ToxSci Advance Access originally published online on September 21, 2005
Toxicological Sciences 2006 89(1):31-41; doi:10.1093/toxsci/kfi336
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REVIEW |
Intracellular Signaling Mechanisms of Acetaminophen-Induced Liver Cell Death
Liver Research Institute, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85737
1 To whom correspondence should be addressed at Liver Research Institute, University of Arizona, College of Medicine, 1501 N. Campbell Ave, Room 6309, Tucson, AZ 85724. Fax: (520) 626-5975. E-mail: jaeschke{at}email.arizona.edu.
Received August 22, 2005; accepted September 16, 2005
| ABSTRACT |
|---|
Acetaminophen hepatotoxicity is the leading cause of drug-induced liver failure. Despite substantial efforts in the past, the mechanisms of acetaminophen-induced liver cell injury are still incompletely understood. Recent advances suggest that reactive metabolite formation, glutathione depletion, and alkylation of proteins, especially mitochondrial proteins, are critical initiating events for the toxicity. Bcl-2 family members Bax and Bid then form pores in the outer mitochondrial membrane and release intermembrane proteins, e.g., apoptosis-inducing factor (AIF) and endonuclease G, which then translocate to the nucleus and initiate chromatin condensation and DNA fragmentation, respectively. Mitochondrial dysfunction, due to covalent binding, leads to formation of reactive oxygen and peroxynitrite, which trigger the membrane permeability transition and the collapse of the mitochondrial membrane potential. In addition to the diminishing capacity to synthesize ATP, endonuclease G and AIF are further released. Endonuclease G, together with an activated nuclear Ca2+,Mg2+-dependent endonuclease, cause DNA degradation, thereby preventing cell recovery and regeneration. Disruption of the Ca2+ homeostasis also leads to activation of intracellular proteases, e.g., calpains, which can proteolytically cleave structural proteins. Thus, multiple events including massive mitochondrial dysfunction and ATP depletion, extensive DNA fragmentation, and modification of intracellular proteins contribute to the development of oncotic necrotic cell death in the liver after acetaminophen overdose. Based on the recognition of the temporal sequence and interdependency of these mechanisms, it appears most promising to therapeutically target either the initiating event (metabolic activation) or the central propagating event (mitochondrial dysfunction and peroxynitrite formation) to prevent acetaminophen-induced liver cell death.
Key Words: acetaminophen hepatotoxicity; oncotic necrosis; apoptosis; endonucleases; DNA fragmentation; oxidant stress; peroxynitrite; covalent binding; reactive metabolites.
| INTRODUCTION |
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Acetaminophen (AAP) is a safe and effective analgesic/anti-pyretic drug when used at therapeutic levels (Rumack, 2004
| INITIATION OF AAP-INDUCED CELL DEATH |
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Among the most extensively studied and least controversial issues is the metabolic activation of AAP. A large portion of a therapeutic dose of AAP is directly conjugated with glucuronic acid or sulfate through glucuronyltransferases or sulfotransferases, respectively (Nelson, 1990
The regioisomer of AAP, 3'-hydroxyacetanilide, can cause glutathione depletion and a similar degree of covalent binding to cellular proteins as AAP, but does not cause liver injury (Tirmenstein and Nelson, 1989
). Despite the same overall protein binding, AAP induces more prominent covalent modifications of mitochondrial proteins than 3'-hydroxyacetanilide (Qiu et al., 2001
; Tirmenstein and Nelson, 1989
). Since the binding of NAPQI to mitochondrial proteins correlates with the potential to cause liver injury, these findings suggest that metabolic activation of AAP and protein binding of the reactive metabolite is a critical initiating event in the toxicity, which needs to be amplified and propagated in order to cause cell death (Jaeschke et al., 2003
). This concept is further supported by many pharmacological interventions that protected but did not affect reactive metabolite formation and protein binding (e.g., Birge et al., 1988
; Corcoran et al., 1985
; Jaeschke, 1990
; James et al., 2003c
; Salminen et al., 1998
; Slitt et al., 2004
).
