From the Cancer Research Center and the
¶ Departments of Medicine, Biochemistry, Pediatrics, Microbiology,
Pathology, and Laboratory Medicine, Boston University School of
Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts 02118
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ABSTRACT |
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The products of the ras genes are
known to regulate cell proliferation and differentiation; recently,
they have been found to play a role in apoptosis. The expression of
oncogenic p21ras in a number of cell types, including Jurkat (a
human T lymphoblastoid cell line) and murine fibroblasts, makes the
cells susceptible to apoptosis following suppression of protein
kinase C (PKC) activity (PKC/Ras-mediated apoptosis). Engagement of Fas
antigen, a potent effector of apoptosis, activates cellular
p21ras, which may be required for completion of the cell death
program. To further investigate the role of p21ras in the
regulation of apoptosis, the cellular mechanisms employed in these two
apoptotic processes in which Ras activity is involved (PKC/Ras-related
and Fas-triggered apoptosis), was explored. Increasing p21ras
activity by expressing v-ras or by treatment with an
antisense oligonucleotide to the GTPase-activating protein was found to accelerate the Fas-mediated apoptotic process in Jurkat and mouse LF cells. PKC/Ras-related apoptosis was associated with, and required, cell cycle progression, accompanied by the expression of the
G1/S cyclins. In contrast, Fas engagement, although
inducing a vigorous and PKC-independent activation of endogenous
p21ras, did not alter cell cycle progression, nor did it
require such progression for apoptosis. Both the protein synthesis
inhibitor cycloheximide and cyclin E antisense oligonucleotides
partially abolished PKC/Ras-mediated apoptosis but had only a moderate
effect on Fas-induced apoptosis. In contrast, the
CED-3/interleukin-1-converting enzyme (ICE) protease inhibitor
Z-VADfmk efficiently suppressed Fas-induced apoptosis and only
marginally inhibited PKC/Ras-mediated apoptosis. Induction of both
pathways resulted in activation of the Jun NH2-terminal
kinase/JUN signaling system. These results suggest that different cell
death programs, such as PKC/Ras-mediated and Fas-mediated apoptosis,
may be interconnected via p21ras and perhaps Jun
NH2-terminal kinase/JUN. In response to various death
stimuli, p21ras may act as a common intermediate regulator in
the transduction of apoptotic signals.
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INTRODUCTION |
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The proteins encoded by the ras gene family participate in several seemingly opposed pathways of signal transduction. The best known and best defined Ras-mediated signaling pathways mediate cell activation or proliferation, leading from receptor tyrosine kinases to transcription factor activation, transduced through phosphorylation of Raf-1 and mitogen-activated protein kinases (1-4). These transcription factors then affect the expression of genes that in turn control cell proliferation or differentiation (5-7). Activated mutants of p21ras and related proteins have a decreased intrinsic GTPase activity and promote the growth of cell lines and tumor formation (8-10). Ras activity is also required in the regulation of cell cycle progression, such as G0 to G1 and G2 to M transitions (11-13). At least some of the mechanisms mediating the mitogenic activities of Ras, including the involvement of molecules directly regulating cell cycle progression, have been elucidated. For example, transformation of mouse 3T3 fibroblasts by oncogenic v-ras has been associated with increased levels of cyclin D and shortened G1 phase (14). In primary human or rodent cells, the introduction of oncogenic ras has been reported to result in a permanent G1 arrest through accumulation of p53 and p16 (15). Yet, although the role of the p21ras proteins in mammalian cell growth has been clearly established, the downstream, cell cycle-related targets of p21ras-activated signaling pathways are not completely defined.
In addition to its involvement in cell proliferation and differentiation, however, p21ras has also been implicated in the regulation of programmed cell death (16-19). Apoptosis is a highly regulated physiological process through which an organism achieves homeostasis and maintains the proper number of cells and structures. The phenomenon of apoptosis includes the generation of fragmented DNA, dissolution of the nuclear membrane, and membrane blebbing (20). A synthesis of many data regarding signals leading either to mitosis or to cell death suggests, surprisingly, that common molecular mediators might be shared by pathways of proliferation and pathways of apoptosis. Such common second messengers appear to include protein kinase C (PKC),1 divalent cations, and p21ras proteins. In lymphocytes, for example, a sustained increase in the cytosolic calcium level is required for both cell activation and for apoptosis (21-25). PKC has been shown to play a crucial role in regulation of cell fate and in calcium signaling (5, 16, 26, 27). p21ras appears to be involved in the regulation of intracellular calcium oscillations (28-30) and also to be an upstream regulator or a downstream effector of PKC. We and others have shown that p21ras may be a potent regulator of apoptosis. After down-regulation of PKC activity, Jurkat lymphoblastoid cells transfected with oncogenic v-Ha-ras rapidly undergo apoptosis (PKC/Ras-mediated apoptosis). Identical results have been shown in mouse fibroblasts expressing with v-Ki-ras. Ligand-stimulated apoptotic programs, including those initiated by Fas or by tumor necrosis factor (18, 31-34) have been shown to activate cellular p21ras, possibly via a sphingomyelin/ceramide pathway (35), and this p21ras activity appears to be absolutely required for efficient execution of the death program. Thus, p21ras, a critical mediator of cell growth, also appears to play an important role in regulation of programmed cell death.
