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Infection and Immunity, February 2006, p. 1148-1155, Vol. 74, No. 2
0019-9567/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/IAI.74.2.1148-1155.2006
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
B Activation and Interleukin-8 Production
Departments of Pediatrics,1 Internal Medicine,2 Microbiology and Immunology, University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, Texas 77555,4 Department of Medicine, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas 770303
Received 3 August 2005/ Returned for modification 1 October 2005/ Accepted 10 November 2005
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B activation and interleukin-8 (IL-8) production. This response was decreased by blocking CD74 with monoclonal antibodies. Further confirmation of the interaction of urease B with CD74 was obtained using a fibroblast cell line transfected with CD74 that also responded with NF-
B activation and IL-8 production. The binding of the H. pylori urease B subunit to CD74 expressed on gastric epithelial cells presents a novel insight into a previously unrecognized H. pylori interaction that may contribute to the proinflammatory immune response seen during infection. |
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An essential factor in H. pylori colonization of the gastric mucosa, which is also considered a major virulence factor, is urease (11, 12). Urease is perhaps the most abundant protein made by H. pylori, comprising
10% of the total bacterial protein (10, 14). It hydrolyzes urea to generate ammonia and CO2, which aid in neutralizing hydrochloric acid and allow H. pylori to colonize the gastric mucosa. Urease-deficient H. pylori failed to colonize the gastric mucosa in multiple studies with mice and gnotobiotic piglets (49). While much urease is found in the cytoplasm of the bacteria (42), it has also been shown to be present in association with the outer membrane (8, 41). Although the presence of surface-associated urease has been debated, a plethora of studies have provided evidence that it exists on the bacterial surface or is released by the bacteria. A recent study showed the presence of urease in sarcosine-insoluble outer membrane fractions of H. pylori (1), while others suggested that autolysis is responsible for surface urease (10, 30, 39). Some have also suggested that urease is secreted or released (18, 50). There is also an intriguing suggestion that urease binds to lipopolysaccharide on the bacterial surface (22).
In addition to the enzymatic role in hydrolyzing urease to ammonia, urease has been suggested to play a role in the pathogenesis of gastritis and peptic ulceration (34, 44). It was shown to activate monocytes and to stimulate them to produce inflammatory cytokines (19). We have previously shown that urease binds to class II major histocompatibility complex (MHC) and induces apoptosis of gastric epithelial cells (15). Evidence for a role of urease in contributing to the local response was obtained when Mongolian gerbils treated with urease inhibitors showed markedly less gastritis when infected by H. pylori than untreated gerbils (37).
As urease is known to interact with class II MHC, this study examined the interaction with the class II MHC-associated invariant chain, or CD74. CD74 is best known for its role in regulating the intracellular transport and functions of class II MHC in antigen-presenting cells (13, 40), and a variety of other functions for this molecule have recently been discovered. Cell surface expression of CD74 on a variety of cell types has been described (38, 51). There is also significant expression on gastric epithelial cell surfaces, which is upregulated during inflammation (6). CD74 has a long cytoplasmic tail that has been implicated in signaling events. Several studies have shown that signaling induced through CD74 plays a role in B-cell maturation (31, 32) that acts though NF-
B activation. We recently showed that H. pylori binding to CD74 stimulates the NF-
B signaling cascade that leads to interleukin-8 (IL-8) production (7). In another signaling role, macrophage migration inhibitory factor (MIF), an important inflammatory cytokine, has been shown to bind to CD74 expressed on cell surfaces and initiate the mitogen-activated protein kinase activation (26).
This study details binding of the urease A and B subunits to class II MHC and the class II MHC-associated invariant chain (Ii), or CD74. We demonstrate that urease B binds to CD74 expressed on gastric epithelial cell surfaces, while the urease A subunit, on the other hand, appears to bind to class II MHC. By utilizing both recombinant urease subunits and urease B knockout bacteria, we have demonstrated that urease B upregulates IL-8 production upon binding to CD74.
