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-Induced Neutrophil Apoptosis by Crystals of Calcium Pyrophosphate Dihydrate Is Mediated by the Extracellular Signal-Regulated Kinase and Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinase/Akt Pathways Up-Stream of Caspase 31



*
Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, and
Department of Medicine, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada; and
Chemokine Therapeutics Corporation, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
| Abstract |
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associated
apoptosis of human neutrophils by crystals of calcium pyrophosphate
dihydrate (CPPD) (25 mg/ml) was investigated. We monitored the
activities of the p44 extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1 (ERK1)
and p42 ERK2 mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinases and
phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3-K)-regulated protein kinase B (Akt)
in neutrophils incubated with TNF-
and CPPD crystals, separately and
in combination, in parallel with the endogenous caspase 3 activity and
DNA fragmentation. CPPD crystals were observed to induce a robust and
transient activation of ERK1, ERK2, and Akt, whereas TNF-
produced
only a modest and delayed activation of Akt. In the presence of
TNF-
, Akt activity was enhanced, and CPPD crystal-induced activation
of ERK1 and ERK2 was more sustained than with CPPD crystals alone, but
TNF-
itself reduced the basal phosphotransferase activities of these
MAP kinases. Preincubation with the MAP kinase kinase (MEK1) inhibitors
PD98059 (20 ng/ml) and U0126 (250 nM), or the PI3-K inhibitors
wortmannin (100 nM) and LY294002 (50 µM) repressed the activation of
ERK1, ERK2, and Akt in association with CPPD crystal incubation, in the
absence or presence of TNF-
. Furthermore, the inhibition of the
Mek1/Mek2
ERK1/ERK2 or PI3-K/Akt pathways reversed CPPD
crystal-associated suppression of TNF-
-induced caspase 3 activation
and neutrophil apoptosis. Together, these results indicate that CPPD
crystals function to induce acute inflammatory responses through
ERK1/ERK2 and PI3-K/Akt-mediated stimulation of neutrophil activation
and repression of apoptosis. | Introduction |
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During the resolution of inflammation, effete neutrophils are removed
from inflammatory sites by a process of programmed cell death known as
apoptosis, leading to their recognition and phagocytosis by macrophages
(5). Any significant delay in neutrophil apoptosis can
lead to excessive accumulation and damage to surrounding tissue
(6). Although apoptosis is an intrinsic process, numerous
inflammatory mediators such as LPS, GM-CSF, fMLP, or immune complexes
(7, 8), and a variety of cytokines such as IL-1 and IL-6
(9, 10), are able to delay apoptosis. Although TNF-
has
been shown to induce extensive apoptosis in neutrophils within 3 h
(11, 12, 13), this cytokine may also inhibit apoptosis in
cells via the early activation of the proinflammatory transcription
factor NF-
B/rel (NF-
B), c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK), or p38
mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase (14, 15, 16). Early
TNF-
-induced transient stimulation of NF-
B, JNK, and p38 is
generally mediated independently of caspase activity
(17).
Intracellular mediators of neutrophil apoptosis are currently under
investigation. The stimulation of the stress-activated kinases
concomitant with the inhibition of the extracellular signal-regulated
kinase 1 (ERK1)/ERK2 MAP kinase pathway has been observed in a number
of cell systems undergoing apoptosis (17, 18). ERK1 and
ERK2 have also been shown to be directly involved in negatively
regulating apoptosis (17, 19). Work done with HeLa cells
demonstrated that the inhibition of ERK1 and ERK2 is implicated in the
activation of the JNK and p38 pathways, resulting in apoptosis
(17). Furthermore, Nolan et al. (19) showed
that LPS-induced activation of ERK inhibited neutrophil apoptosis.
Protein kinase B (Akt) has been reported to negatively regulate
apoptosis in many cell systems (20). Akt is activated in
part by the binding of the phosphatidylinositol 3,4,5-trisphosphate or
phosphatidylinositol 3,4-bisphosphate to its amino-terminal pleckstrin
homology domain, and by direct phosphorylation by the
phosphatidylinositol-dependent kinase-1 (PDK1); PDK1 is also activated
by these phospholipids. Thus, Akt and PDK1 are regulated by
phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3-K), which phosphorylates the
inositol rings of phosphatidylinositol 3,4-bisphosphate and
phosphatidylinositol 3,4,5-trisphosphate at the 3' position (21, 22). Akt is a direct effector of PI3-K-associated cell survival
in vivo (20, 22, 23). Therefore, the ERK1/ERK2 and
PI3-K
PDK1
Akt pathways appear to be involved in the regulation of
the apoptosis signaling cascade.
