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© The Rockefeller University Press,
0021-9525/1999//955 $5.00
The Journal of Cell Biology, Volume 146, Number 5,
, 1999 955-966
Original Article |
Depolarization and Neurotrophins Converge on the Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinase–Akt Pathway to Synergistically Regulate Neuronal Survival
mdfm{at}musica.mcgill.ca
In this report, we have examined the mechanisms whereby neurotrophins and neural activity coordinately regulate neuronal survival, focussing on sympathetic neurons, which require target-derived NGF and neural activity for survival during development. When sympathetic neurons were maintained in suboptimal concentrations of NGF, coincident depolarization with concentrations of KCl that on their own had no survival effect, synergistically enhanced survival. Biochemical analysis revealed that depolarization was sufficient to activate a Ras-phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase–Akt pathway (Ras–PI3-kinase–Akt), and function-blocking experiments using recombinant adenovirus indicated that this pathway was essential for
50% of depolarization-mediated neuronal survival. At concentrations of NGF and KCl that promoted synergistic survival, these two stimuli converged to promote increased PI3-kinase–dependent Akt phosphorylation. This convergent PI3-kinase–Akt pathway was essential for synergistic survival. In contrast, inhibition of calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II revealed that, while this molecule was essential for depolarization-induced survival, it had no role in KCl- induced Akt phosphorylation, nor was it important for synergistic survival by NGF and KCl. Thus, NGF and depolarization together mediate survival of sympathetic neurons via intracellular convergence on a Ras–PI3-kinase–Akt pathway. This convergent regulation of Akt may provide a general mechanism for coordinating the effects of growth factors and neural activity on neuronal survival throughout the nervous system.
Key Words: nerve growth factor sympathetic neurons ras mitogen-activated protein kinase calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II
© 1999 The Rockefeller University Press
THE developmental period of naturally occurring neuronal death is critical to the establishment of appropriate neural circuitry. In the mammalian peripheral nervous system, the ultimate survival or death of any given neuron during this period is regulated both by target-derived trophic support and by neuronal activity (Oppenheim 1991). In this regard, the sympathetic nervous system provides one model system in which the role of growth factors and activity has been well-studied. In particular, a large body of work indicates that sympathetic neurons undergo developmental apoptosis during the first three weeks of neonatal life, and that survival during this period is determined largely by competition for limiting concentrations of target-derived NGF acting through the TrkA tyrosine kinase receptor (reviewed in Kaplan and Miller 1997; Francis and Landis 1999). Moreover, recent studies indicate that other members of the same neurotrophin family may actively signal sympathetic neuron apoptosis by binding to the p75 neurotrophin receptor (Aloyz et al. 1998; Bamji et al. 1998). Together, these findings support a model wherein the repertoire of target-derived neurotrophins encountered by a developing sympathetic neuron determines its life versus death by differential signaling through the TrkA versus p75 neurotrophin receptors (Majdan and Miller 1999).
Although these studies have largely emphasized the role of target-derived growth factors in regulating developmental sympathetic neuron apoptosis, a significant number of findings indicate that establishment of appropriate neuronal activity is also essential (Oppenheim 1991; Franklin and Johnson 1992). Of particular relevance is the finding that blockage of either pre- or postganglionic transmission during naturally occurring cell death led to enhanced sympathetic neuron apoptosis (Maderdrut et al. 1988), indicating that, in addition to NGF, endogenous neural activity is essential for survival of these neurons. Similar conclusions derive from studies of other neuronal populations in both the peripheral and central nervous systems (Franklin and Johnson 1992). Moreover, for some neuronal subtypes, the presence of both trophic support and depolarization are required for survival in culture (Ghosh et al. 1994; Meyer-Franke et al. 1995, Meyer-Franke et al. 1998).
