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Infection and Immunity, December 2001, p. 7205-7212, Vol. 69, No. 12
Combined Program in Pediatric
Gastroenterology and Nutrition, Children's Hospital, and Harvard
Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115,1
and Department of Microbiology, University of Colorado Health
Sciences Center, Denver, Colorado 802622
Received 8 March 2001/Returned for modification 10 April
2001/Accepted 4 September 2001
Escherichia coli type IIa heat-labile enterotoxin
(LTIIa) binds in vitro with highest affinity to ganglioside GD1b. It
also binds in vitro with lower affinity to several other
oligosialogangliosides and to ganglioside GM1, the functional receptor
for cholera toxin (CT). In the present study, we characterized
receptor-mediated signal transduction by LTIIa in the cultured T84 cell
model of human intestinal epithelium. Wild-type LTIIa bound tightly to the apical surface of polarized T84 cell monolayers and elicited a
Cl Type I and type II heat-labile
enterotoxins (LTI and LTII) from Escherichia coli and
cholera toxin (CT) from Vibrio cholerae belong to a family
of structurally and functionally related AB5 enterotoxins (9). In each member of this toxin family, the A polypeptide assembles noncovalently with five identical B
polypeptides to form the holotoxin. The enzymatically active fragment
A1, which corresponds to the amino-terminal domain of polypeptide A, is generated from holotoxin by proteolytic cleavage of the A polypeptide and reduction of the disulfide bond that links fragment A1 to the
carboxyl-terminal fragment A2. Fragment A1 acts inside target cells by
catalyzing ADP-ribosylation of the The pentameric B subunit exhibits lectin-like activity and tethers the
toxin to target cell membranes by binding to specific cell surface
receptors with high affinity and stability. The action of CT and LTI on
target cells is characterized by a lag phase between toxin binding to
receptors at the cell surface and the first detectable signs of
toxicity. Results from multiple laboratories indicate that several
events occur during this lag phase in polarized epithelial cells,
including retrograde trafficking of toxin from apical cell surface
receptors into Golgi cisternae and the endoplasmic reticulum (ER),
translocation of fragment A1 into the cytosol, movement of fragment A1
to the cytoplasmic surface of the basolateral membrane, and interaction
of fragment A1 with the adenylyl cyclase complex (16). The
subsequent accumulation of intracellular cAMP results in toxicity.
The family of heat-labile enterotoxins is classified into two
serogroups (10). CT and LTI belong to serogroup I, and
LTII belongs to serogroup II. Minor antigenic differences are found among the members of serogroup I and also among the members of serogroup II. LTIIa and LTIIb are variants of LTII from different enterotoxigenic isolates of E. coli. Antiserum against any
variant of CT or LTI can neutralize all enterotoxins in serogroup I but not those in serogroup II, and vice versa. The structures of CT, LTI,
and LTIIb were determined by x-ray crystallography (21, 23,
26), and there are close similarities in their overall folds
despite significant differences in their amino acid sequences and
biological properties (10). The three-dimensional
structure of LTIIa has not yet been determined.
The A polypeptides of the type I and type II enterotoxins are
structurally and functionally homologous. Their A1 fragments exhibit
similar NAD-dependent ADP-ribosyltransferase activity in vitro, with
Gs Although LTIIb binds avidly to T84 cells, it fails to elicit any
Cl In the present study, we characterized the functional receptors on T84
cells for the LTIIa variant of type II heat-labile enterotoxin. In
contrast to CT and LTIIb, LTIIa binds in vitro with highest affinity to
ganglioside GD1b, but it can also bind with lower affinity to
gangliosides GD1a, GT1b, GQ1b, GM1, and GD2 (8). Our
studies demonstrated, surprisingly, that ganglioside GM1 in T84 cells
cannot mediate signal transduction by LTIIa, although it serves as a
functional receptor for CT. Furthermore, we showed that binding of
LTIIa to its functional receptor on human intestinal T84 cells, most
likely ganglioside GD1b, associated LTIIa with lipid rafts and mediated
retrograde trafficking of the toxin into the secretory pathway to
elicit a Cl Biologicals and chemicals
CT, CT B subunit,
and tetanus toxin C fragment were obtained from Calbiochem (San Diego,
Calif.), and purified gangliosides GM1 and GD1b were from Matreya, Inc.
