Phenotypic anchoring of arsenic and cadmium toxicity in three hepatic-related cell systems reveals compound- and cell-specific selective up-regulation of stress protein expression: Implications for fingerprint profiling of cytotoxicity

被引:18
作者
Gottschalg, Elke
Moore, Nicholas E.
Ryan, Abigail K.
Travis, Lucy C.
Waller, Ruth C.
Pratt, Steven
Atmaca, Mukadder
Kind, Clive N.
Fry, Jeffrey R.
机构
[1] Queens Med Ctr, Sch Biomed Sci, Sch Med, Nottingham NG7 2UH, England
[2] Univ Dicle, Fac Med, Dept Physiol, Diyarbakir, Turkey
[3] AstraZeneca, R&D Charnwood, Safety Assessment, Loughborough LE11 5RH, Leics, England
关键词
cytotoxicity; stress proteins; metallothionein; heat shock proteins; cadmium; arsenic; phenotypic anchoring; FGC4; cells; rat hepatocytes; HepG2;
D O I
10.1016/j.cbi.2006.04.003
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Exposure of cells to toxic chemicals is known to up-regulate the expression of a number of stress proteins (SPs), including metallothionein (MT) and members of the heat shock protein (HSP) family, and this response may allow the development of a fingerprint profile to identify mechanisms of toxicity in an in vitro toxicology setting. To test this hypothesis, three hepatic-derived cell culture systems (rat hepatoma FGC4 cell line, rat hepatocytes, human hepatoma HepG2 cell line) were exposed to cadmium (as CdCl2) and arsenic (as NaASO(2)), two compounds believed to exert their toxicity through an oxidative stress mechanism, under conditions of phenotypic anchoring defined as minimal and mild toxicity (approximately 5 and 25% reduction in neutral red uptake, respectively). The expression of six SPs - MT, HSP25/27, HSP40, HSP60, HSP70, and HSP90 - was then determined by ELISA. Expression of four of these SPs - MT, HSP25/27, HSP40 and HSP70 - was up-regulated in at least one experimental condition. However, the patterns of expression of these four SPs varied across the experimental conditions, according to differences in toxicant concentration and/or level of toxicity, cell-type and toxicant itself. This lack of uniformity in response of a focussed set of mechanistically defensible targets suggests that similar problems may emerge when using more global approaches based on genomics and proteomics, in which problems of redundancy in targets and uncertain mechanistic relevance will be greater. (c) 2006 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:251 / 261
页数:11
相关论文
共 34 条
[1]   Genomic and proteomic profiling of responses to toxic metals in human lung cells [J].
Andrew, AS ;
Warren, AJ ;
Barchowsky, A ;
Temple, KA ;
Klei, L ;
Soucy, NV ;
O'Hara, KA ;
Hamilton, JW .
ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH PERSPECTIVES, 2003, 111 (06) :825-838
[2]   PRODUCTION OF METALLOTHIONEIN AND HEAT-SHOCK PROTEINS IN RESPONSE TO METALS [J].
BAUMAN, JW ;
LIU, J ;
KLAASSEN, CD .
FUNDAMENTAL AND APPLIED TOXICOLOGY, 1993, 21 (01) :15-22
[3]   Metallothionein overexpression and resistance to toxic stress [J].
Beattie, JH ;
Owen, HLH ;
Wallace, SM ;
Arthur, JR ;
Kwun, IS ;
Hawksworth, GM ;
Wallace, HM .
TOXICOLOGY LETTERS, 2005, 157 (01) :69-78
[4]   Hsp27, Hsp70, and metallothionein in MDCK and LLC-PK1 renal epithelial cells: effects of prolonged exposure to cadmium [J].
Bonham, RT ;
Fine, MR ;
Pollock, FM ;
Shelden, EA .
TOXICOLOGY AND APPLIED PHARMACOLOGY, 2003, 191 (01) :63-73
[5]  
BRADFORD MM, 1976, ANAL BIOCHEM, V72, P248, DOI 10.1016/0003-2697(76)90527-3
[6]   Stress proteins induced by arsenic [J].
Del Razo, LM ;
Quintanilla-Vega, B ;
Brambila-Colombres, E ;
Calderón-Aranda, ES ;
Manno, M ;
Albores, A .
TOXICOLOGY AND APPLIED PHARMACOLOGY, 2001, 177 (02) :132-148
[7]   A method to improve selection of molecular targets by circumventing the ADME pharmacokinetic system utilizing PharmArray DNA microarrays [J].
Dooley, TP ;
Curto, EV ;
Reddy, SP ;
Davis, RL ;
Lambert, G ;
Wilborn, TW .
BIOCHEMICAL AND BIOPHYSICAL RESEARCH COMMUNICATIONS, 2003, 303 (03) :828-841
[8]   Techniques: Application of systems biology to absorption, distribution, metabolism, excretion and toxicity [J].
Ekins, S ;
Nikolsky, Y ;
Nikolskaya, T .
TRENDS IN PHARMACOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 2005, 26 (04) :202-209
[9]   Heat-shock proteins, molecular chaperones, and the stress response: Evolutionary and ecological physiology [J].
Feder, ME ;
Hofmann, GE .
ANNUAL REVIEW OF PHYSIOLOGY, 1999, 61 :243-282
[10]   On the path to the heat shock response: Destabilization and formation of partially folded protein intermediates, a consequence of protein thiol modification [J].
Freeman, ML ;
Borrelli, MJ ;
Meredith, MJ ;
Lepock, JR .
FREE RADICAL BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE, 1999, 26 (5-6) :737-745