Citation: Cell Death and Disease (2012) 3, e390; doi:10.1038/cddis.2012.120
& 2012 Macmillan Publishers Limited All rights reserved 2041-4889/12 www.nature.com/cddis
M Baritaud1,2,3, L Cabon1,2,3, L Delavalle1,2,3, P Galn-Malo1,2,3, M-E Gilles1,2,3, M-N Brunelle-Navas1,2,3 and SA Susin*,1,2,3
The alkylating DNA-damage agent N-methyl-N 0-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine (MNNG) induces a form of caspase-independent necroptosis implicating the mitochondrial avoprotein apoptosis-inducing factor (AIF). Following the activation of PARP-1 (poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase-1), calpains, BID (BH3 interacting domain death agonist), and BAX (Bcl-2-associated X protein), the apoptogenic form of AIF (tAIF) is translocated to the nucleus where, associated with Ser139-phosphorylated histone H2AX (cH2AX), it creates a DNA-degrading complex that provokes chromatinolysis and cell death by necroptosis. The generation of cH2AX is crucial for this form of cell death, as mutation of H2AX Ser139 to Ala or genetic ablation of H2AX abolish both chromatinolysis and necroptosis. On the contrary, reintroduction of H2AX-wt or the phosphomimetic H2AX mutant (H2AXS139E) into H2AX / cells resensitizes to MNNG-triggered necroptosis. Employing a pharmacological approach and gene knockout cells, we also demonstrate in this paper that the phosphatidylinositol-3-OH kinase-related kinases (PIKKs) ATM (ataxia telangiectasia mutated) and DNA-dependent protein kinase (DNA-PK) mediate cH2AX generation and, consequently, MNNG-induced necroptosis. By contrast, H2AX phosphorylation is not regulated by ATR or other H2AX-related kinases, such as JNK. Interestingly, ATM and DNA-PK phosphorylate H2AX at Ser139 in a synergistic manner with different kinetics of activation. Early after MNNG treatment, ATM generates cH2AX. Further, DNA-PK contributes to H2AX Ser139 phosphorylation. In revealing the pivotal role of PIKKs in MNNG-induced cell death, our data uncover a milestone in the mechanisms regulating AIF-mediated caspase-independent necroptosis.
Cell Death and Disease (2012) 3, e390; doi:10.1038/cddis.2012.120; published online 13 September 2012
Subject Category: Cancer
Originally considered as an uncontrolled passive event, some forms of necrosis have recently been recognized as programmed modes of cell death.1,2 Programmed necrosis can be triggered by default when the classical apoptotic enzymes, caspases, are inhibited. More interestingly, it can also occur under multiple pathological conditions, including cancer, ischemia-reperfusion injury, neurodegeneration, cerulein-induced acute pancreatitis, retinal detachment-induced photoreceptor death, Crohns disease, systemic inammatory response syndrome, and viral infection.3 Thus, the physio-pathological relevance of programmed necrosis contributes to the increasing interest in unraveling the molecular determinants that control this newly dened mode of programmed cell death (PCD).
One of the most studied forms of programmed necrosis is necroptosis, which includes, at least two different forms ofPCD.1 The rst necroptotic pathway described is the PCD
Keywords: AIF; ATM; DNA-PK; H2AX; necroptosis
Abbreviations: AIF, apoptosis-inducing factor; ATM, ataxia telangiectasia mutated; ATR, ATM- and Rad-3 related; BAX, Bcl-2-associated X protein; BCL-2, B-cell lymphoma 2; BID, BH3 interacting domain death agonist; CAD, caspase-activated DNase; CypA, cyclophilin A; DSBs, double-strand breaks; DNA-PK, DNA dependent protein kinase; FCS, fetal calf serum; JNK1, c-Jun NH2-terminal kinase 1; Q-VD.OPh, Gln-Val-Asp(non-Omethylated)-Oph; MEFs, murine embryonic broblasts; MNNG, N-methyl-N0-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine; Nec-1, 5-(indol-3-ylmethyl)-(2-thio-3-methyl)hydantoin, Necrostatin-1; MST1, mammalian STE20-like kinase 1; PARP-1, poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase-1; PCD, programmed cell death; PIKKs, phosphatidylinositol-3-OH kinase-related kinases; RIP1, receptor interacting protein-1; RIP3, receptor interacting protein-3; TNF, tumor necrosis factor
Received 22.5.12; revised 2.7.12; accepted 12.7.12; Edited by H-U Simon
AIF-mediated caspase-independent necroptosis requires ATM and DNA-PK-induced histone H2AX Ser139 phosphorylation
process induced by tumor necrosis factor (TNF).1,2 Stimulation of TNF receptor 1 by TNFa leads to the formation of a complex in the cellular membrane that includes TRADD (tumor necrosis factor receptor type 1-associated death domain), TRAF2 (TNF receptor-associated factor 2), RIP1 (receptor interacting protein-1), and cIAP1 (baculoviral IAP repeat-containing protein 1). Under apoptosis-decient conditions, these components dissociate and RIP1 is released into the cytosol. Cytoplasmic RIP1 interacts with receptor interacting protein-3 (RIP3) to form a complex triggering the necroptotic PCD pathway.2 As demonstrated by the use of Necrostatin-1 (Nec-1), a small molecule identied in a chemical library screen as a potent inhibitor of the RIP1 kinase activity, the formation of this complex requires the phosphorylating properties of RIP1.4 Downstream of RIP1 and RIP3, three proteins act as lethal effectors in TNF-induced necroptosis: mixed lineage kinase domain-like
1INSERM U872, Programmed cell death and physiopathology of tumor cells. Team n1 19, Centre de Recherche des Cordeliers, Paris, France; 2Universit Pierre et Marie Curie-Sorbonne Universits, UMRS 872, Paris, France and 3Universit Paris Descartes, UMRS 872, Paris, France*Corresponding author: SA Susin, Centre de Recherche des Cordeliers. 15, rue de lEcole de Mdecine, 75006 Paris, France. Tel: +33 1 44279070; Fax: +33 1 44279036; E-mail: [email protected]
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protein, phosphoglycerate mutase family member 5, and the ssion mediator Drp1 (dynamin-related protein 1).5,6 Alkylating DNA-damage-mediated caspase-independent programmed necrosis is the second necroptotic pathway described to date. Considering RIP1 kinase dependency as a hallmark of this form of death, we have recently shown that high doses of the alkylating DNA-damaging agent N-methyl-N 0-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine (MNNG) trigger necroptosis.
