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Vol. 286, Issue 3, 1420-1426, September 1998

EP4/EP2 Receptor-Specific Prostaglandin E2 Regulation of Interleukin-6 Generation by Human HSB.2 Early T Cells1

Li Zeng, Songzhu An and Edward J. Goetzl

Departments of Medicine and Microbiology-Immunology, University of California Medical Center, San Francisco, California


    Abstract
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Methods
Results
Discussion
References

Human leukemic early T cells of the HSB.2 line coexpress the EP2, EP3 and EP4 subtypes of prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) receptors (Rs). EP3 Rs have previously been demonstrated to transduce PGE2 stimulation of secretion of matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-9 by HSB.2 T cells through Ca++-dependent enhancement of MMP-9 mRNA transcription. We now show that PGE2 and the EP4/EP2/EP3 R-selective agonist misoprostol, but not the EP3 R-directed agonists sulprostone and M&B28767, induced increases in HSB.2 T cell interleukin-6 (IL-6) mRNA and secretion. Pharmacological agents that increase intracellular concentration of cyclic AMP ([cAMP]i) mimicked and synergistically enhanced induction of IL-6 secretion by PGE2, whereas inhibitors of protein kinase A (PKA) but not protein kinase C suppressed PGE2-evoked increases in IL-6 secretion, suggesting that cAMP and PKA are the intracellular messengers of the PGE2 effect. Exposure of HSB.2 T cells to the mitogenic lectin concanavalin A (Con A) increased basal IL-6 secretion, without a change in IL-6 mRNA level. Con A-stimulated HSB.2 T cells responded to PGE2 with greater increases in IL-6 mRNA and secretion of IL-6. Con A also down-regulated mRNA encoding both EP3 Rs and EP2 Rs, and concurrently up-regulated mRNA encoding EP4 Rs of HSB.2 T cells. Therefore, EP4 and EP2 Rs mediate PGE2-induced increases in IL-6 secretion by HSB.2 T cells through a transcriptional and cAMP dependent-mechanism. The increased ratio of EP4 Rs/EP3 Rs may contribute to Con A enhancement of PGE2-elicited increases in IL-6 secretion by HSB.2 T cells.


    Introduction
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Methods
Results
Discussion
References

PGE2 is a product of the cyclooxygenation of arachidonic acid, that potently mediates diverse physiological responses and contributes to the pathogenesis of inflammatory, autoimmune and neoplastic diseases (Goetzl et al., 1995). PGE2 is recognized and transduces cellular effects specifically by interacting with PGE2 Rs of at least four distinct subtypes, designated the EP1, EP2, EP3 and EP4 Rs. All subtypes of PGE2 Rs have recently been cloned and shown to be members of the G protein-coupled seven transmembrane-domain superfamily, but differ in structure, ligand-binding properties, tissue distribution, potency of effects, and signal transduction pathways (Coleman et al., 1990, 1994). EP3 Rs and EP4 Rs are expressed ubiquitously, whereas EP1 and EP2 have a more limited range of tissue expression. EP1 Rs mediate increases in the intracellular concentration of calcium ([Ca++]i). EP2 and EP4 Rs activate AC and stimulate increases in the intracellular concentration of cAMP ([cAMP]i) (Coleman et al., 1990, 1994; An et al., 1993; Yang et al., 1994; Regan et al., 1994; Honda et al., 1993; Watabe et al., 1993). EP3 Rs have multiple isoforms that not only inhibit AC, resulting in a decrease in [cAMP]i elevated by forskolin or other agonists, but also stimulate increases in [Ca++]i (Coleman et al., 1990, 1994; Regan et al., 1994; Honda et al., 1993; An et al., 1994; Namba et al., 1993; Irie et al., 1993).

PGE2 potently and highly selectively modulates the development and specific functions of many immune cells. PGE2 enhances elements of macrophage differentiation, but inhibits functional activation of macrophages (Keller et al., 1991; Schreiber et al., 1990). PGE2 regulates apoptotic elimination of immature B cells, enhances mature B cell production of IgG1 and IgE, but inhibits production of IgM (Garrone et al., 1994; Brown et al., 1992; Roper and Phipps, 1992). PGE2 inhibits T cell proliferation, differentiation, expression of membrane Rs, secretion of diverse cytokines, cytotoxicity and other specific effector functions in cellular immune reactions (Goetzl et al., 1995a). Some effects of PGE2 on T cells appeared to differ among subsets of T cells, such as stimulation of the proliferative and cytokine responses of CD8+ T cells and concurrent suppression of the responses of CD4+ T cells (Goodwin and Ceuppens, 1983). Although PGE2 suppresses virtually all effector functions of T cells, our recent results revealed that PGE2 also stimulates some activities, including expression and activation of endogenous MMPs (Zeng et al., 1996a, 1996b), MMP-dependent basement membrane transmigration (Leppert et al., 1995), and protection of some T cells from activation-induced apoptosis (Goetzl et al., 1995b). The specificity and diversity of PGE2 immunoregulatory effects can be best explained by each subset of T cells or other immune cells expressing a characteristic pattern of different EP Rs with distinctive signaling mechanisms.

