
[Cancer Research 60, 6346-6352, November 15, 2000]
© 2000 American Association for Cancer Research
Arsenite Induces p53 Accumulation through an ATM-dependent Pathway in Human Fibroblasts1
Ling-Huei Yih and
Te-Chang Lee2
Institute of Biomedical Sciences, Academia Sinica, Taipei 115, Taiwan, Republic of China
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ABSTRACT
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Arsenic compounds are potent human carcinogens. Accumulated evidence has
shown that arsenite-induced cytogenetic alterations are associated with
the carcinogenicity of arsenic. Because p53 plays a guarding role in
maintaining genome integrity and accuracy of chromosome segregation,
the mechanistic effects of arsenite on p53 activation were analyzed. In
the present study, arsenite-induced DNA strand breaks were confirmed by
alkaline single-cell gel electrophoresis (comet assay) in human
fibroblast (HFW) cells. Accompanying the appearance of DNA strand
breaks was a significant accumulation of p53 in arsenite-treated HFW
cells, as demonstrated by immunoblotting and immunofluorescence
techniques. p53 downstream proteins, such as p21 and the human
homologue of murine double minute-2, were also significantly induced by
arsenite treatment. Cell cycle retardation and G2-M arrest
were observed in 5-bromo-2'-deoxyuridine pulse-labeled HFW cells by
flow cytometry. Wortmannin, an inhibitor of phosphatidylinositol
3-kinases, inhibited arsenite- or X-ray irradiation-induced p53
accumulation but did not alter UV irradiation- or
N-acetyl-Leu-Leu-norleucinal-induced p53 accumulation.
p53 phosphorylation on serine 15 was also confirmed by immunoblotting
technique in arsenite- and X-ray-treated HFW cells but was not observed
in UV- or N-acetyl-Leu-Leu-norleucinal-treated HFW
cells. These results suggest the involvement of a phosphatidylinositol
3-kinase-related protein kinase in arsenite-induced p53 accumulation.
For confirmation, we demonstrated that arsenite treatment, similar to
X-ray irradiation, did not induce p53 accumulation in GM3395
fibroblasts derived from a patient with ataxia telangiectasia. In
contrast, UV irradiation did cause p53 accumulation in these cells.
Together, these findings infer that arsenite-induced DNA strand breaks
may lead to p53 phosphorylation and accumulation through an ataxia
telangiectasia mutated-dependent pathway in HFW cells.
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INTRODUCTION
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Arsenic compounds are ubiquitously distributed natural toxicants
and are considered to be carcinogenic in humans (1)
.
However, the molecular mechanisms of arsenic carcinogenicity remain
elusive. Although arsenite by itself is thought to be inactive or
typically too weak to induce gene point mutations (2
, 3)
,
increased frequencies of cytogenetic alterations, such as chromosome
aberrations, sister chromatid exchanges, and micronucleus, have been
found in peripheral lymphocytes of human populations with chronic
exposure to arsenic through drinking water (4, 5, 6)
. In
in vitro studies, sodium arsenite, a trivalent arsenic
compound, induced similar cytogenetic alterations in a variety of cell
systems (3
, 7, 8, 9)
. At the same dose range,
arsenite-induced cytogenetic alterations were closely associated with
arsenite-induced morphological transformation in Syrian hamster embryo
cells (10
, 11)
. Our recent studies (12
, 13)
demonstrated that arsenite perturbs spindle dynamics and results in
chromosome malsegregation during mitosis in cultured human cells. These
investigations indicate that the genotoxicity and carcinogenicity of
arsenite might be attributable to its activity on inducing cytogenetic
alterations and/or genetic instability. Other mechanisms, such as
modulation of DNA methylation (14)
or DNA repair
inhibition (15, 16, 17, 18)
, are also reportedly involved in
arsenite genotoxicity and carcinogenicity.
Numerous reports have shown that arsenite treatment induces DNA strand
breaks and DNA-protein cross-links in a variety of cell lines
(19, 20, 21)
. DNA strand breaks usually trigger the
accumulation of p53 protein, a short half-life protein denoted as the
guardian of the genome. Only a few reports have described the
relationship between arsenite exposure and p53 activation and/or
accumulation (22
, 23)
. The p53 protein plays a pivotal
role in maintaining genome integrity. This task is achieved through the
induction of growth arrest for repair of DNA damage or apoptosis for
eliminating cells with irreparable damage (24
, 25)
. In
general, p53 is involved in diverse cellular processes, including DNA
repair, cell cycle checkpoints, apoptosis, cell differentiation, and a
variety of stress responses induced by endogenous and exogenous sources
(26
, 27)
. In response to diverse stresses, p53 activation
is tightly regulated through a complicated signaling network, including
protein stability, subcellular localization, and interaction with other
proteins (28)
. NH2-terminal
phosphorylation of p53 is of importance to maintain p53 protein
stability and its transactivation activities (29)
. Three
members of the
PI3-K3
-related kinase family, DNA-dependent protein kinase (3)
,
ATM, and ATR, are demonstrated to phosphorylate p53 at different sites
in vitro, and two of them, ATM and ATR, possibly
phosphorylate p53 on serine 15 in vivo
(30, 31, 32)
. NH2-terminal
phosphorylation of p53 hampers the association of p53 with MDM-2, the
negative regulator of p53, and hence prevents p53 from
proteosome-mediated degradation (29
, 33, 34, 35)
. p53 is
therefore accumulated and transactivates its downstream genes that are
also involved in cellular stress responses.
