Abstract
Glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF) has been shown to protect and restore dopamine (DA) neurons in injury models and is being evaluated for the treatment of Parkinson's disease. Nevertheless, little is known of its physiological role. We have shown that GDNF suppresses apoptosis in DA neurons of the substantia nigra (SN) postnatally both in vitro and during their first phase of natural cell death in vivo. Furthermore, intrastriatal injection of neutralizing antibodies augments cell death, suggesting that endogenous GDNF plays a role as a target-derived factor. Such a role would predict that overexpression of GDNF in striatum would increase the surviving number of SN DA neurons. To test this hypothesis, we used the tetracycline-dependent transcription activator (tTA)/tTA-responsive promoter system to create mice that overexpress GDNF selectively in the striatum, cortex, and hippocampus. These mice demonstrate an increased number of SN DA neurons after the first phase of natural cell death. However, this increase does not persist into adulthood. As adults, these mice also do not have increased dopaminergic innervation of the striatum. They do, however, demonstrate increased numbers of ventral tegmental area (VTA) neurons and increased innervation of the cortex. This morphologic phenotype is associated with an increased locomotor response to amphetamine. We conclude that striatal GDNF is necessary and sufficient to regulate the number of SN DA neurons surviving the first phase of natural cell death, but it is not sufficient to increase their final adult number. GDNF in VTA targets, however, is sufficient to regulate the adult number of DA neurons.
Keywords: apoptosis, programmed cell death, neurotrophic factors, Parkinson's disease, striatum, substantia nigra
Introduction
Glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF) was identified on the basis of its ability to support the development of embryonic dopamine (DA) neurons (Lin et al., 1993). It has been shown in numerous experiments to both protect and restore DA neurons of the substantia nigra (SN) in many different lesion models (Bowenkamp et al., 1995; Sauer et al., 1995; Tomac et al., 1995a; Gash et al., 1996; Choi-Lundberg et al., 1997; Kordower et al., 2000). Although initial attempts to use it therapeutically for Parkinson's disease by intraventricular injection were unsuccessful (Nutt et al., 2003), more recent efforts using direct intraputaminal infusion have been more promising (Gill et al., 2003). Despite the clear functional effects GDNF has on the neurobiology of DA neurons, there has been no information about its normal physiological role, if any, in their development or maintenance.
We and others have shown that DA neurons of the SN, like most neurons, undergo normal developmental cell death; the event is primarily postnatal, and it is biphasic with peaks at postnatal days (PNDs) 2 and 14 (Janec and Burke, 1993; Mahalik et al., 1994; Oo and Burke, 1997; Jackson-Lewis et al., 2000; Groc et al., 2001a,b). As envisioned by classic neurotrophic theory (Clarke, 1985; Barde, 1989), this death event appears to be regulated by target interactions; it is augmented by disruption of such interactions by a target lesion (Macaya et al., 1994), DA terminal destruction (Marti et al., 1997), or axotomy (El-Khodor and Burke, 2002) during the first 2 weeks of life. We have evaluated the possibility that GDNF may serve as a physiological, limiting, target-derived factor for SN DA neurons. Its mRNA is present in striatum and expressed at high levels during early postnatal development (Schaar et al., 1993; Stromberg et al., 1993; Blum and Weickert, 1995; Choi-Lundberg and Bohn, 1995; Cho et al., 2003). We have shown that GDNF is able to support DA neurons by suppressing apoptosis in a postnatal primary culture model, established during the natural cell death period for these neurons (Burke et al., 1998). We have also shown in vivo that direct intrastriatal injection of GDNF suppresses the first phase of natural cell death on PND 2, whereas injection of neutralizing antibodies augments it (Oo et al., 2003), suggesting a regulatory role for endogenous GDNF.
The hypothesis that GDNF is a physiological, limiting, striatal target-derived neurotrophic factor for SN DA neurons predicts that increased expression of GDNF in targets throughout the natural cell death period should result in an increased number of surviving neurons. To test this hypothesis, we have generated mice that selectively express GDNF in striatum, hippocampus, and cortex. To accomplish this we generated a transgenic mouse containing a tetracycline-dependent transcription activator (tTA)-responsive bidirectional (Bi)TetO-LacZ-rat GDNF (rGDNF) transgene and crossed this mouse with the calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII)-tTA transgenic mouse, as previously described (Mayford et al., 1996; Yamamoto et al., 2000). For this analysis, regionally specific expression in target regions is important not only for a direct test of the hypothesis but also to avoid a confounding effect of direct expression of GDNF within dopaminergic neurons, which, for reasons that are unknown, results in a decreased number of these neurons (Chun et al., 2002). We find, as predicted, that GDNF overexpression in the targets of mesencephalic DA neurons results in an increased number of SN DA neurons surviving the first phase of natural cell death. However, it does not increase the number surviving into adulthood. Thus target-derived GDNF alone is sufficient to forestall natural cell death in DA neurons only during the first phase early in their postnatal development.
