Browsing by Author "Schmidt, Edward E."
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Item The autophagic protein p62 is a target of reactive aldehydes in human and murine cholestatic liver disease(Public Library of Science, 2022-11) Shearn, Colin T.; Anderson, Aimee L.; Devereux, Michael W.; Orlicky, David J.; Michel, Cole; Petersen, Dennis R.; Miller, Colin G.; Harpavat, Sanjiv; Schmidt, Edward E.; Sokol, Ronald J.Inflammatory cholestatic liver diseases, including Primary Sclerosing Cholangitis (PSC), are characterized by periportal inflammation with progression to cirrhosis. The objective of this study was to examine interactions between oxidative stress and autophagy in cholestasis. Using hepatic tissue from male acute cholestatic (bile duct ligated) as well as chronic cholestatic (Mdr2KO) mice, localization of oxidative stress, the antioxidant response and induction of autophagy were analyzed and compared to human PSC liver. Concurrently, the ability of reactive aldehydes to post-translationally modify the autophagosome marker p62 was assessed in PSC liver tissue and in cell culture. Expression of autophagy markers was upregulated in human and mouse cholestatic liver. Whereas mRNA expression of Atg12, Lamp1, Sqstm1 and Map1lc3 was increased in acute cholestasis in mice, it was either suppressed or not significantly changed in chronic cholestasis. In human and murine cholestasis, periportal hepatocytes showed increased IHC staining of ubiquitin, 4-HNE, p62, and selected antioxidant proteins. Increased p62 staining colocalized with accumulation of 4-HNE-modified proteins in periportal parenchymal cells as well as with periportal macrophages in both human and mouse liver. Mechanistically, p62 was identified as a direct target of lipid aldehyde adduction in PSC hepatic tissue and in vitro cell culture. In vitro LS-MS/MS analysis of 4-HNE treated recombinant p62 identified carbonylation of His123, Cys128, His174, His181, Lys238, Cys290, His340, Lys341 and His385. These data indicate that dysregulation of autophagy and oxidative stress/protein damage are present in the same periportal hepatocyte compartment of both human and murine cholestasis. Thus, our results suggest that both increased expression as well as ineffective autophagic degradation of oxidatively-modified proteins contributes to injury in periportal parenchymal cells and that direct modification of p62 by reactive aldehydes may contribute to autophagic dysfunction.Item Carbonyl Reductase 1 Plays a Significant Role in Converting Doxorubicin to Cardiotoxic Doxorubicinol in Mouse Liver, but the Majority of the Doxorubicinol-Forming Activity Remains Unidentified(2020-03) Breysse, Daniel H.; Boone, Ryan M.; Long, Cameron M.; Merrill, Miranda E.; Schaupp, Christopher M.; White, Colin C.; Kavanagh, Terrance J.; Schmidt, Edward E.; Merrill, Gary F.Doxorubicin is a widely used cancer therapeutic, but its effectiveness is limited by cardiotoxic side effects. Evidence suggests cardiotoxicity is due not to doxorubicin, but rather its metabolite, doxorubicinol. Identification of the enzymes responsible for doxorubicinol formation is important in developing strategies to prevent cardiotoxicity. In this study, the contributions of three murine candidate enzymes to doxorubicinol formation were evaluated: carbonyl reductase (Cbr) 1, Cbr3, and thioredoxin reductase 1 (Tr1). Analyses with purified proteins revealed that all three enzymes catalyzed doxorubicin-dependent NADPH oxidation, but only Cbr1 and Cbr3 catalyzed doxorubicinol formation. Doxorubicin-dependent NADPH oxidation by Tr1 was likely due to redox cycling. Subcellular fractionation results showed that doxorubicin-dependent redox cycling activity was primarily microsomal, whereas doxorubicinol-forming activity was exclusively cytosolic, as were all three enzymes. An immunoclearing approach was used to assess the contributions of the three enzymes to doxorubicinol formation in the complex milieu of the cytosol. Immunoclearing Cbr1 eliminated 25% of the total doxorubicinol-forming activity in cytosol, but immunoclearing Cbr3 had no effect, even in Tr1 null livers that overexpressed Cbr3. The immunoclearing results constituted strong evidence that Cbr1 contributed to doxorubicinol formation in mouse liver but that enzymes other than Cbr1 also played a role, a conclusion supported by ammonium sulfate fractionation results, which showed that doxorubicinol-forming activity was found in fractions that contained little Cbr1. In conclusion, the results show that Cbr1 accounts for 25% of the doxorubicinol-forming activity in mouse liver cytosol but that the majority of the doxorubicinol-forming activity remains unidentified. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT: Earlier studies suggested carbonyl reductase (Cbr) 1 plays a dominant role in converting chemotherapeutic doxorubicin to cardiotoxic doxorubicinol, but a new immunoclearing approach described herein shows that Cbr1 accounts for only 25% of the doxorubicinol-forming activity in mouse liver cytosol, that two other candidate enzymes-Cbr3 and thioredoxin reductase 1-play no role, and that the majority of the activity remains unidentified. Thus, targeting Cbr1 is necessary but not sufficient to eliminate doxorubicinol-associated cardiotoxicity; identification of the additional doxorubicinol-forming activity is an important next challenge.Item Cytoprotective Nrf2 pathway is induced in chronically txnrd 1-deficient hepatocytes(2009-07) Suvorova, Elena S.; Lucas, Olivier; Weisend, Carla M.; Rollins, MaryClare F.; Merrill, Gary F.; Capecchi, Mario R.; Schmidt, Edward E."Background Metabolically active cells require robust mechanisms to combat oxidative stress. The cytoplasmic thioredoxin reductase/thioredoxin (Txnrd1/Txn1) system maintains reduced protein dithiols and provides electrons to some cellular reductases, including peroxiredoxins. Principal Findings Here we generated mice in which the txnrd1 gene, encoding Txnrd1, was specifically disrupted in all parenchymal hepatocytes. Txnrd1-deficient livers exhibited a transcriptome response in which 56 mRNAs were induced and 12 were repressed. Based on the global hybridization profile, this represented only 0.3% of the liver transcriptome. Since most liver mRNAs were unaffected, compensatory responses were evidently effective. Nuclear pre-mRNA levels indicated the response was transcriptional. Twenty-one of the induced genes contained known antioxidant response elements (AREs), which are binding sites for the oxidative and chemical stress-induced transcription factor Nrf2. Txnrd1-deficient livers showed increased accumulation of nuclear Nrf2 protein and chromatin immunoprecipitation on the endogenous nqo1 and aox1 promoters in fibroblasts indicated that Txnrd1 ablation triggered in vivo assembly of Nrf2 on each. Conclusions Chronic deletion of Txnrd1 results in induction of the Nrf2 pathway, which contributes to an effective compensatory response."Item Hepatocyte Hyperproliferation upon Liver-Specific Co-disruption of Thioredoxin-1, Thioredoxin Reductase-1, and Glutathione Reductase(2017-06) Prigge, Justin R.; Coppo, Lucia; Martin, Sebastin S.; Ogata, Fernando; Miller, Colin G.; Bruschwein, Michael D.; Orlicky, David J.; Shearn, Colin T.; Kundert, Jean A.; Lytchier, Julia; Herr, Alix E.; Mattsson, Åse; Taylor, Matthew P.; Gustafsson, Tomas; Arnér, Elias S. J.; Holmgren, Arne; Schmidt, Edward E.Energetic nutrients are oxidized to sustain high intracellular NADPH/NADP+ ratios. NADPH-dependent reduction of thioredoxin-1 (Trx1) disulfide and glutathione disulfide by thioredoxin reductase-1 (TrxR1) and glutathione reductase (Gsr), respectively, fuels antioxidant systems and deoxyribonucleotide synthesis. Mouse livers lacking both TrxR1 and Gsr sustain these essential activities using an NADPH-independent methionine-consuming pathway; however, it remains unclear how this reducing power is distributed. Here, we show that liver-specific co-disruption of the genes encoding Trx1, TrxR1, and Gsr (triple-null) causes dramatic hepatocyte hyperproliferation. Thus, even in the absence of Trx1, methionine-fueled glutathione production supports hepatocyte S phase deoxyribonucleotide production. Also, Trx1 in the absence of TrxR1 provides a survival advantage to cells under hyperglycemic stress, suggesting that glutathione, likely via glutaredoxins, can reduce Trx1 disulfide in vivo. In triple-null livers like in many cancers, deoxyribonucleotide synthesis places a critical yet relatively low-volume demand on these reductase systems, thereby favoring high hepatocyte turnover over sustained hepatocyte integrity.Item Hepatocytes