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© The Rockefeller University Press,
0021-9525/2000//857 $5.00
The Journal of Cell Biology, Volume 148, Number 5,
, 2000 857-862
Brief Report |
Reduced Loading of Intracellular Ca2+ Stores and Downregulation of Capacitative Ca2+Influx in Bcl-2–Overexpressing Cells
r.rizzuto{at}unife.it
The mechanism of action of the oncogene bcl-2, a key regulator of the apoptotic process, is still debated. We have employed organelle-targeted chimeras of the Ca2+-sensitive photoprotein, aequorin, to investigate in detail the effect of Bcl-2 overexpression on intracellular Ca2+ homeostasis. In the ER and the Golgi apparatus, Bcl-2 overexpression increases the Ca2+ leak (while leaving Ca2+ accumulation unaffected), hence reducing the steady-state [Ca2+] levels. As a direct consequence, the [Ca2+] increases caused by inositol 1,4,5 trisphosphate (IP3)-generating agonists were reduced in amplitude in both the cytosol and the mitochondria. Bcl-2 overexpression also reduced the rate of Ca2+ influx activated by Ca2+ store depletion, possibly by an adaptive downregulation of this pathway. By interfering with Ca2+-dependent events at multiple intracellular sites, these effects of Bcl-2 on intracellular Ca2+ homeostasis may contribute to the protective role of this oncogene against programed cell death.
Key Words: calcium organelles oncogene aequorin cell signaling
© 2000 The Rockefeller University Press
| Introduction |
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Among the various functions occurring on ER and mitochondrial membranes, ion fluxes are recognized to play major roles. Thus, the intriguing possibility has emerged that members of the Bcl-2 family affect the apoptotic process by modulating ion fluxes in these organelles (Minn et al. 1997; Schendel et al. 1998). In particular, recent work in cell clones stably expressing the oncogene suggests that Bcl-2 causes an overload of Ca2+ within the ER (Lam et al. 1994; He et al. 1997, Kuo et al. 1998). However, this effect appears in contrast with the observation that Bcl-2 insertion in artificial lipid bilayers results in the formation of ionic channels of low selectivity (Minn et al. 1997). Such property should in fact cause a reduction in the ER Ca2+ content (due to an increased leak) rather than excess accumulation. In this report, we have undertaken a detailed investigation of Ca2+ homeostasis at the subcellular level using the recombinant aequorin (AEQ) approach developed in our laboratory (Rizzuto et al. 1992; De Giorgi et al. 1996). We conclude that Bcl-2 overexpression affects Ca2+ handling by reducing the state of filling of the intracellular Ca2+ stores. The implications of these results for the protective action of Bcl-2 on apoptosis are discussed.
| Materials and Methods |
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Aequorin Measurements
For cytosolic AEQ (cytAEQ) and mitochondrial AEQ (mtAEQ), the coverslip with the cells was incubated with 5 µM coelenterazine for 1–2 h in DME supplemented with 1% FCS, and then transferred to the perfusion chamber. For reconstituting with high efficiency, the AEQ chimeras targeted to the Golgi apparatus and the ER (GoAEQ and erAEQ, respectively), the luminal [Ca2+] of these compartments first must be reduced. This was obtained by incubating the cells for 1 h at 4°C in KRB (Krebs-Ringer modified buffer: 125 mM NaCl, 5 mM KCl, 1 mM Na3PO4, 1 mM MgSO4, 5.5 mM glucose, and 20 mM Hepes, pH 7.4, at 37°C) supplemented with coelenterazine 5 µM, the Ca2+ ionophore ionomycin, and 600 µM EGTA. After this incubation, the cells were extensively washed with KRB supplemented with 2% BSA and 1 mM EGTA, and then AEQ reconstitution was carried out as described.
All AEQ measurements were carried out in KRB. Agonists and other drugs were added to the same medium. In experiments with permeabilized cells, a buffer mimicking the cytosolic ionic composition (intracellular buffer, IB: 140 mM KCl, 10 mM NaCl, 1 mM K3PO4, 5.5 mM glucose, 2 mM MgSO4, 1 mM ATP, 2 mM sodium succinate, 20 mM Hepes, pH 7.05, at 37°C) was employed. This solution was supplemented with either 100 µM EGTA or a fixed [Ca2+] (buffered with 2 mM EGTA). The experiments were terminated by lysing the cells with 100 µM digitonin in a hypotonic Ca2+-rich solution (10 mM CaCl2 in H2O), thus discharging the remaining AEQ pool. The light signal was collected and calibrated into [Ca2+] values as previously described (Brini et al. 1995; Rizzuto et al. 1995a). In brief, a 13-mm round coverslip with the transfected cells was placed in a perfused, thermostated chamber located in the close proximity of a low-noise photomultiplier, with built-in amplifier discriminator. The output of the discriminator was captured by a Thorn-EMI photon counting board and stored in an IBM-compatible computer for further analyses. The AEQ luminescence data were calibrated off-line into [Ca2+] values, using a computer algorithm based on the Ca2+ response curve of wild-type and mutant AEQs, as previously described (Brini et al. 1995; Barrero et al. 1997).
