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Departments of Reproductive Biology, Physiology and Biophysics, and Oncology, CASE (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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-mediated remodeling of occludin. The objective of the study was to understand the mechanisms involved. Experiments using human normal vaginal-cervical epithelial cells showed that human normal vaginal-cervical epithelial cells secrete constitutively matrix-metalloproteinase-7 (MMP-7) into the luminal solution and that MMP-7 is necessary and sufficient to produce estrogen decrease of tight junctional resistance and remodeling of occludin. Treatment with estrogen stimulated activation of the pro-MMP-7 intracellularly and augmented secretion of the activated MMP-7 form. Steady-state levels of MMP-7 mRNA and protein were not affected by estrogen. Estrogen modulated phosphorylation of the MMP-7, but the changes were most likely secondary to changes in cellular MMP-7 mass. Estrogen increased coimmunoreactivity of MMP-7 with the Golgi protein GPP130. Tunicamycin and brefeldin-A had no effect on cellular MMP-7 but monensin (inhibitor of Golgi traffic) blocked estrogen effects, suggesting estrogen site of action is at the Golgi system. Estrogen increased generalized secretory activity, including of luminal exocytosis of polycarbohydrates. However, estrogen increased coimmunoreactivity of MMP-7 with synaptosomal-associated protein of 25 kDa in apical membranes, suggesting soluble N-ethylmaleimide sensitive fusion factor attachment protein receptor-facilitated exocytosis of MMP-7. Treatment with the vesicular-ATPase inhibitor bafilomycin A1 inhibited activation of MMP-7. These data suggest that estrogen up-regulates activation of the MMP-7 intracellularly, at the level of Golgi, and augments secretion of activated MMP-7 through soluble N-ethylmaleimide sensitive fusion factor attachment protein receptor-dependent exocytosis. On the other hand, estrogen acidification of the luminal solution would tend to alkalinize exocytotic vesicles and may lead to decreased activation of the MMP-7. These mechanisms acting in concert could be important for regulation and control of estrogen modulation of paracellular permeability in vivo. | Introduction |
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In epithelia, transmembrane tight-junctional proteins are composed of claudins and occludins. Claudins are the main building units of the tight junction and confer the baseline gating properties of the intercellular space (4). Until recently the role of occludins was debated after conflicting reports whether occludins are necessary (1, 5, 6, 7, 8) or sufficient (9, 10) to gate the intercellular space. In the low-resistance human, vaginal-cervical epithelia occludin is present in two main forms: the full-length 65-kDa wild-type isoform and a truncated 50-kDa form (11, 12). A shift from 65- to 50-kDa dominance, e.g. that induced by treatment with estrogen, was associated with a reversible decrease in RTJ (13, 14, 15, 16), suggesting that occludin is important for gating the intercellular space. The data also suggest that estrogen regulates epithelial permeability through remodeling of occludin.
The main objective of the present study was to better understand the mechanism of estrogen modulation of occludin. Previous experiments using cultured human vaginal-cervical epithelia showed that the truncated 50-kDa occludin form is not a distinct translated product but probably a calpain-mediated proteolytic fragment (11, 12). Protease digestion analysis suggested that estrogen, in an effect mediated by the nuclear estrogen receptor (ER)-
induces proteolysis of occludin at the middle of extracellular loop-2, resulting in formation of a truncated 50-kDa isoform (11). Because occludin extracellular loops are important for gating the intercellular space, estrogen up-regulation of a defective truncated 50-kDa form can explain the estrogen decrease in RTJ.
Expression of occludin can be regulated (1, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21), but until recently no studies were published about hormone regulation of occludin. Similarly, only few others groups studied hormone regulation of RTJ (22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27), but the results did not provide in-depth understanding of the mechanisms involved. Remodeling of proteins at extracellular sites in normal cells usually involves matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) (28, 29), whereas cysteine, aspartyl, and serine proteinases play a similar role in cancer cells or in cells exposed to bacterial and viral infections (e.g.30, 31). MMPs actions in uterine epithelial and stromal cells are relatively well understood (e.g. Ref. 32), but until recently little was known about the expression, regulation, and actions of MMPs in normal human vaginal-cervical epithelial cells. Twenty-six vertebrate MMPs and 23 human homologues have been identified (29). Preliminary experiments in the laboratory showed that of those, only MMP-7 (matrilysin) was expressed, and estrogen regulated in human normal vaginal-cervical epithelial cells.
MMP-7, a hydrolyzing protease of proteoglycans and extracellular matrix glycoproteins, exists as an inactive pro from, which becomes activated by proteolytic cleavage. It is the smallest member of the MMPs, containing only the common catalytic domain and the Zn2+ binding region but missing the hemopexin-like domain common to the other MMPs (33). MMP-7 is widely expressed and is the main MMP of epithelial cells (34), including of the female reproductive tract (32, 35, 37). MMP-7 cleavage sites involve the Gly-Leu and Asp-Leu peptide bonds (38). Interestingly, occludin extracellular loop-2 has a Gly226-Leu227 sequence that can potentially serve as a MMP-7 cleavage site (39), and cleavage of occludin at the Gly226-Leu227 site would generate a segment of about 50 kDa. Based on these considerations, the hypothesis of the present study was that the 50-kDa occludin form found in estrogen-treated cells is the result of MMP-7-mediated cleavage of occludin at the 226227 position, suggesting that MMP-7 mediates estrogen remodeling of occludin and the decrease in RTJ.
