Abstract
Phospholipase A2 type IVA (IVAPLA2) is a cytosolic enzyme that on activation selectively releases arachidonic acid (AA) from cell membrane phospholipids. Both AA and lysophospholipid, products of the enzymic reaction, can function as signal transducers in cellular interactions. The enzyme is present in most cells, including polymorphs, eosinophils, and platelets. This study used affinity purification to extract IVAPLA2 from red cell lysate prepared from leukocyte- and platelet-depleted human blood to overcome the masking effect of hemoglobin on Western blot detection. We show that IVAPLA2 is present in red cells as a 90-kDa protein. (Blood. 2004;103:3562-3564)
Introduction
In their 1997 review Minetti and Low1 suggest that the cell signaling components of erythrocytes allow them to respond to their cellular environment and interact with other blood or endothelial cells. Phospholipase A2 group IVA (IVAPLA2) is a widely distributed enzyme2 with cell signaling importance. It is up-regulated by a rise in intracellular calcium, triggering phosphorylation and transfer of active enzyme from cytosol to membrane. On membrane binding it preferentially releases the fatty acid arachidonic acid (AA) from the sn2 position of the membrane phospholipid. Both enzymic products, AA and lysophospholipid, have second messenger properties,3 whereas AA is the source for the eicosanoids. A study4 of arachidonate metabolism in mammalian red cells concluded that the AA-derived 12-hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid metabolite, promoted by Ca2+ ionophore stimulation, came from red cells and not from contaminating platelets and leukocytes.
IVAPLA2 is activated by mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinases,5,6 and the 2 MAP kinase isoforms extracellular signal regulated kinase 1 (ERK1) and ERK2 required for IVAPLA2 phosphorylation are present in human red cells.7 IVAPLA2 is present in neutrophils8 and platelets,9 and it has been measured in eosinophils.10 As the red cell and the leukocytes differentiate from the same common pluripotent stem cell, it is possible that the mature red cell may also contain this enzyme. IVAPLA2 has not previously been observed in human red cells. Detection of IVAPLA2 in the red cell is difficult, as substrate assays lack specificity for the group IVA enzyme and hemoglobin masks detection by Western blot. We have used an affinity purification technique prior to Western blotting to overcome this difficulty.
Study design
The human monocytic cell line U937 (American Type Culture Collection [ATCC] CRL2093) was cultured in roller bottles and harvested at 3.6 × 1010 cells, and a cell cytosol was prepared.11 A human red cell lysate was prepared from 100-mL date-expired, leukocyte- and platelet-depleted red cell transfusion unit, frozen, and stored overnight at -80°C to lyse the cells. The IVAPLA2 from both the U937 cytosol and the red cell lysate was separately affinity purified by chromatography on Prosep-G columns (Millipore, Bedford, MA) that had anti-IVAPLA2 (Binding Site, Birmingham, United Kingdom) coupled to it. The columns were washed with 25 mM Tris (tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane) buffer, pH 7.4, containing 500 mM sodium chloride, and the bound IVAPLA2 was eluted under denaturing conditions with 2% sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS).
To assess the possible contribution of leukocytes and platelets to the IVAPLA2 in the red cell transfusion unit, leukocyte- and platelet-rich preparations were examined. An expired transfusion pack of human platelets was washed with phosphate-buffered saline (PBS), resuspended in 10 mL PBS, and frozen at -80°C. Leukocytes were isolated from 60 mL EDTA (ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid) blood by centrifuging at 200g to remove platelets. The buffy coat was washed with water to remove the red cells, resuspended in 0.5 mL PBS, and frozen at -80°C. Table 1 shows the cell composition of the blood preparations.
The cell lysates were Western blotted after polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in 4% to 12% gradient gels, blotted on nitrocellulose membrane, and probed with a monoclonal anti-IVAPLA2 (Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Santa Cruz, CA), then with peroxidase-conjugated rabbit antimouse immunoglobulin G (IgG; Dako, Glostrup, Denmark) (Figure 1).
The IVAPLA2 present in the blood cell preparations and the affinity column eluates were measured by double dilution titers on Western blots by using IVAPLA2 expressed as a glutathione-S-transferase (GST)-tagged protein in Spodoptera frugiperda (Sf9) insect cells11 as a standard covering the range 0.62 to 5.0 μg IVAPLA2/mL; results are shown in Table 2.
