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Infection and Immunity, February 2006, p. 1273-1283, Vol. 74, No. 2
0019-9567/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/IAI.74.2.1273-1283.2006
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Graduate Institute of Microbiology, College of Medicine, National Taiwan University,1 National Health Research Institute,2 Department of Dentistry, National Taiwan University Hospital, Taipei, Taiwan, Republic of China3
Received 6 September 2005/ Returned for modification 28 October 2005/ Accepted 11 November 2005
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B (NF-
B) and extracellular signal-regulated kinase and that p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase pathways also contributed to the release of IL-6. Streptococcus-infected HUVECs or treatment with purified IL-6 plus soluble IL-6 receptor
enhanced the expression of ICAM-1 and the adherence of the monocytic cell line U937. These results suggest that streptococcal GTFs might play an important role in recruiting monocytic cells during inflammation in IE through induction of adhesion molecules and IL-6, a cytokine involved in transition from neutrophil to monocyte recruitment. |
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The pathogenesis of IE is characterized by the formation of endocardial vegetations through an inflammatory reaction (36). These vegetations consist of a clot of fibrin and platelets mixed with leukocytes, in which the causative microorganisms are embedded and multiply. During the formation of vegetations, the coagulation system is activated through the extrinsic clotting pathway, which is factor VII and tissue factor dependent (9, 17). Monocytes could release tissue factor after interaction with either staphylococci or streptococci (7, 8), and such interactions are essential for vegetation formation in experimental endocarditis (52). Accompanied by vegetation formation, the pathogenesis of IE is characterized histopathologically by a chronic inflammatory reaction with infiltration of monocytes. Therefore, the recruitment and migration of monocytes play a critical role in both the coagulation and inflammation events orchestrated in IE.
Monocyte recruitment to the site of infection (e.g., damaged heart valves and endocardium in IE) requires the concerted interaction of cytokines, chemokines, and adhesion molecules expressed on the activated endothelial linings. The endothelium, a major responder for leukocyte recruitment, could be activated directly by interaction with bacteria or a PAMP, such as lipopolysaccharide (LPS), or indirectly through mediators of inflammation, such as tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-
) and interleukin-1 (IL-1) (41). After activation, the vascular endothelium recruits leukocytes via expression of adhesion molecules and chemokines (37): mainly IL-8 and monocyte chemoattractant protein 1 (MCP-1), key factors for the chemotaxis of neutrophils and monocytes, respectively (31). Limited information is available on endothelial cells and the activation or signaling induced by gram-positive bacteria. S. aureus, an IE-inducing pathogen, can induce the expression of IL-6 and IL-1ß by cultured human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) (58). Different species of viridans group streptococci can stimulate the production of IL-6 and IL-8 by human saphenous vein endothelial cells (HSVECs), and the protein I/II family of immunological and structurally related surface proteins, identified on viridans group streptococci, are potent modulins (53). Proteins I/IIf from S. mutans OMZ 175 could stimulate IL-8 production by HSVECs through interaction with
5ß1 integrins and signaling pathways involving mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs), phospholipase C-
(PLC-
), and protein kinase C (PKC) (2).
Glucosyltransferases (GTFs) are a group of cell-wall-associated or extracellular proteins that convert sucrose into exopolysaccharides (glucans), and isozymes have also been identified in several viridans group streptococci, such as S. mutans, S. sanguinis, S. gordonii, and S. salivarius. These GTFs, with molecular masses around 150 kDa, share conserved N- and C-terminal functional domains, which are coordinately responsible for sucrose splitting and glucan synthesis and binding (35). In addition to their essential role in dental biofilm formation, GTFs act as modulins on the circulating or spleen monocytes to produce preferentially various cytokines, IL-6 in particular, when added in vitro or challenged in vivo (11, 13). In the rat model of experimental endocarditis, we found that IL-6 was induced in situ earlier than TNF-
, that GTFs are the major modulins acting during the acute stage of inflammation on IL-6 release, and that the endothelial lining of the valvular regions might be the source of the IL-6 (46).
IL-6 combined with soluble IL-6 receptor
(sIL-6R
) plays an important role in the transition from neutrophil to monocyte recruitment and the switch from acute to persistent chronic inflammation (29). Plasma concentrations of IL-6, but not TNF-
or IL-1, were found to be associated with inflammation in IE (3, 43). To explore the molecular mechanisms involved in monocyte recruitment by endothelial cells, triggered by common structures shared by IE-related streptococci, we hypothesized that GTFs may act directly to up-regulate the expression of adhesion molecules and also IL-6, which in combination with sIL-6R
would further augment monocyte attachment to endothelial cells. Studies were performed with primary HUVECs as the targets to explore the interaction of GTFs and the signaling events induced. We found that GTF alone was capable of inducing the expression of adhesion molecules and, preferentially, the release of IL-6. Activation of HUVECs by GTFs might involve the activation of nuclear factor
B (NF-
B), a pivotal regulator of proinflammatory gene expression, including cytokines, chemokines, and adhesion molecules. Enhanced monocyte adherence was demonstrated on the GTF-activated HUVECs and could be augmented in the presence of IL-6.
