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Tumor Biology |
Section of Cancer Biology, Radiation Oncology Center, Mallinckrodt Institute of Radiology, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri 63108 [C. M. B., J. E. L., S. J. W., L. M. R., S. K., D. G.], and Free Radical and Radiation Biology Program, Department of Radiology, B180 Medical Laboratories, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa 52242 [D. R. S.]
| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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Previous investigations into the mechanisms by which IR4 , heat, and other presumptive oxidative stresses affect cells in vitro have yielded multiple complex molecular pathways to explain the cellular response to these insults (2 , 5, 6, 7, 8) . The AP-1 transcription factor complex responds to heat shock (8) as well as to a variety of chemical stressors (9, 10, 11) . The c-Fos and c-Jun immediate early gene transcriptional regulatory families, along with other proteins, comprise the mammalian transcription factor AP-1 (11 , 12) . These proteins form an array of heterodimeric protein complexes that bind to specific cis-acting DNA regulatory elements, known as AP-1 sites, to activate the expression of downstream target genes (12, 13, 14, 15) . Further work into the mechanism by which this pathway is triggered has shown that AP-1 is induced by the physical interaction of thioredoxin with the redox-sensitive signaling protein Ref-1 (16) . Analysis of the effects of hyperthermia on the AP-1 complex has demonstrated that cellular stress from heat shock activates the AP-1 complex via redox-sensitive changes in Ref-1 (8) , suggesting that the AP-1 complex may be inducing the expression of downstream genes that are responding to oxidative stress (8 , 17) . In addition, exposure of cells to H2O2, a generalized oxidative stress, has also been shown to activate AP-1 DNA binding and protein expression (18, 19, 20) . Taken together, this suggests that the AP-1 transcription complex has been consistently linked to cellular responses to oxidative stress.
To further evaluate the relationship of AP-1 activity to the phenotype demonstrated by oxidative stress-resistant cells, the previously characterized OC-14 H2O2-resistant Chinese hamster fibroblast cell line was chosen (6 , 17 , 21 , 22) . The OC-14 cell line was selected from the parental HA-1 cell line by continuous exposure to progressively increasing concentrations of H2O2. In addition to a marked resistance to H2O2, OC-14 cells are known to have significantly augmented cellular antioxidant defenses, including increased glutathione content as well as enhanced catalase, superoxide dismutase, and glutathione peroxidase activities (22) . In addition, these cells have been reported to demonstrate increases in the expression of c-jun mRNA, but the significance of this to AP-1 DNA-binding activity and the oxidative stress-resistant phenotype has not been explored (22) .
NSAIDs comprise a class of medication used to alleviate cases of pain and inflammation, often through the inhibition cyclooxygenase activity (23
, 24)
. Although frequently used as anti-inflammatory agents, NSAIDs are being used with greater regularity for additional, and often novel, uses (23
, 25
, 26)
. In addition to their cyclooxygenase-inhibitory properties, investigations relating NSAIDs to cellular responses to environmental stress have conclusively demonstrated that drug pretreatment has observable effects on cellular sensitivity to certain cytotoxic insults (23
, 26, 27, 28, 29)
. For example, NSAIDs have been shown to increase the responsiveness of murine tumors to IR (30)
and to potentiate heat-induced radiosensitization in mouse fibrosarcomas in vivo (26)
. Nuclear transcription factors and other biochemical events are also affected, as NSAIDs have been shown to inhibit immediate early response genes, such as nuclear factor-
B (24
, 25
, 27)
. Additionally, Dong et al. (24)
have shown inhibition of AP-1 activity after treatment with the NSAID, sodium salicylate. Indomethacin is another NSAID which will often relieve symptoms at lower relative doses than many other such drugs, suggesting that further study into its role in the cellular response to stress is warranted.