We have recently demonstrated that opsonized crystals of monosodium
urate monophosphate (MSUM) and CPPD inhibit TNF-
-induced and
spontaneous apoptosis in human neutrophils (24), and that
repression of apoptosis by these microcrystrals is mediated through
inhibition of the proapoptotic cysteine protease, caspase 3. Akahoshi
et al. (25) monitored DNA laddering on agarose gels and
showed that low concentrations of nonopsonized MSUM crystals may
inhibit apoptosis after extended incubations. However, in the same
study, higher concentrations of unopsonized crystals caused cell lysis,
as described by others (26, 27). The regulation of
apoptosis in neutrophils is poorly understood and, to the best of our
knowledge, there have been no reports on the mechanisms of
crystal-associated repression of TNF-
-induced or spontaneous
apoptosis. Because CPPD crystals have been shown to induce ERK1/ERK2
and Akt activation, while repressing TNF-
associated and spontaneous
apoptosis, the objective of this work was to investigate the kinetics
of CPPD crystal-induced activation of these enzymes and determine
whether they mediate CPPD crystal-associated repression of neutrophil
apoptosis. The results demonstrate that CPPD crystals induce a
transient activation of ERK1/ERK2 and Akt in human neutrophils.
Activation of both of these kinases was sustained in neutrophils that
were stimulated with both TNF-
and CPPD crystals vs neutrophils
incubated with TNF-
alone. Repression of either the ERK1/ERK2- or
Akt-dependent pathways with pharmacological inhibitors of these
pathways resulted in the reversal of the CPPD crystal-induced
repression of TNF-
-associated apoptosis.
| Materials and Methods |
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All chemicals were obtained from Sigma (St. Louis, MO) unless stated otherwise.
Preparation and opsonization of crystals
CPPD crystals (triclinic form) were prepared and characterized as previously reported (27). The size distribution of the crystals was as follows: 33% < 10 µm, 58% between 10 and 20 µm and 9% > 20 µm. Plasma-opsonized crystals were used in all studies involving crystal-neutrophil incubations. Opsonization of crystals was conducted using 50% heparinized plasma and HBSS at 37°C for 30 min immediately before experiments. Briefly, 25 mg of CPPD crystals were weighed into 1.5-ml Eppendorf tubes followed by 0.5 ml of 50% fresh human plasma. The tubes were capped and placed in an Eppendorf that is strapped to a 30 rpm shaker at 37°C for long enough to ensure crystals were fully suspended (usually 2 min). The rotator was then stopped and the crystals allowed to "sitting" in the 50% plasma for 30 min. At 10-min intervals, the rack was rotated once to ensure good suspension of the crystals. Tubes were then centrifuged at 1000 x g, and crystals were washed in HBSS and centrifuged.
Neutrophil preparation
Neutrophils were prepared from freshly collected, human, citrated whole blood by dextran sedimentation and Ficoll Paque density centrifugation. Briefly, blood was mixed with enough 5% dextran T500 (Pharmacia LKB Biotechnology, Uppsala, Sweden) in HBSS to give a final concentration of 1%, and allowed to settle for 30 min. Plasma was collected continuously and 5 ml applied to 5 ml of Ficoll Paque (Pharmacia) in 15-ml polypropylene tubes (Corning Glass, Corning, NY). Following centrifugation at 500 x g for 30 min, the neutrophil pellets were washed free of erythrocytes by 15 s of hypotonic shock in distilled water. Neutrophils were resuspended in HBSS, kept on ice, and used for experiments within 4 h. Neutrophil incubation in HBSS has been used in other studies of neutrophil apoptosis (28, 29). Neutrophils prepared under these conditions yielded cell suspensions that contained over 95% neutrophil cell viability (assessed by trypan blue exclusion). To further confirm neutrophil viability, chemiluminescence studies were performed on a cell sample using a cell concentration of 5 x 106 cells/ml in HBSS containing fMLP at 1 µM and cytochalasin B at 0.5 µM in 1.5-ml capped Eppendorf tubes, as described previously (30).
Incubation of neutrophils with crystals and agonists
In all experiments, the final concentrations in 1.5-ml capped
Eppendorf incubation tubes were: neutrophils at 5 x
106 cells/ml, CPPD at 25 mg/ml, TNF-
at 10
ng/ml. Cells were incubated at 37°C with occasional tumbling.
Preincubation conditions were maintained for 15 min before the addition
of another antagonist (as appropriate) for 3.25 h, as indicated in
the figure legend. Stock solutions (1000-fold) of the MEK1 and PI3-K
inhibitors were prepared in DMSO to give the final concentrations
(after addition to the cells): PD98059, 20 ng/ml; U0126, 250 nM;
wortmannin, 100 nM; LY294002, 50 µM; z-Asp-Glu-Val-Asp (DEVD)-fmk
(Calbiochem, La Jolla, CA), 100 µM.
