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Vol. 295, Issue 1, 74-82, October 2000
Division of Basic Medical Sciences, Mercer University School of Medicine, Macon, Georgia (R.K.Z.); and Departments of Oncology, Microbiology and Immunology, Pharmacology and Toxicology and Pathology, University of Western Ontario, London Regional Cancer Centre, London, Ontario, Canada (J.K.)
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Abstract |
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Metallothioneins are encoded by a family of genes that are induced by inorganic mercury. Despite the well-characterized acute response of metallothionein (MT) genes in the kidneys and liver after a single exposure to inorganic mercury, relatively little is known about the activity of these genes and the content of MT protein during prolonged periods after exposure. Rats treated with inorganic mercury accumulate mercury rapidly in kidneys and liver during the first 24 h after exposure, but only in the kidneys does the content of mercury remain elevated throughout the initial 2 weeks. We report herein that transcription of MT genes in response to treatment with inorganic mercury differs dramatically between the kidneys and liver. MT gene transcription and levels of MT protein remained elevated in the kidneys throughout 14 days after treatment. In contrast, the initially high rates of MT gene transcription and enhanced content of MT protein in the liver fell to control levels by 14 days. In the liver, the rates of MT gene transcription and levels of MT protein were strongly correlated with each other and with the content of mercury. In the kidneys, however, these correlations were very weak or absent. Our data indicate that hepatic levels of MT protein are determined primarily by MT gene transcription, but that post-transcriptional events are important in determining the renal content of MT protein during the initial weeks after exposure. This has important implications in understanding differences in mechanisms controlling MT expression in the kidneys and liver.
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Introduction |
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Within
the first 24 h after treating rats i.v. with a non-nephrotoxic
dose of mercuric chloride, the greatest fraction (approximately 50%)
of the dose ends up in the kidneys (Rothstein and Hayes, 1960
; Zalups,
1995
, 2000
). During the initial week after exposure, very little
of the renal burden of mercury is reduced in spite of 30 to 35% of the
dose having been excreted in the urine and feces. However, the hepatic
burden of mercury decreases by approximately 75% within 24 h
after exposure (Zalups, 1995
). Much of the reduction of the hepatic
burden of mercury is likely related to hepato-biliary excretion of
mercury. This is reflected, in part, by the amount of inorganic mercury
in feces. It is unclear what factor(s) and events are responsible for
the retention of mercury by renal tubular epithelial cells,
particularly those lining the proximal tubule (Zalups and Barfuss,
1990
; Zalups, 1991a
,b
).
It is well established that various metal ions (especially group IIB)
induce transcription of metallothionein (MT) genes, particularly those encoding MT-1 and MT-2 proteins, in organs such as
the kidneys and liver (Durnam et al., 1981
; Koropatnick and Leibbrandt,
1995
). We had hypothesized that the increased content of MT induced in
both kidneys and liver acts as an intracellular ligand to bind mercury,
and that the content of induced MT persists in the kidneys (consistent
with chronically elevated renal content of mercury), whereas it is
reduced rapidly in the liver (consistent with the progressive losses of
hepatic mercury soon after acute exposure). In addition, we had
postulated that rates of transcription of MT genes would be
the primary mechanism responsible for changes in the cellular content
of MT protein. Although the physiological roles of the different MTs
induced by developmental and differentiation signals, and by
nonphysiological events, including induction by heavy metals, remains
unclear (Palmiter, 1998
), there is evidence linking the induction of
transcription of these genes and the cellular production of MT protein
in target cells exposed to exogenous heavy metal ions (Zhu and Thiele,
1996
). Based on data from a previous dispositional study (Zalups,
1995
), we also had hypothesized that long-term retention of inorganic
mercuric ions in the kidneys correlates closely with transcription of
MT genes and with the cellular content of MT protein. High
intracellular levels of MT are capable of sequestering mercury and
preventing toxic effects of mercury in different organs (Zalups and
Cherian, 1992a
,b
; Morcillo and Santamaria, 1996
; Dameron and Harrison,
1998
; Sugawara et al., 1998
). Moreover, we postulate that
chronically elevated rates of MT gene transcription in
kidney, but not in liver, after exposure to mercury, would provide a
mechanism for persistent retention of mercury in the kidneys.
