In Drosophila, the melanization reaction is an important defense mechanism against injury and invasion of microorganisms. Drosophila tyrosine hydroxylase (TH, also known as Pale) and dopa decarboxylase (Ddc), key enzymes in the dopamine synthesis pathway, underlie the melanin synthesis by providing the melanin precursors dopa and dopamine, respectively. It has been shown that expression of Drosophila TH and Ddc is induced in various physiological and pathological conditions, including bacterial challenge; however, the mechanism involved has not been fully elucidated. Here, we show that ectopic activation of p38 MAPK induces TH and Ddc expression, leading to upregulation of melanization in the Drosophila cuticle. This p38-dependent melanization was attenuated by knockdown of TH and Ddc, as well as by that of Drosophila HR38, a member of the NR4A family of nuclear receptors. In mammalian cells, p38 phosphorylated mammalian NR4As and Drosophila HR38 and potentiated these NR4As to transactivate a promoter containing NR4A-binding elements, with this transactivation being, at least in part, dependent on the phosphorylation. This suggests an evolutionarily conserved role for p38 MAPKs in the regulation of NR4As. Thus, p38-regulated gene induction through NR4As appears to function in the dopamine synthesis pathway and may be involved in immune and stress responses.
Introduction
Melanin is a widespread pigment found in the skin, hair and eyes of animals, protecting them from harmful environmental stimuli. In arthropods, the melanization reaction is also an important defense mechanism against injury and invasion of a wide variety of microorganisms (Cerenius and Soderhall, 2004; Nappi and Vass, 1993; Sugumaran, 2002). Rapid deposition of melanin at the wound site prevents the loss of hemolymph and leads to killing of the invading microorganisms by toxic intermediates, such as reactive oxygen species, that are produced during the melanin biosynthesis. In Drosophila, tyrosine-derived catecholamines, such as dopa and dopamine, serve as the precursors of melanin, which constitutes the black and brown pigments in the cuticle and wing (Wittkopp et al., 2003). Drosophila tyrosine hydroxylase (TH, also known as Pale) catalyses the oxidation of tyrosine to dopa, which is the first and rate-limiting step in dopamine biosynthesis. Dopa decarboxylase (Ddc) converts dopa into dopamine. Some fractions of dopa and dopamine are oxidized by phenoloxidase (PO) in the hemolymph and converted into quinones, which are then polymerized non-enzymatically to form dopa- and dopamine-melanin, respectively.
Mutations in the pale locus, which encodes TH, have been shown to result in unpigmentated embryos that are unable to hatch (Jürgens et al., 1984; Neckameyer and White, 1993). It has also been shown that TH, together with Ddc, is required for melanin synthesis in the cuticle of adult flies, and expression of both genes is sufficient to cause ectopic melanin patterns in the wing (True et al., 1999). A microarray analysis of Drosophila genes revealed that TH and Ddc were upregulated in the flies after septic injury with a mixture of Escherichia coli and Micrococcus luteus (De Gregorio et al., 2001). In addition, in the moth Manduca sexta, the corresponding tyrosine-hydroxylase-encoding gene was upregulated in response to inoculation with M. luteus (Gorman et al., 2007), suggesting the possible involvement of DTH and Ddc in immune-associated melanization. Despite these lines of evidence, however, the regulatory mechanism of TH and Ddc gene expression in the context of melanization has been elusive.
p38 MAPKs are preferentially activated in response to a wide variety of physical, chemical and biological stress stimuli, and thereafter phosphorylate various substrates, such as transcription factors and other protein kinases, regulating cellular immune and stress responses (Kyriakis and Avruch, 2001; Widmann et al., 1999; Zarubin and Han, 2005). Activation of p38 is regulated by two classes of protein kinases, MAPK kinases (MAP2Ks) and MAP2K kinases (MAP3Ks). MAP3Ks phosphorylate and thereby activate MAP2Ks, and activated MAP2Ks in turn phosphorylate and activate MAPKs. In Drosophila, three p38-MAPK-encoding genes, p38a (also known as Mpk2), p38b and p38c, have been identified (Davis et al., 2008; Han et al., 1998a; Han et al., 1998b). As with mammalian p38s, Drosophila p38a and p38b have been shown to be activated by immune stimulation and various stressors, and flies lacking the p38a or p38b gene are susceptible to some environmental stressors (Craig et al., 2004; Cully et al., 2010; Han et al., 1998b). Recently, it has been shown that the p38a and p38b double-mutant flies are viable in near-sterile condition but hypersensitive to microbial infection (Chen et al., 2010). By contrast, p38c appears to be an atypical p38 MAPK, because it has mutations in the TGY motif, which is required for activating phosphorylation by MAP2Ks (Davis et al., 2008).
Recent studies have shed light on the tissue- and cell-type-specific roles of Drosophila p38 family members in innate immune responses. Oral ingestion of microbial components induces activation of Drosophila p38, and p38 in turn transcriptionally induces Dual oxidase (Duox) in the midgut of flies and contributes to the survival of flies (Ha et al., 2009). In hemocytes, p38b-mediated ‘phagocytic encapsulation’ of bacteria increases the infection tolerance of flies injected with Salmonella typhimurium (Shinzawa et al., 2009). Importantly, Hodgetts and colleagues have demonstrated that p38c is required for septic-injury-dependent Ddc expression in epidermal tissues (Davis et al., 2008). These findings suggest that the Drosophila p38 MAPKs have a physiological role in innate immunity, as has been shown with p38 in other species, such as mammals and Caenorhabditis elegans (Kim et al., 2002; Matsuzawa et al., 2005).
