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Vol. 56, Issue 2, 325-333, August 1999
Shift the Repertoire of Receptor Subtypes from B2
to B1 in Human Lung Fibroblasts
Department of Biochemistry, University of Texas Health Science Center, San Antonio, Texas (S.B.P., L.M.F.L.-L.); and Division of Endocrinology, National Institute for Biological Standards and Control, South Mimms, Hertfordshire, United Kingdom (S.P.)
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Summary |
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Elevated formation of bradykinin (BK) and Lys-BK or kallidin (KD) and
their carboxypeptidase metabolites desArg9BK and
desArg10KD is evident at sites of inflammation. Moreover,
B2 receptors (B2R), which mediate the action of BK and KD, participates
in the acute stage of the inflammatory and pain response, whereas B1
receptors (B1R), through which desArg9BK and
desArg10KD act, partake in the chronic stage. We
hypothesized that kinins autoregulate B2R and B1R expression in favor
of B1R. Incubation of IMR-90 cells with BK (100 nM) led to a loss
(89%) of B2R with a half-life (T1/2) of 7.0 min. Concomitantly, BK increased B1R (2- to 3-fold) with a
T1/2 of 120 min. DesArg10KD
(100 nM) had no effect on B2R but increased B1R (3- to 4-fold) with the
same rate as BK. Interleukin-1
(IL-1
; 500 pg/ml) also increased
B1R (4- to 6-fold). Although both desArg10KD and BK
increased the level of IL-1
mRNA, IL-1
receptor antagonist inhibited the increase in B1R only in response to BK.
DesArg10KD and BK synergistically increased B1R (9-fold),
which was further increased by inclusion of IL-1
(36-fold).
Therefore, kinin metabolism and kinin-stimulated production of
cytokines may play a pivotal role in shifting the repertoire of kinin
receptor subtypes in favor of B1R during inflammation.
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Introduction |
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Tissue
injury triggers the formation of kinins (Proud and Kaplan, 1988
; Bhoola
et al., 1992
), and kinins elicit pain, inflammation, and hyperalgesia
(Proud and Kaplan, 1988
; Dray and Perkins, 1993
). Consequently, kinins
have been implicated in the inflammatory and pain response that occurs
after injury (Dray and Perkins, 1993
). Activation of tissue or plasma
kallikreins results in formation of the first set of kinins, bradykinin
(BK) and Lys-BK or kallidin (KD), from kininogen precursors (Bhoola et
al., 1992
). These products are subsequently degraded in part by
carboxypeptidases to yield the second set of kinins,
desArg9BK and desArg10KD,
which remain biologically active. Receptors for kinins have been
divided into two subtypes named B1 and B2 (Regoli and Barabe, 1980
).
The B2 receptor subtype mediates the action of BK and KD, whereas the
B1 receptor subtype mediates the action of
desArg9BK and desArg10KD.
Both receptor subtypes are members of the superfamily of
seven-transmembrane domain, G protein-coupled receptors (Hess et al.,
1992
; Menke et al., 1994
) and couple to similar, if not identical,
effector systems, including stimulation of phosphoinositide hydrolysis and intracellular Ca2+ mobilization (Tropea et
al., 1993
; Mathis et al., 1996
). However, these receptors differ
significantly in the short-term regulation to which they are subjected.
The B2 receptor elicits a transient response that rapidly desensitizes
(Mathis et al., 1996
), and the receptor is rapidly internalized (Munoz
and Leeb-Lundberg, 1992
; Munoz et al., 1993
). In contrast, the B1
receptor elicits a sustained response that is subject to very limited
desensitization (Mathis et al., 1996
), and the receptor is internalized
only very slowly (Austin et al., 1997
).
The B2 receptor is constitutively expressed in relative high numbers in
many tissues and cultured cells, whereas the B1 receptor is expressed
in very low numbers in few tissues and cells. Furthermore, tissues are
generally unresponsive to desArg9BK and
desArg10KD. These observations have led to the
belief that the B2 receptor is responsible for most of the actions of
kinins in vivo under nonpathological conditions (Dray, 1997
). Indeed,
animal models have directly implicated the B2 receptor in the acute
phase (hours) of the inflammatory and pain response (Proud and Kaplan,
1988
; Dray and Perkins, 1993
). The same models suggest that the B1
receptor is involved in the chronic phase (days) of this response (Dray and Perkins, 1993
). The time-dependent rise in the function of the B1
receptor in the inflammatory and pain response is consistent with the
up-regulation of this receptor by various inflammatory stimuli.
