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Molecular and Cellular Biology, February 2001, p. 1196-1206, Vol. 21, No. 4
0270-7306/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/MCB.21.4.1196-1206.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
p21Cip1 and p27Kip1
Regulate Cell Cycle Reentry after Hypoxic Stress but Are Not Necessary
for Hypoxia-Induced Arrest
Susannah L.
Green,
Rachel A.
Freiberg, and
Amato J.
Giaccia*
Center for Clinical Sciences Research,
Department of Radiation Oncology, Stanford University, Stanford,
California 94303-5152
Received 15 June 2000/Returned for modification 8 August
2000/Accepted 6 November 2000
 |
ABSTRACT |
We investigated the role of the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors
p21Cip1 and p27Kip1 in cell cycle regulation
during hypoxia and reoxygenation. While moderate hypoxia (1 or 0.1%
oxygen) does not significantly impair bromodeoxyuridine incorporation,
at very low oxygen tensions (0.01% oxygen) DNA replication is rapidly
shut down in immortalized mouse embryo fibroblasts. This S-phase arrest
is intact in fibroblasts lacking the cyclin kinase inhibitors
p21Cip1 and p27Kip1, indicating that these
molecules are not essential elements of the arrest pathway.
Hypoxia-induced arrest is accompanied by dephosphorylation of pRb and
inhibition of cyclin-dependent kinase 2, which results in part from
inhibitory phosphorylation. Interestingly, cells lacking the
retinoblastoma tumor suppressor protein also display arrest under
hypoxia, suggesting that pRb is not an essential mediator of this
response. Upon reoxygenation, DNA synthesis resumes by 3.5 h and
reaches aerobic levels by 6 h. Cells lacking p21, however, resume
DNA synthesis more rapidly upon reoxygenation than wild-type cells,
suggesting that this inhibitor may play a role in preventing premature
reentry into the cell cycle upon cessation of the hypoxic stress. While
p27 null cells did not exhibit rapid reentry into the cell cycle, cells
lacking both p21 and p27 entered S phase even more aggressively than
those lacking p21 alone, revealing a possible secondary role for p27 in
this response. Cdk2 activity is also restored more rapidly in the
double-knockout cells when returned to normoxia. These studies reveal
that restoration of DNA synthesis after hypoxic stress, but not the S
phase arrest itself, is regulated by p21 and p27.
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Tumor hypoxia is considered a
limiting factor in response to therapy, particularly radiation and
chemotherapy. The radioresistance of hypoxic cells due to dose
modification is well documented (35). Since hypoxic cells
are poorly perfused, they are likely to receive an inadequate dosage of
chemotherapeutic drugs delivered via the bloodstream. Even if these
cells do receive sufficient drug, their slowly cycling nature has been
proposed to make them resistant to chemotherapeutic drugs, which in
most cases are potent only against rapidly dividing cells. Therefore,
understanding the pathway by which cells arrest their cycle in response
to oxygen deprivation could potentially help circumvent this resistance.
DNA synthesis has been found to diminish upon the removal of oxygen
from cell culture systems, and a substantial body of work addresses
this apparent requirement for oxygen in DNA replication (reviewed in
reference 13). Explanations for these findings have
focused on two critical enzymes in nucleoside biosynthesis, ribonucleotide reductase and dihydroorotate dehydrogenase, which require molecular oxygen for their function. Mammalian ribonucleotide reductase contains a tyrosyl radical in its active site that requires oxygen and iron for its regeneration; in vitro studies have found that
the radical has a half-life of approximately 10 min under anaerobic
conditions (36). A second oxygen sensitive enzyme, dihydroorotate dehydrogenase, resides in the mitochondrial membrane, and its activity is coupled to the respiratory chain (21,
23). It has been hypothesized that inactivation of these enzymes
under hypoxia would lead to a shortage of deoxynucleotide precursors for DNA synthesis and a consequent shutdown of DNA replication. Thus,
these oxygen-dependent enzymes could potentially act as sensors to halt
DNA replication under adverse conditions (23).
Studies using alkaline sedimentation analysis and fiber autoradiography
have revealed that replicon initiation is suppressed by severe oxygen
deprivation, but chain elongation and maturation continue normally for
at least a few hours (11, 29, 32). While the persistence
of chain elongation under hypoxic conditions implies that the lack of
precursors is not directly responsible for the failure to synthesize
DNA, it has been proposed that the nucleotide imbalance caused by
hypoxia can act as a signal leading to cessation of replication
(32). Indeed, drugs such as
N-phosphonoacetyl-L-aspartate (PALA), which
inhibits uridine biosynthesis, have been found to cause a
G1/S, checkpoint-type arrest in cells with wild-type p53 but S-phase arrest in cells lacking functional p53 (19).
Attempts to test the hypothesis that nucleotide shortage is a causative factor in hypoxia-induced arrest have gotten mixed results; while addition of exogenous nucleosides and/or deoxynucleosides can cause
some entry into S phase and replicon initiation in hypoxic cells, it
does not allow for normal progression through the cell cycle
(20-22, 31). Thus, while nucleotide imbalance may play a
role in inhibition of replication under hypoxia, it is not the only
barrier to cell cycling in the absence of oxygen.
