Graduation date: 2008
Glutathione (GSH) is the predominant low molecular weight thiol antioxidant
in liver tissue. GSH plays an important role in maintaining the intracellular thiol redox
ratio as well as detoxification of electrophiles and xenobiotics. Aging leads to a significant decline (35%; P ≤ 0.05) in hepatocellular GSH levels. Using young (2-4
months corresponding to an adolescent human) and old (24-28 months corresponding
to a 60-75 year old person) male Fischer 344 rats, we determined that the age-related
loss of GSH levels were due to lower activity (53 + 6%; P ≤ 0.05) and levels of the
rate-limiting enzyme, γ-glutamate cysteine ligase (GCL). GCL is composed of a
catalytic subunit (GCLC) and also a modulatory subunit (GCLM) that affects the KM
of its substrate. Since GCLC levels are regulated by transcription, we sought to
elucidate its precise transcriptional mechanism and whether aging alters the
transcriptome of the enzyme subunit.
A cis-acting DNA sequence called the antioxidant response element (ARE) has
been previously implicated in the transcriptional regulation of Phase II enzymes, including GCLC and GCLM. Computer-based analysis of the promoter region of Gclc revealed the presence of three putative AREs and a single cis element (ARE-like) containing the core but not the flanking nucleotides of the ARE. Results from
experiments where H4IIE rat hepatoma cells were transfected with luciferase reporter
constructs containing individual Gclc ARE elements revealed that only the ARE
element 3.9 kb upstream of the transcriptional start site (ARE3) possessed basal transcriptional activity. Electromobility shift assay (EMSA) and chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) experiments on liver tissue and primary hepatocytes in culture showed that NF-E2-related factor 2 (Nrf2) was the predominant transcription
factor bound to ARE3 and was partnered with small maf proteins, c-Jun, c-Fos and the
histone acetyltransferase CREB-Binding Protein (CBP).
In aging, nuclear steady-state levels of Nrf2 showed a profound 51 + 7% (P ≤ 0.0001) decline leading to lower Nrf2-ARE3 binding (40%) and transcriptional
activity (70 + 10%; P ≤ 0.05), consistent with the loss in GCLC levels. Concomitantly,
the transcriptional repressor Bach1 was enriched at the ARE3 site and was
accompanied by a loss of CBP. These results show that a negative remodeling of the
active Gclc transcriptional complex occurs in the liver of old rats. Furthermore, Nrf2
was detected at the ARE-like site, which was not transcriptionally active in
hepatocytes from young rats. Thus, a promoter switching mechanism may occur with
age.
In previously published reports, we demonstrated that administration of the
dithiol compound R-alpha-lipoic acid (LA; 40 mg/kg body weight; intraperitoneal
injection) to old rats reversed the age-related decline in hepatic glutathione levels. LA
admininstration both to old rats and to hepatocytes in primary cell culture (100 μM)
replenished nuclear Nrf2 levels lost during aging. Additionally, LA increased Nrf2
enrichment and activity of both the ARE3 and ARE-like promoters albeit, to a greater
extent at the ARE-like promoter (60 + 10%; P ≤ 0.05). This was accompanied by
reversal of the age-related decline in GCLC expression, protein levels and GCL
activity. Thus, LA maintains hepatic GSH status during aging by permitting normal
ARE-mediated GCLC expression, suggesting that it would be a good therapeutic agent
to restore GSH-dependent detoxification systems during aging.