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gtfC, inactivated gtfD), and NHS1DD (
gtfB/C, inactivated gtfD) (50), which differ from the wild type in the expression of two or three gtf genes, were grown in BHI broth supplemented with both erythromycin (10 µg ml1) and tetracycline (10 µg ml1). The genetic stability or phenotypic characteristics were indistinguishable from those of their parental GS-5 strain, except in the expression of GTFs.
Escherichia coli DH5
and BL21 were used for cloning and protein expression. The full-length gtfC was digested with pshAI from pNH3 (50) and subcloned into the NheI- and HindIII-cleaved plasmid pRSETA (Invitrogen). The resulting plasmid, pRSET-gtfC, expresses recombinant GTFC (rGTFC) lacking the signal peptide (amino acid sequence 1 to 42) and contains an additional stretch of six histidine residues at the N terminus. His-tagged rGTFC proteins were purified using Ni-nitrilotriacetic acid-agarose resin (QIAGEN) as previously described (13). The purity of the rGTFC was checked by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) after silver staining (Fig. 1B). The rGTFC exhibited two bands around 155 kDa reactive to anti-GTFB/C polyclonal antibody (10), and the identities of both bands were confirmed by the amino acid composition of tryptic digests on liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry, as described previously (12). Any possible endotoxin content in the purified rGTFC was removed with polymyxin B-agarose beads (Sigma).
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FIG. 1. Adherence of S. mutans and purified rGTFC to HUVECs. (A) FACS analysis of trypsinized HUVECs revealed positive staining of CD31 without CD45-positive leukocytes. (B) SDS-PAGE analysis of purified rGTFC by silver staining (a) or Western blotting using rabbit antibodies specific for GTFB/C (b). (C) Detection of rGTFC bound to HUVECs by Western blotting. HUVECs were treated separately with the amounts of rGTFC indicated at 37°C for 1 h, and unbound protein was washed away. Total cell lysates were harvested and Western blotting of rGTFC was performed as described in Materials and Methods. (D) Detection of S. mutans or rGTFC binding to HUVECs by fluorescence. Confluent HUVECs, untreated (a) or stimulated with purified rGTFC (b), S. mutans GS-5 (c), or GTF-null mutant NHS1DD (d), were fixed and stained with an anti-S. mutans antibody for panels c and d or anti-GTFB/C antibody for panel b. The results were observed by fluorescence microscopy after reaction with a secondary FITC-conjugated anti-rabbit IgG antibody.
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U937, a human monocytic leukemia cell line, was cultured in RPMI 1640 medium (Cambrex Bio Science) supplemented with 10% heat-inactivated FCS, 100 U ml1 of penicillin, and 100 µg ml1 of streptomycin. U937 cells expressed CD45, CXCR1, and CXCR2 on their surface and were able to secrete IL-6, IL-8, and TNF-
after stimulation with phorbol myristate acetate.
Cell activation and bacterial adherence assay. For infection studies, bacteria from the stationary phase were washed three times with phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) and adjusted to a density of 108 CFU ml1 in M199 containing 10% heat-inactivated FCS without antibiotics. Bacteria were added to HUVECs grown to confluence in 24-well tissue culture plates at a multiplicity of infection (MOI) of 500:1 (5 x 107 bacteria at 1 x 105 cells per well). After treatment with bacteria or rGTFC, the culture supernatants and total cell lysates were collected at different time intervals for quantification of cytokines. To confirm that the observed effects were not caused by possible LPS contamination, the experiments were performed in the presence of polymyxin B (40 µg ml1; Sigma). For the adherence assay, the HUVECs were infected with stationary-phase bacteria at an MOI of 500:1 in M199 culture medium for 2 h at 37°C in 5% CO2. The HUVECs were washed three times with PBS and subsequently lysed from the well by 0.5% Triton X-100 in PBS. The number of cell-adherent bacteria was determined by plating appropriate dilutions of the lysate onto BHI agar. The adherence of bacteria or rGTFC to HUVECs was also confirmed by immunofluorescence staining with anti-S. mutans antibody or specific anti-GTFC antibody and observation by fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)-conjugated secondary antibody.
For the inhibition assay, the confluent cells were preincubated with 300 µl of various inhibitors diluted in M199 for 1 h at 37°C and then stimulated with bacteria or purified rGTFC in M199 supplemented with 10% heat-inactivated FCS.
