Proteasome Inhibitors Activate Stress Kinases and Induce Hsp72
DIVERSE EFFECTS ON APOPTOSIS*

Anatoli B. MeriinDagger §, Vladimir L. GabaiDagger , Julia YaglomDagger , Victor I. Shifrinpar , and Michael Y. ShermanDagger **

From the Dagger  Boston Biomedical Research Institute, Boston, Massachusetts 02114, § Institute of Influenza, St. Petersburg, Russia 197022,  Medical Radiology Research Center, Obninsk, Russia 249020, and par  Dana Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, Massachusetts 02115

    ABSTRACT
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Abstract
Introduction
Procedures
Results
Discussion
References

Inhibition of the major cytosolic protease, proteasome, has been reported to induce programmed cell death in several cell lines, while with other lines, similar inhibition blocked apoptosis triggered by a variety of harmful treatments. To elucidate the mechanism of pro- and antiapoptotic action of proteasome inhibitors, their effects on U937 lymphoid and 293 kidney human tumor cells were tested. Treatment with peptidyl aldehyde MG132 and other proteasome inhibitors led to a steady increase in activity of c-Jun N-terminal kinase, JNK1, which is known to initiate the apoptotic program in response to certain stresses. Dose dependence of MG132-induced JNK activation was parallel with that of apoptosis. Furthermore, inhibition of the JNK signaling pathway strongly suppressed MG132-induced apoptosis. These data indicate that JNK is critical for the cell death caused by proteasome inhibitors. An antiapoptotic action of proteasome inhibitors could be revealed by a short incubation of cells with MG132 followed by its withdrawal. Under these conditions, the major heat shock protein Hsp72 accumulated in cells and caused suppression of JNK activation in response to certain stresses. Accordingly, pretreatment with MG132 reduced JNK-dependent apoptosis caused by heat shock or ethanol, but it was unable to block JNK-independent apoptosis induced by TNFalpha . Therefore, proteasome inhibitors activate JNK, which initiates an apoptotic program, and simultaneously they induce Hsp72, which suppresses JNK-dependent apoptosis. A balance between these two effects might define the fate of cells exposed to the inhibitors.

    INTRODUCTION
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Abstract
Introduction
Procedures
Results
Discussion
References

Mammalian cells respond to various stressful conditions by activation of stress kinase signaling cascades. Activation of a stress-kinase, c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK),1 by strong oxidants, UV irradiation, and some other stressful conditions proceeds through a signal transduction pathway that involves small GTP-binding proteins and a cascade of kinases (1, 2). Prolonged activation of JNK is harmful, since it initiates a special program that leads to cell death, apoptosis (3-6). Indeed, overproduction of dominant negative mutants of JNK or other components of the kinase cascade inhibits programmed cell death in response to heat shock, UV irradiation, oxidative stress (5), and certain other inductors (3, 4, 6). However, there are certain types of apoptosis (e.g. Fas- or TNF-induced) that are JNK-independent (7, 8).

Many stressful conditions also induce heat shock proteins, including Hsp72, which increases a cell's tolerance to stresses. Therefore, the cell's decision to die or to survive is determined by the fine balance of these two systems. In cells affected by stresses, Hsp72 binds to damaged and misfolded polypeptides and can either facilitate their repair or target nonreparable polypeptides for degradation by the ubiquitin- and proteasome-dependent pathway (see Refs. 9 and 10 for review). Our recent findings demonstrate, however, that the cell-protective action of Hsp72 may be unrelated to its activity in protein refolding or degradation. In fact, Hsp72 interferes with the activation of stress kinase JNK, and thus prevents apoptotic signaling during certain stresses (11). This suppression of JNK appears to be responsible for Hsp72-mediated protection of cells from apoptosis induced by heat shock, ethanol, and some other stresses (11).2

Recently, inhibition of major cellular protease, proteasome, was shown to activate a cell death program (12-18). In fact, incubation of cells with potent proteasome inhibitors, namely peptide aldehydes and lactocystin, either facilitated apoptosis caused by TNF or Fas-ligand (14) or was alone sufficient to induce apoptosis (13, 15-18). Since many important regulatory proteins, e.g. p53, are the substrates of proteasome, it was suggested that inhibition of the breakdown of these proteins could result in their accumulation, thereby leading to apoptosis (16, 17). On the contrary, other laboratories reported that treatment with inhibitors of proteasome-dependent protein breakdown protected cells from apoptosis triggered by growth factor withdrawal, ionizing irradiation, exposure to glucocorticoids, or phorbol ester (19, 20). Such protection was observed with quiescent cells, while induction of apoptosis by proteasome inhibitors was demonstrated mainly with proliferating cultures. This led to the idea that inhibition of protein degradation has much more severe effects on cells progressing through the cell cycle. However, there are some examples where exposure of quiescent cells to inhibitors also activated apoptosis (16, 20).

