(Investigative Ophthalmology and Visual Science. 2001;42:2139-2144.)
© 2001
by The Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology, Inc.
Oxidative StressInduced Single-Strand Breaks in Chromosomal Telomeres of Human Retinal Pigment Epithelial Cells In Vitro
Shigeru Honda1,
Leonard M. Hjelmeland1,2 and
James T. Handa1
1 From the Departments of Ophthalmology and
2 Molecular and Cellular Biology, University of California, Davis.
 |
Abstract
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PURPOSE. To demonstrate that chronic hyperoxia induces single-stranded breaks in
chromosomal telomeres as a measure of oxidative DNA damage in cultured
RPE cells.
METHODS. RPE340 cells were cultured in 40% and 20% (control) O2.
DNA damage was assessed by mean terminal restriction fragment (TRF)
length, and the S1 nuclease assay was used to determine the frequency
of single-strand breaks in telomeric DNA. The degree of oxidative
stress in cells was estimated by flow cytometric analysis of reactive
oxygen intermediate (ROI)-induced
2',7'-dichlorodihydrofluorescein diacetate fluorescence and Northern
blot analysis of heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1) mRNA induction.
RESULTS. The mean TRF length of cells grown in 40% O2 shortened at
a faster rate than those grown in 20% O2. The S1 nuclease
assay showed that the accelerated mean TRF length shortening was due to
an increased accumulation of single-stranded breaks in telomeric DNA.
The degree of ROI production and HO-1 mRNA induction was greater in
cells treated with 40% than 20% O2, an effect that was
also larger in old than young passaged cells.
CONCLUSIONS. RPE340 cells in vitro grown in chronic hyperoxia exhibited evidence of
DNA damage with accelerated telomeric shortening via an increased
accumulation of single-strand breaks in telomeric DNA. These changes
could provide insight into aging of RPE cells by oxidative DNA
damage.
 |
Introduction
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Oxidative stress is an important potential mechanism to
explain aging of the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) because the RPE
is exposed to high ambient PO2s
(7090 mm Hg),1
2
3
and its high level of oxygen
metabolism generates large quantities of reactive oxygen intermediates
(ROIs).4
Oxidative stress induces a variety of structural
and functional changes to lipids, proteins, and DNA.5
6
It
is unclear, however, how these oxidatively damaged target
macromolecules contribute to the cells behavior during age-related
disease. Although oxidative damage to lipids and proteins has been
extensively studied in RPE cells, little attention has been paid to the
oxidative damage of DNA. Telomeres are one potential region of DNA that
warrants attention. Telomeres are specialized structures at the end of
chromosomes that contain characteristic repetitive G-rich DNA sequences
(TTAGGG) that when damaged or shortened can induce an altered cellular
phenotype that could promote aging.7
Recently, we developed a model of chronic oxidative stress in RPE cells
in vitro through exposure to hyperoxia. These conditions led to
phenotypic changes in RPE cells, including the altered expression of
oxidative stress response genes.8
The purpose of this
study was to test the hypothesis that chronic hyperoxia in vitro leads
directly to DNA damage in RPE cells. We chose to examine oxidative
stressrelated, single-stranded breaks occurring in chromosomal
telomeres as a sensitive method to detect DNA damage in general. Von
Zglinicki et al.,9
in a study of oxidative damage to WI38
human lung fibroblasts, demonstrated that single-stranded breaks are
selectively retained in telomeres as opposed to microsatellite
sequences throughout the genome when exposed to hyperoxia. This
retention of single-stranded breaks was convincingly demonstrated to be
the result of slow DNA repair in telomeres compared with control DNA
sequences.9
10
11
12
In this respect then, telomeres appear to
be especially sensitive to oxidative damage in the same fashion as
mitochondrial DNA, which also suffers from a lack of adequate DNA
repair.4
