Dmitrieva Natalia I, Burg Maurice B
Laboratory of Kidney and Electrolyte Metabolism, National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health, Department of Health and Human Services, 10 Center Drive, Building 10, Room 6N260, Bethesda, MD 20892-1603, USA.
Mutat Res. 2005 Jan 6;569(1-2):65-74. doi: 10.1016/j.mrfmmm.2004.06.053.
Mammalian renal inner medullary cells are normally exposed to extremely high NaCl concentrations. Remarkably, under these normal conditions, the high NaCl causes DNA damage and inhibits its repair, yet the cells survive and function both in cell culture and in vivo. The interstitial NaCl concentration in parts of a normal renal medulla can be 500 mM or more, depending on the species. Studies of how the cells survive and function despite this extreme stress have led to the discovery of protective adaptations, including accumulation of large amounts of organic osmolytes, which normalize cell volume and intracellular ionic strength, despite the hypertonicity of the high NaCl. Those adaptations, however, do not prevent DNA damage. High NaCl induces DNA breaks rapidly, and the DNA breaks persist even after the cells become adapted to the high NaCl. The adapted cells proliferate rapidly in cell culture and function adequately in vivo despite the DNA breaks. Both in cell culture and in vivo the breaks are rapidly repaired if the NaCl concentration is lowered. Although acute elevation of NaCl causes transient cell cycle arrest and, when the elevation is too extreme, apoptosis, proliferation of adapted cells is not arrested in culture and apoptosis is not evident either in culture or in vivo. Further, high NaCl impairs activation of several components of the classical DNA damage response such as Mre11, H2AX and Chk1 leading to inhibition of DNA repair. Nevertheless, other regular participants in the DNA damage response, such as Gadd45a, Gadd153, p53, Hsp70, and ATM are still upregulated by high NaCl. How high NaCl causes the DNA breaks and how the cells survive them is conjectural at this point. We discuss possible answers to these questions, based on current knowledge about induction and processing of DNA breaks.
哺乳动物肾髓质内层细胞通常暴露于极高的氯化钠浓度环境中。值得注意的是,在这些正常条件下,高浓度氯化钠会导致DNA损伤并抑制其修复,但细胞在细胞培养和体内环境中仍能存活并发挥功能。正常肾髓质部分区域的间质氯化钠浓度可达500 mM或更高,具体取决于物种。关于细胞如何在这种极端应激下存活并发挥功能的研究,促成了保护性适应机制的发现,包括大量有机渗透溶质的积累,这些溶质能使细胞体积和细胞内离子强度恢复正常,尽管高浓度氯化钠具有高渗性。然而,这些适应机制并不能防止DNA损伤。高浓度氯化钠会迅速诱导DNA断裂,即使细胞适应了高浓度氯化钠,DNA断裂仍会持续存在。尽管存在DNA断裂,适应后的细胞在细胞培养中仍能快速增殖,在体内也能正常发挥功能。在细胞培养和体内环境中,如果降低氯化钠浓度,DNA断裂会迅速得到修复。虽然氯化钠的急性升高会导致短暂的细胞周期停滞,当升高过于极端时还会引发细胞凋亡,但适应后的细胞在培养中不会停止增殖,在培养或体内环境中也没有明显的细胞凋亡现象。此外,高浓度氯化钠会损害经典DNA损伤反应的几个组成部分的激活,如Mre11、H2AX和Chk1,从而导致DNA修复受到抑制。然而,DNA损伤反应中的其他常规参与者,如Gadd45a、Gadd153、p53、Hsp70和ATM,仍会因高浓度氯化钠而上调。目前,高浓度氯化钠如何导致DNA断裂以及细胞如何在这种情况下存活仍是推测性的。我们基于当前关于DNA断裂的诱导和处理的知识,讨论这些问题的可能答案。