Studies were undertaken to determine whether extracellular signal regulated kinase (ERK) oscillations regulate a unique subset of genes in human keratinocytes and subsequently whether the p38 stress response inhibits ERK oscillations. A DNA microarray identified many genes that were unique to ERK oscillations, and network reconstruction predicted an important role for the mediator complex subunit 1 (MED1) node in mediating ERK oscillation-dependent gene expression. Increased ERK-dependent phosphorylation of MED1 was observed in oscillating cells compared to nonoscillating counterparts as validation. Treatment of keratinocytes with a p38 inhibitor (SB203580) increased ERK oscillation amplitudes and MED1 and phospho-MED1 protein levels. Bromate is a probable human carcinogen that activates p38. Bromate inhibited ERK oscillations in human keratinocytes and JB6 cells and induced an increase in phospho-p38 and a decrease in phospho-MED1 protein levels. Treatment of normal rat kidney cells and primary salivary gland epithelial cells with bromate decreased phospho-MED1 levels in a reversible fashion upon treatment with p38 inhibitors (SB202190; SB203580). Our results indicate that oscillatory behavior in the ERK pathway alters homeostatic gene regulation patterns and that the cellular response to perturbation may manifest differently in oscillating vs nonoscillating cells.
Studies were undertaken to determine whether extracellular signal regulated kinase (ERK) oscillations regulate a unique subset of genes in human keratinocytes and subsequently whether the p38 stress response inhibits ERK oscillations. A DNA microarray identified many genes that were unique to ERK oscillations, and network reconstruction predicted an important role for the mediator complex subunit 1 (MED1) node in mediating ERK oscillation-dependent gene expression. Increased ERK-dependent phosphorylation of MED1 was observed in oscillating cells compared to nonoscillating counterparts as validation. Treatment of keratinocytes with a p38 inhibitor (SB203580) increased ERK oscillation amplitudes and MED1 and phospho-MED1 protein levels. Bromate is a probable human carcinogen that activates p38. Bromate inhibited ERK oscillations in human keratinocytes and JB6 cells and induced an increase in phospho-p38 and a decrease in phospho-MED1 protein levels. Treatment of normal rat kidney cells and primary salivary gland epithelial cells with bromate decreased phospho-MED1 levels in a reversible fashion upon treatment with p38 inhibitors (SB202190; SB203580). Our results indicate that oscillatory behavior in the ERK pathway alters homeostatic gene regulation patterns and that the cellular response to perturbation may manifest differently in oscillating vs nonoscillating cells.
Signaling through the mitogen activated
protein kinase (MAPK) network
affects virtually every major aspect of cell physiology and is among
the most intensely studied cell signaling pathways in biology. Multiple
MAPK regulatory features related to signal strength, signal duration,
compartmental localization, coordination through scaffolds/inhibitors,
and dynamic behaviors have been characterized.[1−5] Four MAPK branches have been defined and are referenced
according to their terminal kinase (p38, extracellular signal regulated
kinase (ERK), JNK, and ERK5).[6] MAPK branches
are frequently associated with opposing cellular programs, such as
p38/JNK regulating differentiation, stress-responsive signaling/apoptosis,
and ERK/ERK5 regulating mitogenic signaling.[7,8] Exceptions
have been observed, such as a role for p38 in proliferation[9,10] or ERK in cell death,[11] making it difficult
to rely on measurements of kinase activities for predicting biological
response.Our group has defined oscillatory behavior in the
ERK pathway,[12] and the function of this
dynamic behavior in
cells and tissues is currently unknown. ERK oscillations are observed
in primary cell culture and become deregulated with prolonged passage.[13] The mechanisms by which ERK oscillations are
deregulated in vitro remain unclear; however, these
observations suggest that the oscillating phenotype is under-represented
in cell culture models used for toxicological investigations. ERK
oscillations regulate a tumor suppressor activity that is conserved in vitro/in vivo,[14] suggesting that oscillatory behavior can significantly impact biological
outcomes. Therefore, it is prudent to consider this regulatory feature
in toxicological investigations, and there is a need to bridge the
molecular dynamics observed in vitro with complex
biology in tissues to improve the interpretation of experimental models
used for hazard assessment and risk prediction. ERK oscillations are
measured at the single cell level in vitro, which
is not experimentally tractable in animal models. In contrast, genes
that are uniquely regulated by ERK oscillations could provide a bridge
that can be examined in vivo by standard molecular/histological
methods.To date, the molecular features regulating canonical
ERK signaling
also regulate oscillatory behavior.[5,12] Stress-responsive
signaling is known to antagonize the ERK pathway,[15] but this cross-talk has not yet been demonstrated to regulate
oscillatory behavior and may be of toxicological interest. As a first
step toward advancing our understanding of ERK dynamics in complex
tissues, we have defined gene expression patterns regulated by ERK
oscillations and provide an initial assessment of regulatory nodes
that may mediate oscillation-specific gene expression that are also
targets of stress-responsive signaling.