Preparation of cytosolic lysates
Crystals were allowed to sediment under gravity for 30 s, and the cell rich supernatant was collected. Residual cells were further separated from crystals with two successive washings in HBSS and gravity sedimentation. Cells were then centrifuged at 500 x g for 5 min. Cells were harvested from incubations that did not contain crystals by centrifugation at 500 x g for 5 min, and washed once with HBSS. For the caspase 3 assay, cells were resuspended at 5 x 107 cells/ml in hypotonic lysis buffer (25 mM HEPES (pH 7.5), 5 mM MgCl2, 5 mM EDTA, 5 mM DTT, 2 mM PMSF, and 10 µg/ml each of pepstatin A and leupeptin) and subsequently lysed with four successive cycles of freezing in liquid nitrogen and thawing in a 37°C water bath. Cell lysates were centrifuged at 14,000 rpm for 20 min at 4°C, and the supernatant (cytosolic fraction) was collected. A sample was stored at -80°C for total protein concentration determination. Lysates for cytoplasmic histone-associated-DNA fragmentation assessment (Cell Death Detection ELISAPLUS; Boehringer Mannheim, Indianapolis, IN) were obtained as described by the manufacturer. Briefly, cells were harvested as described above, and washed once in cold (4°C) PBS. Cells were resuspended in lysis buffer provided by the manufacturer to give a final concentration of 1 x 104 cells/ml and incubated at room temperature for 30 min. The lysate was centrifuged at 200 x g for 10 min. The supernatant (cytosolic fraction) was then removed and analyzed immediately.
Assessment of neutrophil apoptosis
Two quantitative methods were used for the determination of neutrophil apoptosis; cytoplasmic histone-associated-DNA fragmentation assessment (Cell Death Detection ELISAPLUS; Boehringer Mannheim) and endogenous caspase 3 substrate (Ac-DEVD-7-amino-4-methyl coumarin (AMC)) cleavage (Fluorometric CaspACE Assay System; Promega, Madison, WI). In all apoptosis experiments, the protein concentration in the samples was determined by Bradford analysis and experiments were normalized to these concentrations.
Caspase 3 (CPP-32
) activity was assessed by endogenous cleavage of
the caspase 3-specific substrate peptide DEVD labeled with the
fluorochrome AMC provided with the CaspACE Assay System (TB248;
Promega). Activity was determined by observing the fluorescence of the
cleaved substrate after subtraction of the fluorescence units (FU)
obtained in the presence of the tetrapeptide inhibitor DEVD-CHO, as
reported previously (39). The nonspecific component of FU
is dependent upon the "gain" setting of the fluorometer, which was
consistent throughout this study, and was typically observed to be
1200 FU. Caspase 3 activity was monitored at 37°C and determined
following a 2-h incubation with substrate (and substrate and
inhibitor). The rate of fluorescence units released was still in the
linear range during this period (as determined in this work).
For cytoplasmic histone-associated-DNA fragmentation assessment (Cell Death Detection ELISAPLUS; Boehringer Mannheim), 20 µl of extract were used, and the enrichment of nucleosomes in the cytoplasm was quantitated as described by the manufacturer. Briefly, lysate was added to streptavidin-coated wells of 96-well microtiter plates, to which was added a mixture of anti-histone-biotin and anti-DNA-peroxidase Ab. Following a 2-h incubation and washing, the amount of cytoplasmic nucleosome was quantified by the peroxidase retained in the immunocomplex, which was determined spectrophotometrically with 2,2'-azino-di[3-ethylbenzthiazolin-sulfonat] as substrate at an absorbance of 405490 nm.
Kinase assays
ERK1 was assayed at 30°C using the substrate myelin basic
protein (MBP; 1 mg/ml). Akt was assayed using either the Akt-peptide
(1.5 mg/ml) (Upstate Biotechnology, Lake Placid, NY), or histone H2B
(1.5 mg/ml) (Sigma). Substrates were prepared in assay dilution buffer:
20 mM MOPS (pH 7.2), 25 mM
-glycerophosphate, 5 mM EGTA, 2 mM EDTA,
20 mM MgCl2, 2 mM sodium orthovanadate, 1 mM DTT,
500 nM cAMP-dependent protein kinase inhibitor peptide.
