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DNAX Research Institute, Palo Alto, CA 94304
| Abstract |
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-chain. Cells
transfected with both receptor subunits proliferated in response to
purified, recombinant human TSLP, with induced phosphorylation of Stat3
and Stat5. Human TSLPR and IL-7R
are principally coexpressed on
monocytes and dendritic cell populations and to a much lesser extent on
various lymphoid cells. In accord, we find that human TSLP functions
mainly on myeloid cells; it induces the release of T cell-attracting
chemokines from monocytes and, in particular, enhances the maturation
of CD11c+ dendritic cells, as evidenced by the strong
induction of the costimulatory molecules CD40 and CD80 and the enhanced
capacity to elicit proliferation of naive T cells. | Introduction |
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As is frequently observed among structurally related members of the
hemopoietic cytokine family, mTSLP and mIL-7 share a receptor subunit,
the IL-7R
-chain, in their respective signaling complexes, partly
explaining the overlapping biological profiles of these two related
cytokines (7). However, whereas the IL-7R complex requires
the common
-chain (R
c) in addition to IL-7R
, mTSLP
instead recruits a TSLP-specific chain named TSLPR (7, 8)
that had been previously identified as an orphan hemopoietic receptor
most closely related to R
c (9, 10). Mouse
TSLP sequentially binds first with low affinity to TSLPR and then forms
a high affinity complex with IL-7R
(7). Both TSLP and
IL-7 induce tyrosine phosphorylation of the transcription factor Stat5,
but whereas IL-7-mediated signaling occurs via activation of Janus
kinases JAK1 and JAK3, TSLP is unable to activate either enzyme
(3, 11), but may instead interact with JAK2
(10). This evidence points to as yet undefined biological
effects of TSLP that are not shared with IL-7. Although mouse TSLP was
first reported in 1994, no human homologue of TSLP has been
identified.
Here we describe a new human hemopoietic cytokine and its corresponding
primary receptor, respectively called hTSLP and hTSLPR. We provide
evidence that the functional receptor for hTSLP consists of hTSLPR and
hIL-7R
, and activation of this complex leads to phosphorylation of
both Stat5 and Stat3. Biological characterization indicates that hTSLP
acts primarily on myeloid cells. As suggested by the coexpression
profile of TSLPR and IL-7R
on monocytes and dendritic cells, we find
that human TSLP can induce the release of T cell-attracting chemokines
from monocytes and potently enhances the T cell stimulatory capacity of
the CD11c+ subset of dendritic cells.
| Materials and Methods |
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Human 293T epithelial cells were maintained in DMEM (Life Technologies, Gaithersburg, MD) supplemented with 10% FCS. The pro-B cell line Ba/F3 was maintained in RPMI 1640 (Life Technologies) supplemented with 10% FCS and 10 ng/ml mouse IL-3. QBI-293A human embryonic kidney cells used for adenovirus expression were grown in CMF-1 medium (CellWorks, San Diego, CA). BOSC23 cells were maintained in DMEM-10% FCS and guanine phosphoribosyltransferase selection reagents (Specialty Media, Lavellette, NJ). The cells were transferred to DMEM-10% FCS without guanine phosphoribosyltransferase selection reagents 2 days before transfection.
Adenovirus expression of human TSLP and purification of the recombinant protein
The mature coding region of human TSLP (residues 29159) was fused to the signal sequence of mouse SLAM (12) and inserted into a modified version of transfer vector pQB1-AdCMV5-GFP (Quantum Biotechnologies) by PCR. Recombinant adenovirus was produced as described in Quantum applications manual 24AL98. Recombinant virus was used to infect 5 x 108 cells in 1 l CMF-1 with culture in a Nunc Cell Factory (Nalge Nunc, Naperville, IL) for 3 days. The culture medium was clarified by centrifugation, dialyzed, and filtered before application to a 5-ml Q-Sepharose column. The Q-Sepharose flow-through, which contained human TSLP, was loaded onto a 5-ml HiTrap heparin (Pharmacia, Uppsala, Sweden) column at 5 ml/min. The column was washed with 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0) and 1 mM EDTA and eluted with a gradient from 0 to 2.5 M NaCl in 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0) and 1 mM EDTA. The peak fractions were concentrated, dialyzed against PBS and quantitated by SDS-PAGE and Coomassie staining using lysozyme as a standard. A similar procedure was followed to prepare mouse TSLP.