In some experiments using erAEQ, after reaching the plateau level, an artifactual slow decrease in [Ca2+] was observed. Such an artifact is due to a small fraction of missorted AEQ in a low [Ca2+] compartment and a simple practical cure for it has been described by Maechler et al. 1999.
In the experiment of Fig. 4, cells transfected with erAEQ were used to determine the steady [Ca2+]er obtained by incubating the cells in low Ca2+ medium. Two protocols were adopted that gave identical results. In the first, cells incubated in normal medium were depleted according to the standard protocol, but the Ca2+ concentration during the refilling was reduced to 100 µM. In the second protocol, the cells were preincubated in 100 µM CaCl2 for 16 h, depleted, and finally refilled with an extracellular Ca2+ concentration of 100 µM.
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| Results and Discussion |
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The effect of Bcl-2 expression on the cytosolic Ca2+ signal elicited by an agonist, ATP, acting on receptors coupled, through Gq proteins, to the production of inositol 1,4,5 trisphosphate (IP3) was first investigated. In the experiment shown in Fig. 1, HeLa cells, either coexpressing Bcl-2 and cytAEQ (Bcl-2–transfected) or expressing only cytAEQ (controls) were challenged with ATP, which acts on a Gq-coupled P2Y receptor. Both in control and Bcl-2–transfected cells, ATP stimulation causes a rapid rise in cytoplasmic Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]c), followed by a gradually declining sustained plateau. In Bcl-2–transfected cells, the [Ca2+] increases evoked by stimulation with ATP are significantly smaller than in controls (peak amplitude 1.53 ± 0.22 vs. 2.06 ± 0.13 µM, n = 10; Fig. 1 A).
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A second possible explanation for the reduction in the agonist-dependent [Ca2+]c (and [Ca2+]m) increases was next considered, i.e., a decrease in the amount of Ca2+ released by the agonist-sensitive Ca2+ stores. To investigate this possibility, the [Ca2+] in the lumen of the ER was measured in cells cotransfected with Bcl-2 and an erAEQ chimera (Montero et al. 1995). In addition, since we recently have demonstrated that the Golgi apparatus shares many of the Ca2+ homeostatic properties of the ER (Pinton et al. 1998), this latter organelle was also investigated. Fig. 2 shows the calibrated [Ca2+] values in the two compartments. To obtain reliable quantitative estimates of the [Ca2+] in the lumen of these two organelles, their [Ca2+] needs to be decreased during both the reconstitution of AEQ with coelenterazine and the subsequent initial phase of perfusion with KRB/EGTA in the luminometer (see Materials and Methods). Under those conditions, the [Ca2+] was <10 µM in both organelles. When the [Ca2+] in the perfusion medium was switched to 1 mM, the [Ca2+] in the lumen of the two compartments gradually increased, reaching in control cells plateau values of 452 ± 46 µM (n = 7) in the ER and 262 ± 47 µM (n = 7) in the Golgi apparatus, respectively. In Bcl-2 transfected cells, lower steady state values were attained in both compartments (304 ± 38 µM, n = 7 for the ER, and 186 ± 34 µM, n = 7 for the Golgi apparatus, respectively). When the cells were treated with ATP, rapid decreases in the [Ca2+] of the two compartments were observed, both in control and Bcl-2–expressing cells. In both organelles, the decrease of [Ca2+] was larger and faster in controls compared with Bcl-2–expressing cells, reflecting the higher filling state and thus the more rapid flow through the IP3-gated channels.
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But how does Bcl-2 affect ER and Golgi Ca2+ handling? Given that the steady-state [Ca2+] in both organelles depends on the equilibrium between active accumulation and passive leak, the effect of Bcl-2 could be on either process. On one hand, Bcl-2 could reduce Ca2+ uptake by the SERCA, either by a direct effect on the pump or by reducing the resting cytosolic [Ca2+]. On the other, it could increase the passive diffusion of Ca2+ from the ER. To clarify this critical issue, we investigated these possibilities independently.
