* Cancer Research Laboratory Program, London Regional Cancer Program, London Health Sciences Centre, London, Ontario, Canada N6A 4L6; Division of Basic Medical Sciences, Mercer University School of Medicine, Macon, Georgia;
Departments of Oncology, Physiology and Pharmacology, Pathology, and Microbiology and Immunology, University of Western Ontario; and
Lawson Health Research Institute, London, Ontario, Canada N6A 4L6
1 To whom correspondence should be addressed at Cancer Research Laboratories, London Regional Cancer Centre, 790 Commissioners Road East, London, Ontario, Canada N6A 4L6. Fax: (519) 685-8616. E-mail: jkoropat{at}uwo.ca.
Received July 28, 2005; accepted September 6, 2005
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ABSTRACT |
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Key Words: metallothionein; knockout; antisense; drug sensitivity; drug resistance; cisplatin; cadmium; reactive oxygen species; tertbutyl hydroperoxide; zinc.
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INTRODUCTION |
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MT expression has been correlated with resistance to Cd and other toxic metal ions and chemicals in many studies where MTs are overexpressed by virtue of induction with metals, cytokines, hormones, and other chemicals (Blain et al., 1998; Schroeder and Cousins, 1990
). Induced MT protein is believed to be the key mediator of induced cellular protection. However, experiments where MT expression was increased in the absence of induction (after transfection of mammalian MT expression vectors) suggest that MT is not always the critical induced resistance factor. For example, increased MT in transgenic mice, or Zn supplementation of both wild type and MT-knockout animals, did not reduce the hepatotoxic effects of carbon tetrachloride (Davis et al., 2001
). Thus, MT overexpression may not provide additional protection beyond that afforded by low, basal MT levels.
Intracellular localization of MT has been reported to be an important determinant of resistance to Cd and agents that induce oxidative stress (Levadoux-Martin et al., 2001). Furthermore, enhanced MT expression may have a negative effect on cell growth in the absence of exposure to toxicants, and may decrease, rather than increase, cellular resistance to toxic agents such as Cd (Koropatnick and Pearson, 1993
; Robson et al., 1992
). A number of studies have utilized mice, in which MT expression was ablated or enhanced (MT knockout and transgenic strains, respectively). The findings from of these studies support a role for MT in protection against multiple stresses (Kang, 1999
; Liu et al., 1998
; Rofe et al., 1998
). By comparison, others have suggested that MT does not protect (DiSilvestro et al., 1996
; Itoh et al., 1997
; Kaina et al., 1990
; Liu et al., 1999
). Overall, the role of MT in mediating resistance to toxicants appears to differ depending on whether MT function is assessed in the context of low, un-induced, basal MT; MT expression mediated by transfected expression vectors in the absence of induction; or MT induced by various agents that stimulate transcription of endogenous MT genes and other events, unrelated to MT, affected by induction.
In the present study, we tested the hypothesis that toxicant resistance in cells with low basal MT (compared to cells without MT or with less-than-basal expression, generated by gene knockout or antisense treatment, respectively), depends on both MT and non-MT factors. We also tested the hypothesis that MT protects against multiple toxicant-specific mechanisms requiring the presence of MT, but may be independent of the level of MT, and that Zn pretreatment triggers multiple cellular events (in addition to MT induction) that may also mediate resistance. To test these hypotheses, we compared the sensitivity to Cd and Zn (non-essential and essential metals, respectively), CDDP (a chemotherapeutic drug for which resistance is associated with MT overexpression) (Rosell and Felip, 2001), and tertbutyl hydroperoxide (tBH, a generator of toxic reactive oxygen) in mouse MT-null and MT-WT cells. To resolve the role of MT among other Zn-induced events, MT-null and MT-WT cells were studied before and after pretreatment with Zn. To extend our investigation to human cells, we downregulated MT using antisense RNA expression in a human cell line and assessed the effect on resistance to multiple toxic stresses. Our findings indicate that MT mediates resistance to different agents by various mechanisms, some of which correlate with MT content and are enhanced by MT induction, while others require only low, un-induced MT levels, which are not elevated by Zn pretreatment.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Cell Culture
MT-WT, MT-KO1, and MT-KO2 cell lines were generated from embryonic kidneys from control mice (129/Sv strain), and MT-null mice with disrupted production of MT-1 and MT-2 proteins (129/Sv-Mt1Mt2tm1Br strain), respectively (Masters et al., 1994) as described previously (Butcher et al., 2004
). Both MT-KO1 and MT-KO2 cell lines express MT-1 and MT-2 mRNA but lack MT-1 and MT-2 protein (both basal and inducible with Zn or Cd). All three cell lines have a phenotype typical of fibroblasts and both MT-KO1 and MT-KO2 cells do not have altered expression of MT-3 and MT-4 mRNAs compared with that in the MT-WT cells (Butcher et al., 2004
). All cell lines were maintained in DMEM/10% FBS without antibiotics at 37° in 5% CO2.