Indeed, both genetic ablation of RIP1 and its pharmacological inhibition by Nec-1 prevent MNNG-induced caspase-independent PCD.79
MNNG acts by covalently modifying bases in DNA. The relevant DNA damage induced by this modication causes both the disproportionate activation of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase-1 (PARP-1) and the phosphorylation of histone H2AX at Ser139 (gH2AX).1012 In mouse embryonic bro-
blasts (MEFs), hyper-activated PARP-1 governs the sequential activation of the calpain Cys proteases and the proapoptotic B-cell lymphoma 2 (BCL-2) family members BID (BH3 interacting domain death agonist) and BAX (Bcl-2-associated X protein).9,10 Once activated, BAX triggers a mitochondrial damage that, in cooperation with calpains, leads to the generation and release of the proapoptotic protein tAIF, which is the truncated form of the mitochondrial oxydoreductase apoptosis-inducing factor (AIF).13 Once in the cytosol, this caspase-independent effector relocalizes to the nuclear compartment where, in cooperation with gH2AX and cyclophilin A (CypA), it provokes DNA degradation and
PCD.11,12 In fact, by providing a strategic bridge between tAIF and CypA, gH2AX becomes essential for the lethal DNA-degrading activity characteristic of AIF-mediated necroptosis.
H2AX, a member of the histone H2A family,14 is characterized by a phosphorylable SQE motif in its C-terminal tail. The generation of double-strand breaks (DSBs) is related to the phosphorylation of the H2AX C-terminal tail at Ser139 that yields gH2AX. Once generated, gH2AX accumulates at the sites of DSBs,15,16 where it is thought to restructure chromatin
and assist in the recruitment/retention of DNA repair and signaling factors.14,17 Even if the function of H2AX is mainly
associated with DNA-damage repair and DNA packaging,16
this histone is also key in PCD.18,19 In UV-induced caspase-
dependent cell death, it seems that gH2AX alters chromatin conformation to increase the accessibility of nucleosomal
DNA to the DNase CAD (caspase-activated DNase). In this particular caspase-dependent PCD system, H2AX phosphorylation at Ser139 is mediated by c-Jun NH2-terminal kinase 1 (JNK1), a member of the mitogen-activated protein kinase group.19 In other types of caspase-dependent PCD, H2AX is phosphorylated either by the caspase-3 derived form of mammalian STE20-like kinase 1 (MST1)20 or by the three
major phosphatidylinositol-3-OH kinase-related kinases (PIKKs): ataxia telangiectasia mutated (ATM), ATM- and Rad-3 related (ATR), or DNA-dependent protein kinase (DNAPK).2123 The activation of these PIKKs is apparently cell- and DNA-damage-type specic. Moreover, as H2AX phosphor-ylation is detectable in ATM / and DNA-PK / cells, it seems that there exists a functional redundancy among these PIKKs.14 In sum, along caspase-dependent PCD, histone H2AX can be phosphorylated at Ser139 by MST1, JNK, or PIKKs.
As indicated above, the gH2AX function is a crucial event in AIF-mediated necroptosis in MEFs. However, little is known about the kinases implicated in the generation of gH2AX in this particular mode of PCD. Taking into consideration the absence of caspase-3-mediated MST1 function in necroptosis, the aim of the present paper is to analyze the potential role of JNK or the PIKKs in MNNG-induced caspase-independent necroptosis.
Results
MNNG induces necroptosis, a caspase-independent mode of PCD implicating RIP1. Treatment of MEFs with high doses of the alkylating DNA-damaging agent MNNG results in the induction of a form of programmed necrotic cell death initiated by the DNA-repair protein PARP-1.911 The
biochemical hallmarks of this type of PCD combine necrotic features such as lactate dehydrogenase release, ATP/NAD dissipation, absence of oligonucleosomal DNA degradation, or double Annexin V/PI (propidium iodide)-positive labeling10,24 (Figure 1a), with apoptotic features like calpain, BID, and BAX activation, mitochondrial transmembrane potential (DCm) loss, mitochondrial release of tAIF (the calpain-cleaved form of AIF), cytochrome c, Omi/HtrA2, or Smac/
DIABLO to cytosol, or TUNEL-detectable 30-OH DNA breaks (Figures 1bd).911 Among the proapoptotic proteins released from mitochondria after MNNG treatment, AIF has a central role.10
The caspase independence of this type of PCD was conrmed in caspase-9 and caspase-3 gene knockout MEFs10 and by the use of broad caspase inhibitors (Figure 1e). Additionally, we found that in comparison with RIP/ cells, MNNG-mediated PCD was signicantly inhibited in RIP1 / MEFs. As an internal control for the RIP1 implication in MNNG-induced necroptosis, the use of the inhibitor Nec-1 also blocked this necroptotic form of PCD (Figure 1e). Moreover, by means of a new immunoblot approach, we unveiled that RIP1 is phosphorylated early after MMNG-treatment (Figure 1f). This assessment also revealed that the phosphorylation of RIP1 is maintained overtime after MNNG treatment. Taken together, our previous and present results conrm that treatment of MEFs with MNNG induces AIF and RIP1 mediated caspase-independent necroptosis.
