(The FASEB Journal. 2000;14:955-967.)
© 2000 FASEB
Oxidative DNA damage precedes DNA fragmentation after experimental stroke in rat brain
JIANKUN CUI*,
ERIC H. HOLMES
,
THOMAS G. GREENE
and
PHILIP K. LIU*,
1
* Department of Neurosurgery,
Department of Medicine Cardiovascular Program, and Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas 77030, USA; and
Northwest Hospital, Pacific Northwest Cancer Foundation, Seattle, Washington 98125, USA
1Correspondence: Department of Neurosurgery, Baylor College of Medicine, Suite 944, 6560 Fannin, Houston, TX 77030, USA. E-mail: philipl{at}bcm.tmc.edu
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ABSTRACT
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Experimental stroke using a focal cerebral ischemia and
reperfusion (FCIR) model was induced in male Long-Evans rats by a
bilateral occlusion of both common carotid arteries and the right
middle cerebral artery for 3090 min, followed by various periods of
reperfusion. Oxidative DNA lesions in the ipsilateral cortex were
demonstrated using Escherichia coli formamidopyrimidine
DNA N-glycosylase (Fpg protein)-sensitive sites (FPGSS), as labeled
in situ using digoxigenin-dUTP and detected using
antibodies against digoxigenin. Because Fpg protein removes
8-hydroxy-2'-deoxyguanine (oh8dG) and other lesions in DNA, FPGSS
measure oxidative DNA damage. The number of FPGSS-positive cells in the
cortex from the sham-operated control group was 3 ± 3 (mean ± SD per mm2). In animals that received 90 min
occlusion and 15 min of reperfusion (FCIR 90/15), FPGSS-positive cells
were significantly increased by 200-fold. Oxidative DNA damage was
confirmed by using monoclonal antibodies against 8-hydroxy-guanosine
(oh8G) and oh8dG. A pretreatment of RNase A (100 µg/ml) to the tissue
reduced, but did not abolish, the oh8dG signal. The number of animals
with positive FPGSS or oh8dG was significantly (P<0.01)
higher in the FCIR group than in the sham-operated control group. We
detected few FPGSS of oh8dG-positive cells in the animals treated with
FCIR of 90/60. No terminal UTP nicked-end labeling (TUNEL)-positive
cells, as a detection of cell death, were detected at this early
reperfusion time. Our data suggest that early oxidative DNA lesions
elicited by experimental stroke could be repaired. Therefore, the
oxidative DNA lesions observed in the nuclear and mitochondrial DNA of
the brain are different from the DNA fragmentation detected using
TUNEL.Cui, J., Holmes, E. H., Greene, T. G., Liu, P. K. Oxidative DNA damage precedes DNA fragmentation after experimental
stroke in rat brain.
Key Words: hydroxyl radicals oxidative DNA damage neurotoxicity reactive oxygen species stroke
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INTRODUCTION
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EXPERIMENTAL STROKE MODELS have implicated several
initiators in the cascade of events that lead to functional or
structural brain damage (1)
. These initiators include
decreased levels of intracellular ATP, low pH, and increased levels of
extracellular glutamate, intracellular calcium ions, proteases, and/or
free radicals. Free radicals are known to damage proteins, lipids, and
nucleic acids. The conventional measurement of free radicals has shown
that free radicals are produced within 30 min of focal ischemia
(2)
and that they are mostly produced in the penumbral
region (3)
. Nitric oxide, a free radical of oxygen,
appears to increase during focal ischemia (4
5
6)
. Reactive
nitric oxide may combine with superoxide ion to form peroxynitrite,
which generates 3-nitrotyrosine in protein. Measurements of
3-nitrotyrosine show an equal distribution of peroxynitrite within the
ischemic area (7)
. Peroxynitrite is also known to cause
oxidative damage nucleic acids (oh8G, oh8dG, and DNA strand breaks)
either directly or indirectly (8
9
10
11)
.
Two mechanisms have been proposed to account for the damage to nucleic
acids observed after cerebral ischemia and reperfusion. The first is
mediated by nonspecific nucleases (12
13
14)
. The damage,
which is often referred to as DNA fragmentation resulting in cell
death, is found in the nuclear DNA and is not reversible
(15)
. DNA fragmentation can be activated by proteases
(12
, 13)
or by neuronal nitric oxide synthase (11
, 16
17
18
19)
and becomes apparent at least a few hours to a few days
after cerebral ischemia, depending on the duration of ischemia. The
second type is oxidative DNA damage that occurs early after ischemia
(within the first 30 min of reperfusion) (9
10
11)
. In
addition to DNA strand breaks (11
, 15)
, this type of DNA
damage consists of base modifications (9
, 10)
and DNA
lacking a base (11)
. Evidence suggests that reactive
oxygen species, most likely nitric oxide, superoxide ions, and hydroxyl
radicals (8)
, mediate this second type of nucleic acid
damage, which is often referred to as oxidative DNA damage
(8
9
10
11
, 20)
. These DNA lesions are similar to
those found after ionizing radiation (8)
and are generally
reversible by DNA repair mechanisms (21)
, with the
exception of those in RNA (10
, 22)
. On the other hand,
oxidative DNA lesions in the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) of the human
brain accumulate with age (23)
. It is not clear how the
brain repairs oxidative DNA lesions in both the mitochondria and
nuclei, although evidence suggests DNA repair processes exist in
general population (21
, 24
25
26
27)
.
