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Volume 16, Number 17,
Issue of September 1, 1996
pp. 5351-5360
Copyright ©1996 Society for Neuroscience
Impaired Differentiation of Schwann Cells in Transgenic Mice with
Increased PMP22 Gene Dosage
Josef P. Magyar1,
Rudolf Martini2,
Thomas Ruelicke3,
Adriano Aguzzi4,
Katrin Adlkofer1,
Zlatko Dembic5,
Jürgen Zielasek6,
Klaus V. Toyka6, and
Ueli Suter1
Departments of 1 Cell Biology and
2 Neurobiology, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology,
ETH-Hoenggerberg, CH-8093 Zurich, Switzerland, 3 Central
Biological Laboratory and 4 Institute of Neuropathology,
University Hospital of Zurich, CH-8091 Zurich, Switzerland,
5 Hoffmann-LaRoche, CH-4000 Basel, Switzerland, and
6 Department of Neurology, Julius-Maximilians-University,
D-97080 Würzburg, Germany
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
FOOTNOTES
REFERENCES
ABSTRACT
An intrachromosomal duplication containing the PMP22
gene is associated with the human hereditary peripheral neuropathy
Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease type 1A, and PMP22 overexpression as a
consequence of increased PMP22 gene dosage has been
suggested as causative event in this frequent disorder of peripheral
nerves. We have generated transgenic mice that carry additional copies
of the pmp22 gene to prove that increased PMP22 gene
dosage is sufficient to cause PNS myelin deficiencies. Mice carrying
approximately 16 and 30 copies of the pmp22 gene display
a severe congenital hypomyelinating neuropathy as characterized by an
almost complete lack of myelin and marked slowing of nerve conductions.
Affected nerves contain an increased number of nonmyelinating Schwann
cells, which do not form onion bulbs but align in association with
axons. The mutant Schwann cells are characterized by a
premyelination-like state as indicated by the expression of embryonic
Schwann cell markers. Furthermore, continued Schwann cell proliferation
is observed into adulthood. We hypothesize that Schwann cells are
impaired in their differentiation into the myelinating phenotype,
leading to a disorder comparable to severe cases of hereditary motor
and sensory neuropathies. Our findings, combined with the analysis of
heterozygous and homozygous PMP22-deficient mice, indicate that
aberrant pmp22 gene copy numbers cause various forms of
myelination defects.
Key words:
PMP22;
myelin;
Schwann cell;
dysmyelination;
Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease;
gene dosage;
transgenic mouse
INTRODUCTION
Mutations affecting the myelin proteins PMP22,
Cx32, and P0 have been linked to the peripheral neuropathy
Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMT) (for review, see Suter and Snipes,
1995a ). The most common form (70-80%) of familial and spontaneous CMT
(CMT1A) is associated with a 1.5 megabase intrachromosomal duplication
on chromosome 17p11.2, which contains the PMP22 gene (Lupski
et al., 1991 ; Raeymaekers et al., 1991 ; Matsunami et al., 1992 ; Patel
et al., 1992 ; Timmerman et al., 1992 ; Valentijn et al., 1992a ). Less
commonly, nonconservative missense point mutations within the putative
transmembrane regions of PMP22 have also been found in CMT1A (Valentijn
et al., 1992b ; Roa et al., 1993a ,b) and the congenital hypomyelinating
peripheral neuropathy Dejerine-Sottas syndrome (DSS) (Roa et al.,
1993c ). The morphological abnormalities of these human disorders are
comparable to those found in the natural mouse mutants
Trembler (Tr) and Trembler-J
(Tr-J), both of which are also mutated in the
pmp22 gene (Suter et al., 1992a ,b; Suter et al., 1993 ).
Deletions of the same chromosomal segment, which is duplicated in
CMT1A, are linked to hereditary neuropathy with liability to pressure
palsies (HNPP) (Chance et al., 1993 ), and the causative role of PMP22
in HNPP has been demonstrated by the generation of PMP22-deficient mice
that exhibit a phenotype comparable to the human disease (Adlkofer et
al., 1995 ).
PMP22 belongs to a family of hydrophobic proteins with four potential
membrane-associated domains (Spreyer et al., 1991 ; Welcher et al.,
1991 ). Structurally, PMP22 resembles proteolipid protein (PLP), the
major myelin protein of the CNS, and an intriguing parallel exists in
the genetics of PMP22 and PLP in that in both cases, altering gene
dosage and point mutations lead to severe myelin deficiencies (Suter
and Patel, 1994 ; Nave and Boespflug-Tanguy, 1996 ). Evidence derived
from the analysis of PMP22-deficient mice and observations in human
CMT1A patients have established that PMP22 is crucial for the correct
development of peripheral nerves, the maintenance of axons, and the
determination of myelin thickness and stability (Adlkofer et al.,
1995 ). The exact function of PMP22 in the PNS, however, remains elusive
(Suter and Snipes, 1995b ).
In vitro experiments have suggested that PMP22, in addition
to its role as a component of compact PNS myelin (Snipes et al., 1992 ;
Haney et al., 1996 ), may be involved in the regulation of the cell
cycle and apoptosis (Manfioletti et al., 1990 ; Fabbretti et al., 1995 ;
Zoidl et al., 1995 ). A broad role of PMP22 is supported further by its
widespread expression throughout embryonic mouse development (Baechner
et al., 1995 ), its gene regulation by a complex regulatory system
including a myelinating Schwann cell-specific and a ubiquitously
expressed promoter (Suter et al., 1994 ), and the finding of an extended
PMP22 gene family with high expression in various tissues outside of
the PNS (Marvin et al., 1995 ; Taylor et al., 1995 ; Taylor and Suter,
1996 ).