(Pleasant Gap, Pa.). All other commercially available reagents were
from Sigma Chemical Co. (St. Louis, Mo.) unless otherwise stated.
Anthrax protective antigen was a gift from John Collier at Harvard
Medical School.
Cloning and expression of toxins.
Plasmid pTC201 encoding
LTIIa holotoxin was made by subcloning a 2.2-kb
EcoRI-KpnI fragment from pCP3727
(20) into pBluescript KS
0019-9567/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/IAI.69.12.7205-7212.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Characterization of Receptor-Mediated Signal
Transduction by Escherichia coli Type IIa Heat-Labile
Enterotoxin in the Polarized Human Intestinal Cell Line T84

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ABSTRACT
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
secretory response. LTIIa activity, unlike CT
activity, was not blocked by the B subunit of CT. Furthermore, an LTIIa
variant with a T14I substitution in its B subunit, which binds in vitro to ganglioside GM1 but not to ganglioside GD1b, was unable to bind to
intact T84 cells and did not elicit a Cl
secretory
response. These findings show that ganglioside GM1 on T84 cells is not
a functional receptor for LTIIa. The LTIIa receptor on T84 cells was
inactivated by treatment with neuraminidase. Furthermore, LTIIa binding
was blocked by tetanus toxin C fragment, which binds to gangliosides
GD1b and GT1b. These findings support the hypothesis that ganglioside
GD1b, or possibly a glycoconjugate with a GD1b-like oligosaccharide, is
the functional receptor for LTIIa on T84 cells. The LTIIa-receptor
complexes from T84 cells were associated with detergent-insoluble
membrane microdomains (lipid rafts), extending the correlation between
toxin binding to lipid rafts and toxin function that was previously
established for CT. However, the extent of association with lipid rafts
and the magnitude of the Cl
secretory response in T84
cells were less for LTIIa than for CT. These properties of LTIIa and
the previous finding that enterotoxin LTIIb binds to T84 cells but does
not associate with lipid rafts or elicit a Cl
secretory
response may explain the low pathogenicity for humans of type II
enterotoxin-producing isolates of E. coli.
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INTRODUCTION
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
subunit of the heterotrimeric protein Gs, leading to activation of adenylyl
cyclase and stimulation of intracellular cyclic AMP (cAMP) production
(2, 12).
as the acceptor, but the A1 fragments of
the type II toxins are less active than those of the type I toxins for
ADP ribosylation of alternative substrates such as agmatine (2,
12). The B polypeptides of the type I enterotoxins have little
amino acid sequence homology with the B subunits of the type II
enterotoxins, and the type I and type II enterotoxins exhibit striking
differences in receptor-binding specificity (8). CT binds
in vitro with highest affinity to ganglioside GM1 and with lower
affinity to ganglioside GD1b, and in polarized human intestinal T84
cells binding of CT to ganglioside GM1 induces a
Cl
secretory response. In contrast, LTIIb binds
in vitro with highest affinity to ganglioside GD1a, and it does not
bind at all to ganglioside GM1.
secretory response (24). For
chimeric CT/LTIIb enterotoxins, toxicity in T84 cells is determined
primarily by the origin and receptor-binding specificity of the B
subunit and not by the origin of the A1 polypeptide. Toxin binding to
ganglioside GM1 but not to ganglioside GD1a associates CT or the
appropriate chimeric toxins with detergent-insoluble membrane
microdomains (also called lipid rafts or DIGs), and this
correlates closely with toxicity (24). These findings
indicate that ganglioside GD1a does not serve as a functional receptor
for LTIIb in T84 cells. We and others proposed that association with
lipid rafts may be necessary for efficient trafficking of CT into Golgi
cisternae and ER of target epithelial cells (19, 24). We
also proposed that association of CT with lipid rafts may depend on the
specific structure and function of its ganglioside GM1 receptor.
secretory response.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
(Stratagene, La Jolla, Calif.).
