doi:10.1369/jhc.6A7110.2007
Volume 55 (5): 487-493, 2007 Copyright ©The Histochemical Society, Inc. Granulogenesis in Non-neuroendocrine COS-7 Cells Induced by EGFP-tagged Chromogranin A Gene Transfection: Identical and Distinct Distribution of CgA and EGFP
Department of Pathology (CI,SU,NE,TM,ST,RYO) and Teaching and Research Support Center (YI,JI), Tokai University School of Medicine, Kanagawa, Japan; Department of Medicine (LT) and Department of Pharmacology, Center for Human Genetics and Genomics (DTO), University of CaliforniaSan Diego, La Jolla, California; and Veterans Affairs, San Diego Healthcare System, San Diego, California (DTO) Correspondence to: Chie Inomoto, Dept. of Pathology, Tokai University School of Medicine, Bohseidai, Isehara, Kanagawa 259-1193, Japan. E-mail: cisophia{at}is.icc.u-tokai.ac.jp
We examined whether an enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP)-tagged chromogranin A (CgA) gene construct could serve as a marker protein to follow the synthesis of CgA and the process of granulogenesis in non-neuroendocrine (NE) cells. We transfected a CgA-EGFP expression vector into non-NE COS-7 cells and investigated the localization of a chimeric CgA-EGFP protein using confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM). The fluorescent signal of CgA-EGFP was distributed granularly in the cytoplasm. An immunocytochemical study using anti-CgA antibody with a quantum dot (Qd)525 shows colocalization of fluorescent signal of chimeric CgA-EGFP and CgA-Qd525 signals in granular structures, particularly at the periphery of the cytoplasm. We interpreted granules that were immunoreactive to CgA in electron micrographs as secretory. Spectral analysis of EGFP fluorescence revealed distinct EGFP signals without CgA colocalization. This is the first report to show that a granular structure can be induced by transfecting the EGFP-tagged human CgA gene into non-NE cells. The EGFP-tagged CgA gene could be a useful tool to investigate processes of the regulatory pathway. A more precise analysis of the fluorescence signal of EGFP by combination with the Qd system or by spectral analysis with CLSM can provide insight into biological phenomena. (J Histochem Cytochem 55:487493, 2007)
Key Words: chromogranin A enhanced green fluorescent protein granulogenesis COS-7 confocal laser scanning microscopy
NEUROENDOCRINE (NE) cells possess a regulated secretory pathway in addition to the constitutive secretory pathway that is present in all cells (Winkler and Fischer-Colbrie 1992
The accepted model of SG biogenesis comprises four distinct steps ultimately leading to the formation of MSGs. These are (1) aggregation of the regulated secretory protein (RSP) and its sorting to the membrane in the TGN, (2) budding from the TGN, (3) homotypic fusion of ISGs, and (4) remodeling of the ISG membrane and contents (Tooze et al. 2001
Chromogranin A (CgA) is a major soluble protein of the secretory vesicles of NE cells that interacts with several other integral SG membrane proteins at pH 5.5 and dissociates from them at pH 7.5 (Yoo 1993
Green fluorescent protein (GFP) has been widely applied as a tag to localize protein generated by gene transfection. It can monitor the transfection of cells as a reporter for promoter activity or localize fusion proteins in the cytosol. Fusing a RSP to a GFP variant to form a chimera should allow the study of granulogenesis in real time, i.e., granule maturation and speed of granular transport (Kaether and Gerdes 1995 This study determines whether an enhanced GFP (EGFP)-tagged CgA gene construct could serve as a marker protein to follow the synthesis of CgA in non-NE cells via granulogenesis. We focused on granulogenesis induced in non-NE cells after transfection with a CgA-EGFP construct.
Cells Monkey COS-7 cells were obtained from the RIKEN Cell Bank (RCB0539; Ibaraki, Japan) and maintained in DMEM (Invitrogen; Carlsbad, CA) supplemented with 10% FBS (Invitrogen) and 100 U/ml penicillinstreptomycin (Invitrogen). Cells were incubated at 37C in a humidified atmosphere (5% CO2/95% air).
Transfection of Expression Vector pCMV-CgA-EGFP
COS-7 cells in Permanox chamber slides (Nalge Nunc International; Rochester, NY) or glass-bottomed culture dishes (FastGeneTM; NIPPON Genetics Co. Ltd., Tokyo, Japan) were transiently transfected with DNA (pCMV-CgA-EGFP or pCMV-EGFP) using FuGENE HD (Roche Applied Science; Indianapolis, IN) according to the manufacturer's instructions. Cells were then harvested 48 hr later and fixed.
Immunoblot Analysis
Electron and Immunoelectron Microscopy
Chimeric Photoprotein Fluorescence
Immunocytochemistry
Spectral Analysis
Protein Products of CgA-EGFP in Transfected COS-7 Cells Detected by Immunoblotting Cellular expression of the chimeric protein CgA-EGFP was confirmed by immunoblotting lysates from transfected COS-7 cells with antibodies to human CgA and GFP. Figure 2 shows products of 105 kDa on SDS-PAGE that are consistent with the predicted mass of the full-length human CgA-GFP chimera ( 75 kDa for human CgA plus 27 kDa for GFP) (Taupenot et al. 2002 50 kDa (Helman et al. 1988 25 kDa (not shown). Immunoreactivity to CgA-EGFP was absent in pCMV-EGFP transfected and non-transfected cells.
