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Vol. 56, Issue 3, 537-544, September 1999
and
Department of Pharmacology and Therapeutics, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada
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Summary |
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Activator protein-1 (AP-1) transcription factor DNA binding is induced during transient oxidative stress in the midorganogenesis rat conceptus in culture. L-2-Oxothiazolidine-4-carboxylate (OTC), a cysteine prodrug, prevented oxidative stress and the induction of AP-1 binding activity in the embryo but not in the yolk sac. Because AP-1 activity may be a significant determinant of developmental outcome after insult, we investigated the regulation of AP-1 activity in the conceptus. Supershift assays indicated that basal AP-1 binding in the embryo was due primarily to JunD, whereas in the yolk sac c-Jun and JunD were important. Under oxidative stress, c-Fos and c-Jun contributed to the AP-1 binding in the embryo; in the yolk sac, a c-Fos-shifted complex emerged. OTC protection from oxidative stress did not change the AP-1 composition, suggesting that increased AP-1 activity was due to post-translational modifications. Changes in AP-1 activity in embryos under oxidative stress or with OTC protection were not the result of alterations in the net phosphorylation state of Fos or Jun proteins or of changes in activities of the extracellular signal-regulated kinases 1 and 2 or stress-activated protein kinases. However, immunodepletion of redox factor 1 (Ref-1), a nuclear factor that promotes AP-1 binding, eliminated AP-1 activity from embryonic nuclear extracts under both basal and oxidative stress conditions. Therefore, Ref-1 plays a critical role in regulating AP-1 activity in the conceptus; it is plausible that Ref-1-mediated modulation of the AP-1 stress response is a determinant of embryonic fate.
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Introduction |
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A
broad spectrum of highly conserved cellular programs has evolved to
protect cells from permanent damage or death after exposure to
environmental stress (Smith and Fornace, 1996
). Many perturbations, including oxidative stress, transiently induce the activity of the
immediate-early transcription factor, activator protein-1 (AP-1). The
immediate-early members of AP-1 include c-Fos, c-Jun, JunB, and JunD.
AP-1 exists as heterodimers of Fos/Jun proteins or homodimers of
Jun/Jun. In addition, Fos and Jun may form heterodimers with proteins
from outside the AP-1 family (reviewed in Angel and Herrlich, 1994
).
The wide array of potential AP-1 conformations assures sequence
specificity and transactivational potency (reviewed in Karin, 1995
).
The DNA-binding and gene-activation abilities of the various AP-1
dimers are controlled by several post-translational modifications, including phosphorylation status and redox state. The phosphorylation of c-Jun on several serine/threonine residues lying adjacent to the
DNA-binding domain may sterically and electrochemically hinder DNA-protein interactions (reviewed in Karin, 1995
); dephosphorylation of these residues by an unknown phosphatase is required for the binding
of Jun to the AP-1 response element (reviewed in Karin, 1995
). An
additional mediator of AP-1 binding is the redox state of a conserved
cysteine residue contained within the DNA-binding domains of Fos and
Jun proteins (Abate et al., 1990
). Redox factor-1 (Ref-1) reduces this
moiety to its sulfhydryl form, promoting the association of Fos and Jun
to DNA (Xanthoudakis and Curran, 1992
).
The regulation of AP-1 transactivation may also depend on site-specific
changes in phosphorylation and/or redox state. Site-specific phosphorylation of the N-terminal transactivation domains in c-Jun (reviewed in Karin, 1995
) and in JunB and JunD (Sutherland et al.,
1992
) may result in the induction of gene activation. N-terminal phosphorylation of c-Jun is catalyzed by the stress-activated protein
kinases (SAPKs; p46MAPK,
p54MAPK; Kyriakis et al., 1994
), also known as
Jun N-terminal kinases (JNKs; Hibi et al., 1993
; Dérijard et al.,
1994
); alternatively, this reaction may be mediated by the
extracellular signal-regulated kinases (ERKs) 1 and 2 (Pulverer et al.,
1991
; Radler-Pohl et al., 1993
). Homologous regulatory regions have
been described for c-Fos, which is activated through the Fos-related
kinase (p88MAPK; Deng and Karin, 1994
). Redox
status may also influence AP-1 transactivation ability. Phorbol ester
activation of AP-1 reporter constructs was demonstrated to be
Ref-1-dependent (Hirota et al., 1997
).