In the present study, we found that constitutive activation of Drosophila p38 in the dorsal midline of flies induced black pigmentation, which was a consequence of upregulated melanization. In this p38-induced melanization, Drosophila TH, Ddc and the nuclear receptor HR38 were found to play a crucial role. Drosophila HR38 belongs to the NR4A subfamily of nuclear receptors that function as transcription factors and has been shown to play pivotal roles in adult cuticle formation and atypical ecdysteroid signaling in flies (Baker et al., 2003; Kozlova et al., 2009; Kozlova et al., 1998). We found that p38 phosphorylated mammalian NR4As and Drosophila HR38 and potentiated these NR4As to transactivate the rat TH promoter, with this transactivation being, at least in part, mediated by the phosphorylation. This suggests an evolutionarily conserved role for p38 in the regulation of NR4As. We thus propose that p38-regulated gene induction through NR4A nuclear receptors serves as a regulatory mechanism for the dopamine biosynthesis pathway in the immune and stress responses in Drosophila and mammals.
Results
Ectopic expression of ASK1ΔN induces black pigmentation in the fly thorax
To explore target genes downstream of Drosophila p38, we took advantage of the MAP3K Drosophila ASK1 (also known as Pk92B) as a potential p38-activating MAP3K (Kuranaga et al., 2002). We constructed an expression vector for Drosophila ASK1ΔN, lacking the ASK1 N-terminal regulatory domain, which is similar in its primary structure to the mammalian ASK1ΔN that has been shown to act in a constitutively active manner (Mizumura et al., 2006; Takeda et al., 2000). In Drosophila S2 cells, p38a was strongly activated by coexpression with ASK1ΔN compared with that by wild-type (WT) ASK1, as determined by an antibody against phosphorylated p38 that specifically recognizes the dual-phosphorylation of Thr and Tyr residues in the well-conserved TGY motif in the activation loop of p38 (Fig. 1A; supplementary material Fig. S1A). We also found that p38b was activated by coexpression with ASK1ΔN, although we could not evaluate the activation state of p38c because of the lack of the TGY motif (supplementary material Fig. S1A,B). Although ASK1ΔN also activated Drosophila JNK, which is a further stress-activated MAPK, the extent of JNK activation by ASK1ΔN was similar to that by ASK1WT (Fig. 1B). These results suggest that ASK1ΔN acts as a constitutively active mutant selectively for the p38 pathway.
We next established a Drosophila transgenic strain harboring UAS-DASK1ΔN in which cDNA encoding ASK1ΔN was inserted downstream of the UAS binding sequence for the transcription factor GAL4. We then performed crosses of this strain with various ‘driver’ strains that express GAL4 through ubiquitous or tissue-specific promoters. When the pannier (pnr)-GAL4 strain, in which GAL4 is expressed in a longitudinal dorsal domain extending along the thoracic and abdominal segments (Calleja et al., 2000), was crossed with the UAS-DASK1ΔN strain, the progeny (pnr>ASK1ΔN) exhibited black pigmentation in the thorax cuticle, which corresponded to the pnr-GAL4 expression region in the thorax; no such pigmentation was observed in the pnr-GAL4 flies without the UAS-DASK1ΔN transgene (Fig. 1C,D). To confirm that this pigmentation was induced by overexpressed ASK1ΔN, we generated transgenic flies expressing the inverted repeat (IR) RNA for ASK1, which specifically inhibits ASK1 expression in a GAL4-dependent manner (UAS-DASK1-IR). The pigmentation in pnr>ASK1ΔN was suppressed by coexpression with ASK1-IR, excluding the possibility that this phenotype was caused by an artifact of the expression system (Fig. 1E).
Intriguingly, the pigmentation in pnr>ASK1ΔN was confined to the thorax, although pnr-GAL4 is expressed in the dorsal midline both of the thorax and abdomen (Fig. 1C,D). This raised the possibility that the dorsal midline of the thorax is a preferential region where ASK1ΔN expression induces visible pigmentation. To test this possibility, we examined whether and where ubiquitous expression of ASK1ΔN induces pigmentation using a heat-shock-driven GAL4 (hs)>ASK1ΔN flies to ubiquitously express ASK1ΔN upon heat shock. These flies, which were subjected to a 1-hour heat shock at 37°C during their pupal stage, showed the pigmentation in the lower medial region of the thorax cuticle, together with a defect in wing expansion (Fig. 2A,B). By contrast, ASK1ΔN expression in immune-related tissues, such as fat body and hemocytes, did not induce visible pigmentation (data not shown). These results suggested that ASK1ΔN induces pigmentation preferentially in the dorsal midline of the thorax and that tissue-specific factor(s) and/or mechanism(s) are required for ectopic pigmentation.
ASK1ΔN-dependent pigmentation is mediated by the Drosophila p38 pathway
To evaluate the contribution of p38 in ASK1ΔN-dependent pigmentation, we examined whether expression of ASK1ΔN also selectively activates p38 in vivo (Fig. 2C). Heat-shock-dependent expression of ASK1ΔN in the hs>ASK1ΔN flies induced p38 activation (Fig. 2C, the upper and weaker phosphorylated p38 band in the blot), although the basal activity of p38 (the lower stronger band) was high even in the absence of ASK1ΔN expression, probably owing to the heat shock used for induction of GAL4; an analysis using the p38a-null and p38b-null flies suggested that the upper and lower phosphorylated p38 bands corresponded to the activated forms of p38a and p38b, respectively (supplementary material Fig. S1C). By contrast, ASK1ΔN expression did not induce JNK activation, indicating that ASK1ΔN expression also selectively activates p38 in vivo.