Neurotrophins and neural activity have been proposed to interact at a number of levels to promote neuronal survival. In cultured cortical neurons, the survival elicited by KCl acting through voltage-sensitive calcium channels is thought to be due to increased synthesis and secretion of autocrine brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF; Ghosh et al. 1994). Conversely, IGF (insulin-like growth factor)1 treatment leads to potentiation of L-type calcium channels in cerebellar granule cells (Blair and Marshall 1997), an effect that is thought to be largely responsible for IGF-mediated survival of these neurons. As a third example of such interactions, Meyer-Franke et al. 1998 have demonstrated that activity rapidly recruits the TrkB receptor to the membrane of cultured retinal ganglion cells and spinal motor neurons, thereby allowing these neurons to survive in response to BDNF (Meyer-Franke et al. 1998).
An alternative mechanism, whereby neurotrophins and neural activity could interact to promote neuronal survival, derives from the fact that these two different stimuli activate at least some of the same intracellular signaling pathways. Neurotrophin binding to TrkA leads to activation of a number of signaling pathways, including the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3-kinase)–Akt and Ras–mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase (MEK)–mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase pathways (reviewed in Kaplan and Stephens 1994; Kaplan and Miller 1997). Of these signaling proteins, Ras, PI3-kinase, and Akt have all been shown to be essential for NGF-mediated survival of sympathetic neurons (Bartlett et al. 1997; Markus et al. 1997; Crowder and Freeman 1998). In contrast, depolarization-mediated survival of sympathetic neurons requires calcium influx via L-type calcium channels (Franklin et al. 1995). This calcium influx can result in activation of the calmodulin/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase pathway (Hanson and Schulman 1992) and in increased Ras activity (Farnsworth et al. 1995). The resultant activation of the Ras–MEK–MAP kinase pathway (Rosen et al. 1994), therefore, provides at least one point of convergence between neurotrophin and depolarization-induced signaling.
In this report, we have chosen to utilize neonatal sympathetic neurons, which require both NGF and neural activity for survival during naturally occurring cell death in vivo, to examine the cellular interactions between these two extrinsic cues. Our data demonstrate that NGF and depolarization synergize to regulate neuronal survival, and that this synergy is mediated intracellularly by convergence on the Ras–PI3-kinase–Akt pathway. Such convergence may play an essential role in regulating neuronal survival in both the peripheral and central nervous systems.
| Materials and Methods |
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Adenoviral Infection
For adenoviral infection, cells were grown for 3 d in plating medium as described earlier and then switched into similar media containing the desired MOI (multiplicity of infection = pfu/cell) of adenovirus and no cytosine arabinoside. Infection was allowed to proceed for 24 h, after which the cells were switched back to plating media containing cytosine arabinoside without virus for an additional 24 h before the washout and induction with NGF or KCl.
Recombinant adenoviruses expressing dominant-negative Ras (N17-Ras), dominant-negative Akt (dnAkt; Boudreau, M., C. Tudan, and D.R. Kaplan, manuscript submitted for publication), and dnTrkA (Ferrari et al. 1995) were amplified, purified, and titered as previously described (Slack et al. 1996; Aloyz et al. 1998).
Survival Assays and TUNEL
Survival assays were performed 48 h after washout and induction of neurons as previously described (Aloyz et al. 1998; Bamji et al. 1998). In brief, 20 µl of MTT reagent was added to the medium in each well of a 96-well plate containing the cultured neurons. After a 2.5 h incubation at 37°C, the medium/MTT mixture was removed and the cells were lysed with 100 µl of isopropanol containing 2 µl/ml of concentrated HCl. The absorbance of the lysate at 570 and 630 nm was determined using a Biotek model ELX-800 UV plate reader (Mandel Scientific Inc.).
For the TUNEL experiments, cells were briefly rinsed in PBS, pH 7.2, and fixed for 15 min in 4% paraformaldehyde (Sigma Chemical Co.), 0.25% glutaraldehyde (Fluka AG), and 0.2% Triton X-100 (Sigma Chemical Co.) in PBS, pH 7.2. Cells were then permeabilized with 0.5% Triton X-100 for 5 min and washed three times with PBS. TUNEL reaction was performed for 1 h at 37°C. Each 100 µl of TUNEL reaction mixture contained 20 µl of TdT buffer, 1.5 µl of TdT enzyme (both from Promega Corp.), and 1 µl of biotin-16-dUTP (Boehringer Mannheim Corp.). After the TUNEL reaction, cells were rinsed three times in PBS and incubated for 45 min at room temperature with Cy3-conjugated streptavidin (Jackson ImmunoResearch Laboratories) diluted 1:500 in PBS. Cells were then counterstained for 1 min with Hoechst 33258 (Sigma Chemical Co.) and diluted 1:1,000 in PBS. Cells were washed three times with PBS after each of these incubations and then mounted. For each treatment, random images were captured and processed. Digital image acquisition and analysis was performed with the Northern Eclipse software (Empix Inc.) using a Sony XC-75CE CCD video camera.
