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Vol. 293, Issue 3, 973-981, June 2000
Department of Dermatology, University of California, Davis, California (S.Z., A.N., S.A.G.); Department of Dermatology, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota (T.X.L.); and Research & Diagnostic Antibodies, Richmond, California (R.J.W.)
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Abstract |
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Early stages of wound healing rely on the ability of keratinocytes
(KCs) to move over the denuded dermis to re-epithelialize the defect.
The agarose gel keratinocyte outgrowth system (AGKOS) is an in vitro
model of skin re-epithelialization designed to study the migratory
function of KCs. Endogenously secreted acetylcholine controls crawling
locomotion of KCs in AGKOS by binding to the cholinergic receptors of
both the nicotinic and the muscarinic classes that are expressed by
KCs. In this study, we used AGKOS to elucidate the nicotinic pathway of
cholinergic control of keratinocyte migration. Activation of the
nicotinic acetylcholine receptors decreased the migration distance of
KC in a dose-dependent fashion without altering cell viability.
Nicotine also increased in a dose-dependent manner transmembrane influx
of 45Ca2+, and caused a transient rise in the
concentration of [Ca2+]i. Perfect correlation
between concentration responses found in the migration and
45Ca2+ influx assays suggested that
nicotine-induced inhibition of crawling locomotion relies on modulation
of Ca2+ metabolism in KCs. The effects of nicotine could be
mediated by the
3- and the
7-containing nicotinic receptors
visualized on KCs by immunostaining. Long-term incubation with nicotine
up-regulated
7 and down-regulated
3 expression. Thus, nicotine
exerts inhibitory effects on keratinocyte migration, and
Ca2+ serves as a second messenger in the signaling pathway.
These results help explain deleterious effects of nicotine on wound re-epithelialization, and suggest that smoking may delay wound healing
via nicotinic receptor-mediated pathway.
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Introduction |
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Restoration
of the epithelial barrier (i.e., re-epithelialization) is a major
component of the natural process of wound healing. It is widely
accepted that repair of epithelial wounds involves cellular migration
(Woodley et al., 1993
). Active proliferation of basal keratinocytes
(KCs) at the wound edge, derived in part from the outer root sheath of
hair follicles, may provide new generations of migratory KCs (Pang et
al., 1978
). Morphological studies of wounded epidermis have
demonstrated that KCs migrate both as a cellular sheet and as
individually crawling cells (for review, see Donaldson and Mahan,
1988
). In the newly formed epidermal sheet, KCs undergo terminal
differentiation to form a water-impermeable barrier, the stratum
corneum. Thus, the process of skin re-epithelialization includes the
following sequential steps of KC metamorphosis: detachment, migration,
proliferation, attachment, and maturation. Failure to heal may stem
from an error at any step.
To characterize the physiological control of the metamorphosis of KCs
during wound healing, we developed an in vitro model of skin
re-epithelialization termed agarose gel keratinocyte outgrowth system
(AGKOS) (Grando et al., 1993b
). Studies using the AGKOS demonstrated
that the process of re-epithelialization is self-sustained and can be
regulated by endogenously secreted mediators, such as acetylcholine
(ACh) (Grando et al., 1993b
). Epidermal KCs possess the enzymes for ACh
synthesis and degradation, express nicotinic and muscarinic types of
ACh receptors, respond to treatments with cholinergic drugs by dramatic
changes in viability, and mediate all major processes of skin
re-epithelialization (for review, see Grando, 1997
). It was therefore
proposed that a variety of cellular activities mediating KC
metamorphoses during skin re-epithelialization could be controlled by a
single "pace-maker" cytotransmitter: autocrine, juxtacrine, and
paracrine ACh (Grando, 1997
).
The nicotinic ACh receptors (nAChRs) are classical representatives of a
large superfamily of ligand-gated ion channel proteins, or ionotropic
receptors mediating the influx of Na+ and
Ca2+ and efflux of K+.
Undifferentiated KCs express ~5500 nAChRs/cell (Grando et al., 1995
),
which is very similar to the number of nAChRs expressed by cultured
bronchial epithelial cells (Maus et al., 1998
). During maturation, KCs
increase their nAChRs up to 35,400 receptors/cell (Grando et al.,
1995
). Patch-clamp studies have demonstrated that keratinocyte nAChRs
are indeed functional ion channels and can mediate ion transport across
the cell membrane (Grando et al., 1995
). Polymerase chain reactions
have amplified authentic human
3,
5,
7,
2, and
4
subunits from KCs, which indicates that KCs express both the
heteromeric and homomeric nAChR channels (Grando et al., 1995
, 1996
).
