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J. Biol. Chem., Vol. 283, Issue 7, 4304-4313, February 15, 2008
Gene Expression Signatures of cAMP/Protein Kinase A (PKA)-promoted, Mitochondrial-dependent ApoptosisCOMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF WILD-TYPE AND cAMP-DEATHLESS S49 LYMPHOMA CELLS*
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| ABSTRACT |
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800 transcripts) and 6 h (
1000 transcripts) (|Fold| > 2, p < 0.06); by contrast, at 24 h,
2500 and
1100 transcripts were changed in WT and D- cells, respectively. Using an approach that combined regression analysis, clustering, and functional annotation to identify transcripts that showed differential expression between WT and D- cells, we found differences in cAMP-mediated regulation of mRNAs involved in transcriptional repression, apoptosis, the cell cycle, RNA splicing, Golgi, and lysosomes. The two cell lines differed in cAMP-response element-binding protein (CREB) phosphorylation and expression of the transcriptional inhibitor ICER (inducible cAMP early repressor) and in cAMP-regulated expression of genes in the inhibitor of apoptosis (IAP) and Bcl families. The findings indicate that cAMP/PKA-promoted apoptosis of lymphoid cells occurs via mitochondrial-mediated events and imply that such apoptosis involves gene networks in multiple biochemical pathways. | INTRODUCTION |
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Cyclic AMP-promoted apoptosis of lymphoid, in particular T-cell-derived lymphoma, cells depends on the principal effector of cAMP action, protein kinase A (PKA)3 (2-4, 6). Although both PKA and the exchange protein directly activated by cyclic AMP (Epac), another mediator of cAMP action, are found in lymphoid cells, Epac does not appear to be involved in cAMP-mediated control of the cell cycle (7) or apoptosis in these cells (2, 8). Overexpression of certain anti-apoptotic proteins, such as Bcl-2, can protect lymphoma cells from cAMP-mediated apoptosis; such protection appears to be distinct from effects of cAMP on cell cycle arrest (9). Thus, cAMP-promoted growth arrest and apoptosis appear to occur via distinct mechanisms.
S49 lymphoma cells are a unique model system to explore cell growth arrest and apoptosis by the cAMP/PKA pathway. S49 cells, which arose in a BALB/c mouse as a T-cell tumor, grow in suspension culture with a doubling time of 14-16 h and undergo G1 growth arrest and apoptosis in response to elevation of cAMP (10, 11). S49 clonal variants have been isolated that are resistant to killing by cAMP or agents that increase cAMP levels. One of these cAMP-resistant variants, D- (cAMP deathless) S49 cells, has normal PKA activity and cAMP-promoted growth arrest in G1 but lacks cAMP-promoted apoptosis (12).
Treatment of wild-type, but not kin- (which lack PKA), S49 cells with cAMP induces a coordinated up-regulation of cell cycle checkpoint genes (e.g. Gadd45a, p27, cyclin G2) and down-regulation of cyclin E1 and E2, thus defining these as genes and proteins likely to be involved in cAMP/PKA-mediated G1 arrest (11). However, the mechanisms underlying cAMP/PKA-promoted apoptosis are not known. Two major pathways lead to apoptosis: 1) an intrinsic pathway that results from mitochondrial release of pro-apoptotic proteins and subsequent activation of caspases and 2) an extrinsic pathway initiated by extracellular signals that activate death receptors, caspase-8, and downstream effector caspases (13, 14). The intrinsic pathway involves Bcl-2 family members that localize to mitochondria and modulate the release of cytochrome c and Smac (second mitochondria-derived activator of caspase) from the mitochondrial intermembrane space (15). Inhibitor of apoptosis proteins (IAP), which can blunt apoptosis, bind and inhibit caspase activity (16). However, once in the cytosol, Smac binds to specific IAPs and antagonizes their anti-apoptotic activity.