Effects of the inhibition of proteasome-dependent proteolysis on apoptosis could provide new insights into the mechanisms triggering programmed cell death. Furthermore, information about the nature of the inhibitor's cytotoxicity could also be helpful in drug development, since some of the proteasome inhibitors are currently in use as lead compounds for drug design. In this work, we have studied effects of proteasome inhibitors on the activation of JNK and the role of this kinase in cytotoxicity of such inhibitors. We also investigated the role of induction of Hsp72 in the antiapoptotic effects of the proteasome inhibitors.

    EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
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Abstract
Introduction
Procedures
Results
Discussion
References

Materials and Cell Culture-- U937 human lymphoid tumor cells were grown in RPMI 1640 medium with 10% fetal bovine serum and were used for experiments while in the midlog phase (3-7 × 105 cells/ml). 293 human cells were grown in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium with 10% fetal bovine serum and were used in transient transfection experiments while at 40% of confluence. MG132 was purchased from Biomol Research Laboratory, Inc. N-Acetyl-leucinyl-leucinyl-norleucinal (aLLN) was purchased from Sigma. MG132 analogs were synthesized and purified by high pressure liquid chromatography. Anti-hsp72 antibody (SPA810) was from StressGene Biotechnologies Corp. (Canada), and anti-p53 antibody (PAb1801) was from Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Inc.

JNK and p38 Assay-- JNK activity was assayed using GST-c-Jun protein as a substrate after immunoprecipitation with anti-JNK1 antibodies (sc-474, Santa Cruz Biotechnology) or anti-HA antibody for transfected JNK (Berkeley Antibody Company, Richmond, CA). Briefly, cells were lysed in a buffer containing 20 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.4, 50 mM NaCl, 2 mM EDTA, 1% Triton X-100, 25 mM beta -glycerophosphate, 10 mM NaF, 1 mM Na3VO4, and protease inhibitors (1 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride and a 25 µg/ml concentration each of aprotenin, pepstatin, and leupeptin). After immunoprecipitation with anti-JNK1 or anti-HA antibody and protein A-Sepharose for 2 h at 4 °C and washing, a kinase reaction was carried out in a buffer containing 25 mM HEPES, 10 mM MgCl2, 2 mM dithiothreitol, 25 mM beta -glycerophosphate, 2 mM Na3VO4, and 25 µCi of [gamma -32P]ATP at 37 °C for 10 min. Then the samples were subjected to SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis followed by transfer to a nitrocellulose membrane and autoradiography. This membrane was later used for immunoblot with anti-JNK1 antibody to ensure that equal amounts of the kinase were immunoprecipitated. p38 kinase activity was determined by Western blot with polyclonal antibody (New England Biolabs) specifically recognizing the phosphorylated (active) form of p38. Later the same blot was treated with anti-p38 antibody (New England Biolabs) to ensure equal loading of the kinase on different lanes.

Apoptosis Assays-- Poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) degradation was followed by Western blotting with anti-PARP monoclonal antibodies (C2-10; G. Poirier, Montreal, Canada). Apoptosis of 293 cells was detected by cleavage of a truncated form of U1 70-kDa protein d12 (21). Cells were transfected by calcium phosphate method with a plasmid encoding d12 tagged with the T7 epitope alone or together with a dominant-negative mutant form of SEK1 (K/R) or c-Jun (TAM67). After 48 h, cells were either treated with 10 µM MG132 or subjected to heat shock at 45 °C for 15 min. After an additional 24 h, cells were lysed, and cleavage of d12 was detected by Western blot with anti-T7 epitope antibody.

Protein Degradation Assays-- U937 cells were washed once with PBS, resuspended in RPMI 1640 without leucine and with dialyzed fetal bovine serum, and incubated for 40 min. Proteins were then labeled for 1 h with 10 mCi/ml of [14C]leucine. Cells were washed once and chased in regular RPMI 1640 media with 0.2 mg/ml unlabeled leucine, 150 mM cycloheximide (to inhibit protein synthesis and reincorporation of a labeled leucine), and 20 mM chloroquine (to inhibit lysosomal protein degradation) in the presence of different concentrations of MG132 (preincubation of cells with MG132 for 3 h did not change the level of inhibition of degradation). At the end of the chase period, 10% trichloroacetic acid was added, and samples were left for 30 min on ice. Then samples were spun down in Eppendorf centrifuge for 5 min, and the radioactivity in the supernatant was measured. A percentage of degradation was calculated as a ratio of trichloroacetic acid-soluble and total radioactivity in a sample. To assay for inhibition of I-kappa B degradation by MG132, cells were incubated for 45 min with different concentrations of the inhibitor, and then TNFalpha (5 ng/ml) was added. Samples were collected 10 min later and subjected to polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis followed by Western blot with anti-I-kappa B antibody (sc-847, Santa Cruz Biotechnology) and quantitated with a laser scanner.