The results of experiments using cultured human normal vaginal-ectocervical epithelial cells (hEVECs) support the hypothesis, and suggest three novel mechanisms of estrogen modulation of occludin and the RTJ: 1) estrogen facilitates processing and activation of the MMP-7 in the Golgi, leading to augmented secretion of already activated MMP-7; 2) estrogen facilitates secretion of the pro-MMP-7 and the activated MMP-7 by soluble N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive fusion factor attachment protein receptor (SNARE)-dependent exocytosis; and 3) estrogen-dependent luminal acid secretion mediated by the apically located vesicular (V)-ATPase would tend to alkalinize cells and the exocytotic vesicles and may lead to decreased activation of the MMP-7.
| Materials and Methods |
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Primary antibodies
Mouse monoclonal antioccludin antibody was from Zymed Laboratory Inc. (San Francisco, CA) (no. 331500, which recognizes antigenic domains at the human C-terminal of the protein). Anti MMP-7 antibodies were from Research Diagnostics Inc. [RDI; Concord MA; and included the mouse antihuman MMP-7 (pro) monoclonal antibody (no. RDI-MMP7abm-B2, which binds the human pro-MMP-7 29- but not the active/latent 21-kDa MMP-7); the mouse antihuman MMP-7 monoclonal antibody (no. RDI-MMP7abm-F12, which binds the human active MMP-7 21 kDa but not the pro-MMP-7 29 kDa); and the rabbit polyclonal anti-MMP-7 antibody (no. RDI-MMP7Nab), which binds to human MMP-7, including the pro-MMP-7 29 kDa and the activated 21 kDa MMP-7 but does not cross-react with other MMP family members]. The mouse monoclonal anti-cis-Golgi integral membrane phosphoprotein 130-kDa (GPP130) antibody (A1/118, ALX-804603) was from AXXORA (San Diego, CA). The mouse monoclonal antisynaptosomal-associated protein of 25 kDa (SNAP25) antibody was from Transduction Laboratories (BD Biosciences, San Diego, CA).
Cell culture techniques
Secondary/tertiary cultures of hEVECs were generated from minces of histologically normal ectocervix/vagina as described (40). The discarded tissues were collected by the Cooperative Human Tissue Network at University Hospitals of Cleveland and CASE University according to the institutional review board protocol 03-90-TG. Tissues were collected from a total of nine premenopausal women aged 3746 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. hEVECs (also referred to in the past as hECE cells) were previously characterized as phenotypically resembling the stratified squamous vaginal-ectocervical epithelial cells (40). Cells chosen for experiments were those obtained from tissues reported as human papillomavirus negative, and cultures were routinely tested for mycoplasma. Cells were grown and maintained in culture dish at 37 C in DMEM/Hams F12 (3:1) supplemented with nonessential amino acids, adenine (1.8·104 M), penicillin (100 U/ml), streptomycin (100 mg/ml), gentamicin (50 ng/ml), L-glutamine (2 mM), insulin (5 µg/ml), hydrocortisone (1·106 M), transferrin (5 µg/ml), triiodothyronine (2·109 M), epidermal growth factor (0.2 nM), and 8% fetal calf serum (Sigma) in 91%O2-9%CO2 humidified incubator. For experiments using cells attached on filters, cells were plated on either Anocell or Millicell filters. Filters were coated on their upper (luminal) surface with 35 µg/cm2 collagen type IV as described (40). Unless stated differently, the filter experiments involved treatments with drugs added to both the luminal and subluminal solutions. For assays, cultures were shifted to modified Ringer solution, composed of (in millimoles) NaCl (120), CaCl2 (1.2), MgSO4 (1.2), KCl (5), NaHCO3 (10 mM, before equilibration with 95% O2-5% CO2), HEPES (10), glucose (5), and 0.1% BSA plus 0.2 nM epidermal growth factor.
Primary cultures of human normal cervical stromal fibroblasts were generated from discarded ectocervix/vaginal tissues after the surface epithelium was dissected to generate the hEVEC cultures. Tissues were immersed in Hanks balanced salt solution (HBSS) plus 2.5% collagenase for 30 min at 37 C. The subepithelial surface was gently scraped with scalpel; the resulting suspension of cells was incubated for 15 min at 37 C in HBSS plus 1.5% trypsin and 5 mM EDTA followed by two washes and incubation for 5 min at 37 C in medium composed of DMEM/Hams F-12 (3:1) supplemented with 5% calf serum, L-glutamine (2 mM), penicillin (100 U/ml), streptomycin (100 µg/ml), and gentamicin (50 ng/ml). Cells were plated in the same medium, and the resulting secondary-tertiary cultures were composed of stromal fibroblasts as determined by morphology, expression of vimentin, and lack of expression of involucrin and epithelial-type cytokeratins.
