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Address correspondence to Michael Sendtner, Institute for Clinical Neurobiology, Josef Schneider Strasse 11, 97080 Würzburg, Germany. Tel.: (49) 931-201-5771. Fax: (49) 931-201-2697. E-mail: sendtner{at}mail.uni-wuerzburg.de
| Abstract |
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Key Words: CNTF; axotomy; lesion; bcl-xl; reg-2
| Introduction |
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To assess the physiological function of Stat3 for motoneuron survival we have generated a Cre transgenic mouse line that expresses Cre under control of the human neurofilament light chain (NF-L) promoter and exhibits Cre expression in specific populations of neurons, including facial and spinal motoneurons. Neuron-specific Stat3 knockout mice were generated in which the Stat3 gene can be inactivated by Cre-mediated recombination (Takeda et al., 1998). These animals develop normally and do not reveal significant differences in motoneuron numbers in the facial nucleus and spinal cord, although isolated motoneurons from these animals need higher concentrations of CNTF for maximal survival in culture. However, after facial nerve transection in the adult, a dramatic loss of motoneurons is observed. We also report that lesion-induced expression of Reg-2 and Bcl-xl is reduced in mice in which Stat3 is eliminated by motoneuron-specific Cre expression. These data suggest that Stat3 plays an essential role in motoneuron survival after axotomy but not during embryonic development when motoneurons physiologically depend on neurotrophic factors for their survival.
| Results |
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After facial nerve transection in 4-wk-old mice, a significant loss of facial motoneurons in NF-LCre; Stat3flox/KO mice as opposed to NF-LCre; Stat3flox/wt littermates (Fig. 3) was observed. 2 wk after lesion, 57 ± 6% (n = 6, P < 0.001 versus control side) of the axotomized facial motoneurons survived in NF-LCre; Stat3flox/KO mice (Fig. 3 B). This corresponds to approximately the same loss of motoneurons observed in CNTF-/-/LIF-/- mice after nerve lesion (Sendtner et al., 1996).
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| Discussion |
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The signaling pathways used by neurotrophic cytokines of the LIF/CNTF/CT-1 family to promote neuronal survival are still not fully understood. Recent studies have shown that CNTF and NGF promote neuronal survival via upregulation of ITA gene expression in isolated chick sensory and sympathetic neurons (Wiese et al., 1999a). Members of the mammalian IAP family are highly upregulated by NF-
B activation, and it is thought that NF-
B is part of the signaling cascades that promote neuronal survival downstream of neurotrophic factor receptors, B-Raf, and PI-3K/Akt activation (Wiese et al., 2001). This is in agreement with recent findings that inhibition of NF-
B activation by I-
B expression or p65 gene targeting in primary neurons (Middleton et al., 2000) and inhibition of the PI-3K/Akt pathway (Alonzi et al., 2001) reduces survival in response to CNTF. However, survival in response to BDNF appeared unaffected by NF-
B inhibition (Middleton et al., 2000). It will be extremely interesting to find out whether survival by neurotrophins is mediated via other complementary pathways which upregulate IAPs under these experimental conditions. Alternatively, specific CNTF-signaling mediators such as Stat3 could inhibit such complementary pathways and thus interfere with signals after neurotrophin receptor activation. Indeed, it has been shown that Stat3 interferes with neurotrophin-activated signaling pathways, and thus inhibits NGF-mediated differentiation of PC-12 cells (Ihara et al., 1997). Another example how LIFR-ß activation interferes with neurotrophin-mediated signaling pathways are experiments in which LIF promotes cell death of sympathetic neurons which depend on NGF for their survival (Kessler et al., 1993). Along these lines of evidence, Stat3 is not expected as an essential mediator of neuronal survival. It could even suppress survival of neurons in response to other classes of neurotrophic factors, in particular neurotrophins. In vivo models, in particular gene knockout mice, are therefore an ideal tool to study direct and indirect effects of gene inactivation under physiological conditions where these factors play together in promoting neuronal survival. Gene ablation studies have shown that GDNF (Moore et al., 1996; Sanchez et al., 1996; Oppenheim et al., 2000), CT-1 (Oppenheim et al., 2001), and corresponding receptor subunits such as LIFR-ß (Li et al., 1995), gp130 (Nakashima et al., 1999), and CNTFR-
