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First published online 11 January 2006
doi: 10.1242/dev.02237
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1 Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, C. S. Mott Center for Human Growth and
Development, Wayne State University School of Medicine, Detroit, MI,
USA.
2 Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, C. S. Mott Center for Human Growth
and Development, Wayne State University School of Medicine, Detroit, MI,
USA.
3 Perinatology Research Branch, National Institute of Child Health and Human
Development, NIH, DHHS, Bethesda, MD, USA.
4 Departments of Obstetrics and Gynecology, and Physiology and Biophysics,
University of Illinois School of Medicine, Chicago, IL, USA.
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: d.armant{at}wayne.edu)
Accepted 5 December 2005
| SUMMARY |
|---|
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|
|---|
2%) environment of the first trimester conceptus. Using a
well-characterized human first trimester cytotrophoblast cell line, we found
that a 4-hour exposure to 2% O2 upregulates HBEGF synthesis and
secretion independently of an increase in its mRNA. Five other expressed
members of the EGF family are largely unaffected. At 2% O2,
signaling via HER1 or HER4, known HBEGF receptors, is required for both HBEGF
upregulation and protection against apoptosis. This positive-feedback loop is
dependent on metalloproteinase-mediated cleavage and shedding of the HBEGF
ectodomain. The restoration of trophoblast survival by the addition of soluble
HBEGF in cultures exposed to low O2 and metalloproteinase inhibitor
suggests that the effects of HBEGF are mediated by autocrine/paracrine, rather
than juxtacrine, signaling. Our results provide evidence that a
post-transcriptional mechanism induced in trophoblasts by low O2
rapidly amplifies HBEGF signaling to inhibit apoptosis. These findings have a
high clinical significance, as the downregulation of HBEGF in pre-eclampsia is
likely to be a contributing factor leading to the demise of trophoblasts.
Key words: Trophoblast, Placenta, Oxygen, HBEGF (HB-EGF), Metalloproteinases, Apoptosis, Human, Pregnancy
| INTRODUCTION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
18 mm Hg or 2%) at the
human implantation site through week 10 of gestation due to occlusion of the
uterine spiral arteries by extravillous trophoblasts
(Rodesch et al., 1992
60 mm Hg or 8%) of
O2. In vitro studies reveal that human cytotrophoblast
proliferation rates are enhanced at low (2%) O2 concentrations
(Genbacev et al., 1996
Although many cells cannot survive when deprived of O2,
cytotrophoblast cells are resistant to hypoxia-induced apoptosis
(Kilani et al., 2003
). Why
certain cell types (e.g. embryonic, cancer) survive at low O2 is
poorly understood (Vaupel,
2004
; Schipani,
2005
; Ezashi et al.,
2005
), although there is growing information about O2
sensing and adaptive mechanisms (Giaccia
et al., 2004
). Reduced O2 has been correlated at the
molecular level with altered trophoblast expression of growth factors,
integrins, glycolytic enzymes, stress-related proteins and transcription
factors (Genbacev et al.,
1996
; Kilburn et al.,
2000
; Caniggia et al.,
2000
; Hoang et al.,
2001
). Autocrine signaling by cytotrophoblast cells cultured at
low O2 could inhibit apoptosis. For example, signaling downstream
of the epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor can prevent cytotrophoblast cell
death during culture at very low (<10 mm Hg) O2
(Mackova et al., 2003
).
However, it is not known whether activation of this receptor normally occurs
or if EGF signaling is central to cytotrophoblast survival under reduced
O2 conditions.
The EGF receptor is the founding member of a receptor tyrosine kinase
family (HER1-4, also known as ERBB1-4) that binds EGF and related growth
factors (Holbro and Hynes,
2004
). A member of the EGF family, heparin-binding EGF-like growth
factor (HBEGF, also known as HB-EGF), is upregulated by hypoxia in neurons and
intestinal epithelia (Tanaka et al.,
1999
; Jin et al.,
2002
; Xia et al.,
2003
), and functions as a mitogen and potent survival factor
during stress (Pillai et al.,
1998
; Iwamoto and Mekada,
2000
; Michalsky et al.,
2001
). Apoptosis induced by either transforming growth factor
(TGF)-ß or tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-
in human endometrial
stromal cells is reduced by HBEGF
(Chobotova et al., 2005
). HBEGF
expression is induced by sex steroids during the secretory phase of the
endometrial cycle, and persists during early pregnancy
(Das et al., 1994
;
Zhang et al., 1994
;
Yoo et al., 1997
;
Leach et al., 1999
;
Leach et al., 2001
),
suggesting a role in blastocyst implantation and placentation.