Though early studies on Ehrlich ascites cells and NHIK cells suggested
that nucleotide availability was the limiting factor in progression
through S phase under hypoxia, recent studies have suggested that this
is not the case in all cell types. Human T-47D breast carcinoma cells,
which unlike NHIK cells contain functional pRb, appeared to have a
secondary arrest pathway that prevented cellular DNA synthesis under
hypoxia even in the presence of exogenous deoxynucleosides. Amellem et
al. suggest that nucleotide shortage is still the primary cause of
onset of arrest and that pRb is involved in the maintenance of arrest
(1).
Research on more moderate hypoxia (~1% O2 as opposed to
<0.1%; normal atmospheric oxygen is ~21%), under which nucleotide biosynthesis is unlikely to be severely impaired, has supported the
hypothesis that hypoxia leads to a cyclin/Cdk-dependent,
checkpoint-type arrest. Krtolica et al. (16, 17) have
observed decreased Cdk4 and Cdk2 activity in CV-1P monkey kidney cells
treated with ~1% O2, and this kinase inhibition was
associated with an increase in p27Kip1 and a decrease in
Cdk4, cyclin D, and cyclin E protein levels. They propose that this
decreased kinase activity, coupled with increased PP-1 phosphatase
activity, leads to dephosphorylation of pRb and inhibition of cell
cycle progression (16). Similar results were obtained in
ovarian carcinoma cells, suggesting a possible common pathway
(17).
Cell cycle arrest induced by hypoxia is reversible, though the extent
of reversibility is reduced with longer or more stringent hypoxic
treatments (30). In fact, most cells are able to resume DNA synthesis within 10 min to 3 h after reoxygenation
(38). However, little information is known about the
genetic determinants that govern the reentry of hypoxic cells into the
cell cycle except that recovery of DNA synthesis is blocked by
cycloheximide addition in Ehrlich ascites cells (11, 32)
and is associated with the appearance of hyperphosphorylated pRb in
T-47D breast cancer cells (2).
Earlier work in our lab revealed that hypoxia induces arrest in a
variety of transformed and nontransformed cell types and that this
response is independent of p53 status (12). Here, we
further examine the oxygen-dependency, kinetics, and reversibility of
the cell cycle response to hypoxia in nontransformed, immortalized mouse embryo fibroblasts (MEFs). We find that only stringent hypoxia (<0.01% O2) elicits a robust cell cycle arrest response;
DNA synthesis ceases within 5 to 10 h and recovers within a few
hours after reoxygenation. Using genetically matched cell lines we
further demonstrate that neither p21Cip1,
p27Kip1, nor pRb is necessary for cell cycle arrest under
hypoxia. Hypoxia causes a 50 to 75% decrease in Cdk2 activity that is
independent of p21 and p27 and is not associated with appreciable
changes in cyclin E, cyclin A, or Cdk2 protein or in Thr160 or Tyr15
phosphorylation of Cdk2; however, dephosphorylation of Thr14 and Tyr15
with CDC25B can partially restore activity to Cdk2 complexes from
hypoxic cells. While not necessary for arrest under hypoxia, p21 and
p27 do play a role in inhibiting cell cycle reentry upon reoxygenation; both DNA synthesis and Cdk2 activity are restored more rapidly in cells
lacking both p21 and p27. These results suggest that p21 and p27 act as
important modulators of cellular reentry into S phase.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Tissue culture and hypoxia treatment.
Immortalized wild
type, p21
/
, p27
/
, and
p21
/
p27
/
MEFs were generously provided
by James Roberts (7). All were found to be wild type for
p53 by cDNA sequence analysis (data not shown). Rb
/
and
wild-type MEFs were generously provided by Scott Lowe and immortalized
in our lab. All cells were grown at 37°C in Dulbecco modified Eagle
medium plus 10% fetal bovine serum in the presence of 5%
CO2. Cells were plated at a density of 9 × 105 cells per 150-mm glass dish 18 to 24 h prior to
hypoxic treatment; the medium was changed ~1 h before treatment to
assure an adequate nutrient and growth factor supply. Cells were
rendered hypoxic by placement in a Bactron IV anaerobic chamber
(Sheldon Manufacturing) filled with a defined gas mixture. For moderate
hypoxia experiments, this gas mixture was 5% CO2, 1 or
0.1% O2, and the remainder nitrogen. For stringent
hypoxia, the chamber was filled with a mixture of 90% nitrogen, 5%
CO2, and 5% hydrogen, and a palladium catalyst was used to
scavenge any contaminating oxygen by combining it with hydrogen,
bringing the oxygen concentration to <0.01%. Oxygen concentrations of
between 0.01 and 0.1% were found to be experimentally infeasible;
without the use of the oxygen-scavenging catalyst, which reduces oxygen
essentially to zero, oxygen concentration rapidly rises in this
semisealed chamber such that frequent purging is necessary to maintain
even a 0.1% oxygen level. Oxygen concentration was monitored using an
oxygen electrode (OS1000; Oxygen Sensors, Inc., Frazer, Pa.), whose
threshold of detection is 0.01% oxygen, or oxygen-sensitive chemical
strips (Becton Dickinson, Cockeysville, Md.).
Flow cytometry.