In this report, we describe the phenotype caused by highly increased
pmp22 gene dosage in transgenic mice, which leads to a
severe peripheral neuropathy reminiscent of DSS.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Isolation of a cosmid containing the pmp22
gene. Molecular biology techniques were performed according to
standard protocols. A 129Sv mouse genomic pTCF cosmid library was
screened using a 2 kb BamHI-EcoRI fragment of the
5 -flanking region of the pmp22 gene (5 -probe; see Fig. 1).
For the characterization of clones and transgenic animals by Southern
blot analysis, the same 5 -probe and an additional 3 -probe
[1.1-kb-long SfiI-SacII fragment (Adlkofer et al., 1995 )]
was used. For the determination of the transgene copy number, an N-CAM
probe (Cremer et al., 1993 ) was used as internal standard. Signal
intensity values were determined using the PhosphorImager device
(Molecular Dynamics, Kemsing, UK).
Fig. 1.
Generation of PMP22-transgenic mice.
A, Structure of the genomic PMP22 cosmid clone pTCF-6.1.
Identified exons are indicated by filled boxes and
numbered below; cosmid-derived sequences are represented by open
boxes. The DNA probes used for identification and
characterization of the clone (3 - and 5 -probes) are indicated by
thick lines. The 43-kb-long NruI fragment
of pTCF-6.1 was purified on a 0.6% agarose gel, isolated by
electroelution, and microinjected into fertilized oocytes.
S, SalI; K,
KpnI; B, BamHI;
N, NruI. B, Southern blot
analysis of BamHI-digested genomic DNA of
PMP22-transgenic and wild-type founder mice using the 5 -probe
(lanes 2 and 3 are wild type, and
lanes 1, 4, and 5 represent the
transgenic lines TgN247, TgN248, and TgN249, respectively).
[View Larger Version of this Image (17K GIF file)]
Generation of transgenic mice. The 43 kb insert of cosmid
pTCF-6.1 was released by NruI restriction endonuclease
digest and separated on a 0.6% agarose gel. DNA was isolated using the
Biotrap electroelutor (Schleicher & Schuell, Dassel, Germany). DNA was
desalted and equilibrated in the injection buffer (5 mM
Tris-HCl, pH 7.5/5 mM NaCl/0.1 mM EDTA), using
a Centricon 30 concentrator (Amicon, Beverly MA), and was
sterile-filtered with a prewashed Ultrafree-MC filter unit (0.22 µm,
Millipore, Bedford MA). The DNA was diluted to 2 ng/µl and
microinjected into the pronucleus by standard procedures. Zygotes were
recovered from the oviduct of superovulated B6C3F1 females mated with
males of the same hybrid. CD2F1 hybrids were used as surrogates.
RNA isolation and Northern blotting. Tissue samples for
total RNA isolation were dissected and immediately snap-frozen in
liquid nitrogen until further processing. RNA was isolated using the
TRIzol reagent (Life Technologies, Gaithersburg, MD) according to the
manufacturer's recommendations. RNA was resuspended in DEPC-treated
water, and the amount of RNA was determined by measurement of
OD(260/280); 10 µg of RNA was separated on a 1.25%
denaturing agarose gel. RNA was blotted onto a nylon membrane
(Hybond-N+, Amersham, Buckinghamshire, UK) by capillary blotting and
immobilized at 80°C for 2 hr. After prehybridization of the membrane,
PMP22 and P0 mRNA were detected by hybridization with the respective
radioactively labeled cDNA probe. For quantitative analysis, band
intensity data were collected using the PhosphorImager device and
analyzed with the National Institutes of Health Image program (public
domain program, written by Wayne Rasband at National Institutes of
Health and available from the Internet by anonymous FTP from
zippy.nimh.nih.gov).
Preparation of sciatic nerve homogenates and Western blot
analysis. Sciatic nerves were removed and immediately snap-frozen
in liquid nitrogen until processing. Nerves were homogenized in 200 µl of 8 M urea and cleared from debris at 10,000 × g for 5 min, and protein concentration of the supernatant
was determined (Bio-Rad protein assay, Bio-Rad, Richmond, CA). Ten
micrograms of protein in sample buffer were separated on a 12.5%
SDS-PAGE gel, and the proteins were transferred onto a nitrocellulose
membrane (Schleicher & Schuell) using a semi-dry blotting apparatus
(Trans-Blot SD semi-dry transfer cell; Bio-Rad). Transfer efficiency
was controlled by Ponceau-S staining of the membrane and by Coomassie
brilliant blue staining of the gel. Membranes were blocked in 2%
skimmed milk powder in PBS. Antibodies directed against PMP22 (Susi 4)
(Pareek et al., 1993 ) or directed against the myelin protein P0
(P0raba; gift from Dr. M. Filbin, Hunter College, NY, NY) were both
applied at a dilution of 1:1000 at 4°C for 16 hr. Secondary
antibodies (horse radish peroxidase-coupled polyclonal goat anti-rabbit
antisera; Sigma, St. Louis, MO) at a dilution of 1:5000 were applied
for 1-2 hr at room temperature after fourfold washing of the membrane
with PBS/0.2% Tween 20. After repeated washing to remove excess
secondary antibodies, detection of the immunoreactive products was
performed by visualization of chemiluminescence (ECL Western
blot detection reagents; Amersham, Arlington Heights, IL) on x-ray
films (Fuji, Stamford, CT).