The accumulation of HBEGF in implantation sites could activate signaling
downstream of its receptors (HER1 and HER4) to maintain cytotrophoblast
survival in the low O2 environment. During the first trimester,
HBEGF is expressed by both villous and extravillous trophoblasts
(Leach et al., 1999
).
Expression persists throughout gestation in normal pregnancies, but HBEGF is
downregulated in women with the hypertensive pregnancy disorder pre-eclampsia
(Leach et al., 2002b
).
Pre-eclampsia is associated with deficiencies in extravillous trophoblast
invasion and remodeling of the spiral arteries in conjunction with elevated
apoptosis (Brosens et al.,
1972
; DiFederico et al.,
1999
). HBEGF and other members of the EGF family stimulate
cytotrophoblast invasiveness in vitro through interactions with HER1 and HER4
(Leach et al., 2004
),
suggesting that abnormally low expression of HBEGF during implantation and
placentation could be a factor in the pathophysiology of pre-eclampsia.
Members of the EGF family are synthesized as type 1 transmembrane proteins
that are secreted from the cell surface through metalloproteinase-mediated
cleavage of their ectodomains (Holbro and
Hynes, 2004
). The transmembrane form of HBEGF (proHBEGF) is
capable of juxtacrine signaling by binding HER1 or HER4 on adjacent cells
(Iwamoto and Mekada, 2000
;
Harris et al., 2003
).
Proteolytic processing by metalloproteinases to the mature secreted form
(sHBEGF) facilitates paracrine, as well as autocrine, signaling. HBEGF binding
to its receptors is absolutely dependent on its interaction with heparan
sulfate at the cell surface. A variety of physiological stimuli, including
radiation, stress and agonists of G protein-coupled receptors, can
transactivate HER1 by activating metalloproteinases responsible for the
ectodomain shedding of EGF family members, particularly of HBEGF
(Prenzel et al., 1999
;
Harris et al., 2003
).
EGF family signaling could activate trophoblast survival pathways during
the relatively hypoxic period of placentation in the first trimester.
Therefore, we have investigated the role of this signaling network in
O2-regulated proliferation and survival of HTR-8/SVneo cells, which
are derived from first trimester human cytotrophoblasts
(Graham et al., 1993
). Like
primary cytotrophoblasts (Genbacev et al.,
1996
), this cell line undergoes accelerated growth when cultured
in an atmosphere of 2% O2
(Kilburn et al., 2000
).
Physiologically, trophoblasts do not live at 20% O2, used in our
experimental model to provide an oxygenated state, but they do experience
levels near 2% during the first trimester. We hypothesized that interruption
of endogenous HER signaling would be detrimental to cytotrophoblast survival
and growth at 2% O2. Our findings reveal a novel mechanism that
could contribute to the survival of human cytotrophoblast cells during
placentation.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
21 mm
Hg using an oxygen electrode (ISO-OXY-100, World Precision Instruments,
Sarasota, FL). The electrode was calibrated using buffer solution reduced to
0% O2 with sodium dithionite and ambient buffer (20%
O2). During flushing with the low O2 gas mixture,
O2 levels declined to their lowest value within 2 minutes. This
level was maintained in the sealed chamber for up to 24 hours.