lacking thioredoxin reductase 1 have normal replicative potential during development and regeneration(2010-07) Rollins, MaryClare F.; van der Heide, Dana M.; Weisend, Carla M.; Kundert, Jean A.; Comstock, Kristin M.; Suvorova, Elena S.; Capecchi, Mario R.; Merrill, Gary F.; Schmidt, Edward E.Cells require ribonucleotide reductase (RNR) activity for DNA replication. In bacteria, electrons can flow from NADPH to RNR by either a thioredoxin-reductase- or a glutathione-reductase-dependent route. Yeast and plants artificially lacking thioredoxin reductases exhibit a slow-growth phenotype, suggesting glutathione-reductase-dependent routes are poor at supporting DNA replication in these organisms. We have studied proliferation of thioredoxin-reductase-1 (Txnrd1)-deficient hepatocytes in mice. During development and regeneration, normal mice and mice having Txnrd1-deficient hepatocytes exhibited similar liver growth rates. Proportions of hepatocytes that immunostained for PCNA, phosphohistone H3 or incorporated BrdU were also similar, indicating livers of either genotype had similar levels of proliferative, S and M phase hepatocytes, respectively. Replication was blocked by hydroxyurea, confirming that RNR activity was required by Txnrd1-deficient hepatocytes. Regenerative thymidine incorporation was similar in normal and Txnrd1-deficient livers, further indicating that DNA synthesis was unaffected. Using genetic chimeras in which a fluorescently marked subset of hepatocytes was Txnrd1-deficient while others were not, we found that the multigenerational contributions of both hepatocyte types to development and to liver regeneration were indistinguishable. We conclude that, in mouse hepatocytes, a Txnrd1-independent route for the supply of electrons to RNR can fully support DNA replication and normal proliferative growth.Item Hydrodynamic Delivery of Cre Proteins to Lineage-Mark or Time-Stamp Hepatocytes In Situ(2014-03) Sonsteng, K. M.; Prigge, Justin R.; June, Ronald K.; Schmidt, Edward E.Cre-responsive fluorescent marker alleles are powerful tools for cell lineage tracing in mice; however their utility is limited by regulation of Cre activity. When targeting hepatocytes, hydrodynamic delivery of a Cre-expression plasmid can convert Cre-responsive alleles without inducing the intracellular or systemic antiviral responses often associated with viral-derived Cre-expression vectors. In this method, rapid high-volume intravenous inoculation induces hepatocyte-targeted uptake of extracellular molecules. Here we tested whether hydrodynamic delivery of Cre protein or Cre fused to the HIV-TAT cell-penetrating peptide could convert Cre-responsive reporters in hepatocytes of mice. Hydrodynamic delivery of 2 nmol of either Cre or TAT-Cre protein converted the reporter allele in 5 to 20% of hepatocytes. Neither protein gave detectable Cre activity in endothelia, non-liver organs, or non-hepatocyte cells in liver. Using mice homozygous for a Cre-responsive marker that directs red- (Cre-naïve) or green- (Cre-converted) fluorescent proteins to the nucleus, we assessed sub-saturation Cre-activity. One month after hydrodynamic inoculation with Cre protein, 58% of hepatocyte nuclei that were green were also red, indicating that less than half of the hepatocytes that had obtained enough Cre to convert one marker allele to green were able to convert all alleles. For comparison, one month after hydrodynamic delivery of a Cre-expression plasmid with a weak promoter, only 26% of the green nuclei were also red. Our results show that hydrodynamic delivery of Cre protein allows rapid allelic conversion in hepatocytes, but Cre-activity is sub-saturating so many cells will not convert multiple Cre-responsive alleles.Item Non-Invasive Quantification of Cartilage Using a Novel In Vivo Bioluminescent Reporter Mouse(2015-07) Mailhiot, Sarah E.; Zignego, Donald L.; Prigge, Justin R.; Wardwell, Ella R.; Schmidt, Edward E.; June, Ronald K.Mouse models are common tools for examining post-traumatic osteoarthritis (OA), which involves cartilage deterioration following injury or stress. One challenge to current mouse models is longitudinal monitoring of the cartilage deterioration in vivo in the same mouse during an experiment. The objective of this study was to assess the feasibility for using a novel transgenic