HeLa cells express MT-1 and MT-2 and are a highly transfectable human cell line amenable to antisense downregulation (Berg et al., 2002). HeLa cells, grown in culture conditions identical to those used for mouse MT-WT and MT-KO cell lines, were transfected with pNMH-asMT. This is a neo-expressing, eukaryotic expression vector employing a metallothionein promoter/enhancer to drive expression of the entire 400 bp murine MT-1 cDNA inserted, in reverse orientation, into the BamH1 multiple cloning site) or an empty control pNMH vector (Khokha and Denhardt, 1987
; the gift of Dr. Rama Khokha, Univ. Health Network, Toronto, Canada). We have reported previously that this cDNA, when expressed in reverse orientation in a different vector, has the capacity to reduce MT mRNA and protein levels (Leibbrandt et al., 1994
). After 24 h the transfected cells were treated with G418 (Gibco BRL, Grand Island, NY) to select for cells containing vector. Colonies that formed in the presence of G418 were selected and analyzed for the presence of pNMH-asMT. Five control (vector alone) cell lines and three cell lines containing antisense MT-1 cDNA were identified and isolated.
All cell lines were maintained in DMEM supplemented with 10% FBS in a 37°C incubator under 5% CO2.
RNA Extraction and Analysis
Cells were seeded in 90 mm dishes (2 x 106 cells) and allowed to grow for 48 h. The cells were collected by addition of TRIzol Reagent (Gibco BRL, Grand Island, NY) followed by scraping with a rubber policeman. RNA was isolated as described by the manufacturer. Isolated RNA was dissolved in RNAse-free water and stored at 80°C until use.
Northern blots
Heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1), -glutamyl-cysteine synthetase (
-GCS), Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase (SOD-1) and glyceraldehydes-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) transcripts were detected by Northern blot analysis. The HO-1 cDNA probe was a 953 bp murine HO-1 fragment within a 1.5 kb insert of plasmid pT7T3-Pac-HO1 (Marra et al., 1996a; obtained from the American Type Culture Collection, Manassas, VA). The
-GCS cDNA probe, complementary to both mouse and rat
-GCS, was a 390 bp insert isolated after EcoR1 digestion of pGCS (Borroz et al., 1994; the gift of T. Kavanagh, Univ. of Washington, Seattle, WA). The SOD-1 cDNA probe was a 430 bp sequence within a 900 bp fragment isolated after Xho1 cleavage of plasmid pME18S-FL3-SOD1 (American Type Culture Collection, Manassas, VA). The GAPDH cDNA probe was a 1050 bp insert of plasmid pM-GAP (the gift of A. Chambers, London Regional Cancer Program, London, Ont., Canada). Probe hybridization to electrophoresis bands were visualized using a PhosphorImager SI (Molecular Dynamics, Inc., Sunnyvale, CA) and band intensity was determined using the PhosphorImager data file ImagQuant Analysis software (Molecular Dynamics, Inc., Sunnyvale, CA).