Ba/F3 retroviral-mediated gene transfer and proliferation assays
Human IL-7R
cDNA and human TSLPR cDNA were cloned by PCR in
the retroviral vectors pMX and its derivative pMX-puro to give
pMX-hIL-7R
and pMX-puro-TSLPR, respectively (13). The
BOSC23 packaging cell line was transiently transfected with retrovirus
constructs using Fugene 6 (Life Technologies) according to the
manufacturers protocol. Retrovirus-containing supernatants were
collected after 2 days. Ba/F3 cells were infected with retroviral
supernatants for 48 h on petri dishes coated with 40 µg/ml
recombinant fibronectin fragments (Retronectin; Takara, Shiga,
Japan). After 48 h puromycin (1 µg/ml) was added to those cells
infected with virus obtained from pMX-puro constructs. The efficiency
of infection of Ba/F3 cells was >90% as assessed by parallel
infection with the test construct pMXI-EGFP encoding the enhanced
green-fluorescent protein (EGFP). Proliferation assays using Ba/F3
cells were performed as previously described (14). Cells
were washed three times with RPMI medium and plated at a density of
5000 cells/well. Cells were grown with serial 3-fold dilutions of mouse
IL-3, human and mouse TSLP, or human IL-7 (all starting concentrations
of 225 ng/ml). After 36 h at 37°C, Alamar Blue REDOX indicator
(Trek Diagnostic Systems, Medina, NY) was added to a final
concentration of 10% (v/v) to each well. Cells were allowed to grow
for 58 h more, after which plates were measured with a
fluorometer.
Quantitation of mRNA expression
cDNA libraries from various tissue and cellular sources were
prepared as described previously (15) and used as
templates for Taqman-PCR analyses. cDNAs (50 ng/reaction) were analyzed
for the expression of hTSLP, hTSLPR, and hIL7R
genes by the
fluorogenic 5'-nuclease PCR assay (16), using an ABI Prism
7700 Sequence Detection System (Perkin-Elmer, Foster City, CA).
Reactions were incubated for 2 min at 50°C, denatured for 10 min at
95°C, and subjected to 40 two-step amplification cycles with
annealing/extension at 60°C for 1 min, followed by denaturation at
95°C for 15 s. The amplicons used for hTSLP, hTSLPR, and
IL-7R
covered bp 246315, 263335, and 519596, respectively
(numbering starts at the start codon), and were analyzed with
6-carboxyfluorescein (FAM)-labeled probes. Values were expressed
as femtograms per 50 ng total cDNA. Primers and probes for human
chemokine and chemokine receptors were obtained from Perkin-Elmer as
predeveloped assay reagents. Chemokine and chemokine receptor
expression was adjusted for the amount of 18SrRNA and compared with the
control (calibrator) samples using the comparative 
CT method (17). Samples were
measured in duplicate. 18S rRNA levels were determined under
primer-limited conditions in multiplex reactions as recommended using a
Vic-labeled probe (Perkin-Elmer).
Cell isolation and culture
PBMC were purified from buffy coats of healthy volunteers (Stanford Blood Bank, Palo Alto, CA) by centrifugation over Ficoll. Human monocytes were isolated from PBMC by negative depletion using anti-CD2 (Leu 5A), anti-CD3 (Leu 4), anti-CD8 (Leu 2a), anti-CD19 (Leu 12), anti-CD20 (Leu 16), anti-CD56 (Leu 19; BD PharMingen, San Jose CA), anti-CD67 (IOM 67; Immunotech, Westbrook, ME), and anti-glycophorin A (10F7 MN; American Type Culture Collection, Manassas, VA) mAbs and sheep anti-mouse IgG-coupled magnetic beads (Dynal, Oslo, Norway) as described previously (18). Monocytes were cultured in RPMI and 10% FCS at a density of 106 cells/ml in the presence or the absence of IL-7 (50 ng/ml) and/or hTSLP (50 ng/ml) for 24 h, and culture supernatants and cells were harvested for quantitation of cytokine production or gene expression analyses. Human CD11c+ dendritic cells (DC) were isolated from PBMC as previously described (19). Briefly, PBMC were incubated with anti-CD3, anti-CD14, anti-CD19, and anti-CD56 mAbs and depleted from lineage-positive cells using magnetic beads (Dynal), and CD11c+ lineage-negative blood DC were subsequently isolated by cell sorting to reach a purity of >99%. Freshly sorted cells were cultured in RPMI 1640 containing 10% FCS at 5 x 104/100 µl in flat-bottom 96-well half-area culture plates or at 1 x 105/200 µl in flat-bottom 96-well plates, with or without TSLP (15 ng/ml).