We next examined the requirement of the Drosophila p38 pathway for ASK1ΔN-induced pigmentation. Expression of dominant-negative p38a (p38a-DN) (Adachi-Yamada et al., 1999) or IR RNA-mediated knockdown of p38a or p38b in the pnr>ASK1ΔN flies abolished the pigmentation (Fig. 3A–C,J), whereas knockdown of p38c only had a marginal effect (Fig. 3D). The pigmentation was also suppressed by knockdown of a Drosophila MAP2K gene in the p38 pathway, licorne (lic) (also known as Mkk3) (Han et al., 1998b) (Fig. 3E), strongly suggesting that the p38 pathway is required for the ASK1ΔN-dependent pigmentation.
Knockdown of another MAP2K gene, Mkk4, attenuated the ASK1ΔN-dependent pigmentation (Fig. 3F). Because mammalian MKK4 is known to mediate both the JNK and p38 pathways, this result suggested that the ASK1ΔN-dependent pigmentation might be attributed to basal JNK activity, in addition to ASK1ΔN-induced p38 activation. However, it was difficult to assess the requirement of the Drosophila JNK pathway for the ASK1ΔN-induced pigmentation; the loss of JNK activity, accomplished by knockdown of JNK or overexpression of a dominant-negative form of JNK or the JNK phosphatase Puckered, in the pnr-GAL4-expressing region, mostly resulted in lethality before eclosion, probably owing to defects in dorsal or thorax closure (Riesgo-Escovar et al., 1996; Sluss et al., 1996; Zeitlinger and Bohmann, 1999). Among the strains we tested, the pnr>ASK1ΔN flies in a hemizygous background for hep1, a hypomorphic allele of the gene encoding a MAP2K of the JNK pathway (Glise et al., 1995), and those crossed with the UAS-hep-IR (4353R-2) line avoided lethality but retained the ASK1ΔN-dependent pigmentation (Fig. 3G,I). The contribution of JNK to ASK1ΔN-dependent pigmentation might thus be relatively low compared with that of p38, although these results do not completely exclude the possibility that basal JNK activity plays some roles.
p38-dependent pigmentation is caused by melanization
Black and brown pigments in Drosophila cuticle are known to comprise dopa and dopamine melanin (Wittkopp et al., 2003). Fig. 4A shows the current model of the melanin biosynthesis pathway in Drosophila (True, 2003; Wittkopp et al., 2002). Tyrosine is converted into dopa by TH, and dopa is converted into dopamine by Ddc. Some fractions of dopa and dopamine are converted into dopa and dopamine melanin, respectively, by means of the PO system. Dopamine is also catalyzed into N-β-alanyl dopamine (NBAD) by Ebony, and NBAD is subsequently converted into yellowish NBAD sclerotin. The melanization pattern in the thorax cuticle appears to be determined by the balance of genes involved in the melanin synthesis pathway including TH, Ddc and ebony, all of which have been reported to be highly expressed in the epidermal cells of adult thorax (Gibert et al., 2007; Wittkopp et al., 2002). Consistent with the previous finding that overexpression of Ebony suppressed melanin accumulation, probably owing to a reduction in the levels of dopa and dopamine (Wittkopp et al., 2002), we found that coexpression of Ebony with ASK1ΔN abolished ectopic black pigmentation (Fig. 4B,C). Moreover, we found that, in a hemizygous background for a yellow (y1) mutation, in which flies exhibit a yellowish body color compared with WT flies, pigmentation in the ASK1ΔN-expressing region, particularly in the scutellum (the one-fourth to one-third caudomedial portion in each photo), was brown rather than black (Fig. 4D,E). Because yellow is known to be required for the production of black melanin (Walter et al., 1991; Wittkopp et al., 2002), yellow-dependent production of dopa melanin appears to be required for black pigmentation in pnr>ASK1ΔN flies. These results suggested that upregulation of dopa and dopamine melanin was involved in Drosophila-p38-dependent pigmentation.
TH and Ddc are required for p38-dependent melanization
Given that the dopa and dopamine levels are regulated by TH and Ddc, we assessed whether TH and Ddc are involved in the p38-dependent melanization. Expression of IR RNA for TH or Ddc, which targets all known splicing variants of each gene (Friggi-Grelin et al., 2003; Shen et al., 1993), attenuated basal pigmentation in the thorax of pnr-GAL4 flies, indicating the requirement of TH and Ddc for basal pigmentation (Fig. 5A,B). Knockdown of either gene also abolished ASK1ΔN-induced pigmentation, suggesting that TH and Ddc were essential for p38-dependent melanization (Fig. 5C–E).
A recent report showing the role of p38c in the induction of Ddc in the epidermis of bacteria-injected flies motivated us to examine whether the ASK1ΔN-dependent p38 activation induced expression of TH and Ddc in flies (Davis et al., 2008). Although we initially examined the pnr>ASK1ΔN-dependent increase in the mRNA expression of TH and Ddc in adult flies, we failed to detect it, probably owing to high basal expression (Gibert et al., 2007). We therefore examined the hs>ASK1ΔN pupae and their control hs>GFP pupae 36–48 hours after their puparium formation, when TH and Ddc expression is reportedly decreased (Davis et al., 2007a). RNA was extracted from the pupae maintained at 25°C, in which only leaky expression of GFP or ASK1ΔN from the hs promoter was induced, avoiding the effect caused by heat-shock-dependent activation of p38. Quantitative real-time PCR (qRT-PCR) revealed that mRNA expression of TH and Ddc was induced in the ASK1ΔN-expressing pupae, compared with that in the control pupae (Fig. 5F), suggesting that Drosophila p38 activation induced the transcription of TH and Ddc.
