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Molecular and Cellular Biology, July 2003, p. 4701-4712, Vol. 23, No. 13
0270-7306/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/MCB.23.13.4701-4712.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
INSERM U419, IFR 26, 44035 Nantes Cedex 01,1 Clinique Universitaire de Neurochirurgie, Hôpital G & R Laennec, CHU Nantes, 44093 Nantes Cedex 01, France2
Received 21 November 2002/ Returned for modification 17 January 2003/ Accepted 17 March 2003
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) was associated with a longer survival of glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) patients (6), one of the most dreadful types of tumors (18). Bax
was found to be expressed in 25% of the patients examined while very few tumors lacked the expression of Bax (6). We have thus examined the sensitivity to apoptosis of the latter tumors with a particular emphasis on immune-induced apoptosis as the elimination of malignant cells by the immune system appears to be critical for the prevention of tumor development and/or expansion (35). The immune system induced apoptosis in these cells by two main mechanisms: the death receptor and cytotoxic pathways (19, 35). Both pathways induce apoptosis mainly through the proteolytic activation of the BH3-only proapoptotic protein Bid (29, 30) directly in the case of the cytotoxic pathway through granzyme B (GrB) and indirectly through caspase 8 (C8) in the death receptor pathway (19, 35). In vitro, Bax-deficient GBM (BdGBM) derived from resected tumors were more resistant to chemo- or UV-induced apoptosis than control tumors (Bax-expressing GBM [BeGBM]). Using an antisense strategy, we show that Bak accounted for the remaining sensitivity to apoptosis and that double deficient cells Bax-/Bak- GBM were completely resistant to all death stimuli. We also report that Bax- or Bak- cells are equally sensitive to GrB but that the absence of Bak impaired the response of GBM cells to C8.
In this work, we show that in GBM, GrB and C8 induced different proteolytic truncations of Bid (p13-tBid and p15-tBid, respectively) which exhibited different affinities towards Bax and Bak. We thus postulate that these specific cross talks between Bax or Bak and the truncated forms of Bid generated by the cytotoxic pathway (GrB) or the death receptor pathway (C8) could allow the maintenance of immune-induced cell death in tumors.
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Patients. GBM tumors were obtained from patients operated on at the Clinique de Neurochirurgie at the Hospital of Nantes over the years 1997 to 2000 and were classified according to the World Health Organization classification as astrocytoma grade 4 (23). Patient material as well as records (diagnosis, age, sex, and date of death) were used with confidentiality according to French laws and the recommendations of the French National Committee of Ethics.
Cell culture and proliferation. Immediately after resection, the tumors were washed and stored in Ringer's solution at 4°C. Within 2 to 4 h, the tumors were washed with cold phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) prior to mechanical dissociation using a Medimachine (Dako, Trappes, France) and 50 µM Medicon (Dako) according to the manufacturer's instructions. Cells were plated at a density of 5,000 cells/ml and cultured in RPMI 1640 supplemented with 10% fetal calf serum (FCS), penicillin (100 U/ml), streptomycin (100 µg/ml), and 2 mM glutamine for 3 days and then transferred in RPMI 1640-10% FCS supplemented with 1% G5, penicillin (100 U/ml), streptomycin (100 µg/ml) and 2 mM glutamine. Proliferation was estimated using a methylthiazoletetrazolium assay (Promega) according to the manufacturer's instruction. The cells were passaged 10 times before being used in experiments in order to avoid contamination with nontumoral cells. To inhibit Bak expression in GBM, cells were transfected with two consecutive electroporations with 10 µg of plasmid encoding the anti-full-length sequence of human Bak as described by Eguchi et al. (10). The bulk of cells were then selected for 20 days with G418 (250 µg/ml) and used as such to avoid clonal bias.
Immunoblots, RNA purification and RT-PCR. Tumors and primary cultures were homogenized vol/vol in RIPA buffer (PBS containing 1% NP-40, 0.5% Na-deoxycholate, 0.1% sodium dodecyl sulfate [SDS], 1 nM Na-vanadate, and complete inhibitor cocktail) and analyzed for protein expression by standard immunoblotting methods. RNA purification and reverse transcription (RT)-PCR were also performed as previously described (6). For RT-PCR analyses, 40 ng of cDNA was amplified in a final volume of 50 µl using 1 U of Taq polymerase (Invitrogen). Thirty amplification cycles consisting of 95°C for 30 s, 55°C for 30 s, and 72°C for 30 s were performed. The number of cycles was within the linear phase of amplification and amplified products were analyzed in a 1.5% agarose-Tris-borate-EDTA gel. The bands were quantified using the IPLab Gel Program. The DNA methylation pattern of the CpG islands surrounding the TATA box of the Bax gene was investigated by methylation-specific PCR according to the protocol described by Herman et al. (16). Control, methylated (normal control) and ummethylated (positive control) DNAs were obtained from Intergen (Oxford, United Kingdom). In vitro demethylation treatment of BeGBM and BdGBM cells was performed by the addition of 15 mM 5-aza-2'-deoxycytidine (5aza2dC) for 18 days.
