posted on 2022-03-21, 19:09authored byYi-Hua Jan, Diane E. Heck, Yunqi An, Debra L. Laskin, Jeffrey D. Laskin
Cytotoxic blistering agents such
as sulfur mustard and nitrogen
mustard (HN2) were synthesized for chemical warfare. Toxicity is due
to reactive chloroethyl side chains that modify and damage cellular
macromolecules including DNA and proteins. In response to DNA damage,
cells initiate a DNA damage response directed at the recruitment and
activation of repair-related proteins. A central mediator of the DNA
damage response is p53, a protein that plays a critical role in regulating
DNA repair. We found that HN2 causes cytosolic and nuclear accumulation
of p53 in HaCaT keratinocytes; HN2 also induced post-translational
modifications on p53 including S15 phosphorylation and K382 acetylation,
which enhance p53 stability, promote DNA repair, and mediate cellular
metabolic responses to stress. HN2 also cross-linked p53, forming
dimers and high-molecular-weight protein complexes in the cells. Cross-linked
multimers were also modified by K48-linked ubiquitination indicating
that they are targets for proteasome degradation. HN2-induced modifications
transiently suppressed the transcriptional activity of p53. Using
recombinant human p53, HN2 alkylation was found to be concentration-
and redox status-dependent. Dithiothreitol-reduced protein was more
efficiently cross-linked indicating that p53 cysteine residues play
a key role in protein modification. LC-MS/MS analysis revealed that
HN2 directly alkylated p53 at C124, C135, C141, C176, C182, C275,
C277, H115, H178, K132, and K139, forming both monoadducts and cross-links.
The formation of intermolecular complexes was a consequence of HN2
cross-linked cysteine residues between two molecules of p53. Together,
these data demonstrate that p53 is a molecular target for mustard
vesicants. Modification of p53 likely mediates cellular responses
to HN2 including DNA repair and cell survival contributing to vesicant-induced
cytotoxicity.