Plasmid pTC401 encoding the B subunit of LTIIa and the pTC401T14I
derivative encoding the T14I B subunit variant of LTIIa were described
previously (3). A clone expressing LTIIa holotoxin with
the T14I variant B subunit was made by cloning
KpnI-SacI and SacI-BamHI
fragments from pTC201 and pTC401T14I, respectively, into
KpnI- and BamHI-cut pBluescript KS+ to create
pMGJ204. To enable production of LTIIa A only, a 0.6-kbp
PstI restriction fragment encoding the carboxyl half of LTIIa B was deleted from pTC201 to create pMGJ205.
-D-thiogalactopyranoside), and
20-fold-concentrated periplasmic extracts were made in
phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) with polymyxin B (1 mg/ml). Filtered
extracts containing wild-type LTIIa were affinity purified by using
immunoglobulin (Ig) from rabbit polyclonal anti-LTIIa serum coupled to
CNBr-activated Sepharose 4B. All other filtered extracts were affinity
purified by using
(NH4)2SO4-fractionated
Ig from goat anti-LTIIa serum coupled to Affigel-10 (Bio-Rad
Laboratories, Hercules, Calif.). After repeated washing with PBS, toxin
was eluted in 3.5 M MgCl2. Finally, the eluted
toxin was concentrated and buffer exchanged into PBS in a Biomax
Ultrafree-15 (10,000 nominal molecular weight limit [NMWL])
concentrator (Millipore Corp., Bedford, Mass.). Purity of wild-type and
mutant forms of toxin and B subunits, assessed by sodium dodecyl
sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) followed by
Coomassie blue staining, was estimated to be greater than 90%. Toxin
concentration was determined by A280 and/or
bicinchoninic acid (BCA) assay (Pierce Chemical Co., Rockford, Ill.) of
total protein, using known concentrations of CT B subunit to determine
a standard curve. Values obtained by the two methods were similar.
Biotinylation of LTIIa B subunit. LTIIa B subunit was biotinylated with sulfo-N-hydroxysuccinimide-biotin using a protocol recommended by the manufacturer (Pierce Chemical Co., Rockford, Ill.), and the biotinylated protein was exchanged into PBS by using a Centricon-20 centrifugal filter (30,000 NMWL; Millipore Corp., Bedford, Mass.). Final toxin concentration was determined by BCA assay. The binding Km for biotinylated LTIIa B subunits on T84 cells was determined to be 100 nM, compared to 203 nM for commercially available biotinylated CT B subunits and 4.1 nM for unmodified LTIIa B and CT B subunits.
Cell culture. Human colonic T84 and mouse Y1 adrenal cells obtained from the American Type Culture Collection (Rockville, Md.) were cultured and passaged as previously described (13). T84 cell passages 70 to 90 were used for these experiments.
Electrophysiology.
Measurements of short circuit current
(Isc) were performed with 0.33-cm2 monolayers as
previously described (15). Polarized T84 monolayers were
incubated with the appropriate toxin diluted in HEPES-buffered saline
with glucose (HBS) for 40 to 60 min on ice to allow steady-state binding. Monolayers were then transferred to 37°C HBS, and the time
course of toxin-induced Cl
secretion was
determined. In most experiments, calibration of the
Cl
secretory response was obtained using the
cAMP agonist vasoactive intestinal peptide (5 nM) at the end of the study.
Toxin-binding assays. Toxin binding to purified gangliosides on plastic substratum (PolySorp enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay [ELISA] plates [Nalge Nunc International, Rochester, N.Y.] incubated overnight with 100 ng of ganglioside per well and blocked with PBS-0.1% bovine serum albumin [BSA]) was determined after 1-h incubations at room temperature by ELISA, as previously described (24). Toxin binding to T84 cells grown to confluency on plastic substratum (96-well plates; Corning Costar Corp., Cambridge, Mass.) was determined in the same manner except that all incubations were performed on ice.
