SRI International, Menlo Park, California 94025
1To whom correspondence should be addressed at SRI International, PS191, 333 Ravenswood Ave, Menlo Park, California 94025. Fax: 6508592889. E-mail: holger.behrsing{at}sri.com.
Received April 29, 2005; accepted June 30, 2005
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ABSTRACT |
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Key Words: geldanamycin; 17-AAG; dog; liver slices; toxicity.
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INTRODUCTION |
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Precision-cut slices that retain biliary duct structures in their native environment are an attractive option, but they have been limited in value because these preparations deteriorate too rapidly in culture (Pfaller et al., 2004). Advances in slice preparation and culture methods have resulted in more stable, long-lasting roller slice techniques (Behrsing et al., 2003
; Fisher and Vickers, 2003
; Saulnier and Vickers, 2002
).
Recently, two benzoquinone ansamycin anticancer compounds, GEL and its derivative 17-AAG, have received attention. This class of compounds is known to inhibit the function of a major molecular chaperone, Hsp90. Several key signaling molecules such as protein kinases and steroid hormone receptors require Hsp90 for their proper folding and activity (Miyata, 2005). Studies have shown that GEL fits into the ATP-binding pocket of Hsp90 and inhibits its ATP binding, ATPase, and molecular chaperone activity (Prodromou et al., 1997
). Thus, treatment of cells with geldanamycin results in inactivation, destabilization, and degradation of Hsp90 client proteins that play important roles in the regulation of the cell cycle, cell growth, cell survival, apoptosis, and oncogenesis (Miyata, 2005
). Because documented in vivo toxicity demonstrated GEL-induced hepatic necrosis at efficacious dose levels, the drug's clinical development was halted (Page et al., 1997
; Supko et al., 1995
). However, 17-AAG, given its lower toxicity (Page et al., 1997
), is currently being evaluated in Phase I clinical trials. In rat slices, GEL and 17-AAG produce generally similar results and in the same relative timescale as reported in vivo, indicating that this model system is useful as an assay of chemically induced hepatobiliary injury (Behrsing et al., in press
). In summary, results from examining clinical biomarker levels in slices and medium, coupled with histological analysis of tissue, have demonstrated differential, compound-specific and cell-specific injury in a concentration-dependent manner. Geldanamycin proved to be more potent than 17-AAG in causing initial biliary injury and, with higher doses, hepatocellular damage in rat slices. Given that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) requires preclinical toxicology studies to be performed on two species, a rodent and a nonrodent, for all small molecules (Tomaszewski, 2004
), testing was expanded from rat liver slices to another widely used higher species. This report describes GEL and 17-AAG slice experimentation with beagle dog liver and compares results with those for in vivo dog studies. Results obtained from Fischer-344 rat liver slice studies are also briefly compared.
Beagle dogs were selected for these experiments because the dog is the nonrodent species of choice for the preclinical toxicology studies in the Developmental Therapeutics Program (Tomaszewski, 2004; Tomaszewski and Smith, 1997
). After culture of liver slices exposed for varying times to a range of GEL and 17-AAG concentrations, slices and medium were harvested and assessed for biochemical and histological biomarkers. Biochemical biomarkers examined include lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), alanine L-transferase (ALT), alkaline phosphatase (ALP), and
-glutamyl transferase (GGT), as well as tissue protein content (to normalize data). Histological analysis includes HPC and BEC viability assessed with hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) staining and cell proliferation with 5-bromo-2-deoxyuridine (BrdU) immunohistochemistry. The results of our experimentation using dog liver slices show (1) the biochemical and histological cell-specific response of slices to GEL and 17-AAG, (2) the differential toxicity of the two compounds, (3) the time course of short-term exposure to GEL, (4) the concentration-dependency of the tissue response to both compounds, (5) the appearance of biochemical biomarkers in the medium after toxic insult, and (6) a species difference in toxic response when compared with rat data.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Liver slice preparation.