During the last half hour of treatment (2 h
for the experiment with Rb
/
and p130
/
cells), S-phase cells were labeled with 10 µM bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU; a thymidine analog) added directly to the medium. Cells were
then removed from the dishes by trypsinization, collected in ice-cold
phosphate-buffered saline (PBS), and centrifuged 5 min at
500 × g to pellet them. For hypoxic samples,
trypsinization was carried out under hypoxia to avoid BrdU
incorporation upon reoxygenation. Cells were then washed in cold PBS,
fixed in 80% ethanol, and stored at
20°C until stained. Staining
with fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)-conjugated anti-BrdU antibody
(Becton Dickinson, San Jose, Calif.) and propidium iodide was carried
out essentially according to the manufacturer's instructions. Briefly,
cells were treated with 2 N hydrochloric acid plus 0.5% Triton X-100
to denature the DNA, washed in 0.1 M sodium tetraborate to neutralize
the acid, and then stained with anti-BrdU antibody diluted 1:50 in PBS
containing 0.5% Tween 20 and 1% bovine serum albumin (BSA). Following
anti-BrdU staining, cells were washed in the same solution and
resuspended in 5 µg of propidium iodide per ml in PBS. After at least
1 h on ice, cells were analyzed on a FACScalibur flow cytometer
(Becton Dickinson).
[3H]thymidine incorporation.
[3H]thymidine was added to dishes at a concentration of 2 µCi/ml 1 h prior to lysis. Cells were lysed by adding 200 µl
of lysis buffer (25 mM Tris, pH 7.5; 25 mM EDTA; 0.5% sodium dodecyl
sulfate [SDS]) directly to the dish. Lysate was collected and
precipitated with 12% trichloroacetic acid (TCA), and precipitated
counts were collected on Whatman GF-C filters. Filters were washed
extensively with 20 mM sodium pyrophosphate-5% TCA followed by 70%
ethanol, dried, immersed in scintillation fluid, and counted.
Cell extracts, IPs, and kinase assays.
Cells were removed
from dishes by trypsinization. For hypoxic samples, this was generally
done after removal from hypoxia; carrying out this step within the
hypoxic environment was found to have no effect on final results. Cells
were collected in cold PBS and washed in PBS, and the pellet was
resuspended in immunoprecipitation (IP) buffer (50 mM HEPES, pH 7.5;
150 mM NaCl; 1 mM EDTA; 0.1% Tween 20) plus 10 mM sodium fluoride, 1 mM sodium orthovanadate, 20 mM
-glycerophosphate, 5 µg of
leupeptin per ml, 5 µg of aprotinin per ml, 1 µg of pepstatin per
ml, and 1 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride. Extracts were sonicated on
ice twice for 10 s and centrifuged 10 min at 15,000 rpm in a
microcentrifuge to remove debris. The protein concentration was
measured using the BCA assay (Pierce, Rockford, Ill.).
For IP reactions, 100 to 300 µg (for kinase assays) or 0.5 to 1 mg
(for Western blotting) of cell extract was incubated with 1 to 5 µg
of antibody in a 0.4- to 1-ml total volume 1× IP buffer with
inhibitors for 4 to 12 h. To this reaction, 20 to 60 µl of a 1:4
slurry of protein A/G PLUS Agarose (Santa Cruz) was added, and the
reaction was incubated for 1 h. The beads were then collected by
centrifugation and washed once in IP buffer and then three times in
kinase reaction buffer (20 mM Tris, pH 7.4; 7.5 mM MgCl2; 1 mM dithiothreitol [DTT]). For Western blots, the beads were then
resuspended in 20 µl of kinase reaction buffer plus 20 µl of 2×
SDS dissociation buffer and stored at
80°C. For kinase assays, the
beads were resuspended in 50 µl of kinase reaction mixture (kinase
reaction buffer plus 20 µM ATP, 40 µg of Histone H1 [Sigma] per
ml, and 5 µCi of [
-32P]ATP [Amersham]) and
incubated for 30 min at 37°C. The kinase reaction was stopped by the
addition of 50 µl of 2× SDS dissociation buffer and boiling at
95°C for 5 min. Beads were then removed by centrifugation, and 50 µl of the reaction was run on a SDS-12.5% polyacrylamide gel
electrophoresis (PAGE) gel. The gel was dried and exposed to a screen
that was scanned on a Molecular Dynamics Storm Imager. For Cdk2
reactivation experiments, IPs were carried out as described above with
300 µg of cell extract and 3 µg of anti-Cdk2 antibody (Santa Cruz).
Beads were then washed once in IP buffer and three times in phosphatase
buffer (100 mM Tris, pH 7.4; 250 mM NaCl; 1 mM DTT). The reaction
mixture was divided into three tubes, and CDC25B or an equal volume of
glutathione elution buffer was added. This reaction was then incubated
for 30 min at 30°C; the beads were then washed three times in kinase reaction buffer.
Antibodies and Western blotting.
Rabbit polyclonal antibody
to p21Cip1 was a generous gift from Greg Hannon. Mouse
monoclonal antibodies to p27Kip1, Cdk2, phosphotyrosine
(PY20), and p130Rb2 were from Transduction Laboratories; rabbit
polyclonal antibodies to cyclin A, p57Kip2, and p107 (C-18) and goat
polyclonal antibody to Cdk2 (used for IPs) were from Santa Cruz
Biotechnology. Polyclonal antibody to cyclin E was generously provided
by James Roberts.
Samples (35 µg of cell extract or total IP supernatant) were loaded
onto an SDS-PAGE gel and run at 30 mA/gel. Proteins were
transferred to
polyvinylidene difluoride (PVDF) membrane using
a semidry transfer
apparatus. Membranes were blocked in Tris-buffered
saline (TBS)
containing 5% nonfat milk and 0.2% Tween 20 for 1
h at room
temperature (except for the antiphosphotyrosine blots,
in which BSA was
used instead of milk) and then incubated overnight
in primary antibody
diluted in the same solution at 4°C. They
were then subjected to
three 15-min washes in TBST (TBS plus 1%
BSA, 0.1% Tween 20) and
incubated in alkaline phosphatase-conjugated
anti-mouse or anti-rabbit
secondary antibody (Vector Labs) diluted
1:2,500 in TBST for 1 h.