One of the primary aims of the present study was to determine the relationships among the disposition of inorganic mercury, the induction of MT gene transcription, and the production of MT protein in the kidneys and liver over a 2-week period after a single exposure to a low, non-nephrotoxic dose of mercuric chloride. We report, for the first time, that there is a strong relationship between the content of inorganic mercury and the concentration of MT or relative rate of transcription of MT-1 and MT-2 genes in the liver. However, the relationship between the content of inorganic mercury and the rate of MT gene transcription or content of MT protein in the kidneys is weak. Furthermore, the relationship between MT gene transcription and MT protein is virtually nonexistent, in strong contrast with the situation in liver. These data suggest that post-transcriptional events play a significant role in MT expression in kidney.
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Materials and Methods |
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General Experimental Design. The disposition of injected inorganic mercury, the content of MT protein, and the rates of transcription of MT-1 plus MT-2 genes were determined in the kidneys and liver at various times during the course of the initial 2 weeks after a single i.v. injection of a nontoxic dose of mercuric chloride. This allowed us to test the hypothesis that there are relationships between content of mercury and the content of MT protein and/or rates of transcription of MT genes in these organs.
Animals and Groups Used. Male Sprague-Dawley rats (Harlan Sprague-Dawley, Indianapolis, IN) were fed a commercial laboratory diet and water ad libitum and kept in approved animal quarters at 20°C, on a 12-h light/dark cycle, and at a relative humidity of 50%. Rats were subdivided randomly into two treatment groups. One group received a single i.v. 0.5-µmol/kg dose of mercuric chloride in 0.9% saline and the other (control) group was injected i.v. with 0.9% saline alone. All injections were administered by using a volume per body weight ratio of 2 ml/kg.
Each treatment group was subdivided into four groups of five or six animals in a random manner. Paired subgroups of control and mercury-treated rats were housed individually in plastic metabolic cages for 1, 3, 7, or 14 days after treatment.Injection of Inorganic Mercury. All rats given 0.5 µmol/kg mercuric chloride were administered the dose into the femoral vein while under light anesthesia induced by diethyl ether. The injection solution was designed to deliver 0.5 µmol of Hg2+/kg plus 4 µCi of 203Hg2+/kg in 2.0 ml of normal saline (0.2-ml injection volume/100 g b.wt.). Radioactive inorganic mercury was in the form of mercuric chloride (203HgCl2, specific activity = 26 mCi/mg; Buffalo Materials Corp., Buffalo, NY).
Collection of Urine and Feces. Urine and feces were collected continuously from each of the mercury-treated animals during the duration of time that the respective groups of animals were held in the metabolic cages (i.e., 1, 3, 7, or 14 days). The total amounts of urine and feces excreted during each 24-h period were removed from the metabolic cages of all the animals. Each sample was first weighed to determine the amount excreted during the respective 24-h period. One milliliter of each urine sample was sealed in a 12 × 75-mm gamma-counting tube to determine the amount of inorganic mercury excreted. In contrast, all feces excreted in each 24 h were sealed in multiple 16 × 90-mm polypropylene tubes.
Acquisition and Handling of Tissues. Paired groups of animals injected with inorganic mercury or saline were anesthetized heavily with a 100-mg/kg dose of sodium pentobarbital (i.p.) at 1, 3, 7, or 14 days after treatment and two 1-ml samples of whole blood obtained from the inferior vena cava. One milliliter of whole blood was sealed in a preweighed 12 × 75-mm, round bottom, gamma-counting tube and another 1.0 ml was centrifuged at 10,000g to separate the cellular and plasma fractions of blood. Both fractions were sealed separately in gamma-counting tubes. The kidneys and liver were then removed, cleared of fat and connective tissue, and weighed quickly. The left kidney was cut along the transverse plane and one-half was sealed in a preweighed gamma-counting tube. A 1-g sample of liver was obtained similarly and sealed for gamma counting. The right kidney and an additional 1-g sample of liver from each animal were snap frozen in polypropylene tubes for isolation of nuclei for analysis of MT gene transcription, and for measurement of MT protein content.