The nAChR subtypes expressed by KC also are called "neuronal"
(ganglionic) nAChRs because they originally were thought to be
expressed exclusively by neurons. The heteromeric nAChR channels on KC
cell membrane can be composed of the
3,
5,
2, and
4
subunits, e.g.,
3
2(
4)±
5, and the homomeric channels can be
made from several
7 subunits (for review, see Conti-Tronconi et al.,
1994
).
In this study, we report that the nAChRs expressed by KCs are involved in cholinergic control of skin re-epithelialization. Nicotine binding to KC nAChRs inhibits KC migration and is accompanied by both transmembrane influx of 45Ca2+ and an increase in the concentration of [Ca2+]i. These findings indicate that tobacco use can directly inhibit wound re-epithelialization.
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Materials and Methods |
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Chemicals and Tissue Culture Reagents. The nicotinic agonist nicotine and the antagonist of neuronal-type nAChRs mecamylamine were purchased from Sigma Chemical Co. (St. Louis, MO). KC growth medium (KGM) containing 5 ng/ml epidermal growth factor and 50 µg/ml bovine pituitary extract was purchased from Gibco-BRL (Cambridge, MA). Fura-2 and calcium calibration kit were obtained from Molecular Probes (Eugene, OR) and ionomycin from Calbiochem (San Diego, CA). Agarose type HSA was from Accurate Scientific (Westbury, NY). Heat-inactivated newborn calf serum, 0.05% trypsin, trypan blue dye solution, and Wright's stain were from Sigma Chemical Co.
Cell Culture.
KCs were isolated from human epidermis by
treating newborn human foreskin with a trypsin solution overnight. The
individual cells were suspended in serum-free KGM, plated in standard
tissue culture flasks, and cultured at 37°C in a humidified
atmosphere of 5% CO2 according to the procedure
detailed in Grando et al. (1993a)
. The cultures were expanded until
they reached ~70 to 80% confluency, at which time the cells were
harvested and used in the experiments.
AGKOS Assay.
Six-well tissue culture-agarose gel plates were
prepared as described previously (Grando et al., 1993b
), except the
agarose gel was always prepared on the day of experiment. First passage KCs were suspended in KGM, counted in a hemocytometer, and loaded at a
high density (4 × 104 cells/10 µl) into
each 3-mm well in agarose gel. The cells that were loaded into the
AGKOS were >90% viable as determined by trypan blue exclusion. After
an overnight incubation to allow the cells to settle and to form a
megacolony in a 3-mm well in the agarose gel, the cultures were fed
with KGM containing various concentrations of nicotinic agents and
compared with cultures that received no drug (controls), which were
used to determine the baseline migration distance (see below). The
cultures were incubated for 10 days in a humid
CO2 incubator and the medium was refreshed daily.
During this time, the size of the colony increased under the agarose gel due to the advancement of the leading edge outward from the original 3-mm well. The migration of KCs was stopped by fixing the
cells in 0.25% glutaraldehyde and staining them with Wright's stain.
The migration distance, i.e., the distance outward from the original
3-mm well to the leading edge, was measured as described previously
(Grando et al., 1993b
) with minor modifications. Briefly, the image of
the megacolony was magnified by projecting it onto a screen. A
transparent grid corresponding to the original size of the colony was
overlaid to visualize the starting point, and the migration distance
was measured on four sides of the colony from the starting point to the
leading edge. The values from duplicate cultures were averaged to
obtain the mean value of the migration distance for a particular
experiment (n = 1). To standardize results obtained in
experiments with KCs from different donors, the mean values of the
migration distances were converted into the percentage of control. The
control value for KCs from each particular donor was determined by
measuring the baseline migration distance (in millimeters), and taken
as 100%.
Generation of Anti-nAChR Antibodies.
The antisera specific
for the
3 and
7 nAChR subunits were generated in rabbits as
reported previously (Ndoye et al., 1998
). Briefly, a synthetic peptide
analog of the carboxyl terminus of
3, CPLMAREDA (residue numbers
496-503), and
7, CFVEAVSKDFA (residue numbers 493-502), were
conjugated onto bovine thyroglobulin specifically through the Cys
residue that was incorporated into the peptide structure, and the
conjugate was purified before being used to immunize rabbits. The
antisera produced by the rabbits were tested by enzyme-linked
immunosorbent assay for their ability to recognize specifically the
3 and
7 receptor subunits. Positive antisera were selected, and
then tested in Western blots of KC homogenate (data not shown). Only
antisera that recognized the
3 and
7 subunits in enzyme-linked
immunosorbent assay and yielded on Western blots the protein bands that
could be abolished by preincubating the antiserum with the specific
peptide used for immunization were used in the experiments reported
herein. The
3 antiserum produced three bands on the Western blots at
apparent molecular masses of 46, 51, and 58 kDa, respectively,
which are similar to those reported for the
3 subunit isoforms
present in chick ciliary ganglia (Halvorsen and Berg, 1990
). The
7
antiserum produced a single band at an apparent molecular mass of 63 kDa, which is similar to the previously reported molecular mass for
this nAChR subunit (Chen et al., 1998
).
