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MUSCLE CELL BIOLOGY AND CELL MOTILITY
1Exercise Biochemistry Laboratory and 2Muscle Physiology Laboratory, Department of Applied Physiology and Kinesiology, Center for Exercise Science, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida
Submitted 1 October 2008 ; accepted in final form 17 December 2008
| ABSTRACT |
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-actinin (–40%), desmin (–79%), talin (–37%), and troponin I (–80%). Myotube atrophy was also characterized by increased cleavage of the cysteine protease substrate
II-spectrin following 4 h and 24 h of H2O2 treatment. This degradation was blocked by administration of the protease inhibitor leupeptin (10 µM). Using small interfering RNA transfection of mature myotubes against the specific proteases calpain-1, calpain-2, and caspase-3, we demonstrated that calpain-1 is required for H2O2-induced myotube atrophy. Collectively, our data provide the first evidence for an absolute requirement for calpain-1 in the development of skeletal muscle myotube atrophy in response to oxidant-induced cellular stress. skeletal muscle; protease; oxidative stress
Myofilament proteins make up the majority of protein in skeletal muscle cells, and the proteasome is important for the degradation of these proteins during disuse (reviewed in Ref. 4). Evidence reveals that the ubiquitin-proteasome system cannot degrade intact myofibril proteins, indicating that myofilament release is an initial and required step for proteasome-mediated degradation of myofibrillar proteins (4, 7, 20, 26, 27, 34). The inhibition of cysteine proteases (i.e., calpain and caspase-3) in skeletal muscle attenuates disuse muscle atrophy (16, 19, 38). We and others have hypothesized that disturbances in redox balance are critical regulatory mechanisms for the activation of both the Ca2+-dependent calpains I (µ-) and II (m-) and caspase-3 during atrophy and that these proteases are responsible for myofilament release during the initial stages of muscle atrophy (26, 27, 32).
Oxidative stress has been linked to skeletal muscle atrophy in numerous models of muscle wasting, including inactivity (27), diabetes (18), cancer (12), heart failure (13), chronic alcohol intake (25), human immunodeficiency virus infection (24), and sepsis (23). Although oxidative stress can activate cysteine proteases, the specific role that calpains and caspase-3 play in oxidant-induced muscle atrophy remains unclear. Therefore, this study investigated whether activation of cysteine proteases is a requirement for oxidant-induced skeletal muscle atrophy. Specifically, using both a pharmacological approach and RNA interference technology, we determined whether activation of calpain-1, calpain-2, or caspase-3 is required for hydrogen peroxide (H2O2)-induced skeletal muscle C2C12 myotube atrophy. We hypothesized that these cysteine proteases are required for H2O2-induced myotube atrophy in vitro. Our findings demonstrate a specific role for calpain-1 in H2O2-induced skeletal muscle atrophy in this model.
| METHODS |
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Cell viability. H2O2-induced alterations in C2C12 viability were analyzed via Trypan blue exclusion assay as previously described (36). Briefly, fully differentiated cells were treated with varying concentrations of H2O2 (0 µM control, 25 µM, 50 µM, 100 µM, and 200 µM) for predetermined durations (1 h, 2 h, 4 h, 24 h, 48 h, and 72 h). Media were removed, and the cells were incubated; 0.25% Trypan blue (Sigma) in PBS was applied to cultures for 5 min, and cultures were then rinsed twice with PBS. As a positive control, some untreated cultures were exposed to 80% ethanol in PBS for 30 min before application of Trypan blue. Images were obtained via an inverted microscope (Carl Zeiss Axiovert 200) camera system at x10 magnification. Approximately 150 myotubes per treatment, a number chosen by determination of no additional change in standard deviation, were counted for the inclusion/exclusion of dye at each concentration and duration by a blinded investigator, and the percentage of viable cells (excluding dye) was determined.
Transient transfections.
