|
|
||||||||

Departments of
*
Microbiology and Immunology and
Neurology, The Medical School, Newcastle, United Kingdom
| Abstract |
|---|
|
|
|---|
determining expression of the entire CD3-TCR
complex. Each of the variable molecules was expressed independently,
with the exception that CD3 was restricted to cells that also expressed
CD2. Treatment with drugs that affect DNA methylation and histone
acetylation could augment the expression of at least some of the
variable molecules. The striking phenotypic similarity between EL4 and
RMA led us to examine the state of their TCRß genes. Both lines had
identical rearrangements on both chromosomes, indicating that RMA is in
fact a subline of EL4. Overall, these findings suggest that EL4 is an
NK-T cell tumor that may have retained a genetic mechanism that permits
the variable expression of a restricted group of molecules involved in
recognition and signaling. | Introduction |
|---|
|
|
|---|
In contrast to the growing body of knowledge concerning inhibitory receptors on NK cells, the nature of the receptors that deliver activatory signals upon contact with diseased cells has remained controversial. One view has been that NK cells express specific receptors for target cell molecules. For example, there is convincing evidence that members of another C-type lectin family, the NKRP1 family, can deliver activating signals to NK cells (10, 11). A second possibility, also supported by considerable experimental data, is that NK cells use more generic receptors for this purpose. For example, some NK cells express Fc receptors, principally CD16 (12), but also CD32 (13), that deliver activating signals following interaction with cell-bound Ig, or with as-yet-unknown structures expressed on some target cells (14). NK cells can also receive activating signals via other molecules, such as CD2 (15), CD28 (16), CD40 ligand (17), and LFA-1 (18). Interestingly, during clonal development of fetal NK cells in vitro, several potentially activating or modulatory surface receptors that are expressed on subsets of NK cells in vivo, including members of the NKRP1, Ly6, and CD45 families, are expressed in a heterogeneous manner (8).
Recently, subpopulations of T cells, designated NK-T cells, have been
described that appear to utilize the same recognition modalities as NK
cells, but which in addition possess an Ag-specific receptor (for a
review, see Bendelac et al. (19)). This receptor may be of
either
ß or 
type, and in some subpopulations of NK-T cells
is of restricted diversity, one population of
ß NK-T cells having
a largely invariant V
14-J
281
-chain paired with a Vß8,
Vß7, or Vß2-containing ß-chain that endows these cells with the
ability to recognize common microbial lipids presented by CD1
molecules. The expression of CD94/NKG2 (20, 21) and Ly49
(22, 23) receptors on NK-T cells has been documented, but
the extent to which these cells express and utilize the same activating
receptors as NK cells is unknown.
Tumor cells provide a potentially useful means for studying the biochemistry and genetics of molecules that are expressed on small populations of cells that are difficult to grow in large quantities in vitro. With this in mind, we examined a range of tumor cell lines for the expression of molecules that have been implicated in NK cell recognition. We report here the unexpected findings that 1) both EL4 and RMA cells express a number of NK-related C-type lectin molecules, 2) that the expression of these and certain other surface molecules is subject to a high degree of variation, and 3) that EL4 and RMA cells have identical TCRß gene rearrangements and presumably therefore have a common origin.
| Materials and Methods |
|---|
|
|
|---|
RMA, RMA/S, and a TAP2-transfectant of RMA/S, mtp2, were obtained from Drs. R. Glas and K. Karre (Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, Sweden), who also provided the EL4 line used in most of the studies described in this paper. RBL5 cells were kindly provided by Dr. W. Green (Dartmouth Medical School, Hanover, NH). RMA/S lines transfected with Dd and CD1 were kindly provided by Dr. D. Raulet (University of California, Berkeley, CA) and Dr. M. Kronenberg (University of California, Los Angeles, CA), respectively. These cells, and the B cell lymphoma A20, were cultured in DMEM (52100-039; Life Technologies, Paisley, U.K.) supplemented with 2x nonessential amino acids, 5 x 10-5 M 2-ME, and 5% FBS (F-7524; Sigma, Poole, U.K.) in a 10% CO2 atmosphere at 37o. Cells were cloned by adding 100 µl of medium containing 0.5 or 1 cell/ml to flat-bottom 96-well culture plates. Cell lines were regularly tested for mycoplasma as described previously (24) and found to be negative.