Reverse transcription/polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR)
RT-PCR was used to detect the levels of murine antisense MT-1 being expressed in the stably-transfected HeLa cells. Briefly, three aliquots (1 µg each) of RNA from each analyzed RNA sample was lyophilized and redissolved in 20 µl of reverse transcription mix (10 µl RNAse-free water, 1 µl random hexanucleotide primers [100 pmoles/µl], 4 µl 5X reverse transcription buffer, 2 µl of 10 mM mixed deoxyribonucleotides [dNTPs], 1 µl of Moloney murine leukaemia virus [MMLV] reverse transcriptase and 2 µl of 0.1 M dithiothreitol [DTT]). The reaction components were supplied by Gibco BRL Life Technologies (Grand Island, NY). Each tube was incubated at 37°C for 60 min followed by 5 min at 95°C. Five µl of the resulting cDNA products were amplified by PCR (94°C for 45 s, annealing at 55°C for 30 s and extension at 72°C for 1 min 30 s) in 45 µl PCR mix (5 µl Taq DNA polymerase buffer, 1.5 µl of 50 mM MgCl2, 1 µl of 10 mM mixed dNTPs, 0.5 µl of each primer (50 pmoles/µl), 0.25 µl of Taq polymerase and 36.25 µl of sterile water to make a final volume of 50 µl. The oligonucleotide primers were synthesized at the MRC Molecular Biology Core Facility, London Regional Cancer Centre. Primers were generated to specifically amplify mouse antisense MT-1 RNA transcribed from the pNMH/asMT-1 vector in human HeLa cells. The primer sequences were as follows:
MT Protein Measurement
Cells were lysed in 200 ul of 1% Tween 20 (BDH, Toronto, ON) in PBS by five cycles of freezing (isopropanol/dry ice) and thawing (65°C). Insoluble protein was removed by centrifugation. A sensitive dissociation-enhanced lanthanide fluoroimmunoassay (DELFIA) was used to quantify MT protein concentrations as previously described (Butcher et al., 2004). Standard rabbit MT-2 (Sigma Chemical Co., St Louis, MO), mouse monoclonal antibody to MT (Clone E9; IgG1, kappa isotype)(DAKO Corp., Carpenteria, CA), europium-labelled anti-mouse IgG antibody and DELFIA assay buffer and Enhancement solution (Wallac Oy, Turku, Finland), were used according to the manufacturer's protocol. The amount of MT protein was expressed relative to total soluble protein (estimated by a modification of the Bradford assay; Bradford, 1976
) as described by the manufacturer (Bio-RDA protein assay, Bio-RDA Laboratories, Hercules, CA).
Proliferation Assay
MT-WT, MT-KO1, and MT-KO2 cells were plated at 1 x 104 cells/well in 24-well tissue culture plates. Proliferation was assessed on days 1 through 4 at which times the media was removed and the cells were washed twice with PBS. The cells were trypsinized and the number of cells determined with a Coulter Counter Z1. Doubling times were determined, in triplicate experiments, from the slope of logarithmic plots of cell number versus time during exponential growth phase (48 to 72 h after plating).
Measurement of Toxicity
Cytotoxicity of ZnCl2 (0200 µM), CdCl2 (02 µM), CDDP (02 µM), and tBH (025 µM) was assessed by capacity to inhibit growth of cells in complete medium, as described below.
Growth Inhibition Assay
Basal resistance to toxicity.
Cells (2 x 104 cells/well) were seeded in 24-well tissue culture plates in complete medium and were allowed to adhere for 4 h prior to addition of toxicants (ZnCl2, CdCl2, CDDP, or tBH). Cells were grown for two days, after which the culture medium was removed and the cells were washed twice with PBS. The cells were trypsinized and the number of cells measured by direct counting (Coulter Counter Z1). Relative survival (RCS) was expressed as:
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Zn-induced resistance to toxicants.
Cells were pretreated with 80 µM ZnCl2 for 24 h prior to seeding. The cells were then trypsinized, counted, seeded into 24-well tissue culture plates, and resistance to Zn treatment assessed as described above.
Statistical Analysis
All values are presented as the mean of n measurements ± standard error (SE). Differences among means for corresponding sets of data were evaluated using one way ANOVA followed by a post hoc Tukey's multiple comparison test. The level of significance for all statistical analyses was chosen a priori to be p 0.05.
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RESULTS |
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Resistance of MT-Null and MT-Positive Cell Lines to Cd
Inhibition of cellular proliferation mediated by exposure to Cd was assessed in the MT-WT, MT-KO1, and MT-KO2 cell lines. Cellular growth was measured in these cell lines two days after exposure to 1.02.0 µM CdCl2. Surprisingly, both MT-KO1 and MT-KO2 cell lines were more resistant to the toxic effects of all Cd levels than the MT-positive cell line, with MT-KO2 cells demonstrating a greater level of resistance than the MT-KO1 cells (Figs. 3A and 3B). After inducing MT, by exposing cells to 80 µM ZnCl2 for 24 h, MT-WT cells exhibited a 2.5-fold, 3.4-fold, and 3.6-fold increase in resistance to treatment with 1.0 µM, 1.25 µM, or 2.0 µM CdCl2, respectively. Neither MT-KO1 nor MT-KO2 cells that were pretreated with Zn exhibited an induced resistance to treatment with Cd (Fig. 3C).
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MT mRNA and Protein Levels in HeLa Cell Lines
Expression of antisense mouse MT-1 RNA in three human HeLa cell clones (pNMH-asMT4, pNMH-asMT5, and pNMH-asMT6) transfected independently with the pNMH-asMT-1 expression vector was confirmed by detection of amplified mouse MT-1 cDNA by RT-PCR. Lack of antisense MT-1 RNA in five HeLa cell clones (pNMH4, pNMH5, pNMH6, pNMH7, and pNMH8) was similarly confirmed by the absence amplified mouse MT-1 cDNA product (Fig. 7). MT protein was assessed in all control and antisense mouse MT-1-expressing clones by the competitive DELFIA for MT. All three antisense MT RNA-expressing clones had lower MT protein levels than the control HeLa cell clone containing the lowest level of MT.
