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© The Rockefeller University Press,
0021-9525/2000//741 $5.00
The Journal of Cell Biology, Volume 150, Number 4,
, 2000 741-754
Original Article |
Death Commitment Point Is Advanced by Axotomy in Sympathetic Neurons
amt{at}mole.bio.cam.ac.uk
Axotomized neurons have several characteristics that are different from intact neurons. Here we show that, unlike established cultures, the axotomized sympathetic neurons deprived of NGF become committed to die before caspase activation, since the same proportion of NGF-deprived neurons are rescued by NGF regardless of whether caspases are inhibited by the pan-caspase inhibitor Boc-Asp(O-methyl)-CH2F (BAF). Despite prolonged Akt and ERK signaling induced by NGF after BAF treatment has prevented death, the neurons fail to increase protein synthesis, recover ATP levels, or grow. Within 3 d, all the mitochondria disappear without apparent removal of any other organelles or loss of membrane integrity. Although NGF does rescue intact BAF-treated 6-d cultures after NGF deprivation, rescue by NGF fails when these neurons are axotomized before NGF deprivation and BAF treatment. Moreover, cytosolic cytochrome c rapidly kills axotomized neurons. We propose that axotomy induces signals that make sympathetic neurons competent to die prematurely. NGF cannot repair these NGF-deprived, BAF-treated neurons because receptor signaling (which is normal) is uncoupled from protein renewal, and the mitochondria (which are damaged) go on to be eliminated. Hence, the order of steps underlying neuronal death commitment is mutable and open to regulation.
Key Words: apoptosis caspases mitochondria NGF survival signaling
© 2000 The Rockefeller University Press
| Introduction |
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Evidence suggesting that death commitment is commensurate with caspase activation in established sympathetic (superior cervical ganglia [SCG]) neuron cultures was provided by Deshmukh et al. 1996, who showed that inhibition of apoptosis by BAF was sufficient to support cells that could be rescued by NGF even after several days of NGF deprivation. Although neurons had decreased markedly in size, they resumed normal growth upon readdition of NGF. In support, Neame et al. 1998 showed that cytochrome c (cyt c), a cofactor for caspase activation (Liu et al. 1996), was necessary for apoptosis in SCG neurons and was released from the mitochondria after NGF deprivation, but was not sufficient for death since injection of cyt c into the cytosol of NGF-maintained neurons did not trigger apoptosis. Deshmukh and Johnson 1998 invoked the development of a second event also required for the activation of caspases and death which they termed "competence-to-die." Further evidence that death commitment of established SCG neuron cultures is caspase-dependent was provided by Martinou et al. 1999, who showed that the addition of NGF to NGF-deprived/BAF-treated neurons that had progressed to the point where cyt c had been degraded promoted resynthesis of cyt c, refilling of the mitochondria and normal growth.
However, we have reported that NGF addition fails to rescue newly isolated SCG neurons after death by apoptosis is prevented by BAF (Xue et al. 1999). Thus, in these neurons, death commitment appears to be caspase-independent, which is similar to several other cells that cannot be rescued from survival factor deprivation, an insult that is easily reversible (Miller et al. 1997; Villa et al. 1998; Gregoli and Bondurant 1999; Johnson et al. 1999; Stefanis et al. 1999). Furthermore, there is now evidence that treatment with caspase inhibitors in vivo may also provide only temporary protection against death (Kermer et al. 1999). Several explanations have been proposed for caspase-independent death commitment. Some cells in which mitochondria are damaged during an apoptotic stimulus may die by necrosis if ATP falls below a critical threshold (Hirsch et al. 1997; Leist et al. 1997). However, many cells in which apoptosis is prevented by caspase inhibitors do not die immediately by necrosis (McCarthy et al. 1997; Xiang et al. 1998; Xue et al. 1999). Activation of alternative death mechanisms that override caspase inhibition have been suggested, such as one involving autophagy (Xue et al. 1999).