We have detected oh8G (and its deoxy form, oh8dG), 8-hydroxyadenine,
5-hydroxycytosine, and 2,6-diamino-4-hydroxy-5-formamidopyrimidine
(FapyGua) in purified DNA from C57BL6 mouse brains that have been
subjected to transient forebrain ischemia (9
, 10)
. One of
these lesions, oh8G/oh8dG, is widely accepted as an indicator of DNA
damage generated by oxidative stress (28)
. Although
antibodies to oh8G/oh8dG are available for immunohistochemistry, these
antibodies react strongly to lesions in RNA and DNA (10
, 29
, 30)
. An assay to detect DNA lesions that are sensitive to
specific repair enzyme in vitro has been used by many
laboratories (20
, 26
27
28)
, including ours
(9
10
11)
. This assay, however, did not provide the location
of cell injury. In this article, we describe a novel assay that could
detect oxidative DNA lesions based on their sensitivity to Fpg protein
in situ and bypassed extensive DNA purification. Because
oh8dG and FapyGua are substrates for E. coli Fpg protein
(31)
, we used this assay to detect Fpg protein-sensitive
sites (FPGSS) after experimental stroke in a focal cerebral ischemia
and reperfusion (FCIR) model.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS
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Stroke model
Anesthesia was induced with pentobarbital sodium (Nembutal, 80
mg/kg i.p.) 10 min before surgery. The right middle cerebral artery and
both common carotid arteries (the focal cerebral ischemia model) of
male Long-Evans rats (Harlan, Indianapolis, Minn., weighing 200225 g)
were occluded for 3090 min to simulate stroke (32
, 33)
.
The occlusion was then released to allow reperfusion of the affected
area. Housing and anesthesia concurred with guidelines established by
the institutional animal welfare committee in accordance with the NIH
Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals, USDA Regulations, and
with the American Veterinary Medical Association Panel on Euthanasia
guidelines. Body temperature was monitored and maintained at 37 ±
0.5°C; postoperative animal care was as described previously
(34
, 35)
. All animals were kept in well-ventilated
incubators at 24 ± 0.5°C during the reperfusion period.
Animals, under general anesthesia, were killed as described previously
(10
, 32
33
34
35)
at the end of the reperfusion period. For
immunohistochemical analyses, the animals were perfused with 200 ml
each of saline followed by two fixatives in sequence (fixative A:
0.8 g NaOH, 8 g paraformaldehyde, and 1.64 g sodium
acetate in 200 ml distilled H2O, adjusted with
50% glacial acetic acid to pH = 6.5; fixative B: 1.4 g NaOH,
14 g paraformaldehyde, and 13.35 g borax, adjusted to pH =
9.5 with 50% HCl) and cryoprotected in 20% sucrose in fixative B
overnight at 4°C as described previously (10
, 34
, 35)
.
Brain slices were prepared within 24 h and stored at -20°C for
no longer than 4 wk before analysis.
Detection of oxidative DNA lesions in situ
Oxidative DNA lesions caused by peroxynitrite or hydroxyl
radicals include base modifications and DNA strand breaks
(single-strand breaks [SSB] and three types of double-strand breaks
[DSB] including those with protruding 5' ends [5'DBS], protruding
3' ends and with blunt ends). In vitro, some base
modifications such as oh8G/oh8dG are known to be the substrate of
E. coli Fpg protein (31)
, which in turn
generates SSB. The 3'-PO4 termini of SSB
generated by Fpg protein can be treated with phosphomonoesterase or
exonuclease III to remove the 3'PO4 ends and
creating 3'OH ends (36)
, then labeled using DNA
polymerase-I with dNTP plus digoxigenin-dUTP (dig-dUTP). The
specificity of this assay depends on the fact that DNA polymerase-I,
which is template dependent, incorporates dNTP (with dig-dUTP that
replaces TTP) on the 3'OH termini of the SSB or 5'DSB but not on the
other two forms of DSB. The presence of dig-dUTP on the newly
synthesized strand is then detected using FITC conjugates of the
antibody against digoxigenin. Because this assay locates those sites
that have been excised by E. coli Fpg protein, we refer to
these sites of oxidative injury as Fpg protein-sensitive sites (FPGSS)
(9
, 10
, 21)
.