Beagle dog liver specimens were obtained during necropsy procedures from control animals in other ongoing studies. Dogs were purchased from Marshall Farms (Rose, NY); quarantined for 14 days following arrival before study began; and, following study completion, were necropsied after euthanasia with sodium pentobarbital (150 mg/kg iv). The liver tissue (consisting of one to two lobes) was removed immediately after the abdominal cavity was opened for liver slice studies. The lobes were immediately placed in ice-cold UW solution, supplemented with 3 mM glutathione, 2 mM Glutamax I, 1x antibiotic-antimycotic solution, 30 µM L-ascorbic acid, 2 mM sodium pyruvate, 1 µM corticosterone, and 100 nM insulin (human). The vessel containing the lobes was placed into a biosafety hood where all further work was done aseptically. The lobes were quickly cored into 8-mm-diameter cylinders and sliced (in supplemented UW solution) into 200-µm-thick discs, using a Krumdieck slicer (Alabama Research and Development, Munford AL). Only the most uniform-shaped slices were selected for experiments; each contained approximately 3 mg protein. The slices were placed onto precut, sterile, HATF paper inside the titanium inserts, and all manipulations were done in ice-cold supplemented UW solution.
Slice preincubation/culture.
Slices on titanium inserts were placed in sterile scintillation vials, each containing 1.7 ml culture medium (Waymouth's MB 752/1 basal medium containing, per milliliter: 2 mg BSA; 0.084 mg gentamicin sulfate; 5 µg oleic acid; 5 µg linoleic acid; 0.5 µg DL--tocopherol; 7.9 µg D-thyroxine; 5 µg insulin, 5 µg transferrin, and 5 ng selenium (ITS); 288 ng testosterone; 272 ng ß-17estradiol; 39.3 ng dexamethasone; 30 ng glucagon; 0.02 U insulin; 0.2 µmol L-2-phosphate ascorbic acid; and 2 mM sodium pyruvate). The vials were then capped with presterilized open-end caps containing PTFE membrane filters, each held in place by a hole-punched, Teflon liner to allow gas exchange with the external atmosphere. The capped vials were placed in the roller drum inside a humidified incubator at 37°C under a 75% O2/5% CO2/air, atmosphere. The roller drum containing the vials was rotated at 67 rpm. After equilibration for 2.53.0 h, the zero time-point samples were harvested. The medium was aspirated from the remaining vials and then replaced with warmed media with or without GEL or 17-AAG at designated concentrations. The slice medium in each vial was replaced with fresh medium daily until the slices were harvested, and for the portion of the study examining medium biomarker content, the collected medium (1 ml/vial) was pooled for respective slices and stored at 4°C until later biochemical analysis. After medium change, the vials were repositioned on the roller system in the incubator, and the incubation was continued under the above conditions until all groups (four replicates/group) were harvested.
Slice harvest.
At the indicated time points, slices plus filter paper were removed from titanium inserts with tweezers and briefly rinsed by submerging in a vessel containing 20 ml PBS. The slices were then bisected so that one-half could be used for biomarker analysis and the other for histology. For bromo-deoxyuridne (BrdU) incorporation experiments, 20 µM BrdU was added to the medium and allowed to incubate with the slices for 18 h before their harvest.
Biomarker analyses.
Each slice section designated for biochemical analysis was transferred into a 1.5-ml Eppendorf tube containing 0.5 ml PBS + 0.5% Triton X-100 on ice. The sections were then homogenized and briefly sonicated at ice-cold temperatures. The resulting lysates were centrifuged in a Beckman Coulter Microfuge 18 centrifuge at 9000 x g for 5 min to remove particulate matter. The resulting supernatants were stored at 4°C until the experiment was complete and then sent on ice with the corresponding media by courier to Quality Clinical Labs (Mountain View, CA) for analysis on a Hitachi 911 clinical analyzer. Biomarker (aspartate aminotransferase [AST], ALT, ALP, GGT, and LDH) levels measured in slice lysates taken within the first 24 h and analyzed periodically thereafter were stable at 4°C for a minimum of 18 days (data not shown). A small fraction of the lysate was retained for protein analysis with the Pierce BCA protein assay kit (VWR International, West Chester, PA) and BSA standards in PBS + 0.5% Triton X-100. A chemiluminescent ALP-specific substrate purchased from Michigan Diagnostics (Troy, MI) was used to measure ALP activity in the medium. This was done by extrapolating activity in the control and treatment groups from an ALP standard curve. All medium ALP assays were performed in 96-well microtiter plates.
Histology.
The faces of slice sections designated for morphological examination were covered by small squares of lens paper (pre-wet in 10% buffered formalin) and placed between two foam inserts. The entire "sandwich" was first placed in a histological cassette, fixed in 10% buffered formalin for 1824 h, then transferred to 70% alcohol, and finally submitted to Biopathology Lab (South San Francisco, CA) for paraffin embedding. Sections 4 µm thick were cut from paraffin blocks and used for H&E and BrdU immunostaining. A BrdU immunostaining kit (Zymed Labs, South San Francisco, CA) was used to label the proliferating cells. The immunostaining was carried out according to the protocol provided by the manufacturer.