The above results show that in SCG neurons, death commitment may be either caspase-dependent or caspase-independent, suggesting that the steps that control death commitment can vary in the same cell type. Several differences between established cultures and newly isolated neurons may explain the alteration in the steps leading to death commitment. For example, newly isolated neurons are removed at a stage when programmed cell death is about to begin and are highly vulnerable to NGF deprivation, whereas established cultures have been exposed to high amounts of NGF and have developed resistance to NGF deprivation since their intrinsic rate of death is slower than that of younger neurons (Edwards and Tolkovsky 1994; Easton et al. 1997). Alternatively, newly isolated neurons may have partially initiated death signaling events since they have undergone the recent trauma of axotomy that induces stress proteins such as c-Jun (Virdee et al. 1997), which has been associated with NGF deprivation–induced death (Estus et al. 1994; Ham et al. 1995), whereas established cultures have regenerated neurites and no longer express c-Jun protein.
In this study, we explore the reasons why death commitment in NGF-deprived newly isolated neurons cannot be delayed by inhibition of caspases, although caspase inhibition blocks apoptosis. We show that axotomy reverts the behavior of established neurons to that of newly isolated neurons by delivering signals that both advance the death commitment point and makes neurons competent-to-die in response to cytosolic cyt c. We further show that death commitment is due to an underlying failure in mitochondrial function, which cannot be repaired by NGF despite normal signaling through Trk. Damaged mitochondria are selectively eliminated and neurons eventually die by a slow process of starvation, which we propose to name "limoktonia." (Part of these results were presented at the Mitochondrial and Cell Death Workshop. 666th Biochemical Society meeting. Sheffield University, UK, 1998).
| Materials and Methods |
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Cell Culture
SCGs were dissected from 1-d-old Wistar rat pups, and sympathetic neurons were extracted, purified, and cultured as described previously (Virdee and Tolkovsky 1995). To purify the neurons, cells were preplated twice for 0.5–1 h each on collagen-coated culture dishes in L15-CO2 medium containing 5% rat serum under an atmosphere of 5% CO2 at 37°C, and nonadherent neurons were collected by centrifugation. Purified neurons were grown on a poly-L-lysine/laminin substrate in L15-CO2 medium containing 0.6% glucose, 20 µM uridine/fluorodeoxyuridine, 3% rat serum, with or without 50 ng/ml 2.5S NGF and 100 µM BAF (Enzyme System Products) for varying periods of time as indicated. Some cultures were grown for 6 d (6 DIV) with 50 ng/ml NGF before experimentation. The half-life of biologically active BAF (100 µM) in medium bathing SCG neurons was determined by reusing it to inhibit apoptosis of HeLa cells treated with TNF
and cycloheximide, which die by apoptosis within 4–8 h. About 50% of the original BAF activity remained in the medium after 24 h (a loss which also occurred in the absence of the neurons). However, 50 µM BAF was still fully capable of blocking neuronal apoptosis and caspase activation (Fletcher, 1999). BAF was replenished every 24 h when NGF deprivation exceeded 1 d.
Neuritotomy
Small aggregates (
1,000 neurons) of purified 0-DIV neurons were created by growing the neurons overnight in suspension in growth medium containing 50 ng/ml NGF. Aggregates were plated as individual islets on laminin and grown for 6 d. Neurites surrounding each islet were cut with a small needle, and aggregates were collected, washed free of serum, trypsinized, and triturated according to the procedure used for isolating the neurons from ganglia. Neurons were plated as described above in various media as indicated.
Apoptosis, Survival, Cell Size, and MTT Assay Measurements
Apoptosis was scored after staining nuclei with 5 µg/ml Hoechst 33342 by counting the percentage of neurons with fragmented nuclei (at least 200 neurons per well) that we previously showed corresponds to the percentage of nuclei labeled by in situ end labeling (Edwards and Tolkovsky 1994). To score for survival, all of the phase-bright neurons in a prescribed field were counted at the beginning of the experiment, and counting was repeated at various times thereafter. At least 200 neurons were counted per sample. To measure the size of the cell bodies, images of several random fields of neurons were captured using a Panasonic CCD video camera, digitized using Apple Video Player, and imported into NIH Imager 1.62. The circumference of each cell body was traced with the freehand tool, and the area enclosed was determined. Cell body volume was estimated assuming spherical geometry. To relate cell size to metabolic activity, in some experiments, neurons were preincubated in the presence of 0.5 mg/ml 3-[4,5 dimethylthiazol-2-phenyl]-2,5-diphenyl-tetrazolium (MTT) for 30 min, and then imaged immediately as described above. The intensity of formazan staining in each cell was determined at the same time as cell size measurements.
