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RECEPTORS AND SIGNAL TRANSDUCTION
Department of Physiology and Biophysics, Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, Cleveland, Ohio
Submitted 27 March 2008 ; accepted in final form 20 May 2008
| ABSTRACT |
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Rho GTPase; astrocyte; hemichannel
In the brain, ATP can be released by astrocytes, or by other glial cell types, in response to diverse metabolic, mechanical, or inflammatory stimuli (8, 9). Extracellular ATP can target glia and neurons, as well as the smooth muscle cells and endothelial cells that populate cerebrovascular interfaces (1, 21, 32). Although purinergic signaling is an important element of the communication network between astrocytes and surrounding cells, the signaling events upstream of ATP release, as well as the actual conduits or pathways for the export of ATP, have not been clearly established. Studies of regulated ATP release in different astrocyte models have implicated either channel-mediated efflux of cytosolic ATP or exocytosis of vesicles/organelles containing compartmentalized ATP as predominant pathways for the export of intracellular ATP pools. Support for exocytotic models of ATP release has largely been predicated on the inhibitory actions of various reagents, such as brefeldin A, tetanus toxins, or dominant-negative soluble N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive-factor attachment receptor (SNARE) proteins that target particular steps in the standard Golgi
transport vesicle
vesicle/plasma membrane fusion trafficking pathways, as reviewed in Ref. 19. Secretory lysosomes have been recently proposed as a source of releasable ATP from astrocytes based on the ability of glycylphenylalanine 2-napthylamide (GPN), a substrate for lysosomal cathepsin C, to coordinately collapse lysosome integrity and repress the ATP release stimulated by metabolic stress or glutamate receptor activation (63). Studies of conductive pathways have predominantly focused on nonjunctional "gap-junction hemichannels" composed of connexin or pannexin subunits that may act as conduits for stimulated ATP efflux from astrocytes (57) and other cell types (20, 22, 23, 40, 41, 64). Support for this mode of ATP release has been based in part on the inhibitory actions of pharmacological agents, such as glycerrhetinic acid or carbenoxolone (CBX), known to target gap-junction channels. Although CBX was first characterized as an inhibitor of 11-β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase, it has also been used extensively to inhibit the activity of intercellular gap-junction channels and gap-junction hemichannels (18).
Regardless of whether channel-mediated efflux or vesicle exocytosis comprises the predominant ATP release mechanism, most (14, 15, 17, 33, 43, 44, 50, 63), but not all (62), studies have identified elevation of cytosolic Ca2+ as an important regulator of nucleotide export in the different astrocyte model systems. In this regard, we have previously reported that elevated cytosolic Ca2+ plays a critical role in the ATP release elicited by stimulation of protease-activated receptor 1 (PAR1) or M3-muscarinic (M3R) GPCR in the 1321N1 human astrocytoma cell line. PAR1 stimulation-induced ATP release was consistently approximately fourfold higher than that induced by M3R stimulation despite equivalent Ca2+ mobilization responses to either receptor. Experiments with BAPTA-loaded cells revealed that M3R-induced ATP release was entirely dependent on elevation of cytosolic Ca2+, whereas the PAR1-triggered ATP accumulation involved an additional Ca2+-independent component (33). Brown and colleagues (3, 39, 49) have demonstrated that while PAR1 and M3R both activate Gq in 1321N1 cells, only PAR1 additionally couples to G12/13 to regulate Rho signaling. Rho activation and other changes in cytoskeletal organization have been implicated in the activation or modulation of ATP release in other model systems (16, 25, 28, 37). Therefore, we hypothesized that Rho activation and subsequent Rho kinase (ROCK) signaling may synergize with Ca2+ mobilization to increase GPCR-dependent ATP release. We used Clostridium difficile Toxin B (ToxB) and Clostridium botulinum Toxin C3 (C3) to demonstrate that Rho family GTPases potentiate Ca2+-dependent ATP release from 1321N1 human astrocytoma cells via a ROCK-independent signaling pathway. Experiments with brefeldin-treated cells suggest that this Rho-sensitive pathway may involve, in part, the mobilization of Golgi-derived, ATP-containing secretory vesicles. We also observed that CBX suppresses GPCR-stimulated ATP release in the absence of any obvious changes in membrane permeability indicative of hemichannel gating.
