Volume 52 (2): 157-167, 2004 Copyright ©The Histochemical Society, Inc. Temporal Changes in PTHrP, Bcl-2, Bax, Caspase, TGF-ß, and FGF-2 Expression Following Growth Plate Irradiation With or Without Radioprotectant
Departments of Orthopedics and Pathology, SUNY Upstate Medical University (TAD,SM,JAH,JS,BM,JAS), Syracuse, New York, and Cornell University College of Veterinary Medicine (CEF), Ithaca, New York Correspondence to: Timothy A. Damron, MD, Musculoskeletal Science Research Center, Room 3117, Institute for Human Performance, 505 Irving Ave., Syracuse, NY 13210. E-mail: damront{at}upstate.edu
This study examined temporal changes in growth plate apoptosis molecules and growth factors in an animal model of radiation injury with and without a radioprotectant. Thirty weanling 5-week SpragueDawley rats underwent right knee irradiation with single-fraction 17.5 Gy while the left served as internal control. Six animals each were sacrificed at 0.5, 1, 2, 3, or 4 weeks after irradiation. Half of the animals received pretreatment with amifostine (WR-2721) radioprotectant. Immunohistochemical staining for PTHrP, Bcl-2, Bax, caspase-3, FGF-2, and TGF-ß was performed. PTHrP decreased to a nadir at 1 week after irradiation but rebounded to above control levels at 2 weeks in the reserve and transitional zones. The radioprotectant amifostine blunted the decrease in PTHrP but kept PTHrP expression lower than controls during the rebound phase in untreated irradiated animals. Hypertrophic zone Bax expression was decreased by amifostine in both irradiated and non-irradiated limbs at 1 and 2 weeks. FGF, TGF-ß, Bcl-2, and caspase levels generally decreased at 1 week and returned thereafter toward control levels. These findings underscore the importance of PTHrP in response to growth plate irradiation and show the novel finding of a decrease in Bax expression with amifostine pretreatment. (J Histochem Cytochem 52:157167, 2004)
Key Words: growth plate radiation rat growth chondrocyte radioprotection apoptosis amifostine PTHrP Bax
RADIATION damages growth plate chondrocytes in a dose-dependent fashion, often resulting in premature growth arrest and limb length discrepancy in children who require radiotherapy for malignant tumors (Eifel 1988
The serial effects of irradiation on key growth plate growth factors, anti-apoptotic molecules, and pro-apoptotic molecules has not been examined in vivo. Parathyroid hormone-like protein (PTHrP) has been implicated in autocrine and paracrine feedback loops that coordinate growth plate chondrocyte proliferation and differentiation (Lee et al. 1996
The use of radioprotectant drugs has been suggested to minimize damage to the growth plate during irradiation for childhood extremity tumors (Tamurian et al. 1999 We hypothesized that irradiation would result in transient decreased expression of PTHrP, Bcl-2, FGF, and TGF-ß (as proliferative growth factors and anti-apoptotic molecules) and an increase in Bax and caspase (as indicators of apoptosis) expression, followed by a return to normal over time. The radioprotectant amifostine was hypothesized to partially reverse each of the radiation-mediated changes in growth plate growth factors and in anti-apoptotic and pro-apoptotic molecules in a nonselective fashion.
Thirty weanling 5-week-old SpragueDawley rats underwent right knee irradiation with a single 17.5 Gy fraction while the left limb served as an internal control. Six animals were sacrificed at each of the following time intervals after irradiation: 0.5, 1, 2, 3, and 4 weeks. Half of the animals at each time period received amifostine 100 mg/kg IP 20 min before radiation exposure.