Materials
and Methods
Cell Culture
hTERT-immortalized normal human keratinocytes
(kindly provided by Dr. Jerry Shay, The University of Texas Southwestern
Medical Center) with and without stable transfection with an ERK1-green
fluorescent protein (ERK-GFP) chimera were maintained as previously
described.[16] The parental human keratinocyte
line was maintained in Keratinocyte Serum Free Medium (InVitrogen;
Carlsbad, CA) supplemented with bovine pituitary extract and epidermal
growth factor (EGF) according to the manufacturer’s directions.
A subclone of the parental human keratinocyte line that self-regulates
persistent and sustained ERK oscillations via an EGF receptor (EGFR)-dependent
mechanism without the need for the exogenous EGFR ligand was maintained
in keratinocyte serum free medium supplemented with pituitary extract
alone. It is unclear whether this self-maintaining subclone regulates
ERK oscillations via an EGFR autocrine loop or mutant EGFR. Keratinocytes
were subcultured using 0.025% trypsin and 3 volumes of trypsin neutralizing
solution. From this parental keratinocyte cell line, we subcloned
3 distinct strains (#1–3) that differ in their ability to regulate
ERK oscillations. The characteristics of these strains are outlined
in Figure 1. Normal rat kidney cells (NRK CRL-6509,
proximal tubule in origin) were maintained in Dulbecco’s modified
Eagle’s medium (DMEM) supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum
(FBS) and 1% antibiotic antimycotic solution (Sigma Chemical, St.
Louis, MO). Cells were
seeded in 12-well plates at 150,000 cells/mL and allowed to grow for
24 h (90% confluence). Cells were then exposed to 10 μM PD98059
or concentrations of bromate (KBrO3; Sigma Chemical, St.
Loius, MO) ranging from 0.06–0.3 mM for the indicated time
points before being washed and harvested using a rubber policeman
in immunoblot buffer (40 mM Tris [pH 7.5], 1 mM EDTA, 1 mM ethylene
glycol tetraacetic acid (EGTA), 5% NP-40, 1 μM activated
orthovanadate). In select experiments, cells were treated with pharmacological
inhibitors of p38 (SB203580, SB202190), JNK (SP600125), or MEK (PD98059)
(Enzo Life Sciences, Farmingdale, NY). We have previously demonstrated
that bromate activates the p38 pathway at concentrations employed
in our studies,[15,22] and this toxicant was used to
further interrogate p38-dependent antagonism of ERK signaling.
Figure 1
Human keratinocyte
model system. Three independent cell strains
were subcloned from an hTERT-immortalized normal human keratinocyte
cell line that had been transduced with an ERK1-GFP chimera to monitor
ERK nuclear-cytoplasmic shuttling. Strain #1 shows transient ERK activation
and nuclear translocation following TGFα treatment with no detectable
oscillations. Strain #2 displays persistent ERK oscillations that
are dependent on exogenous TGFα and inhibited by mAb 225, indicating
dependence on the EGFR. Strain #3 displays spontaneous ERK oscillations
that are inhibited by mAb 225, indicating dependence on the EGFR.
The time period is different for ERK oscillations regulated in strain
#1 compared to strain #2.
Human keratinocyte
model system. Three independent cell strains
were subcloned from an hTERT-immortalized normal human keratinocyte
cell line that had been transduced with an ERK1-GFP chimera to monitor
ERK nuclear-cytoplasmic shuttling. Strain #1 shows transient ERK activation
and nuclear translocation following TGFα treatment with no detectable
oscillations. Strain #2 displays persistent ERK oscillations that
are dependent on exogenous TGFα and inhibited by mAb 225, indicating
dependence on the EGFR. Strain #3 displays spontaneous ERK oscillations
that are inhibited by mAb 225, indicating dependence on the EGFR.
The time period is different for ERK oscillations regulated in strain
#1 compared to strain #2.