At first, the possibility that Bcl-2 affected primarily cytosolic [Ca2+] (and hence [Ca2+]er only indirectly) was verified. Given that AEQ is not accurate enough to reveal small differences of [Ca2+]
10–7 M, the resting [Ca2+]c was measured with the fluorescent indicator fura-2 (Grynkiewicz et al. 1985). In this experiment, to identify Bcl-2–overexpressing cells in single-cell imaging experiments, the cells were cotransfected with mitochondrially targeted GFP, mtGFP(S65T) (Rizzuto et al. 1995b). GFP-positive cells were distinguished from controls by the typical fluorescence emitted upon illumination with blue light. No difference in the resting cytoplasmic [Ca2+] between Bcl-2–transfected and control cells was observed (data not shown).
Then, we investigated whether Bcl-2 overexpression had any direct effect on the activity of the SERCA pump. For this purpose, the kinetics of Ca2+ accumulation were studied in permeabilized cells (Fig. 3 A). After reconstituting the photoprotein as in the experiment of Fig. 2, Bcl-2–transfected and control cells were transferred to the luminometer chamber and perfused with a buffer (IB, see Materials and Methods) mimicking intracellular ionic conditions, supplemented with 100 µM EGTA (IB/EGTA). After permeabilization with 100 µM digitonin added to the same medium and wash in IB/EGTA, the medium was switched to IB, containing 200 nM [Ca2+] (IB/Ca2+). Under those conditions, [Ca2+]er gradually increased, reaching, in control cells, a plateau value of 728 ± 60, n = 5. In Bcl-2–transfected cells, the maximal rate of Ca2+ accumulation was the same as in control cells (13 ± 2 vs. 12 ± 3 µM/s, n = 5), arguing that the Ca2+ pumping activity is not modified. However, the steady-state value eventually attained was distinctly lower (504 ± 52 µM, n = 5). Therefore, these data exclude that the alteration of ER Ca2+ homeostasis is due to a reduction in the activity of the SERCAs or to soluble cytosolic factors (that are released into the medium after permeabilization with digitonin). Rather, by demonstrating a difference only when ER refilling approaches the high [Ca2+]er values of intact resting cells, i.e., in conditions in which passive leak becomes significant, they suggest that Bcl-2 acts on the latter process.
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Previously, we have demonstrated that a reduction of
30% in steady-state [Ca2+]er results in a substantial activation (>50%) of the so-called capacitative Ca2+ influx (Hofer et al. 1998). The reduction in steady-state [Ca2+]er caused by Bcl-2 overexpression is thus expected to cause an activation of this pathway. However, indirect evidence (namely, the observation that the resting cytosolic Ca2+ level is indistinguishable from controls) suggests that this is not the case. To further investigate the problem, we measured the capacitative Ca2+ influx in Bcl-2–transfected and control HeLa cells expressing cytAEQ (Fig. 4). The cells were treated with the SERCA blocker (10 µM tBuBHQ) while perfused with Ca2+-free medium (KRB/EGTA). This procedure first evoked a small transient increase in [Ca2+]c due to release of Ca2+ from the stores. When the release of stored Ca2+ was complete (
3 min), Ca2+ was readded to the medium. This maneuver evoked a second, larger [Ca2+]c increase via the capacitative pathway, which was markedly lower in Bcl-2–transfected than in controls cells (1.19 ± 0.11 in controls vs. 0.68 ± 0.13 µM in Bcl-2–expressing cells, n = 6). The question then arises as to the mechanism(s) through which Bcl-2 downregulates capacitative Ca2+ influx. Two possibilities were considered: one was that the reduction of this Ca2+ influx pathway is an adaptive mechanism to the long lasting reduction in steady-state [Ca2+]er; the second was that the reduction is a direct consequence of Bcl-2 overexpression. To distinguish between these two possibilities, we verified whether a long-term reduction of [Ca2+]er, obtained independently of Bcl-2, could cause a comparable downregulation of the capacitative Ca2+ influx. Capacitative Ca2+ influx was thus compared in controls and in cells whose [Ca2+]er was reduced to values similar to those of Bcl-2–overexpressing cells by prolonged incubation with a low (100 µM) extracellular [Ca2+]. In cells that had been maintained at low external [Ca2+], and thus experienced a long-term reduction in the resting [Ca2+]er