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Author Notes:

To whom correspondence should be addressed at Department of Medicine, Emory University, 205 Whitehead Research Center, Atlanta, GA 30322. Fax: (404) 712-2974. E-mail: dpjones@emory.edu.

Subject:

Research Funding:

National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (ES011195, ES009047).

Keywords:

  • actin
  • compartmental redox regulation
  • environmental toxicant
  • NF-κB
  • nuclear redox state
  • thiol/disulfide.

Increased Nuclear Thioredoxin-1 Potentiates Cadmium-Induced Cytotoxicity

Tools:

Journal Title:

Toxicological Sciences

Volume:

Volume 131, Number 1

Publisher:

, Pages 84-94

Type of Work:

Article | Post-print: After Peer Review

Abstract:

Cadmium (Cd) is a widely dispersed environmental agent that causes oxidative toxicity through mechanisms that are sensitive to thioredoxin-1 (Trx1). Trx1 is a cytoplasmic protein that translocates to nuclei during oxidative stress. Recent research shows that interaction of Trx1 with actin plays a critical role in cell survival and that increased nuclear Trx-1 potentiates proinflammatory signaling and death in cell and mouse models. These observations indicate that oxidative toxicity caused by low-dose Cd could involve disruption of actin-Trx1 interaction, nuclear Trx1 translocation, and potentiation of proinflammatory cell death mechanisms. In this study, we investigated the role of nuclei-localized Trx1 in Cd-induced inflammation and cytotoxicity using in vitro and in vivo models. The results show that Cd stimulated nuclear translocation of Trx1 and p65 of NF-κB. Elevation of Trx1 in nuclei in in vitro cells and kidney of transgenic mice potentiated Cd-stimulated NF-κB activation and cell death. Cd-stimulated Trx1 nuclear translocation and NF-κB activation were inhibited by cytochalasin D, an inhibitor of actin polymerization, suggesting that actin regulates Trx1 nuclear translocation and NF-κB activation by Cd. A nuclear-targeted dominant negative form of Trx1 blocked Cd-stimulated NF-κB activation and decreased cell death. Addition of zinc, known to antagonize Cd toxicity by increasing metallothionein, had no effect on Cd-stimulated nuclear translocation of Trx1 and NF-κB activation. Taken together, the results show that nuclear translocation and accumulation of redox-active Trx1 in nuclei play an important role in Cd-induced inflammation and cell death.

Copyright information:

© The Author 2012. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society of Toxicology. All rights reserved.

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