Fas/Apo-1 (CD95) belongs to the tumor necrosis factor receptor superfamily (33, 36). Fas is expressed on the surface of a variety of transformed cell lines and chronically stimulated T cells and can mediate apoptosis in vitro and in vivo after ligation with Fas-specific antibodies or Fas-ligand (37). Mutations in Fas or its ligand are responsible for lymphadenopathy, lymphoaccumulation, and accelerated autoimmune defects in lpr and gld homozygous mice, respectively (38-44). Although the molecular mechanisms of Fas-induced apoptosis are not fully understood, it is clear that multiple pathways might be involved in Fas signaling, including those mediated by the CED-3 homolog ICE-like protease family, and the sphingomyelin/ceramide activation of p21ras signaling. In the first pathway, MORT1/FADD and FLICE can bind to an essential intracellular domain of Fas, the death domain, and upon binding, together with other caspases, they form a death-inducing signaling complex (45-48). It is not clear how, or whether, CED-3/ICE signals interact with the sphingomyelin/Ras pathway. Fas ligation appears to activate the Jun NH2-terminal kinase (JNK)/stress-activated protein kinase and p38, through a pathway at least partially independent of MORT1/FADD (49). JNK and its substrate c-Jun are downstream effectors of p21ras, and although they were initially characterized as mitogenic effectors, JNK/Jun can promote apoptosis (35, 50-52). Conversely, there is evidence that activation or mitogenic signals, as well as apoptotic signals, are delivered by Fas (53). It has been reported that developing thymocytes and some T lymphocytes undergo activation-induced cell death, which requires Fas/FasL activity and cell cycle progression. For example, in a T cell hybridoma, activation-induced T-cell death is cell cycle-dependent and is accompanied by elevations of p34cdc2 and cyclin B-associated histone H1 kinase (54). The involvement of p21ras as a common mediator of both mitogenic and apoptotic signals might resolve these seemingly contradictory or opposing activities.
Despite the reports demonstrating a requirement for p21ras
activity in the operation of some apoptotic programs, relatively little is known about the molecular and biochemical mechanisms of Ras in the
regulation of apoptosis. Given the evidence that Ras can regulate two
important and seemingly very different biological processes, cell
proliferation and apoptosis, we wished to determine whether Ras might
function differentially in two potentially distinct types of programmed
cell death: the Fas-induced and the PKC/Ras-mediated apoptotic
processes. We investigated the behavior of Jurkat cells, Jurkat cell
lines stably transfected with v-Ha-ras (PH1), mouse thymoma
cells (LF1210), and LF1210 cells transfected with either a
fas gene (LF(+)) or an antisense fas gene
(LF()) under the conditions of suppression of PKC activity or
engagement of Fas antigen. An additional method for inducing the
activation of endogenous cellular Ras that was not dependent upon
stable transfections was also utilized to further define the role of
Ras in these studies. Inhibition of Ras-GTPase-activating protein (GAP)
proteins is almost certainly one mechanism used by T cell receptor to
physiologically regulate endogenous Ras activity (55-57). GAP-specific
antisense oligonucleotides were employed to suppress the level of GAP
expression, so as to increase the endogenous cellular Ras activity
transiently. In the presence of GAP antisense oligonucleotides, LF(+)
cells underwent apoptosis after suppression of PKC and also became more sensitive to Fas ligation. During PKC/Ras-mediated apoptosis, PH1 cells
remained in the cell cycle without G1 arrest, with
continued expression of G1/S cyclins. The addition of
cycloheximide or cyclin E antisense oligonucleotides, but not the
protease inhibitor peptide Z-VADfmk, suppressed the PKC/Ras-mediated
apoptotic process. In contrast, although increasing p21ras
activity greatly accelerated Fas-mediated apoptosis, cyclin E antisense
oligonucleotides, and protein synthesis inhibitors had only minor
effects on Fas-induced apoptosis. These data therefore suggest a
mechanism by which different apoptotic pathways, such as
PKC/Ras-mediated and Fas-mediated apoptosis, may interconnect. p21ras, as an intermediate regulator, may recruit and modulate
signals at various steps in otherwise discrete apoptotic processes.
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EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES |
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Cell Lines and Cell Transfections--
The human lymphoblastoid
cell line Jurkat (American Tissue Culture Collection, Rockville, MD)
was obtained in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium supplemented with
10% heat-inactivated newborn calf serum (Hazelton Research Products,
Inc., Lenexa, KS), 2 mM L-glutamine, 100 units
of penicillin/ml, 100 µg of streptomycin/ml. Jurkat cells were stably
transfected by electroporation as described previously (58). The
v-Ha-ras expressing vector used was PH1, a circularly
permuted clone of the Harvey sarcoma virus (the generous gift of E. Scolnick, Merck Pharmaceuticals). This gene was co-transfected with a
selectable marker conferring resistance to Geneticin, and transfectants
(called PH1 lines) were selected for resistance to Geneticin. The
independent lines and clones resulting, as well as control Jurkat lines
transfected with the selectable marker alone, have been described
previously (58). After transfection, cells were carried in the same
growth medium plus 0.7 mg/ml of Geneticin. LF1210 mouse thymoma cells
were transfected with fas gene (LF(+)) or antisense
fas gene (LF()) (generous gifts from Dr. S.-T. Ju, Boston
University) and cultured in medium containing 0.7 mg/ml of
Geneticin.
Cell Surface Staining-- Cells (1 × 106), under normal growth conditions or after 24 h of high-dose phorbol myristyl acetate (PMA) treatment to down-regulate PKC activity, were incubated with a mouse monoclonal Ab to human Fas (PanVera Corp., Madison, WI) or a hamster Ab to mouse Fas (Pharmingen, San Diego, CA). After the cells were washed twice with 1× phosphate-buffered saline, they were stained with secondary Abs conjugated with fluorescein. The profiles of the surface staining was analyzed by flow cytometry (FACScan, Becton Dickinson, Mountain View, CA).