TARC ELISA
The production of trymus and activation-regulated chemokine (TARC)/CCL17 in culture supernatants was determined by chemokine-specific ELISA using MAB364 as capture reagent and BAF364 as detection reagent (R&D Systems, Minneapolis, MN). The sensitivity of the assay was 50 pg/ml.
DC viability and flow cytometric analysis
After 24 h of culture, DC were harvested and resuspended in an EDTA-containing medium to dissociate the clusters. Viable DC were first counted using trypan blue exclusion of dead cells. Remaining cells were stained with a variety of mouse anti-human FITC-conjugated mAbs including anti-HLA-DR (BD Biosciences, Mountain View, CA); anti-CD40, -CD80, and -CD86 (all from PharMingen); or an Ig-G1 isotype control (BD Biosciences) and were analyzed with a FACScan flow cytometer (BD Biosciences). Dead cells were excluded based on side and forward scatter characteristics.
T cell proliferation assay
Naive CD4+/CD45CD45RA+ T cells were isolated from adult blood buffy coats by negative depletion of cells expressing CD14, CD19, CD56, CD8, CD45RO, HLA-DR, and glycophorin A using magnetic beads (Dynal). More than 95% of the purified cells had the CD4+CD45RA+ naive T cell phenotype. CD11c+ DC were washed twice to remove any cytokine and cocultured with 5 x 104 allogeneic naive CD4+ T cells in round-bottom 96-well culture plates at increasing DC/T cell ratios. All cocultures were conducted in triplicate. DC alone and T cells alone were used as controls. After 5 days cells were pulsed with 1 µCi [3H]thymidine (Amersham, Arlington Heights, IL) for 16 h before harvesting and counting of radioactivity.
Stat3 and Stat5 activation assays
Stable Ba/F3 transfectant cells (
2.5 x
107 cells) were starved for 46 h and then
stimulated at 106 cells/ml for 15 min with either
10 ng/ml mIL-3 or 30 ng/ml hTSLP. After stimulation cells were
harvested and incubated for 15 min at 4°C in lysis buffer containing
50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5), 300 mM NaCl, 2 mM EDTA, 0.875% Brij 97,
0.125% Nonidet P-40, 10 mg/ml aprotinin, 10 mg/ml leupeptin, 1 mM
PMSF, 1 mM Na3VO4, and 1 mM
NaF. Cell lysates were clarified by centrifugation at 12,000 x
g for 15 min, and supernatants were subjected to 8%
SDS-PAGE. Proteins were electrotransferred onto nylon membranes
(Immobilon-P, Millipore, Bradford, MA) and detected by Western blot
analysis using rabbit Abs against anti-phospho-Stat3 and
anti-phospho-Stat5 (New England Biolabs, Beverly, MA) or
anti-Stat3 and anti-Stat5 (Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Santa
Cruz, CA), followed by mouse anti-rabbit Ig HRP. Immunoreactive
bands were visualized with ECL (SuperSignal West Dura Extended Duration
Substrate, Pierce, Rockford, IL) on ECL film (Eastman Kodak, Rochester,
NY). For reprobing blots were stripped with 200 mM glycine and 1% SDS,
pH 2.5, for 30 min at 65°C.
| Results |
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Genomic databases were searched with a computationally derived
sequence profile of the IL-7 helical cytokine family using methods
described by Oppmann et al. (20). This search identified
an expressed sequence tag (GenBank accession no. AA889581) encoding an
almost full-length novel human cytokine. A search across a panel of
cDNA libraries of various tissues and cell lines identified the lung
fibroblast sarcoma cell line MRC5 as a source for a full-length clone
of this novel cytokine. The open reading frame (Fig. 1
A) encodes a 159-residue
polypeptide that includes a 28-amino acid signal sequence. This novel
human cytokine most likely represents the human orthologue of mTSLP
(Fig. 1
C), although the low sequence identity between the
two proteins (43%) is reminiscent of the great divergence between
human and mouse IL-3 (21). The N-terminal hTSLP residue
was determined to be Y29, so the mature sequence (residues 29159)
encodes a protein with calculated m.w. of 14.9 kDa with six cysteine
residues and two N-glycosylation sites. Human TSLP was
expressed and purified from adenovirus hTLSP-infected 293 cells and
analyzed on SDS gels (data not shown); the purified protein has a
Mr of 23 kDa, indicating that the mature
protein is glycosylated. Quantitative PCR analysis of a large panel of
human cDNAs from various libraries and cultured cell lines showed that
hTSLP expression of a 1.3-kb message was restricted to a few lung
libraries and several monocyte cell samples (data not shown).