    RESULTS
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Abstract
Introduction
Procedures
Results
Discussion
References

Proapoptotic Effects of the Proteasome Inhibitors-- To dissect the mechanisms of induction of apoptosis by proteasome inhibitors, we tested their effects on activation of JNK, a stress kinase required for initiation of the apoptotic program in response to a variety of stressful conditions. Effects of a very potent proteasome inhibitor, benzyloxycarbonyl-leucinyl-leucinyl-leucinal (MG132), on the U937 cell line were studied (Fig. 1A). The degree of apoptosis was followed by the cleavage of PARP and the appearance of an 86-kDa fragment of PARP, which is the hallmark of this process. A fraction of cleaved PARP correlated with a fraction of cells that underwent shrinkage and nuclear condensation (not shown). The first signs of apoptosis were seen at 4-5 h of incubation with 50 µM of MG132, and after 7 h of incubation, more than 50% of cells underwent apoptosis. Prolonged exposure to the inhibitor (20 h) caused programmed cell death in almost 100% of the cell population. Similar results (100% apoptosis) were observed upon titration of MG132 down to 1.5 µM (Fig. 2A). Therefore, dose dependence of apoptosis on MG132 covered a narrow range of concentrations between 0.2 and 1.5 µM.


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Fig. 1.   MG132 induces apoptosis and activates JNK. A, time course of MG132-induced PARP cleavage. U937 cells were incubated with 50 µM MG132 for the indicated time periods, and PARP cleavage was followed by the Western blot with anti-PARP antibody. B, MG132 causes JNK activation. U937 cells were incubated with 50 µM MG132 for the indicated time periods. JNK activity was measured after immunoprecipitation from cell lysates using GST-Jun as a substrate. Note that activation of JNK precedes PARP cleavage. C, increase in JNK activity depends on the permanent presence of the inhibitor in media. U937 cells were incubated with 1.5 µM MG132 for the indicated time periods, and then from a part of the culture the inhibitor was washed out and cells were left in fresh media. JNK activity was measured after immunoprecipitation from cell lysates using GST-Jun as a substrate. Bands were quantitated with a laser scanner in arbitrary units.


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Fig. 2.   Dose dependence of MG132-mediated induction of apoptosis and activation of JNK. A, dose dependence of MG132-induced PARP cleavage. PARP cleavage was measured after a 16-h incubation with the indicated concentrations of MG132. B, dose dependence of JNK activation by MG132. Samples from the experiment showed in panel A were taken after a 4.5-h incubation with the indicated concentrations of MG132 for measurement of JNK activity. C, quantitation of data from panels A and B by laser scanner. The dose dependence of JNK activation strongly correlates with the dose dependence of PARP cleavage.

Apoptosis caused by MG132 closely correlated with activation of JNK. JNK1 activity steadily and strongly increased during incubation with the inhibitor (Fig. 1B) and preceded PARP degradation (Fig. 1A). In addition, the dose dependence of apoptosis was almost parallel with that of activation of JNK (Fig. 2). In fact, incubation of the cells with 1.5 µM MG132 activated JNK1 to the maximal level. This saturation plateau of the activity curve covers the range of MG132 concentrations capable of causing 100% of apoptosis (Fig. 2C). The 0.5 µM concentration of MG132, which lies on the steep portion of the curve, resulted in an intermediate activation of JNK1. These data suggested that JNK activation may play a causative role in apoptosis induced by the proteasome inhibitors. Furthermore, after screening several cell lines, we have found that in COS-7 cells (in contrast to other lines) MG132 did not activate JNK, which correlated with the inability of this proteasome inhibitor to induce apoptosis (not shown).

To test directly whether JNK activation is essential for apoptosis induced by MG132, we studied whether such apoptosis could be suppressed by a dominant-negative mutant form of SEK1, one of JNK's activators. As shown previously, transient transfection of cells with the dominant-negative SEK1 mutant suppresses activation of JNK in response to heat shock, irradiation, oxidative stress, etc., which led to repression of apoptosis (3, 5, 6). Since efficiency of transfection of U937 cells is very low, we used the 293 human kidney cell line for these experiments. MG132 was cytotoxic for 293 cells and activated JNK similarly to that in U937 cells (not shown). As an indicator of apoptosis in transfected cells, we followed cleavage of a recombinant fragment of U1 70-kDa ribonucleoprotein (d12), which is caused by the same apoptosis-activated protease that degrades PARP (22). 293 cells were transfected either with d12 plasmid alone or together with the plasmid encoding the dominant-negative SEK1 mutant. Fig. 3, A and B, show that expression of the mutant SEK1 dramatically reduced activation of JNK and suppressed d12 cleavage caused by the incubation of cells with MG132. In line with previously reported data (5, 6), transfection with the mutant SEK1 also reduced activation of JNK and suppressed d12 cleavage induced by strong heat shock (Fig. 3, A and B). To obtain independent data on the critical role of JNK in MG132-induced apoptosis, we studied if a dominant-negative mutant form of c-Jun, an immediate downstream component of JNK cascade, suppresses such apoptosis. Cotransfection of c-Jun dominant-negative mutant (TAM67) together with d12 strongly suppressed d12 cleavage induced by MG132 (Fig. 3C). Therefore, inhibition of JNK signaling pathway either immediately upstream or immediately downstream of JNK suppressed MG132-induced apoptosis. Taken together, these data strongly indicate that MG132-induced apoptotic pathway involves SEK1, JNK, and c-Jun.