Toxin binding to purified gangliosides or T84 cell monolayers was detected by using primary rabbit polyclonal antibodies raised against LTIIa (20) followed by horseradish peroxidase (HRP)-conjugated secondary antibody, and the assays were developed by incubation with citrate-phosphate buffer, pH 4.2, containing 2.5 mg of ABTS [2,2'-azino-bis(3-ethylbenzthiazoline-6-sulfonic acid)] and 0.25 µl of H2O2 per ml for 30 min. Absorbance was read at 414 nm in a SpectraMax 250 plate reader (Molecular Devices Corp., Sunnyvale, Calif.).Competition studies. Polarized T84 cell monolayers were incubated with the indicated concentrations of competing ligand diluted in HBS containing either 0.5% BSA or gelatin for 40 min on ice. At that time, an additional volume of blocker in HBS-BSA (or gelatin) containing twice the desired final concentration of toxin was added, bringing the final toxin concentration to the desired amount. Incubation continued on ice for an additional 40 min. Monolayers were then transferred to 37°C in HBS for electrophysiological measurements or processed as described above to measure binding of toxin to the monolayers. In competition studies using biotinylated B subunits of LTIIa, the biotinylated proteins were detected and quantified using streptavidin-HRP conjugate.
Y1 cell assay. Toxin action on mouse Y1 adrenal cells was evaluated as described previously (24) except that shape change was assessed after incubation for 2 h at 37°C rather than overnight. The 50% effective dose (ED50) was determined to be the dose at which 50% of Y1 cells changed from elongated to rounded.
Neuraminidase treatment of T84 cells.
Polarized T84 cell
monolayers were treated apically with
2-3,6,8-neuraminidase from
V. cholerae at 0.5 U/ml in HBS for 1 h on ice. After
extensive washing with HBS, toxin was applied, and toxic effects were
measured as described above.
Detergent extractions of tissue culture cells and sucrose equilibrium density centrifugation. Extraction of polarized T84 cells and mouse Y1 adrenal cells and subsequent sucrose equilibrium centrifugation were done as previously described (24). One confluent T84 monolayer or plate of confluent Y1 cells (45-cm2 each) was used for isolation of detergent-insoluble membranes. All steps were performed at 4°C. Cells were rinsed in ice-cold TBS (150 mM NaCl, 10 mM Tris, pH 7.5) and incubated on ice with the indicated concentration of toxin diluted in TBS for 40 min. After rinsing with TBS, cells were scraped into 1 or 2 ml of ice-cold TTBS (150 mM NaCl, 10 mM Tris, 1% Triton X-100, pH 7.5) and homogenized with five strokes in a tight-fitting Dounce homogenizer on ice. The homogenate was adjusted to 40% sucrose by addition of 80% sucrose in 1% TTBS, layered under a linear 5 to 30% sucrose gradient, and centrifuged at 48,000 rpm for 16 to 20 h in a swinging-bucket rotor (model SW41; Beckman Instruments, Palo Alto, Calif.). Sequential 0.5- or 1-ml fractions were collected from the top of the gradient, and 20 µl from each fraction was analyzed by SDS-PAGE and Western blot. Sucrose density was monitored by refractometry.
Statistics. Data were analyzed using Statview 512+ software (Brainpower, Inc., Calabasas, Calif.).
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RESULTS |
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Signaling by LTIIa.
Initial studies showed that purified LTIIa
induced a physiologic Cl
secretory response
from the polarized human intestinal cell line T84. Figure
1 shows the time course of LTIIa action.
LTIIa (100 nM) applied to either the apical or basolateral cell surface
induced a modest Cl
secretory response after a
lag period of between 60 and 90 min. Compared to purified CT (50 nM),
LTIIa induced a much smaller secretory response (peak Isc = 13 versus >100 µA/cm2) after a longer lag phase
(>60 versus 30 min). With LTIIa, we did not observe the differentially
faster time course following basolateral versus apical application of
the toxin that is characteristic of CT (15). When LTIIa
was applied to mouse Y1 adrenal cells, it was more potent than CT, as
assessed by cAMP-dependent cell rounding after 2 h
(ED50 = 0.2 nM versus 1.2 nM for CT). This was in
agreement with previous observations that LTIIa is more toxic than CT
for Y1 adrenal cells, based on morphological changes after overnight
incubation (11).
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secretion (data not
shown). We also used brefeldin A to demonstrate that LTIIa, like CT,
required endocytosis and retrograde trafficking of toxin into the Golgi
and ER to elicit signal transduction. Brefeldin A (20 µM), which
blocks retrograde Golgi-to-ER traffic in T84 cells (14),
completely inhibited LTIIa-induced Cl
secretion
(data not shown). These data showed that purified LTIIa could induce a
physiological Cl
secretory response in
polarized human intestinal T84 cell monolayers, although the lag phase
of the response to LTIIa was longer and the magnitude of the response
to LTIIa was smaller than for CT.