Western Blot Analysis and Immunoprecipitation
Sympathetic neurons were rinsed briefly in cold TBS and then lysed in TBS lysis buffer (137 mM NaCl, 20 mM Tris, pH 8.0, 1% vol/vol NP-40, and 10% vol/vol glycerol; Knusel et al. 1994) supplemented with Mini Complete protease inhibitor cocktail (Boehringer Mannheim Corp.) and 1.5 mM sodium vanadate. Lysates were scraped into Eppendorf tubes and rocked for 10 min at 4°C. Samples were then cleared by centrifugation. Protein concentration was determined by the BCA assay (Pierce Chemical Co.) using BSA as a standard.
For immunoprecipitation, samples were diluted into immunoprecipitation buffer (50 mM Tris, pH 7.5, 150 mM NaCl, 1% vol/vol NP-40, 0.5% wt/wt sodium deoxycholate, 0.1% wt/vol SDS, 5% vol/vol glycerol, 10 mM sodium fluoride, 5 mM EGTA, 1 mM EDTA, and 30 mM glycerolphosphate) containing the primary antibody, and incubated with gentle agitation for 4 h at 4°C. 30 µl of protein A–Sepharose beads (Pharmacia Biotech, Inc.), which were preincubated 1 h in cold immunoprecipitation buffer, were added and the samples were further incubated overnight at 4°C. After immunoprecipitation, beads were washed four times in 3% NETF buffer (50 mM Tris, pH 7.5, 100 mM NaCl, 5 mM EDTA, 50 mM NaF, 3% vol/vol NP-40). The NETF buffer was then replaced with 2x sample buffer and placed in a boiling water bath for 10 min. Immunoprecipitated samples were then separated by SDS-PAGE.
For SDS-PAGE, samples were diluted in sample buffer (Laemmli 1974) and placed in a boiling water bath for 5 min. Equal amounts of protein were separated on 7.5–15% gradient gels and transferred onto nitrocellulose overnight at 100 mA. For all antibodies, except antiphosphotyrosine (which was blocked with 3% BSA in TBS), blots were blocked in 5% skim milk (Carnation) in TBS overnight at 4°C. Primary antibodies used included antiphosphotyrosine (mAb 4G10; Upstate Biotechnology Inc.), anti-panTrk 203 (Hempstead et al. 1992), antiextracellular signal-regulated kinase (anti-ERK) 1 and 2 (pAb C-18; Santa Cruz), anti-tyr/thr phosphorylated ERK1 and 2 (Promega Corp.), anti-Akt and antiphosphoserine 473 Akt (New England Biolabs). For Western blots, secondary antibodies used were HRP-conjugated anti-mouse (1:10,000) and anti-rabbit (1:10,000) pAbs (Boehringer Mannhiem Corp.). All incubations were performed in 2.5% skim milk in TBS + 0.1% Tween-20 (Sigma Chemical Co.). For detection, blots were washed with TBS and antibody localization visualized using the ECL chemiluminescence kit (Nycomed Amersham Inc.).