Immunofluorescence (IIF) Assays.
The indirect IIF
experiments were performed as detailed previously (Zia et al., 1997
)
with freshly frozen normal human skin specimens or cultured KC
monolayers as a substrate. Briefly, first passage human foreskin KCs
were seeded onto glass coverslips, and incubated for 2 days in KGM to
form monolayers. The monolayers were then fixed for 3 min with 3%
freshly depolymerized paraformaldehyde that contained 7% sucrose,
washed, and incubated overnight at 4°C with the rabbit anti-receptor
antibody. The rabbit anti-
3 and -
7 antisera were diluted with PBS
that contained 1.0 mg/ml BSA. Binding of primary antibody was
visualized by incubating the skin section or a coverslip with cultured
KCs at room temperature for 1 h with fluorescein
isothiocyanate-labeled donkey anti-rabbit IgG secondary antibody
(dilution 1:100) purchased from Pierce (Rockford, IL). The specificity
of antibody binding in the IIF experiments was demonstrated by
abolishing the staining by omitting the primary antibody and by
preincubating the rabbit antiserum with the specific peptide used for
immunization. The specimens were examined with an Axiovert 135 fluorescence microscope (Carl Zeiss Inc., Thornwood, NY). To calculate
relative amounts of receptor subunits expressed by KCs preincubated
with nicotine, the acquired immunofluorescent images were analyzed by a
semiquantitative IIF assay (Ndoye et al., 1998
). At least three
different randomly selected segments of each microscopic fields were
analyzed. Each segment included at least three different cells.
Measurement of 45Ca2+ Influx.
The
assay of transmembrane influx of
45Ca2+ was performed
essentially as described in Grando et al. (1996)
. Briefly, KCs were resuspended in KGM and loaded in Eppendorf tubes at a final
concentration of 1 × 107 cells/50
µl/tube. The cell aliquots then received 300 µl of KGM containing
45Ca2+ (1.2 mM
45Ca2+ at a final specific
activity of 11.6 mCi/mmol; NEN, Boston, MA), incubated for 1 min at
37°C in the absence (baseline) or presence of test nicotinic drugs
(experiment). After washing three times by centrifugation at
250g for 1 min in a Beckman microcentrifuge in ice-cold,
radioactive calcium-free KGM, the cells were solubilized in 100 µl of
Triton X-100 (Sigma Chemical Co.), transferred into scintillation vials
containing 5.0 ml of the scintillation cocktail Ecolume (ICN
Pharmaceuticals, Costa Mesa, CA), and
45Ca2+ taken up by KCs was
measured in an LKB liquid scintillation counter. Nicotinic drug-induced
changes in 45Ca2+ influx
were expressed as a percentage of basal influx, taken as 100%.
Measurement of [Ca2+]i.
The
concentration of [Ca2+]i
in KCs was measured with calcium-sensitive Fura-2 acetoxymethyl ester
by the fluorescence ratiometric method detailed in Zia et al. (1997)
.