Three hundred micrograms of total protein (bicinchoninic acid assay;
Pierce, Rockford, IL) from extract supernatants were diluted into
immunoprecipitation buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.5, 150 mM NaCl, 0.5%
Nonidet P-40, 0.5% sodium deoxycholate, 0.1% SDS, 5% glycerol, 10 mM
sodium fluoride, 5 mM EGTA, 1 mM EDTA, 30 mM
-glycerolphosphate),
and the solutions were incubated with the appropriate Abs to MAPK:
anti-ERK1-CT, (Upstate Biotechnology) and Akt: anti-Akt1 (Santa
Cruz Biotechnology, Santa Cruz, CA) for 4 h at 4°C. A 50:50
mixture of protein A-Sepharose and protein G-Sepharose beads (40 µl)
(Pharmacia) that were preincubated in cold (4°C) immunoprecipitation
buffer were added, and the samples were further incubated for 1 h
at 4°C. The beads were washed twice with immunoprecipitation buffer,
and twice with KII buffer (12.5 mM MOPS, pH 7.5, 12 mM
-glycerophosphate, 5 mM EGTA, 7.5 mM MgCl2, 50
mM NaF, and 0.25 mM DTT). The beads were resuspended in KII buffer
supplemented with 10 mM MgCl2 and 5% glycerol
and 10 µl of substrate, and the reactions were initiated with 10 µl
[
-32P]ATP (
2000 cpm/pmol) (in assay
dilution buffer) in a final volume of 40 µl and incubated for 20 min
at 30°C. For the MBP and Akt-peptide p81 paper assays, the reaction
was stopped by spotting 20-µl aliquots onto a 1.5-cm x 2-cm p81
phosphocellulose paper, which was then washed extensively with 1%
phosphoric acid with 10 changes, after which the adsorbed radioactivity
was quantified by liquid scintillation counting in a Packard (Meriden,
CT) TriCarb 4530 instrument. Otherwise, the reactions were terminated
with the addition of 5x SDS-sample buffer (125 mM Tris-HCl, pH 6.8,
4% SDS, 0.01% bromophenol blue, 10%
-mercaptoethanol, and 20%
glycerol), boiled for 5 min, and loaded onto a SDS-PAGE gel. Following
transfer of protein as described above, the membrane was immunoblotted
for the appropriate protein, exposed to film, and the bands
representing MBP for the ERK1 assays, or histone H2B for the Akt assays
were excised and subjected to Cerenkov counting.
Electrophoresis and immunoblotting
SDS-PAGE of the neutrophil lysates was performed on 1.5-ml-thick
gels. A 12% separating gel and a 4% stacking gel were used. Samples
were boiled for 5 min in the presence of 5x SDS-sample buffer and
electrophoresed for
12 h at 10 mA. Subsequently, the separating gel
was soaked in transfer buffer (25 mM Tris, 192 mM glycine, 20%
methanol) for 10 min and then sandwiched with a nitrocellulose
membrane. Proteins were transferred for 3 h at 300 mA. For Akt
Western analysis, the membranes were blocked with TBS (20 mM Tris-HCl,
pH 7.4, 0.25 M NaCl) containing 5% BSA for 3 h at room
temperature, and then washed three times in TBS containing 0.05% Tween
(TBST) for 15 min. Anti-phosphoERK blots were treated with PBS instead
of TBS throughout. The membranes were incubated overnight at room
temperature with primary Ab (phosphoERK; New England Biolabs, Beverly,
MA; Akt, anti-Akt1; Santa Cruz Biotechnology). Membranes were then
washed with TBST three times before 45 min of incubation at room
temperature with secondary Ab (goat anti-rabbit IgG coupled to HRP
in 5% BSA/PBS). The membranes were then rinsed three times in TBST and
once in TBS before (unless when developing the anti-phosphoERK
blot). For detection of HRP-conjugated secondary Abs, membranes were
washed as described previously and subjected to enhanced
chemiluminescence (Amersham, Arlington Heights, IL).
Statistical significance was determined using the Students t test at p < 0.05.
| Results |
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-induced activation of caspase 3 is repressed by CPPD
crystals
Induction of apoptosis in neutrophils mediated by TNF-
and
spontaneous apoptotic signaling has been shown to converge upon the
activation of caspase 3 (10, 31). Endogenous neutrophil
caspase 3 activity was determined by monitoring the cleavage of the
caspase 3-specific peptide DEVD labeled with the fluorochrome AMC with
and without the inhibitory tetrapeptide DEVD-CHO to subtract
nonspecific cleavage. Neutrophils incubated in buffer for 3 h
showed a 2-fold increase in caspase 3 activity relative to freshly
isolated neutrophils (control), indicative of spontaneous apoptosis
(Ref. 24 , and references within) (Fig. 1
A). Neutrophil stimulation
with TNF-
resulted in a 5-fold increase in caspase 3 activity
compared with untreated cells or an
10-fold increase over control
cells. Incubation with CPPD crystals in the absence or presence of
TNF-
reduced the caspase 3 activity to control levels. Neutrophil
incubation with the MEK1 inhibitor PD98059, or the PI3-K inhibitor
wortmannin resulted in caspase activity that was similar to the basal
levels observed in neutrophils incubated in buffer for 3 h. We
have demonstrated that wortmannin inhibits PI3-K at the concentration
shown here (32), and that no change in caspase 3 activity
can be observed even at a 10-fold higher concentration (data not
shown). Preincubation with the MEK1 inhibitor U0126 or the PI3-K
inhibitor LY294002 gave similar results (data not shown). These results
indicate that repression of the ERK1/ERK2 and PI3-K/Akt pathways may
not affect caspase 3 activation associated with spontaneous
apoptosis.
|
stimulated caspase 3 activity
Preincubation of TNF-
-stimulated neutrophils with the MEK1
inhibitor PD98059 had no effect on TNF-
-induced caspase 3 activity
(Fig. 1
B). Because MEK1 functions directly upstream of ERK1
and ERK2, any effects that these MEK1 inhibitors have on neutrophils
can be assumed to be regulated by these MAP kinases. Fig. 1
B
demonstrates that inhibiting ERK1 and ERK2 by preincubation with
PD98059 or U0126 in neutrophils costimulated with CPPD crystals and
TNF-
resulted in caspase 3 activity levels significantly greater
than that observed in neutrophils coincubated with CPPD crystals and
TNF-
alone. Therefore, repression of the ERK1/ERK2 pathways resulted
in an abrogation of the repressive effect CPPD crystals have on
TNF-
-induced caspase 3 activation. Pretreatment with U0126, which is
a more potent MEK1 and MEK2 inhibitor than PD98059, resulted in caspase
3 activity that exceeded levels obtained from neutrophils stimulated
with TNF-
.
