|
July
6, 2004
UCSD Team Determines Cellular Stress Within Body
Is Critical Component Of Cell Growth & Immune Response
By Sue Pondrom
Researchers at
the University of California, San Diego (UCSD) School of Medicine
have determined that a particular type of cellular stress called
osmotic stress is of critical importance to cell growth and
the body’s immune response against infection. The findings
may have implications for autoimmune disorders, transplant rejections,
and potential cancer therapies.
Published in the online
edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
(PNAS) the week of July 5, 2004, the research in mice provided
the first proof that a specific transcription factor, a gene
that acts as an “on-off” switch, is essential for
normal cell proliferation under conditions of osmotic stress
and is also necessary for the body’s immune response to
invading pathogens.
Osmotic stress occurs
when the concentration of molecules in solution outside of the
cell is different than that inside the cell. When this happens,
water flows either into or out of the cell by osmosis, thereby
altering the intracellular environment. Hyperosmotic stress
causes water to diffuse out of the cell, resulting in cell shrinkage,
which can lead to DNA and protein damage, cell cycle arrest,
and ultimately cell death. Cells compensate or adapt to osmotic
stress by activating an osmotic stress response pathway that
is controlled by a gene called nuclear factor of activated T
cells 5 (NFAT5)/tonicity enhancer binding protein (TonEBP).
This NFAT5/TonEBP protein is the only known mammalian transcription
factor that is activated by hyperosmotic stress.
Steffan N. Ho, M.D.,
Ph.D., a UCSD assistant professor of pathology and senior author
of the paper in PNAS, noted that the findings bring to light
new possibilities in the development of drugs to treat autoimmune
diseases, transplant rejection and cancer.
“We are particularly
excited about the implications of our findings to cancer cell
biology,” Ho said. “The tissue microenvironment
of tumors is unique because the unregulated growth of malignant
cells does not allow for the normal development of blood and
lymph vessels within the tumor, which could contribute to osmotic
stress. If the growth of cancer cells in the body requires a
means to adapt to osmotic stress, this stress response pathway
would represent an exciting new target for the identification
of anticancer drugs.”
In describing his team’s
research, Ho said that it was previously thought that the kidney
was the only tissue in the body that was subject to osmotic
stress. The kidney controls how much water and salt is in our
blood using a mechanism that results in very high levels of
osmotic stress within certain areas of the kidney.
“As immunologists,
we were at first rather puzzled when we found that a protein
that was thought to help cells of the kidney adapt to osmotic
stress was also expressed in tissues of the immune system,”
Ho said. “There was no prior evidence that cells of the
immune system or any other cell outside the kidney, for that
matter, were exposed to significant osmotic stress in the body.”
One of the difficulties
in studying the stresses that cells are exposed to within the
body is the nearly impossible task of accurately recreating,
in the laboratory, the complexities of a tissue with its unique
microenvironment as it exists in vivo. To investigate osmotic
stress, the Ho team generated mice that expressed a defective
form of the NFAT5/TonEBP protein, and found that the mice had
an impaired immune response; their cells were unable to grow
when exposed to osmotic stress.
“We now think
that the very process of cell proliferation within a tissue
microenvironment exposes the cell to osmotic stress,”
Ho said. “If the can can’t adapt to that osmotic
stress, it won’t be able to grow. The immune system is
especially dependent on this osmotic stress response because
in order to successfully overcome infection by viruses or bacteria,
the cells of the immune system must proliferate very rapidly.”
The studies were supported
by a grant from the National Institutes of Health, with shared
core facility resources supported by a grant from the National
Cancer Institute. In addition to Ho, the paper’s authors
included first author William Y. Go, a student in the UCSD M.D./Ph.D.
Medical Scientist Training Program; and co-authors Xuebin Liu,
M.D., Ph.D., Michelle A. Roti, B.A., and Forrest Liu, M.D.
News Media Contact: Sue
Pondrom (619) 543-6163
|