| METHODS |
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-methylene ATP (β
-meATP), and lyophilized firefly luciferase ATP assay mix (FL-AAM, LUC) containing luciferase, luciferin, MgSO4, dithiothreitol, EDTA, bovine serum albumin (BSA), and Tricine buffer were from Sigma-Aldrich. Thrombin receptor activating peptide (SFLLRD-TRAP) was synthesized by SynPep. The cytosolic [Ca2+]-buffering agent BAPTA-AM was obtained from Molecular Probes. Wild-type 1321N1 human astrocytoma cells were obtained from Drs. Ken Harden and Jose Boyer (University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill). Purified ToxB was obtained from the Tech Laboratory diagnostic test kit. C3 exoenzyme, the RhoA-"G-LISA" kit, and F-Actin Visualization kit were from Cytoskeleton. A cDNA construct of the fusion protein glutathione S-transferase-rhotekin Rho-binding domain (GST-TRBD) was kindly provided by Dr. Martin Schwartz (University of Virginia). Rabbit polyclonal antibody to RhoA (sc-119) was obtained from Santa Cruz. Cell culture. 1321N1 human astrocytes were maintained in Dulbecco's minimal essential medium (DMEM) containing 10% iron-supplemented bovine calf serum (Hyclone), penicillin (100 U/ml), and streptomycin (100 µg/ml). For all luciferase-based and Rho activation experiments, 1321N1 cells were seeded on 35-mm dishes (Falcon) at 3 x 105 cells per dish, or cells were seeded on 24-well plates at a density of 4 x 104 cells per well. All experiments were conducted using confluent cell monolayers cultured for 5 to 7 days postplating followed by serum starvation for 16 to 24 h before analysis of ATP release. Serum-free DMEM contained 0.1% BSA, penicillin (100 U/ml), and streptomycin (100 µg/ml).
Clostridial toxin loading. Confluent 1321N1 cell monolayers were treated with a 1:50 dilution of purified ToxB (TechLab) for 3 h at 37°C until significant (>95%) cell rounding was observed (see Fig. 2B). Alternatively, cell monolayers were treated with 2 µg/ml of cell-permeant C3 exoenzyme for 6 h, which did not cause cell rounding (see Fig. 2C).
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45 min before being treated with 3 µM TRAP, 100 µM carbachol, or 10 µM LPA for 2 min. The BSS was aspirated, and the cells were lysed and scraped on ice in 1 ml of MLB (plus protease inhibitors). The lysates were then clarified at 14,000 rpm for 5 min at 4°C. Untreated control samples were separated into 2 x 0.5 ml aliquots on ice. For the GTP
S control, one of these aliquots was treated with 10 µl of 0.5 mM EDTA to chelate Mg2+ ions. After addition of 10 µM GTP
S, this lysate sample was subsequently incubated at room temperature for 30 min. The reaction was stopped by addition of 32 µl of 1.0 M MgCl2, and the GTP-loading control was run to verify pull down of activated RhoA (data not shown). Along with this positive control, the rest of the samples were aliquoted in 0.5 ml cleared lysate/tube. To each sample
30 µg of freshly thawed GST-TRBD-bead slurry was added, and the reaction mixtures were rotated for 45 min at 4°C. The beads were washed three times with 0.5 ml MLB, and the slurries were resuspended in 40 µl 2 x Laemmli buffer, boiled for 5 min, and then treated with 2 µl of 1.0 M DTT (to ensure dissociation of bound Rho-GTP from the GSH-beads). Standard Western blot analysis techniques were then used to probe for activated RhoA using 1:200 rabbit polyclonal anti-RhoA antibody (Santa Cruz). This antibody also recognizes RhoB in loading controls (whole cell lysates), but only RhoA binds to the Rhotekin protein. ELISA-based RhoA activation assay. RhoA activity was determined in whole cell lysates prepared from monolayers of 1321N1 cells using the absorbance based G-LISA RhoA activation assay kit (Cytoskeleton) according to the manufacturer's instructions. After 2 min of stimulation with 2 U/ml thrombin, cells were lysed using the supplied cell lysis buffer. Lysates were clarified by centrifugation at 10,000 rpm at 4°C for 2 min. One portion of the lysate was used for quantification of protein concentration and the other portion was used for Rho G-LISA assay. The lysate used in the Rho G-LISA assay was snap frozen in liquid nitrogen as soon as possible after cell lysis to prevent GTP hydrolysis by the extracted Rho. After protein quantification, the frozen aliquots of cell lysate were rapidly thawed, and 0.75 mg/ml protein was used in each well of the supplied 96-well plate. All subsequent incubation and detection followed the instructions provided by the manufacturer.