Fpg protein was purified as described previously (9
, 10)
and contained no detectable amount of nonspecific nucleases. Coronal
sections of 28 animal brains were obtained 1.84.8 mm posterior to the
bregma. At least four 15-micron tissue sections from each animal were
assayed for FPGSS in each experiment. The tissue sections were treated
with proteinase K (0.02 mg/ml for 30 min at 37°C). After they were
washed extensively, the samples were dehydrated using 70, 95, and 100%
ethanol in series (each for 3 min at room temperature), followed by
vacuum drying. Before adding Fpg protein, the samples were rehydrated
in the incubation buffer (10 mM Tris HCl, pH 7.4, 50 mM KCl). The
tissue sections were divided into two groups: one received Fpg protein
(1 µg in each of three 20-min intervals, or a total of 3 µg in
1 h incubation) in the incubation buffer (10 mM Tris HCl, pH 7.4,
50 mM KCl), and the other received buffer only. In each detection,
animals that underwent the same surgical treatment but received no FCI
were used as controls. In addition, a sample from each animal was
incubated in buffer to detect pre-existing 3'OH termini in SSB and
5'DSB. Both groups were incubated at 37°C for 1 h. After
extensive washes in 10 mM Tris HCl (pH 7.4), the tissue sections were
treated with endonuclease-free Kornberg DNA polymerase I (10 U per
section, Boehringer Mannheim, Indianapolis, Ind.) with dNTP minus dTTP
(each at 200 µM) plus dig-dUTP (20 µM), DTT (1 mM), 50 mM Tris HCl
(pH 7.8), and 2 mM MgCl2 for 1 h at 37°C.
Preparation of hybridoma line 8G-14
To confirm that the ipsilateral FCI cortex contained oxidative
DNA lesions, we developed hybridoma that generated the antibody against
oh8G/oh8dG lesions. Molecular biology-grade chemicals, including
periodate oxidized adenosine, guanosine, cytosine, and uracil, were
obtained from Sigma (St. Louis, Mo.). The antigen oh8G (oh8dG or
oh8-adenosine) was prepared as described previously (37
, 38)
. A conjugate of oh8G and bovine serum albumin (BSA) was
prepared in the presence of sodium acetate at pH 7.9 after treatment
with periodate at pH 4.6 (39
, 40)
. The immunoglobulin M
(IgM) antibody was obtained by immunizing mice with periodate-oxidized
oh8G/oh8dG coupled to keyhole limpet hemocyanin. The hybridoma cell
lines were prepared as described previously (28
, 40)
.
Cells were initially screened for positive reactivity with the oh8G-BSA
conjugate and for negative reactivity with both BSA and guanosine-BSA
conjugates. The antibody-producing hybridoma (8G-14) was one such
clone. The conjugate of oh8G-BSA or BSA was tested for its ability to
bind the antibody against oh8G/oh8dG using radioimmunoassay. A 96-well
plate was coated for 16 h with 50 µl each of different nucleoside-BSA
conjugates, initially at a concentration of 50 µg protein/ml, and
serially diluted 1:2. The BSA conjugates were prepared and diluted in a
buffer composed of 50 mM NaPO4 and 5 mM
MgCl2. The plates were blocked with 5% BSA in
PBS. The antibody-containing culture supernatant was incubated on the
plates overnight, followed by extensive washing with PBS containing
0.1% BSA. The plates were then incubated with 1:500 diluted rabbit
anti-mouse whole Ig (ICN, Costa Mesa, Calif.) for 1 h. The plates
were again extensively washed with PBS containing 0.1% BSA and
incubated with 125I-protein A (110,000 cpm per
well) for 1 h. The amount of 125I in each
well was determined by the addition of 200 µl of 1 N NaOH to each
well and incubating for 1 h at 37°C. At the end of this period,
an aliquot of 100 µl was counted in a gamma counter. The antibody
from the conditioned media was tested for its ability to bind
specifically with oh8G-BSA and not with BSA blank or BSA conjugates of
guanosine, oh8-adenosine, adenosine, cytosine, or uracil. The antibody
was later determined to be an IgM antibody.
Determination of oh8G/oh8dG using immunohistochemical methods
The presence of oh8G/oh8dG lesions in the prepared brain tissue
slices was determined as described previously using the free-floating
method (10)
. The primary antibody was murine IgM from
hybridoma 8G-14 (8G-14 IgM). The conditioned medium containing 8G-14
IgM was concentrated 20-fold using the centricon-50 and diluted 1:10
before use. The secondary antibody was a goat anti-mouse IgM-FITC
conjugate (Sigma). Photographs of the fluorescent image were obtained
as described previously (9
10
11)
. Two independent
experiments were performed. Brain specimens that showed a higher
fluorescent signal in the ipsilateral (FCI) cortex than in the
contralateral (non-FCI) cortex, and in which the fluorescent signal
could be abolished or significantly reduced by preadsorption of 8G-14
IgM with oh8G-BSA, were defined as oh8G/oh8dG-positive. The experiments
were repeated and confirmed using another antibody against oh8G/oh8dG
(QED Bioscience, Inc., Wellesley, Mass.) (8
, 28
, 38)
.
DNA fragmentation
To determine whether FPGSS could be detected as DNA
fragmentation, we used terminal UTP nicked-end labeling (TUNEL)
staining to detect all strand breaks, including the 3'OH termini of SSB
and all forms of DSB. TUNEL assay was used to detect DNA damage in
animals with 30 min, 60 min, or 24 h of reperfusion after 90 min
of FCI. Because 90 min of FCI produces necrosis within 24 h of
reperfusion (32
, 33)
, we also examined DNA fragmentation
in animals with 14 days of reperfusion after 30 min of FCI to avoid
interference from necrotic DNA fragmentation (1
, 41)
. The
incorporation of dig-dUTP to DNA was detected using antibody against
digoxigenin-FITC (Oncor, Gaithersburg, Md.). The fluorescent images
were digitally captured using a Cooled Color Digital Camera (the SPOT
camera, Diagnostic, Sterling Heights, Mich.) and statistically analyzed
(10
, 11)
.