Cyt c Trituration
Whole ganglia or aggregates of 6-DIV–neuritotomized neurons were trypsinized, washed, and triturated by uptake and expulsion 20 times through a 200-µl Gilson pipette tip in groups of 10 ganglia per point (Nobes and Tolkovsky 1995; Nobes et al. 1996). Trituration solutions (25 mg/ml of bovine cyt c or yeast cyt c [Sigma Chemical Co.] without or with 100 µM BAF) were prepared in L15 medium containing 5% rat serum. After trituration, cells were immediately preplated on collagen in the presence of NGF with or without BAF and cultured on laminin. Neurons were either scored for apoptosis after 4–12 h, or left to grow for several days. To calculate the amount of exogenous cyt c triturated into the neurons, cohort samples of neurons were collected and cyt c content was analyzed by Western blotting and quantified against known amounts of rat heart cyt c on the same blot using the Leica Q500 Quantimet image analysis system. To measure the number of cells loaded with cyt c, biotinylated cyt c (25 mg/ml; Sigma Chemical Co.), which does not induce apoptosis, was triturated into SCG neurons. After washing and preplating, neurons were cultured on poly-L-lysine/laminin–coated coverslips for 4 h in the presence of 50 ng/ml NGF, fixed with 3% paraformaldehyde, and stained using an antibiotin HRP-conjugated antibody with diaminobenzidine as the substrate. At least 80% of the neurons contained strong, diffuse biotin staining (data not shown).
ATP Measurement
Neurons (16,000 per well) were collected into an Eppendorf tube, washed once gently in ice-cold PBS by centrifugation, and rapidly lysed by boiling for 40 s in 30 µl of preheated glycine buffer (200 mM glycine-potassium hydroxide, pH 7.5). Samples were cooled, spun at 15,000 rpm for 10 min at 4°C, and the supernatants were stored at –20°C. Luciferase/luciferin reagent (freeze-dried in glycine buffer; Sigma Chemical Co.) was used to measure the amount of ATP luminometrically (Jade luminometer; Labtech International) according to manufacturer's instructions with the following modifications: the reagent was dissolved in water to a final concentration of 10 mg/ml and 100-µl aliquots were dispensed into a series of LP3 tubes. For each sample, background reading was set to zero, 10 µl of the sample was added, the tube was spun briefly, and readings were taken every 10 s over 1 min, yielding an average value. A standard curve was similarly constructed using known amounts of ATP. The assay was log linear between 0.1–100 fmol ATP/tube. Samples that fell outside the range of the standard curve were diluted and reread.
Protein Synthesis
Protein synthesis was measured as previously described (Buckmaster et al. 1991). In brief, neurons were incubated in the appropriate growth medium with [35S]methionine (TranslabelTM; ICN Biomedicals) for
18 h. Cultures were washed once with unlabeled medium and incubated three times with 5% ice-cold TCA to precipitate the protein in the wells. Protein precipitate was dissolved in 200 µl 15% SDS and a 100-µl aliquot was counted in a scintillation counter.
Preparation of Cell Extracts and Western Blot Analysis
After treatment, SCG neurons were washed three times with ice-cold PBS, collected by centrifugation, and solubilized in lysis buffer (20 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.4, 250 mM sucrose, 1 mM EDTA, 1 mM EGTA, 1 mM sodium orthovanadate, 10 mM sodium-glycerophosphate, 50 mM sodium fluoride, 5 mM sodium pyrophosphate, 0.1% 2-mercaptoethanol, 1 mM benzamidine, 5 mg/ml leupeptin, 0.2 mM PMSF fluoride, and 1% Triton X-100). Cell lysates were fractionated by SDS-PAGE, electrophoretically transferred to nitrocellulose, and the membrane was probed with antibodies as indicated. Immunocomplexes were detected using enhanced chemiluminescence, and the intensity of bands was quantified using the Leica Q500 Quantimet image analysis system. Images of blots were imported into Microsoft PowerPoint 4.0 without any change.