For experiments with estrogen-deficient conditions, cells on filters were shifted to steroid-free medium (SFM) for 3 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 (13); 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.
Throughout the paper the term estrogen-depleted cells describes cells shifted to SFM for 3 d, whereas estrogen-treated cells refers to estrogen-depleted cells that were treated for 2 d before experiments with a physiological concentration (10 nM) of the naturally occurring 17ß-estradiol.
Measurements of transepithelial electrical resistance (RTE)
Before experiments, filters containing cells were washed three times and preincubated for 15 min at 37 C in a modified Ringer buffer composed of (in millimoles) NaCl (120), KCl (5), NaHCO3 (10, before saturating with 95% O2-5% CO2), CaCl2 (1.2), MgSO4 (1), glucose (5), HEPES (10) (pH 7.4), and 0.1% BSA in volumes of 4.75.2 ml in the luminal and subluminal compartments. Changes in paracellular permeability were determined as changes in the RTE across filters mounted vertically in a modified Ussing chamber from successive measurements of the transepithelial potential difference (
PD, lumen negative) and the transepithelial electrical current (
I, obtained by measuring the current necessary to clamp the offset potential to zero and normalized to the 0.6 cm2 surface area of the filter) as RTE =
PD/
I. The experimental design of the electrophysiological measurements, including calibrations and controls, the significance of the
PD and
I and the conditions for optimal determinations of RTE across low resistance epithelia, e.g. hEVECs, have been described and discussed (41). In some experiments, determinations of RTE were done using the EVOM epithelial voltohmmeter (WPI, Sarasota, FL) (40). Those assays were done in a pediatric incubator to maintain 95% O2-5% CO2 and 37 C atmosphere, with a total volume of 0.2 and 1.0 ml in the luminal and subluminal solutions, respectively (40).
Determinations of the dilution potential (Vdil)
The experiments were performed in the Ussing chamber as described (41). Transepithelial Vdils were determined by measuring the effect of lowering NaCl in the luminal solution on changes in voltage generated across the epithelial culture. This was done by replacing the Ringers buffer in the luminal compartment (130 mM NaCl) with low (10 mM) NaCl solution. The latter buffer was similar to the Ringers solution except that it lacked the 120 mM NaCl and was supplemented with 240 mM sucrose to compensate for osmolarity. The methods of electrophysiological data evaluation were previously described (41). Vdil was the measured potential difference (voltageSL voltageL) after lowering NaCl in the luminal solution, corrected for the potential-electrodes asymmetry, where the subscripts SL and L are the subluminal and luminal solutions. The Henderson diffusion equation for monocations and monoanions was used to interpret the transepithelial dilution potential in terms of ionic permeabilities. With the assumption that Na+ and Cl are the major permeant ionic species, the relative mobilities of Na+ and Cl in the intercellular space uCl and uNa can be determined as beta = uCl/uNa = (K + |Vdil|)/(K |Vdil|), where K
(R·T/F).ln(NaSL/NaL) = 68.5 mV at the given [Na+SL] = 130 mM and [Na+L] = 10 mM (41). For simultaneous measurements of changes in RTE and Vdil, filters containing cells were mounted in the Ussing chamber in modified Ringers solution. After 10 min stabilization, the luminal solution was replaced with modified Ringers solution containing low NaCl (10 mM) plus 240 mM sucrose (to compensate for osmolarity). Drugs were added and determinations of changes in RTE and Vdil in real time were made and analyzed as described (41).
Real-time fluoroscopy of FM143-loaded cells attached on filters
Cells on filters were incubated with 5 µM FM143 for 5 min at 37 C and loaded with the drug using electroporation (Cell-Porator Electroporation system; Gibco, Los Angeles, CA). This method results in less than 5% dead cells, an adequate intracellular incorporation of the dye and minimal photobleaching and leakage of the dye (not shown). The fluorescent styrylpyridium dye FM143 labels recycling populations of secretory vesicles within cells. It is incorporated into the internal membrane of endosomes but does not cross the bilayer so that only the dye bound to internal membranes is retained. The dye is more fluorescent in hydrophobic than in hydrophilic environments, such that surface exposed dye is washed out with dye-free solutions. Subsequently decreases in FM143 fluorescence in cells attached on filters reflect dye loss by exocytosis. Changes in FM143 fluorescence were determined in a custom-designed fluorescence chamber as previously described (42) with some modifications. Filters containing FM143-loaded cells attached on filters were housed in a custom-designed fluorescence chamber. The chamber was constructed as a modified Ussing chamber to allow separation of the subluminal solution that bathes the basolateral membranes from the luminal solution that bathes the apical 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 2·104 cells (42). For assays, filters containing confluent cultures of FM143-loaded cells attached on filters were housed in the fluorescence chamber. Cells were washed with modified Ringer buffer and maintained for 3 h at 37 C in darkness with 15 sec fluorescent illuminations (488/565 nm excitation/emission) every 10 min. Changes in intracellular FM143 were determined relative to the signal strength at time 0.
