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Departments of Reproductive Biology (X.L., L.Z., G.I.G.), Physiology and Biophysics (G.I.G.), and Oncology (G.I.G.), Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio 44106
Address all correspondence and requests for reprints to: George I. Gorodeski, M.D., Ph.D., University MacDonald Womens Hospital, University Hospitals of Cleveland, 11100 Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, Ohio 44106. E-mail: gig{at}cwru.edu.
| Abstract |
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and inhibited by ICI-182,780 and tamoxifen; omission of epithelial growth factor (EGF) from the culture medium; and cotreatments with the EGF receptor inhibitor AG1478, the ERK-MAPK inhibitor PD98059, the casein kinase-II (CK2) inhibitor 5,6-dichloro-1-ß-(D)-ribofuranosylbenzimidazole, the Rho-associated kinase inhibitor Y-27632, and the nonspecific phosphatase inhibitor okadaic acid. Coadministration of 5,6-dichloro-1-ß-(D)-ribofuranosylbenzimidazole plus okadaic acid blocked the 17ß-estradiol effect. H-89 or LY294002 did not significantly affect estrogen effects. Treatment with estrogen increased activation of ERK1/2 and CK2 activity. These data suggest a novel pathway of estrogen regulation of the cytoskeleton in epithelial cells. The effect is mediated by estrogen receptor-
and involves in part the EGF-EGF receptor and ERK-MAPK cascades as proximal signaling networks and the CK2 and Rho-associated kinase-regulated myosin heavy chain phosphatase as terminal effectors. Augmented phosphorylation of NMM-II-B can block filamentation and induce disassociation of the myosin from the cortical actin, and disruption of the actomyosin ring can increase cell deformability. This mechanism can explain estrogen regulation of paracellular permeability in cervical-vaginal epithelia in vivo. | Introduction |
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The RLIS is determined by the geometry of the intercellular space and therefore reciprocally by the width and shape of the epithelial cells that define this space. Our understanding of the importance of the RLIS in regulation of paracellular permeability stems from works of Spring and Hope (13), who showed that hydrostatic gradients in the subluminal
luminal direction induce fluid accumulation in the intercellular space at basolateral regions of the epithelium and dilate the intercellular space. The effect is limited to basolateral regions of the intercellular space, i.e. those in proximity to the sublumen (the blood compartment) because of the near-apical location of the tight and adherence junctions, which prevent expansion of the intercellular space at near-apical domains (Fig. 1B
). This fundamental mechanism explains how surface epithelia maintain lubrication of the lumen: blood pressure in the capillary bed generates a subluminal
luminal hydrostatic gradient that expands the basolateral intercellular space and decreases the RLIS. This allows plasma transudation from the blood into the lumen through the paracellular route.
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luminal gradients depends on the elasticity of the cytoskeleton: cells expressing a rigid cytoskeleton will change their shape less readily in response to stimuli than cells expressing a dynamic, flexible cytoskeleton. One mechanism, mentioned above, is actin polymerization: formation of polymerized F-actin-dominated cytoskeleton will tend to increase the RLIS, whereas formation of depolymerized G-actin-dominated cytoskeleton will decrease the RLIS (9). Interestingly, by comparing the time course of estrogen modulation of actin status with estrogen modulation of paracellular resistance, it became apparent that the changes in actin status cannot explain entirely the estrogen regulation of RLIS because estrogen increase in G-actin preceded estrogen decrease in RLIS by about 24 h (6, 9). One of the conclusions was that estrogen modulation of the RLIS involves an additional mechanism to that of actin polymerization. In addition to actin polymerization, the rigidity of the cytoskeleton can be also modulated by regulation of myosin filaments (14). Myosins are proteins that interact with actin and hydrolyze ATP to generate force. In nonmuscle cells including epithelial cells, myosins interact with actin and regulate actin organization into filaments that maintain the shape of cellular structures or coordinate contraction and cell division (15). Loss of myosin-II, the prototypical two-headed myosin, can disrupt actin polymerization and lead to cell detachment (15). The nonmuscle myosin-II, a subclass of myosin-II (16), was shown to play a role in epithelial cell attachment and intercellular communications (15, 17). In the human, the state of myosin-II activation regulates paracellular permeability in kidney cells (18, 19), and abrogation of paracellular resistance leads to backleak of glomerular filtrate (15). In patients with inflammatory bowel disease, colonic epithelial myosin light-chain kinase expression and enzymatic activity were found to be increased, suggesting that myosin light-chain kinase up-regulation may contribute to barrier dysfunction and the pathogenesis of inflammatory bowel disease (20).