Briefly, KCs were plated onto two-well glass coverslip chambers (Nunc
Nalgene, Naperville, IL) at a density of 1.5 × 104 cells/cm2 and cultured
in KGM in a humid CO2 incubator at 37°C. On the day of an experiment, the cells were washed with HEPES/Hanks' buffer
consisting of 20 mM HEPES, 132 mM NaCl, 5.4 mM KCl, 0.44 mM
KH2PO4, 0.34 mM
Na2HPO4, 0.41 mM
MgSO4, 0.49 mM MgCl2, 0.03 mM CaCl2, 5.5 mM glucose, and 0.05% BSA (pH
7.4); loaded for 60 min at room temperature with 5 µM Fura-2 in the
HEPES/Hanks' buffer; washed twice with the same buffer; and allowed to
recover for 15 min by incubating in a CO2
incubator at 37°C. The chamber slide was then mounted on the
preheated stage at 37°C of an invert Axiovert 135 microscope equipped
with an incubator chamber and with an automated filter wheel that was
controlled by the computer software IP Lab Ratio Imaging (Signal
Analytical, Vienna, VA). The Fura-2 fluorochrom was excited
sequentially at wavelengths of 340 and 380 nm and its emission at 510 nm was detected. The
[Ca2+]i was continuously
monitored by capturing and digitalizing images of each cell with a 20×
Fluar objective and an IC-100 video camera (Photon Technology
International, Monmouth Junction, NJ) that transmitted the signal to a
Power Macintosh 8500/120 computer. The fluorescence was quantified by
averaging pixel intensities of 20 cells for each experiment and by
subtracting background. At the end of each experiment, 340:380-nm
fluorescence ratios were calibrated by measuring minimum and maximum
fluorescence (Rmin and
Rmax). The
Rmax was achieved by adding 5 µM
ionomycin to 1.2 mM CaCl2 containing
HEPES/Hanks' buffer, and the Rmin was obtained by adding 4 mM
ethyleneglycol-bis(B-aminoethylether)-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid to the culture medium. The concentrations of
[Ca2+]i were calculated
from 340:380-nm fluorescence ratios. The
Kd value of 216 nM was determined with
the calcium calibration kit from Molecular Probes with the protocol
provided by the manufacturer.
Statistics. The results of the quantitative assays were expressed as mean ± S.D. Significance was determined with Student's t test. The relationship between nicotine effects on migration and transmembrane 45Ca2+ influx was determined with correlation analysis.
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Results |
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Migration of KCs In Vitro.
The AGKOS has been designed to
study the migratory function of KCs in prolonged experiments. It
measures the response of a large cell population
(>104 cells) to an experimental treatment
(Grando et al., 1993b
). Approximately 2 h after KCs were loaded
into a 3-mm-diameter well in the agarose gel, they formed a round
megacolony of tightly packed cells corresponding to the size of the
well. The cells at the periphery of the colony flattened and advanced
under the agarose gel outward from the colony. The drugs that were
tested were always added on the 24th h of incubation, and the crawling
locomotion of the KCs was observed through the transparent agarose gel
with an inverted phase-contrast microscope. KCs moved as individual
cells as well as a cellular sheet that constituted the leading front of
the colony. Measurements of the KC outgrowth, the migration distance,
were always made from the edge of the 3-mm well that outlined the
circumference of the original colony to the front of the outgrowth. The
magnitude of outgrowth was partially donor dependent, and the migration distances of untreated KCs over the 10-day period of observation ranged
between 2.5 and 5.0 mm.
Activation of KC nAChRs Inhibits Cell Migration.
To determine
nicotine effects on KC migration, KCs were incubated in AGKOS plates
for 10 days in the presence of the nicotinic agonist nicotine given
alone or in combination with mecamylamine, a specific antagonist of the
neuronal-type nAChRs expressed by KCs (Grando et al., 1995
). As shown
in Fig. 1A, activation of KC nAChRs with
100 µM nicotine significantly (P < .05) reduced the
migration distance. The inhibitory effect of nicotine was mediated by
activation of KC nAChRs because it could be abolished by mecamylamine
(Fig. 1A). When given alone, mecamylamine did not significantly alter
KC migration (P > .05). The cytotoxicity was not
responsible for the inhibitory effect observed with nicotine. Cell
viability assays, based on the trypan blue dye exclusion, revealed an
average of 8.3% dead cells after 10 days of incubation of KCs from
different cell donors at 100 µM nicotine. This is not statistically
different (P > .05) when compared either with the
12.8% dead cells found in the cultures incubated in KGM containing 100 µM mecamylamine alone or with the 10.3% dead cells present in the
control, untreated cultures of KCs from the same cell donors.
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18 to 10
3 M. Measurements of the migration distances at the end of incubation demonstrated that nicotine inhibited crawling locomotion of KCs in a
dose-dependent manner (Fig. 1B). The decrease of the migration distance
became significant (P < .05) at the nanomolar
concentration of nicotine.
Activation of KC nAChRs Elicits 45Ca2+
Influx.
