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Molecular and Cellular Biology, October 2000, p. 7311-7318, Vol. 20, No. 19
0270-7306/00/$04.00+0
Role for Mitochondrial Oxidants as Regulators of Cellular
Metabolism
Shino
Nemoto,1
Kazuyo
Takeda,2
Zu-Xi
Yu,2
Victor J.
Ferrans,2 and
Toren
Finkel1,*
Laboratory of Molecular Biology1 and
Pathology Section,2 National Heart Lung
and Blood Institute, NIH, Bethesda, Maryland 20892
Received 6 March 2000/Returned for modification 3 April
2000/Accepted 3 July 2000
 |
ABSTRACT |
Leakage of mitochondrial oxidants contributes to a variety of
harmful conditions ranging from neurodegenerative diseases to cellular
senescence. We describe here, however, a physiological and heretofore
unrecognized role for mitochondrial oxidant release. Mitochondrial
metabolism of pyruvate is demonstrated to activate the c-Jun N-terminal
kinase (JNK). This metabolite-induced rise in cytosolic JNK1 activity
is shown to be triggered by increased release of mitochondrial
H2O2. We further demonstrate that in turn, the
redox-dependent activation of JNK1 feeds back and inhibits the activity
of the metabolic enzymes glycogen synthase kinase 3
and glycogen
synthase. As such, these results demonstrate a novel metabolic
regulatory pathway activated by mitochondrial oxidants. In addition,
they suggest that although chronic oxidant production may have
deleterious effects, mitochondrial oxidants can also function acutely
as signaling molecules to provide communication between the
mitochondria and the cytosol.
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INTRODUCTION |
Recent evidence suggests that
reactive oxygen species (ROS) may modulate a variety of signaling
pathway (14, 23, 32). Studies in cultured cells have
demonstrated that a variety of growth factors, including
platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF), epidermal growth factor (EGF),
and angiotensin II, stimulate the rapid production of ROS upon binding
to their cognate receptor (5, 15, 37). Inhibiting the rise
in ligand-stimulated ROS levels results in inhibition of
downstream signaling. In particular, the burst of tyrosine
phosphorylation stimulated by PDGF or EGF is significantly attenuated
by overexpression of the peroxide-scavenging enzyme catalase (5,
37). This has led to speculation that tyrosine phosphatases,
which have a reactive cysteine residue in their active sites, might be
direct targets of ligand-stimulated ROS production (14).
Consistent with this notion, protein tyrosine phosphatase 1B was
recently shown to be reversibly inactivated by oxidation following EGF
stimulation (25).
Although the enzymatic source of ligand-stimulated ROS production is
unclear, evidence suggests a regulatory role for the small GTPases.
Expression of constitutively active Rac1 mutants produce an increase in
ROS levels in fibroblasts (19-21, 36, 38). Similarly,
dominant negative forms of Rac can inhibit ligand-stimulated ROS
production in cells (36, 38). Evidence also suggests that the ability of Rac proteins to contribute to Ras-mediated cell transformation appears to be linked in part to their ability to produce
superoxide anions (19, 20). In phagocytic cells, Rac controls superoxide production via regulation of the NADPH oxidase. Although this oxidase was long considered to be expressed exclusively in neutrophils, recent reports have demonstrated that nonphagocytic cells have a homologous system (7, 35).
In contrast to the cytosolic, ligand-stimulated production of oxidants,
in many cells the mitochondria constitute the primary source of ROS
production. It has been appreciated for some time that mitochondria
produce oxidants at a rate that exceeds their scavenging capacity.
Estimates from isolated mitochondria suggest that approximately 1 to
3% of the O2 consumed is incompletely metabolized and
thereby diverted into O2
generation (10,
30). A variety of evidence has implicated this continuous release
of mitochondrial oxidants in the pathogenesis of both degenerative
diseases and organismal aging (8, 33, 39, 41). Though
mitochondria possess manganese superoxide dismutase to convert
superoxide into hydrogen peroxide, the peroxide, once generated, is
freely diffusible and can therefore contribute to increased levels of
ROS in the cytosol. Although numerous cellular antioxidant defenses
exist, given the significant toxicity of ROS, it remains unclear why
cells have not evolved even more efficient strategies to limit
mitochondrial oxidants. Although there are many potential answers to
this question, we have concentrated on the hypothesis that in addition
to their harmful effects, mitochondrial oxidants may also function
physiologically as signaling molecules that regulate aerobic metabolism.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Cell lines and transfections.