In subsequent experiments we investigated whether these differences in
physiological responses could be explained by differences in the
interactions of purified LTIIa and CT with their cellular receptors.
Toxin binding.
First, we compared the binding of purified
wild-type and mutant forms of the B subunit of LTIIa to purified
gangliosides immobilized on plastic. Initial studies showed that the B
subunit of wild-type LTIIa bound in vitro to purified ganglioside GD1b
with high affinity (Fig. 2A and Table
1). To demonstrate specificity, we used
the T14I variant of the B subunit of LTIIa, which has a single residue substitution of isoleucine for threonine 14 in the oligosaccharide binding site. Although the LTIIa B T14I variant did not bind in vitro
to ganglioside GD1b (Fig. 2A), both the wild-type and T14I variant of
the LTIIa B subunit bound in vitro with high affinity to purified
ganglioside GM1, as did CT B (Fig. 2B and Table 1). These findings with
the purified toxin B subunits confirmed and extended previous
experiments that were performed with the corresponding recombinant
proteins in crude periplasmic extracts from E. coli (3).
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secretory response (data not shown), indicating that factors other than
decreased toxin binding are responsible for the decreased toxicity of
LTIIa for T84 cells.
The binding of LTIIa B subunits to T84 cell surface receptors was
specific. We biotinylated LTIIa B subunit in order to examine the
ability of LTIIa B to compete with itself for binding to T84 cells.
Figure 3B shows that the binding of 25 nM biotinylated LTIIa B subunit
to T84 cells was effectively blocked by an excess of unlabeled LTIIa B
subunit (at 5 µM). Although biotinylation increased the
Km of LTIIa B binding, 25 nM biotinylated
LTIIa B subunit was within the linear range of detection. In contrast, the binding of native, unmodified LTIIa B subunit (at 5 nM) was not
diminished by an excess of competing CT B subunit (5 µM) or anthrax
protective antigen (5 µM, a negative control). However, tetanus toxin
C fragment (at 5 µM), which can bind to gangliosides GD1b and GT1b,
inhibited the binding of the native LTIIa B subunit to T84 cells by
approximately 65%. Taken together, these data showed that LTIIa
exhibited little or no binding to ganglioside GM1 on T84 cells, and
they suggested that ganglioside GD1b is likely the principal receptor
for LTIIa on T84 cells.
Analysis of functional LTIIa receptors.
To confirm by a
functional assay that LTIIa did not bind to ganglioside GM1 on T84
cells, we compared the ability of the B subunits of CT and of LTIIa to
block intoxication by 0.5 nM CT. Figure
4A shows the specific inhibition of
CT-induced Cl
secretion when the ganglioside
GM1 receptors were blocked by CT B. The CT-induced Isc decreased by
approximately 50% when CT B was present at 10 nM, and CT B at 300 nM
completely inhibited the response. In contrast, the LTIIa B subunit did
not interfere with CT-induced Cl
secretion
until concentrations of >3 µM were used, and the inhibition of
CT-induced Cl
secretion by 10 µM LTIIa B was
only 50%. These results indicated that the affinity of the LTIIa B
subunit for ganglioside GM1 on T84 cells was approximately 1,000-fold
less than that of CT.
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secretion with an excess of
the wild-type or T14I variant of LTIIa B subunit or of CT B (Fig. 4B).
LTIIa holotoxin (75 nM) elicited a mean peak Isc of 18 ± 0.6 µA
(mean ± standard deviation [SD], n = 3).
Competition with 10 µM CT B, which completely blocked the
physiological response to CT in the previous experiment, did not alter
the response to LTIIa. This finding confirmed that GM1 is not the
functional receptor for LTIIa in T84 cells. We also found, however,
that high concentrations (10 µM) of the LTIIa B subunit enhanced the
toxic effect of LTIIa (mean peak Isc = 32 ± 1.2 µA,
mean ± SD, n = 3) rather than inhibiting it. This enhancement occurred at several different concentrations of LTIIa holotoxin, and the magnitude of the enhancement increased as the dose
of LTIIa holotoxin increased (data not shown).