levels, the [Ca2+]c peak evoked by activation of the capacitative Ca2+ influx was markedly lower than in controls (0.59 ± 0.11 µM, n = 5). Of interest, the level of steady-state [Ca2+]er in cells incubated in low extracellular Ca2+ was very similar (269 ± 46 µM, n = 4) to that measured in Bcl-2–overexpressing cells incubated in normal (1 mM) extracellular Ca2+ concentration. The simplest explanation of these results is that the decrease in capacitative Ca2+ influx is an adaptive consequence to the prolonged reduction in steady-state [Ca2+]er, though, at the moment, it cannot be excluded that other factors (e.g., a reduction in plasma membrane potential) contribute to this effect. This reduction in capacitative Ca2+ influx, on one hand, appears critical to maintain a resting [Ca2+]c indistinguishable from that of control cells, despite a major reduction of [Ca2+] in the ER; on the other hand, it could account, at least in part, for a higher resistance of cells expressing Bcl-2 to apoptotic cell death, as the reduction of this ubiquitous Ca2+ influx pathway may prevent the overload of Ca2+, considered one of the key events in apoptosis. In agreement with this view, Ma and coworkers recently demonstrated that SERCA overexpression, by causing ER Ca2+ overload, increases spontaneous apoptosis (Ma et al. 1999). Finally, our data are not in contrast with previous results showing that the SERCA inhibitor, thapsigargin, activates programed cell death (Bian et al. 1997). In this latter case, in fact, the Ca2+ depletion is acute (1–2 min) and complete, whereas in Bcl-2–transfected cells, the drop in [Ca2+]er is modest and develops slowly. Thus, thapsigargin not only causes a massive activation of the capacitative Ca2+ influx pathway, but also such a drastic reduction in the level of [Ca2+]er to interfere with the basic activity of ER chaperonins.
We have demonstrated that overexpression of Bcl-2 causes a reduction of the steady-state [Ca2+] levels, both in the ER and in the Golgi apparatus, the two main agonist-sensitive Ca2+ stores. We also showed that this alteration affects the Ca2+ signal to which the effector systems are exposed, in particular those located in local environments highly dependent on the filling state of the intracellular stores (such as the mitochondria). The chronic reduction in [Ca2+] of the ER results in a downregulation of the capacitative Ca2+ influx. The alterations in Ca2+ handling provoked by Bcl-2 overexpression could be part of the mechanisms through which Bcl-2 exerts its role in the control of cell growth. Targets of Bcl-2 effects on Ca2+ homeostasis could be: the ER itself, where sorting and trafficking of proteins, e.g., enzymes or membrane receptors, are modulated by luminal [Ca2+] (Booth and Koch 1989); the mitochondria, where Ca2+ accumulation regulates the production of ATP (RobbGaspers et al. 1998; the concentration of which is a key determinant of the apoptosis vs. necrosis choice, Leist et al. 1997), and, possibly, the release of the apoptotic cofactor cytochrome c (Krajewski et al. 1999); or the cytoplasm, where bulk or local [Ca2+] increases activate enzymatic effectors, such as the Ca2+-dependent protease, calpain (Carafoli and Molinari 1998; Squier et al. 1999), or the phosphatase, calcineurin (Wang et al. 1999). Whether, and how, these routes interact, and how they are affected by the alteration in Ca2+ homeostasis caused by Bcl-2, awaits further investigation.
| Acknowledgments |
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This work was supported by grants from Telethon (# 845, 850), the Italian University and Health Ministries, the CNR target project "Biotechnology", the Italian Association for Cancer Research (AIRC), and the Armenise-Harvard Foundation to R. Rizzuto and T. Pozzan.
Submitted: 27 September 1999
Revised: 21 January 2000
Accepted: 21 January 2000
Abbreviations used in this paper: AEQ, aequorin; cytAEQ, cytosolic AEQ; erAEQ, AEQ chimera targeted to the ER; GFP, green fluorescent protein; GoAEQ, AEQ chimera targeted to the Golgi apparatus; IB, intracellular buffer; IP3, inositol 1,4,5 trisphosphate; KRB, Krebs-Ringer modified buffer; mtAEQ, mitochondrial AEQ; mtGFP, mitochondrially targeted GFP; SERCA, sarcoendoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ ATPases; tBuBHQ, 2,5-di-(tert-butyl)-1,4-benzohydroquinone.
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