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Vol. 27, Issue 7, 786-791, July 1999
An In Vitro Study
Structural Biochemistry Center, University of Maryland Baltimore County, Baltimore, Maryland; and Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland
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Abstract |
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Acquired drug resistance is one of the most important problems in cancer chemotherapy. One of the proposed mechanisms for these phenomena is the sequestration of alkylating agents by metallothionein in vivo. This research shows that metallothionein can covalently sequester phosphoramide mustard, the active form of cyclophosphamide in vitro. On-line electrospray mass spectrometry reveals that it is phosphoramide, not nornitrogen mustard that alkylates metallothionein, although the metallothionein/nornitrogen mustard adduct was isolated as the major adduct. Tandem mass spectrometric experiments were performed on an isolated drug-modified tryptic peptide. The alkylation occurred predominantly at Cys48 of metallothionein. These results provide further evidence that overexpression of metallothionein can detoxify the active form of the drugs.
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Introduction |
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Metallothionein
(MT)1
is a family of small metal-binding proteins that
exists ubiquitously in all kinds of cells in mammalians. MT was first
identified in equine kidney cortex in 1957 (Margoshes and Vallee,
1957
). It has a low molecular weight (usually 61-62 amino acids in a
single polypeptide chain) and high cysteine content (20 cysteines,
~30%). In addition, each MT molecule binds seven Zn2+ and Cd2+ ions (Otvos
et al., 1985
). MT occurs in diverse isoforms. Humans have the most
complicated MT isoform family, which includes human MT-1a, 1b, 1e, 1f,
1g, 1 h, 1x; human MT-2; human MT-3; and human MT-4 (Moffatt and
Denizeau, 1997
). These MT isoforms usually share highly conserved
sequences with almost invariant positions of their 20 cysteines. One of
the most remarkable features of MT is its inducibility both in vivo and
in cultured cells. The MT concentration in tissues is usually highly
variable and changes significantly under the influence of a large
variety of conditions, including metal ions such as
Zn2+, Cd2+,
Cu1+, Hg2+, antibiotics,
hormones, inflammatory agents, anticancer drugs, and stress-producing
conditions (Kagi, 1993
; Moffatt and Denizeau, 1997
).
MT has two discrete domains. Rat liver Cd7MT 2a
can be cleaved by protease into two domains (Winge and Miklosy, 1982
):
a
domain at the N terminal that contains a
Cd3Cys9 metal cluster and
an
domain at the C terminal that contains a
Cd4Cys11 cluster. X-ray
crystallography shows that each domain has a solvent accessible cleft
(Robbins et al., 1991
). The cleft in the
domain contains Cys5,
Cys7, and Cys13 as solvent-exposed residues, whereas the cleft in the
domain contains Cys37, Cys41, and Cys57 as solvent-exposed residues.
Although MT has been extensively studied in the past 40 years, its
exact function remains a topic of discussion (Bremner, 1991
). One
proposed function of MT is detoxification of heavy metals such as
cadmium and mercury (Kagi and Vallee, 1961
). It is suggested that MT
plays a key role in the storage and regulation of
Zn2+ and Cu+ in vivo
(Bremner, 1991
). It may also regulate transcription by means of
Zn2+ transfer to nucleic acid-binding proteins
(Zeng et al., 1991
). The Zn2+ transfer of
MT can be modulated by the glutathione redox couple (Jiang et al.,
1998
). Although transgenic mice carrying no functional MT genes grew
and reproduced normally (Michalska, 1993
), they did show increased
sensitivity to chemical stress (Lazo et al., 1995
).
Recently, much work has been focused on the relation between MT
induction and acquired drug resistance during cancer chemotherapy. Accumulated evidence supports the idea that overexpression of MT
contributes to acquired drug resistance in chemotherapy by alkylating
agents (Lazo and Basu, 1991
). Human tumor cell lines with induced high
levels of MT have been found to gain resistance to anticancer drugs
(Kelly et al., 1988
). Human tumor cell lines with elevated MT induced
by heavy metals showed increased resistance to
cis-dichlorodiamineplatinum and nitrogen mustards (Basu and Lazo, 1990
). Overexpression of MT has also been found in tumor cells
from cancer patients after chemotherapy (Wood et al., 1993
). It
was found that the alkylating agents melphalan (Yu et al., 1995
),
chlorambucil (Zaia et al., 1996
), and mechlorethamine (Antoine et al.,
1998
) reacted covalently with MT under near physiological conditions in
vitro. The major alkylation sites were Cys48 and Cys33. Molecular
modeling supports selective binding of these drugs. When human bladder
tumor T24 cells were treated with chlorambucil, multiple MT alkylation
occurred (T. He, D.F. and C.F., submitted). In addition, it was also
found that chlorambucil-alkylated MT transfers zinc ions to other
protein more rapidly than unmodified MT, which may trigger the
overexpression of MT by means of gene regulation (Zaia et al., 1998
).