These results are likely explained by the ability of free LTIIa A
subunits to assemble with free LTIIa B subunits, originally described
by Connell and Holmes (4). To test this, we performed additional studies with Y1 cells and crude periplasmic extracts from
recombinant strains of E. coli producing only LTIIa A and LTIIa B. We added LTIIa B subunits at saturating
concentrations, washed the cells to remove the unbound B subunits, and
then added serial dilutions of free LTIIa A subunit extracts. A
dose-dependent rounding of the Y1 cells showed that free LTIIa A
subunits interacted with the receptor-bound LTIIa B subunits to form
holotoxin and cause intoxication. Neither free A subunits alone nor
free B subunits alone caused rounding of the Y1 cells. Finally, as
expected, the secretory response to LTIIa was not blocked by the T14I
variant of LTIIa B subunit.
To confirm the specificity of LTIIa binding to T84 cell surface
receptors, we examined the effects of neuraminidase treatment of T84
cells on LTIIa binding and LTIIa-mediated signal transduction. Neuraminidase from V. cholerae trims sialic acid residues
from oligosialogangliosides and other glycoconjugates, and it converts oligosialogangliosides of the G1b series to ganglioside GM1.
Consequently, treatment of T84 cells with V. cholerae
neuraminidase was predicted to decrease their subsequent capacity to
bind LTIIa and to be intoxicated by LTIIa. These predicted results were
obtained. Treatment of T84 cell monolayers with neuraminidase strongly
inhibited both the Cl
secretory response
induced by 75 nM LTIIa (Fig. 5A) and
LTIIa binding to T84 cells (Fig. 5B). As expected, neuraminidase
treatment of T84 cells increased CT binding, demonstrating that the
number of ganglioside GM1 receptors for CT had increased (data not
shown).
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Association of LTIIa receptor with lipid rafts.
In human
intestinal T84 and mouse Y1 adrenal cells, ganglioside GM1 functions to
associate CT with lipid rafts, and this correlates strongly with
toxicity (24). In the present study, we extended these
observations by examining human T84 and mouse Y1 adrenal cells for
association of LTIIa with lipid rafts (Fig.
6). In T84 cells, where LTIIa is less
potent than CT, less than half of the LTIIa-receptor complex
partitioned with the Triton-insoluble lipid raft fraction, whereas the
CT-receptor complex was present primarily in the Triton-insoluble lipid
raft fraction, as previously described (24). In contrast,
in Y1 cells, where LTIIa exhibited greater potency than CT in eliciting
cAMP-dependent cellular shape change, almost all of the LTIIa-receptor
complex was found in the lipid raft fraction (Fig. 6). These data
support the idea that receptor-mediated association with lipid rafts
functions critically in toxin action for LTIIa as well as for CT. Thus,
the LTIIa receptor (presumably ganglioside GD1b) can act like the CT
receptor (ganglioside GM1) in T84 cells to drive toxin association with
lipid rafts, and this correlates with toxin function.
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DISCUSSION |
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We found that the receptor-binding activity of LTIIa distinguished
between the oligosaccharide side chains of ganglioside GM1 immobilized
on plastic and those displayed on the apical membranes of cultured
intestinal T84 cells. The B subunits of CT and LTIIa bound with similar
high apparent affinities to gangliosides GM1 and GD1b on plastic and
with similar apparent affinities to the apical surface of T84 cells in
culture. Unexpectedly, the T14I variant of the LTIIa B subunit, which
binds to ganglioside GM1 with similar affinity as the wild-type LTIIa B
subunit but not to ganglioside GD1b in vitro, was completely unable to
bind to monolayers of T84 cells. Furthermore, the CT B subunit failed to block binding and signal transduction by wild-type LTIIa in T84
cells. Taken together, these findings demonstrated that ganglioside GM1
on T84 cells cannot act either as a ligand or as a functional receptor
for LTIIa despite its high activity as a functional receptor for CT
binding and CT-induced Cl
secretion on the same cells.
