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Vol. 289, Issue 3, 1306-1312, June 1999
Laboratory of Molecular Neuro-Oncology, Department of Neurology, University of Tübingen, School of Medicine, Tübingen, Germany
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Abstract |
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Betulinic acid (BA), a pentacyclic triterpene, is an experimental cytotoxic agent for malignant melanoma. Here, we show that BA triggers apoptosis in five human glioma cell lines. BA-induced apoptosis requires new protein, but not RNA, synthesis, is independent of p53, and results in p21 protein accumulation in the absence of a cell cycle arrest. BA-induced apoptosis involves the activation of caspases that cleave poly(ADP ribose)polymerase. Interactions of death ligand/receptor pairs of the CD95/CD95 ligand family do not mediate BA-induced caspase activation. BA enhances the levels of BAX and BCL-2 proteins but does not alter the levels of BCL-xS or BCL-xL. Ectopic expression of BCL-2 prevents BA-induced caspase activation, DNA fragmentation, and cell death. Furthermore, BA induces the formation of reactive oxygen species that are essential for BA-triggered cell death. The generation of reactive oxygen species is blocked by BCL-2 and requires new protein synthesis but is unaffected by caspase inhibitors, suggesting that BA toxicity sequentially involves new protein synthesis, formation of reactive oxygen species, and activation of crm-A-insensitive caspases.
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Introduction |
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Betulinic
acid (BA), a pentacyclic triterpene, is an experimental antineoplastic
agent that induces apoptosis in melanoma cells in vitro and in vivo
(Pisha et al., 1995
), as well as in neuroectodermal tumor cell lines in
vitro (Fulda et al., 1997
). BA is abundant in the plant kingdom and
easily prepared in high yields from betulin of white-barked birch trees
(Betula spp.). Cultured neoplastic glial cells are rather
resistant to most proapoptotic stimuli (Weller, 1996
). This corresponds
to the poor response to radiotherapy or chemotherapy of human malignant
gliomas in vivo. Numerous in vitro studies performed in recent years
have shown that most types of drug-induced cytotoxicity in human tumor cell lines are associated with the induction of apoptosis. Drugs reported to induce apoptosis in glioma cells not only include common
cancer chemotherapy drugs such as
N,N'-bis(2-chloroethyl)-N-nitrosourea and
cisplatin but also several drugs that, among other actions, interfere
with the activation of protein kinase C, including staurosporine, calphostin C, hypericin, and the hydroxy-methylglutaryl-CoA reductase inhibitor, lovostatin. To characterize a novel potential antiglioma agent, the relationship to the CD95 and p53 systems needs to be defined, as well as the relationship to the caspase cascade.
CD95 is a cell surface receptor of the tumor necrosis factor/nerve
growth factor receptor superfamily expressed on a variety of normal and
neoplastic cells (Nagata, 1997
). To transmit the apoptotic signal
(Schlottmann and Coggeshall, 1996
), CD95 associates via its death
domain with the Fas-associating protein with death domain (FADD/MORT1),
which binds FADD-like ICE (interleukin 1-converting enzyme)
(FLICE/caspase 8/MACH-1). FLICE/MACH-1 contains a caspase (ICE/CED-3-like protease) domain that seems to be activated upon ligation and trimerization of CD95 by a conformational change of FLICE
(Medema et al., 1997
). FLICE then transmits the activation signal to
ICE and CPP32 (caspase 3), which is thought to trigger cell death. In
contrast to untransformed astrocytes, malignant glioma cells acquire
CD95 expression during malignant progression (Tachibana et al., 1995
)
and become sensitive to CD95-mediated apoptosis.
The p53 tumor suppressor gene (TP53) is
the most frequently altered gene in human cancer and also is found
mutated in human gliomas. Transfer of TP53 can induce apoptosis in
different cell types, including human glioma cells (Li et al., 1997
).
Evasion of the pathways leading to apoptosis is critical for the
development of tumors. For example, p21 is an important downstream
mediator of p53-dependent, cisplatin-induced apoptosis (Kondo et al.,
1996
).
