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1 Dipartimento di Scienze e Tecnologie Avanzate, Universitá del Piemonte Orientale "Amedeo Avogadro," Corso Borsalino 54, 15100 Alessandria; 2 Dipartimento di Biologia Generale Sperimentale e dell'Ambiente, Universitá di Genova, Palazzo delle Scienze, Corso Europa 26, 16132 Genova, Italy; and 3 Instituto de Ciencias Marinas de Andalucía (C.S.I.C.), Campus Universitá Río S. Pedro, 11510 Puerto Real (Cádiz), Spain
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ABSTRACT |
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Metallothionein (MT) is a sulfhydryl-rich protein involved mainly in heavy metal homeostasis and detoxification. In this study, the use of the mussel as an experimental model allowed us to test MT antioxidant properties at the molecular, cellular, and organism level. MT induction was achieved by mussel exposure to Cd (200 µg/l) in aquaria for 7 days followed by detoxification in the sea for 28 days. Cd-preexposed and nonexposed mussels were then treated with Fe (300-600 µg/l) in aquaria for 3 days. Biochemical assays on digestive gland tissue showed that treatment with Fe led to a significant increase in oxyradical production and malondialdehyde level only in mussels not preexposed to Cd. The Cd-dependent resistance to oxidative stress was ascribed to MT induction, as Cd produced no significant variation of reduced glutathione and major antioxidant enzymes. Digital imaging of isolated digestive gland cells showed lower oxyradical rise and higher viability in cells from Cd-preexposed mussels after treatments with 0.5-5 mM H2O2. Analyses on whole organisms showed that anoxic survival was lowered in mussels that had been treated with Fe, but such an effect was less pronounced in Cd-preexposed mussels compared with nonpreexposed ones. In conclusion, data suggest an antioxidant role for MT, which seems to occur through oxyradical scavenging and is able to protect both isolated cells and the entire organism from oxidative stress.
antioxidant defense system; cadmium; iron
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INTRODUCTION |
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METALLOTHIONEIN (MT) is a low-molecular-weight protein (6,100-7,100 in mammals) with high sulfhydryl content (16). MT shows high affinity for groups IB and IIB metal ions, thereby playing a pivotal role in cellular processes of metal handling and detoxification (15, 29). MT is also involved in different metabolic processes that depend on zinc and copper (6), but a growing body of evidence suggests that the role of MT is not confined to heavy metal homeostasis and exchange.
MT is inducible by heavy metals (15) but also, to various extents, by different chemicals and stressors and, in particular, by oxidants (4). Accordingly, it has been found that the mammal MT gene promoter contains metal response elements (15, 35) and glucocorticoid response elements (17) but also genetic elements responsive to oxidant agents (8, 9). More recent studies have demonstrated that the MT gene promoter of fish shows regulatory sequences that are similar to those of mammals (27, 30).
The evidence that oxidant compounds can promote MT gene activation is in line with the possible involvement of MT in the cellular antioxidant defense system (see reviews in Refs. 18, 31). Such a view is based on different findings: 1) MT shows a remarkable in vitro scavenging activity against different free-radical species (19, 36); 2) the cellular level of MT can be increased by different oxidants (4); 3) cultured cells overexpressing MT can resist oxidative stress (32), whereas cells deficient in MT are more sensitive to oxidants (22); and 4) MT seems able to prevent free-radical injury to biological structures both in vitro (1) and in vivo (26). However, despite a bulk of data arguing for MT-based antioxidant defense, controversy still exists due to contrary observations indicating that the knowledge about the actual antioxidant role of MT is still incomplete (31).