The whole-rat embryo culture system is widely used to investigate the
effects of putative teratogens (Sadler and Warner, 1984
; Hales, 1991
).
A number of factors, including the tripeptide glutathione (L-
-glutamyl-L-cysteinylglycine), protect
the rodent embryo against stressors, including reactive oxygen species
(Harris et al., 1987
; reviewed in Wells et al., 1997
). Glutathione
exists in oxidized (GSSG) and reduced (GSH) forms. As the most abundant
cellular nonprotein thiol, the GSSG:GSH ratio reflects the cellular
redox balance and serves as an important measure of oxidative stress (Meister, 1976
). When rat embryos were placed in culture, there was a
significant increase in the GSSG:GSH ratio, peaking within 30 min and
returning to baseline by 90 min (Ozolin
and Hales, 1997
, 1999
).
Concomitant with the increased GSSG:GSH ratio was a transient induction
of fos and jun mRNAs and AP-1 DNA-binding activity (Ozolin
and Hales, 1997
, 1999
). Furthermore, the
culture-induced changes in GSSG:GSH ratio and AP-1 regulation were not
observed in the conceptus when exogenous superoxide dismutase or
catalase were added to the culture medium. The
5-oxo-L-proline analog, L-2-oxothiazolidine-4-carboxylate (OTC; 5 mM),
increased GSH biosynthesis in the conceptus (Harris et al., 1987
) and
prevented the rise of the GSSG:GSH ratio in the embryo but not in the
yolk sac (Ozolin
and Hales, 1999
). The effects of OTC on
glutathione homeostasis in the embryo and yolk sac were reflected in
the tissue specificity of the AP-1 response, i.e., inhibition of the
induction of AP-1-binding activity in the embryo but not in the yolk
sac (Ozolin
and Hales, 1999
). Together, these data support a
role for glutathione homeostasis in AP-1 regulation.
Although the AP-1 response may be an important determinant of developmental outcome in response to oxidative stress, there is a relative dearth of information about the regulation of AP-1 activity in the conceptus. The purpose of these studies was to investigate AP-1 regulation in the conceptus by using OTC to protect against oxidative stress in a tissue-specific manner.
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Materials and Methods |
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Embryo Culture.
Timed-pregnant Sprague-Dawley rats (200-225
g) (Charles River Canada Ltd., St. Constant, Quebec) were housed in
plastic cages with hardwood bedding and maintained in a
temperature-controlled environment with a 12-h light/dark cycle. Food
(Purina Rat Chow; PMI Feeds, St. Louis, MO) and tap water were provided
ad libitum. On the morning of the 10th day of gestation (morning of
sperm-positive vaginal smears was defined as gestational day 0),
embryos were explanted from the dams and cultured according to the
method of New (1978)
, as described (Ozolin
and Hales, 1997
). The
cysteine prodrug OTC (Sigma Chemical Co., St. Louis, MO) increases
glutathione biosynthesis (Williamson and Meister, 1981
) and prevents
oxidative stress within the conceptus (Ozolin
and Hales, 1999
).
OTC was added directly to the culture medium at a final concentration of 5.0 mM; previous studies (Harris et al., 1987
) have shown that this
concentration increases glutathione biosynthesis in the conceptus without causing overt embryotoxicity (Ozolin
and Hales, 1999
).
Cell Culture. Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium containing 10% fetal calf serum, 100 U/ml penicillin, and 100 µg/ml streptomycin, was used to culture HeLa and RBA (murine mammary carcinoma cells, American Type Culture Collection, Rockville, MD). As a positive control for SAPK induction, HeLa cells were exposed to 100 J/m2 of germicidal UV irradiation and collected 30 to 60 min later. As a control for induction of the ERKs, RBA cells were serum-starved for 48 h in medium containing 0.1% fetal calf serum, re-exposed to medium containing 10% fetal calf serum, and collected 30 min later.
Preparation of Nuclear Extracts.
Crude nuclear extracts from
embryos and yolk sacs were prepared exactly as described (Ozolin
and Hales, 1999
). Nuclear extracts derived from cell cultures were
prepared similarly, except that they were not sonicated in the first step.
Gel-Shift Assays.