The nAChR subunits found in KCs (for review, see Grando,
1997
) can form ion channels that are permeable to
Ca2+ (Fieber and Adams, 1991
; Delbono et al.,
1997
; Quik et al., 1997
), and agonist binding to KC nAChRs elicits
Ca2+ influx (Grando et al., 1996
). We previously
also reported that incubation of KCs in the presence of nicotine
results in rapid differentiation (i.e., senescence) of these cells
(Grando et al., 1996
). Because calcium plays a critical role in
launching KC differentiation program (Martinez et al., 1999
) and
because differentiation of KCs slows their migration rate by
approximately one-half (Obedencio et al., 1999
), inhibition of KC
migration by nicotine might be mediated by alterations of
calcium-dependent regulation of the KC cell cycle. To test this
hypothesis, we determined the relationship between the concentration
response of KCs to nicotine determined in the migration assay and the
concentration response measured in the
45Ca2+ influx assay. As
expected, exposure of suspended KCs to increasing concentrations of
nicotine elicited a dose-dependent increase of the amount of
45Ca2+ taken up by the
cells (Fig. 1C). Because measurable changes in 45Ca2+ influx started at
the nanomolar dose of nicotine, the concentration values of
10
9, 10
8,
10
7, 10
6, and
10
5 M were used to determine whether
correlation exists. The correlation analysis of the
concentration-response curves shown on Fig. 1, B and C, revealed a
perfect inverse relationship between nicotine-induced decrease of
migration distance and an increase of
45Ca2+ influx in KCs. The
calculated Pearson's correlation coefficient (
) was equal to
0.851, and the coefficient of determination (R2) was found to be 0.725.
Activation of KC nAChRs Is Associated with an Increase of
[Ca2+]i.
The permeability to
Ca2+ of a neuronal-type nAChR channel comprised
of
7 subunits is sufficient to elicit detectable increase in
[Ca2+]i (Delbono et al.,
1997
). However, the oscillations of
[Ca2+]i are thought to
mediate physiological regulation of vital cellular functions of KCs,
including migration (Yuspa et al., 1988
). Therefore, to elucidate the
biochemical mechanisms of nicotine effects on KC migration, we examined
the effects of nicotinic drugs on
[Ca2+]i in cultured KCs
with the calcium-sensitive dye Fura-2. The ratiometric analysis of
cells loaded with Fura-2 quantitates the total concentration of free
cytoplasmic Ca2+, which can originate from the
mobilization of intracellular stores and from the influx through
Ca2+ channels in the plasma membrane (Grynkiewicz
et al., 1985
).
7 nAChRs occur at a relatively high
(10
4 M) concentration of nicotine (Delbono et
al., 1997
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Cultured KCs Express Both
3- and
7-Containing nAChRs.
The repertoire of nAChR subunits that can assemble functional ACh-gated
ion channels in the cell membrane of human KCs includes the classic
3,
5,
7,
2, and
4 nAChRs subunits (Grando et al., 1995
,
1996
). Because the
7 subunits form a homomeric channel, composed of
several identical subunit proteins, and because the other subunits are
assembled into a single heteromeric channel, such as
3
2
4
5,
3
2
5,
3
4
5,
3
2
4,
3
2, and
3
4, each of which contains an
3 subunit, all of the various nAChRs expressed by KCs can be visualized with the use of just two antibodies, an
anti-
3 antibody and an anti-
7 antibody.
3 immunoreactivity
was localized mainly to the cell membrane of undifferentiated, small
basal cells attached to the epidermal basal membrane. In marked
contrast, the
7 immunoreactivity was localized predominantly to
terminally differentiated, large KCs comprising the stratum granulosum,
the uppermost layer of viable epidermal cells.
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3-positive KCs are
small cells that are evenly distributed throughout the colony (Fig.
3c). The immunostaining for
3 was seen both in KC cultures incubated
in KGM containing low and high concentrations of
Ca2+, 0.09 and 1.8 mM, respectively, indicating
that the
3-containing nAChRs are present at the earliest stages of
KC maturation. At confluence, the
3 subunits clustered in areas of
the cell membrane associated with cell-to-cell contacts (data not
shown). As seen in Fig. 3c, the IIF staining with the
3-specific
antibody selectively excluded the large, immotile KCs located between
the small, actively moving
3-positive cells.
The
7-immunoreactive cells were large, immotile, terminally
differentiated cells located predominantly in the more central parts of
the colony (Fig. 3d). The
7-specific antibody did not stain the
small, nondifferentiated KCs interspersed between the
7-positive
large KCs. In contrast to the results obtained with the
3-specific
antibody, preincubation of cultures in KGM containing a
differentiation-inducing concentration of free
Ca2+ (1.8 mM Ca2+) resulted
in an increase in the number of
7-immunoreactive KCs, which suggests
that KC maturation and differentiation are associated with an increase
in the number of homomeric
7 nAChRs per cell.