In the current study, resistance of OC-14 cells to H2O2, cisplatin, and heat-induced radiosensitization, relative to the parental HA-1 cells was found to correlate with elevated constitutive AP-1 DNA-binding activity and overexpression of the affiliated proteins comprising the AP-1 transcription factor complex. Indomethacin administered at anticarcinogenic doses was found to down-regulate AP-1 activity in both HA-1 and OC-14 cells, as is evidenced by the inhibition of both basal and inducible AP-1 DNA binding. Concomitant with this down-regulation was a deceased resistance of OC-14 cells to the cytotoxic effects of hyperthermia, H2O2, and cisplatin. These results suggest that NSAIDs could be used to reverse cellular resistance to cancer therapeutic agents via the inhibition of AP-1 transcription factor activity and, as such, may represent a useful adjuvant to cancer therapy protocols.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Stock solutions of the NSAID indomethacin (50 mM; Sigma, St. Louis, MO) were prepared in 100% ethanol and added to the growth medium at 100400 µM. Sham controls treated with ethanol alone were included in all experiments to control for the vehicle used to deliver the indomethacin. Cells were heated by submersing parafilm-sealed plates in a prewarmed, circulating water bath at 43 ± 0.1°C for intervals of 30 or 60 min, returned to 37°C for 1 h, and exposed to IR using a Pantak (Branford, CT) PMC1000 X-ray generator operated at 220 kV and 10 mA that includes an exposure chamber at 37°C in 5% CO2 atmosphere. Control nonirradiated cells were placed into a similar environmentally controlled chamber next to the X-ray machine.
H2O2 stock solutions were made in sterile PBS, and their molar concentrations were determined by a spectrophotometric method previously described (6) . Doses of H2O2 were delivered directly to the growth medium. Likewise, cisplatin (Sigma) stock solutions (0.25% w/v) were made in sterile H2O immediately prior to treatment of cells to prevent chemical hydration and potency degradation. Cells were treated with cisplatin added directly to the growth media. After addition of indomethacin, H2O2, and/or cisplatin to the growth media, dishes of treated cells were returned to a 37°C incubator for 1 h. Doses of H2O2 and cisplatin were chosen to allow for the calculation of a DMF at 10% or 50% isosurvival (6 , 21) , where DMF(10, 50) = (Dose to reach 10% (or 50%) survival in OC-14)/(Dose to reach 10% (or 50%) survival in HA-1).
Clonogenic Cell Survival Assays.
HA-1 and OC-14 cells were plated at densities of 3.0 x 105 and 3.5 x 105 cells, respectively, per 100-mm tissue culture dish, grown exponentially for 2 days, pretreated with indomethacin (100400 µM), incubated at 37°C for 1 h, and then treated with chemical stressors (e.g., H2O2 or cisplatin) or other environmental stressing conditions (e.g., heat shock or IR). At 1 h after exposure, cells were trypsinized and counted using a Coulter Counter (Beckman Coulter, Fullerton, CA). Dilutions of the treated cells were prepared, and duplicate 60-mm tissue culture dishes were seeded with 20020,000 cells each, depending on the severity of the challenge treatment. Colonies were allowed to form in an undisturbed, humidified, 37°C/5% CO2 environment for 710 days, fixed with 70% ethanol, stained with Coomassie Blue, and counted under a dissection microscope.
Only those plates containing 25250 colonies were computed as statistically relevant; only those colonies containing at least 50 cells were considered to be viable survivors. Surviving fractions from the treated test cultures were normalized to sham-treated controls and plotted as a function of dose on a log/linear plot. TERs were calculated as previously described (31 , 32) to determine the degree of heat-induced radiosensitization demonstrated by OC-14 cells relative to HA-1.
Preparation of Whole-Cell Protein Extracts and Subcellular Fractions.
Protein extracts from whole cells and nuclear and cytoplasmic subcellular fractions were prepared for analysis via a method slightly modified from Dignam (33)
and described by Curry et al. (2)
. Subcellular protein extracts were obtained from freshly trypsinized cells used for clonogenic cell survival by pipetting the remaining volume of the most concentrated dilution of treated cells (after plating dilutions had been made) into 15-ml centrifuge tubes and pelleting at 800 rpm for 5 min at 4°C. Following centrifugation, the pellet was resuspended and washed in 10 ml of 4°C PBS, followed by another 4°C centrifugation at 800 rpm for 5 min. This washing process was performed a second time, followed by resuspension of the pellet in PBS/2.5 mM EDTA and transfer of the cells into 1.5-ml microfuge tubes. From this point, the protocol for obtaining subcellular protein fractions, as previously described, was followed (2)
.