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Mouse TSLP binds to a specific receptor named mTSLPR
(7). This recently described molecule is most closely
related to R
c, the shared receptor present in the
signaling complexes for IL-2, IL-4, IL-7, IL-9, IL-15, and possibly
IL-21 (22). Both R
c and mTSLPR sequences
were used in a focused search for a candidate hTSLPR gene;
consequently, a cDNA that encoded an orphan member of the hemopoietin
receptor family was identified from a proprietary database (HGS,
Rockville, MD). This cDNA, designated hTLSPR, contains an open reading
frame encoding a 371-aa protein with a single transmembrane region
(Fig. 1
B). Human TSLPR displays the closest identity to
mTSLPR (39%) followed by R
c (24%), and most likely
represents the human orthologue of mTSLPR (Fig. 1
C).
Intriguingly, an alternatively spliced, soluble, short form of the
mTSLPR has been described (10), suggesting that an
analogous human molecule could serve as a secreted inhibitor of
hTSLP.
Identification of a functional heteromeric human TSLP receptor complex
The functional receptor complex for mTSLP consists of mTSLPR and
mIL-7R
. To test the hypothesis that the functional receptor for
hTLSP consists of hTSLPR and hIL-7R
, Ba/F3 cells were infected with
retroviral constructs encoding the receptors. While parental Ba/F3
cells would only proliferate in response to IL-3, those cells infected
with either hTSLPR or hIL-7R
alone showed no proliferative response
when either hTSLP or hIL-7 was added (Fig. 2
, A and B).
However, Ba/F3 cells expressing both receptors proliferated strongly in
response to hTSLP, but not at all upon addition of hIL-7 (Fig. 2
C). The response was specific for hTSLP, as mTSLP was not
able to induce proliferation (Fig. 2
C). This finding
establishes that the functional receptor for hTSLP consists of two
subunits, hTSLPR and hIL-7R
; furthermore, we observed no
cross-reactivity between mTSLP and the hTSLP receptor complex. The
corresponding activation status of Stat5 and Stat3 was also measured in
the various Ba/F3 cell populations. Fig. 3
shows that both Stat5 and Stat3 were
phosphorylated upon addition of hTSLP, but only when both hTSLPR and
hIL-7R
were present.
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in human DC and monocytes
To identify possible target cells capable of responding to hTSLP
we have analyzed by quantitative PCR a large panel of human cDNA
libraries for the simultaneous expression of both TSLPR and IL-7R
mRNAs (Fig. 4
). Several cell types
expressed both receptors. Th cell clones, in particular activated DC,
and to a lesser extent monocytes produced significant levels of both
receptors, suggesting that these cell types might respond to
TSLP.
|
The spectrum of biological activities induced by TSLP was
investigated based on the overlapping expression patterns of TSLP
receptor components. cDNA was prepared from human monocytes cultured
for 24 h in the presence of TSLP or IL-7, and the expression of 38
human chemokines and 20 human chemokine receptors was analyzed by
quantitative real-time PCR. Interestingly, TSLP and IL-7 influenced the
expression of distinct sets of chemokines (Table I
), but did not affect the expression of
chemokine receptors. TSLP enhanced the expression of TARC/CCL17,
DC-CK1/pulmonary and activation-regulated chemokine (PARC)/CCL18,
macrophage-derived chemokine (MDC)/CCL22, and MIP3
/CL19. IL-7
also enhanced the expression of TARC/CCL17, MDC/CCL22, and
MIP3
/CCL19, but, in addition, enhanced the expression of IL-8/CXCL8,
CTAPIII/CXCL7, ENA78/CXCL5, and GROabg/CXCL123 and decreased the
expression levels of IP-10/CXCL10, I-TACK/CXCL11, SDF1/CXCL12,
MCP2/CCL8, and MCP4/CCL13 (Table I
). The induction of TARC protein by
TSLP on monocyte and DC populations was confirmed by ELISA. The level
of TARC production by CD11c+ DC was at least
10-fold higher than that by monocytes (Fig. 5
).
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Freshly purified immature CD11c+ blood DC
are known to spontaneously mature in culture (23). After
24 h in medium alone, we observed loose and irregular clumps in
the DC culture (Fig. 6
A). In
the presence of TSLP this maturation process was dramatically enhanced.
