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Identification of alternative transcripts of rat CD9 expressed by tumorigenic neural cell lines and in normal tissues

Abstract

CD9 is the best-studied member of the tetraspanin family of transmembrane proteins. It is involved in various fundamental cellular processes and its altered expression is a characteristic of malignant cells of different origins. Despite numerous investigations confirming its fundamental role, the heterogeneity of CD9 or other tetraspanin proteins was considered only to be caused by posttranslational modification, rather than alternative splicing. Here we describe the first identification of CD9 transcript variants expressed by cell lines derived from fetal rat brain cells. Variant mRNA-B lacks a potential translation initiation codon in the alternative exon 1 and seems to be characteristic of the tumorigenic BT cell lines. In contrast, variant mRNA-C can be translated from a functional initiation codon located in its extended exon 2, and substantial amounts of this form detected in various tissues suggest a contribution to CD9 functions. From the alternative sequence of variant C, a different membrane topology (5 transmembrane domains) and a deviating spectrum of functions can be expected.

CD9; tetraspanin; transcript; splice variant; membrane topology


CELLULAR, MOLECULAR AND DEVELOPMENTAL GENETICS

RESEARCH ARTICLE

Identification of alternative transcripts of rat CD9 expressed by tumorigenic neural cell lines and in normal tissues

Sonja WolfahrtI; Sandra HermanI; Claus-Jürgen ScholzII; Georg SauerIII; Helmut DeisslerI

IDepartment of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, University of Ulm, Ulm, Germany

IIIZKF Laboratory for Microarray Applications, University of Würzburg, Würzburg, Germany

IIIDepartment of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, Robert Bosch Hospital, Stuttgart, Germany

Send correspondence to Send correspondence to Helmut Deissler Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, University of Ulm Frauensteige 14 D-89075 Ulm, Germany E-mail: helmut_deissler@web.de

ABSTRACT

CD9 is the best-studied member of the tetraspanin family of transmembrane proteins. It is involved in various fundamental cellular processes and its altered expression is a characteristic of malignant cells of different origins. Despite numerous investigations confirming its fundamental role, the heterogeneity of CD9 or other tetraspanin proteins was considered only to be caused by posttranslational modification, rather than alternative splicing. Here we describe the first identification of CD9 transcript variants expressed by cell lines derived from fetal rat brain cells. Variant mRNA-B lacks a potential translation initiation codon in the alternative exon 1 and seems to be characteristic of the tumorigenic BT cell lines. In contrast, variant mRNA-C can be translated from a functional initiation codon located in its extended exon 2, and substantial amounts of this form detected in various tissues suggest a contribution to CD9 functions. From the alternative sequence of variant C, a different membrane topology (5 transmembrane domains) and a deviating spectrum of functions can be expected.

Keywords: CD9, tetraspanin, transcript, splice variant, membrane topology.

Introduction

CD9 is the prototype member of the tetraspanin protein family consisting of two extracellular loops and short intracellular ends that are linked through four transmembrane domains. Tetraspanins play a special role in biological membranes as adaptor proteins in functional complexes with adhesion molecules and other components that are implicated in various cell types in the regulation of fundamental processes, like cell differentiation, proliferation, motility and invasion (Maecker et al., 1997; Hemler, 2005). For many types of malignant diseases, e.g. breast, colon, lung, and cervical cancers (Higashiyama et al., 1995; Miyake et al., 1996; Mori et al., 1998; Sauer et al., 2003), the level of expression of CD9 was found to correlate, in most cases inversely, with the stage of tumor progression, appearance of metastases, or poor clinical prognosis (Romanska and Berditchevski, 2011; Wang et al., 2011). In the fetal and adult rat brain, CD9 was predominantly detected in distinct regions. It is a component of plasma membranes of all types of mature and premature glial cells with a pronounced expression by oligodendrocytes and, in the peripheral nervous system (PNS), Schwann cells (Tole and Patterson, 1993; Anton et al., 1995; Kaprielian et al., 1995; Deissler et al., 1996; Terada et al., 2002). In the central nervous system and the PNS, CD9 was found concentrated in axoglial paranodal junctions (Ishibashi et al., 2004). Nakamura et al. (1996) confirmed that CD9 is a constituent of myelin and suggested an important role in the regulation of myelination. An initial investigation of human brain tumors did not show a typical inverse, but a positive correlation of CD9 expression with the malignancy of astrocytic tumors, whereas CD9 seemed down-regulated in other types of gliomas compared to their corresponding normal cellular counterparts (Kawashima et al., 2002). In contrast, most malignant neural rat cell lines established from fetal brain cells after in vivo-exposure to ethylnitrosourea strongly expressed CD9. Only two of these cell lines (BT8Ca and BT12Ca) were CD9-negative or showed minimal CD9-specific immunoreactivity assessed by flow cytometry (Deissler et al., 1996). Further analyses of these cells, however, indicated predominant expression of different CD9 species that were not detectable with the previously used antibodies. Subsequently, two novel CD9 transcripts containing alternative first exons were identified. Whereas CD9 mRNA-B seems to be a characteristic of BT cell lines, mRNA-C was found to be expressed in various normal tissues. The deduced amino acid sequence, beginning with a functional translation initiation codon, suggested altered membrane topology and functions of this CD9 variant.