Results and discussion
The immunoblot (Figure 1) shows that the IVAPLA2 present in U937 cells (lane 2) is effectively bound to the column, as no IVAPLA2 was detected in the eluate (lane 3). SDS elution from the column showed the presence of a 90-kDa protein (lane 4) which was also present in the affinity-purified red cells (lane 5) and in the unpurified platelets (lane 7). Column recovery of IVAPLA2 from the U937 lysate was 29%. Identification of the IVAPLA2 depends on 2 antibodies. The affinity purification antibody is against the last 24 amino acids of the molecule's C terminus and has no homology with any other protein, whereas the probing antibody is against the first 216 amino acids at the N terminus. Figure 1 provides clear evidence that IVAPLA2 present in U937 cells before and after affinity purification is also detected in red cells and platelets. Failure to detect IVAPLA2 in the leukocyte preparation (lane 8) is probably a result of insufficient numbers of IVAPLA2-containing leukocytes in the preparation (Table 1).
In the immunoblot the IVAPLA2 from the 3 different sources migrated on polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) as a 90-kDa protein. The molecular weight of IVAPLA2 on the basis of amino acid sequence is 85 kDa.12 Molecular weights reported for this protein have ranged from 110 kDa when purified from U937 cells,13 100 kDa when expressed and purified from Sf9 insect cells,11 94 kDa in Chinese hamster ovary cells,14 and 90 kDa when purified from human platelets.15 Although our findings agree with the last report, there has never been an adequate explanation proposed for the differences in molecular weights reported for this protein.
In the blood used for affinity purification, leukocytes were reduced to less than 3% and platelets to less than 0.4% of that found in whole blood; nevertheless, it is possible that the remaining leukocytes and platelets could have contributed to the IVAPLA2 isolated by the affinity purification from red cells. By using the results from the Western blot titering experiment we were able to estimate the IVAPLA2 content of the nonerythroid cells (Table 2).
The U937 cell contained 292 fg IVAPLA2/cell, consistent with overexpression of the protein; platelets contained 2.8 fg/cell. Because we could not detect IVAPLA2 in the leukocyte, we assumed the amount present to be less than the detection limit of the titering experiment (ie, 0.62 μg/mL), and by using this figure we estimated the leukocyte has less than 7.8 fg/cell. However, the true figure is likely to be much less than this level. This figure now allows us to estimate the possible contribution of leukocytes and platelets to the IVAPLA2 measured in the red cell affinity-purified material. In 100 mL red cells applied to the affinity column; platelets contributed 0.1 × 109 × 2.8 × 10-15 g = 0.28 × 10-6 g (ie, 0.28 μg). Leukocytes contributed 0.02 × 109 × 7.8 × 10-15 g = 0.16 × 10-6 g (ie, 0.16 μg). Total platelet and leukocyte contribution = 0.44 μg.
This amount is 1.5% of the 29.6 μg eluted from the red cell affinity column. We, therefore, conclude that the remaining platelets or leukocytes in the red cell transfusion pack only contributed a very small amount to the IVAPLA2 found and that the detected IVAPLA2 was derived from the red cells. The estimate of IVPLA2 in the red cells can now be calculated as 0.16 fg/cell and assumes an equivalent recovery from the affinity purification as for U937 cells. This estimate is of the same order as found in eosinophils by another technique (ie, 0.38 fg/cell).10
In conclusion this report provides clear evidence that IVAPLA2 is present in human red cells. Its function within the red cell is unclear, but it may provide a large mobile store for AA, allowing its release at sites in which there is a metabolic interaction between red cells and other cells, for example, platelets.16
Prepublished online as Blood First Edition Paper, January 15, 2004; DOI 10.1182/blood-2002-09-2698.
D.J.M., R.M.B., and A.C.A.G. have declared a financial interest in a company whose potential product was studied in the present work. A patent has been applied for in respect of an ELISA measurement of IVAPLA2 in red blood cells. The patent is held by Laxdale Ltd, and a percentage of royalties go to the South Glasgow University Hospitals National Health Service (NHS) Trust and the authors.
The publication costs of this article were defrayed in part by page charge payment. Therefore, and solely to indicate this fact, this article is hereby marked “advertisement” in accordance with 18 U.S.C. section 1734.
We acknowledge the generous support of the South Glasgow University Hospitals NHS Trust and Dr A. S. Hutchison, Consultant Clinical Biochemist and Head of Department in offering research facilities in the laboratory. We thank Professor C. C. Leslie, Department of Pediatrics, National Jewish Medical and Research Centre, Denver, CO, for her generous gift of GST-cPLA2. We are indebted to Mr H. Oliphant, Mr A. Kyle, and the staff of the Haematology Department, Victoria Infirmary, for their help in the cell preparation work.
Author notes
David F. Horrobin died on April 1, 2003.