Materials and Methods
Transgenic mice. The coding sequence for the rGDNF was obtained by performing reverse transcription-PCR on RNA derived from postnatal rat brain using primers to encompass bp 39–685 (GenBank accession number L15305). This fragment was inserted into multiple cloning site 2 in the appropriate orientation downstream to minimal promoter Pmin-1 in the bidirectional plasmid pBI-3 (Baron et al., 1995) (Fig. 1 A), kindly provided by Dr. René Hen (Columbia University, New York, NY). A 7.1 kb AseI fragment of this construct was microinjected by standard techniques into single-cell CBA × C57BL/6 embryos. Six founders were obtained; of these, four demonstrated germ line transmission. These lines were expanded by mating with C57BL/6 inbred mice. To achieve regionally selective expression in projection targets of mesencephalic dopaminergic systems, these monotransgenic mice were crossed with mice carrying a CaMKIIα-tTA transgene, as previously described (Mayford et al., 1996; Yamamoto et al., 2000) (Fig. 1 B). These crosses revealed two BiTetO-LacZ-rGDNF lines, which, when crossed with the CaMKII-tTA line, produced positive LacZ staining in brain. Although this double-transgene system permits suppression of transgene expression by administration of doxycycline (Fig. 1 B), and we successfully demonstrated suppression in these two double-transgenic lines (data not shown), we did not use this feature in the studies presented herein. Before proceeding with an assessment of phenotype in living double-transgenic animals, we confirmed biological activity of the transgene rGDNF protein product by demonstrating that dissociated striatal postnatal cultures derived from double transgenics induced intense sprouting in cocultured postnatal mesencephalic DA neurons (Rayport et al., 1992) compared with wild-type striatal cultures (data not shown), an effect similar to that we had previously reported for exogenous GDNF (Burke et al., 1998).
LacZ staining and β-galactosidase immunohistochemistry. For LacZ staining, brains were removed rapidly and quickly frozen in isopentane on dry ice. Sections 14 μm thick were cut in a cryostat, thaw-mounted on slides, and stored at –80°C. At the time of staining, the slides were warmed to room temperature, and the sections were fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde and 0.1 m phosphate buffer (PB). After a rinse in PBS, sections were incubated in 5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl β-d-galactopyranoside staining solution as previously described (Yamamoto et al., 2000) at 37°C overnight. For demonstration of β-galactosidase expression at a cellular level, immunohistochemistry was performed. Animals were initially perfused by gravity intracardially with saline, followed by 4% paraformaldehyde and 0.1 m PB. Brains were then postfixed in the same fixative for 24 hr and then cryoprotected in 20% sucrose for an additional 24 hr at 4°C. The brains were then rapidly frozen in isopentane on dry ice, and sections were cut in a cryostat at 20 μm. Sections were processed free-floating. After a PBS wash and treatment with PBS, 0.5% bovine serum albumen, and 0.1% Triton X-100, sections were incubated with rabbit anti-β-galactosidase (Cortex-Biochem) at 1:500 for 48 hr at 4°C. After a wash, sections were then incubated biotinylated protein A (prepared in this laboratory) at 1:100 for 1 hr at room temperature. Sections were then incubated with avidin-biotinylatedhorseradish peroxidase complexes (ABC; Vector Laboratories, Burlingame, CA) at 1:600 for 1 hr. After incubation with diaminobenzidine, sections were mounted onto subbed slides and counterstained with thionin.
Western analysis of GDNF, tyrosine hydroxylase, and vesicular monoamine transporter 2. Individual striata were homogenized in lysis buffer containing 50 mm Tris-HCl, pH 7.5, 150 mm NaCl, 2 mm EDTA, 1% NP-40, 5 μg/ml aprotinin, 5 μg/ml leupeptin, and 17 μg/ml PMSF. The homogenate was centrifuged at 14,000 × g at 4°C, and the protein concentration of the supernatant was determined with a micro BCA kit (Pierce, Rockford, IL). An aliquot containing 50–70 μg of protein/lane was diluted in Laemmli sample buffer (Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA), electrophoresed in a 15% polyacrylamide gel, and transferred onto a polyvinylidene difluoride (PVDF) membrane (Amersham Biosciences, Arlington Heights, IL). The membrane was then probed with anti-tyrosine hydroxylase (TH; Chemicon, Temecula, CA), anti-DA transporter (DAT; Chemicon), or anti-vesicular monoamine transporter 2 (VMAT2) (Chemicon) antibodies, treated with appropriate secondary antibodies, conjugated with horseradish peroxidase, and detected with a chemiluminescent substrate (Pierce). For Western analysis of GDNF, whole forebrain was homogenized in lysis buffer containing 1% SDS and centrifuged, and the protein concentration of the supernatant was determined. An aliquot containing 100 μg of protein was electrophoresed in a 15% polyacrylamide gel and transferred onto a PVDF membrane (Amersham Biosciences). The membrane was probed with anti-GDNF antibodies (Research Diagnostics, Inc., Flanders, NJ) and detected with chemiluminescent substrate.