In marine invertebrates, knowledge about MT responses to stress is by far more restricted than in vertebrates. However, bivalve mollusks and mussels in particular are known to accumulate high heavy metal amounts that produce MT induction and eventually heavy metal detoxification (5). Moreover, it has also been shown that strong variations of temperature, oxygen, and salinity can increase the cellular concentration of MT (39). In this study, mussels have been pretreated in vivo with Cd and then, after a period of detoxification, whole animals or isolated cells have been exposed to prooxidant compounds. Previous research has shown that mussels preexposed to Cd for a few days and then detoxified for 1 mo show an increase in MT, which binds most of cytosolic Cd (40). Hence, this experimental system, involving in vivo MT induction followed by oxidative stress, has allowed us to study the possible antioxidant role of MT at the molecular, cellular, and organism levels.
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METHODS AND MATERIALS |
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Chemicals. Cytochrome c, EDTA, glutathione reductase, reduced glutathione (GSH), oxidized glutathione (GSSG), HEPES, hypoxanthine, leupeptin, phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride (PMSF), NADPH, pronase, and xanthine oxidase were from Sigma-Aldrich (Milan, Italy). The oxyradical probe dihydrorhodamine 123 (DHR) and the LIVE/DEAD kit were from Molecular Probes (Eugene, OR). All other reagents were of analytical grade.
Animals and in vivo treatments.
Specimens of mussels (Mytilus
galloprovincialis, 5- to 6-cm shell length), purchased
from a mussel farm (La Spezia, Italy) in March-April, were acclimated for 3 days in aquaria containing recirculating synthetic seawater (1 liter/animal), pH 7.9-8.0, 35
(20) at 15°C. Mussels
were exposed for 7 days to Cd (200 µg/l) and then transferred to an unpolluted sea area within cages for a 28-day detoxification
period. Subsequently, control and Cd-exposed/detoxified
animals were treated with Fe (300-600 µg/l) for 3 days in
aquaria. Metal additions and seawater changes were made
daily, and Cd was used as CdCl2 and Fe as FeCl3. After treatments,
digestive glands were rapidly dissected out and immediately used or
stored at
80°C until use.
Heavy metal determinations. Digestive gland tissues were lyophilized, and digestion was carried out in a microwave oven according to the procedure described by Stripp and Bogen (34). Heavy metal concentrations were determined by atomic absorption spectrophotometry with flame for Fe (Perkin Elmer 3110) and with a graphite furnace for Cd (Perkin Elmer 4110 ZL). The analytical procedure was checked using standard reference material (mussel tissue, BCR 278) provided by the Commission of the European Communities, Community of Bureau Reference. The results are expressed as micrograms per gram dry weight.
Evaluation of oxyradical production in tissue homogenates. Digestive gland tissue was ice-cold homogenized (1:10) in 0.32 M sucrose, 20 mM HEPES (pH 7.4), 1 mM MgCl2, 0.5 mM PMSF, and 2 µM leupeptine using a Potter-Elvehjem glass/Teflon homogenizer. Homogenates were centrifuged at 20,000 g for 20 min at 4°C. Aliquots of the supernatant (166 µg protein) were incubated with 30 mM HEPES (pH 7.2), 200 mM KCl, 1 mM MgCl2, and 16 µM DHR in a total volume of 2 ml. DHR is a nonfluorescent derivative that is converted to the fluorescent dye rhodamine 123 on reaction with reactive oxygen species. Probe fluorescence signal was detected by using a Perkin Elmer LS 50B spectrofluorometer [excitation (ex.) = 505 nm, emission (em.) = 534 nm, slit = 2.5 nm].
MT determination. MT was evaluated on digestive gland homogenates according to a previously described spectrophotometric method (41).
Malondialdehyde determination. Digestive gland tissue was ice-cold homogenized (1:4) in 30 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.4), mixed 1:1 with acetonitril, and centrifuged at 6,000 g for 20 min at 4°C. Malondialdehyde (MDA) concentration in the supernatant was assayed by HPLC as previously described (38).