Determination of Content of Mercury in Samples. Radioactivity of 203Hg2+ in tissues, urine, feces, and injection solution (standards) was determined by counting samples in a 1282 Compugamma CS deep-well gamma spectrometer equipped with a 3-inch sodium iodide crystal (Wallac, Gaithersburg, MD), with a counting efficiency of approximately 50%. The content of inorganic mercury in each sample was calculated by dividing the activity of 203Hg2+ (dpm) in the sample by the specific activity of 203Hg2+ (dpm/nmol) in the injection solution. Concentrations of mercury in the tissues are expressed as percentage of the administered dose per gram of tissue and the content of mercury in organs is expressed as a percentage of the administered dose. The total volume of blood in rats was estimated to be ~6% of body weight.
Run-On Transcription.
Snap-frozen samples of kidney or liver
were homogenized in 10 volumes of buffer 1 [0.32 M sucrose, 3 mM
CaCl2, 2 mM Mg(OAc)2, 0.1 mM EDTA, 0.1% Triton X-100, 1 mM dithiothreitol (DTT), 10 mM Tris-HCl,
pH 8.0] by using a motor-driven Teflon-glass homogenizer. The
homogenate was filtered through Miracloth, homogenized again, and combined with 2 volumes of buffer II [2 M sucrose, 5 mM
Mg(OAc)2, 0.1 mM EDTA, 1 mM DTT, 10 mM Tris-HCl,
pH 8.0]. The crude nuclear suspension was layered over a 10-ml cushion
(2 M sucrose, 5 mM magnesium acetate, 0.1 mM EDTA, 10 mM Tris-HCl, pH
8.0) and pelleted by ultracentrifugation at 24,000 rpm for 60 min in an
SW-28 rotor at 4°C. The pellet of nuclei was suspended in nuclei
storage buffer (40% glycerol, 5 mM MgCl2, 50 mM
Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, 0.1 mM EDTA), counted by hemacytometer, and stored at
a concentration of 2 × 107 nuclei/400 µl
in liquid nitrogen until use. The yield of intact nuclei was
approximately 50 to 60% of that obtained by using fresh, unfrozen
tissue. RNA elongation reactions were performed for 30 min at 30°C by
using 2 × 107 nuclei/400-µl reaction.
Reaction mixtures were composed of 20 µl of nuclei storage buffer
[plus 200 µl of sterile 2× reaction buffer (10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, 5 mM MgCl2, 0.3 M KCl, 1 mM ATP, 1 mM CTP, 1 mM
GTP, 5 mM DTT, 2 µl [
-32P]CTP (~3000
Ci/mmol, 10 mCi/ml)]. Nucleotides, radionucleotides, and DTT were
added immediately before use. Nascent RNA transcripts were allowed to
elongate for 30 min at 30°C on a shaking platform, followed by
addition of 600 µl of RNase-free DNase 1 [0.04 U of RQ1 DNase 1 (RNase-free; Promega, Madison WI), 0.5 M NaCl, 50 mM
MgCl2, 2 mM CaCl2, 10 mM
Tris-HCl, pH 7.4]. The 32P-labeled RNA was
isolated by using Trizol (Life Technologies, Inc., Grand Island,
NY), and the final precipitated RNA was dissolved in Church
hybridization buffer (1 mM EDTA, 0.5 M NaHPO4, pH
7.2, 7% sodium lauryl sulfate), to a final concentration of
4 × 106 cpm/ml.
Hybridization of Radiolabeled RNA to Immobilized Unlabeled
Probes.
Target DNA (immobilized on nylon filters in triplicate
dots, 2 µg/dot) consisted of the following: 1) a single-stranded
synthetic oligonucleotide (5'-ATGGACCCCAACTGCTCCTG-3') complementary to a sequence at the 5' end of both MT-1 and MT-2
mRNA, and 2) an unlabeled cDNA probe complementary to glyceraldehyde
phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) mRNA (Denhardt et al.,
1988
), denatured and immobilized on the same nylon filters by using a
previously described protocol (Koropatnick, 1980
). Hybridization of
radiolabeled RNA to these dots assessed transcription of
GAPDH genes and acted as internal standards against which to
measure changes in MT-1 + MT-2 gene
transcription. Nylon filters containing triplicate dots of unlabeled
target DNA were prehybridized in Church buffer for 20 min at 65°C in
a Hybaid hybridization chamber. The prehybridization buffer was then
removed, 2 ml of radiolabeled RNA resulting from 30 min of run-on
transcription in isolated nuclei (in Church hybridization buffer,
4 × 106 cpm/ml) was added, and the filters
were hybridized for 48 h at 65°C. The filters were then washed
twice at 65°C in posthybridization buffer (40 mM
Na2HPO4, 1% SDS; 20 min/wash). Posthybridization buffer was removed and 8 ml of RNase A (1 µg/ml in 6× standard saline citrate) was added and incubated for 30 min at 37°C to reduce signal from unhybridized radiolabeled RNA.