Statistical analysis
All experiments described in this article were repeated at least
twice in tissue samples collected from a minimum of three animals at
each time point. Briefly, the fluorescent images were captured on Kodak
film (9
, 35)
, color prints were made, and the printed
images were scanned using a flatbed scanner (HP Picture Scan) into the
computer in digitized forms for analysis. In some experiments, the
fluorescent images were captured using a Cooled Color Digital Camera.
The intensity of green fluorescent signal was analyzed using Adobe
PhotoShop 5.0 (10
, 11)
. For FPGSS analysis, cells with at
least a threefold increase in the signal value over the background
(30±18) in the contralateral cortex using PhotoShop were defined as
FPGSS-positive cells. The mean density (±SD) of positive
cells in the right ipsilateral cortex of each animal (four brain
sections per animal, each separated by 50 µ) was obtained. Animals
with a density of
150 FPGSS-positive cells per
mm2 (excluding brain surface epithelial cells)
were defined as FPGSS-positive animals. If any animals were
FPGSS-positive without Fpg protein pretreatment, the animals were
defined as positive in non-FPGSS (SSB/5'DSB) and would not be analyzed
further.
For oh8G/oh8dG immunoreactivity, we defined animals as
oh8G/oh8dG-positive if their ipsilateral cortices showed at least
twofold or higher increase in fluorescent signal compared with the
contralateral cortex and if the fluorescent signal was abolished or
significantly reduced in the negative controls in the same FCIR tissue
treated with 8G-14 IgM antibody preadsorbed with antigen oh8G-BSA,
8G-14 IgM antibody deletion, and secondary anti-IgM-FITC deletion.
Cell densities of FPGSS-positive (or oh8dG-positive) were compared in
non-FCI and FCIR (90/15 only) animals using Students t
test. In addition to Students t test, we also adapted
Fishers exact test, an established method for genetic testing
(42)
. We graded animals as positive or negative for FPGSS
and/or oh8dG-immunoreactivity rather than using infarct volume
(32
, 33)
. The use of infarct volume would have introduced
variables for the following reasons. 1) Oxidative DNA damage
undergoes continual repair, and individual cells and animals may have
different rates of repair that could introduce variability if cellular
counts were used at the time when repair of DNA damage is detected.
2) The FCIR model induces edema in the affected cortex,
which may alter infarct volume independently of DNA damage, and we
could not obtain the correction factor for edema under microscope using
a 100x objective. 3) Because there was a gradation of
ischemia from the core of the affected cortex to its outermost
boundary, known as anoxic depolarization in the core and intra-ischemic
depolarizations in the penumbral regions and extrapenumbral cortical
regions (1
, 7)
. Because of the small number of expected
frequencies, we used Fishers exact test to compare the number of
FPGSS-, oh8G/oh8dG-, or TUNEL-positive animals in the control group
with the FCIR groups. The level for a statistical significance for all
tests was set at P < 0.05.
 |
RESULTS
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DNA damage and strand breaks in situ after FCI
Figure 1
shows that Fpg protein specifically excised oh8dG in DNA oligomer
(lanes 3, 4). Moreover, the fragments of oligomer with oh8dG after Fpg
protein digestion could not be extended by Klenow enzyme of E.
coli DNA polymerase-I (lanes 7, 8) but could be extended by two
different preparations of endonuclease-free Kornberg DNA polymerase-I
(lanes 5, 6, 9, 10). The fact that Kornberg DNA polymerase-I can extend
the fragment generated by Fpg protein indicates that the preparation of
Kornberg DNA polymerase-I contained phosphomonoesterase and could be
used to detect FPGSS in the brain tissue.

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Figure 1. The ability of E. coli DNA polymerase-I (Kornberg pol-I)
to extend synthesis of the 3'-end generated by E. coli
Fpg protein. A synthetic DNA sequence of c-fos gene
(5'-CATCATGGTCZTGGTTTGGGCA-3', where Z is the oh8dG) was
labeled on the 5' end using [ ]-32P-ATP
(21)
, then was hybridized to the complementary strand,
which C was opposite Z. The double-stranded DNA (7.5 x
106 cpm/pmol, 100 fmol) was treated with buffer (lanes 1,
2) or with Fpg protein (0.15 µg, lanes 310) in 37°C for 10 min,
followed by heating at 80°C for 10 min. All of the reaction products
were then incubated with dNTP (40 µM) (lanes 110) and additional
endonuclease-free DNA polymerase-I (2.5 U, two different preparations
of Kornberg enzyme [lanes 5, 6, 9, 10] or endonuclease-free Klenow
enzyme [lanes 7, 8]) at 37°C for 5 min. The reaction was stopped by
heating and then resolved in 10% sequencing PAGE gel to analyze
single-strand DNA.