Immunocytochemistry
SCG neurons grown on poly-L-lysine/laminin–coated coverslips were fixed with 3% paraformaldehyde in PBS, blocked with 1% BSA and 0.1% saponin in PBS, and probed with a mouse mAb against cyt c, followed by anti-mouse IgG antibody conjugated with Cy3. The nuclei were stained with 2.5 µg/ml Hoechst 33342 during the final wash. Images of the neurons were captured using a Leica TCS-NT confocal system. Aperture settings were fixed throughout the experiment to compare intensities between different treatments without distortion. Images were imported into PowerPoint 4.0 without change.
Electron Microscopy
SCG neurons grown on poly-L-lysine/laminin–coated dishes were fixed with 3% glutaraldehyde in 0.1 M Pipes buffer, pH 7.2, containing 2 mM CaCl2 at 4°C for 4 h. The cells were collected by scraping and centrifugation at 1,000 g for 5 min. After four washes with the same buffer, the pellets were postfixed with 1% osmium ferricyanide in the above buffer for 1 h at 4°C, followed by three washes of H2O and 1-h block staining with 2% uranyl acetate in 0.5 M maleate buffer, pH 5.5. The samples were dehydrated and embedded in Spurr's epoxy resins. Ultrathin sections were stained with uranyl acetate and lead citrate, and observed in a Philips CM100 electron microscope. The total numbers of mitochondria (and in some cases, autophagic particles) in several individual cell sections were counted under the EM viewer. Data were sorted into 12 groups (sections containing 0–10 or >10 mitochondria) and plotted as a frequency of distribution.
| Results |
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15% of the neurons had died despite the presence of NGF. From this time, more neurons died each day, 50% death being measured by
6 d after the beginning of the culture period (Xue et al. 1999). No toxic or metabolic effects of BAF treatment were apparent since
90% of the neurons cultured continuously in the presence of NGF and BAF survived up to 25 d and neurite outgrowth was not diminished (see Fig. 4).
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85% of the 6-DIV neurons after 22 d, in contrast to the lack of rescue of 0-DIV neurons. Survival of 6-DIV BAF-treated/NGF-deprived neurons rescued with NGF was maintained for at least 6 wk. Thus, BAF prevents the attainment of death commitment induced by NGF deprivation in 6-DIV but not newly isolated neurons. The mode of death of BAF-treated/NGF-deprived 0-DIV neurons was nonapoptotic since there was no sign of DNA degradation, condensation, or fragmentation (see Fig. 4 and Fig. 6). Further, caspase activity was completely blocked since there was also no increase in the cleavage of the caspase substrates DEVD.AMC or VDVAD.AMC (VDVAD.AMC is a preferred caspase-2 substrate; Talanian et al. 1997; Mesner et al. 1999) in extracts from BAF-treated/NGF-deprived neurons, whereas cleavage of both substrates increased between 6–13-fold in extracts from NGF-deprived neurons (Xue et al. 1999) (no change in cleavage of other caspase substrates was detectable; Fletcher, 1999). Death was also not typically necrotic since cells did not become permeable to propidium iodide until they became phase-dark, and nuclei did not form the typical tight pyknotic knot associated with necrotic SCG neurons (induced, for example, by profound oxygen and glucose deprivation). These data show that caspase activity and execution of apoptosis was blocked by BAF in both 0-DIV and 6-DIV cultures of neurons (see Fig. 10). Thus, it appears that death commitment is caspase-independent in 0-DIV cells, but is caspase-dependent in 6-DIV SCG neurons.
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90% of the control neurons had died (after 1 and 3 d, respectively). Since 0-DIV neurons become committed to die faster than 6-DIV neurons when deprived of NGF (Edwards and Tolkovsky 1994), it was possible that NGF failed to rescue BAF-treated 0-DIV neurons because of some secondary changes that occur during the period of NGF deprivation itself. Therefore, we tested whether NGF might rescue more 0-DIV neurons if the period of BAF treatment and NGF deprivation was reduced. Therefore, 0-DIV neurons were NGF-deprived in the presence of BAF for 8, 15, and 24 h before NGF was added, and survival over the next 15 d was compared with that of neurons that were deprived of NGF in the absence of BAF. Fig. 2 shows that at each time (8, 15, or 24 h) after NGF deprivation, NGF rescued the same proportion of neurons irrespective of BAF treatment (survival after 8 h of deprivation, 85 ± 3% or 81 ± 6% with or without BAF; after 15 h of deprivation, 50 ± 8% or 51 ± 1% with or without BAF; after 24 h of deprivation, 11 ± 2% or 13 ± 3% with or without BAF, respectively). Although NGF-deprived neurons died much faster in the absence of BAF (with 42 and 85% of the neurons dying by apoptosis within 15 and 24 h of NGF deprivation), there was no period of time during which treatment with BAF increased the potential of 0-DIV neurons to be rescued by NGF. These data strengthen the conclusion that 0-DIV neurons undergo a caspase-independent mechanism of death commitment.