Cell Viability Assay--
Jurkat, PH1, LF1210, LF(+) and LF()
cells (1 × 106 cells/ml) were incubated in 500 nM of PMA for 24 h, washed twice with 1× phosphate-buffered saline, and seeded into 100-mm Petri dishes (0.5 × 106 cells/ml). For the Fas ligation
experiment, the cells were incubated with 1.5 µg/ml of anti-human Fas
antibody (PanVera Corp., Madison, WI) for Jurkat and PH1 cells or 5 µg/ml mouse anti-mouse Fas antibody (Pharmingen, San Diego, CA) for
LF cells. Cells were collected at the time points indicated and
enumerated using trypan blue dye exclusion to assess viability. For the
inhibitor assays, the concentrations of cycloheximide and Z-VADfmk were
10 and 1 µg/ml, respectively. The cell cultures were treated with the
inhibitors for the last 6 h following 24 h of high-dose PMA
treatment or for 30 min prior to Fas ligation. For the antisense
oligonucleotide experiments, 20 µM of GAP antisense or
sense oligonucleotides or 5 µM of cyclin E antisense or
sense oligonucleotides were added to the cell cultures simultaneously
with the addition of 500 nM of PMA or 48 h in advance
for Fas ligation experiments. The sequences of the GAP sense and
antisense nucleotides were 5'-AACATGATGGCGGCCGAG-3' and
5'-CTCGGCCGCCATCATGTT-3', respectively. The sequences of the cyclin E
sense and antisense nucleotides were
5'-GCCATGCCAAGGGAGAGAGACTCGA-3' and 5'-TCGAGTCTCTCTCCCTTGGCATGGC-3',
respectively.
Cell Cycle Analysis-- After treatment with either 500 nM of PMA for 24 h or anti-Fas antibody as described above, or culture under normal conditions, cells (1 × 106) were washed twice with 1× phosphate-buffered saline, fixed with 70% ethanol, and treated with 10 ng/ml RNase. Subsequently, the cells were stained with propidium iodide. Cytofluorometric analysis was performed with a FACScan (Becton Dickinson, CA). The data analysis and display were performed using the Cell-Fit program, which provides data from the flow cytometer and real-time statistical analysis of the data, computed at 1-s intervals, and also discriminates doublets or adjacent particles. Those cells with less than G1 DNA content were excluded on the basis of wide and low angle scatter.
Measurement of p21ras Activation-- Cells (20 × 106 cells/per cell line) were washed with phosphate-free RPMI medium containing 10% dialyzed fetal bovine serum and cultured in the same medium with 0.5 mCi/ml ortho-32P for 4 h. Subsequently, cells were lysed in lysis buffer containing 25 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5), 1% Triton X-114, 20 mM MgCl2, 150 mM NaCl, and 100 µg of aprotinin and leupeptin per ml. Equal amounts of cell lysates were immunoprecipitated with anti-Ras antibody (Y13-259) (Oncogene Science, Uniondale, NY), followed by addition of goat anti-rat immunoglobulin-conjugated protein A-Sepharose beads. Precipitates were washed with lysis buffer, and bound nucleotides were eluted with elution buffer containing 20 mM EDTA and 25 µM each of cold GDP and GTP at 65 °C. The eluted products were separated on PEI-cellulose plates. Quantitation was performed by densitometric scanning of autoradiograms using a laser densitometer.
JNK Activity and Protein Expression--
The solid-phase JNK
assays were carried out by using a GST-c-Jun (1-79) fusion protein
coupled to glutathione beads (Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Inc., Santa
Cruz, CA) as a substrate. The cells (10 × 106) were
treated with either 500 nM of PMA for 24 h or anti-Fas Ab for 60 min and subsequently lysed in lysis buffer (25 mM
HEPES, pH 7.5, 0.3 M NaCl, 1.5 mM
MgCl2, 0.2 mM EDTA, 0.1% Triton X-100, 0.5 mM dithiothreitol, 20 mM -glycerophosphate,
0.1 mM Na3VO4, 2 µg of
leupeptin/ml, 1 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride). One hundred µg of the lysates were mixed with glutathione-agarose beads
to which 20 µg of GST-c-Jun were bound. The beads were incubated in
the kinase reaction buffer (12.5 mM MOPS, pH 7.5, 12.5 mM
-glycerophosphate, 7.5 mM
MgCl2, 0.5 mM EGTA (ethylene
glycol-bis[
-aminoethyl ether)-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid), 0.5 mM NaF, 0.5 mM
Na3VO4, 20 µM ATP, 3 mM dithiothreitol) plus 2.5 µCi of
[
-32P]ATP at 30 °C for 30 min. The phosphorylated
proteins were resolved on a 10% SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis
gel and visualized by autoradiography. For the immunoblot assay of JNK1
protein, the cells were treated as described above. Equal amounts of
the cell lysates were immunoprecipitated and subsequently immunoblotted with anti-JNK1 Ab (Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Inc.). The immunoblots were developed with the appropriate antibody alkaline phosphatase reagent (Oncogene Science).