RNA isolation and RT-PCR. Total RNA was isolated from confluent HUVECs by guanidine isothiocyanate-phenol-chloroform extraction as described previously (14). Reverse transcription (RT) of 2 µg of total RNA was conducted in a 50-µl reaction volume using 1 µg of oligo(dT18) and Moloney murine leukemia virus reverse transcriptase (Promega Corporation, Madison, Wis.) at 37°C for 1 h. A total of 2.5 µl of cDNA solution was used for RT-PCR in a total volume of 25 µl containing 0.04 µM of sense and antisense primers. The mRNA stimulated by S. mutans or rGTFC was initially screened with a multiplex PCR kit (Maxim Biotech) and confirmed subsequently by using specific primers. The specific primers for IL-1ß, IL-6, IL-8, and GADPH were selected based on the published human cDNA sequences. The oligonucleotide primers used were as follows: (i) IL-1ß, 5'-AAACAGATGAAGTGCTCCTTCCAGG-3' and 5'-TGGAGAACACCACTTGTTGCTCCA-3'; (ii) IL-6, 5'-ATGAACTCCTTCTCCACAAGCGC-3' and 5'-GAAGAGCCCTCAGGCTGGACTG; (iii); IL-8, 5'-ATGACTTCCAAGCTGGCCGTGGCT-3' and 5'-TCTCAGCCCTCTTCAAAAACTTCTC-3'; and (iv) GAPDH, 5'-GAAGGTGAAGGTCGGAGTC-3' and 5'-GAAGATGGTGATGGGATTTG-3'. The PCR temperatures used were as follows: denaturing at 94°C for 30 s, annealing at 60°C for 30 s, and polymerization at 72°C for 1 min, followed by final extension for 7 min at 72°C. PCR products were separated by 2% agarose gel electrophoresis and visualized with ethidium bromide. The relative intensities of the bands were quantified by densitometric analysis using the Electrophoresis Documentation and Analysis System 120 (Scientific Imaging Systems, Eastman Kodak). The data were normalized as ratios to copies of an internal control gene coding for GAPDH in order to correct for any differences between samples in the efficiency of the RT and PCRs.
Detection of cytokine and chemokine by ELISA.
The IL-1ß, IL-6, IL-8, TNF-
, or sIL-6R
concentration in conditional medium or total cell lysates was quantified by sandwich immunoassays using commercially available enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) kits (R and D Systems), according to the manufacturer's protocol. For inhibition assays, HUVECs were preincubated in culture medium containing specific inhibitors of PKC (Ro-31-8220, 1 or 10 µM; Sigma), phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K; LY294002, 2 or 20 µM; Sigma), protein tyrosine kinases (PTKs [genistein], 25 or 50 µM; Sigma), ERK1/2 (PD98059, 25 or 50 µM; Cashmere Biotech), p38 MAPK (SB203580, 1 or 5 µM; Cashmere Biotech), JNK (SP600125, 1 or 5 µM; Cashmere Biotech), or NF-
B (pyrrolidine dithiocarbamate [PDTC], 25 or 50 µM; Sigma) for 1 h and then stimulated with bacteria or rGTFC as described above. After 24 h of incubation, the supernatants of cell cultures were collected for determination of cytokines by ELISA. Experiments were conducted in triplicate, and the results are shown as mean picograms per milliliter ± standard deviation. A two-sample t test was used to compare the mean levels of cytokine secretion following a particular treatment, and differences with P values of <0.05 were considered significant.
Cell lysate preparation and Western blotting. rGTFC-treated or untreated cells were harvested at various time points, washed three times with ice-cold PBS, and lysed at 4°C with lysis buffer (150 mM NaCl, 0.5% NP-40, 50 mM Tris HCl, pH 7.4, 2 mM EDTA, 0.25% sodium deoxycholate, 10 mM Na3VO4) plus protease inhibitors (2 ng ml1 leupeptin, 1 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, 15 ng ml1 aprotinin). Total protein in the cell extracts was determined by Bradford assay (Bio-Rad). Samples containing 20 µg of total protein were electrophoresed on 10% SDS-PAGE gels and then transferred to polyvinylidene difluoride membranes; afterwards, membranes were blocked with a 4% (wt/vol) solution of nonfat milk powder in Tris-buffered saline-Tween (TBST; 25 mM Tris, pH 7.4, 150 mM NaCl, 0.05% Tween 20) for 1 h at room temperature. Membranes were probed with polyclonal rabbit antibodies specific for GTFC at 4°C overnight. The membranes were then incubated with alkaline phosphatase-conjugated secondary antibodies (1:4,000 in 4% nonfat milk-TBST) for 2 h at room temperature. Following washing, immunoreactivity was detected using naphthol AS-MX phosphate and fast blue BB salt (Sigma).
Detection of NF-
B translocation by indirect immunofluorescence.