 |
Materials and Methods
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Cell Culture
Cultures were maintained in a three-gas incubator (NuAire,
Plymouth, MN), which maintains the oxygen concentration to within an
accuracy of ±0.2%. The gas tension was measured weekly with a Fyrite
kit (Bacharach, Pittsburgh, PA) and confirmed to be 20% or 40%
oxygen. The PO2 in the culture medium
was measured with a YSI 5331 oxygen probe (YSI Incorporated, Yellow
Springs, OH) and found to be 160 ± 4 mm Hg (n =
3) when in 20% oxygen (control) and 295 ± 3 mm Hg
(n = 3) in 40% oxygen. The RPE340 cell line from one
globe of a 1-year-old trauma victim was propagated as previously
described and maintained in Dulbeccos modified Eagles
medium/Nutrient mixture F12 with 15 mM Hepes buffer (DMEM/F12;
BioWhittaker, Walkersville, MD) + 10% fetal bovine serum (FBS; UBI
Upstate, Lake Placid, NY), 0.348% additional sodium bicarbonate, 2 mM
L-glutamine solution (GIBCO, Grand Island, NY) at
20% and 40% oxygen conditioned in 10% CO2 at
37°C.13
WI38 cells (ATCC, Manassas, VA) were cultured in
Eagles minimum essential medium with Earles balanced salt solution,
2 mM L-glutamine (EMEM), 1 mM sodium pyruvate
(GIBCO), and 10% FBS at 20% and 40% oxygen conditioned in 5%
CO2 at 37°C. This culture medium was selected
because it is considered the optimum growth medium for WI38 cells
(personal communication, ATCC), and it was used for WI38 cells in other
oxidative stressrelated work.11
For experiments, cells
were grown in 75-cm2 flasks at an initial seeding
density of 10,000/cm2 unless stated. Cells were
passaged before reaching confluence to avoid contact inhibition. At
each passage, cell number was counted using a Coulter counter Z1
(Coulter, Miami, FL), and population doubling level (PDL) was
determined as current PDL = last PDL +
log2(collected cell number/seeded cell number).
Southern Blot Analysis of Mean Terminal Restriction Fragment Length
Genomic DNA was extracted using the Qiagen blood and cell
culture DNA midi kit (Qiagen, Santa Clarita, CA). DNA samples at known
PDL were limit-digested using HinfI and RsaI
(Boehringer Mannheim, Indianapolis, IN) and electrophoresed on
a 1% agarose gel for 500 to 600 V-h. Southern blotting was performed
using an alkaline phosphataselabeled telomeric specific probe
(TTAGGG)4 according to manufacturers
instructions (GIBCO) and exposed to autoradiographic film as previously
described.7
Autoradiograms were scanned by densitometry,
and the mean terminal restriction fragment (TRF) length was calculated
according to L =
ODi/
(ODi/Li), where
ODi is the densitometer output (arbitrary units),
and Li is the length of the DNA at
position i.
S1 Nuclease Assay
The accumulation of single-strand breaks in DNA results in a
progressive shift of the hybridization signal to a shorter molecule
size with increasing S1 nuclease concentration. After limited digestion
with HinfI and RsaI, DNA was incubated with S1
nuclease (0.01 to 2 U/µg DNA; Boehringer Mannheim) for 30 minutes at
37°C. The reaction was terminated with 25 mM EDTA. Samples were
electrophoresed and Southern blotted as described above. Resultant
autoradiograms were scanned to quantify the profiles of each disperse
band, and S1 break content was determined as previously
described.12
Briefly, the frequency of S1 nuclease
sensitive site (nx) per Mbp DNA detected
by using an S1 nuclease concentration of x U/µg DNA was
calculated by nx =
(L0 -
Lx)/L0Lx,
where L0 is the mean fragment length
of DNA undigested with S1 nuclease, and Lx
is the mean fragment length at a nuclease concentration of x
U of S1 nuclease. The degree of mean TRF length shortening depends on
the number of single-stranded breaks, which have been correlated to the
sites that are digested by S1 nuclease. In preliminary experiments, a
dose-dependent decrease in mean TRF length due to single-stranded
breaks was seen until 0.1 to 0.2 U/µg DNA S1 nuclease, and
concentrations >0.2 U/µg DNA induced a potent decrease in TRF length
due to nonspecific double-stranded DNA breaks. Thus, 0.1 U/µg DNA S1
nuclease was used to assess the number of S1 sites.