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To investigate more closely whether NGF addition could reverse any of the metabolic effects of NGF deprivation (Deckwerth and Johnson 1993; Franklin and Johnson 1998), we measured four parameters: cell size, reduction of MTT into formazan (Fig. 5 A), ATP content, and net protein synthesis (Fig. 5 B), which was measured after 2.5 d of continuous incorporation of [35S]methionine into proteins. We chose to measure protein and ATP content because it has been suggested that NGF signaling controls neuron size by coupling the rates of protein synthesis and degradation (Franklin and Johnson 1998), while Buttgreit and Brand 1995 have demonstrated that protein synthesis in cells is limited by the amount of available ATP. Fig. 5 A (left) shows that after 1 d, there was no difference in the size or the extent of formazan production between BAF-treated/NGF-deprived neurons, and those neurons maintained in the presence of NGF. However, 3 d later (right), the set of neurons maintained continuously with NGF grew significantly and increased formazan production (P < 0.01, two-tailed t test), but there was no increase in the size of BAF-treated/NGF-deprived neurons that had been treated with NGF for 3 d. Formazan production was visibly diminished, although the numbers did not achieve statistical significance.
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BAF-treated/NGF-deprived 0-DIV Neurons Do Not Refill Their Mitochondria with cyt c after NGF Addition
To further pinpoint which process might cause the metabolic impairment and uncouple NGF signaling from growth, we examined cellular cyt c levels. BAF-treated/NGF-deprived 0-DIV neurons lose cyt c from their mitochondria, releasing it into the cytoplasm where it is degraded (Xue et al. 1999), which is similar to 6-DIV neurons treated with BAF or zVAD.fmk (Deshmukh and Johnson 1998; Neame et al. 1998; Martinou et al. 1999). In Fig. 6, the pattern of immunostaining of cyt c in 0-DIV and 6-DIV neurons and the amount of cyt c determined by Western blotting are compared. Both sets of neurons lost >95% of the cyt c from their mitochondria during the period of NGF deprivation in the presence of BAF (0 time point). However, although 6-DIV neurons were deprived of NGF for 3 d whereas 0-DIV neurons were only deprived for 1 d, cyt c packaging into the mitochondria of 6-DIV neurons resumed within 1 d after NGF readdition (confirming the data of Martinou et al. 1999). But no filling of mitochondria with cyt c was observed in 0-DIV neurons after NGF addition even after 7 d, during which time the nuclei of surviving cells were still normal.
Neurons that Cannot Be Rescued by NGF after BAF Treatment Lose Their Mitochondria
The data above show that NGF does not induce net synthesis of cyt c. One reason may be that NGF signaling fails to engage the mechanism that couples protein synthesis and degradation rates (Franklin and Johnson 1998). Alternatively, the mitochondria themselves could be irreversibly altered so that they cannot be refilled with cyt c. Since NGF deprivation of 0-DIV neurons for 16 h induces autophagy of mitochondria, which is not inhibited significantly by BAF (Xue et al. 1999), we wished to examine whether we could detect any structural changes in mitochondria of 0-DIV neurons that had been BAF-treated/NGF-deprived for 1 d and then stimulated with NGF for 3 d. Fig. 7 shows that most of the neurons that had been NGF-deprived and BAF-treated for 1 d still contained several normal looking mitochondria, although autophagic activity was also very prominent (Fig. 7 B; >5 autophagic particles detected in 93/99 sections). Surprisingly, however, the majority of neurons that had been subsequently treated with NGF for 3 d contained no detectable mitochondria whatsoever, although the plasma membrane, Golgi apparatus, ER, nuclei, centrioles, microtubules, and cytoplasm all appeared to be normal (Fig. 7 C). Fig. 7 D shows a frequency plot of the proportion of cell sections contained in categories of 0–10 or >10 mitochondria. Over 50% of the cell sections contained no detectable mitochondrial structures, whereas analysis of cohort cultures showed that 20% of neurons contained >10 mitochondria and were also rescued by NGF. Thus, NGF addition failed to induce refilling of mitochondria with cyt c, in part, because the mitochondria were dysfunctional and eliminated. To investigate whether NGF addition to BAF-treated/NGF-deprived neurons prompted the loss of mitochondria, or whether the damage occurred during the period of NGF deprivation, we also cultured BAF-treated/NGF-deprived neurons in BAF alone, without adding NGF. We not only found that these neurons died at similar rates to those neurons to which NGF was added (Xue et al. 1999), but also that mitochondria disappeared from these neurons with the same kinetics (Xue, L., unpublished data), implying that the signals that prompt the loss of mitochondria are induced during the period of NGF deprivation and not by the subsequent addition of NGF.
