Central features of both
B. anthracis- and LeTx-induced animal death are vascular leakage and pulmonary edema. One important mechanism of LeTx-induced vascular leakage may be direct induction of endothelial cell death [
37]. However, reports that LeTx-induced endothelial cell death is inefficient [
38] and absence of measurable endothelial cell death in mice receiving LeTx doses sufficient to induce animal death [
5] suggest that additional mechanisms may operate to promote the vascular effects of this toxin. In this study we evaluated early effects of LeTx in highly vascularized lung tissue in order to identify transcriptional changes pointing to new potential mechanisms of LeTx-induced vascular effects including vascular leakage and pulmonary edema. Although this study was designed to identify the earliest LeTx-induced gene expression changes, other transcripts that are modulated at late time points may also be important in pathogenesis. Nevertheless, at least 8 of the identified differentially expressed transcripts are normally enriched in endothelial cells (, and ), including
Gpr182 and
Adrb2, discussed in more detail below.
Though not an endothelial-specific gene
per se,
Rgs2 is expressed in endothelial cells and was specifically induced by LeTx.
Rgs2 encodes Regulator of G-protein Signaling 2, a GTPase activating protein (GAP) critical for negative regulation of G (q) alpha receptors and control of vascular tone and blood pressure. Previously, the up-regulation of
Rgs2 was observed in the hearts of Swiss Webster mice 48 h post-inhalational Ames spore challenge [
48]. We observed significant up-regulation of
Rgs2 in A/J mice due to LeTx treatment alone. Mice deficient in this gene exhibit hypertension and decreased cGMP-mediated vascular relaxation [
36,
49], indicating that modulating vascular smooth muscle homeostasis is a unique role for this GAP. Elevated expression of
Rgs2 would thus be predicted to result in vascular relaxation and may contribute to LeTx-mediated animal death since lowered mean arterial blood pressure occurs early following LeTx infusion and predicts non-survivors of systemic LeTx exposure [
6,
50]. Interestingly,
Rgs2 was originally cloned as an early response gene up-regulated in activated T cells [
51]. Given the lymphocyte gene signature also observed in this study, it is also possible that elevated
Rgs2 could be occurring primarily in T lymphocytes (see further discussion below). Further studies to assess expression of
Rgs2 in isolated vascular tissue from LeTx-treated animals will be needed to clarify this point. An interesting study would be to determine whether
Rgs2 deficient mice exhibit enhanced resistance to LeTx-mediated death.
Another important LeTx-mediated expression change observed was down-regulation of the endothelial-enriched gene
Gpr182 encoding the adrenomedullin receptor (ADMR). Adrenomedullin is a potent blood vessel-secreted vasoactive peptide hormone [
33] that can suppress apoptosis of endothelial cells [
52] and prevent bleomycin-induced lung injury when administered intratracheally to mice [
53]. Interestingly, a previous study found dramatic up-regulation of
Adm, the gene coding for adrenomedullin, in the hearts of Ames spore challenged mice [
48]. Whether the
Gpr182 gene product is a
bona-fide receptor for adrenomedullin is controversial, however. Binding of adrenomedullin to COS-7 cells transfected with rat or human ADMR was not detectable [
54]; however, siRNA-mediated silencing of ADMR expression in both HUVEC and mouse lung endothelial cells demonstrated that autocrine effects of adrenomedullin in these cells were mediated through ADMR [
55].
Expression of a second endothelial-enriched gene, adrenergic β receptor 2 (
Adrb2) was modulated by LeTx treatment. Adrenergic β receptor 2 agonists have been demonstrated to participate in up-regulation of active Na
+ transport
in vitro [
56]. More recently, up-regulation of alveolar fluid clearance due to increased active Na
+ transport has been demonstrated
in vivo [
35,
57]. Additionally, C57BL/6
Adrb2 knockout mice have severely impaired ability to clear alveolar fluid when compared to wild type mice [
34]. In our study, this gene was significantly down-regulated in A/J mice treated with LeTx; supporting that proper
Adrb2 function could be necessary for clearance of LeTx associated pulmonary edema. Further studies, such as exploring the effects of adrenergic β receptor 2 agonists on LeTx treated mice or evaluation of
Adrb2 deficient mice for enhanced susceptibility to LeTx-mediated death, are needed to investigate this possibility.
Our study also revealed a group of genes associated with cellular structure. These genes code for tubulin, actin, keratin, and other intermediate filaments that are involved with both inter- and intra-cellular architecture and may contribute to vascular leakage in the lungs [
58]. Consistent with a previous study that observed the formation of actin stress fibers upon LeTx treatment [
14], we observed the up-regulation of actin filament associating protein 1, or
Afap1. Additionally, the down-regulation of
Krt79, which codes for keratin, a component of desmosomes, is consistent with the possibility that the disruption of intercellular junctions may lead to vascular leakage.