Cell treatments
Medium was changed to add vehicle or supplements to growing cell cultures
30 minutes before exposure to ambient or 2% O2, which initiated
each experiment. The supplements included 10 µg/ml CRM197 (EMD Biosciences,
San Diego, CA), 0.1 U/ml heparitinase I (from Flavobacterium
heparinum, EC 4.2.2.8; 100704-1, Seikagaku America, East Falmouth, MA),
10 µg/ml goat anti-HBEGF (R&D Systems, Minneapolis, MN), 10 µg/ml
mouse anti-HER1 (Ab-2) or HER4 (Ab-3) blocking antibodies (Lab Vision,
Fremont, CA), 20 µg/ml mouse non-immune IgG (Jackson ImmunoResearch
Laboratories, West Grove, PA), 0.1-10 nM recombinant human HBEGF, EGF,
TGF
, epiregulin, amphiregulin or betacellulin (R&D Systems), 2
µg/ml of the capase inhibitors, Z-DEVD-FMK, Z-IETD-FMK, Z-LEHD-FMK or
Z-VAD-FMK (EMD Biosciences), 200 µg/ml of the negative control for caspase
inhibitors Z-FA-FMK (EMD Biosciences), 1-20 µg/ml GM6001
{N-[(2R)-2-(hydroxamidocarbonylmethyl)-4-methylpentanoyl]-L-tryptophan
methylamide} or a negative control analog,
N-t-butoxycarbonyl-L-leucyl-L-tryptophan methylamide (EMD
Biosciences).
Immunohistochemistry
Cytotrophoblast cells grown in 150 µl of medium in 96-well tissue
culture plates (Becton Dickinson) were processed for immunohistochemistry, as
previously described (Kilburn et al.,
2000
). Nuclei expressing Ki-67 were labeled with a monoclonal
antibody (Ki-S5; DAKO, Carpinteria, CA). Goat polyclonal antibodies (R&D
Systems) against human recombinant HBEGF (5 µg/ml), epiregulin (5
µg/ml), amphiregulin (8 µg/ml), betacellulin (5 µg/ml), EGF (8
µg/ml) and TGF
(8 µg/ml) were used at concentrations in the
linear portion of each binding curve. Controls were incubated with 10 µg/ml
non-immune IgG (Jackson ImmunoResearch). Cells labeled with goat primary
antibodies were incubated 1 hour at 25°C with 0.1 µg/ml rabbit
anti-goat IgG (Jackson ImmunoResearch). To visualize and quantify (gray level)
antigen, an Envision SystemTM peroxidase anti-mouse/rabbit kit (DAKO) was
used in conjunction with image analysis, according to our published procedure
(Leach et al., 2002b
). Values
obtained with IgG substituted for primary antibody were subtracted from each
sample.
Cell death and proliferation assays
Cytotrophoblast cells were grown and treated in 150 µl of medium in
96-well plates prior to assay. Cell death was detected by terminal
deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated dUTP nick end-labeling (TUNEL) using a
fluorescein-based kit from Roche Applied Science (Indianapolis, IN) and
counterstaining with 5 µg/ml 4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole, HCl
(DAPI; EMD Biosciences). Fluorescent nuclei were viewed at 20x
magnification using a Leica (Wetzlar, Germany) DM IRB epifluorescence
microscope and representative images of both DAPI and fluorescein fluorescence
were acquired with a Hamamatsu Orca digital camera (Hamamatsu City, Japan).
Images were processed using Simple PCI (C-Imaging, Cranberry Township, PA)
imaging software, adjusting the threshold to optimize automated counting of
fluorescent nuclei. The percentage of TUNEL/DAPI-labeled nuclei (TUNEL index)
was determined from triplicate fields in each well. Cells labeled with
antibody against Ki-67 were counterstained with DAPI and similarly assessed
for the percentage of Ki-67/DAPI-labeled nuclei as an index of cell
proliferation. Externalized phosphatidylserine was detected by incubating live
cells for 15 minutes at room temperature with biotin-labeled annexin V (1:20;
Molecular Probes, Portland, OR) in 10 mM HEPES, 140 mM NaCl, 2.5 mM
CaCl2 (pH 7.0). Cells were then fixed and incubated overnight at
4°C with 5 µg/ml UltraAvidin-Texas Red (Leinco Technologies, St Louis,
MO) and 5 mg/ml BSA in PBS. After counterstaining with DAPI, representative
images of both DAPI and Texas Red fluorescence were acquired.
Apoptotic DNA laddering was assessed using a kit from Roche Applied Science. Cells were grown and treated in 3 ml of medium in Falcon six-well plates (Becton Dickinson). Each lane of a 2% agarose gel was loaded with 5 µg of isolated DNA, electrophoresed and stained with ethidium bromide. Gels were photographed with an EDAS290 digital camera documentation system (Kodak, New Haven, CT) using transilluminated UV light.