Light microscopic analysis. Six micrometer frozen sections
from the quadriceps muscle were stained by NADH tetrazolium reductase
histochemistry according to standard protocols and analyzed and
photographed on an Axiophot microscope. Ten micrometer
cross-cryosections of the sciatic nerves of 8-, 21-, and 70-d-old
wild-type and PMP22-transgenic mice were stained with
4 ,6-diamidine-2 -phenylindole dihydrochloride (DAPI) (Boehringer
Mannheim, Mannheim, Germany) according to the manufacturer's
recommendations. Photographic slides were analyzed using a Power
Macintosh 6100/60 computer using the National Institutes of Health
Image program (see above). For semithin sections, nerves embedded as
for electron microscopy were cut in 2 µm sections and stained with
alkaline toluidine blue.
Immunohistology. The localization of low-affinity NGF
receptor (LNGFR), N-CAM, L1, and glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP)
was carried out by indirect immunofluorescence on fresh-frozen sections
of femoral quadriceps nerves as described (Giese et al., 1992 ;
Montag et al., 1994 ).
Proliferation analysis. Mice were injected with
5-bromo-2 -deoxyuridine (BrdU) intraperitoneally (50 mg/kg in PBS) at
various time points (21 and 70 d after birth). The animals were
killed with an overdose of Nembutal (Abbott Laboratories, North
Chicago, IL) 18 hr after the administration of the nucleotide analog
that allows for immunocytochemical detection of proliferating cells
after incorporation into replicating DNA (Gratzner, 1982 ). Sciatic
nerves were fixed in situ for 20 min, postfixed in 4%
paraformaldehyde (PFA) in PBS, and embedded in paraffin. BrdU
immunocytochemistry was carried out using a monoclonal, biotinylated
antibody (1:50; Caltag, San Francisco, CA).
Tissue preservation and electron microscopy. Electron
microscopy of sciatic nerves of transcardially perfused experimental
and control mice (2% PFA and 2% glutaraldehyde in 0.1 M
cacodylate buffer) was performed according to Adlkofer et al.
(1995) .
Electrophysiological analysis. The methods for
electrophysiological analysis have been described (Adlkofer et al.,
1995 ). Six PMP22-transgenic and five wild-type control animals (sibling
of two litters) were examined. Latencies, amplitudes, duration of the
compound muscle action potential (CMAP or M-response) (Kimura, 1989 ),
and the F-wave elicitability, latency, and duration were analyzed in
the sciatic nerve (Hartung et al., 1988 ; Kimura, 1989 ). Because CMAP
amplitudes were very low in PMP22-transgenic mice, 10-20 M-responses
in these animals were averaged. Nerve conduction velocities of control
mice were similar to those reported earlier (Low and McLeod, 1975 ;
Pollard and McLeod, 1980 ; Montag et al., 1994 ; Adlkofer et al., 1995 ).
Double-sided U test (significance level 0.05) was used to
assess the statistical significance of differences in the nerve
conduction studies between PMP22-transgenic and control mice (Instat,
GraphPad, San Diego, CA).
RESULTS
Isolation of a cosmid clone containing the mouse genomic
pmp22 gene and generation of transgenic mice
On the basis of the examination of mouse genomic DNA by Southern
blot analysis, we estimated that the pmp22 gene spans ~40
kb (data not shown). Thus, we decided to screen a mouse cosmid library
to isolate a full-length mouse genomic pmp22 clone. Using
the 5 -flanking region of the pmp22 gene as a probe
(5 -probe containing exons 1b and 2) (Fig.
1A), we isolated five independent
overlapping cosmid clones ranging in their insert size from 32.5 to
42.5 kb (data not shown). One of these clones (pTCF-6.1; insert size,
42.5 kb) (Fig. 1A) contained the entire
pmp22 gene flanked by ~7 kb upstream nontranscribed region
and >4 kb downstream nontranscribed region. The 5 -untranslated exons
1a and 1b were mapped by Southern blot analysis, and identity was
confirmed by DNA sequencing (Adlkofer et al., 1995 ) (data not shown).
Exon 5 was localized by Southern blot analysis using a probe specific
for the 3 -flanking region (Adlkofer et al., 1995 ) (3 -probe in Fig.
1A), and the presence of the complete exon 5 was
confirmed by PCR analysis (data not shown). The purified 43 kDa
NruI-excised insert of pTCF-6.1, which included ~0.2 kb of
vector sequences on either end, was used for microinjection into
fertilized mouse oocytes of the F1 hybrid strain B6C3F1 to generate
PMP22-transgenic mice.
Copy number of pmp22 genes in PMP22-transgenic
mouse lines
PMP22-transgenic mice were identified by Southern blot analysis of
BamHI-digested mouse genomic DNA using the 5 -probe
described above (Fig. 1B). Quantitative analysis using an
internal control standard (see Materials and Methods) and
phosphor-imaging identified three transgenic founder mice (out of 17 viable progenies) with gene copy numbers of approximately 16 [TgN(pmp22Ge)248Zbz = TgN248; nomenclature according to ILAR
News, 1992] and 30 [TgN(pmp22Ge)247Zbz = TgN247 and
TgN(pmp22Ge)249Zbz = TgN249]. Detailed additional analysis
correlated with concatemeric head-to-tail integration of the transgenes
(data not shown). Stable transgenic lines were established from all
three founder animals, and no significant differences were observed in
the phenotype and pathology between the three lines. Thus, the
following analysis shows representative data obtained using line TgN248
(unless indicated differently).