HR38 is required for p38-dependent melanization
In mammals, the NR4A subfamily of nuclear receptors consists of three transcription factors: NR4A1 (also known as Nur77 and NGFI-B), NR4A2 (also known as Nurr1), and NR4A3 (also known as NOR-1) (Maxwell and Muscat, 2006). NR4A2 has been shown to regulate expression of the genes encoding tyrosine hydroxylase and aromatic L-amino acid decarboxylase (AADC), a mammalian ortholog of Ddc, and to play crucial roles in the development of dopaminergic neurons (Jankovic et al., 2005; Perlmann and Wallen-Mackénzie, 2004). NR4As bind to the NBRE (NGFI-B response element), through which NR4A2 regulates the mammalian TH promoter (Maxwell and Muscat, 2006). HR38 is the single Drosophila ortholog of the mammalian NR4A family and has been shown to bind to the NBRE (Baker et al., 2003; Fisk and Thummel, 1995). Consistent with this, it has recently been reported that HR38 binds to the NBRE-like sequence upstream of the Ddc gene and that ectopic expression of HR38 influences expression of Ddc in a tissue-dependent manner (Davis et al., 2007b). Furthermore, we found that four NBRE-like sequences existed in the Drosophila TH gene promoter (−2748 bp, −2318 bp, −2148 bp, and −459 bp from the transcription start site). These findings suggest that HR38 is involved in p38-dependent transcriptional control of Drosophila TH and Ddc.
To evaluate this possibility, we knocked down HR38 by pnr-GAL4-dependent expression of IR RNA for HR38. Because of the lethality of the pnr>DHR38-IR flies at a conventional temperature of 25°C, we maintained the flies at 18°C to reduce GAL4-dependent expression of HR38-IR and thus avoided the lethality (Fig. 5G). ASK1ΔN-induced melanization at 18°C, which was less obvious than that at 25°C, probably owing to the reduced GAL4 activity, was inhibited by coexpression of HR38-IR (Fig. 5H,I), suggesting that HR38 was required for the p38-dependent melanization. Taken together with the result that expression of HR38 did not change upon ASK1ΔN expression (Fig. 5F), Drosophila p38 appears to induce TH and Ddc through post-translational activation of HR38.
Mammalian p38 activation potentiates NR4As to transactivate the rat TH promoter
Because the structure of the NR4A family factors including Drosophila HR38 is highly conserved among species (Baker et al., 2003; Wang et al., 2003), we expected that p38 regulates gene expression through NR4As by a conserved mechanism. We therefore evaluated the transactivation function of NR4As by coexpressing the reporter gene TH/−9kb, which contained the rat TH promoter (−9 kb to +15 bp) fused to the luciferase gene (Iwawaki et al., 2000), in rat PC12 cells and measuring the relative luciferase activity. Although expression of mammalian ASK1ΔN or either of the NR4As activated the promoter to some extent, coexpression of ASK1ΔN and either of NR4As synergistically activated the promoter (Fig. 6A). The reporter gene TH/NBRE1 containing three copies of NBRE, but not the control gene TH/NBRE1-mt containing the same copies of mutated NBRE sequences, was activated only when either of NR4As was coexpressed with ASK1ΔN (Fig. 6B), indicating that mammalian ASK1ΔN potentiated NR4As to transactivate the rat TH promoter through the NBREs. Importantly, synergistic activation of the TH/−9kb promoter by coexpression of ASK1ΔN and NR4A2 was dose-dependently suppressed by treatment with the p38 inhibitor SB203580 but not with the JNK inhibitor SP600125 (Fig. 6C), suggesting that p38 activation was required for the ASK1ΔN-induced transactivation functions of NR4As. Moreover, coexpression of NR4A2 with the constitutively active MKK6 (also known as MAP2K6) mutant MKK6DD, which is a MAP2K that selectively activates p38, induced synergistic activation of the TH/−9kb promoter (Fig. 6D), suggesting that activation of p38 is sufficient to potentiate NR4As to transactivate the TH promoter.
p38 directly phosphorylates NR4As
Because Drosophila p38 activation did not upregulate HR38 expression (Fig. 5F), we sought to examine whether p38 regulates NR4As by protein modification such as phosphorylation. To this end, we used a bacterially expressed GST-tagged N-terminal portion of NR4A2 (GST–NR4A2-NT) as a substrate of p38 in an in vitro kinase assay. This portion of NR4A2 includes most of consensus phosphorylation sites targeted by p38 (Ser-Pro or Thr-Pro; indicated as red arrowheads in Fig. 7D). Whereas p38α (also known as MAPK14) and p38β (also known as MAPK11) phosphorylated GST–NR4A2-NT only faintly, both of them were activated by coexpression with ASK1WT, but not with kinase-negative (KN) form of ASK1, and effectively phosphorylated GST–NR4A2-NT (Fig. 7A). Because ASK1WT alone did not phosphorylate NR4A2-NT (data not shown), p38 MAPKs activated by ASK1 appear to directly phosphorylate NR4A2.