Originally observed in the rabbit aorta as an induction in the
responsiveness of the tissue to B1 agonists on prolonged in vitro
incubation, a direct link with proinflammatory cytokines was
established after the observation that B1 responsiveness could be
induced in several vascular tissues by pyrogens such as bacterial lipopolysaccharide, muramyl-dipeptide, and interleukin (IL)-1 (Marceau,
1995
). Even though several cytokines such as IL-1
, tumor necrosis
factor (TNF)-
, interferon
, and IL-2 and the chemokine IL-8 have
been implicated in B1 receptor up-regulation, only IL-1
has been
shown to do so both in vitro (Menke et al., 1994
; Marceau, 1995
; Phagoo
et al., 1997
; Zhou et al., 1998
) and in vivo (Davis and Perkins, 1994
;
Perkins et al., 1995
). In all, these observations have led to the
belief that the B2 receptor serves in triggering the inflammatory and
pain response, whereas the B1 receptor serves in maintaining the
response (Dray and Perkins, 1993
).
We hypothesized that kinins themselves are able to coordinate the
activities of B1 and B2 receptors during inflammation. To study the
regulation of the receptors by kinins, we used IMR-90 human
fetal lung fibroblasts. These cells were chosen for two reasons. First,
under basal conditions, these cells express both B2 and B1 receptors at
levels that reflect reasonably well those observed in tissues in vivo.
Second, kinin receptors have been proposed to play an important role in
allergic inflammation of the airways (Polosa, 1992
), and the airways of
asthmatic subjects contain elevated levels of both kallikrein activity
and kinins (Christiansen et al., 1992
).
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Experimental Procedures |
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Materials.
[2,3-prolyl-3,4-3H]Bradykinin (114 Ci/mmol),
des(Arg10)[3,4-prolyl-3,4-3H]kallidin
(82-91 Ci/mmol), and
myo-[3H]inositol (22 Ci/mmol) were
obtained from DuPont-NEN (Boston, MA). IMR-90 human fetal lung
fibroblasts were obtained from the American Type Culture Collection
(Rockville, MD). Primers for reverse transcription-polymerase chain
reaction (RT-PCR) were synthesized at the University of Texas Health
Science Center at San Antonio. All cell culture reagents were obtained
from Life Technologies (Gaithersburg, MD), except fetal bovine serum
(FBS), which was obtained from Sigma Chemical Co. (St. Louis, MO).
rRNasin was obtained from Promega (Madison, WI).
DesArg9[Leu8]BK, HOE140,
and desArg10KD were obtained from Bachem
(Torrance, CA). IL-1
was purchased from R&D Systems (Minneapolis,
MN). IL-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1ra) and TNF-
were obtained from
the National Institute for Biological Standards and Control (Potters
Bar, UK). IL-6 and IL-8 neutralizing antibodies were purchased from
Sigma Chemical Co. and Endogen (Woburn, MA), respectively. All other
chemicals were obtained from Sigma. Six-well plates (Primaria) and
tissue culture plastics were from Falcon.
Culture of IMR-90 Human Fetal Lung Fibroblasts. IMR-90 fibroblasts were cultured in complete growth media composed of Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium (DMEM) containing 10% FBS, 50 IU/ml penicillin, 50 µg/ml streptomycin, 4 mM L-glutamine, and 1% nonessential amino acids. The cells were maintained in a humidified atmosphere in 5% CO2 at 37°C. Cells were subcultured by incubation with 0.05% trypsin-0.5 mM EDTA at a ratio of 1:2 or 1:3, twice weekly. For all experiments, cells were plated at a density of 150,000 cells/well in 6-well (3.5-cm-diameter) plates and used at confluency (4-5 days) between passages 15 and 25. Before experimentation, the IMR-90 cells were washed once with growth medium excluding FBS (hence referred to as DMEM) before being incubated in the absence and presence of receptor agonists and/or cytokines in 2 ml of DMEM as described in the figure legends.
Radioligand Binding.