However, here we characterize a cascade of apoptosis triggered by the novel antineoplastic agent BA in cultured malignant glioma cells that is independent of CD95-ligand/receptor interaction and the p53 status of the tumor cells. We find that BA-induced apoptosis of glioma cells is characterized by a sequential requirement for new protein, but not RNA, synthesis, generation of reactive oxygen species, and caspase processing associated with poly(ADP-ribose)polymerase cleavage. BA-induced apoptosis of glioma cells does not involve net changes in the BCL-2/BAX rheostat.
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Materials and Methods |
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Chemicals.
BA [3
-hydroxy-20(19)lupaen28-carbonic acid]
was purchased from Aldrich (Steinheim, Germany) and dissolved in 50 mM
dimethyl sulfoxide. Aliquots were stored at
20°C. Cycloheximide
(CHX), actinomycin D (ActD),
N-tert-butyl-
-phenylnitrone (PBN), and N-acetylcysteine (NAC) were purchased from Sigma (St. Louis,
MO). Soluble CD95 ligand (CD95L) was obtained from CD95L
cDNA-transfected N2A neuroblastoma cells (Roth et al., 1997
).
Cell Lines and Cell Culture.
LN-18, LN-229, LN-308, and U87
MG cells were kindly provided by Dr. N. de Tribolet (Lausanne,
Switzerland). T98G were obtained from the American Type Culture
Collection (Manassas, VA). U87 MG cells are wild type for p53. LN-229
cells are heterozygous for p53 and exhibit p53 transcriptional
activity, whereas LN-18 and T98G cells are mutant for p53. LN-308 cells
do not express p53 protein (Van Meir et al., 1994
). The human glioma
cell lines were cultured in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium (DMEM)
supplemented with 10% fetal calf serum (FCS) and 1%
penicillin/streptomycin. The generation of glioma cell clones
expressing murine BCL-2 or p53val135 proteins or
the viral caspase inhibitor, crm-A, has been described (Weller et al.,
1995
; Trepel et al., 1996
; Wagenknecht et al., 1997
). Transgene
expression was assessed by immunoblot analysis for murine BCL-2 and p53
protein and by Northern blot analysis for crm-A mRNA. Experiments were
performed with control transfectants harboring plasmids without insert
(neo for BCL-2, hygro for p53val135, and puro for
crm-A).
Viability and Apoptosis Studies.
Cell growth, generation
times, and survival were assessed by crystal violet staining (Weller et
al., 1997a
). Apoptotic cell death was measured by quantitative
assessment of DNA fragmentation (Reber et al., 1997
).
Biochemical Studies.
The generation of reactive oxygen
species was monitored using a fluorescent probe, dichlorofluorescein
diacetate (Reber et al., 1997
). Caspase 3 activity was
measured by conversion of the fluorescent substrate, DEVD-AMC (Schulz
et al., 1997
). The caspase-3 inhibitor,
N-acetyl-Asp-Glu-Val-Asp-aldehyde (DEVD-CHO), was purchased from Biomol (Hamburg, Germany).
Immunoblot Analysis. Cells were rinsed in PBS, harvested, centrifuged at 1000g, lysed in 0.1 M Tris-HCl (pH 7.2) containing 0.1% Nonidet P-40, 0.1 mM EDTA, and 5 µg/ml phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride for 40 min on ice, and centrifuged at 10,000g for 10 min. Protein concentration was assayed using Bio-Rad reagents (München, Germany) with photometric analysis. Twenty micrograms of protein per lane was separated by 10 to 15% SDS-PAGE and electroblotted onto nitrocellulose (Amersham, Braunschweig, Germany). Equal protein loading was controlled by Ponceau red staining. After blocking for 1 h in PBS supplemented with 2% bovine serum albumin and 0.1% Tween 20, immunodetection of caspase 8 and 3, poly(ADP-ribose)polymerase (PARP), Bax, Bcl-x, Bcl-2, p53, and p21 proteins was done using the following antibodies: mouse anti-caspase 8 monoclonal antibody C15 (1:5 dilution of hybridoma supernatant kindly provided by Dr. P. H. Krammer, Heidelberg, Germany), mouse anti-caspase 3 monoclonal antibody (1:1000; Transduction Laboratories, Lexington, KY), rabbit anti-PARP polyclonal antibody (1:10,000; Boehringer, Mannheim), rabbit anti-BAX and anti-BCL-x polyclonal and mouse anti-BCL-2, and rabbit anti-p21 polyclonal and mouse anti-p53 monoclonal antibody (1:1000; Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Santa Cruz, CA). Goat anti-mouse IgG or anti-rabbit IgG (1:5000; Santa Cruz Biotechnology) and enhanced chemiluminescence (Amersham) were used for detection.