Aliquots of
1 x 106 EL4 cells were
incubated for 24 h with various doses of 5-azacytidine (freshly
prepared), trichostatin A (made up from a 10 mM stock in ethanol stored
at -20o), or, as control, 5-azaguanine (made up
by dissolving at 4 mM in 0.5 M NaOH, then diluting to 1 mM in PBS, and
storing at 4o). The cells were then washed and
returned to culture for 57 days before staining. All chemicals were
purchased from Sigma.
Abs and staining
The main Abs used in this study were as follows: KT3
anti-CD3
(25), YTS 191 anti-CD4
(26), 2.4G2 anti-CD16/32 (27), Pgp1
anti-CD44 (28), A1 anti-Ly49A (29),
5E6 anti-Ly49C (30), 4D11 anti-Ly49G
(31), PK136 anti-NK1.1 (32), and 10A7
anti-10A7 (33), all kindly provided by the original
investigators, with the exception of 2.4G2 which was obtained from the
American Type Culture Collection (Manassas, VA). Aliquots of 2 x
105 cells were incubated with either medium or
saturating concentrations of these Abs in HBSS supplemented with 2%
FBS and 0.2% sodium azide (H2FA) for 20 min at
4o, washed twice with cold H2FA, then incubated
with a saturating concentration of FITC sheep anti-mouse Ig (Harlan
SeraLab, Loughborough, U.K.) in H2FA for 20 min at
4o. After a further wash in H2FA, cells were
resuspended in H2FA, and single viable cells, selected on the basis of
forward and side-scatter characteristics, were analyzed on a FACScan
(Becton Dickinson, Mountain View, CA). Two-color staining was performed
using the above Abs and/or PE- or Cychrome-conjugated Abs of the same
specificity purchased from PharMingen (San Diego, CA).
Preparation of DNA
A total of 12 x 107 cells were
incubated in 500 µl of 10 mM Tris/1 mM EDTA buffer (pH 7.4)
containing 2 mg/ml proteinase K and 1% SDS for 416 h at
37o with gentle shaking. DNA was then
phenol/chloroform extracted, precipitated with ethanol, washed in 75%
ethanol, dissolved in Tris/EDTA buffer at pH 8.0, and treated with
RNase A at 100 µg/ml for 30 min at 37o.
Analysis of rearrangements at the TCRß locus was performed
essentially as described by van Meerwijk et al. (34) using
the primers shown in Table I
.
|
RNA was prepared using RNAzol B (Biogenesis, Poole, U.K.) at the
rate of 1 ml per 107 cells according to the
manufacturers instructions. cDNA was prepared from
1 µg of RNA
using an oligo(dT) primer and a Promega (Madison, WI) Reverse
Transcription kit. Aliquots (1 µl) of cDNA solution were added to 49
µl of PCR mixture containing 200 µM dNTPs, 12 mM
Mg2+, 0.75 U Taq polymerase, and 1
µM forward and reverse primers. The Ly49 and CD3 primers have been
described previously (38); most of the other primers used,
together with their annealing temperature
(Tm), are shown in Table I
. The
specificity of the Ly49 primers has been confirmed by sequencing
(38). The specificity of the other primers is based on 1)
the work of others (see references in Table I
), 2) the presence of a
single product band of the correct molecular size on gels, and 3) PCR
product being detected only in cells that expressed the relevant
molecule at the cell surface. To establish which Vß region was
present in the TCR in EL4 cells, we used the set of primers described
by Casanova et al. (37), kindly provided by Dr. A. Mellor
(Clinical Sciences Centre, London, U.K.) and Dr. A.G. Diamond
(University of Newcastle, Newcastle, U.K.). For sequencing, additional
Vß12 and Cß primers bearing M13 tags were constructed (Table I
).