mouse for non-invasive quantification of cartilage. Chondrocytes are defined by expression of the matrix protein aggrecan, and we developed a novel mouse containing a reporter luciferase cassette under the inducible control of the endogenous aggrecan promoter. We generated these mice by crossing a Cre-dependent luciferase reporter allele with an aggrecan creERT2 knockin allele. The advantage of this design is that the targeted knockin retains the intact endogenous aggrecan locus and expresses the tamoxifen-inducible CreERT2 protein from a second IRES-driven open reading frame. These mice display bioluminescence in the joints, tail, and trachea, consistent with patterns of aggrecan expression. To evaluate this mouse as a technology for non-invasive quantification of cartilage loss, we characterized the relationship between loss of bioluminescence and loss of cartilage after induction with (i) ex vivo collagenase digestion, (ii) an in vivo OA model utilizing treadmill running, and (iii) age. Ex vivo experiments revealed that collagenase digestion of the femur reduced both luciferase signal intensity and pixel area, demonstrating a link between cartilage degradation and bioluminescence. In an in vivo model of experimental OA, we found decreased bioluminescent signal and pixel area, which correlated with pathological disease. We detected a decrease in both bioluminescent signal intensity and area with natural aging from 2 to 13 months of age. These results indicate that the bioluminescent signal from this mouse may be used as a non-invasive quantitative measure of cartilage. Future studies may use this reporter mouse to advance basic and preclinical studies of murine experimental OA with applications in synovial joint biology, disease pathogenesis, and drug delivery.Item Thioredoxin reductase 1 regulates hepatic inflammation and macrophage activation during acute cholestatic liver injury(Ovid Technologies, 2023-01) Shearn, Colin T.; Anderson, Aimee L.; Miller, Colin G.; Noyd, Reed C.; Devereaux, Michael W.; Balasubramaniyan, Nata; Orlicky, David J.; Schmidt, Edward E.; Sokol, Ronald J.Background and Aims: Cholestatic liver diseases, including primary sclerosing cholangitis, are characterized by periportal inflammation with progression to hepatic fibrosis and ultimately cirrhosis. We recently reported that the thioredoxin antioxidant response is dysregulated during primary sclerosing cholangitis. The objective of this study was to examine the impact of genetic and pharmacological targeting of thioredoxin reductase 1 (TrxR1) on hepatic inflammation and liver injury during acute cholestatic injury. Approach and Results: Primary mouse hepatocytes and intrahepatic macrophages were isolated from 3-day bile duct ligated (BDL) mice and controls. Using wildtype and mice with a liver-specific deletion of TrxR1 (TrxR1LKO), we analyzed the effect of inhibition or ablation of TrxR1 signaling on liver injury and inflammation. Immunohistochemical analysis of livers from BDL mice and human cholestatic patients revealed increased TrxR1 staining in periportal macrophages and hepatocytes surrounding fibrosis. qPCR analysis of primary hepatocytes and intrahepatic macrophages revealed increased TrxR1 mRNA expression following BDL. Compared with sham controls, BDL mice exhibited increased inflammation, necrosis, and increased mRNA expression of pro-inflammatory cytokines, fibrogenesis, the NLRP3 inflammatory complex, and increased activation of NFkB, all of which were ameliorated in TrxR1LKO mice. Importantly, following BDL, TrxR1LKO induced periportal hepatocyte expression of Nrf2-dependent antioxidant proteins and increased mRNA expression of basolateral bile acid transporters with reduced expression of bile acid synthesis genes. In the acute BDL model, the TrxR1 inhibitor auranofin (10 mg/kg/1 d preincubation, 3 d BDL) ameliorated BDL-dependent increases in Nlrp3, GsdmD, Il1β, and TNFα mRNA expression despite increasing serum alanine aminotransferase, aspartate aminotransferase, bile acids, and bilirubin. Conclusions: These data implicate TrxR1-signaling as an important regulator of inflammation and bile acid homeostasis in cholestatic liver injury.Item TrxR1, Gsr, and oxidative stress determine hepatocellular carcinoma malignancy(2019-06) McLoughlin, Michael R.; Orlicky, David