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Bacterial cultures. H. pylori strains 43504 and 51B, which were clinical strains isolated from Japanese patients with simple gastritis, were used in this study. Isogenic ureB mutants were constructed using strains 43504 and 51B as parental strains. For isogenic ureB mutants, portions of the genes were amplified by PCR and the amplified fragment was inserted into the EcoRV site of pBluescript SK(+)(Stratagene, La Jolla, CA) with the BamHI site deleted in advance. A kanamycin resistance gene cassette (a gift from Rainer Haas, Max von Pettenkofer Institut, Munich, Germany) was inserted into the BamHI site of insert DNA for the ureB gene. The obtained plasmids (1 to 2 µg) were used for inactivation of chromosomal genes by natural transformation as previously described (21). Inactivation of the genes was confirmed by PCR amplification followed by Southern blot hybridization. All strains were grown on blood agar plates (Becton Dickinson, San Jose, CA) at 37°C under microaerophilic conditions as previously described (2). Bacteria were transferred after 48 h into brucella broth containing 10% fetal bovine serum and left for an additional 24 h. After centrifugation at 2,500 x g for 10 min, bacteria were resuspended in sterile phosphate-buffered saline (PBS). The number of bacteria per milliliter was determined by measuring the absorbance (at 530 nm) with a spectrophotometer (DU-65; Becton Dickinson Instruments, Inc., Fullerton, CA) and comparing the value to a standard curve generated by quantifying viable organisms from aliquots of bacteria at various concentrations that were also assessed by absorbance.
Biotinylation of bacteria and urease. Bacterial strains, urease (Oravax, Cambridge, MA), and urease A and B subunits (Austral Biologicals, San Ramon, CA) were biotinylated using the Fluoreporter cell surface biotinylation kit (F-20560; Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR). According to the manufacturer, this reagent is cell membrane-impermeative biotin-XX sulfosuccinimidyl ester, an amine-reactive compound that is designed to label surface proteins of live cells. Bacteria and subunits were then biotinylated according to the manufacturer's instructions. H. pylori strains were lysed by sonication, and bacterial lysates were dialyzed overnight in PBS.
Urease binding of immunoprecipitated CD74. P3HR1 cells (2 x 107) were lysed with buffer containing 50 mM Tris-HCl, 150 mM NaCl, 10% NP-40, 10% Na-deoxycholate, and protease inhibitor cocktail (Sigma, St. Louis, MO) and were centrifuged at 10,000 x g for 10 min to remove nuclei. Biotinylated bacterial surface proteins were added to cell lysates and rotated for 2 h at 4°C. The lysate mixture was precleared with 10 µl of protein A/G beads (Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Santa Cruz, CA) for 2 hours at 4°C. CD74 was immunoprecipitated using protein A/G beads that were preincubated with BU-45 monoclonal antibody for 2 hours at room temperature. After washing, beads were incubated with the lysate mixture of P3HR-1 cells and biotinylated bacterial surface proteins or urease subunits for 2 h at 4°C. Beads were then washed four times, and the bound CD74 was eluted with 0.1 M citrate buffer (pH 2.7) and neutralized immediately. The bound material was eluted, and samples were run on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, transferred to a nitrocellulose membrane, and incubated with avidin-horseradish peroxidase (HRP) (Santa Cruz Biotechnology) to detect precipitated H. pylori proteins or urease subunits by Western blot analysis.
Attachment assays. Ten micrograms of biotinylated urease A or B subunits was incubated with 2 x 105 gastric epithelial cells or fibroblast cells for 1 h at room temperature. Some samples were incubated with the anti-CD74 monoclonal antibody MB-741 (Becton Dickinson) for 1 h prior to urease exposure or with an isotype control. After being washed with PBS, samples were incubated with 1 µl of strepavidin-phycoerythrin (PE) (Becton Dickinson) for 30 min on ice. Samples incubated with only strepavidin-PE were used as negative controls. Samples were washed two more times and analyzed by flow cytometry on a FACScan cytometer (Becton Dickinson). H. pylori was stained with the red fluorochrome PKH26 (Sigma) according to the manufacturer's instructions, washed multiple times with RPMI 1640, and resuspended in RPMI. Bacteria were washed and added to pelleted cells treated with medium or gamma interferon and with blocking or control antibodies where indicated. The cultures were treated with a 30:1 ratio of bacteria to cells and incubated for 90 min at 37°C. Negative control samples consisted of cells treated with the wash from stained H. pylori to assess background staining of cells.
I
B
degradation.
Cells grown in 24-well plates were incubated overnight with serum-free medium and stimulated with H. pylori for specified times. Cells were removed from plates by scraping and lysed as described for similar studies (37). Lysates were centrifuged at 14,000 x g for 10 min at 4°C. The resulting samples were run on 10% sodium dodecyl sulfate gels for electrophoresis and transferred to nitrocellulose membranes for Western blotting. The membranes were treated with HRP-conjugated anti-I
B
antibody along with anti-tubulin-
(Santa Cruz Biotechnology) as a loading control. Immunoreactive proteins were detected using Super Signal West Pico chemiluminescent substrate (Pierce Biotechnologies, Rockford, IL).