Generally, 35 cycles were run at 95°C for 1 min,
Tm for 1 min, 72°C for 30 s,
with a final extension time of 10 min. Aliquots of the reaction were
examined on agarose gels containing ethidium bromide.
| Results |
|---|
|
|
|---|
In a search for cells that express NK-related molecules, we
examined a panel of tumor cell lines available in our laboratory. Of
the lines initially examined, only two, EL4 and RMA, expressed
molecules encoded in the NK complex. Surprisingly, in both cases the
expression of NK-related molecules was found to be highly variable.
Thus, despite the fact that EL4 has previously been reported to express
Ly49A (23, 29, 39), one line of EL4, EL4(S), that had been
maintained in our laboratory for many years, showed no detectable
expression of Ly49A, whereas another line of EL4, obtained from Dr. K.
Karre and used in all of the studies described below, did express
Ly49A, but only on a proportion of the cells (Fig. 1
). Neither EL4 line showed any
detectable surface expression of Ly49C, -I, or -G. By contrast, the RMA
line stained strongly and uniformly for Ly49A, was negative for Ly49C
and -I, but expressed Ly49G in a heterogeneous manner (Fig. 1
).
Expression of Ly49 molecules was confirmed and extended by RT-PCR
analysis: EL4 was found to express mRNA for Ly49B as well as Ly49A, but
lacked mRNA for Ly49C, -D, -E, -G1, -G2, -G3, and -H; RMA expressed
mRNA for Ly49A, -B, -G1, -G2, and -G3, but not for Ly49C, -D, -E, or -H
(data not shown).
|
RIII) and CD32 (Fc
RII). PCR analysis,
performed as described by Koyasu (35), revealed that it
was CD32 and not CD16 that was expressed by EL4 and RMA cells (data not
shown), in agreement with previous reports concerning EL4 (41, 42).
A number of other molecules were also found to be expressed
heterogeneously on one or both of these tumor cell lines, including
CD2, CD3, CD4, and CD44 (Fig. 1
). Most molecules examined, however,
were consistently expressed in a uniform manner on both the parent EL4
and RMA lines and on all sublines and clones examined; for example,
Thy-1, CD5, CD45, Kb, and
Db being expressed on all cells, and 2B4, CD8,
CD25, and various CD45R isoforms being absent from all cells.
Furthermore, the phenomenon of variable Ag expression appeared to be
largely confined to EL4 and RMA, as staining of several other tumor
cell lines (including YAC-1, R1.1, SL8, LBRM, L1210, P815, A20, C1498,
and J774) with a large panel of Abs showed, with very few exceptions,
entirely uniform patterns of expression or nonexpression (data not
shown).
Clonal analysis reveals that many of the surface molecules that are expressed in a mosaic manner on EL4 and RMA are continuously switching
The heterogeneity in expression of surface molecules on EL4 and
RMA could have a number of trivial explanations, including spontaneous
mutation during the many years of growth in vitro and in vivo,
contamination with other cell lines, or cell cycle-related expression.