Immunohistochemistry for TH in DA neurons of the SN. Animals were perfused intracardially first with 0.9% NaCl and then with 4% paraformaldehyde and 0.1 m PB. The brains were then removed and postfixed in the same fixative for 1 week. Each brain was then cryoprotected in 20% sucrose for 24–48 hr and then rapidly frozen. A complete set of serial sections through the SN was then cut at 30 μm. Sections were saved individually in serial order at 4°C, and individual sections at regular intervals were then selected for TH immunostaining, in conformity with the fractionator method of sampling (Coggeshall and Lekan, 1996) (see below). Sections were processed free-floating, as described above for β-galactosidase, with the exception that the primary antibody was a rabbit anti-TH (Calbiochem, La Jolla, CA) at 1:1000. After treatment with biotinylated protein A and ABC, sections were mounted on subbed slides in serial order and thionin-counterstained.
Determination of SN and ventral tegmental area DA neuron numbers by stereological analysis. A complete set of TH-immunostained serial sections, sampled as every fourth section through the SN, was analyzed by a stereological method for each animal. Each analysis was performed under blinded conditions on coded slides. For each animal, the SN on one side of the brain was analyzed. For each section, the entire SN was identified as the region of interest. Using StereoInvestigator software (Micro Bright Field, Inc.) a fractionator probe was established for each section. The number of TH-positive neurons in each counting frame was then determined by focusing down through the section, using a 100× objective under oil, as required by the optical dissector method (Coggeshall and Lekan, 1996). Our criterion for counting an individual TH-positive neuron was the presence of its nucleus either within the counting frame or touching the right or top frame lines (green) but not touching the left or bottom lines (red). The total number of TH-positive neurons for each SN on one side was then determined by the StereoInvestigator program. The total volume of the SN was also determined by the StereoInvestigator program for each brain on the basis of the sum of volumes derived from the area of each individual serial section and the tissue height represented by that section. In a separate analysis of the same sections used for the SN determinations, the number of neurons in the ventral tegmental area (VTA) was determined.
Striatal TH fiber immunostaining and analysis. For optimal TH-positive fiber staining, each mouse was perfused by a peristaltic pump at 10 ml/min intracardially with chilled 0.9% NaCl for 3 min, followed by chilled 4% paraformaldehyde and 0.1 m PB for 8 min. Each brain was then postfixed in the same fixative for 48 hr at 4°C. Without cryoprotection, each brain was rapidly frozen in isopentane on dry ice. Coronal sections were then cut through the striatum at 30 μm from planes 4.06–4.90 mm (interaural; Paxinos and Franklin, 2001) and processed free-floating. After a wash in Tris-buffered saline (TBS) and treatment with TBS and 5% goat serum, sections were incubated with rabbit anti-TH (Calbiochem) at 1:500 for 48 hr at 4°C. Sections were then treated with biotinylated goat anti-rabbit antibody (Vector Laboratories) at 1:400 for 1 hr at room temperature. They were then treated with ABC and incubated with diaminobenzidine. Sections were then mounted onto subbed slides and coverslipped. The regional optical density of TH immunostaining over the striatum was then determined as previously described (Burke et al., 1990). The optical density analysis was performed under blinded conditions on coded slides.
DAT immunostaining and stereological analysis. For DAT immunostaining, each animal was perfused by a pump at 20 ml/min intracardially with 0.1 m PBS (1 U of heparin/ml) at 37°C for 1.5 min, followed by chilled 4% paraformaldehyde and 0.1 m PB by gravity for 5 min, on the basis of the methods of Parish et al. (2001). The brain was then removed, blocked, and postfixed for 24 hr. Each brain was then cryoprotected in 20% sucrose for 24 hr and then frozen rapidly in isopentane on dry ice. A complete set of serial sections through the striatum, from planes 3.94–4.90 (Paxinos and Franklin, 2001), was then cut at 30 μm. Sections were saved individually in serial order at 4°C, and individual sections at regular intervals were processed for DAT immunostaining and stereological analysis. Sections were initially washed in TBS, treated with TBS and 0.1% Triton X-100, and blocked with 0.1 m TBS and 3% normal rabbit serum. After another TBS wash, they were incubated with rat anti-DAT (Chemicon) at 1:1000 in TBS and 3% normal rabbit serum for 48 hr at 4°C. Sections were then treated with biotinylated rabbit anti-rat antibody (Vector Laboratories) at 1:300 for 1 hr at room temperature. Sections were then treated with ABC, incubated with diaminobenzidine, and mounted on subbed slides in serial order. The total number of DAT-positive punctate structures in the striatum was then determined using a stereological approach, similar to that described by Parish et al. (2001). Every fifth section from planes 3.94–4.90 was analyzed. For each section, the entire striatum on the one slide was identified as the region of interest. Using StereoInvestigator software, a fractionator probe was established. The number of DAT-positive punctate structures in each counting frame was then determined by focusing down through the section at 100× under oil. The total number of punctate structures per striatum and the striatal volume were determined by the StereoInvestigator program.