We undertook the current studies to answer several questions regarding cAMP/PKA-promoted apoptosis in WT and D- S49 cells, reasoning that comparative studies of these two closely related cell types would provide new insights into apoptosis produced by cAMP/PKA. Does such apoptosis occur via the intrinsic or extrinsic pathway? Which gene expression changes characterize cAMP/PKA-promoted apoptosis? What mechanisms trigger and mediate cAMP-promoted apoptosis?
| EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES |
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Apoptosis Assay and Analysis of DNA Content and Cell Cycle by Flow Cytometry—Apoptosis was evaluated by assessment of annexin V binding or propidium iodide staining, as described previously (9).
Detection of Mitochondrial Membrane Potential (MMP) 
m—MMP was assessed by using the fluorescent probe DiOC6 (3,3'-dihexyloxacarbocyanine iodide, Molecular Probes). Cells were treated with 8-CPT-cAMP for the indicated times and then incubated with 40 nM DiOC6 for 15 min in a standard cell culture incubator. Cells were then removed from the incubator, centrifuged, and resuspended in PBS containing 1% fetal bovine serum. MMP was then measured at room temperature using fluorescence-activated cell sorter analysis with an excitation and an emission wavelength pair of 485 and 530 nm. As a positive control, cells were treated with 50 µM of the protonophore carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone (Molecular Probes) for 5 min and then stained with DiOC6 and analyzed by fluorescence-activated cell sorter.
Caspase Activity Assay—Caspase-3 and caspase-8 activity were measured by a colorimetric assay (R&D Systems) according to the manufacturer's instructions. Briefly, S49 cells were treated with 8-CPT-cAMP for 24 h and with anti-Fas for 16 h. Cell lysates were prepared and incubated with p-nitroaniline (pNA)-conjugated substrates for caspase-3 (DEVD-pNA) and caspase-8 (IETD-pNA). Absorbance was read at 405 nm using a spectrophotometer.
Immunohistochemistry—S49 cells were treated with 8-CPT-cAMP for 24 h, incubated with 100 nM Mitotracker Red CMXRos (Molecular Probes) for 30 min, and placed on poly-D-lysine-coated coverslips. The cells were fixed for 15 min with 3.7% formaldehyde, Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium, washed twice with PBS, 0.1% bovine serum albumin, permeabilized with 0.1% Triton X-100, PBS for 10 min, washed twice with PBS, 0.1% Tween 20 and finally with PBS, 1% bovine serum albumin, 0.05% Tween for 2 h. The cells were incubated for 2 h with an anti-cytochrome c antibody (Santa Cruz Biotechnology) diluted (1:100) in PBS containing 1% bovine serum albumin, 0.05% Tween and washed three times with PBS, 0.1% Tween. The cells were then incubated with a Cy2-conjugated secondary antibody anti-rabbit IgG (1:250), washed five times with PBS, 0.1% Tween, incubated with 4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (1:5000) for 20 min, washed for 10 min with PBS, and mounted in gelvatol for microscopy. All incubation and wash steps were conducted at room temperature.
Image Deconvolution Analysis—Deconvolution images were obtained as described previously (17). Images were captured with a DeltaVision deconvolution microscope system (Applied Precision, Issaquah, WA). The system includes a Photometrics charge-coupled device mounted on a Nikon TE-200 inverted epifluorescence microscope. In general, between 30 and 60 optical sections spaced by
0.1 µm were taken. Exposure times were set such that the camera response was in the linear range for each fluorophore. The data sets were deconvolved and analyzed by using SOFTWORX software (Applied Precision) on a Silicon Graphics Octane work station.