IL-8 induction and detection. Gastric epithelial cells or fibroblast transfectants were incubated for 24 h with H. pylori (30:1 bacteria/cell ratio). The fibroblast control cells, M1, and the CD74-transfected cells, M1-p33, were incubated with serum-free medium for 16 h before bacterial exposure because of high basal IL-8 production. Some samples were incubated with anti-CD74 antibodies or isotype control antibodies before exposure to H. pylori. Supernatants were harvested at 24 h and analyzed using IL-8 enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISAs) (Becton Dickinson) according to the manufacturer's instructions to compare IL-8 secretion from gamma interferon-treated and untreated cells exposed to H. pylori, CD74 cross-linking, or blocking anti-CD74 antibodies.
Real-time PCR
Total cellular RNA was isolated using the RNeasy RNA isolation kit (QIAGEN, Valencia, CA) according to the manufacturer's instructions. The sample concentration was measured by spectrophotometry at 260 nm, and RNA quality was determined on a 1% agarose gel. real-time reverse transcription-PCR (RT-PCR) was performed according the Applied Biosystems two-step real-time RT-PCR protocol (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA). All reagents were purchased from Applied Biosystems. The RT reaction mixture include random 2.5 µM hexamers, 500 µM deoxynucleoside triphosphates, 0.4 U/µl of the RNase inhibitors, 5.5 mM MgCl2, MultiScribe reverse transcriptase (3.125 U/µl) and its buffer, and 1 µg of cellular RNA. The RT mix was up to final volume of the 50 µl using RNase- and DNase-free H2O (Sigma). The RT step was performed using the GeneAmp PCR system 9700 thermocycler (Perkin-Elmer Applied Biosystems) according to the following protocol: 10 min at 25°C, 60 min at 37°C, and 5 min at 95°C. The cDNA samples obtained were stored at 20°C (if necessary) and used for the PCR step. The PCR mix was prepared using TaqMan universal PCR master mix (Applied Biosystems). The Assays-on-Demand gene expression assay mix (Applied Biosystems) for human 18S rRNA, IL-8, or CD74 (a 20x mix of unlabeled PCR primers and TaqMan MGB probe, 6-carboxyfluorescein dye labeled) and 2 µl of cDNA were added to the PCR mix. The reaction was carried out in a 20-µl final volume using the GeneAmp 5700 sequence detection system (Applied Biosystems) according to the following protocol: 2 min at 50°C, 10 min at 95°C (1 cycle), and 15 s 95°C and 1 min at 60°C (40 cycles). The negative controls were included in the RT real-time two-step reaction. The endpoint used in real-time PCR quantification, CT, is defined as the PCR cycle number that crosses the signal threshold. CT values range from 0 to 40, with the latter number assumed to represent no product formation. Quantification of cytokine gene expression was performed using the comparative CT method (Sequence Detector user bulletin 2; Applied Biosystems) and reported as the fold difference relative to the human 18S rRNA housekeeping gene. In order to calculate the fold change (increase or decrease), the CT value for 18S rRNA was subtracted from CT value for the target cytokine gene to yield the
CT. The change in the expression of the normalized target gene as a result of experimental conditions was expressed as
, where 
CT =
CT for experimental samples
CT for biological control.
CD74 expression. Gastric epithelial cell lines were incubated with urease B or H. pylori for 24 h at 37°C. After washing, samples were incubated with anti-CD74 monoclonal immunoglobulin G1 clone BU-45 (Serotec, Raleigh, NC) or an isotype control for 1 h at 4°C. Cells were then washed with PBS and stained with secondary PE-conjugated antibody (DAKO, Carpentaria, CA). Samples were analyzed on the FACScan flow cytometer (Becton Dickinson) using CellQuest software.
Statistical analysis. Results are expressed as means ± standard errors of the means. H. pylori binding and IL-8 production results were compared by analysis of variance and considered significant if the P value was <0.05.
