% identical to that of human TNFR1. NRH1 and NRH2, like
p75NTR, possess death domains and a C-terminal motif (SSXV) that is
predicted to bind type I PDZ domains. This suggests that signaling mechanisms
used by the three proteins may be similar. However, NRH2 lacks the
cysteine-rich repeat domain that constitutes the ligand-binding domain of
p75NTR. This does not simply reflect failure to identify
full-length cDNA clones of NRH2 transcripts, because no cysteine repeat coding
sequences are present in the short interval between the 5' end of the
human genomic sequences for NRH2 at chromosomal position 3p21
[PDB]
.32a and an
adjacent gene, KIF9, nor is a cysteine-repeat coding sequence present in the
mouse gene (on chromosome 9, position 15954.94).

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Figure 1. Relationship among p75NTR homologs. A, Sequence
alignment reveals extensive sequence identity among mouse p75NTR,
Xenopus NRH1, and mouse NRH2 in transmembrane and cytoplasmic
domains. p75NTR and NRH1 possess similar cysteine-rich repeat
motifs in the extracellular domain, whereas NRH2 lacks this domain. Blue box,
Transmembrane domain; green box, p75NTR PEST domain; red box, death
domain; black box, PDZ binding motif. B, BLAST scanning of EST and
genomic DNA libraries reveals the presence of p75NTR and homologs
in various vertebrate orders. p75NTR is present in all vertebrate
orders for which data are available, whereas NRH1 is not found in mammals, and
NRH2 is found only in mammals. C, Dendrogram modeling phylogenic
relatedness of p75NTR and homologs. Sequence alignments generated
by the CLUSTAL algorithm were used to generate dendrograms using VectorNTI
software. D, Diagram depicting the structural similarity of
p75NTR, metalloprotease-cleaved p75NTR, and the NRH
subfamily proteins. NRH2 exists in long (L) and short (S) splice variants that
resemble predicted C-terminal fragments of -secretase-like and
-secretase-like cleavage of p75NTR, respectively.
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NRH1 homologs exist in amphibians (Xenopus laevis and Silurana
tropicalis), fish (zebrafish and pufferfish), and birds (chickens) but
none is present in mammalian EST databases, and none can be detected in the
human or mouse genomic databases. In contrast, NRH2 homologs are present among
ESTs from diverse mammals (human, mouse, rat, bovine, porcine), but none are
present in ESTs or genomic databases of non-mammalian vertebrates.
p75NTR homologs can be identified in all vertebrate classes,
including fish, amphibians, birds, and mammals. Consequently,
p75NTR coexists with NRH1 in fish, amphibians, and birds but
coexists with NRH2 in mammals (Fig.
1B). The simplest (but not the only) scenario for the
evolution of this gene family is that a gene duplication gave rise to NRH1 and
p75NTR early in vertebrate evolution and that NRH2 arose by a
deletion mutation of NRH1 around the time of divergence of avian and mammalian
lineages. A dendrogram modeling phylogenic relationships of p75NTR
and homologs is consistent with this interpretation
(Fig. 1C). EST
sequences suggest the existence of multiple splice variants of NRH2, with
variant sequences at the N terminus. These putative splice variants can be
grouped into long splice variants (NRH2L) that are predicted to
span the membrane, and a short splice variant (NRH2S), lacking a
transmembrane domain, that is predicted to exist as a soluble cytoplasmic
protein [and these predictions have been confirmed recently
(Frankowski et al., 2002
)].
NRH2L and NRH2S are comparable with the predicted
C-terminal products of cleavage of p75NTR by
-secretase-like
and
-secretase-like activities (Fig.
1D).
-secretase and
-secretase cleavage of
p75NTR
To examine possible cleavage fragments of p75NTR we used an
antibody against the cytoplasmic domain of p75NTR for Western blot
analysis of a stable HEK293 cell line engineered to inducibly express
hp75NTR in response to Ponasterone A (pIND p75 cells). Several
immunoreactive protein species were detected, and all were derived from
p75NTR as indicated by their induction by Ponasterone A
(Fig. 2A). In addition
to the intact 7080 kDa receptor (present as a broad band because of
heterogenous glycosylation), a major
50 kDa component was observed that
probably represents immature nascent protein that is not fully glycosylated
(Grob et al., 1985
). Because a
zinc-dependent metalloprotease is implicated in the ectodomain shedding of the
p75NTR (DiStefano et al.,
1993
) and metalloproteases implicated in
-secretase
receptor cleavage are often activated by a protein kinase C (PKC)-dependent
mechanism (Peschon et al.,
1998
), we assessed the effect of the PKC activator PMA on
p75NTR cleavage. Exposure of cultures to PMA caused the appearance
of a faint
30 kDa product, only visible with long blot exposures (data
not shown). The size of this fragment is consistent with the size expected for
an
-secretase-mediated ectodomain cleavage event. (Although the
predicted polypeptide molecular weight is
24,000, the presence of an
additional increment from O-linked carbohydrate is likely.)

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Figure 2. PMA induces proteolytic processing of p75NTR. A, Using
pIND-p75 cells, p75NTR expression was induced with 5
µM Ponasterone A (Pon) for 24 hr before addition of inhibitors.
Inhibitors of different proteolytic enzymes, epoxomycin (Epo, 1
µM), -clasto-lactacystin (Lac, 5
µM), calpastatin (Cal, 1 µM), and DAPT (2
µM) were added for 90 min before PMA addition (100 ng/ml, 40
min). Western blots probed with an antibody specific to the cytoplasmic domain
of p75NTR revealed a PMA-stimulated proteolysis that results in a
small fragment (<) produced by a DAPT-sensitive, -secretase-mediated
cleavage. This PMA-stimulated cleavage product is derived from an intermittent
-secretase product (*) that visibly accumulates in the presence of the
-secretase inhibitor DAPT. B, RN22F rat Schwannoma cells,
which endogenously express p75NTR, were treated with inhibitors and
stimulated with PMA as in A with similar results. C, Primary
mouse embryonic fibroblast cells were transfected with p75NTR and
treated with Epo and PMA. Without treatment, these cells have a constitutive
-secretase cleavage, and no observable -secretase cleavage of
p75NTR. Stimulation with PMA fails to trigger additional
processing. D, pIND-p75 cells were pretreated with Epo (all lanes)
and the p38 MAP kinase inhibitor SB203580 (26 µM), the MEK
inhibitor PD98059 (100 µM), the metalloproteinase inhibitor TAPI
(25µM), or a DMSO control, and then stimulated with PMA (all
lanes). PMA-induced cleavage of p75NTR was inhibited in the
presence of either TAPI or PD98059, but not SB203580.