Materials and Methods

Cell lines and primary antibodies

Rat neuroectodermal cell lines BT4Ca, BT8Ca and BT12Ca (Laerum et al., 1977) from the collection at the Institute of Cell Biology, University of Essen (Germany) were cultivated in DMEM/10% FCS (PAA Laboratories, Linz, Austria). Testing of all cultivated cells lines for a potential mycoplasma infection was performed regularly with a Mycoplasma Detection Kit (Roche Diagnostics, Mannheim, Germany).

To detect CD9, we used the monoclonal antibodies MEM-61 (Exbio, Praha, Czech Republic) and NCA-1 (Deissler et al., 1996). In all experiments, specificity of these antibodies was confirmed by parallel processing with an isotype-matched control antibody from Southern Biotechnology (Birmingham, U.S.A).

Immunofluorescence staining

Cells were seeded onto glass coverslips and cultivated in DMEM/10% FCS for 2 days. After washing twice with PBS, cells were kept in cold buffered paraformaldehyde (4% solution, pre-cooled in ice) for 10 min. Cells were washed 3x with PBS, as between all of the following steps: Blocking by 3% BSA/PBS for 30 min at room temperature (RT), incubation with the CD9-specific antibody (hybridoma supernatant or purified antibody diluted to 0.5 µg/mL in blocking solution) at 4ºC for 16 h, incubation with the detection antibody goat anti-mouse-AlexaFluor-594 (Invitrogen; 2.5 µg/mL in 3% BSA/PBS) for 1h at RT, and mounting with Vectashield Fluorescence Mounting Medium (Vector, Burlingame, UK). Specimens were examined under an Olympus BX51 fluorescence microscope.

Solubilization and Western blot analyses of EGFP fusion proteins

Cells were collected in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) and solubilized at a concentration of 6x106 cells/mL for 1 h at 4ºC in 40 mM TrisCl, pH 7.4, 150 mM NaCl (TBS), 50 mM n-Octylglucosid (Calbiochem), supplemented with protease inhibitors (Complete mix, Roche Diagnostics, Mannheim). After centrifugation at 15,000 g, the supernatant was analysed by standard polyacrylamide gelelectrophoresis (Laemmli 1970). Proteins were transferred to polyvinylidene difluoride membranes (Pall, Dreieich, Germany) by semi-dry electroblotting for 60 min at 1.5 mA/cm². Membranes were blocked in blocking solution (Pierce, Bonn, Germany) and incubated with a purified polyclonal rabbit anti-EGFP antibody (Abcam, Cambridge, UK; diluted 1:2000 in blocking solution). Bound primary antibodies were detected with a SuperSignal Detection Kit (Pierce) containing a peroxidase-conjugated anti-rabbit IgG antibody and a chemoluminescence substrate.

RT-PCR and RACE

RNA was isolated with an RNeasy Mini Kit (Qiagen, Hilden, Germany) and residual genomic DNA was removed with a DNA-free Kit (Ambion, Woodward, USA). cDNA to be used in conventional PCRs was synthesized with Multiscribe reverse transcriptase and an oligo-dT primer (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, USA) according to the supplier's protocol. cDNAs representing transcripts from various rat organs were purchased from Clontech (Heidelberg, Germany). For conventional PCR with 50 ng template cDNA, 10 pmol of each primer (Thermo, Ulm, Germany) and Fast Start Taq polymerase (Roche Diagnostics, Mannheim, Germany), the cycling conditions were: 94ºC for 3 min followed by 30 cycles of 94ºC for 30 s, 56ºC for 30 s and 72ºC for 1 min.