MNNG generates double-strand breaks in DNA and phosphorylation of histone H2AX at Ser139. By producing O-methyl adducts, MNNG generates a severe damage in DNA that provokes the activation of nuclear repair proteins, such as PARP-1.10 Moreover, histone H2AX is activated/phosphorylated after MNNG treatment, providing a mark of DSBs DNA damage: gH2AX. Indeed, a newly developed ow cytometry detection/quantication assay revealed a rapid and time-dependent H2AX phosphorylation on Ser139 (gH2AX) in MNNG-treated cells (Figure 2a). This result was further substantiated by immunouorescence, which detected formation of gH2AX nuclear foci and quantied immunoblotting (Figures 2b and c). This triple analysis conrms that, in MNNG-induced necroptosis, the generation of gH2AX is a rapid and time-dependent process
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Figure 1 Biochemical characteristics of MNNG-induced necroptosis. (a) After the indicated time post MNNG treatment, MEFs were stained with Annexin V-APC and PI, and the frequency of double positive labeling was recorded by ow cytometry and illustrated as a plot. Data are the means of ve independent experimentsS.D. Representative cytouorometric plots are shown. Percentages refer to Annexin V and PI double-positive staining. (b) Cells were treated with MNNG for the indicated times, then labeled with CMXRos, whereas the loss of the mitochondrial membrane potential (DCm) was assessed by ow cytometry and expressed as a plot. Results are the means of six independent experimentsS.D. (c) Cytosolic fractions, recovered after the indicated MNNG-treatment, were blotted for tAIF detection. MNNG-treatment induces time-dependent tAIF release to cytosol. Actin (cytosolic marker) and NDUFA9 (complex I mitochondrial subunit 39) were used to control protein loading and fractionation quality. (d) At the indicated times post MNNG treatment, MEFs were stained for the detection of 30-OH DNA breaks and analyzed by ow cytometry. Data are the means of six independent experimentsS.D. In representative cytouorometric plots, percentages refer to TUNEL-positive cells. (e) Assessment of cell death in RIP/ and RIP / cells pre-incubated or not with the pan-caspase-inhibitor Q-VD.OPh (QVD, 10 mM) or the necroptosis inhibitor Nec-1 (10 mM) before induction of death by MNNG (9 h). Cell death was recorded by Annexin V and PI staining as in a. Results are the means of four independent experimentsS.D. (f) RIP1 immunoblotting detection performed in WT
MEFs untreated or treated with MNNG at different times. Actin was used as a loading control
detected as soon as 5 min after MNNG treatment. Note that the extent of gH2AX generated during this necroptotic process remains unchanged (even at 9 h post MNNG treatment, Figure 2c), contrary to what has been previously reported in other PCD models.25
The conformation of histone H2AX governs AIF-mediated necroptosis. The relevance of H2AX in AIF-
mediated necroptosis has been underlined by the results indicating that H2AX / MEFs were less sensitive to MNNG than control cells.11 In H2AX / MEFs, 9 h after MNNG treatment, the percentage of phosphatidylserine (PS) exposure and loss of viability reached o15%. At the same time,
MNNG induced death in about 50% of H2AX/ (WT) cells (Figures 3a and b). The lower sensitivity to MNNG displayed by H2AX / MEFs correlates with negative TUNEL labeling
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Figure 2 MNNG treatment generates DSBs in DNA and Ser139 histone H2AX phosphorylation. (a) Kinetics of H2AX phosphorylation induced by MNNG in MEFs. Cells were left untreated (control) or treated with MNNG at different times, and H2AX Ser139 phosphorylation was assessed by ow cytometry and expressed as a 3D plot. In the bar chart, gH2AX was quantied by the MFI and expressed as a plot. Data are mean valuesS.D. (n 5). (b) Immunouorescent staining of gH2AX detected in MEFs left
untreated (control) or treated with MNNG at different times and stained with Hoechst 33342 (to visualize nuclei) and a gH2AX-specic antibody. Images are from a representative experiment. Bar: 10 mm. (c) gH2AX immunoblotting detection in total extracts obtained from MEFs untreated or treated with MNNG at different times. Actin was used to assess protein loading. The optical density ratio (OD ratio) illustrates the time course of gH2AX generation after MNNG treatment. Data are the means of four independent experimentsS.D.
(Figure 3c). In contrast, in H2AX / cells, MNNG-treatment provoked mitochondrial damage as well as AIF processing and release (Figures 3d and e) in exactly the same way as in WT cells. This conrmed that the inhibition of PCD recorded in H2AX / MEFs is exclusively linked to the inactivation of the nuclear features characterizing MNNG-mediated necroptosis.12 Finally, by reintroducing H2AX-wt cDNA into H2AX / cells by lentiviral transduction, we conrmed that the inhibition of MNNG-mediated PCD was due to the specic lack of H2AX: H2AX-wt cDNA transduction fully resensitized H2AX / cells to MNNG (Figures 3ac).
H2AX phosphorylation at Ser139 during the necrotic process induced by MNNG is crucial for both the interaction of H2AX with AIF and the formation of the DNA-degrading complex that controls DNA degradation and necroptosis.11,12
Therefore, we focused our interest on the relevance of this
post-translational modication in MNNG-induced PCD. It has been previously reported that phosphorylation of H2AX at Ser139 alters H2AX conformation inside the nucleosome as well as the conformation of the nucleosome itself. These changes in H2AX/nucleosome elicit a modication in the structure and functionality of the chromatin ber, making it accessible to diffusible factors.14,17,26 In line with this, in
MNNG-mediated PCD, transduction of H2AX / MEFs with a H2AX mutant that cannot be phosphorylated (H2AX-S139A, Ser139 mutated to Ala) failed to restore the ability of MNNG to induce PCD in H2AX / MEFs (Figures 3ac). Surprisingly, transduction of H2AX / cells with an H2AX mutant that constitutively mimics the phosphorylated conformation of the protein (H2AX-S139E, with Ser139 mutated to Glu)27 restored the responsiveness to MNNG. Thus, in the phosphorylated conformation (i.e., gH2AX or H2AX-S139E), H2AX is an active
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Figure 3 The phosphorylated conformation of histone H2AX governs MNNG-mediated necroptosis. (a) H2AX/ (WT), H2AX / , and two selected clones of H2AX / MEFs cells transduced with H2AX-wt, H2AX-S139A and H2AX-S139E cDNAs were untreated (control) or treated with MNNG (9 h), labeled with Annexin V and PI, and analyzed by ow cytometry. Representative cytouorometric plots are shown. Percentages of cell death refer to double positive staining. Red squares highlight the high viability recorded in H2AX / and H2AX-S139A transduced MEFs or the loss of cell viability observed in H2AX / MEFs transduced with the H2AX-S139E cDNA after MNNG treatment. (b) Kinetic analysis of PS exposure and cell viability loss induced by MNNG in the cells described in a. After the indicated times, MEFs were stained with Annexin V and PI and the frequency of double positive labeling was recorded in a ow cytometer and expressed as a percentage. Data are the means of seven independent experimentsS.D. The expression level of H2AX in these cells was assessed by immunoblotting. Equal loading was conrmed by Actin assessment. (c) MEFs were untreated (control) or MNNG-treated (9 h), and the presence of 3-OH DNA breaks was assessed by ow cytometry and illustrated as a plot. Data are the means of ve independent experimentsS.D. In cytouorometric plots, percentages correspond to TUNEL-positive cells. (d) MEFs described in a were untreated (control) or MNNG-treated (9 h), labeled with CMXRos, and assessed for DCm by ow cytometry. The frequency of cells with DCm loss was recorded and expressed as a bar chart. Data are the mean of four independent experimentsS.D. (e) Cytosolic fractions recovered from the panel of MEFs used in a under untreated (control) or MNNG-treated (9 h) conditions were probed for tAIF detection. Actin was used to assess protein loading. Panels c, d, and e show the results obtained with H2AX-wt, H2AX-S139A, and H2AX-S139E in clone 1. Similar results were recorded with clone 2
necroptotic protein. On the contrary, in its non-phosphorylated conformation (i.e., H2AX-S139A), H2AX is unable to generate the DNA-degrading activity that provokes necroptosis. As for WT or H2AX / MEFs, MNNG-treatment provokes mitochondrial damage and AIF processing and release in H2AXS139A and H2AX-S139E transduced cells (Figures 3d and e), conrming that the observed modulation of PCD is exclusively linked to the regulation of the nuclear features characterizing this mode of necroptosis.