Characterization of PMP22 expression in PMP22-transgenic mice
Northern blot analysis was performed to examine the regulation of
PMP22 expression in transgenic animals. In agreement with the
tissue-specific expression pattern of the endogenous pmp22
gene in wild-type control mice, no PMP22 mRNA was detected in kidney,
stomach, thymus, spleen, and liver of transgenic animals at postnatal
day 21 (data not shown). Low expression of PMP22 mRNA was found in the
heart and the lung. Although no overexpression was observed in the lung
of PMP22-transgenic mice (data not shown), a relative PMP22
overexpression of approximately twofold was found in the heart (for
examples, see Fig. 2A, lanes
1-4), but no defects could be detected in this tissue by
histological analysis (data not shown). P0 expression was not
detectable, demonstrating that PMP22 expression in the heart is not
attributable to innervation. As expected on the basis of the observed
severe myelin deficiency in sciatic nerves of PMP22-transgenic mice
(see below), PMP22 mRNA was decreased to 54 ± 32%
(n = 5) if normalized to the amount of total RNA and
compared with wild-type animals (for example, see lanes 5 and 6 in Fig. 2A,C). Because PMP22 and P0
show a similar regulation in myelinating Schwann cells, we used a cDNA
probe specific to P0 as an internal standard for myelin-specific genes
and reprobed the Northern blot membranes. On the basis of the decreased
expression of the P0 mRNA (26 ± 7%; n = 6) in
PMP22-transgenic animals (lanes 5 and 6 in Fig.
2B,C), an approximately twofold overexpression of PMP22 mRNA
was observed in the sciatic nerves of 21-d-old PMP22-transgenic animals
when standardized to the levels of P0 mRNA expression. Western blot
analysis using antibodies directed against PMP22 or P0 revealed a
dramatic decrease in protein expression of both myelin proteins in
PMP22-transgenic mice (Fig. 2D). Interestingly, this
reduction was much more pronounced than at the mRNA level observed
previously in Northern blot analysis.
Fig. 2.
Analysis of the expression of PMP22 and P0.
Northern blot analysis of PMP22-transgenic and wild-type mice
(A-C). The same blot was hybridized first with a PMP22
cDNA probe (A) and subsequently with P0 cDNA probe
(B). Ethidium bromide-stained agarose gel
(C; 18S RNA) is shown as quantitation control. RNA was
isolated from heart (lanes 1-4) and from sciatic nerves
(lanes 5 and 6) of 21-d-old
PMP22-transgenic mice (lanes 1, 3, and 5)
and wild-type (lanes 2, 4, and 6)
siblings (note that the exposure times of the different blots and
probes were not identical). Western blot analysis of PMP22-transgenic
and wild-type mice (D). Crude sciatic nerve homogenates
(20 µg of protein) of PMP22-transgenic mice (lanes 1
and 3; TgN248) and wild-type littermates (lanes
2 and 4) were separated on 12.5% SDS-PAGE and
blotted to nitrocellulose membranes. Proteins were probed with
antibodies specific for PMP22 (lanes 1 and
2) or P0 (lanes 3 and
4).
[View Larger Version of this Image (67K GIF file)]
Behavioral characteristics of PMP22-transgenic mice
Two of the founder mice (TgN247 and TgN249) showed a distinct
phenotype characterized mainly by an unsteady gait, a trait that was
stably transmitted to the progeny. The founder of TgN248 was not
visibly affected and yielded only 27% (n = 168)
transgenic progeny in the F1 generation (which was phenotypically and
pathologically not distinguishable from TgN247 and TgN249), indicative
of a mosaic animal. In general, PMP22-transgenic males show poor
breeding efficiency, and the litter size of PMP22-transgenic females
was reduced significantly (data not shown).
First signs of behavioral abnormalities appear 2 weeks after birth as
manifested by a slight shivering of the animals, which is most obvious
at the head. At 4 weeks, an unsteady gait becomes apparent. Signs of
muscle atrophy, in the form of distal body shape slenderness, are
present at the age of 2-3 months but are variable in extent between
individual animals. Progression in severity of the disease with age
often culminates in pronounced paralysis of the hindlimbs. Generally,
the lifespan of PMP22-transgenic mice exceeds 8 months.
Electrophysiology
Motor nerve conduction studies in all examined 10- to 12-week-old
PMP22-transgenic mice showed the typical electrophysiological signs of
a severe dysmyelinating polyneuropathy, i.e., increased latencies and
decreased amplitudes of CMAP responses with temporal dispersion in both
the sciatic and facial nerves (Fig. 3). Motor nerve
conduction velocities were reduced severely in the sciatic nerve of
PMP22-transgenic mice. In general, a large inter-individual variability
in the severity of the electrophysiological impairment in
PMP22-transgenic mice was observed, for example, with facial nerve
M-response latencies ranging from 3.8 msec to as much as 14.2 msec
(range of normal control mice, 0.8-1.24 msec; see Fig. 3). We could
not obtain M-responses after proximal sciatic nerve stimulation in
three PMP22-transgenic mice, indicating either severe dysmyelination or
complete conduction failure. F-wave studies showed reproducible late
compound motor responses in only two PMP22-transgenic mice, with a
highly increased latency (37 and 42.5 msec as compared with a mean ± SD of 4.1 ± 0.2 msec in five control mice after proximal
sciatic nerve stimulation). Threshold stimulus values were increased
significantly in the facial and sciatic nerve (distal stimulation site)
of PMP22-transgenic mice (data not shown), indicating possible axonal
damage. Reliable measurements of the absolute refractory time of the
facial nerve could not be obtained in PMP22-transgenic mice because of
M-response polyphasia and signal background. We also could not record
mixed afferent nerve potentials in the sciatic nerve of
PMP22-transgenic mice even after averaging >100 stimuli, indicating
either complete conduction failure or profound dispersion of nerve
potential components leading to phase cancellation attributable to
severe dysmyelination. This latter finding indicates that afferent
fibers are affected similarly to motor fibers.