| MITOCHONDRIAL DYSFUNCTION AND PROPAGATION OF AAP-INDUCED CELL INJURY |
|---|
AAP overdose triggers mitochondrial dysfunction as indicated by inhibition of mitochondrial respiration (Burcham and Harman, 1991
Superoxide can react with nitric oxide (NO) to form peroxynitrite, a potent oxidant and nitrating species (Denicola and Radi, 2005
). This reaction is diffusion limited and is actually several times faster even than the superoxide dismutase-catalyzed dismutation reaction (Denicola and Radi, 2005
). Immunohistochemical staining for nitrotyrosine protein adducts in cells undergoing necrosis provided evidence for peroxynitrite formation after AAP overdose (Hinson et al., 1998
; Knight et al., 2001
). Subcellular fractionation showed that peroxynitrite is predominantly generated in mitochondria (Cover et al., 2005b) (Fig. 1), which is consistent with the increased formation of superoxide in these cell organelles (Jaeschke, 1990
; Tirmenstein and Nelson, 1990
). The source(s) of NO after AAP treatment remain somewhat unclear. On the one hand, nitrotyrosine staining is reduced in inducible nitric oxide synthasedeficient (iNOS/) mice (Gardner et al., 2002
; Michael et al., 2001
), which would suggest that iNOS is a major source of NO for peroxynitrite formation after AAP treatment. In addition, animals lacking the anti-inflammatory gene interleukin-10 (IL-10) responded to an AAP overdose with higher iNOS induction and increased liver injury compared to wildtype animals (Bourdi et al., 2002
). However, nitrotyrosine protein adducts were detected as early as 0.5 to 1 h after AAP exposure in the absence of iNOS induction (Cover et al., 2005b; Knight et al., 2001
). These results indicate that iNOS is an important, but not the only, possible source for NO in AAP hepatotoxicity.
|
Although there is extensive evidence for peroxynitrite formation before tissue injury, the important question remains if this reactive nitrogen species is a relevant mediator for the overall cell death. Experiments with iNOS/ mice (Gardner et al., 2002
| CONSEQUENCES OF MITOCHONDRIAL OXIDANT STRESS AND PEROXYNITRITE FORMATION |
|---|
Oxidant stress caused by reactive oxygen and nitrogen species and increased Ca2+ levels are well-known inducers of the mitochondrial membrane permeability transition (MPT) in many cell types including hepatocytes (Kim et al., 2003
1500 Dalton molecular weight (Kim et al., 2003
m), the inability to synthesize ATP, and finally, necrotic cell death (Kim et al., 2003
Since AAP overdose depletes mitochondrial GSH levels, induces formation of peroxynitrite in mitochondria (Cover et al., 2005b) (Fig. 1), and causes cellular Ca2+ accumulation (Corcoran et al., 1988
) through inhibition of the Ca2+-Mg2+-ATPase (Tsokos-Kuhn et al., 1988
), it is not surprising that AAP induced the mitochondrial MPT in primary cultured mouse hepatocytes 46 h after exposure to AAP (Kon et al., 2004a
). The MPT occurred after GSH depletion and after initiation of reactive oxygen formation, but preceded necrotic cell death (Bajt et al., 2004
; Kon et al., 2004a
). The AAP-induced MPT and cell necrosis could be substantially delayed with CsA but not prevented at later time points (Kon et al., 2004a
). These data suggest that AAP initially triggers a CsA-sensitive, regulated MPT, which is followed by a CsA-insensitive, unregulated MPT (Kon et al., 2004a
). CsA treatment also protected against AAP hepatotoxicity in vivo (Haouzi et al., 2002
; Masubuchi et al., 2005
). More recent observations indicate that ferrous iron mobilized from lysosomes and oxidant stress appears to be involved in triggering the MPT after AAP (Kon et al., 2004b
). This mechanism explains the previously reported protective effect of iron chelation against AAP toxicity in vitro (Adamson and Harman, 1993
). In addition, N-acetylcysteine treatment 2 h after AAP attenuated the oxidant stress, the loss of the mitochondrial membrane potential, and cell injury (Bajt et al., 2004
; Reid et al., 2005
). Taken together, these findings support the hypothesis that reactive oxygen and Fenton-type reaction products may be important in the induction of the MPT and cell necrosis in vitro. Consistent with this conclusion, antioxidants such as vitamin E have been shown to protect against AAP-induced cell injury in culture (Nagai et al., 2002
). However, in contrast to the findings in vitro, the iron chelator desferoxamine is either not at all protective (Smith et al., 1986
) or only delays toxicity in vivo (Schnellmann et al., 1999
). Treatment with
- or
-tocopherol, which clearly prevented lipid peroxidation and cell injury after iron/allyl alcohol administration, did not protect against AAP-induced liver injury (Knight et al., 2003
). Thus, together these observations indicate that there might be a higher emphasis on oxidant stress mechanisms in vitro compared to the in vivo situation where peroxynitrite appears to dominate (Knight et al., 2002
). The reason for this effect could be an artificially enhanced mitochondrial oxidant stress due to the generally used hyperoxic cell culture conditions (Halliwell, 2003
).