Differentiated myotubes were transiently transfected in six-well plates with small interfering RNA (siRNA) sequences for cysteine proteases. At least three validated siRNA sequences (Ambion) were evaluated for knockdown efficacy for each cysteine protease. Efficiency of knockdown was deemed adequate when mRNA abundance for each protease was reduced by
70%. RNA oligos were transfected into differentiated myotubes using Lipofectamine 2000 (Invitrogen), according to the manufacturer's instructions. Briefly, siRNA and Lipofectamine 2000 were separately diluted in Opti-MEM (Gibco). The diluted Lipofectamine 2000 reagent was incubated for 5 min and was then added to the siRNA mixture at a final volume of 500 µl/well. The lipid/siRNA mixtures were allowed to complex for 20 min during which the cells were rinsed twice with Opti-MEM and bathed in a final volume of 2 ml Opti-MEM/well. Lipid:siRNA complexes were then applied to the cells (final transfection volume of 2.5 ml). Separate experiments were performed using equivalent amounts of lipid reagent devoid of siRNA. Cultures were rocked every 2 h for the initial 6 h of incubation and were incubated with the transfection mixture for a total of 24 h. After 24 h, transfection medium was removed and replaced with differentiation medium. Parallel cultures were transfected with fluorescein (FAM)-labeled nonsilencing control and calpain-1 siRNA oligomers (Ambion) and were imaged on an inverted fluorescence microscope (Carl Zeiss Axiovert 200) camera system at x10 magnification to determine transfection efficiency. Cultures were maintained for an additional 24 h before H2O2 treatment.
Oxidative stress.
4-Hydroxynonenal (trans-4-hydroxy-2-nonenal; 4-HNE, C9H16O2) is an
,β-unsaturated hydroxyalkenal that is produced by lipid peroxidation in cells (35). 4-HNE modification of proteins was analyzed as an indicator of oxidative damage in C2C12 cells via Western blotting as described (1). Values for 4-HNE were corrected for duration-matched untreated controls (0 µM H2O2) and are presented as fold changes.
Myotube atrophy. Myotube diameter morphological analysis was performed as previously described (22) with the following modifications. Briefly, images of cultures were obtained via phase contrast at x100 magnification after the appropriate treatment durations were obtained on an inverted microscope (Carl Zeiss Axiovert 200) camera system at x10 magnification. The diameters were measured in a total of 100 myotubes from at least 10 random fields, a number chosen by determination of no additional change in standard deviation, using computerized image analysis (Scion Image, Frederick, MD). Each myotube analyzed was measured at three points along the length of the myotube in a blinded fashion, and results are expressed as percentage of the control treatment diameter.
Western blot analysis.
On completion of the appropriate incubation time, cells were rinsed 2x in ice-cold 1x PBS and scraped for protein isolation in 130 µl nondenaturing lysis buffer (NDL buffer: 1% Triton X-100, 300 mM NaCl, 50 mM Tris-base, 5 mM EDTA, 3.1 mM sodium azide, 95 mM NaF, 22 µM Na3VO4), vortexed, incubated at 4°C for 25 min, and centrifuged at 1,000 g for 5 min. The supernatants were subsequently assayed for protein using the Bradford method (Sigma, St. Louis, MO), separated by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis via 4–15% gradient, and transferred to nitrocellulose membranes (100 V for 3 h at 4°C) for Western blot analysis. As verification of equal loading and transfer, the resulting transfer membrane was stained with Ponceau S, and each lane was analyzed using computerized image analysis and used to correct the Western blot analysis for the total amount of protein in each lane, respectively (Scion Image) (data not shown). Membranes were then probed for manganese superoxide dismutase (MnSOD; SOD-111; Stressgen; Victoria, BC, Canada), copper zinc superoxide dismutase (CuZnSOD; SOD-101; Stressgen), catalase (Ab16731; Abcam, Cambridge, MA) and calpain-1 (no. 2556), calpain-2 (no. 2539), caspase-3 (no. 9665),
II-spectrin (no. 2122), cleaved
II-spectrin (no. 2121), talin (no. 4021), and troponin I (no. 4002) (all purchased from Cell Signaling Technology, Carlsbad, CA). Myosin (A4335) and
-actinin (A7811) were purchased from Sigma-Aldrich (St. Louis, MO). Actin (sc-7210) and desmin (sc-14026) were purchased from Santa Cruz Biotechnology (Santa Cruz, CA). 4-Hydroxynonenal (trans-4-hydroxy-2-nonenal; 4-HNE, C9H16O2; ab46545) was purchased from Abcam.