Clonogenicity and growth in Swiss nude mice. For the clonogenicity assay, 400 BdgBM, BeGBM, or Bak antisense-transfected BdGBM and BeGBM cells were plated into six-well plates (3 ml per well) in semisolid medium containing 0.3% agar and allowed to adhere overnight. After 21 days, colonies were fixed and stained with 0.5% crystal violet. Only colonies with diameters of ≥2 mm were counted.
For in vivo growth experiments, six Swiss nude mice received subcutaneous injections in the flank with 106 BdGBM, BeGBM, or Bak antisense-transfected BdGBM and BeGBM cells. Tumoral progression was monitored by measuring, every 4 days over a period of 30 days, the size of the tumors formed.
Induction of apoptosis in vitro and confocal analyses. Apoptosis was induced in semiconfluent cells (50 to 70%) BdGBM or BeGBM cells by the addition of staurosporine (STS), doxorubicin (DOXO), or UVB treatment as indicated. Cell death was evaluated 24 h later, as it corresponded in all cases to the maximum loss of cell viability. Apoptosis was quantified by measuring the release of lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) in the culture medium as previously described (5, 6). For immunohistochemical detection of Bax, Bak, and GFAP, the cells were cultured for 7 days before analysis by laser confocal microscopy as previously described (6).
Microinjection. Microinjections were performed as described by Juin et al. (22). Briefly, cells were seeded on glass coverslips the day prior to microinjection using sterile microcapillaries (femtotips II; Eppendorf) mounted on an automated microinjection system (Eppendorf). Recombinant proteins were dissolved in PBS together with dextran (70 kDa)-conjugated lysine-fixable Oregon green (0.5% final concentration; Molecular Probes) as a coinjection marker. Typically, 100 to 150 cells were injected using identical pressures (150 hPa) and times (0.1 s).
Cell-free assay and preparation of p13- and p15-tBid. Mitochondrial isolation and incubation with purified or in vitro-translated Bid, Bax, or Bak as well as protein binding and cytochrome c (CYT-C) release assays were performed as described previously (5).
The coding region of Bid was subcloned into pTrcHis2-TOPO plasmid (Invitrogen). The His-tagged proteins were expressed in bacteria and purified according to the manufacturer's instructions. In vitro, 100 µg of full-length Bid (fl-Bid)-His was incubated with 300 U of IETDase activity GrB (Alexis Biochemicals) or C8 (Calbiochem) at 37°C for 3 h to generate the p13- and p15-tBid fragments. The digestion product was purified on Ni-Sepharose prior to microinjection and SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) analysis.
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(data not shown). We obtained primary cultures from 2 tumors lacking the expression of Bax (BdGBM 38 and 44) and from 2 tumors expressing Bax
(BeGBM 12 and 24). The persistence of the lack of expression of Bax in BdGBM was confirmed by immunostaining (Fig. 1a) and by immunoblotting (Fig. 1b). Bax could be found under the same conditions in BeGBM cells (Fig. 1a and b). As show in Fig. 1c, no mRNA encoding Bax could be found in the BdGBM cells. We have recently observed that Bax expression in GBM was partially controlled by methylation of the gene (6). Methylation of the promoter regions of CpG-rich sites in genes is the major mechanism for the silencing of many genes in tumors (3). We thus compared the methylation pattern of the Bax gene in BeGBM and in BdGBM cells using a methylation-specific PCR method (16). As shown in Fig. 1d, hypermethylation of the 5' untranslated region of the Bax gene around the TATA box was observed in BdGBM but not in BeGBM cells and thus could be responsible for the lack of transcription of the Bax mRNAs in BdGBM cells. To confirm this, BdGBM cells were treated with the methylation inhibitor 5aza2dC as described by Soengas et al. (36). As show in Fig. 1e, the 5aza2dC treatment was sufficient to restore the expression of Bax in BdGBM, confirming the existence of an epigenetic silencing of Bax in the latter tumors.