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For several instances of RIP, including Notch, the products of the initial
and secondary cleavage events do not accumulate in significant quantities,
because the product of
-secretase cleavage is rapidly processed by
-secretase cleavage, and the latter product is quickly subjected to
proteasomal degradation (Oberg et al.,
2001
). The cytoplasmic domain of p75NTR contains a PEST
motif, characteristic of proteins that are subject to proteasomal degradation
(Fig. 1A). Therefore,
we examined whether exposure to proteasome inhibitors might stabilize cleavage
products of the receptor. In the absence of PMA, epoxomycin did not produce
significant accumulation of any p75NTR cleavage products in pIND-p75 cells
(Fig. 2A). However,
when treated with PMA, both
-clasto-lactacystin and epoxomycin
caused accumulation of a
25 kDa fragment that is consistent with the size
predicted for a
-secretase cleavage event
(Fig. 2A). Although
proteasome inhibitors dramatically increase the amount of the
25 kDa
fragment detected, small amounts were observed in the absence of proteasome
inhibitors when blots were heavily overexposed (data not shown). To assess
whether the low abundance of the 25 kDa fragment results from the rapid
processing of this fragment by
-secretase, we exposed cells to a potent
and specific
-secretase inhibitor, DAPT, which eliminated the 25 kDa
fragment and caused accumulation of the 30 kDa fragment
(Fig. 2A), indicating
that the 25 kDa fragment results from
-secretase-mediated cleavage of
the 30 kDa fragment. This cleavage event was also inhibited by other
-secretase inhibitors, including WPE-89, MW111, and MG132 (data not
shown). In contrast, the calpain inhibitor calpastatin had no effect on
PMA-induced processing. We next confirmed that the sequential processing of
p75NTR occurs in cells that endogenously express p75NTR
using RN22F Schwannoma cells. Although low levels of basal
-secretase
activity were revealed by the presence of the
30 kDa band in untreated
RN22F cells (Fig. 2B,
left lane), a
25 kDa cleavage product was only detectable when cells were
stimulated with PMA in the presence of the proteasome inhibitor epoxomycin. As
in the pIND-p75 cells, production of this unstable, PMA-inducible 25 kDa
fragment was blocked by DAPT, indicating that the conversion of the 30 kDa
fragment to the 25 kDa fragment is mediated by a
-secretase protease
(Fig. 2B, right lane).
We have noted significant differences in the extent of constitutive
-cleavage of p75NTR in diverse cell lines, as evidenced by
comparison of the Schwannoma cells with the inducible pIND-p75 cells. The
dependence of cleavage on cellular context is most striking in primary mouse
embryonic fibroblasts transfected with p75NTR, where extensive
-secretase-like cleavage occurs constitutively
(Fig. 2C).
Interestingly, in these cells where the
-product is easily detected,
PMA negligibly affected
-secretase processing, and
-secretase-like cleavage is not observed
(Fig. 2C).
-secretase-like activity cleaving p75NTR resembles
ADAM10 and ADAM17
Stimulation of p75NTR cleavage by PMA is consistent with a role
for select metalloproteases of the ADAM family. We therefore examined whether
the pharmacological profile of the
-secretase was consistent with that
of the PMA-inducible ADAMs, ADAM 10 (kuzbanian) and ADAM 17 (TACE).
PMA-stimulated cleavage of p75NTR is prevented by TAPI
(Fig. 2D), a potent
but broadly specific inhibitor of membrane metalloproteases including ADAM10
and ADAM17. Recent reports suggest that PMA activation of ADAM10/17 is
mediated by activation of either p38 MAP kinase
(Gechtman et al., 1999
) or ERK
MAP kinase (Fan and Derynck,
1999
). The PMA-stimulated cleavage of p75NTR is blocked
by PD-98059, an inhibitor of ERK activation, but not by SB-203580, an
inhibitor of p38 activation (Fig.
2D). Although ERK activation is necessary, ERK alone is
not sufficient to induce cleavage, because exposure to other agents that
activate ERK, such as epidermal growth factor or fetal bovine serum, did not
stimulate processing (data not shown). Therefore, the p75NTR
-secretase is a TAPI-sensitive, zinc-dependent metalloprotease
(DiStefano et al., 1993
) with
sensitivity to PMA that requires the activity of the ERK MAP kinase pathway.
This profile resembles ADAM 10 and 17 and suggests that these proteases may
mediate p75NTR cleavage, although other metalloproteases may
contribute. ADAM10 and ADAM17 appear to function redundantly for both Notch
and APP, and also may do so for p75NTR. ADAM17 is not essential for
p75NTR cleavage, because cleavage occurs in fibroblasts derived
from ADAM17 null mice. These fibroblasts, however, abundantly express ADAM10
(data not shown).