In both tissue and cell culture specimens, the intensity of IIF
staining observed with the
7-specific antibody was stronger than
that observed with the
3-specific antibody (Fig. 3, a-d). Examination of the specimens at higher magnifications showed that the
immunopositive clusters revealed by the anti-
7 antibody on KC cell
surfaces were larger than those revealed by the anti-
3 antibody.
Taking into consideration the ability of nicotine to modulate the
expression of its own receptors/channels (Peng et al., 1994
3 and
7 in exposed KCs reveled reciprocal
changes in the relative amounts of these subunits (Fig. 3, e and f). On
the cell surfaces of nicotine-treated KCs, the relative amount of
3
significantly (P < .05) decreased whereas the relative
amount of
7 significantly (P < .05) increased compared with the baseline, taken as 100%. Both low (10 nM) and high
(100 µM) doses of nicotine produced similar changes, except that
up-regulation of the
7 expression was more pronounced at the
nanomolar compared with the micromolar concentration of nicotine. These
findings suggested that the effects of nicotine on both KC locomotion
and calcium metabolism were mediated predominantly by KC
7 nAChRs.
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Discussion |
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This study characterizes for the first time the nAChR-mediated pathway of the physiological autocrine, paracrine, and juxtacrine control of wound re-epithelialization by endogenously secreted ACh. Through this pathway, ACh may inhibit KC migratory function with Ca2+ as a second messenger. The results provide a biochemical mechanism to explain the deleterious effects of nicotine on wound healing.
To characterize the cholinergic effects on crawling locomotion of KCs,
we used an "under agarose" cell migration system, or AGKOS (Grando
et al., 1993b
). Immunostaining of AGKOS plates at the end of
experiments revealed that KCs expressing the proliferation marker Ki-67
are localized between the leading front and more internal parts of the
colony (Grando et al., 1993b
). KCs comprising the leading front do not
express the Ki-67 antigen, suggesting that migrating KCs do not divide.
Using AGKOS, we previously demonstrated that ACh and its congeners
exhibit a plethora of effects on KCs, including regulation of crawling
locomotion, and that deprivation of endogenous ACh kills KCs (for
review, see Grando, 1997
; Grando and Horton, 1997
). Hence, ACh may act
as a cytokine for movement.
In this study, we found that long-term exposure of KCs to nicotine decreases their migration distance. The inhibitory effect of nicotine was receptor mediated rather than toxic. This is illustrated by the following observations. First, the extent of migration inhibition correlated directly with the pharmacological dose of nicotine added to AGKOS plates. Second, mecamylamine, a specific antagonist of the neuronal-type nAChRs that are expressed by KCs, abolished the inhibitory effect of nicotine. And third, cytotoxicity was eliminated as a potential explanation by finding in the cultures treated with nicotine the number of dead cells that was similar to that found in untreated, control cell cultures originated from the same donors of KCs.
The response of KCs to chronic nicotine exposure appears to be directly
opposite to that observed on short-term exposure. Short-term exposure
to nicotine augments cytoplasm motility and lateral migration of KCs
and also aggravates other cell functions, such as proliferation and
adhesion (Grando et al., 1995
). Acute exposure of suspended KCs to
nicotine results in attachment and spreading of the cells on the dish
surface and development of intercellular contacts within 20 to 30 min,
whereas untreated cells accomplish this only after 90 to 120 min
(Grando et al., 1993b
, 1995
). The exposed cells flatten and extend
cytoplasmic aprons toward neighboring cells, which is very similar to
nAChR-mediated induction of actin-driven lamellar protrusions (Zheng et
al., 1994
). This response to short-term treatment with nicotine may partially explain why nicotine-treated rats with dry-ice blisters show
more rapid wound healing compared with untreated controls (Westerman et
al., 1993
). Long-term exposure of KCs to nicotine produces opposite
effects. In addition to inhibition of migration, found in this study,
it has been demonstrated previously that chronic exposure to nicotine
markedly increases the number of KCs forming cornified envelopes and
staining with antibodies to the differentiation markers cytokeratins
10/11, filaggrin, involucrin, and transglutaminase type I (Theilig et
al., 1994
; Grando et al., 1996
). In keeping with these findings is a
recent report showing that differentiation decreases speed of moving
KCs (Obedencio et al., 1999
).