In cervical epithelial cells, the main myosin component of the cortical actomyosin frame is nonmuscle myosin-II-B (NMM-II-B) (present data). Preliminary results from the lab showed that NMM-II-B filaments are constitutively phosphorylated, and the phosphorylation is regulated by casein kinase-II (CK2) and Rho-associated kinase (ROCK)-dependent modulation of myosin heavy-chain phosphatase. We also found that increased phosphorylation of NMM-II-B filaments abrogates filamentation and decreases myosin-actin interaction (not shown). These data could be important for our understanding of regulation of permeability because myosin-actin interaction determines the rigidity of the cytoskeleton and hence the RLIS. The present study tested the hypothesis that estrogen modulation of the RLIS involves modulation of NMM-II-B filamentation. We found that estrogen augments phosphorylation of nonmuscle myosin-II heavy-chain (NMMHC)-II-B filaments and decreases NMM-II-B filamentation. We also found that the effect of estrogen involves the estrogen receptor (ER)-
and in part also the epithelial growth factor (EGF)-EGF-receptor (EGFR) and ERK-MAPK cascades as proximal signaling networks, whereas the terminal effectors are the CK2 and the myosin heavy-chain phosphatase. These findings suggest a novel mechanism of estrogen regulation of the RLIS through modulation of NMM-II-B-actin interaction.
| Materials and Methods |
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antibody were from Santa Cruz Biotechnology (Santa Cruz, CA). The antibodies were used according to the manufacturers instructions. All chemicals, unless specified otherwise, were obtained from Sigma Chemical (St. Louis, MO). 5,6-Dichloro-1-ß-(D)-ribofuranosylbenzimidazole (DRB) and Y-27632 ware obtained from Calbiochem (La Jolla, CA).
Cell-culture techniques
The experiments used two types of cells: normal human epithelial vaginal-ectocervical cells (hEVECs) and CaSki cells. Secondary/tertiary cultures of hEVECs were generated from minces of histologically normal ectocervix/vagina as described (3). The discarded tissues were collected by the Cooperative Human Tissue Network at University Hospitals of Cleveland and Case Western Reserve University according to the institutional review board protocol 03-90-TG. Tissues were collected from seven premenopausal women aged 3746 yr and six postmenopausal women aged 5365 yr who underwent hysterectomy for medical indications unrelated to the present study. None of the women were treated with steroid sex hormones for at least 3 months before surgery. Menopause was defined as amenorrhea for 1 yr or longer or amenorrhea of at least 6 months plus climacteric symptoms and plasma levels of FSH greater than 25 mIU/ml. hEVECs (also referred to as hECE cells) were previously characterized as phenotypically resembling the stratified squamous vaginal-ectocervical epithelial cells (3). Cells chosen for experiments were those obtained from tissues reported as human papillomavirus negative, and cultures were routinely tested for mycoplasma. Experiments also used CaSki cells, which are a stable line of transformed endocervical epithelial cells (3). Culture conditions for hEVECs and CaSki cells were described (3). For experiments using cells attached on filters, cells were plated on Anocell-10 filters (Anocell, Oxon, UK, obtained through Sigma), which are ceramic-base filters, pore size of 0.02 µm width and 50 µm depth. Filters were coated on their upper (luminal) surface with 35 µg/cm2 collagen type IV as described (21). Filter experiments involved treatments with drugs added to both the luminal and subluminal solutions. Unless specified otherwise, the experiments used culture medium containing a saturating dose of 0.2 nM EGF that suffices to activate the EGFR (22). Some experiments used culture medium lacking EGF.
For experiments with estrogen-deficient conditions, cells on filters were shifted to steroid-free medium for 35 d. This medium was composed of phenol-red-deficient (DMEM)/Hams F12 or RPMI 1640 (Sigma) containing 8% heat-inactivated fetal bovine serum that was previously treated with charcoal to remove steroids. Preparation of charcoal-treated serum was described (6); briefly, dextran-coated charcoal (Sigma) was dissolved at 8% in 0.15 M NaCl, autoclaved, mixed by stirring, spun, and the pellet resuspended as 1 g per 1.25 ml in H2O. Fetal bovine serum (Hyclone, Logan, UT) was mixed with the activated charcoal-dextran at 20:1 (vol/vol) and incubated for 45 min at 55 C. At the completion of incubation, the mixture was spun twice at 800 x g for 20 min, and the supernatant (serum) was decanted and collected.
Changes in the width of cells attached on filters
The experiments used a previously described method (23) with some modifications. Filters containing attached cells were housed in a custom-designed fluorescence chamber. The chamber was constructed as a modified Ussing chamber so that it allows separation of the subluminal solution that bathes the basolateral parts of the cells membranes, from the luminal solution that bathes the apical part of the cells membranes. A bifurcated custom-designed fiberoptics was placed over the apical surface of the cells and served to send the excitation signal and capture the emitted signal from a constant horizontal field (cross-section) of about 2 x 104 cells (23). Changes in cell width were determined in cells loaded with fura-2 by measurements of changes in intracellular fura-2 fluorescence at the isosbestic wavelengths [360/510 nm excitation/emission (F360/510)]. Because in hEVECs and CaSki cells photobleaching or leakage of fura-2 are minimal under the conditions of the experiment (23), changes in F360/510 reflect changes in the intracellular concentrations of fura-2 across the monitored cross-section and therefore changes in cell width. The bifurcated fiberoptic sleeve resting above the apical surface of the cells was attached to a stand that allowed fine (micrometers) vertical movements of the fixed fiberoptics sleeve and therefore to monitor fluorescence from different horizontal cross-sections along the vertical axis of the cells. Changes in F360/510 were determined in response to transepithelial hydrostatic gradients. Subluminal
luminal transepithelial hydrostatic gradients of 06 mm H2O, which prevail in the extracellular space in vivo (24, 25), were generated by increasing the fluid level of the subluminal solution above that of luminal solution by adding aliquots of culture medium to the subluminal container to predetermined levels (Fig. 1A
).