After a final wash in posthybridization buffer (10 min, 37°C) filters
were blotted dry, dots were individually cut out, and the radioactivity
of bound 32P was measured by scintillation
spectrophotometry with an LKB Rackbeta 1211 liquid scintillation
counter. This was distinguishable from 203Hg
present in samples by appropriate choice of energy windows to detect
decay particles. Phosphorimage visualization of hybridization was not
performed because 203Hg present in samples
introduced an unacceptably high background that was not possible to
exclude with that technology. The ratio of MT-1 + MT-2 gene transcription to the transcription of the housekeeping GAPDH gene was used as a measure of relative rate of
MT gene transcription.
Measurement of MT Protein.
MT protein in tissue samples was
measured, in triplicate, by solid-phase radioimmunoassay as described
previously (Leibbrandt et al., 1991
) with a rabbit polyclonal antiserum
to rat MT-2, which has affinity for both MT-1 and MT-2 isoforms.
Briefly, samples of renal and hepatic tissues were homogenized in 4 volumes of 0.25 M sucrose and centrifuged at 20,000g for 10 min at 4°C. The supernatants were heated to 70°C for 10 min to
precipitate heat-denaturable proteins, cooled on ice, and then
centrifuged at 20,000g for 20 min at 4°C. The amount of
MT-1 + MT-2 protein in the supernatant was expressed relative to total
tissue weight.
Numerical and Statistical Analysis. Data expressed as a percentage of a total were first normalized with the arcsine transformation before applying any parametric statistical analysis. This transformation takes the arcsine of the square root of the decimal fraction of the percentage score.
Data for the disposition of inorganic mercury, content of MT protein, and rates of transcription of MT-1 and MT-2 genes in the kidneys and liver are presented as mean ± S.E. for an n of five or six animals. For the cumulative excretion of inorganic mercury in the urine and feces, the data for day 1, 3, 7, and 14 represent the mean ± S.E. for n = 23, 17, 12, and 6 animals, respectively. Assessment of differences among means for the renal and hepatic disposition of inorganic mercury was carried out with a one-way ANOVA followed by Tukey's protected t test post hoc procedure. Differences among means for the data for MT protein or rates of transcription of MT-1 and MT-2 genes were carried out with a two-way ANOVA, followed by Tukey's protected t test post hoc procedure. The two variables assessed with these analyses were time and treatment. In all three studies, evaluation of differences among means for any set of data was carried out by applying a two-way ANOVA followed by Tukey's protected t test. The level of significance for all statistical analyses was chosen a priori to be P < .05. Determination of the mathematical function that best describes the cumulative urinary excretion of mercury in the urine and feces was done with nonlinear regression, best-fit, least-squares analysis. To better understand the potential relationships between the concentration of mercury and the concentration of MT protein or the rate of transcription of MT-1 and MT-2 genes in the kidneys and liver, linear regression analysis was applied to plots of individual data derived from each animal studied. The relationships between the rate of transcription of MT-1 and MT-2 genes and the concentration of MT in the kidneys and liver was also carried out using linear regression analysis.| |
Results |
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Renal Burden of Mercury.
Approximately 50% of the
administered dose of inorganic mercury was present in the total renal
mass 1 day after the i.v. injection of the 0.5-µmol/kg dose of
mercuric chloride (Fig. 1A). There was no
significant difference in the renal burden of mercury between the
animals studied on the 1st day after treatment and the animals studied
on the 3rd day after treatment. At 7 days after treatment, the renal
burden of mercury was approximately 6% lower than that in the animals
studied at 1 day after treatment. The greatest decrease in renal
mercury was detected in the animals studied at 14 days after treatment,
and was approximately 26% less than that in the animals studied 1 day
after treatment.