Because p53 reacts to different stress-promoting conditions and may
serve as the center of a signal network responsible for appropriate
responses to various cellular stresses, understanding how arsenite
enhances p53 accumulation could help unveil cellular responses to
arsenite-induced injury. HFW cells manifest normal and stable
karyotypes and become senescent after several passages
(12)
. We previously used HFW cells to investigate the
effects of arsenite on cell cycle progression and cytogenetic
alterations (7
, 12)
. Our results showed that arsenite not
only caused chromosome aberrations and micronuclei but also induced
spindle defects and perturbed mitosis in HFW cells. Therefore, HFW
cells were again used to investigate p53-dependent cellular responses
to arsenite insults. In this study, we found that arsenite induces DNA
strand breaks and results in p53 phosphorylation and accumulation in
HFW cells through an ATM-dependent pathway.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS
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Cell Culture.
HFW cells derived from newborn foreskin were kindly provided by Dr.
W. N. Wen (National Taiwan University). GM3395 and GM3398 cells were
obtained from Coriell Cell Repositories (Camden, NJ). Cells were
routinely maintained in DMEM (Life Technologies, Inc., Grand Island,
NY) supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum (Hyclone Laboratories,
Logan, UT), 0.37% sodium bicarbonate, 100 unit/ml penicillin, and 100
µg/ml streptomycin. The cells were cultured at 37°C in an incubator
with humidity-saturated air and 10% CO2
(36)
.
DNA Strand Break Analysis.
DNA strand breaks were measured by single-cell alkaline gel
electrophoresis (comet assay) as described by Lynn et al.
(20)
. Briefly, HFW cells after arsenite treatment were
harvested, embedded in 1% agarose gel at a density of 1 x 106/ml, and spread onto a fully frosted
slide. The slides were immersed in ice-cold lysis buffer (10
mM Tris-HCl, 2.5 M NaCl,
100 mM Na2EDTA, 1% sodium
N-lauryl sarcosinate, 1% Triton X-100, and 10% DMSO; pH
10) for 1 h at 4°C. Cellular DNA was denatured in
electrophoresis buffer (300 mM NaOH and 1
mM Na2EDTA) for 20 min at
room temperature and then electrophoresed for 20 min at 25 V and 300
mA. Afterward, the slides were washed in distilled water, renatured in
0.4 M Tris-HCl (pH 7.5), stained with Sybr green
(Molecular Probe, Eugene, OR), and examined under a fluorescence
microscope (BX60; Olympus, Tokyo, Japan). Comets were classified into
four groups based on the length and fluorescence intensity of the comet
tail: type I, no tail (intact nuclei; Fig. 1
a, AC); type II, comet with short tail (tail length less
than the head diameter; Fig. 1
a, DF); type III, comet with
tail length longer than the head diameter and with low fluorescence
intensity (Fig. 1
a, G and H); and type IV, comet
with tail length longer than the head diameter and with high
fluorescence intensity (Fig. 1
a, I; Ref. 37
).
Five hundred cells were examined for each treatment.

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Fig. 1. DNA strand breaks induced by arsenite in HFW cells. HFW
were treated with 5 µM arsenite for the times indicated
and then subjected to comet assay as described in "Materials and
Methods." a, four comet types induced by arsenite.
Type I, AC; type II, DF; type III,
G and H; and type IV, I.
b, incidence of each comet type in arsenite-treated HFW.
Five hundred nuclei were analyzed for each treatment. Data presented
are the averages of three to five independent experiments;
bars, SD.
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Immunoblot Analysis of p53, p21, and MDM-2.
Immunoblotting was performed as described previously (12)
.