Cell lysis (necrosis) was assessed by measuring lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) activity released into the culture medium with a DHLTM Cell Cytotoxicity Assay Kit (AnaSpec, San Jose, CA), according to the manufacturer's instructions. Cells grown in black, clear-bottom 96-well tissue culture plates (Corning, Corning, NY) were treated (n=18) as detailed in the Results in 100 µl of modified BWW medium (Irvine Scientific, Santa Ana, CA). After medium was collected for assay in separate wells, cells were washed three times with BWW medium and lysed for assay of total LDH. The fluorescent reaction product was quantified using a SpectraMax M2 multiplate spectrofluorometer (Molecular Devices, Sunnyvale, CA). To calculate the LDH release index, the value of LDH activity in the medium, multiplied by 100, was divided by the value obtained from the lysed cells.
Northern blotting and real time RT-PCR
Cytotrophoblast cells grown and treated in 2 ml of medium in six-well
plates were washed three times with sterile PBS (Cambrex Bio Sciences,
Verviers, Belgium) and RNA was extracted using RNeasy Mini Kits from Qiagen
(Valencia, CA). Northern blotting (10 µg RNA per lane) and quantitative
real time RT-PCR (1 µg RNA per reaction) were conducted as previously
described (Leach et al.,
2002a
). Northern blots were probed with a 658-bp,
[35S]-labeled complementary RNA fragment of the human
HBEGF gene prepared from a cloned cDNA, as previously described for
in situ hybridization (Leach et al.,
1999
). The primers 5'-TGG TGC TGA AGC TCT TTC TGG-3'
(sense) and 5'-GTG GGA ATT AGT CAT GCC CAA-3' (antisense) were
used to measure HBEGF mRNA copy number by real time PCR. An
HBEGF standard curve was constructed using a pGEM-7Zf(+) vector
(Promega, Madison, WI) containing a human HBEGF insert (Accession
Number M60278). TATA box binding protein mRNA, amplified using the primers
5'-CAC GAA CCA CGG CAC TGA TT-3' (sense) and 5'-TTT TCT TGC
TGC CAG TCT GGA C-3' (antisense), was quantified in each sample to
normalize HBEGF mRNA levels and compensate for intersample variations
in the efficiency of RNA isolation and reverse transcription.
HBEGF ELISA
Cells were cultured and treated in six-well plates. Culture medium (10
ml/plate) cleared by centrifugation at 5000 g for 5 minutes
was frozen at -70°C. Attached cells were extracted with 600 µl/plate of
PBS containing 0.5% Tween 20 (Sigma) and protease inhibitors (1 µg/ml each
of leupeptin, chymostatin and pepstatin, 25 KIU/ml aprotinin, 2 µg/ml
antipain and 10 µg/ml benzamidine; all from Sigma). Extracts were
centrifuged at 5000 g and the supernatants were stored frozen
at -70°C. Total cellular protein concentrations were determined
(Lowry et al., 1951
) for all
cell lysates.
Microtiter plates (Costar #3590, Corning, Corning, NY) were coated for 24 hours at 4°C with 100 µl of 0.5 µg/ml monoclonal anti-HBEGF (R&D Systems) and blocked overnight at 4°C with 1% BSA in PBS. Cell lysates were diluted 5-fold with PBS and then serially diluted for assay in PBS containing 0.1% BSA and 0.1% Tween 20. Conditioned medium was serially diluted in culture medium containing 0.1% BSA and 0.1% Tween 20. Separate standard curves were constructed for medium and lysates by preparing 0-1000 ng/ml recombinant human HBEGF (R&D Systems) in diluent containing 0.1% BSA, 0.1% Tween 20 and either culture medium or PBS, respectively. All preparations (100 µl) were incubated for 1 hour at 25°C in duplicate, antibody pre-coated, wells. After washing four times with 200 µl PBS, 100 µl of 200 ng/ml of biotin-labeled, affinity-purified, polyclonal anti-HBEGF (R&D Systems) was added to each well for 1 hour at 25°C. The wells were again washed and then incubated for 1 hour at 25°C with 100 µl of streptavidin-conjugated horseradish peroxidase (1:200; R&D Systems). The wells were washed and peroxidase activity was detected using a kit (R&D Systems) containing H2O2 and 3,3',5,5' tetramethylbenzidine. The optical density at 450 nm was determined using a programmable multiplate spectrophotometer (Power Wave Workstation, Bio-Tek Instruments, Winooski, VT). The calculated inter- and intra-assay coefficients of variation for this human HBEGF immunoassay were 3.45% and 2.26%, respectively. The detection limit of the assay was 12 pg/ml. The HBEGF concentration of each sample was calculated by interpolation from the corresponding standard curve and was expressed as picogram per microgram cellular protein.