Fig. 3.
Nerve conduction analysis of PMP22-transgenic mice
and wild-type littermates. Top, Summary of the results
of the nerve conduction studies in the facial (left) and
sciatic nerves (right; Mean ± SD;
n = number of animals analyzed) of 10-week-old
PMP22-transgenic and wild-type control mice. We were unable to elicit
proximal sciatic nerve CMAP responses in two PMP22-transgenic mice.
Therefore, the conduction velocity in the sciatic nerve could be
determined in only three mice of this group and may therefore be
slightly overestimated. Bottom, Redrawn original
recordings of CMAP responses after stimulation of the facial nerve
(left) and the distal sciatic nerve
(right) of a 79-d-old control mouse (top
row) and of a 79-d-old PMP22-transgenic sibling (bottom
row). Note the different time and amplitude scales. Recordings
were reproducible on repeated stimulation.
[View Larger Version of this Image (39K GIF file)]
Morphological analysis by light microscopy
Two micrometer semithin cross-sections of the sciatic nerve were
prepared and stained with alkaline toluidine blue. No detectable myelin
was seen in 21-d-old PMP22-transgenic mice (compare Fig.
4a and 4a ) or in 10- or 70-d-old
animals (data not shown). Abnormal myelination in nerves of wild-type
animals was never observed.
Fig. 4.
Assessment of myelination in semithin sections and
immunohistological analysis. Cross-sections (2 µm) of 21-d-old
wild-type (a) and PMP22-transgenic mice
(a ) were stained with toluidine blue. Note the lack of
detectable myelin (a ). Immunohistological localization
of the cell surface molecules LNGFR (b,
b ), N-CAM (c, c ), and L1
(d, d ) in femoral quadriceps nerves of
adult wild-type (b-d) and mutant mice
(b -d ). Although LNGFR is prominently
upregulated in mutant mice (b, b ), N-CAM
is moderately (c, c ) and L1 weakly
increased (d, d ). Note that the
nonmyelinating axon-Schwann cell units also are labeled stronger for
N-CAM and L1 in the mutants (c , d ) than
in the wild-type mice (c, d). Arrow in
c marks the weakly N-CAM-immunoreactive perineurium of a
wild-type nerve. Scale bars, 50 µm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (115K GIF file)]
The examination of other organs and tissues did not reveal any
differences between PMP22-transgenic mice and wild-type littermates,
with the exception of neurogenic muscle atrophy (see below) and
decreased body fat (probably attributable to feeding difficulties).
Characterization of Schwann cell antigen expression
To characterize the differentiation status of Schwann cells
overexpressing PMP22, the expression of a set of proteins typically
associated with Schwann cells of a pre- or nonmyelinating state was
investigated on fresh-frozen sections of peripheral nerves of wild-type
and mutant adult mice. These markers include the cell surface
components low-affinity NGF receptor (LNGFR), N-CAM, and L1, and the
cytoskeletal component GFAP (Jessen and Mirsky, 1991 ; Martini,
1994 ).
We have chosen the femoral quadriceps nerve for this analysis because
it contains only a few nonmyelinating axon-Schwann cell units, which
express these molecules in the wild type at high levels (Fig. 4
b-d) (Giese et al., 1992 ). In mutant mice, a strong
upregulation of LNGFR by most, if not all, Schwann cells was
characteristic (Fig. 4b ). N-CAM was upregulated by the
developmentally abnormal Schwann cells of the mutant but to a
significantly lower degree than LNGFR (Fig. 4c ). L1 was
weakly upregulated by some abnormal Schwann cells of the nerve (Fig.
4d ). Interestingly, both N-CAM and L1 were also
upregulated by nonmyelinating axon-Schwann cell units (Fig.
4c ,d ), suggesting that PMP22
overexpression might have an additional subtle effect on this Schwann
cell type, which has recently been shown to express low levels of
endogenous PMP22 (Haney et al., 1996 ). Finally, the cytoskeletal
component GFAP was confined to nonmyelinating Schwann cells in the wild
type and was weakly upregulated in the mutant nerve (not shown).
Electron microscopy
In sciatic nerves of 10-, 21-, and 72-d-old wild-type mice, large
caliber axons were surrounded by compact myelin (Fig.
5a). All Schwann cells formed a typical basal
lamina, and endoneurial collagen fibrils were abundant between the
axon-Schwann cell units.
Fig. 5.
Ultrastructural examination of sciatic nerves.
Electron microscopy of sciatic nerves of 10- (a, b), 21- (c), and 72-d-old (d) wild-type
(a) or PMP22-transgenic mice (b-d;
TgN248). In 10-d-old wild-type mice (a), larger-caliber
axons (A) are associated with compact myelin
(M), whereas in transgenic littermates
(b), larger-caliber axons are ensheathed by Schwann
cells, which do not form myelin. Arrowhead points to
Schwann cell basal lamina. In 21-d-old PMP22-transgenic mice
(c), most of the larger-caliber axons are associated
with Schwann cells, which do not form myelin; however, ~10% of the
axons having acquired a 1:1 ratio with Schwann cells are surrounded by
a thin sheath of compact myelin (M). Note the prominent
pockets of Schwann cell basal laminae (arrowheads),
which are occasionally filled with Schwann cell processes of high
electron density (double arrowheads). A ,
Axons devoid of an ensheathing Schwann cell are found that are
surrounded by pockets of basal laminae, indicative of the previous
presence of a Schwann cell (arrowheads). In 72-d-old
PMP22-transgenic mice (d), larger-caliber axons
(A) are always associated with Schwann cells devoid of
myelin. Profiles of supernumerary Schwann cell basal laminae
(arrowheads) are seen consistently but appear less
prominent than in 21-d-old mice. Scale bars, 1 µm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (143K GIF file)]
Morphology of the sciatic nerves of the corresponding mutant
littermates was very different and showed evidences of a severe
disruption of myelin formation (Figs. 5b-d). In 10-d-old
mice, myelin sheaths were completely absent, although most of the
Schwann cells had formed a basal lamina and had acquired a 1:1 ratio
with their axons (Fig. 5b). In rare cases, two or more
Schwann cells were associated with one central axon (data not shown).