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Renal Concentration of MT Protein. At all times studied, the renal concentration of MT (mg/g of tissue) was significantly greater in the rats treated with the 0.5-µmol/kg dose of mercuric chloride than in the corresponding control rats treated with normal saline (Fig. 1B). Among the four groups of rats treated with inorganic mercury, only in the rats studied at 14 days after treatment were significant differences in the renal concentration of MT detected. The renal concentration of MT in these animals was significantly lower than that in the corresponding rats studied 1 or 3 day(s) after the injection of mercuric chloride.
Relative Rates of Transcription of MT-1 and MT-2 Genes in Kidney. The rate of transcription of MT-1 and MT-2 genes (relative to the rate of transcription of the gene for GAPDH) in the kidneys was significantly greater in the rats treated with mercuric chloride than in the corresponding rats treated with normal saline at each time studied (Fig. 1C).
With one exception, the rates of transcription of MT genes in the kidneys remained relatively constant among the groups of rats treated with mercuric chloride. Only in the rats studied at 3 days after treatment was the relative rate of transcription of MT genes decreased, compared with that in the group studied 24 h after treatment. In contrast, there was no significant difference in the relative rate of transcription of renal MT genes between the group studied 24 h after treatment and the group studied 7 or 14 days after treatment.Hepatic Burden of Mercury.
Approximately 5.5% of the
administered dose of inorganic mercury was present in liver 24 h
after treatment (Fig. 2A). Fifty percent
of the hepatic burden mercury was eliminated by 3 days post-treatment,
and 62 and 74% by 7 and 14 days after treatment, respectively.
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Hepatic Concentration of MT Protein. Hepatic concentrations of MT were significantly greater in the rats treated with 0.5 µmol/kg mercuric chloride than control rats at all times studied (Fig. 2B). The hepatic concentration of MT decreased with time in parallel with the content of inorganic mercury (Fig. 2A). At 3, 7, and 14 days after the injection of mercuric chloride, the hepatic concentration of MT was approximately 32, 60, and 78% lower, respectively, than that at 1 day after treatment.
Relative Rates of Transcription of MT-1 and MT-2 Genes in Liver. The relative rates of transcription of MT-1 and MT-2 genes in the liver were highest in the group studied 1 day after treatment, and were lowest (at almost baseline levels) in the group studied at 14 days after treatment (Fig. 2C). The temporal pattern of transcription of MT-1 and MT-2 genes in the liver was clearly different from that detected in the kidneys (Fig. 1C).
Urinary Excretion of Mercury.
Rats injected with 0.5 µmol/kg
mercuric chloride excreted approximately 5.5% of the dose during the
first 24 h, and 11% by 48 h, after treatment (Fig.
3A). By the end of the 1st and 2nd week
after treatment, approximately 20 and 24% of the dose, respectively, had been excreted in the urine. Thus, about 83% of the cumulative urinary excretion of mercury occurred during the 1st week after treatment. With nonlinear regression analysis, the data for the urinary
excretion of mercury had a best fit with the cumulative function
y = a(1
e(
b(x))), with
an r2 = 0.9966 when coefficient
a = 23.98 and coefficient b = 0.2779.
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Fecal Excretion of Mercury.
Approximately 5.5% of the
administered dose was excreted in feces during the 1st day after the
injection of mercuric chloride (Fig. 3B). By the end of the 2nd day,
approximately 8% of the dose had been excreted. Approximately 18 and
23% of the dose had been excreted in the feces by the end of the 1st
week and 2nd week post-treatment, respectively. Similar to the
cumulative urinary excretion of mercury, about 78% of the cumulative
fecal excretion of mercury occurred during the 1st week after
treatment. Interestingly, the data for the fecal excretion of mercury
also fit the cumulative function y =
a(1
e(
b(x))) very
well. An r2 = 0.9966 is obtained by
using coefficient a = 24.08 and coefficient b = 0.2073.
Relationships among Concentration of MT Protein, Rate of
MT Gene Transcription, and Concentration of Mercury in
Kidneys.