After three 15-min washes in TBST, the
membranes were incubated in
AttoPhos reagent (Vistra, Amersham,
and Molecular Dynamics) for 5 min,
dried, and scanned on a Storm
Imager (Molecular
Dynamics).
CDC25B expression and purification.
Glutathione
S-transferase (GST)-CDC25B bacterial expression construct
was kindly provided by Tony Hunter (University of California at San
Diego). The protein was expressed in BL21-Gold(DE3)pLysS-competent cells (Stratagene). Bacteria were grown to mid-log phase (optical density at 60 nm of 0.6 to 0.7) and induced with 0.6 mM IPTG for 2 h at room temperature. They were then harvested, washed in TD buffer
(150 mM NaCl; 10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.5) and lysed in TD plus 1% Tween 20 and 1% Triton X-100 by sonication three times for 10 s each time.
Extracts were clarified by centrifugation at 15,000 rpm in a
microcentrifuge for 10 min. Then, 100 µl of glutathione-Sepharose was
added, and the reaction was incubated overnight at 4°C. Beads were
then washed four times in wash buffer (500 mM NaCl; 10 mM HEPES, pH
8.0; 10 mM DTT) and eluted in glutathione elution buffer (100 mM
Tris-HCl, pH 8.0; 10 mM DTT; 5 mM glutathione) for 3 h at 4°C.
Beads were centrifuged out, and the supernatant was used fresh for Cdk2 reactivation.
 |
RESULTS |
The majority of previous studies investigating the molecular
factors contributing to hypoxia-induced cell cycle arrest relied on
transformed cells that were not genetically matched. In order to study
the molecules necessary for arrest in normal cells, we used matched
immortalized MEFs that contain deletions in defined cell cycle
regulatory genes. We initially determined the level of oxygen at which
cellular growth was inhibited. While normal atmospheric oxygen contains
ca. 21% oxygen, tissues typically experience a lower oxygen
concentration in the range of 3 to 9% (3, 15, 37). Thus,
mild reductions in oxygen concentration often improve cell growth
compared to growth in air; higher-than-normal oxygen (hyperoxia)
appears to limit cell growth due to oxidative stress. At some level of
hypoxia, however, oxygen availability becomes limiting and cell
proliferation is inhibited. Oxygen concentrations as low as 1% have
been found to enhance cell growth; however, other reports have found
this oxygen level to be growth inhibiting (3, 17).
We exposed immortalized MEFs to 1% oxygen to determine whether this
degree of hypoxia would lead to a cell cycle arrest. After 24 or
48 h, no cell cycle inhibition was apparent in 1%
O2-treated cultures. At 24 h, hypoxic cells appeared
to show a somewhat larger S phase (BrdU-positive) population than
normoxic controls (56 versus 46%; Fig.
1). At 48 h, both aerobic and
hypoxic cultures exhibited a slight decrease in the S phase compared to
the situation at 24 h, a finding presumably resulting from the
depletion of nutrients and/or growth factors from the medium; there was
no significant difference in cell cycle distribution between control and hypoxic cells.


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FIG. 1.
Cell cycle response to moderate and stringent hypoxia in
immortalized MEFs. (A) 2D cell cycle diagrams of cells treated with 1, 0.1, or 0.01% oxygen compared to time-matched normoxic controls. The
x axis is red propidium iodide fluorescence; the
y axis is green fluorescence from FITC-conjugated anti-BrdU
antibody. The percentage of cells that are BrdU positive is indicated.
(B) Composite data from multiple experiments, indicating the percentage
of cells that are BrdU positive after 24 h (12 h in the case of
0.01% oxygen treatment).
|
|
Similar experiments at 0.1% oxygen revealed that even this rather
profound decrease in oxygen tension did not appear to inhibit cell
cycling. Cell cycle profiles of cells incubated in either 21 or 0.1%
oxygen for 24 or 48 h reveal virtually no changes in BrdU
incorporation in hypoxic samples compared with time-matched controls
(Fig. 1A). These experiments were repeated several times, and composite
results are graphed in Fig. 1B. After 24 h of treatment, the
number of BrdU-positive cells was consistently higher in 1% oxygen-treated samples and unchanged in 0.1% oxygen-treated samples. Stringent hypoxia (<0.01% O2), in contrast, led to
complete growth arrest within 12 h (Fig. 1).
These results are at odds with recent reports that have found oxygen
concentrations of 0.5 to 1.5% oxygen to be capable of inducing cell
cycle arrest (16-18). This difference may be due, in
part, to differences in cell type; this previous work was done with
ovarian carcinoma cells and CV-1P monkey kidney cells. It may also be
due to differences in methodology, including both the methods used to
achieve hypoxia (described in detail in Materials and Methods) and the
methods used to measure DNA synthesis, specifically [3H]thymidine incorporation versus BrdU incorporation.
