1.IntroductionMultiphoton microscopy1 2 3 and high-resolution imaging of human epidermal tissues and keratinocytes (HEK) are providing detailed information about the molecular injuries and pathogenic manifestations produced by exposure to sulfur mustard (SM). Sulfur mustard is a lipophilic, percutaneous, alkylating agent that readily penetrates the stratum corneum and produces prevesicating lesions within 2 min of exposure.4 This agent has been used by warring nations for more than 80 years, and the global prospect of exposure to SM is probably greater today than at any time since World War I. Still, there is no completely effective treatment against its toxicity. Efforts to develop mechanistically based treatment strategies are confounded by not knowing precisely how the inherent characteristics of skin are altered so that the epidermal–dermal junction becomes the specific site for blister formation. We know from other work that mutations causing altered assembly or absence of epidermal keratins can produce blistering diseases of the skin.5 6 7 8 9 10 We also know from our own studies11 12 that keratins K5 and K14 are early SM targets. In that regard, epidermolysis bullosa simplex (EBS, a family of blistering skin diseases) has generally been associated with mutations and abnormal assembly of these same heterodimeric keratins.13 14 However, EBS blisters occur above the hemidesmosomes14 and not at the epidermal–dermal junction, as do SM blisters.15 16 Accordingly, we have tried to determine whether the toxic effects of SM on keratin filaments also include associated proteins and ultimately the structural integrity of adhesion complex molecules. The rationale for that question lies in knowing that hemidesmosomes link transmembrane α6β4 integrin receptors to keratin filaments17 and to the basement membrane via plectin,18 19 20 21 bullous pemphigoid antigens,14 22 23 and laminin 5.24 25 Mutations that disrupt the assembly of α6β4 integrin or laminin 5 are causative factors in junctional epidermolysis bullosa (JEB), another family of blistering skin diseases.26 Based on similarities between SM- and JEB-induced vesication, we have postulated that the blisters produced by sulfur mustard may share a similar pathology, i.e., may result from disruptions in the subcellular assembly of adhesion complex molecules. Multiphoton microscopy is providing us with the spatial resolution to test this hypothesis. 2.Materials and Methods2.1.Human Epidermal Keratinocyte CulturesHuman epidermal keratinocyte cultures (Clonetics/Cambrex, Walkersville, Maryland) were grown on borosilicate glass coverslips in Clonetics’ keratinocyte growth medium (KGM) at 37 °C in a humidified atmosphere of 5 CO 2 in air. Replicate cultures were maintained in exponential growth to densities of ∼50,000 cells/cm2, i.e., until they were approximately 70 confluent, and were subjected to renewal of the medium 2 h prior to SM exposure. 2.2.Human Epidermal TissuesTissues were prepared as previously described27 by gentle proteolytic treatment of surgical explants obtained from the Cooperative Human Tissue Network (Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio). Intact tissue preparations were maintained at 6 °C in KGM and then warmed to room temperature immediately prior to SM exposure. 2.3.Sulfur Mustard ExposuresSulfur mustard exposures were the same for HEK cultures and epidermal tissues. Supernatant media were removed from replicate culture and tissue dishes and were replaced with prewarmed (37 °C) KGM for sham-treated controls or with prewarmed KGM containing 400 μM SM. After a 5-min exposure, all cultures and tissues were washed three times with fresh KGM and returned to the CO 2 incubator. 2.4.Postexposure Fixing and Immunofluorescent Staining of HEK and Epidermal TissuesThe HEK cultures were fixed with 4 paraformaldehyde for 10 min at room temperature for the study of α6 integrin and laminin 5, and were postfixed (permeabilized) for 3 min with 100 acetone at −20 °C for the study of keratin 14. Epidermal tissues were fixed overnight at 6 °C with modified Karnovsky’s fixative consisting of 2.5 glutaraldehyde and 1.6 paraformaldehyde in 0.1 M sodium cacodylate, pH 7.4. Using indirect staining, the HEK and epidermis were incubated 1 h at room temperature with one of the following primary antibodies diluted in phosphate buffered saline (PBS). A 1:200 dilution of mouse antihuman keratin 14, clone LL002 (Neo Markers Inc., Fremont, California); a 1:50 dilution of mouse antihuman α6 integrin (Harlan, Sera-Lab Ltd., Loughborough, England); a 