Cell Cycle Analysis. For cell cycle analysis, the glioma cells were treated as indicated, washed with PBS, incubated with trypsin for 3 min at 37°C, harvested, washed, and fixed with 70% ice-cold ethanol. Cells (106 per experiment) were stained with propidium iodide (50 µg/ml in PBS containing 100 U/ml RNase A) for 30 min. All samples were analyzed on a FacsCalibur flow cytometer using Cell Quest acquisition and analysis software (Becton Dickinson, Heidelberg, Germany).
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Results |
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BA Induces Apoptosis in Human Glioma Cell Lines.
The glioma
cells were exposed to increasing concentrations of BA for different
time intervals. All five human glioma cell lines were susceptible to
BA-induced growth inhibition in a concentration-dependent manner (Fig.
1, A and B). The
EC50 values were in the range of 20 µM for
LN-229, 25 µM for U87 MG and T98G, 70 µM for LN-18, and 100 µM
for LN-308. When the cells were seeded at low density, exposed to BA
for 24 h, and then allowed to recover for 5 to 10 generation times
(doubling times: T98G, 22 h; LN-229, 24 h; LN-18, 33 h;
U87 MG, 39 h; LN-308, 59 h), there was no significant
decrease in EC50 values (data not shown),
suggesting that the acute cytotoxic effects shown in Fig. 1, A and B,
were responsible for the inhibition of clonogenic survival in the
pulse/recovery colony-formation assays. Light microscopic monitoring
suggested that BA-induced growth inhibition of glioma cells was
associated with the induction of apoptosis. Consistent with that
hypothesis, exposure to BA induced DNA fragmentation of up to 25%, a
degree of DNA fragmentation commonly induced by other proapoptotic
stimuli in these cells, including CD95L (Fig. 1C). Next, we asked
whether BA-induced apoptosis was an active type of cell death, that is,
requires new mRNA and protein synthesis. We observed that BA-induced
cell death was attenuated by a protein synthesis inhibitor, CHX, but
unaffected by the RNA synthesis inhibitor, ActD (Fig. 1D), suggesting
that translation of pre-existing mRNA mediates BA-induced apoptosis.
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BA Induces p21, but Not p53, Accumulation, in the Absence of a Cell
Cycle Arrest.
Wild-type p53 activity is dispensable for BA-induced
apoptosis because the p53 mutant cell lines, T98G and LN-18, as well as
the p53 null cell line, LN-308, were not resistant to BA-induced apoptosis. However, the cell lines that retain p53 transcriptional activity in CAT assays, LN-229 and U87 MG (Van Meir et al., 1994
), were
rather sensitive to BA. Figure 2A shows
that BA exposure did not result in p53 accumulation, which would be
suggestive of wild-type function, in LN-229 cells and does not affect
p53 levels in LN-18 cells. However, there was a time-dependent
accumulation of p21 in both cell lines after exposure to BA, indicating
that p21 expression is induced in a p53-independent manner. Because p21
accumulation is associated with cell cycle arrest, we next examined
possible effects of BA on cell cycle progression. Cell cycle analysis
of T98G and LN-229 cells treated with BA (50 µM) for 4 and 24 h
showed no G0-G1 or
G2-M arrest compared with control cells (Fig.
2C). To further determine the role of p53 in BA toxicity, we took
advantage of LN-18 and LN-229 transfectants expressing the
temperature-sensitive p53val135 mutant that
behaves as a mutant p53 protein at 38.5°C but adopts wild-type
conformation and activity at 32.5°C (Michalowitz et al., 1990
). At
38.5°C and 32.5°C, the p53-transfected cells were as sensitive to
BA as hygro control cells (Fig. 2D), confirming the independence of the
BA-triggered apoptotic pathway from p53.