PKC Enzymatic Assay-- Jurkat and PH1 cells (1 × 106 cells/ml) were cultured in five replicate wells of a 6-well plate with 10 ml of medium per well, containing different reagents as indicated. For single stimulation experiments, the cells were exposed to either PMA or anti-Fas antibody alone for 15 min. For PKC activity inhibitory experiments, cells were exposed either to 500 nM of PMA for 24 h or to 50 nM of chelerythrine, a PKC inhibitor, for 10 min before stimulation of the cells with 50 nM of PMA. After lysing the cells in 25 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5), 1% Triton X-100, 20 mM MgCl2, and 150 mM NaCl, the lysates were normalized for protein concentration, and 100-µg aliquots of protein were analyzed for PKC activity by using a PKC assay kit containing a specific substrate peptide for PKC and the inhibitor mixture, which blocks PKA and calmodulin kinase (Upstate Biotechnology, Lake Placid, NY). Subsequently, the 32P-incorporating substrate for each treatment was separated from the residual [32P]ATP using p81 phosphocellulose paper, and the radioactivity incorporated into the substrate was measured by scintillation counting.
Immunoblot Analysis--
After culturing in medium containing
500 nM of PMA for 30 h, or 015 µg/ml of
anti-human-Fas antibody for 5 h, cells (20 × 106) were resuspended in lysis buffer containing 20 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5), 2 mM EDTA, 5 mM EGTA, 10 mM -mercaptoethanol, and 100 µg of leupeptin and aprotinin per ml. The protein concentration of cell lysate was normalized. Equal amounts of total protein from the
three different treatments were separated on 10% acrylamide gel and
subsequently were blotted with anti-cyclin D, E, and A antibodies,
respectively (Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Inc.). The immunoblots were
developed with the appropriate antibody alkaline phosphatase reagent
(Oncogene Science). For the determination of the optimal inhibitory
concentration of cyclin E antisense oligonucleotides, the cells were
cultured in medium containing different concentrations of the antisense
oligonucleotides for 48 h. Subsequently, the lysates were
prepared, and immunoblot analysis was performed using anti-cyclin E
antibody.
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RESULTS |
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Human T lymphoblastoid Jurkat cells were transfected with a vector
(PH1) containing an activated ras (v-ras) gene
derived from the Harvey sarcoma virus (v-Ha-ras), and
designated PH1 cells. Several subclones of PH1 cells expressing various
levels of v-Ha-ras transcripts and p21ras protein
were isolated. All PH1 subclones were susceptible to apoptosis
following down-regulation or inhibition of PKC activity by a number of
means, as shown in previous reports (16, 59). However, the cells with
higher levels of v-ras message and p21ras protein
were more susceptible to PKC/Ras-mediated apoptosis. Mouse thymoma
cells (LF 1210), transfected with either the fas gene
(LF(+)) or an antisense fas gene (LF()), were also
employed in this investigation. Jurkat cells express fairly high
concentrations of Fas antigen on their surface, and v-ras
transfection did not alter the surface level of Fas expression on the
PH1 cells (Fig. 1a, upper
panel). LF(+) cells expressed higher levels of Fas molecules on
their surface than the parental LF1210 cells, as expected. Fas
expression on LF(
) cells was almost undetectable. Following Fas
ligation, the viability of the cells was determined on the basis of
trypan blue exclusion (Fig. 1b). PH1 cells were more sensitive to Fas ligation than Jurkat cells, with death of the PH1
cells occurring as early as 5 h after addition of the antibody. In
comparison, the number of Jurkat cells started to decline 7 h
after addition of the anti-Fas antibody. By 24 h, approximately 80% of the PH1 cells had undergone apoptosis, in contrast to only 60%
of Jurkat cells. The results of DNA fragmentation assays confirmed the
differences in the induction of Fas-mediated apoptosis between these
two cell lines (data not shown). Jurkat cells transfected with the
empty vector alone demonstrated similar cell growth kinetics in
response to Fas engagement to the parental Jurkat cells (data not
shown). These findings suggested that the expression of activated p21ras may accelerate the Fas-mediated apoptotic process. For
murine LF cells, the numbers of LF(+) and LF1210 cells started to
decrease by 10 h following addition of anti-Fas Ab. The delay of
the execution in response to Fas ligation may be due to intrinsic,
physiological differences in programmed cell death between human and
murine systems. LF(+) cells were more susceptible to Fas-induced
apoptosis than LF1210. By 36 h after Fas ligation, 80% of LF(+)
cells were dead. In contrast, the viability of LF(
) cells was not
affected by Fas ligation, demonstrating a requirement for cell surface expression of Fas antigen in Fas-mediated apoptosis.
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To determine the susceptibility of these cell lines to a different
apoptotic stimulus, the cells were exposed to 500 nM of PMA
for 24 h to down-regulate endogenous PKC activity. Such
persistent, high-dose PMA treatment has been demonstrated to inhibit or
suppress PKC activity in human and murine lymphocytes, and consequently to induce PH1 cells or mouse fibroblasts transfected with
v-Ki-ras to undergo apoptosis (16, 30). Viable cells
were enumerated at daily intervals (Fig. 1c).
Down-regulation of endogenous PKC activity by persistent, high-dose PMA
treatment resulted in cessation of proliferation in parental Jurkat
cells, with recovery after 2 days. The number of PH1 cells, after
down-regulation of PKC, decreased over 4 days, and no obvious recovery
or regrowth was observed. After down-regulation of PKC activity by
continuous PMA treatment, LF(+) and LF() cells behaved like Jurkat
cells in that they ceased proliferation for 2 days and then regained normal growth profiles. DNA fragmentation assays showed that 35% of
PH1 cells contained a hypodiploid DNA content 48 h after
down-regulation of PKC activity, whereas DNA fragmentation in Jurkat,
LF(+) and LF(
) cells did not increase (data not shown). Because the
level of cell surface expression of Fas is one factor that can modulate the sensitivity of a cell to Fas-induced apoptosis, the effect of
down-regulation of PKC activity on Fas expression was examined in the
different cell types (Fig. 1a, lower panel). PH1 cells, as
well as control Jurkat and LF(+) cells, under normal growth conditions
or after 500 nM of PMA treatment for 24 h, were
surface-stained with anti-Fas antibody. The profile of Fas staining
after down-regulation of PKC was almost identical to that measured
under normal growth conditions in all three cell lines. Thus, the
increase in sensitivity to Fas-mediated apoptosis conferred by
activated p21ras was not the result of modulation of Fas
receptor expression.