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Fig. 3.   Involvement of JNK1 in apoptosis caused by MG132. A, overexpression of the dominant negative SEK1 blocks JNK activation caused by MG132. 293 cells were transiently transfected with plasmid expressing hemagglutinin-tagged JNK kinase alone or along with the plasmid expressing mutant SEK1 gene. After 48 h, cells were subjected to heat shock (45 °C, 15 min) or treated with MG132 (10 µM, 8 h), and samples were withdrawn for assessment of JNK activity. Overexpression of mutant glutathione S-transferase-tagged SEK1 was confirmed by Western blot with anti-glutathione S-transferase antibody. B, overexpression of the dominant negative SEK1 blocks apoptosis caused by MG132. 293 cells were transiently transfected with plasmid expressing T7-tagged d12 protein (see "Experimental Procedures") alone or along with the plasmid expressing mutant SEK1 gene. After 48 h, cells were subjected to heat shock (15 min, 45 °C) or treated with MG132 (10 µM). 24 h later, the extent of apoptosis was assessed by the degree of d12 cleavage. C, overexpression of the dominant negative c-Jun (TAM67) blocks apoptosis caused by MG132. 293 cells were transiently transfected with plasmid expressing T7-tagged d12 protein alone or along with the plasmid expressing TAM67 protein. After 48 h, cells were treated with MG132 (10 µM). 24 h later, the extent of apoptosis was assessed by the degree of d12 cleavage.

In U937 cells, reduction of the amount of JNK by incubation of cells with an antisense oligonucleotide covering the 5'-translated region of JNK1 coding sequence (23) also suppressed MG132-induced apoptosis. This effect was modest (about 50%), since even after prolonged incubation of cells in the presence of the oligonucleotide, cellular content of JNK1 decreased only about 50% (not shown).

It is noteworthy that exposure of cells to MG132 also led to an activation of another stress-kinase p38 (Fig. 4). This kinase had been shown to participate in production of interleukin-6, activation of phospholipase A2, regulation of phosphorylation of Hsp27, and other processes (24, 25). The pattern of activation of p38 kinase by 1.5 µM MG132 was similar to that of JNK activation (Fig. 4A), but a high concentration of this proteasome inhibitor (50 µM) caused much faster activation of p38 (not shown). Although p38 was reported to be critical for certain types of apoptosis (4), activation of this kinase appeared not to be involved in MG132-induced apoptosis. In fact, incubation of cells with the specific inhibitor of p38, SB203580, did not suppress, and even slightly facilitated, this apoptosis (Fig. 4B). Therefore, the proteasome inhibitor MG132 activates two distinct stress kinases (JNK and p38), but only one of them (JNK) is essential for apoptosis. We cannot exclude, however, the possibility that isoforms of p38 insensitive to SB203580 could be involved MG132-induced apoptosis.


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Fig. 4.   MG132 causes activation of p38. A, U937 cells were incubated with 1.5 µM MG132 for the indicated time periods, and the activity of p38 kinase was detected by Western blot with an anti-phospho-p38 antibody that recognizes only the activated form of p38 (see "Experimental Procedures"). B, U937 cells were incubated with 10 µM MG132 for 8 h with or without 10 µM SB203580, and PARP cleavage was measured. Control was not incubated with MG132 (incubation with SB203580 alone did not cause apoptosis).

To examine whether the JNK-activating and cytotoxic effect of MG132 is related to inhibition of proteasome, two other proteasome inhibitors were tested. Lactacystin-beta -lacton, a very specific covalent proteasome inhibitor, and aLLN, a weaker noncovalent inhibitor, both activated JNK (Fig. 5) and caused apoptosis (not shown). The onset of JNK activation and of apoptosis lagged behind those induced by MG132, probably because of a slower accumulation of these inhibitors in cells or because of a lower rate of inhibition of a proteasome. Another strong covalent inhibitor of the proteasome, NIP-L3VS (26), also induced apoptosis in U937 cells. By contrast, less active or inactive analogs of MG132 (benzyloxycarbonyl-leucinyl-leucinyl-leucine, benzyloxycarbonyl-leucinyl-leucinyl-norvaline or benzyloxycarbonyl-leucinyl-leucinyl-leucinyl-amide) did not cause detectable PARP cleavage in the cells even when added at up to 50 µM concentrations (not shown). Therefore, there was a strong correlation between the cytotoxicity of MG132-like compounds and their ability to inactivate proteasome.