J.; Prigge, Justin R.; Krishna, Pushya; Talago, Emily A.; Cavigli, Ian R.; Eriksson, Sofi; Miller, Colin G.; Kundert, Jean A.; Sayin, Volkan I.; Sabol, Rachel A.; Heinemann, Joshua; Brandenberger, Luke O.; Iverson, Sonya V.; Bothner, Brian; Papagiannakopoulos, Thales; Shearn, Colin T.; Arner, Elias S. J.; Schmidt, Edward E.Thioredoxin reductase-1 (TrxR1)-, glutathione reductase (Gsr)-, and Nrf2 transcription factor-driven antioxidant systems form an integrated network that combats potentially carcinogenic oxidative damage yet also protects cancer cells from oxidative death. Here we show that although unchallenged wild-type (WT), TrxR1-null, or Gsr-null mouse livers exhibited similarly low DNA damage indices, these were 100-fold higher in unchallenged TrxR1/Gsr–double-null livers. Notwithstanding, spontaneous cancer rates remained surprisingly low in TrxR1/Gsr-null livers. All genotypes, including TrxR1/Gsr-null, were susceptible to N-diethylnitrosamine (DEN)-induced liver cancer, indicating that loss of these antioxidant systems did not prevent cancer cell survival. Interestingly, however, following DEN treatment, TrxR1-null livers developed threefold fewer tumors compared with WT livers. Disruption of TrxR1 in a marked subset of DEN-initiated cancer cells had no effect on their subsequent contributions to tumors, suggesting that TrxR1-disruption does not affect cancer progression under normal care, but does decrease the frequency of DEN-induced cancer initiation. Consistent with this idea, TrxR1-null livers showed altered basal and DEN-exposed metabolomic profiles compared with WT livers. To examine how oxidative stress influenced cancer progression, we compared DEN-induced cancer malignancy under chronically low oxidative stress (TrxR1-null, standard care) vs. elevated oxidative stress (TrxR1/Gsr-null livers, standard care or phenobarbital-exposed TrxR1-null livers). In both cases, elevated oxidative stress was correlated with significantly increased malignancy. Finally, although TrxR1-null and TrxR1/Gsr-null livers showed strong Nrf2 activity in noncancerous hepatocytes, there was no correlation between malignancy and Nrf2 expression within tumors across genotypes. We conclude that TrxR1, Gsr, Nrf2, and oxidative stress are major determinants of liver cancer but in a complex, context-dependent manner.Item Unresolved questions regarding cellular cysteine sources and their possible relationships to ferroptosis(Europe PMC, 2024-05) Arnér, Elias S.J.; Schmidt, Edward E.Cysteine is required for synthesis of glutathione (GSH), coenzyme A, other sulfur-containing metabolites, and most proteins. In most cells, cysteine comes from extracellular disulfide sources including cystine, glutathione-disulfide, and peptides. The thioredoxin reductase-1 (TrxR1)- or glutathione-disulfide reductase (GSR)-driven enzymatic systems can fuel cystine reduction via thioredoxins, glutaredoxins, or other thioredoxin-fold proteins. Free cystine enters cells thorough the cystine-glutamate antiporter, xCT, but systemically, plasma glutathione-disulfide might predominate as a cystine source. Erastin, inhibiting both xCT and voltage-dependent anion channels, induces ferroptotic cell death, so named because this type of cell death is antagonized by iron-chelators. Many cancer cells seem to be predisposed to ferroptosis, which has been proposed as a targetable cancer liability. Ferroptosis is associated with lipid peroxidation and loss of either glutathione peroxidase-4 (GPX4) or ferroptosis suppressor protein-1 (FSP1), which each prevent accumulation of lipid peroxides. It has been suggested that an xCT inhibition-induced cellular cysteine-deficiency lowers GSH levels, starving GPX4 for reducing power and allowing membrane lipid peroxides to accumulate, thereby causing ferroptosis. Aspects of ferroptosis are however not fully understood and need to be further scrutinized, for example that neither disruption of GSH synthesis, loss of GSH, nor disruption of glutathione disulfide reductase (GSR), triggers ferroptosis in animal models. Here we reevaluate the relationships between Erastin, xCT, GPX4, cellular cysteine and GSH, RSL3 or ML162, and ferroptosis. We conclude that, whereas both Cys and ferroptosis are potential liabilities in cancer, their relationship to each other remains insufficiently understood.