It has been demonstrated that apoptotic processes triggered by
different effectors can be cell cycle-dependent or cell
cycle-independent (54, 60, 61). To determine the cell cycle dependence
of PKC/Ras-mediated or Fas-induced apoptosis, DNA profiles of the same
populations of the four cell lines studied in Fig. 1, b and c, were analyzed (Fig. 1d). After down-regulation
of PKC activity, the majority of Jurkat (94.8%), LF(+) (95.4%), and
LF() (95.8%) cells accumulated in the G1 phase. In
comparison, no such G1 cell cycle arrest occurred in PH1
cells, and a significant proportion of these cells (35%) remained
distributed throughout the cell cycle. Taken together with the data
from Fig. 1c, in which the numbers of PH1 cells steadily
decreased after suppression of PKC, these results suggest that the
operation of the PKC/Ras-related apoptotic program may require cell
cycle progression. After addition of anti-human Fas antibody, when the
death program had become apparent (5 h for PH1 and 7 h for Jurkat
cells), there was no G1 arrest of cell cycle. A significant
proportion of either Jurkat (26%) or PH1 cells (26.2%) were still in
S and G2/M phases following Fas ligation. Similarly, murine
LF(+) and LF(
) cells did not alter their DNA profiles 12 h after
Fas ligation. It appears that Fas signaling had no impact on the cell
cycle progression. To further confirm the results of the DNA profile
analyses, the expression of certain G1/S cell cycle
regulators, cyclins D, E, and A, were assayed in Jurkat, PH1, LF(+),
and LF(
) cells, in response to Fas ligation or chronic, high-dose PMA
treatment (Fig. 1e). An immunoblot of cyclin D showed that
the protein was overexpressed in PH1 cells (about 3-4-fold) under
normal growth conditions, which is in agreement with other reports that
oncogenic ras can cause increased expression of cyclin D
(14). After 36 h of high-dose PMA treatment or following 5 h
of Fas ligation, the level of cyclin D expression did not change in PH1
cells. Cyclin D protein was expressed at a minimal level under normal
growth conditions in unsynchronized Jurkat, LF(+), and LF(
) cells and
increased to moderate levels after 36 h of down-regulation of PKC
activity. After 7 h (for Jurkat cells) or 14 h (for LF(+) and
LF(
) cells) of Fas ligation, the expression of cyclin D did not
change. Cyclins E and A were constitutively expressed in all cell lines
under normal growth conditions, because the cell populations were
unsynchronized. In Jurkat, LF(+), and LF(
) cells, the expression of
cyclins E and A was undetectable following 500 nM of PMA
for 36 h, consistent with an arrest in G1 phase.
However, in PH1 cells, the levels of cyclin E and A remained high after
exposure to high-dose PMA. This result is in a good agreement with the
data from DNA profile analyses, in which PH1 cells remained distributed
through the cell cycle after down-regulation of PKC. There was no
change in the levels of the cyclin proteins in any of the cells in
response to Fas ligation.
Fas has been reported to activate JNK (49-52), and p21ras is involved in certain cellular responses leading to activation of JNK (e.g., the UV response) (62). To compare JNK induction in our experimental settings, the activity of JNK and JNK protein expression were analyzed (Figs. 2). The cells were cultured under normal growth conditions, after chronic, high-dose PMA treatment, or in the presence of anti-Fas Ab for 60 min. Subsequently, JNK activity was determined by its ability to phosphorylate an NH2-terminal (residues 1-79) c-Jun-GST fusion protein (Fig. 2a, upper panel). There was a detectable amount of phosphorylated c-Jun-GST in all control lanes, which may reflect basal JNK activity under normal growth conditions. After down-regulation of PKC, JNK activity was increased in PH1 cells about 4-fold. Fas-induced JNK activation was observed in all three cell lines and the magnitude of the induction ranged from 2-fold to 4-fold. This result therefore suggested that JNK activity may be required in, or at least related to, these two apoptotic processes. Immunoblot analysis showed that the level of JNK protein itself in the cells was not changed after induction of apoptosis by either chronic, high-dose PMA treatment or the presence of anti-Fas Ab (Fig. 2a, lower panel).
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There are at least seven different isoforms of PKC in T lymphocytes
(,
1,
,
,
,
, and
). The isotypes of PKC are
classified according to their structure and cofactor requirements for
activation (63). PKC
,
,
,
, and
activities are all
dependent upon stimulation bys diacylglycerol. In the presence of
activated p21ras, the expression and the ratios of different
PKC isotypes does not change in Jurkat cells (30, 64). Because
p21ras is involved in PKC signaling during T cell activation
and because p21ras activation has been suggested to play a role
in Fas-mediated apoptosis (21, 35, 51), a potential requirement for PKC activity in the Fas-mediated apoptotic pathway was determined. A
PKC-specific enzymatic assay was employed to measure the
phosphotransferase activity of PKC in Jurkat cells after Fas ligation
or treatment with 500 nM of PMA for 24 h (Fig.
2b). Induction of PKC activity was not observed either after
Fas ligation or by re-stimulation of the cells with 50 nM
of PMA following the chronic high-dose PMA treatment. This confirmed
that chronic, high-dose PMA treatment did suppress PKC activity and
suggested that PKC activation may not be directly involved in Fas
signaling. In control experiments, PMA stimulation increased PKC
activity, whereas chelerythrine, a PKC-specific inhibitor, suppressed
PKC activity in the cells.