Human leukemic T cells of the HSB.2 cultured line are early "double-negative" thymocytes bearing CD2 and CD7, but not CD3, CD4 or CD8 (Adams et al., 1970; Hara et al., 1988). HSB.2 T cells express a mean of 7300 Rs per cell for PGE2, of which the EP3 and EP2 subtypes predominate and the EP4 subtype is present at a lower level (Zeng et al., 1996a). The coexpression of EP3, EP2 and EP4 Rs by HSB.2 T cells has permitted us to study distinctive effects of each subtype of PGE2 R on regulation of T cell functions. We have previously demonstrated that PGE2 stimulates increases in matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-9 production and secretion by HSB.2 T cells, that are transduced by the EP3 Rs through [Ca++]i-dependent enhancement of transcription of MMP-9 mRNA (Zeng et al., 1996a). Using HSB.2 T cells that coexpress multiple EP Rs as a model cell line, we now examine possible functional roles of EP2 Rs and/or EP4 Rs. We find now that PGE2 stimulates production of IL-6 by HSB.2 T cells through EP4 R and/or EP2 R transduction of [cAMP]i-dependent increases in IL-6 mRNA. This is the first report of separate functional effects of EP3 Rs and EP2 and/or EP4 Rs in the same T cells that coexpress multiple EP Rs. We also have found that the mitogenic lectin concanavalin A alters EP R frequencies in T cells in a pattern that augments PGE2 stimulation of HSB.2 T cell IL-6 mRNA and protein.

    Methods
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Abstract
Introduction
Methods
Results
Discussion
References

Materials. M&B 28767 (Rhone-Poulenc Rorer Research, Dagenham, Essex), PGE2 and sulprostone (Schering Pharmaceuticals, Berlin), misoprostol (Searle, Skokie, IL), butaprost (Bayer U.K. Ltd.), IBMX, ovalbumin, concanavalin A (Con A), actinomycin D, forskolin and dibutyryl-cAMP (Sigma Chemical, St. Louis, MO) were obtained from the designated sources.

Culture of HSB.2 T cells. Human leukemic T cells of the HSB.2 line (Adams et al., 1970; Hara et al., 1988) were obtained from American Type Culture Collection and cultured in RPMI-1640 medium (UCSF Cell Culture Facility) with 25 mM HEPES, 10% (v:v) fetal bovine serum (FBS, Hyclone Laboratories, Logan, UT), 100 U/ml of penicillin and 100 µg/ml of streptomycin (complete RPMI medium). Cultures were maintained at 37°C in a humidified atmosphere of 5% CO2/95% air and medium was changed every 1 to 3 days to maintain a density of 0.4-1.8 × 106 cells/ml.

ELISA quantification of IL-6 secretion by HSB.2 T cells. Replicate suspensions of 5 × 107 HSB.2 cells were washed three times with protein-free RPMI-1640 and incubated in 10 ml of protein-free Iscove's: RPMI-1640 medium (1:1, v:v) with 10-9 M to 10-6 M PGE2, synthetic agonists, or other agents at 37°C in 5% CO2 - 95% air for up to 24 hr. Under these conditions there were no significant changes in the total number of HSB.2 T cells or the total amounts of secreted proteins (Zeng et al., 1996a). HSB.2 T cells also were stimulated with 5 µg/ml of concanavalin A (Con A) alone or with 10-9 M to 10-6 M PGE2 for up to 24 hr. The suspensions then were centrifuged at 2000 × g for 5 min. The supernatants from suspensions of unstimulated HSB.2 cells and of Con A-stimulated HSB.2 cells were collected and concentrated by centrifugation through Microcon-3 columns (Amicon, Inc. Beverly, MA). Less than 5% of IL-6 was lost when diluted standard IL-6 was concurrently concentrated by the same method. IL-6 in concentrated supernatants of unstimulated and Con A-stimulated cells was quantified by ELISA, according to the manufacturer's protocol (ENDOGEN, Woburn, MA).

Reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction. Replicate suspensions of HSB.2 T cells were washed and incubated at 5 × 106 cells/ml in 5 ml protein-free Iscove's:RPMI-1640 medium (1:1, v:v) at 37°C for 24 hr. PGE2 or other agents were added to the suspensions at 24 hr, 12 hr, 4 hr and 1 hr before harvesting suspensions of control and treated HSB.2 T cells for isolation of poly (A+) RNA by the Fast Track kit (Invitrogen, San Diego, CA) and total RNA by a TRIzol Reagent kit (GIBCO-BRL, Grand Island, NY). First-strand cDNAs were synthesized from HSB.2 T cell poly (A+) RNA or total RNA with oligo-dT primers and Superscript II reverse transcriptase (GibcoBRL), and were used as templates for PCR. PCR was carried out for 25-30 cycles of 95°C for 1 min, 58°C for 1 min, and 72°C for 1 min. The primers used are: IL-6 external primers of sequences: 5' (upstream)-CCAGGAGCCCAGCTATG and 5' (downstream)-CATTTGCCGAAGAGCC (Demuth et al., 1996). Five µl of the resultant RT-PCR products were amplified again in RT-PCR for 7-15 cycles under the same conditions as the first PCR, but with the IL-6 internal primers of sequences: 5' (upstream)-AACTCCTCCTCCACAAGCG and 5' (downstream)-TGGACTGCAGGAACTCCTT (Demuth et al., 1996). Both the external and internal primers for IL-6 included the intron-exon border to avoid amplification of genomic DNA. Analysis of EP R mRNA in control HSB.2 T cells and Con A-stimulated HSB.2 T cells was performed by RT-PCR using the same volume of cDNA for each subtype of PGE2 R. The upstream primers were 5'-CTCGCCGCCCTGGTGTGCAACACGC for EP1 R, 5'-TTCATCCGGCACGGGCGGACCGC for EP2 R, 5'-TGTGTCGCGCAGTACCGGCG for EP3 R, and 5'-CCTCCTGAGAAAGACAGTGCT for EP4 R. The downstream primers were 5'-GGCCTCCCAGGCGCTCGGTGTTAGGCC for EP1 R, 5'-GTCAGCCTGTTTACTGGC ATCTG for EP2 R, 5'-CGGGCCACTGGACGGTGTACT for EP3 R and 5'-AAGACACTCTCT GAGTCCT for EP4 R (An et al., 1993, 1994; Regan et al., 1994; Funk et al., 1993). The constitutively-expressed gene encoding GAPDH was used as an internal control in RT-PCR to normalize the amounts of RNA in each sample. The cDNA of the GAPDH gene was amplified from the same volume of cDNAs as for IL-6 and the EP Rs, but only 10-12 cycles of PCR. The resultant RT-PCR products were resolved by electrophoresis in 2% agarose gels.

    Results
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Methods
Results
Discussion
References

Coexpression of the EP3, EP2, and EP4 subtypes of PGE2 R and Con A-induced alteration in the profile of EP Rs in HSB.2 T cells. The cultured line of human leukemic HSB.2 T cells coexpresses 7282 ± 1805 (mean ± S.E.) PGE2 Rs/cell, that consist of the EP2, EP3 and EP4 subtypes. Application of a series of synthetic agonists and antagonists, that bind preferentially to one or more subtypes of PGE2 Rs to block binding of [3H]PGE2 to HSB.2 T cells suggested predominant protein expression of EP3 Rs, fewer EP2 Rs and EP4 Rs, and no EP1 Rs (Zeng et al., 1996a). The presence of functional EP2 Rs and EP4 Rs was demonstrated by stimulation of increases in [cAMP]i by PGE2, misoprostol (EP4/EP2/EP3 R-selective agonist) and butaprost (EP2 R-specific agonist), whereas the presence of functional EP3 Rs was indicated by increases in the [Ca++]i by PGE2 and sulprostone (EP3/EP1 R-selective agonist) (Zeng et al., 1996a). Coexpression of mRNA encoding EP3 Rs, EP2 Rs and EP4 Rs in unstimulated HSB.2 T cells was confirmed by RT-PCR analysis of poly (A+) RNA or total RNA from HSB.2 T cells (lane 1 in fig. 1). When HSB.2 T cells were stimulated with 5 µg/ml of the mitogenic lectin Con A for 1 to 24 hr, expression of mRNA encoding EP3 Rs and EP2 Rs were down-regulated by Con A in a time-dependent manner, whereas EP4 R mRNA was maintained or up-regulated by Con A (fig. 1). mRNA encoding the EP1 Rs was not detected in either unstimulated or Con A-stimulated HSB.2 T cells (data not shown).


