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Vol. 55, Issue 5, 821-831, May 1999
Department of Molecular Biosciences (W.F., G.L., R.X., I.N.P.), School of Veterinary Medicine, University of California, Davis, California; and Department of Physics (J.J.A.), Portland State University, Portland, Oregon
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Summary |
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Quinones undergo redox cycling and/or arylation reactions with key biomolecules involved with cellular Ca2+ regulation. The present study utilizes nanomolar quantities of the fluorogenic maleimide 7-diethylamino-3-(4'-maleimidylphenyl)-4-methylcoumarin (CPM) to measure the reactivity of hyperreactive sulfhydryl moieties on sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) membranes in the presence and absence of quinones by analyzing the kinetics of forming CPM-thioether adducts and localization of fluorescence by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Doxorubicin, 1,4-naphthoquinone (NQ), and 1,4-benzoquinone (BQ) are found to selectively and dose-dependently interact with a class of hyperreactive sulfhydryl groups localized on ryanodine-sensitive Ca2+ channels [ryanodine receptor (RyR)], and its associated protein, triadin, of skeletal type channels. NQ and BQ are the most potent compounds tested for reducing the rate of CPM labeling of hyperreactive SR thiols (IC50 = 0.3 and 1.8 µM, respectively) localized on RyR and associated protein. The reduced forms of quinone, tert-butylhydroquinone, and 5-imino-daunorubicin do not alter significantly the pattern or kinetics of CPM labeling up to 100 µM, demonstrating that the quinone group is essential for modulating the state of hyperreactive SR thiols. Nanomolar NQ is shown to enhance the association of [3H]ryanodine for its high-affinity binding site and directly enhance channel-open probability in bilayer lipid membrane in a reversible manner. By contrast, micromolar NQ produces a time-dependent biphasic action on channel function, leading to irreversible channel inactivation. These results provide evidence that nanomolar quinone selectively and reversibly alters the redox state of hyperreactive sulfhydryls localized in the RyR/Ca2+ channel complex, resulting in enhanced channel activation. The Ca2+-dependent cytotoxicities observed with reactive quinones formed at the microsomal surface by oxidative metabolism may be related to their ability to selectively modify hyperreactive thiols regulating normal functioning of microsomal Ca2+ release channels.
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Introduction |
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Quinone
structures are ubiquitous in the human environment, having both natural
and anthropogenic sources. Human exposure to quinones can occur
clinically, e.g., the antineoplastic anthraquinones such as doxorubicin
(DXR) (Olson and Mushlin, 1990
) and by environmental exposure to diesel
exhaust, cigarette smoke, and industrial particulate matter (Monks and
Lau, 1992
). In addition, a large number of environmental contaminants
from industrial sources including carbamate pesticides, naphthalene,
and polyaromatic hydrocarbons are metabolized via quinone
intermediates. Quinones are of significant concern to human health
because their intrinsic electrophilicity can induce various patterns of
acute and chronic oxidative damage to biological tissues. The
biological activity of quinones has been closely associated with
changes in cellular Ca2+ regulation in a number
of cell types. However, there is a critical need to identify key
Ca2+ regulatory proteins that are the principle
targets of quinone-mediated oxidative insult and to determine the exact
role that these altered macromolecules play in cellular dysfunction and
organ-selective toxicity (Monks et al., 1992
).
Ca2+ channels localized to the sarcoplasmic
reticulum (SR)/endoplasmic reticulum (ER) membrane including ryanodine
receptors (RyRs) (Agdahsi et al., 1997a
; Quinn and Ehrlich, 1997
; Zable et al., 1997
) and inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptors (Bootman et
al., 1992
, Bird et al., 1993
; Kaplin et al., 1994
) have been shown to
be extremely sensitive to oxidation-induced changes in function
elicited by chemically diverse xenobiotic oxidizing agents. More
recently, nitric oxide has been demonstrated to activate cardiac RyRs
by poly-S-nitrosylation (Xu et al., 1998
), and nitric oxide
seems to confer protection against oxidation-induced
Ca2+ release (Aghdasi et al., 1997a
). The
mechanism by which diverse oxidizing agents alter
Ca2+ channel activity has remained unclear. One
possible mechanism underlying the high sensitivity of microsomal
Ca2+ channels to oxidizing agents may involve the
presence of a small number of extremely reactive (hyperreactive)
sulfhydryl groups which are important for regulating aspects of
function (Liu et al., 1994
; Liu and Pessah, 1994
). The existence of a
class of hyperreactive sulfhydryl moieties associated with the RyR
complex, which is several orders of magnitude more reactive than other SR protein thiols, was revealed by the ability of these sulfhydryls to
rapidly and selectively form Michael adducts with a limiting concentration of the fluorogenic maleimide
7-diethylamino-3-(4'-maleimidylphenyl)-4-methylcoumarin (CPM;
0.01-1 pmol CPM/µg of SR protein). A unique feature of
channel-associated hyperreactive sulfhydryl moieties is that their
hyperreactivity appears to be allosterically regulated by physiological
ligands such as Ca2+ and
Mg2+ and by pharmacological probes such as
ryanodine, neomycin, and ruthenium red (RR). The RyR complex appears to
possess a biochemical "sensor" which can monitor the local redox
environment. Recent advances indicating microsomal
Ca2+ channels are under strict redox control
raises an important question as to whether redox active quinones can
selectively target hyperreactive sulfhydryl moieties associated with
ryanodine-sensitive Ca2+ channels (RyRs), thereby
altering microsomal Ca2+ transport function.