HeLa cells were obtained from
the American Type Culture Collection (ATCC) and maintained in
Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium supplemented with 10% fetal calf
serum. To obtain cells devoid of respiration-competent mitochondria,
HeLa cells were grown in the presence of ethidium bromide (400 ng/ml)
for 7 days. At the end of this period of time, Western blot analysis
demonstrated a >90% reduction in expression of the mitochondrially
encoded gene product COX II. Human umbilical endothelial cells (HUVEC) were obtained from Clonetics (Walkersville, Md.), while IMR-90 primary
human fibroblasts, HEK-293 embryonic kidney cells, and 3T3 mouse
fibroblasts were obtained from the ATCC (Rockville, Md.). Primary
cultures of neonatal myocytes were prepared as previously described
(31).
For the construction of inducible cell lines, a HeLa cell line
(Clontech) expressing high levels of a tetracycline-inducible transactivator was used as a parental line. Following transfection and
selection in hygromycin (250 µg/ml) single colonies were amplified and screened for inducible protein expression. Stable expression of
glutathione S-transferase-Pi (GSTpi) in HeLa
cells was obtained by transfection of pcDNA-GSTpi (a gift of Ze'ev
Ronai) followed by selection in G418 and isolation by limiting
dilutions. For transient expression of GSTpi, cells were cotransfected
with an epitope form of c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK), HA-JNK. Cells
were analyzed 40 h after transfection with Lipofectamine
(Gibco-BRL) using 2.5 µg of DNA consisting of the indicated
concentration of GSTpi, 0.5 µg of HA-JNK, and the balance with empty
vector DNA. Where indicated, cells were incubated with extracellular catalase (5,000 U/ml) for 20 h prior to stimulation with pyruvate.
In vitro kinase and enzyme activity assays.
For analysis of
JNK1 and glycogen synthase kinase 3 (GSK-3) activity, following
stimulation with pyruvate (100 mM, except where noted),
interleukin-1
(IL-1
; 10 ng/ml), or mitochondrial inhibitors, HeLa
cells were washed with phosphate-buffered saline and then scraped into
kinase extraction buffer (20 mM Tris-HCl [pH 7.6], 250 mM NaCl, 3 mM
EDTA, 3 mM EGTA, 0.5% [vol/vol] NP-40, 1 mM dithiothreitol [DTT],
50 mM
-glycerophosphate, 20 µg of aprotinin per ml, 20 µg of
leupeptin per ml, and 1 mM Na3 VO4). JNK1 or
GSK-3
was immunoprecipitated from 30 or 10 µg of protein lysate,
respectively, with anti-JNK1 (Santa Cruz) or anti-GSK-3
(Transduction Laboratories) antibodies, respectively. The immune complex was recovered by centrifugation, the supernatant was removed, and the complex was washed once with kinase extraction buffer and twice
with reaction buffer. For JNK1 activity, immunoprecipitates were
assayed in a final volume of 30 µl containing 50 mM HEPES (pH 7.4),
10 mM MgCl2, 10 mM MnCl2, 1 mM DTT, 2 µg of
GST-ATF2
, and 10 µM [
-32P]ATP (10 µCi). After
incubation for 30 min at 30°C, the reaction was terminated with 6 µl of 6× Laemmli buffer, heated at 100°C for 3 min, and subjected
to sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis on 12%
acrylamide gels. All results of JNK1 assays presented are
representative of at least three similar experiments. Fold activity was
determined by phosphoimager analysis (Molecular Dynamics). GSK-3
activity in immunoprecipitates was assayed in a final volume of 20 µl
containing 25 mM
-glycerophosphate (pH 7.4), 100 mM NaCl, 0.5 mM
benzamidine, 0.05 mM Na3VO4, 0.5 mM DTT, 10 mM
MgCl2, 50 µM phospho-GS peptide substrate (Upstate Biotechnology), and 50 µM [
-32P]ATP (10 µCi).
After incubation for 30 min at 30°C, the reaction was terminated with
15 µl of 75 mM phosphoric acid and centrifuged for 3 min, and 25 µl
of the supernatant was spotted onto phosphocellulose units (Pierce).