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90% of the neurons that had been NGF-deprived in the absence of BAF had died (43 h for 2-DIV neurons, 48 h for 4-DIV neurons, and 60 h for 6-DIV neurons). Then, NGF was added and survival was scored after 14 d. Fig. 8 A shows that there was a progressive increase in the capacity of NGF to rescue the BAF-treated/NGF-deprived neurons as the time in culture increased before the treatment commenced, with NGF rescuing
50% of 2-DIV BAF–treated/NGF-deprived cultures. By 4-DIV, neurons behaved the same as 6-DIV neurons. These data show that there is a progressive change in the mechanisms that underlie death commitment as neurons age in culture.
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| Discussion |
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Irreversible Mitochondrial Dysfunction Causes Failure of Coupling between NGF Signaling and Rescue of Axotomized SCG Neurons
In seeking the answer to the first question, we needed to eliminate both the possibility that BAF treatment is simply ineffective in blocking death commitment in axotomized neurons, and that Trk, the NGF receptor, merely fails to signal when NGF is added after a period of NGF deprivation and BAF treatment. We ruled out the first possibility by showing that BAF was capable of preventing both death and death commitment of 0-DIV neurons when death was induced rapidly by injection of bovine cyt c (Fig. 10). Indeed, with NGF, these neurons grew robustly, showing that BAF can inhibit cyt c–mediated caspase activation sufficiently to allow rescue of axotomized neurons as long as neurons do not undergo a period of NGF deprivation. We ruled out the second possibility by showing that NGF induced long-term activation of Akt and ERK1/2 (Fig. 3), which are two signals that mediate the survival of SCG neurons (Crowder and Freeman 1998; Philpott et al. 1997; Anderson and Tolkovsky 1999; Xue et al. 2000). In fact, activation levels were no different than those found in neurons maintained continually with NGF for 1 d or to those found in neurons maintained for the first day with CPTcAMP (which supports survival without activating ERK1/2 or Akt), showing that neither the intensity of signaling nor its duration were impaired.
