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Effects of cadmium on osteoblast cell line: Exportin 1 accumulation, p-JNK activation, DNA damage and cell apoptosis

Ling Ou, Haixia Wang, Zhidi Wu, Panpan Wang, Li Yang, Xiaoyun Li, Kehuan Sun, Xiaofeng Zhu, Ronghua Zhang

2020Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety40 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Cadmium is an environmental metal pollutant that has been a focus of research in recent years, which is reported to cause bone disease; however, its skeletal toxicity and the mechanism involved are not yet fully known. Therefore, this study used MC3T3-E1 subclone 14 cells to determine the mechanism of cadmium toxicity on bone. Cadmium chloride (Cd) significantly reduced cell viability in a concentration-dependent manner. Exposure to Cd inhibited osteoblast-related proteins (Runx2, Col-1, STC2) and decreased alkaline phosphatase (ALP) activity. Cd caused Exportin-1 accumulation and induced DNA damage. Cd significantly down-regulated caspase 9 and induced cleaved-PARP, cleaved-caspase 3 protein level. Treatment with JNK inhibitor, SP600125, suppressed cadmium-induced elevation in the ratio of phosphorylation of JNK to JNK. Inhibition of caspase with pan-caspase inhibitor, Z-VAD-FMK, prevented MC3T3-E1 subclone 14 cells from cadmium-induced reduction of Runx2, STC2, caspase 9, and accumulation of cleaved PARP and cleaved caspase 3. Cd-induced cell survival enhanced by SP600125 but rescued by Z-VAD-FMK or KPT-335. These results suggest that cadmium cytotoxicity on bone involved exportin 1 accumulation, phosphorylation of JNK, induction of DNA damage and pro-apoptosis, which was induced by activation of caspase-dependent pathways.

Topics & Concepts

ApoptosisViability assayDNA damagePhosphorylationCadmium chlorideCaspase 3Poly ADP ribose polymeraseChemistryOsteoblastMolecular biologyCadmiumProgrammed cell deathAlkaline phosphataseCell biologyCaspaseToxicityBiologyBiochemistryDNAEnzymeIn vitroPolymeraseOrganic chemistryHeavy Metal Exposure and ToxicityTrace Elements in HealthBone Metabolism and Diseases