After washing in phosphoric acid, phosphate incorporation was
determined by liquid scintillation counting. GSK-3
activity represents the mean ± standard error of three independent
experiments, each performed in triplicate.
The activity of ribosomal S6 kinase (RSK) proteins, p70 S6 kinase
(p70S6K), and protein kinase B (AKT) proteins was determined by immune
complex in vitro kinase assays using antibodies directed against RSK 1, 2, and 3, p70S6K, and AKT1 (Santa Cruz). Peptide substrates for RSK and
p70S6K proteins (15 µg) and AKT (20 µg) were also obtained from
Santa Cruz. Enzyme activity was assessed 1.5 h after pyruvate
stimulation or 20 min after antimycin challenge. RSK3 phosphorylation
of GSK-3 was assayed by an in vitro kinase reaction using a GSK fusion
protein (New England Biolabs) as the substrate and the reaction
conditions specified by the manufacturer.
Glycogen synthase activity was assayed as incorporation of
[14C]glucose derived from
uridine-5'-diphosphate[U-14C]glucose into glycogen
(17). Results were expressed as fractional activities
obtained in the absence or presence of 10 mM glucose 6-phosphate for 30 min at 30°C.
Fluorescence measurements.
Levels of mitochondrial oxidants
were determined by dihydrorhodamine123 (DHR123; Molecular Probes)
fluorescence as previously described (11, 24). Where
indicated, cells were pretreated for 15 min with rotenone (100 µM),
thenoyltrifluoroacetone (TTFA; 100 µM), or antimycin A (100 µM).
Levels of cytosolic ROS were determined by loading cells with
dichlorodihydrofluorescein diacetate (DCFDA; Molecular Probes) as
previously described (37). In both cases, fluorescence was
quantified from 50 to 100 random cells obtained from six separate
fields and expressed as the relative fluorescence (mean ± standard deviation) compared to the basal state. Levels of
intracellular ATP were assessed by the luciferin-luciferase bioluminescence assay using the ATP determination kit (Molecular Probes). Intracellular pH was assessed by loading cells with the fluorescent indicator 2',7'-bis-(2-carboxyethyl)-5-(and
6)-carboxyfluorescein and assessing the ratio of emission intensity
following excitation at 520 and 488 nm.
In vivo enzyme assays.
To determine whether pyruvate
stimulated JNK activity in vivo, neonatal rats were given
intraperitoneal injections of pyruvate. One hour after injection,
livers were isolated and subsequently homogenized in 1 ml of kinase
extraction buffer. Following brief centrifugation (10,000 × g for 10 min), 150 µg of protein extract was used to assess JNK1
activity. Corresponding levels of serum pyruvate were measured by the
addition of lactate dehydrogenase, and the conversion of NADH to NAD
was assessed at 340 nm (pyruvate diagnostic kit; Sigma).
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RESULTS |
Pyruvate stimulates JNK1 activity.
Previous reports have
demonstrated that the addition of extracellular pyruvate, a
three-carbon metabolite of glucose, stimulates cellular respiration
(9, 16). We therefore treated HeLa cells with pyruvate as a
means to acutely increase metabolic supply. To understand whether the
addition of pyruvate in turn stimulated a cytosolic signaling cascade,
we measured the activity of a variety of mitogen-activated protein
kinase (MAPK) family members. Levels of JNK2 and p38 activity were
unchanged, while ERK activity demonstrated a small increase following
pyruvate addition (data not shown). In contrast, as demonstrated in
Fig. 1A, the activity of JNK1 was
potently activated by pyruvate. In the medium used to culture HeLa
cells, pyruvate is normally present at a concentration of 1 mM. As
demonstrated in Fig. 1B, increasing pyruvate concentrations in the 5 to
100 mM range resulted in an increase in JNK1 activity in a wide variety
of different cell types.

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FIG. 1.
Pyruvate stimulates an increase in cytosolic JNK1
activity. (A) Time course of JNK1 activity in HeLa cells following
pyruvate (100 mM) stimulation. Activity was assessed in 30 µg of
protein extract by immunocomplex kinase assays using GST-ATF2 as a
substrate. Lysates were also probed by Western blot analysis for JNK1
protein levels. (B) Levels of JNK1 activity 1 h after pyruvate
addition in various cell types. The normal concentration of pyruvate in
basal medium was 1 mM.
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Mitochondrial oxidants as mediators of JNK1 activation.