While these two methods might seem very similar, two-dimensional (2D)
fluorescence-activated cell sorter (FACS) analysis measures DNA
synthesis on a cell-by-cell basis, while [3H]thymidine
incorporation measures the total incorporation in a dish of cells. As a
result, [3H]thymidine incorporation, unlike 2D FACS
analysis, is influenced by cell number as well as by the percentage of
cells in S phase and the rate of DNA synthesis. Therefore, during a
prolonged hypoxic treatment, a subtle decrease in proliferation rate
could lead to a pronounced reduction in [3H]thymidine
incorporation. To test the possibility that these two measures would
lead to different conclusions, we incubated cells in 2% oxygen for 24 and 48 h and measured [3H]thymidine incorporation
during a 1-h pulse-label at the conclusion of the experiment (Fig.
2). Using this method, we found that
hypoxic samples did exhibit reduced [3H]thymidine
incorporation compared to aerobic conditions; in this experiment, the
difference was only borderline statistically significant. However, a
comparison between the 24- and 48-h samples revealed two interesting
facts. First, incorporation increased more than fourfold in the aerobic
samples at 48 h; this difference is presumably due entirely to the
increase in cell number, since the fraction of cells in S phase would
not be expected to increase. Second, incorporation increased threefold
in the hypoxic samples, suggesting that significant cellular
proliferation is able to take place under these conditions, albeit at a
slightly reduced rate compared to the aerobic conditions. Therefore, we
believe that the reductions in [3H]thymidine
incorporation under moderate hypoxia are largely due to the accumulated
effects of a mild deceleration of progress through the cell cycle and
not a true "arrest."

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FIG. 2.
Effect of mild hypoxia on tritiated-thymidine
incorporation. Raw counts are plotted for dishes incubated in 2 or 21%
oxygen for 24 or 48 h.
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|
In order to study the genetics and biochemistry of cell cycle arrest
under hypoxia, we considered it necessary to use conditions capable of
eliciting a robust arrest response. Therefore, the remaining
experiments were performed using stringent hypoxic treatments in which
the oxygen concentration was kept as low as was experimentally achievable using an oxygen-free gas mixture and an oxygen-scavenging catalyst. Some cancer cell lines are able to continue BrdU
incorporation for as long as 24 to 48 h under these conditions
(10); therefore, we believe the arrest observed in MEFs is
the result of an active signaling pathway rather than nucleotide pool
depletion or other energetic or metabolic limitations.
A closer examination of the kinetics of arrest showed that immortalized
wild-type MEFs exhibit a gradual decrease in DNA synthesis under
stringent hypoxic conditions. In these cells, a slight reduction in
BrdU incorporation is apparent by as early as 2.5 h, and by 10 h there is virtually no incorporation (Fig.
3). Interestingly, essentially no change
is observed in the DNA histograms of these populations; analysis with
ModFit reveals the G1, S, and G2 populations to
vary by no more than 5% of the total number of cells, and no consistent trends are observed. Therefore, the decrease in DNA synthesis observed in these cells appears to be the result of cells
arresting in mid-S phase rather than accumulating in another phase of
the cell cycle.


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FIG. 3.
Cell cycle behavior of matched immortalized MEFs during
hypoxia. (A) 2D cell cycle diagrams of all four cells lines from a
representative experiment. (B) Composite data for wild-type ( ) and
p21 / p27 / double-knockout ( ) cell
lines from all experiments; error bars represent the standard error.
Cells were placed in an anaerobic chamber for the times indicated,
pulse-labeled for 30 min with BrdU under continuous hypoxia, and then
collected and prepared for analysis as described in Materials and
Methods.
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|
Two molecules that have been implicated in a variety of stress-induced
cell cycle arrest pathways are the cyclin kinase inhibitors (CKIs)
p21Cip1 and p27Kip1 (6, 9, 33).
p27Kip1 has been found to be upregulated by hypoxia and has
been suggested as a mediator of hypoxia-induced arrest (5,
16). To more rigorously test the role of these proteins in
hypoxia-induced arrest, we obtained immortalized MEFs lacking p21 and
p27 individually, as well as cells inactivated in both, and examined
their cell cycle behavior under hypoxia. The control aerobic cell cycle
distributions differ somewhat among cell lines, which may be a result
of the immortalization pathways, as well as the CKI deletions
(7). However, all four cells lines arrest with similar
kinetics under hypoxia: a reduction in DNA synthesis beginning at
2.5 h leading to total arrest by 10 h (Fig. 3). Furthermore,
p21 and p27 levels in the cell are unchanged, as determined by Western
blot (Fig. 4A and B). These observations
reveal that something other than these CKIs is responsible for blocking
DNA synthesis under these severely hypoxic conditions.

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FIG. 4.
(A) Representative Western blots of p21 and p27 in
hypoxic cell extracts. (B) Composite Western blot data from multiple
experiments. Blots were scanned on a Storm Imager and analyzed with
ImageQuant; the numbers given are ratios relative to the control. (C)
Western blot of pRb in hypoxia-treated cells; the higher mobility band
represents unphosphorylated or hypophosphorylated pRb (pRb) while the
lower mobility band contains hyperphosphorylated pRb (ppRb). WT, wild
type.
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|
Since p21 and p27 were found not to be essential in induction of arrest
under hypoxia, it remained in question whether the lack of DNA
synthesis under hypoxia was due to a cyclin-Cdk-dependent arrest
pathway or some basic metabolic constraint. To address this question,
we examined the phosphorylation state of pRb, an important regulator of
the G1/S-phase transition. As early as 2 h after
initiation of the hypoxic treatment, pRb begins to appear in the
hypophosphorylated, active form, suggesting that pRb could be an
upstream element of the hypoxia-induced arrest, as has been proposed
previously (16) (Fig. 4C). However, cell cycle analysis of
hypoxia-treated Rb knockout cells in comparison to matched immortalized
MEFs reveals that they exhibit a normal hypoxia-induced arrest (Fig.