Western blotting
Conditioned medium was collected as described for ELISA. Cell lysates were
extracted in SDS sample buffer. SDS gel electrophoresis
(Laemmli, 1970
) was conducted
under reducing conditions using 20 µg/lane of total protein. Recombinant
human HBEGF (20 ng) and biotinylated protein standards (Cell Signaling
Technology, Beverly, MA) were run in adjacent lanes. Proteins transferred
electrophoretically to 0.45 µm nitrocellulose membranes (Fisher Scientific)
were blocked for 1 hour at 25°C with 5% BSA in Tris-buffered saline
containing 0.1% Tween-20. Membranes were incubated for 18 hours at 4°C
with 5 µg/ml of goat anti-HBEGF in 3% BSA, and then for 1 hour at 25°C
with 0.2 µg/ml peroxidase-conjugated donkey anti-goat antibody (Jackson
ImmunoResearch). Labeled bands were visualized by enhanced chemiluminescence
using Hyperfilm ECL (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech, Piscataway, NJ).
Statistics
Assays were conducted using replicate samples and all experiments were
repeated at least three times. The program SPSS version 12.0 (SPSS, Chicago,
IL) was used to determine statistical significance. For immunohistochemical
quantification, the level of each growth factor at 20% and 2% O2
was compared with a two-tailed Student's independent t-test.
Comparisons were made to vehicle-treated controls for Ki-67, TUNEL and LDH
data, and to 20% O2 controls (0 minutes at 2% O2) for
RT-PCR data, all using an ANOVA with the Newman-Keuls posthoc test. TUNEL data
that did not meet the assumption of equal variances among groups were log
transformed before analysis. All ELISA data were analyzed by the
Kruskal-Wallis non-parametric ANOVA with the Mann-Whitney posthoc test, using
the Holm modification to the Bonferonni correction. All graphed data are
presented as mean±s.e.m.
| RESULTS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
, amphiregulin and betacellulin were
unaffected by O2 tension (Fig.
1B). Epiregulin labeling increased 1.6-fold (P=0.042),
well below the effect on HBEGF. Western blotting failed to detect HBEGF in cell lysates or conditioned medium from cytotrophoblast cells cultured for 24 hours at ambient O2 levels, although the antibody recognized recombinant HBEGF (Fig. 2A). When O2 was reduced to 2%, bands corresponding to pro-HBEGF (18.7 kDa) and the mature sHBEGF (9.7 kDa) appeared in cell lysates and sHBEGF was present in conditioned medium.
HBEGF, quantified by ELISA, increased dramatically in cell lysates after 4 hours of exposure to 2% O2, from less than 0.1 pg/µg cellular protein to approximately 20 pg/µg (Fig. 2B). Secretion of HBEGF into the medium was essentially undetectable during ambient culture; however, it accumulated after 4 hours at 2% O2 to over 500 pg/µg cellular protein and attained a concentration in the medium of approximately 1.5 nM.
|
Regulation of apoptosis by HBEGF
To determine the function of HBEGF in cytotrophoblast cells exposed to low
O2, its ability to signal through its receptors, HER1 and HER4, was
inhibited and the effects on cell proliferation and survival were assessed
(Table 1). HTR-8/SVneo cells
express all four members of the HER family
(Leach et al., 2004
), making
them fully capable of transducing the HBEGF signal. CRM197 is a mutant
diphtheria toxin that specifically antagonizes HBEGF by masking its EGF domain
(Mitamura et al., 1995
). HBEGF
signaling was blocked with CRM197, polyclonal anti-HBEGF or a combination of
function-blocking antibodies against HER1 and HER4. Disruption of HBEGF
signaling did not prevent the 4-fold increase in Ki-67 expression
(P<0.05) at reduced O2. This finding indicates that
HBEGF accumulation at 2% O2 is not responsible for the increased
proliferation of cytotrophoblasts.
|
Cell death at low O2 due to interference with HBEGF signaling
was mediated through the apoptotic pathway, on the basis of several lines of
evidence. Genomic DNA from cells treated with CRM197, anti-HBEGF or antibodies
against HER1 and HER4 formed the hallmark laddering pattern of
oligonucleosomal fragmentation (Fig.