Trans-regulation of p75NTR cleavage
The
-secretase-mediated cleavage of Notch is stimulated by its
physiologic ligand, Delta (Lieber et al.,
2002
). Therefore we examined whether
-secretase cleavage of
p75NTR is stimulated by neurotrophins. In pIND-p75 cells expressing
p75NTR, but not Trk neurotrophin receptors, NGF, BDNF, and NT3 had
no significant effect on
-secretase cleavage of p75NTR
(Fig. 3, top panel; all lanes
pretreated with epoxomycin). Recent studies have revealed that
pro-neurotrophins activate p75NTR-mediated proapoptotic signaling
more potently than mature fully processed neurotrophins
(Lee et al., 2001
;
Beattie et al., 2002
). However,
neither proNGF nor proBDNF influenced
-secretase cleavage of
p75NTR (Fig. 3). We
next examined whether the coexpression of the Trk neurotrophin receptors
altered the processing of p75NTR, because it has been proposed that
these receptors physically interact (Huber
and Chao, 1995
; Wolf et al.,
1995
; Ross et al.,
1996
; Bibel et al.,
1999
). HEK293 cells were cotransfected with p75NTR and
TrkA, TrkB, or TrkC, and 24 hr later the cells were pretreated with epoxomycin
before stimulation with PMA. Surprisingly, in the absence of PMA treatment,
the expression of TrkA results in a robust accumulation of a p75NTR
fragment of the same mass as the m-CTF product of
-secretase-mediated
cleavage (Fig. 3, bottom
panel). A similar but weaker effect was observed for TrkB, whereas TrkC had no
effect. Accumulation of m-CTF could result either from stimulation of cleavage
of p75NTR by
-secretase or inhibition of cleavage of m-CTF
by
-secretase. The latter mechanism appears to predominate, because the
presence of TrkA and TrkB diminishes the production of the ICD fragment. Some
contribution of the former mechanism is plausible, however, because TrkA and
TrkB signaling activate mitogen-activated protein kinases, which are
implicated in the regulation of
-secretase. No neurotrophins were added
in the experiments shown, but added neurotrophins did not enhance the effect
of TrkA or TrkB in other experiments (data not shown). However, constitutive
activation of Trk receptors occurs when they are highly expressed. To assess
directly whether Trk receptor signaling is required for modulation of
p75NTR processing, we examined the effect of addition of K252a, a
selective inhibitor of Trk receptor signaling. Interestingly, K252a did not
influence the ability of TrkA to promote accumulation of m-CTF, but K252a
inhibited the ability of TrkB to promote accumulation of m-CTF
(Fig. 3, bottom panel),
suggesting that these two Trk receptors may modulate p75NTR
processing by different mechanisms. Although the mere physical presence of
TrkA is sufficient to promote m-CTF accumulation, possibly because a
p75NTR/TrkA complex shields p75NTR from
-secretase, active signaling by TrkB is apparently required for it to
be effective. It should be noted that we used relatively high concentrations
of K252a in these experiments (100 nM) to ensure that inhibition of
Trk tyrosine kinase activity was complete. At this concentration, K252a is
known to nonselectively inhibit other protein kinases, including protein
kinase C. Thus, not surprisingly, we observed that stimulation of
p75NTR processing by the protein kinase C activator, PMA, was
inhibited by K252a.

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Figure 3. Trk modulation of p75NTR processing. Top panel, p75 expression
in pIND-p75 cells was induced overnight, and then cells were pretreated with
epoxomycin (all lanes) before 40 min stimulation with the neurotrophins NGF
(100 ng/ml), proNGF (10 ng/ml), BDNF (200 ng/ml), proBDNF (60 ng/ml), NT-3
(100 ng/ml), or PMA (100 ng/ml). Where PMA activates both and
cleavage events, neurotrophins fail to directly affect p75NTR
processing. Bottom panel, HEK293 cells were cotransfected with
p75NTR and TrkA, TrkB, TrkC, or empty vector control and then
pretreated with epoxomycin (all lanes) before stimulating p75 cleavage with
PMA. The expression of TrkA results in significant accumulation of the
p75NTR -secretase product in the absence of PMA. TrkB produces this
result as well, but less intensely, whereas TrkC has no effect. In the absence
of Trk expression, PMA stimulates formation of - and -secretase
products, but the expression of TrkA or TrkB prevents the PMA-induced
cleavage, because there is a concomitant accumulation of the product
and decrease in the product in the presence of TrkA and TrkB, but not
TrkC. Pretreatment with the Trk kinase inhibitor K252a (100 nM)
does not eliminate the effect of TrkA expression on -product stability
but does inhibit the effect of TrkB, suggesting alternate modes of influence
on p75NTR processing with different dependence on Trk receptor
activation. Blots were reprobed with a pan-Trk antibody to show equivalent
expression levels (bottom).
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Processing of NRH1 and NRH2 is distinct from p75NTR
Similarities in the structure of p75NTR, NRH1, and NRH2,
including the remarkable homology of the transmembrane sequences of these
proteins, suggested that NRH1 and NRH2 might also be processed by
-secretase and
-secretase. In HEK293 cells transiently
transfected with plasmids encoding NRH1 and NRH2 bearing C-terminal
myc-epitope tags (NRH1-MT, NRH2-MT), short exposures of Western blots using an
antibody against the myc tag revealed that NRH1-MT was expressed predominantly
as a 7080 kDa protein, with smaller amounts of larger species
suggesting dimeric and trimeric aggregates. NRH2-MT was expressed
predominantly as a 5060 kDa protein
(Fig. 4A). In
addition, longer exposures consistently revealed the existence of several
smaller weight fragments in both NRH1 and NRH2. In the absence of any
treatment, both NRH1 and NRH2 produce fragments of 2528 kDa
(Fig. 4A). Because the
six myc-epitope tag contributes
11 kDa to the molecular weight, this mass
is consistent with a cleavage event within or just intracellular to the
membrane. Unlike NRH1 and p75NTR, the NRH2 sequence diagramed in
Figure 1 lacks the hydrophobic
leader sequence that typically characterizes type I membrane proteins and
secreted proteins. This raised the possibility that the NRH2 cleavage
fragments seen in Figure
4A were the result of intracellular proteolysis of a
protein that does not correctly target to the cell surface. Initially,
therefore, we examined whether NRH2 exists as a cytoplasmic or a membrane
protein using a cell-surface biotinylation assay. Using COS cells transiently
transfected with the full-length isoform of myc-tagged mouse NRH2, we exposed
intact cells to a cell-impermeant biotinylating reagent, followed by
precipitation of detergent cell extracts with streptavidin beads and Western
blot analysis with antibodies against the myc epitope. The
50 kDa band
was specifically precipitated, confirming that full-length mNRH2-MT is
expressed at the cell surface (Fig.