Fluxes of Ca2+ across SR/ER stores are essential
for normal cellular signaling in healthy cells. The fact that oxidative
metabolism of prooxidants to active quinone structures occurs
principally by the cytochrome P-450 monooxygenases localized to the
microsomal membrane raises the possibility that site-selective
oxidation of ryanodine-sensitive calcium channels may be relevant to
early mechanisms of oxidative damage. In the present article,
fluorescent kinetic labeling experiments with discriminating
concentrations of CPM and intact SR membranes are utilized to validate
the hypothesis that the RyR complex is uniquely sensitive to local
changes in redox environment induced by the presence of reactive
quinones, thereby revealing an important mechanism by which quinones
can alter cellular Ca2+ regulation.
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Materials and Methods |
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Preparation of SR Membranes.
SR membrane vesicles enriched
in biochemical markers of the terminal cisternae were prepared from
back and hind limb skeletal muscles of New Zealand White rabbits
according to the method of Saito (Saito et al., 1984
). Heavy SR from
rat cardiac ventricles was prepared by sucrose-density gradient
centrifugation, as described previously (Pessah et al., 1990
). The
preparations were stored in 10% sucrose, and 5 mM imidazole (pH 7.4)
at
80°C until needed.
Kinetic Fluorescence Measurement of CPM-Thioether Adducts.
The nonfluorescent maleimide CPM (Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR) readily
undergoes Michael addition with protein thiols producing an
irreversible adduct with high fluorescent yield (Sipple, 1981
). Studies
aimed at quantifying the kinetics of forming CPM-thioether adducts were
performed with SR protein (50 µg/ml) diluted 100-fold in
solution A consisting of 100 mM KCl and 20 mM
3-(Nnorpholino)propanesulfonic acid (MOPS; pH 7.0)
just before initiating an experiment. The measurement and analysis of
the reaction kinetics of forming CPM-thioether adducts were performed
according to the protocol of Liu et al. (1994)
with minor
modifications. All labeling studies utilized CPM at concentrations
ranging between 0.2 and 1.0 pmol/µg SR protein) such that the SR
thiol concentration greatly exceeded that of CPM. Unless otherwise
noted, 50 µg/ml SR protein was exposed to 10 to 50 nM CPM. The
vesicles were incubated with the test quinone in solution A for 5 min
before the introduction of CPM by Hamilton syringe into a cuvette whose
contents were stirred constantly at 37°C. The increase in
fluorescence intensity was continuously monitored by a SML 8000 spectrofluorometer (SML Instruments Inc., Urbana, IL) interfaced with
an IBM computer/recording system. Excitation and emission were set at
397 nm and 465 nm (width of slit = 4 nm), respectively. The rates
of increasing fluorescence were sampled at 1 Hz and analyzed by
nonlinear regression analysis (ENZFITTER, Elsevier BioSoft). Each of
the agents used in the study (e.g., quinone,
CaCl2, MgCl2) were
initially examined for autofluorescence or for their ability to quench
CPM fluorescence in the presence of glutathione or SR vesicles (i.e.,
after CPM-thioether fluorescence had reached a maxima).
SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE).