Molecular biology techniques
The method for generation of ER
-antisense oligonucleotide (ASO; 5'-TCA TGG TCA TGG TCC GT-3') and random coil control (RC) oligonucleotide (5'-AGA ACG TTA CTT ACA CTG-3'), and their usefulness in blocking ER
-dependent actions in human vaginal-cervical cells was recently described (43). MMP-7 expression was modulated by using MMP-7 antisense nucleotide (5'-GTA TAT GAT ACG ATC-3') or the RC nucleotide (5'-GTA TTA GTA TCG AAC-3') (44). RT-PCR assays used the following primers and conditions: human MMP-7 (matrilysin) (NM_002423) forward, 5'-TCT TTG GCC TAC CTA TAA CTG G-3', reverse, 5'-CTA GAC TGC TAC CAT CCG TC-3' (product size 352 bp, cycles 29); glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (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).
Real-time quantitative RT-PCR was done as described (11) using i-Cycler (Bio-Rad Laboratories, Hercules, CA) following the manufacturers instructions and with the above primers. PCR conditions were: 95 C for 2 min, 50 cycles of 30 sec denaturation at 95 C, 30 sec of annealing at 60 C, 1 min of extension at 70 C, 80 cycles of 30 sec reaction at 55 C including data collection and real-time analysis, and cooling to 4 C. Results were calculated using the comparative threshold cycle method of relative quantitation.
Protein assays
Cell-fractionation by the freeze/thaw method and preparation of cytosol and plasma membrane-enriched fractions were described (45). Western immunoblotting were described (45). 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 were described (45). For phosphorylation assays, 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 plus 1 µg/ml microcystin L-R (Calbiochem, San Diego, CA). After treatments, cells were washed with ice-cold PBS, lysed in lysis buffer, and processed by immunoprecipitation with the indicated antibody. Samples containing equal amounts of protein were resolved on 610% polyacrylamide gels and dried under vacuum. Radioactive bands were visualized by PhosphorImager [Molecular Dynamics (Amersham), Piscataway, NJ] and exposure to x-ray film (45).
Translabel labeling
Cultures were washed with HBSS and incubated in methionine-deficient medium enriched with 0.45% glucose and 10% regular medium plus 10 µCi/ml Translabel for 18 h.
[14C]glucosamine labeling
Cultures were washed with HBSS and incubated in medium plus 10 µCi/ml [14C]glucosamine for 4 d during which time the medium was replaced once. Cultures were then washed with HBSS and incubated for an additional 46 h in serum-free medium plus 10 µCi/ml of the radiolabeled carbohydrate. At the end of incubation, the medium was collected for assay and stored at 4 C (not more than 1 h).
Separation of secreted molecules by molecular weight (MW)
Collected conditioned medium was transferred to microcentrifuge tubes and spun briefly in a high speed microcentrifuge to remove cell debris. The medium was then spun to separate molecules by MW, using Centricon (San Diego, CA) filter tubes as described (40). The medium was layered on top of a Centricon-100 filter and the tube was spun at 4 C in a Beckman (Fullerton, CA; model J221) centrifuge (JA20 Rotor) at 5000 x g for 35 h. Upon completion of spinning, 0.5 ml of 5 mM Tris/HCl (pH 7.4) was added to the top of the filter for an additional 40 min spin and the latter step repeated. The remaining fluid in the upper compartment (about 60 µl), containing secreted molecules with MW greater than 100,000 was collected and used for assays.
Zymography
Protease activity was analyzed by substrate gel electrophoresis (zymography) in polyacrylamide gels containing 1 mg/ml pig gelatin. Samples (10 µl of total homogenates or concentrated aliquots of conditioned medium) were dissolved in modified Laemmli sample buffer [containing 2.5% (vol/vol) sodium dodecyl sulfate without ß-mercaptoethanol] and electrophoresed, without prior boiling, at 4 C. After removal of the sodium dodecyl sulfate by washing in 2.5% (vol/vol) Triton X-100 in 50 mM Tris/HCl (pH 7.5) for 1 h, the gels were incubated overnight at 37 C for 18 h with gentle shaking in a buffer containing 40 mM Tris/HCl (pH 7.5), 10 mM CaCl2, and protease inhibitors (50 µM each of carbobenzoxy-L-Phe-chloromethyl ketone, L-1-tosylamino-2-phenylethylchloromethyl ketone, Nalpha-tosyl-L-lysine chloromethyl ketone, and 4-[2-aminoethyl]benzenesulfonyl fluoride; Calbiochem). Gels were stained with 0.1% Coomassie Brilliant Blue (Bio-Rad) in 40% MeOH and 10% acetic acid for 45 min and destained with 7% acetic acid to allow the identification of gelatinolytic activity as clear zones in a blue background (46).