1:50 dilution of mouse antihuman laminin 5 γ2 chain (Chemicon International, Temecula, California). For dual labeling of α6 integrin and laminin 5, we used a 1:50 dilution of rat antihuman α6 integrin (Chemicon). Cells and tissues were then washed (three times, 3 min each) and incubated 1 h in the dark with the appropriate secondary antibody (as indicated). For single labels, we used a 1:50 dilution of fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)-conjugated goat antimouse immunoglobulin G (IgG; heavy and light chain H & L) (Accurate Chemical and Scientific Corp., Westbury, New York). For dual labels, we used a 1:200 dilution of Alexa488-conjugated goat antimouse IgG (H & L) and Alexa568-conjugated goat antirat IgG (H & L) (Molecular Probes Inc., Eugene, Oregon). 2.5.Counterstaining Cells with Propidium IodideWhen counterstaining nuclei with propidium iodide (PI; Molecular Probes Inc.), attached HEK (already processed for K14) were equilibrated in 2× (SCC) (0.3 M NaCl, 0.03 M sodium citrate; pH 7.0), incubated for 20 min at 37 °C with 100 μg/ml ribonuclease (RNAse) IIA (Sigma Chemical Co., St. Louis, Missouri), then washed and stained for 5 min with PI (32 μM) and washed again in PBS prior to imaging as wet mounts. 2.6.Multiphoton ImagingImaging was performed with an MRC-1024 multiphoton laser-scanning system (Bio-Rad, Hemel Hempstead, United Kingdom) using an Axiovert-135 inverted microscope and a C-Apochromat 63×/1.2 NA water objective (Carl Zeiss Inc., Thornwood, New York). Excitation was conducted at 780 nm using a Verdi 5-W diode pump and a Mira 900 Ti:sapphire pulsed laser with X-wave optics (Coherent Laser Group, Santa Clara, California). Fluorescent emissions were directed through an E625 short-pass (SP) filter, an HQ 575/150 filter and then onto external detectors. For cell and tissue preparations labeled with a single fluorochrome, emissions were detected at photomultiplier tube-1 (PMT-1) without additional filtering. For dual imaging of preparations labeled with two fluorochromes, the coincident red and green emissions were split by a 550 dichroic long-pass (DCLP) filter, which allowed red light to pass through a D630/60 bandpass filter to PMT-1 and reflected green emissions through a D525/50 filter to PMT-2. These filters (Chroma Technology Corp., Brattleboro, Vermont) allowed resolution of target molecules without bleedthrough between detectors. 2.7.Analyses of the ImagesAnalyses were performed using a combination of Bio-Rad’s LaserSharp software, complementary Meridian software, and Microsoft Excel. The average results for control and exposed populations are presented as the mean ±SEM. Student’s t-test was used for statistical comparison with probabilities of p<0.01 regarded as statistically significant. 3.Results3.1.Collapse of the Keratin 14 CytoskeletonImmunofluorescent images from replicate HEK cultures showed that keratin 14 filaments and their intracellular organization are exquisitely sensitive to SM alkylation. In 6-h postexposure profile studies, high-resolution stereo images (Figs. 1 and 2) showed that vesicating doses of sulfur mustard caused early disruption and progressive collapse of the K14 cytoskeleton. Cells in control populations maintained a characteristic airy, interlacing network of filaments [Figs. 1(a), 1(c), and 2(a)]. Each cell, regardless of shape, had a tentlike organization of K14 filaments that extended out and down from the dorsal surface of the raised central nucleus to a narrow rim of basolateral anchoring sites. The presence of numerous epithelial shapes in subconfluent, control populations was an expression of functional asymmetry, i.e., basal cell capacity to reorganize and configure its K14 filament arrangements to meet the dynamics of polarized mobility. At 1 h after exposure, the images showed substantial reductions in the open, airy appearance of K14 networks [Fig. 1(b)]. These images revealed early signs of focal erosion in the K14 cytoskeleton, retraction of basolateral filaments, intercellular separations, and partial collapse (with stretching) of filaments over the raised, central nuclei. At 2 h after exposure, the images showed severe progressive collapse of the K14 cytoskeleton [Fig. 1(d)], with almost complete disruption of its open, latticelike organization. Progressive collapse over the nuclei exacerbated perinuclear stretching of filaments and caused nuclear displacement to the HEK attachment surface. The images also indicated progressive loss of functional asymmetry, i.e., polarized mobility. At 6 h after