In brief, after drug treatment HFW cells were scraped from culture
dishes with the aid of a rubber policeman, lysed immediately in
electrophoretic sample buffer, and heated at 95°C for 5 min
(38)
. Protein concentrations were determined by Bradford
analysis (39)
. An aliquot of 10 µg of cellular protein
was loaded onto a 10% SDS-PAGE. After electrophoretic separation,
polypeptides were transferred onto a nitrocellulose membrane by a
semidry electrotransfer system (ATTO, Tokyo, Japan). After
blocking in 5% skimmed milk in PBST (PBS containing 0.2% Tween 20)
for 1 h, the membranes were incubated overnight at 4°C with
primary antibodies that were appropriately diluted in blocking
solution. p53, p21, and MDM-2 were reacted with anti-p53 monoclonal
antibody (DO-1, sc-126; Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Santa Cruz, CA),
anti-p21 monoclonal antibody (Transduction Laboratories, San
Diego, CA), and anti-MDM-2 monoclonal antibody (Santa Cruz
Biotechnology), respectively. The membranes were then extensively
washed with PBST and incubated with secondary antibodies conjugated
with horseradish peroxidase (Organon Teknika-Cappel, Turnhout,
Belgium). Proteins were visualized using an enhanced chemiluminescence
system according to the manufacturers instruction (Pierce,
Rockford, IL). The levels of p53 were estimated using a densitometer
(Densitometer 300S; Molecular Dynamics, Sunnyvale, CA).
Immunofluorescence Staining of Cellular p53 and Cyclin B1.
To localize the p53 in cells, HFW cells were seeded onto glass
coverslips. After treatment, cells on the coverslips were washed twice
with PBS and then fixed in situ with methanol:acetone (1:1)
at -20°C for 10 min. The coverslips were washed twice with PBS and
incubated with anti-p53 monoclonal antibody (DO-1; Santa Cruz
Biotechnology) at 4°C for 1 h. The unbound antibody was removed
by extensively washing with PBST. The coverslips were further incubated
with FITC-conjugated secondary antibody (Organon Teknika-Cappel) in the
dark for 30 min. Chromosomes were counterstained with 0.1 µg/ml
4,6-diamino-2-phenylindole. After thoroughly rinsing with PBST, the
coverslips were mounted with a 90% glycerol solution containing 1
mg/ml phenylenediamine (pH 8.0). For each treatment, 1000 cells were
randomly selected and examined under a fluorescence microscope
(Olympus, Tokyo, Japan). Cellular cyclin B1 was stained with rabbit
anti-cyclin B1 antibodies (Santa Cruz Biotechnology) and visualized
with rhodamine-conjugated secondary antibodies (Organon
Teknika-Cappel).
Analysis of Phosphorylation of p53 on Serine 15.
After drug treatment, HFW cells were immediately lysed in lysis buffer
(50 mM Tris-HCl, 5 mM
Na2EDTA, 150 mM NaCl, 0.5% NP40, 1
mM DTT, 1 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, 0.5
mM sodium vanadate, and 1 mM sodium fluoride)
for 20 min on ice. To immunoprecipitate cellular p53, an aliquot of 1
mg of cellular protein was incubated with 1 µg of anti-p53 monoclonal
antibody (DO-1, sc-126; Santa Cruz Biotechnology) for 1 h at 4°C
with agitation. Protein A-Sepharose beads (Sigma) were added to the
mixture and incubated for another 1 h at 4°C. The immunocomplex
was spun down by centrifugation, washed with lysis buffer five times,
and boiled in SDS-PAGE sample buffer. The clear supernatants were
subjected to immunoblot analysis for total p53 with another polyclonal
p53 antibody (FL-393, sc-6243; Santa Cruz Biotechnology) and for
phosphorylated p53 with an anti-p53 antibody specific to phosphorylated
serine 15 (p53-S15, #3284S; New England BioLabs, Beverly, MA).
Analysis of Cell Cycle Progression.
Logarithmically growing HFW cells were treated with 20 µM
BrdUrd for 30 min. BrdUrd was then removed, and the cells were further
incubated in medium with or without 5 µM arsenite. At
various time points, cells were harvested for analysis of BrdUrd
incorporation and DNA content. In brief, total cells were collected and
fixed in cold 70% ethanol. After treatment with 2 N HCl
for nicking DNA, 0.1 M
Na2B4O7
was added to neutralize the reaction mixture. The incorporated BrdUrd
was reacted with FITC-conjugated anti-BrdUrd antibodies (Boehringer
Mannheim Biochemicals, Mannheim, Germany), and cellular DNA was stained
with 4 µg/ml PI in PBS containing 1% Triton X-100 and 0.1 mg/ml
RNase A. The fluorescent intensities of PI and FITC of individual cells
were analyzed with a fluorescence-activated cell sorter (FACStar;
Becton Dickinson Immunocytometry Systems) as described previously
(36)
. The BrdUrd level in each cell cycle phase was
determined using a computer program provided by the Becton Dickinson
Immunocytometry System.
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RESULTS
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Induction of DNA Strand Breaks by Arsenite.