Assays were performed as described
(Ozolin
and Hales, 1997
) using the DNA fragment containing the
human collagenase AP-1-binding site (Angel and Karin, 1991
). The
concentration of DL-dithiothreitol (DTT) used in the
binding buffer was determined empirically as the minimum amount needed
to produce visible binding activity after overnight exposure of the
autoradiograph. This varied from 0.1 to 0.5 mM DTT.
Supershift Assays. Supershift assays compared basal (0 min) AP-1 binding with the period of peak AP-1 binding (30 min). To better visualize the relative contributions of AP-1 constituent proteins, the nuclear extracts were normalized for binding activity rather than protein content. Affinity-purified rabbit polyclonal antibodies (1 µg), specifically recognizing only c-Fos, c-Jun, phospho c-Jun, JunB, or JunD proteins (Santa Cruz Biotechnologies Inc., Santa Cruz, CA), were added to preformed AP-1/DNA complexes in the binding mixture [10 µl of 20% glycerol, 5 mM MgCl2, 2.5 mM EDTA, 1 mM DTT, 250 mM NaCl, 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5), 0.25 mg/ml poly dI·dC]. Naive affinity-purified rabbit IgG (1 µg; Zymed Inc., San Francisco, CA) was used to control for nonspecific rabbit IgG interactions. After 1 h of incubation at room temperature, 10× loading buffer was added [250 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5), 40% glycerol]. Electrophoretic mobility-shift assays (EMSAs) were done in 4% native acrylamide gels (0.5× Tris-borate EDTA, 1% glycerol) with 0.5× Tris-borate EDTA running buffer. Specificity of the interaction between the antibody and the DNA-binding complex was demonstrated by the abolition of a supershift on addition of a peptide fragment containing the antibody epitope and the lack of effect after addition of a fragment that did not contain the epitope (data not shown).
Kinase Assays.
Immunoprecipitations were carried out with
modifications to published methods (Harlow and Lane, 1998
). Concepti
were sonicated or cells were lysed in 25 mM HEPES (pH 7.5), 1% Triton
X-100, 1% (w/v) deoxycholate, 0.1% SDS, 0.5 M NaCl, 5 mM EDTA, 3 mg/ml aprotinin, 40 mg/ml bestatin, 10 mg/ml leupeptin, 1 mg/ml
pepstatin, 1 mM phenymethylsulfonyl fluoride, 50 mM NaF, 1 mM sodium
orthovanadate, and 40 mM
-glycerophosphate (Hibi et al., 1993
) using
an ultrasonic processor (Sonics and Materials Inc., Danbury,
CT). Homogenates were cleared by 15 min of centrifugation at
15,000g at 4°C. The protein concentrations of the soluble
extracts were determined by using the method of Bradford (BioRad
Laboratories Inc., Mississauga, ON) and were equalized with
lysis buffer. Sample extracts (conceptus, 500 µg; cells, 300 µg)
were first preadsorbed with 5 µg of naive, affinity-purified rabbit
IgG (Zymed Inc., San Francisco, CA), followed by a 1-h
incubation with 10 µl (50% suspension) of protein G-linked Sepharose
beads (Pharmacia Biotech Inc., Baie D'Urfé, Québec) at
4°C. Samples were cleared as described above. The supernatants were
removed and sequentially immunoprecipitated with rabbit
affinity-purified polyclonal pan-ERK and pan-SAPK antibodies
(recognizing, respectively, ERKs-1,2
[p44MAPK,p42MAPK] and the
SAPKs [p54MAPK,p46MAPK];
both from Santa Cruz Biotechnologies Inc.) and cleared by a 1-h
incubation at 4°C with protein G. Immunocomplexes were washed five
times in lysis buffer, three times in 25 mM HEPES (pH 7.5), 0.2%
Triton 100, 1 mM EDTA, and twice in kinase reaction buffer [25 mM
HEPES (pH 7.5), 20 mM MgCl2, 20 mM
-glycerophosphate, 0.1 mM sodium orthovanadate
(NaVaO4), and 2 mM DTT]. Pellets were mixed with
50 µl of kinase reaction buffer, 5 µg of substrate (GST-c-Jun[1-79]; Santa Cruz Biotechnologies Inc.), 10 µCi of [32P] ATP (6000 mmol/Ci; Amersham Canada Ltd.,
Oakville, Ontario). The reaction was carried out at 30°C for 15 (SAPKs) or 60 min (ERKs), because the activity of ERKs toward c-Jun is
less than that of the SAPKs (Hibi et al., 1993
; Kyriakis et al., 1994
). The reaction was terminated by the addition of loading buffer [25 mM
Tris-HCl (pH 6.8), 2% SDS, 1% glycerol, 5% 2-mercaptoethanol] and 3 min of boiling, and the products were resolved by SDS/12% polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE). Gels were dried and autoradiographed. Analysis was done by densitometric quantification of
autoradiograms (Scanmaster 3+; Howtek Inc., and Masterscan; Scanalytics Inc., Billerica, MA) and confirmed by excision of the fragment from the gel and liquid scintillation counting (LKB1217 Rackbeta; Pharmacia Biotech, Inc.).