To assess whether p38 MAPKs also phosphorylated NR4As within cells, we treated, or left untreated, lysates of NR4A2-expressing cells with λ-phosphatase (λPPase) and subjected them to immunoblotting (Fig. 7B). PPase-treated NR4A2 migrated slightly faster than untreated NR4A2 (Fig. 7B, lanes 1 and 2), suggesting that NR4A2 was basally phosphorylated to some extent. Whereas coexpression of p38β did not affect the migration of NR4A2 probably due to the inactive states of p38β as determined using an antibody against phosphorylated p38 (Fig. 7B, lanes 3 and 4), coexpression of p38β and ASK1ΔN markedly retarded the migration of NR4A2 in a manner sensitive to λPPase (Fig. 7B, lanes 5 and 6). We also found that, in HEK-293 cells coexpressing p38β and ASK1ΔN, HR38 and NR4A2 exhibited similarly retarded migrations, both of which were sensitive to SB203580 (Fig. 7C). These results suggested that p38 phosphorylated NR4As within cells.
p38 MAPKs potentiate NR4As, at least in part, by phosphorylation
We next examined the involvement of p38-dependent phosphorylation of NR4As in their transactivation functions. A total of 15 potential (consensus) phosphorylation sites targeted by p38 (Ser-Pro or Thr-Pro) exist in both human and mouse NR4A2 as depicted in the diagram in Fig. 7D. Although we initially tested the NR4A2 mutants carrying single replacements of all potential sites with Ala residues, the ASK1ΔN-induced of none of the mutants had significantly different transactivation functions from that of WT NR4A2 (data not shown). We therefore examined the effect of combinational Ala mutations on NR4A2 activity. The 15 potential phosphorylation sites are distributed to four clusters that we designated I (Ser11, Ser16 and Thr36), II (Ser126, Thr129, Thr132, Ser140, Thr168, Ser18 and Thr185), III (Ser250 and Ser256) and IV (Ser351, Ser356 and Ser359). We generated four mutants, in which all potential Ser and Thr residues in each cluster were replaced with Ala. Each of these mutants activated the TH/−9kb promoter to a similar extent to that of WT NR4A2 (Fig. 7D, left six columns), indicating that these cluster mutants maintained their basal transactivation functions. Among the four mutants, however, ASK1ΔN-dependent synergistic activation of the TH/−9kb promoter by the cluster II mutant was partially, but significantly, reduced compared with that by WT (Fig. 7D, right six columns, and inset), suggesting that phosphorylation of multiple Ser and Thr residues in cluster II was required for p38-dependent activation of NR4A2.
To examine whether cluster II actually includes p38 phosphorylation site(s), we generated a GST-tagged NR4A2-ΔC protein that lacked C-terminal ligand-binding domain (LBD) and either contained all the phosphorylation site clusters (NR4A2-ΔC WT) or had the Ala replacement mutations in cluster II (NR4A2-ΔC II) (Fig. 7D). In vitro kinase assays using these proteins as substrates revealed that NR4A2-ΔC II was less phosphorylated by p38β than NR4A2-ΔC WT (Fig. 7E). Moreover, the retarded migration of NR4A2 coexpressed with ASK1ΔN was only not observed in the cluster II mutant (Fig. 7F). These results suggest that p38 activation potentiated NR4As, at least in part, by direct phosphorylation of cluster II in NR4As to transactivate the TH promoter.
Discussion
Here, we found that ectopic expression of Drosophila ASK1ΔN induced p38-dependent black pigmentation, which was caused by upregulated melanization. We also found that Drosophila p38 activation induced TH and Ddc expression and that these genes were essential for the p38-dependent melanization. Taking into account the diverse functions of p38 in immune and stress responses in a wide variety of organisms, regulation of basal and/or stimulation-induced Drosophila TH and Ddc expression might be an important device for p38 to exert its protective activity against harmful environmental stimuli in Drosophila.
Several lines of evidence have revealed that expression of Drosophila TH and Ddc is regulated at the transcription level in various physiological and pathological conditions. In the developmental process, these genes are transcriptionally upregulated before eclosion and play a role in the pigmentation of the adult cuticle (Davis et al., 2007a). Upon wounding, by pricking with a sterile needle, Drosophila TH and Ddc expression is induced in the epidermal cells near the wound site and contributes to repair the integument (Mace et al., 2005; Pearson et al., 2009). Septic injury with microbes is another setting in which regulation of Drosophila TH and Ddc expression is involved, as described in the introduction. Importantly, Drosophila p38c has been shown to be selectively required for E.-coli- and S.-aureus-induced Ddc expression in the epidermis (Davis et al., 2008). In our genetic interaction studies, we found that Drosophila p38a and p38b, rather than p38c, were required for ASK1ΔN-induced melanization (Fig. 3). Thus, not only Drosophila p38c but also p38a and p38b might regulate TH and Ddc expression in a manner dependent on cell types and/or cellular context.
We have shown, using the hs driver strain, that the dorsal midline of the thorax is the preferential region where expression of Drosophila ASK1ΔN induces visible melanization (Fig. 2). One plausible explanation for this regional selectivity is that Drosophila p38 activated by ASK1ΔN induces TH and Ddc expression efficiently in cells in the corresponding region of the thorax. Alternatively, it is possible that, although Drosophila p38 induces TH and Ddc in a wide range of cells, the upregulated TH and Ddc contribute to visible melanization only in the dorsal midline of the thorax. In the latter case, Drosophila p38-dependent regulation of TH and Ddc might have roles, such as in immune and stress responses, that are independent from melanization in tissues other than the thorax cuticle.