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Fig. 1.   Coexpression of the EP3, EP2, and EP4 Rs and time-course of Con A-induced alteration in the profile of EP Rs in HSB.2 T cells. HSB.2 T cells were incubated for 24 hr in medium (lane 1) and 5 µg/ml of Con A was added to the incubation at 1, 2, 4, 12, or 24 hr (in lanes 2-6, respectively) before harvesting the cells. RT-PCR analysis of the same poly (A+) RNA or total RNA with a probe specific for each EP R-subtype of human PGE2 Rs or GAPDH, a constitutively expressed mRNA were performed as described in Methods. The result presented was representative of those from three experiments.

PGE2 stimulation of IL-6 secretion by unstimulated- and Con A-stimulated-HSB.2 T cells. PGE2 enhanced secretion of immunoreactive IL-6 by unstimulated HSB.2 T cells in a time-dependent manner (fig. 2A). Since the basal levels of IL-6 secreted by unstimulated HSB.2 T cells were low, we chose to measure IL-6 cumulative secretion by HSB.2 T cells during 24 hr of incubation. At 24 hr, the secretion of IL-6 by HSB.2 T cells was increased significantly by 10-7 M PGE2 to a mean maximal level 8.8-fold higher than that of PGE2-untreated controls. At 24 hr, IL-6 secretion was increased by PGE2 in a concentration-dependent manner (fig. 2B), with significant mean enhancement to levels 5.0-, 9.3- and 13.2-fold higher than that of unstimulated HSB.2 cells by 10-8 M, 10-7 M, and 10-6 M PGE2, respectively (fig. 2B). Incubation of HSB.2 T cells with 5 µg/ml of Con A for 24 hr enhanced secretion of IL-6 to a mean 12-fold higher than that of HSB.2 T cells incubated in medium alone (fig. 2C). When HSB.2 T cells were concurrently stimulated with Con A and a range of concentrations of PGE2 for 24 hour, IL-6 secretion was further enhanced 2.5-, 6.7-, 8.8-, and 10.2-fold by 10-9, 10-8, 10-7, and 10-6 M PGE2, respectively, when compared with Con A-evoked IL-6 secretion (0.25 pg/ml culture medium) (fig. 2C). After 24 hr of Con A stimulation without and with PGE2, more than 70% of HSB.2 T cells were still viable, as assessed by trypan blue exclusion.


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Fig. 2.   Time-course and PGE2 concentration-dependence of stimulation of secretion of IL-6 by HSB.2 T cells without and with Con A-stimulation. A: Time-course of secretion of IL-6 in HSB.2 T cells by PGE2 alone. HSB.2 T cells were incubated with medium for 24 hr and 10-7 M PGE2 was added to the incubation at 1, 2, 4, 12, or 24 hr before harvesting the cell supernants. B: Dependence of IL-6 secretion on PGE2 concentration with a 24 hour incubation. Fold-increases in A and B were calculated relative to the level of IL-6 secretion with medium alone (fold-increase = 1.0). In the absence of PGE2, the IL-6 secretion by HSB.2 T cells was .02 pg/ml culture medium. C: PGE2 concentration-dependence of stimulation of secretion of IL-6 by Con A-stimulated HSB.2 T cells. HSB.2 T cells were exposed to 5 µg/ml of Con A for 24 hours and 10-7 M PGE2 was added to the incubation as described in A. "+"=with and "-"=without. The results presented in A, B and C represent the mean ± S.E. of the results from three or four experiments performed in duplicate.

PGE2 enhancement of IL-6 mRNA in unstimulated- and Con A-stimulated-HSB.2 T cells. We then examined whether PGE2 regulates IL-6 at a transcriptional level. Pretreatment of HSB.2 cells with 1 µg/ml of the cellular RNA synthesis inhibitor actinomycin D for 2 hr and continued incubation for 24 hr together with 10-6 M PGE2, resulted in a mean of 42% (n = 4) reduction in the PGE2-evoked increases in IL-6 secretion compared to that elicited by PGE2 without actinomycin D. Actinomycin D alone failed to change the basal level of IL-6 secretion by HSB.2 T cells (data not shown). Therefore, HSB.2 T cell IL-6 response to PGE2 required de novo RNA synthesis.