Distribution of Chimeric CgA-EGFP Protein by CLSM We designed an expression plasmid encoding the enhanced fluorescence variant of wild-type GFP fused at the N-terminus of EGFP, to the C-terminus of full-length human CgA (pCMV-CgA-EGFP; Figure 1). The single, red-shifted excitation peak of EGFP (mutations Ser65 to Thr65 and Phe64 to Leu64) fluoresces 35-fold more intensely than wild-type GFP when excited at 488 nm. Intracellular distribution of CgA-EGFP chimeric protein was assessed by CLSM in COS-7 cells fixed with paraformaldehyde (Figure 3
). Non-fused EGFP was diffusely distributed in the cytosol of pCMV-EGFP transfected COS-7 cells (data not shown).
Signals of chimeric CgA-EGFP protein were diffuse and/or accumulating and aggregating in the cytoplasm and perinuclear area, consistent with the Golgi field (Figure 3A, green signals). Fluorescence corresponding to EGFP or chimeric CgA-EGFP was not detected in non-transfected cells (data not shown). We further investigated the intracellular localization of CgA-EGFP by immunocytochemistry using a monoclonal antibody (LK2H10) against human CgA (Figure 3B, red signals). Figure 3B shows a non-uniform punctate distribution of anti-CgA-Qd525- immunocytochemically stained signals (red) throughout but more at the peripheral region of the cytoplasm. The CgA-Qd525 signal was excluded from the nucleus. Green signals of chimeric CgA-EGFP protein and red CgA-Qd525 signals that colocalized in a granular fashion merged into yellow (Figure 3D). With CLSM we could clearly demonstrate that the signals of CgA-EGFP (Figure 4A , green in color) and LAMP-1 (Figure 4B, red in color) are mainly localized in different granules (Figure 4D).
SG Formation Identified by EM Despite the absence of endogenous SGs in non-transfected COS-7 cells (Figure 5A ), COS-7 cells transfected with pCMV-CgA-EGFP contained granule-like structures (Figure 5B). These structures varied in size from 150 to 250 nm, which was larger than the dense-core SGs in PC12 cells (Taupenot et al. 2003
Distinct Distribution of CgA and EGFP Determined by CLSM Spectrum Analysis Three-dimensional confocal META analyses revealed individual signals from CgA-EGFP, EGFP, and CgA-QD525 in COS-7 cells transfected with pCMV-CgA-EGFP as an unmixed image. Figure 6 shows individual signals of CgA-EGFP, EGFP, and CgA-QD525 discriminated by META spectral analysis. Emission spectra of the reference signals from chimeric protein CgA-EGFP (Figure 6A), EGFP (Figure 6B), CgA-Qd525 (Figure 6C), and ToTo-3 counterstain (Figure 6J) were defined, and all fluorescence emission spectra were merged in Figure 6K. The input images were then calculated and individual signals were separated in the liner-unmixing mode (Figures 6D6G; CgA-EGFP chimeric protein signal, green; EGFP, yellow; CgA-Qd525, red; ToTo-3 nuclear, blue).
These results show that chimeric CgA-EGFP protein, unfused EGFP, and CgA immunoreactivity emitted distinct signals that were differently distributed for a short period. Accumulated and aggregated CgA-EGFP fluorescence signals were detected in the cytoplasm and perinuclear Golgi field (Figure 6D). Granule-like signals of EGFP were distributed mainly in the cytoplasm (Figure 6E). Fine, dotted CgA signals were mainly localized in the peripheral region excluding the Golgi field (Figure 6F). Nuclei were counterstained with ToTo-3 (Figure 6G). CgA-EGFP chimeric protein signals (green) and EGFP signals (yellow) were differently distributed. EGFP signals were mainly in the perinuclear area, whereas speckled CgA-EGFP signals were aggregated in the periphery of the cytoplasm.
This is the first report to demonstrate granular structure produced by transfecting the EGFP-tagged human CgA gene into non-NE COS-7 cells. The role of the granin family in granulogenesis in NE and non-NE cells has been demonstrated by transfection with the CgA and CgB genes (Kim et al. 2001 Another striking finding was that CgA and EGFP are not always identically distributed in the cytoplasm. In cells transfected with EGFP-tagged CgA, the EGFP signal indicates CgA itself, so CgA localization has not been further examined. In the present study we investigated the localization of EGFP and CgA using an additional cytochemical technique and found that the CgA distribution did not always coincide with the EGFP signal. We found that fluorescence signals for chimeric CgA-EGFP or EGFP protein were distributed in the cytoplasm and mainly in the Golgi fields. In contrast, CgA-Qd525 signals were immunocytochemically localized mainly to the periphery of the cytoplasm (Figure 3). One explanation for this is that the fusion protein could be processed in the TGN, and only CgA lacking EGFP was packed in the mature granules.
The process of granule formation has been investigated in detail by EM. Morphology and final size of granules are diverse and depend on the cell type and granule contents. MSGs in PC12 cells are
Core density of the granular structures also indicates SG maturity. Previous EM studies have shown that granules have low electron density in NE, endocrine, and exocrine cells (Arvan and Castle 1992
The role of CgA has been under discussion. Kim et al. (2001) In conclusion, EGFP-tagged CgA is a powerful tool to investigate how CgA contributes to granulogenesis.
Received for publication October 4, 2006; accepted December 22, 2006
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