Confluent HUVECs on 12-mm glass coverslips, were treated with rGTF for 1 h at 37°C, washed carefully with ice-cold PBS, and then permeabilized with 1% Triton X-100 for 15 min at room temperature; for polyclonal rabbit antibodies specific for NF-
B p65 (clone c-20; Santa Cruz Biotechnology), permeabilization was performed at room temperature for 1 h. The cells were examined by fluorescence microscopy after incubation with FITC-conjugated secondary antibodies (Zymed Laboratories) at room temperature for 1 h. For inhibition assays, HUVECs were preincubated with culture medium containing a specific inhibitor of PKC (Ro-31-8220, 10 µM) or NF-
B (PDTC, 50 µM) for 1 h and then stimulated with rGTFC as described above.
Detection of adhesion molecule expression on HUVECs.
Cell surface expression of adhesion molecules was determined by indirect immunofluorescence followed by fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS; Becton Dickinson). Confluent HUVECs were stimulated with bacterial suspension (GS-5 or NHS1DD), rGTFC, purified IL-6 alone (1, 10, or 20 ng; PeproTech, UK) or IL-6 plus sIL-6R
(20 ng; PeproTech, UK), or LPS (O111:B4; Sigma) for 6 h and then harvested by treating cells with trypsin-EDTA (0.005% trypsin, 0.002% EDTA) solution. Following fixation with 2% paraformaldehyde, trypsinized cells were resuspended in ice-cold PBS with a MAb (e-Bioscience) specific for CD54 (clone HA58), CD106 (clone STA), CD62E (clone CTB202), CD62P (clone AK-4), or CD45 (clone HI30) at 4°C for 1 h. The cells were stained with FITC-conjugated secondary antibodies at 4°C for 1 h. Washed cells were resuspended in PBS containing 1% paraformaldehyde and applied to a FACS analyzer. HUVECs treated with conjugated antibody alone served as controls for background fluorescence.
U937 adherence assay.
Monolayers of HUVECs were pretreated with a bacterial suspension (GS-5 or NHS1DD), rGTFC or IL-6 alone, or IL-6 plus sIL-6R
for 6 h at 37°C. After treatment, the cells were washed twice with prewarmed M199 culture medium before adherence of U937 to stimulated HUVECs was assessed. Briefly, 5 x 105 U937 cells (3 to 5 monocytes per HUVEC) were added to the HUVEC monolayer and allowed to attach to HUVECs during 2 h of incubation at 37°C under static conditions. Loosely adherent cells were removed by being washed with prewarmed PBS three times. The cells were harvested, trypsinized followed by fixation in 2% paraformaldehyde, and then stained with MAb specific for CD45 and FITC-conjugated secondary antibodies. The numbers of HUVEC-bound monocytes were determined by FACS as described above. Data are expressed as the percentage of monocytes that bound to S. mutans-, rGTFC-, or IL-6-stimulated HUVECs.
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GTFs modulate cytokine production in HUVECs.
Human endothelial cells, such as HSVECs, respond to S. mutans cell surface protein I/II by producing the polymorphonuclear leukocyte chemokine IL-8 (53, 54). Previous results in vivo indicated that GTFs preferentially induced IL-6 from circulating monocytes (11) and the surrounding endocardium in situ (46). To delineate endothelial cell responses to GTFs, cytokine production by HUVECs was studied by comparing responses induced by wild-type S. mutans GS-5; a GTF-null mutant, NHS1DD; and two isogenic mutants, NHR1DD (which expresses GTFB only) and GS-5DD (which expresses GTFB and -C). Cytokine release into the culture supernatants was determined by cytokine-specific ELISA measurement of unstimulated HUVECs or cells stimulated with different strains at comparable infective doses. All four strains induced significant amounts of IL-8 from HUVECs, as found earlier for HSVECs (Fig. 2B), albeit a constitutively higher level of IL-8 (400 ± 56 pg ml1) was found in HUVECs (26). The GTF-null or -defective mutants could still induce comparable levels of IL-8, because they express other proinflammatory agonists, such as protein I/II, and they express them at similar levels to parental GS-5, as seen on Western blots probed with a specific antiserum (data not shown). Unstimulated HUVECs released limited levels of IL-1ß and TNF-
(<5 pg) and IL-6 (<200 pg). Addition of S. mutans GS-5, NHR1DD, or GS-5DD resulted in a marked increase (up to 10-fold) in the release of IL-6, but not TNF-
or IL-1ß, in a time-dependent manner (Fig. 2A). However, the ability to induce IL-6 was completely abolished for the GTF-null mutant NHS1DD. The preferential induction of IL-6 by S. mutans was dose dependent and could be achieved by two other clinical isolates, NTU-5526 and NTU-4312, suggesting that the ability to induce IL-6 might be ubiquitous. Further analysis revealed that IL-ß was found in the cell lysates, but not in the culture supernatant, after 3 h of stimulation with all strains tested. However, distinct from IL-6 or IL-8, the level of IL-1ß decreased significantly thereafter (Fig. 2C). This inverse relationship between IL-6 and IL-1ß, plus the notion that membrane-associated IL-1ß was inactive (15), excluded the possibility that IL-6 production was secondary to IL-1ß. However, a possible effect derived from IL-1
, which is active either intracellularly or pericellularly, was not excluded. These results confirmed our earlier findings in vivo and suggested that GTFs contribute significantly to IL-6 production and that endothelial cells could be targeted in addition to monocytes. The presence of only one cell-wall-associated GTF molecule, GTFB or GTFC, was significant for the observed stimulatory effect.