After preparation of whole-cell extracts or subcellular fractions, protein quantifications within each sample were performed via Bradford analysis (Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA) on a Beckman (Fullerton, CA) DU-640 spectrophotometer to ensure equal protein loading. All samples were thawed on ice and stored at -80°C to minimize protein denaturation.
EMSAs.
Gel EMSAs were performed as described elsewhere (2
, 8)
. Equal protein amounts (1020 µg/sample) from whole-cell or subcellular extracts were incubated with a 10% poly(dI:dC) solution on ice for 15 min. After this incubation, a 32P-labeled oligonucleotide containing either an nuclear factor-
B or AP-1-specific binding domain (Promega, Madison, WI) was added to each sample and they were incubated at 25°C for 30 min. A loading dye consisting of 5x Tris-boric acid-EDTA solution (Bio-Rad), glycerol, and bromphenol blue was added, and the samples were loaded and electrophoresed on native 4.5% polyacrylamide gel. Gels were dried, exposed to a phosphorimaging screen overnight and analyzed on a Storm 840 PhosphorImager (Molecular Dynamics, Sunnyvale, CA) using Image Quant software for quantification.
Polyacrylamide-SDS Gel Electrophoresis and Western Blot Assays.
Equal amounts of protein, ranging from 10 to 30 µg/sample, were mixed with Laemmli lysis buffer and boiled for 5 min. Protein samples were then separated on a denaturing polyacrylamide-SDS gel and transferred to a nitrocellulose membrane using a semidry transfer apparatus (Owl Scientific, Inc., Portsmouth, NH). The membrane was blocked for 1 h in a 5% milk/PBS-T and was hybridized overnight at room temperature with a polyclonal antibody against c-Fos or c-Jun (Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Santa Cruz, CA), each diluted 1:1000 in 2.5% milk in PBS-T. The membrane was washed three times for 15 min each in PBS-T, and then incubated for 1 h at room temperature with an antirabbit IgG-horseradish peroxidase secondary antibody (Santa Cruz Biotechnology) diluted 1:2000 in 2.5% milk in PBS-T. The membrane was again washed three times for 15 min each in PBS-T and then analyzed via an enhanced chemiluminescence method (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech, Newark, NJ) per the manufacturers instructions. The assay was resolved on radiographic film (Eastman Kodak, Rochester, NY).
| Results |
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An investigation into the possible role of the AP-1 transcription factor was initiated based on previous observations that heat shock activates the AP-1 complex via a redox-sensitive signaling protein (8) , suggesting that the AP-1 complex may induce the expression of downstream genes that modify thermal cytotoxicity. The hypothesis that resistance to heat-induced radiosensitization demonstrated by OC-14 cells could be attributable to constitutive activation or superinduction of the AP-1 complex was tested.
The cellular extracts shown in Fig. 1B
were used to determine the constitutive and inducible levels of AP-1 DNA-binding activity in HA-1 and OC-14 cells (Fig. 1C)
. EMSAs demonstrated a 10-fold increase in constitutive AP-1 DNA-binding activity in untreated OC-14 cells when compared to untreated HA-1 cells (Fig. 1C
, Lane 9 versus 11). No change in AP-1 DNA-binding activity was noted in either cell line at this time point when the cells were irradiated (Fig. 1C
, Lane 9 versus 10 and 11 versus 12). In addition, heat shock failed to further induce AP-1 DNA-binding activity in OC-14 cells, whereas a 3-fold increase in AP-1 binding was observed in HA-1 cells following heating (data not shown). These experiments demonstrate that heat- and H2O2-resistant OC-14 cells have markedly elevated constitutive AP-1 DNA-binding activity relative to the parental HA-1 cell line. These results suggest that increased AP-1 activity may contribute to the oxidative stress-resistant phenotype demonstrated by OC-14 cells.
Indomethacin Inhibits Increased AP-1 DNA Binding in OC-14 Cells.