DC in culture formed tight and round clumps with fine dendrites visible
at the periphery of each clump (Fig. 6
B). The TSLP-induced
maturation was confirmed by analyzing the surface phenotype of DC using
flow cytometry. Whereas TSLP slightly up-regulated the expression of
HLA-DR and CD86, it strongly induced the costimulatory molecules CD40
and CD80 (Fig. 6
C). This maturation process was accompanied
by an increased viability of the DC (data not shown). A titration of
TSLP using log dilutions of the cytokine showed that both the effect on
survival and the induction of costimulatory molecules on DC were
maximal at 15 ng/ml and above and were still significant at
concentrations as low as 15 pg/ml (data not shown).
|
| Discussion |
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c, the shared receptor present in
the signaling complexes for IL-2, IL-4, IL-7, IL-9, and IL-15. This
link suggests that TSLPR is possibly a promiscuous receptor, although
it cannot substitute in any of the signaling complexes that involve
R
c (data not shown). The second subunit of the
functional hTSLP receptor is IL-7R
, a chain that is also part of the
functional IL-7R. Thus, the functional receptors for human and mouse
TSLP both require the species-specific forms of TSLPR and IL-7R
. We
have not observed cross-species activity of either human or mouse TSLP.
In contrast, both human and mouse IL-7 show cross-species
activities.
Investigation of the spectrum of biological actions induced by hTSLP
was guided by the common expression patterns of TSLP receptor
components. Both receptor subunits are primarily expressed by dendritic
cells and to a lesser extent by monocytes, with expression of IL-7R
in general approximately 10-fold higher than that of TSLPR. On freshly
isolated human monocytes TSLP specifically induced the chemokines TARC,
PARC, and MDC, which are all notably ligands for CCR4, a chemokine
receptor predominantly found on Th2-type lymphocytes. Thus, TSLP can
activate monocytes to release chemokines that may attract effector
cells with a Th2 phenotype. TSLP-induced expression of TARC was very
strong in the CD11c+ subset of DCs. This subset,
representing <1% of mononuclear cells in the blood, normally
differentiates into mature DCs in response to inflammatory stimuli. The
expression of TARC in these cells was accompanied by a dramatic
enhancement of their maturation, as evidenced by the strong induction
of the costimulatory molecules CD40 and CD80. These results suggest
that this DC subset stimulated with TSLP could be a potent inducer of
primary T cell-mediated immune responses. Indeed,
CD11+ DCs cultured in the presence of TSLP were
much more potent in their capacity to elicit the proliferation of naive
T cells than DC cultured in medium.
Since both mouse and human TSLP share the IL-7R
-chain with IL-7,
some overlap in function between these two cytokines can be expected.
In mice IL-7 mediates T and B cell lymphopoiesis, and targeted deletion
of IL-7 or its receptor subunits (IL-7R
or R
c) leads
to severe T and B lymphopenia (25, 26, 27, 28). Both in vitro and
in vivo mTSLP has been reported to costimulate thymocytes and mature T
cells and to support the growth of pre-B cells, although the precise
definition of the in vivo importance of mTSLP remains to be established
(1, 3, 6). There is a prominent discrepancy between the
function of IL-7 in mice vs humans; in the latter, IL-7 is critical for
T lineage, but not B lineage, development, and either R
c
or IL-7R
deficiency results in the arrest of only T cell development
(T-B+ SCID)
(29, 30, 31, 32). This argues against a major role of either hTSLP
or IL-7 in human B cell development. Indeed, preliminary evidence from
our laboratory suggests that hTSLP cannot support the growth of
CD34+ CD19+ B cell
precursors from normal human bone marrow either alone or in combination
with IL-7. Some T cell clones, however, coexpress TSLPR and IL-7R
transcripts, suggesting that some T cells can respond to hTSLP. This
finding is presently under investigation.
It appears from the work described here that the biological activity of TSLP, at least in humans, is not restricted to lymphoid cells. In fact, based on the prominent expression of both TSLP receptor subunits on cells of myeloid origin it is likely that TSLP mainly functions on cells of the myeloid lineages. Activities of mTSLP on these cells have not yet been reported, but the recent identification of a functional mTSLP-receptor complex invites a similar analysis for the present work.
| Acknowledgments |
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| Footnotes |
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2 Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Robert Kastelein, DNAX Research Institute, 901 California Avenue, Palo Alto, CA 94304-1104. E-mail address: kastelein{at}dnax.org ![]()
3 Abbreviations used in this paper: TSLP, thymic stromal lymphopoietin; mIL-3, murine IL-3; mTSLP, mouse TSLP; hTSLP, human TSLP; TSLPR, TSLP receptor; R
c, common
-chain receptor; JAK, Janus kinase; DC, dendritic cells; TARC, thymus and activation-regulated chemokine; MDC, macrophage-derived chemokine; PARC, pulmonary and activation-regulated chemokine. ![]()
Received for publication March 28, 2001. Accepted for publication April 25, 2001.
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