GAP negatively regulates p21ras activity by increasing the conversion of active GTP-bound Ras to the inactive GDP-bound state (55-57). To directly study a role for p21ras activity in the two apoptotic pathways Fas-induced and PKC/Ras-mediated programmed cell death, GAP-specific antisense oligonucleotides were used in LF(+) cells to inhibit GAP expression so as to increase endogenous p21ras activity. The concentration of the antisense oligonucleotides required to suppress GAP expression was determined to be 20 µM by dose titration experiments (data not shown). LF(+) cells were exposed to 20 µM of either GAP-specific sense or antisense oligonucleotides for 48 h, and immunoblotting was then performed using an anti-GAP monoclonal antibody. The antisense, but not the sense, oligonucleotides suppressed the expression of GAP protein (Fig. 3a). Subsequently, the effects of the antisense treatment on p21ras activity were determined by quantitating the percentage of [32P]GTP and [32P]GDP bound to endogenous p21ras (Fig. 3b). In the presence or absence of anti-Fas Ab, LF(+) cells treated with GAP antisense oligonucleotides, together with PH1, Jurkat, and control LF(+) cells, were lysed, and the lysates were subjected to immunoprecipitation with an anti-Ras monoclonal antibody. Subsequently, the guanine nucleotides bound to immunoprecipitated Ras were separated by TLC. The GTP-bound form of p21ras was undetectable in Jurkat and LF(+) cells. However, treatment with GAP-specific antisense oligonucleotides did up-regulate the endogenous Ras activity in LF(+) cells. The relative percentage of the GTP-bound form of p21ras versus the GDP form in LF(+) cells treated with GAP antisense oligonucleotides was 19%, comparable to the 18.5% GTP-bound p21ras measured in the PH1 cells. In response to Fas ligation, the percentage of the GTP-bound form of p21ras in PH1 cells was higher (40%) than that of other three cell lines (about 30%), which may be due to overexpressed v-ras in PH1 cells.
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To determine the behavior of LF cells in which endogenous p21ras activity had been increased by antisense treatment, during either Fas-induced or PKC/Ras-related apoptotic signaling, the viabilities of LF(+) and its parental LF1210 cells, treated or untreated with the GAP-specific antisense oligonucleotides, were examined following Fas ligation (Fig. 3c). LF(+) and LF1210 cells treated with the antisense oligonucleotides became more sensitive to the apoptotic stimulation than the untreated cells. The death of the cells treated with the antisense oligonucleotides occurred at 7 h following Fas ligation, and 80% of LF(+) cells died by 24 h, which is comparable to the accelerated kinetics of Fas apoptosis in the PH1 cells (as demonstrated in Fig. 1b). The increased sensitivity of LF(+) cells treated with the GAP antisense oligonucleotides to apoptosis, in comparison with LF1210 cells under the same condition, may reflect overexpression of Fas in LF(+) cells. It appears that enhancing p21ras activity amplifies or accelerates the Fas-induced apoptotic signals in LF cells. In response to persistent, high-dose PMA treatment, the numbers of LF(+) and LF1210 cells, treated with the GAP antisense oligonucleotides, steadily declined over 4 consecutive days, and approximately 70% of the cells had undergone apoptosis by day 4 (Fig. 3d). This result demonstrates that susceptibility to apoptosis after suppression of PKC activity can be conferred by activation of wild-type, endogenous p21ras, as well as by a mutated, oncogenic p21ras, and is therefore dependent upon the activation of p21ras. Furthermore, it provides evidence that even the normal promitogenic activity of wild-type cellular p21ras protein can be redirected toward pathways leading to cell death.
The ICE-like family of cysteine proteases has been implicated in Fas-induced apoptosis (65). To determine whether the apoptosis mediated by down-regulation of PKC required the activity of CED-3/ICE-family proteases, the viabilities of Jurkat and PH1 cells were examined in the presence or absence of ICE-like protease inhibitor Z-VADfmk after Fas ligation or following PKC down-regulation by chronic PMA treatment (Fig. 4). After addition of anti-Fas Ab, PH1 cells began to undergo apoptosis at 5 h and were almost entirely apoptotic by 24 h (Fig. 4a). By contrast, when the cells were treated with Z-VADfmk prior to Fas ligation, they remained nearly completely viable at 7 h after the addition of anti-Fas Ab, and by 24 h only 10-15% of PH1 cells had undergone apoptosis. Jurkat cells were also sensitive to Fas ligation, but the magnitude of the death process was lower than PH1 cells. However, 24 h after addition of Z-VADfmk, less than 8% of Jurkat cells had undergone apoptosis, which indicated there may be another apoptotic pathway in addition to CED-3/ICE pathway, and Ras may be involved in this pathway because the inhibition of Fas-induced apoptosis by Z-VADfmk was more prominent in PH1 cells than Jurkat cells. The DNA profile and the DNA fragmentation of Jurkat cells following Fas engagement in the presence of the inhibitor were also examined (data not shown). There was no G1 cell cycle arrest of Jurkat cells, and only a slight increase in DNA fragmentation (8-10%) was observed under such condition. After down-regulation of PKC by chronic, high-dose PMA treatment (Fig. 4b), there was only a moderate blocking effect (15-20%) of the apoptotic process in PH1 cells by Z-VADfmk. These findings suggested that the execution of apoptotic program by p21ras in PH1 cells during suppression of PKC activity may be downstream to, or not dependent completely on, CED-3/ICE-family proteases. Because down-regulation of PKC under normal conditions is not an apoptotic stimulus, Jurkat cells ceased growing for 2 days and regained the proliferation afterward, following suppression of PKC in the presence or absence of the inhibitor.