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DISCUSSION |
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To address these issues, we investigated the role of basal and Zn-induced MT in resistance to a panel of toxicants (Cd, Zn, CDDP, and tBH) using renal sustentacular cells from control and MT-knockout mice. To assess intrinsic, non-MT effects in these cell lines (with the potential to affect toxicant sensitivity), we measured expression of genes implicated in cellular resistance to reactive oxygen and chemotherapeutic drugs (HO-1, SOD-1, and -GCS). High or low HO-1 or SOD-1 expression did not segregate with MT-1/MT-2 expression in MT-WT or MT-KO cells (Fig. 1) making them unlikely to account for differences in toxicant sensitivity.
-GCS mRNA levels, on the other hand, were lower in both MT-KO cell lines compared to MT-WT. However,
-GCS mediates the rate-limiting step in the synthesis of glutathione (GSH) and is positively correlated with cellular redox status and protection against oxidative stress, multiple cancer chemotherapeutic drugs, and ionizing radiation (Fojo and Bates, 2003
). Lower basal
-GCS mRNA levels in relatively Cd, CDDP, and Zn-resistant MT-KO cell lines was opposite to the pattern expected in view of these
-GCS correlations. Within the limits of interpretation of mRNA levels alone without protein level and activity information, these data collectively suggest that HO-1, SOD-1, and
-GCS are not consequential determinants of resistance to Cd, Zn, or CDDP in MT-WT or MT-KO cells.
Although MT expression has been correlated with proliferation, and primary MT-null T cells have been reported to have decreased mitogen-induced proliferation (Mita et al., 2002), no effect of MT knockout on in vitro basal proliferative rate has been reported. Differences in rates of cellular growth have been associated with resistance to some drugs and toxicants (Peters et al., 2002
) and altered growth rate, if induced by MT knockout, might result in enhanced sensitivity to toxicants. We have not observed significant differences in proliferation among MT-WT and MT-KO cell lines (Fig. 2), suggesting that MT-dependent differences in toxicant-sensitivity are not due to altered growth.
When sensitivity of MT-WT and MT-KO cells to Cd or Zn was assessed, we were surprised to find that MT-WT cells were more sensitive to the toxic effects of Cd or Zn than either MT-KO1 and MT-KO2 cells (Figs. 3 and 6). We have reported previously that both MT-KO1 and MT-KO2 cell lines have decreased cytosolic levels of MT protein relative to MT-WT cells (Butcher et al., 2004). Therefore, basal MT-1 and/or MT-2 do not appear to act as independent markers of resistance to the toxic effects of Cd or Zn. Known mediators of resistance to some toxins either did not consistently segregate with loss of MT-1 and MT-2 (HO-1 and SOD-1), or were lower in MT-KO1 and MT-KO2 in spite of resistance to Cd and Zn relative to MT-WT (Fig. 1). Other cellular characteristics, independent of MT (presently uncharacterized but potentially including capacity for metal uptake, activity of pro- and antiapoptotic enzymes and transcription factors, and others), appear to mediate differences in metal sensitivity and diminish or nullify the effect of the presence or absence of low basal MT levels.
Alternatively, loss of MT might have resulted in activation of other, non-MT cellular events mediating sensitivity to Cd or Zn or inactivation of events mediating resistance to these metals. Although we did not assess possible mechanisms underlying this relative resistance of MT-KO cell lines to Cd and Zn (compared to MT-WT cells), it is clear that basal MT-1 and/or MT-2 protein do not, alone, protect from the toxic effects of Cd or Zn. Other events, independent of MT, can apparently provide protection against these metal toxicants in MT-null cells.
On the other hand, Zn induction of MT enhanced resistance to Cd only in MT-WT cells, and not in either of the two MT-KO cell lines lacking basal or Zn-inducible MT expression. In view of our previous report that pretreatment with Zn increases MT protein only in MT-WT and not in either MT-KO1 or MT-KO2 cells (Butcher et al., 2004), this clearly indicates that induced MT-1 and/or MT-2 are the critical factors mediating Zn-induced resistance to the toxic effects of Cd. Therefore, despite Zn mediating multiple cellular events (including induction of both MT and non-MT genes), Zn-induced non-MT events had no effect on Cd resistance. Although MT expression has been correlated with protection against Cd, to our knowledge, this is the first report that MTs, and not non-MT factors, are the critical molecules induced by Zn pretreatment that mediate Cd resistance.