Native SR
protein (10-20 reactions each at 50 µg/ml) was incubated with 1 mM
Mg2+ or EGTA in the presence or absence of
quinone compound at 37°C in solution A. After exposure of SR
membranes to CPM (<1.0 pmol/µg protein) for 1 min, 2 mM
N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) was added to quench the reaction. The
CPM-labeled SR protein was combined and pelleted by centrifugation (90 min at 200,000g). The pellets were resuspended in a small
volume of buffer and denatured with an equal volume of nonreducing
sample buffer consisting of 48 mM
NaH2PO4, 170 mM
Na2HPO4 (pH 7.4), 6 M urea,
0.02% bromophenol blue, and 1% (w/v) SDS (final concentrations). The
samples were incubated at 60°C for 10 min and 30 to 80 µg of
protein was loaded onto a 3 to 10% gradient SDS-polyacrylamide gel
(Laemmli, 1970
) and electrophoresed at constant voltage (200 V). The
fluorescent protein bands on PAGE gels were visualized at 360 nm
excitation using a transilluminator and the fluorescence image
photographed through a 450-nm cutoff filter. The fluorescence intensity
of protein bands was digitized by a video analysis system (SPSS,
Chicago, IL) and integrated by computer within the linear range
of protein density.
Ca2+ Flux Measurement.
Measurement of
Ca2+ transport across SR membranes were performed
using the absorbance dye antipyrylazo III (APIII) or the fluorescent indicator fluo-3. SR membranes (50 µg/ml) were equilibrated at 37°C with transport buffer consisting of 92 mM KCl, 20 mM K-MOPS (pH
7.0), 7.5 mM Na-pyrophosphate, and 250 µM APIII or 0.5 µM fluo-3. A
coupled enzyme (CE) system consisting of 1 mM MgATP, 10 µg/ml
creatine phosphokinase, and 5 mM phosphocreatine was present to
regenerate ATP. Ca2+ fluxes were monitored by
measuring APIII absorbance at 710
790 nm using a diode-array
spectrophotometer (model 8452A; Hewlett Packard, Palo Alto, CA).
Alternately, changes in fluo-3 florescence intensity were measured at
530 nm emission (510 nm excitation) at 37°C using a SML 8000 fluorometer. To measure the influence of quinones on
Ca2+ efflux, SR was loaded either with six
sequential additions of 20 nmol of CaCl2,
allowing the extravesicular Ca2+ to return to
baseline between additions, or one 100 nmol addition of
CaCl2. Once the loading phase was complete,
quinone or dihydroquinone was added to the cuvette to assess the
influence on Ca2+ efflux. Alternately, quinone
was added just before initiating SR Ca2+ loading
to assess influences on initial rates of uptake. In these experiments,
some of the SR was incubated with 50 nM CPM for 1 min (terminated by 50 µM glutathione reduced form) at 37°C in the presence of 1 mM free
Mg2+ (to reduce channel-open probability) to
selectively react with hyperreactive sulfhydryls to form thioether
adducts. Raw data were collected digitally and analyzed by nonlinear
regression analysis.
Measurement of [3H]Ryanodine Binding and Data
Analysis.
Equilibrium and kinetic measurements of specific
high-affinity [3H]ryanodine binding were
determined according to the method of Pessah et al. (1987)
. SR vesicles
(50 µg protein/ml) were incubated with quinone (10 nM to 10 µM) in
assay buffer containing HEPES (20 mM, pH 7.1), KCl (250 mM), NaCl (15 mM), CaCl2 (25 µM), MgCl2 (1 mM), and [3H]ryanodine (1 nM). Equilibrium
studies were performed by incubating the reaction at 37°C in the dark
for 3 h, at which time the samples were filtered through GF/B
glass-fiber filters and washed twice with ice-cold harvest buffer
composed of 20 mM Tris-HCl, 250 mM KCl, 15 mM NaCl, and 50 µM
CaCl2 (pH 7.1). Apparent association kinetics
were determined in the presence and absence quinone as described above
except that reactions were quenched at times ranging between 5 min and
3 h. Each assay was performed in duplicate and repeated at least
twice. Nonspecific binding was determined by incubating SR vesicles
with the concentration of quinone that give maximum binding and
1000-fold excess unlabeled ryanodine.
B)] against log concentration of quinone (where B = specific
[3H]ryanodine occupancy,
Bmax = maximum
[3H]ryanodine occupancy in the presence of
quinone), with data between 10 to 90% of
Bmax. Association kinetics were analyzed
excluding the inhibition phase (when present) by fitting to a single
exponential and calculating the apparent association rate constant
(Kobs) and apparent half-time
(T1/2) (ENZFITTER, Elsevier Biosoft).