RNA Extraction and Northern Blot Analysis
Total RNA was extracted using TRIZOL reagent (GIBCO) according
to the manufactures recommendations. Fifteen-microgram aliquots of
each sample were electrophoresed in 1% agarose gels, transferred to
nylon membranes, and prehybridized for 3 hours at 42°C in 50%
formamide, 5x Denhardts solution, 5x SSC, 100 µg/ml salmon sperm
DNA, and 0.1% SDS. The membranes were hybridized for 18 hours at
42°C with 25 ng of the 32P-labeled cDNA probe
of heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1), a generous gift from Augustine Choi (Yale
University, New Haven, CT).14
Blots were washed in
0.1% SDS/0.1x SSC three times at room temperature and then once at
50°C before being subjected to phosphorimage analysis (Molecular
Dynamics, Sunnyvale, CA). The blots were stripped and hybridized with a
28S rRNA cDNA probe.15
Hybridization signals were
normalized against 28S rRNA.
Flow Cytometry
Cells were grown in DMEM/F12 + 10% FBS (RPE340 cells) and EMEM
+ 10% FBS (WI38 cells) for 3 days in control conditions (20% oxygen).
At 80% to 90% confluence, half of the flasks were transferred to
hyperoxia (40% oxygen) for 24 hours. Cells were rinsed twice with
Hanks balanced salt solution (HBSS) and treated with 10 µM of
2',7'-dichlorodihydrofluorescein diacetate (H2DCFDA; Molecular Probes,
Eugene, OR) for 30 minutes. Cells were then trypsinized and resuspended
in 1% paraformaldehyde/HBSS, and fluorescence was measured with a
FACScan (Becton Dickinson, San Jose, CA).16
Statistical Analysis
Statistical significance of data was determined using the
two-tailed Students t-test. P < 0.05 was
considered significant.
 |
Results
|
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Mean TRF Length of RPE340 Cells and WI38 Fibroblasts Grown in 20%
and 40% O2
Figure 1A
is a representative Southern blot used to calculate the mean TRF length
for RPE340 and WI38 cells, whereas Figure 1B graphically depicts the
decrease in mean TRF with increasing PDL obtained from the Southern
blot analysis of RPE340 cells in Figure 1A
. Figure 2
summarizes three independent experiments showing the decrease in mean
TRF length after hyperoxia treatment. The mean TRF length of control
treated cells (20% O2) decreased gradually to a
minimum length of 4.9 kbp in RPE340 cells, whereas WI38 cells showed
shortening of the mean TRF length to 5.2 kbp. The mean TRF length
shortening by RPE340 cells (41 bp per PDL) was accelerated by
hyperoxia, an effect that was greater in cells with an old (128 bp/PDL)
than a young starting PDL (54 bp/PDL). The mean TRF shortening in WI38
cells grown in control (20% O2) was 112 bp per
PDL, which was accelerated by hyperoxia treatment. This acceleration
was also greater in old (255 bp/PDL) than young (139 bp/PDL) WI38
cells.

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Figure 1. The decrease in mean TRF length by hyperoxic treatment. (A)
A representative Southern blot using an alkaline phosphatase-labeled
(TTAGGG)4 oligonucleotide probe. Molecular weight
markers are indicated on the left. (B) Graph of
mean TRF length versus PDL obtained from the Southern blot analysis of
RPE340 cells depicted in (A): ( ), control (20%
O2); (), 40% O2.