Surface (apical) protein biotinylation
hEVECs cultured on Millicell filters were washed with ice-cold PBS for 5 min and incubated with biotinylation buffer [composed of 1.25 mg/ml N-hydroxysuccinimide S-S-biotin (Pierce Chemical Co., Milwaukee, WI) freshly diluted in 10 mM triethanolamine, 2 mM CaCl2, 150 mM NaCl (pH 7.5)], added to the luminal compartment facing the apical membranes. After 20 min incubation at 4 C with gentle stirring, cells were rinsed with PBS complemented with 0.1 mM CaCl2, 1 mM MgCl2, and 100 mM glycine (pH 7.5) for 20 min at 4 C to quench unreacted biotin. The cells were then rinsed twice with ice-cold PBS complemented with 0.1 mM CaCl2 and 1 mM MgCl2, scraped in ice-cold PBS, and pelleted by centrifugation at 800 x g at 4 C. The pellets were solubilized for 45 min in 20 µl of lysis buffer [1% Triton X-100, 150 mM NaCl, 5 mM EDTA, 50 mM Tris (pH 7.5)] supplemented with a cocktail of proteinase inhibitor (Pierce) and 10 µM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride. The lysates were spun at 14,000 x g for 10 min at 4 C, and the supernatants were incubated overnight with streptavidin-agarose beads to recover biotinylated proteins. Samples from the streptavidin beads were collected in 2x sample buffer containing 10% ß-mercaptoethanol and incubated for 20 min at room temperature. Samples were heated at 95 C for 3 min, separated by SDS-PAGE, and subjected to Western blot analysis with the appropriate antibodies.
Tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase (TIMP)-1-TIMP-2 quantification
Commercially available ELISA kits were used to measure TIMP-1 (MTM100; R&D, Minneapolis MN) or TIMP-2 (RPN2618; Amersham, http://proteomics.amershambiosciences.com) using 200400 µg of protein per assay according to suppliers protocols. The TIMP-1 ELISA detects approximately 80% of the TIMP-1 complexed with pro-MMP-9 and approximately 60% when complexed with active MMP-9, and it does not recognize other TIMPs. The TIMP-2 ELISA recognizes free TIMP-2 (but not TIMPs-1 or TIMPs-3) and TIMP-2 complexed with the active form of MMPs (with varying increased efficiencies) but does not detect TIMP-2 complexed with pro-MMP-2. Samples and standards were incubated in duplicate in the plates precoated with specific antibodies for 2 h at room temperature, washed, and incubated with horseradish peroxidase-conjugated antibody to form an immobilized complex. The resulting color was read at 405 nm. TIMP-1 was measured in the range of 350 ng/ml (sensitivity of 1.25 ng/ml). TIMP-2 was measured in the range of 818 ng/ml (sensitivity of 3 ng/ml).
Data presentation and analysis
Data are presented as means (± SD), and significance of differences was estimated by ANOVA using GB-STAT (Dynamic Microsystems Inc., Silver Spring, MD).
| Results |
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·cm2 to about 25
·cm2 (Fig. 1A
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antisense oligonucleotide (Fig. 1
MMP-7 mediates estrogen modulation of RTJ
To ascertain the specificity of MMP-7 modulation of permeability, hEVECs were cotreated with the rabbit polyclonal anti-MMP-7 antibody MMP-7 Nab, which reacts with both the pro-MMP-7 and the activated MMP-7. As is shown in Fig. 2A
, coincubation with the MMP-7 Nab blocked MMP-7 decrease in RTE.
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MMP-7 effects on occludin
The reported mechanism by which estrogen modulates the RTJ is through remodeling of occludin (11). The result in Fig. 3A
confirms (11) that treatment with estrogen augments the expression of a truncated 50-kDa form of occludin, which based on previous studies is a proteolytic fragment of the protein (11, 12). Treatment with the ER
antisense oligonucleotide alone had no significant effect, but cotreatment with the ER
antisense oligonucleotide blocked estrogen effect (Fig. 3A
), suggesting that the ER
mediates estrogen effect.
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The extracellular effects of MMP-7 on occludin expression are shown in Fig. 3C
. Similar to estrogen, treatment with MMP-7 also induced expression of a 50-kDa occludin form. In contrast, proteinase-K induced de novo expression of 55- and 44-kDa bands (Fig. 3C
and Ref. 11). Previous studies showed that plasmin induces expression of 55- and 48-kDa bands, and MMP-2 induces expression of 60-, 58-, 53-, and 45-kDa forms (11).
Pretreatment of estrogen-depleted cells with the MMP-7 antisense oligonucleotide did not affect occludin expression and did not affect MMP-7 induction of the occludin 50-kDa form (Fig. 3D
). However, in estrogen-treated cells, cotreatment with the MMP-7 antisense oligonucleotide blocked expression of the occludin 50-kDa form (Fig. 3E
). Collectively, the data in Fig. 3
show that MMP-7 are sufficient and necessary for estrogen remodeling of occludin and suggest that MMP-7 mediates estrogen remodeling of occludin.