(DeChiara et al., 1995) are necessary for motoneuron survival during development, at least in subpopulations. In contrast, no enhanced motoneuron cell death could be observed in mice which lack receptors for neurotrophins (Smeyne et al., 1994; Klein et al., 1994; DeChiara et al., 1995), thus pointing to an important role of ligands for gp 130/LIFR-ß as modulators of motoneuron survival during development. Gp130 and LIFR-ß activate several signaling pathways, including Stat3 as a downstream effector. Therefore, it was suggested that Stat3 contributes to the survival effect of CNTF and related cytokines on motoneurons (Stahl and Yancopoulos, 1994). This hypothesis was substantiated by the finding that Reg-2, a Stat3-dependent gene, is involved in CNTF-mediated survival of isolated embryonic rat motoneurons (Nishimune et al., 2000). Reg-2 influences survival of embryonic motoneurons via NF-
B, which is in agreement with the hypothesis that NF-
B mediates neuronal survival via upregulation of IAP proteins.
In NF-LCre; Stat-3flox/KO mice, axotomized motoneurons can be rescued from cell death by the application of the neurotrophic factors BDNF, GDNF and, interestingly, also by CNTF. Thus, the effect of Stat3 deficiency could be overcome by other signaling pathways which are activated by CNTF when added locally at high concentrations to lesioned motoneurons. This finding corresponds to our in vitro data with embryonic motoneurons from NF-LCre; Stat3flox/KO mice showing reduced survival responses to CNTF at low doses. However, maximal survival of motoneurons could be achieved with high dose recombinant rat CNTF. Nevertheless, our data suggest that the signaling pathways which support motoneuron survival during development and after lesion differ from each other. In developing sensory and sympathetic neurons, CNTF and NGF lead to upregulation of ITA, the chick homologue of mammalian IAP-2 and/or XIAP. Interestingly, lesion of the facial nerve in adult mice does not lead to upregulation of IAP-1, IAP-2, and XIAP after binding of endogenous neurotrophic factors to their receptors on motoneurons. Therefore, it will be interesting to know whether other molecules such as NAIPs become important during postnatal life (Perrelet et al., 2000). Indeed, expression of all known members of the NAIP family is low in the nervous system of embryonic mice but upregulated after birth (Götz et al., 2000). At least for members of the NAIP family, it has been shown that they can inhibit neurite outgrowth (Götz et al., 2000). It is not known whether members of the IAP family exert similar effects. This, however, would counteract regeneration and regrowth of nerve fibers to their denervated targets. In addition, Bcl-2 overexpression promotes axonal regeneration of retinal ganglion cells (Chen et al., 1997). Therefore, signaling effects of IAPs and members of the Bcl-2 family could lead to additional cellular responses besides preventing apoptosis, and thus play an important role in the cellular programs leading to regeneration of motoneurons after lesion. In this study, we have found that Bcl-xl is highly upregulated in motoneurons after lesion. Previous studies have shown that Bcl-xl is an important mediator of neuronal survival (Gonzalez-Garcia et al., 1995). Gene ablation of Bcl-xl leads to massive neuronal cell death around embryonic day 13 (Motoyama et al., 1995). Mice overexpressing Bcl-xl (Parsadanian et al., 1998) are resistant to lesion-induced cell death. Thus, the upregulation of Bcl-xl by Stat3 appears as an essential component of neurotrophic signaling leading to survival of adult axotomized motoneurons.