Despite appropriate survival signaling in response to NGF, axotomized neurons that were not rescued by NGF failed to grow neurites and increase in size (Fig. 4 and Fig. 5), unlike similarly treated established cultures which dramatically increase in cell size upon readdition of NGF (Deshmukh et al. 1996; Franklin and Johnson 1998). Clearly, recovery of anabolic metabolism was impaired since net protein synthesis and ATP levels in NGF-deprived, BAF-treated neurons grown with NGF for 3 d were
20% of that observed in neurons that had not been NGF-deprived. However, similar losses of size and protein synthesis were observed in established neurons during long-term NGF deprivation in the presence of BAF (Deckwerth and Johnson 1993; Deshmukh et al. 1996); yet, these cells recovered with NGF treatment. Further analysis showed that the mitochondria of intact 6-DIV neurons regained cyt c within 1 d of addition of NGF to BAF treated/NGF-deprived neurons (similar to Martinou et al. 1999), but 0-DIV neurons failed to recover any cyt c protein (Fig. 6), keeping the mitochondria metabolically inert. When we examined the mitochondria of 0-DIV neurons by electron microscopy to see whether we could detect any signs of structural damage, we were surprised to find that mitochondria were virtually eliminated from the neurons within 3 d of NGF addition to BAF-treated/NGF-deprived neurons. In transition, some of the mitochondria had altered shapes (as do those described by Martinou et al. 1999), but none of the gross swelling seen in late stages of apoptosis or condensation was observed. The loss of mitochondria appeared to be specific since there was no apparent structural deficiency in any other organelle. The changes in mitochondria were not due to the addition of NGF, per se, since the same changes in the neurons occurred when they were maintained in the presence of BAF but without NGF addition (data not shown). These data are, to our knowledge, the first report of complete disappearance of mitochondria from intact cells following apoptotic signals. Lemasters et al. 1998 has suggested that autophagy is used by cells as a protective mechanism to eliminate mitochondria that have open permeability transition pores, and, therefore, dysfunctional inner membrane function. Whether this is the phenomenon we are seeing is not clear since we do not observe mitochondrial swelling before the mitochondria disappear. Interestingly, when SCG neurons overexpressing Bcl-2 are subjected to NGF deprivation and BAF treatment, they do not lose cyt c from the mitochondria nor do they eliminate their mitochondria (Xue, L., unpublished data). These data show that for NGF deprivation to provoke the orderly elimination of mitochondria, some damage to the mitochondria must take place. We are currently testing the possibility that the signal is allied to an irreversible drop in mitochondrial membrane potential (Neame et al. 1998). Whatever the mechanism may be, it is clear that NGF cannot arrest the loss of mitochondria. Thus, as described in Fig. 11, we propose that the irreversible mitochondrial change that is induced by NGF deprivation (and which signals mitochondrial elimination) is the single most important event that induces caspase-independent death commitment. Because of this damage, NGF fails to rescue the neurons.
Axotomy Resets the Mechanism of Death Commitment from Being Caspase-dependent to Being Caspase-independent
Having established that 0-DIV and 6-DIV neurons become committed to die at different biochemical points along a common, cyt c–dependent apoptotic pathway (Deshmukh and Johnson 1998; Neame et al. 1998; Fletcher, G.C., data not shown), we went on to explore the reasons why 0-DIV and 6-DIV neurons behaved differently. We wished to test whether the recent axotomy undergone by the newly isolated neurons during extraction was responsible for these changes, and/or whether the cell bodies of 6-DIV neurons had acquired novel properties. We found that neurons cultured with NGF before NGF deprivation undergo a gradual shift from the 0-DIV to the 6-DIV phenotype, with
50% rescue by NGF occurring in neurons that had been cultured for 2 d with NGF before NGF deprivation and BAF cotreatment. Interestingly, this time course is very similar to the time course of disappearance of c-Jun protein, whose expression (but not phosphorylation) is elevated in 0-DIV SCG neurons during their preparation (Virdee et al. 1997). c-Jun has been suggested to be necessary for apoptosis in SCG neurons (Estus et al. 1994; Ham et al. 1995; Eilers et al. 1998), but is clearly not sufficient since 0-DIV neurons expressing c-Jun are rescued by NGF. However, if c-Jun must be phosphorylated to participate in neuronal death (Eilers et al. 1998), then preexistence of c-Jun could advance the mechanism of apoptosis by providing a ready substrate for JNK, which is activated within hours of NGF deprivation (Virdee et al. 1997). Death via the JNK pathway has been proposed to be mediated by upregulation of the Fas ligand (LeNiculescu et al. 1999), but our preliminary data does not support activation of the Fas pathway as a cause of death in 0-DIV SCG neurons (which already express high amounts of Fas ligand; Tolkovsky, A.M., unpublished data).