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In some cases, the apoptotic program is dependent upon new synthesis of proteins. To compare any requirement for new protein synthesis in PKC/Ras-mediated apoptosis and Fas-induced apoptosis, a cell kinetic assay was conducted in the presence of the protein synthesis inhibitor cycloheximide at a concentration that inhibited the incorporation of [35S]methionine and [35S]cysteine into new protein by >90% (data not shown). Cycloheximide was added to the cell cultures 18 h after treatment with 500 nM PMA or 15 min before addition of anti-Fas antibody. In the presence of cycloheximide, after down-regulation of PKC by chronic, high-dose PMA treatment, the apoptotic process in PH1 cells was inhibited in both rate and magnitude in comparison with the cells treated with PMA alone (Fig. 4c). This finding suggested that the apoptosis induced by p21ras during inhibition of PKC activity is at least partially dependent upon new protein synthesis. There was no effect of cycloheximide on Fas-mediated apoptosis in PH1 cells (Fig. 4d), indicating an independence from a requirement for new macromolecular synthesis in Fas-triggered apoptosis. Possible confounding toxic effects of cycloheximide (or of the antisense cyclin E oligonucleotides utilized below) were minimized by determining the minimal inhibitory concentration range of the reagent and selecting a concentration in which the viability of the cells was maintained at least for 2 days.
The observed differences in cell cycle kinetics during Fas-induced versus PKC/Ras-mediated apoptosis (Fig. 1d) raised the question of whether cell cycle progression is required for the latter. Cyclin E-specific antisense oligonucleotides were used to determine whether the expression of cyclins is required in either PKC/Ras-mediated or Fas-induced apoptosis in PH1 cells. The concentration of the antisense oligonucleotides required to abrogate cyclin E protein expression was determined in PH1 cells by immunoblotting for cyclin E protein following 2 days of exposure to the antisense oligonucleotides at different concentrations (Fig. 5a). Cyclin E antisense oligonucleotides at 5 µM suppressed the expression of the cyclin E protein in PH1 cells. Cyclin E antisense oligonucleotides significantly reduced PKC/Ras-mediated apoptosis in PH1 cells (range, 40-50% reduction) (Fig. 5b). By contrast, the same concentration of cyclin E sense oligonucleotides had no blocking effect on the apoptotic process. After Fas ligation, neither cyclin E antisense nor cyclin E sense oligonucleotides blocked the apoptotic process in PH1 cells (Fig. 5c). Therefore, cyclin E expression and, likely, consequent cell cycle progression are required for the PKC/Ras-mediated apoptotic program to be executed, but not for the Fas-mediated apoptotic program.
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DISCUSSION |
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We have previously demonstrated that activated p21ras can cause human lymphoid Jurkat cells or mouse fibroblasts to undergo apoptosis under the condition of inhibition of PKC activity by chronic, high-dose PMA treatment or PKC inhibitors. This apoptosis is specifically related to p21ras expression (16). Jurkat cells express Fas antigen on the cell surface, and p21ras activation has been demonstrated as a requirement in Fas-induced apoptosis (18, 35, 51). The present investigation was designed to compare the basic molecular mechanisms of two different programmed cell death pathways requiring p21ras activity, Fas-induced apoptosis, and PKC/Ras-related apoptosis.
p21ras and one of its downstream effectors, the stress-activated kinase family (JNK/p38), participate in the regulation of the apoptotic process in many different cell types (5, 16, 51, 66). For example, withdrawal of nerve growth factor from PC12 cells results in increased JNK activity, followed by apoptosis (67). It has also been shown that ceramides, which are generated at cell membrane through the activation of sphingomyelinases by Fas ligation, stimulate p21ras activity and induce cell death in T lymphocytes (35). In other studies, JNK activity has been demonstrated to be activated in Fas-mediated apoptosis. It appears that there must be some uncharacterized selectivity regarding Fas activation of JNK that distinguishes it from other pathways activating JNK, because transcription factor AP-1, which can be activated via enhanced phosphorylation of the c-Jun NH2-terminal activation domain by JNK in response to UV light or certain stresses, is not induced by Fas ligation (50). Here, we demonstrate that PKC/Ras-related apoptosis is at least partially dependent on cell cycle progression, but Fas-induced apoptosis is independent of cell cycle progression. However, p21ras activity is required in both apoptotic processes (16, 35). Although JNK activity was demonstrated in both death processes, it is still not clear whether the activation of the kinase is necessary for the execution of the death program, or is due, rather, to the stress caused by the apoptotic stimuli. Further investigation of this question using antisense or dominant-negative approaches to determine the role of JNK in these two apoptotic processes is underway.