Semi-quantitative RT-PCR analysis of poly (A+) RNA or total RNA revealed expression of IL-6 mRNA at a low level in unstimulated HSB.2 T cells and significant increases in IL-6 mRNA after PGE2 stimulation (fig. 3A). The rise in IL-6 mRNA was seen after 30 min of exposure to PGE2 (data not shown), reached a maximum by 1-2 hr, and returned to the prestimulated level after 12-24 hr (fig. 3A). The effect of PGE2 on IL-6 mRNA in HSB.2 T cells was significant at 10-8 M - 10-6 M PGE2 (data not shown). When HSB.2 T cells were pretreated with 1 µg/ml of actinomycin D for 24 hr to block cellular RNA synthesis, and then stimulated with 10-7 M PGE2 for 1 hr, there were no increases in IL-6 mRNA elicited by PGE2 (fig. 3B), suggesting that HSB.2 T cell IL-6 response to PGE2 depended on de novo RNA synthesis rather than RNA stabilization.


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Fig. 3.   PGE2-induced increases in IL-6 mRNA in HSB.2 T cells. A: Time-course of PGE2-induced increases in mRNA encoding IL-6. The samples are: medium control (lane 1) and 10-7 M PGE2 after incubation for 1 hr, 4 hr and 24 hr (lane 2-4, respectively). B: Actinomycin D inhibition of increases in IL-6 mRNA elicited by PGE2. HSB.2 T cells were pretreated without and with 1 µg/ml actinomycin D for 24 hr, and then stimulated with or without 10-7 M PGE2 for 1 additional hour. Lane 1-4 are medium control, PGE2, actinomycin D, PGE2 plus actinomycin D, respectively. C: Effect of Con A-induced changes in mRNA encoding IL-6. HSB.2 cells were incubated in medium (lane 1) or treated with 5 µg/ml of Con A for 1, 4, 12, and 24 hr in lanes 2-5, respectively. D: Effects of a combination of Con A and PGE2 on mRNA encoding IL-6. HSB.2 T cells were pretreated without and with 5 µg/ml Con A for 24 hour and then treated with or without 10-7 M PGE2 for 1 additional hour. Lane 1-4 are control, PGE2 plus Con A, PGE2, and Con A alone, respectively. In A-D, RT-PCR analysis were performed as described in Method. The results presented in A-D were representative of those from three experiments.

RT-PCR analysis of IL-6 mRNA from HSB.2 T cells stimulated by Con A for 1 to 24 hr failed to show any changes (fig. 3C). However, when HSB.2 T cells were pretreated with 5 µg/ml of Con A for 24 hr and the incubation continued with 10-7 M PGE2 for an additional 1 hr, the expression of IL-6 mRNA was substantially increased when compared with that from control HSB.2 T cells treated only with PGE2 for 1 hr (fig. 3D).

EP4/EP2 R mediation of PGE2 stimulation of IL-6 secretion. We next determined which EP Rs mediate the effect of PGE2 on IL-6 by employing agonists selective for one or more subtypes of EP R. PGE2 and the EP4/EP2/EP3 R-agonist misoprostol (fig. 4C) stimulated the secretion of IL-6 by HSB.2 T cells to a similar extent (fig. 4A), suggesting a dependence on EP4, EP2 and/or EP3 Rs. The fact that two EP3 R-directed agonists sulprostone and M&B 28767 (fig. 4C) did not increase the secretion of IL-6 by HSB.2 T cells (fig. 4A) ruled out the involvement of EP3 Rs. PGE2 stimulation of HSB.2 T cell secretion of IL-6 thus is mediated by EP4 and/or EP2 Rs. The fact that the EP2 R-selective agent butaprost (fig. 4C) is a weak agonist, as assessed in its ability to elevate [cAMP]i in HSB.2 T cells (Zeng et al., 1996a), may explain its failure to stimulate IL-6 secretion (fig. 4A). With a similar specificity for EP4/EP2 Rs, the increases in IL-6 mRNA evoked by PGE2 were mimicked by the EP4/EP2/EP3 R-agonist misoprostol, but not by the EP3 R-directed agonists sulprostone and M&B 28767 (fig. 4B). That butaprost is a weak agonist for the EP2 R may explain its failure in increasing IL-6 mRNA (fig. 4B). Thus increases in both IL-6 message expression and protein secretion by PGE2 are dependent on EP4 Rs and/or EP2 Rs.