Measurement and buffering of cytosolic Ca2+.
Receptor-triggered elevations in cytosolic [Ca2+] were assayed using fura 2 fluoresecence measurements as previously described (33). Briefly, serum-starved 1321N1 cell monolayers on 10-cm plates were trypsinized and resuspended in BSS and loaded with 1 µM fura2-AM at room temperature (20°C) for 1 h. The washed cells were then assayed for fura 2 fluorescence (339-nm excitation and 500-nm emission) in the presence of 300 µM β
-meATP, 3 µM TRAP, 100 µM carbachol, or 10 µM LPA. The role of cytosolic [Ca2+] in stimulated ATP release was studied using 1321N1 cell monolayers loaded with the cell-permeable Ca2+ chelator 1,2-bis (2-aminophenoxy)ethane-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid tetrakis acetoxymethyl ester (BAPTA-AM) as previously described (33).
On-line luciferase-based ATP assay.
Serum-starved 1321N1 astrocytes were prepared for ATP release assays as described previously (33, 34). Briefly, serum-starved 1321N1 cell monolayers were washed twice and bathed in 1 ml BSS. The washed monolayers were then incubated for
45 min at room temperature before experimental manipulation. Soluble FL-AAM (Sigma) was reconstituted with 5 ml of sterile filtered water and stored in frozen 500-µl aliquots. For experiments, aliquots of FLAAM were thawed at room temperature and diluted 1:25 (40 µl) into the 35-mm dishes before start of luminescence recordings. All extracellular ATP measurements were recorded using a Turner Designs (TD 20/20) luminometer that accommodates 35-mm culture dishes. ATP-dependent changes in extracellular luciferase activity were measured as relative luminescence unit (RLU) values integrated over 5-s photon counting periods. For all experiments, the luciferase activity was recorded every 2-min for up to 30 min. Calibration curves were generated for each experiment using cell-free dishes pulsed with increasing concentrations of ATP standards. The limit of ATP detection was 100 fmol per 1 ml assay volume and luminescence was linear with increasing ATP concentration up to 1,000 nM. After luciferase activity reached steady state, 1321N1 monolayers were treated for up to 15 min with 2 U/ml of thrombin, 3 µM of SFLLRD-TRAP, 100 µM carbachol, or 10 µM LPA. The ecto-ATPase inhibitor β
-meATP (300 µM) was added either simultaneously with agonist or 15 min before agonist addition. Luciferase activity was recorded every 2 min during the stimulation period, and every addition to the 1-ml ATP assay volumes was made using 100- to 1,000-fold concentrated stocks of the various test reagents. At the end of each experiment, cell monolayers were permeabilized using digitonin (50 µg/ml), and the peak concentrations of digitonin-releasable ATP were averaged in matched dishes.
Off-line luciferase-based ATP assay.
Serum-starved 1321N1 cell monolayers in 24-well plates were washed twice and bathed in a final assay volume of 300 µl basal saline solution (BSS) for
60 min at room temperature before experimental manipulation. All subsequent additions to the sample resulted in less than 1% total change in volume. After addition of agonist, cells were incubated at room temperature for 15 min. Samples of extracellular media (50 µl) were carefully removed at designated times and boiled immediately for 5 min. After a brief (2 min, 1,000 g) centrifugation step to clarify the samples, ATP content was quantified using a Turner Designs (TD 20/20) luminometer. For all measurements, 25 µl of sample was added to a mix of 4 µl of FLAAM and 71 µl of BSS. The final volume was 100 µl with a 1:25 dilution of FLAAM. The solution was added to a 12 mm x 50 mm disposable plastic cuvette (Promega, Madison WI), and RLU values were integrated over 5-s photon counting periods.
Ethidium influx as assay of hemichannel activity. Effects of PAR1 activation on hemichannel activity was assayed using ethidium dye influx as described previously (31). Briefly, trypsinized, suspended 1321N1 cells were assayed in a stirred cuvette at 37°C at a concentration of 5 x 105 cells/ml. Ethidium bromide (20 µM) was added and fluorescence was measured at 360 nm excitation/575 nm emission before and after stimulation with thrombin (2 U/ml); experiments were terminated by addition of digitonin (50 µg/ml) to permeabilize the cells to permit maximum binding of ethidium to cellular nucleic acids.