|
|
S1 NucleaseSensitive Site (S1S) in the Mean TRF of Cells Grown in
20% and 40% O2
S1 nuclease digestion was performed to assess the amount of
single-stranded breaks in telomeric DNA induced by oxidative stress. In
control 20% O2, the number of S1 nuclease
sensitive sites (S1S) in the mean TRF length increased gradually with
PDL up to 2.6-fold of the starting PDL in RPE340 (Figs. 3A
and 4A)
and 9.9-fold in WI38 cells (Figs. 3B
and 4B)
. In 40%
O2, S1S increased rapidly with PDL up to 6.8-fold
in RPE340 cells and up to 27.0-fold in WI38 cells compared with the
initial S1S frequency of cells grown in control 20%
O2. The S1S accumulation in RPE340 cells after
hyperoxia was dependent on the starting PDL of the cell, with an
average increase in S1S of 2.7, 8.5, and 77.9/Mbp DNA/PDL for starting
PDL 36, 43, and 49, respectively.

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Figure 3. Southern blot of TRF after digestion with S1 nuclease.
HinfI- and RsaI-digested DNA was
subjected to incubation with or without S1 nuclease (0.1 U/µg DNA).
RPE340 cells (A) and WI38 cells (B) after
treatment with control (20% O2) and 40%
O2. Molecular weight markers are indicated on the
left.
|
|
ROI Production and HO-1 mRNA Expression by Hyperoxia in Young and
Old PDL Cells
The accelerated reduction in mean TRF shortening with
hyperoxia by cells with older starting PDL prompted us to measure the
degree of oxidative stress on cells with several different starting
PDLs grown in hyperoxia. The development of ROI production in RPE340
cells grown in 40% O2 was assessed by the
development of fluorescence from the reaction of
2',7'-dichlorodihydrofluorescein diacetate with
H2O2. After 24 hours of
incubation, hyperoxia increased the fluorescence 50% in young PDL
RPE340 cells compared with young cells grown in the 20%
O2 control (P < 0.0005). The
fluorescence in old PDL RPE340 cells treated with hyperoxia increased
40% over old PDL cells in the 20% O2 control
(P < 0.001). Hyperoxia also increased the fluorescence
of young WI38 cells 80% over young cells grown in 20%
O2 (P < 0.005) and increased
30% in old WI38 cells compared with old PDL cells grown in 20%
O2 (P < 0.01). The replicative
age of the cell was a factor in determining the degree of fluorescence.
In 20% O2, the fluorescence in old PDL RPE340
cells was 230% higher than young cells (P < 0.0001;
Fig. 5A
). Likewise, old PDL WI38 cells showed a 50% increase in fluorescence
compared with young cells (P < 0.0005) grown in the
control 20% O2 (Fig. 5B)
.
The induction of HO-1 mRNA was used as a second marker of oxidative
stress induced by hyperoxia treatment.17
18
Young RPE340
cells grown in 40% O2 had a 40% increased
steady state HO-1 mRNA expression over young RPE340 cells grown in 20%
O2 (P < 0.05). Similarly, HO-1
mRNA in old PDL RPE 340 cells was upregulated 30% in 40%
O2 compared with old PDL RPE340 cells grown in
the control 20% O2 (P < 0.05).
The expression of HO-1 mRNA was approximately 200% higher in old than
young PDL RPE340 cells grown in 20% O2
(P < 0.01, Figs. 6A
6C
). In WI38 cells, HO-1 mRNA increased 70% in young cells with hyperoxia
treatment (P < 0.05), but did not change in old cells
(P = 0.49). In 20% O2, the
expression of HO-1 mRNA by old WI38 cells was increased 210% over
young cells (P < 0.05, Figs. 6B
6D
).
 |
Discussion
|
|---|
These data support our hypothesis that chronic hyperoxia induces
oxidative stressrelated, single-stranded breaks in telomeric DNA in
RPE cells in vitro. We demonstrate also that cells with longer
replicative life spans, which were more susceptible to oxidative
stress, showed increased levels of single-stranded telomeric breaks.
This observation suggests, but does not prove, that the accumulation of
DNA damage in older cells was a result of oxidative stress.