RNA isolation and cDNA synthesis. Cells harvested for RNA isolation were rinsed two times in ice-cold 1x PBS and scraped in TRIzol reagent (Life Technologies, Carlsbad, CA), according to the manufacturer's instructions. Total RNA (5 µg) was then reverse transcribed using the Superscript III First-Strand Synthesis System for RT-PCR (Life Technologies) using oligo(dT)20 primers and the protocol outlined by the manufacturer.
Real-time polymerase chain reaction.
One microliter of cDNA was added to a 25-µl PCR reaction for real-time PCR using Taqman chemistry and the ABI Prism 7000 Sequence Detection System (ABI, Foster City, CA). Relative quantitation of gene expression in treated C2C12 cells was performed using the comparative computed tomography method (ABI, User Bulletin no. 2). This method uses a single sample, the calibrator sample (hprt; GenBank NM_013556
[GenBank]
.2), for comparison of every unknown sample's gene expression. 
CT [
CT (calibrator) –
CT (sample)] was then calculated for each sample, and relative quantification was calculated as 2
CT (where CT is cycle threshold). Hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase (Hprt), an enzyme involved in purine catabolism, was chosen as the reference gene on the basis of initial experiments showing unchanged expression with our experimental manipulations. Fivefold dilution curves were assayed on selected samples to confirm the validity of this quantitation method for each gene. Calpain-1 (GenBank NM_001110504.1), calpain-2 (GenBank NM_009794
[GenBank]
.3), caspase-3 (GenBank NM_009810
[GenBank]
.2), and calpastatin (GenBank NM_009817
[GenBank]
.3) mRNA transcripts were assayed using predesigned rat primer and probe sequences commercially available from Applied Biosystems (Assays-on-Demand).
Statistical analysis. A priori analysis was used to determine any differences between control treatments of varying durations. When no differences existed between groups, respective groups were pooled. Comparisons between treatments were made by a one-way analysis of variance and, when appropriate, a Tukey honestly significant difference test was performed post hoc. Significance was established at P < 0.05. Values are reported as means ± SE.
| RESULTS |
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H2O2-induced myotube atrophy. Myotube diameter was analyzed as an indicator of myotube atrophy in response to 25 µM H2O2 treatment. Myotube diameter was not altered from control values following 4 h of peroxide treatment (91.78 ± 7.9% of control). Myotube diameter decreased 31–37% with 25 µM H2O2 treatment during 24, 48, or 72 h. This finding demonstrated 2 important points: 1) that this lower dose of H2O2 treatment was sufficient to induce myotube atrophy and 2) that the 24-h duration of exposure resulted in roughly the same level of myotube atrophy as the 72 h.
Sarcomeric protein expression.
Four hours of 25 µM H2O2 exposure resulted in decreases in myosin (–22%),
-actinin (–23%), and desmin (–80%) protein expressions (Table 1 and Supplemental Fig. S1C). Interestingly, 4 h of exposure also increased (101%) the protein expression of troponin I. Twenty-four hours of 25 µM H2O2 exposure resulted in further decreases in myosin and desmin, and decreases in talin (–37%), troponin I (–80%), and
II-spectrin (–29%) proteins. Actin protein expression was not altered by H2O2 exposure at any time-point analyzed. Overall, these data suggest that H2O2 exposure differentially alters the expression of numerous sarcomeric proteins in atrophying myotubes.
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II-spectrin), resulting in the disorganization of normal sarcomeric architecture (4, 29). The percentage of total
II-spectrin protein cleaved by proteases with 4 h or 24 h of 25 µM H2O2 treatment increased (Fig. 2A), indicating the amount of relative alterations in cleaved
II-spectrin and total
II-spectrin with H2O2 treatment. Furthermore, addition of the nonspecific protease inhibitor leupeptin to the differentiation medium attenuated myotube diameter loss associated with 24 h of 25 µM H2O2 treatment (Fig. 2B).
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II-spectrin (Fig. 5, A and C). Neither calpain-2 nor caspase-3 interference reduced the H2O2 cleavage of
II-spectrin.