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Fig. 5.   Activation of JNK by lactacystin-beta -lacton and aLLN. U937 cells were incubated with 5 µM aLLN (upper panel) and 10 µM of lactocystin-beta -lacton (lower panel) for the indicated time periods, and JNK activity was measured as described in the legend to Fig. 1B.

It was suggested that inhibition of proteasome leads to accumulation of certain otherwise short lived proteins, providing a cytotoxic effect (13, 16, 17). Furthermore, apoptosis caused by proteasome inhibitors was shown to be dependent on accumulation of p53 (16). However, U937 cells used in our work express negligible amounts of p53, which is undetectable by Western blot with anti-p53 antibody (27, 28). Moreover, incubation of cells with a high concentration of MG132 (50 µM) for up to 20 h did not cause any detectable accumulation of p53 in our experiments (not shown). Therefore, in the U937 cell line, apoptosis induced by the proteasome inhibitor is clearly p53-independent.

To our surprise, MG132 at concentrations that activated JNK and apoptosis showed only little effect on the breakdown of the bulk of short lived proteins. To measure nonlysosomal (mostly proteasome-dependent) protein degradation, cell proteins were labeled with [14C]leucine and chased with an excess of unlabeled leucine in the presence of an inhibitor of lysosomal degradation. The proteolysis was followed by an appearance of label in the trichloroacetic acid-soluble fraction. In these experiments, 0.5 µM of MG132, which provided about half-maximal activation of JNK and apoptosis (Fig. 2), showed almost no inhibition of degradation of the bulk of short lived proteins (Fig. 6). Moreover, 1.5 µM of MG132, which caused maximal activation of JNK and resulted in 100% of apoptosis (Fig. 2), provided only about 25% inhibition of proteolysis. A further increase in concentration of MG132 allowed much stronger reduction in protein breakdown, and 50 µM provided up to 85% inhibition. The extent of the inhibition did not change significantly after longer exposure of the cells to MG132 (not shown).


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Fig. 6.   Dose dependence of MG132 inhibition of degradation of distinct types of proteins. Effects of MG132 on degradation of I-kappa B and the bulk of short lived proteins were tested. Degradation of I-kappa B was stimulated by the addition of 5 ng/ml TNF for 10 min. MG132 was added to cell suspension 45 min prior to the addition of TNF. The amount of I-kappa B was detected by Western blot with anti-I-kappa B antibody (see "Experimental Procedures"). Nonlysosomal degradation of the bulk of short lived proteins was measured in a pulse-chase experiment as described under "Experimental Procedures."

Although the active concentration of MG132 (0.5 µM) was too low to affect degradation of the bulk of short lived proteins, there is a possibility that the breakdown of distinct unstable polypeptides (including a hypothetical protein(s) that controls JNK activity) could selectively be more sensitive to this inhibitor. To test this possibility, as a model unstable protein we have chosen I-kappa B, which becomes extremely short lived after exposure to TNFalpha . Indeed, 0.5 µM of MG132 was sufficient to strongly reduce the ubiquitin-dependent breakdown of I-kappa B (Fig. 6). Therefore, the proteasome-dependent degradation of certain unstable proteins could selectively be inhibited by MG132 even at concentrations that do not affect the breakdown of the bulk of short lived proteins. Defining such unstable protein(s) that regulates JNK is an important goal for future research.

Antiapoptotic Effects of the Proteasome Inhibitors-- Recent publications indicate that under certain conditions, inhibition of proteasome-dependent protein breakdown prevents apoptosis triggered by harmful stimuli (19, 20). We suggested that proteasome inhibition may cause both pro- and antiapoptotic effects, and depending on which effect dominates, cells either undergo apoptosis or become protected from apoptosis caused by another stress. As shown above, proapoptotic effects of the proteasome inhibitors are associated with the activation of the JNK pathway. What could be the nature of antiapoptotic action of the inhibitors? It was described previously that exposure to proteasome inhibitors induces the 70-kDa heat shock protein, Hsp72 (12, 29). Recently, we and others reported that Hsp72 accumulation confers resistance to apoptosis (11, 30-33). Therefore, we suggested that antiapoptotic effects of proteasome inhibitors could be mediated by accumulation of Hsp72. In our experiments, incubation of U937 cells with MG132 (Fig. 7A), lactacystin-beta -lacton, NIP-L3VS, or aLLN (not shown) was found to dramatically increase the levels of Hsp72. Hsp40 and Hsp27 also appeared to be induced by incubation with MG132 (not shown). By contrast, treatment with even high concentrations of less active and inactive MG132 analogs, benzyloxycarbonyl-leucinyl-leucinyl-leucine, benzyloxycarbonyl-leucinyl-leucinyl-norvaline, or benzyloxycarbonyl-leucinyl-leucinyl-leucinyl-amide, did not lead to any significant induction of Hsp72. These data indicate that induction of Hsp72 was caused by inhibition of the proteasome-dependent protein breakdown.