Measurement of striatal DA and metabolites. For determination of striatal levels of DA and its metabolites, mice were decapitated, and their brains were rapidly removed and placed into a chilled glass plate. Each brain was placed in mouse brain matrix, and a 2.0 mm coronal slice of forebrain was taken through the striatum. The slice was placed anterior surface-up on the glass plate, and the striatum was punched out on each side with a 2.0 mm punch. The striata were frozen on dry ice. For each pair of striata, DA, dihydroxyphenylacetic acid (DOPAC) and homovanillic acid (HVA) were determined by HPLC by Bioanalytical Systems Inc. and expressed as nanograms per sample.
Striatal slice preparation and electrochemical recordings. Striatal DA release was studied in five pairs of the double-transgenic mice and wild-type littermates for the adult group (2–5 months) and seven pairs for the PND 13–15 group using fast-scan cyclic voltammetry (CV). Recordings were obtained from the first three coronal slices (300 μm) prepared from rostral caudate putamen. Slices were allowed to recover for 1.5 hr in a holding chamber in oxygenated artificial CSF (ACSF) at room temperature and then placed in a recording chamber and superfused (1 ml/min) with ACSF (in mm: 125 NaCl, 2.5 KCl, 26 NaHCO3, 2.4 CaCl2, 1.3 MgSO4, 0.3 KH2PO4, and 10 glucose) at 36°C. Electrochemical recordings and electrical stimulation were adapted from the methods of Schmitz et al. (2001). Briefly, disk carbon fiber electrodes of 5 μm diameter with a freshly cut surface were placed into the dorsal striatum ∼50 μm into the slice. For CV, a triangular voltage wave (–400 to + 900 mV at 280 V/sec vs Ag/AgCl) was applied to the electrode every 100 msec. Current was recorded with an Axopatch 200B amplifier (Axon Instruments, Foster City, CA), with a low-pass Bessel filter setting at 10 kHz, digitized at 25 kHz (ITC-18 board; Instrutech Corp., Great Neck, NY). Triangular wave generation and data acquisition were controlled by a personal computer running a locally written IGOR program (Dr. Eugene Mosharov; WaveMetrics, Lake Oswego, OR). Striatal slices were electrically stimulated every 2 min with either a single-pulse stimulation or a paired stimulus by an Iso-Flex stimulus isolator triggered by a Master-8 pulse generator (AMPI, Jerusalem, Israel) using a bipolar stimulating electrode placed at ∼100 μm distance from the recording electrode. Background-subtracted cyclic voltammograms served to identify the released substance. The DA oxidation current was converted to concentration on the basis of a calibration of 5 μm DA in ACSF after the experiment (Mosharov et al., 2003).
Behavioral analysis. Spontaneous motor activity in adult mice was assessed by use of a Med Associates, Inc. Activity Monitor System and expressed as distance traveled per 10 min epoch. Motor activity response to injection of amphetamine (2.0 mg/kg) was assessed in a separate group of animals by use of the following protocol: on day 1, spontaneous motor activity over 2 hr was assessed; and on days 2 and 3, motor activity was assessed over 2 hr after administration of vehicle and amphetamine, respectively. Each animal was placed in the activity arena immediately after injection at time = 0. For spontaneous motor activity, two-way ANOVA revealed no difference between males and females for either genotype, so data from males and females were combined.
Results
Characterization of CaMKIIα-tTA × BiTetO-LacZ-rGDNF double-transgenic mice
Of six founder lines of BiTetO-LacZ-rGDNF monotransgenic mice, two, lines 1 and 14, demonstrated positive LacZ staining in brain and increased forebrain GDNF protein expression when crossed with the CaMKIIα-tTA monotransgenic mice. Line 14 showed the most robust LacZ staining in the striatum (Fig. 2), so it was selected for further studies. To confirm the regionally selective expression expected from the use of the CaMKIIα promoter, representative sections in the rostrocaudal dimension were examined for LacZ staining. As anticipated, on the basis of previous use of the CaMKIIα-tTA mice by others (Mayford et al., 1996; Yamamoto et al., 2000), LacZ expression was observed in only select forebrain regions: striatum, hippocampus and cortex (Fig. 3). No LacZ expression was observed in brainstem regions that contain nuclei with afferent projections to the substantia nigra pars compacta (SNpc) (Carpenter, 1984), and, importantly, there was no LacZ expression in the SNpc itself. Among the forebrain targets of mesencephalic dopaminergic projection systems, the striatum showed the most intense LacZ staining. This pattern of more intense staining in striatum was observed in immature (2- and 4-week-old) mice (data not shown) as well as adults.