To investigate these possibilities, the lines were cloned and the
clones examined at an early stage of development (1020 days after
cloning) for expression of variable molecules. In a typical experiment
in which EL4 was cloned at 0.05 cell/well, where the probability of
clones having arisen from a single progenitor was >98% (as judged
from Poisson analysis of the frequency of wells having colonies), 15/30
clones were found to be uniformly positive for CD32, 13/30 were
uniformly negative, and 2/30 showed heterogeneous staining. When the
same clones were stained for Ly49A, 3 were found to be uniformly
positive, 1 was uniformly negative, and 26 were heterogeneous. Examples
of the staining patterns are shown in Fig. 2
. When heterogeneous clones were recloned,
heterogeneous Ag expression was again seen on many of the granddaughter
clones.
|
Over a period of time the proportions of cells expressing particular
surface molecules fluctuated considerably, and clones that were
uniformly positive or negative for a given Ag often became
heterogeneous. Examples of two clones that were followed for >1 year
are shown in Fig. 3
. The finding that
clones that initially appeared to be uniformly negative or positive for
a given Ag often became heterogeneous for the expression of that Ag, as
illustrated for 10A7 in clone 1 and for CD2, CD3, and Ly49A in clone
3D, raised the possibility that clones that appeared to be uniformly
negative or positive for a particular Ag were in fact heterogeneous at
a level below the sensitivity of detection (about 1%). That this was
indeed the case was confirmed in several cases by showing that
Ag-positive cells could be obtained from apparently negative
populations by positive selection with magnetic beads (data not
shown).
|
That at least some of the Ags displaying variable expression on
EL4 and RMA cells can vary independently from each other is shown by
the data in Fig. 3
in which Ly49A, 10A7, CD32, and CD44 showed
heterogeneous expression on clone 1, whereas CD2 and CD3 were expressed
uniformly. By contrast, in clone 3D, CD32 and CD44 were expressed
uniformly, whereas CD2 and CD3 were expressed heterogeneously. On the
other hand, some of the data in Fig. 3
suggest the possibility of
linked variation, such as between Ly49A and CD44 in clone 1 and among
Ly49A, CD2, and CD3 in clone 3D. To address this issue more directly,
cloned populations of EL4 and RMA cells were examined by two-color
immunofluorescence. Fig. 4
shows some
examples of the results obtained. The most common finding, illustrated
by the expression of CD44 and CD32 on EL4 clone 1A, and of CD4 and 10A7
on RMA clone D3, was that the expression of two variable Ags was
completely unlinked, the frequency of double positive and double
negative cells being close to that expected for random assortment
(Table II
). In some cases, illustrated by
the expression of CD2 and Ly49A on EL4 clone 3E, a partial but
significant (p = 2.7 x
10-4) inverse correlation was found between the
expression of two variable molecules. Because this inverse correlation
was only partial (a significant proportion of double positive cells
being present), and was not consistently observed for the expression of
these Ags in other clones, it most likely arose either as a consequence
of the dominant growth of subclones of cells within the clonal
population or as a reflection of a random switching event that occurred
at a formative stage in the development of the clone. A similar partial
correlation was found between the expression of Ly49G and 10A7 on RMA
clone D3 (Fig. 4
); this partial coordinate expression of 10A7 and Ly49G
was also seen on each of several randomly chosen subclones of D3 (data
not shown). However, by far the most striking case of linked
expression, was that between CD2 and CD3: among the dozens of clones
examined in this study we found not a single instance in which the
proportion of CD3+ cells significantly exceeded
the proportion of CD2+ cells. The linkage between
CD2 and CD3 expression was most strikingly illustrated by EL4 clone 3D
in which nearly all cells were either double positive or double
negative, and few if any cells expressed CD3 in the absence of CD2
(Fig. 4
, Table II
).
|
|
As noted above, surface expression of Ly49 molecules on parental
EL4 and RMA lines correlated with the presence of the corresponding
mRNA. As shown in Fig. 5
, this was also
true for other molecules expressed in a variable manner. Interestingly,
clones that lacked expression of CD3 contained mRNA for CD3
, CD3
,
and CD3
, but were deficient in expression of mRNA for CD3
.
