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Published online before print September 4, 2008
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From the Department of Pathology,* University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; 1st Department of Medicine,
University of Mainz, Mainz, Germany
| Abstract |
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-mediated liver injury can be induced by several different means; however, the signaling events and mechanisms of cell death are likely different. We investigated the mechanism of both apoptotic and necrotic hepatocyte cell death as well as the role of c-Jun NH2-terminal kinase (JNK) in the ConA and ConA/D-galactosamine (GalN) models of murine liver injury. ConA alone induced primarily necrotic cell death with no caspase activation, whereas ConA/GalN induced apoptosis in addition to necrotic cell death. The bi-modal death pattern in the ConA/GalN model was confirmed by the use of transgenic mice expressing a dominant-negative form of Fas-associated death domain in which the mice were resistant to apoptotic but not necrotic cell death. JNK1 and, more significantly, JNK2 participated in the induction of hepatocyte apoptosis in response to ConA/GalN. Deletion of JNK led to the stabilization of FLIPL, reduced caspase-8 activation, decreased Bid cleavage, and inhibition of the mitochondrial apoptosis pathway. In contrast, JNK did not participate in necrotic death induced by ConA either alone or in combination with GalN. As such, JNK-deficient mice remained susceptible to necrotic liver injury in both model systems. Thus, ConA and ConA/GalN mouse models induce liver injury with different mechanisms of cell death, and JNK contributes to apoptotic but not necrotic cell death. These findings further elucidate the specific pathways involved in tumor necrosis factor-
-mediated liver injury.
-induced liver injury is mediated by multiple signaling events, which are yet to be fully revealed.1-3
Liver injury can be attributed to hepatocyte death of apoptotic and necrotic nature. For the apoptotic mechanism, TNF
binds to its receptors and recruits the adapter molecule, TNF receptor-associated death domain, which engages Fas-associated death domain (FADD), which in turn binds to and activates the initiator caspase-8. FLICE-like inhibitory protein (FLIP) is structurally similar to caspase-8 with the N-terminal death effector domain, but the catalytic domain is either missing (FLIPs) or is inactive (FLIPL). It thus serves as an inhibitor of caspase-8 activation by binding to FADD. While caspase-8 can directly activate the downstream effector caspases such as caspase-3, to lead to cellular destruction, this activation is often blocked in the Type II cells, such as hepatocytes, by the X-linked inhibitor-of-apoptosis, which binds to caspase-3.4,5
Thus the cleavage of Bid, a pro-death BH3-only Bcl-2 family protein, by caspase-8, is crucial to the death induction, as cleaved Bid (tBid) moves to the mitochondria to induce the release of cytochrome c, which activates caspase-9 together with Apaf-1, and Smac, which overcomes the inhibitory effects of X-linked inhibitor-of-apoptosis.4-8
While the apoptosis pathway is relatively clear, very little is known about the necrotic mechanism of hepatocyte death in the context of TNF
toxicity, although in other types of cells this seems to be related to the receptor-interacting protein-mediated pathway and reactive oxygen species.9,10
The extent of hepatocyte apoptosis versus necrosis would certainly depend on the nature of the stimulation and the severity of the insults. In the experimental models of murine liver injury, TNF
could be directly administrated, or more frequently is induced in the animal. TNF
could be made by Kupffers cells on stimulation by lipopolysaccharide (LPS), or by T lymphocytes on treatment with concanavalin A (ConA). In general, LPS-induced liver injury requires sensitization, such as by a liver-specific transcription inhibitor, D-galactosamine (GalN). This combination induces significant apoptosis of hepatocytes and irreversible liver damage with a high mortality. On the other hand, ConA-induced liver injury is more complicated. First, ConA alone is able to induce liver injury without sensitization. The injury is usually mild, reversible, and followed by liver regeneration.11-13
However, hepatocyte death is evident with the increased liver enzymes in the blood. The nature of the death could be necrotic, but not apoptotic, since caspase activity could not be identified at the time when blood enzyme level was peaked,13,14
although DNA breakdown could be detected.11,14,15
Second, sensitization with GalN clearly leads to a potent activation of apoptosis with significantly increased caspase activities.13
The liver damage becomes more severe and irreversible with a high mortality. Thus ConA/GalN model seems to offer a better model to study the signaling events of the caspase-mediated apoptosis in this T cell-mediated liver injury.