Isolation and Culture of Primary Salivary Epithelial Cells
Primary salivary gland epithelial cells were isolated from adult
male Sprague–Dawley rat submaxillary glands. Glands were removed
aseptically; the outer connective tissue was excised followed by washing
in Hank’s balanced salt solution (HBSS) supplemented with 1×
antibiotic/antimycotic (Life Technologies 100× antibiotic–antimycotic
solution, Grand Island, NY). Glands were cut into cubes of approximately
1 mm3 followed by washing 2× in HBSS using gravity
settling. Cubes were then suspended in HBSS supplemented with collagenase
(CLSPA, 150 units/mL) and hyaluronidase (150 units/mL) (Worthington
Biochemical Corporation, Lakewood, NJ) and dissociated for 45 min
at 37 °C with gentle rocking. The digests were passed through
a 70 μm nylon mesh, and isolated cells were collected by centrifugation
at 1300 rpm for 5 min. Cell pellets were resuspended in advanced DMEM:F12
supplemented with 2.5% FBS, 2 mM Glutamax, 100 units/mL penicillin,
100 units/mL streptomycin, 0.25 μg/mL fungizone, and 10 ng/mL
epidermal growth factor (EGF). Cells were subcultured by trypsinization
and used at passage 3.
ERK Oscillation Assay
An oscillation
assay that monitors
persistent ERK nuclear-cytoplasmic shuttling at the single cell level
was used as described.[12,16] Persistent nuclear-cytoplasmic
shuttling requires coordinated regulation by both positive and negative
feedback processes[17] and is an appropriate
index for long-term monitoring of ERK activity in live cells. Oscillation
characteristics included amplitude, time period, rise time, and decay
time. Two independent experiments were pooled for statistical analysis
(approximately 100 cells). Results from p38 inhibitor studies in pooled
experiments were validated separately at the single cell level as
described in Results.
Microarray Analysis
Gene expression patterns using
the Affymetrix system were defined as previously described.[14] Transcriptomics for each cell strain was defined
for conditions of low vs high ERK activity. This was accomplished
by maintaining strains 1 and 2 in the presence (high ERK activity)
or absence (low ERK activity) of transforming growth factor alpha
(TGFα). For strain #3 (self regulated ERK oscillations), cells
were maintained in the presence of nonspecific immunoglobulin G (IgG) (high ERK activity)
or EGFR neutralizing antibody (mAb 225; low ERK activity; Figure 1). The microarray experimental design employed 5
independent biological replicates (n = 5) for each
condition to ensure robust statistical power. All microarray data
used in this study have been deposited into the Gene Expression Omnibus
database under accession number GSE55823.
Western Blot
Western
blot analysis was performed as
previously described.[12] Titers for primary
and secondary antibodies were 1:3000 and 1:5000, respectively. Antibodies
used included mediator complex subunit 1/phospho-MED1 (MED1/P-MED1)
T1457 (abcam, Cambridge, MA), P-p38 (Cell Signaling Technologies,
Beverly, MA), actin (EMD Millipore, Billerica, MA), and ZO-1 (Invitrogen,
Camarillo, CA).
Statistical Analysis
Individual
comparisons were made
using Student’s t test or ANOVA with a posthoc
Student’s Newman–Keul test, as appropriate. The p < 0.05 level was accepted as significant.
Results
Three independent cell strains have been subcloned from an hTERT
immortalized normal human keratinocyte cell line. Strain #1 exhibits
transient ERK activation induced by TGFα, without detectable
oscillations (Figure 1). Strain #2 exhibits
persistent ERK oscillations that are dependent on stimulation with
exogenous TGFα. Strain #3 exhibits spontaneous ERK oscillations
in the absence of exogenous TGFα. An EGFR neutralizing antibody
(mAb 225)[18] fully inhibits ERK oscillations
in strains #2 and #3 (Figure 1), indicating
dependence on the EGFR in both cases. The time period for ERK oscillations
is slightly prolonged in strain #3, as compared with strain #2, as
might be expected for an autocrine process requiring the shedding
of the ligand. However, we cannot distinguish whether strain #3 is
regulating ERK oscillations via an EGFR autocrine loop or a mutant
EGFR based on results using mAb225 alone. Collectively, all cell strains
share the same genetic background and EGFR-dependent ERK activation,
which is an ideal scenario for direct comparison of groups in a microarray
experiment.DNA microarray was used to define transcriptomics
of the human
keratinocyte cell lines described in Figure 1. Conditions for high and low ERK activity were defined for each
cell strain as described in Materials and Methods, and gene expression patterns for the low ERK activity condition
were subtracted from the high ERK activity condition to enrich for
ERK-dependent gene expression patterns. We then defined the genes
that were common or unique to each cell strain from this enriched
data set. As illustrated in the Venn diagram (Figure 2A), we identified 45 genes that are common to the two oscillation
proficient strains (#2 and #3) and are absent in the oscillation deficient
strain (#1). The Metacore annotated database was used to predict the
transcription factor networks encompassed within the 45 genes common
to ERK oscillations (Figure 2B). Network reconstruction
suggests that ERK oscillations are coupled to transcription factor
networks through the MED1 coactivator and CD44.