Rat CD9-specific primers were: CD9-A-F1 (5'-TGTACCATGCCGGTCAAAGGAG-3'), CD9-A-F2 (5'-TCCTCTTGGTGATATTCGCCATTG-3'), CD9-A-FNC (5'-TGGCACTTTTTAAAAGTGGAGCCTC-3'), CD9-A-R1 (5'-ACTCTAGACCATTTCTCGGCTCCTG-3'), CD9-A-R2 (5'-CTCCTGGAGTCTTTAATCACCTCGTC-3'), CD9-A-RNC (5'-GTATCAAATTGTCTTCAATATAACTTACAACC-3'). Primers specific for the newly identified CD9 transcripts were: rCD9-B-F1 (5'-GCCCAGATCTGTGTCCTGCAC-3') and rCD9-C-F1 (5'-CTGAACGAAATGATGCCGAAGTCC-3'). In RT-PCR analyses, these were combined with the CD9-A reverse primers.

For amplification of the 5'-ends of CD9 mRNA species, we used the SMART RACE Kit from Clontech (Heidelberg, Germany). cDNA synthesis was performed with a modified oligo(dT) primer and a SMART oligonucleotide resulting in a 5'-extension after (dC)-tailing. The 5'-ends were then amplified by PCR (30 cycles of 94ºC for 30 s, 68ºC for 30 s and 72ºC for 30 s) with universal primers binding to the 5'-extension and a CD9-specific reverse primer (CD9-GSP1: 5'-TTTCCCGCTGGGGCTCATCCTTGTTCC-3'). PCR products were used as a template in a second PCR (25 cycles of 94ºC for 30 s, 63ºC for 30 s and 72ºC for 30 s) with a provided nested universal primer and a nested CD9-specific primer (5'-GCGGCGATCTCAATGGCGAATATCAC-3'). After analysis by agarose gel electrophoresis, bands were excised and the PCR products isolated with the QIAquick Gel Extraction Kit (Qiagen, Hilden, Germany) for sequence analyses (Seqlab, Göttingen, Germany).

Generation and transfection of expression plasmids

The cDNAs encoding CD9 species with alternative exons (rCD9-B, rCD9-C with or without terminating stop codons) were amplified by conventional PCR with primers containing extensions that allowed their recombinase-mediated insertion into the donor vector pDNR-Dual with the InFusion recombinase (Clontech, Heidelberg, Germany) according to the suppliers' instructions. Inserts were then transferred to the acceptor vector pLP-EGFP-C1 in a reaction with Cre recombinase (Clontech) under recommended conditions. Lipofectamine 2000 (Invitrogen, Leck, Netherlands) was used to transfect the purified (EndoFree Plasmid Maxi Kit, Qiagen, Hilden, Germany) plasmids into BT4Ca cells. Fusion proteins with C-terminal EGFP were visualised directly by fluorescence microscopy or by Western blot analyses.

Sequence-deduced prediction of membrane topology

The membrane topology of the variant encoded by mRNA-C in comparison with the typical CD9-A tetraspanin structure was predicted on the basis of a hydrophobicity plot (Kyte and Doolittle, 1982) or regional similarity with confirmed transmembrane domains as calculated with the dense alignment surface (DAS) algorithm (Cserzo et al., 1997).

Results

Initial analyses of CD9 expression by BT cell lines

CD9 had been analysed by flow cytometry with a set of anti-CD9 antibodies (NCA1-4) (Deissler et al., 1996) which revealed the existence of two cell lines with very low (BT12Ca) or undetectable (BT8Ca) cell surface expression. In accordance with FACS analyses, immunofluorescence staining with the antibody NCA-1 confirmed strong membrane-localized expression of CD9 in BT4Ca cells, weak expression by BT12Ca cells and a lack of CD9-specific immunoreactivity by BT8Ca cells. With mAb MEM-61, preferentially recognizing intracellular CD9, however, CD9 was detected also in BT8Ca cells (Figure 1). In these, the presence of CD9 transcripts was confirmed by RT-PCR, but specific PCR products were not observed when one of the primers was located in exon 1 of the CD9 gene, suggesting transcripts lacking exon 1 or containing an alternative exon 1 (Supplementary Material Figure S1).



