Vascular Biology |
From the Medical Clinic IV (I.C., N.S.-M., M.G.-S.) and Medical Clinic II (A.Y., C.D.G.), University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Erlangen, Germany. Present address for N.S.-M.: Natural and Medical Sciences Institute (NMI), University of Tuebingen, Department of Biochemistry, Reutlingen, Germany.
Correspondence to Dr M. Goppelt-Struebe, Medical Clinic IV, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Loschgestr. 8, D-91054 Erlangen, Germany. E-mail Goppelt-Struebe{at}rzmail.uni-erlangen.de
| Abstract |
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Methods and Results We used biphasic Triton X-114 system, 1-dimensional isoelectric focusing, and 2D-electrophoresis for the separation of modified and nonmodified Rho proteins. These methods were evaluated in human fibroblasts treated with simvastatin. 2D-electrophoresis, which proved to be the most sensitive method, revealed 2 major spots of identical molecular weight but different isoelectric points, with the more basic spot representing the carboxymethylated form of RhoA. In control cells, 90% of RhoA was fully modified (carboxymethylated). After treatment with simvastatin, a significant shift toward the unmethylated form was observed, representing inhibition of isoprenylation, which is a prerequisite to further modification. Similar shifts were observed for Rac1 and Cdc42. In freshly isolated peripheral blood mononuclear cells, a shift toward nonmodified RhoA was observed after treatment with atorvastatin in vitro and in vivo. There was a significant increase in unmethylated RhoA in statin-treated individuals versus control individuals.
Conclusions 2D-electrophoresis is a sensitive method for detecting changes in the amount of nonisoprenylated Rho proteins, allowing monitoring the direct cellular effects of statins.
The purpose of this study was to directly monitor statin effects on Rho proteins. Using 2D electrophoresis, a significant shift toward nonisoprenylated RhoA was detected in fibroblasts and mononuclear cells treated with statins in vitro and in vivo. Thus, 2D electrophoresis is a sensitive method allowing monitoring the direct effects of statins.
Key Words: RhoA isoprenylation carboxymethylation HMG-CoA reductase statins
| Introduction |
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As interference with the geranylgeranyl modification of Rho proteins is one of the earliest steps related to the direct cellular actions of statins, it appears desirable to determine the relative amount of modified versus nonmodified protein. Some of the isoprenylated proteins, such as Ras proteins, can be separated from their nonmodified form by high-resolution SDSpolyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE).4 However, for Rho family proteins, because of their specific type of posttranslational modification, the separation of nonmodified and modified proteins cannot be assessed by SDS-PAGE.
Members of the Rho family, eg, RhoA, Rac1, and Cdc42, belong to a group of proteins that are characterized by the carboxyterminal amino acid pattern CaaX, where "a" represents an aliphatic amino acid and "X" may be any amino acid.5 These proteins are modified by 3 sequential modification steps.6 The first step of posttranslational modification of Rho proteins is the transfer of a geranylgeranyl moiety to the cysteine residue by the respective transferase. Subsequently, the 3 terminal amino acids are cleaved by a prenylprotein-specific endoprotease.7 Finally, the terminal prenylcysteine is methylated by the isoprenylcysteine carboxyl methyltransferase (Figure 1). These modifications are not accompanied by a significant change in molecular mass. Because the addition of the geranylgeranyl moiety is being compensated by the cleavage of the 3 terminal amino acids (mostly leucine, isoleucine, or valine), it is not possible to separate the nonmodified and the posttranslationally modified forms by size using SDS-PAGE. Furthermore, because of their nonpolar nature, the removal of the terminal amino acids does not change the isoelectric point of the Rho proteins. However, carboxymethylation changes the isoelectric point of the protein as has been shown for Cdc428 and RhoA,9 with the methylated form being less acidic than the carboxylated form.