4B). Notably, the 25 kDa fragment does not precipitate in
this assay, confirming that it is intracellular, and provides an internal
control for membrane integrity during the biotin labeling. In addition, we
validated membrane integrity by reprobing the blot for the cytoplasmic protein
pyruvate kinase, which did not precipitate
(Fig. 4B). The short
putative NRH2 extracellular domain contains predicted sites for both N- and
O-linked glycosylation, and the heterogeneous smear observed on the Western
blot is typical for a glycosylated protein. We verified that NRH2 is
glycosylated by culturing cells with tunicamycin, an inhibitor of N-linked
glycosylation. This converted the protein to a smaller, less heterogeneous
species (Fig. 4C),
confirming the presence of N-linked glycosylation. Glycosylation is atypical
of cytoplasmic proteins, confirming that this form of NRH2 is an intrinsic
membrane protein. This conclusion is consistent with the results of Frankowski
et al. (2002
).

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Figure 4. NRH1 and NRH2 are constitutively cleaved at the cell surface. A,
Western blot of HEK293 cells transiently transfected with mNRH2-MT and
xNRH1-MT shows that full-length NRH1 is expressed as a 7580 kDa
protein and NRH2 is 5560 kDa, but both proteins produce fragments
too small to represent nascent immature proteins. B, COS cells were
transfected with mNRH2-MT and either untreated or cell-surface biotinylated.
Cells were washed extensively and lysed, and biotinylated proteins were
affinity precipitated using ultralink-neutravidin beads. Full-length NRH2-MT
specifically precipitated from cells labeled with biotin, but not unlabeled
cells, indicating that the precipitate was specific for biotinylated
cell-surface proteins. Blots were reprobed for the cytoplasmic protein
pyruvate kinase (P.K.) as a control for the physical integrity of the cells
during the labeling procedure. C, Overnight treatment with the
glycosylation inhibitor tunicamycin (10 µg/ml) reduced the mass of NRH2-MT
from a broad 5560 kDa band to < 50 kDa, indicating that NRH2 is
substantially N-glycosylated, indicative of a cell-surface protein.
D, HEK293 cells transfected with either NRH1-MT or NRH2-MT were
pretreated for 2 hr with the proteasome inhibitor epoxomycin (1
µM) and/or the -secretase inhibitor DAPT
(10µM) and then treated with PMA (100 ng/ml) for 40 min before
lysis. Neither epoxomycin nor DAPT had any effect on cleavage. PMA induced a
novel cleavage in NRH2 producing a 40 kDa band (<), but this cleavage
was also unaffected by epoxomycin and DAPT. D, PMA-induced cleavage
of NRH2 is prevented by 2 hr pretreatment with metalloprotease inhibitors
GM6001 (10 µM) and TAPI (25 µM), similar to the
PMA-induced cleavage of p75NTR.
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|
In contrast to p75NTR, the cleavage fragments of NRH1 and NRH2
were readily detectible in the absence of proteasome inhibitors
(Fig. 4A,D). We
examined whether treatment with PMA might increase the formation of the small
fragments and whether epoxomycin affected their detection. Unlike
p75NTR, the stability of the NRH1 and NRH2 intracellular fragments
was not sensitive to epoxomycin, nor was their generation stimulated by PMA
(Fig. 4D).
Surprisingly, NRH cleavage is also insensitive to the
-secretase
inhibitor DAPT (Fig. 4D) and
WPE (data not shown), indicating that this cleavage is not mediated by
-secretase. A PMA-induced
-secretase-like cleavage of NRH2 does
occur (Fig. 4D, <)
and is inhibited by metalloprotease inhibitors GM6001 and TAPI
(Fig. 4E). However,
unlike p75NTR, this cleavage is not a necessary prerequisite for
proteolytic release of the ICD, because production of the ICD fragment is
insensitive to GM6001 and TAPI (Fig.
4E). We were unable to detect PMA-stimulated cleavage of
NRH1 by our methods, although it is possible that an
-secretase
cleavage product of NRH1 is hidden within the broad band representing the
heterogeneously glycosylated full-length NRH1 protein. Thus, NRH1 and NRH2 are
processed to produce soluble ICD fragments like p75NTR, but neither
of the two proteases required to produce soluble p75NTR ICD are
required to produce soluble ICDs of NRH1 or NRH2, and the ICD fragments of
NRH1 and NRH2 are proteolytically more stable. These differences between
p75NTR and the NRH proteins are unlikely to result from the
C-terminal epitope tags used with the NRH proteins, because we do not see a
change in p75NTR processing when it is similarly tagged (data not
shown).
Nuclear trafficking of ICD fragments of p75NTR and
NRH2
The subcellular distributions of the various proteolytic fragments of
p75NTR and NRH2L-MT were assessed by centrifugal
fractionation of HEK293 cell extracts into cytoplasmic, nuclear, and membrane
fractions, followed by Western blot analysis. As shown in
Figure 5, the putative m-CTF
fragments reflecting cleavage of p75NTR and NRH2 by an
-secretase-like activity were found in the membrane fractions and not
in the cytoplasmic fractions, as predicted. The small amount of m-CTF
fragments of p75NTR and NRH2 present in the nuclear fractions
probably reflects contamination by membrane, because small amounts of
full-length p75NTR and NRH2 are also present in the nuclear
fractions. The putative ICD fragments of p75NTR and NRH2 are not
present in membrane fractions but are present in cytoplasmic fractions, as
predicted. Importantly, significant amounts of the ICD fragments of
p75NTR and NRH2 are present in the nuclear fractions, suggesting
that these fragments can enter the nucleus.