Figure 2
Microarray comparing
oscillating vs nonoscillating cell strains.
Panel A: Venn diagram showing subset of genes enriched for ERK-dependent
regulation in oscillating vs nonoscillating cell strains and overlap
between experimental groups. Panel B: Bioinformatics was used to predict
the major transcription factor networks represented by the 45 genes
common to two independent cell strains exhibiting ERK oscillations.
MED1 and CD44 represent regulatory nodes predicted to couple ERK oscillations
to inferred transcription factor networks.
Microarray comparing
oscillating vs nonoscillating cell strains.
Panel A: Venn diagram showing subset of genes enriched for ERK-dependent
regulation in oscillating vs nonoscillating cell strains and overlap
between experimental groups. Panel B: Bioinformatics was used to predict
the major transcription factor networks represented by the 45 genes
common to two independent cell strains exhibiting ERK oscillations.
MED1 and CD44 represent regulatory nodes predicted to couple ERK oscillations
to inferred transcription factor networks.Studies were conducted to determine whether an index of MED1
activation
showed differential regulation under oscillating vs nonoscillating
conditions as validation. ERK phosphorylates MED1 on T1457, which increases MED1 stability and activity,[19] and we examined MED1 T1457 phosphorylation status
(P-MED1) by Western blot analysis in cell strains #1–3. P-MED1
levels were below detection in strains #1 and #2 under serum-starved
conditions, and treatment with EGF for 10 min resulted in a dramatic
increase in P-MED1 levels (Figure 3A). At 8
h post-EGF stimulation, cell strain #2 (ligand-induced oscillations)
displayed higher P-MED1 levels compared with that of cell strain #1
(nonoscillating). Cell strain #3 (spontaneous oscillations) displayed
constitutive P-MED1 levels that were reduced by treatment with mAb
225 or ERK inhibitor (PD98059) for 60 min (Figure 3B). Thus, oscillatory behavior in the ERK pathway is associated
with increased P-MED1 status at an established ERK-responsive site.
Figure 3
P-MED1
patterns in cell strains 1–3. Panel A: Cell strains
#1 and #2 were serum-starved for 24 h, followed by stimulation with
10 ng/mL EGF for 10 min or 8 h. Panel B: Cell strain #3 (spontaneous
ERK oscillations) was treated with IgG, mAb 225, or PD98059 for 60
min, and P-MED1 levels were determined by Western blot. Similar results
were observed in 2 separate experiments.
P-MED1
patterns in cell strains 1–3. Panel A: Cell strains
#1 and #2 were serum-starved for 24 h, followed by stimulation with
10 ng/mL EGF for 10 min or 8 h. Panel B: Cell strain #3 (spontaneous
ERK oscillations) was treated with IgG, mAb 225, or PD98059 for 60
min, and P-MED1 levels were determined by Western blot. Similar results
were observed in 2 separate experiments.We subsequently considered the interplay between growth-
and stress-responsive
signaling on the ERK-MED1 axis. Stress-responsive p38 signaling can
antagonize the ERK pathway,[15] and high
oxygen tension in vitro can induce tonic stress.[20] Thus, we asked whether p38-dependent antagonism
of ERK oscillations was apparent under standard cell culture conditions.
TGFα-stimulated keratinocytes were treated with DMSO or 1 μM
SB203580 (p38 inhibitor), and ERK oscillation characteristics were
quantified. Treatment with SB203580 resulted in a marked increase
in TGFα-dependent ERK oscillation amplitudes but did not alter
the time period, rise time, or decay time (Figure 4A, white bar; rise/decay time not shown). Additional evidence
that was consistent with p38-dependent negative feedback included
a small increase in the number of TGFα-stimulated cells displaying
ERK oscillations (45% of population for TGFα-stimulated cells
→ 53% of population in cells treated with TGFα + SB203580).
Treatment of keratinocytes with vehicle (DMSO) or a JNK inhibitor
(100 nM SP600125)[21] did not alter ERK oscillation
characteristics in the presence or absence of TGFα (data not
shown). We then confirmed that SB203580 increased ERK oscillation
amplitudes at the single cell level. ERK oscillations were monitored
in TGFα-treated human keratinocytes for approximately 1 h prior
to the addition of 1 μM SB203580. ERK oscillation amplitudes
were clearly increased at the single cell level following SB203580
treatment, as compared with the pretreatment time period (Figure 4B), confirming the effects of the p38 inhibitor
on oscillation amplitudes. In mathematical terms, ERK oscillations
are classified into two categories, termed clean and noisy oscillations.[22] At present, it is unclear whether any biological
difference exists between clean and noisy oscillators, and Figure 4B illustrates that both clean (bottom trace) and
noisy (top trace) oscillators show a comparable response to the p38
inhibitor.