Sample Preparation for Expression Array Analysis—Total cellular RNA was isolated from cells by using RNeasy mini-columns (Qiagen, Santa Clara, CA) and reverse-transcribed with SuperScript II reverse transcriptase and an oligo(dT) primer containing a T7 RNA polymerase promoter. Single-stranded cDNA was converted into double-stranded cDNA and then purified (MessageAMP aRNA kit, Ambion, Austin, TX). Biotinylated cRNA was generated from double-stranded cDNA by in vitro transcription (MessageAMP aRNA Kit, Ambion). After a further round of purification, in vitro transcription reactions yielded 30-70 µg of biotinylated cRNA, which was fragmented to
100-bp fragments before hybridization. Each Affymetrix 430 A chip was hybridized to 10 µg of fragmented cRNA. Arrays were hybridized and scanned with a GeneArray scanner (Hewlett-Packard/Affymetrix). For each array, the CEL files were generated with the Affymetrix Microarray Suite 5.0 and analyzed with GC RMA (18). Data are available at GEO (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/projects/geo/) under the accession number GSE9727
[NCBI GEO]
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Regression Analysis and Hierarchical Ordered Partitioning and Collapsing Hybrid (HOPACH) Clustering of Transcripts—Log base 2 expression intensity estimates for all 22,690 probe sets on the Affymetrix chip were modeled using regression methods with the R statistical program utilizing the LIMMA package from the Bioconductor project. For each probe set, a polynomial regression model was fit to the 26 expression values with separate intercepts, and linear and quadratic time terms at 0, 2, 6, and 24 h after treatment, plus linear and quadratic time-by-cell line (WT versus D-) interaction terms. We used the p value from the moderated F statistic (LIMMA interaction p value) for the simultaneous contribution of the linear and quadratic interaction coefficients to test for time-dependent differential expression between WT and D- cells over 24 h of treatment. We found 2,572 probe sets with a LIMMA interaction p < 0.05. To functionally annotate these differentially expressed transcripts, we clustered them with HOPACH (19) and annotated clusters with Gene Ontology (GO) terms using the MAPPFinder program (20). The raw output was filtered to show the most non-redundant GO terms with the GO slim program.4 The top five GO terms ranked by Z-score are shown for each cluster. Complete unfiltered GO results are available as supplemental Table 1.
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Ct, where
Ct = Ct interested gene - Ct GAPDH and 
Ct =
Ct treatment -
Ct control. Immunoblot Analysis—For CREB and ICER (inducible cAMP early repressor) immunoblots, cells were centrifuged at various time points after treatments, washed twice in ice-cold PBS, and lysed (4 x 106 cells/aliquot) in 0.2 ml of SDS sample buffer (2% SDS, 10% glycerol, 0.01% bromphenol blue, 62.5 mM Tris-HCl, pH 6.8, 2.5% β-mercaptoethanol), incubated for 30 min on ice, sonicated three times for 10 s, and centrifuged (5 min at 4 °C, 14,000 rpm). For cytochrome c and SMAC immunoblots, 2 x 107 cells were lysed in 0.5 ml of isotonic buffer containing 250 mM sucrose, 20 mM Hepes-KOH (pH 7.5), 10 mM KCl, 1.5 mM MgCl2, 1 mM Na-EDTA, 1 mM Na-EGTA, 1 mM dithiothreitol, and a mixture of protease inhibitors, incubated for 15 min on ice, ground in a glass Dounce homogenizer with a tight pestle (b-type) about 30-50 times, and then centrifuged at 800 x g for 10 min. The supernatant was further centrifuged at 100,000 x g for 1 h in a Beckman Optima TLX ultracentrifuge. Lysates were treated and assayed on 12% NuPAGE bis-Tris gels according to the manufacturer's instructions. Filters were blocked with 3% nonfat dry milk in PBS for 30 min and probed with primary antibodies overnight at 4 °C. After five washes in PBS containing 0.1% (v/v) Tween 20, filters were incubated with horseradish peroxidase-conjugated secondary antibodies at a final dilution of 1/5,000 and then washed five times. Proteins were visualized by ECL (Amersham Biosciences) using a UVP BioImaging system. Filters were stripped in RestoreTM (Pierce) and reprobed with GAPDH antibody or Creb antibody for normalization.