In addition to the MPT, peroxynitrite may cause a number of other adverse effects in the mitochondria. Recently, we showed a decline of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) during AAP hepatotoxicity as assessed by a slot blot hybridization assay (Cover et al., 2005b
). When nitrotyrosine formation in mitochondria was eliminated by treatment with GSH, which accelerated the recovery of mitochondrial GSH levels, the loss of mtDNA was only partially prevented (Cover et al., 2005b
). This suggests that peroxynitrite is only one of several causes of mtDNA modifications (Rogers et al., 1997
). Although the effect of mtDNA loss on acute cell toxicity may be minimal, if the cell survives the initial insult, long-term survival may be jeopardized.
Mitochondrial release of Ca2+, together with the inhibition of the Ca2+-Mg2+-ATPase in the plasma membrane (Tsokos-Kuhn et al., 1988
), may lead to an increase of cytosolic Ca2+ levels sufficient to activate Ca2+-dependent intracellular proteases such as calpains. These enzymes can proteolytically cleave structural proteins within the cell and contribute to oncotic necrosis (Liu et al., 2004
). In addition, release of calpains from necrotic cells can affect neighboring cells and expand the injury within the liver (Limaye et al., 2003
). Another consequence of the disrupted intracellular Ca2+ homeostasis is the accumulation of Ca2+ in the nucleus and activation of a Ca2+-dependent endonuclease (Ray et al., 1990
).
| MITOCHONDRIAL DYSFUNCTION AND NUCLEAR DNA FRAGMENTATION |
|---|
AAP overdose causes fragmentation of nuclear DNA and karyolysis both in vivo and in primary cultured hepatocytes, as first recognized by Corcoran and coworkers (Ray et al., 1990
The most studied endonuclease is the DNA fragmentation factor (DFF40) or caspase-activated DNase (CAD), which is activated through cleavage of its inhibitor (DFF45/ICAD) by caspase-3 (Nagata et al., 2003
). In the liver, caspase-3 is mostly activated through cytochrome c release from mitochondria and caspase-9 activation by the apoptosome (Hill et al., 2003
). Although mitochondrial cytochrome c release has been shown during AAP hepatotoxicity (Adams et al., 2001
; El-Hassan et al., 2003
; Knight and Jaeschke, 2002
) (Fig. 2), a number of laboratories consistently reported either no or at best a minor activation of caspases (Adams et al., 2001
; El-Hassan et al., 2003
; Ferret et al., 2001
; Gujral et al., 2002
; Lawson et al., 1999
; Nagai et al., 2002
; Tinel et al., 2004
). In addition, the staining pattern of the TUNEL assay and the amount of low-molecular-weight DNA fragments in the cytosol or plasma are clearly different between AAP-induced cell injury and death receptor-mediated apoptosis, where activation of DFF/CAD is undisputed (Cover et al., 2005b
; Gujral et al., 2002
; Jahr et al., 2001
; Lawson et al., 1999
). Thus, despite DNA ladders undistinguishable from apoptosis, there is no evidence for a relevant activation of DFF/CAD during AAP hepatotoxicity. Nevertheless, until the responsible endonucleases are definitively identified, a contribution of DFF/CAD to nuclear DNA fragmentation cannot be completely ruled out.