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| DISCUSSION |
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II-spectrin. Second, activation of the cysteine protease calpain-1 is a requirement for H2O2-induced atrophy. A brief discussion of these key results follows. Requirement for calpain-1 in H2O2-induced myotube atrophy. The most important finding from the current study is that the knockdown of calpain-1 attenuated H2O2-induced myotube atrophy. This suggests a direct requirement for calpain-1 in the progression of H2O2-induced myotube atrophy. The magnitude of protease knockdown in the current study was not sufficient to completely abrogate calpain mRNA abundance or protein expression. It is possible that residual levels of protease may continue to mediate the normal response to physiologically relevant stimuli, resulting in the attenuation but not complete prevention of atrophy or substrate cleavage. Our data clearly demonstrate that this level of interference was sufficient to protect the myotubes from atrophy and the cleavage of protease substrate proteins. The transfection efficiency observed in the current study combined with the large number of myotubes and sample sizes used for the analysis of diameter and biochemistries, however, suggest that residual physiologically activated calpains are insufficient to overcome the magnitude of protective effects of the protease knockdown achieved. The C2C12 myotubes used in the present study were analyzed after a treatment period encompassing a total of 7 days of differentiation, allowing for sufficient time for mature myotube formation. However, residual calpain may also be localized to nondifferentiated myoblasts or in nontransfected myotubes in culture, providing another potential mechanism for continued protease activation, mRNA abundance, and protein expression by analysis.
To date, the mechanistic link between oxidants and activation of calpain-1 remains unclear. A potential mechanism for calpain activation by reactive oxygen species (ROS) in skeletal muscle involves the formation of reactive aldehydes that damage calcium handling proteins and increase cytosolic Ca2+ levels. Our finding that exposure of myotubes to H2O2 increases cellular levels of the reactive aldehyde (4-HNE) is consistent with this notion. Regardless of the mechanism of how H2O2 activates calpain in myotubes, our data suggest that calpain-1 activity participates in myofilament protein release in atrophying muscles. Finally, while active calpain-1 participates in myofilament release, it is also possible that calpains could contribute to skeletal muscle atrophy in other ways as well. For example, additional reported functions of calpain proteases in skeletal muscle include transcription factor degradation and modification of protein kinase B (PKB/Akt) activity (reviewed in Ref. 34).
H2O2-induced muscle atrophy. Oxidants such as H2O2 are theorized to play important roles in the progression of skeletal muscle atrophy due to inactivity or various diseases. In fact, antioxidant administration attenuates myofiber atrophy in both disease and disuse models (20, 25, 32). Hydrogen peroxide is often used as an exogenous oxidant treatment to promote oxidative stress and proteolytic signaling pathways in both isolated skeletal muscles (6, 28) and in vitro myotubes (14, 15). Although the ability of H2O2 to induce skeletal muscle myofiber atrophy has been inferred in several studies, the current study is the first to demonstrate a direct link between H2O2 and myotube atrophy. Moreover, our results also extend previous work (15) by demonstrating that proteases involved in the ubiquitin-proteasome proteolytic cascade are activated and transcriptionally induced by the treatment of C2C12 myotubes with H2O2. Note that we cannot attribute the effects of the H2O2 treatment solely to the biochemical properties of this oxidant. Indeed, it is possible that H2O2 could react with transition metals and/or superoxide in the cell to produce more reactive species such as the hydroxyl radical. Hence, the specific oxidant(s) directly responsible for our results remain unknown.