To confirm that forebrain GDNF is expressed at increased levels in double-transgenic mice throughout the postnatal period of natural cell death in SNpc DA neurons and thus would have the potential to influence it, we performed a developmental analysis. This analysis confirmed that double-transgenic mice did express higher levels of GDNF as early as PND 2 and until PND 14, the final day of the natural cell death event (Janec and Burke, 1993; Oo and Burke, 1997; Jackson-Lewis et al., 2000). Interestingly, for reasons that are unknown, the transgene protein product was observed principally as the monomeric form of GDNF during this developmental period. In our Western conditions, the monomer was not observed in controls (Fig. 4).
Little is known about the cellular sites of endogenous GDNF expression in developing or mature brain. However, limited data suggest that some of the expression in striatum during development can be localized to neurons (Lopez-Martin et al., 1999). To determine whether transgene expression occurred in striatal neurons, we performed immunohistochemistry for β-galactosidase. This analysis revealed that, at a cellular level, transgene expression was confined to small striatal neurons, the major striatal population (Fig. 5). No expression was observed in large striatal neurons or non-neural cell types. This neuronal cellular pattern of expression is in keeping with the known expression patterns of CaMKII (Ouimet et al., 1984; Scholz et al., 1988). Thus, transgene expression occurs in a cellular population similar to that identified for endogenous GDNF (Lopez-Martin et al., 1999).
SN DA neurons in CaMKIIα-tTA × BiTetO-LacZ-rGDNF double-transgenic mice
To determine whether sustained overexpression of GDNF in the target regions of the mesencephalic dopaminergic system has an effect on the number of SN DA neurons surviving the first phase of natural cell death, we performed a stereological analysis on animals at PNDs 7–9, during the nadir of the first phase (Janec and Burke, 1993; Oo and Burke, 1997; Jackson-Lewis et al., 2000). This analysis revealed a 46% increase in the number of TH-immunopositive neurons in the SN of CaMKIIα-tTA × BiTetO-LacZ-rGDNF double-transgenic (CBLG-DT) mice compared with wild-type controls and a 77% increase compared with CaMKIIα-tTA monotransgenic controls (Fig. 6A). In addition to this increase in DA neuron number, there was also an increase in the mean DA neuron size in the double-transgenic animals (Fig. 6B, Table 1). A frequency histogram analysis of neuron sizes in the double-transgenic animals (data not shown) revealed that there was a shift of a normal distribution of sizes to larger; there was not the emergence of a bimodal distribution; i.e., no subsets of responsive and nonresponsive neurons were identifiable. There was no difference between wild-type and double-transgenic animals in the mean size of the SN volume (Table 1).
Table 1.
|
PND 7-9 |
Adult |
||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Genotype |
n
|
Cell area (μm3) |
SN volume (μm3 × 106) |
n
|
Cell area (μm3) |
SN volume (μm3 × 106) |
||||
WT | 7 | 232 ± 6.3 | 555 ± 33 | 8 | 185 ± 5.4 | 739 ± 25 | ||||
CBLG-DT |
7 |
370 ± 11.1*
|
616 ± 26 |
8 |
191 ± 5.8 |
778 ± 37 |
At PNDs 7-9, DA neurons were significantly larger in double-transgenic mice. There was no difference in SN volume. In adult animals, there was no difference in either neuron size or SN volume.
p < 0.001.
To determine whether overexpression of GDNF throughout the development was sufficient to maintain an augmented number of neurons surviving into adulthood, we performed a stereological analysis of the number of SN DA neurons in animals aged 8–12 weeks (wild-type mean, 9.1 ± 0.4 weeks; CBLG-DT, 10.3 ± 0.5). This analysis showed that, in adulthood, there was no longer any difference between wild-type and double-transgenic animals (Fig. 6C). In adulthood, both wild-type and double-transgenic animals had approximately the same estimated total number of SN DA neurons as observed in wild-type and monotransgenic controls after the first phase of the natural cell death. There was also no difference between wild-type and CBLG-DT adult mice in the size of their DA neurons or the volume of the SNs (Table 1). Unlike the SN, the VTA showed an increase in the number of DA neurons in adult double-transgenic animals, to 55% more than that of wild-type controls (Fig. 6D).