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Fig. 4.   PGE2 R subtype-specificity of transduction of stimulation of IL-6 secretion (A) and mRNA (B) by HSB.2 T cells. A: HSB.2 were incubated for 24 hr with medium, 10-7 M PGE2, sulprostone or M&B 28767 (EP3 R-directed), and misoprostol (EP4/EP2/EP3-selective) or 10-6 M butaprost (EP2 R-selective). Fold-increase calculated and basal IL-6 secretion were similar to that described in Fig. 2B. Each bar and bracket represents the mean ± S.E. of the results of three experiments performed in duplicate. The levels of statistical significance were determined by a Student's t test for each value relative to control, *= P < .01. B: HSB.2 T cells were incubated in serum-free medium for 24 hours and stimulated with 10-7 M PGE2 or the subtype-selective agonists for 1 hr. RT-PCR analysis of poly (A+) RNA with probes specific for IL-6 or GAPDH were carried out as described in Method. The samples from lane 1-6 were: control, 10-7 M PGE2, sulprostone, M&B 28767, misoprostol, and 10-6 M butaprost. The results were representative of those from three experiments. C. Structures of PGE2 analogues selective for each EP R used in the study.

Involvement of [cAMP]i and protein kinase A-dependent mechanisms in the effects of PGE2 on IL-6 secretion. We next examined the signal transduction from the EP Rs that mediate the PGE2 effects of IL-6 secretion by HSB.2 T cells. Dibutyryl-cAMP (a permeant cAMP analogue), forskolin (a direct activator of adenylyl cyclase) and IBMX (a cAMP phosphodiesterase inhibitor) are all capable of increasing cellular levels of cAMP. Optimal concentrations of dibutyryl-cAMP, forskolin and IBMX each increased the secretion of IL-6 by HSB.2 T cells to levels similar in magnitude to that elicited by 10-7 M PGE2 at 24 hr (fig. 5A). Simultaneous addition of PGE2 and either dibutyryl-cAMP, forskolin or IBMX resulted in further enhancement of IL-6 secretion when compared with that elicited by PGE2 alone (fig. 5A). Thus an increase in [cAMP]i is one second messenger mediating IL-6 responses of HSB.2 T cells. Again, this supports the dependence of PGE2-evoked increases in IL-6 secretion on EP4 and/or EP2 Rs that are functionally coupled to increases in [cAMP]i.


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Fig. 5.   Involvement of [cAMP]i and protein kinase A on IL-6 secretion evoked by PGE2. A: [cAMP]i mediation of PGE2 effect on IL-6 secretion. HSB.2 T cells were incubated for 24 hours without (Frame Left) and with (Frame Right) 10-7 M PGE2 alone or with IBMX, dibutyryl-cAMP ((Bu)2cAMP) and forskolin (FSK) at respective final concentrations of 1 µM, 10 mM, and 10 µM. B: Protein kinase A requirement for PGE2 to increase IL-6 secretion. HSB.2 T cells were cotreated with 10-7 M PGE2 and a PKA inhibitor KT5720 or PKC inhibitor calphostin C (Cal C) at 10-6 M for 24 hr. In s A and B, fold-increases calculated and basal IL-6 secretion with buffer alone were similar to that described in Fig. 2. The levels of statistical significance were determined by a Student's t test for each value relative to control, + = P < .05, * = P < .01. However, **= P < .01 when compared to the PGE2 -stimulated level of IL-6 secretion.

Furthermore, cotreatment of HSB.2 cells with 10-6 M PKA inhibitor KT5720 for 24 hr blocked PGE2 elevations in IL-6 secretion without altering the basal levels (fig. 5B). Thus, the PGE2 effect on IL-6 secretion by HSB.2 T cells appeared to be dependent on activities of PKA activity. In contrast, cotreatment of HSB.2 cells with the specific PKC inhibitor calphostin C at concentration of 10-6 M changed neither the basal nor PGE2-stimulated IL-6 levels (fig. 5B), ruling out the involvement of PKC.