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FIG. 1. Absence of expression of Bax in a subset of GBM. (a) Confocal microscopy analysis of in vitro Bax expression in BdGBM and in BeGBM cells using the GFAP as glial marker and as a control of the level of protein expression. (b) Immunoblot analysis of Bax confirming the absence of the protein in BdGBM cells in vitro. Representative immunoblots were done with 50 µg of BeGBM and 150 µg of BdGBM loaded on SDS-PAGE. (c) mRNA encoding Bax was examined by RT-PCR using the SMART system as described in Materials and Methods using ß2-macroglobulin as a control as described in reference 6. (d) Methylation specific PCR analysis of the Bax promoter region in BeGBM and in BdGBM cells. PCR was performed on genomic DNA purified from BdGBM or BeGBM cells. The DNA was untreated (U) or modified (M) by bisulfite sodium as originally described by Herman et al. (16). Pos control, ummethylated DNA; Normal control, methylated DNA. A gel representative of results from three independent experiments performed on each cell line is illustrated. (e) 5aza2dc treatment of GBM cells restored the expression of Bax in BdGBM cells as shown by immunoblotting with anti-Bax antibodies using actin as an internal control (50 µg of protein was loaded in each lane).
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FIG. 2. Bak is overexpressed in BdGBM. (a) Immunoblot analyses of Bcl-2, Bcl-XL and Bid expression in BeGBM and in BdGBM cells. Immunoblotting with a Bak antibody revealed that this protein was overexpressed in BdGBM cells; 50 µg of protein was loaded in each lane and actin was used as a control. (b) The ratio between Bak and actin in the resected tumors was calculated from immunoblots and represented as a histogram.
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FIG. 3. Bak overexpression in BdGBM cells can be inhibited by full-length Bak antisense transfection. The inhibition of Bak expression by the full-length Bak antisense in the cell lines was analyzed by immunoblotting using actin and Bax as controls (a) and by confocal microscopy with mitochondria labeled with Mitotrackter green (mito) as a control (b).
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FIG. 4. Single or double Bax and/or Bak deficiency influenced neither GBM cell clonogenicity nor their growth in the nude mice. (a) The clonogenicity assays were performed as described in Materials and Methods; histograms were drawn from the results obtained from six independent experiments. Data are given as numbers of UFC (colony-forming units) ± standard deviations. (b) Tumoral growth in Swiss nude mice (data shown were obtained from six different mice for each tumor). Standard deviations are shown. Bax+/Bak+ = BeGBM, Bax-/Bak+ = BdGBM, Bax+/Bak- = antisense Bak-transfected BeGBM cells, and Bax-/Bak- = antisense Bak-transfected BdGBM cells.
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FIG. 5. Double Bax/Bak deficiency abolished sensitivities toward apoptosis in GBM. Bax+/Bak+ (BeGBM), Bax-/Bak+ (BdGBM), Bax+/Bak- (antisense Bak-transfected BeGBM cells) and Bax-/Bak- (antisense Bak-transfected BdGBM) cells were treated with UV irradiation (10 s to 120 s) and increasing concentrations of DOXO (up to 20 ng/ml) or STS (up to 20 µM). Cells were transfected with increasing concentrations of plasmid encoding human C3 (up to 20 µg of plasmid) or an empty plasmid (20 µg) used as a control. It should be noted that no significant cell death was recorded in mock-transfected cells after selection. Cell death was quantified after 24 h using the release of LDH (measured as described in Materials and Methods) in the cell culture medium. Representative results from one of 3 independent experiments are illustrated for each treatment.
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FIG. 6. Sensitivity of single or double Bax/Bak-deficient GBM cells toward immune-induced apoptosis. (a) Bax+/Bak+ (BeGBM), Bax-/Bak+ (BdGBM), Bax+/Bak- (antisense Bak-treated BeGBM cells) and Bax-/Bak- (antisense Bak-treated BdGBM) cells were treated with increasing concentrations of FasL (from 0 to 20 µg/ml) or were transfected with increasing concentrations of plasmid (up to 200 µg of plasmid) encoding GrB. Cell death was quantified after 24 h of treatment using the release of LDH as an assay. Representative results from one of three independent experiments are illustrated for each treatment. (b) BeGBM or BeGBM cells treated with UVB irradiation (60 s) or FasL (10 µg/ml) or transfected with a plasmid encoding GrB (10 µg) were harvested 24 h after the start of the treatment. Cell extracts (50 µg) were analyzed for pro-caspase 8 (proC8) cleavage into the large subunit of caspase 8 (C8 LS) as a marker. The processing of fl-Bid (p22Bid) into p15-tBid or p13-tBid was analyzed in the same extracts using a 12 to 20% gradient SDS-PAGE.