Simultaneous inhibition of ATM and DNA-PK, not ATR or JNK, abolishes H2AX phosphorylation in MNNG-induced necroptosis. The critical role of the conformational state of gH2AX in caspase-independent necroptosis prompted us to investigate the kinase(s) regulating Ser139 phosphorylation.
Therefore, we used a set of specic small-molecule inhibitors
of ATM, ATR, DNA-PK, or JNK as a rst approach to search for the kinase(s) regulating gH2AX generation. More in detail, we used KU55933 (ATMi), an ATP competitive ATM kinase inhibitor,28 ETP-46464 (ATRi), a very recently described inhibitor of ATR,29 NU-7026 (DNA-PKi), a highly potent DNAPK inhibitor,30 as well as SP-600125 (JNKi), a cell permeable JNK inhibitor.31 All these inhibitors, used at doses described to be selective for the indicated kinase, were veried for efciency in inhibiting the corresponding kinase phosphor-ylation by immunoblot or ow cytometry (Figure 4a). These approaches indicate that contrary to ATM, DNA-PK and JNK, ATR is not specically activated/phosphorylated in our PCD model. Indeed, compared with control cells, ATR appears a bit less phosphorylated after MNNG treatment (Figure 4a). This result correlates with previously published data indicating that PARP-1, a protein highly activated in
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Figure 4 ATM and DNA-PK, but not JNK or ATR, modulate H2AX Ser139 phosphorylation in MNNG-induced necroptosis. (a) Immunoblotting or ow cytometry detection of the phosphorylated forms of ATM (Ser1981), ATR (Ser428), DNA-PK (Ser2053), and JNK (Thr183/Tyr185) obtained from MEFs untreated, treated with MNNG (1 h), or co-incubated with specic inhibitors of ATM (ATMi, 10 mM), ATR (ATRi, 15 nM), DNA-PK (DNA-PKi, 10 mM) or JNK (JNKi, 25 mM) before treatment with MNNG (1 h). See the
Materials and Methods section for further details on these inhibitors. In immunoblots, total ATM or ATR were used as a loading control. (b) Assessment of H2AX Ser139 phosphorylation in MEFs left untreated (control), treated with MNNG (1 h), or co-incubated with the inhibitors described in a before treatment with MNNG (1 h). H2AX Ser139 phosphorylation was monitored by ow cytometry. Representative cytouorometric plots are shown. (c) Kinetic analysis of H2AX Ser139 phosphorylation induced in MEFs treated as in b. After the indicated times, gH2AX was quantied as in Figure 2 and expressed as a plot. Data are the meanS.D. (n 4). (d) gH2AX immunoblotting detection
in total extracts obtained from MEFs untreated, treated with MNNG at different times, or co-incubated with specic inhibitors of ATM (ATMi, 10 mM) and DNA-PK (DNA-PKi, 10 mM) before treatment with MNNG. Actin was used as a loading control. The OD ratio depicted in the graph illustrates the gH2AX inhibition immunodetected in MNNG-treated MEFs co-incubated with the ATM or DNA-PK inhibitors. Data are the means of four independent experimentsS.D.
MNNG-mediated PCD,10 negatively regulates ATR activation/phosphorylation in MEFs.32
As depicted in Figure 2, MNNG-treatment induced detectable H2AX phosphorylation as soon as 5 min with a maximum of 1 h. Thus, we decided to use this timeframe in our analysis of MNNG-induced H2AX phosphorylation. It is important to underline that, in the chosen timeframe, this set of inhibitors did not provoke toxicity in MNNG-treated MEFs. After 1 h of MNNG treatment, a toxic effect precluded any kinetic assessment (data not shown). We rst assessed gH2AX levels by ow cytometry. This procedure revealed that only
ATM and DNA-PK inhibitors modulated MNNG-induced gH2AX generation (Figures 4b and c). On the contrary, the action of the ATR or JNK inhibitors was irrelevant in modulating Ser139-phosphorylated H2AX (Figures 4b andc). These results strongly suggest that only ATM and DNA-PK
activities are implicated in the H2AX post-translational regulation. Interestingly, ATM and DNA-PK inhibitors modulate H2AX phosphorylation in a particular manner: ATMi inhibits H2AX Ser139 phosphorylation at all assessed points in time. Conversely, DNA-PKi displays a delayed modulator effect on gH2AX generation, which was rst detectable only 15 min post MNNG treatment (Figure 4c). In order to substantiate our cytouorometric data further, we carried out a complementary immunoblot assessment. As shown in Figure 4d, the immunodetection of Ser139 phosphorylated H2AX in MEFs pretreated with ATMi or DNA-PKi before MNNG addition conrms that ATM and DNA-PK regulate gH2AX production. The immunoblot quantication corroborates that ATM modulates gH2AX generation overtime and
DNA-PK mediates Ser139-phosphorylated H2AX production at 15, 30, and 60 min post MNNG treatment.