Estrogen modulation of MMP-7 secretion and expression
Conditioned media were obtained from the subluminal and luminal compartments of hEVECs attached on filters, and MMP-7 expression was determined using anti-MMP-7 antibodies. No MMP-7 immunoreactivity was found in conditioned media obtained from the subluminal compartment (not shown). In contrast, immunoblots using luminal conditioned media showed significant MMP-7 immunoreactivity (Fig. 4
, AC). In those samples the anti-MMP-7 Nab pAb reacted with 29- and 21-kDa forms, which presumably represent the pro-MMP-7 and the activated MMP-7, respectively. The data in Fig. 4
, AC, also show a consistent pattern of estrogen regulation of MMP-7 secretion: treatment with estrogen decreased the density of the 29-kDa form (Fig. 4
, A and B) and increased the density of the 21-kDa form (Figs. 4
, A and C). Densitometry of three experiments showed that treatment with estrogen decreased the density of the 29-kDa form by about 4-fold and increased the density of the 21-kDa form by about 4-fold (Fig. 4
, AC). Cotreatment with the ER
antisense oligonucleotide blocked estrogen effects (Fig. 4
, AC).
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No gelatinolytic activity was found in subluminal conditioned media of hEVEC cultures attached on filters; in contrast, a significant gelatinolytic activity at 29 and 21 kDa was found in luminal conditioned media (Fig. 4D
). In estrogen-depleted cells, the 29-kDa gelatinolytic activity was more pronounced, whereas treatment with estrogen reversed the pattern of the effect (Fig. 4D
). Homogenates of the cells from which the conditioned media were obtained showed a similar pattern of immunoreactivity with the MMP-7 antibodies (Fig. 4E
) of the pro-MMP-7/activated MMP-7 as described in Fig. 4
, AC, for the conditioned media.
Collectively, the data in Fig. 4
, AE, suggest that hEVECs secrete MMP-7 to the luminal compartment and that treatment with estrogen stimulates activation of the pro-MMP-7 intracellularly to an activated MMP-7 form and augments secretion of the activated MMP-7.
Mechanisms of estrogen modulation of MMP-7 secretion
Steady-state mRNA and protein levels.
Figure 5A
(left panel) shows that steady-state levels of MMP-7 mRNA were not affected by estrogen treatment. Evaluation of estrogen effects on intracellular MMP-7 protein was done by labeling cells with Trans35S-label and immunoprecipitation of total cells homogenates with the MMP-7 Nab antibody. Figure 5A
(right panel) shows that steady-state levels of MMP-7 protein were also not affected by estrogen treatment. Collectively, the data in Fig. 5A
ruled out estrogen regulation of MMP-7 through transcription, posttranscriptional mRNA stabilization, and protein translation and stability. Instead, the results suggest posttranslational regulation of the MMP-7.
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Processing in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and Golgi.
The experiments in Fig. 6
, AD, tested estrogen modulation of MMP-7 processing and activation in the endoplasmic reticulum/Golgi. In Fig. 6A
, total homogenates of estrogen-depleted and of estrogen-treated hEVECs were immunoprecipitated with the MMP-7 B-2 or MMP-7 F-12 antibodies and immunoblotted with the anti cis-Golgi protein GPP130 antibody. Treatment with estrogen increased the coimmunoreactivity of MMP-7 29 and 21 kDa with GPP130, without affecting cellular GAPDH. These results suggest that estrogen increases activation of the pro-MMP-7 in the Golgi network. To gain better understanding of the site of estrogen effects, cells were treated with tunicamycin (inhibitor of N-acetylglucosamine addition to dolicholphosphate, the first step in the formation of the core oligosaccharide in N-linked glycosylation); brefeldin-A (agent that fuses Golgi with endoplasmic reticulum and effectively blocks endoplasmic reticulum processing); or monensin (inhibitor of intra-Golgi traffic). Neither of the agents had any significant effect on cellular expression of the pro-MMP-7 when administered alone (Fig. 6
, BD). Also, when coadministered in estrogen-treated cells, neither tunicamycin nor brefeldin-A had any significant effect on the estrogen increase in cellular pro-MMP-7 (Fig. 6
, B and C). In contrast, cotreatment with monensin blocked estrogen increase in cellular pro-MMP-7 (Fig. 6D
). These results suggest that the estrogen site of action is at the Golgi system.
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Effects of bafilomycin A1 on extracellular acidity.
Extracellular acidity can modulate activity of extracellular proteases (53, 54). In the woman, the luminal fluid in the vaginal and ectocervical canal is acidic, and the acidic milieu of the fluid is determined by active H+ secretion through V-ATPase located in the apical membrane of vaginal-ectocervical epithelial cells (55). Because the activity of the V-ATPase is estrogen dependent (55), the hypothesis was tested that secretion and luminal activation of the MMP-7 depend on estrogen regulation of luminal acid secretion.
It was previously shown that cotreatment of estrogen-treated cells attached on filters with the V-ATPase inhibitor bafilomycin A1 blocks acidification of the luminal fluid (55). However, estrogen-depleted cells do not significantly acidify the luminal solution, and in those cells, bafilomycin A1 does not induce a significant additional effect on luminal pH (55). Using a similar experimental design, estrogen-depleted or estrogen-treated hEVECs were cotreated with bafilomycin A1, added to the luminal solution. In estrogen-treated cells treatment with bafilomycin A1 attenuated estrogen-increase in the expression of cellular pro-MMP-7 (Fig. 8
, A and B). Similarly, conditioned media of estrogen-treated hEVECs cotreated with bafilomycin A1 showed lesser expression of the 29- and 21-kDa MMP-7 forms (Fig. 8
, C and D) and lesser MMP-7 gelatinolytic activity (Fig. 8E
). The acidic milieu per se did not affect MMP-7 activation (Fig. 8F
).