The animals were anesthetized with Telezol 30 mg/kg IP before radiotherapy treatment and were then placed upon a Plexiglas sheet with the right leg extended, secured with tape, and placed under the radiation source (Philips MGC 30; Shelton, CT) (Tamurian et al. 1999
The proximal tibiae for three animals per time and treatment group were fixed for 3 hr at room temperature (RT) in a fixative containing 2% glutaraldehyde, 2% paraformaldehyde, and 0.7% RHT (hexamine ruthenium trichloride) in a 0.1 M cacodylate buffer, pH 7.4. After several changes of wash buffer and storage at 4C, the specimens were embedded in methylmethacrylate (MMA) (Erben 1997 Immunohistochemical staining for PTHrP (parathyroid hormone-like protein, Ab-2) (Oncogene; Cambridge, MA), Bcl-2 (clone Bcl-2-100; Zymed, San Francisco, CA), Bax (P19; Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Santa Cruz, CA), caspase-3 (CPP32, Ab-4; Neomarkers, Fremont, CA), FGF-2 (sc-79; Santa Cruz Biotechnology), and TGF-ß (Chemicon MAb 1032 or Santa Cruz sc-146) was performed. PTHrP Ab-2 is a purified polyclonal rabbit antibody raised against the peptide corresponding to residues 3453 of human PTHrP with rat cross-reactivity. Bcl-2 Ab is a mouse synthetic peptide MAb corresponding to amino acids 4154 of the Bcl-2 protein. Bax Ab is an affinity-purified rabbit polyclonal antibody raised against a peptide mapping to the amino terminus of mouse Bax. Caspase, FGF-2, and TGF-ß antibodies are also rabbit polyclonal antibodies. Appropriate negative and positive control tissues were examined (breast carcinoma for PTHrP, normal human colon for Bcl-2, human colon carcinoma for Bcl-2 and FGF-2, breast carcinoma for Bax, tonsil for caspase, and porcine uterus for TGF-ß). Staining for PTHrP receptor1 (Ab-1; Oncogene) was attempted late on these sections, but despite being able to demonstrate its presence in more recently harvested tissue, very little useful immunoreactivity could be shown on the sections derived from animals used for the current study. For antigen retrieval, slides were either placed in a vegetable steamer for 40 min (PTHrP, Bax-19, Bcl-2, TGF-ß), microwaved twice 6 min at 90% power (caspase 3), or boiled for 10 min (FGF-2) in 0.01 M citrate buffer, pH 6.0, then allowed to cool to RT and followed with a wash in PBS. The sections were then incubated for 1 hr at RT in blocking buffer containing 0.1 M PBS with 10% normal horse serum (NHS) and 2% bovine serum albumin (BSA). The following antibodies were incubated overnight at 4C with primary antibody diluted with PBS/BSA and 2% NHS: Bax (P19), Santa Cruz Biotechnology, sc-526, 1:75; Bcl-2, Zymed Laboratories, 18-0193, 1:100; PTHrP, Oncogene, PC09, 1:150; TGF-ß, Santa Cruz Biotechnology, sc-146, 1:20; FGF-2, Santa Cruz Biotechnology, sc-79, 1:250; and caspase 3, Neomarkers, RB-1197-P1, 1:20. The next day all sections were washed several times with PBS/BSA and incubated in biotinylated anti-mouse/anti-rabbit IgG (1:200; Vector Laboratories, Burlingame, CA) for 30 min at RT. After several PBS/BSA washes, the slides were incubated for 20 min at RT in avidinbiotinylated enzyme complex (ABC) (Vector Elite Kit; Vector Laboratories). Finally, after several PBS/BSA washes the slides were visualized with DAB as the chromogen (BioGenex) for 5 min, washed in deionized water, and counterstained with 2% methyl green or hematoxylin. Negative controls were substitutions of primary antibody or secondary antibody with antibody diluent.
Slides were reviewed by two reviewers (TAD, SM) with one reviewer having no specific knowledge of the treatments. All eight of the sections from two different depths of section (four sections at each depth) within each growth plate were reviewed to obtain an overall impression of the staining. Staining was graded 0 to 3 for its extent within each zone (reserve, proliferative, transitional, and hypertrophic) and 0 to 3 for intensity of staining. For each stain, an index was calculated to reflect overall staining extent and intensity by multiplying the value for extent by the value for intensity within each zone. Hence, the following formula was used:
The grading and scoring were modifications of those previously reported to account for variability in both staining intensity and percent positivity (McCarty et al. 1985 The periphery of the growth plate was excluded from review for these purposes because its contribution to bone growth both in width and length renders it more difficult to interpret relative to its changes after irradiation. After independent reviews, on recommendation by the statistician, the two reviewers completed a final consensus rating for each slide based on simultaneous review of slides for which their scores differed by any amount. Essentially all differences were minor (one level) and were easily resolved.