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Figure 5 ATM and DNA-PK phosphorylate at Ser1981 and Ser2053, respectively, to regulate MNNG-induced gH2AX generation. (a) Kinetic assessment of gH2AX in MEFs left untreated (control), treated with MNNG at different times, or co-incubated with the specic inhibitors of ATM (ATMi, 10 mM) and DNA-PK (DNA-PKi, 10 mM) before treatment with MNNG. Representative cytouorometric plots are shown. Relevant gH2AX uorescence intensity was quantied by the MFI and expressed as a plot. Data are the means of four independent experimentsS.D. (b) gH2AX immunoblotting detection in total extracts obtained from MEFs untreated, treated with MNNG at different times, or co-incubated with the inhibitors of ATM (ATMi, 10 mM) and DNA-PK (DNA-PKi, 10 mM) before treatment with MNNG. Actin was used to assess protein loading. The OD ratio in the chart depicts the gH2AX inhibition immunodetected in the presence of the ATM and DNA-PK inhibitors. Data are the meanS.D. (n 5). (c) ATM Ser1981
immunoblotting detection performed in total extracts from MEFs untreated or treated with MNNG at different times. Total ATM immunodetection was used to assess protein loading. The OD ratio in the graph depicts the quantication of the relative amount of ATM Ser1981 immunodetected. Data are the means of ve independent experimentsS.D. (d) Kinetics of the DNA-PK Ser2053 phosphorylation induced by MNNG in MEFs. Cells were left untreated (control) or treated with MNNG at different times, and DNA-PK Ser2053 phosphorylation was assessed by ow cytometry and expressed as a 3D plot. In the bar chart, DNA-PK Ser2053 was quantied by the MFI. Data are the meanS.D. (n 4). (e) MEFs untreated (control), treated with MNNG (9 h), or co-incubated with the inhibitors of ATM (ATMi, 10 mM) and DNA-PK (DNA-PKi, 10 mM)
before treatment with MNNG (9 h) were stained for the detection of 3-OH DNA breaks, analyzed by ow cytometry, and expressed as a plot. Data are the means of four independent experimentsS.D.
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Figure 6 Genetic ablation combined with pharmacological inhibition of ATM and DNA-PK precludes MNNG-induced necroptosis. (a) ATM/, ATM / , DNA-PK/, and DNA-PK / MEFs were left untreated (control), treated with MNNG (1 h), or pre-incubated with specic inhibitors of ATM (ATMi, 10 mM) and DNA-PK (DNA-PKi, 10 mM)
before treatment with MNNG (1 h). H2AX Ser139 phosphorylation was recorded by ow cytometry. Representative cytouorometric plots are shown. (b) Kinetic analysis of gH2AX induced in the panel of MEFs described and treated as in a. After the indicated times, gH2AX was quantied by the MFI and expressed as a plot. Data are mean valuesS.D. (n 4). (c) ATM/, ATM / , DNA-PK/, and DNA-PK / MEFs left untreated (control), treated with MNNG (9 h), or pre-incubated with the indicated
inhibitor before treatment with MNNG (9 h) were stained for the detection of 3-OH DNA breaks and analyzed by ow cytometry. Data in the bar chart are the means of four independent experimentsS.D.
The signicance of ATM and DNA-PK in MNNG-mediated PCD has also been conrmed by co-incubation of cells with inhibitors of these two PIKKs. Flow cytometry and immunoblot data demonstrate that co-incubation of H2AX/ MEFs with ATMi and DNA-PKi abolishes MNNG-induced gH2AX generation (Figures 5a and b). Overall, our data reveal that ATM and DNA-PK, but not ATR or JNK, generate the Ser139-phosphorylated form of H2AX characteristic of MNNG-mediated necroptosis.
By modulating gH2AX generation, ATM and DNA-PK control MNNG-induced necroptosis. To gain insights into the impact of ATM and DNA-PK in MNNG-induced
necroptosis, we analyzed the activation of these two PIKKs in further detail.33,34 We observed that the kinetics of ATM and DNA-PK phosphorylation at Ser1981 and Ser2053 correlated with the chronological involvement of ATM and DNA-PK in MNNG-induced gH2AX generation. ATM was activated early after MNNG treatment, whereas phosphor-ylation of DNA-PK at Ser2053 was detectable only 15 min after DNA-damage induction (Figures 5c and d). Moreover, when pretreated with ATM and DNA-PK inhibitors, WT MEFs exhibited a signicant decrease in TUNEL-detectable 30-OH
DNA breaks (Figure 5e). This indicates that the modulation of ATM and DNA-PK is sufcient not only to block gH2AX generation but also to regulate MNNG-induced necroptosis.
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Figure 7 Representation of MNNG-induced caspase-independent necroptosis. MNNG addition generates double-strand breaks in DNA (1) and subsequent ATM/DNA-PK activation. These two PIKKs participate together in the generation of gH2AX (2). While ATM initiates histone H2AX Ser139 phosphorylation, at later steps DNA-PK seems required to maintain this phosphorylation. The DNA damage provoked in the nucleus activates the repair protein PARP-1 (3), which, through the calpain Cys proteases (4) and the BCL-2 family members BID and BAX (5), leads to the release of the necroptotic effector tAIF (truncated AIF) from the mitochondria to the cytosol (6). Upon transfer to the nucleus, tAIF associates with CypA and gH2AX to generate a DNA-degrading complex (7) that promotes AIF-mediated caspase-independent chromatinolysis (8)
The concomitant involvement of ATM and DNA-PK in MNNG-induced necroptosis was nally corroborated in ATM / or DNA-PK / MEFs treated with inhibitors of the complementary kinase. When treated with the ATM inhibitor, DNA-PK / cells exhibited a signicant decrease in gH2AX generation and MNNG-induced chromatinolysis. Similar results were obtained in ATM / MEFs pretreated with a DNA-PK inhibitor (Figures 6ac). Overall, the results obtained in gene knockout cells prove that ATM and DNA-PK have a central role in AIF-mediated caspase-independent necroptosis.