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When brain sections from animals treated with 90 min of FCI were tested
for FPGSS by incubating with Fpg protein, followed by a treatment with
Kornberg DNA polymerase-I and labeling substrates, we observed no
incorporation of dig-dUTP in the contralateral left (non-FCI) cortex
(Fig. 2A
), as compared with the ipsilateral right (FCI) cortex (Fig. 2B
). Fpg protein or Kornberg DNA polymerase-I alone did not
increase the dig-dUTP signal in the brain sections of the control
animals (Fig. 3A or B
, respectively). Only in the non-FCI brain
tissue that was treated with DNase I (to make SSB bearing 3'-OH ends)
and with Kornberg DNA polymerase-I did we observe the dig-dUTP signal
in the nucleus (Fig. 3C
). This result confirmed that the
signal was from dig-dUTP on DNA and that the procedures themselves did
not create excessive strand breaks.

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Figure 2. FPGSS in the cortex after FCIR. FPGSS in the left (A)
and the right (B) cortices from a Long-Evans rat treated
with FCIR (90/15). FPGSS appear as the white fluorescent signal.
Bar = 20 µm.
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Figure 3. The incorporation of dig-dUTP by Kornberg DNA polymerase-I is dependent
on SSB bearing 3'-OH ends. The incorporation of dig-dUTP to 3'-OH
termini (white fluorescent signal) in the sham-operated control brains
(one of four is presented here) was tested using only Fpg protein
(A), Kornberg DNA polymerase-I (B), or
DNase I and then Kornberg DNA polymerase-I (C). The
fluorescent signal that can be observed in panels A and
B comes mostly from the background of the cytoplasm.
Similar results were noted in another set of experiments when Kornberg
enzyme was replaced with Klenow or terminal transferase (not shown).
Bar = 35 µm.
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Figure 4
shows an increase in the presence of cellular FPGSS in Fpg
protein-treated cortices from animals treated with FCIR (four
representative cortices from the 33 animals listed in Table 1
). We did not observe significant dig-dUTP incorporation in the nuclei
of the cortex from sham-operated animals (Fig. 4A
[no Fpg
protein] and Fig. 4E
[with Fpg protein]). The presence of
cytosolic green signals without Fpg protein appeared similar to the
background shown in Fig. 3A, B
and treatment with Fpg
Protein did not increase the signal (Fig. 4E
). In animals
with FCIR, we observed no significant incorporation of dig-dUTP without
Fpg protein pretreatment (Fig. 4B, C
), but we observed a
significant elevation of cellular FPGSS during the first 15 min of
reperfusion in Fpg protein-treated tissue (Fig. 4F
),
and the signal decreased within the next 45 min (Fig. 4H
).

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Figure 4. FPGSS in rat brain after FCI and reperfusion. Four representative
ipsilateral cortices from Table 2
show FPGSS in sham-operated animals
and animals treated with FCI (90 min) and reperfusion of various time
intervals. The tissue in the left panels (AD) was
treated with buffer and the Kornberg polymerase-I only; the tissue in
panels EH was treated with Fpg protein then the
Kornberg polymerase-I. The green fluorescent signal indicates the FPGSS
and is the strongest at 15 min of reperfusion (90/15) and at 90/30 min
of reperfusion. Perinuclear signals (asterisks) are shown in the 90/60
groups. At 30 and 60 min of reperfusion, some signal appears in tissue
without Fpg protein (non-FPGSS or SSB/5'DSB, arrows). Bar = 40
µm.
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The signal of FPGSS in the FCIR animals was located mostly in the
nucleus at 90/15 and 90/30 FCIR groups and in the perinuclear
(asterisks) regions at 90/60 FCIR group. We also noticed a trace of
dig-dUTP incorporation in tissue section without Fpg protein at 30 and
60 min of reperfusion (arrows, Fig. 4C, D
), suggesting the
presence of non-FPGSS signals at these time periods. The mean density
of FPGSS-positive cells (per mm2) in the non-FCI
cortex was 3 ± 3 (mean ± SD) compared
with 757 ± 58 in animals with FCIR of 90/15 (P
0.001,
t test). The density of FPGSS-positive cells in FCIR of
90/30 and 90/60 was not calculated because of the presence of non-FPGSS
signal (SSB/5'DSB). A total of 7 of 9 non-FCI control animals and 1 of
28 FCI animals were classified as FPGSS-negative animals (Table 1)
. The
remaining 27 FCI animals were either FPGSS-positive (n=20)
or positive with non-FPGSS signals (SSB/5'DSB, n=7) signals.
Three of four FCI animals with 120 min of reperfusion contained
positive non-FPGSS signals.
Detection of oxidative stress by the presence of oh8G/oh8dG after
FCI
To confirm that the presence of FPGSS did in fact indicate
oxidative DNA damage in the FCIR cortices, we measured oh8G/oh8dG
immunoreactivity in the right FCIR cortex. Two types of antibodies were
used: the newly developed 8G-14 IgM and a commercial IgG (10
, 28
, 38)
. Figure 5
shows the oh8G/oh8dG immunoreactivity (green fluorescent signal) in the
ipsilateral cortex after FCIR (90/15, n=3). No green signal
was observed in the right cortex of the control animal (data not
shown). The ipsilateral cortices from all of FCI animals (within 30 min
of reperfusion after 30, 60, or 90 min FCI) exhibited elevated
oh8G/oh8dG immunoreactivity (Table 2
). We observed an elevation in oh8G/oh8dG immunoreactivity in the right
(ipsilateral) cortex (Fig. 6A
), area II of the parietal cortex (Fig. 6B
),
caudate putamen, cingulum, and corpus callosum (Fig. 6C
) of
FCIR animals as compared with the non-FCI cortex (Fig. 6D
).