GalN blocks the transcriptional activity of nuclear factor (NF)-
B, which is concomitantly activated by TNF
, and suppresses the apoptotic effects of the latter.16
Gene products regulated by NF-
B can suppress caspase and mitochondrial activation, reactive oxygen species accumulation and c-Jun NH2-terminal kinase (JNK) activation.16
JNK has recently emerged as a key step regulated by NF-
B. Deletion of JNK1 or JNK2, or use of JNK inhibitors can suppress hepatocyte apoptosis in vitro and in LPS/GalN-induced liver injury in vivo.17-19
Intriguingly, it is reported that JNK1 could participate in the liver injury caused by the administration of ConA alone.15
However, the role of JNK in liver injury caused by ConA/GalN, where apoptosis is better characterized, has not been characterized.
Due to the unique presentation of liver injury in ConA versus ConA/GalN-treated mouse and the effect of GalN in blocking NF-
B, thereby promoting JNK activation, it is imperative to understand the role of JNK in the two different liver injury regimes that are related to the effects of ConA. Our present study provides definite evidence that JNK participates in only the apoptotic changes in the ConA/GalN model, but not the necrotic changes characterized by the ConA only model. This is consistent with the pro-death role of JNK being regulated by the NF-
B activity.
| Materials and Methods |
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JNK1-deficient mice (B6.129S1-Mapk8tm1Flv/J) and JNK2-deficient mice (B6.129S2-Mapk9tm1Flv/J) maintained in C57BL/6 background were obtained from The Jackson Laboratory (Bar Harbor, ME). Transgenic mice expressing a dominant negative mutant of FADD in the liver had been described previously.20 All animals received humane care. Animal procedures were conducted according to the guideline of National Institute of Health with the protocols approved by the IACUC of the University of Pittsburgh.
Reagents
The following antibodies were used: anti-caspase 8 from Dr. Razq Hakem (University of Toronto, Canada); anti-caspase-9, anti-caspase-3, anti-phosphorylated JNK, anti-phosphorylated c-Jun, and anti-c-Jun from Cell Signaling (Boston, MA); anti-B220, anti-CD3, anti-cytochrome c, anti-JNK (clone 666), and anti-Smac from BD Bioscience (San Diego, CA); anti-FLIP from Santa Cruz Biotech (Santa Cruz, CA); anti-Bid21 and anti-β-actin from Sigma (St. Louis, MO). ConA and GalN were also obtained from Sigma. They were prepared in 0.9% endotoxin-free sterile saline (Sigma).
Animal Experimentation
Liver injury was induced as previously described.13 Briefly, mice about 20 to 30 grams in weight were intravenously given ConA (25 mg/kg) with or without an intraperitoneal injection of GalN (700 mg/kg) given 30 minutes earlier. Mice were then sacrificed at the designated time point. Each time and treatment group contained 3 to 9 mice. For Western blot and caspase activity measurement, liver lysates from each mouse within the same treatment group were pooled to avoid any bias caused by conditions in individual mouse.
Bone marrow reconstitution was conducted as previously described.22 Recipient mice were lethally irradiated (1000 cGy) with a 137Cs irradiator, fractionated in 600 and 400 cGy 4 hours apart. On the next day, they were intravenously reconstituted with 8 x 106 nucleated bone marrow cells from male donor mice. Recipient mice were challenged with ConA/GalN 12 weeks later. Number of mice used in each group is indicated in the figure legend.
Biochemical Assays
Serum level of alanine aminotransferase (ALT) was measured using the assay kit purchased from Biotron Diagnostics (Hemet, CA) according to the manufacturers instruction. Serum TNF
and interferon
levels were determined using the Beadlyte mouse multicytokine detection system (Millipore, Billerica, MA), which is a Luminex-based multiplexed assay, per manufacturers instruction. The experimental data were analyzed using a five-parametric-curve fitting.