Discussion
By deciphering the signaling paths leading to the phosphor-ylation of histone H2AX at Ser139, the present work uncovers a new step in the mechanism regulating alkylating DNA-damage-induced necroptosis in MEFs. We indeed identied the PIKKs ATM and DNA-PK as the kinases regulating gH2AX generation in this particular mode of cell death. Combined with our previous work, our present study conrms that MNNG-mediated necroptosis is a highly regulated form of PCD involving a large network of molecular determinants: DNA-damage repair proteins, (PARP-1 and H2AX), kinases (RIP1, ATM, and DNA-PK), proteases (calpains), anti- and proapoptotic members of the Bcl-2 family (BID, BAX, and BCL-2), mitochondrial effectors (AIF), and DNases (CypA). So far, the involvement of all these proteins can be considered as the
new signature for alkylating DNA-damage-induced caspase-independent necroptosis (Figure 7).
AIF is a main effector in the caspase-independent necroptotic process induced by the treatment of MEFs with high doses of the nitrosourea MNNG.10 Recently, we have demonstrated that AIF promotes MNNG-mediated necroptosis via a nuclear interplay with the Ser139 phosphorylated form of histone H2AX (gH2AX).11 Indeed, this interaction is crucial in the formation of the chromatinolytic complex that regulates necroptosis. Therefore, as AIF, gH2AX is an essential molecular determinant in MNNG-mediated necroptosis.
Initially described as inert packing material for DNA, histones regulate many cellular processes, such as gene expression, cell cycle, cell proliferation, and PCD.35 The
chromatinolytic process promoted by gH2AX is a common feature in caspase-dependent and caspase-independent
PCD.11,12,16,18,19,36 The involvement of gH2AX in PCD
presents specic characteristics for these two different forms of cell death: (i) gH2AX determines the nature of the DNA degradation by regulating the accessibility of different DNases to DNA (CAD for the oligonucleosomal fragmentation associated to caspase-dependent PCD and CypA for the large-scale DNA degradation involved in caspase-independent PCD),11,12,19 and (ii) JNK1 phosphorylates H2AX at Ser139
in UV-induced caspase-dependent PCD.19 On the contrary, caspase-independent PCD does not require JNK for gH2AX generation (this work). Overall, all these data indicate that the same protein (H2AX) and the same post-transductional
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modication (Ser139 phosphorylation) regulate different PCD pathways. This strengthens the idea that caspase-dependent and caspase-independent PCD represent alternate outcomes of a similar molecular path in which H2AX functions as a molecular switch.
A signicant part of our study focuses on the relevance and consequences of the phosphorylation of H2AX on the serine 139 residue in AIF-mediated necroptosis. We rst conrmed the crucial role of such phosphorylation by using a non-phosphorylatable mutant of H2AX (H2AX-S139A). However, the function of that specic post-translational modication in necroptosis still remained unexplained: it could have been either related to the recruitment of specic factors through the phosphate recognition or related to conformational changes of the nucleosome and the chromatin in general. To investigate this particular question, we used another H2AX mutant, H2AX-S139E. It has been proved that the substitution of serine in glutamate precludes phosphorylation at Ser139, but constitutively mimics the serine-phosphate structure. This mutant of H2AX has been associated with a relaxed chromatin conformation,37 but also with an impairment of the proper maintenance of the DNA repair machinery.27 In our model, the introduction of that phospho-mimetic mutant fully restored AIF-dependent DNA degradation and necroptosis. This conrms that AIF-mediated necroptosis requires conformational gH2AX-associated mechanisms. In this light: (i) the conformational changes caused by Ser139
H2AX phosphorylation could favor the exposure of the H2AX interface interacting with AIF. This would allow for AIF/H2AX interplay and the formation of the AIF/H2AX/CypA complex that provokes chromatinolysis and necroptosis;11,12 (ii) In
its Ser139 phosphorylated form, H2AX helps in relaxing chromatin and in maintaining its decondensed state.38
Therefore, it seems plausible to propose that, by exposing key amino acids and by facilitating the accessibility of proteins such as AIF and CypA to DNA, the conformational modications associated to gH2AX generation can modulate the chromatinolytic process controlling MNNG-induced necroptosis.
Our genetic and pharmacological approaches reveal that the PIKKs ATM and DNA-PK, and not other PIKKs such as ATR, regulate Ser139 H2AX phosphorylation in MNNG-induced necroptosis. We also noticed that ATM and DNAPK act in necroptosis in a chronologically complementary manner. Indeed, ATM regulates Ser139 H2AX phosphorylation early after the DNA insult triggering necroptosis, while DNA-PK contributes further to H2AX phosphorylation (Figures 4c and d). In any case, joint action of ATM and DNA-PK is needed to generate the phosphorylated form of H2AX that controls necroptosis. This was initially revealed by a pharmacological approach: the combined action of ATM and DNA-PK inhibitors precludes gH2AX generation and PCD more efciently than the single addition of either ATM or DNA
PK inhibitors. The coupled action of ATM and DNA-PK is further substantiated with the help of gene knockout MEFs: (i) in DNA-PK / cells, ATM inhibition prevents the gH2AX generation observed after MNNG addition and, consequently, blocks AIF-mediated chromatinolysis; (ii) in ATM / cells, DNA-PK inhibition abolishes both gH2AX generation and
PCD. Therefore, it seems that the combined action of
DNA-PK and ATM is required for the optimal control of alkylating DNA-damage-mediated necroptosis.