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FIG. 7. Different forms of truncated Bid generated by C8 and GrB affect differently the single or double deficient GBM cells. (a) GBM cells with distinct Bax and Bak phenotypes were microinjected with GrB and C8 concentrations exhibiting similar IETDase activities (5 U) and mixed with Oregon green dextran as a microinjection marker. Cell death was assessed morphologically by fluorescent microscopy as described by Juin et al. (22). (b) Specific cleavage of fl-Bid (4 fmol) into p15-tBid by C8 (300 U of IETDase) and into p13-tBid by GrB (300 U of IETDase) in a cell-free assay. (c) Similar amounts of p13-tBid or p15-tBid (0.1 ng/µl) were microinjected, and cell death was quantified as in panel a.
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FIG. 8. Preferential cooperation of p15-tBid with Bak and p13-tBid with Bax in a cell-free assay. (a) 35S-fl-Bid was digested by C8 or GrB as described in Fig. 7, and 4 fmol of 35S-C8-cleaved fl-Bid (p15-tBid) or 35S-GrB-cleaved Bid (p13-tBid) was incubated for 30 min at 37°C with 50 µg of mitochondria before centrifugation for 10 min at 10,000 x g at 4°C. The binding of 35S-Bid to mitochondria was analyzed by SDS-PAGE and autoradiography of the mitochondrial pellet. One femtomole (25% of the initial input of 35S-labeled protein [i.e., 25%]), was added to the mitochondrial binding assay mix as a loading control. The influence of the different forms of Bid on Bax (b) and Bak (c) association in the cell-free system was assessed by the association of 35S-Bax and 35S-Bak with mitochondria after incubation with equimolar concentrations of cold Bid (4 fmol). Mitochondrial pellets were analyzed after SDS-PAGE and autoradiography as described for panel a. p13-tBid and p15-tBid involvement in Bax- (d) or Bak- (e) induced CYT-C release from mitochondria. After binding of Bax and Bak to mitochondria in the absence or the presence of different forms of Bid, mitochondria were pelleted for 10 min at 10,000 x g at 4°C and the presence of CYT-C in the supernatant was analyzed by immunoblotting. Data (± standard deviations) were obtained from at least 3 independent experiments.
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-positive tumor patients (10.8 ± 3 months versus 11.2 ± 5 months; P = 0.654), while the 17 patients expressing the gain of function variant Bax
had a significant increase in their survival (19 ± 3 months, P = 0.019) (6). Thus, the loss of Bax appears to have less impact on tumor growth than the increase in its proapoptotic properties. Consistent with these results, but contrary to recent results in mice (8), the inactivation of Bax and/or Bak facilitated neither the clonogenicity nor the tumor growth (Fig. 4). In GBM, Bax deficiency was linked to the methylation of the gene (Fig. 1), a mechanism which has been associated with the silencing of tumor suppressors in many cancers (3). The absence of Bax in GBM cells decreased but did not abolish the apoptotic response to various cell death inducers (Fig. 5). However, contrary to a previous report by Zhang et al. (47), the persistence of an apoptotic response was not due to a change in the level of antiapoptotic proteins such as Bcl-2 or Bcl-XL but rather to the compensatory increase in the expression of Bak, a proapoptotic member of the Bcl-2 family (Fig. 2). The latter point was highlighted using the antisense strategy described by Eguchi et al. (10) to generate Bak-deficient BeGBM (Bax+/Bak-) or BdGBM (Bax-/Bak-) cells (Fig. 3). The double deficient GBM cells were highly resistant to various apoptotic stimuli (Fig. 5) and thus behaved like the equivalent cells derived from the double knockout of Bax and Bak in mice (7, 8, 44). The overexpression of Bak in BdGBM cells did not fully compensate for Bax deficiency in UVB- or chemo-induced cell death (Fig. 5). The latter point suggested that either Bax fulfilled a more fundamental role in the control of apoptosis in GBM than Bak or that Bax and Bak had distinct specificities toward cell death stimuli. The ability of tumors to evade apoptotic death is one of the hallmarks of cancer defined by Hanahan and Weinberg (15), and the immune system appears to be one of the main effectors of cell death in tumors (35). The immune system exerts its antitumoral surveillance mainly through cell death induced by cytotoxic T lymphocytes and NK cells (19, 35). Cytotoxic T lymphocytes and NK cells use different effectors to mediate apoptosis in target cells: the death receptor mechanism with the FasL/Fas receptor system as model and the perforin/GrB cytotoxic pathway (35, 40). The ligation of the death ligands to their receptors, such as that of FasL to Fas receptor, initiates cell death by the activation of the intracellular initiator caspase C8 which in turn can induce apoptosis either through the direct activation of C3 in type I cells or by using mitochondria as an obligatory amplifier of the death signal in type II cells (19). Cytolytic granules function through the serine protease GrB which activates apoptosis mainly by the mitochondrial pathway (2, 32, 37, 39, 42). We show here that Bax deficiency decreases the sensitivity of GBM to FasL but not to C3 and that this sensitivity is completely abolished by the suppression of Bak expression both in BeGBM and BdGBM cells (Fig. 6 and 7) These results suggest that GBM are type II cells and that Bak plays a fundamental role in C8-induced apoptosis as previously suggested by Wang et al. (42). Of note, no difference in the sensitivity toward GrB was observed under the same conditions in the double deficient cells as little or no signs of apoptosis were observed (Fig. 6 and 7).