Single-Channel Kinetics in Bilayer Lipid Membranes. RyR channels were reconstituted into artificial planar lipid bilayer (5:3:2 phosphatidylethanolamine/phosphatidylserine/phosphatidylcholine, 60 mg/ml in decane) by introducing SR vesicles to the cis chamber. The cis chamber contained 0.7 ml of 500 mM CsCl, 50 µM CaCl2, and 10 mM HEPES (pH 7.4), whereas the trans side contained 100 mM CsCl, 50 µM CaCl2, and 10 mM HEPES (pH 7.4). Upon the fusion of SR vesicle into bilayer, the cis chamber was perfused with the identical solution, except lacking CaCl2. Single-channel activity was measured at a holding potential of +30 mV (applied cis relative to the trans ground side) using a patch clamp amplifier (model 3900A; Dagan Co., Minneapolis, MN). The data was filtered at 1 kHz before acquisition at 10 kHz by a DigiData 1200 (Axon Inst., Foster City, CA). The data were analyzed using pClamp 6 (Axon Instruments, Burlingame, CA) without additional filtering.
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Results |
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Quinones Decrease Kinetics of Forming CPM-Thioether Adducts.
The presence of pharmacological or physiological agents that promote SR
Ca2+ channel closure have been shown to enhance
significantly the rate by which CPM forms Michael adducts with
hyperreactive sulfhydryl moieties localized on RyR1 (skeletal isoform
of ryanodine receptor) and channel-associated proteins found within the
triad junction (Liu et al., 1994
; Liu and Pessah, 1994
). Figure
1, A and B (traces labeled 0), show the
rapid kinetics of adduct formation between 1 pmol CPM/µg skeletal
junctional SR in the presence of 7 µM Ca2+ and
1 mM Mg2+ (calculated initial rate,
k = 0.0275 ± 0.0035 s
1;
mean of 12 determinations). Under these conditions, the rate of
CPM-thioether adduct formation was reduced in a dose-dependent manner
by a 30-s pretreatment of SR membranes with 1,4-naphthoquinone (NQ) or
1,4-benzoquinone (BQ). The maximal concentration of NQ or BQ used in
the present experiments (2 µM) decreased the initial rate of CPM
labeling >10-fold (k = 0.0023 ± 0.0007 with NQ,
mean of four determinations), when compared with rates obtained in the
absence of quinone. The presence of reactive quinone when channel
closure is favored (in the presence of 1 mM Mg2+)
qualitatively and quantitatively mimics results obtained with a
physiological channel activator, e.g., the presence of 100 µM Ca2+, in reducing CPM labeling kinetics (to
k = 0.0024 s
1; Liu et al.,
1994
), but differs in the mechanism by which channel activation is
obtained.
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2 min
with SR to significantly decrease the rate of formation of
CPM-thioether adducts. With a 3-min pretreatment of SR, DXR was found
to be nearly 50-fold less potent than NQ (IC50 = 16.3 ± 0.8 µM). Importantly, tert-butylhydroquinone
(THQ), whose quinone moiety is fully reduced, lacks significant
activity in the CPM assay at concentrations
100 µM with a 30-min
treatment (Fig. 1C). Figure 2 shows that
cardiac junctional SR enriched in RyR2 (cardaic form of ryanodine
receptor) measured under conditions which favor channel closure (7 µM
Ca2+, 10 mM Mg2+) exhibits
rapid labeling kinetics in the absence of quinone. Like skeletal SR,
cardiac SR is also highly sensitive to NQ, BQ, and DXR, which
significantly slow the rate of forming CPM-thioether adducts with the
same apparent rank order of potency.
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Quinones Alter Hyperreactive Sulfhydryls on RyR1 and Triadin.
The identity of protein(s) labeled by CPM in the presence and absence
of quinone was determined by visualizing fluorescent labeled bands
after SDS-PAGE as described in Materials and Methods. Consistent with previous findings, SR labeled for 1 min in a medium containing 10 nM CPM and 1 mM Mg2+, but lacking
quinone, revealed CPM fluorescence was predominantly localized to the
RyR1 protomer of Mr 565,000, a major
proteolytic fragment of RyR1 of Mr 150,000 (Meissner et al., 1989
), and triadin of Mr
95,000 (Fig. 3A, lane 1 labeled Mg). A
30-s preincubation of SR with NQ (2 µM), BQ (2 µM), or NQS (10 µM) before labeling with CPM for 1 min revealed a selective loss of
fluorescence associated with RyR1 and triadin protein bands (Fig. 3A,
lanes 2-4 labeled NQ, BQ, and NQS, respectively). Digital imaging of
the fluorescent bands on gels revealed a >98% decreased in the CPM
fluorescence intensity associated with the RyR1 protomer and triadin in
SR-pretreated with quinone compared to control SR treated with
Mg2+ alone (Fig. 3A, left panel). However, no
significant change in the pattern of CPM labeling was detected with SR
pretreated with fully reduced THQ (50 µM for 30 min; Fig. 3B, lane
labeled THQ) when compared with the control SR (lane labeled
).