We considered the possibility that the decrease in the relative numbers of the SN DA neurons in the double-transgenic animals between PNDs 7–9 and adulthood may be attributable to the inability of overexpressed GDNF to maintain an augmented population through the second phase of natural cell death at PND 14, when perhaps some other factor becomes limiting and results in a “rebound” increase in natural cell death in the double transgenics. To assess this possibility, we determined the number of apoptotic profiles in SN in PND 14–15 animals. We found that there was no rebound increase in natural cell death among the double transgenics; on the contrary, they showed a diminished level of apoptosis in comparison with a group including wild-type and CaMKII-tTA monotransgenic controls: controls (n = 16), 3.9 ± 0.4 apoptotic profiles per SN; CBLT-DT (n = 13), 2.9 ± 0.3 (p = 0.05, t test). Thus, the normalization of SN DA neuron numbers in the double-transgenic mice does not occur within the time course of the normal natural cell death event in these neurons during the first 2 postnatal weeks.
Striatal dopaminergic innervation is not increased in CBLG-DT mice
Although sustained GDNF overexpression in mesencephalic dopaminergic target regions did not induce a lasting increase in the number of SN dopaminergic neurons, in light of the ability of exogenous GDNF to induce sprouting of dopaminergic fibers in adult animals of different species (Hudson et al., 1995; Tomac et al., 1995a; Kordower et al., 2000), we sought to evaluate the possibility that the double-transgenic animals may show increased dopaminergic innervation of the striatum. However, the striatal TH-positive fiber staining evaluated at the regional level by optical density measurements (Burke et al., 1990; Oo et al., 2003) in adult mice revealed no difference between double transgenics and controls (Fig. 7A), nor did Western analysis of TH in striata (Fig. 7B). We considered the possibility that GDNF overexpression may downregulate the expression of TH as a phenotypic marker of dopaminergic structures because it has been shown to do so when overexpressed by lentiviral transfer (Georgievska et al., 2002). We therefore used another marker, that of DAT, to assess dopaminergic innervation at a cellular level. We assessed the number of DAT-positive punctate structures within the entire striatum by use of a stereological technique, as previously described (Parish et al., 2001). This analysis likewise did not reveal a difference between CBLG-DT mice and wild-type controls (Fig. 7C). There was also no difference between double-transgenic mice and controls in either the volume of the striatum or the density of DAT-positive punctate structures (data not shown).
In addition to these assessments of protein phenotypic markers of dopaminergic fibers and terminals, we assayed by HPLC striatal DA and its metabolites, DOPAC and HVA. These measures, as well as calculation of the DOPAC/DA ratio, revealed no difference between double-transgenic mice and both monotransgenic and wild-type controls (Fig. 7D; data not shown).
Although these morphological and biochemical assessments showed no effect on dopaminergic striatal innervation in the double-transgenic mice, we considered the additional possibility that there may be effects detectable by physiological assessments. We therefore examined DA release in the striatum by using electrochemical recordings. Striatal slice preparations containing presynaptic DA terminals were stimulated by a single electrical pulse, and the concentration and kinetics of DA release were measured using fast-scan CV (Wightman and Zimmerman, 1990). Because PND 14 is a critical period for dopaminergic development (Janec and Burke, 1993), we investigated the evoked DA release in PND 13–15 mice in addition to the adult mice. To minimize the variations of evoked DA release attributable to the heterogeneous distribution of the DA terminals, three sites in the dorsal striatal region of each slice were checked and then averaged. Although evoked DA release in PND 13–15 mice [wild-type (WT), 1.49 ± 0.17 μm; n = 16; CBLG-DT, 1.38 ± 0.15 μm; n = 11] was smaller compared with that in adult (WT, 2.23 ± 0.28 μm; n = 16; CBLG-DT, 2.34 ± 0.29 μm; n = 11), consistent with the immaturity of the DA system, DA release in response to a single-pulse stimulus did not differ significantly between transgenic and WT mice either at PND 13–15 (data not shown) or at the age of adult (Fig. 8A).
Evoked DA release in striatal slices exhibits a pronounced and long-lasting paired pulse depression (PPD); i.e., the amount of DA release elicited by the second stimulus is reduced compared with the DA release elicited by the first stimulus. Full recovery takes ∼60 sec and is fitted by a double-exponential function (Kennedy et al., 1992; Abeliovich et al., 2000). Therefore, to investigate whether GDNF overexpression in the transgenic mice plays a role in modulation of the activity-dependent synaptic DA release, we examined the PPD both in the adult and the PND 13–15 groups. Slices were stimulated with a paired pulse at interpulse intervals ranging from 1 to 60 sec (Fig. 8B). In adult WT mice, the time constants for the fast component (τf) and the slow component (τs) were 4.2 and 16.4 sec, respectively, whereas in adult CBLG-DT mice, τf and τs were 4.4 and 18.5 sec. Thus, the results indicated that overexpression of GDNF in the transgenic mice did not alter the kinetics of DA transmission. The same conclusion applied to the PND 13–15 group (data not shown), although at the interval of 5 sec, we observed a slightly faster recovery of the DA release in the transgenic mice.
We therefore conclude that overexpression of GDNF in striatum throughout development, at the levels achieved in these double-transgenic mice, is not sufficient to induce a lasting dopaminergic hyperinnervation by morphological, biochemical, or physiological criteria.