In this study, the reaction of phosphoramide mustard (PM), the active
form of cyclophosphamide (CP), with MT was investigated to provide a
further test of the hypothesis.
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Experimental Procedures |
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Materials. Rabbit liver MT 2a (Zn 0.7%, Cd 5.3%, Lot#34H95161) was purchased from Sigma Chemical Co. (St. Louis, MO). Bovine trypsin (TPCK-treated), zinc atomic absorption standard solution, methyl-4-nitrobenzene sulfonate, tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane, dithiothreitol, trifluoroacetic acid (TFA), and guanidine hydrochloride were also supplied by Sigma. HPLC grade acetonitrile was obtained from J. T. Baker Chemical Company (Phillipsburg, NJ). A five thousand molecular weight cut off centrifugal filter device was purchased from Millipore (Fisher Scientific, Pittsburgh, PA). PM was obtained from the Drug Synthesis & Chemistry Branch, National Cancer Institute (Bethesda, MD).
Mass Spectrometry (MS) Analysis.
Matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization (MALDI) MS was carried out
on a Kratos Kompact MALDI III mass spectrometer (Manchester, UK) with a
337-nm nitrogen laser. The matrices used in MALDI analysis were
3,5-dimethoxy-4-hydroxycinamic acid and
-cyano-4-hydroxycinamic acid. (Aldrich, Milwaukee, WI). Both linear and reflectron modes were
used with external calibration.
Reconstitution of Zn7 MT.
Zn7 MT was prepared according to an earlier
reference (Vasak, 1991
). Briefly, the commercial Zn(Cd) MT was
dissolved in 50 mM HCl, desalted by gel filtration, and further
purified by a size-exclusive column. The apo-MT was collected,
lyophilized, and stored at
20°C. For reconstitution, purified
apo-MT was dissolved in degassed 50 mM HCl (0.5 mg/ml) containing
dithiothreitol (0.25 mg/ml) under argon atmosphere. Eight equivalents
of ZnCl2 solution (15.4 mM in 1% HCl) was added
and the solution was brought to pH 7.5 by slowly adding 0.5 M
tris(hydroxymethyl) aminomethane. The reconstituted
Zn7 MT2a was desalted and changed to 10 mM
NH4HCO3 buffer using
Millipore (5000 MW cut) ultra filtration. The Zn7 MT concentration was determined by measuring the UV absorbance at 220 nm of the protein in 100 mM HCl solution (
= 48,200 mol
1cm
1; Vasak,
1991
).
In Vitro Alkylation of MT. Cd(Zn) MT2a (586 µM, 1 equivalent) and PM (2.05 mM, 3.5 equivalents) were incubated in 100 mM potassium phosphate buffer (pH 7.4) at 37°C for 15 min. The reaction mixtures were acidified to pH 2 by adding 20% TFA and desalted by gel filtration. The collected fraction was frozen and lyophilized before mass spectrometric analysis or HPLC separation.
Methylation of the Alkylated MT.
The alkylated MT was stabilized by cysteine methylation (Hunziker,
1991
). The methylation reaction was stopped by adding 20% TFA to
pH = 2 and desalted by gel filtration.
Trypsin Digestion of Alkylated MT. The cysteine-methylated MT/PM products were dissolved in aqueous ammonium bicarbonate (100 mM, pH = 7.8) or potassium phosphate (100 mM, pH = 7.8) and digested with trypsin (1:20 molar ratio) at 37°C for 30 min. The digested peptide mixture was acidified by 20% TFA and desalted by gel filtration. The collected solution was lyophilized before being analyzed by MS or separated by HPLC.
HPLC Separation of Alkylated MT and Tryptic Peptides. Reversed-phase (RP) HPLC was used to separate alkylated MT and tryptic peptides. A Shimazu (Columbia, MD) chromatography system equipped with dual LC-600 pumps and a variable wavelength SPD-6A UV detector was used. A C18 RP-HPLC column (Aquapore RP-300, 4.6 × 250 mm, Applied Biosystems, San Jose, CA) was used and the separation was monitored at 215 nm UV absorbance. For all HPLC separations, the mobile phases used were A (H2O, 0.1% TFA) and B (acetonitrile, 0.08% TFA). For the separation of alkylated MT, a shallow linear gradient program was used: 1 min, 10% B; 8 min, 19% B; 68 min, 19.6% B; 73 min, 50% B; 75 min, 80% B. For the separation of tryptic alkylated MT peptides, the following linear gradient was used: 2 min; 10% B; 20 min, 20% B; 30 min, 35% B; 31 min, 80% B.