To determine B1 and B2
receptor-specific binding on cells that had been exposed to receptor
agonists, a previously described acid-stripping technique was used that
effectively removes bound ligand from cells by washing with low pH
buffer (Munoz and Leeb-Lundberg, 1992
; Munoz et al., 1993
). As we have
shown previously, this treatment was not deleterious to the cells and
did not significantly affect receptor affinity or number. This
procedure was performed at 4°C. In short, after exposure of the cells
to receptor agonist, bound ligand was removed by first rinsing with
PBS, followed by two incubations in 0.05 M glycine-HCl, pH 3.0, for 6 and 0.5 min and then two brief rinses in PBS. As determined by cell
viability staining with Trypan blue, this acid-washing procedure was
not detrimental to the IMR-90 cells and did not alter significantly [3H]BK and
[3H]desArg10KD binding.
8%. For saturation studies, IMR-90 cells were incubated
for 75 min in the presence of various concentrations of
[3H]BK or
[3H]desArg10KD ranging
from 0.125 to 5 nM in binding buffer that was composed of 20 mM HEPES,
pH 7.4, 125 mM N-methyl D-glucamine, 5 mM KCl, 0.14 g/l bacitracin, 1 mM 1,10-phenanthroline, and 1 g/l BSA. All other experiments were performed using a radioligand concentration of 1 nM. Nonspecific binding was defined as the amount of radiolabeled ligand bound in the presence of 1 µM nonradioactive ligand. After incubation, the assay buffer was removed, and the cells were washed with 2 × 4 ml of ice-cold PBS. The cells were then lysed with 0.05% SDS. Specific binding was expressed in fmol/mg protein, and
protein was determined according to the method of Bradford (1976)RT-PCR.
Total RNA was extracted from cells using TRIZOL
reagent as described by the manufacturer (Life Technologies,
Gaithersburg, MD). Single-stranded cDNA was generated using Superscript
II reverse transcriptase (100 U) in a 20-µl reaction mixture
containing reaction buffer (50 mM Tris · HCl, pH 8.3, 75 mM KCl, 3 mM MgCl2, 10 mM dithiothreitol), 0.5 mM dNTP, 0.5 µg of oligo(dT)12-18, 10 U of rRNasin, and 2 µg of total RNA. The reaction was carried out for 1 h at 42°C.
Amplification of cDNA by PCR was performed using oligonucleotide primer
pairs for IL-1
and
-actin as described by Jung et al. (1995)
. The
reactions were carried out using a thermal cycler (M.J. Research,
Watertown, MA) in a 30-µl reaction mixture containing reaction
buffer (20 mM Tris · HCl, pH 8.4, 50 mM KCl, 1.5 mM
MgCl2), 0.2 mM dNTP, 1.5 U of Taq
polymerase, and 2 µl of cDNA. Each primer was added at a final
concentration of 0.1 µM. PCR was for 35 cycles with each cycle
consisting of 1 min at 95°C and annealing/extension at 60°C for 2.5 min. Amplification of cDNA for the B1 receptor was performed using
oligonucleotide primer pairs as described by Bachvarov et al. (1996)
.
In this case, the above reaction mixture was modified to include 1.0 mM MgCl2 and a primer concentration of 0.25 µM.
PCR was for 30 cycles, each cycle consisting of 1 min at 95°C,
annealing at 55°C for 1 min, and extension at 72°C for 1 min. PCR
products were separated on 1% agarose gels containing 50 µg/ml
ethidium bromide and visualized under UV light.
Cytokine/Chemokine Assays.
Human recombinant
cytokines/chemokines were handled according to the manufacturers'
instructions (see Experimental Procedures). Samples of the
media from stimulated cells were collected by centrifugation at
14,000g for 5 min at 4°C and then frozen on dry ice and
stored at
70°C until assay (1-3 months). The supernatant was
assayed for the presence of IL-6 and IL-8 using two-site enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays as described by Steffen and Ebersole (1996)
. Neutralizing antibodies were incubated with cells at 5 µg/ml for 1 h before the addition of agonists.
Phosphoinositide Hydrolysis.
Total inositol phosphate
production was assayed as described by Tropea et al. (1993)
with a few
modifications. Briefly, cells were labeled with 10 µCi/ml
myo-[3H] inositol for 18 h.
They were then washed once and incubated for 6 h in the presence
of various factors in 2 ml of DMEM. After stimulation, the cells were
washed with low pH buffer as described to remove any bound ligand and
then allowed to equilibrate at room temperature for 5 min. At 30 min
before the assay, the medium was changed to DMEM/50 mM LiCl at 37°C.
The cells were stimulated with 1 µM desArg10KD
in 2 ml of DMEM for 20 min before termination of the reaction by
aspirating off the medium and adding ice-cold 10% trichloroacetic acid. Total inositol phosphates were then assayed by anion exchange chromatography.