3A). Pyknotic nuclei identified by DAPI labeling were TUNEL
positive (Fig. 3B). Dying cells
bound annexin V (Fig. 3C),
indicative of the phosphatidylserine redistribution observed in apoptotic
cells (Allen et al., 1997
).
Furthermore, this cell death could be prevented by inhibitors of the caspase
cascade, but not by an inactive analog
(Fig. 3D). LDH release into the
medium, a sign of membrane damage during necrotic cell death, did not increase
(P=0.49) when cells cultured for 8 hours at 2% O2 were
exposed to CRM197 (vehicle control, 7.57±1.11; CRM197-treated,
7.54±0.99), although a 2-hour treatment with 1 mM
H2O2 increased (P<0.0001) LDH release
(33.0±1.55). These data provide compelling molecular and biochemical
evidence that HBEGF signaling prevents activation of the apoptotic pathway in
cytotrophoblasts cultured at 2% O2.
Regulation of HBEGF
Decreased survival at 2% O2 under conditions that inhibited
HBEGF signaling was accompanied by a failure to upregulate cellular and
secreted HBEGF (Table 1),
suggesting that HBEGF is self regulating. CRM197 or anti-HBEGF treatment
abolished HBEGF accumulation in cytotrophoblast cells cultured at 2%
O2. Treatment with blocking antibodies against both HER1 and HER 4
inhibited the rise in cellular and secreted HBEGF. Only a partial reduction of
HBEGF upregulation was achieved by inhibiting either HER1 or HER4 alone.
However, the residual HBEGF secretion was sufficient to maintain cell
survival, as indicated by low TUNEL. Therefore, signaling downstream of either
HER1 or HER4 induces HBEGF accumulation and maintains cytotrophoblast survival
at 2% O2.
The role of HBEGF secretion
Transmembrane proHBEGF can directly bind its receptors on adjacent cells
(Iwamoto and Mekada, 2000
), or
it can be processed by metalloproteinases to sHBEGF
(Prenzel et al., 1999
). In the
presence of the metalloproteinase inhibitor GM6001, cytotrophoblast cells
cultured at 2% O2 failed to upregulate cellular or secreted HBEGF
(Fig. 4A). GM6001 inhibition
was dose-dependent, with maximal effect at 10 µg/ml. HBEGF upregulation was
not affected by an inactive structural analog that served as a negative
control (10 µg/ml; data not shown), nor did the analog affect the rate of
apoptosis at 2% O2 (Fig.
4B). However, 10 µg/ml GM6001 reduced cytotrophoblast cell
survival at 2% O2 (Fig.
4B), but had little effect on the rise in nuclear Ki-67 expression
(data not shown). Neither compound altered the apoptosis of fully oxygenated
cells. The inhibitory activities of GM6001 support a mechanism, independent of
juxtacrine HBEGF signaling, that is initiated by shedding from a small pool of
proHBEGF maintained on the surface of trophoblasts.
|
| DISCUSSION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
|
has
little effect on proliferation rates, but is highly effective at converting
these cells to an invasive phenotype
(Leach et al., 2004
In the absence of HBEGF signaling, elevated cytotrophoblast cell death was
mediated through the apoptotic pathway, based on observations of pyknotic
nuclei, internucleosomal DNA cleavage, externalized phosphatidylserine and
dependence on the caspase cascade. Z-VAD-FMK, an inhibitor of all caspases,
completely blocked apoptosis, whereas the inactive analog Z-FA-FMK failed to
reduce apoptosis. Inhibition of the effector caspase, caspase 3, was more
effective than inhibition of either initiator caspase, leaving it uncertain
whether receptor-mediated or endogenous apoptotic signaling is involved. No
evidence was found for necrosis, which would have resulted in the release of
LDH into the culture medium. EGF, which activates HER1
(Holbro and Hynes, 2004
),
inhibits hypoxia-induced apoptosis in cytotrophoblast cells
(Mackova et al., 2003
), yet
activators of other receptor tyrosine kinases, including basic fibroblast
growth factor, insulin-like growth factor 1, platelet-derived growth factor
AA, vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and placental growth factor, are
all ineffective (Smith et al.,
2002
). Trophoblast survival is mediated downstream of HER1 by the
p42/p44 and JNK mitogen-activated protein kinase pathways, sphingosine kinase
1 and phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase
(Mackova et al., 2003
;
Johnstone et al., 2005
).