    Discussion
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Methods
Results
Discussion
References

Prostaglandin E2 has potent effects on T cell differentiation, proliferation, survival, adhesion, migration, expression of membrane Rs and diverse synthetic responses to antigens and mitogens (Goetzl et al., 1995a). Expression of a characteristic pattern of different subtypes of EP Rs by each subset of T cells is the principal determinant of specificity of the response of those T cells to PGE2. Aspects of ligand specificity and transductional biochemical pathways have been partially defined for each of the subtypes of EP Rs expressed by T cells. The HSB.2 T cell is a "double-negative" thymocyte (Adams et al., 1970; Hara et al., 1988), that coexpresses a total of 7000 EP3, EP2 and EP4 Rs per cell with a Kd of 3.7 nM (Zeng et al., 1996a). The results of ligand binding studies (Zeng et al., 1996a) and RT-PCR analyses (fig. 1) suggested that the levels of expression of EP R mRNA and protein by unstimulated HSB.2 T cells are in the order of prevalence of EP3 Rs = EP2 Rs >EP4 Rs, without EP1 Rs. The presence of functional EP3 Rs or EP2/EP4 Rs was demonstrated by respective increases in [Ca++]i and [cAMP]i by PGE2 and EP R-selective agonists (Zeng et al., 1996a). The EP3 Rs of HSB.2 T cells have been shown to mediate PGE2 stimulation of MMP-9 production and secretion by a Ca++-dependent mechanism (Zeng et al., 1996a). HSB.2 T cells do not produce IL-2 constitutively (Kasahara et al., 1985), which was also confirmed in our study. IL-6 is a multifunctional cytokine with many immunological and inflammatory activities, including regulation of differentiation and functions of B and T lymphocytes (Van Snick 1990). Although PGE2 has been shown to modify IL-6 release from T lymphocytes (Della Bella et al., 1997), the EP R-specificity and transductional mechanisms have not been elucidated for defined sets of T cells. Coexpression of EP3 Rs, EP2 Rs and EP4 Rs by HSB.2 early T cells allowed us now to examine their potentially important roles in regulating IL-6 secretion.

HSB.2 T cell secretion of IL-6 was stimulated in a time-dependent and concentration-dependent manner and increased up to 13-fold by 10-8 M - 10-6 M PGE2 (fig. 2). Dibutyryl-cAMP, forskolin and IBMX that increase the [cAMP]i in HSB.2 T cells by different mechanisms, mimicked PGE2 in enhancing secretion of IL-6 from HSB.2 T cells (fig. 5), which supported a cAMP-dependent mechanism. The combination of PGE2 and dibutyryl-cAMP, forskolin or IBMX resulted in a greater stimulation of IL-6 secretion than either type of agonist alone, suggesting mechanisms of additive mediation. These observations are consistent with previous findings that PGE2 effects on IL-6 production by macrophages or astrocytoma cells are mediated by cAMP (Hinson et al., 1996; Fiebich et al., 1997). The cAMP-dependence of PGE2 enhancement of IL-6 secretion by HSB.2 T cells suggests involvement of EP4 Rs and/or EP2 Rs. The predominant role of EP4 Rs and/or EP2 Rs was confirmed by finding that the EP4/EP2/EP3 R-selective agonist misoprostol (IC50=44 ± 1.3 nM) but not the EP3 R-preferential agonists sulprostone (IC50=2.3 ± .6 nM) and M&B 28767 (IC50=4.0 ± .4 nM) (Zeng et al., 1996a), reproduced the effects of PGE2 on IL-6 secretion by HSB.2 T cells. Thus, stimulation of HSB.2 T cell secretion of IL-6 by PGE2 is mediated by the adenylyl cyclase-coupled EP4 Rs and/or EP2 Rs. Butaprost (EP2 R) (IC50>1 µM) (Zeng et al., 1996a), failed to increase IL-6 secretion (fig. 4) presumably because it is a weak agonist for EP2 R-mediated adenylyl cyclase activity. Furthermore, PGE2-evoked increases in IL-6 secretion were suppressed by a PKA inhibitor but not by a PKC inhibitor, indicating the central role for cAMP-dependent PKA activation and ruling out the involvement of PKC. The PK inhibitor data supported the possibility that IL-6 responses to PGE2 are dependent on EP4/EP2 Rs coupled to cAMP-PKA pathway, but not on EP3 Rs and the PKC pathway.