|
In many systems gene expression has been found to be linked to the
demethylation of critical cytidine residues (43, 44, 45) and
to the acetylation of nucleosomal histones in gene regulatory regions
(46, 47). In at least some cases, these two events seem to
be linked (48). To determine whether these processes might
be involved in the mosaic expression of surface molecules on EL4 cells,
we examined whether transient exposure of cloned EL4 cells to
5-azacytidine, an inhibitor of DNA methylation, and/or trichostatin A,
an inhibitor of histone deacetylase, would affect the expression of
variable Ags. Cells were pretreated for 24 h with drugs, then
washed and cultured for a further 47 days in drug-free medium before
analysis. Some clones showed no change in expression of any of the Ags
examined. However, several clones showed a dramatic increase in the
proportion of cells expressing 10A7 or CD32 when treated for 24 h
with 1050 µM 5-azacytidine. Trichostatin A had no effect on
Ag expression when used alone. However, when combined with low doses
(110 µM) of 5-azacytidine, synergistic effects were often observed.
A typical result involving the induction of 10A7 is shown in Fig. 6
.
|
The finding that EL4 and RMA shared not only an unusual
NK1.1+, 10A7+,
Ly49+, CD3+,
CD32+ phenotype, but also the unusual property of
mosaic expression of these and other surface molecules, led us to
consider the possibility that EL4 and RMA might be directly related.
Using a PCR-based method we found that both tumor lines had similar
rearrangements at their TCRß gene loci. Thus, at the Jß1 locus they
both possessed a partial Dß1-Jß1.5 rearrangement and lacked a
germline Dß1-Jß1 band (Fig. 7
A), whereas at the Jß2
locus they both lacked partial Dß1-Jß2 (data not shown) and
Dß2-Jß2 rearrangements (Fig. 7
B) and displayed a
germline Dß2-Jß2 band (Fig. 7
B). Sequencing of the
Dß1-Jß1.5 partial rearrangement showed it to be identical in both
EL4 and RMA, having the junctional sequence
Dß1(gggacaggggg)-N(gca)-Jß1.5(taacaacca... . ). These results
agree with an earlier study that demonstrated that EL4
possessed a partial Dß1-Jß1 rearrangement and expressed a
full-length Cß2-containing mRNA transcript (49).
|
To exclude the possibility that the RMA line had been mixed up with EL4
in our laboratory, we examined several RMA-related lines that were
distinguishable from EL4: 1) the RMA/S line derived by Karre et al.
(51), which we obtained directly from the originating
laboratory, and which we demonstrated to have the expected
characteristics of RMA/S (lack of expression of
Kb and Db under normal
culture conditions, but expression of these at
26oC, and inducibility by
Kb and Db specific
peptides); 2) mtp2, a TAP-transfected revertant of RMA/S, generated by
Powis et al. (52), which we obtained from Drs. R Glas and K. Karre, and
which we confirmed to have the expected characterisics (partially but
not completely restored expression of Kb and
Db, resistance to G418 (in addition, this line is
morphologically distinct from all other EL4/RMA-related lines in our
laboratory); 3) an RMA line transfected with Dd
(53) obtained directly from Dr. D. Raulet and which we
confirmed to have the unique characteristics of coexpression of
Kb, Db, and
Dd, and resistance to G418; and 4) an RMA/S line
transfected with CD1 (54) obtained directly from Dr. M.
Kronenberg and confirmed to have the unique phenotype of lack of
expression of Kb and Db
under normal culture condtions, expression of the C57 isoform of
ß2-microglobulin, extremely high expression of
CD1 (at least 10-fold higher than on any other cell line in our
laboratory), and resistance to G418. RT-PCR performed on RNA extracted
from these lines, but not on RNA extracted in parallel from unrelated
tumor cell lines, revealed a Vß12 product. In each case its sequence
was identical to the EL4 Vß12 sequence. In addition, we found that a
line of RBL5 that we obtained, RBL5 being the parent line from which
both RMA and RMA/S were derived (51), also expressed a
Vß12 transcript with the same junctional sequence as that found in
EL4. Finally, following communication of our findings to another group,
they were able to establish that their lines of EL4 and RMA expressed
full-length rearranged V
10-containing transcripts of identical
sequence, and that their line of RBL5 possessed both Vß12 and V
10
transcripts (T. van Hall, M. Kraakman, C. Melief, F. Ossendorp, and R.