NF-LCre; Stat3flox/KO mice do not exhibit enhanced motoneuron loss during postnatal development up to 1 yr of age. This finding indicates that Stat3 is dispensable for CNTF/LIF/CT-1/CLC-mediated survival of motoneurons under physiological conditions. In adult control mice, facial nerve transection leads only to minor loss of corresponding motoneurons. Under such conditions, endogenous neurotrophic factors such as CNTF, LIF, BDNF, and others become available to the axotomized neurons and promote their survival (Sendtner et al., 1997). In mice carrying null mutations for both CNTF and LIF,
40% of facial motoneurons are lost, indicating that factors of this gene family act as essential lesion factors (Sendtner et al., 1996). Our results indicate that these survival effects involve Stat3. We do not know whether the population of neurons which degenerates after axotomy in CNTF/LIF double knockout mice is the same as that in the NF-LCre; Stat3flox/KOmice. Given that not all motoneurons show recombination of the Stat3 gene in our study, it is likely that the rate of motoneuron cell death would even be higher under such ideal experimental conditions and thus exceed the loss observed in CNTF/LIF double knockout mice. This suggests that additional factors of the CNTF family such as CLF/CLC (Elson et al., 2000) act together with CNTF and LIF on lesioned motoneurons, and thus support their survival after nerve lesion in the adult.
In conclusion, our data reveal an essential function of Stat3 signaling for survival of adult motoneurons after axotomy, but not for survival of motoneurons during the developmental period of physiologically occurring cell death. This indicates that the contribution of various signaling cascades, which are activated in response to neurotrophic factors in order to support motoneuron survival, changes during development and that Stat3 becomes increasingly important after pathophysiological conditions.
| Materials and methods |
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2 kb of NF-L promoter sequence, Cre cDNA, polyadenylation signal, and the NF-L downstream region (intron 1 to endogenous polyadenylation signal) was subsequently ligated into the SmaI site of pKS.neo placing the NF-LCre sequences 3' to the neomycin resistance cassette. The neoNF-LCre fragment was isolated from this vector by KpnI-NotI digestion and gel-purified before electroporation into R1 embryonic stem cells (provided by A. Nagy, Toronto, Canada). Transgenic G418-resistant clones were subjected to Southern blot analysis. Genomic DNA was digested with XbaI and probed with a CrecDNA (491bp MluI-EcoRV fragment; probe A). Chimeric mice were obtained by morula aggregation, and two transgenic clones (#50 and #13) gave rise to germline transmitting chimeric mice. Offspring from line #50 and #13 was bred onto CD-1 and C57Bl/6 genetic backgrounds, respectively. Tail DNA was also tested by Southern Blot (digested with EcoRI, probed with the Cre cDNA probe A), whereas PCR was used for routine genotyping of transgenic offspring. All data in this study were derived from animals of the NF-LCre line #50. Line #13 did not express Cre activity and was not maintained.
PCR protocols for genomic DNA
Inheritance of the NF-LCre transgene was checked by PCR on tail tip biopsies using the primers NF-LSEQ 5'-TCG CAG GCT GCG TCA GGA G-3' and pMC-Cre 5'-GGT ATG CTC AGA AAA CGC C-3' that detect the unique combination of the human NF-L promoter and Cre cDNA. The product size is 250 bp. For genotyping of Stat3 transgenic animals we used the primers mStat3e22fwd 5'-CCT GAA GAC CAA GTT CAT CTG TGT GAC-3' and mStat3e23rev 5'-CAC ACA AGC CAT CAA ACT CTG GTC TCC-3' that yield products of 250 bp and 350 bp for wild-type and floxed Stat3, respectively. To detect the recombined lacZ reporter gene, the following primers were used: AG2 5'-CTG CTA ACC ATG TTC ATG CC-3' and Z3 5'-GGC CTC TTC GCT ATT ACG-3'. The recombined allele yields a product of 580 bp. To detect Cre-mediated recombination of the floxed Stat3 gene we used the following primers: mStat3loxP 5'-GAT TTG AGT CAG GGA TCC ATA ACT TCG-3' and mStat3e23rev. The recombined Stat3 allele yields a product of 150 bp.