In previous studies based on immunoassays, LTIIa and CT were shown to interact differently with the oligosaccharide side chains of gangliosides (3, 8). Both LTIIa and CT can bind under appropriate conditions to gangliosides GM1 and GD1b, which have one and two sialic acid residues, respectively, on the internal galactose. When a small amount of immobilized ganglioside is used in immunoassays, LTIIa binds preferentially to ganglioside GD1b, but CT binds preferentially to ganglioside GM1. When a large amount of immobilized ganglioside is used, however, the binding of LTIIa to ganglioside GM1 is almost equal to its binding to ganglioside GD1b. The immunoassays in the present study used a large amount of immobilized ganglioside. Under these conditions, the apparent affinities of LTIIa and CT for gangliosides GD1a and GM1 varied within a range of only threefold, but the differences in binding of wild-type and T14I variants of LTIIa B subunit to ganglioside GD1b were dramatic. Furthermore, LTIIa but not CT can bind to gangliosides such as GD1a, GT1b, and GQ1b that have either one or two sialic residues on the terminal galactose (8).
Although the molecular interactions of CT with GM1 oligosaccharide have been determined by x-ray crystallography (17, 18), the precise mode of binding of LTIIa to the GM1 oligosaccharide is not yet known. Direct effects that could explain the inaccessibility of the binding site for LTIIa but not the binding site for CT on ganglioside GM1 on T84 cells include, but are not limited to, the orientation of the oligosaccharide moiety versus the cell surface and possible competitive binding interactions of the oligosaccharide with other cell membrane components. Indirect effects that could explain this phenomenon might be caused by differences in the ceramide components among gangliosides that exhibit similar binding to LTIIa in vitro but differential binding to LTIIa when they are displayed on cultured T84 cells. These results emphasize the structural and functional complexity of the apical surfaces of intestinal epithelial cells that are displayed to invading toxins and microbes and the importance of receptor context.
Our results indicate that ganglioside GD1b, or possibly a glycoconjugate with a similar oligosaccharide component, is a functional receptor for LTIIa on T84 cells. LTIIa binds ganglioside GD1b with the highest affinity among the known, purified gangliosides (3, 8). In our studies with T84 cells, only the LTIIa B subunit and tetanus toxin C fragment (which binds to gangliosides GD1b and GT1b [5, 7, 25]) were able to inhibit LTIIa binding. The B subunit of LTIIa did not block LTIIa signaling in T84 cells; instead, it enhanced signaling. This apparently paradoxical but repeatable increase in signaling was likely caused by the presence in our purified LTIIa of some free A subunits in addition to, or derived from, holotoxin, as discussed below.
Our LTIIa holotoxin was purified by affinity chromatography with polyclonal rabbit antibodies that recognized epitopes on both the A and the B subunits and could therefore have contained some free A and/or B subunits. Previous studies showed that biologically active LTIIa and LTIIb holotoxins can be formed when crude periplasmic extracts containing their recombinant A and B subunits are mixed together and tested by solid-phase immunoassays or bioassays (4). In contrast, in vitro assembly of CT or LTI holotoxins from their A and B subunits only occurs when the subunits are exposed to denaturing and renaturing conditions (6, 9, 22). In the present experiments, the activity of LTIIa on T84 cells was stimulated rather than inhibited even when LTIIa B subunits were added in large excess, and the magnitude of the stimulation increased as the dose of LTIIa holotoxin increased. These results, together with the previous findings of Connell and Holmes (4), raised the possibility that free LTIIa A subunits were present that interacted preferentially with LTIIa B subunits bound to ganglioside receptors on T84 cells.
Alternatively, since free LTIIa A and B subunits can spontaneously assemble into holotoxin, pure holotoxin may exist in equilibrium with free A and B subunits. Assembly of free A subunits in our purified holotoxin with B subunits bound on T84 cells would have resulted in exposure of the cells to an increased dose of holotoxin and a consequent increase in LTIIa-mediated signal transduction despite the presence of a large excess of LTIIa B subunits in the culture medium. Intoxication of Y1 cells by the addition of free LTIIa A subunits to cells previously incubated with and washed free of unbound LTIIa B subunits provided experimental evidence in support of this concept. Our present findings confirm and extend the conclusion of Connell and Holmes (4) that there appear to be striking differences in conditions that permit in vitro assembly of type II and type I heat-labile enterotoxins.