exposure, there were numerous focal erosions [Fig. 2(b)] and severe nuclear displacements beneath the jumbled mats of collapsing filaments. Loss of HEK mobility persisted and was characterized by retraction of basolateral filaments, intercellular separations, loss of functional asymmetry, and accumulation of more regular, geometric cell shapes. From the 6-h control and SM-exposed populations [Figs. 2(a) and 2(b)], serial sections taken at increments of 0.5 μm from the attachment surface gave further evidence for the extensive collapse of the K14 cytoskeleton. Control images at 2 μm from the attachment surface [Fig. 2(c)] showed narrow peripheral bands of open, airy, keratin filaments circumscribed around a relatively large, nonfluorescent intracellular area containing no K14 filaments. Images from the 2-μm section of the SM-exposed population [Fig. 2(d)] showed broad perinuclear mats of collapsed filaments that filled the intracellular space and occasionally covered the severely displaced nuclei. Western blots and densitometry studies (not shown) confirmed that there was no postexposure increase in K14 concentration (Dillman et al.;, unpublished data).28 With multiphoton excitation and dual emission techniques, images from 2-h control populations [Fig. 3(a)] showed that FITC-labeled K14 filaments (λ em 518 nm) co-localized on the uppermost surface of propidium-iodide labeled nuclei (λ em 617 nm). Co-localization revealed an orange, gridlike pattern of filament-to-nucleus attachments. In exposed populations, cytoskeletal collapse obscured the orange color and detail of filament attachments [Fig. 3(b)]. The extent of collapse and its potential for adversely affecting signal transduction became more evident when optical slices were compared. Images taken at 3.5 μm from the HEK attachment surface showed control populations with peripheral rings of K14 filaments set well apart from the main body of each nucleus [Fig. 3(c)]. At 2 h postexposure, images taken at 3.5 μm from the attachment surface showed that the intracellular space and nuclei of most HEK were awash in a mat of collapsed filaments [Fig. 3(d)]. Typically, there was an accumulation of geometric cell shapes in each image field, indicating an SM-induced loss of mobility and functional asymmetry. Collapse of the K14 cytoskeleton, as illustrated in Fig. 4 revealed that SM alkylation disrupted the dynamic organization of filaments linking each nucleus to its plasma membrane. That effect almost certainly disrupts normal signaling between these elements. Since α6β4 integrins are uniquely adapted for linking K14 to the HEK attachment surface,17 18 21 the following studies were undertaken to enhance our understanding of SM effects on both cell adhesion and the structures affecting signal transduction. 3.2.Imaging of α6β4 Integrin and Laminin 5 in HEK CulturesDual imaging of α6β4 integrin and laminin 5 (Fig. 5) located the brightest emissions from these molecules at the basolateral membrane margins of the constituent HEK. Overall distribution of these molecules relative to keratin 14 was determined by viewing (0.5-μm) serial sections from 3-D reconstructions starting at the level of cell-to-substrate attachment and moving up through as many as 25 Z-series slices [Fig. 5(a)]. Alexa dyes 568 and 488 conjugated to α6β4 integrin and laminin 5, respectively, showed that a majority of the integrins [Fig. 5(b)] and all of laminin 5 [Fig. 5(c)] were contained in the first two sections, i.e., within 0.5 μm of the attachment surface. Dual imaging of these molecules confirmed that in subconfluent, mobile populations, α6β4 integrin was co-localized on extracellular laminin 5 tracks. The integrins appeared as well-defined, narrow (orange) bands at the basolateral membrane margins of HEK [Fig. 5(d)], which also contains anchoring sites for the K5/K14 cytoskeleton. In control populations stained for α6 integrin, the membrane margins of mobile cells frequently expressed brightly fluorescent filopodial-type retraction fibers [Fig. 6(a)]. At 1 h after exposure, however, there was a statistically significant (p<0.01) 27 decrease in fluorescence intensity, an obvious reduction in retraction fibers, and a concomitant loss of functional asymmetry [Fig. 6(b)]. Similar results were previously reported for β4 integrin.11 Postexposure studies of the laminin 5 ligand in vitro produced images that were complementary to those from α6β4 integrin, its adhesion receptor. At 1 h after exposure, there was a statistically significant 32 decrease in the extracellular laminin 5 volume and a corresponding decrease in image intensity. Image outlines conformed to the basolateral shapes of the constituent HEK and affirmed the loss of polarized mobility (Fig. 7). It is worth noting that the in vitro image patterns from all three interactive molecules (keratin 14, α6β4 integrin, and laminin 5) attest to a postexposure loss of mobility and functional asymmetry. 