As previously discussed, indomethacin and other NSAIDs have been shown to have a variety of molecular consequences in multiple cell types, including inhibition of AP-1 and other transcription factor activity (24
, 27)
. For this reason, pretreatment of OC-14 cells with indomethacin was hypothesized to inhibit the activation of AP-1 DNA-binding activity. To test this concept, OC-14 cells were exposed to increasing concentrations of indomethacin and harvested at 1 or 2 h after exposure. As previously demonstrated (Fig. 1C)
, AP-1 DNA-binding activity was constitutively increased in OC-14 cells (Fig. 2A
, Lane 1) as compared to HA-1 cells (Lane 2). In OC-14 cells treated with 100, 200, or 300 µM indomethacin, a dose-dependent decrease in basal AP-1 DNA binding was observed at 1 h (Fig. 2A
, Lanes 35) and at 2 h (Lanes 6 and 7). Specifically, at 200 µM the AP-1 DNA-binding activity is 2-fold greater than HA-1 cells (lanes 4 and 6 versus 2) and at 300 µM the AP-1 DNA-binding activity is identical to HA-1 cells (Lanes 5 and 7 versus 2). These results demonstrate that exposure of OC-14 cells to indomethacin inhibits constitutive AP-1 DNA binding activity in a dose-dependent manner.
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Indomethacin Inhibits the Resistance of OC-14 Cells to Heat-induced Radiosensitization.
The results presented above demonstrate that H2O2-resistant OC-14 cells exhibit resistance to a variety of cytotoxic agents and exhibit a marked increase in AP-1 DNA binding activity that can be inhibited by treatment with indomethacin. Interestingly, these cytotoxic agents (H2O2, cisplatin, and heat-induced radiosensitization) have all been suggested to cause oxidative stress (6
, 17
, 21) . Furthermore, it is well documented that agents that induce oxidative stress also induce AP-1 DNA binding and transcriptional activity (8, 9, 10
, 15
, 16)
. Thus, experiments using indomethacin were performed to determine whether resistance of OC-14 cells to these agents was in part mediated by increased AP-1 activity.
OC-14 cells were treated with indomethacin (100 or 250 µM) for 1 h before and during heat shock and subsequent IR (Fig. 3B)
. These concentrations were chosen because 100 µM resulted in a roughly 50% decrease in AP-1 DNA-binding activity (Fig. 2A
, Lane 1 versus 3) and 250 µM was the lowest concentration of indomethacin that appeared to completely inhibit the constitutive increase in OC-14 AP-1 DNA-binding activity, relative to HA-1 (data not shown). Clonogenic survival experiments demonstrated that pretreatment of OC-14 cells with indomethacin for 1 h before and during heat shock and IR resulted in a dose-dependent decrease in survival at 100 and 250 µM indomethacin (Fig. 3B)
. Similar results were obtained with HA-1 cells (Fig. 3A)
, although the effect of indomethacin was very modest relative to that seen in OC-14 cells (Fig. 3B)
. No change in survival was observed with indomethacin alone or with indomethacin and IR (data not shown). The results of these experiments show that indomethacin inhibits resistance of OC-14 cells to the cytotoxicity of heat-induced radiosensitization (relative to HA-1) and suggests that the mechanism may involve the inhibition of constitutive increases in AP-1 DNA-binding activity demonstrated by these cells.
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| DISCUSSION |
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Oxidative stress-resistant OC-14 cells (relative to parental HA-1 cells) exhibit remarkable constitutive increases in AP-1 DNA-binding activity and overexpression of the affiliated proteins of the AP-1 transcription factor complex (Figs. 1
and 2
) as well as resistance to hyperthermia (17)
, cisplatin (21)
, heat-induced radiosensitization (Fig. 1)
, and H2O2 (6)
. Indomethacin has now been shown to inhibit both basal and inducible AP-1 DNA-binding activity in OC-14 cells as well as inhibit the resistance of OC-14 cells to the cytotoxic effects of heat-induced radiosensitization, cisplatin, and H2O2 (Figs. 2
3
4
5)
, relative to HA-1. The results of these experiments strongly suggest that increased AP-1 DNA-binding activity and the resultant downstream target genes activated by this transcription complex play a significant role in the multimodality-resistant phenotype demonstrated by the oxidative stress-resistant OC-14 cell line.