To investigate further how Drosophila p38 regulates TH and Ddc expression, we focused on HR38, a member of the NR4A nuclear receptor family, and found that it was also required for Drosophila p38-dependent melanization (Fig. 5). NR4A nuclear receptors are classified as a subgroup of orphan nuclear factors. However, NR4As have recently been found to function independently from ligand binding (Baker et al., 2003; Wang et al., 2003) and, instead, are regulated by their expression levels and/or post-transcriptional regulation. At least in Drosophila p38-dependent melanization, HR38 appeared to be regulated post-transcriptionally rather than transcriptionally, because we found that Drosophila ASK1ΔN expression did not induce mRNA expression of HR38 (Fig. 5F). Consistent with this, we found that mammalian p38 MAPKs directly phosphorylated mammalian NR4As (Fig. 7), consistent with the previous findings that several other kinases, including Akt, ERK, JNK and RSK, phosphorylated NR4As (Kolluri et al., 2003; Masuyama et al., 2001; Slagsvold et al., 2002; Wingate et al., 2006). Among the NR4A2 mutants we generated, in which potential phosphorylation sites targeted by p38 were replaced with Ala residues, only the cluster II mutant failed to be efficiently activated by mammalian p38 (Fig. 7D), suggesting that phosphorylation of multiple Ser and Thr residues in the cluster II is required for p38-induced activation of NR4A2. The partial reduction of both p38-dependent phosphorylation and activation of the cluster II mutant also suggests that a combination of phosphorylation of other clusters with that of cluster II is required (Fig. 7D,E). Comparison of amino acid sequences of NR4As (Fig. 8) reveals that most of potential phosphorylation sites targeted by p38 in each protein are in the relatively unconserved regions, not in the highly conserved DNA-binding and ligand-binding domains, and that the relative locations of these sites within a molecule vary among NR4As with the exception of the serine residue corresponding to Ser181 of NR4A2. This information supports the idea that a combination of phosphorylation of multiple residues, rather than phosphorylation of one crucial residue, might be a common transactivation mechanism of NR4As induced by p38 MAPKs. Nevertheless, other mechanisms (e.g. p38-dependent induction and/or recruitment of certain coactivators of NR4As) might facilitate the phosphorylation-induced transactivation functions of NR4As.
In mammals, NR4A2 has been shown to regulate the expression of genes such as TH and AADC that are important in the synthesis and storage of dopamine in central dopaminergic neurons (Jankovic et al., 2005; Perlmann and Wallen-Mackénzie, 2004). As one of our approaches to elucidate the role of p38 and NR4Rs in mammals, we examined dopamine levels in brains from ASK1-deficient adult mice, in which basal p38 activity is reduced compared with those from WT mice (Takeda et al., 2004). No significant difference in dopamine levels between WT and ASK1-deficient whole brains was detected (data not shown). However, dopamine levels are increased, at least in the striatum and prefrontal cortex, in ASK1-deficient mice (Kumakura et al., 2010), suggesting that the basal activity of p38 is not involved in the upregulation of dopamine levels, at least in the healthy mouse brain. Recently, it has been shown that genetic mutations of NR4A2 are associated with Parkinson's disease, a neurodegenerative disorder primarily affecting dopaminergic neurons (Le et al., 2003). Given that various potential roles of p38 in the regulation of the nervous system have been proposed (Takeda and Ichijo, 2002), p38 might participate in the pathophysiological regulation of dopaminergic neurons through NR4A2.
In correlation with the possible involvement of Drosophila p38-dependent induction of Drosophila TH and Ddc in immune responses in flies as discussed above, mammalian NR4As have also been shown to be induced by inflammatory stimuli and to regulate inflammatory gene expression (Pei et al., 2005; Pei et al., 2006). Further analyses of the regulatory mechanisms of NR4As by p38 both in Drosophila and mammals will shed light on the precise roles of p38–NR4As axis in immune responses. Moreover, we expect that our model of p38-dependent melanization in Drosophila will provide a useful tool to genetically search for signaling components that are crucially involved in the p38-dependent regulation of immune and stress responses.