No degenerating myelin or myelin debris was detectable in 10-d-old
mice, suggesting that the absence of myelin was not the result of
myelin degeneration but the consequence of disrupted myelin formation
from the onset. In 21-d-old animals, the situation was similar to that
seen in 10-d-old mice, with three exceptions (Fig. 5c).
First, the cytoplasm of most of the Schwann cells associated with large
caliber axons was much more electron-dense than that of 10-d-old mutant
mice or 21-d-old wild-type littermates forming myelin. Second, each
axon-Schwann cell unit was surrounded by multiple ``pockets'' of
basal laminae, which usually contained very thin collagen fibrils,
indicative of Schwann cell origin (Bunge et al., 1986 ). Occasionally,
in some of these supernumerary pockets, dark Schwann cell processes
were detectable. Third, a few larger-caliber axons were surrounded by
unusually thin sheaths of compacted myelin. Such profiles were always
surrounded by multiple pockets of Schwann cell basal laminae. Rarely,
degenerating myelin and myelin debris were detectable (data not shown).
At postnatal day 72, compact myelin was no longer seen, which is in
line with the occurrence of some degenerating myelin profiles in
21-d-old mice (Fig. 5d, and data not shown). Supernumerary
Schwann cell basal laminae were still frequent, but often appeared
disorganized or even disrupted and only very rarely contained Schwann
cell processes (Fig. 5d).
The finding of abnormally thin but structurally intact myelin in
21-d-old animals may be explained by somatic transgene inactivation,
like methylation or chromosomal rearrangements, that allowed some
Schwann cells to escape from PMP22 overexpression. Because such
inactivation processes are likely to be only partially effective, the
remaining PMP22 overexpression level may still lead to an unstable
myelin structure that is rapidly degraded, similar to the observed
pathology of CMT1A patients with comparably mild PMP22 overexpression
(Gabreels-Festen et al., 1996).
In contrast to the Schwann cells associated with large caliber axons,
the Schwann cells ensheathing small caliber axon groups were normally
organized in mutant mice and were neither of darker appearance nor
surrounded by multiple pockets of basal laminae (Fig. 5d;
data not shown).
Muscle pathology in PMP22-transgenic mice
Histological analysis of the quadriceps muscle of 10-week-old mice
using NADH tetrazolium reductase staining revealed an even distribution
of intermingled type I (dark muscle fibers) and type II (light muscle
fibers) in wild-type animals (Fig.
6A). In PMP22-transgenic animals,
however, extensive fiber-type grouping was visible (Fig.
6B), and at more advanced stages, definite signs of
neurogenic atrophy were seen, such as large areas containing mainly
atrophic fibers intermingled with smaller groups of hypertrophic muscle
fibers (Fig. 6C). Even at this stage, however, no muscle
fiber degeneration was present, indicating the absence of any relevant
myopathic component in the disease.
Fig. 6.
Histological analysis of the quadriceps muscle of
PMP22-transgenic and wild-type mice. Normal chessboard-like
distribution pattern of types I (slow-twitch muscle,
dark) and II (fast twitch muscle, light)
muscle fibers of wild-type animals (A). PMP22-transgenic
animals (B, C) show prominent segregation and grouping
of types I and II fibers (B) and few hypertrophic fibers
(arrows) but no significant atrophy. C,
Late stage of neurogenic myopathy with type grouping and large groups
of atrophic fibers. Scale bar, 25 µm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (106K GIF file)]
Aberrant Schwann cell proliferation in the sciatic nerve of
PMP22-transgenic mice
Isolation of total RNA from the sciatic nerves of PMP22-transgenic
21-d-old animals consistently yielded double the amount of RNA compared
with that of wild-type littermates, indicating a potential increase in
cell number (data not shown). Ten micrometer frozen cross- and
longitudinal sections of the sciatic nerves of 8-, 21-, and 70-d-old
mice were used to assess cell number. 4 ,6-diamidine-2 -phenylindole
dihydrochloride (DAPI) staining revealed an approximately twofold
increase of nuclei in 8-d-old mutant animals when compared with
wild-type littermates and an approximately fourfold increase in
70-d-old mutant nerves (Fig. 7). Analysis of
longitudinal sections by electron microscopy showed that most of the
supernumerary cells are Schwann cells that have axonal contact and are
aligned along the axon (Fig. 8C); however,
these Schwann cells fail to build up myelin. These results are in
agreement with the microscopic findings that there are no signs of a
significant number of invading macrophages, endoneurial fibroblasts, or
supernumerary Schwann cells not in contact with axons in the sciatic
nerves of mutant mice (data not shown). Proliferation analysis as
examined by injection of 5-bromo-2 -deoxyuridine (BrdU) and subsequent
immunohistochemical analysis of sciatic nerves revealed a robust
increase in the number of proliferating cells in 21-d-old
PMP22-transgenic mice compared with wild-type littermates (Fig.