Kinase Assays
100 µg of total protein was immunoprecipitated, except that after immunoprecipitation, beads were washed twice in 3% NETF buffer, followed by two washes in NETF buffer without NP-40, and a single wash in reaction buffer (20 mM MOPS, pH 7.2, 25 mM β-glycerolphosphate, 5 mM EGTA, 2 mM EDTA, 20 mM MgCl2, 2 mM sodium orthovanadate, 1 mM dithiothreitol, PKA inhibitor peptide [Upstate Biotechnology, Inc.], and 5% glycerol). The beads were resuspended in 20 µl of reaction buffer and 10 µl of myelin basic protein cocktail (2 mg/ml MBP in reaction buffer) for ERK assays, or histone H2B cocktail (1.6 mg/ml histone H2B in reaction buffer) for Akt assays. The reactions were initiated with 10 µl of 50 µM
[32P]ATP (
3,000 cpm/pmol) in a final volume of 40 µl and incubated for 20 min at 30°C. The reactions were terminated with the addition of 5x SDS sample buffer for 5 min and loaded onto an SDS-PAGE gel. After transfer of protein, the membrane was immunoblotted for the appropriate protein, exposed to film, and the bands excised and subjected to Cerenkov counting.
Akt peptide assays were conducted similarly, except an Akt specific substrate peptide was used in place of histone H2B. In brief, the beads were suspended in 20 µl reaction buffer with 10 µl Akt-1 substrate peptide (RPRAATF; Santa Cruz) dissolved as 1 mg/ml in assay buffer, and the reaction was started with the addition of 10 µl of 250 µM
[32P]ATP (3,000 Ci/mmol prepared in assay dilution buffer). The reaction proceeded for 20 min at 30°C and was stopped by spotting 25 µl on 2.5-cm P81 filter paper (Whatman Inc.) and the remaining protein was charged with loading buffer for Western analysis. The P81 filter papers were washed 10 times in 0.75% phosphoric acid and counted in the scintillation counter to monitor incorporation of
[32P]ATP.
| Results |
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To perform these experiments, sympathetic neurons were selected for five days in 50 ng/ml NGF, were switched to varying concentrations of NGF and/or KCl for two days, and survival was then measured using MTT assays, which measure mitochondrial function. As previously reported, maximal sympathetic neuron survival was obtained with either 10 ng/ml NGF or 50 mM KCl (Fig. 1 a; Franklin et al. 1995; Belliveau et al. 1997). Interestingly, when suboptimal concentrations of NGF and KCl were added together, these two stimuli acted synergistically to promote neuronal survival (Fig. 1 a). Specifically, while 2.5 ng/ml NGF supported only 29% survival and 5 or 10 mM KCl supported no survival, the combination of 2.5 ng/ml NGF plus 5 or 10 mM KCl supported 46 and 59% neuronal survival, respectively. Similarly, 5 ng/ml NGF caused 53% survival, but the addition of 10 mM KCl, which on its own has no survival effect, supported
100% neuronal survival (Fig. 1 a).
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We confirmed that Trk activity is not necessary for KCl-induced survival using the pharmacological Trk antagonist, K-252a (Tapley et al. 1992); neurons were exposed to varying concentrations of NGF or KCl plus or minus 200 nm K-252a, and were then analyzed biochemically for TrkA activation, using MTT assays and TUNEL to monitor survival. Western blot analysis of anti-panTrk immunoprecipitates with antiphosphotyrosine (Fig. 4 c) revealed that, as predicted, K-252a completely eliminated NGF-mediated TrkA autophosphorylation. MTT assays revealed that 200 nM K-252a decreased NGF-dependent sympathetic neuron survival by 60%, but had no effect on survival mediated by KCl (Fig. 4 d). In addition, 200 mM K252a did not support survival in the absence of NGF or KCl (Fig. 4 d). TUNEL confirmed these results; in 10 ng/ml NGF, K-252a treatment led to the same percentage of TUNEL-negative neurons as did NGF withdrawal (10%), while having no effect on the number of TUNEL-negative nuclei in 50 mM KCl (82%; Fig. 4 e).
Finally, we confirmed (Franklin et al. 1995) that KCl-mediated, but not NGF-mediated, sympathetic neuron survival requires activation of L-type calcium channels, using the L-type calcium channel blocker, nifedipine (Fox et al. 1987; Triggle et al., 1990). TUNEL-labeling of sympathetic neurons maintained in NGF or KCl plus or minus 1 µM nifedipine revealed that this drug completely inhibited KCl-, but not NGF-mediated survival (Fig. 4 e). Moreover, biochemical analysis confirmed that nifedipine had no effect on Trk receptor activation in the presence of NGF or KCl (Fig. 4 c). Thus, KCl-dependent survival requires activation of L-type calcium channels, and NGF-dependent survival requires TrkA.