Alkaline Phosphatase-Sensitive Mobility Shifts.
The protocol
used was as described (Wang et al., 1996
), except that 200 µg of
protein was used, and c-Fos, c-Jun, and JunD were sequentially
immunoprecipitated as described above and treated with calf intestinal
alkaline phosphatase (Boehringer Mannheim Canada Ltd., Laval, Quebec).
Immunodepletion Assay. The consequences of Ref-1 immunodepletion were studied with nuclear extracts from embryos that were cultured for 30 min (oxidatively stressed) or cultured and treated with OTC for 30 min (protected from oxidative stress). The nuclear extracts were normalized for binding activity, rather than protein content, to permit better visualization of the effects of Ref-1 depletion. The concentration of DTT in the binding buffer was determined empirically, as described above. To control for nonspecific IgG binding, the nuclear extracts were preadsorbed with 5 µg of affinity-purified rabbit IgG (Zymed Inc.) at 4°C for 1 h on a rotator. Immunocomplexes were removed by a subsequent 1-h incubation with 5 µl (50% suspension) of protein G-linked Sepharose beads (Pharmacia Biotechnology, Inc.). The supernatant was incubated for 1 h in the presence of rabbit polyclonal affinity-purified Ref-1 antibody (3 or 10 µg, Santa Cruz Biotechnologies, Inc.) followed by immunoprecipitation with protein G. The supernatant was used in EMSA, as described above. Specificity of the removal of Ref-1 from extracts was demonstrated by competition studies with a noncatalytic Ref-1 peptide fragment containing the antibody epitope (Santa Cruz Biotechnologies, Inc.) in which the protein concentrations were kept constant with BSA (RNase/DNase-free; Boehringer Mannheim Canada Ltd., Laval, Quebec or Pharmacia Biotechnology, Ltd.).
Western Blot Analysis.
Immunoprecipitates were boiled for 5 min in sample loading buffer [62.5 mM Tris-HCl (pH 6.8), 12%
glycerol, 2% SDS, 5% 2-mercaptoethanol] and fractionated with 10%
PAGE (Laemmli, 1970
). The proteins were transferred (Towbin et al.,
1979
) to Hybond polyvinylidene difluoride membranes (Amersham Canada
Ltd.). Blocking was done for several hours on an orbital shaker at room
temperature with 5% skim milk powder and 1% BSA fraction V (Sigma) in
TBS-T [137 mM NaCl, 20 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8), 0.1% Tween 20].
The membrane was washed 3 times for 10 min in TBS-T and then incubated
for 1 h at room temperature in TBS-T with 5% skim milk and 1%
BSA and for 3 h with the appropriate antibody (anti-c-Fos, 1:1500;
anti-c-Jun, 1:1000; anti-JunD, 1:2500; anti-Ref-1, 1:1000). After three
10-min washes, the membranes were incubated for 2 h with
horseradish peroxidase-linked anti-rabbit antibody (1:2500) in TBS-T,
5% skim milk, and 1% BSA; the signals were detected using enhanced
chemiluminescence (Amersham Canada Ltd., Mississauga, ON).
Statistical Analysis. Data were analyzed using Student's t test with the CSS (Complete Statistics System) computer program (Statsoft, Tulsa, OK), followed by a post hoc Tukey's test. The a priori level of significance was P < .05.
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Results |
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Effects of OTC on AP-1 DNA-Binding Activity.
AP-1 DNA-binding
activity in the embryo was induced 4-fold by culture for 30 min,
relative to 0 min (basal activity) (Fig. 1A); the addition of OTC prevented the
induction of AP-1 in the embryo. In the yolk sac, AP-1 DNA-binding
activity at 30 min was 3-fold higher than at 0 min; unlike in the
embryo, OTC had no effect on the induction of AP-1 activity in the yolk
sac (Fig. 1B).