Statistical Analyses—For apoptosis, mitochondrial membrane depolarization, caspase-3 and -8 activity, and real-time PCR analysis, all determinations were performed in duplicate or triplicate; each experiment was repeated at least three times, and values are expressed as mean ± S.E. For microarray analysis, we computed permutation t test statistics with the multtest package in R (from the Bioconductor project) and -fold calculations with the log2 GC RMA signal values. Four microarrays (n = 4) were used to hybridize baseline (0 h) experimental replicates; three microarrays were used for each time of treatment (2, 6, and 24 h). Because we had three replicates per time point, the permutation tests resulted in the smallest p values of either 0.02 or 0.057; therefore, we used a p < 0.06 and an absolute -fold change >2 as the criteria for significance. Regression analysis was conducted as described above. For determination of protein level kinetics, statistical significance was determined by one-way analysis of variance followed by Bonferroni's post hoc test for all possible pairwise comparisons. Comparison between two groups was based on an unpaired Student's t test. A probability value of p < 0.05 was considered to be statistically significant; each experiment was repeated at least three times, and error bars represent the means ± S.E. in Figs. 1, 2, 3, 5, and 6.
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| RESULTS |
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cAMP/PKA Acts via a Mitochondrial Pathway to Induce Apoptosis in S49 Cells—Previous data indicate that Bcl2 family members likely play an important role in cAMP-mediated apoptosis in WT S49 cells (2, 9). Since the action of such Bcl2 family members generally involves the mitochondria (21), we hypothesized that cAMP may act via a mitochondrial pathway to induce apoptosis. Indeed, treatment of WT cells with cAMP resulted in a prominent loss of mitochondrial membrane potential (Fig. 2A), whereas D- cells displayed a much smaller decrease in mitochondrial membrane potential in response to treatment with cAMP than did WT cells (Fig. 2A) despite having a similar loss of mitochondrial membrane potential as do WT cells in response to carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone, an uncoupler of oxidative phosphorylation and disruptor of mitochondrial membrane potential. We corroborated the results for loss of mitochondrial membrane potential by using immunocytochemistry, which showed that cAMP induced a loss of cytochrome c from mitochondria in WT, but not D-, S49 cells (Fig. 2B). Apoptosis induced by cAMP can require transcriptional up-regulation of smac/diablo (22); we found that cAMP induced a release of SMAC into the cytosol in WT, but not D-, S49 cells (Fig. 2C).
cAMP-mediated Apoptosis Is Fas-independent—Cyclic AMP/PKA activation increases caspase-3 activity in WT but not D- S49 cells but does not increase caspase-8 activity in either cell type (Fig. 3). Caspase-3 activity can increase via either the mitochondria-dependent (intrinsic) apoptotic pathway or the death receptor/caspase-8-dependent (extrinsic) pathway (23, 24). To distinguish the effects of cAMP/PKA on those two pathways, we treated WT and D- S49 cells with anti-Fas antibody. Incubation of WT or D- S49 cells with anti-Fas antibody increased caspase-3 and -8 activities (Fig. 3). Together with the data above, these results show that cAMP/PKA acts via a Fas-independent, mitochondrial-mediated apoptotic pathway in WT S49 cells and that the apoptotic protective mutation in D- cells is upstream of caspase-3 activity.
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We used regression analysis (see "Experimental Procedures") to identify transcripts that are differentially regulated between cAMP-treated WT and D- cells in an effort to identify key differences in gene regulation between the two cell types. We found
2,500 transcripts that showed a significant difference (p < 0.05) in the kinetics of their regulation between WT and D- cells over the 24-h treatment period with 8-CPT-cAMP (Fig. 4A). Clustering and annotation of these transcripts indicated that several of these differentially regulated genes could be classified into functional groups. When compared with D- cells, WT cells had increased expression of lysosomal, ribosomal, and Golgi-related transcripts as a function of time of incubation with CPT-cAMP (Fig. 4A, clusters 1 and 2). Both the lysosomal and the Golgi compartments are known to undergo changes during apoptosis (25, 26). We also found several clusters of nuclei-related transcripts involved in mitosis and RNA processing and splicing that were down-regulated to a greater extent in WT versus D- cells 24 h after CPT-cAMP treatment (Fig. 4A, clusters 6 and 7). Alternative splicing has been shown to be an important mediator of apoptosis (27). In support of this, we found evidence of alternative splicing of several apoptotic mediators, as evidenced by the highly divergent signals of certain microarray probe sets that are specific to different transcript isoforms for a single gene (e.g. smac, bnip3l, data not shown, and crem/icer, see Fig. 6B).