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Figure 5. Subcellular fractionation of p75NTR and NRH2. A,
p75NTR expression was induced (+ Pon) in pIND-p75 cells, and then
cells were treated with epoxomycin (Epo, 1 µM), DAPT (2
µM), or PMA (100 ng/ml) as indicated. Cells were then
fractionated into cytoplasmic, membrane, and nuclear fractions to examine the
distribution of p75NTR cleavage products with antibody 9992. The
-secretase product appeared in the cytoplasmic and nuclear fractions,
whereas the -secretase product is present in the membrane but not the
cytoplasm. Specificity of additional bands in the nuclear fraction (*, X) is
questionable because of their presence in the uninduced control.
Alternatively, these bands may represent p75NTR in membrane
contamination from the Golgi. B, Subcellular fractionation of HEK293
cells either untransfected () or transfected with myc-tagged
mNRH2L (Tx). Western blot probed with anti-myc antibody indicates
cytoplasmic and nuclear localization of the smallest fragment (<<).
Larger mass NRH2 localize to membrane fractions (**, ***). As in A,
nonspecific bands are present in nuclear fractions (***).
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Subcellular distribution of these proteins was also assessed by laser
scanning confocal microscopy after transfection of cells with plasmids
encoding full-length p75NTR and NRH2L bearing C-terminal
GFP tags. In HEK293 cells, both p75NTRGFP
(Fig. 6C,D) and
NRH2GFP (Fig.
6A,B) were most abundantly localized to the cell surface.
In addition, GFP was also visible in the nucleus of NRH2GFP-transfected
cells but was not detectable in p75NTRGFP-transfected cells.
We noted the same distribution in various transfected cells, including NIH3T3
cells, HeLa cells, and COS cells (data not shown). Because our analysis by
Western blotting suggested that in the absence of PMA stimulation there is
little p75NTR cleavage but considerable NRH2 cleavage in 293 cells, we
examined the effect of PMA stimulation in the presence of epoxomycin on the
subcellular distribution of the GFP-tagged proteins, but failed to see
significant changes for either protein (data not shown). This may reflect the
difficulty in resolving the comparatively small amount of p75NTR
product from the abundant full-length protein. To assess the
distribution in a cell type that naturally expresses p75NTR and
NRH2, we transfected primary cultures of Schwann cells with the GFP-tagged
proteins. NRH2GFP transfected Schwann cells often exhibited prominent
nuclear localization (Fig.
6E,F), although this enrichment was not seen in all
transfected cells (data not shown). In contrast, although
p75NTRGFP could be detected in the nucleus at low levels, no
preferential nuclear accumulation was observed
(Fig. 6G,H). These
experiments were repeated in the presence of a proteasome inhibitor
(epoxomycin) and PMA treatment, but such treatments had no discernible effect,
nor did application of a nuclear export inhibitor (leptomycin B) (data not
shown). Therefore, consistent with previous studies of Notch, it is difficult
to follow the fate of the p75NTR
-secretase product using
conventional means. In contrast, NRH2 is readily seen both at the cell surface
and in the nucleus.

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Figure 6. Subcellular distribution of p75NTR and NRH2L.
AD, HEK293 cells were transfected with either
NRH2LGFP (A) or p75NTRGFP
(C) and imaged by confocal microscopy. Comparison with DAPI-stained
nuclei (B, D) shows that NRH2GFP (A, B)is strongest
at the cell surface but also has prominent nuclear localization, whereas
p75NTR-GFP (C, D) is not detectable in the cell nucleus.
EH, Primary cultures of P0 rat Schwann cells were transfected
with NRH2LGFP (E) or p75NTRGFP
(G) and imaged by confocal microscopy. Comparison with DAPI-stained
nuclei (F, H) shows that NRH2-GFP (E, F) shows enriched
nuclear localization, and faint nuclear localization is detectable in
p75NTR-GFP transfected cells (G, H). I,
Bright-field image of DAB-stained immunoreactivity for p75NTR in
the trigeminal ganglion of an E20 rat (10 µm section), using an antibody to
the intracellular domain of p75NTR (9992). Subsets of trigeminal
neurons stain in the soma (arrowhead) but not the nucleus. Immunoreactivity is
also prominent among Schwann cells (arrow) but is non-nuclear. J,
Immunoreactivity for NRH2 in a section adjacent to that in I, using
an antibody specific to the intracellular domain of NRH2 (5592). NRH2 is
strongly expressed innearly all sensory neurons of the E20 trigeminal
ganglion, with lower levels of expression in Schwann cells. Neuronal labeling
was almost always enriched in the nucleus (arrowhead), whereas only subsets of
Schwann cells had nuclear labeling (arrow). This labeling was reproduced using
several fixatives (Methacarnoys, 10% Formalin, 4% PFA) and both paraffin and
cryostat processing. K, Higher-magnification image of representative
p75NTR immunostaining of sensory neurons depicted in I. L,
Higher-magnification image of representative NRH2 immunostaining of sensory
neurons depicted in J. M, Western blot of HEK293 cells transfected
with either mouse NRH2L or rat NRH2S using the anti-NRH2
intracellular domain antibody 5592 demonstrates that the antibody recognizes
the long and short forms of NRH2, although some background reactivity is seen
in untransfected (No Tfx) cell lysates. N, HEK293 cells were
transiently transfected with rat NRH2S and immunostained using the
5592 anti-NRH2 antibody and a Cy3-labeled secondary. Untransfected cells were
not labeled by the antibody, but transfected cells labeled strongly,
confirming that the antibody recognizes the native conformation of NRH2. Scale
bars: A, E, 20 µm; I, J, 50 µm.