A schematic representation of the system and an actual result are shown in Fig. 1
. In cells bathed under normostatic conditions (Fig. 1A
, left panel), a positive signal was recorded at the basal part of the cells (above the filter proper, Fig. 1B
, control, upper right panel, cross-section Bl), and the signal terminated when the focus plane was above the apical part of the cell (Fig. 1B
, control, upper right panel, cross-section Ap). When transepithelial hydrostatic gradients were produced in the subluminal
luminal direction (Fig. 1A
, right panel, and Fig. 1B
, lower panel), the F360/510 signal in plane Bl increased significantly, compared with the signal in plane Ap. The interpretation is that the intracellular concentration of fura-2 in plane Bl increased relative to that in plane Ap, i.e. the average cell width in plane Bl decreased relative to that in plane Ap. Changes in cell width, reflecting cell deformability, were determined in terms of changes in the ratio of the F360/510 signal in plane Bl relative to the F360/510 signal in plane Ap (Bl/Ap F360/510 ratio).
Protein assays
Immunostaining, light microscopy, and fluorescence microscopy were described (26). Briefly, after treatments, cells on coverslips or filters were washed with cold PBS and fixed in methanol; blocked with 3% BSA/PBS/0.2% Triton X-100 for 30 min; incubated with primary antibodies overnight at 4 C; washed three times with PBS; and incubated with secondary antibodies attached with Alexa Fluor 488 (donkey antirabbit IgG) or Alexa Fluor 594 (goat antimouse). Nuclei were stained with 4',6'-diamino-2-phenylindole (Vector Laboratories, Burlingame, CA). In some experiments cells were incubated with horseradish peroxidase-labeled goat antirabbit IgG and heavy- and light-chain peroxidase, and the reaction was visualized by Fast-Red (Dako, http://www.dakocytomation.com). Cell fractionation by the freeze/thaw method and Western immunoblotting were described (26). Confirmation of the separation efficiency of the membrane-enriched fraction was determined by blotting with antioccludin antibody (tight junction plasma-membrane protein). Likewise, confirmation of separation efficiency of the cytosolic fraction was determined by blotting with anti-GAPDH antibody. Aliquots, normalized to 15 µg protein, were fractionated by 610% SDS-PAGE and blotted by Western analysis, and bands were analyzed semiquantitatively by densitometry. Immunoprecipitation/immunoblotting assays were described (26). Phosphorylation assays were described (26). Briefly, cells on filters were shifted to phosphate-free DMEM containing 10 mM HEPES (pH 7.4) at 37 C and treated with 100 µCi/ml [32P]orthophosphate (PerkinElmer Life Sciences, Boston MA) plus 1 µg/ml microcystin L-R (Calbiochem). After treatments, cells were washed with ice-cold PBS, lysed in lysis buffer, and processed by immunoprecipitation with anti-NMMHC-II-B antibody. Samples containing equal amounts of protein were resolved on 10% polyacrylamide gels and dried under vacuum. Radioactive bands were visualized by PhosphorImager [Molecular Dynamics (Amersham), Piscataway, NJ] and exposure to x-ray film.
Extraction and purification of NMM-II-B filaments
The experiments used a modification of existing methods (27, 28). All steps were done at 4 C. Total cells homogenates were incubated overnight with antinonmuscle myosin-II heavy-chain-A (NMMHC-II-A) antibody to immunoprecipitate the nonmuscle myosin-II-A (NMM-II-A). Pansorbin was added to the immunoprecipitates for 2 h, and the pansorbin-anti-NMMHC-II-A antibody-NMM-II-A complexes were pelleted by centrifugation at 25,000 x g for 5 min. The supernatants were washed three times with buffer containing 0.5 M NaCl, 50 mM 3[N-morpholino]propanesulfonic acid (pH 7.4), and 0.1 mM EGTA to remove nonspecifically bound proteins. Supernatants were resuspended in 0.2 ml of wash buffer containing 50-fold molar excess of the peptide used to generate the antihuman NMMHC-II-A antibody (GKADGAEAKPAE, corresponding to the C terminus of the human NMMHC-II-A), and after 2 h of incubation on ice, samples were spun at 35,000 x g for 5 min and the supernatants containing the released NMM-II-B were dialyzed against several changes of wash buffer and concentrated to a volume of about 250 µl by washing in Centricon 100 (Amicon, Houston, TX). This method of purification yields a single 200-kDa band that is immunodetected by the anti-NMMHC-II-B antibody (not shown).