It is
conceivable that the pyruvate-induced activation of JNK1 resulted from
a secondary effect on overall energy metabolism. However, direct
measurement of intracellular ATP 1 h after treatment with the
highest concentration of pyruvate revealed that in HeLa cells, ATP
levels were maintained at 95% ± 4% of control levels. Similarly, we
could detect no change in intracellular pH following pyruvate
administration (data not shown). Nonetheless, when compared to other
known activators of JNK1, the increase in JNK1 activity by pyruvate was
relatively slow, peaking roughly 1 to 2 h following metabolite
addition. The delay in pyruvate-induced activation of JNK1 suggested
that this activation indeed may not be a direct effect, but instead may
require the prior mitochondrion-dependent metabolism of pyruvate.
Therefore, to further understand the role of pyruvate metabolism in
pyruvate-induced JNK1 activation, we treated cells with rotenone, a
specific inhibitor of mitochondrial respiration. As shown in Fig.
2A, levels of pyruvate-induced JNK1 were
reduced in the presence of rotenone, while the activation of JNK1 by
other activators, such as IL-1
, was unaffected. To further define
the requirement for mitochondrion-dependent pyruvate metabolism for the
observed activation of JNK1, we depleted HeLa cells of
respiration-competent mitochondria by long-term culturing in ethidium
bromide. As demonstrated in Fig. 2B, pyruvate addition, up to 100 mM,
was incapable of stimulating JNK1 in such cells, while the activation
of IL-1
was essentially unaffected.

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FIG. 2.
Role of the mitochondria in pyruvate-stimulated JNK1
activity. (A) Peak levels of pyruvate (100 mM) and IL-1 (10 ng/ml)
stimulated JNK1 activity in cells pretreated (1 h, 25 µM) with
rotenone, a specific mitochondrial complex I inhibitor. (B) Lack of
pyruvate-induced JNK1 activity but preservation of IL-1 -stimulated
JNK1 activity in HeLa cells depleted of mitochondria by treatment with
ethidium bromide (400 ng/ml) for 7 days.
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We next sought to understand whether the pyruvate-induced rise in JNK1
activity was secondary to an increase in mitochondrial oxidants. To
assess the level of mitochondrial ROS, cells were loaded with DHR123.
The intensity of DHR123 fluorescence has been used as a measure of
mitochondrial H2O2 levels (11, 24).
It is important to note that DHR123 is not an unambiguous measure of
mitochondrial oxidants since this probe can presumably also be oxidized
by peroxide produced by other intracellular oxidases and the organic
cation generated can subsequently accumulate in the mitochondria. As
demonstrated in Fig. 3A and B, the
addition of pyruvate increased the level of DHR123 fluorescence.
Consistent with the kinetics of JNK1 activation, levels of DHR123
fluorescence rose over the first 2 h after pyruvate addition. The
dose response for mitochondrial oxidant levels as assessed by DHR123
fluorescence was similar to that observed for JNK1 activation (Fig.
3C). Similarly, measurements of cytosolic ROS levels with the
peroxide-sensitive fluorophore DCFDA demonstrated that cytosolic
peroxide levels rose after pyruvate addition (Fig. 3D). The addition of
rotenone, in accord with its effects on JNK1 activity, produced a small increase in the basal level of mitochondrial oxidants. This is consistent with previous observations that complex I is a known, albeit
relatively minor, site for mitochondrial ROS production (22). Perhaps more important than its modest effects on
basal ROS levels, rotenone inhibited the pyruvate-induced rise in
DHR123 fluorescence (Fig. 3E). These results demonstrate that
consistent with its known effects in stimulating O2
consumption, pyruvate metabolism induces a rise in both mitochondrial
and cytosolic oxidant levels.


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FIG. 3.
Pyruvate addition stimulates the release of
mitochondrial oxidants. Confocal image of DHR123 fluorescence (A) under
basal conditions and (B) 2 h following 100 mM pyruvate addition.
Dose-response of (C) pyruvate-induced DHR123 fluorescence and (D) DCFDA
fluorescence. (E) Quantitation of DHR123 fluorescence under basal
conditions and 2 h following pyruvate addition in the presence (25 µM for 1 h) and absence of rotenone.