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We next examined the subcellular distribution of p75NTR and NRH2
in vivo. We generated a polyclonal antibody against a region of the
NRH2 death domain with poor homology to p75NTR and verified that
the antibody specifically recognizes mouse and rat NRH2
(Fig. 6M,N) but not
p75NTR (data not shown). Using an anti-p75NTR
intracellular domain antibody the specificity of which has been established
independently (antibody 9992), we performed immunocytochemistry on tissue
sections from developing rat. NRH2 is coexpressed with p75NTR in
various cell types of the peripheral nervous system, including spinal and
cranial sensory neurons, sympathetic neurons, and Schwann cells, but NRH2 is
distributed more widely than p75NTR in the CNS (data not shown). In
cells that were found to express both p75NTR and NRH2, such as E18
rat trigeminal ganglion neurons and subpopulations of Schwann cells in the
trigeminal nerve, NRH2 immunoreactivity had prominent nuclear localization
(Fig. 6J,L), whereas
little if any p75NTR immunoreactivity was detected in nuclei
(Fig. 6I,K). We
observed prominent nuclear staining with the NRH2 antibody in several neural
and epithelial cell types, but failed to see prominent nuclear
p75NTR immunoreactivity in any cell type in vivo. This is
consistent with staining of the p75 9992 antibody of cell lines that naturally
express p75NTR, including PC12 cells and RN22F Schwannomas, in
which nuclear staining is not evident even in the presence of proteasome
inhibitors and PMA (data not shown). In contrast, and in agreement with the
results of NRH2GFP-transfected cells, NRH2 is readily detected in the
nucleus. The NRH2 nuclear immunostaining was specific, because previous
absorption of the antibody with the immunizing peptide completely eliminated
staining (data not shown). These data strongly support a physiologic function
for NRH2 nuclear
translocation.

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Figure 7. Soluble intracellular domains of p75NTR and NRH2 potentiate
NF- B activation by TRAF6. HEK293 cells were cotransfected with a
B-luciferase reporter and the normalization vector EF1-LacZ, and either
TRAF6 (black bars) or an empty vector control (open bars), and full-length rat
p75NTR, rat p75NTRICD, full-length mouse
NRH2L-MT, mouse NRH2 ICD, or empty vector control. Twenty-four
hours after transfection, cells were lysed and assayed for luciferase
expression. In the absence of TRAF6 expression, mild activation of NF- B
resulted from the expression of the p75NTR ICD compared with the
empty vector control. This degree of activation was dwarfed by the basal
activity seen in the presence of TRAF6 expression. When TRAF6 was coexpressed,
activation of NF- B by full-length p75NTR and NRH2 did not
significantly differ from the empty vector control. In contrast, soluble
p75NTR ICD and NRH2 ICD significantly potentiated NF- B
activation by TRAF6. Two-tailed t test; p75NTR ICD versus
vector: *p = 0.012; NRH2 ICD versus vector: *p = 0.007.
Error bars represent SD; n = 3.
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Soluble ICDs of p75NTR and NRH2 affect endogenous
transcriptional signaling pathways
The results above suggest that soluble ICDs of p75NTR and NRH2
localized within the cytoplasm and nucleus might participate in
transcriptional regulation, as has been observed for various other membrane
proteins that undergo "RIP." The presence of significant pools of
ICDs within the cytoplasm (Fig.
5) raises the possibility that ICDs may also possess cytoplasmic
signaling functions. p75NTR is thought to regulate
NF-
B-mediated transcriptional regulation
(Carter et al., 1996
) by
interacting with cytoplasmic proteins such as TRAF6, RIP2, and IL-1 receptor
associated kinase (IRAK) (Khursigara et
al., 1999
; Khursigara et al.,
2001
; Mamidipudi et al.,
2002
). Consequently, we examined whether soluble ICD forms of
p75NTR and NRH2 were competent to function in this context. HEK293
cells expressing a
B luciferase reporter construct were transfected
with either full-length or soluble ICD of p75NTR and NRH2
constructs in the presence or absence of cotransfected TRAF6. In the absence
of exogenous TRAF6, p75NTR (without added neurotrophin) and NRH2
had little effect on
B-luciferase expression, whereas a soluble ICD of
p75NTR modestly stimulated
B-luciferase expression (Fig. 9).
Overexpression of TRAF6 in the absence of p75NTR or NRH2
significantly stimulated
B-luciferase expression. In the presence of
TRAF6 overexpression, full-length p75NTR and NRH2 did not
potentiate NF-
B activation. In contrast, the soluble ICDs of
p75NTR and NRH2 significantly stimulated TRAF6 induction of
B-luciferase expression. Thus NRH2, like p75NTR, couples to
NF-
B signal transduction, and in the absence of ligand the ICDs of
p75NTR and NRH2 couple to NF-
B activation more efficiently
than full-length membrane-resident proteins. We were unable to assess whether
NF-
B activation by full-length p75NTR and NRH2 requires
cleavage by
-secretase, because inhibitors of
-secretase
directly activated expression of the
B-luciferase reporter (data not
shown).
 |
Discussion
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|---|
-secretase and
-secretase
These studies demonstrate that proteolysis releases ICDs from
p75NTR, NRH1, and NRH2. For p75NTR this process
resembles other examples of RIP.
-secretase action generates m-CTF,
which is cleaved by
-secretase. In contrast, the NRH2 ICD is generated
by a protease that is distinct from
-secretase, in a process that does
not require previous cleavage by
-secretase, although
-secretase
cleavage of NRH2 does occur. We have not yet identified the enzyme(s)
responsible for these
-secretase activities. Cleavage is not eliminated
in fibroblasts derived from ADAM17 null mice (data not shown). However, these
fibroblasts express ADAM10, which may function redundantly with ADAM17. ADAM10
and ADAM17 do not possess well defined specificity for the local sequence at
the site of cleavage but cleave at sites near the outer face of the membrane.
The size of the p75NTR m-CTF is consistent with such cleavage.
-secretase also lacks a rigidly defined sequence specificity, but
cleaves within protein transmembrane domains, commonly N-terminal to valine
residues, which are abundant in the p75NTR transmembrane domain.
Although NRH1 and NRH2 have valine residues at equivalent positions within
their transmembrane domains, cleavage of these proteins is not mediated by
-secretase.
The
-secretase-independent release of NRH2 ICD may occur because the
short ECD of NRH2L resembles the
-secretase-truncated ECD of
p75NTR. Alternatively, the unidentified protease responsible for
NRH2 cleavage may simply lack a requirement for an abbreviated ECD.
p75NTR processing is highly dependent on cell type.