We showed previously that arsenite at a dose range of 1.255
µM significantly induces chromatid breaks and micronuclei
in HFW cells (7
, 12)
. In the present study, a recently
developed and very sensitive method called "single-cell alkaline gel
electrophoresis" or "comet assay" was adopted to determine
whether arsenite causes DNA strand breaks in HFW cells. Treatment of
HFW cells with 5 µM arsenite for 06 h time dependently
increased the frequencies of type II comets from 10% to
60% and
type III and IV comets from very low to 16 and 8%, respectively (Fig. 1b)
. Types IIV comets were assigned numerical scores of
03, respectively (40)
; the average scores for each time
point of 5 µM arsenite treatment were
0.11 ± 0.03, 0.28 ± 0.06,
0.54 ± 0.18, 0.77 ± 0.12,
0.86 ± 0.21, 0.97 ± 0.18, and
1.15 ± 0.10. This result indicated that 5
µM arsenite significantly induced DNA strand
breaks in HFW cells (P < 0.001, according to
ANOVA analysis). According to dye exclusion assay, HFW cells remained
viable and maintained intact membrane integrity at the time the comet
assay was performed, and no apoptosis was detectable under the
experimental conditions. Therefore, consistent with a previous report
(20)
, the arsenite-induced DNA strand breaks identified
through comet assay were not attributable to apoptotic or dead cells.
Elevation of p53 Levels by Arsenite.
Because p53 is a well-documented DNA damage marker (41)
,
the effects of arsenite on p53 protein levels were examined using
immunoblotting. Treatment of HFW cells with arsenite at a dose range
from 1.25 to 10 µM for 24 h dramatically increased
p53 levels (Fig. 2A)
. In a time-dependent experiment, p53 accumulation was
observed at 1 h after arsenite treatment and increased to maximum
accumulation at 46 h (Fig. 2B)
. Afterward, p53 levels
declined to one-third of the maximum and remained at a constant level
for 24 h (Fig. 2B)
. Using a densitometer, the
intensities of p53 induced by 5 µM arsenite
(0-, 1-, 2-, 4-, and 6-h time points in Fig. 2B
) were
measured and plotted against the average comet scores (the same time
points in Fig. 1b
). As shown in Fig. 2
D, the
levels of p53 accumulation were linearly correlated to comet scores
(r2 = 0.929). These results
indicated that during the first several hours, the levels of
arsenite-induced p53 accumulation were parallel with the incidence of
DNA strand breaks. In addition to p53 accumulation, the protein levels
of p53 target genes, such as p21 and
MDM-2, were concomitantly increased by arsenite treatment
(Fig. 2C)
.

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Fig. 2. Effects of arsenite on cellular levels of p53, p21, and
MDM-2 proteins. HFW cells were treated with various concentrations of
arsenite. At the times indicated, 10 µg of cellular proteins from
each treatment were separated by 10% SDS-PAGE. Cellular p53, p21, and
MDM-2 were detected by immunoblot with anti-p53 antibody (DO-1),
anti-p21 antibody, and anti-MDM-2 antibody, respectively, as described
in "Materials and Methods." A, dose-dependent
induction of p53 accumulation in HFW cells treated with 010
µM arsenite for 24 h. B,
time-dependent induction of p53 accumulation in HFW cells treated with
5 µM arsenite for 024 h. C,
dose-dependent induction of p53, p21, and MDM-2 in HFW cells treated
with 010 µM arsenite for 6 h. D,
correlation between p53 levels in B and comet scores in
Fig. 1
b. The p53 levels in B (time 0, 1,
2, 4, and 6 h) were estimated using a densitometer and plotted
against the comet scores at the same time points of arsenite
treatment.
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Arsenite-induced p53 accumulation was further confirmed by
immunofluorescence staining. Consistent with the results of
immunoblotting (Fig. 2B)
, p53 levels were very low in
untreated HFW cells (Fig. 3, A and B)
. However, highly abundant p53 was
frequently present in nuclei of arsenite-treated HFW (Fig. 3, C and D)
. The frequency of arsenite-treated cells
showing bright fluorescence gradually increased from 5 to 30% during
the 24-h treatment period (Fig. 3E)
. For comparison, we
examined the kinetics of p53 nuclear accumulation in nuclei of
X-ray-irradiated HFW cells. After 1 Gy of X-ray irradiation, p53
accumulation in nuclei occurred immediately and transiently,
i.e., 60% of nuclei showed bright fluorescence 1 h
after irradiation and the frequency rapidly declined (Fig. 3E)
, indicating that the kinetics of p53 accumulation to
nuclei in arsenite-treated HFW cells are quite different from those in
X-ray-irradiated cells. In another staining study, double staining for
p53/cyclin B1 showed that arsenite-treated cells with p53 nuclear
accumulation (Fig. 4
A, arrowheads) were completely separable from cyclin
B1-positive cells (Fig. 4
B, arrows). Cyclin B1 is a marker
for the G2 phase cells; hence, this finding
showed that cells with p53 nuclear accumulation were not at the
G2 phase.