Antioxidant enzyme assays. Digestive glands were homogenized (1:5) in 0.5 M sucrose and 0.15 M NaCl in 0.02 M Tris-HCl, pH 7.6. The homogenate was centrifuged at 500 g for 15 min at 4°C and the resulting supernatant at 12,000 g for 30 min at 4°C. The 12,000-g pellet (peroxisomal and mitochondrial fraction) was resuspended in a small volume of homogenization buffer. The 12,000-g supernatant (cytosolic fraction) was chromatographed on a Sephadex G-25 column (Pharmacia PD-10); equilibration and elution buffer were the same as the homogenization buffer. Both fractions were used immediately for enzyme assay. Enzyme activities were measured in a Beckman DU 70 spectrophotometer under conditions of saturating substrate concentration at the temperature of 25°C, as described by Lemaire et al. (23). Superoxide dismutase (SOD) and catalase (Cat) were assayed on both the mitochondrial fraction and the cytosolic fraction, glutathione peroxidase (GPX) was assayed in the cytosolic fraction only.
Cat activity was determined by following the decrease in absorbance at
240 nm, due to
H2O2
consumption (extinction coefficient of 40 M
1 · cm
1).
Final reaction mixture (1 ml) was 50 mM
H2O2
in 50 mM
KH2PO4/K2HPO4, pH 7.0 (13).
SOD activity was evaluated with the xanthine oxidase-cytochrome c method as described by McCord and Fridovich (24). The cytochrome c reduction by superoxide anion radicals generated by the xanthine oxidase-hypoxanthine reaction was monitored at 550 nm. One unit of SOD activity is defined as the amount of sample causing 50% inhibition of cytochrome c reduction under the assay conditions. Final reaction mixture (3 ml) was 43 mM KH2PO4/K2HPO4, pH 7.6, 0.1 mM EDTA, 0.5 mM hypoxanthine, 28 mU xanthine oxidase, and 30 µM cytochrome c.
GPX activities were measured by linking the reaction to that of
glutathione reductase and following the decrease in NADPH at 340 nm
(extinction coefficient of 62,200 M
1 · cm
1).
Selenium-dependent activity (Se-GPX) and the sum of Se-GPX and
selenium-independent activities (total GPX) were measured by using,
respectively,
H2O2
and cumene hydroperoxide as substrate (21). Final reaction mixture (1 ml) was 65 mM
KH2PO4/K2HPO4, pH 7.5, 2 mM GSH, 1 mM sodium azide
(H2O2
assay only), 1 U glutathione reductase, 0.12 mM NADPH, and 2 mM
H2O2
or 8 mM cumene hydroperoxide.
Glutathione assays. For the determination of total glutathione, digestive gland tissue was homogenized (1:5) in cold 1 M perchloric acid containing 2 mM EDTA and centrifuged at 30,000 g for 20 min at 4°C. Supernatants were neutralized with 2 M KOH/0.3 M MOPS and centrifuged at 1,000 g for 10 min at 4°C. The resulting supernatant was used for total GSH content determination through the glutathione reductase enzymatic assay of Akerboom and Sies (2). The reaction mixture contained 1 mM EDTA in 0.1 M KH2PO4/K2HPO4, pH 7.0, 0.2 mM NADPH, 0.06 mM dithionitrobenzoic acid, and 0.12 U glutathione reductase. Calibration was performed using GSSG instead of sample. The linear increase in absorbance was recorded at 412 nm, temperature was controlled at 25°C.
Determination of GSH was performed according to the method of Asensi et al. (3). Tissue was homogenized (1:10) in 15% trichloroacetic acid containing 1 mM EDTA and centrifuged at 15,000 g for 5 min at 4°C. The final reaction mixture consisted of 25 µl of the acidic supernatant, 10 µl of 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene (2 mg/ml of ethanol), 10 µl of glutathione S-transferase (500 U/ml), and 825 µl of 0.5 M KH2PO4/K2HPO4, pH 7.0, containing 1 mM EDTA. Absorbance was recorded at 340 nm until the end point of the reaction.