Data Analysis.
Data are reported as the mean ± S.E.
and were compared using Student's t test. Values of
p
.05 were considered to be significant.
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Results |
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Constitutive Expression of B1 and B2 BK Receptors in IMR-90
Cells.
IMR-90 fibroblasts express both B1 and B2 BK receptor
subtypes as determined by specific
[3H]desArg10KD and
[3H]BK binding, respectively (Menke et al.,
1994
). When these cells are cultured under standard conditions in the
presence of 10% serum, the B1 and B2 receptor subtypes are present in
a ratio of approximately 1:14. Furthermore, B1 receptors in these cells are up-regulated in response to IL-1
(Menke et al., 1994
; Zhou et
al., 1998
). To investigate the regulation of B1 and B2 receptor expression without interference by any regulatory factors that may be
present in the serum, the current study incorporated the stimulation of
the cells at 37°C in DMEM rather than in serum. After incubation of
the cells in DMEM for 6 h at 37°C, the IMR-90 cells expressed B1
and B2 receptors in a ratio of approximately 1:85 (Table
1).
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B2 Receptor Agonists Promote B2 Receptor Internalization and a
Decrease in Available Cell Surface B2 Receptors.
Figure
1A shows a typical saturation binding
isotherm of [3H]BK to cell surface B2 receptors
on IMR-90 cells after incubation in DMEM for 6 h. Under these
conditions, [3H]BK identified a relatively
large number of B2 receptors (Bmax = 1,283 fmol/mg protein) with high affinity (KD = 0.59 nM; Table 1). Exposure of the cells to 100 nM BK for 6 h at
37°C resulted in a dramatic loss in the number of B2 receptors
available for [3H]BK binding
(Bmax = 145 fmol/mg protein) without a
significant change in the affinity of [3H]BK
for the receptors (KD = 0.39 nM; Fig. 1A
and Table 1). The BK-promoted response was rapid
(T1/2 = 7.0 ± 1.5 min) and reached a
plateau at approximately 2 h that was maintained for
6 h in the
continued presence of BK (Fig. 1B). The response was concentration dependent with an EC50 value for BK of 7.0 ± 1.5 nM (Fig. 1C). Furthermore, the response was inhibited by
preincubation of the cells for 1 h with the B2 receptor-specific
antagonist HOE140 (30 µM) but not with the B1 receptor-specific
antagonist
desArg9[Leu8]BK (100 µM; data not shown). These results are similar to those previously
described elsewhere for B2 receptors in a variety of cell types and
show that agonist binding to B2 receptors leads to a rapid
internalization of the receptor. This response is specific for the B2
receptor as incubation of the cells with the B1 receptor agonists
desArg10KD (10 µM) or
desArg9BK (10 µM) for 6 h had minimal or
no effect on the availability of B2 receptors (Fig. 1B).
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B2 and B1 Receptor Agonists and IL-1
Promote an Increase in B1
receptor Gene Expression and an Increase in Available Cell Surface B1
Receptors.
Figure 2A shows a typical
saturation binding isotherm of
[3H]desArg10KD to cell
surface B1 receptors on IMR-90 cells after incubation in DMEM for
6 h. Under these conditions,
[3H]desArg10KD identified
a relatively small number of B1 receptors
(Bmax = 15.1 fmol/mg protein) with high
affinity (KD = 0.50 nM; Table 1). Exposure
of the cells to 100 nM BK for 6 h at 37°C resulted in a 2- to
3-fold increase in the number of B1 receptors available for
[3H]desArg10KD binding
(Bmax = 31 fmol/mg protein) without any
significant effect on the affinity of
[3H]desArg10KD for the
receptors (KD = 0.36 nM; Fig. 2A, Table 1).
As shown in Fig. 2B, the BK-promoted response was transient with a
maximum at 4 to 6 h. The increase was clearly apparent at 0.5 h, half-maximal at approximately 2 h, and had returned to near
basal levels by 8 h. The response was concentration dependent with
an EC50 value for BK of 11.3 ± 3.5 nM (Fig.
2C). To confirm that the BK-promoted increase in B1 receptor expression
was mediated through the B2 receptor, the cells were preincubated for
1 h with receptor-selective antagonists. The B2-selective
antagonist HOE140 (30 µM) inhibited the increase in the number of B1
receptors, whereas the B1-selective antagonist
desArg9[Leu8]BK (100 µM) was unable to perturb the response (Fig. 2D). These results show
that agonist binding to B2 receptors leads to an increase in the number
of B1 receptors in IMR-90 cells.