Recently, the classical dogma on oxidants as cellular disruptors of homeostasis by overwhelming endogenous antioxidant systems has undergone revision. A role for ROS in compartmentalized cellular signaling regulating cellular functions has been introduced (8, 10). Specifically, oxidants have been recognized as modifiers of cellular signal transduction, phosphatase and protease activity, chaperone proteins, and transcription factors (reviewed in Ref. 8). H2O2 is receiving amplified attention as a cellular signaling molecule due to its ability to reversibly oxidize amino acids, specifically cysteines (8), resulting in posttranslational protein modifications that affect cellular function. A continuum of redox-based cellular modifications, proposed by Forrester and Stamler (3), suggests that reversible posttranslational modifications of cysteine thiol side chains (S-nitrosothiol, sulfenic acid, and disulfides) are demonstrative of physiological signaling modifications initiated by oxidants. In contrast, irreversible modifications (protein carbonyl and methionine sulfoxide formation) are maladaptive and represent oxidative stress-induced cellular injury. In this context, the low dose of H2O2 used in the current study was insufficient to induce cell death but resulted in the induction of endogenous antioxidant (CuZnSOD and MnSOD) protein abundance, development of oxidative stress (4-HNE modification of proteins), and atrophy. It remains plausible, therefore, that H2O2 functions in multiple stages along the redox continuum, first as a signaling intermediate to initiate protein modifications and cellular signaling and later as promoter of oxidative injury. At present, the relative contributions of the overlapping phases of this redox continuum to the progression of skeletal muscle atrophy remains unknown.
Cysteine protease-mediated muscle proteolysis. The involvement of cysteine proteases in skeletal muscle atrophy has been implicated in reports suggesting that inhibition of calpain or caspase-3 retards both disuse and sepsis-induced muscle atrophy (2, 16, 19, 38). We and others have postulated that myofilament protein release may be a rate-limiting step in myofilament protein degradation by the ubiquitin-proteasome system in atrophying skeletal muscle (7, 11, 21, 34). The current study further corroborates this idea by demonstrating that protease activation and myofilament substrate cleavage occur early during the development of atrophy in myotubes. In direct contrast to this theory, Zhao et al. (40) treated cells with both lysosomal and proteasomal inhibitors and demonstrated a 90% reduction in overall proteolysis. These investigators failed to inhibit overall muscle proteolysis with specific pharmacological inhibitors of caspases and concluded that caspases and/or calpains play a minor role in overall cellular proteolysis. The current findings corroborate a negligible role for caspase-3 in skeletal muscle atrophy due to H2O2 treatment. However, our results clearly demonstrate an important role for calpain-1 in oxidant-induced myotube atrophy. We appreciate that inhibition of the proteasome (4) would attenuate a portion of skeletal muscle proteolysis in response to atrophic stimuli. Nonetheless, since the proteasome cannot degrade intact myofilaments, it is feasible that proteolytic release of these proteins remains an initial and required step for the subsequent degradation of myofilament proteins via the proteasome proteolytic system. In support of this postulate, a recent report indicates that calpain inhibition can retard muscle proteolysis independent of key ubiquitin ligases deemed critical to the proteasome system (2). Therefore, we conclude that an important role for calpains in skeletal muscle atrophy remains.
Calpains are classically defined as calcium-activated proteases found in most cell types (5). Despite the fact that H2O2-induced atrophy and cellular oxidative stress result in calpain activation and myotube atrophy, a direct link between calcium release and oxidative stress has not been definitively proven in the current study. A possible link between cellular oxidative stress and cellular calcium overload involves the oxidant-induced production of reactive aldehydes (4-HNE) that inhibit plasma membrane Ca2+-ATPase activity and attenuate the ability of the cell to remove cytosolic Ca2+ (33). Our study demonstrates that the formation of reactive aldehydes is an initial event in response to the stress provided by H2O2 treatment of myotubes in vitro. This may provide insight into a possible mechanism for Ca2+-induced calpain activation in the current model. Future studies are needed to examine the role of oxidant stress in Ca2+-induced calpain activation and should investigate stress-induced alterations in Ca2+-ATPase membrane channel function or structure as a potential mechanism.
Conclusions. Our study revealed that the development of hydrogen peroxide-induced myotube atrophy in culture requires calpain-1, but not calpain-2 or caspase-3 cysteine proteases. The exact role for calpain-1 activity in atrophying myotubes is not entirely clear, but it may be due in part to its cleavage of structural myofilament proteins in response to hydrogen peroxide treatment. Although a requirement for calpain-1 for all types of muscle atrophy has not been established, our discovery that calpain-1 is required for H2O2-induced atrophy could lead to refined pharmacological or genetic therapies targeted at the maintenance of protein balance in skeletal muscle during wasting conditions involving oxidative stress.
| GRANTS |
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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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