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In an effort to further understand the role of mitochondrial oxidants
in pyruvate-induced JNK activation, we treated cells with the
peroxide-scavenging antioxidant N-acetylcysteine (NAC). As
demonstrated in Fig. 4A, NAC treatment
resulted in a concentration-dependent inhibition of metabolite-induced
JNK1 activity. To further explore this notion, we transfected cells
with an expression vector containing GSTpi. This cytosolic antioxidant
protein has recently been demonstrated to form a molecular complex with
JNK, and overexpression of GSTpi has been demonstrated to reduce
oxidant-stimulated MKK4/SEK1 and JNK activity (1). As
demonstrated in Fig. 4B and C, consistent with these previous results,
transient expression of GSTpi significantly attenuated JNK activation
by pyruvate. Previous studies have also demonstrated that extracellular
administration of catalase can also inhibit peroxide-sensitive
signaling pathways (13, 27, 37). In some cells, this is
because catalase is apparently internalized (37), while in
other cells, extracellular catalase may act as a sink for the freely
diffusible peroxide that is formed intracellularly. As demonstrated in
Fig. 4D, treatment of cells with extracellular catalase blocks
pyruvate-induced JNK1 activation, again supporting a role for peroxide
in this pathway.

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FIG. 4.
Role of mitochondrial oxidants in the activation of
JNK1. (A) Inhibitory effect of the peroxide-scavenging agent NAC on
JNK1 activity. Where indicated, cells were incubated with NAC for
15 h prior to pyruvate stimulation. (B) Effects of increasing
amounts of GSTpi expression on pyruvate-stimulated JNK1 activity. (C)
Corresponding level of GSTpi protein expression in total cellular
lysate in control transfected ( ) or GSTpi-transfected (2 µg) cells.
The amount of GSTpi in transfected cells is underestimated in this blot
since transfection efficiency was approximately 20%. (D) Exogenous
catalase blocks pyruvate-induced JNK1 activation. (E) Levels of DHR123
fluorescence 15 min after treatment with various mitochondrial
respiratory inhibitors and (F) the corresponding levels of JNK1
activity.
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To further underscore the relationship between the release of
mitochondrial oxidants and cytosolic JNK1 activity, we made use of
specific mitochondrial respiratory inhibitors as a direct method to
increase mitochondrial oxidant release. As demonstrated in Fig. 4E,
treatment with a complex I inhibitor (rotenone) or a complex II
inhibitor (TTFA) produced a very modest increase in the basal level of
DHR123 fluorescence. In contrast, antimycin A, an inhibitor of complex
III function, resulted in a significant increase in mitochondrial ROS
levels. Correspondingly, as demonstrated in Fig. 4F, although rotenone
and TTFA had only modest effects, antimycin A significantly increased
JNK1 activity.
Redox and JNK-dependent regulation of GSK-3.
If the activation
of JNK1 by mitochondrial ROS provides a regulatory function, we
reasoned that JNK1 should in turn affect the activity of enzymes
regulating the flow of metabolites into the mitochondria. Previous
studies have demonstrated that insulin stimulation of skeletal muscle
(28) or glucose stimulation of hepatocytes (3)
leads to activation of JNK and a fall in GSK activity. Although both
insulin or glucose stimulate a host of other intracellular kinases, in
these two previous studies, the activation of JNK appeared to be the
most likely candidate to mediate the phosphorylation-dependent fall in
GSK-3 activity. GSK is a well-characterized and pivotal enzyme involved
in glycogen metabolism. A reduction in GSK-3 activity would favor
increased conversion of glucose to glycogen and hence divert the flow
of metabolites away from the mitochondria. In the setting of high pyruvate levels, a fall in GSK-3 activity would make physiological sense, since this represents a condition in which the further metabolism of glucose is unnecessary. Nonetheless, neither the effects
of pyruvate on GSK-3 activity nor the role of intracellular oxidants on
GSK-3 activity has been explored.
As demonstrated in Fig. 5A, pyruvate
addition caused a significant fall in GSK-3
activity. The ability of
pyruvate to inhibit GSK-3
activity is, however, dependent on
intracellular oxidant levels. In accordance with its effects on JNK1
activity, cells incubated with increasing concentrations of the
peroxide scavenger NAC demonstrated a blunted fall in GSK-3
activity
following pyruvate addition (Fig. 5A). Interestingly, the effects of
direct mitochondrial oxidative stress on GSK-3
activity are
qualitatively similar to those induced by metabolite addition. As
demonstrated in Fig. 5B, incubation with antimycin A led to a
significant reduction in GSK-3
activity, while similar treatment
with rotenone had only a modest effect. The reduction in GSK-3
activity following direct mitochondrial oxidative stress is, however,
quicker than what is seen following pyruvate addition. These
differences in kinetics are nonetheless consistent with the differences
in kinetics of ROS generation and subsequent JNK1 activation that are
observed following direct oxidative stress versus metabolite addition.