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(Menke et al., 1994
(Phagoo et al., 1997
for 6 h
resulted in a 4- to 6-fold increase in the density of B1 receptors
available for
[3H]desArg10KD binding
(Bmax = 56.5 fmol/mg protein) without any
significant effect on the affinity of
[3H]desArg10KD for the
receptors (KD = 0.26 nM). A similar
increase in B1 receptor expression (4.8 ± 0.09-fold) was observed
in response to TNF-
(10 ng/ml). In contrast, IL-1
had only a
minimal effect (1.2 ± 0.07-fold increase) on the number of B2
receptors in these cells (Fig. 1B).
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. In all, these results show that agonist stimulation
of B1 and B2 receptors leads to an up-regulation of B1 receptor gene
expression and a subsequent increase in the number of B1 receptors
available for binding desArg10KD on the cell surface.
IL-1
Mediates B2 Agonist-Promoted But Not B1 Agonist-Promoted
Up-regulation of B1 Receptors.
Considering that IL-1
is capable
of up-regulating B1 receptors in IMR-90 cells, this cytokine represents
one candidate mediator of the B2 and B1 agonist responses. If so, B2
and B1 agonists should be able to stimulate the expression of IL-1
in these cells. As demonstrated in Fig. 3B, exposure of cells to 100 nM
BK or desArg10KD for 6 h resulted in a
significant increase in the level of the PCR product encoding for
IL-1
mRNA. These results show that both B1 and B2 receptor agonists
promote the transcriptional activation of the IL-1
gene and the
formation of IL-1
mRNA. Treatment with 500 pg/ml IL-1
also
up-regulated IL-1
gene expression (Fig. 3B), confirming that IL-1
gene expression is autoregulated by IL-1
(Dinarello et al., 1987
).
in
agonist-promoted up-regulation of B1 receptor expression. This
antagonist binds to cell surface IL-1 type I receptors and competitively inhibits the binding of both IL-1
and IL-1
. Figure 4A shows, as expected, that the increase
in B1 receptors produced by a peak concentration of exogenously added
IL-1
(500 pg/ml) was almost completely inhibited in the presence of
a 400-fold excess of IL-1ra (200 ng/ml). IL-1ra also almost completely
inhibited the BK-induced response. In contrast, IL-1ra did not
significantly perturb the increase in B1 receptors promoted by
desArg10KD (Fig. 4A). These results clearly show
that although both B1 and B2 receptor agonists are capable of
increasing the level of IL-1
mRNA, only the B2 receptor-mediated
up-regulation of B1 receptors involves the action of mature IL-1
protein. IL-1ra almost completely inhibited the BK- and
desArg10KD-stimulated increase in IL-1
mRNA,
confirming an autoregulatory mechanism of IL-1
gene expression in
the action of these factors (Fig. 4B).
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B2 and B1 Receptor Agonists and IL-1
Act Synergistically to
Up-regulate B1 Receptor Expression.
Because sites of inflammation
contain elevated levels of both B2 and B1 agonists, it can be expected
that these agonists act in concert. Figure
5 shows that at 0.5 and 2 h of
exposure, the effect of adding BK and desArg10KD
in combination was more or less additive to the individual effects of
the agonists at these times. On the other hand, at 6 h of
exposure, a dramatic synergism was observed between these two agonists.
Indeed, the increase observed in response to the two receptor agonists
(9-fold) was significantly higher than that observed in response to
IL-1
(4-6-fold) These results suggest that at early time points
(
2 h), B2 and B1 agonists may act via the same mechanism to increase
B1 receptor gene expression. On the other hand, the synergism observed
between B2 and B1 agonists at later time points (
6 h) confirms
earlier conclusions that these agonists act at least in part through
distinct mechanisms.
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for 6 h produced a 23-fold increase in the
Bmax value of
[3H]desArg10KD binding
without an effect on the KD value of the
binding (Fig. 6A and Table 1). This
increase in B1 receptors was much larger than that observed with
IL-1
alone, which was 4- to 6-fold, indicating that it is not simply
due to an increased production of IL-1
(Fig. 6A and Table 1).
Instead, these factors must synergize in their action to increase B1
receptor expression. IL-1
synergized considerably more with
desArg10KD than with BK (Fig. 6B). This is not
surprising because the effect of BK appears to be mediated to a major
extent by IL-1
. Receptor agonists also synergized in a similar way
to IL-1
with a peak concentration of TNF-
(10 ng/ml; data not
shown).
