Serine protease granzyme M (GrM) is highly expressed in the cytolytic granules of NK cells, which eliminate virus-infected cells and tumor cells. The molecular mechanisms by which GrM induces cell death, however, remain poorly understood. In this study we used a proteomic approach to scan the native proteome of human tumor cells for intracellular substrates of GrM. Among other findings, this approach revealed several components of the cytoskeleton. GrM directly and efficiently cleaved the actin-plasma membrane linker ezrin and the microtubule component α-tubulin by using purified proteins, tumor cell lysates, and tumor cells undergoing cell death induced by perforin and GrM. These cleavage events occurred independently of caspases or other cysteine proteases. Kinetically, α-tubulin was more efficiently cleaved by GrM as compared with ezrin. Direct α-tubulin proteolysis by GrM is complex and occurs at multiple cleavage sites, one of them being Leu at position 269. GrM disturbed tubulin polymerization dynamics in vitro and induced microtubule network disorganization in tumor cells in vivo. We conclude that GrM targets major components of the cytoskeleton that likely contribute to NK cell-induced cell death.
Granzyme-mediated cell death is the major pathway for cytotoxic lymphocytes to kill virus-infected and tumor cells. In humans, five different granzymes (i.e. GrA, GrB, GrH, GrK, and GrM) are known that all induce cell death. Expression of intracellular serine protease inhibitors (serpins) is one of the mechanisms by which tumor cells evade cytotoxic lymphocyte-mediated killing. Intracellular expression of SERPINB9 by tumor cells renders them resistant to GrB-induced apoptosis. In contrast to GrB, however, no physiological intracellular inhibitors are known for the other four human granzymes. In the present study, we show that SERPINB4 formed a typical serpin-protease SDS-stable complex with both recombinant and native human GrM. Mutation of the P2-P1-P1′ triplet in the SERPINB4 reactive center loop completely abolished complex formation with GrM and N-terminal sequencing revealed that GrM cleaves SERPINB4 after P1-Leu. SERPINB4 inhibited GrM activity with a stoichiometry of inhibition of 1.6 and an apparent second order rate constant of 1.3×104 M−1s−1. SERPINB4 abolished cleavage of the macromolecular GrM substrates α-tubulin and nucleophosmin. Overexpression of SERPINB4 in tumor cells inhibited recombinant GrM-induced as well as NK cell-mediated cell death and this inhibition depended on the reactive center loop of the serpin. As SERPINB4 is highly expressed by squamous cell carcinomas, our results may represent a novel mechanism by which these tumor cells evade cytotoxic lymphocyte-induced GrM-mediated cell death.
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