Data evaluation. Relative luminescence unit (RLU) recordings were downloaded into Microsoft Excel using the Turner Designs spreadsheet interface software (version 2.0.1, Sunnyvale, CA). RLU values were converted to ATP concentrations using calibration curves generated with each experiment. OD490 absorbance values of GTP-bound RhoA were recorded using a (Molecular devices) SpectraMax 340 96-well plate reader. Measured values were normalized to untreated control cells. (GraphPad) Prism 3.0 software was used to compute the means and SE as well as generate graphs of the calculated ATP levels and relative GTP-bound RhoA from identical, independent experiments. Some figures were also generated using Adobe Illustrator 7.0 and Microsoft PowerPoint software. For statistical analysis of data the two-tailed Student's t-test was used to evaluate differences between means ± SE.
| RESULTS |
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-MeATP, which suppresses the rapid clearance of released ATP by the predominant ecto-ATPase expressed on 1321N1 astrocytes (34). PAR1-induced ATP release was also reduced (50–75%) when these cells were pretreated with Clostridial difficile ToxB for 3 h. (Figs. 1, A and B, and 2C). ToxB catalyzes the transfer of the glucosyl moiety from UDP-glucose to conserved threonine residues in the effector targeting domains of RhoA, Rac, and Cdc42 and renders all of these Rho family GTPases functionally inactive (2). The observed inhibitory action of ToxB suggests that Rho family GTPases can synergize with elevated Ca2+ to potentiate ATP release in this astrocyte model system.
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ToxB-treated monolayers were characterized by elevated basal levels of extracellular ATP (relative to control cells) when assayed by the on-line luciferase assay (Fig. 1, A and B) but not the off-line ATP measurements (Fig. 2C). We speculate that this may be due to the repeated movement of the culture dishes into and out of the luminometer chamber in the former, but not latter, protocol. This repeated movement may induce mechanical stimulation-dependent ATP release due to enhanced effects of fluid shear on the rounded-up cells that characterize the ToxB-treated cultures (Fig. 2A).
Increased Rho-GTP accumulation but not Rho-kinase activity is correlated with thrombin-induced ATP release. Because ToxB glucosylates and inhibits the Rho, Rac, and Cdc42 members of the Rho-GTPase family, use of this reagent does not reveal which particular member(s) of this small GTPase family regulates the ATP release response elicited by PAR1 agonists. Clostridial botulinum C3 toxin is a mono-ADP-ribosyl transferase that selectively inhibits RhoA, RhoB, and RhoC by covalently modifying the N-41 residue of these proteins, preventing nucleotide exchange (61). We used a membrane-permeable version of C3 toxin to test whether Rho subtype GTPases, in particular, are involved in ATP release. Although ToxB treatment for 3 h caused uniform rounding of adherent 1321N1 human astrocytes, a 6-h preincubation with 2 µg/ml C3 minimally affected cell shape (Fig. 2A). However, this C3 treatment produced a 75% decrease in thrombin-stimulated Rho-GTP accumulation (Fig. 2B), which was comparable to the 85% reduction produced by ToxB. The C3-induced decrease in Rho activation was correlated with a 57% decrease in thrombin-triggered ATP release (Fig. 2C); this compared with the 75% decrease observed in ToxB-treated cells assayed under identical conditions. Thus C3 is only marginally less efficacious than ToxB as an inhibitor of ATP release despite the ability of ToxB to additionally target Rac and Cdc42. This indicates that the inhibitory effects of ToxB on stimulated ATP release predominantly reflect the inactivation of Rho-dependent signals.
We tested whether this Rho-dependent component of regulated ATP release was related to the well-characterized roles of Rho on cytoskeletal dynamics. These latter actions of Rho are mediated in part by the downstream Rho-dependent kinases I/II (ROCK1/2) coupled to myosin light chain (MLC) phosphorylation. Previous studies have indicated that PAR1 activation of 1321N1 cells triggers rapid ROCK-dependent changes in cell shape and organization of the actin cytoskeleton (29, 36, 42, 56). However, treatment of 1321N1 cells with 10 µM of the Y-27632 ROCK inhibitor for 1 h before thrombin stimulation did not attenuate the rate or peak magnitude of ATP release (Fig. 3A). Likewise, 1321N1 astrocytes treated with 1 µM of the ML-7 MLC-kinase inhibitor exhibited no changes in their ATP release response to thrombin. These data indicate that thrombin-dependent ATP release does not involve an obligatory role for ROCK, MLCK, or major reorganization of actin stress-fibers. The efficacies of Y-27632 and ML-7 were confirmed by their ability to reduce the number of longitudinal stress fibers in 1321N1 cells stained with rhodamine-phalloidin (data not shown).