Preincubation of TNF-
-stimulated neutrophils with the PI3-K
inhibitor wortmannin did not inhibit TNF-
-induced caspase 3 activity
(Fig. 1
C), but resulted in an
25% increase in caspase 3
activation over that in neutrophils stimulated with TNF-
alone. Fig. 1
C demonstrates that inhibiting PI3-K by preincubation with
wortmannin or LY294002 in neutrophils costimulated with CPPD crystals
and TNF-
resulted in caspase 3 activity levels significantly greater
than that observed in neutrophils coincubated with CPPD crystals and
TNF-
alone. Therefore, both wortmannin and LY294002 pretreatment
resulted in an abrogation of the repressive effect that CPPD crystals
have on TNF-
-induced caspase 3 activation. These results indicate
that the ERK1/ERK2 and PI3-K pathways are both important for
crystal-associated repression of TNF-
-induced caspase 3
activation.
The induction of ERK MAP kinase by CPPD crystals in the absence or
presence of TNF-
in neutrophils
We have previously reported that a 2-min incubation of neutrophils
with CPPD crystals results in the activation of ERK1/ERK2
(30). These MAP kinases have been shown to undergo
biphasic activation, depending on the type of stimuli and cells, and it
has been suggested that the duration of their activation can determine
whether they function to regulate apoptosis (33, 34).
Therefore, we determined the effects of CPPD crystals and TNF-
on
ERK1 phosphotransferase activity at different times over the period of
caspase 3 activation. Incubation of neutrophils with CPPD crystals
resulted in a rapid induction of ERK1 activity over basal levels that
were sustained for at least 60 min (Fig. 2
A). Incubation with TNF-
resulted in a 50% repression of ERK1 activity compared with untreated
cells at 5 min and 3 h, which may be due to enhanced apoptosis in
TNF-
-stimulated cells vs untreated cells. Costimulation of
neutrophils with CPPD crystals and TNF-
rescued the
TNF-
-associated repression of ERK1 activity, and resulted in an
increasing and sustained activation of ERK1 (Fig. 2
A). At
3 h of incubation with both TNF-
and CPPD crystals, an
100%
increase of ERK1 activity over basal levels at 0 min was observed. Fig. 2
B demonstrates that preincubation with PD98059 resulted in
the inhibition of CPPD crystal-induced activation of ERK1. These
results are consistent with the notion that CPPD crystal-dependent
activation of ERK1 in untreated or TNF-
-stimulated neutrophils may
be responsible for suppression of TNF-
-induced and spontaneous
apoptotic activation of caspase 3.
|
-stimulated cells, phosphorylation of p44
ERK1 (upper band) and p42 ERK2 (lower band) is minimal, with lower
levels following extended periods of incubation. CPPD crystal-induced
phosphorylation of ERK1 and ERK2 in the absence or presence of TNF-
is significantly greater than cells incubated alone or with TNF-
,
respectively. Furthermore, the phosphorylation of ERK1 and particularly
ERK2 is sustained in the presence of CPPD crystals. These results are
consistent with the MBP phosphotransferase analysis described in Fig. 2
|

PI3-K has been demonstrated to function upstream of Akt because
wortmannin can block Akt activation (35). Platelet-derived
growth factor mutants that fail to activate PI3-K also fail to activate
Akt (36, 37). Because repression of PI3-K with wortmannin
inhibited the prosurvival effect of CPPD crystals, we investigated the
effects of TNF-
and CPPD crystals in the absence or presence of
TNF-
on endogenous neutrophil Akt activity (Figs. 4
and 5
).
Minimal Akt-associated histone H2B phosphotransferase activity was
observed following 30 min and 5 min of incubation in buffer without or
with TNF-
, respectively, and was negligible compared with
neutrophils incubated with CPPD crystals (Fig. 4
A).
Furthermore, incubation of TNF-
-stimulated neutrophils with CPPD
crystals resulted in an induction of Akt activity vs neutrophils
stimulated with TNF-
alone. Preincubation with wortmannin was shown
to inhibit CPPD crystal-induced Akt activity. Interestingly,
pretreatment with PD98059 resulted in an enhanced activation of Akt
following 30 min of CPPD crystal incubation (Fig. 4
A).