ESI Experiments under Neutral Conditions. Reconstituted Zn7MT (254 µM in 10 mM NH4HCO3 solution) was reacted with 3.5 equivalents of PM at 37°C for 15 min. The reaction solution was infused directly into the source with a sheath flow of MeOH at 1 µl/ml.
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Results |
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Separation of Alkylated Products by HPLC. Figure 1 compares the HPLC profile of reactant (a, control) and product (b) after acid treatment. Because both MT and the drug lack an UV chromaphore, the protein elution was monitored at 215 nm. Using the HPLC conditions reported in Experimental Procedures, apo-MT2a and apo-MT2a' isoforms were eluted at 53.5 and 51.5 min, respectively. After 15 min, the majority of MT was still unreacted (72% of apo-MT2a and apo-MT2a' by integration). About 28% of MT was alkylated. Products included one major alkylation product (46.5 min, 23% by integration) and some minor products (49.0 min, 5% total by integration). The alkylation of MT increased with higher reactant concentrations, longer reaction time, or more equivalents of PM (data not shown); however, the alkylated products tended to deteriorate under vigorous conditions and no distinct products were detected by HPLC or ESI MS.
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Identification of Alkylated Products.
The isolated products were analyzed by ESI MS under acidic conditions
(Fig. 2). Table
1 summarizes the identified alkylated products and their structures, determined by their average molecular masses. The molecular mass of the rabbit liver MT2a isoform was measured as 6122.8 Da, which agrees well with the reported mass (MMT2a = 6125.3 Da; Yu et al., 1993
). The other
MT isoform MT2a' was determined as 6155.6 Da
(MMT2a' = 6155.3; Yu et al., 1995
). The major
product had a molecular mass of 6230.0 Da, which was determined as the
apo-MT2a isoform covalently bonded to one nornitrogen mustard (NNM;
apo-MT2a-NNM, calculated MW: 6230.8 Da). It is interesting that the
phosphoramide group was lost in this adduct. Experiments were carried
out to determine whether hydrolysis happened before the alkylation or
during the reaction work up (see below). The minor products were
determined to be apo-MT2a mono PM adduct (apo-MT-PM) and the same
adduct with the chloride group hydrolyzed to a hydroxyl group
(apo-MT-PM(-OH)). The relative amounts of the minor adducts varied
depending on the conditions used for stopping the reaction and
separation. The work up condition was controlled to get apo-MT-NNM as
the major product.
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Mapping the Alkylation Site by FAB and ESI MS. Protein mapping by tryptic digestion and peptide sequencing by MS/MS experiments were carried out to determine which cysteine(s) were alkylated by the drug. The alkylated products were methylated and digested by trypsin without prior HPLC separation (see Experimental Procedures).The tryptic peptides were separated by RP-HPLC and fractions were checked by MALDI, FAB, and ESI MS experiments and compared with control experiments. The results of FAB MS experiments are summarized in Table 2. A major modified peptide was found to be alkylated peptide [44-51] (CAQGCICK), with a mass increase of 99 Da. No other modified peptides were detected by HPLC or MS.
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Sequencing of Alkylated Peptide.
The alkylated peptide [44-51] was purified and collected by HPLC.
MS/MS experiments were carried out to sequence the peptide (Fig.
3). The immonium ions (I, C, Q,
C+ drug) and fragment 805.2 Da, which also
appeared in the control MS/MS experiment of unmodified peptide
[44-51] (data not shown), confirmed the peptide as [44-51] with a
drug molecule covalently bound to one of its cysteine side
chains. The w ion series was used to determine unequivocally that the
drug was linked to Cys48 of apo-MT2a isoform. The mass of the drug
group was determined to be 114 Da. The structure of this group was
determined as ethyl-2-oxazolinone (Fig. 5). This structure has also
been found in PM metabolic studies (Momerency et al., 1994
; Joqueviel
et al., 1998
).
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Discussion |
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CP is the most widely used alkylating agent in tumor chemotherapy
(Chabner and Collins, 1990
). Unlike many other nitrogen mustards, CP
shows almost no cytotoxic activity in vitro. It is a prodrug that needs
to be metabolically activated (Hill, 1975
). In vivo, nontoxic CP is
oxidized to a cytotoxic species, 4-hydroxycyclophosphamide, by an
enzyme system including cytochrome P-450-linked oxidase. The oxidation
takes place predominantly in microsomes in the liver (Brock,
1971
). The activated 4-hydroxycyclophosphamide undergoes isomerization and elimination to form PM and acrolein.