Immunoblot assay and caspase activity measurement were conduced as previously described.7,23 JNK activity was measured using the in vitro JNK kinase assay with glutathione S-transferase-conjugated c-Jun as the substrate as described by the manufacturer (Cell Signaling).
Flow Cytometry
Single cell suspensions were prepared from mouse spleens after lysis of red blood cells. Cells were stained with fluorescein isothiocyanate-labeled anti-murine CD3 and PE-labeled anti-B220 (BD Bioscience) and analyzed by a FACSCalibur flow cytometer. Data were analyzed with Win MDI software.
Histology and Semiquantitative Assessment
Livers were dissected, fixed in 10% neutral buffered formalin and paraffin embedded. Sections were cut at 5 µm in thickness and stained with H&E. Images were obtained using a light microscope (Nikon Eclipse E200, Melville, CA) equipped with a digital camera (SPOT, Diagnostic Instruments, Sterling Heights, MI). The degree of injury is assessed semiquantitatively by the following criteria and scored based on the area affected: a) increased eosinophilic staining of the hepatocytes and the accumulation of erythrocytes in the sinusoids (0: none; 1: <25%; 2: 25% to <50%; 3: 50% to <75%, and 4: 75% to 100%), b) cellular vacuolization (0: none; 1: <25% and 2: >25%), and c) cell lysis (0: none; 1: <25% and 2: >25%). The final score of each sample is the summarization of the three parameters.
Statistics
Statistical analysis was performed using Students t-test, where necessary.
| Results |
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To investigate the mechanisms of cell death in ConA/GalN- and ConA-induced liver injury, we first examined the role of apoptosis in these two regimes by using a transgenic mouse strain that expresses a liver-specific truncated form of FADD (FADD-DN), which exerts a dominant negative effect by competing with the wild-type (WT) FADD.20
Significant caspase activation in the liver tissue could be detected in WT mice, but not in FADD-DN mice, treated with ConA/GalN (Figure 1, A–B)
. Previous studies have indicated that hepatocytes are Type II cells in which the death receptor-initiated apoptosis requires the mitochondrial participation.4,6,7
Consistently, the mitochondrial pathway was inhibited in FADD-DN livers with no cytochrome c release and caspase-9 activation (Figure 1B)
. These observations indicate that ConA/GalN could induce a potent mitochondrial apoptotic response and caspase-activation in a FADD-dependent manner.
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In contrast to the ConA/GalN regime, no caspase-8, -9, and -3 activities could be detected in WT mouse livers following the treatment with ConA for 8 hours (Figure 1A)
and there was no mitochondrial apoptotic activation (see below). Inhibition of FADD made no difference as expected. Nevertheless, serum ALT level was significantly elevated in both strains of mice (Figure 1C)
. Histological examination of the liver demonstrated obvious cellular swelling, increased eosinophilic staining and red cell accumulation in the sinusoids with occasional cellular vacuolization and cell lysis (Figure 1D)
. The histological features between the WT and FADD-DN in the ConA regime were similar although they were slightly less significant in the latter (a composite score of 5 ± 0 and 4 ± 1 for the WT and FADD-DN livers, respectively). Interestingly, these features were also similar to those observed in the FADD-DN mice treated with ConA/GalN and there were no significant differences in the severity of the injury (a score of 4 ± 1 and 4 ± 0 for ConA alone and ConA/GalN, respectively, see above). Taken together, these results indicated that ConA primarily induced a FADD-independent necrotic injury, whereas ConA/GalN induced not only FADD-independent necrotic injury, but also FADD-dependent apoptotic injury.