The inhibition of KC migration with nicotine in AGKOS assays was within
the range of nicotine concentrations found in the blood of cigarette
smokes and snuff users (Russell et al., 1981
), indicating that the
pathobiological effect of nicotine on re-epithelialization may play a
role in delayed wound healing in tobacco users. Chronic exposure to
nicotine-containing products, such as direct and second-hand tobacco
smoke and chewing of smokeless tobacco, is associated with impaired
wound healing (for review, see Smith and Fenske, 1996
). Inhibition of
wound re-epithelialization, a distinctly deleterious effect, has
traditionally been ascribed to ischemia due to nicotine-induced
vasoconstriction. However, KCs grow perfectly well in a serum-free
environment (Gilchrest et al., 1982
; Boyce and Ham, 1983
), suggesting
that other mechanisms may play significant roles. Among these, the
direct effect of nicotine on KC migration described in this study. A
combination of two effects of chronic nicotine exposure on KCs, namely,
inhibited locomotion and increased terminal differentiation (Grando et
al., 1996
), helps explain impaired healing of cutaneous (Smith and
Fenske, 1996
) and intraoral (Jones and Triplett, 1992
) wounds in
tobacco users. Furthermore, the mechanism underlying the negative
effects of nicotine on KC motility may be similar to that proposed to
explain the reduced ciliary beating of bronchial epithelial cells in
smokers (Agius et al., 1995
). Likewise, the expression of nAChRs on the
surface of blood vessel endothelium (Macklin et al., 1998
) and, most
importantly, by vascular smooth muscles (S. A. Grando and A. Ndoye,
unpublished observations), suggests that smoking-associated
vasoconstriction is a direct effect of nicotine, rather than an
indirect effect that is mediated by a release of catecholamine from the
adrenal gland.
The drastic differences in effects observed between acute and chronic
administration of nicotine to KCs may be related to the
nicotine-induced alterations of KC nAChRs that are due to desensitization of overstimulated receptors and/or that are due to
genomic effects of nicotine on the repertoire of cutaneous cholinergic
enzymes and receptors regulating ACh metabolism and mediating ACh
signaling through both the muscarinic and the nicotinic pathways. Both
mechanisms have been described in the literature (Peng et al., 1994
;
Sastry, 1995
; Wang, 1997
). In this study, we found that nicotine
elicits a switch in KC nAChR subunit composition wherein the
7
subunit-containing nAChRs replace the
3 subunit-containing nAChRs on
the cell membrane of KCs. Taking into consideration that rapid
desensitization is a property of homomeric
7 subunit-containing nAChRs (Fenster et al., 1997
), we expected to find a decreased amount
of
7 in KCs preincubated with nicotine. However, we observed instead
a significant (P < .05) increase in the relative
amount
7 immunoreactivity in KCs incubated with either low or high
dose of nicotine for 10 days, suggesting that during long-term
exposures of KCs to nicotine a compensatory overexpression of
7
nAChRs occurs. Indeed, nicotine has been shown to stimulate the
expression of
7 by the human neuroblastoma cell line SH-SY5Y (Peng
et al., 1997
). We have reported previously that smoking significantly (P < .05) increases the relative numbers of nAChRs in
bronchial epithelial cells, and that this increase can be reproduced in cell cultures exposed to nicotine, including up-regulation of
7 (Zia
et al., 1997
). The results of this study also show that the pattern of
nicotine-induced changes of the subunit composition of KC nAChRs
matches that observed during normal differentiation of KCs in the
epidermis, suggesting that nicotine accelerates the genetically
determined program of KC differentiation leading to premature
senescence, or terminal differentiation, of these cells.
We found that the contribution of different nAChR subunits to formation
of ACh-gated nicotinic ion channels in the plasma membrane of KCs
changes with KC maturation. Both the heteromeric nAChRs, containing
3 subunits, and the homomeric nAChRs, comprised of
7 subunits,
were found by immunostaining on the cell membrane of cultured KCs.
Incubation of KCs at high extracellular concentration of
Ca2+ launches a genetically determined cellular
differentiation in KCs (Sharpe et al., 1993
). In this study, it
increased the immunostaining for the
7 subunit, which indicates that
the expression of
7-containing nAChRs is differentiation dependent.