Identification of two novel CD9 transcripts

By the RACE technique and subsequent sequencing of the extended 5'-regions, two novel rat CD9 transcripts with an alternative exon 1 (rCD9 mRNA-B, GenBank accession number KC162232) or beginning with an extended exon 2 (rCD9 mRNA-C, KC162233) were identified in mRNA isolated from BT8Ca cells (Figure 2). The mRNA variant B lacks a potential translation initiation codon and there is a stop codon in frame with the following CD9 sequence impeding translation into a variant protein. In the 5'-extension of exon 2, characteristic of mRNA-C, the ORF is not interrupted and an ATG close to the 5'-end suggested efficient translation which was confirmed by expression of a fusion protein with C-terminal GFP in BT4Ca cells. Bright green fluorescence of the transfectant cells indicated translation, which was not observed when mRNA-B was coupled to EGFP, or when a construct with a stop codon terminating the CD9 sequence was used (Figure 3A). The rCD9-C-EGFP fusion protein was also seen as a specific band of expected size when cell lysates were analysed by Western blot with an anti-EGFP antibody (Figure 3B, Supplementary Material Figure S2).




Differential expression of CD9 mRNA variants

RT-PCR with primers specific for the different CD9 mRNA variants was used to analyse their expression by BT cell lines (Supplementary Material Figure S3). BT4Ca cells strongly expressed all variants, BT8Ca cells did so moderately for mRNA-B and weakly for mRNA-C. BT12Ca and BT13Ca cells showed the typical strong expression of mRNA-A, but additionally, mRNA-C was expressed. CD9 mRNA-C was also found to be co-expressed with mRNA-A in various tissues (brain, liver, lung, mammary gland, kidney, placenta) of normal Spraque-Dawley rats (Supplementary Material Figure S4), whereas mRNA-B was not detected in any of the tested normal rat tissues.



Discussion

Our analyses confirmed the atypical CD9 expression by BT8Ca cells in which only traces of the almost ubiquitously expressed transcript mRNA-A were detected. In these cells, two novel transcripts lacking the normal exon 1 were identified. Such aberrant variants have not been recognized previously, most likely due to dominant expression of variant A. mRNA-B seems to be a specific characteristic of the tumorigenic BT cell lines derived by in vitro carcinogenesis from immature rat brain cells (Laerum et al., 1977). Although mRNA-B cannot be translated to a CD9-like protein, it may play a role in the regulation of gene expression, e.g. by competing for RNA-binding proteins, as a source of small regulatory RNA fragments (Costa, 2007; Rother and Meister, 2011) affecting specific CD9 expression or even general transcriptional activity through potential effects on DNA methyltransferases (Veeck and Esteller, 2010). In contrast to CD9 mRNA-B, variant C was found accompanying mRNA-A in most of the analysed tissues. Interestingly, the alternative exon 1 of this form contains a functional translation initiation codon and can contribute to the total amount of CD9 proteins. Like many other tetraspanins, CD9 often appears as a double band or even multiple bands when analysed by gel electrophoresis, and it seems possible that, in addition to posttranslational modification, alternative splicing may contribute to this heterogeneity. According to hydrophobicity plots and model calculations to reveal potential transmembrane domains based on the DAS algorithm (Cserzo et al., 1997), the CD9 form translated from mRNA-C should possess an additional transmembrane segment close to the N-terminal end, resulting in a small second intracellular loop and replacement of the N-terminus to the extracellular space (Figure 4). Consequences of such structural differences most likely include an altered connection of CD9-containing protein complexes to the intracellular signalling machinery (Stipp et al., 2003; Levy and Shoham, 2005) and/or a modified spectrum of other proteins binding to CD9. Subsequent studies are needed to reveal specific functions and the relative importance of this CD9 variant. These will be initiated by the generation of antibodies binding to the region defined by the alternative exon 1.


Internet Resources

Received: November 15, 2012; Accepted: April 9, 2013.

Associate Editor: Anamaria Aranha Camargo

License information: This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Supplementary Material

The following online material is available for this article:

- Figure S1 – RT-PCR analyses of CD9 expression by rat BT cell lines.

- Figure S2 – Expression of a CD9-B-EGFP fusion protein in BT4Ca cells.

- Figure S3 – Differential expression of CD9 transcript variants by rat BT cell lines.

- Figure S4 – CD9 mRNA-C is expressed in various rat tissues.

This material is available as part of the online article from http://www.scielo.br/gmb.

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  • Send correspondence to

    Helmut Deissler
    Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, University of Ulm
    Frauensteige 14
    D-89075 Ulm, Germany
    E-mail:
  • Publication Dates

    • Publication in this collection
      07 June 2013
    • Date of issue
      2013

    History

    • Received
      15 Nov 2012
    • Accepted
      09 Apr 2013
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