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In the present study we investigated whether the difference in isoelectric point was a sensitive method to discriminate between the modified and nonmodified forms of the Rho family proteins before and after treatment with statins.
| Methods |
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| Results |
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25 kDa, but different isoelectric points (Figure 2A). According to the literature, these spots represent the methylated and the unmethylated forms of RhoA.9 In control cells, >90% of RhoA was methylated. The acidic spot contained 2 overlapping forms of RhoA, the nonmodified form and the geranylgeranylated unmethylated form, which do not differ significantly in their size and isoelectric point. An increase in the nonmodified form was observed when the cells were incubated with either simvastatin (10 µmol/L, 18 hours) or an inhibitor of geranylgeranyltransferase (L841, 50 nmol/L, 18 hours) to prevent posttranslational modification.
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As observed previously, incubation of the cells with simvastatin or L841 increased the total synthesis of RhoA.10 Reprobing of the blot with an antibody directed against Cdc42 showed a similar distribution of the post-translationally modified forms of Cdc42 (Figure 2A). RhoA was still visible because both primary antibodies were of the same species. The isoelectric points of Cdc42 were shifted to a more alkaline pH than those of the RhoA forms, consistent with data reported earlier by Backlund.8 Similar results were obtained with respect to Rac1, which overlapped with Cdc42 (data not shown).
In addition to the major acidic spot, some minor forms of RhoA shifted to more acidic pH were detected (arrows in Figure 2A, left). RhoA may be phosphorylated by kinases such as protein kinase A,11 suggesting that the minor acidic spots may represent phosphorylated forms of RhoA. To test this hypothesis, statin-treated fibroblasts were homogenized and incubated in vitro with alkaline phosphatase. As shown in Figure 2B, the most acidic spot disappeared, whereas the other smaller spot proved to represent a nonphosphorylated form of RhoA. The addition of mevalonate or geranylgeranylpyrophosphate to simvastatin-treated fibroblasts almost completely prevented the generation of the acidic unmethylated forms of RhoA (Figure 2C).
The long-term effect of statins was evaluated by culturing fibroblasts for 7 days in the presence of different concentrations of statins. As the metabolic fate of simvastatin in cell culture is not known, the cells were treated with simvastatin every day between the medium changes, nominally increasing the concentration of simvastatin 3-fold. In the presence of 1 µmol/L simvastatin, the acidic forms of RhoA were predominant, and the shift was still detectable at 10 nmol/L simvastatin, a concentration that is close to statin levels expected in vivo12 (Figure 3).
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To take advantage of the difference in isoelectric points, samples were also directly loaded on 1-dimensional IEF gels (Figure I, available online at http://atvb.ahajournals.org). The shift from the methylated to the nonmodified form was clearly visible in samples treated with simvastatin and L841, but not in control samples or samples treated with both simvastatin and mevalonate. However, compared with the 2D analysis, this method proved to be less sensitive with no detectable unmethylated form in control samples. Therefore, all further analyses were performed using 2D electrophoresis.
Another method to separate geranylgeranylated RhoA from nonmodified RhoA partitions the nonmodified RhoA into the aqueous phase of the biphasic Triton X-114 system.13 After treatment of the cells with simvastatin, nongeranylgeranylated RhoA became detectable in the aqueous phase when the protein was analyzed by standard SDS-PAGE (Figure IIa, available online at http://atvb.ahajournals.org). The aqueous and detergent phases had to be analyzed on 2 different 2D gels that were run in parallel. Western blotting was also performed using the same antibody and detection of the ECL signal with one film to allow semi-quantitative analysis. The detergent-containing phase of control cells contained approximately equal amounts of methylated and unmethylated forms of RhoA, indicative of demethylation during the incubation of the homogenates (Figure IIb). Only
10% of total RhoA was detectable in the aqueous phase, which was acidic and thus unmethylated. On treatment with simvastatin, the nonmodified form of RhoA was extracted into the aqueous phase. However, a considerable amount of nonmodified RhoA remained in the detergent phase, thus demonstrating one of the limitations of the separation by the Triton X-114 system.