Contrary to the effects of Zn-exposure on the sensitivity to the toxic effects of Cd, pretreatment with Zn resulted in enhanced resistance to subsequent exposure to toxic levels of Zn in all cell lines, regardless of the presence or absence of Zn-inducible MT genes. Therefore, neither basal nor induced MT appeared to be a critical factor mediating Zn resistance. Although Zn is rarely considered to be toxic except under exceptional circumstances, zinc overload may be an important factor in neurodegenerative disease states (Dineley et al., 2003). Data suggest that efforts to induce MT in neural tissues may be a useful approach to ameliorate or prevent such toxicity, but that induced MT is not likely to be a critical factor in mediating the protections afforded by Zn.
The pattern of basal and Zn-induced protection against CDDP was qualitatively similar to that against Cd in MT-WT and MT-KO cells (Fig. 4). Therefore, basal MT does not appear to necessarily mediate CDDP resistance, which is in accord with reports implicating factors other than MT in providing protection (Akiyama et al., 1999). On the other hand, Zn induction of MT did enhance cellular resistance to CDDP, but only in MT-WT cells, similar to the situation detected with Cd. These observations suggest that differences in MT expression at low levels may not correlate with resistance to the toxic effects of CDDP, but that differences at higher levels (in the range induced by Zn) may.
A very different pattern of sensitivity to tBH was observed. Contrary to the situation detected with Cd, Zn, and CDDP, MT-WT cells were more resistant to tBH than either MT-KO cell line, suggesting that low, basal MT had the capacity to mediate resistance (Fig. 5). -GCS levels were also lower in both MT-KO cell lines, suggesting a role for this difference (possibly induced by MT gene ablation) that is currently under investigation in our laboratory. This effect of differences in MT in mouse fibroblasts was paralleled in the human HeLa cells; where antisense-mediated reduction in MT reduced resistance to tBH (but not resistance to Cd or CDDP) in multiple, independent clonal populations compared with a panel of control HeLa clones (Fig. 6). When MT-KO cells were pretreated with Zn, there was no increase in resistance to tBH, in spite of increased MT expression. It appears that basal MT, reduced by different mechanisms in both mouse and human cells, plays a key role in mediating resistance to tBH, but not Cd, Zn, or CDDP. On the other hand, increased MT levels, resulting from Zn pretreatment, had little or no effect on tBH resistance. These observations are not consistent with the hypothesis that MT interacts directly with toxic ROS generated by tBH, where an increase in the level of MT would mediate an increase in resistance. Rather, it is in line with the concept that MTs may mediate the activity of one or more factor(s) important in tBH resistance: in the case of tBH, low levels of MT might be sufficient to ensure optimal or maximal activity of such factors. If the level of those factors is not increased by Zn induction, then increased MT levels induced by Zn pretreatment would not enhance factor-activity beyond the "plateau level" supported by basal MT expression. On the other hand, Zn-induced resistance to Cd and CDDP is consistent with, a role for MT in directly interacting with and inactivating these toxicants or, damaging species induced in cells by exposure to them, without ruling out the possibility that MT might mediate the function of MT-dependent resistance factors at the same time.
Overall, our data support the contention that, at low basal MT levels, factors other than MT can provide relative resistance to the toxic effects of some toxicants (Cd, CDDP, and Zn), but not others (tBH). This is exemplified in the mouse cells lacking MT, as a result of gene knockout, and in the human cells with antisense-downregulated MT-expression. By contrast, elevated MT induced by Zn pretreatment, among other Zn-inducible factors, is a key factor in affording protection to the toxic effects of some agents (Cd and CDDP), but not others (Zn and tBH). Pretreatment with Zn induces cellular events, other than MT, which mediate increased resistance to subsequent exposure to potentially toxic concentrations of Zn, although induced MT does not appear to be a critical factor in affording protection. However, basal MT levels are important in the protection afforded during exposure to tBH, while increased levels of MT are not. These findings support the hypothesis that MTs mediate resistance through both direct mechanisms (interaction with and inactivation of toxic species) and indirect mechanisms (possibly including mediating the activity of proteins important in resistance to toxicants). The value of MTs in predicting resistance to toxicants, and the importance of MT in mediating toxicant resistance, appears to differ depending on the toxicant being tested, and depends on whether MT levels are compared at relatively low or high levels, or if MT levels are basal or induced (by Zn).
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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