In vitro NMM-II-B filament assembly assay
Purified NMM-II-B filaments at concentrations of 1500 µg/ml (about 20 nM to 10 µM) were incubated with 2.5 mM MgSO4 and 10 mM NaCl at 4 C in the presence of 10 mM imidazole-HCl (pH 7.5) and 0.1 mM Ca2+ to induce filament assembly. At the completion of incubations, samples were centrifuged at 35,000 x g for 30 min at 4 C, and the protein content in the supernatant (i.e. nondimerized NMM-II-B) was measured and expressed per total protein measured before centrifugation as the percent nondimerized nonmuscle myosin-II-B. To ascertain complete recovery of nondimerized filaments, aliquots from the supernatant were centrifuged at 90,000 x g for 20 min. Assays in which sediment was found, indicating inappropriate separation of the monomers from the oligomers, were omitted from analysis (less than 3% of assays). NMM-II-B filament assembly was expressed in terms of the critical concentration of NMM-II-B necessary to induce dimerization from the curve of percent nondimerized NMM-II-B vs. added protein. The critical concentration of NMM-II-B necessary for dimerization was defined as the concentration of NMM-II-B that induced maximal oligomerization.
Determinations of cellular total protein
The method was described (29). Protein stains of Western blots were done using Ponceau (Ponceau S solution, P7170; Sigma) according to the manufacturers instructions.
Antisense oligonucleotides (ASO) assays
ER-specific ASO and random control oligonucleotide (CLO) were designed from the published sequences of the human ER
(30) (NM_012389); the human ERß (31) (AJ002602); and the G protein-coupled receptor GPR30 (a membrane receptor responsive to the classical ligands of the ER
and ERß (32) (AF027956) by using HYBsimulator (Advanced Gene Computing Technologies, Irvine, CA) and choosing the melting temperature of the oligonucleotides as 34 C. Possible sequences that would have the given melting temperature were identified from the target mRNA, and the cross-hybridization against the whole sequence in the GenBank database of each oligonucleotide was calculated. The oligomers ASO that would hybridize to the coding region of the ER
, ERß, and GPR30 mRNAs were selected as 5'-TCA TGG TCA TGG TCC GT-3', 5'-CAT CAC AGC AGG GCT ATA-3'; and 5'-TTG GGA AGT CAC ATC CAT-3', respectively. The CLO was composed of a random 18-mer sequence AGA ACG TTA CTT ACA CTG with GC content (32%) similar to the antisense oligonucleotides. The CLO was designed such that no cross-hybridization against the ER genes would occur.
To assess the effects of the ASOs and CLO on ER
, ERß, or GPR30 mRNA expression, hEVEC and CaSki cells were treated with or without ASO or CLO at concentrations of 10 µM. RT-PCR assays were carried out after 2 d, and assay experiments after 34 d. RT-PCR assays used the following primers and conditions: ER
forward, 5'-TTA CGA AGT GGG CAT GAT GA-3'; reverse, 5'-ATC TTG TCC AGG ACT CGG TG-3' (product size 711 bp, 35 cycles); ERß forward, 5'-GAG GCC TCC ATG ATG ATG TC-3'; reverse, 5'-TCT CCA GCA GCA GGT CAT AC-3' (product size 610 bp, 35 cycles); GPR30 forward, 5'-TAA TAA GTC GAC GGG TCT CTT CCT-3', reverse, 5'-ATT ATT GGA TCC TAC ACG GCA CTG C-3' (product size, 652 bp, 35 cycles) (AF027956); and GAPDH (XM_227696) forward, 5'-CCA TGT TCG TCA TGG GTG TGA ACC A-3'; reverse, 5'-GCC AGT AGA GGC AGG GAT GAT GTT C-3' (product size 229 bp, cycles 25). End points for successful transfections were 50% or greater reduction in ER
, ERß, or GPR30 mRNA, compared with GAPDH mRNA; there were no significant effects on GAPDH mRNA and no significant effects of the CLO (not shown).
Determinations of CK2 activity
CK2 activity in cell lysates was determined by the ability to phosphorylate the decapeptide RRREEETEEE, which is a specific phosphate acceptor for CK2 (33), using a previously described method (34). Assays were carried out in 30 µl of buffer [composed of 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.2), 50 mM NaCl, 25 mM KCl, 10 mM MgCl2, 10 µM Na-orthovanadate] plus 15 µM [
-32P]ATP (2 Ci/mmol) and 0.15 mM peptide substrate. Reactions were initiated by the addition of 1 µl of lysate (1015 µg total protein) and were allowed to proceed for 15 min at 30 C (to reach maximal velocity). Phosphorylation was stopped by adding 20 µl of 40% trichloroacetic acid to each sample. After centrifugation, 10 µl of the supernatant were applied to P-81 phosphocellulose paper. The paper was washed in 100 mM phosphoric acid to remove excess [
-32P]ATP, and the radioactivity was measured by scintillation counting. In parallel tubes, reactions were carried out in the presence of 10 µg/ml alkaline phosphatase (which inactivates CK2), added 15 min before the assay. CK2 activity (in nanomoles Pi per minute per milligram protein) was determined in terms of alkaline-phosphatase-sensitive change in the accumulated phosphoprotein (t15 min baseline). Cellular expression of CK2 mRNA was determined by RT-PCR using primers designed based on the published sequence of the human CK2
(X70251): forward, 5'-GAA GTA TTT GAA GCC ATC A-3'; reverse, 5'-ATC ATA ATT GTC ATG TCC AT-3' (product size 350 bp, 30 cycles).