Materials and Methods
Expression plasmids
pUAST-ASK1 wild type (WT) was described previously (Kuranaga et al., 2002). cDNA encoding Drosophila ASK1ΔN that lacked N-terminal 558 amino acids was generated by PCR and subcloned into pUAST (pUAST-ASK1ΔN). ASK1 cDNAs of WT, kinase-negative [KN; Lys618 was substituted by Met as described previously (Kuranaga et al., 2002)], and ΔN were subcloned into pUAST with an N-terminal Flag tag. Drosophila p38a, p38b, p38c and HR38 cDNAs were cloned by reverse transcript (RT)-PCR from total RNA isolated from Drosophila embryos or adult flies and subcloned into pUAST and pcDNA3 (Invitrogen) with an N-terminal Flag tag, respectively. pUAST-JNK was obtained from Makoto Nakamura (Matsuyama University, Japan). Head-to-head inverted repeat constructs, pUAST-ASK1-IR, pUAST-TH-IR and pUAST-HR38-IR, were generated by inserting cDNA fragments of Drosophila ASK1 [nucleotides (nt) 1759–2257], TH (nt 244–720 of variant I) and HR38 (nt 1–139), respectively, into pUAST-R57 (a gift from Ryu Ueda, National Institute of Genetics, Mishima, Japan). A driver plasmid pWAGAL4 that expresses GAL4 under the control of the actin5C promoter was a gift from Yasushi Hiromi (National Institute of Genetics, Mishima, Japan) pcDNA3 expressing HA–ASK1ΔN, HA–ASK1WT, HA–ASK1KN, Flag–mouse-p38α and Flag–mouse-p38β were described previously (Mizumura et al., 2006; Nishitoh et al., 1998; Saitoh et al., 1998). pcDNA3-Flag-NR4A2 was generated by subcloning mouse NR4A2 cDNA from pCMX-Nurr1 (Iwawaki et al., 2000). cDNA encoding the N-terminal 261 and 369 amino acids of NR4A2 (NR4A2-NT and NR4A2-ΔC, respectively) were generated by PCR and subcloned into pGEX4T-1 (GE Healthcare). cDNAs encoding mouse NR4A1 and NR4A3 were cloned by RT-PCR from total RNA isolated from RAW264.7 cells and subcloned into pcDNA3-Flag. A constitutively active mutant of human MKK6 (MKK6DD; Ser208 and Thr211 were both replaced with Asp) and a series of Nurr1 mutants, in which Ser and/or Thr were replaced with Ala, were obtained using the QuikChange site-directed mutagenesis kit (Stratagene) and subcloned into pcDNA3, with a C-terminal HA tag, and pcDNA3-Flag, respectively. pTH/−9kb, pTH/NBRE1, and pTH/NBRE1-mt were as described previously (Iwawaki et al., 2000). pGL4.70 [hRluc] was purchased from Promega.
Antibodies and reagents
Mouse monoclonal antibody to Flag tag (M2) and rat monoclonal antibody to the HA tag (clone 3F10) were purchased from Sigma and Roche, respectively. Phosphorylation-specific antibodies for JNK (Thr183 and Tyr185) and p38 (Thr180 and Tyr182) MAPKs were purchased from Cell Signaling. Anti-JNK rabbit polyclonal antibody (JNK1-FL) and anti-p38 goat polyclonal antibody were purchased from Santa Cruz Biotechnology. Anti-GST goat polyclonal antibody was purchased from GE Healthcare. Phosphorylation-specific antibodies to Thr838 of human ASK1 was used for monitoring Drosophila ASK1 activity as previously described (Kuranaga et al., 2002). The p38 inhibitor SB203580 and the JNK inhibitor SP600125 were purchased from Calbiochem.
Fly stocks and generation of transgenic flies
Driver strains and hs-GAL4 (Bloomington Drosophila Stock Center) were used for the ectopic expression of Drosophila ASK1WT and ASK1ΔN. UAS-Dp38a-DN (Adachi-Yamada et al., 1999), UAS-ebony (Wittkopp et al., 2002), UAS-GFPS65T, and UAS-LacZ-IR (Kennerdell and Carthew, 2000) strains and hep1 (Glise et al., 1995), and y1w1 (Wittkopp et al., 2002) mutant strains were used for genetic interaction assays. Other IR strains, UAS-Dp38a-IR (5475R-2), UAS-Dp38b-IR (7393R-1), UAS-hep-IR (CG4153R-2), UAS-dMKK4-IR (9738R-1), and UAS-Ddc-IR (10697R-1) were provided by NIG-FLY stock center, and UAS-lic-IR (20166) and UAS-Dp38c-IR (105173) were provided by Vienna Drosophila RNAi Center. Mutant strains of p38a (Crag et al., 2004) and p38b (Shinzawa et al., 2009) were used for characterization of phosphorylated Drosophila p38 bands (see supplementary material Fig. S1). For generation of transgenic flies harboring UAS-DASK1ΔN, UAS-DASK1-IR, UAS-DTH-IR, and UAS-DHR38-IR, each pUAST plasmid was injected into w1118; Dr/TMS, Sb P[ry+, Δ2–3] embryos as described previously (Kuranaga et al., 2002). We carried out crosses between Drosophila strains at 25°C by standard procedures.
Cell culture and transfection
S2 cells were cultured in Schneider's Drosophila medium (Gibco) containing 10% fetal bovine serum (FBS), 100 units/ml penicillin G and 5 mg/ml Bacto Pepton (BD Difco) at 26°C. PC12 cells were cultured in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium (DMEM) containing 10% FBS, 10% heat-inactivated horse serum and 100 units/ml penicillin G under a 5% CO2 atmosphere at 37°C. HEK-293 cells were cultured in DMEM containing 10% FBS, 4.5 mg/ml glucose and 100 units/ml penicillin G under a 5% CO2 atmosphere at 37°C. Transfection of expression plasmids into S2 cells, PC12 cells and HEK293 cells was performed with Cellfectin (Invitrogen), Lipofectamine 2000 (Invitrogen) and FuGENE6 (Roche), respectively, according to the manufacturers' instructions. We differentially used PC12 cells and HEK-293 cells for the NBRE-dependent promoter assays and the transfection-based phosphorylation assays, respectively; the former assays have been shown to depend upon cell types (Iwawaki et al., 2000) and worked well in PC12 cells, but not in HEK-293 cells, whereas the latter assays require a high transfection efficiency, which was achieved in HEK-293 cells, but not in PC12 cells.