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Fig. 7.   Induction of Hsp72 by MG132. A, U937 cells were incubated with 1.5 µM MG132 for the indicated time periods, and the level of Hsp72 was measured by Western blot with anti-Hsp72 antibody. B, U937 cells were incubated with the indicated concentrations of MG132 either for 4.5 h followed by a recovery or overnight, and the level of Hsp72 was measured by Western blot with anti-Hsp72 antibody.

To investigate whether the induction of Hsp72 by proteasome inhibitors leads to suppression of apoptosis caused by certain stresses, we first searched for the conditions under which antiapoptotic action of proteasome inhibitors could be separated from their proapoptotic effect. Incubation of cells with 1.5 µM of MG132 for 4.5 h, followed by its withdrawal from the culture, activated JNK only temporally (Fig. 1C), which was insufficient to induce apoptosis (not shown). This treatment, on the other hand, was sufficient to cause strong accumulation of Hsp72 after several (4-16) hours of recovery (Fig. 7B). These conditions appeared to be suitable for revealing an antiapoptotic action of the proteasome inhibitor. Using heat shock as an apoptotic stimulus, we found that pretreatment with MG132 reduced the extent of cell death from about 40% to a negligible level (Fig. 8A). Thus, long incubation of U937 cells with the proteasome inhibitor caused prolonged activation of JNK leading to apoptosis. By contrast, short incubation of the same cells with this inhibitor caused temporal nontoxic activation of JNK (Fig. 1C) and induction of Hsp72, which protected cells from certain stresses.


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Fig. 8.   Antiapoptotic effects of MG132. A, pretreatment of cells with MG132 reduces PARP cleavage during heat shock-induced apoptosis. U937 cells were incubated with 1.5 µM MG132 for 4.5 h. Then MG132 was removed, and after 13.5 h of recovery, cells were subjected to heat shock at 43 °C for 60 min. PARP processing was assayed 20 h later. C, control; HS, heat-shocked cells. B, pretreatment of cells with MG132 inhibits activation of JNK in response to the heat shock and TNFalpha . U937 cells were pretreated with MG132 as indicated in Fig. 7A and then exposed to either heat shock (43 °C for 60 min) or TNFalpha (5 ng/ml for 15 min), and JNK activity was assayed. C, pretreatment of cells with MG132 does not protect cell from TNFalpha -induced apoptosis. U937 cells were pretreated with MG132 as indicated in Fig. 7B and then exposed to TNFalpha (5 ng/ml for 15 min), and PARP cleavage was measured in 20 h. D, pretreatment of cells with MG132 or mild heat shock renders temporary suppression of JNK activation by subsequent incubation with this inhibitor. After either short incubation with 1.5 µM MG132 for 4.5 h or mild heat shock at 43 °C for 20 min, cells recovered for 16 h and then were incubated with MG132 for the indicated time periods or subjected to heat shock (HS; 43 °C for 60 min, as a control stress), and JNK1 activity was measured.

What could be the mechanism of protection of cells from stresses after pretreatment with the proteasome inhibitors? We have previously observed that overproduction of Hsp72 blocks stress-induced apoptosis by suppression of JNK (11). In line with this data, MG132-induced protection of cells from heat shock also resulted from suppression of JNK. In fact, severe heat shock of pretreated cells led to much lesser activation of this kinase compared with activation of JNK under the same conditions in untreated cells (Fig. 8B). The effects of preincubation of cells with MG132 on severe heat shock-induced JNK activation and apoptosis were indistinguishable from the effects of pretreatment with mild heat shock or overproduction of recombinant Hsp72 (11). Therefore, the protective effects of MG132 on cells apparently is due to the Hsp72-mediated suppression of JNK.

Since MG132-induced apoptosis is also dependent on JNK, we tested if the pretreatment with MG132 suppresses activation of this kinase and protects from apoptosis caused by subsequent long term incubation with MG132. In fact, this pretreatment caused strong suppression of JNK at early (up to 6 h) but not late (after 8 h) time points (Fig. 8D). Temporal suppression of JNK in the pretreated cells correlated with a delay in apoptosis; e.g. after 8-h incubation with the proteasome inhibitor, only 10% of PARP were cleaved in MG132-pretreated cells, while the extent of cleavage in control cells was 30%. However, after 18 h of incubation, almost all PARP was cleaved in both types of cells. The effect of MG132 pretreatment on activation of JNK and apoptosis caused by subsequent stress was similar to the effects of pretreatment with mild heat shock, i.e. mild heat shock also rendered transient suppression of JNK (Fig. 8D) and delayed apoptosis caused by MG132 (not shown). Probably, during long incubation with this inhibitor, a putative activator of JNK accumulates and reaches a level when protective effects of pretreatment with MG132 or mild heat shock become insufficient.