Presumably, HBEGF operates similarly, although HER4 could recruit additional
pathways. It is not known whether the same downstream pathways are responsible
for the upregulation of HBEGF by low O2.
|
|
25% of control) to avert apoptosis.
Interestingly, this was approximately the concentration of exogenous HBEGF
required to rescue cytotrophoblasts treated with GM6001 during culture at 2%
O2. These data establish a post-transcriptional mechanism for
cytotrophoblast survival at low O2, based on the transactivation of
HER1 or HER4 through sHBEGF shedding, leading to both HBEGF amplification and
inhibition of apoptosis (Fig.
5). This response contrasts with reports of brain neurons and
intestinal epithelial cells, in which HBEGF is upregulated by hypoxia at the
mRNA level (Tanaka et al.,
1999
Oxygen, which is low in the first trimester, regulates trophoblast
phenotype during normal development
(Jauniaux et al., 2001
). HBEGF
is upregulated by cytotrophoblasts 4 hours into O2 deprivation,
providing an early, crucial response to hypoxia. Human trophoblasts also
upregulate VEGF, soluble FLT1, TGFß3, TNF
, IL1
and
IL1ß (Benyo et al., 1997
;
Caniggia et al., 2000
;
Ahmed et al., 2000
;
Nagamatsu et al., 2004
;
Nishi et al., 2004
;
Li et al., 2005
). The levels
of these proteins increase much later (24-72 hours at 2% O2) and
might contribute to trophoblast survival or stimulate proliferation. Hypoxia
inducible factor (HIF)-1
is a transcription factor produced by human
cytotrophoblasts within 4 hours of exposure to reduced O2
(Caniggia et al., 2000
;
Hayashi et al., 2005
).
Although the timing of HIF1
expression would be consistent with a role
upstream of HBEGF accumulation, it would have to operate indirectly, because
HBEGF is regulated by O2 at the post-transcriptional level. Within
a similar timeframe, tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinases (TIMP) 1 and 2
are downregulated, suggesting the possibility of increased matrix
metalloproteinase (MMP) activity (Canning
et al., 2001
) that could directly mediate HBEGF shedding, as
outlined in Fig. 5. HBEGF
shedding can be regulated by a variety of metalloproteinases in the MMP and
ADAM (a disintegrin and metalloproteinase) families
(Yu et al., 2002
;
Razandi et al., 2003
;
Wu et al., 2004
;
Higashiyama and Nanba,
2005
).
Global gene expression by placental tissues at low O2 resembles
that of placentas from women with pre-eclampsia
(Soleymanlou et al., 2005
).
Placental expression of HIF1
and TGFß3, proteins associated with a
less-differentiated trophoblast phenotype, persists late into gestation in
pre-eclampsia (Caniggia et al.,
2000
). These findings suggest that the aberrant regulation of
trophoblast differentiation by oxygen in pre-eclampsia impedes remodeling of
the spiral arteries and diminishes perfusion of the chorionic villi. Whether
the pathology is the result of hypoxia or other factors that produce a similar
outcome is not known. Oxidative stress caused by reoxygenation after ischemia
has also been suggested as an instigating factor in pre-eclampsia
(Roberts and Hubel, 1999
;
Hung et al., 2002
). The
reduced expression of HBEGF observed in pre-eclampsia
(Leach et al., 2002b
) could
reflect the disruption of oxygen regulation or a failure of the trophoblast to
respond normally to environmental cues. The present study indicates that, in
the absence of HBEGF, trophoblast cells are highly vulnerable to stresses that
jeopardize their survival.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
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|---|
|
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