Additional controls are shown in Fig. 5
B.
|
|
-32P]ATP. Crystal-induced Akt activation
was observed to be sustained for
60 min with no apparent biphasic
activation (Fig. 6
also resulted in a transient activation of Akt. These results indicate
that CPPD crystal-induction of Akt may function to promote neutrophil
survival, and that only a short, transient activation is probably
required.
|
regulation of DNA fragmentation
The measurement of the cytoplasmic DNA concentrations allows for
the quantitation of this late apoptotic event in neutrophils. We
assessed the effects of the PD98059 and wortmannin on CPPD
crystal-mediated repression of TNF-
and spontaneous associated DNA
fragmentation in neutrophils to determine whether CPPD crystal-induced
induction of ERK1/ERK2 and Akt and repression of caspase 3 results in
the inhibition of neutrophil apoptosis (Fig. 6
). Cells incubated in
buffer alone for 4 h had an enhanced level of DNA fragmentation vs
cells that were isolated from human blood and immediately assessed for
DNA fragmentation, indicative of spontaneous apoptosis.
TNF-
-stimulated cells showed amplified levels of DNA fragmentation
of
3-fold over cells incubated in buffer alone. Similar to the
caspase 3 activity results, coincubation of neutrophils with CPPD
crystals and TNF-
resulted in a repression of TNF-
-induced DNA
fragmentation to levels comparable to untreated cells at
t = 0. Preincubation with either PD98059 or wortmannin
in cells costimulated with CPPD crystals and TNF-
resulted in the
repression of the inhibitory effect that CPPD crystals have on
TNF-
-induced DNA fragmentation. This result indicates that induction
of the ERK1/ERK2 and PI3-K/Akt pathways may regulate CPPD crystal
repression of TNF-
-associated apoptosis. Incubation with PD98059 or
wortmannin alone resulted in a repression of DNA fragmentation to
levels lower than cells incubated in buffer alone for 4
h.
Neutrophil preincubation with PD98059 in CPPD crystal-stimulated cells
resulted in an induction of DNA fragmentation, whereas wortmannin
preincubation had no effect. This indicates that, contrary to
TNF-
-induced apoptosis, repression of crystal-induced PI3-K does not
result in the inhibition of spontaneous apoptosis, although caspase 3
activity is suppressed. To illustrate that crystal induction of the
ERK1/ERK2 and PI3-K/Akt pathways regulate neutrophil survival through
suppression of caspase 3 in TNF-
-stimulated cells, we coincubated
neutrophils treated with TNF-
, CPPD crystals, and TNF-
in the
absence or presence of PD98059 or wortmannin, with the caspase 3
inhibitor z-DEVD-fmk (38). Inhibition of caspase 3
resulted in DNA fragmentation levels significantly lower than levels
observed in untreated cells under all conditions, except for cells
costimulated with CPPD crystals and TNF-
that were preincubated with
wortmannin. Therefore, PI3-K-mediated suppression of TNF-
-associated
apoptosis functions through an alternate pathway, in addition to
suppressing caspase 3 activity. The multifunctional role of PI3-K in
response to TNF-
was also apparent when TNF-
-stimulated
neutrophils were preincubated with wortmannin. DNA fragmentation was
observed to be inhibited, which indicates that TNF-
-associated PI3-K
can have a proapoptotic effect (Fig. 6
).
| Discussion |
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|
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It is now thought likely that the extended inflammation associated with
disease states such as rheumatoid arthritis and inflammatory bowel
disease are characterized by the accumulation of neutrophils in the
joint or bowel, respectively. Because the rapid accumulation of
neutrophils in the synovial joints of patients with MSUM or CPPD
crystal induced inflammation is well-documented (1), we
have addressed in the current study whether CPPD crystal induction of
the ERK1/ERK2 and/or PI3-K/Akt signaling pathways are responsible for
crystal-induced neutrophil survival under TNF-
and spontaneous
apoptotic conditions. CPPD crystals were observed to induce a robust
and transient activation of the MAP kinases and Akt. In the presence of
TNF-
, CPPD crystals induced ERK1 and Akt activation that was not
present in cells stimulated with TNF-
alone, and this activation was
sustained compared with cells incubated with CPPD crystals alone.
Direct inhibition of MEK1 or PI3-K with specific pharmacological
antagonists resulted in the repression of ERK1/ERK2 and Akt activities,
respectively, associated with CPPD crystal incubation, in the absence
or presence of TNF-
. Furthermore, inhibition of the ERK1/ERK2 or
PI3-K pathways with their respective inhibitors resulted in the
repression of CPPD crystal-associated suppression of TNF-
-induced
neutrophil apoptosis as determined by caspase 3 activity and DNA
fragmentation.
The stimulation of hemopoietic cells by cytokines leads to the rapid
activation of PI3-K (13, 21). The lipid products of PI3-K
serve to localize and activate downstream signaling molecules, such as
Akt, in the vicinity of the cell membrane (35, 37, 40).