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Clostridial toxins and BAPTA-loading do not affect 1321N1 cell ecto-ATPase activity. Extracellular ATP concentrations reflect a balance between ATP release and ATP clearance by ectonucleotidases. Thus a decrease in GPCR-induced extracellular ATP accumulation could reflect an increased rate of ATP clearance rather than, or in addition to, a reduced rate of ATP export. Although MeATP was routinely included to suppress ATP clearance, it was important to verify that treatment of 1321N1 cells with Rho-directed toxins or BAPTA-loading did not upregulate a MeATP-insensitive ecto-ATPase. Alternatively, the higher basal (preagonist) level of extracellular ATP observed in ToxB-treated cells assayed by the on-line luciferase protocol could be indicative of a reduced rate of ATP clearance. However, direct comparison of the ecto-ATPase activities in control, ToxB-, C3-, or BAPTA-treated cultures of 1321N1 cells challenged with identical 100 nM pulses of exogenous ATP revealed no differences in nucleotide clearance (Fig. 6, A and B). Modest differences in the control rates of hydrolysis between Fig. 6, A and B, experiments likely reflect differences in passage number and/or cell density.
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35% and 80% inhibition by 10 and 100 µM CBX, respectively (Fig. 8A). Significantly, activation of PAR receptors with thrombin did not elicit ethidium bromide uptake, an indicator of nonselective pore activity (Fig. 8B). Permeabilization with digitonin verified that maximal ethidium-dependent fluorescence increases were equivalent in all assays. Despite its marked suppression of ATP release, CBX did not affect either the Rho-GTP activation (Fig. 8C) or the Ca2+ mobilization signals that mediate thrombin-stimulated ATP release (Fig. 8D).
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| DISCUSSION |
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Signaling mechanisms that regulate ATP release.
Our observations suggest that the efficacy of a particular GPCR in inducing ATP release from nonexcitable cells will be limited by its capacity to coordinately couple to both PLC
Ca2+ mobilization and RhoGEF
Rho activation pathways. Although this will generally involve coupling to parallel Gq
PLCβ
and G12/13
RhoGEF cascades, Gq has been implicated as an upstream inducer of Rho activation in some cell types, and G12/13 may regulate Ca2+ mobilization via Rho-dependent PLC
activation in other cellular contexts (30, 54, 55). Additionally, lymphoid blast crisis (lbc) Rho-GEF activity can augment Gq signaling via interactions independent of accumulated active RhoA (53). Thus cellular responses, such as ATP release, which require Gq
PLC
Ca2+ mobilization as necessary signals may be modulated by Rho signaling via multiple networks. Although PAR1 activation triggers markedly less inositol phosphate accumulation than M3R stimulation in 1321N1 astocytes, both receptors couple to PLC in these cells via pertussis toxin-insensitive and presumably Gq-mediated pathways (36, 38, 39). In contrast, LPAR has been reported to elicit inositol lipid turnover in 1321N1 cells via a PTX-sensitive pathway likely involving Giβ
regulation of other PLC isoforms (27). Moreover, Citro et al. (13) have recently reported that inositol phosphate generation in response to thrombin, but not LPA or carbachol, depends on primary Rho activation in cultures of primary rat astrocytes. Despite these differences in GPCR-induced inositol phosphate generation pathways in various astrocyte models, we observed no differences in maximal Ca2+ mobilization in response to thrombin, LPA, or carbachol in our 1321N1 model (Fig. 1D, 4C). In contrast, activation of PAR1 and LPAR, but not M3R, triggered robust accumulation of active Rho in these astrocytes. Similar divergent effects of PAR1 versus M3R on Rho activation, as well as Rho-dependent rounding of 1321N1 cells, have been previously described (56).