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B1 and B2 Agonists Stimulate Release of IL-6 and IL-8.
The
cytokine IL-6 and chemokine IL-8 have been implicated in inflammation
(Schindler et al., 1990
; Cunha et al., 1991
; Ferreira et al., 1993b
;
Davis and Perkins, 1994
). To evaluate the involvement of these
cytokines in the action of B2 and B1 agonists and, specifically, in the
up-regulation of B1 receptors, we first quantified the levels of these
cytokines in the media after agonist stimulation of IMR-90 cells.
Incubation of cells with either 100 nM BK or desArg10KD at 37°C resulted in a time-dependent
increase in the amount of both immunoreactive IL-6 (Fig.
7A) and IL-8 (Fig. 7B) in the media, with
BK being the more efficacious agonist in stimulating the release of
these cytokines.
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Up-Regulation of B1 Receptors Leads to an Increase in B1
Receptor-Mediated Phosphoinositide Hydrolysis.
To determine the
functional significance of agonist-promoted B1 receptor up-regulation
in IMR-90 cells, we analyzed B1 receptor-mediated phosphoinositide
hydrolysis after agonist and cytokine pretreatment for 6 h. As
shown in Fig. 8, the ability of BK,
desArg10KD, and IL-1
to promote an increase in
desArg10KD-stimulated phosphoinositide hydrolysis
correlated closely with their ability to increase B1 receptor
expression both individually and in combination. That the
desArg10KD-stimulated functional response was
mediated through the B1 receptor was shown by the fact that 100 µM
desArg9[Leu8]BK
completely inhibited the desArg10KD-mediated
response, whereas this antagonist was unable to stimulate a response on
its own (data not shown).
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Discussion |
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Animal models suggest that B2 BK receptors participate in the
acute phase of the inflammatory and pain response, whereas the B1 BK
receptor participates in the chronic phase of the response (Dray and
Perkins, 1993
). However, little, if anything, is known about the
regulatory mechanisms underlying this sequence of receptor activities.
The results presented in this report provide direct evidence that kinin
agonists themselves regulate B1 and B2 receptors in vitro in IMR-90
cells, and this regulation matches that observed in vivo during inflammation.
IL-1
is believed to occupy a central position in the mechanism of B1
receptor up-regulation. IL-1
increases B1 receptor expression in
vitro (Menke et al., 1994
; Phagoo et al., 1997
; Zhou et al., 1998
), in
vivo (Davis and Perkins, 1994
), and ex vivo (Marceau, 1995
), and this
response appears to be mediated in part by the transcription factor
nuclear factor
B (Ni et al., 1998
; Schanstra et al., 1998
; Zhou et
al., 1998
). Also, inflammatory conditions promote the release of
IL-1
. In addition, both B1 and B2 agonists directly stimulate the
release of IL-1
(Tiffany and Burch, 1989
; Pan et al., 1996
). Despite
these observations, some models of B1 receptor induction show less
dependence on IL-1
. For instance, the spontaneous sensitization to
B1 agonists as a function of time in isolated rabbit aortic rings is
insensitive to IL-1ra, even though this antagonist inhibits the
potentiating effect of IL-1
on this process (Petitclerc et al.,
1992
). Furthermore, IL-1ra fails to prevent the expression of B1
receptor-mediated responses after bacterial lipopolysaccharide
injection in rabbits (Whalley et al., 1993
). Therefore, IL-1
does
not seem to be the only mediator of B1 receptor induction in vivo
during inflammation. Likewise, IL-1
cannot be responsible for the
diminishing contribution of B2 receptors during the inflammatory
response. IL-1
has been shown to regulate B2 receptors in vitro, but
the change in the receptor number is relatively small and involves
receptor up-regulation (Schmidlin et al., 1998
).
BK and KD, the first set of kinin peptides formed after tissue damage,
act on B2 receptors in a wide variety of tissues to cause a broad
repertoire of physiological responses. The action of these kinins is
probably limited to their site of production because they are subject
to rapid degradation by both carboxyl- and amino-peptidases (Ward,
1991
). The action of BK and KD is further limited by short-term
mechanisms that negatively regulate the B2 receptor. Agonist binding to
this receptor results in a transient signal that rapidly desensitizes
(Mathis et al., 1996
), and the agonist receptor complex is internalized
(Munoz and Leeb-Lundberg, 1992
; Munoz et al., 1993
). In IMR-90 cells,
this was observed as a rapid loss of the available cell surface B2
receptors. The agonist-promoted loss of B2 receptors is reversible
because agonist removal results in a recycling of the receptors to the
cell surface independently of protein synthesis (Munoz et al., 1993
).