Cortical dopaminergic innervation is increased in CBLG-DT mice
Given our finding of increased numbers of VTA DA neurons in the CBLG-DT adult mice and the important differences in the neurobiology of the nigrostriatal and mesocortical dopaminergic projections (Mundorf et al., 2001), we next sought to determine whether GDNF overexpression had an effect on cortical innervation by dopaminergic fibers. In the same DAT-immunostained sections used for the analysis of the striatum, we used a stereological optical fractionator technique to determine the number of DAT-positive structures in the piriform cortex, where there is normally a high density of DA terminals (Bjorklund and Lindvall, 1984). This analysis revealed a 2.8-fold increase in the number of DAT-positive puncta in double-transgenic mice compared with wild-type controls (Fig. 9A–C). We did not attempt to measure the average length of DAT-positive fibers in these sections, but visual inspection demonstrated much more extended and branched fiber networks in the double-transgenic mice (Fig. 9A,B). To confirm this observation with another phenotypic marker for dopaminergic fibers, we used the same sections used for analysis of striatal TH immunostaining to quantify the number TH-positive fibers entering the cingulate cortex from the corpus callosum. This specific anatomical location also normally contains a high density of dopaminergic fibers, and it is advantageous methodologically because individual fibers can be discerned and counted. This analysis also revealed an increase, by 40%, in the double-transgenic mice compared with wild-type mice. We conclude that, in the cortex, unlike the striatum, there is an increase in dopaminergic innervation.
Basal and amphetamine-induced activity in CBLG-DT mice
To determine whether these morphologic demonstrations of increased cortical dopaminergic innervation in the double-transgenic mice may have a behavioral correlate, we examined basal and amphetamine-induced activity in an open-field setting. This analysis revealed no difference between double-transgenic and wild-type animals in basal activity in an open field, monitored for 120 min (Fig. 10A). However, in response to amphetamine (2.0 mg/kg), double-transgenic mice showed increased activity for the initial 40 min of observation (Fig. 10B).
Discussion
One principal result of these investigations is the demonstration that sustained developmental overexpression of GDNF in the striatum, the primary target of the dopaminergic nigrostriatal projection, results in an increased surviving number of DA neurons after the first phase of natural cell death. This result supports the hypothesis that GDNF serves as a physiological, limiting, striatum-derived neurotrophic factor for DA neurons during their first phase of natural cell death. This hypothesis is further supported by a number of previous observations. GDNF mRNA is highly expressed in the striatum during development (Schaar et al., 1993; Stromberg et al., 1993; Blum and Weickert, 1995; Choi-Lundberg and Bohn, 1995; Golden et al., 1999), and we have shown by quantitative analysis that its highest level of expression is on PND 2 (Cho et al., 2003), during the first phase. The receptor for GDNF, GDNF receptor α1 (GFRα1), and its signaling tyrosine kinase, Ret, are both highly expressed in SNpc during development (Widenfalk et al., 1997; Yu et al., 1998). As expected for a target-derived factor, GDNF can be specifically transported retrograde from striatum to SNpc (Tomac et al., 1995b). We showed that GDNF uniquely suppressed apoptosis specifically within DA neurons in a primary postnatal culture model established during the first phase of natural cell death (Burke et al., 1998). In vivo, GDNF administered into the striatal target on PND 2 suppresses natural cell death (Oo et al., 2003). Conversely, anti-GDNF neutralizing antibodies administered into the striatum augment death, but they are only capable of doing so during the first phase (Oo et al., 2003). The chief evidence against a physiological role for GDNF in regulating natural cell death in substantia nigra DA neurons is that homozygous null mice for GDNF (Moore et al., 1996; Pichel et al., 1996; Sanchez et al., 1996) and for GFRα1 (Cacalano et al., 1998; Enomoto et al., 1998) show no reduction in the number of DA neurons at birth. However, these mutations are perinatal lethal because of abnormalities of the kidneys and the enteric nervous system, so the mice die before most of the postnatal natural cell death event has occurred. Furthermore, these were not temporally regulated nulls, so compensatory changes may have taken place. Further studies in regionally specific and temporally regulated nulls are required to resolve these issues. In summary, we conclude that, at the present time, the weight of the evidence supports a physiological role for GDNF in regulating the first phase of natural cell death in DA neurons.
The question may be raised of whether the increased number of TH-positive DA neurons at PNDs 7–9, demonstrated by immunohistochemistry, represents an increase in phenotypic expression rather than an actual increase in the number of surviving neurons. This explanation is unlikely because we have previously shown for PND 2 animals (Oo et al., 2003) and in the current study for PND 14–15 animals that increased levels of striatal GDNF suppress apoptosis. In addition, an effect solely on phenotype cannot explain our observation of a higher number of DA neurons at PNDs 7–9 in the double transgenics than in adults of either the wild-type or double-transgenic genotype.