8A,B). Similar results were obtained in 70-d-old mice (data
not shown).
Fig. 7.
Cell number in cross-sections of sciatic nerves.
Sciatic nerves of 10-week-old wild-type mice (A) and
PMP22-transgenic siblings (B) were analyzed
histologically after DAPI staining. Scale bar, 50 µm. Ten micrometer
cryosections of PMP22-transgenic and wild-type mice of various ages
were stained with DAPI, and the nuclei were counted (C).
The bars indicate the relative surplus of nuclei in the
sciatic nerves of PMP22-transgenic mice compared with wild-type
animals. p values (two-tailed Student's
t test) are given.
[View Larger Version of this Image (66K GIF file)]
Fig. 8.
Schwann cell proliferation in the sciatic
nerve of PMP22-transgenic and wild-type mice. Longitudinal sections (2 µm) of BrdU-labeled sciatic nerves of 21-d-old wild-type mice
(A) and PMP22-transgenic littermates (B).
Frequent incorporation of BrdU in PMP22-transgenic mice indicates
proliferation of Schwann cells (arrows in
B), whereas only rare signals in the wild type are
detectable. Scale bar, 25 µm. Ultrathin longitudinal section of a
sciatic nerve of a 10-week-old PMP22-transgenic mouse
(C). A large caliber axon (black
asterisks) is ensheathed by darkly appearing Schwann cell
processes (arrows in C). White
asterisks indicate Schwann cell perikarya with direct contact
to the axon. Note that their frequency is unusually high. The two
neighboring Schwann cell nuclei at the left possibly
indicate that a Schwann cell mitosis takes place
(arrowheads, endoneurial collagen). Scale bar, 5 µm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (78K GIF file)]
DISCUSSION
We report the characterization of three transgenic mouse lines
that carry additional copies of the pmp22 gene. Each line
showed an identical phenotype in all parameters examined, despite
differences in the copy number of transgenes. We attribute this finding
to the high number of PMP22 transgenes present, which probably leads to
a massive overdose of PMP22 expression in all three lines.
Nevertheless, we observed only a twofold overexpression of PMP22 mRNA
in the mutant animals relative to the mRNA levels of the major PNS
myelin protein P0. When normalized to total RNA, both PMP22 and P0 mRNA
levels were reduced, and this downregulation was quantitatively even
more pronounced at the protein level, in agreement with the virtually
complete absence of myelin. Interestingly, similar downregulations of
P0 mRNA have also been observed in other myelin-deficient mouse strains
with either null mutations in the Krox-20 gene (Topilko et al., 1994 )
or point mutations in pmp22 (Tr; Bascles et al.,
1992 ). In PMP22-transgenic mice, the finding of a twofold absolute
overexpression of PMP22 mRNA in heart tissue suggests that the observed
absolute underexpression of PMP22 in the sciatic nerve is a
tissue-specific phenomenon, probably attributable to the predominant
dysmyelination phenotype.
The relatively small overexpression of PMP22 compared with the
level of P0 and the number of transgenes also has been seen in other
transgenic mouse mutants that carry multiple copies of myelin genes,
including PLP and DM20 (Nadon et al., 1994 ). It is important to
realize, however, that the overexpression of transgenes may vary
considerably throughout development, particularly in PMP22-transgenic
mice, because the observed phenotype indicates that the critical time
period in which overexpression of PMP22 affects Schwann cell
development is right at the start of myelination. In line with these
results, PMP22-deficient mice are delayed significantly in myelination,
suggesting that PMP22-deficiency also affects Schwann cell
differentiation (Adlkofer et al., 1995 ).
Comparison of the phenotypes of PMP22-transgenic mice and
hereditary peripheral neuropathies
PMP22-transgenic mice reveal that strong overexpression of
PMP22 is sufficient to cause a very robust myelin deficiency with the
typical clinical and electrophysiological signs of a severe
dysmyelinating polyneuropathy. This dysmyelination is likely
attributable to the highly increased PMP22 gene dosage, because
transgenic rats that carry a lower copy number of PMP22 transgenes
exhibit a more CMT1A-like demyelinating phenotype, which is
characterized by classical Schwann cell onion bulb formation (Sereda et
al., 1996 ). In contrast, PMP22-transgenic mice are characterized mainly
by complete lack of myelin, Schwann cell proliferation, and the
presence of redundant basal laminae. We interpret these findings such
that a high pmp22 gene dosage in transgenic mice shows the
consequences of one extreme of a continuum of phenotypes associated
with different levels of PMP22 expression. Mice that are completely
deficient in PMP22 develop prominent focal hypermyelination (tomacula)
and subsequent myelin degeneration (Adlkofer et al., 1995 ). A similar
but less pronounced pathology is observed in mice carrying only one
functional pmp22 copy, which genetically and pathologically
mimics HNPP patients. Three PMP22 gene copies in
heterozygous CMT1A patients (Gabreels-Festen et al., 1996) at first
approximation lead to quite normal myelination followed by
demyelination, with a more severe phenotype in homozygous CMT1A
patients (four pmp22 gene copies) (Killian and Kloepfer,
1979 ). Finally, the high pmp22 gene copy number in the mice
reported here is characterized by the most severe defect, essentially
showing nearly complete absence of myelin. Thus, the combined data
support the hypothesis that altered PMP22 gene dosage is not compatible
with normal Schwann cell development and homeostasis.