-secretase-mediated cleavage in HEK293 cells requires activation by
PMA, whereas Schwann cells have substantial constitutive
-secretase
cleavage that is further stimulated by PMA, and mouse embryo fibroblasts
exhibit strong constitutive
-secretase cleavage, generating m-CTF that
is not subject to
-secretase cleavage. The failure of p75NTR
to be cleaved by
-secretase in these cell lines is surprising, because
-amyloid precursor protein and Notch are efficiently cleaved by
-secretase in the same cell line. Presenilin functions as a protease in
the context of a complex with multiple partners, including nicastrin and Aph-2
(Kopan and Goate, 2002
).
Perhaps p75NTR association with presenilin requires the presence of
another presenilin accessory protein that mouse embryo fibroblasts lack.
Alternatively, these cells may express proteins that protect p75NTR
from
-secretase action. Our results indicate that Trks may function in
this manner.
p75NTR/Trk interactions
Full-length p75NTR affects the sensitivity
(Hempstead et al., 1991
;
Davies et al., 1993
;
Barker and Shooter, 1994
;
Lee et al., 1994
;
Verdi et al., 1994
) and
specificity (Mischel et al.,
2001
) of neurotrophin binding to Trks, whereas p75NTR
lacking an ECD is sufficient to enhance the affinity of NGF/TrkA binding
(Esposito et al., 2001
) and
retains the ability to physically interact with TrkB
(Bibel et al., 1999
). Thus the
p75NTR m-CTF fragment may influence Trk receptor function. It is
notable that TrkC does not influence the stability of the p75NTR
m-CTF fragment, because p75NTR has been shown to interact
differently with the three Trks. Although p75NTR enhances TrkA and
TrkB autophosphorylation in response to their preferred ligands, an effect on
TrkC activation by NT-3 is contested
(Hantzopoulos et al., 1994
;
Vesa et al., 2000
). It has
been suggested that p75NTR signals cell death in the absence of
Trks but potentiates survival in the presence of Trks (for review, see
Roux and Barker, 2002
). This
cross-talk may not reflect an effect of p75NTR on Trks so much as a
silencing of p75NTR signaling by Trks
(Majdan et al., 2001
). In the
absence of Trks, truncated and intracellular forms of p75NTR more
potently induce neuronal cell death
(Coulson et al., 2000
;
Roux et al., 2001
). Therefore,
the regulation of p75NTR cleavage by TrkA and TrkB may be one
mechanism by which Trks affect p75NTR cell death signaling.
Nuclear trafficking of ICDs
We have presented evidence that the ICDs of p75NTR and NRH2
traffic to the nucleus. Despite similarities, nuclear trafficking of
p75NTR and NRH2 ICDs differs in important respects. The
p75NTR ICD is unstable in the absence of proteasome inhibitors,
whereas NRH2 ICD is stable independently of proteasome inhibition.
p75NTR ICD instability is not inconsistent with possible signaling
functions because similar instability is characteristic of other examples of
functionally relevant RIP-mediated nuclear trafficking
(Brown et al., 2000
).
p75NTR ICD instability may result from the presence of a PEST
sequence; NRH2 lacks such a sequence. Even considering the greater stability
of the NRH2 ICD, the prominent nuclear localization of NRH2 immunoreactivity
in sensory neurons and Schwann cells is notable. It is possible that these
cell types preferentially express NRH2 splice variants that consist
exclusively of the ICD. The distribution of these splice variants in
vivo has not been examined.
Do soluble ICDs signal?
We have demonstrated that artificially generated p75NTR and NRH2
ICDs actively stimulate NF-
B-mediated gene expression. This suggests
that physiological release of these ICDs may contribute to NF-
B
signaling. We were unable to directly test this possibility by inhibition of
-secretase, however, because DAPT itself stimulated NF-
B
activity. Our finding is not the first evidence for potent signaling capacity
of a p75NTR ICD construct. Expression of p75NTR ICD in
developing neurons of transgenic mice induced extensive neuronal apoptosis
(Majdan et al., 1997
), and
proapoptotic signaling of p75NTR ICD has been demonstrated in
cultured cells (Coulson et al.,
2000
; Roux et al.,
2001
). The present study raises the possibility that such
ICD-mediated functions may occur physiologically.
The p75NTR death domain has been implicated in NF-
B
activation through interaction with RIP2
(Khursigara et al., 2001
) or
TRAF6 (Khursigara et al.,
1999
; Wang et al.,
2000
), Myd88, and IRAK (Mamidipudi and Wooten, 2002). Our finding
that TRAF6 cooperates with ICDs of both p75NTR and NRH2 to
stimulate NF-
B suggests that the NRH2 death domain recruits similar
signaling proteins. Our results suggest, however, that activation may not
occur exclusively at the plasma membrane but may also occur within the
cytoplasm or even within the nucleus. The p75NTR death domain
represents a subtype present in MyD88, p100 NF-
B, p105 NF-
B, and
DAP kinase, (Feinstein et al.,
1995
). p75NTR interacts with MyD88 via an interaction
of the death domain of MyD88. The presence within p100 and p105 NF-
B
subunits of similar death domains suggests that nuclear trafficking of the
p75NTR ICD might directly promote nuclear access of NF-
B
proteins.
Nuclear trafficking of p75NTR interacting proteins
Numerous proteins interact with the p75NTR ICD (for review, see
Roux and Barker, 2002
), and
many of these have been suggested to have nuclear functions. These include
proteins with multiple zinc finger domains, characteristic of transcription
factors [neurotrophin receptor interacting factor (NRIF), TRAF6, TRAF1, SC1],
three members of the MAGE gene family
(Salehi et al., 2000
;
Tcherpakov et al., 2002
),
which have been implicated as transcriptional and cell cycle regulators
(Barker and Salehi, 2002
), and
the apoptosis-inducing protein p75 neurotrophin receptor-associated cell death
executor (NADE), which has tightly regulated nuclear import/export
(Mukai et al., 2000
). Several
of these p75NTR-interacting proteins (NADE, NRIF, TRAF6, NRAGE)
show enhanced binding to p75NTR in the presence of NGF, and several
(NRIF, SC-1) translocate from the cytoplasm to the nucleus in the presence of
NGF (Casademunt et al., 1999
;
Chittka and Chao, 1999
). Thus
one can envision a model in which neurotrophin binding initially recruits
these proteins to p75NTR, after which proteolysis permits nuclear
trafficking of these proteins as a complex with the p75NTR ICD. It
remains to be determined whether the closely similar ICDs of NRH1 and NRH2
also interact with these proteins.