Offringa, manuscript in preparation).
| Discussion |
|---|
|
|
|---|
That EL4 expresses the prototypic member of the Ly49 family, Ly49A, has been known for some time (29, 39). What had not been generally appreciated is that EL4 expresses at least two other members of Ly49 family, Ly49G (confirming another recent report (23)), and Ly49B (at least at the RNA level), and that the expression of Ly49A and Ly49G varies considerably both between and within sublines. The latter observation, coupled with the finding of freshly derived clones showing mosaic expression of these molecules, demonstrates that the genes encoding Ly49A and -G molecules exist in a heritable metastable state, switching on and off in a frequent and apparently random manner. By contrast, we did not detect expression of Ly49C, -D, -E, -F, -H, or -I in EL4 cells. However, EL4 did express certain other NK-related molecules. In particular, expression of NK1.1 (NKRP1C) was found, albeit at a low level, together with expression of the NKRP1 molecules recognized by the mAb 10A7, which are known to include NKRP1A and NKRP1B (V. Kumar, personal communication). The 10A7-defined molecule(s) were almost always expressed in a mosaic manner, even on newly derived clones, and by this criterion were the most variable of all of the molecules we investigated.
Several other molecules, namely CD2, CD3, CD4, CD32, and CD44, were
also found to vary on EL4 cells, although, as judged from the frequency
of clones that displayed mosaic expression, the rate of switching was
much lower than for Ly49A, Ly49G, and 10A7. In every case, expression
was controlled at the mRNA level, and apparently independently for each
molecule. The striking exception was the strong and consistent linkage
of CD3 expression to that of CD2. Because expression of the entire
CD3-TCR complex appeared to be controlled by expression of CD3
, this
finding suggests that, at least in EL4 cells, transcription of the
CD3
gene rarely occurs in the absence of transcription of the CD2
gene. Linkage between these gene products has previously been reported
at the functional level, signaling through CD2 being dependent on the
expression of CD3
(55, 56). Lack of expression of
CD3
would also be expected to prevent signaling via GPI-linked
surface molecules such as Thy-1 and Ly6 (57) and the
recently described NK activating molecule p46 (58). In
addition, silencing of the CD3
genetic region may block expression
of the transcription factor Oct1 that is encoded on the opposite DNA
strand to CD3
(59), leading to an absence of all those
proteins whose expression is dependent on this factor.
At present we have little information on the nature of the regulatory events responsible for the mosaic expression of certain molecules in EL4 cells. One possibility would be that it is caused by the limiting availability of key transcription factors. However, in view of the independent variation of expression of several different molecules, this would require a large number of relatively gene-specific transcription factors to be close to threshold levels. An alternative possibility would be that the binding of readily available transcription factors was affected by changes in local chromatin structure or histone modification. In support of this, our studies showed that the expression of some of the variable Ags could be altered by drugs that affect the methylation levels of DNA or the acetylation levels of histones, in line with a previous report that 5-azacytidine treatment of a Thy-1- variant of EL4 restored expression of Thy-1, and that this was associated with demethylation of the Thy-1 gene promoter (60). Indeed, the mosaic expression of surface molecules on EL4 cells bears a striking resemblance to position effect variegation in which genes located close to the borders of euchromatin and heterochromatin are switched on and off by saltatory shifts in the positions of these borders, perhaps triggered by changes in methylation (61). Increased methylation of genes in cultured cells could lead to the development of a functionally hemizygous state (62) or even the complete loss of expression of nonessential proteins (63, 64). However, we suspect that at least some of the phenotypic variability we have observed in EL4 lines is of a nontrivial nature in that 1) in contrast to the occasional and largely irreversible loss of gene expression that occurs through epigenetic mutation in long-lived cell lines, the changes in gene expression in EL4 are much more frequent and occur in both directions, 