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FIG. 2. Induction of cytokines and chemokine by S. mutans wild type or mutants. The confluent monolayer of HUVECs was treated with wild-type strain GS-5 (hatched bars), GTFB-expressing strain NHR1DD (dark gray bars), GTFB/C-expressing strain GS-5DD (black bars), or the GTF-null mutant NHS1DD (light gray bars) and compared with the untreated control (spotted bars) for the time indicated. Culture supernatants or cell lysates were harvested for detection of IL-6, IL-8, and IL-1ß levels by a sandwich ELISA. IL-6 (A) and IL-8 (B) were released by HUVECs, and IL-1ß (C) was detected in the cell lysates but not in the supernatants. Data are expressed as means for triplicate experiments from three independent assays. Error bars indicate standard deviations. * and **, P 0.05 and P 0.01, respectively, relative to uninfected cells; # and ##, P 0.05 and P 0.01, respectively, relative to NHS1DD. (D) Upregulation of cytokine and chemokine mRNA expression. HUVECs (1 x 106 cells) were stimulated with 5 x 108 CFU of S. mutans or NHS1DD. Total cellular RNA was extracted, reverse transcribed, and analyzed by RT-PCR using synthetic oligonucleotides. PCR products were separated on 2% agarose gel and stained with ethidium bromide. Relative amounts of RNA were quantified by a densitometry analysis as described in Materials and Methods; GAPDH mRNA expression was used as an internal control.
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FIG. 3. Dose-dependent induction of IL-6 release and up-regulation of cytokine mRNA in HUVECs induced by rGTFC. (A) Up-regulation of cytokine and chemokine mRNA expression in rGTFC-stimulated HUVECs. TNFR1, TNF receptor 1. (B) Dose-dependent induction of IL-6. A confluent monolayer of HUVECs (1 x 105) was stimulated by crude extracts of cell wall-associated (CA) or secreted (CF) proteins from wild-type GS-5 or from GTF-null mutant NHS1DD, purified rGTFC (1.56 to 50 µg ml1), or recombinant immunodominant glycoprotein 60 (idg60; 25 µg ml1) for 24 h. (C) Dose-dependent inhibition of LPS-stimulated IL-6 production in HUVECs stimulated by polymyxin B. rGTFC-induced IL-6 release was not affected by polymyxin B. HUVECs were stimulated in the presence or absence of 20 or 40 µg ml1 polymyxin B for 24 h. IL-6 in supernatants was determined by sandwich ELISA. Data are expressed as means from triplicate experiments. Error bars indicated standard deviations. *, P 0.05; **, P 0.01.
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GTFC enhances adhesion molecule expression on HUVECs. In addition to cytokine and chemokine production, activated endothelial cells exhibited up-regulated expression of several adhesion molecules, including E-selectin, ICAM-1, and VCAM-1. To test if GTFs could also exert similar effects, untreated HUVECs or HUVECs treated with rGTFC or LPS (positive control) at different time intervals were analyzed by FACS. Results from three independent assays are summarized in Table 1, and a representative FACS analysis is depicted in Fig. 4. The treatment with either S. mutans whole cells or rGTFC could significantly enhance the expression of all three tested adhesion molecules on the surface of HUVECs with distinct kinetics. E-selectin, the adhesion molecule involved in polymorphonuclear leukocyte trafficking, was induced rapidly to reach a plateau around 6 h and returned to a basal level comparable to that of the untreated controls (Fig. 4) after 16 h of stimulation with either whole bacterium or rGTFC. VCAM-1 followed similar kinetics to E-selectin, but the induction of ICAM-1, the adhesion molecule responsible mainly for monocyte recruitment, was persistently up-regulated after 16 h. These results indicated that GTFs in cell-free form could activate endothelial cells and result in up-regulation of IL-6 and adhesion molecules.