Relative to HA-1, H2O2-resistant OC-14 cells contain increased levels of several cellular antioxidants, including catalase, CuZn superoxide dismutase, heme oxygenase, total and reduced glutathione, glutathione S-transferase activity, and glutathione peroxidase activity (6 , 17 , 21 , 22 , 40 , 41) . These cellular antioxidants represent some of the major detoxification pathways that regulate intracellular oxidation/reduction status and cellular responses to oxidative stress. The precise mechanism(s) responsible for the broad spectrum of cellular antioxidant overexpression seen in OC-14 cells is currently not well understood, but thought to involve some type of coordinate regulation. Interestingly, the upstream regulatory elements for several of the aforementioned genes that regulate intracellular oxidation/reduction status contain AP-1 enhancer elements that are thought to play central roles in modulating the gene expression of cellular antioxidants (8 , 9 , 15 , 22 , 42) . These previous results combined with the results presented in the current report support the hypothesis that the AP-1 complex contributes to the coordinate regulation of cellular oxidative stress responses that may contribute to the multimodality resistance demonstrated by tumors treated with systemic cytotoxic agents thought to induce oxidative stress. This hypothesis also fits well with the growing idea that transcription factors play a central role in the cellular response to cytotoxic agents, and, in selected tumors, immediate early gene overexpression may be predictive of clinical outcome (43 , 44) .
The mechanism of the effect of indomethacin on the regulation of the AP-1 complex in this work remains unknown. In this regard, it is interesting to speculate that indomethacin may increase the intracellular oxidative stress level above the threshold that the OC-14 antioxidant pathways can detoxify. Thus, when combined with a cytotoxic agent that also induces oxidative stress, there may be an increase in cell killing. Although this idea is speculative, recently it has been suggested that indomethacin increases intracellular oxidative stress as shown by others (45 , 46) and our group.5
In summary, we have used indomethacin to inhibit the increased AP-1 DNA binding activity demonstrated by oxidative stress-resistant OC-14 cells exposed to heat-induced radiosensitization, H2O2, and cisplatin. In addition, the doses of indomethacin required to inhibit AP-1 DNA-binding activity also inhibited the resistance of OC-14 cells to the cytotoxicity of heat-induced radiosensitization, H2O2, and cisplatin. The results of these experiments suggest that indomethacin, and possibly other NSAIDs at intermediate concentrations, may represent novel agent(s) that can sensitize resistant tumor cells to therapeutic modalities via the inhibition of AP-1 activity. Taken together with previous investigations (8 , 47 , 48) , these results also support the concept that a common central pathway mediating cellular responses to heat shock or other types of environmental or metabolic oxidative stress may involve redox-sensitive signaling pathways leading to AP-1 activation.
| FOOTNOTES |
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1 Supported by grants from the NIH (1 K08 CA72602-01 and PO1 CA75556) and the American Cancer Society (ACS-IRG-58-010-43 and ACS RPG-00-292-01-TBE), to D. G. D. R. S. was supported by a grant from the NIH (R01 HL51469). ![]()
2 C. M. B. and J. E. L. contributed equally to this manuscript. ![]()
3 To whom requests for reprints should be addressed, at Section of Cancer Biology, Radiation Oncology Center, Mallinckrodt Institute of Radiology, Washington University School of Medicine, 4511 Forest Park Boulevard, Suite 402A, St. Louis, MO 63108. Phone: (314) 362-9781; Fax: (314) 362-9790; E-mail. davidg{at}radonc.wustl.edu ![]()
4 Thre abbreviations used are: IR, ionizing radiation; AP-1, activator protein 1; H2O2, hydrogen peroxide; Ref-1, redox factor 1; NSAID, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug; DMF, dose modification factor; TER, thermal enhancement ratio; EMSA, electrophoretic mobility shift assay; PBS-T, PBS with 0.05% Tween 20; HSF, heat shock factor. ![]()
5 C. M. Bradbury and D. Gius, manuscript in preparation. ![]()
Received 9/21/00. Accepted 2/19/01.
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