Statistical analysis of the data
Data are presented as means (±SD), and significance of differences among means was estimated by ANOVA using GB-STAT (Dynamic Microsystems Inc., Silver Spring, MD).
| Results |
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subluminal hydrostatic gradients have no effect on epithelial permeability (3). In contrast, subluminal
luminal hydrostatic gradients increase permeability by decreasing the RLIS secondary to dilatation of the lateral intercellular space at basolateral domains (Fig. 1B
luminal direction (Fig. 1A
luminal hydrostatic gradient than cells bathed in normostatic conditions.
The effects of estrogen on the F360/510 ratio are summarized in Fig. 1C
. Compared with estrogen-depleted cells (Fig. 1C
, left panel), treatment with 17ß-estradiol at the physiological concentration of 10 nM facilitated a greater increase in the Bl to Ap F360/510 ratio in response to subluminal
luminal hydrostatic gradients (Fig. 1C
, right panel). This result suggests that estrogen facilitated a decrease in cell width in basolateral regions of the cells in response to subluminal
luminal hydrostatic gradients.
Effects of modulators of actin and myosin.
Changes in the Bl to Ap F360/510 ratio in response to subluminal
luminal hydrostatic gradients were determined in cells treated with agents that modulate cytoskeletal actin and the actomyosin status. Drugs were used at doses that produced submaximal effects, and lengths of treatments were chosen so that on removal of the drugs (by washes), F360/510 levels returned to baseline within 12 h (not shown). The reversibility of the effects assured that observed changes in F360/510 were not the result of toxic effects of the drugs.
Regardless of estrogen status, treatment with the F-actin-disrupting agent cytochalasin-D facilitated the largest increase in Bl to Ap F360/510 ratio in response to the hydrostatic gradients, whereas treatment with the F-actin depolymerization-inhibitor phalloidin facilitated the smallest increase in the Bl to Ap F360/510 ratio (Fig. 1C
).
In estrogen-depleted cells, treatment with the ER
blocker ICI-182,780, the ERK/MAPK inhibitor PD98059, or the CK2 inhibitor DRB had no effect on the Bl to Ap F360/510 responses to subluminal
luminal hydrostatic gradients (Fig. 1C
, left panel). In contrast, treatment with the ROCK inhibitor Y-27632 facilitated an increase in the Bl to Ap F360/510 ratio (Fig. 1C
, left panel), but the Bl to Ap F360/510 ratios did not reach levels seen in estrogen-treated cells (Fig. 1C
, right panel).
In estrogen-treated cells, cotreatments with ICI-182,780, PD98059, or DRB resulted in smaller increases in the Bl to Ap F360/510 ratio than cells treated only with estrogen; however, the Bl to Ap F360/510 ratios were higher than in estrogen-depleted cells. In estrogen-treated cells, cotreatment with Y-27632 had no additional effect on the Bl to Ap F360/510 ratio to that seen in cells treated only with estrogen (Fig. 1C
, right panel).
Collectively, the results in Fig. 1
suggest that estrogen modulation of the responses to subluminal
luminal hydrostatic gradients involves modulation of the cytoskeletal actomyosin and cell deformability.
Estrogen effects on actin and on NMM-II isoforms
Immunostaining.
Estrogen depletion resulted in actin confinement to cell membrane regions in the form of a narrow cortical frame (Fig. 2Ai
and Al), whereas treatment with estrogen induced rounding of the cortical actin and the cells (Fig. 2A
, f,o).
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In hEVECs of premenopausal and postmenopausal women (Fig. 2A
, b,e,h,k,n) and CaSki cells (Fig. 2B
, q,s,u,w), NMM-II-B staining localized mainly in plasma membrane regions, and estrogen status had marked effects on the immunostaining with the anti-NMMHC-II-B antibody. In estrogen-deprived hEVECs of pre- and postmenopausal women, NMM-II-B staining was similar to actin staining and was confined mainly in the peripheral cortical frame (Fig. 2A
, h,k). Treatment with estrogen resulted in disassociation of the myosin from the cortical actin and its sequestration into cytoplasmic and perinuclear areas (Fig. 2A
, e,n). Similar trends were observed in CaSki cells (Fig. 2B
). In hEVECs and CaSki cells maintained in regular culture medium, the cellular distribution of NMM-II-B was similar to that observed in estrogen-treated cells, and estrogen treatment had no additional effect (Fig. 2
, Ab, Bq, and Bs). The most likely explanation is that regular culture medium contains estrogenic activity that suffices to activate the estrogen receptor mechanism (6).
In view of the marked effects of estrogen on cellular NMM-II-B and the relative little effect on cellular NMM-II-A, all subsequent experiments focused on NMM-II-B.
Cellular content and distribution of NMM-II-B.
Treatment with 10 nM 17ß-estradiol increased cellular NMM-II-B 2-fold over the 48-h period of treatment (Figs. 3
, A and B). The effect was dose related (Fig. 3
, A and C), reaching saturation at 525 nM. Cell-fractionation assays confirmed that treatment with estrogen significantly changed the cellular distribution of NMM-II-B. As early as 612 h after treatment, the amount of NMM-II-B recovered in plasma membrane-enriched fractions decreased, reaching trace amounts at 2448 h, whereas the amount of the myosin recovered in the cytosol increased inversely (Fig. 4
).
