Abstract

Extracellular superoxide dismutase (SOD3), which catalyzes the dismutation of superoxide anions to hydrogen peroxide at the cell membranes, regulates the cellular growth in a dose-dependent manner. This enzyme induces primary cell proliferation and immortalization at low expression levels whereas it activates cancer barrier signaling through the p53-p21 pathway at high expression levels, causing growth arrest, senescence, and apoptosis. Because previous reports suggested that the SOD3–induced reduction in the rates of cellular growth and migration also occurred in the absence of functional p53 signaling, in the current study we investigated the SOD3-induced growth-suppressive mechanisms in anaplastic thyroid cancer cells. Based on our data, the robust over-expression of SOD3 increased the level of phosphorylation of the EGFR, ERBB2, RYK, ALK, FLT3, and EPHA10 receptor tyrosine kinases with the consequent downstream activation of the SRC, FYN, YES, HCK, and LYN kinases. However, pull-down experiments focusing on the small GTPase RAS, RAC, CDC42, and RHO revealed a reduced level of growth and migration signal transduction, such as the lack of stimulation of the mitogen pathway, in the SOD3 over-expressing cells, which was confirmed by MEK1/2 and ERK1/2 Western blotting analysis. Interestingly, the mRNA expression analyses indicated that SOD3 regulated the expression of guanine nucleotide-exchange factors (RHO GEF16, RAL GEF RGL1), GTPase-activating proteins (ARFGAP ADAP2, RAS GAP RASAL1, RGS4), and a Rho guanine nucleotide-disassociation inhibitor (RHO GDI 2) in a dose dependent manner, thus controlling signaling through the small G protein GTPases. Therefore, our current data may suggest the occurrence of dose-dependent SOD3–driven control of the GTP loading of small G proteins indicating a novel growth regulatory mechanism of this enzyme.

Highlights

  • Cell membrane-bound extracellular superoxide dismutase (SOD3) is one of the three Superoxide dismutases (SODs) isoenzymes that catalyze the dismutation of superoxide radical (O2.-) to hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) [1]

  • Both O2.- and H2O2 are second messengers in cell signaling [2,3] suggesting that the cellular effects of SOD3 are mediated by the local reduction of the O2.- concentration and the simultaneous increase of the H2O2 concentration affecting the activation of the cell membrane-bound receptor tyrosine kinases (RTK), with a consequent impact on downstream growth and migration signaling [4,5,6]

  • We previously showed that robust SOD3 over-expression reduced the rate of cell proliferation by causing DNA damage, inducing the DNA-damage response, and activating the downstream p53-p21 signal transduction pathway of TPC1 papillary thyroid cancer cells, which have an intact growth-arrest signaling pathway

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Summary

Introduction

Cell membrane-bound extracellular superoxide dismutase (SOD3) is one of the three SOD isoenzymes that catalyze the dismutation of superoxide radical (O2.-) to hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) [1] Both O2.- and H2O2 are second messengers in cell signaling [2,3] suggesting that the cellular effects of SOD3 are mediated by the local reduction of the O2.- concentration and the simultaneous increase of the H2O2 concentration affecting the activation of the cell membrane-bound receptor tyrosine kinases (RTK), with a consequent impact on downstream growth and migration signaling [4,5,6]. Activation of the p53-p21 signal transduction pathway is likely to play a major role in growth limitation, high-dose SOD3–inhibited proliferation was observed in anaplastic thyroid cancer cells lacking functional p53 [5], indicating the existence of additional growth regulatory mechanisms

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