Accordingly, both in vivo and in vitro the anti-
7 antibody stained
more mature, immotile KCs. In contrast, the immunostaining for the
3
subunit did not require preincubation of KCs at high
Ca2+, which indicates that the
3-containing
nAChRs are present at the earliest stages of KC development. The
anti-
3 antibody stained mainly small, motile, nondifferentiated KCs
located in vitro at the leading front of the colony, and comprising in
vivo the epidermal basal layer. Therefore, it can be postulated that
the
3-containing nAChRs play a major role in mediating the effects
of ACh and its nicotinic congeners at the earliest stages of
KC-mediated re-epithelialization when
7-containing nAChRs are absent
from or underexpressed on the cell membrane of crawling KCs. After the
migrating KCs had stopped, attached to one another, and formed islands
of epithelization, the
7-containing nAChRs may exert control over
the nicotinic-mediated pathway of cholinergic regulation of
re-epithelialization. Therefore, a switch in subunit composition of the
nAChR-gated ion channels, which in turn, brings about a corresponding
switch in the ionic properties of the ion channels on the KC cell
membrane, is a more likely explanation of the profound differences
observed in the effects between short- and long-term exposure to
nicotine on KCs, rather than a mere desensitization of the
3-containing nAChRs.
The deleterious effect of nicotine on crawling locomotion of KCs
correlated perfectly with stimulatory effect of nicotine on
Ca2+ influx, suggesting that nicotine-induced
alterations in KC calcium metabolism played a role. Furthermore, both a
decreased migration distance and an increased sensitivity to
nicotine-dependent rise in
[Ca2+]i were associated
with up-regulation of the
7 subunit-containing nAChRs. Although both
3 and
7 subunits can contribute to the nAChRs that are permeable
to Ca2+, the ACh-gated ion channels composed of
the
7 subunits have the greatest Ca2+
permeability (Seguela et al., 1993
). We found that nicotine induces elevation in cytosolic free Ca2+ similar to that
described for bronchial epithelial cells, which have been shown to
exhibit an increase in
[Ca2+]i on exposure to
nicotine (Zia et al., 1997
). The nicotine-induced increase in
[Ca2+]i levels in KCs was
terminated by washing the cells to remove the nicotine. Mecamylamine
blocked nicotine-induced
[Ca2+]i suggesting an
nAChRs-mediated pathway. An increased of
[Ca2+]i could result from
activation of the
7-containing nAChRs (Delbono et al., 1997
; Quik et
al., 1997
). Interestingly, both in the studies with human embryonic
kidney cells 293 with a stable expression of
7 nAChRs (Delbono et
al., 1997
) and in our studies with human neonatal KCs expressing native
7 nAChRs, the influx of Ca2+ could be observed
starting at the nicotine dose that was much lower than that that
required to elicit measurable changes in [Ca2+]i. This phenomenon
can be explained by the fact that an increase in the
[Ca2+]i measured in the
Fura-2 assay is a summative effect of Ca2+
influx, mediated primarily via
7 nAChRs, and a set of intracellular events, such as Ca2+ extrusion, sequestration,
and buffering, which may act to protect the cell from an unopposed
raise in [Ca2+]i. The
need to preincubate KCs with nanomolar concentrations of nicotine to
increase sensitivity of these cells to nicotine in the ratiometric
assay of [Ca2+]i may be
explained by the above-discussed ability of nicotine to foster KC
differentiation that is associated with up-regulated expression of its
own receptors, particularly the
7-containing nAChRs.
In conclusion, activation of the nicotinic pathway in human KCs elicits
a transmembrane influx of Ca2+, whereas
activation of the muscarinic pathway inhibits
Ca2+ influx and enhances
Ca2+ efflux (Grando and Horton, 1997
). Perhaps,
the stimulatory effect of ACh on Ca2+ influx into
the cells, mediated by its nicotinic class of cholinergic receptors, is
balanced by an inhibitory effect, mediated by its muscarinic class of
the cholinergic receptors, and simultaneous activation of both receptor
classes may be required to produce a kind of a yin-yang autoregulatory
balance. By selectively activating nAChRs, nicotine may imbalance this
physiological equilibrium, and an imbalance between the nicotinic and
muscarinic pathways of ACh regulation of Ca2+
metabolism may alter normal cellular performance. Therefore, changes in
the [Ca2+]i level may
account for the inhibitory effect of nicotine on KC migration.
| |
Footnotes |
|---|
Accepted for publication February 21, 2000.
Received for publication October 27, 1999.
1 This study was supported by National Institutes of Health Grant R29 AR42955 (to S.A.G.).
Send reprint requests to: Sergei A. Grando, M.D., Ph.D., D.Sc., Department of Dermatology, University of California-Davis, UC Davis Medical Center, 4860 Y St., Suite 3400, Sacramento, CA 95817. E-mail: sagrando{at}ucdavis.edu
| |
Abbreviations |
|---|
KC, keratinocyte; AGKOS, agarose gel keratinocyte outgrowth system; ACh, acetylcholine; nAChR, nicotinic acetylcholine receptor; KGM, KC growth medium; IIF, indirect immunofluorescence.
| |
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