The green immunoreactivity of oh8G/oh8dG antibody complex was mostly
seen in the cytoplasm with trace amounts of staining in the nuclei
(arrows, Fig. 6A
). The three negative FCIR control animals,
which included 1) preadsorption of the IgM antibody with the
antigen of the oh8G-BSA conjugate (Fig. 6E
), 2)
no 8G-14 IgM antibody (Fig. 6F
), and 3) no
secondary antibody (not shown), reduced or abolished the green
fluorescent signal. Indeed, the 8G-14 IgM antibody bound only to the
oh8G-BSA conjugate (Fig. 7
), indicating the specificity of the IgM antibody. The weak fluorescent
signal seen in the nonischemic animals (arrow, Fig. 6D
)
suggests that a small amount of oh8G lesions existed during normal
metabolism (20
, 30)
.

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Figure 5. 8-OH-G antigen in the cortex after FCI-reperfusion. The 8G-14 IgM
antibody was used to demonstrate the presence of oxidative DNA lesions
after transient ischemia. The figure shows the right hemisphere
surrounding the lateral ventricle at low magnification. The green
fluorescence indicates the presence of the FITC-antibody-antigen
complex; the background was stained yellow by the fluorescent
antifade-mounting medium (Sigma, two particulates are present in the
image). The cortical samples are from one of three animals treated with
90 min of FCI and 15 min of reperfusion. A higher magnification is
shown in Fig. 6
. Bar = 100 µm.
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Figure 6. Immunoreactivity of oh8G/oh8dG is stronger in cytosol than in nuclei
after FCIR. A higher magnification of typical ipsilateral brain tissue
from each group of animals with 90/15 FCIR (AC, E, F)
or without FCIR (D) are shown: A, DF)
frontal cortex; B) parietal cortex; C)
corpus callosum. The smaller patch of green signal could be from
overlapping astrocytes. The IgM antibody in panels E, F
was either preadsorbed with the 8-OH-g-BSA conjugates (50 ng,
E) or deleted in the assay (F),
and they serve as the negative controls. The FITC signal was strong
enough that preadsorption did not completely eliminate the green FITC
signal in panel E. Arrows show signals in the cytoplasm
and perhaps nuclei such that the intensity of yellow antifade was
reduced. Bar = 10 µm.
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Figure 7. Specificity of 8G-14-antibody binding for the oh8G-BSA conjugate using
radioimmunoassay (see Materials and Methods). Four determinations in
two separate experiments were performed. The mean (means) and
SD (bars) at each dilution are shown.
|
|
Because the IgM antibody stained both oh8G in RNA and oh8dG in DNA,
cellular outlines were difficult to discern, making differentiation
between the neurons and astrocytes based on morphology generally not
possible under microscope. We therefore defined the image obtained from
non-FCI animals (Fig. 6D
) to represent background oh8G/oh8dG
immunoreactivity (oh8G/oh8dG-negative), which we then compared with the
images from the FCIR animals. As shown in Table 2
, we found a
significant increase (P
0.001) of the oh8G/oh8dG signal in
17 right ipsilateral cortices of the 19 FCIR animals that experienced
30, 60, or 90 min of FCI and
30 min of reperfusion. One of the 19
FCIR animals was oh8G/oh8dG-positive in both the right and left
cortices, and the other animal was oh8G/oh8dG-negative.
Treatments with DNase-free RNase A (25 µg/ml), which digested tRNA
(20 µg) but not DNA (1 µg) in test tubes (37°C, 1 h),
drastically reduced but did not abolish the fluorescent signal in the
brains that received 60 min of FCI (Fig. 8
). The density of oh8dG-positive cells at this time point was 853 ± 113 per mm2 and was not significantly
different from the density of FPGSS-positive cells. We also compared
oh8dG immunoreactivity using a previously established IgG antibody.
Almost all of the cells in the ischemic cortex from animals with 60/15
FCIR were positive for oh8dG immunoreactivity (Fig. 9
). In addition, we observed a positive oh8dG signal in cells (arrows,
Fig. 9
) that were non-neuronal origins (GFAP-positive, see below).
Figure 10
shows GFAP-positive cells (arrows) and GFAP-negative cells (asterisks)
exhibiting a trace of oh8dG-immunoreactivity in the right cortex of a
control animal and elevated oh8dG-immunoreactivity in the ipsilateral
cortex of an FCIR animal (90/01). The green signal expanded mostly in
neurons immediately after FCIR. The data suggested that both astrocytes
and neurons were vulnerable to DNA damage by hydroxyl radicals during
early reperfusion.

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Figure 8. The immunoreactivity of oh8dG (IgM-8G-14) remains visible after RNase
treatment. A typical image of the right cerebral cortices from one of
three animals underwent FCIR (60/0) and RNase A (25 µg/ml, 30 min at
room temperature, bottom panel) treatment before the addition of the
8G-14 IgM. The green fluorescent signal was visible in area surrounding
the nuclei.
|
|

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Figure 10. GFAP-positive and GFAP-negative cells contain oh8dG-immunoreactivity.