The partial suppression of IL-6 response to PGE2 in HSB.2 T cells by the RNA synthesis inhibitor actinomycin D suggested a transcriptional mechanism with a requirement for IL-6 mRNA synthesis rather than mRNA stability. Northern analysis of HSB.2 T cell poly (A+) RNA, by hybridization with a cDNA probe specific for human IL-6 showed that one predominant transcript of 2.4 kb, corresponding in size to mRNA encoding IL-6, was increased after 1 hr of exposure to PGE2 (data not shown). Since IL-6 mRNA levels were low in HSB.2 T cells, we employed semi-quantitative RT-PCR with higher sensitivity than Northern blot to monitor the changes of mRNA encoding IL-6. The transcriptional regulatory mechanism was confirmed by finding that PGE2 increased IL-6 mRNA level in HSB.2 T cells. RT-PCR analysis revealed higher levels of IL-6 mRNA after 1 hr of exposure to PGE2 (fig. 3). The PGE2 transcriptional regulation of IL-6 production had been demonstrated in macrophages and astrocytoma cells (Hinson et al., 1996; Fiebich et al., 1997). The EP4/EP2 R specificity of the PGE2 stimulatory effect on IL-6 secretion was confirmed by demonstrating the capacity of both PGE2 and EP4/EP2/EP3 R-agonist misoprostol, but not the EP3 R-agonists sulprostone or M&B 28767, to elevate the level of IL-6 mRNA (fig. 4). Thus, HSB.2 T cell IL-6 responses to PGE2 are dependent on EP4/EP2 Rs. Again, butaprost failed to increase IL-6 mRNA expression (fig. 4) presumably because it is a weak agonist for EP2 Rs.

As T cells can be activated by exposure to antigen and multiple immune cytokines, the effects of PGE2 on IL-6 production were investigated after pretreatment of HSB.2 T cells with Con A as a mitogenic stimulus of early T cells. A mitogenic concentration of Con A alone increased the level of IL-6 secretion, and conditioned greater sensitivity of HSB.2 T cells to PGE2 and a higher magnitude of IL-6 response to the same concentration of PGE2 (fig. 2). Con A increased IL-6 secretion to nearly 12-fold higher than the basal level (Fig. 2). After Con A pretreatment, HSB.2 T cells responded with increased IL-6 secretion to 10-9 M PGE2 that had no effect on unactivated HSB.2 T cells (fig. 2). In addition, the magnitude of IL-6 secretion evoked by 10-8 M-10-6 M PGE2 was increased 7-10-fold by exposure of HSB.2 T cells to Con A, when compared with Con A treatment alone. We have also found that Con A suppressed mRNA encoding EP3 Rs and EP2 Rs and concurrently increased EP4 R mRNA (fig. 1), without detectably altering the level of IL-6 mRNA (fig. 3C). Con A-activation of HSB.2 T cells consequently increased the representation of EP4 Rs in relation to EP3 Rs even though Con A also suppressed EP2 R mRNA, which served to augment the role of EP4 Rs as the transducers of PGE2 stimulation of IL-6 secretion by Con A-stimulated HSB.2 T cells. This may explain the effect of Con A in enhancing both basal and PGE2-stimulated levels of IL-6 secretion but with similar fold-increases in IL-6 secretion evoked by a range of concentrations of PGE2 for unstimulated and Con A-stimulated HSB.2 cells, when compared with their respective basal IL-6 secretion without PGE2 (fig. 2). Con A also enhanced the potency of PGE2 as a stimulus of HSB.2 T cell expression of IL-6 mRNA. This was evidenced by our finding of a greater increase in expression of IL-6 mRNA when HSB.2 T cells were incubated with Con A and PGE2, than when HSB.2 T cells were incubated with PGE2 alone (fig. 3). Con A activation thus both up-regulates EP4 R expression selectively and achieves sensitization of T cells to the effects of PGE2. Con A stimulated HSB.2 T cells to greater PGE2-evoked increases in IL-6 mRNA and secretion, at least in part by changing the profile of expression of EP Rs.

Therefore, PGE2-evoked increases in IL-6 production and secretion are attributable to EP4 Rs and/or EP2 Rs in HSB.2 T cells, that are mediated through a transcriptional mechanism and cAMP-PKA-dependent events. Con A-induced alterations in the relative ratio of EP4/EP3 Rs directly contributed to the specificity of changes in IL-6 responses to PGE2 in HSB.2 T cells.

    Footnotes

1 This research was supported by Grant HL31809 from the National Institutes of Health. L.Z. is supported by a Postdoctoral Research Training Fellowship of the American Lung Association. S.A. is an Arthritis Investigator of the Arthritis Foundation.

Received February 26, 1998.

Send reprint requests to: Edward J. Goetzl, M.D., Department of Medicine, University of California, Box 0711, 533 Parnassus, San Francisco, CA 94143-0711.

    Abbreviations

PGE2, prostaglandin E2; R, receptor; AC, adenylyl cyclase; [cAMP]i, intracellular concentration of cyclic AMP; IBMX, 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine; FBS, fetal bovine serum; HBSS, Hanks' balanced salt solution; RT-PCR, reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction; IL, interleukin.

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THE JOURNAL OF PHARMACOLOGY AND EXPERIMENTAL THERAPEUTICS
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