Figure 4
ERK oscillation amplitudes are increased following treatment with
the p38 inhibitor. Panel A: Pooled results from two independent experiments
showing that SB203580 treatment selectively increases ERK oscillation
amplitudes (white bar) but does not alter other ERK oscillation characteristics
(time period is shown by the black bar; other oscillation characteristics
are not shown). Values represent the mean ± SE. *Significantly
different from TGFα-treated cells, p < 0.05.
Panel B: Single cell trace confirming increase in ERK oscillation
amplitude following SB203580 treatment. Traces representing noisy
(top) and clean (bottom) oscillators are shown to illustrate that
oscillation amplitude is increased by SB203580 in both types.
ERK oscillation amplitudes are increased following treatment with
the p38 inhibitor. Panel A: Pooled results from two independent experiments
showing that SB203580 treatment selectively increases ERK oscillation
amplitudes (white bar) but does not alter other ERK oscillation characteristics
(time period is shown by the black bar; other oscillation characteristics
are not shown). Values represent the mean ± SE. *Significantly
different from TGFα-treated cells, p < 0.05.
Panel B: Single cell trace confirming increase in ERK oscillation
amplitude following SB203580 treatment. Traces representing noisy
(top) and clean (bottom) oscillators are shown to illustrate that
oscillation amplitude is increased by SB203580 in both types.The increase in ERK oscillation
amplitude induced by the p38 inhibitor
suggests increased ERK activation under this condition since this
index requires a quantitative increase in nuclear ERK-GFP protein
levels. We next examined nuclear P-MED1 levels to determine whether
the ERK-MED1 axis was regulated in a similar manner. Human keratinocytes
were treated with SB203580 for 5–10 min, and nuclear P-ERK
and P-MED1 levels were defined by epifluorescence microscopy following in situ staining with the appropriate antibodies. SB203580
treatment resulted in a significant increase in nuclear P-ERK levels
(Figure 5A square), which preceded increased
nuclear P-MED1 levels (Figure 5A, circle).
P-MED1 and MED1 protein levels in nuclear extracts were increased
following treatment of human keratinocytes with SB203580 for 20–60
min, while actin levels served as the loading control (Figure 5B). The increase in P-MED1 protein level induced
by the p38 inhibitor is suppressed by an ERK inhibitor (PD98059) but
not by a JNK inhibitor (SP600125) (Figure 5C). Thus, p38 inhibition enhances the ERK-dependent phosphorylation
and stabilization of MED1.
Figure 5
p38 inhibitor increases ERK activation that
precedes MED1 phosphorylation.
Panel A: Treatment of human keratinocytes with the p38 inhibitor (SB203580)
for 5–10 min results in increased nuclear P-ERK levels (square)
that precede detection of increased nuclear P-MED1 levels (circle).
Values represent the mean ± SE. *Significantly different from
the respective control, p < 0.05. Panel B: Treatment
of human keratinocytes with SB203580 for 10–60 min results
in a time-dependent increase in both P-MED1 and MED1 levels. Panel
C: The increase in P-MED1 levels induced by the p38 inhibitor at 60
min can be blocked by cotreatment with the ERK inhibitor (PD98059)
but not the JNK inhibitor (SP600125). Similar results were observed
in two separate experiments.
p38 inhibitor increases ERK activation that
precedes MED1 phosphorylation.
Panel A: Treatment of human keratinocytes with the p38 inhibitor (SB203580)
for 5–10 min results in increased nuclear P-ERK levels (square)
that precede detection of increased nuclear P-MED1 levels (circle).
Values represent the mean ± SE. *Significantly different from
the respective control, p < 0.05. Panel B: Treatment
of human keratinocytes with SB203580 for 10–60 min results
in a time-dependent increase in both P-MED1 and MED1 levels. Panel
C: The increase in P-MED1 levels induced by the p38 inhibitor at 60
min can be blocked by cotreatment with the ERK inhibitor (PD98059)
but not the JNK inhibitor (SP600125). Similar results were observed
in two separate experiments.Bromate is a probable human carcinogen produced as a disinfection
byproduct from the ozonation of water containing bromide. The stress
response to bromate has been carefully characterized and includes
activation of p38.[23,24] ERK oscillations in human keratinocytes
and JB6 cells treated with 1 mM bromate were inhibited following bromate
treatment (Figure 6). Western blot analysis
demonstrated that 1 mM bromate increased phospho-p38 (P-p38) and decreased
P-MED1 protein levels at 60 min in both model systems. Basal P-p38
levels were clearly detectable in human keratinocytes, consistent
with results illustrated in Figure 4 showing
that p38 inhibitor alone increases ERK oscillation amplitudes in human
keratinocytes. We have observed that JB6 cells are highly sensitive
to hydrogen peroxide-mediated toxicity as compared with other in vitro models we have used (Weber et al., unpublished
observation). Bromate treatment induced the accumulation of ERK-GFP
in the nucleus immediately following the cessation of oscillations
to a greater extent in JB6 cells as compared with human keratinocytes.