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| Discussion |
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-mediated mechanism, up-regulates activation of MMP-7 intracellularly and its secretion into the luminal solution; 3) estrogen facilitates activation of MMP-7 in the Golgi network and augments SNARE-dependent exocytosis of pro- and activated MMP-7; and 4) treatment with bafilomycin A1 attenuates secretion of the pro-MMP-7. The results support the hypothesis that estrogen decrease in RTJ is mediated by MMP-7-dependent cleavage of occludin, possibly at the Gly226-Leu227 site of extracellular loop 2. The expected product would be a 50-kDa form, as we found (Refs. 11, 12 and present results). Formation of a truncated form would result in defective transmembrane junctional protein that fails to gate the intercellular space, leading to decreased RTJ. The results may be of physiological significance because experiments used a well-characterized system of human normal vaginal-cervical cells that maintain phenotypic characteristics of the native vaginal-ectocervical epithelia, and the doses of the natural 17ß-estradiol were within the physiological range in the woman.
Occludin 65-kDa form was found both in the cytosolic and plasma membrane fraction of hEVECs (Fig. 3B
). The cytosolic 65-kDa occludin is most likely newly synthesized and in-transit occludin, whereas that in the membrane fraction is the protein inserted into the plasma membrane junctional complex. Most of the occludin 50-kDa form was found in membrane fractions. This finding and the fact that lactacystin and chloroquine did not modulate estrogen occludin effect suggest that remodeling of occludin did not occur at intracellular sites because intracellular remodeling of proteins occurs in compartmentalized cytoplasmic proteasomes or lysosomes. MMP-7, on the other hand, exerted its effect on occludin extracellularly. Because estrogen effect is possibly mediated by MMP-7, the results suggest that estrogen modulation of occludin involves remodeling of occludin extracellular loop 2 by a direct effect at apical extracellular domains of the tight junction. MMP-7 substrates are numerous and, in addition to occludin, may include adherens junction proteins such as E-cadherin (29, 57, 58). Cleavage of E-cadherin can disrupt epithelial confluence and secondarily abrogate the RTJ (57). However, we have previously shown that in hEVECs estrogen does not affect E-cadherin (11), ruling out modulation of E-cadherin as the estrogen/MMP-7 mechanism of RTJ decrease.
One of the objectives of the study was to understand how estrogen regulates MMP-7 activity. The present results ruled out estrogen modulation of MMP-7 transcription and translation and suggest at least three posttranslational mechanisms: modulation of MMP-7 processing in the Golgi system, SNARE-dependent exocytosis, and modulation of vesicular acid secretion. Posttranslational processing of proteins, including the MMP-7, involves glycosylation and trafficking in the endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi networks before insertion in the plasma membranes or exocytosis. MMPs are synthesized as inactive zymogens with a presignal peptide at the N terminal that directs the MMP to the endoplasmic reticulum and is removed on protein maturation. Attached to the predomain is a propeptide containing cysteine switch element at the C-terminal end and a C-terminal catalytic domain. The prodomain maintains enzyme latency until it is removed or disrupted. Proteolytic cleavage of the propeptide converts inactive pro-MMP-7 into active MMP-7 through disruption of the Cys-Zn2+ interaction (29). The past theory of MMP posttranslational activation was that MMPs are constitutively secreted by exocytosis and activated in the extracellular fluid. More recent studies suggested that MMPs can be activated by intracellular signals before they reach the cell surface or are secreted (59, 60) and that MMPs secretion by exocytosis can be regulated (29). The latter hypotheses are supported by the present estrogen data.
The finding that treatment with monensin, inhibitor of intra-Golgi traffic, blocked estrogen increase in cellular pro-MMP-7 indicates that the MMP-7 is activated already in the Golgi or more proximal sites. Lack of an effect by tunicamycin (inhibitor of glycosylation) and brefeldin-A (modulator of endoplasmic reticulum-Golgi fusion) suggests that estrogen modulation of MMP-7 processing does not occur at the endoplasmic reticulum or endoplasmic reticulum-Golgi fusion sites. Whether the effect occurs at the cis-, medial-, or trans-Golgi systems is at present unknown.
The mechanism of estrogen activation of MMP-7 in the Golgi system is unknown. Treatment with ASO-ER
blocked estrogen modulation of the RTJ, occludin remodeling, and MMP-7 activation, suggesting involvement of the ER
mechanism. Lack of an effect on MMP-7 steady-state mRNA and protein levels rules out the involvement of the classical genotropic action mediated by the ER
/coactivator complex. Alternatively, estrogen acting via the ER
could increase activity of intermediate cascades that secondarily affect MMP-7 activation. Examples are genomic regulation of endothelial nitric oxide synthase leading to nongenomic modulation of activity of target proteins that control actin polymerization (16) and actin-myosin interaction (61). However, these cascades usually involve phosphorylation of the target protein, but the present results ruled out phosphorylation of the MMP-7. Therefore, one possibility would be modulation of activity of enzymes that are involved in the proteolytic cleavage of the propeptide that converts inactive pro-MMP-7 into an active MMP-7 (62).