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BA-Induced Apoptosis Involves Activation of Caspases.
To
further characterize the apoptotic cascade triggered by BA, we asked
whether caspase activation was a critical event in BA-induced cell
death. Immunoblot analysis revealed proteolytic cleavage of caspase 8 at 2 h after BA exposure of LN-229 cells (Fig.
3A). Caspase 3 also was proteolytically
processed, with a similar time course (Fig. 3B), and PARP, one of the
putative substrates of caspase 3, was cleaved to yield an 85-kDa
fragment at 2 h as well (Fig. 3C). Consistent with the immunoblot
data, BA caused a gradual increase in caspase 3-like enzyme activity, which peaked at 12 h after addition of BA (Fig.
4A). To confirm a critical role for
caspase 3 in BA toxicity, we show that the preferential caspase 3-like
pseudosubstrate peptide inhibitor, DEVD-CHO, significantly reduced BA
toxicity (Fig. 4B). However, ectopic expression of the viral caspase
inhibitor, crm-A, failed to attenuate BA-induced DNA fragmentation
(Fig. 4C), caspase 3 activity (Fig. 4D), and cell death (Fig. 4E) in
both cell lines.
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BA-Induced Apoptosis Does Not Require CD95/CD95L Interactions.
Because activation of caspases, specifically caspase 8, is thought to
mediate apoptosis triggered by cytotoxic cytokines, we asked whether
BA-induced caspase activation might depend on interactions of
endogenous death ligands and receptors. To this purpose, we used
sublines from the CD95L-sensitive LN-18 cell line that exhibit acquired
resistance to CD95L (Fig. 6A), APO2L, and
TNF (data not shown). These cells retained sensitivity to BA (Fig. 6B),
suggesting that BA bypasses such ligand/receptor interactions and
activates caspases via another pathway.
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BA-Induced Apoptosis Leads to Free Radical Formation.
We have
characterized previously a cascade of apoptosis in neurons that
involved the sequential requirement for new protein synthesis, caspase
activation, and generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) (Schulz et
al., 1996
). Here, we report that BA induces the formation of ROS in
glioma cells (Fig. 7A) and that the
antioxidants PBN and NAC prevent BA-induced ROS formation (Fig. 7B) as
well as cell death (Fig. 7C). Next, we elucidated the sequence of
events during BA-induced apoptosis of glioma cells. We find that
treatment with CHX when given 2 h before exposure to BA abolished
ROS formation (Fig. 8A), diminished
caspase 3 activity (Fig. 8B), and significantly reduced cell death
(Fig. 8C). There was no such effect when CHX was given at the time of
or after BA exposure. The free radical spin trap, PBN, had to be given
before or at the same time as BA, but not after addition of BA, to
prevent the rise in ROS fluorescence (Fig. 8D). PBN significantly
attenuated DEVD-AMC cleavage even when added 2 h after BA exposure
(Fig. 8E), suggesting that ROS formation is required for caspase
activation. Similarly, no caspase 3 activation became apparent on
immunoblot analysis when BA exposure was started after 2-h pre-exposure
to PBN (Fig. 8F). DEVD-CHO supplementation up to 2 h after
incubation of the cells with BA prevented the rise in caspase 3 activity (Fig. 8G) but had no effect on ROS formation (Fig. 8H).
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Discussion |
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BA is a novel antineoplastic agent with cytotoxicity against melanoma and neuroectodermal tumor cells. Here, we report that BA triggers an apoptotic cascade in human malignant glioma cells as well. BA-induced apoptosis of glioma cells involves sequentially new protein synthesis, formation of reactive oxygen species, and caspase processing. In detail, we show that BA toxicity depends on new protein but not mRNA synthesis, suggesting that translation of preexisting mRNA mediates BA toxicity. Caspase 8 and 3 activation are critical steps in the killing cascade triggered by BA because cell death ensues whenever caspase activation is detected. Furthermore, pharmacological (PBN, NAC, DEVD-CHO) or genetic (BCL-2) manipulations that inhibit apoptosis do so at the level of, or upstream of, caspase activation. Cytotoxic, cytokine-resistant glioma cells do not exhibit cross-resistance to BA, suggesting that caspase activation is independent of interactions of endogenous CD95/CD95L or related pairs of death ligands and receptors.