There are examples of depressed B2 receptor function in chronic
inflammatory conditions, but it is unclear how this occurs (Marceau et
al., 1998
). IL-1
caused only a minimal change (1.2-fold increase) in
the number of B2 receptors in IMR-90 cells. Consequently, we propose
that B2 receptor function is controlled primarily by short-term mechanisms involving receptor desensitization and internalization.
Despite the presence of regulatory mechanisms to limit the action of BK
and KD on B2 receptors in IMR-90 cells, these peptides stimulate a
small but significant increase in B1 receptor expression that is
associated with an increase in B1 receptor-mediated phosphoinositide hydrolysis. This increase was sensitive to cycloheximide and matched by
an increase in B1 receptor mRNA. Thus, B2 receptor-mediated up-regulation of B1 receptors appears to occur at the level of B1
receptor gene expression. That this type of kinin receptor cross-regulation occurs in vivo was supported by the fact that repeated
administration of the B2 receptor agonist
[Tyr8]BK in a rat model of hyperalgesia
resulted in an increase in the responsiveness to the B1 receptor
agonist desArg9BK (Campos et al., 1995
).
Furthermore, treatment with angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors,
which inhibits the degradation of BK, also increased the responsiveness
to desArg9BK in rabbits (Whalley and Nwator,
1989
).
BK and KD are degraded to desArg9BK and
desArg10KD, respectively, via the action of
arginine carboxypeptidases (kininase I), including carboxypeptidases N
and M (Ward, 1991
), and these metabolites represent the second set of
kinin agonists formed after tissue damage (Dray and Perkins, 1993
). The
in vivo production of desArg9BK and
desArg10KD is believed to be relatively
inefficient because these enzymes have comparatively low affinities for
BK and KD. However, desArg9BK has a significantly
longer half-life than BK (4-12-fold), suggesting that these
metabolites have a greater capacity to accumulate than their parent
peptides (Marceau et al., 1998
). The action of
desArg9BK and desArg10KD is
also enhanced by the fact that the B1 receptor is not subject to
short-term mechanisms that negatively regulate the receptor. DesArg9BK or desArg10KD
binding to the B1 receptor elicits a signal that is highly sustained
and subject to very limited desensitization (Mathis et al., 1996
).
Furthermore, this receptor is internalized only very slowly (Austin et
al., 1997
).
In this study, we show that the action of desArg metabolites through the B1 receptor subtype is also enhanced by autologous receptor up-regulation. DesArg9BK and desArg10KD stimulated a small but significant increase in the number of B1 receptors expressed in these cells. The rate of the increase was similar to that for BK through the B2 receptor. Furthermore, the increase was completely inhibited by cycloheximide and matched by an increase in B1 receptor mRNA. Together, these results indicate that B1 receptors are up-regulated in response to both B1 and B2 receptor activation, and the regulation occurs at the level of B1 receptor gene expression.
In agreement with previous studies (Menke et al., 1994
; Schanstra et
al., 1998
; Zhou et al., 1998
), treatment of IMR-90 cells with IL-1
for 6 h caused a significant increase in the amount of B1 receptor
mRNA and B1 receptors. IL-1ra completely inhibited the IL-1
response, indicating that the response is mediated through the IL-1
receptor. The B2 receptor-mediated response was also inhibited by
IL-1ra. Together with the fact that B2 agonists stimulated an increase
in IL-1
mRNA, these results show that IL-1
is responsible for the
B2 receptor-mediated increase in B1 receptor expression in IMR-90
cells. The lack of any significant synergism between BK and IL-1
in
up-regulating the B1 receptor further emphasized the common mechanism
of action of these factors in this response.