JNK Participates in ConA/GalN-Induced Mitochondrial Apoptosis in the Liver
We then examined how JNK could contribute to TNF
-induced liver injury in the two ConA regimes. Deletion of either JNK1 or JNK2 led to reduced and delayed mitochondrial release of cytochrome c and Smac, and caspase activation in the liver on ConA/GalN treatment (Figure 2, A–D)
. The apoptotic response could be detected at 4 hours after treatment in the WT mice, but were delayed in the JNK1 or JNK2-deficient mice. In addition, the response level was much reduced, particularly in JNK2-deficient mice.
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-induced mitochondrial activation is related to caspase-8 activation and Bid cleavage, we investigated the mechanism of JNK in promoting ConA/GalN-induced apoptosis by examining these events. Caspase-8 was cleaved around 4 hours, and reached peak around 6 to 8 hours after ConA/GalN treatment as indicated by the reduction of the pro-caspase-8 (Figure 4, A–B)
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and IFN
, which cause liver injury,26-28
we examined the serum TNF
and IFN
levels in JNK-deficient mice. To determine whether JNK may affect liver injury by regulating T cell response, we found that IFN
levels were not significantly different between the WT and JNK1 or JNK2-deficient mice (Figure 5A)
level seemed to be increased in JNK1-deficient mice at 2 hours after treatment, but was reduced in JNK2-deficient mice at both 2 and 4 hours (Figure 5A)
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Differential Roles of JNK in Liver Injury Caused by ConA/GalN and that by ConA
ConA alone at the dose of 25 mg/kg does not cause lethal liver injury. Together with GalN, this dose of ConA is lethal with most of the mice died around 6 to 8 hours. Deletion of JNK1 or JNK2 significantly reduced the mortality. While the mean survival time for the WT mice were 7.45 ± 0.35 hours, those for JNK1-deficient and JNK2-deficient mice were 11.08 ± 1.96 hours and 13.38 ± 1.89 hours, respectively. The massive apoptosis, cell lysis, blood vessel destruction and parenchymal alterations as seen in the WT mice were inhibited in the JNK1-deficient and JNK2-deficient mice (Figure 6A)
. Semiquantitative analysis of the histological changes indicated a composite score of 8 ± 0, 4.5 ± 0.7, and 2.7 ± 0.6 for the WT, JNK1-deficient and JNK2-deficient livers, respectively. The somewhat stronger protection of JNK2 deficiency was consistent with the more significant effect of this deficiency in suppressing mitochondria apoptotic response and caspase activation (Figures 2 and 4)
. Taken together these observations supported that JNK1 and JNK2 participated in the hepatic apoptosis program triggered by ConA/GalN and promoted the lethal injury.
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To further examine this issue, we treated JNK1- and JNK2-deficient mice with ConA alone, which, based on above studies, should cause a non-apoptotic injury. We detected no significant reduction in ALT levels in JNK1 or JNK2-deficient mice treated with ConA alone (Figure 7A)
, compared to the WT mice. In addition, there were no differences in the histological manifestations between the WT and JNK-deficient mice (Figure 7B)
, although there were some reductions in the extent of the injury (an injury score of 5 ± 0 and 3.3 ± 0.6 for the WT and JNK2-deficient livers, respectively). Notably, the histological presentations were similar to those observed in FADD-DN mice receiving ConA alone, and furthermore, were similar to those observed in FADD-DN and JNK-deficient mice treated with ConA/GalN (Figures 1D and 6A)
. Consistently, there were no activation of mitochondrial apoptosis pathway (Figure 7C)
and no increases in caspase-activity (Figure 7D)
in ConA-treated WT, JNK1-deficient, or JNK2-deficient livers. Taken together these data indicated that JNK1 or JNK2 was involved in ConA/GalN-induced apoptotic liver injury but not in ConA-induced non-apoptosis-mediated liver injury.
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| Discussion |
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T cell mediated liver injury can be commonly analyzed following an intravenous injection of a T cell mitogen, ConA, with or without a pre-sensitization by GalN. Cytokines play a significant role in the development of liver injury.26-28
Although in both cases, TNF
, generated by T cells, is the main cytokine that causes the injury,26
there are significant differences between the two models. Specifically, caspase-dependent apoptosis is the dominant mode of cell death in ConA/GalN model, but not in the ConA model. As such the injury is usually irreversible in the former, but reversible in the latter.