C3 toxin selectively inactivates RhoA, RhoB, and RhoC, whereas ToxB nonselectively inactivates all Rho-family GTPases (61). Because both C3 toxin and ToxB inhibited GPCR-activated ATP release from 1321N1 cells to a similar extent (Figs. 2C, 5, A and B), RhoA is the most likely Rho-family GTPase to potentiate Ca2+-dependent ATP release. Rho activation and regulated ATP release have been linked in previous studies using other model systems. Inactivation of Rho with C3 toxin attenuates the ATP release stimulated by hypotonic stress in bovine aortic endothelial cells (37). Moreover, Hirakawa et al. (28) noted that treatment of human endothelial cells (HUVEC) with LPA elicited cotemporal RhoA activation, Ca2+ mobilization, and rapid ATP release similar to our observations with human astrocytes (Figs. 4A and 5, C and D). However, an important difference between these studies was that GPCR-induced ATP release from HUVEC was completely suppressed by the ROCK inhibitor Y-27632, whereas we observed no effect of Y-27632 on PAR1-triggered ATP release from 1321N1 cells (Fig. 3). Several factors may underlie this divergent effect of ROCK inhibition of ATP release in these two cell types. Interestingly, hypotonic stress-induced Ca2+ mobilization in these HUVEC was also inhibited by Y-27632, whereas LPA-induced Ca2+ transients were suppressed by suramin, a nonselective P2Y receptor antagonist. Attenuation of regulated ATP release by Y-27632 in these endothelial cells may reflect, in part, autocrine activation of P2 receptors with consequent ATP-induced ATP release. 1321N1 astrocytes are notable because they lack endogenous P2 receptor expression (45). Signaling reactions that affect accumulation of extracellular ATP release in these cells are not complicated by ATP-induced ATP release.
Previous studies have demonstrated that inhibition of either Rho-kinases by Y-27632 or myosin light chain kinase by ML-7 will suppress thrombin-stimulated rounding of 1321N1 cells, as well as remodeling of actin stress fibers (29, 35, 53). The inability of Y-27632 or ML-7 to attenuate ATP release (Fig. 3) dissociates the well-characterized actions of thrombin on actin cytoskeletal reorganization from its effects on ATP release in 1321N1 cells. Moreover, neither LPA, a potent ATP secretagogue, nor carbachol, a weak ATP secretagogue, mimic the ability of thombin to induce 1321N1 cell rounding (56). This suggests that the cytoskeletal reorganization that underlies cell rounding involves a network of GPCR signals distinct from those that elicit ATP release.
Because inhibition of ROCKs with Y-27632 did not affect ATP release, Rho signaling must potentiate Ca2+-dependent ATP release via another effector protein. Significantly, Kreda et al. (36) also found that the thrombin-stimulated, BAPTA-sensitive release of another nucleotide, UDP-glucose, from 1321N1 cells was unaffected by concentrations of Y-27632 that suppressed cell rounding and actin reorganization. Although the ROCKs are the best-characterized downstream targets of active Rho, several other signaling proteins including other serine-threonine kinases, protein phosphatases, lipid kinases, lipases, and scaffold proteins, have been implicated as Rho effectors (5). Several Rho effectors, other than ROCK, provide clear functional intersections of Ca2+ and Rho signaling that might be involved in GPCR-regulated ATP release. For example, Rho-sensitive phosphatidylinositol-4-phosphate 5-kinase (PI-4-P5K) is required to prime exocytotic vesicles of the Ca2+ regulated secretory pathway (26). Other studies have indicated a role for Rho signaling in the regulation of LPA- and GTP
S-stimulated glucose transport that involves rapid translocation of GLUT4 transporters in intracellular membrane pools to the surface membrane. This regulated mobilization of GLUT4 transporters can be inhibited by C3 toxin or expression of dominant-negative PKN (protein kinase N), a RhoA-regulated serine-threonine kinase (59).
ATP release mechanisms. Regardless of the GPCR-dependent signals that induce ATP release from 1321N1 cells and other astrocyte models, the actual mechanism(s) by which intracellular ATP is transferred to the extracellular compartment remains poorly understood. Some studies have indicated that exocytosis of ATP within secretory vesicles or atypical organelles is the predominant route for ATP release from astrocytes. For example, Zhang et al. (63) recently reported that stimulation of primary rat astrocytes with ionomycin, glutamate receptor agonists, or metabolic inhibitors triggered an ATP release that involved exocytosis of secretory lysosomes containing compartmentalized ATP. In that system, stimulated ATP export was abolished by GPN, an agent that permeabilizes lysosomes. However, we found that thrombin-stimulated ATP release was not suppressed in GPN-treated 1321N1 cells (Fig. 7A). This is consistent with other reports indicating that ATP release from astrocytes is better correlated with the Ca2+-dependent exocytosis of nonlysosomal vesicles (44, 50). Haydon and colleagues (46) used an inducible transgenic mouse model selectively expressing dominant-negative SNARE protein within astrocytes to demonstrate the requirement of an exocytotic pathway for ATP release and subsequent extracellular adenosine accumulation that mediates activity-dependent heterosynaptic depression. Similarly, in mixed astrocyte/neuron cocultures, astrocyte Ca2+ wave propagation, which depends on paracrine activation of P2 receptors by released ATP, was found to be sensitive to BAPTA and bafilomycin but not to gap junction hemichannel inhibitors (10, 14).