Although increased striatal GDNF expression is sufficient to augment the number of SN DA neurons surviving after the first phase of natural cell death, we find that it is not sufficient to maintain an increased number of these neurons surviving into adulthood. We considered the possibility that, in the absence of increased abundance of some other unknown factor(s) during the second phase of natural cell death at PND 14, there may be a rebound increased level of natural cell death in the double transgenics at that time, but we found this not to be the case. In fact, we continued to observe a modest suppression of cell death in the double-transgenic animals at PND 14. We assume, therefore, that sometime between PND 14 and adulthood, the numbers of DA neurons in the double transgenics diminish to wild-type levels. The timing and mechanism of this regressive event are unknown, and also unknown are the other factors that participate with GDNF in the regulation of the ultimate adult number of DA neurons. These factors may include other target-derived diffusible factors or the GDNF receptor GFRα1, which may become limiting in the double-transgenic animals, or they may include afferent projections, which have been shown to regulate DA neuron number (Alonso-Vanegas et al., 1999).
An unexpected observation, in view of previous demonstrations in lesion models of the ability of GDNF to induce dopaminergic fiber sprouting when injected intracerebrally (Hudson et al., 1995; Tomac et al., 1995a; Rosenblad et al., 1998), was the lack of an effect in double-transgenic animals on striatal dopaminergic innervation or evoked DA release. We considered the possibility that GDNF overexpression attributable to the transgenes may have been downregulated TH expression, as described when GDNF overexpression is mediated by lentiviral gene transfer (Georgievska et al., 2002). However, assessment of DAT immunostaining at the cellular level and VMAT2 protein levels by Western analysis (data not shown) also failed to provide evidence of hyperinnervation. This lack of an effect on striatal dopaminergic innervation was observed despite a clear induction of innervation in the adjacent cortex, demonstrated as increased numbers of DAT-positive fibers in piriform cortex and TH-positive fibers in cingulate cortex. This difference in effects on striatal and cortical innervation is not likely to be attributable to differences in the level of GDNF expression between the two target regions. In fact, striatum is more likely to express higher levels of GDNF because it showed higher levels of β-galactosidase expression throughout development. It has been shown that β-galactosidase expression strongly predicts levels of expression of the second transgene in this bicistronic, bidirectional module (Krestel et al., 2001). The increased dopaminergic cortical innervation correlates with our finding that, in the VTA, which gives rise to the cortical innervation, there is an increased adult number of DA neurons in the double transgenic animals. These results therefore may suggest a fundamental difference in the responsiveness of the mesocortical and nigrostriatal systems to GDNF. These results may indicate, for example, that nigrostriatal dopaminergic innervation, unlike mesocortical dopaminergic innervation, is limited by some factor other than, or in addition to, GDNF. One possibility is that striatal GFRα1, exerting an effect in trans (Yu et al., 1998; Paratcha et al., 2001), becomes limiting in the doubletransgenic animals. Such an effect has been demonstrated in vitro for neurite growth of nodose and sympathetic ganglia grown in the presence of nonlimiting concentrations of GDNF (Ledda et al., 2002).
Despite our inability to demonstrate increased dopaminergic innervation or DA release in the striatum in the CBLG-DT animals, we observed a behavioral phenotype of increased locomotor activity after administration of amphetamine. This behavioral response has classically been attributed to an induction of striatal DA release by amphetamine (Schultz, 1982; Weiner, 1985). Thus, the presence of this behavioral phenotype may therefore suggest that developmental overexpression of GDNF in the striatal target has had a lasting functional effect on the nigrostriatal dopaminergic projection not assessed by the physiological studies that we performed. Further experiments, for example, examining the DA release challenged with amphetamine, will shed light on the underlying mechanism. Alternatively, it is also possible that the increased locomotor response to amphetamine in the double-transgenic animals is not related to the nigrostriatal projection but rather to the dopaminergic mesocortical projection, which is clearly increased by morphologic analysis. Unfortunately, investigation of DA transmission in the cortex by CV in vitro was hindered by the sparse innervations of DA terminals in this region. Thus, these CBLG-DT animals may prove useful for the functional analysis of dopaminergic mesencephalic projections.
In conclusion, the present findings lend further support to the hypothesis that striatal target-derived GDNF plays a physiological role in the early determination of numbers of SN DA neurons. It is also clear, however, that GDNF alone in target structures is not sufficient to produce a lasting increase in the mature number of these neurons, so other regulatory factors remain to be identified.
Footnotes
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grants NS26836 and NS38370, The Parkinson's Disease Foundation, and the Lowenstein Foundation.
Correspondence should be addressed to Robert E. Burke, Department of Neurology, Room 308, Black Building, Columbia University, 650 West 168th Street, New York, NY 10032. E-mail: rb43@columbia.edu.
DOI:10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4506-03.2004
Copyright © 2004 Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474/04/243136-11$15.00/0
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