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Composition of the AP-1-Binding Complex.
Supershift assays
were done to determine whether differences in AP-1-binding activity
between oxidatively stressed embryos and those protected with 5 mM OTC
were due to changes in the AP-1 constituent proteins. Samples were
obtained at 0 and 30 min after the initiation of culture; 30 min was
the period of maximal oxidative stress and AP-1 binding and the time
point at which OTC had its most pronounced protective effect
(Ozolin
and Hales, 1999
). Affinity-purified rabbit IgG did not
produce a supershifted band (Fig. 2, A
and B). In the embryo, at the beginning of culture (0 min), only the
JunD antibody retarded migration of the bound AP-1 dimer, indicating
that detectable quantities of c-Fos, c-Jun, and JunB did not contribute
to the basal binding activity. When the amount of antibody added to the
binding mixture was doubled from 1 to 2 µg, no novel supershifted
complexes were apparent (data not shown). In addition, the proportion
of existing supershifted complexes relative to the total AP-1 complex
did not change, indicating that the antibodies were not limiting (data
not shown). Thus, other AP-1 family members (FosB or Fra 1,2) or
proteins from outside the AP-1 family were also constituents of basal
AP-1 binding in the conceptus.
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and Hales, 1999Phosphorylation of Jun by ERKs or SAPKs Is Not Responsible for
Oxidative Stress-Induced AP-1 DNA-Binding Activity.
Immunocomplex
kinase assays were done to determine whether changes in the activities
of the ERKs or SAPKs could account for the induction of AP-1 binding by
oxidative stress. In the embryo, the activities of the ERKs at 0 and 30 min were similar, and OTC treatment did not alter these activities
(Fig. 3A). Similar results were obtained
in the yolk sac (Fig. 3B). Thus, in the conceptus, the increased AP-1
binding in response to culture-induced oxidative stress was not the
result of the phosphorylation of Fos or Jun by the ERKs. As a positive
control for induction of ERK activities, a serum starvation/re-exposure
paradigm was used with RBA cells (murine mammary carcinoma
cells). Relative to the serum-starved cells, the cells re-exposed to
serum and collected 30 min later exhibited a 4-fold increase in ERK
activities (Fig. 3, A and B).
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Phosphorylation Changes in Conceptal AP-1 Constituents.
Because AP-1 binding and transactivation activity may depend on the
balance between phosphorylation and dephosphorylation reactions, we
investigated whether the phosphorylation states of c-Fos, c-Jun, and
JunD changed in response to culture in a manner that was independent of
the ERKs and SAPKs. JunB was not examined because it was not detected
as a constituent of the AP-1-binding activity (Fig. 2). In the embryo,
alkaline phosphatase-sensitive SDS/PAGE mobility shifts were not
observed for c-Fos or JunD, indicating that these proteins were not
significantly phosphorylated in either the basal or induced state (Fig.
5A). To further investigate the role of
AP-1 phosphorylation, a supershift assay was done to determine whether
transcriptionally active phospho-c-Jun was a component of the
AP-1-binding complex. No supershifted phosphorylated c-Jun complex was
noted in embryonic samples under basal conditions or 30 min after heat
shock or oxidative stress (Fig. 6A).
Under basal conditions, phosphorylated c-Jun was not detected in HeLa cell nuclear extracts, whereas a supershifted complex was detected in
extracts obtained from HeLa cells 30 min after UV irradiation (Fig.
6A). Thus, AP-1 binding in the embryo was not influenced by changes in
the overall phosphorylation of c-Fos, c-Jun, or JunD.
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AP-1-Binding Activity in the Embryo Is Ref-1-Dependent.
To
determine whether Ref-1 was the redox activity-controlling AP-1 binding
in the embryo during oxidative stress, nuclear extracts were
immunodepleted of Ref-1 before running the EMSA, and the effect on
binding was assessed. The yolk sac was not examined because OTC had no
effect on AP-1 binding activity in this tissue. Western blot analysis
confirmed the presence of Ref-1 in the immunoprecipitates of extracts
treated with 10 µg of the Ref-1 antibody (Fig.