RIP of p75NTR may also contribute to cytoplasmic signaling
processes. Transfection of a soluble p75NTR ICD activates RhoA
GTPase and the ICD fragment physically associates with RhoA, whereas such an
interaction was not detected with the full-length membrane-resident
p75NTR (Yamashita et al.,
1999
). This suggests the possibility that functional
RhoA/p75NTR ICD interactions might be stimulated by proteolytic
release of the p75NTR ICD. p75NTR plays an important
role in axon guidance, both in axon growth in response to neurotrophins
(Yamashita et al., 1999
;
Bentley and Lee, 2000
;
Tucker et al., 2001
), and in
axon repulsion in response to myelin inhibitory factors via association of
p75NTR with the Nogo receptor. RhoA activation is implicated in
these responses (Wang et al.,
2002
; Wong et al.,
2002
; Yamashita et al.,
2002
). ADAM metalloprotease regulation of
p75NTR-mediated axon guidance would be consistent with growing
literature suggesting metalloprotease function in axon guidance
(McFarlane, 2003
).
Although it is our presumption that the functional significance of cleavage
of p75NTR by
- and
-secretases, and by analogy to
Notch and similar systems, lies in the active propagation of signals from the
cell surface, the alternative possibility that cleavage occurs as a mode of
negative regulation of p75NTR signaling cannot be dismissed.
However, the observation that NRH2 generates as its primary translation
products proteins resembling the products of cleavage of p75NTR by
-secretase and
-secretase proteases suggests that the
p75NTR cleaved products are not simply inactive products of
p75NTR degradation. Progress toward understanding the function of
p75NTR cleavage and understanding the function of NRH2 may be
closely linked. Finally, because several other members of the TNF receptor
superfamily also undergo metalloprotease-mediated ECD shedding, it may be
productive to examine whether these receptors also undergo subsequent
-secretase-mediated generation of soluble ICDs.
 |
Footnotes
|
|---|
Received Nov. 25, 2002;
revised Apr. 17, 2003;
accepted Apr. 24, 2003.
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health (NIH) Grant
R01NS33200 to M.B. K.K. was supported by NIH Institutional Training Grant 5
T32 GM07108. We thank M. Chao (Skirboll Institute, New York University) for
providing anti-p75NTR antibody 9992, M. Wolfe (Harvard University)
for providing
-secretase inhibitors, Millenium Pharmaceuticals for
providing plasmids encoding rat and mouse NRH2, Genentech for providing NGF,
Regeneron for providing BDNF and NT3, B. Hempstead (Cornell Medical College)
for providing proNGF, and Immunex Pharmaceuticals for providing ADAM17 null
fibroblasts.
Correspondence should be addressed to Mark Bothwell, Department of
Physiology and Biophysics, Box 357290, University of Washington, 1959 Pacific
Avenue, Seattle, WA 98195. E-mail:
mab{at}u.washington.edu.
Copyright © 2003 Society for Neuroscience
0270-6474/03/235425-12$15.00/0
 |
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M. Hartmann, T. Brigadski, K. S. Erdmann, B. Holtmann, M. Sendtner, F. Narz, and V. Lessmann
Truncated TrkB receptor-induced outgrowth of dendritic filopodia involves the p75 neurotrophin receptor
J. Cell Sci.,
November 15, 2004;
117(24):
5803 - 5814.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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K. Gowrishankar, M. G. Zeidler, and C. Vincenz
Release of a membrane-bound death domain by {gamma}-secretase processing of the p75NTR homolog NRADD
J. Cell Sci.,
August 15, 2004;
117(18):
4099 - 4111.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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H. A. Chung, J. Hyodo-Miura, A. Kitayama, C. Terasaka, T. Nagamune, and N. Ueno
Screening of FGF target genes in Xenopus by microarray: temporal dissection of the signalling pathway using a chemical inhibitor
Genes Cells,
August 1, 2004;
9(8):
749 - 761.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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S. S. Murray, P. Perez, R. Lee, B. L. Hempstead, and M. V. Chao
A Novel p75 Neurotrophin Receptor-Related Protein, NRH2, Regulates Nerve Growth Factor Binding to the TrkA Receptor
J. Neurosci.,
March 17, 2004;
24(11):
2742 - 2749.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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C. E. Paul, E. Vereker, K. M. Dickson, and P. A. Barker
A Pro-Apoptotic Fragment of the p75 Neurotrophin Receptor Is Expressed in p75NTRExonIV Null Mice
J. Neurosci.,
February 25, 2004;
24(8):
1917 - 1923.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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G. Weskamp, J. Schlondorff, L. Lum, J. D. Becherer, T.-W. Kim, P. Saftig, D. Hartmann, G. Murphy, and C. P. Blobel
Evidence for a Critical Role of the Tumor Necrosis Factor {alpha} Convertase (TACE) in Ectodomain Shedding of the p75 Neurotrophin Receptor (p75NTR)
J. Biol. Chem.,
February 6, 2004;
279(6):
4241 - 4249.
[Abstract]
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K.-i. Kuwako, H. Taniura, and K. Yoshikawa
Necdin-related MAGE Proteins Differentially Interact with the E2F1 Transcription Factor and the p75 Neurotrophin Receptor
J. Biol. Chem.,
January 16, 2004;
279(3):
1703 - 1712.
[Abstract]
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M. V. Chao
Dependence Receptors: What Is the Mechanism?
Sci. Signal.,
September 16, 2003;
2003(200):
pe38 - pe38.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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