Linear regression analysis of the plot of renal
concentration of MT (mg/g of tissue) versus the renal concentration of
mercury (nmol/g of tissue) for each individual animal revealed that the equation y = 0.014x + 0.207 is the best-fit
linear equation characterizing the relationship between these two
parameters (Fig. 4A). The
r2 of 0.340051, however, indicates
that the relationship is a poor one.
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Relationships among Concentration of MT Protein, Rate of
MT Gene Transcription, and Concentration of Mercury in
Liver.
Assessment of the plot of hepatic concentration of MT (mg/g
of tissue) versus the hepatic concentration of mercury (nmol/g of
tissue) by simple linear regression analysis indicates that the
best-fit linear equation defining the relationships between these
parameters is y = 4.363x + 0.114 (Fig.
5A). The
r2 of 0.874441 indicates that there is
a predictable direct relationship between these two parameters.
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0.019) (Fig. 5B).
The r2 of 0.906326 indicates a strong
direct relationship between these two parameters.
Relationship between Rates of Transcription of MT-1 and
MT-2 Genes and Concentration of MT Protein in Kidneys and
Liver.
The linear equation that best describes the relationship
between the concentration of MT protein and the relative rate of transcription of MT genes in the kidneys is y = 0.041x + (0.532) (Fig. 6A). However, the
regression analysis indicates that there is essentially no correlation
between these two renal parameters (r2 = 0.001581).
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0.019) best
defined the relationship between these hepatic parameters.
Evaluation of Potential Toxic Effects of 0.5 µmol of
HgCl2/kg on Transcription in Kidneys and Liver.
To
rule out the possibility that the dose of inorganic mercury used might
suppress transcription in target tissues and confound results, we
assessed overall transcription and transcription of GAPDH in
the kidneys and liver over the 14 days of study. Incorporation of
radiolabeled precursor into total tissue RNA (per
105 nuclei) was assessed in the kidneys and liver
of animals treated and not treated with the 0.5-µmol/kg dose of
mercuric chloride. No significant changes in overall transcription in
the kidneys or liver were detected between the animals not treated with
inorganic mercury and those treated with inorganic mercury (Fig.
7). Moreover, there were no significant
changes in overall transcription in the kidneys and liver from day 1 after treatment through day 14 after treatment (Fig. 7). Transcription
of the housekeeping gene GAPDH (as assessed by the amount of
radiolabeled GAPDH RNA hybridized to immobilized
GAPDH cDNA probe, per 8 × 108 cpm
radiolabeled RNA resulting from 30 min of run-on transcription in
isolated nuclei) also was unaffected in either the kidneys or liver at
all times studied (Fig. 8). These
findings confirm that the dose of mercuric chloride used in the present
study does not elicit demonstrable toxic effects.
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Discussion |
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Numerous studies (Rothstein and Hayes, 1960
; Zalups and Cherian,
1992a
,b
; Zalups, 1995
, 2000
), including the present one, indicate that
the kidneys of rats exposed to a low dose of inorganic mercury
accumulate approximately one-half the dose during the initial 24 h
after exposure. Approximately 75% of the mercury accumulated in the
kidneys is retained by the tubular epithelial cells over the subsequent
weeks after exposure.
In contrast, only about 5 to 6% of the dose is present in the liver by
the end of the 1st day after exposure (Zalups and Cherian, 1992a
,b
;
Zalups, 1995
). However, the hepatic burden of mercury is as great as 7 to 8% of the dose 1 h after exposure (Zalups et al., 1999
). Thus,
the maximal hepatic burden of mercury is achieved rapidly after
exposure, and hepatic elimination of mercury begins within hours. The
relatively efficient elimination of mercury results in the hepatic
burden of mercury being reduced to less than 1.5% of the dose, which
is an 80% reduction of the initial hepatic burden, by the end of the
initial 2 weeks after treatment. Only about 25% of the renal burden of
mercury is eliminated during the same period of time. It is not clear
why there are such great differences in the efficiency of elimination
of accumulated mercury between the kidneys and liver.
MT has been shown to play a significant role in protecting against the
cytotoxic effects of various forms of mercury, including mercury vapor
(Hg0) (Yoshida et al., 1999
) and mercuric
chloride (Zalups and Cherian, 1992a
,b
; Morcillo and Santamaria, 1996
).