Although the mechanism for nuclear accumulation is beyond our present
scope, bromate induces toxicity via the generation of an oxidative
stress.[23] Oxidative stress inhibits nuclear
export regulated by the CRM1 export protein,[25] which is relevant because CRM1 regulates the export of ERK from
the nucleus.[12] Thus, it is plausible that
oxidative stress may modulate multiple mechanisms (e.g., p38 and CRM1)
capable of inhibiting ERK oscillations, and the antioxidant status
of the cell system may be an additional variable for consideration.
Movies illustrating ERK oscillations in human keratinocytes and JB6
cells before and after the addition of bromate can be found in Supporting Information (S1 and S2).
Figure 6
Bromate inhibits
the ERK-MED1 axis in human and murine model systems
displaying ERK oscillations. ERK oscillations induced by TGFα
(human keratinocytes) or bFGF (JB6 cells) were monitored for several
hours to demonstrate sustained regulation followed by treatment with
1 mM bromate. Following bromate treatment, oscillations were observed
to cease in both model systems. Bromate treatment induced an increase
in P-p38 and decrease in P-MED1 protein levels as detected by Western
blot. Similar results were observed in two separate experiments.
Bromate inhibits
the ERK-MED1 axis in human and murine model systems
displaying ERK oscillations. ERK oscillations induced by TGFα
(human keratinocytes) or bFGF (JB6 cells) were monitored for several
hours to demonstrate sustained regulation followed by treatment with
1 mM bromate. Following bromate treatment, oscillations were observed
to cease in both model systems. Bromate treatment induced an increase
in P-p38 and decrease in P-MED1 protein levels as detected by Western
blot. Similar results were observed in two separate experiments.We attempted to extend our investigation
to normal rat kidney cells
(NRK) and primary salivary gland epithelial cells but met technical
limitations that constrained our interpretation of p38-dependent cross-talk.
Specifically, we used our established retroviral transduction system[12] for ERK-GFP expression in both model systems.
NRK cells showed efficient transduction with ERK-GFP; however, NRK
cells rapidly acquired a malignant phenotype (within 2–3 passages)
characterized by a stellate morphology and loose adherence to tissue
culture plates (data not shown). Safety protocols dictate that cells
cannot be removed from the virus laboratory until after 3 passages,
and the NRKERK-GFP cells we were able to examine under this condition
did not display ERK oscillations in response to EGF treatment (data
not shown). We have shown that JB6 cells transformed to a malignant
phenotype by phorbol ester treatment lose the ability to regulate
oscillatory behavior;[12] therefore, the
lack of oscillations in NRK cells are difficult to interpret because
the transformed phenotype may inhibit this dynamic behavior. Primary
salivary gland epithelial cells were also examined for comparison
with immortalized cell line responses; however, the primary cells
were difficult to transduce, and we were unable to generate a stable
model system for analysis.Although the status of ERK oscillations
remains unclear in NRK
and salivary epithelial model systems, we believe that the antagonistic
cross-talk between p38 and the ERK pathways is relevant to both canonical
and dynamic signaling features and used these models to further investigate
the ERK-MED1 axis. P-MED1 levels are detected in NRK cells and inhibited
by 10 μM PD98059 (Figure 7A), indicating
that ERK-dependent regulation of MED1 was conserved in this model.
Treatment of NRK cells with 0.06–0.3 mM bromate for 1 h reduced
P-MED1 levels (Figure 7B), consistent with
the activation of p38 by bromate in NRK cells as previously established.[14,22] P-MED1 levels remained depressed in bromate-treated cells at 24
h (data not shown). NRK cells were then treated with 0.06 mM bromate
with or without pretreatment with a p38 inhibitor (10 μM SB202190).
Bromate treatment reduced P-MED1 levels, and this effect was inhibited
by SB202190 (Figure 7C and D).
Figure 7
Bromate decreases P-MED1
levels in NRK cells. Panel A: Inhibition
of MED1 phosphorylation by the ERK inhibitor (PD98059), confirming
ERK-dependent regulation. Panel B: Treatment of NRK cells with 0.06–0.3
mM bromate for 1 h results in a dose-dependent decrease in P-MED1
levels. Decreased P-MED1 levels induced by bromate were observed in
three separate experiments. Panels C and D: P-MED1 profile for NRK
cells treated with bromate with or without pretreatment with SB202190
and quantified values. Results shown in panels C and D are for the
1 h time point, and similar results were observed at 3 and 24 h time
points (data not shown).