5). Thus, pRb is not a vital component of
the arrest pathway. We also assessed the arrest competency of MEFs
deleted in p130Rb2, an Rb homolog, and found that they, too, exhibit
cell cycle arrest when subjected to hypoxia (Fig. 5B).


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FIG. 5.
(A) Cell cycle profiles of Rb / and
wild-type fibroblasts during hypoxia. (B) Cell cycle profiles of
p130 / cells under hypoxia compared to the wild type.
Cells were labeled with BrdU for the final 2 h of treatment. WT,
wild type.
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|
These results were surprising, given the importance attributed to pRb
in previous studies of hypoxia-induced arrest; however, pRb
phosphorylation is not the only important element of the
G1/S transition. In fact, while cyclin D1 has been found to
be dispensable in cells lacking Rb, cyclin E is still required for
S-phase entry in these cells (27). This and other evidence
suggests that Cdk2, which forms complexes with cyclins E and A, has
targets besides pRb whose phosphorylation is necessary for entry into
and progression through S phase. We therefore assayed the activity of
Cdk2 in extracts from hypoxia-treated cells. We found that Cdk2
activity decreases dramatically in both wild-type and mutant cells
after 4 to 12 h of hypoxia, though to a slightly lower degree in
the mutants (Fig 6A and B). Therefore,
the activity of this kinase is being downregulated under hypoxia by
some means independent of p21 and p27. Replication inhibitors such as
hydroxyurea or aphidicolin, in contrast, do not affect Cdk2 activity
(reference 25 and unpublished observations), so
these data suggest that hypoxia's effects on the cell cycle are not
solely the result of direct DNA synthesis inhibition.

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FIG. 6.
Cdk2 activity regulation in hypoxic cells. (A) Cdk2
activity in hypoxia-treated cells, measured by immune-complex kinase
assay. Autoradiograms of phosphorylated Histone H1 were scanned and
then analyzed by using ImageQuant, and 32P incorporation
was plotted as a percentage of the control. (B) Histone H1
autoradiogram and Western blots of Cdk2, cyclin E, and cyclin A from a
representative time course. (C) Kinase activity and Cdk2 content of
cyclin A and cyclin E immunoprecipitates from control and hypoxic cell
extracts.
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In order to form an active kinase complex, Cdk2 must first bind to
cyclin E or cyclin A. Since hypoxia is known to generally downregulate
macromolecular synthesis, it was important to determine whether these
subunits were present in adequate amounts in hypoxic cells. By Western
blotting, we showed that the levels of Cdk2, cyclin E, and cyclin A
remain stable during a 12-h hypoxic treatment (Fig. 6B); thus, the lack
of Cdk2 activity in hypoxic extracts is not the result of a decrease in
either Cdk2 protein or its cyclin binding partners. After binding to
cyclin, Cdk2 must be phosphorylated on Thr160 by the cyclin-activating
kinase to become fully active; this phosphorylation leads to an
increase in mobility on SDS-PAGE. The relative intensity of the two
bands in the Cdk2 doublet on also remains unchanged with hypoxia (Fig.
6B), suggesting that dephosphorylation of this residue is not
responsible for Cdk2 inactivation. This analysis was also performed on
the p21
/
p27
/
cells to ensure that the
behavior of this cell line was the same.
Though Western blots showed that Cdk2 and cyclin E and A levels are
essentially unchanged by hypoxic treatment, it was not clear that they
actually remain associated in complexes. It was therefore possible that
the Cdk2 in hypoxic cells is rendered inactive by sequestration that
prevents cyclin association. We tested this hypothesis by measuring the
level of cyclin-associated Cdk2. Complexes were immunoprecipitated from
control or hypoxic cell extracts using antibodies to cyclin E or cyclin
A; the reaction was then divided and assayed for kinase activity or for
associated Cdk2 by Western blot. As shown in Fig. 6C, both cyclin A-
and cyclin E-associated activities are inhibited by hypoxia, but the amount of bound Cdk2 is unchanged.
Cdks can also be inactivated by inhibitory phosphorylation; in the case
of mouse Cdk2, the inhibitory residues are Thr14 and Tyr15. Most
reports have indicated that, of these two inhibitory phosphorylation
sites, Tyr15 is the more important and the more frequently
phosphorylated in vivo. In fact, Thr14 is seldom if ever phosphorylated
in the absence of Tyr15 phosphorylation, at least in normally cycling
cells (14). To determine whether Tyr15 phosphorylation was
increased by hypoxia, we used an antiphosphotyrosine antibody to probe
a Western blot of immunoprecipitated Cdk2. While antiphosphotyrosine
immunoreactivity is low, there is a distinct pair of bands present in
anti-Cdk2 IPs that is absent in a mock IP (Fig.
7A). Most of the phosphotyrosine appears
to be associated with the higher-mobility, Thr160-phosphorylated
form of Cdk2, as has been observed previously. However, while
phosphotyrosine immunoreactivity is increased in irradiated cells, as
reported (8), Cdk2 complexes from hypoxic cells do not
demonstrate increased phosphotyrosine staining. Reprobing of this blot
with an anti-Cdk2 antibody revealed equal amounts of Cdk2 in control
and hypoxic samples (Fig. 6A).

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FIG. 7.