Recent experiments have shown that both Bax and Bak and thus the mitochondrial pathway are coupled to the Fas pathway/C8 through the BH3-only proapoptotic protein Bid (9, 13, 14, 29, 30, 46). No significant difference in the expression of Bid was observed between BeGBM and BdGBM cells (Fig. 2) or in cells transfected with Bak antisense (data not shown). Treatment of the BeGBM or BdGBM cells with UVB irradiation, FasL or GrB leads to a similar activation of C8 but generates different forms of truncated Bid (Fig. 6). GrB has been shown to cleave Bid at Asp75 and C8 at Asp59 (14). This result is consistent with the pattern of generation of the p13-tBid and the p15-tBid, observed in BeGBM and BdGBM cells, by treatments which utilize one or both enzymes (Fig. 6). Of note, the activation of the GrB pathway in GBM cells induces mainly p13-tBid with a minor p15-tBid while in an acellular assay pure GrB produces only the p13-tBid (Fig. 6). The latter results are likely to be due to a direct activation of C8 by GrB, which led to the production of p15-tBid and as such could explain the discrepancies between the microinjection of GrB and that of p13-tBid observed in Fig. 7. The microinjection of different forms of tBid showed that p13-tBid induced cell death more efficiently in the presence of Bax than in that of Bak while p15-tBid seems to synergize better with Bak than with Bax (Fig. 7). Using a cell-free system, we found that p13-tBid and p15-tBid displayed similar affinities for mitochondria, while fl-Bid did not associate with the organelle (Fig. 8). The presence of p13-tBid enhanced the association of Bax to mitochondria as well as the Bax-dependent release of CYT-C from the organelle (Fig. 8.). On the other hand, Bak association with mitochondria was stimulated by the addition of p15-tBid and unaffected by that of p13-tBid (Fig. 8). However, the Bak-dependent release of CYT-C from mitochondria was more affected by the presence of p15-tBid than by that of p13-tBid (Fig. 8). Taken together, our results suggest the existence of a preferential cross talk between p13-tBid and Bax which is preferentially used in the GrB pathway whereas p15-tBid appeared to cooperate better with Bak than with Bax and to be used in the cell death receptor/C8 pathway (see Fig. 9).
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FIG. 9. Schematic representation of the cross talks between Bak and the death receptor pathway and Bax and the cytotoxic pathway. The immune system can trigger cell death in target GBM cells by the death receptor pathway (i.e., interaction of FasL with its plasma membrane receptor Fas) or by the cytotoxic pathway (i.e., the translocation of GrB throughout the target plasma membrane mediated by the perforin proteins). The activation of C8 is achieved by activation of the death receptor pathway or by GrB (cf. Fig. 6b). In the latter case, fl-Bid is cleaved into two fragments: p13-tBid directly by GrB and p15-tBid by the GrB-activated C8 (Fig. 6b). Hence, GrB generates both products of cleavage of fl-Bid and C8 generates only p15-tBid (Fig. 7a). p13-tBid has a preferential interaction with Bax and triggers its association with mitochondria while p15 appears to preferentially interact with Bak to induce the release of CYT-C from mitochondria and the subsequent activation of the execution phase of apoptosis (Fig. 7c and 8).
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P.-F.C. is a recipient of a fellowship from the Ligue Contre le Cancer du Doubs et du Pays de Montbeliard. This work was supported by grants from INSERM and La Ligue Contre le Cancer.
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, is correlated with an increased survival of glioblastoma multiforme patients. Hum. Mol. Genet. 11:675-687.
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