While the primary goal of this study was to identify new candidate pathways that may promote vascular leakage and pulmonary edema in LeTx-treated mice, additional groups of genes for other processes were also identified. One such identified process that was enriched among differentially expressed genes in A/J mice was cell death. Although endothelial cell death may not be the major cause of vascular/capillary leakage, cell death in other cell types due to exposure to LeTx may contribute to increased
B. anthracis virulence. In this study we observed a down-regulated myeloid gene signature in A/J mice treated with LeTx. Since LeTx is known to kill macrophages [
59,
60] and host myeloid cell death may be essential for successful
B. anthracis infection [
61], this myeloid related gene signature is of interest. Genes expressed specifically in macrophages (
Mrc1,
Csf2ra,
Ccl6, and
Sirpb1a), neutrophils (
Ccl6,
Sirpb1a, and
Lcn2) and other myeloid cells were observed.
Products of another observed group of differentially expressed immune-related genes participate in neutrophil chemoattraction. Although neutrophilia is induced in the circulation by LeTx, margination of neutrophils into tissues is conspicuously absent in such animals [
7]. Barson
et al. observed the suppression of chemokine producing gene expression
in vitro after 2 hours of LeTx exposure [
62]. Furthermore, LeTx has been shown to inhibit neutrophil chemotaxis in a direct manner by a process that impairs actin filament assembly [
13]. The present study suggests that LeTx may also impair neutrophil chemotaxis in whole lung tissue through additional mechanisms including transcriptional inhibition of neutrophil chemoattractants and transcriptional down-regulation of urokinase-type plasminogen activator (CD87/uPAR), encoded by
Plaur. This gene product promotes trans-endothelial migration of neutrophils [
44]. Mice deficient in uPAR demonstrated severely impaired neutrophil migration into lungs and impaired host defense against pulmonary infection with
Psuedomonas aeruginosa [
46] and Pneumococcal pneumonia [
45].
Interestingly, a group of 15 differentially expressed genes, 12 in A/J mice and 3 in B6 mice, related to tumor regulation/angiogenesis was observed. Considering the unique cytoplasmic translocation method utilized by LF via PA [
41], the specificity of the PA/receptor interaction and innate anti-angiogenic properties of LF, and the over-expression of the anthrax toxin receptor TEM-8 in tumor endothelium [
63], it is not surprising that some investigators have begun to explore the use of LeTx as a method of tumor therapy [
32,
42,
43]. Disrupting angiogenesis is a possible means by which LeTx achieves tumor regulation. The down-regulation of pro-angiogenic genes in our study such as
Gpr182 [
55],
P2ry13 [
64] and
Plaur [
65] is consistent with this.
Unexpectedly, the most prominent LeTx-induced differentially expressed gene signature, which was found in both A/J and B6 mice, involved enhanced expression of multiple lymphoid genes, including genes encoding the canonical antigen receptors of both T and B lymphocytes. Ingenuity Pathways Analysis revealed significant enrichment of differentially expressed genes suggesting both quantity and activation of lymphocytes. Our histologic analysis of lung tissue revealed lungs devoid of lymphocytic infiltrates, in agreement with other studies demonstrating lack of immune cell infiltrates in lungs even at late time points following systemic LeTx exposure [
52]. Because 6 h is an insufficient length of time for T or B cell proliferation in response to any stimulus, these prominent transcriptional changes could either represent a prelude to proliferation of lymphocytes already present in the lungs/lung vasculature or LeTx-mediated lymphocyte activation. Indeed, CD69 transcripts were elevated in LeTx-treated lungs of A/J mice at this early time point. In contrast, several groups have demonstrated that LeTx instead impairs lymphocyte proliferation and activation [
11,
12,
66,
67]. However, all of these studies either examined responses of isolated lymphocytes
in vitro or examined restimulation of lymphocytes previously exposed to LeTx. One interesting study demonstrated that LeTx has a mitogenic effect on T cells, resulting in their proliferation [
68]. This mitogenic effect was shown to be mediated indirectly through a soluble factor secreted by monocytes, and the proliferating cells had not been stimulated through the T cell receptor. The effect could not have been mediated by endotoxin contamination of LeTx components because T cell proliferation did not occur in the presence of PA or LF alone and also failed to occur in the presence of PA plus an inactive mutant of LF. The results of the present study lead to speculation that a similar mitogenic effect may be occurring
in vivo in LeTx-treated mice, resulting in initial LeTx-mediated lymphocyte activation. Such an abnormal activation event could easily lead to an anergic state, rendering lymphocytes unresponsive to further stimulation. Interestingly, pharmacological treatment with interleukin-2 (IL-2) causes a vascular leakage syndrome [
69,
70], and rapid, systemic mitogenic T cell proliferation may well be accompanied by a burst of systemic IL-2.