3.3.Imaging of α6β4 Integrins and Laminin 5 in Human EpidermisThe structural organization and the response of α6β4 integrins to sulfur mustard were particularly revealing in intact, epidermal tissues. In 3-D reconstructions, focal sites found on the membrane margins of basal cells appeared to define the origins and insertions of α6β4 -integrin subunits [Fig. 8(a)]. These sites gave rise to stalked exodomains that fused apically and produced relatively long, narrow, bridging strips that traversed the surface of one or more adjacent cells. Ultimately, these bridging strips coalesced to produce a complex, highly textured matrix of receptors that covered the entire ventral, basal cell surface with circular, porelike structures having an inner diameter of approximately 1 μm. Production of laminin 5 by epidermal tissues was typically found only in isolated basal cell clusters [Fig. 9(a)], indicating that de novo synthesis was discontinuous. During active laminin 5 production, images of the γ-2 chain precursor showed that the process included reduction, polarization, and movement of a single punctate, laminin 5 isoform to the ventral surface of each basal cell [Fig. 9(b)]. As a result, each punctate unit became attached to an anchoring site on the epidermal surface, forming a laminin 5 ligand cluster at the epidermal–dermal junction [Fig. 9(c)]. By dual imaging of α6 integrin and laminin 5 in human epidermis (Fig. 10), the co-localization of punctate laminin 5 units [Fig. 10(b)] and circular α6 -integrin surface structures [Fig. 10(a)] was resolved. The images showed that the orange, laminin 5 anchoring sites were positioned on the outer rim of the circular α6β4 surface receptors. It is interesting to note that solitary basal cells were occasionally engaged in laminin 5 synthesis and movement activity [Fig. 10(d)]. In such cases, delivery and precise placement of the ligand on a circular integrin anchoring site was conducted through elongated cytoplasmic extensions. Following exposure to sulfur mustard, we observed severe disruption of the α6β4 surface receptors. Within 1 h of exposure, there was unraveling of the circular, porelike structures and retraction of the extracellular assemblies to their origins and insertions on the plasma membrane margins [Fig. 8(b)]. The effect was characterized by an almost total loss in the organization and surface expression of α6β4 integrins. Depletion of these adhesion receptors would obviously result in a concomitant loss of laminin 5 anchoring sites. That would in effect weaken the attachment complex. It should be noted, however, that disassembly and depletion of α6β4 integrins also occurred spontaneously following dermal–epidermal separation, making it difficult to discriminate between cause and effect. 4.Discussion4.1.SM Effects on the Basal Cell Adhesion ComplexMultiphoton microscopy and immunofluorescent imaging have given structural details that enhance our understanding of SM-induced pathogenic lesions. From postexposure images of human basal cells and epidermal tissues we now have compelling evidence that key molecules of the basal cell’s adhesion complex are early targets of SM alkylation. These molecules include the intracellular, keratin 14 cytoskeleton, the transmembrane α6β4 integrin receptors, and laminin 5, a ligand and bridging element to the basement membrane. Together with associated proteins, these well-integrated molecules link the basal cell’s nucleus to the plasma membrane and provide a structural and functional continuum for basal cell adhesion and signal transduction.29 30 31 32 It follows, therefore, that SM-induced disruptions in the structural integrity of adhesion complex molecules might also cause functional anomalies that interfere with maintenance and repair of epidermal–dermal attachments. In fact, the images did reveal losses in functional asymmetry, polarized mobility, and capacity to repair the adhesion complex, and ultimately the loss of cell viability (data not shown). All of these functions (motility, growth, repair, and anchorage-dependent viability) depend on signal transduction.30 33 34 Therefore, our postexposure image profiles indicate that the “window of opportunity” for therapeutic treatment of SM lesions is limited by the early onset and progressive nature of their structural disruptions. Nevertheless, these same image profiles provide an important mechanistic and temporal basis for developing effective treatment strategies. To that end, we have assembled a working model (Fig. 11) for future studies on the treatment and resolution of SM effects on the adhesion complex and on the bidirectional signaling required for maintenance and repair of that complex. The model is a composite of information extrapolated from our multiphoton studies and from the literature. 