Consistent with the behavior of DXR in CPM kinetic labeling
experiments, a higher concentration and longer pretreatment time were
needed for anthraquinone to alter the pattern of fluorescent labeling on SDS-PAGE. The degree to which DXR (50 µM) decreased CPM labeling on RyR1 and triadin protomers by a detectable level was dependent on
the length of time SR was exposed to the drug. SR protein pretreated with DXR for 3, 10, and 30 min largely eliminated detectable
fluorescence associated with these bands (Fig. 3A, DXR lanes 5, 6, and
7, respectively). Importantly, 5-iminodaunorubicin (IDAU; 50 µM),
which lacks redox activity, fails to alter the pattern of CPM labeling
even with several hours of incubation (Fig. 3B, lane labeled IDAU).
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Nanomolar Quinone Alters Ca2+ Transport across Actively
Loaded SR Vesicles.
Figure 4A shows
that NQ mobilizes Ca2+ from actively loaded SR in
a dose-dependent manner that quantitatively parallels its ability to
diminish labeling of hyperreactive SR thiols with CPM. In the presence
of 50 µg/ml SR protein and transport buffer containing ATP and CE,
the Ca2+-sensitive dye APIII responded to
addition of 100 µM Ca2+ with an abrupt rise in
absorbance which was followed by a rapid decrease that stemmed from the
uptake of Ca2+ into SR vesicles. Addition of 300 nM to 2 µM NQ induced a net efflux of Ca2+ from
SR attributable to activation of the RyR1 complex. As expected, addition of 2 µM RR during the release phase blocks the channel and
results in reaccumulation of Ca2+ despite the
presence of NQ. The threshold for NQ-induced Ca2+
release ranged between 50 and 100 nM (n = 12 determinations). NQ was not found to interfere with the APIII dye
signal at the concentrations used in these experiments by final
addition of ionophore A23187 to calibrate the signal (Fig. 4A). Similar
effects on Ca2+ transport were observed with BQ
(Fig. 4B). After the Ca2+ loading phase in which
six additions of 20 µM CaCl2 were made to the
SR mixture, addition of BQ (300 nM to 2 µM) induced a dose-dependent release of accumulated Ca2+ which could largely
be inhibited by prior addition of 2 µM RR (Fig. 4B, lowest trace).
Consistent with findings obtained from CPM-labeling kinetics, 5- to
6-fold higher concentrations of NQS were required to produce release
rates comparable to NQ and BQ (not shown).
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) to
that labeled 0 CPM). However, pretreatment of SR with CPM (traces labeled 30, 50, and 75 nM) revealed that formation of thioether adducts
restored the rate of Ca2+ uptake toward that of
control. Additions of ionophore 4-Br-23187 followed by 0.5 mM EGTA at
the end of each experiment showed that the calibration of the dye
remained unchanged and demonstrated that the reagents used did not
interfere with the response of fluo-3. These results indicate that
hyperreactive sulfhydryls associated with the RyR1 complex contribute a
redox-sensing function and that these effects are independent of the
quinone or method used to make the measurement.
Concentration- and Time-Dependent Mechanism by Which NQ Modifies
RyR Function.
To further elucidate the mechanism underlying
NQ-mediated effects on vesicular Ca2+ transport,
the actions of NQ on the binding of
[3H]ryanodine to SR membranes were examined
under equilibrium and kinetic conditions. Figure
6A reveals that the ability of NQ to modify equilibrium binding of [3H]ryanodine to
SR (12.5 µg of protein) was highly dependent on concentration. Under
assay conditions which were less than optimally favorable for the
binding of [3H]ryanodine (25 µM
Ca2+, 1 mM Mg2+), nanomolar
NQ enhanced occupancy of [3H]ryanodine to SR
membranes nearly 3-fold, with an EC50 = 123 nM
(2.46 pmol NQ/µg SR; Fig. 6A). By contrast, low micromolar NQ
inhibited the binding of [3H]ryanodine to
high-affinity sites with an IC50 = 1.2 µM (24 pmol NQ/µg SR; Fig. 6A).
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1, respectively) and
increases occupancy >3-fold at 3 h (binding increases from 0.14 to 0.428 pmol/mg). Although 5 µM NQ additionally enhances the
apparent rate of association over control (from 0.0172 to 0.0559 min
1), receptor occupancy is enhanced only
1.8-fold at optimal incubation time (~50-80 min). The latter is
undoubtedly the result of the subsequent inhibitory phase of NQ on RyR
function. Taken together, results from CPM-labeling kinetics, vesicle
transport, and [3H]ryanodine-binding studies
suggest that NQ should initially activate the SR
Ca2+ channel complex in a manner directly related
to its concentration in the assay medium. Significant channel
activation would be predicted to occur soon after addition of NQ with
subsequent inhibition of channel gating only occurring with NQ
concentration exceeding 1 µM.