Bromate decreases P-MED1
levels in NRK cells. Panel A: Inhibition
of MED1 phosphorylation by the ERK inhibitor (PD98059), confirming
ERK-dependent regulation. Panel B: Treatment of NRK cells with 0.06–0.3
mM bromate for 1 h results in a dose-dependent decrease in P-MED1
levels. Decreased P-MED1 levels induced by bromate were observed in
three separate experiments. Panels C and D: P-MED1 profile for NRK
cells treated with bromate with or without pretreatment with SB202190
and quantified values. Results shown in panels C and D are for the
1 h time point, and similar results were observed at 3 and 24 h time
points (data not shown).Salivary gland epithelial cells afforded a comparison of
the ERK-MED1
axis in a primary cell system. Salivary epithelial cells grow as epithelial
islands and show localization of the tight junction protein ZO-1 at
points of cell–cell contact (Figure 8A). Treatment of salivary epithelial cells with 1 mM bromate for
60 min reduced P-MED1 levels, and this effect was inhibited by the
p38 inhibitor SB203580 (Figure 8B and C).
Figure 8
Bromate
decreases P-MED1 levels in primary salivary epithelial
cells. Panel A: Primary salivary epithelial cells grow as islands
and express significant levels of the ZO-1 tight junction protein
localized to points of cell–cell contact. Panels B and C: P-MED1
profile for salivary epithelial cells treated with 1 mM bromate with
or without pretreatment with SB203580 and quantified values. Similar
results were observed in 2 separate experiments.
Bromate
decreases P-MED1 levels in primary salivary epithelial
cells. Panel A: Primary salivary epithelial cells grow as islands
and express significant levels of the ZO-1 tight junction protein
localized to points of cell–cell contact. Panels B and C: P-MED1
profile for salivary epithelial cells treated with 1 mM bromate with
or without pretreatment with SB203580 and quantified values. Similar
results were observed in 2 separate experiments.
Discussion
ERK oscillations represent a new regulatory mode
in the ERK pathway[5,12] whose biological function remains
unclear. The results of the present
study advance our understanding of ERK oscillations through the identification
of unique gene expression patterns that can be used to infer possible
biological function. The sensitivity of MED1 phosphorylation status
to stress-responsive signaling raises the possibility that MED1 may
represent a transcriptional node for signal integration that is relevant
to both canonical and dynamic ERK signaling.ERK phosphorylates
MED1 on T1032/T1457, which
imparts two distinct functions: (1) it stimulates MED1 transcriptional
activity, and (2) it increases the stability and half-life of MED1.[19] Therefore, the activation of MED1 by ERK is
established, and what remains to be determined is how oscillatory
behavior uniquely impacts transcriptional regulation through the MED1
node. MED1 regulates the activity of a battery of transcription factors;[26−30] therefore, sustained MED1 activation by ERK oscillations could impact
a broad transcriptional program. The stabilization of MED1 protein
levels by ERK oscillations might result in the development of a MED1
gradient (Figure 3A), and future studies will
determine the relationship between MED1 protein and ERK activity levels.
Molecular gradients associated with pathways exhibiting oscillatory
behavior have been documented,[31,32] and morphogens demonstrate
the importance of gradients as a regulatory mode in biology.[33,34] Theoretically, an increase in MED1 stoichiometry is expected to
permit interaction of MED1 with low abundance transcription factors
following saturation of MED1 binding sites on high abundance transcription
factors. Other mechanisms are possible, and additional studies focused
on the MED1 node are warranted.p38 antagonizes canonical ERK
signaling,[15] and it was prudent to demonstrate
that this antagonism extended
to ERK oscillations and the ERK-MED1 axis (Figures 6–8). Prior work by Wiley’s
group[22] has demonstrated an important balance
between positive and negative feedback loops in regulating oscillatory
behavior. In fact, they demonstrated that treatment of cells with
a phosphatase inhibitor alone in the absence of growth factor was
sufficient to induce ERK oscillations. p38-dependent antagonism of
ERK oscillations illustrates another example of negative feedback
that is relevant to toxicological investigations in light of the broad
association of p38 with stress-responsive signaling. Because ERK oscillations
regulate a unique subset of genes, these observations raise the possibility
that antagonistic signaling by p38 might manifest differently in cells
displaying transient versus dynamic ERK signaling behaviors.Bromate was chosen as a test agent because it is a probable human