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FIG. 5.
Redox-dependent activation of GSK-3 . (A) Levels of
GSK-3 activity following pyruvate addition in the presence and
absence of the peroxide scavenger NAC (circles, pyruvate only;
triangles, pyruvate with 2 mM NAC; squares, pyruvate with 10 mM NAC).
(B) GSK-3 activity following treatment with 25 µM antimycin A
(triangles), 25 µM rotenone (squares), or vehicle only (circles).
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To further assess the role of JNK in regulating GSK-3
activity, we expressed a dominant negative form of SEK1 (MKK4), a
proximate upstream JNK activator, under the control of a
tetracycline-dependent promoter. Addition of doxycycline induced the
dominant negative SEK1 gene product, and pyruvate-induced JNK1 activity
was subsequently inhibited (Fig. 6A,
inset). As demonstrated in Fig. 6A, induction of the dominant negative
SEK1 isoform inhibited the pyruvate-induced fall in GSK-3
activity,
demonstrating a requirement for JNK activation in this process. The
fall in GSK-3
activity resulted in a subsequent change in cytosolic
metabolism. As shown in Fig. 6B, pyruvate addition or antimycin
treatment resulted in a rise in glycogen synthase activity. The rise in
glycogen synthase activity induced by these agents was, however,
inhibited in cells expressing a dominant negative SEK1 isoform.

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FIG. 6.
Role for JNK1 in cytosolic metabolism. (A) Levels of
GSK-3 activity in a HeLa cell line expressing a
tetracycline-inducible dominant negative SEK1 isoform. Activity
following pyruvate addition was assessed in the presence (solid
circles) or absence (open circles) of doxycycline (DOX, 1 µg/ml).
(Inset) Levels of expression of the dominant negative SEK1 isoform and
the corresponding JNK1 activity in the presence and absence of
doxycycline. (B) Glycogen synthase activity following pyruvate
treatment (stippled bar), antimycin treatment (shaded bar), or under
basal conditions (open bar). Activity was assessed in cells expressing
a doxycycline (DOX)-inducible form of a dominant negative SEK1
isoform.
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In vivo activation of JNK1.
To further extend and confirm the
physiological significance of these results, we assessed the ability of
pyruvate to stimulate JNK activity in vivo. Neonatal rats were given a
bolus of pyruvate, and 1 h later, levels of JNK1 activity were
determined in liver extracts. As shown in Fig.
7A, pyruvate addition resulted in a significant increase in JNK1 activity. A dose-response curve of pyruvate concentration and JNK1 activity demonstrated that similar to
what was noted in vitro, pyruvate stimulated JNK1 activity over a wide
range of concentrations (Fig. 7B). Analysis of serum levels of pyruvate
in neonatal rats revealed that baseline levels of pyruvate were
0.30 ± 0.05 mM. At the time of sacrifice, following the largest
dose of pyruvate, serum levels rose approximately sixfold to 1.84 ± 0.02 mM.

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FIG. 7.
In vivo assessment of JNK1 activity. (A) JNK1 activity
in rat liver homogenates 1 h following injection of the indicated
amount of pyruvate. (B) In vivo dose-response of JNK1 activity
following pyruvate. b.w., body weight.
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A role for RSK3.
We next sought to further characterize the
pathway leading from JNK activation to the fall in GSK-3
activity.
Based on the above results, the kinase that regulates GSK-3
should
be activated by agents such as pyruvate and antimycin, and this
activation should be redox and JNK dependent. Using purified proteins,
we could not, however, demonstrate direct phosphorylation of GSK-3
by activated JNK (data not shown). Previous studies have demonstrated that GSK-3 is phosphorylated and hence inactivated by the RSK, p70S6K,
and the AKT family of kinases (4). We therefore assayed these kinases following treatment with pyruvate or direct mitochondrial oxidant stimulation by antimycin. As shown in Fig.