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antagonist ICI-182,780 inhibited the estrogen increase in cellular NMM-II-B and increased the ratio density of the coimmunoprecipitated product of actin-NMM-II-B relative to cellular actin. These results suggest that the estrogen increase in cellular NMM-II-B and the estrogen decrease in the coimmunoprecipitated product of actin-NMM-II-B relative to cellular actin involve the ER
.
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Estrogen effects on the assembly of NMM-II-B filaments
Optimal binding of NMM-II-B to actin requires NMM-II-B in its homodimeric form (27, 28, 35, 36, 37). To understand whether the estrogen effects shown in Figs. 26![]()
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involve modulation of oligomerization of NMM-II-B filaments, NMM-II-B filaments were extracted from lysates of estrogen-depleted and estrogen-treated cells, and changes in filaments assembly were determined in terms of the critical concentration of NMM-II-B filaments necessary to induce oligomerization in vitro. Figure 7A
demonstrates the methodology and end point evaluation, and Figs. 7B
, 8
, and 9
show the results.
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-estradiol, the weak estrogenic ligands estrone and estriol, or the nonpermeable estrogen 17ß-E2-BSA had no significant effects (Fig. 7B
Involvement of ER
Treatments with the ASO for the ER
or with ICI-182,780 and tamoxifen had no significant effect on NMM-II-B critical concentration (Fig. 8A
). On the other hand, cotreatments with the ASO-ER
, ICI-182,780, or tamoxifen blocked 17ß-estradiol increase in NMM-II-B critical concentration (Fig. 8A
). Treatments with the ASO for the ERß and GPR30 as well as with progesterone (1 µM, 2 d) alone had no effects on NMM-II-B critical concentration, and cotreatments of these agents/drugs with 17ß-estradiol did not significantly affect estrogen action (not shown). Collectively, these data suggest the involvement of ER
as mediator of estrogen modulator of NMM-II-B filaments.
Involvement of CK2, ROCK, and myosin heavy-chain phosphatase
Treatments with DRB, Y-27632, and okadaic acid, alone or in combination, had no significant effect on NMM-II-B critical concentration (Fig. 8B
). Cotreatments with DRB or Y-27632 attenuated estrogen increase in NMM-II-B critical concentration (Fig. 8B
). Combined treatments of DRB plus Y-27632 attenuated estrogen modulation increase in NMM-II-B critical concentration more than each drug alone but failed to block estrogen effect (Fig. 8B
). Combined treatment of DRB plus okadaic acid blocked estrogen effect (Fig. 8B
). Collectively, these data suggest the involvement of CK2, ROCK, and myosin heavy-chain phosphatase in estrogen modulation of NMM-II-B filamentation.
Involvement of the EGFR
To determine whether the EGFR mechanism plays a role in estrogen modulation of NMM-II-B filamentation, assembly assays were done on NMM-II-B filaments obtained from cells grown in the presence or absence of EGF. In estrogen-depleted cells, removal of EGF from the culture medium had no substantial effect on the critical concentration of NMM-II-B. In contrast, in estrogen-treated cells lack of EGF attenuated the estrogen increase in the critical concentration of NMM-II-B (Fig. 9A
).
To better understand the potential role of the EGFR mechanism, the effects of the EGFR inhibitor AG1478 on NMM-II-B filamentation were studied. Treatment of estrogen-depleted cells with the EGFR inhibitor AG1478 had no effect on the critical concentration of NMM-II-B, regardless of whether cells were grown in the presence or absence of EGF. However, cotreatment of estrogen-treated cells grown in the presence of EGF with AG1478 inhibited estrogen increase in the NMM-II-B critical concentration to levels observed in cells grown in the absence of EGF (Fig. 9A
). These data suggest that the EGFR mechanism is involved in mediating estrogen modulation of NMM-II-B filamentation.
Involvement of the ERK/MAPK cascade
To determine whether the EGFR mechanism plays a role in estrogen modulation of NMM-II-B filamentation, the effects of the ERK/MAPK inhibitor PD98059 were studied. In estrogen-depleted cells, PD98059 had no substantial effect on the critical concentration of NMM-II-B. In contrast, in estrogen-treated cells, PD98059 attenuated the estrogen increase in the critical concentration of NMM-II-B (Fig. 9B
). In estrogen-treated cells, combined treatments of PD98059 plus AG1478 had no additional effect to that of PD98059 (Fig. 9B
). These data suggest that the ERK/MAPK cascade is involved in mediating estrogen modulation of NMM-II-B filamentation. Lack of additive inhibition also suggests that the EGFR and ERK/MAPK cascade may operate via a common signaling pathway.
Lack of effect of H-89 and LY294002
Treatment of estrogen-depleted cells grown in the presence of EGF with H-89, inhibitor of protein kinase A, or with LY294002, inhibitor of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase-Akt, produced no significant changes in NMM-II-B critical concentration (not shown). Similarly, in estrogen-treated cells grown in the presence of EGF cotreatment with H-89 or with LY294002 had no significant effect on the estrogen increase in NMM-II-B critical concentration (not shown).