In mice with genetically ablated MT-1 and MT-2
genes (MT-null mice), lack of MT results in increased susceptibility to
renal damage induced by inorganic mercury, even though the renal
accumulation of inorganic mercury in the MT-null mice is less than that
in the wild-type control mice (Satoh et al., 1997
). The importance of
MT in the kidneys in providing resistance to the toxic effects of a
wide variety of transition metals (Klaassen and Liu, 1998
; Nordberg et
al., 1992
) has directed attention to processes that regulate the
cellular content of MT protein in the kidneys, as well as other organs and tissues.
The mechanisms involved in controlling transcription of members of the
MT gene family have been studied extensively. Transcription of
MT-1 and MT-2 genes is induced rapidly in various
cell types by oxidative stress, inflammation, and exposure to numerous
metals, including zinc, cadmium (Andrews, 2000
), and mercury (Murata et al., 1999
). Increased transcription of these genes in response to acute
exposure to metals appears to correlate well with increased production
of MT protein (Durnam et al., 1981
), suggesting that transcription is a major point of control in the induction and maintenance MT protein within certain target cells. However, it is not
clear whether there is a direct relationship between the transcription
of MT genes and the consequent production of MT protein in
all target cells that take up and accumulate toxic metals. In addition,
it is not clear whether the relationships that exist between the rates
of transcription of MT genes and the content of MT protein
in certain target cell populations persist during more chronic periods
of time after the exposure to toxic metals, such as mercury.
Of relevance to these issues, post-transcriptional events are involved
in cellular accumulation MT protein under some circumstances (Andrews,
1990
). Rats treated with cadmium or copper salts recruit less
MT-2 mRNA into hepatic cell polyribosomes than the amount of
total MT-2 mRNA induced by the metal (Vasconcelos et al.,
1996
). In transgenic mice overexpressing interleukin-6
genes, MT-1 and MT-2 protein are elevated in brain tissue in spite of
minimal increases and even decreases in the levels of MT-1
mRNA (Hernandez et al., 1997
). The stability MT mRNA in
embryonic chick hepatocytes has been reported to be significantly
increased during inhibition of protein synthesis induced by treatment
with cycloheximide, but not puromycin (McCormick et al., 1991
). The
inferred capacity of specific proteins to degrade MT mRNA
indicates possible post-transcriptional regulation. Hepatic MT protein
with enhanced stability has been reported in mutant mice that
overaccumulate copper-associated MT, indicating a post-translational
mechanism regulating MT protein levels under some circumstances
(Koropatnick and Cherian, 1993
). The potential of post-transcriptional
events to play a role in the accumulation of MT protein in renal and
hepatic tissues exposed to inorganic mercury (as well as other tissues
exposed to heavy metals in general) has been largely unexplored.
Therefore, it is important to explore physiological events other than
gene transcription that may regulate accumulation of heavy metals, and
resistance to their toxic effects, in different organs.
We studied changes in the disposition of inorganic mercury and MT protein, and rates of transcription of MT-1 and MT-2 genes, in kidneys and liver during the initial 2 weeks after treatment with mercuric chloride. Our aim was to determine whether transcription of MT genes alone was the most likely factor responsible for the accumulation of MT protein in response to exposure to inorganic mercury in those tissues. As mentioned above, the net retention of mercury was greater in kidneys than in liver. Differences, between kidney and liver, with respect to the amount of induced MT that persisted over time were even more dramatic: The renal content of MT did not change significantly during the initial 7 days after exposure to inorganic mercury, whereas the content MT in the liver dropped by more than 50%.
By 14 days post-treatment, the content of MT protein in liver was near to basal levels, which paralleled closely the relative rate of MT-1 and MT-2 gene transcription (Fig. 2). These data support the hypothesis that MT gene transcription in the liver is indeed a primary factor regulating hepatic levels of MT after exposure to inorganic mercury, a concept that is strengthened further by the very strong direct relationship (r2 = 0.924) between the concentration of MT and the relative rate of MT gene transcription (Fig. 6). The strong correlation (r2 = 0.90) between the content of inorganic mercury and MT gene transcription strongly suggests that inorganic mercury was the primary agent inducing hepatic MT gene transcription (Fig. 4). In addition, the strong correlation (r2 = 0.87) between the content of mercury and the concentration of MT suggests the transcription of MT genes alone, and not post-transcriptional events mediated by mercuric ions, plays the primary role in regulating the content of MT in the liver.