We used neuraminidase treatment of T84 cells to further establish that
LTIIa function is receptor mediated. Neuraminidase treatment removes
sialic acid residues from oligosialogangliosides and other
oligosialylated glycoconjugates, and it converts many of the known
oligosialogangliosides to the neuraminidase-resistant monosialoganglioside GM1. Neuraminidase treatment of T84 cells largely
eliminated the ability of LTIIa to either bind to the cells or elicit a
Cl
secretory response. These findings confirmed
that LTIIa requires an oligosialylated receptor, which is most likely
ganglioside GD1b.
Heat-labile enterotoxins ADP-ribosylate the regulatory protein
Gs
, resulting in activatation of adenylyl
cyclase, accumulation of intracellular cAMP, and activation of
cAMP-dependent signals (2, 12). Because the A1
polypeptides of the type I and type II enterotoxins have similar
ADP-ribosylating activity for Gs
in vitro but
the toxicity of LTIIa for T84 cells is much less than that of CT, it
seems likely that the LTIIa receptor is not as efficient as the CT
receptor in directing its ligand into a pathway that results in
intoxication of T84 cells. LTIIa also exhibits a significantly longer
signaling lag time than CT when it is applied to the apical surface of
polarized T84 cells and, unlike CT, does not show a significant
decrease in signaling lag time when it is applied to the basolateral
surface rather than the apical cell surface. These observations support
the hypothesis that the pathways leading from receptor binding to the
activation of adenylyl cyclase, while similar in outcome for these two
toxins, must differ greatly in efficiency.
We and others have previously shown that specificity of CT action in model intestinal epithelia depends on the ability of the ganglioside GM1 receptor to partition CT into detergent-insoluble glycosphingolipid-rich membranes (lipid rafts) (19, 24). Additionally, LTIIb, which does not partition into lipid rafts in T84 cells but does so in Y1 cells (24), is inactive on T84 cells but highly active on Y1 cells. Together these studies provide evidence that toxin function (and presumably intracellular trafficking) correlates with association of the toxin-receptor complexes with lipid rafts. Similarly, the present study suggests that LTIIa function is correlated with the degree of association of LTIIa with lipid rafts. In T84 cells, where LTIIa is much less toxic than CT, a much smaller proportion of LTIIa than of CT was associated with lipid rafts. However, in mouse Y1 adrenal cells, where LTIIa is at least as potent as CT, nearly all of the LTIIa (this paper) or CT (24) was associated with lipid rafts. The partial to nearly complete exclusion of LTIIa and LTIIb from lipid rafts in human intestinal cells (this paper and references 1 and 24) may at least partially explain why isolates of enterotoxigenic E. coli that produce type II enterotoxins have not been clearly associated with diarrheal disease in humans.
These studies also demonstrate that ganglioside GM1 is not the only receptor that can partition heat-labile enterotoxins into lipid rafts. Furthermore, if ganglioside GD1b is indeed the receptor for LTIIa, then the differences that we found in distribution of the LTIIa receptor among cell types indicate that the oligosaccharide moiety cannot be the sole determinant of ganglioside partitioning into lipid rafts. Other factors that may play a role in partitioning of gangliosides into lipid rafts, such as the composition of the ceramide domain, possible interactions of the oligosaccharide moiety with other components of lipid rafts, or both, must also be considered and investigated.
In conclusion, our studies showed that entry of LTIIa into the polarized human intestinal cell line T84 and subsequent signal transduction depend on its binding to the cell surface receptor ganglioside GD1b or possibly to another glycoconjugate with a similar oligosaccharide moiety. Ganglioside GM1 on T84 cells, which functions as the receptor for CT, was not able to be bound by LTIIa or to serve as its receptor. Receptor binding partitioned LTIIa into apical membrane lipid rafts, which correlated with toxin function. Thus, LTIIa, like CT, must associate with lipid rafts for toxicity.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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The research reported here was supported in part by the following research grants from the National Institutes of Health: AI31940 (to R.K.H.), DK48106 (to W.I.L.), DK34854 (to the Harvard Digestive Disease Center), and individual NRSAs (to S.W.-M. and A.A.W.).
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FOOTNOTES |
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* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Microbiology, Box B-175, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, 4200 East Ninth Avenue, Denver, CO 80262. Phone: (303) 315-7727. Fax: (303) 315-6785. E-mail: Michael.Jobling{at}UCHSC.EDU.
Present address: LigoCyte Pharmaceuticals, Inc., Bozeman, MT 59718.
Editor: J. D. Clements
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