While ConA-induced liver injury depends on both TNF-R1 and TNF-R2, caspase activation in ConA/GalN treatment depends only on TNF-R1.13
Early work had also shown that the liver injury could be greatly inhibited by a pan-caspase inhibitor in the ConA/GalN model, but not in the ConA only model.13
TNF
-R1-mediated caspase activation depends on the adaptor molecule TNF receptor-associated death domain and FADD, which recruit caspase-8. Consistently, we found that FADD-DN mice were well protected from ConA/GalN injury with no caspase activation. These mice had been shown before to be resistant to anti-Fas and LPS/GalN-induced liver injury.20
It is thus predictable that ConA/GalN-induced apoptosis in the hepatocyte would be dependent on mitochondria as in the other models of death receptor-initiated liver injury. Indeed, mitochondrial release of cytochrome c could be detected early on in WT mice, but was not observed in the FADD-DN mice. The mitochondria response would be mediated by Bid, which is translocated to the mitochondria following the cleavage by caspase-8. We did find a significant reduction of mitochondria apoptosis in the Bid-deficient mice following ConA/GalN treatment (data not shown), as in the anti-Fas and LPS/GalN treatment.4,6,7
Thus suppression of caspase-8 activation by FLIP, an NF-
B target, is a crucial regulatory mechanism.
No apparent caspase activation could be detected in the absence of GalN at the time when the liver enzymes had already arisen significantly in the blood (Figures 1 and 7)
, which was also observed in early studies.14,13
The injury could clearly occur in a caspase-independent way, as they could be also observed in the FADD-DN mice (this study) and could not be suppressed by blocking antibodies against FADD/caspase 8 cascade,28
or by a pan-caspase inhibitor.13
ConA alone thus induced a mainly non-caspase dependent cell death, which seems to be oncotic necrosis. While the exact mechanisms of TNF
-induced necrotic mechanisms are not clear, receptor-interacting protein-mediated pathway and reactive oxygen species generation have been implicated.9,10
The latter could be linked to the activation of mitochondria permeability transition pore and reduction of ATP production, which could contribute to necrosis.29
Interestingly, despite that hepatocytes can mount a significant apoptosis in response to ConA stimulation in the presence of GalN, the necrotic death still occurs, as observed in FADD-DN mice. In these mice, while apoptosis was completely blocked following ConA/GalN treatment, blood liver enzyme level was still elevated and liver histology was still abnormal. Both presentations resembled to what could be observed in the ConA model. These observations support the notion that the apoptotic death and non-apoptotic death in the two ConA models are clearly mediated by different signal pathways. While both modes of cell death are activated in the ConA/GalN model, only the necrotic mode is activated in the ConA alone mode. It seems that the default mechanism of cell death in the ConA regime is necrosis and apoptosis is induced to appreciable levels only when GalN is applied and when the apoptosis pathways are intact.
Differential Role of JNK in ConA Versus ConA/GalN-Induced Liver Injury
JNK has been widely implicated in TNF
-induced toxicity in hepatocyte.17-19,23
JNK, particularly JNK2, was found to be critical to hepatocyte apoptosis and liver injury in the LPS/GalN regime19
and in the ischemia/reperfusion regime.30
Here we have demonstrated that JNK is important for the ConA/GalN-induced injury but not ConA-induced injury. In the formal, JNK2 seems to play a more prominent role than JNK1. The bone marrow transplantation study indicated that the pro-death effect of JNK could be manifested at the liver level.