8A, neither p70S6K nor AKT kinase
activity was significantly increased following pyruvate or antimycin
treatment. Interestingly, both p70S6K and AKT are stimulated by
exogenous hydrogen peroxide (6, 40), suggesting that the
source and subcellular localization of oxidant production may be
critical to understanding the specificity of the observed response. In
contrast to the lack of effect on p70S6K and AKT, both pyruvate and
antimycin led to a significant increase in RSK activity. Although the
activity of all three RSK isoforms increased following stimulation with
pyruvate or antimycin, we observed the largest increase with RSK3. In
general, pyruvate addition led to a three- to sixfold increase in RSK3
activity, while antimycin resulted in a 6- to 10-fold increase.
Consistent with a direct involvement, activated RSK3 could, in an in
vitro kinase assay, phosphorylate a GSK-3 fusion protein (Fig. 8A,
inset). Activation of RSK3 by pyruvate and antimycin was also sensitive to the cellular redox state. As noted in Fig. 8B and C, activation of
RSK3 by these agents was inhibited either by stable expression of GSTpi
or by pretreatment with NAC. Consistent with a requirement for JNK in
this pathway, oxidant-stimulated RSK3 activation but not the activation
of RSK2 was inhibited by expression of a dominant negative isoform of
SEK1 (Fig. 8D). The latter results are consistent with past studies
demonstrating that, in contrast to RSK1 and -2, whose activation
appears primarily dependent on ERK activity (4), RSK3 is
less dependent on ERK activity (42) and can instead be
directly activated by JNK (28).

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FIG. 8.
Activation of RSK3 by mitochondrial oxidants. (A)
Assessment of RSK3, p70S6K, and AKT1 activity under basal conditions or
following pyruvate stimulation or antimycin treatment. (Inset) In vitro
phosphorylation of a GSK fusion protein using immunoprecipitated RSK3
from control (C), pyruvate (P)-, or antimycin (A)-stimulated lysate.
(B) Basal and stimulated levels of RSK3 activity in cells stably
expressing an approximately twofold increase in GSTpi or in control
(neo)-transfected cells. (C) Levels of RSK3 activity with or without
overnight pretreatment with 20 mM NAC. RSK3 activity was assessed under
basal conditions (open bar) or 90 min after 100 mM pyruvate (stippled
bar) or 25 µM antimycin (shaded bar) treatment. (D) Levels of RSK2 or
RSK3 activity under basal conditions or after increased mitochondrial
oxidant release induced by antimycin treatment. Activity was assessed
in the absence ( ) or presence (+) of a dominant negative SEK1
isoform.
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 |
DISCUSSION |
Our results demonstrate that an increase in metabolite supply, in
this case in the form of pyruvate, is capable of activating JNK1. This
is not a direct effect of pyruvate, but instead requires the
mitochondrion-dependent metabolism of this substrate. An increase in
mitochondrial ROS develops as a consequence of the increase in
metabolism, and the subsequent generation of
H2O2 is essential for the activation of JNK1.
Not unexpectedly, pyruvate causes a fall in GSK-3
activity.
Interestingly, this reduction in GSK-3
activity requires the
redox-dependent activation of JNK1 and appears to proceed through RSK3
activation. As such, these results describe the outline of the novel
regulatory loop depicted in Fig. 9.

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FIG. 9.
Model for mitochondrial oxidants as regulators of
cellular metabolism. As described, an increase in metabolite flow to
the mitochondria results in an increase in O2 consumption
with the subsequent increased release of ROS into the cytosol. This
increased ROS level is sensed by the cytosol, resulting in the
activation of JNK1. In turn, JNK1 inhibits the activity of GSK-3 ,
most likely through a pathway involving RSK3. The resulting change in
GSK-3 activity leads to augmented glycogen synthase (GS) activity.
Increased glycogen synthase activity results in an increased conversion
of glucose to glycogen, with a subsequent reduction in metabolic
substrate and hence a fall in mitochondrial oxidants. In addition to
the effects of peroxide on JNK activity, peroxide can also result in
the decarboxylation of pyruvate and thereby reduce mitochondrial
metabolism, represented as the flow of electrons (e )
through complexes I through IV. CoA, coenzyme A; CoQ,
coenzyme Q; MnSOD, manganese superoxide dismutase.