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FIG. 1. Urease coprecipitates with CD74 from P3HR1 cell lysates which do not contain class II MHC. CD74 was immunoprecipitated from P3HR1 lysates mixed with (A) biotinylated H. pylori (Hp) surface proteins and (B) recombinant urease and urease subunits. In panel A, recombinant urease was run in parallel with H. pylori proteins coprecipitated with CD74. Biotinylated H. pylori proteins that were coprecipitated with CD74 were detected by avidin-HRP. Numbers on the left are molecular masses in kilodaltons.
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FIG.2. Urease B binds to CD74 on gastric epithelial cells. (A and B) Biotinylated urease subunits were incubated with cells after treatment with an isotype control or blocking antibodies. After incubation with strepavidin-PE and washing, binding was determined by flow cytometry. (A) Histogram of HS-738 showing urease B attachment compared to the negative control of cells incubated with strepavidin-PE alone. (B) Percent attachment of urease A or B subunits with gastric epithelial cells or CD74-transfected fibroblast cells. (C and D) PKH26-labeled H. pylori strains 51B and 43504 and urease B knockouts were incubated with the indicated cells for 90 min and binding was determined by flow cytometry. (C) Histogram showing 43504 and the urease B knockout compared to the negative control cells. (D) Percent positive cells above background staining of control. The means and standard errors of the means are shown as the results of duplicates in four experiments (n = 8) in panels B and D.
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Urease B triggers I
B
degradation.
We have previously shown that H. pylori binding to CD74 and cross-linking CD74 resulted in I
B
degradation leading to NF-
B activation (7). In this study, we sought to determine if urease binding to CD74 is involved in these responses. Recombinant urease B subunit was incubated with gastric epithelial cells for 20-min intervals to observe I
B
degradation. As seen in Fig. 3A, incubation of recombinant urease B alone with N87 cells resulted in I
B
degradation at 40 and 60 min, and its expression was restored at 80 min. The tubulin control was utilized in order to demonstrate that equal protein concentrations were loaded into each well. When cells were preincubated with anti-CD74 antibodies, very little I
B
degradation was seen in response to urease B exposure (Fig. 3B). Similarly, when wild-type H. pylori was incubated with N87 cells, I
B
degradation was visible at 40 and 60 min (Fig. 3C), but when the urease B knockout bacteria were used, the I
B
bands are more visible (Fig. 3D). Interestingly, the kinetics of I
B
degradation induced by urease B alone are comparable to those induced by H. pylori (Fig. 3A and C). These results are consistent with our previous data showing a decrease in I
B
degradation in cells exposed to H. pylori upon blocking of CD74 (7).
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FIG. 3. Urease engagement of CD74 on gastric epithelial cells causes I B degradation. (A) Urease B incubation with N87 cells resulted in I B degradation at 40 min shown in a representative result with a tubulin- loading control. (B) Preincubation of cells with anti-CD74 antibodies blocked I B degradation as shown in a representative result with a tubulin- control. (C) Incubation of N87 cells with H. pylori strain 43504 led to I B degradation at 40 min as shown in a representative result with N87 cells with a tubulin- control. (D) Incubation of cells with an H. pylori 43504 urease knockout decreased I B degradation.
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FIG. 4. Urease B engagement of CD74 on multiple cell types induces IL-8 production as measured by ELISA. Urease subunit incubation with N87 cells resulted in very little increase in IL-8 production with urease A subunit but a significant increase with urease B subunit at 24 h, which was decreased upon blocking CD74 with monoclonal antibodies but not when blocking class II MHC with (A) N87 and M1-p33 cells and (B) HS738 cells. H. pylori strains 51B and 43504 induced IL-8 production, while urease B knockouts induced significantly less IL-8 with (C) N87 and M1-p33 cells and (D) HS738 cells. The means and standard errors of the means are shown as the results of duplicates in four experiments (n = 8).
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FIG. 5. Urease B engagement of CD74 on multiple cell types leads to increased IL-8 mRNA production as measured by real-time PCR. (A) Urease subunit incubation with N87 cells resulted in very little increase in IL-8 mRNA with urease A subunit but significant increases with urease B subunit at 24 h, which was decreased upon blocking CD74 with monoclonal antibodies with N87, M1-p33, and HS738 cells. (B) H. pylori strains 51B and 43504 increased IL-8 mRNA, while urease B knockouts induced significantly less IL-8 mRNA, in N87, M1-p33, and HS738 cells. The means and standard errors of the means are shown as the results of duplicates in four experiments (n = 8).