By contrast with the results observed after a 24-h incubation with 8-CPT-cAMP, a time at which WT cells had more than twice as many transcripts change >2-fold relative to D- cells, incubation with the cAMP analog for 2 and 6 h yielded more similar numbers of treatment-related changes and substantial overlap in identity of transcripts between WT and D- cells (Fig. 4, B and C). The latter results imply that the majority of gene expression changes reflective of apoptosis require >6 h of elevated cAMP levels and that the apoptotic resistance in D- cells is associated with a global blunting of gene expression at the 24-h time point. Washout experiments have revealed that >6h of treatment with CPT-cAMP is required to irreversibly commit WT S49 cells to apoptosis (2). Because most of the gene expression changes in the two cell lines were similar at the 2- and 6-h time points (Fig. 4C), the apoptotic-resistant phenotype of D- cells may result from a relatively small subset of genes, although apoptosis and its consequences likely involve many more transcripts, as reflected by the much larger differences in gene expression observed between WT and D- treated with CPT-cAMP for 24 h.
WT and D- Cells Have Large Differences in Transcript Regulation 24 h after 8-CPT-cAMP Treatment—Transcriptional or posttranscriptional regulation of particular transcription factors is a likely explanation for the large differences in the number of transcripts between WT and D- cells treated with CPT-cAMP for 24 h. We found a cluster of seven transcriptional repressors that were up-regulated in the D- (but not WT) cells at 24 h, and thus, that may contribute to the differences in global mRNA regulation between the two cell lines (included in Fig. 4A, cluster 4, and in Table 1). Of note, down-regulation of one of these repressors, CCCTC-binding factor, has been shown to be required for stress-induced apoptotic response of human hematopoietic myeloid cells (28).
Extension of our analysis revealed that 70 transcription factors had interaction p values of <0.05 (supplemental Table 3), highlighting potential targets for the transcriptional blunting effect seen at the 24-h time point in WT cells when compared with D- cells. The most significantly changed such transcript was peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-
(p < 0.000001), which was up-regulated >15-fold at 24 h in WT cells but without significant change in D- cells. Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-
has been shown to inhibit proliferative response, decrease viability, and increase apoptosis in T-cells (29, 30). Stat1 and an interferon
(IFN-
)-activated transcript (ifi203) also displayed significantly different expression patterns between WT and D- cells incubated with CPT-cAMP, suggesting that the IFN-
pathway is more active in WT than in D- S49 cells. Further analysis revealed that mRNA expression of IFN-
and both of its receptors was up-regulated to a greater extent in WT than in D- cells (see Fig. 7). We tested whether recombinant IFN-
acts synergistically with cAMP to promote killing in D- or whether a blocking antibody to IFN-
could inhibit killing by cAMP in WT cells but found that neither treatment significantly affected cAMP-promoted apoptosis of WT or D- S49 cells (data not shown).
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Icer is an isoform of the Crem family of CRE modulators that is induced by Creb. We found that Icer mRNA and protein expression levels had a similar kinetic pattern with higher values in WT than in D- S49 cells at all time points (Fig. 6B). In WT cells, icer displayed a biphasic increase, peaking at 2 h and then again at 24 h. This biphasic response is absent in D- cells, which showed a smaller peak of icer than did WT cells at 2 h and a return to basal levels by 24 h. The differential regulation of CREB and ICER proteins likely contributes to the global differences in transcriptional regulation observed 24 h after cAMP treatment of WT and D- cells and thus may help regulate the pro-apoptotic responses to cAMP in WT S49 cells.