7A); longer exposures were needed to
reveal the Ref-1 signal when 3 µg of antibody were used (data not
shown). The secondary antibody detected the anti-Ref-1 antibody in
samples to which protein G was added (Fig. 7, A and B). The removal of
Ref-1 from the embryonic nuclear extracts with 3 µg of antibody
partially inhibited binding (Fig. 7C), suggesting that small amounts of
Ref-1 are critical to AP-1 binding. Binding activity was entirely
inhibited with 10 µg of anti-Ref-1 antibody (Fig. 7C). These effects
were noted in untreated and OTC-treated samples collected 30 min after
the initiation of culture. Furthermore, when a constant protein
concentration was maintained with BSA supplementation, the addition of
the noncatalytic epitope containing Ref-1 peptide fragment restored
binding activity. To address the possibility that immunoprecipitates of
Ref-1 coprecipitated with the entire AP-1 binding complex, Western
blots were also probed with anti-JunD antibody (the most abundant
identifiable component of the AP-1 complex; Fig. 2). Although the
antibody did detect a positive control peptide adsorbed to the
membrane, no JunD bands were detected in the Ref-1 immunoprecipitates
(Fig. 7B). Thus, the anti-ref-1 antibody did not coprecipitate the
AP-1-binding complex, suggesting that the absence of Ref-1 was the
cause for reduced AP-1-binding activity. These results implicate Ref-1
in the regulation of basal and inducible AP-1 activity in the embryo.
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Discussion |
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AP-1 induction is potentially a cytoprotective response in the
midorganogenesis conceptus and may be a significant determinant of
developmental outcome after perturbation. The induction of AP-1-binding
activity was observed in the rodent conceptus after the initiation of
culture, coincident with a transient oxidative stress response. This
stress response was characterized by a disruption of glutathione
homeostasis, as assessed by an increase in the GSSG:GSH ratio and
increased protein and DNA oxidation products (Winn and Wells, 1995
;
Ozolin
and Hales, 1997
, 1999
). Hyperoxic culture conditions also
induced the activities of several antioxidant enzyme, including the
glutathione peroxidases and glutathione S-transferases
(Ishibashi et al., 1997
; Ozolin
and Hales, 1999
). Although the
relevance of this transitory oxidative stress response to the
developmental outcome of a cultured organogenesis-stage embryo remains
unclear, it is significant that free radical-mediated disturbances in
glutathione homeostasis and oxidative damage to embryonic DNA and other
macromolecules have been implicated in the teratogenicity of drugs such
as thalidomide (Parman et al., 1999
).
The differences in AP-1 regulation between the embryo and the yolk sac
in response to OTC exposure were related to the mechanism by which OTC
alters glutathione homeostasis (Ozolin
and Hales, 1999
). OTC
increased GSH content in the embryo but not in the yolk sac.
Interestingly, protein concentrations of
-glutamyl-cysteine synthetase, as assessed in Western blots, were significantly higher in
the yolk sac than in the embryo. We can speculate that feedback inhibition of glutathione synthesis may occur in the yolk sac but not
in the embryo. Other investigators, using different embryo culture
conditions, have reported that OTC is more effective at maintaining
glutathione homeostasis under stress in the yolk sac than in the embryo
(Harris et al., 1987
).
Dimeric composition is an influential determinant of the AP-1 binding
and transactivational potential (reviewed in Karin, 1995
).
Interestingly, in the embryo, the AP-1 complex was void of c-Fos and
c-Jun activity, but JunD and an unidentified nonsupershifted complex
contributed significantly under basal conditions (0 min; Fig. 2A). The
yolk sac differed from the embryo in that c-Jun was detected during
basal conditions. Thus, JunD may be critical for the execution of
developmental programs during organogenesis; in the embryo, c-Jun may
not be important, whereas in the yolk sac during this period of
development, c-Fos may be irrelevant. These suggestions are supported
by the observation that c-fos-null mice were viable at birth
(Johnson et al., 1992
; Wang et al., 1992
), whereas
c-jun-null mice died relatively late in gestation, during
the fetal period (Johnson et al., 1993
; Hilberg et al., 1993
). The role
of JunD during development is unclear because junD-null transgenic mice
have not yet been reported.