The signal transduction pathway initiated by growth factors and
cytokines involving PI3-K and Akt seems to be important for cell
survival in a number of cell systems (13, 21, 22). The
role of PI3-K and Akt in neutrophil survival in response to
neutrophil-CPPD crystal interactions or microcrystal phagocytosis has
not been previously delineated. We have shown a correlation between
CPPD crystal-induced activation of the PI3-K/Akt pathway and neutrophil
survival in TNF-
-stimulated cells. Inhibition of Akt with inhibitors
of PI3-K in cells costimulated with TNF-
and CPPD crystals resulted
in an activation of caspase 3 and DNA fragmentation associated with
TNF-
-stimulated apoptosis. The observation that caspase 3 inhibition
with z-DEVD-fmk in wortmannin preincubated neutrophils stimulated with
CPPD crystals and TNF-
resulted in the induction of DNA
fragmentation (Fig. 6
) indicates that PI3-K functions to regulate
neutrophil survival through an alternate pathway, in addition to
suppression of caspase 3. Because preincubation of CPPD
crystal-stimulated cells with wortmannin did not result in the
stimulation of DNA fragmentation, CPPD crystal-associated repression of
spontaneous apoptosis is not mediated solely through the PI3-K/Akt
pathway even though caspase 3 is repressed.
Although we have demonstrated an activation of Akt in neutrophils
within 5 min of stimulation with CPPD crystals (39), a
time course of Akt activity following crystal incubation has not been
done. Activation of Akt in cells incubated with CPPD crystals, or
costimulated with crystals and TNF-
resulted in a transient
activation, which diminished to basal levels after 30 min (Figs. 4
and 5
). PI3-K has been shown to contribute to the activation of the ERK1
and ERK2 (38). Dominant negative forms of PI3-K were
used to show that selective inhibition of Raf isoforms,
upstream effecters of ERK1 and ERK2, may explain the ability of the
PI3-K pathway to affect these MAP kinases in some cell systems, and not
others (46). CPPD crystal-stimulated neutrophils
preincubated with wortmannin showed an
30% increase in
crystal-induced ERK1/ERK2 activity. Therefore, the ability of
wortmannin and LY294002 to inhibit the prosurvival effect of CPPD
crystals in TNF-
-stimulated cells is not a result of ERK1 inhibition
in neutrophils.
Because CPPD crystals were able to activate ERK1 and ERK2 in
neutrophils incubated in buffer alone or with TNF-
over basal
levels, it was possible that this MAP kinase pathway could mediate the
signal for neutrophil survival. We show here that CPPD
crystal-dependent cell survival in TNF-
-stimulated neutrophils is
dependent on ERK1/ERK2 activation: inhibition of MEK1 with PD98059 or
U0126 abrogated the anti-apoptotic effect of crystals (Fig. 2
). The
transient ERK1 and ERK2 activation in CPPD crystal-incubated
neutrophils stimulated with TNF-
indicates that the additional CPPD
crystal-dependent activation of ERK1/ERK2 over basal levels could be
involved in promoting neutrophil survival. It could be suggested that
the transient activation of this MAP kinase pathway induces the
expression of genes that are anti-apoptotic. Previous work in our
laboratory is consistent with this. We showed that the suppression of
TNF-
induced and spontaneous apoptosis mediated through caspase 3
following crystal incubation was inhibited by preincubation with
cycloheximide (24). Although the activation of the
ERK1/ERK2 pathway in TNF-
-stimulated cells was sustained in response
to crystals over levels observed in neutrophils treated with crystals
alone, these results indicate that only the initial activation of
ERK1/ERK2, leading to the expression of prosurvival genes is necessary
for neutrophil survival. We have identified in our laboratory that
cycloheximide preincubation of CPPD crystal-treated neutrophils
resulted in the selective repression of CPPD crystal-induced ERK1
activity, with no effect on endogenous Akt activity (data not shown).
We previously reported the existence of a pathway in TNF-
-associated
apoptosis that is repressed by crystal treatment independent of protein
synthesis, which probably does not function in neutrophil spontaneous
apoptosis (24). The results presented in this report
suggest that the PI3-K
Akt pathway selectively represses TNF-
vs
spontaneous associated apoptosis signaling, whereas the ERK1/ERK2
pathway represses both. Therefore, it is possible that the
cycloheximide-dependent suppressive effects of CPPD crystals on
neutrophil apoptosis may be mediated in part through the ERK1/ERK2
pathway, independent of PI3-K
Akt. This is currently under
investigation in our laboratory.