In contrast, the close relationships observed in liver are extremely
weak or absent in kidney. Over a period of 7 days after treatment with
mercuric chloride, the renal content of inorganic mercury remained
elevated compared with the content of inorganic mercury in the liver
(Fig. 1). This is consistent with reports indicating that exposure to
mercury results in relatively high renal levels compared with
concentrations in other tissues (Rothstein and Hayes, 1960
, Zalups
1995
; Tanaka-Kagawa et al., 1998
). By 14 days, renal mercury and MT
levels were substantively decreased compared with 7-day levels.
However, unlike the situation in liver, the correlation between the
renal concentrations of MT and inorganic mercury was weak
(r2 = 0.34) over the 14 days of study.
This suggested that other factors, independent of the presence of
inorganic mercury, contributed to regulating the amount of MT present
in kidney. Those factors had a more significant effect in the kidneys
than in the liver. Furthermore, MT gene transcription and MT
protein levels were extremely poorly associated with content of
inorganic mercury. The r2 between the
renal concentration of inorganic mercury and the rate of transcription
of MT-1 and MT-2 genes in the kidneys was only
0.12 (Fig. 5), and the association between the rate of transcription of
MT genes and the tissue concentration of MT protein in the kidneys was even worse. In kidneys isolated from 22 rats, with MT gene transcription levels that varied over a nearly
3-fold range, the r2 with MT protein
levels was virtually zero (Fig. 6). These data strongly support the
hypothesis that, in kidney, events other than MT gene
transcription play a significant role in mediating the production
and/or retention of MT.
At early times after mercuric chloride treatment, both kidney and liver responded by accumulating inorganic mercury, increasing MT gene transcription, and accumulating MT protein (Figs. 1 and 2). Clearly, MT gene transcription in response to inorganic mercury was the preeminent factor responsible for MT protein accumulation at early stages (1 to 3 days) after metal ion exposure. However, between 7 and 14 days post-treatment, the persistence of MT gene transcription in kidney contrasted with the loss in transcription in liver and contributed to the increasingly poor relationship between transcription and protein accumulation. Therefore, these data suggest that post-transcriptional events in kidney may contribute to regulation of MT protein levels more strongly during long-term exposure to metal ions than in situations of short-term acute exposure. This situation may reflect more accurately the pattern of exposure in humans exposed to environmental metal ions.
The post-transcriptional events mediating MT levels in kidney are not
known at the present time, and are under investigation in our
laboratories. Although differences in the stability of MT
mRNAs will be difficult to assess in tissues, assessment of differences
in the stability of MT protein in the kidneys and liver of rats treated
with mercuric chloride is possible by using a combined
post-labeling/Western blot technique (Koropatnick and Cherian, 1993
).
This strategy, in combination with analysis of the metal ligands
associated with renal MT at varying times after mercuric chloride
treatment, is being pursued to determine whether increased stability of
renal MT protein contributes to MT levels.
Overall, our data indicate that, in addition to initial induction of MT gene expression, post-transcriptional events contribute to MT protein accumulation in the kidney in response to exposure to mercuric chloride. These factors become increasingly significant at longer periods of time between the initial inducing event and the measurement of the levels of MT protein. The importance of MT in mediating resistance to toxic metals, and in retaining metals in different cells and tissues, contributes to the importance of understanding multiple factors (in addition to gene transcription) that regulate MT protein levels in vivo.
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Footnotes |
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Accepted for publication June 5, 2000.
Received for publication February 15, 2000.
1 This study was supported by grants awarded by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (ES05157 and ES05980) and the Medical Research Council of Canada.
Send reprint requests to: Dr. Rudolfs K. Zalups, Division of Basic Medical Sciences, Mercer University School of Medicine, 1550 College St., Macon, GA 31207-0001. E-mail: zalups.rk{at}gain.mercer.edu
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Abbreviations |
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MT, metallothionein; DTT, dithiothreitol; GADPH, glyceraldehyde phosphate dehydrogenase.
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References |
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Biochemical Aspects) (Goyer RA andCherian MG eds) vol 115, pp 93-120,
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