Many CP metabolites have been found (Colvin et al., 1973
; Joqueviel et
al., 1998
). Among them, 4-hydroxycyclophosphamide and PM have gained
much attention. Although both show high cytotoxic activities, they are
suggested to play different roles in vivo (Alberts et al., 1984
). The
4-hydroxycylcophosphamide species is regarded as a transportation form,
entering cells in conjugation with other molecules. PM is considered to
be the active form of CP, alkylating biopolymers intracellularly. These
characteristics suggest that although CP is used in in vivo
pharmacological studies, 4-hydroxycylcophosphamide is a good candidate
in a study using a cell line and PM is a good candidate for test tube
studies. Although the interaction of these two species with glutathione has been extensively studied (Pallante et al., 1986
; Dirven et al.,
1994
), references on their interaction with proteins are rare. It has
been reported that although CP was minimally protein-bound (13%), its
metabolites were bound by plasma protein as much as 56% (Jardine et
al., 1978
).
In this study, PM was found to react readily with MT under near
physiological conditions in vitro. Under the reaction and work up
conditions used, the major product is apo-MT-NNM (Table 1). Direct
ESI-MS experiments proved that the hydrolysis of PM to NNM happened
during the acidic work up conditions. Unlike melphalan and
chlorambucil, PM does not have an aromatic chromaphore. Thus, the
hydrophobicities of the drug-modified MTs do not change much on the
HPLC chromatogram (Fig. 1), similar to the adducts of MT with
mechlorethamine (Antoine et al., 1998
).
Previous studies (Yu et al., 1995
; Zaia et al., 1996
; Antoine et al.,
1997
) showed that alkylating agents react with rabbit liver MT2a
selectively at Cys48 and Cys33. The selectivity is proposed to result
presumably from a noncovalent binding of the aziridinium cation of the
drug to a pocket near Cys48 of MT. Molecular dynamics and solid-docking
simulations confirmed that the binding pocket is within a region
bordered by the two domains and the linking region of MT. In agreement
with these studies, the exclusive binding site of MT by PM has also
been proven to be Cys48. The biological significance of these
interesting results is still unknown. Alkylation of the Cys33 site in
the MT was not detected in this study. Compared with the chemical
structures of other alkylating agents such as mechlorethamine, the
unique phosphoramide anion group in PM may interact with the
electron-rich region near the binding pocket, which will affect
both its reaction rate and selectivity. When the results of HPLC
quantitation and on-line ESI/MS experiments are compared, the relative
reaction rates of MT alkylation by nitrogen mustards are: PM < melphalan < chlorambucil < mechlorethamine. Although not a
rigorous kinetic study, this order agrees with the reaction kinetics
with guanosine (Kallama and Hemminki, 1984
) and
4-(p-nitrobenzyl)pyridine (Bardos et al., 1965
).
When PM reacted with ethanethiol at near physiological conditions, both
a PM adduct and a NNM adduct were identified (Colvin et al., 1976
). It
was argued that PM, not NNM, acted as the alkylation agent, because NNM
does not show alkylating activity at pH 7.4 with
4-(p-nitrobenzyl)pyridine assay. Our on-line ESI/MS
detection of PM/MT reaction provides direct evidence that PM forms a
covalent bond with MT first and that the PM adduct may be hydrolyzed to a NNM adduct, especially under acidic conditions.
As shown in Fig. 5, the alkylation adduct
PM/MT hydrolyzes to NNM/MT rapidly upon acidification. The NNM/MT
adduct reacts readily with trace amounts of carbon dioxide to form the
ethyl-2-oxazolinone adduct at slightly basic pH. These two derivatives
of PM, although obtained during work-up, agree well with previous in
vivo and in vitro studies of PM metabolism and decomposition
(Williamson et al., 1966
; Struck et al., 1975
; Colvin et al., 1976
;
Momerency et al., 1994
; Joqueviel et al., 1998
). However, under argon
atmosphere a
elimination (
HCl) derivative was formed (Zaia et
al., 1996
).
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This study provides the evidence that during cancer chemotherapy by CP, the intracellular MT may sequester the active form PM and reduce its concentration. The results provide further evidence to support the hypothesis that overexpressed MT will confer tumor cell resistance to nitrogen mustards administered therapeutically.
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Footnotes |
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Received November 11, 1998; accepted March 16, 1999.
This work was supported by National Institutes of Heath Grant GM21248.
Send reprint requests to: Dr. C. Fenselau, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742. E-mail: smccain{at}umail.umd.edu
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Abbreviations |
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Abbreviations used are: MT, metallothionein; CP, cyclophosphamide; ESI, electrospray mass ionization; FAB, fast atom bombardment; MALDI, matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization; MS, mass spectrometry; MeOH, methanol; MS/MS, tandem mass spectrometry; NNM, nornitrogen mustard; PM, phosphoramide mustard; RP, reversed-phase; TFA, trifluoroacetic acid.
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References |
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