Curiously, in both the embryo and the yolk sac, approximately
half of the basal and induced AP-1 DNA-binding activity resided in the
nonsupershifted complex (Fig. 2, A and B). This complex may
include other members of the AP-1 family, namely FosB,
FosB or
Fra's1,2. In addition, other bZIP proteins from outside the AP-1 family may also form heterodimers with AP-1. These may include ATF-2, CREBII, Maf and Nrl, MafB, NfBp65, or NfBp50 (reviewed in Angel
and Herrlich, 1994
). Ironically, if FosB or Fra proteins do not
contribute to the unidentified components of the AP-1-binding complex,
this may suggest that AP-1-dependent transcription may, in fact, be
relatively AP-1-independent.
Irrespective of OTC treatment, no additional supershifted bands were observed in embryonic extracts collected 30 min after the initiation of culture. In the yolk sac, a substantial c-Fos supershifted complex was detected in addition to the c-Jun and JunD containing complexes that were present during basal conditions (0 min). The different mobilities of the c-Fos- and c-Jun-containing complexes in the yolk sac indicated that, unlike the embryo, these were not Fos/Jun heterodimers. The relatively constant overall amounts of Fos and Jun proteins in the nuclei of concepti from all three treatment groups (Fig. 2) showed that the increased binding activities were not the result of increased protein synthesis.
The implications of the large contribution of JunD to the AP-1-binding
activity of the embryo and the yolk sac are unknown, although the
presence of JunD strongly influences protein associations that modulate
the binding of the AP-1 complex. For instance, the Jun-associated
binding protein-1 (JAB-1) selectively enhances the occupancy of the
AP-1 response element with dimers that contain c-Jun and JunD, but not
JunB (Claret et al., 1996
). Thus, although purely speculative, the
differences in AP-1-binding between oxidatively stressed and protected
embryos may be the result of interactions with proteins such as JAB-1;
however, the role of JAB-1 during development and the stress response
has not been determined.
Interestingly, JunB was not detected in the AP-1 DNA-binding activity
(Fig. 2, A and B) or in the immunoprecipitates of the nuclear
fraction (data not shown), even though expression of its transcripts
was induced by culture of the conceptus (Ozolin
and Hales,
1999
). The ramifications of the absence of JunB are unclear, owing in
part to the sequence specificity of its effects on transcription
(reviewed in Karin, 1995
). Recently, JunB has been implicated as an
important constituent of AP-1-binding activity in an in vivo carbon
tetrachloride-induced hepatic model of metabolic oxidative stress; in
vitro phosphorylation of JunB by SAPKs is reported to be an important
part of this response (Mendelson et al., 1996
). Thus, the absence of
JunB may be detrimental to the conceptus when confronted with different
stressors. The activities of both the ERKs and SAPKs were refractory to
the oxidative stress of culture (Figs. 3 and 4). This is consistent
with a report that showed that the inducibility of ERKs by
H2O2 was tissue-specific (Kyriakis et al., 1994
). Interestingly, SAPK activities were induced in
the conceptus by stimuli other than oxidative stress. Treatment with UV
irradiation or a dysmorphogenic dose of heat shock significantly stimulated SAPK activity in the yolk sac, although only heat shock was
effective in the embryo (Fig. 4). Phospho-c-Jun was only detected in
the yolk sac, despite the activation of SAPKs in both the embryo and
the yolk sac in response to heat shock. First, this suggests that the
SAPK kinase pathways may be poorly developed in the embryo. Second, it
indicates that other stress-response proteins, such as ATF-2, may be
alternative targets of heat shock-induced SAPKs (reviewed in Angel and
Herrlich, 1994
). Interestingly, ATF-2 does bind, albeit with different
avidity, to AP-1 and AP-1 binding sequences, suggesting that ATF-2 may
be responsible for increased "AP-1" binding activity (van Dam et
al., 1995
). The relative insensitivity of the SAPK pathway in
the conceptus may contribute to sensitizing the conceptus to insult
because SAPKs are thought to promote cell survival (Devary et al.,
1992
). In addition, mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase 4, the
upstream regulator of SAPKs, may be repressed until its developmental
role during hepatogenesis has been fulfilled (Yang et al., 1997
).
The absence of Fos- and JunD phosphatase-sensitive
mobility shifts during PAGE provided further evidence to negate the
importance of phosphorylation changes in the regulation of AP-1-binding
in the embryo. A single phosphorylated band was noted for both c-Fos and JunD. It has been proposed that Fos and Jun must undergo
phosphorylation changes to become transcriptionally active (reviewed in
Karin, 1995
). Without changes in the phosphorylation state of Fos or Jun, it is not clear whether the increased AP-1 DNA-binding activity that was noted is related to a change in transcriptional activity.