Staining indices were determined individually for the reserve zone, the proliferative zone, the transitional zone, and the hypertrophic zone (Figure 1)
. The reserve zone was defined as the region from the epiphysis (excluding all cells related to the secondary center of ossification) to the first flattened chondrocyte at the base of a cell column. The proliferative zone extended from there to the first chondrocyte in which a shape change was evident. The transitional zone extended from there to the first level of fully enlarged chondrocytes. The hypertrophic zone extended from there to the chondro-osseous junction (Wilsman et al. 1996
Representative immunohistochemistry results are shown in Figures 2, 3, and 4 . The IHC results must be viewed in the context of the dramatic changes in length, growth rate, histomorphometry, and BrdU labeling evidence of proliferative activity that occur after growth plate irradiation, as previously reported elsewhere for these same animals (Damron et al. 2003
PTHrP Control unirradiated growth plate demonstrated PTHrP expression predominately in the transitional and early hypertrophic zones (Figure 2). Mean staining index was greatest for the transitional zone, followed by the hypertrophic zone and reserve zones, respectively (Figures 5A5C) . Very little staining was observed in the proliferative zone. PTHrP staining was cytoplasmic and/or intranuclear. The PTHrP staining index did not differ markedly over time for these unirradiated controls, but the index generally tended to be gradually lower at the third and fourth weeks of observation. PTHrP has been previously observed predominately within the transitional, hypertrophic, and reserve zones, as shown here (Lee et al. 1996
Irradiated tissue showed the lowest staining index for PTHrP at 1 week after irradiation, falling from higher levels at 0.5 weeks in all zones (Figures 2A2D). The decrease at 1 week corresponds to the nadir of growth plate height and growth rate as well as the peak time of growth plate histomorphometric disarray after irradiation, as previously reported (Damron et al. 2003 Amifostine administration tended to blunt the initial reduction in transitional and hypertrophic zone PTHrP expression at 1 week after irradiation (Figures 5B and 5C). Surprisingly, the irradiated tissue from animals that had received amifostine did not show the increased PTHrP staining index at 2 or 3 weeks that had been seen in growth plate recovering from irradiation alone (Figures 5A5C). The lower staining index for this group created differences in staining between groups at 2 weeks in the reserve, transitional, and hypertrophic zones and at 3 weeks in the reserve and transitional zones described earlier. Mean PTHrP staining index in the amifostine-treated and irradiated growth plate for all zones was not only less than irradiated specimens (except at 1 week) but also less than unirradiated controls for the transitional and hypertrophic zones. The PTHrP staining indices for unirradiated tibia in animals that had received amifostine were very close to control unirradiated tissue in all zones.
Bax
The hypertrophic and transitional zone growth plate chondrocytes in the amifostine-pretreated tissue had decreased Bax expression at nearly all time points compared to controls and, most consistently, in the hypertrophic zone, also compared to irradiated tissue. This contributed to the notable differences in hypertrophic zone staining evident at 1 and 2 weeks. This was true both for right irradiated and for left unirradiated tibiae, although the staining index was lowest for the amifostine-treated unirradiated tissue (Figure 6).
Bcl-2
FGF FGF hypertrophic zone staining index after irradiation decreased to levels markedly less than control levels at 1 week and then gradually returned to control levels by 4 weeks (Figure 7) . Staining after irradiation was predominately cytoplasmic from 0.5 through 2 weeks but thereafter returned to an intranuclear pattern. Amifostine blunted the initial decrease in FGF staining at 1 week after irradiation but it did not result in increased FGF staining beyond control levels thereafter, nor was there any difference in staining compared to irradiated growth plates without amifostine.
TGF-ß TGF-ß control staining was both cytoplasmic and intranuclear, with a distribution throughout all zones but greatest in the late proliferative, transitional, and hypertrophic zones (Figures 4E4H). TGF-ß1 has been observed previously in the reserve, proliferative, and transitional zones of rats with weak hypertrophic staining (Matsunaga et al. 1999
Caspase
The present study characterizes IHC staining for potentially important growth plate repair modulators after a single 17.5-Gy -irradiation dose in an active growth plate using the SpragueDawley rat model. These findings expand on previous reports of the normal distribution for these growth factors and apoptosis-related molecules in the unirradiated growth plate (Lee et al. 1996Interpretation of the present findings must be tempered by the inherent limitations of the techniques used. The reliance on IHC alone describes only protein expression, and its grading is subjective. More objective comparison of relative protein expression between samples would require Western blotting, which was not performed in the present study. Differences in protein expression do not necessarily reflect transcriptional differences because differences in post-transcriptional processing, translation, post-translational processing, and protein degradation may also account for these changes. Hence, no conclusions can be made with respect to transcriptional differences among specimens, and examination with Northern blotting and polymerase chain reaction would be needed to assess those differences.