Repression of CPPD crystal-induced survival was induced by the
preincubation of neutrophils with either the MEK1 inhibitors or the
PI3-K inhibitors in TNF-
-stimulated cells. These results, coupled
with the observation that the MEK1 and PI3-K inhibitors suppressed
ERK1/ERK2 or Akt pathways, respectively, would indicate that the
induction of both the ERK1/ERK2 and PI3-K/Akt pathways is necessary to
mediate neutrophil survival. It is interesting to note that cells
preincubated with wortmannin for 5 min resulted in a
30% increase
in CPPD crystal-induced ERK1 activation (Fig. 3
B), and cells
preincubated with PD98059 for 30 min resulted in a
95% increase in
CPPD crystal-induced Akt activation (Fig. 5
B). This would
suggest that cross-talk between these pathways exist in neutrophils,
where one pathway actually functions to suppress the other. Our
laboratory and others have demonstrated that both ERK1/ERK2 and
PI3-K/Akt are involved in neutrophil activation (30, 32, 47). Further, reactive oxygen species production in neutrophils
has been shown to mediate apoptosis in neutrophils stimulated with
Fas/CD95 (48, 49). It is possible that repression of basal
levels of the ERK1/ERK2 and PI3-K, because of their coinhibitory
effects on each other during normal neutrophil activation, results in
the suppression of prosurvival signaling, because subsequent inhibition
of ERK1/ERK2 and PI3-K pathways would result in the reduction of their
suppressive effects on caspase 3. Because the levels of ERK1/ERK2 and
Akt activity in neutrophils are significantly greater subsequent to
CPPD crystal treatment, it is likely that any repression is masked by
the immense inductive signals mediated by the crystals.
Another explanation for the observation that either inhibition of the
ERK1/ERK2 or PI3-K pathways results in the induction of caspase 3 in
CPPD crystal-stimulated neutrophils is that these pathways may converge
to regulate survival. For instance, it has been demonstrated that the
Bcl-2 family proteins regulate caspase 3 in neutrophils
(50). Both of the anti-apoptotic
bcl-X1 gene and the death-promoting bax-
gene
were shown to be expressed in neutrophils. Bcl-X1
and bax-
are known to form homodimers and heterodimers, respectively
(Ref. 51 , and references within). Any shift in the balance
of the bax-
/bcl-X1 ratio, which can be
achieved by the up-regulation or down-regulation of both interacting
members, has previously been shown to determine whether a cell will
undergo apoptosis (51). ERK1/ERK2 can activate the Elk-1
and cAMP response element-binding protein, CREB. Activated CREB binds
to the cAMP response elements (CRE), specific sites on the cAMP
responsive genes. The Bcl-2 promoter contains a functional CRE, and
Bcl-2 expression in B cells is also dependent on CREB phosphorylation
(52). Therefore, induction of ERK1/ERK2 by CPPD crystals
may shift the balance of bax-
and bcl-X1 in
favor of the prosurvival bcl-X1 gene. Bad family
proapoptotic proteins, including Bax-
, can be repressed
posttranscriptionally by phosphorylation (51, 52).
Phosphorylation of the Bad family proteins has been demonstrated to be
mediated by Akt (53). Collectively, these results, coupled
with these presented here, indicate that CPPD crystal-induction of the
ERK1/ERK2 and PI3-K pathways, may cooperate to repress caspase 3
activity in neutrophils by regulating the expression of genes that are
anti-apoptotic, and may also induce posttranslational modification
to inactivate the neutrophil-intrinsic death machinery. In the presence
of CPPD crystals, the induction of other signaling pathways, such as
ERK1/ERK2, probably function in concert with PI3-K to tilt the balance
of the survival/apoptosis signals in favor of a prosurvival signal in
neutrophils.
Our findings with respect to CPPD crystal-associated neutrophil
survival being mediated upstream of caspase 3 through activation of the
ERK1/ERK2 and PI3-K/Akt pathways is illustrated in Fig. 7
. The specific mechanism(s) remain to be
elucidated and are currently under investigation in our laboratory. For
instance, we are now investigating the regulation of
bcl-X1 and bax-
expression in response to CPPD
crystals in neutrophils. Together, our results indicate that CPPD
crystals function to induce acute inflammatory responses through
ERK1/ERK2 and PI3-K/Akt-mediated repression of apoptosis in
neutrophils. Furthermore, we suggest that mediators of the ERK1/ERK2
pathway may have therapeutic implications in treating diseases, where
accumulation of neutrophils occurs because their apoptosis machinery
has become dysfunctional is symptomatic, including arthritis.
|
| Footnotes |
|---|
2 Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Helen M. Burt, Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, 2146 East Mall, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. ![]()
3 Abbreviations used in this paper: CPPD, calcium pyrophosphate dihydrate; ERK, extracellular regulated kinase; MAP, mitogen-activated protein; PI3-K, phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase; JNK, c-Jun N-terminal kinase; MSUM, monosodium urate monophosphate; DEVD, Asp-Glu-Val-Asp; AMC, 7-amino-4-methyl coumarin; MBP, myelin basic protein; MEK1, MAP kinase kinase-1; Akt, protein kinase B; PDK1, phosphatidylinositol-dependent kinase-1; FU, fluorescence unit. ![]()
4 C. Tudan, J. K. Jackson, S. L. Pelech, and H. M. Burt. Calcium pyrophosphate dihydrate crystal associated induction of neutrophil activation and repression of TNF-
-induced apoptosis is mediated by the p38 MAP kinase. Submitted for publication. ![]()
Received for publication May 15, 2000. Accepted for publication August 17, 2000.
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