Depolarization Activates ERK and Akt Kinases in Sympathetic Neurons
To determine potential intracellular convergence points for KCl and NGF-mediated survival, we examined two downstream substrates; the ERKs (MAP kinases), which are activated in sympathetic neurons by depolarization (Franklin et al. 1995) and by NGF (Creedon et al. 1996), and the serine–threonine kinase Akt, which is activated by TrkA (Andjelkovic et al. 1998), and is required for NGF-mediated sympathetic neuron survival (Crowder and Freeman 1998). To perform these experiments, NGF-selected sympathetic neurons were acutely stimulated with varying concentrations of NGF or KCl for 15 min, and then analyzed biochemically. Western blot analysis of neuronal lysates with phospho-specific ERK antibodies revealed that both NGF and KCl caused a dose-dependent increase in ERK phosphorylation, as monitored by phospho-specific antibodies for tyrosine and threonine (tyr/thr) or for tyrosine alone (Fig. 5 a). We also performed in vitro kinase assays using myelin basic protein as a phospho-acceptor substrate to monitor ERK activity. This analysis revealed that while both NGF and KCl induced increased phosphotransferase activity of ERK in a concentration-dependent fashion, higher levels of activation were observed with NGF than with KCl (Fig. 5 b).
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The Ras–PI3-kinase–Akt Pathway Is Involved in Depolarization-induced Neuronal Survival
Together, these results indicate that depolarization leads to robust activation of both the ERKs and Akt in sympathetic neurons. Since both of these substrates are known downstream targets of Ras (Rosen et al. 1994; Datta et al. 1996), and because Ras previously has been shown to be activated by calcium influx (Farnsworth et al. 1995), we hypothesized that depolarization-induced neuronal survival required Ras-dependent stimulation of either the PI3-kinase–Akt pathway or the MEK–ERK pathway. To test this hypothesis, we selectively blocked Ras and/or each of these two signaling pathways.
We first determined whether KCl-mediated survival required Ras activation, using an adenovirus expressing a dominant-inhibitory form of Ras (dnRas, N17Ras; Howe and Marshall 1993). NGF-selected neurons were infected with 200 MOI of adenovirus, expressing either dnRas or green fluorescent protein (GFP), and then were switched to KCl for two days. MTT assays revealed that dnRas expression decreased survival 60% in the presence of 50 mM KCl, a decrease similar to that observed in 10 ng/ml NGF (Fig. 6 a). The GFP adenovirus had no effect on neuronal survival.
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40%, while treatment with PD98059 had no effect (Fig. 6 b). The effect of cotreatment with both drugs was similar to LY294002 alone (Fig. 6 b). In contrast, LY294002 completely inhibited survival mediated by NGF (Fig. 6 b), as previously reported (Bartlett et al. 1997; Crowder and Freeman 1998). TUNEL confirmed these results; PD98059 had no effect on numbers of TUNEL-negative neurons in either KCl or NGF, whereas LY294002 decreased the proportion of TUNEL-negative neurons to 42 and 10% respectively, in the presence of 50 mM KCl and 10 ng/ml NGF (Fig. 6 c). To confirm that this concentration of PD98059 inhibited MEK, in spite of having no effect on neuronal survival, we examined the downstream MEK substrates, the ERKs. Western blot analysis of sympathetic neurons treated with 10 ng/ml NGF or 50 mM KCl plus or minus 75 µM PD revealed that, as predicted, this drug inhibited both tyrosine/threonine and tyrosine phosphorylation of the ERKs, but had no effect on Akt phosphorylation (Fig. 6 e). Thus, the MEK–ERK pathway is apparently not required for depolarization-induced sympathetic neuron survival.