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TABLE 1. Surface expression of adhesion molecules in response to S. mutans, rGTFC, or LPS
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FIG. 4. Time-dependent expression of adhesion molecules on stimulated HUVECs. A confluent monolayer of HUVECs (1 x 105 cells) was treated with culture medium (solid line) or rGTFC (25 µg ml1; heavy solid line) for 6 h or 16 h. The cells stained with secondary antibody served as a negative control (dot line). Cell surface expression of adhesion molecules was determined by indirect immunofluorescence and FACS analysis. Representative histograms are shown. The x axis indicates relative fluorescence intensity on a logarithmic scale; the y axis shows the number of cells on a linear scale. A total of 104 cells were analyzed for each histogram.
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in combination resulted in an additive effect from 1.63- to 2.9-fold. Enhanced expression of ICAM-1 on the cell surface was accompanied by a dose-dependent increased adhesion of the monocytic U937 cells to IL-6- or combined sIL-6R
-activated HUVECs (Table 2). The fold increase in U937 adherence was similar to that observed earlier on GS-5-infected HUVECs. The supernatant from GS-5- or rGTFC-treated HUVECs contained undetectable sIL-6R
and exhibited induced ICAM-1 at a much higher level than IL-6 alone, suggesting that GTF-induced ICAM-1 expression was not secondary to the effect of IL-6. Taken together, our results indicated that GTFs activate endothelial cells to recruit monocytes by up-regulation of adhesion molecules and IL-6, which in combination with sIL-6R
could further augment the interactions per se. |
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TABLE 2. Effect of IL-6 in combination with sIL-6R on cell surface expression of ICAM-1 and U937 adherence
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B appears to be the pivotal regulator of the transcription of proinflammatory cytokines, chemokines, adhesion molecules, etc. (5, 48). To investigate whether MAPK signaling pathways might contribute to GTF-induced IL-6 or IL-8 production from HUVECs, selected inhibitors of p38 MAPK, ERK1/2, and JNK were prepared and added to the cell culture medium. As shown in Fig. 5A, rGTFC-induced IL-6 release by HUVECs could be inhibited dose dependently by both SB203580, a selective inhibitor of p38 MAPK at low concentrations, and PD98059, the specific MEK1 and MEK2 inhibitor that blocks the ERK1/2 signaling cascade. The maximal levels of inhibition of IL-6 release obtained with SB203580 or PD98059 were 33.6% ± 2.5% and 23% ± 1%, respectively. But only marginal inhibition of IL-6 production induced by rGTFC could be observed with the JNK inhibitor SP600125. Interestingly, the release of IL-8 was unaffected by p38 MAPK inhibitor, but it was significantly inhibited (up to 50%) when the ERK1/2 signaling cascade was blocked (Fig. 5A). The presence of dimethyl sulfoxide in the culture medium was found to have no effect on IL-6 or IL-8 release by infected HUVECs (data not shown). Activation of MAPKs could be mediated in concert through upstream activation of PI3K, PKC, and PTKs (18). In agreement with the concerted pathway, preincubation with respective antagonist LY294002 (PI3K) and inhibitor Ro-31-8220 (PKC) or genistein (PTKs), caused a significant reduction of rGTFC-induced IL-6 production by approximately 50% to 95% (Fig. 5B). These results suggested that p38 MAPK and ERK1/2, but not JNK, could be activated by rGTFC protein and contributed to the induction of IL-6 release from HUVECs.
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FIG. 5. Inhibitor-mediated inhibition of IL-6 or IL-8 and NF- B translocation in rGTFC-stimulated HUVECs. (A) Inhibitor-mediated inhibition of IL-6 and IL-8 in stimulated HUVECs. HUVECs were pretreated with different inhibitors for 1 h and then stimulated with purified rGTFC (25 µg ml1) for 24 h at 37°C. Levels of IL-6 (white bars) and IL-8 (dark bars) in the cell supernatants were determined by sandwich ELISA. The results are expressed as percentages of inhibition of IL-6 and IL-8 release and are means ± standard deviation for triplicate determinations from three independent assays. *, P 0.05; **, P 0.01. (B) Immunofluorescence detection of p65 translocation and PDTC-mediated inhibition in HUVECs. HUVECs were left unstimulated (A, B, and C) or were stimulated with purified rGTFC (D, E, and F) for 1 h, and then cells were fixed, permeabilized, and stained with an anti-NF- B p65 antibody (visually by the FITC-labeled secondary antibody). For inhibition assays, HUVECs were pretreated with PKC inhibitor Ro-31028 (B and E) or with NF- B inhibitor PDTC (C and F) and then stimulated with rGTFC. Original magnification, x400.