The redox-regulated protein, Ref-1, promotes the DNA-protein
interactions of several transcription factors, including AP-1 (Xanthoudakis and Curran, 1992
; Xanthoudakis et al., 1992
). Previous studies have demonstrated that the Ref-1 protein can be detected immunohistochemically in the rat fetus (Wilson et al., 1996
). The
immunodepletion of Ref-1 from nuclear extracts and the ensuing abolition of AP-1-binding activity demonstrate, for the first time, the
absolute requirement for Ref-1 for in vitro AP-1-binding function in
the embryo (Fig. 7). A functional requirement for Ref-1 in early
embryogenesis is supported by the preimplantation death of mouse
embryos lacking the ref-1 gene (Xanthoudakis et al., 1996
).
However, because of the bifunctionality of Ref-1, it is not known if
embryonic death is the result of improper gene expression by
Ref-1-dependent transcription factors or the accumulation of oxidative
DNA lesions caused by the absence of Ref-1 endonuclease activity
(Xanthoudakis et al., 1996
).
The activities of antioxidant enzymes in the embryo are extremely low
compared with adult values (reviewed in Wells et al., 1997
);
consequently, the cysteine residues of Fos and Jun that control
redox-dependent binding may be particularly sensitive to oxidative
stress (Abate et al., 1990
). This may explain why oxidatively stressed
and OTC-protected samples were equally dependent on Ref-1 for the
protein-DNA interaction. Ref-1 may be required at all times for AP-1
binding, not just during oxidative stress.
It is difficult to determine whether Ref-1 redox activity is induced in
response to oxidative stress and whether this contributes to increased
AP-1 binding and transactivation in oxidatively stressed embryos.
Recent data demonstrate that, after stimulation with a phorbol ester,
thioredoxin moves from the cytosol into the nucleus and physically
associates with Ref-1 (Hirota et al., 1997
). Because of the concomitant
increase in the expression of AP-1-driven reporter constructs and the
requirement for the thioredoxin catalytic center, it has been suggested
that the thioredoxin/Ref-1 association induces Ref-1 redox activity,
which, in turn, stimulates AP-1 transactivation. Therefore, the
inducibility of Ref-1 may be an important component in the initiation
of the AP-1 response, particularly in the embryo, where AP-1
phosphorylation changes are not apparent. Interestingly, Ref-1-dependent inhibition of gene expression also has been reported (Okazaki et al., 1994
).
The generation and persistence of oxidative DNA damage in rodent
embryos as a result of culture and exposure to teratogens (Winn and
Wells, 1995
) suggest that Ref-1 may be an important component of
embryonic DNA repair during organogenesis. Ref-1 may have two roles in
the embryonic oxidative stress response. It may promote the AP-1
dependent changes in gene expression necessary for survival in a
hyperoxic environment, and it may initiate the repair of oxidative DNA damage.
| |
Acknowledgments |
|---|
We thank Yannick Blanchard and Shyam Ramchandani, both from the Department of Pharmacology and Therapeutics, McGill University, for providing, respectively, the RBA and HeLa cells.
| |
Footnotes |
|---|
Received January 28, 1999; Accepted May 19, 1999
This work was supported by the Medical Research Council of Canada.
Send reprint requests to: Dr. Barbara F. Hales, Department of Pharmacology and Therapeutics, McGill University, 3655 Drummond Street, Montréal, Québec H3G 1Y6, Canada. E-mail: bhales{at}pharma.mcgill.ca
| |
Abbreviations |
|---|
AP-1, activator protein-1; EMSA, electrophoretic mobility shift assay; ERKs, extracellular signal-regulated kinases; GSH, reduced glutathione; GSSG, oxidized glutathione; MAPK, mitogen-activated protein kinase; PAGE, polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis; OTC, L-2-oxothiazolidine-4-carboxylate; SAPKs, stress-activated protein kinases or Jun-activating kinases (JNKs); TBS-T, 137 mM NaCl, 20 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8), 0.1% Tween 20; DTT, DL-dithiothreitol; JAB-1, Jun-associated binding protein-1; redox factor 1., .
| |
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