Since PI3-kinase is necessary for 40–50% of KCl-mediated neuronal survival, we next determined whether KCl-induced survival also required the PI3-kinase substrate Akt, using an adenovirus expressing dnAkt from a TTA-inducible promoter (Boudreau, M., C. Tudan, and D.R. Kaplan, unpublished data). NGF-selected sympathetic neurons were infected with 10 to 100 MOI dnAkt adenovirus and 50 MOI TTA-expressing adenovirus (which transactivates the promoter for dnAkt), and were then maintained in 50 mM KCl for two days. As a control, neurons were infected with 50 or 200 MOI of the TTA adenovirus alone. MTT analysis revealed that dnAkt reduced KCl-mediated survival
40%, whereas the TTA adenovirus on its own had no effect (Fig. 6 d). In contrast, similar experiments with 10 ng/ml NGF revealed that, as previously reported (Crowder and Freeman 1998), dnAkt completed inhibited NGF-induced survival (Fig. 6 d).
Together, these data indicate that blocking either Ras, PI3-kinase, or Akt is sufficient to reduce KCl-mediated survival by 40–50%. To test whether these results reflect the presence of a linear Ras–PI3-kinase–Akt survival pathway, we determined whether inhibiting Ras or PI3-kinase blocked the KCl-induced phosphorylation of Akt. Initially, we examined Ras: neurons were infected with the dnRas adenovirus and were then acutely activated with 50 mM KCl or 10 ng/ml NGF for 15 min. Western blot analysis with antiphospho-Akt revealed that dnRas blocked Akt activation in response to 50 mM KCl (Fig. 6 f), suggesting that Akt activity is dependent upon Ras activity. Similarly, inhibition of PI3-kinase with 100 µM LY294002 revealed that treatment with LY294002 completely blocked the KCl-induced phosphorylation of Akt, as assayed either by Western blot analysis with antiphospho-Akt (Fig. 6 e) or Akt kinase assays using the Akt-specific substrate (Fig. 5 e). Thus, calcium influx through L-type calcium channels causes activation of a Ras–PI3-kinase–Akt pathway that is essential for
50% of KCl-induced neuronal survival.
Depolarization and NGF Converge on Akt and ERKs, but only Akt Is Necessary for Synergistic Survival
On the basis of these data, we hypothesized that the synergistic survival seen with NGF and KCl might be mediated by a convergent stimulation of the Ras–PI3-kinase–Akt pathway. To test this hypothesis, NGF-selected neurons were induced for 15 min with 5 ng/ml NGF plus 10 mM KCl, a combination that mediated survival synergistically (Fig. 1 a), and were then analyzed biochemically. Western blot analysis with antiphospho-Akt, followed by quantitative densitometry, revealed that while 10 mM KCl had no detectable effect on Akt phosphorylation (Fig. 7, a and c), the addition of 10 mM KCl to either 2.5 or 5 ng/ml NGF led to levels of Akt phosphorylation that were higher than either of these concentrations of NGF alone (Fig. 7, a and c). Similar results were obtained when ERK phosphorylation was examined. 10 mM KCl did not detectably increase ERK tyrosine/threonine phosphorylation above controls, but the addition of 10 mM KCl to either 2.5 or 5 ng/ml NGF led to significantly higher levels of ERK phosphorylation than did treatment with either concentration of NGF alone (Fig. 7, a and b).
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50%, a result similar to that seen with NGF or KCl alone (Fig. 6 a). Coincident with the decrease in neuronal survival observed with dnRas, we also observed a partial decrease in the downstream activation of Akt and the ERKs, as assessed by Western blots with phosphorylation-specific antibodies (Fig. 8 b).
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Finally, we examined the necessity for Akt using the dnAkt adenovirus: neurons were infected with 50 MOI of the TTA-expressing adenovirus and 10 to 100 MOI of the dnAkt adenovirus, and then switched to 5 ng/ml NGF plus 10 mM KCl for two days. MTT assays revealed that inhibition of Akt completely blocked the ability of NGF plus KCl to maintain sympathetic neuron survival (Fig. 8 d). Together with the LY294002 experiments, these data indicate that the synergistic survival observed with depolarization and NGF is mediated via convergence onto the PI3-kinase–Akt pathway.