Digestive gland cell dissociation. Digestive gland was removed from mussels after in vivo treatments (see Animals and in vivo treatments) and rinsed for ~30 s in ice-cold Ca2+/Mg2+-free saline (CMFS) containing (in mM): 20 HEPES, 500 NaCl, 12.5 KCl, and 5 EDTA. The tissue was then ice-cold minced and stirred into a beaker containing 25 ml of CMFS. Pronase (1 mg/ml) was added to the solution, and the suspension was incubated under stirring for 30 min at 13°C, passed through a 280-µm silk, and then through a 150-µm silk. The obtained cell suspension was centrifuged for 10 min at 200 g, and cells were resuspended in physiological saline containing (in mM): 20 HEPES, 436 NaCl, 53 MgSO4, 10 KCl, and 10 CaCl2. This latter step was repeated twice.
Digital imaging of intracellular oxyradical production. Isolated digestive gland cells (see Digestive gland cell dissociation) were settled for 10 min on coverslips previously treated with poly-L-lysine (1:10 in deionized water), loaded with 3 µM DHR for 3 min, and then washed with physiological saline to remove dye excess. Fluorescent images (ex. = 505 nm, em. = 534 nm) were acquired by an Olympus IMT-2 inverted microscope equipped with an IMT2-RFL fluorescence attachment (Olympus Optical, Germany) and with an MTI SIT 68 intensified camera (Oatencourt, England). Images were digitized and analyzed using the CUE2 RMS 4.0 imaging system (Galai Production, Israel).
Cell viability assay. Digestive gland cells were settled on coverslips, loaded with the LIVE/DEAD viability solution containing ethidium homodimer-1 (4 µM) and calcein AM (2 µM), and incubated for 30 min in a wet chamber at 13°C. In living cells, the membrane-permeant calcein AM is cleaved by esterases to yield cytoplasmic green fluorescence (ex. = 485 nm, em. = 530 nm). In dead cells with damaged membranes, the membrane-impermeant ethidium homodimer-1 labels nucleic acids with red fluorescence (ex. = 485 nm, em. = 590 nm). After staining, cells were washed with physiological saline and incubated for 1 h with different concentrations of H2O2. Thereafter, the percentages of red (dead) and green (alive) cells were estimated by sampling at least four coverslip regions.
Anoxic survival assay. After in vivo mussel treatments (see Animals and in vivo treatments), a total of 40 animals for each kind of treatment plus controls were subjected to anoxia by air exposure at 15°C in a humified room. Surviving animals were counted daily by considering open valves or absence of muscular activity as death symptoms until 100% mortality was reached.
Statistics. Data were analyzed by the InStat software package (Graph Pad, San Diego, CA), except survival analysis, which was performed using the Lifetest Procedure, SAS Software (SAS Institute, Cary, NC).
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RESULTS |
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In the present study, mussel exposure to Cd was used to enhance MT tissue levels, whereas Fe exposure served to induce an oxidative stress (14). Hence, a combination of Cd preexposure/detoxification and subsequent Fe treatment was used to investigate antioxidant properties of MT.
Chemical and biochemical analyses.
Mussel exposure to 200 µg/l Cd for 7 days followed by detoxification
for 4 wk produced an ~350-fold Cd increase in digestive gland tissue.
Such a sharp difference in Cd content between Cd-exposed and nonexposed
animals remained essentially unvaried after treatment with 300-600
µg/l Fe (Table 1). Treatments with Fe
produced a significant Fe accumulation in digestive gland tissue, both
in the presence and in the absence of Cd preexposure (Table 1). MT
assays showed a >10-fold increase in the digestive gland of
Cd-exposed mussels compared with controls (Fig.
1A).
In animals not preexposed to Cd, the treatment with 300 µg/l Fe
produced an ~100% MT rise, whereas the treatment with 600 µg/l Fe
produced a lower but also significant increase (Fig. 1B). In animals preexposed to Cd, Fe
treatments produced slight, nonsignificant decreases in the high MT
content induced by Cd (Fig. 1A).