The decrease in PTHrP staining through 1 week after irradiation supports our hypothesis and the findings of others that PTHrP expression is diminished by irradiation (Pateder et al. 2001
Bcl-2 expression, which has been reported to be upregulated by PTHrP, was found to be reduced after irradiation, as would be expected in accordance with the decrease in PTHrP, but it remained reduced for a longer period than PTHrP. Hence, Bcl-2 return in response to irradiation, after an initial nadir at 1 week, appeared to follow but to lag behind that of PTHrP. Although Bax expression did not appear consistently increased after irradiation, the relative increase in the Bax to Bcl-2 ratio for the first 23 weeks after irradiation at this dose in the SpragueDawley rat may favor apoptosis (Oltvai et al. 1993
TGF-ß1 and FGF-2 showed a decrease in staining at 1 week and then a return toward control levels. Both of these growth factors have been shown to have positive proliferative effects on growth plate chondrocytes (Jingushi et al. 1995
The growth plate chondrocyte proliferative cytokine bFGF, recognized as an endothelial mitogen, has been hypothesized to play a role in linking chondrocyte hypertrophy with blood vessel penetration (Leach et al. 1997 The primary observed function of the free radical scavenger amifostine was to significantly decrease Bax staining compared to controls. This decrease was observed independent of irradiation, as both the unirradiated left-sided limbs from the animals that received amifostine and the irradiated, amifostine-pretreated right limbs from the same animals showed decreased Bax staining compared to controls. Amifostine also blunted the decrease in PTHrP that occurred at 1 week after irradiation. However, amifostine did not result in an increase over controls in the PTHrP staining observed at 2 weeks after irradiation and, in fact, was markedly below control and irradiated limb levels of staining at this time point. The fact that amifostine-treated irradiated limbs, which have been shown previously to have increased growth rate over untreated irradiated limbs, did not show the same increase in PTHrP over controls, as was observed in the irradiated limbs, downplays the role that PTHrP seems to have in modulating the effect of amifostine at the 2-week time point after irradiation in this animal model. Therefore, it is more likely that amifostine achieves its positive effects on restoring irradiated growth plate chondrocyte function through a Bax-mediated decrease in apoptosis rather than entirely and directly through the PTHrP pathway. Similarly, the amifostine-treated limbs after irradiation did show some decrease in the drop in TGF-ß1 and FGF-2 staining that occurred with irradiation alone at 1 week after irradiation. However, similar to its lack of effect at 2 weeks on PTHrP, amifostine-treated irradiated growth plates did not show any notable increase in TGF-ß1 or FGF-2 staining beyond controls at the key 2-week time point corresponding to the point of first observed return of proliferative clones. Hence, similar to its action relative to the PTHrP/Bcl-2 pathway, amifostine does not appear to achieve its effects on growth plate chondrocytes directly via upregulation of the proliferative mediators TGF-ß and FGF-2 at the 2 week point in this model. In summary, the SpragueDawley rat growth plate, irradiated with a single fraction at a level that allowed recovery of function, followed a temporal sequence of changes in the expression of many potentially important modulators. The major effects of irradiation from this perspective included a notable decrease in PTHrP, TGF-ß, and FGF-2 at 1 week after this single 17.5-Gy fraction. The recovery phase seen initially at 2 weeks after irradiation was characterized by a marked increase in PTHrP expression in the reserve, transitional, and hypertrophic zones, supporting the importance of PTHrP in a postnatal regulatory feedback loop. The proliferative growth factors TGF-ß in the transitional zone and FGF-2 in the hypertrophic zone also returned rapidly to control levels as the growth plate began to recover. However, the exact interrelationship among these various modulators remains unclear and awaits further more detailed study. Other candidate radioprotectant drugs that use mechanisms such as the PTHrP/Bcl-2 pathway or that have a positive effect on proliferative mediators may provide a basis for combination therapies that will result in greater overall radioprotection than when the drugs are used independently. Hence, combination therapy using amifostine with other radioprotectants warrants further study.
Supported by grants from the Children's Miracle Network, the Orthopaedic Research Foundation, and the NIH (CA83892). We thank Patrick Damron and James Lindbom, MD, for their assistance in procuring porcine tissue for this study. We also thank Lee Reichel for technical assistance.
Received for publication January 24, 2003; accepted August 9, 2003
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