Dayton J S, Lindsten T, Thompson C B, Mitchell B S
Department of Pharmacology, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 27599.
J Immunol. 1994 Feb 1;152(3):984-91.
Inosine monophosphate dehydrogenase (IMPDH) catalyzes the first step in the formation of guanine ribonucleotides from inosine monophosphate and the activity of this enzyme appears to be essential for cell proliferation. Inhibitors of IMPDH have been demonstrated to be effective immunosuppressive agents and to inhibit T cell activation in vitro. IMPDH activity results from the expression of two different genes (types I and II) that encode protein subunits of identical size with 84% amino acid identity. To determine the relative contribution of the expression of these two genes to T cell activation, we have examined the effects of T cell stimulation on IMPDH activity, mRNA levels, and protein. The stimulation of isolated peripheral blood CD28+ T cells with PMA and ionomycin causes a 15-fold increase in IMPDH activity over a 72-h period. This is associated with a 10-fold increase in type II mRNA levels at 48 h. Type I mRNA is expressed at very low levels in resting T cells, but increases 10-fold by 24 h after stimulation. The type I cDNA probe also detects a second larger mRNA species of 4.0 kb that is not detectable in a variety of normal tissues or in a panel of leukemic cell lines. RNase protection assays using RNA probes corresponding to the entire coding region of the type I enzyme reveal a single protected fragment, demonstrating that the 4.0-kb message is the result of alternate splicing in the 5' or 3' untranslated regions or the use of an alternative polyadenylation site. Western blot analysis demonstrates a concomitant increase in total IMPDH protein on T cell activation, although posttranslational modifications do not allow the distinction between type I and type II on isoelectric focusing gels. We conclude that the induction of both type I and type II IMPDH contribute significantly to the T cell proliferative response. Both enzymes therefore should be considered important targets for immunosuppressive therapy.
肌苷单磷酸脱氢酶(IMPDH)催化从肌苷单磷酸形成鸟嘌呤核糖核苷酸的第一步反应,该酶的活性似乎对细胞增殖至关重要。已证明IMPDH抑制剂是有效的免疫抑制剂,并能在体外抑制T细胞活化。IMPDH活性源于两个不同基因(I型和II型)的表达,这两个基因编码大小相同的蛋白质亚基,氨基酸同一性为84%。为了确定这两个基因的表达对T细胞活化的相对贡献,我们研究了T细胞刺激对IMPDH活性、mRNA水平和蛋白质的影响。用佛波酯(PMA)和离子霉素刺激分离的外周血CD28+ T细胞,在72小时内IMPDH活性增加了15倍。这与48小时时II型mRNA水平增加10倍有关。I型mRNA在静息T细胞中表达水平非常低,但在刺激后24小时增加10倍。I型cDNA探针还检测到一种4.0 kb的更大的mRNA,在多种正常组织或一组白血病细胞系中均未检测到。使用对应于I型酶整个编码区的RNA探针进行核糖核酸酶保护分析,显示出一个单一的受保护片段,表明4.0 kb的信息是5'或3'非翻译区选择性剪接或使用替代聚腺苷酸化位点的结果。蛋白质印迹分析表明,T细胞活化时总IMPDH蛋白随之增加,尽管翻译后修饰不允许在等电聚焦凝胶上区分I型和II型。我们得出结论,I型和II型IMPDH的诱导均对T细胞增殖反应有显著贡献。因此,这两种酶都应被视为免疫抑制治疗的重要靶点。