How ATM and DNA-PK are activated in MNNG-mediated necroptosis is a key question for further studies. Data obtained in other biological systems indicate that recruitment to the damage site is important for ATM activation in response to DNA damage. Controversy remains, however, regarding where the initial activation of ATM occurs in response to DSBs damage. It seems that the changes of chromatin structure initiate ATM activation.39 In our paradigm, it may be interesting to analyze whether the changes in chromatin structure provoked by the treatment of MEFs with the nitrosourea MNNG may directly activate ATM or whether even PARP-1 may directly activate ATM, as has been suggested in other PCD programs.40 In the case of DNA
PK, its function and activation seem related to Ku70/80-dependent localization.39 Ku70/80 forms a complex with high afnity for DNA ends. Binding of Ku70/80 to DNA ends provides a scaffold for the association of DNA-PK. The analysis of the role of the Ku70/80 complex in necroptosis could therefore highlight the upstream signaling behind DNAPK activation.
Post-translational modications of proteins are considered as crucial changes in the regulation of the different cell signaling pathways. Histones, including but not limited to H2AX, are highly regulated by post-translational modications, such as acetylation, methylation, ubiquitination, sumoylation, ADP-ribosylation, and phosphorylation.35 Altogether, these modications help in regulating chromatin remodeling, gene transcription, DNA repair, and PCD. Indeed, experimental evidence underpins the hypothesis of the existence of an apoptotic histone code relying on H2A-ub or H2B phosphorylated on Ser14. Our results on caspase-independent necroptosis reported here now raise the question of whether there also exists a necroptotic histone code. That code would be different from the apoptotic histone one, although both would imply post-translational histone modications. A better knowledge of these codes and underlying mechanisms would certainly provide conceptual advances both in the understanding of the biology of programmed cell death and in the research of potential therapeutic targets to modulate necroptosis.
Materials and MethodsCell culture, cell death induction and inhibition. MEFs were cultured in Dulbeccos modied Eagles medium supplemented with 10% fetal calf serum (FCS), 2 mM L-glutamine, and 100 U/ml penicillin/streptomycin (Life Technologies, Cergy-Pontoise, France), and maintained at 37 1C in a 5% CO2 atmosphere.
RIP1/ and RIP1 / cells were provided by MA Kelliher (UMass Medical School, Worcester, CA, USA), H2AX/ and H2AX / MEFs by A Nussenzweig (NIH, NCI, Bethesda, MD, USA), DNA-PK/ and DNA-PK / by DJ Chen (University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX, USA), and ATM/ and ATM / by C Sherr and M Russel (St Jude Childrens Research Hospital, Memphis, TN, USA). Unless otherwise stated, WT cells refer to H2AX/ MEFs.
To induce alkylating DNA-damage-mediated necroptosis, MEFs were treated with MNNG (500 mM, ABCR GmbH, Karlsruhe, Germany). The treating medium was replaced after 20 min of incubation by fresh medium devoid of MNNG, and cells (B80% conuence) were cultured during the indicated times. To modulate necroptosis and caspase-dependent PCD, cells were pre-incubated (1 h) with Nec-1 (10 mM), Q-VD.OPh (Gln-Val-Asp(non-Omethylated)-Oph) (QVD, 10 mM, MP
Biomedicals, Illkirch, France) before MNNG-treatment.
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Flow cytometry. We used Annexin V-APC (0.1 mg/ml, BD Biosciences, Le Pontde-Claix, France) for the assessment of PS exposure, PI (0.5 mg/ml) for cell viability analysis, and MitoTracker Red (CMXRos, 20 nM, Life Technologies) for DCm quantication. Cell death was recorded in a FACSCanto II (BD Biosciences) in the total population (10 000 cells). Data, including the assessment of mean uorescence intensity (MFI), were analyzed using FlowJo software (TreeStar, Ashland, OR, USA).
3-OH DNA breaks (TUNEL) detection. Detection of blunt double-stranded fragments carrying a 50-phosphate and 30-hydroxyl group was carried out as previously described.10
cH2AX immunouorescent detection. For immunouorescent assessment, MEFs were xed in 1% paraformaldehyde , permeabilized with methanol/ acetone (1 : 1 v/v, 10 min), incubated with an anti-gH2AX (clone JBW301,
Millipore, Molsheim, France), and detected by anti-mouse IgG conjugated with Alexa Fluor 488 (Life Technologies). Fluorescence was observed in a Nikon Eclipse TE2000-U microscope and analyzed using the Nikon NIS-Elements BR software. To visualize nuclei, cells were co-stained with Hoechst 33342.
cH2AX pharmacological modulation. Before MNNG-treatment, MEFs were pre-incubated during 30 min with the following small-molecule inhibitors: 2-(4-morpholinyl)-6-(1-thianthrenyl?)-4H-pyran-4-one (KU-55933, ATMi, 10 mM), ethyl 6-bromo-4-chloroquinoline-3-carboxylate (ETP-46464, ATRi, 15 nM), 2-(4-morpholinyl)-4H-naphthol(1,2-b )pyran-4-one (NU-7026, DNA-PKi, 10 mM), or anthra(1,9-cd)pyrazol-6(2H)one, 1,9-pyrazoloanthrone (SP-600125, JNKi, 25 mM).
KU-55933, NU-7026, and SP-600125 were from Calbiochem (San Diego, CA, USA). ETP-46464 was kindly provided by Dr. O Fernandez-Capetillo (CNIO, Madrid).
cH2AX, DNA-PK Ser2053 and JNK Thr183/Tyr185 ow cytometry assessment. At different times after MNNG treatment, 5 105 cells were
xed in 70% ethanol (4 1C, 2 h) and permeabilized in 0.3% Triton X-100 (10 min, RT). After centrifugation (1500 g, 15 min), cells were saturated in phosphate-buffered saline 0.1% Triton X-100 10% FCS (30 min, RT), incubated 1 h with anti-gH2AX, anti-DNA-PK-Ser2053 (Abcam, Paris, France) or anti-JNK-Thr183/Tyr185 (clone G9, Cell Signaling, Danvers, MA, USA), and detected by an anti-mouse or anti-rabbit IgG conjugated with Alexa Fluor 488 or 647. Data were recorded in a FACSCanto II in total cell population. gH2AX and DNA-PK-Ser2053 were quantied by the MFI of each sample and were expressed relative to the MFI obtained in untreated cells ( 1.0).
