Minimal Peroxide Exposure of Neuronal Cells Induces Multifaceted Adaptive Responses

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Abstract

Oxidative exposure of cells occurs naturally and may be associated with cellular damage and dysfunction. Protracted low level oxidative exposure can induce accumulated cell disruption, affecting multiple cellular functions. Accumulated oxidative exposure has also been proposed as one of the potential hallmarks of the physiological/pathophysiological aging process. We investigated the multifactorial effects of long-term minimal peroxide exposure upon SH-SY5Y neural cells to understand how they respond to the continued presence of oxidative stressors. We show that minimal protracted oxidative stresses induce complex molecular and physiological alterations in cell functionality. Upon chronic exposure to minimal doses of hydrogen peroxide, SH-SY5Y cells displayed a multifactorial response to the stressor. To fully appreciate the peroxide-mediated cellular effects, we assessed these adaptive effects at the genomic, proteomic and cellular signal processing level. Combined analyses of these multiple levels of investigation revealed a complex cellular adaptive response to the protracted peroxide exposure. This adaptive response involved changes in cytoskeletal structure, energy metabolic shifts towards glycolysis and selective alterations in transmembrane receptor activity. Our analyses of the global responses to chronic stressor exposure, at multiple biological levels, revealed a viable neural phenotype in-part reminiscent of aged or damaged neural tissue. Our paradigm indicates how cellular physiology can subtly change in different contexts and potentially aid the appreciation of stress response adaptations.

Figures

  • Figure 3. CMP treatment of SH-SY5Y cells affects intermediary cell metabolic responses to stimulatory ligands. Representative western blots and associated histograms depict the changes in ERK1/2 (A), c-Src (B) and Akt-1 (C) activation in response to b-methylcholine (MeCh, 10 nM) or brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF, 10 ng/mL) stimulating ligands in both control (blue bars) or CMP-treated (red bars) SH-SY5Y cells. The time courses (0-60 minutes) for stimulation are denoted in the associated histograms depicting the mean 6 SEM from at least three separate experiments. Statistical significance is indicated for changes in kinase activity in the CMP state relative to their time-matched control in vehicletreated (control) cells. Statistical significance was measured using a Student’s t-test (GraphPad Prism v.3): * - p,0.05; ** - p,0.01. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0014352.g003
  • Table 1. Gene Ontology (biological process) analysis of CMP-mediated geneset alteration compared to control SH-SY5Y cell geneset.
  • Table 2. KEGG pathway analysis of CMP-mediated geneset alteration compared to control SH-SY5Y cell geneset.
  • Table 3. Medical subject heading term analysis of CMPmediated geneset alteration compared to control SH-SY5Y cells geneset.
  • Figure 4. CMP treatment exerts a biased effect upon gene transcription in SH-SY5Y cells. A–C The CMP-responsive significantlyregulated geneset was interrogated using latent semantic indexing (GeneIndexer) of input terms. The number of implicitly correlated genes ($0.1 latent semantic indexing correlation score) are denoted for each interrogation term (red bar section = upregulated genes; green bar section = downregulated genes) as well as the total correlation score for those genes (italic next to colored bar). The specific interrogation term (A- BDNF vs. Acetylcholine: B- Neurotrophin receptor vs. G protein-coupled receptor: C- Aging vs. juvenile) are denoted in each panel A–C. D Latent semantic indexing scores and number of genes associated with aging/degeneration disease-related interrogation terms (senescence, Parkinson’s disease, neurodegeneration, Huntington’s disease, Cognitive impairment, Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, Alzheimer’s disease) compared to ageingindependent disorders (Tourette syndrome, Spina bifida, measles, asthma, ADHD, achondroplasia). The number of implicitly-associated genes are indicated in the colored horizontal bars as well as the cumulated latent semantic indexing scores (italic). doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0014352.g004
  • Figure 7. Global cellular signal transduction analysis of neural response to chronic minimal hydrogen peroxide exposure. A Representative Cy3/Cy5 protein-labeled cell signaling PanoramaH antibody microarray chip. Exemplary insets from experimental antibody chips are highlighted indicating relative changes in Cy3 or Cy5 reactivity for the negative (unlabelled bovine serum albumin deposited on chip) and positive control (Cy3/Cy5-labeled bovine serum albumin deposited on chip) chip area as well as for factors identified that demonstrate increased, decreased or an unchanged expression between control and CMP conditions. Individual channel (Cy3 or Cy5 emission) fluorescent intensities are displayed along with the merge colored channel. B Expression ratios (mean 6 SEM (n = 4 arrays)) between proteins extracted from CMP-treated SH-SY5Y cells compared to control. Protein expression greater in CMP compared to control (red bars) demonstrated an expression ratio of greater than 1.0 while an expression ratio significantly less than unity indicated a reduced expression level induced by CMP (green bars). doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0014352.g007
  • Table 4. Down-regulated proteins identified by MS/MS mass spectrometry from DIGE gels following CMP treatment.
  • Table 5. Up-regulated proteins identified by MS/MS mass spectrometry from DIGE gels following CMP treatment.

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Chadwick, W., Zhou, Y., Park, S. S., Wang, L., Mitchell, N., Stone, M. D., … Maudsley, S. (2010). Minimal Peroxide Exposure of Neuronal Cells Induces Multifaceted Adaptive Responses. PLoS ONE, 5(12), 1–26. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0014352

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