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B as a potential candidate in our experimental systems. Incubation of HUVECs with rGTFC provoked a marked nuclear translocation of NF-
B within 1 h in about 82% ± 10% (80 to 100 cells per field from 10 fields) of the cells (Fig. 5B). Activation of NF-
B by rGTFC was unaffected in the presence of polymyxin B, whereas the LPS-induced NF-
B activation in HUVECs was abolished by polymyxin B (data not shown). Preincubation of endothelial cells with the PKC inhibitor Ro-31-8220 or NF-
B inhibitor PDTC (Fig. 5B) markedly reduced (over 90%) the nuclear shift of NF-
B and the release of IL-6 (Fig. 5A) in response to rGTFC. An analogous inhibitory effect on IL-6 release was also observed when cells were pretreated with BAY 11-7082, an inhibitor of cytokine-induced I
B-
phosphorylation. The up-regulation of all three adhesion molecules at 6 h was abolished completely in the presence of PDTC, an inhibitor of NF-
B activation (Table 1). Taken together, these findings suggested that up-regulation of adhesion molecules on HUVECs induced by rGTFC was dependent on NF-
B activation that also contributed to the induction of IL-6. |
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GTFs synthesize exopolysaccharide glucans using sucrose as a substrate, and both GTFs and glucans are important virulence factors for adherence and the formation of biofilm on the tooth surface in the oral cavity (49). S. mutans and other GTFs secreting viridans group streptococci can gain access readily to the blood circulation after routine dental procedures or traumatic injury (20). Distinct from the oral cavity, sucrose is found infrequently in human blood, and the results of previous and present studies demonstrated another role of GTFs during systemic infections. Complex roles of GTFs in pathogenesis might be attributed to the multiple domains that are well conserved in these molecules. GTFs of S. mutans consist of an amino-terminal enzymatic domain and a carboxyl-terminal glucan-binding domain (GBD) (45). The GBD of GTFs binds both dextran, rich in
-1,6 linkages, and mutan, which consists predominantly of
-1,3 linkages. The GBDs of three GTFs consist of repeating units of 21 amino acids, characterized by the consistent presence of one or more tyrosine residues near the beginning of the repeat and a highly conserved glycine in the middle of the repeat. Sequence comparison reveals that these repeats are homologous not only to each other within a protein but also to the repeats found in the GTFs from other oral streptococci, toxins A and B from Clostridium difficile, and the autolysins from Streptococcus pneumoniae and its bacteriophages (57). Similar to GTFs, toxin A exhibits two functional domains: the carboxyl-terminal portion of the toxins comprising the cellular binding domain and the amino-terminal portion containing the enzymatic activity (UDP-glucosyltransferase), which inactivates the intracellular GTP binding proteins RhoA and -B (28). Toxin A binds to a variety of cells from different lineages, and such broad binding specificity might be attributed to the interaction of C-terminal repeats with multiple cellular receptors of glycoproteins or glycolipid containing carbohydrate domains. Rabbit sucrase-isomaltase is a functional intestinal receptor for Clostridium difficile toxin A (42). Our current hypothesis is that GTFs, analogous to toxin A, might bind to multiple glycoproteins, such as integrins or proteoglycans, commonly identified on endothelial cells, and such binding is relevant to the signal transduction mechanisms that mediate in vitro and in vivo modulation activity.
In HUVECs, a well-characterized model of vascular endothelial cells, S. mutans or GTFs alone induce persistent expression of IL-6 and IL-8 and transient expression of IL-1ß. An interesting finding was that the induction of IL-6, but not IL-8, was nearly abolished by NHSIDD, a GTF-null mutant, albeit the expression of other modulins, such as protein I/II, was unaffected on NHS1DD. These results are not considered to be contradictory to a previous report that proteins I and II were potent modulins of endothelial cells, inducing them to produce both IL-6 and IL-8 (53). The possibility was that different cell cultures and cell culture medium were tested. In the present study, HUVECs were the targeted cells, whereas the proteins I/II were tested primarily on HSVECs. The experiment to determine the effect of S. mutans whole cells or rGTFC on HUVECs was conducted in culture medium containing 10% heat-inactivated fetal calf serum in the present study, whereas the binding of proteins I and II to HSVECs and induced cytokine release could be inhibited by heat-inactivated normal human serum (2, 53). Whether a similar inhibitory effect on protein I/II by fetal calf serum might occur and such inhibition might be attributable to the defect in NHS1DD awaits further investigation. Tissue-specific phenotypical variations in terms of chemokine or chemokine receptor expression have been reported in endothelial cells of different origins (26). Common, as well as distinct, signaling pathways might be involved in the up-regulation of the IL-6 or IL-8 gene upon exposure of HUVECs to GTFs. The MAPK pathway is one of the major pathways for transmitting signals to immediate-early genes implicated in the regulation of cytokine responses. We demonstrated that inhibition of JNK with SP600125 resulted in no significant change in the total amounts of secreted IL-6 or IL-8. It has been proposed that JNK is not a major activator, but contributes to IL-8 gene expression (16). Using specific inhibitors of p38 MAPK and ERK1/2, we demonstrated that these MAPKs might contribute, but only partially, to the enhanced expression of IL-6 or IL-8. In addition, rGTFC-induced IL-8 release is weakly dependent on the p38 MAPK signaling pathway, because IL-8 release from activated HUVECs was unaffected in the presence of SB203580, while the release of IL-6 was inhibited by a total of 33% by a low concentration of SB203580 (5 µM). Differential regulation of IL-6 versus IL-8 expression via one or more MAPKs has also been demonstrated upon exposure of synoviocytes to S. mutans protein I/II or human brain microvascular endothelial cells to Neisseria menigitidis (40, 47). Interestingly, the IL-8 release from synoviocytes induced by S. mutans protein I/II also was weakly dependent on p38 MAPK, even though p38 MAPK stabilizes IL-8 mRNA and may contribute to IL-8 production by posttranscriptional mechanisms (21, 56).