JNK may promote cell death by different mechanisms in different cells. Several studies now indicate that JNK is involved in the mitochondria activation.17-19,23,31
This seems to be the case in the ConA/GalN model, in which deficiency of JNK1 or JNK2 greatly reduced mitochondria activation and caspase activation. It seems that JNK affects mitochondria activation by controlling the upstream events. Therefore degradation of FLIPL was blocked in the absence of JNK and in turn caspase-8 activation was reduced with decreased cleavage of Bid. These observations are consistent with previous findings that TNF
-induced caspase cascade can be blocked by FLIP,32
and that FLIPL degrades following TNF
stimulation33
through a JNK-mediated activation of its E3 ligase, Itch.34
Several additional observations need to be considered for the role of JNK in the liver injury scenario. First, it seemed that neither the phosphorylation status nor the c-Jun kinase activity is closely linked with the pro-death activity, although they were good indications of JNK activation. This discord had also been observed in the liver injury induced by LPS/GalN.19 The c-Jun kinase activity seems to be mostly associated with JNK1, which was intact in the JNK2-deficient mice. This was consistent with what had been reported in fibroblasts25 and other cells.35 However, unlike in the fibroblasts,25 JNK2-deficient mice conferred a greater protection against liver injury than JNK1-deficient mice. The c-Jun kinase activity of JNK2, although much lower than that of JNK1, may still be contributory to apoptosis induction. In addition, the ability of JNK2 to promote c-Jun degradation and therefore to suppress cell proliferation35 may in turn antagonize the pro-survival status of the cell. Alternatively, other yet-to-be-defined activities of JNK2 could be instrumental. From this aspect, it is possible that the ability of JNK to activate Itch could be segregated from its ability to activate c-Jun. These possibilities have yet to be examined in future studies. Finally, it should be noted that JNK could promote mitochondria activation via non-Bid-mediated pathways.23,36
In contrast to what was observed in the ConA/GalN model, we did not observe any significant protection against ConA-induced injury conferred by the deletion of JNK1 or JNK2 as measured by serum ALT level and liver pathology. Similar observation was made when a chemical JNK inhibitor was used.37 This was not the case in a previously reported study in that JNK1 or JNK2-deficient mice were protected.15 The reason for this discrepancy is not clear. One possible explanation may be related to the interpretation of certain parameters, such as terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated dUTP nick-end labeling staining, which was not used in present study because it was not a reliable marker for apoptosis and it could be misleading without a careful quantification and other supportive evidence.
However, it may not be surprising that JNK does not participate in ConA-mediated liver injury, as it was mainly caused by non-apoptotic death, as discussed above. Most evidence supports that JNK participates in the apoptotic response in TNF
-induced toxicity. In the ConA-induced injury, apoptosis is only present when GalN is given, which blocks NF-
B activation. A major function of NF-
B-mediated protection is to suppress sustained JNK activation, which is required for its pro-death effect.16,38-41
Indeed, sustained JNK activation is most clearly seen when NF-
B is blocked in the ConA/GalN treatment (Figure 3A)
. Thus JNK is important in ConA/GalN-induced injury likely because of the apoptotic nature of the injury and the suppression of NF-
B. Conversely, JNK does not seem to be important in ConA-mediated injury likely because of its non-apoptotic nature of the injury and because there is no suppression of NF-
B. Consistently, in other types of cells in which TNF
-induced non-apoptotic death was documented, JNK was also found to be non-essential.9,10
It has to be pointed out that JNK can participate in non-apoptotic death in some non-TNF
-mediated scenarios. For example, JNK is critical for acetaminophen-induced liver injury, which is characterized by caspase-independent oncotic necrosis.37
This effect of JNK is specific to this type of injury and was not observed in injury caused by CCl4 or ConA.37
In summary, ConA stimulation of liver injury evokes different cell death modes depending on the presence of the sensitizing agent, GalN. Whereas ConA alone mainly induce a caspase-independent necrotic death and mild reversible liver injury, ConA/GalN also activates a potent caspase-dependent apoptotic response, in which JNK participates to promote mitochondria activation, leading to irreversible liver injury and mortality.
| Acknowledgements |
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| Footnotes |
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Supported by an NIH grant to X.-M. Yin (R01CA 83817). W-X Ding was supported by a Liver Scholar Award from American Liver Foundation and Alpha-1 Foundation.
Accepted for publication June 26, 2008.
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