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Fig. 3. Effects of arsenite on p53 nuclear accumulation. HFW cells
were untreated (A and B) or treated with
5 µM arsenite for 24 h (C and
D). Cellular p53 was examined by immunofluorescence
staining with the p53 antibody (DO-1) and the FITC-conjugated secondary
antibody (A and C). Nuclei were
visualized by staining with 4,6-diamino-2-phenylindole
(B and D). E, kinetics of
p53 nuclear accumulation in HFW cells treated with arsenite or X-ray
irradiation. HFW cells were treated with 5 µM arsenite or
1 Gy of X-ray. HFW cells were harvested for p53 immunofluorescence
staining at times indicated. For each treatment, 1000 cells were
randomly selected and microscopically examined. Data presented are the
averages of three independent experiments; bars, SD.
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Fig. 4. Differential effects of arsenite on p53 and cyclin B1
accumulation. HFW cells were treated with 5 µM arsenite
for 24 h. Cellular p53 protein and cyclin B1 were visualized by
immunostaining techniques as described in Fig. 3
and in "Materials
and Methods." A, staining with p53 DO-1 antibody and
FITC-conjugated secondary antibody. B, staining with
cyclin B1 antibody and rhodamine-conjugated secondary antibody.
Arrowheads, cells with p53 nuclear accumulation;
arrows, cells with cyclin B1 accumulation;
stars, mitotic cells.
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Signalings Involved in Arsenite-induced p53 Accumulation.
Numerous reports have shown that p53 is phosphorylated by ATM kinase
(30
, 31)
, a member of the PI3-K-related protein kinase
family, and hence is prevented from degradation and subsequently
results in p53 accumulation (33
, 42)
. To test whether ATM
kinase is involved in the signaling of arsenite-induced p53
accumulation, HFW cells were cotreated with arsenite and wortmannin, an
inhibitor of the PI3-K family (43)
. Wortmannin by itself
did not affect the levels of p53 but effectively inhibited
arsenite-induced p53 accumulation (Fig. 5A)
. For comparison, wortmannin also inhibited X-ray-induced
p53 accumulation (Fig. 5B)
. However, wortmannin did not
abrogate p53 accumulation in UV-irradiated or ALLN-treated cells (Fig. 5B)
. ALLN is a calpain/proteosome inhibitor that induces p53
stabilization by inhibiting its degradation instead of altering its
phosphorylation level (33)
. Similarly, wortmannin reduced
MDM-2 levels in arsenite- or X-ray-treated HFW cells but had no effect
in UV-irradiated and ALLN-treated cells (Fig. 5B)
. Because
ATM kinase phosphorylates p53 on serine 15 (30
, 31)
, a
p53-S15 antibody that specifically recognizes p53 with phosphorylated
serine 15 was used to examine the phosphorylation status of
arsenite-accumulated p53. As shown in Fig. 6
, p53 that accumulated in arsenite-treated and X-ray-irradiated HFW
cells strongly reacted to the p53-S15 antibody, whereas p53 in
ALLN-treated and UV-irradiated HFW cells was much less reactive to the
antibody. These results demonstrate that arsenite, similar to X-ray,
induces phosphorylation of p53 on serine 15 but ALLN and UV do not.
Accordingly, arsenite mimics X-ray in causing DNA strand breaks and
activating ATM kinase, which phosphorylates p53 on serine 15 but
follows different kinetics to produce these DNA strand breaks and p53
accumulation.

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Fig. 5. A, effects of wortmannin on p53
accumulation in arsenite-treated HFW cells. HFW cells were treated with
020 µM wortmannin alone or in combination with 5
µM arsenite for 6 h. Cells were then harvested for
immunoblot analysis of p53 and actin. The actin levels were used as the
internal control. B, effects of wortmannin on p53
accumulation by arsenite, UV, ALLN, and X-ray. HFW cells were treated
singly with 5 µM arsenite, 20 J/m2 UV, 50
µM ALLN, or 5 Gy X-ray, respectively, or in combination
with the individual agent and 10 µM wortmannin. After a
6-h treatment, the cellular levels of p53, MDM-2, and actin were
examined by immunoblot analysis as described in "Materials and
Methods."
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Fig. 6. p53 phosphorylation on serine 15 of HFW cells treated with
arsenite, UV, ALLN, or X-ray. HFW were treated as indicated for 6 h. p53 was immunoprecipitated with a monoclonal p53 antibody (DO-1) as
described in "Materials and Methods." The immunocomplex was then
analyzed by immunoblot with a polyclonal p53 antibody (FL-393; p53,
upper panel) and with an antibody specific to the
phosphorylated serine 15 of p53 (p53-S15, lower
panel).
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No Arsenite-induced p53 Accumulation in ATM(-/-)
Fibroblasts.
To further confirm the requirement of ATM for induction of p53
accumulation in arsenite-treated HFW cells, we examined the effects of
arsenite on p53 accumulation in ATM-/- cells.