Inhibitory phosphorylation under hypoxia. (A)
Antiphosphotyrosine and anti-Cdk2 Western blots of anti-Cdk2 or mock
IPs. (B) Histone H1 kinase activity of Cdk2 complexes treated with
GST-CDC25B.
|
|
We further tested whether dephosphorylation of Thr14 and Tyr15 could
restore activity to Cdk2 complexes from hypoxic cells. Removal of the
inhibitory phosphates from Cdks is carried out by the CDC25 family of
dual-specificity phosphatases; a member of this family, CDC25B, can
dephosphorylate and reactivate both Cdk2 and Cdc2 in vitro
(34). We treated the Cdk2 immunoprecipitates from control
and hypoxic cells with GST-tagged CDC25B expressed in bacteria and
purified on glutathione agarose. CDC25B treatment leads to significant
activation of Cdk2 complexes from hypoxic cells; however, complexes
from control cells are activated to a similar degree (Fig. 7B). Cdk2
immunoprecipitates from confluent and serum-starved cells, in contrast,
remain inactive upon CDC25B treatment (data not shown). This suggests
that inhibitory phosphorylation plays some role in Cdk2 inactivation
under hypoxia but probably cannot entirely account for the lack of Cdk2
activity in hypoxic cell extracts.
A few other proteins are known to be capable of inhibiting Cdk2 in
vitro or in vivo; these include the Cip/Kip family member p57Kip2 and the Rb-related pocket proteins p130 and p107.
Western blot analysis of these proteins did not reveal any significant
induction by hypoxia (data not shown); moreover, p130 null cells arrest normally, as shown in Fig. 5B. Thus, Cdk2 inhibition under hypoxia may
result in part from a novel mechanism or from changes in complex formation or phosphorylation that are too subtle to be detected by the
methods used here.
Although p21 and p27 play no significant role in the onset of
hypoxia-induced arrest, we hypothesized that these CKIs could regulate
the kinetics of cell cycle reentry upon reoxygenation. After a 12-h
hypoxic treatment, wild-type cells are able to resume DNA synthesis
within 3 h of reoxygenation. A group of G1 DNA content cells synchronously enters S phase after roughly 3.5 h, and by 6 h the number of BrdU-positive cells is comparable to that of aerobic samples (Fig. 8). Approximately 5 to 10% of cells remain arrested in S phase at this point. The p21
knockout cells, on the other hand, initiate DNA synthesis within an
hour after release from hypoxia, substantially earlier than the wild
type (Fig. 8A). The p27
/
fibroblasts do not exhibit
rapid cell cycle reentry, though these results were difficult to
interpret due to the slowly cycling nature of this cell line (Fig. 8A).
Deletion of p27 in a p21 knockout background, however, results in even
greater DNA synthesis posthypoxia; by 6 h the majority of cells
are BrdU positive, even more than in aerobic control cells (Fig. 8).


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FIG. 8.
Cell cycle profiles of matched immortalized MEFs after
reoxygenation. (A) 2D cell cycle diagrams from a representative
experiment. (B) Composite BrdU incorporation data for wild-type and
double-knockout cell lines from all experiments. (C)
[3H]thymidine incorporation. After a 12-h hypoxic
treatment, cells were returned to atmospheric oxygen and allowed to
reenter the cell cycle. Incorporation for each cell line was normalized
to a 12-h aerobic control.
|
|
Since these differences in timing are fairly subtle, we reconfirmed the
results with the single knockout cells using
[3H]thymidine incorporation to assess DNA synthesis (Fig.
8C). As expected, a 12-h hypoxic treatment reduces incorporation to
background levels; synthesis recovers upon reoxygenation, but total
incorporation remains less than for the time-matched controls because
of the reduced number of cells in hypoxia-treated dishes. Cells lacking p21 alone exhibit significantly greater DNA synthesis at 3.5 h of
reoxygenation, reconfirming the results obtained by 2D FACS analysis.
At 6 h the incorporation in the p21 knockouts is reduced compared
to that at 3.5 h, a finding which we believe to be the result of
cell death; these cells appear to be hypersensitive to hypoxic stress
(data not shown). The p27 knockout cells again show poor incorporation
but clearly seem to be recovering at 6 h postreoxygenation.
To further investigate the roles of p21 and p27 in regulating the cell
cycle during reoxygenation, we examined the levels of these cyclin
kinase inhibitors both under hypoxia and at multiple times after
reoxygenation. Both p21 and p27 levels are largely unchanged during a
12-h hypoxic treatment and are only mildly induced upon subsequent
reoxygenation (Fig. 9). Although this may
seem surprising in light of the cell cycle data, some evidence suggests
that redistribution of inhibitory molecules in the absence of major
protein induction can have a significant effect on cell cycling
(28). Differences in association are not readily apparent by coimmunoprecipitation and Western blotting, but this is not unexpected given the subtlety of the effects observed and the crude
nature of this assay.

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FIG. 9.
Western blots of p21 and p27 from reoxygenated cells
(A), along with a graph of average values over all experiments (B).
Cells were exposed to hypoxia for 12 h prior to being returned to
atmospheric oxygen.
|
|
After reoxygenation, changes in Cdk2 activity in the wild-type and
double-knockout cells parallel changes in DNA synthesis (Fig.