This figure shows the double-stain for GFAP- (top panels) and oh8dG-
(bottom panels) immunoreactivity. Arrows indicate the location of
GFAP-positive cells; asterisks indicate location of GFAP-negative
cells. A) sham-operated control; B) 90/01
of FCIR. Bar = 10 µm.
|
|
FCIR-induced DNA fragmentation
To test whether the DNA damage detected using our FPGSS
assay might include DNA fragmentation, TUNEL staining was used to
detect DNA strand breaks, including the 3'OH termini of SSB and all
forms of DSB (36)
. Tissue was analyzed at 60 min and at
24 h of reperfusion after 90 min of FCI and at 14 days of
reperfusion after 30 min of FCI (1
, 41)
. We did not
observe TUNEL-positive staining during the first 60 min of reperfusion
after 90 min of FCI (Table 3
). TUNEL-positive staining in brain tissue became apparent in four out
of four animals at 24 h of reperfusion after 90 min of FCI. In
animals treated with 30 min of FCI, TUNEL-positive brain tissue was
apparent beginning on the 2nd day and was significantly increased on
the 3rd and 4th days. The nuclei in the ischemic core became condensed
under hematoxylin-eosin staining (Fig. 11
and some of these cells showed TUNEL-positive staining (Fig. 11B
), suggesting positive TUNEL staining was a sign of
ischemic cell death (1)
. Most of the cells that were
TUNEL-positive were not GFAP-positive (Fig. 11B-D
).
 |
DISCUSSION
|
|---|
Excessive oxidative stress causes an elevation in hydroxyl
radicals in vulnerable populations of brain cells and may be a key
mechanism underlying a number of neurological disorders
(43
44
45)
. To understand the mechanism that repairs
oxidative DNA damage in the central nervous systems, we investigated
DNA damage and repair after transient cerebral ischemia. The work we
present here suggests that there is a temporal difference between
oxidative DNA damage measured using FPGSS and DNA fragmentation
measured using TUNEL, and that oxidative DNA damage in the
mitochondrial and nuclear DNA of astrocytes and neurons occurs
primarily during the first 15 min of reperfusion after cerebral focal
ischemia. SSBs bearing 3'-OH termini became apparent ~30 min after
reperfusion. Our results suggest that the DNA repair process was able
to remove the majority of the oxidative DNA damage by 60 min of
reperfusion (10)
. Although the DNA repair process reduced
oxidative DNA damage (21)
, neurons appear more prone to
programmed cell death after focal cerebral ischemia than did
astrocytes.
Experimental brain injury of the ischemia-reperfusion type, which
approximates the injury seen in most stroke patients, affects oxygen
supply and perturbs the energy metabolism of the brain (energy
failure). The sudden increase in blood supply during reperfusion, as
occurs after removal of a vessel block in thrombotic stroke, causes an
electron imbalance and results in an increase in oxygen free radicals
in brain cells (20
, 46)
. This oxidative stress and the
resultant increase in oxygen free radicals may cause various types of
RNA/DNA damage, such as strand breaks and base lesions, in addition to
causing damage to various proteins (nitrotyrosine) and lipids. Two
types of DNA injury induced by oxidative stress have been demonstrated
after cerebral ischemia-reperfusion. The first type, DNA fragmentation
(14)
, is the most commonly studied and is found during
cell death. Evidence for enzymes that repair DNA fragmentation during
cell death is lacking, and, therefore, this type of DNA injury is
believed to be irreversible once it starts (12
13
14
15)
. The
second type is oxidative DNA damage, which results from attacks on
nucleic acids by excess electrons and is often observed after cerebral
ischemia (9
10
11)
, or ionizing radiation (20
, 47)
. This type of damage could also be associated with changing
the expression of genes (9
, 10
, 48
49
50)
. Changing the
expression of genes may lead to the initiation of various neurological
diseases by mutations or cell death (51)
. In
vitro, at least 70 different types of oxidative damage in RNA and
DNA can be generated. Eight of these have been identified in the
ischemic brain (9
10
11
, 15)
. One of the eight identifiable
oxidative DNA lesions in the brain is oh8dG. Oxidative DNA damage in
the brain cannot be detected using DNA laddering in agarose gel
electrophoresis or using TUNEL staining. Although chromatographic
techniques or immunoreactivity can detect oxidative DNA damage, the
efficiency of the DNA repair mechanism has often led to conflicting
results using these techniques (14
, 20
, 24)
. A reversal of
oxidative DNA damage after cerebral ischemia and reperfusion in mice
reduces cell death (11)
. Under normal physiological
conditions, the repair of oxidative DNA damage is generally mediated by
DNA repair processes (24)
. The consensus belief is that
DNA repair processes are generally beneficial to the cell during normal
metabolism. After stroke or traumatic brain injury, when energy becomes
critical to the viability of the affected tissue, certain repair steps,
such as the ligation step that involves DNA ligase and
poly(ADP-ribose)polymerase (PARP), may deplete further the needed
energy source and may be harmful to the very tissue that the repair
process is attempting to rescue. Therefore, there is an urgent need to
delineate the mechanism of oxidative DNA damage and repair in the
brain.