Protein extraction, cell fractionation, and immunoblotting. 2 106
cells were washed twice with ice-cold phosphate-buffered saline containing 5 mM Na-orthovanadate and 50 mM sodium uoride. Total protein extraction was performed by sonication in buffer containing 10 mM HEPES (pH 7.5), 5 mM KCl,2.5 mM EDTA, 0.5 mM DTT, 2.5 mM PMSF, 5 mM iodoacetamide and 0.5% Nonidet P-40. Histones were puried after lysis of 1 106 cells in NETN buffer (150 mM
NaCl, 1 mM EDTA, 20 mM Tris (pH 8) and 0.5% Nonidet P-40), centrifuged (16 000 g, 5 min, 4 1C) followed by resuspension of the pellet in acidic solution (0.1 M
HCl).19
For cytosolic extracts, MEFs were resuspended in buffer containing 220 mM mannitol, 70 mM sucrose, 50 mM Hepes-KOH (pH 7.2), 10 mM KCl, 5 mM EGTA, 2 mM MgCl2, and 0.025% digitonin, and kept on ice for 5 min. Lysed cells were centrifuged (16 000 g, 5 min, 4 1C) and the supernatant was retained as cytosolic fraction. Protein concentration was determined using the BioRad Protein Assay.
Equal amounts of total proteins (40 to 150 mg) were loaded on linear SDS-PAGE gels and transferred onto a nitrocellulose membrane. Membrane blocking and antibody incubations were performed in phosphate-buffered saline 0.1% Tween 20 plus 5% non-fat dry milk.
Membranes were probed with primary antibodies against H2AX, gH2AX (Millipore), RIP1/phospho RIP1 (BD Biosciences, clone 38/RIP), ATM (clone 2C1,
GeneTex, Irvine, CA, USA), ATM-Ser1981 (this Ab also recognizes Ser1987 in mouse, clone 10H11.E12, Rockland, Gilbertsville, PA, USA), ATR, ATR-Ser428 (Cell Signaling), AIF, mitochondrial complex I NDUFA9 (Life Technologies, clone 20C11), and b-actin (clone AC-15). Immunoreactive proteins were detected using
HRP-conjugated secondary antibodies and revealed by the ECL system. Immunoblot images were acquired in a Bio-Imaging System MF-ChemiBis 4.2 (DNR Bio-Imaging Systems, Jerusalem, Israel) or in a Kodak X-OMAT 1000 processor (Kodak, Chalon-sur-Saone, France).
gH2AX and ATM-Ser1981 were quantied using the Multi Gauge 3.0 software (Fujilm Life Sciences, Bois dArcy, France). The optical density was normalized according to an endogenous background and was expressed relative to the data obtained in untreated cells ( 1.0).
Vectors and lentiviral transduction. H2AX-wt, H2AX-S139A, and H2AX-S139E cDNAs were cloned into the pLVX-IRES-Zs-Green lentiviral vector (Clontech-Takara Bio Europe, Saint-Germain-en-Laye, France). Viruses were produced into 293T cells by CaCl2 transient transfection of the lentiviral constructs and the packaging plasmids pMD2.G and psPAX-2 (Addgene plasmids 12259 and 12260, respectively). Forty-eight hours after transfection, lentiviral supernatants were harvested, claried by ltration, and used immediately for H2AX / MEFs
transduction with 4 mg/ml of polybrene. Seventy-two hours after transduction, cells were diluted for immunoblot selection of individual clones. Clones with similar
H2AX levels to H2AX/ MEFs were selected, expanded, and analyzed.Unless specied, chemicals and reagents were from Sigma-Aldrich.
Conict of InterestThe authors declare no conict of interest.
Acknowledgements. We are grateful to Drs. A Nussenzweig, DJ Chen, CJ Sherr, M Russel, and MA Kelliher for immortalized MEFs, NV Tomilin (Institute of Cytology, St. Petersburg) for H2AX, H2AXS139A, and H2AXS139E cDNAs, O Fernandez-Capetillo and M Murga (CNIO, Madrid) for the ATR inhibitor ETP-46464, and S Krantic and M Segade for critical reading of the paper. This work was supported by Agence Nationale de la Recherche (contract ANR-09-BLAN-0247), Ligue Contre le Cancer (Comits de Paris et du Val dOise), Fondation ARC (contract 5104), Association Laurette Fugain, and Fondation de France (to SA Susin). M Baritaud and L Cabon receive PhD fellowships from Ministre de lEnseignement Suprieur et de la Recherche and Ecole Normale Suprieure-Cachan, respectively.
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Copyright Nature Publishing Group Sep 2012
Abstract
The alkylating DNA-damage agent N-methyl-N[variant prime]-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine (MNNG) induces a form of caspase-independent necroptosis implicating the mitochondrial flavoprotein apoptosis-inducing factor (AIF). Following the activation of PARP-1 (poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase-1), calpains, BID (BH3 interacting domain death agonist), and BAX (Bcl-2-associated X protein), the apoptogenic form of AIF (tAIF) is translocated to the nucleus where, associated with Ser139-phosphorylated histone H2AX (γH2AX), it creates a DNA-degrading complex that provokes chromatinolysis and cell death by necroptosis. The generation of γH2AX is crucial for this form of cell death, as mutation of H2AX Ser139 to Ala or genetic ablation of H2AX abolish both chromatinolysis and necroptosis. On the contrary, reintroduction of H2AX-wt or the phosphomimetic H2AX mutant (H2AX-S139E) into H2AX -/- cells resensitizes to MNNG-triggered necroptosis. Employing a pharmacological approach and gene knockout cells, we also demonstrate in this paper that the phosphatidylinositol-3-OH kinase-related kinases (PIKKs) ATM (ataxia telangiectasia mutated) and DNA-dependent protein kinase (DNA-PK) mediate γH2AX generation and, consequently, MNNG-induced necroptosis. By contrast, H2AX phosphorylation is not regulated by ATR or other H2AX-related kinases, such as JNK. Interestingly, ATM and DNA-PK phosphorylate H2AX at Ser139 in a synergistic manner with different kinetics of activation. Early after MNNG treatment, ATM generates γH2AX. Further, DNA-PK contributes to H2AX Ser139 phosphorylation. In revealing the pivotal role of PIKKs in MNNG-induced cell death, our data uncover a milestone in the mechanisms regulating AIF-mediated caspase-independent necroptosis.
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