10). In the wild-type cells, Cdk2
activity decreases slightly at 2 h of reoxygenation and then
begins to recover by 4 h. In the double p21 and p27 knockout
cells, kinase activity is consistently higher than that in the
wild-type cells, but the kinetics of recovery are variable between
experiments (Fig. 10). The changes in activity are not associated with
changes in protein levels, since Cdk2, cyclin A, and cyclin E levels
remain stable under all of these conditions (Fig. 10A). The close
correlation between Cdk2 activity, which is required for S-phase entry,
and DNA synthesis implies that kinase activity is a limiting factor for
S-phase entry under these conditions.

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|
FIG. 10.
Cdk2 activity regulation in reoxygenated cells. (A)
Autoradiograms of phosphorylated Histone H1 and Western blots of Cdk2,
cyclin E, and cyclin A from a representative reoxygenation time course.
(B) [32P]phosphate incorporation into Histone H1 averaged
over all experiments. WT, wild type.
|
|
 |
DISCUSSION |
In this study, we have observed a cessation of DNA synthesis in
immortalized MEFs under low-oxygen conditions similar to that observed
in other cell types. This arrest is accompanied by a significant
downregulation of Cdk2 kinase activity and therefore is unlikely to
result from a direct block to DNA synthesis such as deoxynucleotide
shortage. Interestingly, the hypoxia-induced arrest is intact in cells
lacking pRb, implying that other Cdk2 targets are mediating this
response. We found that the kinase inhibition is not due to association
with the inhibitory molecules p27Kip1 or
p21Cip1; both the arrest and the Cdk2 activity
downregulation under hypoxia are normal in cells lacking both p21 and
p27. Cdk2, cyclin E, and cyclin A protein levels are largely unaffected
by hypoxia, so the lack of kinase activity is also not due to lack of
the Cdk2 protein itself or its cyclin-binding partners. Activating phosphorylation on Thr160, inhibitory phosphorylation on Tyr15, and the
binding of cyclins by Cdk2 also appear unchanged, though Cdk2 complexes
from hypoxic cells can be partially reactivated by treatment with
CDC25B. The mechanism by which Cdk2 is inactivated under hypoxia is
still under investigation; while inhibitory phosphorylation appears
responsible in part, a further means of inhibition exists which could
act through a novel mechanism or through changes too subtle to be
detected by the methods used here.
We have also found that both the arrest and the kinase inhibition under
hypoxia are reversible and regulated by p21 and p27 upon reoxygenation.
In wild-type cells, Cdk2 activity and DNA synthesis are restored within
6 h after the return to normoxia, while this recovery is much more
rapid in the p21 p27 double-knockout cells. This may be due to p21 and
p27 representing an inhibitory "threshold" which must be overcome
in the wild-type cells. Also, a moderate (~50%) induction of these
CKIs after reoxygenation may contribute to the prolonged Cdk2
inhibition in the wild-type cells. p21
/
p27
/
cells also appear to be hypersensitive to hypoxia
in a clonogenic survival assay (data not shown); while a variety of
factors may influence the colony-forming potential in immortalized
cells, it is interesting to note that premature reentry into the cell cycle may impair viability.
These results suggest that hypoxia-induced Cdk2 inhibition occurs
through a pathway distinct from known stress-activated cell cycle
arrest pathways, many of which appear to involve p21 and/or p27. These
include both genotoxic stresses, such as ionizing or UV radiation
(4, 28), and nongenotoxic stresses, such as transforming
growth factor
treatment or serum deprivation (6, 33).
Interestingly, oxidative stresses such as peroxide treatment and
hyperoxia are among the stimuli known to upregulate p21 (26, 39). This could explain the p21 induction caused by
reoxygenation, which is known to lead to free radical production and
can be considered a stress in itself. In addition, the p21 message, but
not protein, is induced in a p53-independent manner under hypoxia in a
variety of cell lines (10), and reoxygenation may allow
translation of this accumulated mRNA.
Our finding that pRb is not essential to the arrest in response to
hypoxia appears to be in conflict with previously published work.
However, this work has been mostly correlative, demonstrating that
arrest under hypoxia is associated with the appearance of hypophosphorylated pRb (1, 24). Amellem et al. did find
that T-47D breast cancer cells, unlike two Rb-null cancer cell lines, could not be stimulated to enter S phase upon deoxynucleotide addition
under hypoxia, and these authors attributed this to a secondary arrest
pathway dependent on functional Rb. However, no matched cell lines that
differed in Rb status were compared (1). Our results are
therefore consistent with previously published reports in that we, too,
observed pRb hypophosphorylation under hypoxia but differ from them in
that we found that this modification is not a critical component of the
arrest pathway. Therefore, other Cdk2 targets are likely to be involved
in mediating the arrest in response to hypoxia.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
This work was supported by NIH grants PO1 CA67166 and CA64489 to
A.J.G. S.L.G. was supported in part by a Lucille P. Markey fellowship in Molecular Mechanisms of Disease.
We thank James Roberts for the wild-type, p21
/
,
p27
/
, and p21
/
p27
/
fibroblasts and the cyclin E antibody; Greg Hannon for the p21 antibody; and Scott Lowe for the wild-type, Rb
/
, and
p130
/
fibroblasts. We also thank members of the Giaccia
and Roberts labs for useful advice and assistance.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: CCSR South, Room
1255, Department of Radiation Oncology, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305-5152. Phone: (650) 723-7366. Fax: (650) 723-7382. E-mail: giaccia{at}leland.stanford.edu.
 |
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Molecular and Cellular Biology, February 2001, p. 1196-1206, Vol. 21, No. 4
0270-7306/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/MCB.21.4.1196-1206.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
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