Cross-breeding with lacZ-reporter mice and ß-galactosidase histochemistry
Doubly transgenic NF-LCre/lacZ animals were killed by ether inhalation and perfused pericardially with 2% paraformaldehyde (PFA) in 0.1 M sodium phosphate buffer at pH 7.4. E13 embryos were immersion fixed in the same fixative for 4 h. Organs were removed and postfixed for 3 h in the same fixative and cryo-protected with 30% sucrose overnight. Tissues were embedded in Tissue-Tek (Sakura), cryo-sectioned at 20 µm, and stained for ß-galactosidase activity overnight at 30°C in 0.1 M sodium phosphate buffer, pH 7.4, supplemented with 5 mM potassium hexacyanoferrate (I), 5 mM potassium hexacyanoferrate (III), 2 mM MgCl2, and 0.1% X-Gal (5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl-galactoside). After X-gal staining sections were counterstained with 1% neutral red in 4 mM sodium acetate buffer, pH 3.5. Whole organs and embryos were immersed into X-Gal staining solution over night.
Motoneuron culture
Motoneurons were isolated from E14 spinal cord from individual embryos and cultured for at least 5 d (Wiese et al., 1999b, 2001) in the presence of BDNF (1 ng/ml), GDNF (0.1 ng/ml) or various concentrations of CNTF ranging from 0.005 ng/ml to 50 ng/ml. Genotyping of embryos was done after counting was complete to avoid observer bias.
Facial nerve lesion, application of factors and histological staining
In 45 week old anesthetized mice, the right facial nerve was exposed as it exits from the foramen stylomastoideum and transected with microscissors. Neurotrophic factors (5 µg) were applied in collagen foam. 2 wk later, the animals were perfused with 4% paraformaldehyde, brain stems were removed, and paraffin sections of 7 µm were Nissl stained. Motoneurons in the facial nucleus were counted in every fifth section as described (Sendtner et al., 1996).
Semiquantitative RT-PCR analysis
Extraction of total RNA was done using TriZol (Life Technologies) reagent. Using Superscript II reverse transcriptase (Life Technologies), 100 ng of total RNA were was transcribed per 10 µl with random hexamer primers following the supplied protocol including RNase H digestion. Cycle numbers of PCR reactions were optimized to yield a linear relationship between cDNA and signal intensity. PCR products were either visualized directly in ethidium bromidestained agarose gels or transferred by Southern blotting on nitrocellulose membranes followed by hybridization with random priming labeled probes (for Bcl-xl and Reg-2). Quantification was performed using the Fuji BAS Reader and AIDA image analysis software (Raytest) and resulting values were normalized to EF1 signals. Primer sequences are given below followed by product size, cycle numbers, and annealing temperature. Cre mRNA: Cre2f 5'-ACG ACC AAG TGA CAG CAA TGC-3'; Cre1r 5'-CTC CCA CCG TCA GTA CGT GAG ATA-3'; 265 bp; 30; 58°C. ß-Actin mRNA: Act-f 5'-GTG GGC CGC CCT AGG CAC CAG-3'; Act-r 5'-CTC TTT AAT GTC ACG CAC GAT TTC-3'; 539 bp; 30; 58°C. Stat3 mRNA: mStat3e22fwd 5'-CCT GAA GAC CAA GTT CAT CTG TGT GAC-3'; mStat3e23rev2 5'-CTG AGG GCT CAG CAC CTT; 150 bp; 3035; 56°C. Stat3 mRNA
exon 22: mStat3e21fwd 5'-GTC TCC ACT TGT CTA CCT CTA-3'; mStat3e23rev2; 241 bp (wt), 148 bp (
22); 35; 56°C. EF-1 mRNA: mefs 5'-ACA CGT AGA TTC CGG CAA GTC-3'; mefas 5'-CAA CAA TCA GGA CAG CAC ACT C-3'; 350 bp; 2530; 55°C. Reg-2 mRNA: mReg-2fwd 5'-AGG AGA AGA CTC TCC GAA G-3'; mReg-2rev 5'-TTA ACC AGT AAA TTT GCA G-3'; 750 bp; 2330; 53°C. Bcl-2 mRNA: bcl2fwd 5'-CTT TGT GGA ACT GTA CGG CCC CAG CAT GCG-3'; bcl2rev 5'-ACA GCC TGC AGC TTT GTT TCA TGG TAC ATC-3'; 250 bp; 22; 55°C. Bax mRNA: baxfwd 5'-TGG AGC TGC AGA GGA TGA TT-3'; baxrev 5'-AAG TTG CCA TCA GCA AAC AT; 95 bp; 35; 55°C (Greenlund et al., 1995). Bcl-xl mRNA: bcl-xlsense 5'-AGG CTG GCG ATG AGT TTG AA-3'; bcl-xlantisense 5'-CGG CTC TCG GCT GCT GCA TT-3'; 336 bp; 24; 60°C (Imaizumi et al., 1999). Bcl-w mRNA: bcl-wfwd 5'-GAA TTC ATG GCG ACC CCA GC-3'; bcl-wrev 5'-TAG ACT TTC TCA CTT GCT AGC-3'; 780 bp; 22; 55°C. Primer sequences and PCR conditions for c-IAP1, c-IAP2, and XIAP were as published previously (Wiese et al., 2001).