The present results showed that estrogen enhances secretion of MMP-7 by SNARE-related exocytosis. The data also suggest that estrogen enhances secretion via other mechanisms. However, whereas the FM143 data are compatible with generalized enhanced secretion (63), the [14C]glucosamine-labeled high MW secretion and the SNARE-related exocytosis showed predominantly apical secretion. Because in epithelial cells membrane polarization is determined by the tight junctions, and because activated MMP-7 can disrupt occludin and decrease the RTJ (present results), the present data predict that MMP-7 proteolysis of occludin can unseal the intercellular space to diffusion of molecules. Transport of the MMP-7 and other MMPs from the luminal compartment into the subluminal compartment can disrupt basolateral aspects of the tight junctions as well as adherens molecules and desmosomes located more basally than the tight junctions. Proteolysis of tight junction proteins at apical and basolateral domains of the tight junction as well as other intercellular connecting proteins that form the intercellular bridges could lead to loss of epithelial barrier capacity. The presence of endogenous inhibitors of MMPs (TIMPs) and other control mechanisms is therefore important for maintaining the delicate balance of estrogen decrease in RTJ vs. loss of epithelial barrier capacity through overactivation and uncontrolled MMP-7 secretion. One such mechanism could be estrogen regulation of acid secretion.
The third mechanism of estrogen activation of MMP-7 could be by regulation of vesicular acidification. Treatment with bafilomycin A1 attenuated the gelatinolytic activity of secreted MMP-7. The effect was not direct because the gelatinolytic activity of MMP-7 was not dependent on pH. More likely it was secondary to decreased intracellular activation of MMP-7 and decreased luminal secretion of the pro- and activated MMP-7. Treatment with bafilomycin A1 blocks the apically located plasma membrane V-ATPase (55), which is the driving force for apical acid secretion. However, treatment with bafilomycin A1 also blocks vesicular V-ATPases, which control the acidic vesicular milieu, including in exocytotic vesicles (64). Because treatment with bafilomycin A1 inhibited intracellular activation of MMP-7, it is possible that the presence of an acidic milieu is necessary for the continued activation of MMP-7 during its trafficking from Golgi through the exocytotic machinery.
hEVECs acidify their extracellular luminal milieu constitutively (55). This mechanism is estrogen dependent, primarily through estrogen up-regulation of apical membrane V-ATPase activity. The mechanism of estrogen action is not entirely clear. It involves the ER
but is not the result of transcription or translation regulation (55). It could be secondary to the metabotrophic effects of estrogen and its ability to increase influx of glucose and fluxes of lactate via glycolysis (65) that control the assembly of the V-ATPase complex (66) and the stoichiometry of the proton transport and ATPase activity (36). Whether estrogen also up-regulates the activity of vesicular V-ATPases is at present unknown. However, the present and our past data (55) suggest the opposite. Estrogen up-regulation of apical membrane V-ATPase is associated with enhanced intracellular alkalosis (Gorodeski, G. I., unpublished results). This effect would tend to increase the electrochemical gradient of the vesicular V-ATPases and may result in less vesicular acidification. Therefore, estrogen acidification of the luminal solution could lead to decreased vesicular acidification and inhibit MMP-7 activation.
The present results ruled out modulation of TIMP-1 and -2 and their activity status as the mechanism of estrogen modulation of MMP-7 activity. The possibility that estrogen modulates activity of other MMPs that can secondarily activate or block MMP-7 was not determined.
In conclusion, the present data suggest that estrogen modulation of the RTJ is mediated by MMP-7-dependent remodeling of occludin. Estrogen up-regulates activation of the MMP-7 intracellularly, at the level of Golgi, and augments secretion of activated MMP-7 through SNARE-dependent exocytosis. On the other hand, estrogen acidification of the luminal solution would tend to attenuate acidification of exocytotic vesicles and may lead to decreased activation of the MMP-7. These mechanisms acting in concert could be important for regulation and control of estrogen modulation of paracellular permeability in vivo.
| Acknowledgments |
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| Footnotes |
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Disclosure: The author has nothing to disclose.
First Published Online October 12, 2006
Abbreviations: APMA, 4-Aminophenylmercuric acetate; ASO, antisense oligonucleotide; ER, estrogen receptor; GAPDH, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase; HBSS, Hanks balanced salt solution; hEVEC, human normal vaginal-ectocervical epithelial cell;
I, change in electrical current; MMP, matrix-metalloproteinase; MW, molecular weight;
PD, change in potential difference; RC, random coil control; RTE, transepithelial electrical resistance; RTJ, resistance of the tight junctions; SFM, steroid-free medium; SNAP25, synaptosomal-associated protein of 25 kDa; SNARE, soluble N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive fusion factor attachment protein receptor; TIMP, tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase; V, vesicular; Vdil, dilution potential.
Received August 15, 2006.
Accepted for publication September 29, 2006.
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