To further evaluate the suggestion that pretreatment with MG132 prevents apoptosis by suppression of JNK, we tested effects of such pretreatment on two other types of apoptosis: ethanol-induced apoptosis, which requires JNK,3 and TNF-induced apoptosis, which is able to mobilize a distinct, JNK-independent pathway (7, 8). MG132 strongly suppressed activation of JNK by both ethanol (not shown) and TNF (Fig. 8B), while effects on cell death were strikingly different. Similarly to its effects on heat shock-induced apoptosis, pretreatment with MG132 suppressed cell death caused by ethanol (not shown). By contrast, pretreatment with this inhibitor did not rescue cells from TNF-induced apoptosis and even potentiated it (Fig. 8C). Likewise, pretreatment of the cells with mild heat shock, which induced Hsp72, strongly reduced activation of JNK after exposure to TNF, but no protection from TNF-induced apoptosis was observed under these conditions (not shown). Therefore, pretreatment with proteasome inhibitors appears to protect cells only from JNK-dependent apoptosis.

    DISCUSSION
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Abstract
Introduction
Procedures
Results
Discussion
References

Recently, proteasome inhibitors were demonstrated to cause very complex effects on programmed cell death. With some exceptions, it appeared that dividing cells respond to the inhibitors by activation of apoptosis, while in nondividing cells such inhibitors showed antiapoptotic effects. Therefore, the common assumption was that this difference is attributed to difference in the cell types or in proliferating activity. Here we demonstrated that both pro- and antiapoptotic effects of proteasome inhibitors could be seen with the same cell line, U937, depending on the conditions of treatment (i.e. prolonged treatment resulted in apoptosis, while shorter exposure did not kill cells; it induced Hsp72 that caused protective effects). Therefore, we suggested that in cell types where JNK could not be highly activated by proteasome inhibitors, they do not manifest a proapoptotic effect (in fact, we observed that in the COS-7 cell line where MG132 does not activate JNK, it is unable to induce apoptosis). Then, accumulation of Hsp72 in response to proteasome inhibitors would render cells protected from certain types of apoptosis. In prior publications that reported antiapoptotic effects of proteasome inhibitors, these inhibitors were applied simultaneously with the apoptotic stimuli (19, 20). Probably MG132 is a poor activator of JNK in cell lines used in these experiments. Fast Hsp72 accumulation may also contribute to prevention of commitment of these cells to apoptosis.

Proteasome inhibitor-induced apoptosis was dependent on the stress kinase JNK, as with heat shock and certain other stresses. In fact, these inhibitors caused very strong activation of JNK, and dose dependence of such activation closely correlated with the dose dependence of induction of apoptosis (see Fig. 2). Moreover, specific suppression of the JNK signaling pathway by either expression of a dominant-negative form of JNK activator SEK1 or of a dominant-negative form of c-Jun (TAM67) rendered cells substantially less sensitive to MG132-induced apoptosis.

MG132 apparently causes JNK activation through the inhibition of the proteasome. In fact, proteasome inhibitors other than MG132 with different mechanisms of action, like lactacystin-beta -lacton and aLLN, displayed similar cytotoxic and JNK activating properties, indicating that all of these compounds act through their common ability to inhibit proteasome. Furthermore, three inactive MG132 analogs did not cause apoptosis, even when added to cells at high concentrations.

It is noteworthy that MG132 activated JNK in concentrations that did not significantly affect the breakdown of a total bulk of short lived proteins. Nevertheless, certain short lived proteins (e.g. I-kappa B, which we used as a model) are strongly stabilized even at these low concentrations of MG132. Therefore, exposure to proteasome inhibitors may specifically block degradation of a certain short lived protein(s) that upon its accumulation directly or indirectly up-regulates JNK, resulting in apoptosis. An alternative possibility is that inhibition of the proteasome by itself could somehow signal JNK and induce apoptosis, analogously to specific activation of JNK and induction of apoptosis by inhibition of ribosome (34). This possibility, however, seems unlikely because inhibition of protein degradation by suppression of ubiquitination without affecting proteasome also causes apoptosis.4

What could be the reason for specific inhibition by MG132 of the breakdown of certain proteins without affecting the degradation of bulk of short lived polypeptides? One possibility is that, while for the majority of short lived proteins the rate-limiting step in degradation pathway is ubiquitination, for certain regulatory proteins the rate-limiting step could be cleavage by the proteasome. Hence, the inhibition of proteasome activity to a certain extent would have a much stronger impact on the breakdown of such proteins than on the degradation of the rest of polypeptides. Alternatively, the rate-limiting step in degradation of some proteins could be cleavage at the hydrophobic site of the proteasome, which is known to be the target of MG132, while the rate-limiting step in degradation of the bulk of short lived proteins could be cleavage at some other site(s).

It was previously reported that the apoptosis induced by the proteasome inhibitors is dependent on p53 (16). However, we did not detect any accumulation of p53 in U937 cells upon exposure to MG132, even at concentrations that induce 100% apoptosis, indicating that in this cell line such apoptosis is p53-independent. Therefore, the p53 dependence of apoptosis induced by the proteasome inhibitors is indeed cell type-specific.