NF-
B is a dimeric transcription factor formed by the hetero- or homodimerization of proteins in the Rel family, including p50 and p65. Activation of the NF-
B proteins plays a central role in inflammation through the regulation of genes encoding proinflammatory cytokines, chemokines, and adhesion molecules (6). Our results also demonstrated that GTFC-induced nuclear translocation of p65 containing NF-
B in HUVECs and a selective inhibitor of NF-
B, PDTC, inhibited the release of IL-6 to a much greater extent than IL-8 at both a low concentration (25 µM) and a higher concentration (50 µM). Such a discrepancy, as found in the MAPKs, suggested further the IL-6 and IL-8 might be differentially regulated in HUVECs upon stimulation with GTFs. Distinct pathways as well as the signaling events upstream await further investigation. In contrast to the activation of IL-6 or IL-8, induced expression of adhesion molecules E-selectin, VCAM-1, and ICAM-1 was totally dependent on the activation of NF-
B, because PDTC completely blocked the surface expression of these adhesion molecules. The promoters of the E-selectin, VCAM-l, and ICAM-1 genes contain recognition sequences for NF-
B. Direct binding of NF-
B to these sites in vitro has been demonstrated in HUVECs after TNF-
stimulation. The stimulatory effect achieved by rGTFC on the expression of adhesion molecules and adherence of U937 cells was comparable to that by the S. mutans whole cells, whereas the stimulation achieved by NHS1DD was reduced significantly. These results suggested that GTFs play a significant role in monocyte recruitment by up-regulation of adhesion molecules through the activation of NF-
B.
One important question in such a model is whether the induced adhesion of U937 by GTFC was direct or indirect through the combinatorial effects of IL-6 and sIL-6R
. In our experimental model, gp130 protein expression could be detected in HUVECs but exogenous sIL-6R
was undetectable. Nevertheless, IL-6 when added alone could enhance ICAM-I expression and U937 adherence. IL-6 has been reported to induce activation of HUVECs directly, as well as lymphocyte-endothelial cell adhesion (55), although HUVECs express the gp130 transducer but not IL-6R
. In addition, IL-6 could exert its autocrine effect on HUVECs through an IL-6/IL-6R
/gp130 complex to induce the release of MCP-1, a key chemokine for monocytes (33). Specifically, IL-6 is able to form a complex with sIL-6R
, before forming a complex with gp130 homodimers, and activate HUVECs for chemokine production and adhesion molecule expression (44). Similar results were obtained in the present study: greater (fold) expression of ICAM-I and U937 adherence was achieved when exogenous sIL-6R
was added in addition to IL-6. As well as MCP-1, IL-8 could also arrest rolling monocytes to adhere firmly onto HUVECs by inducing the expression of specific integrin adhesion receptor on the monocytes, probably through signaling pathways distinct from MCP-1 (23). Primary cultured HUVECs constitutively express IL-8, as demonstrated in this and another report (26), and might account for the basal level of U937 adherence detected in the untreated HUVECs. Addition of IL-6 and sIL-6R
, within physiological concentrations (<500 ng ml1), to thrombin-activated HUVECs induced the secretion of MCP-1 but not IL-8 (33). A similar observation also was made in the present studythat addition of IL-6 plus sIL-6R
could induce the expression of MCP-1 but not IL-8 (data not shown).
In conclusion, we have demonstrated that streptococcal GTFs could activate endothelial cells to enhance the expression of IL-6 and adhesion molecules, which act in concert to arrest monocyte adherence to endothelial cells. Such an interaction might take place in vivo during IE, resulting in the chronic inflammation and damage to the underlying endocardium caused by persistent release of bacterial modulins, such as GTFs, instead of the whole bacterium.
This work was supported in part by the National Science Council (grants NSC-922320-B002-183, NSC-932320-B002-041, and NSC-942320-B-002-007) and National Health Research Institute grants (grant NHRI-EX91-9139SI, NHRI-EX92-9139SI, NHRI-EX93-9139SI, and NHRI-EX94-9432-SI).
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