|
During apoptosis, DFF/CAD is thought to cleave DNA first into 50 kb fragments (Nagata et al., 2003
The pro-apoptotic Bcl-2 family member Bax resides in the cytosol but can translocate to mitochondria and can form pores in the outer mitochondrial membrane alone or in combination with other Bcl-2 proteins, e.g., Bad and the truncated form of Bid (Chao and Korsmeyer, 1998
). Formation of these pores together with formation of the MPT pores in the inner membrane can release proteins from the intermembrane space of mitochondria (Jaeschke and Lemasters, 2003
; Scorrano and Korsmeyer, 2003
). Apoptosis-inducing factor (AIF) (Susin et al., 2000
) and endonuclease G (van Loo et al., 2001
) are proteins that have been implicated in chromatin condensation and nuclear DNA fragmentation, respectively. Therefore, we assessed the release of endonuclease G and AIF from mitochondria and their translocation to the nucleus in response to AAP treatment. In primary cultured mouse hepatocytes, nuclear translocation of endonuclease G and AIF was observed between 3 and 6 h after AAP exposure, i.e., after GSH depletion but before cell death (Bajt et al., unpublished observation). Nuclear translocation of endonuclease G and AIF and DNA fragmentation was inhibited by treatment with N-acetylcysteine (Bajt et al., unpublished observation), which also attenuated cell death (Bajt et al., 2004
). In vivo, mitochondrial translocation of Bax and truncated Bid (tBid) precedes nuclear DNA fragmentation and mitochondrial oxidant stress (Adams et al., 2001
; Bajt et al., 2005
; El-Hassan et al., 2003
) (Fig. 2). However, in Bax-deficient (Bax/) mice, only DNA fragmentation and cell injury but not peroxynitrite formation was delayed (Bajt et al., 2005
). On the other hand, DNA damage and injury was similar in Bax/ and in wild-type mice at later time points (
12 h) (Bajt et al., 2005
; Bajt et al., unpublished results). These findings indicate that AAP-induced Bax translocation to the mitochondria may induce the early release of intermembrane proteins, e.g., endonuclease G, AIF, the second mitochondria-derived activator of caspases (Smac), and cytochrome c. Endonuclease G and AIF translocate to the nucleus and cause DNA damage, which correlates with cellular necrosis. Therefore, endonuclease G and AIF may be the link between Bax-mediated pore formation in the outer mitochondrial membrane and nuclear DNA fragmentation. Furthermore, endonuclease G may be the DNase that generates the large DNA fragments for the activation of DNAS1L3. However, since the oxidant stress and peroxynitrite formation occur independent of Bax, the resulting MPT will eventually cause endonuclease G and AIF release, which leads to further DNA fragmentation and cell injury. Thus, the Bax-mediated signaling mechanism is overridden by peroxynitrite and the mitochondrial MPT at later time points.
How DNA damage contributes to cell necrosis remains unclear. One possible link could be the activation of PARP, which is critical for DNA repair (Meyer-Ficca et al., 2005
). However, excessive activation of PARP, which depletes cellular levels of NAD+ and ATP, leads to an energy crisis within the cell, causing cell necrosis (Ha and Snyder, 1999
). Although there is clear evidence for PARP activation after AAP overdose, the activation of this enzyme occurs after the onset of DNA fragmentation and cell injury (Cover et al., 2005a
). In addition, no protective effect was observed in PARP-deficient (PARP/) mice or with specific PARP inhibitors (Cover et al., 2005a
). In fact, PARP/ mice showed a slightly increased injury (Cover et al., 2005a
). This finding is similar to a previous in vitro study using a PARP inhibitor (Shen et al., 1992
). In contrast, it was reported that high doses of the PARP inhibitor 3-aminobenzamide protected against AAP hepatotoxicity in vivo (Ray et al., 2001
). However, this effect appears to be independent of PARP, because the chemical was as effective in wildtype as in PARP/ mice (Cover et al., 2005a
). Together, these findings suggest that PARP activation is a response to DNA damage after AAP, but is not actively involved in the process of cell injury. On the other hand, regeneration was suppressed in PARP/ mice at later time points after AAP overdose (Bajt et al., unpublished observations).