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Discussion |
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The present results reveal that the RyR1 complex represents one of
the most sensitive biological targets yet described for reactive
quinones. Utilizing three different measures of channel function
(analysis of [3H]ryanodine-binding, macroscopic
SR Ca2+ transport, and single channels in BLM),
nanomolar quinone is found to promote channel activation by a mechanism
which modifies a very small number of hyperreactive cysteine residues
localized primarily on the RyR and triadin. In this respect, the intact quinone moiety is essential for activity toward the channel since reduced forms such as THQ and IDAU have no significant effect on
CPM-labeling kinetics, localization of fluorescence, or SR function
(Pessah et al., 1990
). This observation suggests that reactive quinones
enhance channel-open state by a mechanism which alters the oxidation
state of hyperreactive cysteines, a mechanism which is apparently
conserved between skeletal and cardiac RyR isoforms. Previously, we
showed that the rate constant (k) for CPM-thioether adduct
formation is proportional to the number of free sulfhydryl groups which
are available for CPM labeling, (i.e., k = Km [SH]t) (Liu et
al., 1994
). The present results suggest that nanomolar naphtho- or
benzoquinone cause a quantitative diminution in the total number of
hyperreactive thiol groups associated with SR membranes, as revealed by
the dose-dependent slowing of CPM-labeling kinetics. Comparing Figs. 1
and 3 reveals that the slower kinetics of CPM labeling of SR induced by
quinones is associated with a selective disappearance of CPM labeling
from channel-associated protein thiols. These data can be explained by
one of three mechanisms (schemes 1-3, Fig. 9). Common to each
mechanism is the presence of a nucleophilic domain within the
RyR-triadin complex which renders a small number of cysteines
hyperreactive (Fig. 9, shaded regions of
schemes 1-3).
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In Fig. 9, scheme 1, reactive quinones preferentially oxidize
hyperreactive thiols to intramolecular or intermolecular disulfide bonds. Such a mechanism would be consistent with the hypothesis of
oxidation-induced Ca2+ release as proposed by
Abramson and Salama (1989)
in which one or more intramolecular
oxidations of critical thiols on the channel complex to disulfides
(possibly as a result of redox cycling with quinone) are coupled to
channel activation. Implicit in this mechanism is the requisite
oxidation and reduction of critical thiols coincident with channel
opening and closing. In scheme 1 (Fig. 9), naphtho- and anthraquinones
accept one electron from hyperreactive thiols, thereby enhancing
channel activation as a direct result of oxidizing "critical"
channel thiols to disulfides. Whether oxidation/reduction of critical
thiols is rapid enough to account for rapid channel transitions
characteristic of RyR remains unproved. However, it is unlikely that
the stimulatory actions of nanomolar quinone can be attributed to
oxidation to intramolecular or intermolecular disulfides because: 1)
the BQ semiquinone is extremely electrophilic, making it more likely
that BQ will undergo arylation than redox-cycling reactions; 2) the in
vitro conditions used in the present study lack reducing cofactor to
drive redox cycling; and 3) channel activation induced by reactive
quinones is readily reversible in the absence of reducing agent.
In Fig. 9, scheme 2, quinones undergo nucleophilic addition to
hyperreactive thiols, resulting in an arylated channel complex. This
mechanism implies that normal channel gating does not proceed with a
requisite change in oxidation of critical receptor thiols to disulfides
per se. Alternately, the formation of arylated thio- adducts induces
allosterism which promotes channel activation. Again, this mechanism is
less plausible considering the reversible nature of quinone-mediated
channel activation. Furthermore, NQ is a better redox cycler than it is
an arylator (Monks et al., 1992
) and at low concentration (nanomolar)
enhances channel activation in a manner indistinguishable from DXR, a
pure redox cycler. Finally, this mechanism seems untenable when one
considers that nucleophilic addition of CPM to hyperreactive thiols
does not itself alter Ca2+ uptake but rather
removes the ability of reactive quinones from affecting changes in
Ca2+ uptake (Fig. 5).
In Fig. 9, scheme 3, agents that enhance channel-open probability
(Ca2+, adenine nucleotides, caffeine, etc.)
influence a conformational transition to the open state of the channel
that masks the nucleophilic domain and dramatically reduces the
reactivity of functionally critical cysteines. In scheme 3 (Fig. 9),
the formation and elimination of a nucleophilic domain with native
channel transitions in conformation corresponds to the appearance and
disappearance of hyperreactive thiols detected by CPM fluorescence.