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Fluorimetric data concerning production rates of reactive oxygen
species (ROS) were obtained by incubating a
20,000-g supernatant from digestive
gland homogenate with the DHR probe. Bonferroni mean comparisons showed
that exposure to 600 µg/l Fe caused a significant rise in ROS
production compared with controls (P < 0.05), whereas exposure to Cd did not significantly modify control ROS production rates, and preexposure to Cd abolished the ROS production rise induced by the Fe treatment (Fig.
2A).
Parallel data were achieved from an evaluation of the MDA tissue
content, obtained through HPLC assay. Also in this case, the Bonferroni analysis showed significant MDA rise in Fe-treated mussels
(P < 0.05), whereas differences
among controls, Cd-treated, and Cd/Fe-treated animals were not
significant (Fig. 2B). In another
set of experiments, the sensitivity to oxidative stress in control and
Cd-pretreated animals was tested by incubating (in vitro for 60 min) a
digestive gland 20,000-g supernatant
with 50 µM Fe/100 µM ascorbate, a potent prooxidant mixture (14).
Incubation with Fe/ascorbate produced higher ROS production and MDA
levels (t-test,
P < 0.05 in both cases) in extracts
from controls compared with those from Cd-pretreated mussels
(Fig. 3).
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To exclude that the resistance to oxidative stress acquired by
Cd-treated mussels could have derived from an induction of antioxidant
systems other than MT, we assayed main antioxidant enzyme activities,
viz. Cat, SOD, GPX, and total glutathione levels in digestive gland
extracts. No significant differences between control and Cd-exposed
animals were found for each of these components of the antioxidant
defense system, with the exception of a minor component of Cat measured
in the peroxisome fraction, which increased after Cd exposure (Table
2). Moreover, we also checked
the glutathione redox status by evaluating reduced glutathione. The
percentage present in the reduced form remained at 97.6% in controls
and 96.7% in Cd-exposed mussels. Hence, these data globally indicate no significant induction of main antioxidant enzymes and compound after
Cd exposure.
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Analyses on isolated cells. The
results of the above biochemical analyses seem to indicate that MT
plays a role as antioxidant. However, a confirmation of these data was
sought in experiments on isolated digestive gland cells obtained from
mussels exposed to Cd and/or to Fe. In a first experiment concerning
the sensitivity to oxidative stress, cells were loaded with DHR and
analyzed by digital imaging to point out intracellular ROS production
rates. In cells from Cd-exposed animals, treatment with 0.5 mM
H2O2
elicited a lower ROS production rise than observed in controls, as
shown by t-test comparison
(P < 0.01, Fig.
4). In addition, basal ROS production rates
prior to
H2O2
addition were similar in both samples (Fig. 4), thus confirming the
data about ROS production in extracts from digestive gland homogenates
(see Fig. 2). A second experiment, based on cell loading with the
LIVE/DEAD viability solution followed by incubations with different
H2O2
concentrations, showed a significant drop at 1 mM
H2O2
in the viability of cells deriving from animals treated with Fe
(Bonferroni test, P < 0.01, Fig.
5), whereas cells from mussels preexposed
to Cd and then treated with Fe showed a viability similar to controls
(Fig. 5).
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Analyses on whole organisms. Finally,
an experiment based on mussel anoxic survival was aimed at verifying,
also at the organism level, the protective effects of preexposure to Cd
against oxidative stress. After in vivo treatments with Cd and/or Fe,
animals were left in air under controlled conditions of temperature and
humidity. As previously demonstrated, survival in air is lower in
stressed mussels (37). In our experiment, survival curves allowed us to
point out that animals preexposed to Cd and then treated with Fe were
more resistant to air exposure than animals treated with Fe without Cd
preexposure (Fig. 6). The
LT50 (50% lethal time) of
Fe-treated mussels was 6.65 days, whereas the
LT50 of Cd-preexposed/Fe-treated mussels was 8.8 days, very close to the
LT50 of 9 days for
controls. Survival analysis showed significant
differences among curves (Fig. 6).