Semiquantititative histological analysis.
Hematoxylin and eosin (H&E)-stained slice sections were extensively examined under low (50x) and medium (100x and 200x) magnification and assessed for HPC and BEC viability. From this assessment, a viability percentage was assigned for both HPCs and BECs. In addition, glycogen deposition in HPCs was estimated, using a scale of 04 where 0 represents a finding of no glycogen, 1 = minimal, 2 = mild, 3 = moderate, and 4 = high. Biliary epithelial cell proliferation was evaluated on sections immunostained with BrdU. From each section, the five best portal tracts consisting of medium-sized bile ducts were selected and counted for BrdU-positive BEC using a Zeiss Axioskop 2 equipped with Axiocam digital camera and KS 300 interactive imaging software. A mean proliferating BEC count was then calculated for each slice.
Statistics.
Replicates from control and treatment groups were consolidated between experiments and compared via t-test analysis using an Excel spreadsheet. Values were considered significantly different if p < 0.05. Treatment group averages and standard deviations were calculated. Data presented as percentage of control had treatment groups divided by their respective control values and multiplied by 100 to obtain percent values. For percent of control values, standard deviation was calculated as a percentage of the ratio between the treated group and control.
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RESULTS |
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Effect of GEL and 17-AAG on Medium Biomarkers
Plasma levels of clinical biomarkers as an indicator of toxicity are routinely examined in in vivo studies. Several experiments were also conducted to measure clinical chemistry parameters (AST, ALT, LDH, and ALP) in medium after slice treatment with GEL or 17-AAG. Medium biomarker values represent cumulative levels between slice harvests (e.g., day 3 medium = pooled medium from days 2 and 3, multiplied by the number of days collected; 2 in this example). To increase sensitivity, a luminescence assay was used to measure ALP in medium. Control value averages indicated that AST and ALT activity levels remained relatively steady over the 5-day incubation period (Table 4). Interestingly, ALP and LDH activities measured in the medium were found to increase over time.
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Latent GEL Toxicity
Prior experiments using rat tissue indicated that a delayed toxic effect occurs in slices after a short exposure to GEL. To examine whether dog liver tissue responded similarly, the study was repeated using dog liver slices. Medium containing 1.5 µM GEL was applied to slices for 24 h, followed by 48 h of medium alone before harvest on day 3. Results were compared statistically with the 72 h constant exposure groups and with the constant exposure group harvested at 24 h. The values were listed as percent of day 3 control (Table 2) for comparison with the biomarker values of the 3-day constant exposure group. A latent toxic effect was demonstrated after a limited (24 h) exposure of GEL to liver slices. Although slices were exposed for only 24 h, results from biomarker patterns were similar to 72 h of continuous exposure. Slices with only 24 h exposure did not display changes in HPC markers compared with day 1 control (data not shown), but BEC biomarkers (ALP, GGT, and viability) were significantly lower. Lactate dehydrogenase activity also diminished. The overall toxic response appears to be more severe than that elicited for slices harvested on day 1, but less severe than that for slices exposed to 1.5 µM GEL continuously for 72 h.
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DISCUSSION |
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The current study demonstrated differential hepatobiliary toxicity induced by GEL and 17-AAG using the dog liver slice model and a panel of clinically relevant biomarkers measured in slice lysates and medium, coupled with histological analysis. The results obtained indicate that (1) GEL clearly elicited a greater hepatobiliary toxic response in dog liver slices than did 17-AAG at the same time points and the same concentrations; (2) the response to both compounds was concentration-dependent and cell-specific, as indicated by biochemistry readings and concurrent histological analysis; (3) compound-induced reduction of slice biomarker levels and parenchymal cell viability (biochemical and/or histological) was concomitant with the appearance of AST, ALT, and LDH in the medium; in contrast, ALP in the medium for control slices increased with time in culture, and as toxicity to BEC increased by exposure to GEL or 17-AAG, both slice and medium activities of ALP were reduced in a concentration-dependent manner; (4) the lower 17-AAG concentrations (0.1 and 0.5 µM) appeared to induce BEC proliferation, as evidenced by elevated BrdU incorporation on days 3 and 5, an in vitro observation that correlates with the bile duct hyperplasia seen in vivo; and (5) with regard to cell viability, GEL was approximately tenfold more potent than 17-AAG in producing hepatobiliary cell necrosis.