B1 agonists also stimulated an increase in the production of IL-1
mRNA in IMR-90 cells. However, the B1 receptor-mediated increase in B1
receptor expression was not inhibited by IL-1ra. Thus, autologous
up-regulation of the B1 receptor involves a mechanism that is
independent of the endogenous production of IL-1
. That the action of
B1 agonist does not directly rely on IL-1
production was also
emphasized by the remarkable synergism observed between B1 agonists and
IL-1
delivered either exogenously or endogenously through
stimulation of the B2 receptor. The magnitude of the increase in B1
receptor expression observed in response to the combined action of B1
and B2 agonists was at least 3-fold higher than that observed in
response to a peak concentration of IL-1
alone, which was 4- to
6-fold. These results argue that the up-regulation of B1 receptors in
vivo is not due to the individual action of any one factor alone but
rather to the combined action of several factors. Together with the
BK-promoted decrease in B2 receptors, the combined action of BK and
desArg10KD resulted in a shift in the ratio of
expressed B1 and B2 receptors from ~1:85 under basal conditions to
~1:1 after exposure of the cells to BK and
desArg10KD for 6 h. Inclusion of a peak
concentration of IL-1
further increased the ratio to ~4:1.
Overall, the receptor ratio changes >300-fold in favor of the B1
receptor. Clearly, these conditions lead to a shift in the repertoire
of kinin receptors from a predominantly B2 to a predominantly B1
receptor subtype on these cells. The increase in B1 receptor expression
was matched by a 4-fold increase in B1 receptor-mediated stimulation of
phosphoinositide hydrolysis indicating that the up-regulated B1
receptors are functionally coupled.
B1 and B2 agonists also stimulated the release of IL-6 and IL-8 in
IMR-90 cells. Both factors have been strongly implicated in the
mechanisms of inflammatory hyperalgesia (Cunha et al., 1991
; Ferreira
et al., 1993b
). Additionally, IL-6 may exert anti-inflammatory effects
by suppressing the production of IL-1
and TNF-
(Schindler et al.,
1990
). IL-8 has been reported to up-regulate B1 receptor-mediated responses in vivo, and this effect occurred through the release of
IL-1
(Davis and Perkins, 1994
). However, neither of these factors
appears to be directly involved in the agonist-promoted up-regulation
of B1 receptors in IMR-90 cells. Inflammation also involves the release
of TNF-
(Ferreira et al., 1993a
). Kinins have been reported to
release TNF-
from macrophages (Tiffany and Burch, 1989
; Ferreira et
al., 1993a
), and TNF-
up-regulates B1 receptors in cultured human
fibroblasts (Phagoo et al., 1997
). However, the significance of TNF-
in this response is unclear because this cytokine is ineffective in
inducing hyperalgesia in animal models (Davis and Perkins, 1994
). In
IMR-90 cells, TNF-
was as efficacious as IL-1
in up-regulating B1
receptor expression both by itself and in combination with B1 agonists.
In summary, our results present a cellular mechanism in which kinins
themselves regulate the expression and activity of their receptors, and
this mechanism is compatible with the sequence of activities of these
receptors during the inflammatory process. In this mechanism, BK and
KD, the first set of kinins formed in response to tissue injury, act on
B2 receptors to prime the site of injury for inflammation. This
involves the production of secondary mediators including the cytokines
IL-1
and IL-6 and the chemokine IL-8. Furthermore, these kinins
enhance the responsiveness of surrounding tissues to kinins by
promoting an increase in the expression of B1 receptors. Because the B2
receptor is subject to both desensitization and internalization,
progression of the inflammatory and pain response depends on BK and KD
degradation to form sufficient amounts of
desArg9BK or desArg10KD,
the second set of kinins formed. These kinins act on B1 receptors to
optimize the B1 receptor up-regulation. Kinin action is further enhanced by the limited desensitization of the B1 receptor. Indeed, the
lack of negative regulation of the B1 receptor may be one reason why
two kinin receptors have evolved: one constitutively expressed and
rapidly desensitizing receptor, the B2 receptor, which acts to sense
the tissue injury and to which kinin action is limited if the injury is
less severe, and another inducible and nondesensitizing receptor, the
B1 receptor, which acts to sustain the kinin response if the injury is
more severe.
| |
Footnotes |
|---|
Received March 4, 1999; Accepted May 14, 1999
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grant GM41659.
Send reprint requests to: L. M. Fredrik Leeb-Lundberg, Ph.D., Department of Biochemistry, University of Texas Health Science Center, 7703 Floyd Curl Dr., San Antonio, TX 78284-7760. E-mail: lundberg{at}biochem.uthscsa.edu
| |
Abbreviations |
|---|
BK, bradykinin; KD, kallidin; IL, interleukin; RT, reverse transcription; TNF, tumor necrosis factor; PCR, polymerase chain reaction; DMEM, Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium; IL-1ra, interleukin-1 receptor antagonist.
| |
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