To relate the results of the in vitro experiments to the therapeutic situation, peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) obtained from healthy volunteers were investigated. To avoid demethylation caused by inappropriate handling of the samples, PBMCs were extracted immediately after blood collection, and the protein pellets were frozen at 80°C until analysis. In these mononuclear cells,
80% of RhoA was methylated (Figure 4A; Co in vivo). Culturing of PBMCs for 24 hours shifted the ratio from the methylated to the unmethylated form (Figure 4A; Co in vivo compared with Co in vitro). As shown in Figure 4A, incubation with 1 or 10 µmol/L atorvastatin for 24 hours interfered with geranylgeranylation of de novo synthesized protein, leading to the increase in the proportion of unmethylated RhoA and the appearance of the more acidic forms. This effect was reversed when the cells were cultured in the presence of 10 µmol/L atorvastatin plus 100 µmol/L mevalonate, comparable to the effect in fibroblasts (Figure 2C and data not shown). Furthermore, the appearance of the more acidic forms of RhoA was sensitive to mevalonate. In the initial experiment, in vivo application of 40 mg/d atorvastatin for 2 days did not change the ratio of RhoA protein forms, whereas after 7 days, the shift from fully modified, ie, methylated RhoA to nonmodified RhoA, was clearly visible and the more acidic forms became detectable (Figure 4A). Furthermore, PBMCs of 3 different healthy volunteers were analyzed and compared with samples obtained from subjects who were prophylactically treated with simvastatin (10 mg/d) or atorvastatin (20 mg/d) for asymptomatic familial hypercholesterolemia. The percentage of nonmodified RhoA in healthy subjects was 24.1±6.3 (means±SD) and increased to 42% and 49%, respectively, in statin-treated subjects.
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Based on these studies, which showed the applicability of the method to peripheral blood mononuclear cells, 10 healthy volunteers were enrolled in a subsequent study. The subjects took 40 mg/d atorvastatin for 5 days. Volunteers served as their own controls. Treatment with atorvastatin reduced the cholesterol levels in all but one volunteer by >20% (Figure 4B). However, analysis of the ratio of methylated and unmethylated forms did not show a significant difference between samples before and after treatment. Thus, it became apparent that demethylation of RhoA occurs not only during in vitro incubation, as shown in Figure 4A, but also during ex vivo handling and transportation of the blood samples from the clinic to the laboratory. Prolonged preparation time influenced the ratio, increasing the percentage of the unmethylated form up to 35% to 40% in several samples. Therefore, the ratio of modified and nonmodified form would not be recommendable as an indicator of direct statin action in conditions in which an immediate extraction of PBMCs is impossible. Analysis of the more acidic spot (arrow in Figure 4A, left), however, proved to be a reliable indicative of statin treatment. The acidic spot increased significantly after the treatment with atorvastatin and was more than doubled in 6 of 10 volunteers (Figure 4B).
| Discussion |
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In the present study, we demonstrate that separation by 2D electrophoresis is a useful method to determine the interference of statins with the geranylgeranyl modification of Rho proteins not only in vitro but also after treatment ex vivo. The advantage of this method is its independence of any specific target of statins. It detects changes in isoprenylation, which account for the majority of the direct cholesterol-independent actions of these drugs.
The prerequisite for the analysis was the observation that, depending on the cell type, 80% to 90% of geranylgeranyl-modified Rho proteins are also carboxymethylated. In contrast to the irreversible cleavage of the C-terminal amino acids, methylation is principally reversible.9 In our experiments, demethylation was observed on incubation of cellular homogenates, which was not unexpected because of the presence of esterases, which hydrolyze the methyl esters. Accumulation of the unmethylated form was also observed when PBMCs were cultured in vitro for 24 hours. Given the long incubation time, the shift may be caused by interference with carboxymethylation which, among other mechanisms, is regulated by the level of S-adenosyl-methionine within the cells.22
Treatment of cells in vitro with high concentrations of statins resulted in an increase in the acidic forms of the Rho protein, which reached >90% of the total RhoA amount. The shift could not be attributed to interference with the methylation step, because it was prevented by coincubation of the cells with mevalonate, the precursor of geranylgeranyl pyrophosphate. This finding suggests the shift is secondary to the direct inhibition of HMG-CoA reductase by statins. Furthermore, a similar shift was also observed when the geranylgeranyl transferase was directly inhibited. Analysis of the phases of the Triton X-114 separation method confirmed that the acidic spots represented the form of RhoA that was not geranylgeranyl-modified. In addition, we demonstrated the limitations of the Triton method because a considerable amount of nonmodified protein was found in the detergent phase, which was supposed to contain only modified RhoA. Taken together, the in vitro data confirmed that the statin-mediated increase in the acidic forms of RhoA was attributable to Rho proteins that were not modified by isoprenylation. The isoelectric points of the 3 members of the Rho family, RhoA, Rac1, and Cdc42, differ slightly, but the shift observed for all 3 proteins was comparable. This finding was not unexpected given that the 3 proteins have similar terminal amino acids, consisting of 2 leucines and valine, isoleucine, or leucine.