2) many, perhaps all, of the molecules that show variable expression on EL4 cells are expressed in a heterogeneous manner on NK and NK-T (see below) cell populations in vivo, and 3) freshly established lines of fetal mouse NK cells derived from single progenitor cells show mosaic expression of several of these same molecules, most importantly those encoded in the NK complex, including the NKRP1 molecules recognized by the mAb 10A7 (8), Ly49 molecules (8), and Qa1 receptors (9). It is interesting to note that in EL4 lines, there is clear evidence of both coordinated and independent regulation of molecules encoded within the NK complex. Thus, whereas EL4 cells can express Ly49 molecules, they frequently express Ly49A in the absence of Ly49G, and never express Ly49C or -I. Similarly, although the NKRP1-encoded molecules recognized by 10A7 tend to be expressed on cells that also express Ly49G, the linkage is only partial, and the expression of these NKRP1 molecules is unlinked to those recognized by the PK136 anti-NK1.1 mAb. Analysis of the factors controlling the expression of these molecules in EL4 cells may therefore provide insights into the mechanism responsible for the stochastic expression of these molecules in vivo.
Although EL4 lacks the canonical V
14-J
281 chain (M. Unnikrishnan,
unpublished observations) that is expressed by a large proportion of
NK-T cells (65), and expresses a Vß12-containing rather
than a Vß8-, Vß7-, or Vß2-containing receptor (66),
the findings reported here suggest that EL4 may be a transformed NK-T
cell line. First, not only do NK-T cells and EL4 cells express Ly49 and
NKRP1 molecules, but they both do so in an apparently stochastic
manner. The heterogeneous expression of Ly49 molecules on NK-T cells in
vivo has been well documented (23, 67). With regard to
NKRP1 molecules, Chen et al. (68) have reported that NK1.1
was frequently lost upon activation of splenic NK-T cells in vitro.
Furthermore, two recent studies have provided compelling evidence for
the existence of populations of NK-T cells in vivo that lack NK1.1
(69, 70), and when human NK-T cells were cloned by
Davodeau et al. (71), four of five clones showed
heterogeneous expression of NKRP1A. Second, like NK-T cells in vivo,
EL4 exists in alternate forms that are either
CD4+CD8- or
CD4-CD8-. Although the
relationship between the CD4+ and
CD4- subsets of NK-T cells in vivo is unclear,
Chen et al. (68) found that the expression of CD4 on
CD4+ splenic NK-T cells is unstable, being lost
from some but not all cells following activation in vitro. Third, like
NK-T cells (72, 73), EL4 secretes IL4 upon stimulation
(74).
The most unexpected finding in our study was that the EL4 and RMA lines that we investigated, which included the RMA and RMA/S lines from the originating laboratory, shared 1) the same Vß gene rearrangements on both chromosomes, 2) expressed Vß12 containing receptors on the surface, and 3) contained in-frame Vß12 RNA transcripts of identical sequence. This sequence was in turn identical to that previously reported for TCRß transcripts in the TIB39 subline of EL4 obtained from the American Type Culture Collection (50). The finding that RMA and RMA/S are almost certainly variants of EL4 does not affect the validity of any of the important findings relating to Ag processing and NK recognition that have been made using these lines. Indeed, it may lead to important insights and rationalization of existing data. For example, the striking resistance of EL4 and RMA to lysis by activated NK cells, and their apparent sharing of a novel protective class I molecule (9), is now revealed not to be a coincidence. However, our finding of extensive epigenetic instability in the expression of various molecules in EL4/RMA lines provides a strong and salutory warning against the assumption that variant lines of these cells, e.g., RMA and RMA/S, are identical in all respects other than those controlled by the mutated or transfected genes. At the same time, our results have provided rigorous confirmation that RMA, RMA/S, and various transfectant lines derived from them are indeed all variants of the same line, albeit EL4. In addition, we have established that the EL4 Vß12 sequence is expressed in three widely used variants of EL4 namely the "Salk" variant, EL4(S), which displays different retroviral Ags to those found on other EL4 lines (75), a ß2-microglobulin mutant of EL4, C4.4 (76), and its ß2-microglobulin transfected revertant, E50 (76), confirming that these are indeed of EL4 origin.