| DISCUSSION |
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50% of high grade non-Hodgkin lymphomas but undetectable in terminally differentiated adult tissues (37). Survivin suppresses activation and/or activity of caspase-3 (38), although others have found that it can bind caspase-9 and/or neutralize the proapoptotic protein, DIABLO/SMAC (39, 40). Thus, decreased expression of survivin may contribute to cAMP/PKA-mediated apoptosis in S49 cells. Our results also implicate Bim, a proapoptotic Bcl-2 family member, as the most differentially regulated between WT and D- cells; in addition, the expression pattern of Bim after CPT-cAMP suggests that it may help regulate apoptosis in S49 cells (Fig. 7) (2). Differential levels of expression of icer in WT and D- S49 cells may also contribute to cAMP/PKA-promoted apoptosis in the WT S49 cells. Icer, a crem isoform that is associated with regulation of cell growth, is produced by an alternative start site in the crem gene locus (41). ICER is a powerful inhibitor of cAMP-induced transcription because it contains the DNA binding and leucine zipper domains but not the N-terminal transactivation domain of CREM. Icer can be rapidly induced by cAMP and then shuts off cAMP-inducible gene expression driven by CRE DNA consensus elements, including its own promoter that harbors two closely spaced CREs (42). Sustained elevation of ICER levels can elicit pathological consequences, such as death of neuronal cells and cardiomyocytes (43, 44). ICER-promoted apoptosis occurs in part through CREB-mediated transcription and down-regulation of bcl-2 (45), although we did not find a significant change in bcl-2 expression, as measured by microarray in either WT or D- cells. CPT-cAMP induces phosphorylation of CREB and increases icer expression in WT but not kin- S49 cells (2, 11). Other data indicate that phosphorylation of CREB appears to be necessary, but not always sufficient, for the activation of icer expression (46, 47).
In conclusion, the current data show that cAMP promotes apoptosis of WT S49 cells via a mitochondrial signaling pathway that depends on PKA activity and transcriptional regulation. cAMP/PKA regulates both pro-apoptotic and anti-apoptotic genes in S49 cells (summarized in Fig. 7). Our data implicate multiple genes and pathways as contributing to cAMP/PKA-promoted apoptosis and the anti-apoptotic phenotype of D- cells. It is conceivable that a limited subset of such genes and their gene products serve as "master regulators," i.e. rate-limiting pro-/anti-apoptotic genes, whose altered expression and action in response to increases in cellular cAMP levels and PKA activation critically control the commitment to and events mediating apoptosis. Our future studies will focus on candidate genes identified in the current experiments that may serve as such regulators.
| FOOTNOTES |
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The on-line version of this article (available at http://www.jbc.org) contains three supplemental tables. ![]()
1 Both authors contributed equally to this work. ![]()
2 To whom correspondence should be addressed: Dept. of Pharmacology, 9500 Gilman Dr., BSB 3073 UCSD 0636, La Jolla, CA 92093-0636. E-mail: pinsel{at}ucsd.edu.
3 The abbreviations used are: PKA, protein kinase A; WT, wild type; 8-CPT-cAMP, 8-(4-chlorophenylthio)-adenosine-3':5'-cyclic monophosphate; CRE, cAMP-response element; CREB, CRE-binding protein; P-CREB, phosphorylated CREB; ICER, inducible cAMP early repressor; IAP, inhibitor of apoptosis; MMP, mitochondrial membrane potential; pNA, p-nitroaniline; PBS, phosphate-buffered saline; GO, Gene Ontology; real-time PCR, realtime quantitative reverse transcriptase-PCR; SMAC, second mitochondria-derived activator of caspase; IFN, interferon; HOPACH, hierarchical ordered partitioning and collapsing hybrid; bis-Tris, 2-(bis(2-hydroxyethyl)amino)-2-(hydroxymethyl)propane-1,3-diol. ![]()
4 N. Salomonis, A. C. Zambon, and B. R. Conklin, manuscript in preparation. ![]()
5 L. Zhang and P. A. Insel, unpublished results. ![]()
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