With respect to human peripheral neuropathies, the morphological
phenotype of PMP22-transgenic mice is almost identical to a specific
subtype of hereditary motor and sensory neuropathies type III
(autosomal recessive HMSN III), which is characterized by amyelination
and basal lamina onion bulb formation (Gabreel-Festen et al., 1992 ;
Nara et al., 1995 ). Recent findings in transgenic mice carrying null
mutations of the Krox-20 (Schneider-Maunoury et al., 1993 ; Topilko et
al., 1994 ) and SCIP genes (Bermingham et al., 1995 ) exhibit a phenotype
similar to HMSN III, which may indicate that specific mutations in
transcription factors that are involved in the determination of the
myelinating Schwann cell phenotype are also potential candidate disease
genes. Thus, it is tempting to speculate that mutations in these
transcription factors may lead to a dysregulation of PMP22
gene expression and in turn to a closely related hypomyelinating
phenotype as observed in PMP22-transgenic animals.
Consequences of PMP22 overexpression and comparison to PMP22
point mutations
The phenotype of PMP22-transgenic animals is similar but not
identical to that of Tr mice, which carry a point mutation
in the pmp22 gene (Henry et al., 1983 ; Henry and Sidman,
1988 ). Severe hypomyelination and increased Schwann cell number are the
main common morphological features, and prominent pockets of redundant
basal laminae surrounding hypomyelinated axons have been described in
both mouse mutants (Low, 1977 ). The etiology of excessive basal laminae
is not clear but differs in Tr compared with
PMP22-transgenic mice. During the development of Tr nerves,
supernumerary Schwann cells move away from the axons and form classical
onion bulbs as the result of demyelination, Schwann cell proliferation,
and remyelination. Subsequently, these redundant Schwann cells are
believed to extend sprouts that later degenerate or retract, leaving
basal laminae behind as a fingerprint of this process (Low, 1977 ). In
contrast, classical cellular onion bulb formation was not observed in
PMP22-transgenic mice, and the supernumerary Schwann cells were found
aligned along the axons. Thus, the detected excessive basal laminae are
likely to be the direct result of proliferation, migration, and
possible transient extensions of Schwann cell processes associated with
axons. Alternatively, the observed redundant basal laminae might be
remnants of Schwann cells that have undergone cell death, possibly
attributable to PMP22 overexpression.
Schwann cell development and proliferation in PNS
myelination mutants
Increased Schwann cell number and aberrant Schwann cell
proliferation into adulthood are common features in PNS hypomyelinating
mutants; however, this phenomenon seems to be caused by different
mechanisms. In longitudinal sections of sciatic nerves of Krox-20 null
mutants, the nuclei of redundant nerve-resident cells appear mainly
spherical and are distributed randomly (Topilko et al., 1994 ). In
contrast, Schwann cell nuclei in PMP22-transgenic mice retain their
characteristically elongated shape, in agreement with the finding that
supernumerary Schwann cells retain axonal contact. Immunohistological
analysis of PMP22-transgenic nerves reveals a strong upregulation of
LNGFR, a moderate increase of N-CAM, and minor upregulation of L1 and
GFAP. This characteristic expression profile of Schwann cell
development markers in combination with the positions of the
supernumerary Schwann cells along single axons indicates that the
differentiation state of mutant Schwann cells in PMP22-transgenic mice
closely resembles the characteristics of normal Schwann cells just
before myelination (Jessen and Mirsky, 1991 ). It is an attractive
hypothesis that the mutant Schwann cells begin to differentiate toward
the myelinating phenotype and concomitantly start to overexpress PMP22
massively (Suter et al., 1994 ). This pulse of strong PMP22
overexpression may not allow further differentiation, thereby
explaining the dysmyelination phenotype, or possibly may even cause
cell death, as suggested by complementary in vitro studies
(Fabbretti et al., 1995 ). If the latter speculation is correct, the
observed aberrant proliferation of Schwann cells into adulthood may
provide a mechanism to replace the continuously dying cells.
It should be stressed, however, that the mutant Schwann cells in
PMP22-transgenic mice have established a 1:1 relationship with large
caliber axons and laid down basal laminae. Furthermore, no
morphological abnormalities of nonmyelinating Schwann cells ensheathing
small caliber axons were observed. This is in contrast to a mouse model
with increased Schwann cell death, which is caused by the expression of
the bacterial diphtheria toxin A chain under the control of the P0 gene
promoter (Messing et al., 1992 ). Those mutants show a pronounced
secondary response of nonmyelinating Schwann cells, including
proliferation and retraction of processes, suggesting a dynamic
equilibrium between myelinating and nonmyelinating Schwann cells.
In summary, although the elucidation of the mechanistic basis of the
observed Schwann cell differentiation defects in mice with strongly
increased pmp22 gene dosage requires additional in
vivo and in vitro studies to clarify the function of
PMP22 in normal and mutant organisms, these animals demonstrate that
impaired Schwann cell differentiation is a likely disease mechanism in
hereditary peripheral neuropathies.
FOOTNOTES
Received April 9, 1996; revised May 31, 1996; accepted June 11, 1996.
This work was supported by a grant from the Swiss National Science
Foundation to U.S. We thank C. Zgraggen and S. Kasper for excellent
technical assistance, and Dr. V. Taylor for critically reading this
manuscript.
Correspondence should be addressed to Ueli Suter, Institute of Cell
Biology, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, ETH-Hoenggerberg,
CH-8093 Zurich, Switzerland.
Dr. Dembic's present address: Institute for Immunology and
Rheumatology, Fr. Quamsgt. 1, N-0172 Oslo,
Norway.
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