GM3395 cells are fibroblasts derived from an ataxia telangiectasia
patient in which both alleles of the ataxia telangiectasia gene are
mutated (atm-/-) and extremely sensitive
to X-ray-irradiation (44)
.
GM3398(atm+/?) cells, derived from the healthy
brother of the same ataxia telangiectasia patient, were included for
comparison. The results shown in Fig. 7, A
and B, demonstrate that neither arsenite nor
X-ray irradiation were able to induce p53 accumulation in
GM3395(atm-/-) cells, whereas the same
treatment induced significant p53 accumulation in
GM3398(atm+/?) cells. Because a different pathway
is involved in UV irradiation-induced p53 accumulation
(45)
, p53 accumulation was also examined in
UV-irradiated-GM3395 cells. UV irradiation expectedly and significantly
enhanced p53 accumulation in GM3395(atm-/-)
cells (Fig. 7C)
.

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Fig. 7. Effects of arsenite, X-ray, and UV on the induction of
p53 accumulation in GM3395 and GM3398. GM3395(atm-/-) and
GM3398(atm+/?) were treated with 010 µM
arsenite (A) or irradiated with 05 Gy X-ray
(B). GM3395(atm-/-) were irradiated with
040 J/m2 UV (C). Six h later, p53 levels
were examined by immunoblot with the p53 antibody (DO-1) as described
in "Materials and Methods."
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Induction of Cell Death and Cell Cycle Arrest by Arsenite.
Induction of p53 accumulation often leads to cell cycle arrest and/or
apoptosis. It is very difficult to induce apoptosis in HFW cells. By
colony-forming assay, treatment of HFW cells with 5 µM
arsenite for 24 h resulted in a 25% survival rate
(12)
; however, no apoptosis was observed immediately after
treatment. Even 24 h after arsenite was withdrawn from the medium,
the incidence of nucleus-fragmented cells, a manifestation of
apoptosis, was 1.2 ± 0.3% (average ± SD from four independent experiments). These results indicated that
arsenite-treated HFW cells did not die through apoptosis.
To examine the effect of arsenite on cell cycle progression, HFW cells
were first pulse-labeled with 20 µM BrdUrd for 30 min and
then chased for 024 h in the presence or absence of 5
µM arsenite. The levels of BrdUrd were flow
cytometrically detected after immunostaining with FITC-conjugated
anti-BrdUrd antibodies, and cell cycle stages G1,
S, and G2-M were concurrently analyzed by
staining the cells with PI. Because the cell population with or without
FITC could be easily distinguished and gated by the analysis software
of FACStar, we could chase the effects of arsenite on the cell cycle
progression of two cell populations with (S-phase cells) or without
(non-S-phase cells) BrdUrd labeling. In untreated cultures, we observed
a rapid decline of BrdUrd-labeled S-phase cells (Fig. 8B)
, subsequently followed by an increase of BrdUrd-labeled
G2-M cells (Fig. 8C)
and
G1 cells (Fig. 8A)
. A reappearance of
BrdUrd-labeled S-phase cells occurred at 16 h after BrdUrd pulse
labeling (Fig. 8B)
, indicating that untreated cells normally
and actively underwent their cell cycle. In arsenite-treated culture,
BrdUrd-labeled S-phase cells declined as did untreated cells but at a
slower rate (delay for at least 7 h; Fig. 8B
). However,
the G2-M cells continued to accumulate during
arsenite treatment, indicating a G2-M arrest.
Furthermore, the appearance of BrdUrd-labeled G1
cells was first observed after a 16-h chase, at least 8 h later
than in untreated cells (Fig. 8A)
. These results support
that arsenite treatment results in S-phase retardation and
G2-M arrest.

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Fig. 8. Effects of arsenite on cell cycle distribution. HFW cells,
after being pulse-labeled with 20 µM BrdUrd for 30 min,
were untreated (open symbols) or treated (solid
symbol) with 5 µM arsenite for 24 h. At the
times indicated, HFW cells were harvested, fixed, and incubated with
FITC-conjugated anti-BrdUrd antibodies. Nuclear DNA was counterstained
with PI. The intensities of FITC and PI in individual cells were
measured with FACStar as described in "Materials and Methods."
Cells were gated into two parts, the BrdUrd-incorporated HFW
(FITC+) and the BrdUrd-nonincorporated HFW
(FITC-), and separately subjected to cell cycle phase
analysis.
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The kinetics of the increase in non-BrdUrd-labeled S phase in
arsenite-treated HFW cells were similar to those of untreated cells
(Fig. 8E)
, indicating that arsenite did not affect the
progression of non-BrdUrd-labeled G1 cells to
S-phase. However, the decline of non-BrdUrd-labeled
G2-M phase cells was apparently slower in
arsenite-treated cells than in untreated cells (Fig. 8F)
.