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FIG. 6. CD74 expression by gastric epithelial cell lines exposed to urease B is increased. Gastric epithelial cells stained for CD74 after exposure to urease subunits, H. pylori strain 43504, and a urease B knockout showed increased expression with urease B but very little increase with urease A compared to the solid-peak isotype control in a sample histogram with HS-738 cells (A), showed increased expression with H. pylori strain 43504 but less expression with the urease B knockout (B), and showed increased expression by real-time PCR, with CD74 RNA levels normalized to 18S RNA and relative to untreated controls, after exposure to urease subunits or H. pylori strains (C). The means and standard errors of the means are shown as the results of duplicates in four experiments (n = 8) in panel C.
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Gastric epithelial cells have been suggested to be nonprofessional antigen-presenting cells and express high levels of class II MHC and CD74 on the cell surface (3, 7). Although CD74 is best known for its role in regulating the intracellular biology of class II MHC molecules, CD74 has recently been suggested to have functions independent of class II MHC. One recently discovered function for CD74 is its role as a receptor for macrophage migration Inhibitory factor. MIF binding to CD74 leads to signaling events such as extracelluar signal regulated kinase activation, cell proliferation, and prostaglandin E2 production (27, 33). Other studies have indicated that CD74 is required for signaling that induces B-cell maturation (31, 33). In B cells, MIF binding to CD74 results in activation of transcription factors, including NF-
B, which is an important control in immune and inflammatory responses (26). The variety of functions and signaling leading to immune responses that have recently implicated CD74 in initiating signaling processes suggests that there is much more to be revealed about the functions of this molecule.
We have previously shown that H. pylori utilizes gastric epithelial cell surface-expressed CD74 as a point of attachment (7). We have also shown that urease binds to class II MHC (15). In this study, we expanded upon these findings to discover that urease B binds to CD74, while urease A appears to have a higher affinity for class II MHC. Recent studies have shown urease to be among surface proteins in the sarcosine-insoluble outer membrane fraction of H. pylori (1). We further demonstrated that urease appears to be among the H. pylori surface proteins because it was biotinylated before live bacterial lysis by sonication. Many studies have attributed surface urease to bacterial autolysis (30, 39), so it is probable that the urease in our biotinylated outer membrane proteins can be attributed to autolysis as well. The importance of surface-associated urease was demonstrated in one study where H. pylori did not survive in acidic conditions in the absence of surface-associated urease (23). Studies by Icatlo et al. have shown that urease binds sulfated polysaccharides (22), and we have shown that class II MHC-associated CD74 has an important chondroitin sulfate-modified isoform (4) that may play a role in urease binding and should be further investigated.
Similar to professional antigen-presenting cells, gastric epithelial cells respond to H. pylori with comparable cytokine profiles (5, 48). H. pylori urease B similarly elicits a Th1 response from antigen-presenting cells (19, 35). In this study, we have shown that urease B represents a ligand for CD74, which leads NF-
B activation and IL-8 production. N87 cells, HS-738 cells, and M1-p33 CD74-transfected fibroblast cells, which exhibit very little response when transfected with the vector alone, all responded in the same way to urease treatment, and that response was negated by blocking CD74 with specific antibodies. In contrast, recombinant urease A did not bind well to M1-p33 CD74-tranfected fibroblasts and did not stimulate them to produce IL-8. Together, these observations suggest that urease A probably attaches to class II MHC and could then be in involved in the induction of apoptosis, as we demonstrated in a previous study (15).
The interaction of urease B with CD74 and the elevated responses were further examined using urease B-deficient strains compared to parental strains. Decreases were seen in attachment and IL-8 responses with the urease B mutants compared to the wild-type strains. Because there are multiple receptors for H. pylori and there are multiple virulence factors that induce IL-8 production (36), attachment and induction of IL-8 were still observed with the urease B-deficient bacteria; however, significant decreases in both were observed. These studies suggest that urease plays a role specifically in the attachment of and proinflammatory immune response initiated by H. pylori. While the coprecipitation studies showed that two high-molecular-weight proteins, in addition to the urease subunits, were coprecipitated by CD74, their identities are at present unknown. However, they are present in lower quantities than urease subunits. They could be proteins that bind directly to CD74 or that coassociate with H. pylori urease.
Urease encompasses an even broader role than previously theorized in the pathogenesis associated with infection of H. pylori and should not be overlooked. Although urease is known for its enzymatic activity, the dual function as an adhesion and immunogen should not be surprising since bacteria contain genes involved in a wide range of physiological processes, perhaps as an mechanism for adaptation to an ample array of growth conditions.
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