Von Zglinicki et al.9
10
11
in a series of publications
showed that hyperoxia dramatically shortened the mean TRF length in
human WI38 fibroblasts by inducing single-stranded breaks. This effect
depended on culture age, duration of hyperoxia, and slow repair of
single-stranded breaks in telomeric DNA compared with other regions of
DNA. Chen et al.19
showed that oxygen generated
8-oxoguanine in human fibroblasts in vitro. The ability of hyperoxia to
damage DNA may be related to site-specific Fenton reactions or the
production of OH radicals from
H2O2 catalyzed by DNA-bound
Fe2+. Henle et al.20
recently
identified the G-rich DNA sequences of telomeric repeats as especially
sensitive sites for
Fe2+/H2O2-mediated
DNA oxidation. Although this study demonstrated the vulnerability in a
human telomere insert, these results should be generalizable to any
G-rich DNA fragment.
Compared with RPE340 cells, the increase in single-stranded
breaks in WI38 cells was dramatically accelerated after hyperoxia
treatment. We chose 40% oxygen incubation because in our previous
work, this concentration provided the highest oxygen exposure without
inducing cellular toxicity to RPE340 or WI38 cells.8
Presumably, the difference in single-stranded telomeric breaks between
the two cell types is due to different antioxidant capabilities, which
predispose WI38 cells to oxidative damage.21
22
The basal
ROI level was higher in WI38 than RPE340 cells (data not shown), which
suggests a relatively decreased antioxidant capacity in WI38 cells. It
is possible that small increases in ROI production from hyperoxic
treatment surpassed a critical level of ROI that promoted rapid
single-stranded break formation in telomeric DNA of WI38 cells.
Alternatively, the differences in medium composition for the two cell
lines could account for the different rates of telomeric DNA damage
from hyperoxia. In preliminary experiments, however, we determined that
RPE340 cells had no significant change in ROI production when grown in
DMEM/F12- or EMEM-based formulations.
A contributing factor to oxidative aging concerns the cells
antioxidant defense mechanisms. The RPE is well documented to contain a
significant antioxidant system. With aging, the RPEs defense system
appears to be reduced. For example, Liles et al.21
found
an age-related decrease in RPE catalase activity, whereas Frank et
al.23
observed an age-related decline in HO-1
immunoreactivity in the RPE with aging and in age-related macular
degeneration specimens. Furthermore, Samiec et
al.24
noted that reduced glutathione content with age
plays an essential role in susceptibility to oxidative damage to the
RPE. Thus, it is possible that aged RPE cells in vivo have a decreased
antioxidant defense that would promote accumulation of oxidative damage
to DNA.
Our data highlight how oxidative stress can induce significant
DNA damage. Although telomeres appear to be particularly sensitive to
oxidative damage and served as a useful marker for our work, the
important targets for oxidative damage are not yet known. For example,
Barreau et al.25
showed that mitochondrial DNA 4977
deletion increased significantly with aging in the RPE in vivo and
speculated that oxidative stress was a likely etiology. Therefore, a
systematic examination of DNA damage and their repair mechanisms from
aging eyes for a variety of DNA damage like single-stranded breaks or
mutational deletions would likely provide insights into oxidative aging
of the RPE.
 |
Footnotes
|
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Supported by National Institutes of Health Grants EY00344 (JTH) and EY06473 (LMH), UCD Health System Awards (JTH), Manpower Award (JTH), an unrestricted RPB grant from Research to Prevent Blindness to the Department of Ophthalmology and Nippon Eye Bank Association (SH).
Submitted for publication February 9, 2001; accepted April 13, 2001.
Commercial relationships policy: N.
The publication costs of this article were defrayed in part by page charge payment. This article must therefore be marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C.
1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Corresponding author: James T. Handa, Wilmer Eye Institute, 3110 Jefferson Building, 600 N. Wolfe Street, Baltimore, MD 21287. jthanda{at}jhmi.edu
 |
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