Abstract

Apoptotic cells expose phosphatidylserine (PtdSer) on their surface, leading to efferocytosis, i.e. their engulfment by resident macrophages that express the PtdSer receptor T cell immunoglobulin mucin receptor 4 (TIM4) and TAM family receptor tyrosine kinase receptors (MERTK, AXL, and TYRO3). TAM family receptors stimulate cell proliferation, and the many aspects of the growth signaling pathway downstream of TAM family receptors have been elucidated previously. However, the signaling cascade for TAM receptor-mediated efferocytosis has been elusive. Here we observed that efferocytosis by mouse-resident peritoneal macrophages was blocked by inhibitors against the MERTK, mitogen-activated protein kinase/extracellular signal-regulated kinase kinase (MEK), AKT Ser/Thr kinase (AKT), focal adhesion kinase (FAK), or STAT6 pathway. Accordingly, apoptotic cells stimulated the phosphorylation of MERTK, ERK, AKT, FAK, and STAT6, but not of IκB or STAT5. A reconstituted efferocytosis system using MERTK- and TIM4-expressing NIH3T3-derived cells revealed that the juxtamembrane and C-terminal regions of MERTK have redundant roles in efferocytosis. The transformation of murine IL-3-dependent Ba/F3 cells (a pro-B cell line) with MERTK and TIM4 enabled them to proliferate in response to apoptotic cells in a PtdSer-dependent manner. This apoptotic cell-induced MERTK-mediated proliferation required both MERTK's juxtamembrane and C-terminal regions and was blocked by inhibitors of not only ERK, AKT, FAK, and STAT6 but also of NF-κB and STAT5 signaling. These results suggest that apoptotic cells stimulate distinct sets of signal transduction pathways via MERTK to induce either efferocytosis or proliferation.

Highlights

  • Apoptotic cells expose phosphatidylserine (PtdSer) on their surface, leading to efferocytosis, i.e. their engulfment by resident macrophages that express the PtdSer receptor T cell immunoglobulin mucin receptor 4 (TIM4) and TAM family receptor tyrosine kinase receptors (MERTK, AXL, and TYRO3)

  • We recently showed that a set of resident macrophages, such as resident peritoneal macrophages, Kupffer cells, and skin macrophages, express TIM4 and TAM kinase for efficient efferocytosis [15, 16]

  • We found that efferocytosis with resident peritoneal macrophages was inhibited by inhibitors against mitogen-activated protein kinase/extracellular signal-regulated kinase kinase (MEK), AKT, focal adhesion kinase (FAK), or STAT6 but not against NF-␬B or STAT5 pathways

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Summary

Signal transduction for efferocytosis and cell proliferation

Using NIH3T3-derived cell lines expressing TIM4 and MERTK mutants, we showed that MERTK’s membrane-proximal and C-terminal tail regions were not required for efferocytosis, whereas apoptotic cell–stimulated growth signaling required the membrane-proximal and C-terminal tail regions of MERTK in addition to its kinase domain. These results indicate that apoptotic cells can stimulate cell growth via MERTK and that overlapping distinct signaling molecules are involved in MERTK-mediated efferocytosis versus MERTK-mediated growth promotion

Results
Phosphorylation of signaling molecules activated by apoptotic cells
Different MERTK cytoplasmic domains for efferocytosis and cell growth
Activation of signaling molecules via the kinase domain of MERTK
Discussion
Experimental procedures
Efferocytosis assay
Immunoprecipitation and Western blotting
Statistical analysis
Full Text
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