Based on the differences in isoelectric points, we tried to separate the modified forms of the Rho proteins by 1-dimensional isoelectric focusing using commercially available gels. However, these gels proved to be less effective than the 2D electrophoresis. Because of the larger area of the individual bands compared with the spots in the 2D analysis, the sensitivity was decreased. The minor acidic spots were not detectable by this type of analysis. Furthermore, separation proved to be less reproducible compared with the 2D analysis. Therefore, to get reliable results, each sample was separated by 2D electrophoresis.
Rho proteins are major regulators of the actin cytoskeleton,21 and cytoskeletal changes can affect intracellular transport, mRNA stability, and gene transcription. Thus, given the importance of Rho proteins in the regulation of cell growth, gene expression, and organization of the cytoskeleton, a complete inhibition of Rho modification should not be expected after treating patients with statins. Consistent with this, we found a change in the ratio of isoprenylated versus nonmodified form when mononuclear cells from statin-treated individuals were compared with the cells of healthy volunteers. However, even in the statin-treated individuals, >40% of Rho proteins remained fully modified, ie, in the carboxymethylated form. The shift toward unmethylated form was observed in mononuclear cells in vivo after 1 week of treatment with a moderate dose of atorvastatin (40 mg/d) and after prolonged treatment with low doses of simvastatin (10 mg/d) or atorvastatin (20 mg/d).
In a controlled study with healthy volunteers taking 40 mg/d atorvastatin over 5 days, the size of the more acidic spot proved to be the most sensitive measure of the effect of atorvastatin. It was more than doubled in 6 of 10 volunteers, whereas the other subjects it did not show any significant change. This interindividual variability may be caused by the fact that atorvastatin is supposed to inhibit HMG-CoA reductase in the liver, so the systemic levels of this lipophilic compound vary considerably between individuals.12 Extending our data to the clinical situation, the differential response of the volunteers suggests that individual patients will benefit to different degrees from the pleiotropic effects of statins, independently of the lipid-lowering effect. The increase in nonisoprenylated inactive form of RhoA in PBMCs has been linked to the atheroprotective effects of statins on these cells, such as downregulation of plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 synthesis,18 decreased transcription of matrix metalloproteinases and adhesion molecules in monocytes,16 decreased monocyteendothelial cell interactions,23 and inhibition of activation and proliferation of T lymphocytes.24 The most responsive patients will be expected to benefit from lipid-lowering and from pleiotropic atheroprotective effect of statins. However, in patients showing little inhibition of Rho isoprenylation in circulating cells of immune system, additional therapy may be needed to attenuate the inflammatory responses in atherosclerosis. Thus, monitoring of RhoA isoprenylation may be a useful tool for the prediction of the possible pleiotropic benefits in statin-treated patients.
In conclusion, the separation by 2D electrophoresis is a sensitive method to monitor the inhibition of RhoA isoprenylation, which is responsible for the majority of pleiotropic effects of statins. Studies with larger numbers of patients will be needed to determine additional variables, which might affect the posttranslational modification of Rho proteins.
| Acknowledgments |
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| Footnotes |
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Received March 19, 2004; accepted September 2, 2004.
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