Reactive quinones such as NQ, by virtue of their electrophilic redox
potentials (NQ Eredox = +36 mV; Clark, 1960
)
would be expected to perturb the redox microenvironment within the
nucleophilic domain wherein hyperreactive thiols reside. The presence
of low concentrations (nanomolar) of quinone would further enhance the
nucleophilicity of hyperreactive thiols which could aid in promoting
the deprotonation of R-SH to R-S' + H+. In the deprotonated state, the hyperreactive
thiols may contribute significantly to decrease the stability of the
closed state through disruption of key noncovalent interactions.
Although the present study does not directly prove the mechanism
proposed in scheme 3 of Fig. 9, several experimental observations are
consistent with a redox-sensing model. The potency and rapidity with
which channel activation occurs appears to follow the standard redox potential of the quinone. BQ (Eredox +293 mV;
Clark, 1960
) and NQ (Eredox +36 mV; Fig. 4) were
found to be substantially more potent and rapid than anthraquinones
(typical Eredox <
150 mV) in releasing SR
Ca2+ (Abramson et al., 1988
; Pessah et al.,
1990
). Consistent with the model, NQ and BQ were also significantly
more potent than DXR toward decreasing the rate of CPM labeling of
hyperreactive thiols. The apparently higher potency of NQ compared to
that of BQ in the CPM assay probably stems from the extreme
nucleophilicity of the latter, which is expected to decrease the actual
free concentration of quinone in aqueous solution. The concept of redox
sensing by the Ca2+ channel complex is supported
by the observation that pretreatment of SR with a concentration of CPM
known to derivatize a large fraction of the channel-associated
hyperreactive thiols dramatically reduces the sensitivity of the
channel to activation by NQ and DXR. By destabilizing the closed state,
the redox-sensing hypothesis (Fig. 9, scheme 3) could account for why
anthraquinones can so effectively sensitize the channel to activation
by Ca2+ (Abramson et al., 1988
; and Pessah et
al., 1990
).
Nanomolar NQ and BQ induce rapid and selective loss of hyperreactive
thiol groups on RyR1 and triadin protomers, and the immediate functional consequence is enhanced channel activity and net SR Ca2+ efflux. These results are in agreement with
those of Aghdasi et al. (1997b)
who found that channels incubated with
a high concentration of NEM for increasing periods of time display
three distinct phases of functional effects. However, the experimental
design of Aghdasi et al al. (1997b
) did not account for the
conformational state of the channel before addition of sulfhydryl
reagent nor was the molar ratio of sulfhydryl reagent relative to SR
protein adjusted to <1 pmol/µg protein. For these reasons, labeling
was not limited to the most reactive channel thiols and comparisons
about the functional consequence of sulfhyrdryl oxidation cannot be
directly compared with the present study which addresses the functional ramifications of site-selective modification of the most reactive channel-associated thiols. The ability of NQ at a higher concentration to produce biphasic actions on both channel function and
[3H]ryanodine-binding kinetics support this
interpretation since under these conditions it would be expected to 1)
arylate protein thiols and 2) oxidize hyperreactive and less reactive
but more abundant channel-associated thiols to disulfides. Experiments with additional quinone structures which exclusively arylate or redox
cycle should clarify the relationship between chemical mechanism at the
Ca2+ channel complex and functional response.
Micromolar NQ clearly shows biphasic actions on the binding of
[3H]ryanodine, first enhancing occupancy
followed by inhibition (Fig. 6), whereas anthraquinones only enhance
the binding of [3H]ryanodine to SR across their
dose-response range (1-200 µM) (Abramson et al., 1988
; Pessah
et al., 1990
). Channel inactivation at high concentrations and
longer exposure of the RyR complex to NQ appears to proceed by a
mechanism different from that seen with nanomolar NQ. The irreversible
mechanism could stem from 1) oxidation of critical thiols or
disulfides; 2) oxidation of another, less reactive, class of channel
thiols to disulfides; or (3) arylation of the channel complex. In this
respect, the actions of anthraquinones, which are poor arylators, have
been shown to activate the gating of single RyR channels reconstituted in BLM in a persistent manner without a subsequent phase of inhibition (Holmberg and Williams, 1990
; Buck and Pessah, 1995
). Ondrias et
al. (1990)
have, however, reported that DXR exhibits biphasic actions
in channels reconstituted from cardiac muscle. Despite the apparent
discrepancy in the reported effects of DXR between laboratories
(monophasic versus biphasic), it is unlikely anthraquinones promote
channel inactivation. Indeed, radioligand-binding experiments with
[3H]ryanodine and skeletal (Abramson et al.,
1988
) or cardiac (Pessah et al., 1990
) SR demonstrated only DXR-induced
activation of ligand binding, even after several hours of incubation in
the presence of anthraquinone.