CaMKII Activity Is Required for Depolarization-induced Survival, but Not Synergistic Survival Mediated by NGF and Depolarization
Together, these data indicate that Ras–PI3-kinase–Akt is one of the survival pathways induced by activation of neuronal L-type channels, and that this pathway is essential for the synergy between NGF and depolarization. A second, calcium-activated pathway that might also be involved in neuronal survival involves calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII; Hanson and Schulman 1992; Ghosh and Greenberg 1995). To determine the potential importance of this pathway for sympathetic neuron survival, neurons were maintained in various concentrations of NGF and/or KCl plus or minus 10 µM KN-62, a specific pharmacological blocker of CaMKII (Tokumitsu et al. 1990). MTT assays two days later revealed that 10 µM KN-62 dramatically reduced neuronal survival in 50 mM KCl, but had no effect on survival mediated by 10 ng/ml NGF or by 5 ng/ml NGF plus 10 mM KCl (Fig. 9 a). TUNEL assays confirmed this result: the number of TUNEL-negative cells was similar in NGF plus or minus KN-62, but a large decrease in TUNEL-negative cells was observed when KN-62 was added to 50 mM KCl (Fig. 9 b). Thus, in addition to a Ras–PI3-kinase–Akt pathway, calcium influx through L-type channels also mediates neuronal survival through a CaMKII-dependent pathway.
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| Discussion |
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50% of central and peripheral neurons undergo apoptosis. Although neurotrophin signaling has traditionally been considered to be the major mechanism for the matching of neurons to their targets (Barde 1989; Majdan and Miller 1999), a large body of work indicates that establishment of appropriate neural activity is also important (Oppenheim 1991; Franklin and Johnson 1992). Evidence presented here demonstrates that, when NGF is limiting, levels of depolarization that themselves have no survival effect, synergize with NGF to support sympathetic neuron survival. Since NGF concentrations in vivo during naturally occuring sympathetic neuron death are limiting (Barde 1989; Levi-Montalcini, 1987), our findings imply that developing neurons that are active will have a competitive survival advantage over those that are not, even when both are exposed to similar limiting amounts of target-derived NGF. This mechanism, therefore, ensures selection of neurons that pathfind their way to an appropriate target early enough to sequester target-derived NGF and participate in a functional circuit. The validity of such a model derives from the finding that inhibition of either pre- or postganglionic activity is sufficient to enhance developmental sympathetic neuron apoptosis (Maderdrut et al. 1988). Does this mechanism generalize to neurons other than sympathetic neurons? Results presented here demonstrating synergistic survival effects of neurotrophins and depolarization are strikingly similar to those previously reported for central neurons, such as retinal ganglion cells (Meyer-Franke et al. 1995, Meyer-Franke et al. 1998), which require both growth factors and either depolarization or neurotransmitters for their survival in culture. Thus, central and peripheral neurons may not be as different in this regard as previously thought. It may simply be that cooperative interactions between growth factors and activity are always essential for survival of central neurons, whereas they are only essential for peripheral neurons when trophic support is suboptimal. However, since NGF concentrations are suboptimal during development (Barde 1989; Levi-Montalcini, 1987) and neural activity is essential for survival during naturally occurring sympathetic neuron death (Maderdrut et al. 1988), then these apparent differences may be a function of culture conditions, rather than a reflection of the in vivo situation. In this regard, convergent activation of Akt by growth factors and activity may be just as important to central neurons as to peripheral neurons, since Akt is a necessary survival protein for CNS neurons, such as cerebellar granule cells (Dudek et al. 1997). It is also clear, however, that in the case of central neurons, growth factors and depolarization collaborate to regulate neuronal survival by more than one mechanism (Ghosh et al. 1994; Blair and Marshall 1997; Meyer-Franke et al. 1998).