Conversely, NGF induces protective mechanisms such as the antiapoptotic protein FLICE inhibitory protein (Raoul et al. 1999; Wiese et al. 1999), which could delay apoptosis induced by several death receptors. NGF also induces strong neurite outgrowth, which could account for the altered cellular behavior. To test this possibility, we cultured SCG neurons for 6 d, and reexposed them to the processes of axotomy and separation used during isolation of 0-DIV neurons. Unlike their intact 6-DIV counterparts, these axotomized 6-DIV neurons reverted their behavior to that of 0-DIV neurons, in that after NGF deprivation and BAF treatment, they could not be rescued. However, interestingly, their intrinsic rate of death after NGF deprivation was similar to that of intact 6-DIV neurons (50% time of death
25 h) compared with 0-DIV neurons (50% time of death
15 h; Edwards and Tolkovsky 1994), thus, supporting our previous evidence that the slower rate of death of older and/or more established cultures is not due to a reservoir of signaling intermediates provided by the neurites, but is rather an intrinsic property of cell bodies that increases with neuron age. Whatever the mechanism leading to the slower rate of apoptosis onset (which could be the FLICE inhibitory protein), it clearly does not contribute to the mechanism that defines the death commitment point since neuritotomized 6-DIV apoptosed slowly, yet they switched from having a caspase-dependent to a caspase-independent mode of death commitment.
Death Commitment and Competence-to-Die Are Separable Events
Since the death commitment point of axotomized 6-DIV neurons reverted to being caspase-independent, like 0-DIV neurons, we speculated that axotomy may make these cells competent-to-die and that competence to die and caspase-independent death commitment may be associated. Axotomized cells were indeed competent-to-die in response to cytosolic cyt c; thus, axotomy can mimic a period of NGF deprivation (Deshmukh and Johnson 1998) and sensitize established neurons to cyt c release. However, since axotomized neurons containing exogenous cyt c can be rescued by NGF in the presence of BAF (Fig. 9), death commitment and competence-to-die must be two separate events. Further, since these BAF-treated cells are both competent-to-die and contain cytosolic cyt c but can be rescued, another event must be required for death commitment. We postulate that death commitment arises because of irreversible mitochondrial dysfunction resulting from NGF deprivation.
The inhibition of caspases has been proposed as a potential strategy to prevent cell loss arising from pathology and trauma (Schulz et al. 1999; Kumar 1999). If caspase inhibition is to be a successful strategy, it must inhibit both apoptosis and death commitment of cells. While caspase inhibition can clearly prevent apoptosis, it is still not clear whether it can prevent the eventual loss of cells. Indeed, mechanisms of death other than apoptosis have been proposed to cause neurodegenerative disease (Perry et al. 1998; Migheli et al. 1999; Selznick et al. 1999). Our data suggest that the inhibition of the apoptotic pathway in some damaged neurons may merely prevent the removal of these cells by apoptosis, and that the cells will be lost nonetheless by a mechanism involving the selective loss of the mitochondria, and energy starvation. The relevance of these observations to axotomized systems in vivo remains to be studied.
In summary, our data suggest that the main difference between 0-DIV and established cultures of SCG neurons is related neither to the age of the neurons, nor to their altered responsiveness to NGF, nor to the differences in the ability of BAF to prevent caspase activity. Rather, it appears that the difference is due to the signals produced by axotomy, which render the neurons competent-to-die prematurely and induce a major shift in death commitment point which, together with NGF deprivation, causes irreversible damage to the mitochondria. Our preliminary data suggest that cell death by mitochondrial loss is widespread in cultured cells. We propose to name this nonnecrotic, nonapoptotic mode of death "limoktonia" (limoktonia, pronounced with emphasis on "nia," which is the Greek term for starvation).
| Acknowledgments |
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This work was supported by a BBSRC CASE Studentship funded in part by Novartis Pharma (to G.C. Fletcher), a Medical Research Council Industrial Collaborative Studentship funded in part by Merck, Sharpe & Dohme (to S.K. Passingham), and by a Wellcome Trust Programme grant (to A.M. Tolkovsky and L. Xue).
Submitted: 3 March 2000
Revised: 25 May 2000
Accepted: 22 June 2000
Abbreviations used in this paper: BAF, t-butoxy carbonyl-Asp(O-methyl)-CH2F; CPTcAMP, 8-(4-chloropheny thio) cAMP; cyt c, cytochrome c; fmk, fluoromethylketone; MTT, 3-[4,5 dimethylthiazol-2-phenyl]-2,5-diphenyl-tetrazolium; SCG, superior cervical ganglia; zVAD.fmk, benzyloxyonyl-Val-Ala-Asp(O-methyl)-CH2F; 0-DIV, newly isolated SCG neurons; 6-DIV, 6-day cultured SCG neurons.
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