These results indicate that arsenite treatment immediately affects the
progression of G2-M cells. The delay of
G2-M progression apparently results in a decline
of non-BrdUrd-labeled G1 phase cells because of a
decrease in cell division (Fig. 8D)
.
 |
DISCUSSION
|
|---|
In the present study, using comet assay, BrdUrd labeling, and flow
cytometry, we found that arsenite induces DNA strand breaks and
G2-M arrest. Concomitantly with DNA strand
breaks, we observed p53 accumulation in HFW cells. Our results also
showed that arsenite- and X-ray-induced p53 accumulation was inhibited
by wortmannin, an inhibitor of the PI3-K family. In contrast, UV- or
ALLN-induced p53 accumulation was insensitive to the inhibitory effects
of wortmannin. We further confirmed that arsenite- and X-ray-induced
p53 is phosphorylated at serine 15. Furthermore, both arsenite and
X-ray irradiation, but not UV irradiation, failed to induce p53
accumulation in ATM(-/-) fibroblasts, GM3395.
These results support that arsenite causes DNA strand breaks in HFW
cells and mimics X-ray irradiation to induce p53 phosphorylation and
accumulation through an ATM-dependent pathway.
Nevertheless, arsenite and X-ray irradiation obviously follow different
kinetics in terms of DNA strand break induction and p53 accumulation.
In general, IR immediately causes DNA strand breaks and hence induces
early and transient accumulation of p53 to nuclei (46)
.
Alternatively, arsenite is gradually taken up by cells. The induction
of DNA strand breaks and p53 accumulation by arsenite apparently
follows a time-dependent course. The slow kinetics of DNA strand breaks
and p53 accumulation are also manifested by a slow transport of p53 to
nuclei in arsenite-treated cultures. Although arsenite showed different
kinetics of DNA strand break induction and p53 accumulation from those
of X-ray irradiation, other evidence indicated that arsenite and X-ray
treatment of HFW cells share a similar signaling pathway for p53
accumulation, i.e., an ATM-dependent pathway. Our present
results showing that p53 nuclear-accumulated cells are distinguishable
from cyclin B-positive cells were similar to a previous report
(47)
that irradiation induces p53 nuclear accumulation in
human fibroblasts, predominantly during the G1
phase and at the beginning of the S-phase of the cell cycle. Whether
these cells lost their proliferation activity is an interesting
question that remains to be answered.
Phosphorylation of p53 is a pivotal modification that regulates p53
stability and transactivation activities (48)
. Numerous
studies have demonstrated that phosphorylation at serine 15 is required
for p53 protein stabilization in response to DNA damage (32
, 33)
. Furthermore, recent reports have also shown that
phosphorylation of serine 15 of p53 is possibly involved in enhancing
the p53s transactivation activities (49)
. At least two
distinct signal transduction pathways can lead to p53 activation. One
of these pathways involves ATM, the product of the gene mutated in
patients with the cancer-predisposing disorder ataxia telangiectasia
(50)
. ATM is a member of the PI3-K-related protein kinase
family because its COOH terminus shows high similarities to the
catalytic domain of PI3-K (51)
. The ATM pathway is
activated upon exposure to IR and chemical compounds that induce DNA
strand breaks (52)
. The other pathway, the ATM-independent
pathway, is activated upon exposure to UV irradiation and cisplatin,
which produce bulky DNA lesions and induce DNA strand breaks during
repair processes (28
, 53)
. Our present results demonstrate
that the ATM-dependent pathway is involved in arsenite-induced p53
accumulation, supporting that arsenite exposure is indeed a genotoxic
stress.
In addition to p53, a variety of targets have been identified for ATM
catalytic activity, such as c-Abl, I
B, Chk2, and replication protein
A (52)
, which are involved in ATM-mediated multiple
responses to genotoxic stress including stress gene expression, DNA
repair, and activation of cell cycle checkpoints (54
, 55)
.
ATM thus serves a surveillance role in maintaining genomic integrity.
Elucidating the mode of transmission of ATM-mediated responses to
arsenite-induced stress may help us better understand arsenite
carcinogenesis and to develop chemopreventive strategies.
In the present study, arsenite treatment induced immediate
G2-M arrest. In response to DNA damages, p53
transcriptionally activates p21, the inhibitor of cyclin-dependent
kinases, and leads to G1 and
G2 arrest (56)
. Disruption of either
the p53 or p21 gene abrogates the
G2 arrest induced by IR (57)
.
Arsenite-induced G2-M arrest might be a
consequence mediated by p53-dependent p21 induction. However, the
involvement of p21 in G2-M arrest is
controversial (58)
. A strong p53-dependent induction of
the 14-3-3
gene was observed in IR-induced
G2 arrest cells (59)
. The mammalian
cell cycle checkpoint protein kinase Chk-2 is phosphorylated and
activated in response to DNA damages in an ATM-dependent manner
(55)
. Activated Chk-2 phosphorylates Cdc25C on serine 216.