We provide the first direct evidence for a molecular mechanism by which
quinones of toxicological concern selectively target a microsomal
Ca2+ channel. Importantly, the present results
raise the possibility that microsomal Ca2+
channels may actually utilize hyperreactive sulfhydryl chemistry in
"sensing" localized changes in the redox environment. In this respect, the injurious effects of quinones have been attributed to
their ability to 1) undergo redox cycling, thereby generating reactive
oxygen species; and 2) directly arylate biological macromolecules (Monks et al., 1992
). In both muscle and nonmuscle cells, the acute and
chronic toxicity mediated by quinones or their precursor molecules are
known to be closely associated with a rise in cellular Ca2+ that initiates functional and structural
changes which eventually lead to cell death (Farber, 1990
; Reed, 1990
;
Nicoterra et al., 1992
). Increased intracellular
Ca2+ is known to activate proteases (Nicoterra et
al., 1986
; Lee et al., 1991
), endonucleases (McConkey et al., 1988
),
phospholipases C (Berridge et al., 1987
) and A2
(Exton, 1990
), and kinases (Shulman and Lou, 1989
). Quinones that alter
normal Ca2+ signaling can be expected to alter
Ca2+-dependent biochemical cascades responsible
for maintenance of cellular homeostasis and function. The hypothesis
that nonselective peroxidation of membrane lipids can fully account for
the loss of ion barriers and the cytotoxicity of quinonoids has been
questioned in recent years. Although disagreement exists concerning the
sequence of events leading from quinone-mediated disruption of
Ca2+ regulation to cell death (Herman et al.,
1990
), intense interest is now focused on the identity of specific
cellular macromolecules which are primary targets of oxidative damage
and on assessing their exact role in toxicity (Monks et al., 1992
;
Hinson and Roberts 1992
). To date, most studies aimed at elucidating
the molecular mechanisms underlying the cytotoxicity of anthraquinones
(Olson and Mushlin, 1990
), naphthoquinones (Frei et al., 1986
), and
benzoquinones (Moore et al., 1988
) in a variety of cell types have
examined loss of mitochondrial integrity. An added significance of the mechanism revealed in the present study is that RyRs represent a key
Ca2+ regulatory channel that is widely expressed
within microsomal membrane of a wide variety of cells where most
quinone precursor molecules are metabolized to bioactive quinones by
the cytochrome P-450 system. Colocalization of ryanodine-sensitive
Ca2+ channels and cytochrome P-450 enzyme, which
catalyze formation of quinone-containing compounds, could provide a
fundamental mechanism by which localized oxidative stress is
"sensed" by the major intracellular Ca2+
store. This mechanism may have both physiological and toxicological significance.
| |
Acknowledgments |
|---|
We acknowledge Dr. Alan Buckpitt for helpful suggestion and review of the manuscript.
| |
Footnotes |
|---|
Received July 29, 1998; Accepted February 12, 1999
This work was supported by Grant ES05002, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences Center for Environmental Health Sciences Grant ES05707 from the National Institutes of Health (to I.N.P.), and Oregon Affiliate of the American Heart Association (to J.J.A.).
Send reprint requests to: Dr. Isaac N. Pessah, Department of Molecular Biosciences, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of California, Davis, Davis, CA 95616. E-mail: inpessah{at}ucdavis.edu
| |
Abbreviations |
|---|
BLM, bilayer lipid membrane; BQ, 1,4-benzoquinone; CE, coupling enzyme; CPM, 7-diethylamino-3-(4'-maleimidylphenyl)-4-methylcoumarin; DXR, doxorubicin; IDAU, 5-iminodaunorubicin; MOPS, 3-(N-morpholino)propanesulfonic acid; NQ, 1,4-naphthoquinone; NQS, 1,2-naphthoquione-4-sulfonic acid; NEM, N-ethylmaleimide; PAGE, polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis; RR, ruthenium red; RyR1, skeletal isoform of ryanodine receptor; RyR2, cardiac form of ryanodine receptor; SERCA, SR/ER Ca2+ ATPase; SR, sarcoplasmic reticulum, TG, thapsigargin; THQ, tert-butylhydroquinone.
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References |
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