How do NGF and KCl converge to activate Akt? Neurotrophin binding to TrkA leads to activation of the PI3-kinase–Akt pathway (reviewed in Kaplan and Stephens 1994; Kaplan and Miller 1997). The activation of PI3-kinase is thought to occur both via Ras (Rodriguez-Viciana et al. 1994) and Gab-1 (Holgado-Madruga et al. 1997). Moreover, Ras, PI3-kinase, and Akt activity have all been shown to be essential for NGF-mediated survival of sympathetic neurons (Bartlett et al. 1997; Markus et al. 1997; Crowder and Freeman 1998). With regard to KCl, calcium influx has been shown to activate Ras via Ras–GRF (Farnsworth et al. 1995) and, depending on the neuronal context, may or may not activate PI3-kinase (D'Mello et al. 1997; Miller et al. 1997; Soler et al. 1998). In this paper, we demonstrate that calcium influx also activates Akt, and that this activation involves both Ras and PI3-kinase (Fig. 10). Moreover, our data demonstrate that synergistic survival is dependent on Ras, PI3-kinase, and Akt activity, indicating that NGF and KCl converge directly on these proteins to coordinately regulate neuronal survival.
The synergistic activation of signaling proteins by two growth factors previously has been observed in a number of systems, such as Erk 2 by stem cell factor and IL-3 (Pearson et al. 1998), and p38MAPK by IL-2 and IL-12 (Gollob et al. 1999). Such biochemical synergy can occur on several levels. We favor a hypothesis in which KCl causes a nonlinear activation of Ras or PI-3 kinase beyond the activation or localization observed by NGF alone, stimulating the production of PI3-kinase–derived second messenger molecules that function as activators of PDK1, PDK2, and Akt itself, and which recruit Akt to the plasma membrane, an event necessary for increasing Akt activity (Coffer et al. 1998; Downward 1998). The synergistic activation of Akt would therefore be due to the combined actions of multiple Akt activators, some of which are activated linearly and others nonlinearly.
In a recent study examining depolarization-induced survival of neuroblastoma cells, Yano et al. 1998 showed that in neuroblastoma cells, calcium influx mediates cell survival via a PI3-kinase–independent CaMK kinase–Akt pathway. In contrast, our findings indicate that depolarization-induced Akt activation in primary sympathetic neurons is totally dependent upon PI3-kinase. Moreover, although KCl-mediated sympathetic neuron survival is highly dependent on CaMKII, this protein is dispensable for the Akt-dependent synergistic survival effect seen with NGF and KCl. These findings do not imply that CaMKII is unimportant for sympathetic neurons exposed to both NGF and depolarization. In fact, data presented here indicate that CaMKII activity is essential for the synergistic ERK activation seen in response to these two extrinsic cues. Although this ERK activation is not essential for sympathetic neuron survival, it may well be essential for other neuronal responses. In particular, the MEK–ERK pathway is required for neurite extension in PC12 cells (reviewed in Kaplan and Stephens 1994), and our recent data indicate that MEK is equally important for growth of sympathetic neurons in vivo and in vitro (Zirrgeibel, U., D. Lederfein, J. Atwal, J. Toma, F. Miller, and D. Kaplan, unpublished data). Thus, the biochemical convergence of NGF and KCl on the ERKs may well be important for neuronal growth and plasticity (Impey et al. 1999). The involvement of CaMKII in this convergence fits well with its proposed role in neuronal plasticity (reviewed in Ghosh and Greenberg 1995).
In summary, these findings demonstrate that, like central neurons, NGF and depolarization synergistically regulate the survival of peripheral sympathetic neurons under conditions where trophic support is suboptimal, such as during naturally occurring neuronal death. This synergistic survival effect is mediated by intracellular convergence on a Ras–PI3-kinase–Akt pathway. Since Akt is an essential survival molecule for several neuronal populations, this intracellular convergence may represent a general mechanism for coordinating the survival effects of growth factors and neural activity throughout the nervous system.
Submitted: 9 June 1999
Revised: 23 July 1999
Accepted: 23 July 1999
1.used in this paper: CaMKII, calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II; dnAkt, dominant-negative Akt; ERK, extracellular signal-regulated kinase; GFP, green fluorescent protein; IGF, insulin-like growth factor; MAP, mitogen-activated protein; MEK, MAP kinase kinase; MOI, multiplicity of infection; MTT, 3[4,5-dimethylthio-zol-2-yl]2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide; PI3-kinase, phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase; TUNEL, TdT-mediated dUTP nick end labeling
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