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DISCUSSION |
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A main question arising from experimental data consists of the extent to which they are representative of real phenomena. In previous research, MT antioxidant properties were indeed explored at different levels, from in vitro chemical reactions to whole organisms. Hence, multilevel information is available, but it must be reconstituted from a variety of data obtained in different experiments. In addition, many studies actually indicated an antioxidant role of MT, but some did not; thus contributing to build up a complex and debatable picture about the MT role in cellular antioxidant defense (31).
In this study, we attempted to achieve an integrated picture of MT antioxidant effects, spanning from the molecular to the organism level. We, therefore, chose the mussel as an experimental model organism as this bivalve mollusc, besides showing fair MT inducibility, is particularly resistant to manipulations. The mussel seemed, therefore, particularly suitable for an experimental design involving a sequence of in vivo treatments. Moreover, the developed resistance of mussels to air exposure allowed us to perform sensitive anoxic survival tests for an assessment of the physiological status of whole organisms at the end of heavy metal incubations.
The first step of this research consisted of the checkup of heavy metal tissue contents on in vivo mussel exposures to metals. Data showed that Cd and Fe incubations caused an increase of either metal in digestive gland tissue and, moreover, that these metals did not largely interfere with the tissue accumulation of each other. More in detail, Fe treatments produced significant Fe increases compared with controls in both Cd-preexposed and nonpreexposed mussels; and in Cd-preexposed mussels, treatment with Fe produced no variation of the enhanced Cd content (see Table 1). The high Cd content found in mussels after the detoxification period and even after subsequent Fe treatments is a confirmation of the particularly long half-life of this heavy metal in mussel tissue (40).
The assay of MT after Cd exposure and detoxification confirmed that Cd produced a strong and persistent MT increase in mussel digestive gland tissue. Moreover, such an increase remained nearly unaltered after treatment with Fe, showing that mussels preexposed to Cd were endowed with high MT tissue levels while experiencing Fe accumulation. On the other hand, Fe treatments made on mussels that had not been preexposed to Cd also produced a lower but significant MT increase. This is to some extent in line with previous data on the chick, in which Fe parenteral injections led to marked MT rise (10, 25). It has also been shown that Fe can bind in vitro to MT, but the physiological meaning of this interaction has not been established yet (12).
The prooxidant effects of transition metals such as Cu and Fe on marine organisms have been assessed, showing that these metals can induce oxyradical production leading to lipid peroxidation (33, 38). This was confirmed by our experiments, demonstrating increases of both oxyradical production and MDA in the tissue of mussels exposed to Fe. By contrast, no evidence for an alteration of the redox status was found in Cd treated/detoxified mussels. Moreover, in the present study, it was also found that Cd preexposure was able to prevent prooxidant processes due to subsequent Fe treatment or to lessen the susceptibility to oxidative stress of tissue extracts, suggesting an antioxidant effect of MT.
Yet, these data do not exclude that cellular antioxidant systems other than MT could be involved in the prevention of Fe-induced oxidative stress. For this reason, we also tested the effect of Cd exposure on main antioxidant enzymes and glutathione levels. Glutathione is considered a main hydrophilic oxyradical scavenger able to protect cells from oxydative damage (7). The concentration and redox status of this low-molecular- weight thiol, which is effective against oxidative damage also in the mussel (28), showed no significant variation in Cd-exposed mussels compared with controls. Main enzymes involved in detoxification from reactive oxygen species, i.e., SOD for superoxide anion radical, Cat for H2O2, and GPX for hydroperoxides, have been shown to contribute to antioxidant defense also in the mussel (11). Our data showed negligible variations for these enzymes, with the only exception of some Cat increase that cannot account for the sharp resistance to prooxidant processes developed by Cd-preexposed mussels. Hence, these assays globally indicated that main mussel antioxidant systems remained unaltered after Cd treatment.