| AAP HEPATOTOXICITY AND REGENERATION |
|---|
The liver is a unique organ in the sense that a significant loss of liver cells due to drug toxicity or other insults can be overcome by regeneration (Mehendale, 2005
(Akerman et al., 1992
(Chiu et al., 2003| APOPTOTIC SIGNALING PATHWAYS AND AAP-INDUCED ONCOTIC NECROSIS |
|---|
As discussed, there is a significant overlap between events normally associated with apoptosis and AAP-induced cell death. The first observation of this kind was DNA fragmentation as indicated by DNA ladders after AAP overdose (Ray et al., 1990
Currently, there are only two experimental conditions where AAP unequivocally causes apoptotic cell death. First, exposure of hepatoma cell lines to high concentrations of AAP in cell culture will induce classical caspase-dependent apoptosis (Boulares et al., 2002
; Macanas-Pirard et al., 2005
). Since these hepatoma cell lines lack the capacity to metabolically activate a relevant amount of AAP and therefore do not properly mimic the initiating events of AAP hepatotoxicity, the relevance of these mechanisms for the pathophysiology in vivo has to be questioned. Second, AAP induces apoptosis in primary hepatocytes when the necrotic cell death is prevented by fructose and glycine treatment (Kon et al., 2004a
). However, these findings in cell culture remain to be confirmed in vivo. In general, inhibition of AAP-induced cell necrosis in vivo results in a permanent protection and does not induce apoptosis.
| GENOMICS AND PROTEOMICS APPROACHES |
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In the recent past, livers from AAP-treated mice were subjected to genomics and proteomics analysis. When mRNA expression of livers from AAP-treated animals (300 mg/kg; 6 h) was compared to controls, numerous genes encoding stress proteins, cell cycle and growth inhibitors, adhesion molecules and structural proteins, inflammatory mediators, and cell signaling proteins were upregulated, and many genes involved in cell metabolism were downregulated (Reilly et al., 2001
| SUMMARY |
|---|
A fraction of the dose of AAP is metabolically activated to a reactive metabolite (NAPQI), which first depletes cellular glutathione and subsequently covalently binds to cellular proteins (Fig. 3). These initiating events lead to disturbances of the cellular Ca2+ homeostasis, with increase of the cytosolic Ca2+ levels, Bax and Bid translocation to the mitochondria, and a mitochondrial oxidant stress and peroxynitrite formation. The Bcl-2 family members form pores in the outer mitochondrial membrane and release cytochrome c, Smac, AIF, and endonuclease G from the mitochondrial intermembrane space. Reactive oxygen species and peroxynitrite induce the membrane permeability transition, which causes the collapse of the mitochondrial membrane potential, eliminates ATP synthesis, and causes further release of mitochondrial proteins. The declining ATP levels appear to prevent caspase activation by the release of cytochrome c and Smac. AIF and endonuclease G translocate to the nucleus and induce DNA fragmentation, which is further aggravated by the nuclear Ca2+/Mg2+-dependent endonuclease DNAS1L3. The massive nuclear DNA damage and the rapid elimination of functional mitochondria, together with activation of intracellular proteases (calpains), lead to cell membrane failure and oncotic necrosis of the hepatocytes. The postulated intracellular signaling events after AAP overdose can explain the massive cell death and liver failure. However, many aspects are still unclear and require further investigation. In addition, it has to be kept in mind that AAP-induced cell death in vivo can be modulated by changes in the expression levels of P450 and phase II detoxification enzymes, variation in the GSH and antioxidant levels (nutritional status), and preexisting conditions affecting the susceptibility of hepatocytes (steatosis, mitochondrial abnormalities, inflammation). Therefore, to most effectively protect against AAP overdose, it is important to focus on central mechanisms of the pathophysiology. At the present time, this appears to be the metabolic activation as initiating event in the toxicity and mitochondrial dysfunction as the key cellular event that controls the propagation of the injury.
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| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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Work from the authors' laboratory was supported by National Institutes of Health grants R01 AA 12916 and R01 DK 070195.
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superoxide; ONOO, peroxynitrite; PARP, poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase; Smac, second mitochondria-derived activator of caspases; tBid, truncated from of Bid.