Of particular relevance to our studies, Kreda et al. (36) recently described the GPCR-regulated release of UDP-glucose, a nucleotide-sugar that is the selective agonist of P2Y14 receptors, from 1321N1 astrocytes (11). Those investigators observed that thrombin, but not carbachol, triggered a rapid export of UDP-glucose that was inhibited by BAPTA-loading but was insensitive to the Y-27632 ROCK inhibitor. They also noted that thrombin-stimulated UDP-glucose release was almost completely suppressed (>95%) by BFA, which inhibits the generation of the Golgi-derived transport vesicles used for constitutive export of new proteins and lipids to the cell surface. Because of its role as a substrate for protein glycosylation, UDP-glucose is accumulated within the Golgi and Golgi-derived vesicles. ATP is also compartmentalized within the Golgi for use by the ATP-dependent chaperone proteins that mediate protein folding. Similarly, we observed that BFA treatment (5 µg/ml, 2 h) reduced PAR-1-activated ATP release (Fig. 7) but to a lesser extent (50% inhibition) than the UDP-glucose release. Taken together, our results and those of Kreda et al. indicate that ATP is likely costored and coreleased with UDP-glucose in mobilizable Golgi-derived vesicles.
The ability of BFA to completely suppress PAR1-activated UDP-glucose release while only partially attenuating ATP release from 1321N1 cells suggests that ATP is exported by an additional pathway(s) in this model. In this regard, multiple reports have described strong correlations between stimulated ATP release and the activation of gap junction hemichannels. For example, Ca2+-dependent ATP release from C6 glioma cells is markedly increased by connexin overexpression (15, 17, 58). Multiple studies have used various pharmacological blockers of connexin-based gap junctions and nonjunctional hemichannels to probe the possible role of such channels in ATP export. CBX is one such widely used inhibitor of gap junction channels, hemichannels, and ATP release, Although CBX blocks gap junction channels and nonjunctional hemichannels formed by both pannexins and connexins, hemichannels formed by pannexins have been reported to be more sensitive to CBX blockade (6). Pelegrin and Surprenant (47) recently reported that pannexin-1 is endogenously expressed in 1321N1 astrocytes and that CBX-sensitive hemichannel activity (as assayed by fluorescent dye fluxes) can be stimulated by extracellular ATP in 1321N1 cells engineered to express heterologous P2X7 receptors. Although CBX markedly inhibited PAR1-stimulated ATP release from 1321N1 cells (Figs. 7 and 8A), we were unable to correlate these effects with any pannexin-like hemichannel activity as detected by thrombin-stimulated or CBX-inhibited ethidium bromide uptake (Fig. 8B). This does not unequivocally exclude the possibility that hemichannels mediate ATP efflux because the difference in charge between ethidium (+1) and ATP (–4) or MgATP (–2) could impact movement via such channels. Another possibility is that the pore-forming ability of hemichannels is not required for ATP release but rather that pannexin or connexin proteins modulate release by other mechanisms (48). CBX is also known to affect voltage-gated Ca2+ channels and membrane potential via gap junction channel-independent mechanisms (52, 60). Similarly, CBX may exert connexin/pannexin-independent actions on the signal transduction pathways or membrane dynamics that regulate nonconductive, exocytotic ATP release pathways. However, we did verify that CBX treatment did not attenuate PAR1-stimulated Ca2+ mobilization or Rho activation in 1321N1 astrocytes. (Fig. 8, C and D).
In summary, our studies indicate that the coordinate induction of Ca2+- and Rho-GTPase signals are required for maximal ATP release from astrocytes and that this ATP export reflects in part the mobilization of Golgi-derived transport vesicles. However, defining the mechanisms that underlie the brefeldin-insensitive and CBX-sensitive components of ATP release remains a challenging area of investigation.
| GRANTS |
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| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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| FOOTNOTES |
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The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
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