Biochemical assays involve the use of tissue homogenates, in which the cellular distribution of MT could be altered and oxyradical production rates modified, thus possibly providing biased information about the actual antioxidant potentials of MT at the cellular level. However, data concerning isolated digestive gland cells have provided a confirmation to biochemical assays. Firstly, exposure to H2O2 strongly enhanced oxyradical production, as detected by DHR, in control cells but not in cells from Cd-exposed mussels. Secondly, the viability on H2O2 incubations observed in cells from mussels preexposed to Cd clearly indicated that the reduction in intracellular oxyradical production due to Cd preexposure actually protected cells from oxidative damage. Hence, data collected on whole cells combined with evidence from biochemical assays provide a clear indication that MT has a physiological role in the protection of cells against the toxic effects of free oxygen radicals.
Yet, data obtained on cells in primary culture, although extremely indicative, cannot provide exhaustive information about a possible repercussion at the organism level of MT antioxidant properties. However, in our experiments, such a gap has been filled by anoxic survival tests, which allowed us to ascertain a protective effect of Cd preexposure against noxious effects produced by Fe treatments at the organism level. This clearly indicates that the resistance to oxidative stress conferred by MT rise, as evaluated at the subcellular and cellular levels, reflects the occurrence of a physiological process, which is effective also at the organism level.
Taking into account the very high in vitro reactivity of MT with hydroxyl radical · OH (36), it has been speculated that the antioxidant role of MT could mainly consist in a scavenging activity of this extremely reactive and dangerous oxyradical species, a view also reinforced by the fact that no specific enzyme for hydroxyl radical inactivation is known (31). Our data provide support to such a view, as Fe is known to act as a catalyst for the Fenton reaction, thereby facilitating the production of hydroxyl radicals (14). In our experiments, MT tissue rise corresponded to increased resistance against Fe and H2O2, and in both cases, a reduction in oxyradical production rates was also found.
In conclusion, this study has provided evidence arguing for an antioxidant role of MT in the mussel. The significant contribution to antioxidant defense provided by MT seems to derive from oxyradical scavenging activity and is effective in protecting cells and the entire organism from oxidative stress.
Perspectives
It seems now well assessed that MT can act as an oxyradical scavenger, thereby reducing noxious oxyradical effects at the molecular, cellular, and organism level. However, little is known about the mechanisms by which MT antioxidant effects can be accomplished. For instance, to evaluate the importance of MT in the response to oxidative stress, the occurrence of an antioxidant response element in the MT gene promoter of different species and the extent to which such a regulatory sequence can induce MT neosynthesis will have to be ascertained. Moreover, although it has been shown that oxyradicals can exert a strong influence on Ca2+- and tyrosine kinase-dependent cell signaling, information is still lacking about the consequences of MT antioxidant protection on cellular mechanisms of signal transduction. This is a critical point, as oxydative stress could even impair an organism's response to stress by interfering with cell signaling pathways elicited by stress hormones. In conclusion, investigations aimed at elucidating the MT ability of preserving specific cell metabolic pathways and signaling activities will be an essential step toward an understanding of the physiological role of MT as part of the cellular antioxidant system.| |
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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We thank M. P. Rogantin (Univ. of Genova) for allowing the use of the SAS software.
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FOOTNOTES |
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This work was financially supported by the European Union (UE BIOMAR II Project, ENV4-CT-96-0300) and by the Italian Ministry for Foreign Affairs (Program for Bilateral Exchanges between Italy and Spain).
The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. §1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: B. Burlando, Dept. of Science and Advanced Technology, Univ. of Piemonte Orientale at Alessandria, Corso Borsalino 54, 15100 Alessandria, Italy (E-mail: burlando{at}mfn.al.unipmn.it).
Received 8 December 1998; accepted in final form 20 July 1999.
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