Down-regulation of PKC activity generally results in a reversible G1 arrest in most cell types, including Jurkat (Refs. 16 and 59 and Fig. 1). After transient suppression of PKC activity, PH1 cells did not arrest in the G1 phase. The progressive concurrent decreases in the number of viable cells and the increasing numbers of cells with fragmented DNA (16), indicating ongoing apoptosis, suggested a relationship with, and a potential requirement for, cell cycle progression to achieve the apoptotic consequence in these cells. The coincident increase in the expression of cyclins E and A in PH1 cells during the inhibition of PKC activity further supported the idea that these cells undergoing apoptosis fail to synchronize at a cell cycle checkpoint. Therefore, the data suggest that during suppression of PKC activity, activated p21ras may force cells through a G1 checkpoint and that such aberrant cell cycle progression events may be mediated by asynchronously expressed G1/S cyclins, with these inappropriate signals subsequently initiating the death program existing in the nucleus. A requirement for cell cycle progression and cyclin expression was tested for in PKC/Ras-related apoptosis by employing antisense inhibition of cyclin E, which significantly, but incompletely (60%), inhibited the apoptotic process. Inhibition of new protein synthesis also inhibited PKC/Ras-related apoptosis to a similar extent. Because inhibition of cell cycle progression or macromolecule synthesis only partially protected the cells, we conclude that there are at least two apoptotic death pathways initiated in PKC/Ras-related apoptosis. One major pathway is dependent on abnormal cell cycle events, wherein the cell cycle may be required for assembling or synthesizing the proteins needed for the execution of the death program. The second pathway is independent of the cell cycle. This apoptotic program may be executed in the cytoplasm, perhaps involving the activation of some CED-3/ICE family members, without the requirement of nuclear events.
Both LF(+) and Jurkat cells express moderate levels of Fas antigen on the cell surface and undergo apoptosis in response to Fas ligation to a similar degree. Although the onset of apoptosis in Jurkat cells is earlier than in LF(+) cells, this may reflect intrinsic physiological differences among different cell lines or cells from different species. It appears that the Fas signaling pathway does not directly involve PKC activity. In the presence of oncogenic p21ras or under conditions in which endogenous p21ras activity is up-regulated, the apoptotic process initiated by Fas ligation is accelerated. Taken together with data previously presented by ourselves and others (16, 18, 35, 51, 59), this finding further supports the involvement of p21ras in the regulation of Fas-induced apoptosis. Antisense cyclin E oligonucleotides or cycloheximide did not block the apoptotic process initiated by addition of anti-Fas Ab to PH1 cells. In combination with the finding that Fas ligation did not alter cell cycle progression, these data suggest that the components required for the Fas-initiated apoptotic process, such as CED-3/ICE family members, pre-exist in the cell.
Experiments using the protease inhibitor peptide Z-VADfmk showed that Z-VADfmk prevented about 85% of PH1 cells from undergoing Fas-induced apoptosis, and such protection became minor in the control Jurkat cells. However, the inhibitor only moderately protected PH1 cells (about 20%) from the death after suppression of PKC activity (PKC/Ras-related apoptosis). Because p21ras is clearly involved in both of these apoptotic processes, it is tempting to speculate that p21ras may function differentially in these two death programs, perhaps due in part to the involvement of PKC, a known anti-apoptotic effector in a number of systems (16, 22, 26, 27, 68-74). Under normal growth conditions in cells expressing an activated p21ras, PKC may cooperate with the signals generated by p21ras to transmit growth or mitogenic signals, and at same time may also act in a protective fashion to suppress the activation of apoptotic components in the cells as a result of the unregulated mitogenic signals generated by the activated p21ras. After inhibition of PKC activity, however, the same signals generated by the activated p21ras, without modification by PKC, may trigger the nuclear apoptotic machinery through the temporally incorrect activation of cell cycle progression events (16). Because endogenous (c)-p21ras appears to have a role in apoptotic programs initiated by agents such as Fas and tumor necrosis factor, it is also possible that activated p21ras, perhaps through activation of JNK, may have a more direct action on death effector pathways, such as the CED-3/ICE family members. The only modest protection afforded by protease inhibitors in the setting of PKC/Ras-related apoptosis compared with Fas-mediated apoptosis, however, suggests that p21ras activation alone, without Fas ligation, does not result in proper recruitment of death effectors such as caspases, nor in the full and efficient activation of the CED-3/ICE family. However, p21ras activation initiated by Fas ligation may facilitate the full activation of the Fas death signal by activating and accelerating (in addition to the Fas-MORT1/FADD-CED-3/ICE pathway) a parallel p21ras-effected pathway leading to apoptosis, which is relatively independent of CED-3/ICE family proteases.
In conclusion, p21ras, as an apoptotic signal transducer, may be involved in the regulation of two different types of apoptotic mechanisms, Fas-induced and PKC/Ras-related apoptosis. The analysis of PKC/Ras-related apoptosis in comparison with Fas-mediated apoptosis suggests that these two apoptotic programs may, to some extent, share common elements, including the activation of p21ras and the JNK/JUN signaling pathway. Endogenous or exogenously activated p21ras can accelerate both types of programs. p21ras, under apoptotic conditions, may be a key intermediate molecule linking different cell death processes, such as cell cycle-independent (possibly cytoplasmic) and cell cycle-dependent (possibly nuclear) machinery.
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENT |
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We thank Dr. Shyr-Te Ju for providing the LF cells and for helpful comments.
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FOOTNOTES |
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* This work was supported by Research Grant CA50459 from the NCI, National Institutes of Health (to D. V. F.).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.
§ Supported by a Cardiovascular Biology Training Grant from the NHLBI, National Institutes of Health.
To whom correspondence should be addressed: Cancer Research
Center, Boston University School of Medicine, 80 E. Concord St., Room
K-701, Boston, MA 02118. Tel.: 617-638-4173; Fax: 617-638-4176; E-mail: dfaller{at}bu.edu.
1
The abbreviations used are: PKC, protein kinase
C; PMA, phorbol myristyl acetate; Z-VADfmk,
N-benzyloxycarbonyl-Val-Ala-Asp-fluoromethylketone; ICE,
interleukin-1-converting enzyme; JNK, Jun NH2-terminal
kinase; Ab, antibody; MOPS, 4-morpholinepropanesulfonic acid.
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REFERENCES |
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