4.2.Effects of SM on Keratin 14Keratin 14 presented an elaborate response to SM that included (1) collapse of the K14 cytoskeleton; (2) loss of its open, airy, tentlike organization; (3) focal erosions; (4) dorsoventral stretching of K14 filaments collapsed over the nucleus; and (5) ventral displacement of the nucleus. Cytoskeletal collapse was progressive through the 6 h of postexposure study. That period of worsening conditions was consistent with the delayed onset of SM-induced blisters, which have a dose-dependent, clinical latent phase of 8 to 24 h.4 In skin, however, SM-induced blisters do not form above the hemidesmosomes4 15 as they do in EBS,14 a family of blistering skin diseases linked to mutations that interfere with the assembly of K5/K14 filaments. It appears, therefore, that SM-induced collapse of the K14 cytoskeleton results from disruption of cytoskeletal organization and not from disruption of filament assembly. In complementary SM studies using sodium dodecyl sulphate–polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE), Western blots, and densitometry, others have found a postexposure presence and accumulation of both low molecular weight K14 fragments (Mol, personal communication)35 and high molecular weight K14 protein bands (Dillman et al.;)28 without any increase in K14 content. 4.3.Effects of SM on α6β4 Integrin and Laminin 5The strength and resilience of dermal–epidermal attachments have been clearly related to hemidesmosomes25 36 37 and to their inherent α6β4 integrin receptors.38 They provide a nexus linking basal cell keratins (K5/K14) to laminin 5 and the basement membrane.39 40 41 The distribution of integrin receptors on the epidermis (Fig. 8) and their effective role in providing anchoring sites for laminin 5 attachment (Fig. 9 and Fig. 10) are well served by the topographic complexity of the ventral epidermis. In fact, images presented in previous multiphoton studies16 showed the extent to which α6β4 integrins occupy the elaborate surface area provided by rete pegs and ridges. While the elaborate matrix of integrin receptors enhances the adhesive strength of epidermal–dermal junctions, it is increasingly clear that α6β4 integrins and laminin 5 provide basal cells with much more than simple attachment sites. Together with other adhesion receptors and linker proteins, they convey positional information and mediate inside-out and outside-in communication between the basal cell and its extracellular environment.42 43 33 As illustrated in Fig. 4, the structural continuum for bidirectional interaction in our system links the gridlike keratin 14 cytoskeleton to the dorsal surface of the nucleus and to a narrow rim of anchoring sites within the basolateral membrane margins (Fig. 1 and Fig. 2). Those membrane margins also contain a narrow band of α6β4 integrins [Fig. 5(b)] that co-localize on (attach to) laminin 5 ligand deposits within 0.5 μm of the HEK attachment surface [Fig. 5(d)]. It is interesting to speculate how specific, well-directed nuclear responses to positional information from the extracellular environment and from the considerable matrix of α6β4 receptors might be augmented by integration and signal averaging through the cytoskeletal-nuclear grid. According to the literature, the specificity of signal transduction involves specific ligand binding and both subunits of a given αβ heterodimer.30 33 That activation process requires conformational changes involving intracellular separation of the αβ subunits44 45 plus well-established integrin–cytoskeletal interactions.46 We suggest that this highly involved and structure-dependent process would clearly be incapacitated by the progressive, disruptive effects of sulfur mustard. 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CITATIONS
Cited by 14 scholarly publications.
Blistering agents
Cytoskeletons
Receptors
Molecules
Tissues
Multiphoton microscopy
Natural surfaces