This phosphorylation promotes the binding of 14-3-3
to
Cdc25C, thereby negatively regulating Cdc25C phosphatase activities and
hence preventing the onset of mitosis, which results in
G2 arrest (60
, 61)
. Because both
14-3-3
and Chk are downstream transducers of the
ATM-dependent DNA damage checkpoint pathway, their involvement in
arsenite-induced G2-M arrest requires further
investigation.
It has been reported that fibroblasts with wild-type p53 fail to enter
into mitosis when DNA synthesis is blocked (62)
. The
delayed progression of S-phase HFW cells probably resulted from
retarded DNA polymerization in the presence of arsenite-induced DNA
damages. Numerous reports have shown that ATM is also involved in the
activation of S-phase checkpoints, such as the down-regulation of
cyclinA/Cdk2 activity (63)
and interference with
replication protein A (64)
, and consequently reduces the
rate of DNA synthesis.
Arsenite induces G2-M arrest but does not trigger
apoptosis in HFW cells. According to colony-forming assay, 75% of HFW
cells lost their proliferation ability after treatment with 5
µM arsenite for 24 h (12)
, indicating
that arsenite-induced injury eventually kills HFW cells. Nevertheless,
we have demonstrated previously that arsenite at the same dose used in
this study induces aneuploidy and other cytogenetic alterations in HFW
colonies that survived (7
, 12)
. Because the roles of p53
in triggering apoptosis are complex and not fully understood, the
reason for the lack of apoptosis in arsenite-treated HFW cells is
unclear. Arsenite is known to exert at least some of its toxic effects
through interaction with sulfhydryl groups, and the nonprotein
sulfhydryl glutathione appears to play an important role in the
detoxification of arsenite (65)
. Disturbances in
intracellular calcium homeostasis is also involved in arsenite-induced
cytotoxicity (66)
. A cathepsin-like protease activity may
also be involved in the killing effects of arsenite (67)
.
These studies and speculation suggest that arsenite may induce other
cellular injuries besides DNA damage to cause cell death.
Numerous studies have shown that p53 activation is signaled via
distinct transduction pathways in response to different stresses and
results in various cellular responses (28)
. Arsenite has
been reported to induce DNA damage (19, 20, 21)
, oxidative
stress (68
, 69)
, oncogene expression
(70, 71, 72)
, and gene amplification (73)
. In the
present study, using a highly sensitive comet assay, we confirmed that
arsenite treatment results in DNA strand breaks in HFW cells. At the
same dose used in this study, we demonstrated previously that arsenite
not only induces chromosome aberrations and micronuclei but also
induces aneuploidy in HFW cells that survived (7
, 12)
. DNA
strand breaks are potential lesions that can be converted into such
cytogenetic alterations. Although arsenite-induced oxidative stress is
thought to play a crucial role in the induction of DNA strand breaks
(20
, 74)
, the exact mechanism of arsenite-induced DNA
strand breaks and the roles of ATM pathway activation warrant our
further concern.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
|
|---|
We thank Douglas Platt for carefully reading the
manuscript.
 |
FOOTNOTES
|
|---|
The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore be hereby marked advertisement in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
1 This work was supported by Academia Sinica and a
grant from the National Science Council, Republic of China. 
2 To whom requests for reprints should be
addressed, at Institute of Biomedical Sciences, Academia Sinica, Taipei
115, Taiwan, Republic of China. Phone: 886-2-7899014; Fax:
886-2-7825573; E-mail: bmtcl{at}ibms.sinica.edu.tw 
3 The abbreviations used are: PI3-K,
phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase; PI, propidium iodide; ATM, ataxia
telangiectasia mutated; ATR, ataxia telangiectasia-related kinase; HFW,
human fibroblast; MDM-2, human homologue of murine double minute-2;
BrdUrd, 5-bromo-2'-deoxyuridine; ALLN,
N-acetyl-Leu-Leu-norleucinal; IR, ionizing radiation. 
Received 4/12/00.
Accepted 9/20/00.
 |
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J. S. Sidhu, R. A. Ponce, M. A. Vredevoogd, X. Yu, E. Gribble, S.-W. Hong, E. Schneider, and E. M. Faustman
Cell Cycle Inhibition by Sodium Arsenite in Primary Embryonic Rat Midbrain Neuroepithelial Cells
Toxicol. Sci.,
February 1, 2006;
89(2):
475 - 484.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
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J.-P. Li, J.-C. Lin, and J.-L. Yang
ERK Activation in Arsenite-Treated G1-Enriched CL3 Cells Contributes to Survival, DNA Repair Inhibition, and Micronucleus Formation
Toxicol. Sci.,
January 1, 2006;
89(1):
164 - 172.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
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