carcinogen that activates p38 via the generation of oxidative stress.[23,24] We have previously shown that reactive oxygen species and ionizing
radiation inhibit ERK oscillations;[13] therefore,
the inhibition of ERK oscillations by bromate is consistent with our
previous observations. Prior studies have demonstrated that a bolus
dose of hydrogen peroxide inhibits ERK oscillations and induces ERK
accumulation in the nucleus, while a low dose of ionizing radiation
inhibits ERK oscillations without nuclear ERK accumulation.[13] Bromate at a high dose (1 mM) inhibits ERK oscillations
in association with both p38 activation and nuclear accumulation of
ERK in JB6 cells (Figure 6). Thus, it appears
that multiple mechanisms can contribute to the inhibition of ERK oscillations
and that the p38 stress response may be activated at lower doses of
free radicals, relative to other possible mechanisms, such as the
inhibition of CRM1-dependent nuclear export. This may provide a useful
gauge for interpreting the level of oxygen free radicals produced
by toxicants in vivo, based on a comparison of p38
activation, the nuclear accumulation of ERK/CRM1, and target oscillation-specific
gene expression patterns for oscillation positive cell types.In the context of carcinogenesis, bFGF-dependent ERK oscillations
regulate tumor suppressor activity in JB6 cells that is conserved
in mouseskin carcinogenesis.[14] We have
defined gene expression patterns that are unique to bFGF in JB6 cells
and not associated with the fully transformed JB6 phenotype (RT101
cells).[14] We have analyzed this data set
and identified tumor suppressors unique to bFGF-dependent ERK oscillations
(lysyl oxidase,[35] ≈7-fold ↑;
aspartoacylase 2,[36] ≈9-fold ↑;
insulin-like growth factor binding protein 5,[37] ≈9-fold ↑; and scavenger receptor class A, member
5,[38] ≈7-fold ↑). In human
keratinocytes (Figure 2B), ERK oscillations
were uniquely associated with increased tumor suppressor mRNA expression,
including PDCD6,[39] CD44,[40] WNT7A,[41] HOPX,[42] WNT5A,[43] and others. Thus, the
regulation of multiple tumor suppressor genes was a common function
of ERK oscillations in murine and human model systems. Antagonism
of ERKoscillations might decrease tumor suppressor activity, which
has obvious implications for increasing cancer risk.In considering
the ERK-MED1 axis, MED1 is known to form a complex
with tumor suppressor genes such as BRCA1.[44] Alternatively, MED1 is a transcriptional coactivator for several
nuclear hormone receptors, including members of the vitamin D and
retinoic acid families.[45] Our experimental
model systems are derived from skin, and both the vitamin D receptor[46] and retinoid receptors[47−49] are implicated
as tumor suppressors in skin. Therefore, increasing MED1 transcriptional
coactivation is expected to increase tumor suppressor activities mediated
by vitamin D and retinoic acid pathways. In the murine model system
where bFGF-dependent ERK oscillations directly inhibit the cell transformation
response,[14] retinoid X receptor alpha mRNA
expression is increased (2-fold), which could further sensitize retinoid-mediated
tumor suppression. In human keratinocytes, retinoid receptor beta
(RXRB) mRNA showed decreased expression with ERK oscillations, and
a RXRB-causal network in humancancer has been hypothesized by independent
investigators.[50] Therefore, retinoid signaling
is a common theme in microarray data sets defining oscillation-specific
gene expression.In summary, we have demonstrated that oscillatory
behavior in the
ERK pathway couples to the regulation of a unique subset of genes,
including many tumor suppressor genes. Network reconstruction suggests
that ERK oscillations are decoded into a transcriptional response,
at least in part, through MED1 whose activation is antagonized by
p38. Our results indicate that oscillatory behavior in the ERK pathway
can alter homeostatic gene regulation patterns and that the cellular
response to perturbation may manifest differently in oscillating vs
nonoscillating cells.
Authors: P Herrlich; H Morrison; J Sleeman; V Orian-Rousseau; H König; S Weg-Remers; H Ponta Journal: Ann N Y Acad Sci Date: 2000-06 Impact factor: 5.691
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Authors: Alexander G Goglia; Maxwell Z Wilson; Siddhartha G Jena; Jillian Silbert; Lena P Basta; Danelle Devenport; Jared E Toettcher Journal: Cell Syst Date: 2020-03-18 Impact factor: 10.304
Authors: Kathryn D Tuttle; S Harsha Krovi; Jingjing Zhang; Romain Bedel; Laura Harmacek; Lisa K Peterson; Leonard L Dragone; Adam Lefferts; Catherine Halluszczak; Kent Riemondy; Jay R Hesselberth; Anjana Rao; Brian P O'Connor; Philippa Marrack; James Scott-Browne; Laurent Gapin Journal: Nat Commun Date: 2018-07-09 Impact factor: 14.919