Findings that quiescent cells are less sensitive to proteasome inhibitor-induced apoptosis led to the suggestion by several authors that accumulation of a certain protein involved in the cell cycle causes apoptosis (13, 15). The fact that MG132 caused 100% apoptosis in asynchronous U937 cell culture in less than 16 h, while the cell cycle of U937 cells takes about 24 h, practically rules out this suggestion. Furthermore, maximal activation of JNK was seen within 7 h after the addition of MG132, indicating that critical events of the apoptotic process initiate even earlier. Therefore, apoptosis-inducing action of the proteasome inhibitors, at least in U937 cells, is independent upon the passing of a certain point of the cell cycle. Furthermore, MG132 could not cause apoptosis in rapidly proliferating COS-7 cells (while activating expression of Hsp72), which suggests that correlation between the cell division and proapoptotic action of the proteasome inhibitors is not universal. It does not exclude, however, the possibility that certain rapidly proliferating cells are more sensitive to exposure to the proteasome inhibitors, because a protein regulator of JNK may accumulate in such cells more efficiently, for example, due to a faster synthesis.

What could be the mechanism of another cellular response to inhibition of proteasome synthesis of Hsp72? It is well established that accumulation of misfolded proteins induces Hsp72 (for a review, see Ref. 35). Therefore, we originally suggested that the primary signal for induction of Hsp72 by the proteasome inhibitors is accumulation of newly synthesized polypeptides, which for certain reasons cannot acquire a proper conformation. However, our data rule out this possibility, because MG132 was able to dramatically induce Hsp72 at concentrations that did not affect the breakdown of the bulk of short lived proteins. Therefore, it appears that accumulation of a specific regulatory polypeptide(s) causes induction of Hsp72. Although we have not identified the putative short lived protein inducer of Hsp72, probably it is different from the putative activator of JNK. In fact, although dose dependence of Hsp72 induction closely correlated with that of JNK activation in U937 cells, in primary fibroblast culture the dose dependences of these two events were clearly different (not shown). Furthermore, we demonstrated that in COS-7 cells MG132 did not activate JNK but still caused accumulation of Hsp72 (not shown).

Previously, we demonstrated that overproduction of Hsp72 prevents apoptosis in response to a variety of stresses by suppression of activation of JNK (11). Accordingly, in this work MG132-induced accumulation of Hsp72 suppressed activation of JNK in response to severe heat shock and blocked apoptosis (Fig. 8, A and B). These data suggested that the protective effect of the proteasome inhibitors is specific to the apoptotic pathway that involves JNK activation. By contrast, JNK-independent apoptosis was expected not to be sensitive to preincubation of cells with MG132. Although TNFalpha is a strong activator of JNK, TNFalpha -induced apoptosis was reported to be independent of JNK (7, 8). Accordingly, we observed that cells pretreated with MG132 suppressed TNFalpha -activation of JNK but did not reduce TNFalpha -induced apoptosis (Fig. 8, B and C). Thus, the protective effects of the proteasome inhibitors indeed appeared to be limited to the JNK-dependent apoptotic pathway. Previously, it was reported that MG132 protects cells from apoptosis induced by the nerve growth factor withdrawal, gamma -irradiation, and phorbol ester (19, 20). Although there are no data on the JNK-dependence of phorbol ester-induced apoptosis, it has been shown that JNK is essential for apoptosis induced by both nerve growth factor withdrawal and gamma -irradiation (3, 4).

Therefore, the inhibition of proteasome activates the apoptotic pathway dependent on the stress-kinase JNK and simultaneously induces synthesis of the protective protein Hsp72, which suppresses JNK. We suggest that the balance between these two activities could define whether pro- or anti-apoptotic action of the inhibitors would dominate.

The ability of the proteasome inhibitors to induce Hsp72 and to suppress JNK and p38 kinases could be very useful in the design of new drugs. In fact, JNK-mediated apoptosis appears to be involved in the pathology of myocardial ischemia (36), while p38 is critical for a variety of inflammatory responses (37). Therefore, MG132 could be used as a prototype of therapeutics against certain myocardial and inflammatory pathologies.

    ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

We thank Dr. J. Avruch and Dr. R. Davis for kindly providing the plasmids used in this work.

    FOOTNOTES

* This work was supported in part by National Institutes of Health Grant RO1 (to M. Y. S.) and by a Medical Foundation grant (to M. Y. S.).The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.

** To whom correspondence should be addressed. Tel.: 617-742-2010 (ext. 312); Fax: 617-523-6649; E-mail: sherman{at}bbri.harvard.edu.

1 The abbreviations used are: JNK, c-Jun N-terminal kinase; TNF, tumor necrosis factor; PARP, poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase; aLLN, N-acetyl-leucinyl-leucinyl-norleucinal.

2 V. L. Gabai, J. Yaglom, A. B. Meriin, and M. Y. Sherman, manuscript in preparation.

3 J. Yaglom, unpublished data.

4 L. Monney, personal communication.

    REFERENCES
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Procedures
Results
Discussion
References

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