Estrogen activation of ERK1/2
The results in Fig. 9
, A and B, suggested the involvement of EGFR and the ERK/MAPK cascade in estrogen modulation of NMM-II-B filamentation. Previous studies in cervical cells investigated the interaction between estrogen and EGFR signaling (e.g. Ref. 38). However, less was known in cervical cells about the interaction between estrogen and the ERK/MAPK signaling. To better understand this interaction, we studied estrogen activation of ERK in hEVECs, in terms of ERK1/2 phosphorylation. Fig. 9
, C and D, shows that in the absence of EGF, the steady-state level of ERK1/2 phosphorylation was low, and estrogen did not exert a significant effect. In estrogen-depleted cells incubated in the presence of 0.2 nM EGF, ERK1/2 phosphorylation was substantial, and cotreatment with 10 nM 17ß-estradiol increased it 2.5-fold (p-ERK1/2 42 kDa) or 4.5-fold (p-ERK1/2 44 kDa) without affecting significantly ERK expression (Fig. 9C
). DRB, Y-27632, or okadaic acid did not produce any significant additional effect on ERK1/2 phosphorylation to that of estrogen (not shown). These results suggest that in human vaginal-cervical cells, estrogen up-regulates ERK1/2 phosphorylation.
Estrogen activation of CK2
One of the conclusions from the data in Fig. 8
is the possible involvement of CK2 as terminal mediator of estrogen effects on NMM-II-B. This novel hypothesis was tested more directly by determinations of the effects estrogen treatment on CK2 expression and activity. Neither estrogen depletion nor treatment with 17ß-estradiol had any significant effect on cellular CK2 mRNA or protein expression (not shown). In contrast, estrogen status markedly affected CK2 activity. In lysates of hEVECs obtained from estrogen-treated cells, CK2 activity was 3-fold greater than in lysates obtained from estrogen-depleted cells (Fig. 10
). CK2 activity in lysates of cells treated with ICI-182,780, DRB, Y-27632, or okadaic acid was similar to that in control cells. CK2 activities in lysates of cells cotreated with estrogen plus Y-27632 or estrogen plus okadaic acid were similar to that determined in lysates of cells treated with estrogen only, suggesting that treatments with Y-27632 or okadaic acid do not modulate estrogen increase in CK2 activity. In contrast, CK2 activities in lysates of cells cotreated with estrogen plus ICI-182,780 or estrogen plus DRB were smaller than that determined in lysates of cells treated with estrogen only, in the range observed in lysates obtained from estrogen-depleted cells, suggesting that treatments in vivo with ICI-182,780 and DRB blocked CK2 activity.
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| Discussion |
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and involves the EGFR and ERK/MAPK cascades as proximal mediators, whereas CK2- and ROCK-regulated myosin heavy-chain phosphatase are involved as distal mediators. Although the possibility that some of these effects are unrelated epiphenomena has not been ruled out, the present results support the hypothesis that the effects are related and represent a novel cascade of estrogen action. Accordingly, enhanced phosphorylation inhibits oligomerization of the myosin filaments, leading to decreased interaction of the NMM-II-B filaments with cortical actin. This novel hypothesis is depicted schematically in Fig. 11
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/coactivator complex. In contrast, estrogen effects on NMM-II-B phosphorylation, NMM-II-B-actin interaction, and NMM-II-B filamentation cannot be explained by transcription regulation alone. The results showed that NMM-II-B filaments are constitutively phosphorylated, possibly through CK2 and ROCK regulation of myosin heavy-chain phosphatase. Accordingly, myosin heavy-chain phosphatase dephosphorylates NMMHC-II-B, thereby enhancing filamentation and increased myosin-actin interaction, and phosphorylation of the myosin heavy-chain phosphatase by ROCK blocks myosin heavy-chain phosphatase activity and decreases filamentation (Fig. 11Our data support the hypothesis that CK2 mediates in part estrogen-phosphorylation of NMMHC-II-B. CK2 is a ubiquitous, highly pleiotropic and constitutively active serine/threonine protein kinase (41). Although there are more than 300 documented substrates for CK2, most are involved in gene expression, protein synthesis, and signaling but only a few in the regulation of the cytoskeleton (41), and only two reports documented the involvement of myosin II in smooth muscle cells (40, 42). The present data are the first to suggest that NMMHC-II-B of epithelial cells is also a CK2 substrate. This conclusion is of interest, given the known role of CK2 in cell survival, cell growth and proliferation (43), and the known mitogenic properties of estrogen.
The present data and our previous studies in the field also suggest involvement of ER
and the EGFR/ERK-MAPK cascades in the proximal arm of estrogen signaling. Human vaginal and cervical epithelial cells express ER
and ERß mRNA and protein (44) and mRNA for the GPR30 (not shown). However, estrogen modulation of NMM-II-B filamentation could be blocked only with ASOs for the ER
. In addition, the ER
-specific inhibitor ICI-182,780 inhibited estrogen activation of CK2, estrogen modulation of NMM-II-B-actin coimmunoprecipitation, and estrogen modulation of NMM-II-B phosphorylation. Moreover, the pharmacology of estrogen action, i.e. the time and dose effect and the specificity pattern, supports involvement of the ER
in estrogen modulation of NMM-II-B phosphorylation, filamentation, and interaction with actin.