Interestingly, we were able to demonstrate that BA-induced ROS formation is necessary for caspase activation and cell death and that new protein synthesis is required for ROS formation. Although BA does not change the BAX/BCL-2 rheostat as assessed by protein levels on immunoblots, ectopic expression of BCL-2 suppressed BA-induced cell death upstream or at the level of ROS generation, confirming that some antiapoptotic properties of BCL-2 are related to antioxidative defense mechanisms.
p53 that mediates growth arrest or apoptosis in response to DNA damage
in many tumor cells is a direct transcriptional activator of the human
bax gene (Miyashita and Reed, 1995
) and may mediate apoptosis via
induction of oxidative stress (Polyak et al., 1997
).
However, no accumulation of p53 was seen in p53 wild-type cells after
treatment with BA, and enhanced levels of BAX and p21 proteins as well
as ROS formation were observed after BA exposure in p53 mutant cell
lines, too, indicating that all these changes are p53 independent.
p53-independent death mechanisms after administration of
chemotherapeutic drugs or
-irradiation have been described (Liebermann et al., 1995
), and BAX-accelerated apoptosis in response to
dexamethasone has been observed in the absence of p53 (Brady et al.,
1996
). These data suggest that in addition to p53-restricted pathways,
alternative pathways are involved in the up-regulation of BAX
expression and drug-induced apoptosis. In regard to p21, this protein
inhibits cyclin-dependent kinase (cdk) activity and mediates
p53-dependent and independent cell cycle arrest in
G0-G1 and
G2-M. However, cell cycle analysis after exposure
to BA revealed no specific pattern of cell cycle redistribution in
LN-18 or LN-229 cells despite the induction of p21 expression. This may
be a consequence of the retinoblastoma gene product checkpoint
disruption in both cell lines, which we have been able to link to a
homozygous deletion of p16 in both cell lines (Wagenknecht et al.,
1997
).
These findings may provide implications for overcoming drug resistance
of glioma cells. The CD95-resistant LN-18 glioma cells showed the same
response to BA as the CD95-sensitive cells, suggesting that resistance
is bypassed by activating death-signaling pathways downstream of
CD95L-receptor interactions. BA therefore might be an interesting
adjunct to present glioma chemotherapy. BA is especially attractive
because of a lack of toxicity reported in the literature (Pisha et al.,
1995
) and no death-inducing action in concentrations up to 250 µM in
nontransformed cultured human astrocytes in our lab (unpublished
observation). Our data are consistent with the work of Fulda et al.
(1997)
on neuroblastoma cells in that BA triggers apoptosis in these
cells independently of CD95/CD95L interactions and p53 status, but
depends on activation of caspases 8 and 3 and involves ROS formation.
Furthermore, we define here a critical role for new protein synthesis
in BA toxicity and report that new protein synthesis, ROS formation,
and activation of caspases are sequential and necessary steps in
BA-induced apoptosis.
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Footnotes |
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Accepted for publication January 28, 1999.
Received for publication October 23, 1998.
Send reprint requests to: Michael Weller, M.D., Department of Neurology, University of Tübingen, School of Medicine, Hoppe-Seyler-Strasse 3, 72076 Tübingen, Germany. E-mail: michael.weller{at}uni.tuebingen.de
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Abbreviations |
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ActD, actinomycin D;
BA, betulinic acid;
CD95L, CD95 ligand;
CHX, cycloheximide;
DEVD-CHO, N-acetyl-Asp-Glu-Val-Asp-aldehyde;
NAC, N-acetyl-cysteine;
PARP, poly(ADP-ribose)polymerase;
PBN, N-tert-butyl-
-phenylnitrone;
ROS, reactive
oxygen species.
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References |
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transgenic mice show accelerated apoptosis in response to stimuli but do not show restored DNA damage-induced cell death in the absence of p53.
EMBO J
15:
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