In general, the correlation between the biochemical and histological results was excellent, although there were a few exceptions. For example, the HPC biomarkers (ALT and AST) declined at a greater rate than the loss of viability (assessed histologically) over the culture period. This observation was also made in a study of rat liver slices (Behrsing et al., in press). One explanation for this phenomenon could be that the large build-up of glycogen displaces significant cytoplasmic volume, leading to a diminution of cytoplasmic markers such as ALT and cytoplasmic AST. It can be argued that, should this be the case, LDH values would also decline. However, LDH is a general marker for all cell types and the increase in BEC proliferation could offset any noticeable decline of LDH as a result of cytoplasmic displacement. Another possibility is that the culture environment for slices results in the altered regulation of hepatobiliary enzymes. Reasons for the loss of AST and ALT in control cultures can only be speculative at this time. The depressed build-up of glycogen in treated slices was found to be an indicator of toxicity. This was not surprising because it is known that various hepatotoxicants can influence glycogenolytic processes (Kawaji et al., 1992
; Kim and Na, 1990
; Nishihata et al., 1988
). However, given that a depressed build-up of glycogen is observed, as opposed to glycogenolysis (where stores already present are depeleted), it may be more appropriate to refer to this phenomenon in liver slices as "impaired glycogenesis."
Slice AST levels increased, rather than decreased, after incubation with 0.5, 1.5, and 5 µM GEL, on both days 3 and 5. Although this result may seem paradoxical, in fact, such an effect on the protein-regulation processes is not surprising, given that GEL's toxic effects may have widespread implications for HPCs. The addition of GEL to cells containing heat shock protein 90 (Hsp90) has been reported to lead to the upregulation of Hsp70 (Elo et al., 2005). It is also known that Hsp70 is involved in the processing of precursory mitochondrial AST (Artigues et al., 1998
). Thus exposure to GEL may increase Hsp70, which then facilitates the production of a greater amount of active mitochondrial AST.
When slice toxicity was evaluated, the levels of biomarkers detected in the medium did not make up the difference between the treated groups and control slice values, although concentration dependency was clearly observed. Because the biomarker enzymes are released over the entire incubation period between medium collections, they are probably subject to degradation by the proteolytic enzymes that are also released from dead cells. Thus, an accurate stoichiometric correlation between slice and media biomarker levels cannot be made.
During the culture period, BEC in both rat and dog liver slices proliferated. We hypothesize that this is a normal response to the slice preparation process. From the results presented, Figure 4 depicts the proliferative BEC response in slice culture. The proliferative response seen in control cultures can be augmented based on treatment of slices. For example, increased proliferation has been noted with low concentrations of 17-AAG or other compounds such as -naphthylisothiocyanate (unpublished results). Higher concentrations of 17-AAG or other more potent heptobiliary toxicants such as GEL have been shown to inhibit the proliferative response (Fig. 4). Interestingly, ALP levels in the medium of control slices also increased over time, although no overt toxicity was found. More investigation is needed to explain this phenomenon.
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Our recent findings using rat liver slices (Behrsing et al., in press) indicate that it is possible to detect compound-, concentration-, and cell-specific toxicities in response to GEL and 17-AAG application. The current study demonstrates that dog liver slices can also be used for such studies, and that species-related differences in toxicity seen in vivo are replicated in this in vitro system using GEL and 17-AAG. Results from these experiments indicate that dog liver slices differentiate the toxic and cell-specific effects of GEL and 17-AAG as well or better than do rat liver slices. In comparing toxic responses from rat and dog tissues, it appears that rat liver (in regard to HPC and BEC) is more susceptible to GEL toxicity than is dog liver (e.g., greater sensitivity of rat BEC [LC50 < 0.5 µM] to GEL than dog BEC [LC50 = 1.55 µM] on day 5 when assessed histologically).
The availability of both rat and dog liver slices that can be maintained in long-term culture (e.g., rat liver slices survive for at least 21 days with 70% viability [unpublished results]) and that are capable of discriminating compound-, concentration-, cell-, and species-specific toxicities suggests that such models could serve as valuable approaches for early drug evaluations. Future work will be directed toward further optimizing and extending the usefulness of the liver slice systems for the culture of human liver slices so that the benefits now afforded by the use of rat and dog liver slices can be realized using this more relevant tissue.
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SUPPLEMENTARY DATA |
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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