Treatment with estrogen had no significant effect on cellular CK2 levels, and estrogen regulation of CK2-dependent NMM-II-B activity therefore cannot be explained by the classical direct ER/coactivator gene transcription regulation of CK2. An alternative explanation is that it involves ER
transcription up-regulation of intermediary steps (9, 45) or ER
-mediated activation of kinase-initiated signaling cascades that participate in the signal cascade (46, 47, 48, 49). Estrogen modulation of NMM-II-B filamentation depended on the presence of EGF in the culture medium, and it could be attenuated by blocking the EGFR. Because the EGFR is transcriptionally up-regulated by estrogen (50), including in human cervical cells (38), it is possible that the EGFR is mediator of estrogen action. Accordingly, the EGFR is a rate-limiting mediator involved in activation of the CK2, and ER
-up-regulation of cellular EGFR increases activity of this kinase (Fig. 11
). This hypothesis is supported by findings that CK2 can be a substrate for the EGF/EGFR kinase mechanism (34). The hypothesis may be physiologically relevant because EGF is constitutively secreted by stromal cervical and vaginal cells (51); the EGFR can be activated by changes in cell size (52); and the rate-limiting effect for EGF actions in many tissues is cellular levels of the EGFR (53).
The present data also support involvement of the ERK/MAPK cascade in estrogen action. Treatment with the ERK/MAPK inhibitor PD98059 attenuated estrogen modulation of cytoskeletal deformability, NMM-II-B filamentation, and increased ERK activation. The NMM-II-B filamentation effect of estrogen was dependent on EGF but was not affected by treatments with DRB, Y-27632, or okadaic acid. A possible explanation is of a hierarchical effect, namely that the EGFR/MAPK cascades modulate CK2 phosphorylation status. Another possible explanation is the involvement of other signaling networks that operate in parallel (Fig. 11
). At present relatively little is known which other signaling networks are involved, although lack of effects of H-89 and LY294002 effectively ruled out the involvement of protein kinase A and the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase-Akt networks. A third possibility is feedback signaling regulation, namely potentiation of estrogen effect through CK2 phosphorylation of the ER
(54, 55).
The present data may be physiologically relevant for our understanding of estrogen modulation of epithelial permeability because the rigidity of the cytoskeleton determines the RLIS and thereby the permeability characteristics of the epithelium (3). Previous studies in human cervical-vaginal epithelia showed that estrogen can regulate the rigidity of the cortical actomyosin through modulation of actin polymerization (6, 9, 21). The present data suggest an additional novel mechanism, by modulation of the cortical myosin. The two mechanisms have different time courses: modulation of actin polymerization requires 16 h of treatment with estrogen (6, 7, 8, 9) and modulation of NMM-II-B 624 h (present data). The two mechanisms are also hierarchically different because actin polymerization induces cytoskeletal changes that override NMM-II-B-related modulation of the cytoskeleton. Thus, it is possible that short-term effects of estrogen, e.g. the preovulatory increase in epithelial permeability, are mediated by actin depolymerization, whereas the long-term effects of estrogen require modulation of the myosin.
In summary, the present results suggest a novel mechanism of estrogen regulation of the cytoskeletal actomyosin frame in epithelial cells. Estrogen induces phosphorylation of NMMHC-II-B filaments and abrogation of NMM-II-B filamentation that could lead to disassociation of the myosin from the cortical actin. Disruption of the actomyosin ring increases cell deformability and may lead to decreased RLIS. The effect of estrogen is mediated by the ER
and may involve the EGF-EGFR and ERK-MAPK as proximal signaling cascades. Terminal effectors are possibly the CK2- and ROCK-regulated myosin heavy-chain phosphatase. This novel cellular mechanism can explain, in part, the estrogen increase in epithelial permeability in vivo.
| Acknowledgments |
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| Footnotes |
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Disclosure statement: the authors have nothing to disclose.
First Published Online August 10, 2006
Abbreviations: ASO, Antisense oligonucleotide; CLO, control oligonucleotide; CK2, casein kinase-II; DRB, 5,6-dichloro-1-ß-(D)-ribofuranosylbenzimidazole; EGF, epithelial growth factor; EGFR, EGF-receptor; ER, estrogen receptor; GAPDH, antiglyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase; hEVEC, human epithelial vaginal-ectocervical cell; NMMHC, nonmuscle myosin-II heavy chain; NMM-II-A, nonmuscle myosin-II-A; NMM-II-B, nonmuscle myosin-II-B; RLIS, resistance of the lateral intercellular space; ROCK, Rho-associated kinase; RTJ, resistance of the tight junctions.
Received June 9, 2006.
Accepted for publication July 31, 2006.
| References |
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in vivo and in vitro. Biochem Biophys Res Commun 243:122126[CrossRef][Medline]
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