We have shown here that oh8G/oh8dG lesions, detected in
situ as immunoreactivity to newly developed monoclonal 8G-14 IgM,
or as substrates to E. coli Fpg protein, appear in brain
cells of the affected cortex within the first 30 min of reperfusion.
The results using 8G-14 IgM agree with those from the more commonly
used chromatographic methods (9
, 23
, 45)
. The 8G-14 IgM
antibody specifically binds to oh8G-BSA and gives a positive cytosolic
signal that is comparable to the results described previously using
different antibodies (10
, 29)
. Several assays that detect
DNA damage in the brain have been reported (9
10
11
, 29
, 30)
. The current method offers several additional advantages.
First, we were able to show that oxidative DNA damage occurs in mtDNA
and nuclear DNA, because immunoreactivity of cytoplasmic oh8dG to 8G-14
IgM antibody in the FCIR cortex did not disappear after treatment with
RNase A. Our results are in contrast to those found in patients with
Alzheimers disease, and the difference could be in the concentration
of RNase A used by Nunomura et al. (29)
. Second, we were
able to show that although both neurons and astrocytes contain
oxidative DNA damage early during reperfusion, the only cells in the
ischemic core that showed signs of cell death were neurons.
Our detection of cellular oh8G/oh8dG immunoreactivity using 8G-14
IgM and IgG confirms our FPGSS findings, except that we observed more
cytosolic lesions using the immunohistochemical method than using
the in situ FPGSS method. The discrepancies may be in the
assays that were used. Cellular IgM or IgG immunoreactivity labels oh8G
in RNA and oh8dG in mtDNA (10)
, whereas the FPGSS
assay labels other oxidative base damage in both mtDNA and nuclear DNA.
The current study supports the notion that mRNA and its nuclear gene
could be targeted by oxygen free radicals during reperfusion
(9
10
11)
. We have previously estimated that the frequency
of FPGSS on the genomic level is approximately two FPGSS per reporter
gene (9
10
11
, 21)
. Our observation that neurons are more
prone to cell death than our astrocytes after FCIR in this rat model
agrees with our previous observations using the mouse forebrain
ischemia and reperfusion model (11)
. Evidence from other
studies suggests that astrocytes repair oxidative DNA damage with a
greater efficiency than do neurons (47)
.
In addition to base modifications, oxidative DNA damage also
includes DNA strand breaks (11
, 15
, 52
, 53)
. Three
mechanisms are known to produce DNA strand breaks: 1) an
attack on DNA by hydroxyl radicals (9
10
11
, 20)
,
2) the digestion of base modification by DNA lesion-specific
enzymes (21
, 65
, 66)
, and 3) an attack on DNA
by nonspecific nucleases during programmed cell death
(15)
. Our inability to identify significant SSB/5'DSB at
or before 15 min of reperfusion does not exclude the possibility that
FCIR induces other types of DNA strand breaks with 3'phohphoglycolate
termini (53)
, which cannot be detected using the FPGSS
assay. The end-labeling assay by DNA polymerase-I in the absence of Fpg
protein indicated the presence of SSB/5'DSB bearing 3'-OH termini
beginning at 30 min of reperfusion (10
, 11)
. Moreover, we
did not observe TUNEL-positive staining at <120 min of reperfusion,
suggesting that the DNA strand breaks we detected at 3060 min of
reperfusion were not a result of apoptosis-associated DNA
fragmentation. Our studies suggest that a temporal sequence of
oxidative stress-induced DNA damage starts with the beginning of
reperfusionoxidative DNA base modifications, followed by the
formation of SSB/5'DSB, followed by DNA fragmentation and cell death.
The appearance of these SSB/5'DSB with 3'-OH ends could be the
intermediates of the repair activity (9
10
11
, 21
, 52
, 54)
.
Because DNA strand breaks are known to activate PARP, our data would
predict that the activation of PARP could be at or after 30 min of
reperfusion after cerebral injury. Indeed, most studies suggested that
PARP is activated at least 30 min after brain injury (55)
.
An elevation in reactive oxygen species may be an etiological factor in
Alzheimers disease (9
, 17
, 29
, 56)
, Parkinsons
diseases (44)
, Battens disease (57)
,
seizure disorders (58)
, stroke (59)
, ischemia
(9
10
11
, 15
, 17
, 21
, 60)
, Hallervorden-Spatz disease
(61)
, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (62
, 63)
,
and brain edema (64)
. Further studies are needed to
determine whether there is an elevation in oxidative stress and to
measure the ability of these patients to repair DNA damage.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
|
|---|
We thank Mr. James Wolff, Dr. Shutong Cao, and Dr. Ling Yu (Baylor
College of Medicine) for excellent technical assistance; Dr. M. Fry
(University of Washington, Seattle, Wash.) and Dr. W. Hamilton (Baylor
College of Medicine) for editorial comments. This work was supported in
part by an Established Investigator Award (9640202N) from the American
Heart Association and from NIH (NS34810 [P. K. L]; CA67163
[E.H.H.]) and from funds provided by CytoChem, Seattle, Wash.
(E.H.H.).
 |
FOOTNOTES
|
|---|
Received for publication June 10, 1999. Revised for publication December 8, 1999.
 |
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