In situ detection of gene expression
Mouse brains were freshly dissected, embedded in Tissue-Tek, and flash-frozen in isopentane and stored at 80°C. Serial cryosections of 10 µm were collected and every tenth section was stained with the Nissl method to identify brain stem nuclei. After fixation with 4% paraformaldehyde and washes in PBS, sections were acetylated and washed in PBS and DEPC water. After 1 h prehybridization at 60°C in hybridization buffer (600 mM NaCl, 10 mM Tris HCl, pH 7.5, 1 mM EDTA, 0.05% yeast tRNA, 1x Denhardt's solution, 50% dextransulfate, and 100 µg/ml salmon sperm DNA), hybridization was performed using DIG-labeled probes (Roche T7/SP6-DIG RNA labeling kit; Roche) overnight at the same conditions. The following washes of 20 min were performed at room temperature: 2x SSC, 1x SSC, RNase A 20 mg/l, 1x SSC, 0.2x SSC. Afterwards, the sections were washed at 60°C in 0.2x SSC for 1 h followed by a 20 min wash in water at room temperature. Samples were blocked over night in 100 mM Tris, pH 7.5, 150 mM NaCl, and 2% FCS at 4°C. Anti-DIG Fab-fragment conjugated to alkaline phosphatase (Roche) was used at 1:500 dilution in blocking buffer. After 4 h incubation at room temperature, the sections were washed twice in blocking buffer without serum (pH 7.5 then pH 9.5) and developed using the BCIP/NBT system (DAKO) in the presence of 0.2 mM levamisol. Probes used were the complete open reading frame of rat Reg-2 (GI254694, a gift from C.E. Henderson, Marseille), the Cre open reading frame (GI15135), and the 336 bp mouse Bcl-xl fragment (GI506647 position 275611) used for RT-PCR analysis. Controls included the same sequences in the sense orientation and a negative control without RNA probe to check for unspecific, endogenous phosphatase activity.
Testing of motor function
According to published procedures (Masu et al., 1993; Holtmann et al., 1999).
Statistical analysis
Results were analyzed using Graph Pad Prism Software. Student's t test, Mann-Whitney U Test and one-way ANOVA, followed by Bonferroni's post-hoc comparison were applied where appropriate. The null hypothesis was rejected on the basis of P < 0.05. Results are given as mean ± SEM unless otherwise indicated.
| Footnotes |
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* Abbreviations used in this paper: CNTF, ciliary neurotrophic factor; IAP, inhibitor of apoptosis; KO, knockout; LIF, leukemia inhibitory factor; NF-L, neurofilament light chain; PI-3K, phosphatidylinositol 3 kinase; RT, reverse transcription.
| Acknowledgments |
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This study was supported by grants from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, SFB 487, TP C4.
Submitted: 3 July 2001
Revised: 6 December 2001
Accepted: 10 December 2001
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