Immunoblotting analysis
Cells or flies were lysed with a lysis buffer [1% Nonidet P-40, 0.5% deoxycholate, 0.1% SDS, 50 mM Tris-HCl pH 8.0, 150 mM NaCl, 1 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride (PMSF) and 5 μg/ml aprotinin]. In Fig. 7F, another lysis buffer [1% Triton X-100, 1% deoxycholate, 20 mM Tris-HCl pH 7.5, 150 mM NaCl, 10 mM EDTA, 1 mM PMSF, 5 μg/ml Leupeptin and PhosSTOP (Roche)] was used. Cell or fly extracts were clarified by centrifugation, and the supernatants were resolved by SDS-PAGE and electroblotted onto PVDF membranes. After blocking with 5% skimmed milk powder in TBS-T (50 mM Tris-HCl pH 8.0, 150 mM NaCl and 0.05% Tween 20), the membranes were probed with antibodies. The antibody–antigen complexes were detected using the ECL system (GE Healthcare).
qRT-PCR analysis
UAS-GFPS65T/+; hs-GAL4/+ and UAS-DASK1ΔN/+; hs-GAL4/+ pupae were maintained at 25°C, at which only leaky expression from the heat-shock promoter was induced. Total RNA was isolated at 36–48 hours after puparium formation using TRIzol (Invitrogen) and reverse transcribed with the QuantiTect Reverse Transcript Kit (QIAGEN). Quantitative PCR was performed with Power SYBR Green PCR Master Mix using the ABI PRISM 7000 Sequence Detection System (Applied Biosystems). The following oligonucleotides were used: rp49 forward, 5′-CGGATCGATATGCTAAGCTGT-3′; rp49 reverse, 5′-GCGCTTGTTCGATCCGTA-3′; ASK1 forward, 5′-CCCCCTCCATAATATCACTCAC-3′; ASK1 reverse, 5′-AACCCCTTTATTCTCCCTCTTAA-3′; TH forward, 5′-TTCGGAGGCGGCATTG-3′; TH reverse, 5′-ACAGCCGACCAAGAACGATT-3′; Ddc forward, 5′-TCTGGAGAATATACGCGAAAGG-3′; Ddc reverse, 5′-CACTTCTCCGGCTTCTCG-3′; HR38 forward, 5′-GCGTTCTGTGATCAGGGTTAGG-3′; HR38 reverse, 5′-GCACAACCTGGAGATCGACAT-3′. The expression value of each gene was normalized to that of the control rp49 gene and represented as relative mRNA expression by setting the value of hs>GFP as 1.
Luciferase reporter assays
PC12 cells seeded in 12-well plates were transiently transfected with expression and reporter plasmids using Lipofectamine 2000 (Invitrogen). Each transfection included 0.2 μg of pGL4.70 [hRluc] (Promega) for normalization of transfection efficiency and 0.3 μg of a reporter plasmid. The total amount of plasmid DNA was kept at 1 μg/well by supplementation with empty pcDNA3. At 24 hours after the transfection, cell extracts were analyzed for firefly luciferase and Renilla activities using the dual luciferase kit (Promega).
In vitro kinase assays
GST–NR4A2-NT, GST–NR4A2-ΔC WT and GST–NR4A2-ΔC II were prepared as described previously (Saitoh et al., 1998). At 24 hours after the transfection, HEK-293 cells were lysed with a lysis buffer (1% Triton X-100, 1% deoxycholate, 12 mM β-glycerophosphate, 20 mM Tris-HCl pH 8.0, 150 mM NaCl, 5 mM EDTA, 1 mM dithiothreitol (DTT), 1 mM NaF, 1 mM Na3VO4, 1 mM PMSF and 5 μg/ml aprotinin). Cell extracts were clarified by centrifugation, and the supernatants were immunoprecipitated with anti-Flag antibody gel (M2 gel, Sigma). The immune complex was incubated in a kinase buffer containing 50 mM Tris-HCl pH 8.0, 20 mM MgCl2, 1 mM DTT, 100 μM ATP and 0.3 μCi of [γ-32P]ATP together with GST–NR4A2-NT at 25°C for 20 minutes. Kinase reactions were stopped by adding SDS sample buffer and samples were subjected to SDS-PAGE. Phosphorylation of substrate proteins was analyzed by storage phosphor screen autoradiography using the STORM imaging system 840 (GE Healthcare).
Phosphatase treatment
Cell lysate was treated with 2 units/μl λ protein phosphatase (λPPase, New England Biolabs) in a buffer containing 50 mM Hepes pH 7.5, 5 mM DTT, 0.1 mM EDTA, 0.01% Brij-35 and 2 mM MnCl2 at 30°C for 30 minutes. Reactions were stopped by adding SDS sample buffer.
Acknowledgements
We thank T. Adachi-Yamada, R. L. Cagan, S. B. Carroll, K. Ito, F. Matsuzaki and H. Okano for fly strains, M. Nakamura, Y. Hiromi and R. Ueda for plasmids, the Berkeley Drosophila Genome Project for providing various reagents and information, and the Bloomington Drosophila Stock Center, the Drosophila Genetic Resource Center at Kyoto Institute of Technology, NIG-FLY stock center and the Vienna Drosophila RNAi Center for fly strains. We are grateful to H. Kanuka and N. Shinzawa for valuable discussions and fly strains. We also thank all the members of the Laboratory of Cell Signaling for their critical comments. This work was supported by the Astellas Foundation for Research on Metabolic Disorders, by Grants-in-Aid for scientific research from the Ministry of Education, by Grant in aid from the Tokyo Biochemical Research Foundation and by Takeda Science Foundation.