Our finding that a line of the RBL5 tumor, from which both RMA and
RMA/S were derived (51), also expresses the EL4 Vß
transcript, strongly suggests that RBL5 had inadvertently been
contaminated with EL4 cells before its distribution to the Karolinska
Institute. Remarkably, during the preparation of this paper, we found
that two other tumor cell lines in our laboratory express the canonical
EL4 Vß12 transcript. One is a line of the E
K1 tumor
(77), and the other a line of MBL2, a tumor that has
previously been reported to express Ly49 molecules (39),
and which was derived at the same time and in the same laboratory as
RBL5 (78). (A third line, E
G2 (81), was
found to express a Vß12-containing receptor but this was associated
with a Vß12-Jß2.1 transcript that had a distinct junctional
sequence from that found in EL4 lines.) Although these results require
confirmation in other laboratories, it is clear that contamination of
cell lines with EL4 has been a widespread but previously undocumented
occurrence, with profound implications for the validity of a wide range
of studies, especially those on tumor specific Ags. We suggest that all
C57 T cell tumor lines, especially those reported to express Ly49
molecules such as TIMI4 (79) and C6VL-B (29),
be suspected of being EL4 until proven otherwise.
| Acknowledgments |
|---|
| Footnotes |
|---|
2 Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Colin Brooks, Department of Microbiology and Immunology, The Medical School, Newcastle, NE2 4HH, U.K. ![]()
Received for publication November 29, 1999. Accepted for publication March 2, 2000.
| References |
|---|
|
|
|---|
RIIC gene. Blood 91:2369.
T cells expressing NK cell receptors. J. Immunol. 159:3723.[Abstract]
/
stimulated by nonpeptidic ligands. J. Exp. Med. 186:1769.
/ß antigen receptor. J. Immunol. 138:815.[Abstract]
-ß TCR+CD4-CD8- and
-
TCR+CD4-CD8- cells. J. Exp. Med. 179:1957.
ß TCR expression of peripheral V
14+ NK T cells. J. Immunol. 158:2076.[Abstract]
receptor II encoded by the Fc
R
gene. J. Exp. Med. 170:73.
chain. J. Exp. Med. 187:367.
dependence of the CD2 pathway of activation in T lymphocytes and natural killer cells. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 89:1492.
cytoplasmic domain mediates CD2-induced T cell activation. J. Exp. Med. 176:139.
/
/
locus is colinear with and transcribed antisense to the gene encoding the transcription factor Oct-1. J. Immunol. 151:3152.[Abstract]
14+ TCR
chain in NK1.1+ T cell populations. Int. Immunol. 7:1157.
ß T cells expressing invariant TCR
-chains. J. Immunol. 158:5603.[Abstract]
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
V. Pascal, N. R. Nathan, E. Claudio, U. Siebenlist, and S. K. Anderson NF-{kappa}B p50/p65 Affects the Frequency of Ly49 Gene Expression by NK Cells J. Immunol., August 1, 2007; 179(3): 1751 - 1759. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
B. Vanherberghen, K. Andersson, L. M. Carlin, E. N. M. Nolte-`t Hoen, G. S. Williams, P. Hoglund, and D. M. Davis Human and murine inhibitory natural killer cell receptors transfer from natural killer cells to target cells PNAS, November 30, 2004; 101(48): 16873 - 16878. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||