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We observed an increase in JNK1 activity in a variety of different cell
types over a range of pyruvate concentrations. The largest increase in
JNK1 activity came at a high pyruvate concentration, suggesting that
the pathways described here may primarily operate in the setting of a
sudden, large increase in metabolic supply. Nonetheless, it is
important to note that cells in culture, particularly transformed
cells, have an increased rate of anaerobic glycolysis. As such, the
percentage of pyruvate entering the mitochondria may be significantly
reduced in cultured cells. It should also be noted that it has been
known for many years that pyruvate can scavenge peroxide directly,
resulting in the oxidative decarboxylation of pyruvate (26).
In light of the results presented here, it is tempting to speculate
that this property of pyruvate has a homeostatic effect. In particular,
small increases in pyruvate would cause increases in mitochondrial
peroxide generation that in turn could be scavenged by cytosolic
pyruvate. In the process of scavenging hydrogen peroxide, pyruvate is
decarboxylated to lactate and hence diverted away from aerobic
metabolism and further ROS generation. It is possible that the
scavenging and decarboxylation of pyruvate help regulates metabolic
flux under basal conditions, while the pathway described in this paper
may primarily operate following a large metabolic load. Under such
conditions, the ROS generated by pyruvate would exceed the scavenging
capacity of pyruvate. This is consistent with our observations that
under conditions in which pyruvate stimulated JNK1 activity, both
mitochondrial and cytosolic ROS levels rose.
The in vivo activation of JNK1 by pyruvate occurred with an
approximately sixfold rise in serum pyruvate levels. Although this
represents a significant rise in pyruvate levels, recent evidence
suggests that vigorous exercise can produce a similar three- to
fivefold elevation in human subjects (12). Similarly, in
preliminary studies in our laboratory, pyruvate levels rose approximately threefold 1 h after eating a large slice of
chocolate cake (unpublished observations). As such, the activation of
JNK1 by pyruvate occurs at apparently high but physiologically
achievable doses of serum pyruvate.
In the process of review of the manuscript, a report appeared
suggesting that the increase in mitochondrial ROS induced by elevated
glucose levels may contribute to many of the pathological changes
observed in diabetes (29). In particular, elevated
mitochondrial ROS appeared to contribute to glucose-stimulated
activation of protein kinase C, sorbitol accumulation, and the
activation of NF-
B. Inhibition of each of these pathways appears in
previous animal studies to provide benefits from some of the
complications of diabetes. Given these recent results as well as the
data presented here, it is tempting to speculate that the homeostatic
regulation provided by mitochondrial oxidants may be perturbed in
certain disease states such as diabetes. Under these conditions the
normal negative feedback provided by mitochondrial oxidants may not be present or as robust. In this setting, high levels of metabolic substrate such as glucose or pyruvate would not be appropriately channeled into glycogen. Consistent with this notion, glycogen synthesis activity is known to be impaired in type II diabetics (18). Direct scavenging of mitochondrial oxidants or
augmenting the activation of JNK1 may therefore be one strategy to
prevent these perturbations. In this regard, the compound RO 31-8220 has been recently shown to activate JNK and increase cellular glycogen synthase activity (34). Interestingly, preliminary evidence suggests that in vivo administration of this compound appears to
reverse some of the metabolic abnormalities seen in the type II
diabetic Goto-Kakizaki rats (34).
A growing body of literature suggests that oxidants function as
signaling molecules (14, 23, 32). Many ligands appear to
stimulate cytosolic oxidant production, and this ligand-activated change in oxidant production appears to affect a variety of downstream pathways. In contrast to the growing appreciation that oxidants generated in the cytosol contribute to signaling pathways, the continuous release of mitochondrial oxidants has been generally regarded solely as a deleterious byproduct of aerobic metabolism. Nonetheless, oxidants are also employed as signaling molecules in
plants (2), suggesting that this represents an
evolutionarily conserved method of signal transduction. The ancient
incorporation of mitochondria into eukaryotic cells undoubtably
required that the cell cytosol coordinate metabolite flow and metabolic
rates with these newly acquired energy-producing organelles. Our
results suggest that one means by which the mitochondria and the
cytoplasm communicate is by the release of the small diffusible
molecule hydrogen peroxide.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Laboratory of
Molecular Biology, NIH, Bldg. 10/6N-240, 10 Center Drive, Bethesda, MD 20892-1622. Phone: (301) 402-4081. Fax: (301) 402-9311. E-mail: finkelt{at}nih.gov.
 |
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