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Next Article 
Volume 16, Number 19,
Issue of October 1, 1996
pp. 5897-5904
Copyright ©1996 Society for Neuroscience
Bcl-2 Sensitivity Differentiates Two Pathways for Motoneuronal
Death in the wobbler Mutant Mouse
Muriel Coulpier,
Marie-Pierre Junier,
Marc Peschanski, and
Patrick A. Dreyfus
Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche
Médicale U421, 94010 Créteil Cedex, France
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
FOOTNOTES
REFERENCES
ABSTRACT
The molecular events leading to motoneuronal death are still
poorly understood. In mammals, the bcl-2 proto-oncogene,
which encodes a membrane-associated protein, has been shown to suppress
both developmental motoneuronal death and experimental axotomy-induced
motoneuronal death. We assessed a potential protective effect of Bcl-2
on pathological motoneuronal death processes in adult rodents. We took
advantage of the murine mutant wobbler, which undergoes
progressive degeneration of the spinal and brainstem motoneurons. A
hybrid carrying both the wobbler mutation and the human
bcl-2 transgene under the control of the neuron-specific
enolase promoter was produced. Although Bcl-2 protected spinal and
brainstem motoneurons from developmental death and the postnatal
motoneurons of the facial nucleus from axotomy-induced death, the
pathological motoneuronal death was not altered in the adult hybrid.
These results demonstrate that Bcl-2 sensitivity distinguishes at least
two different motoneuronal death pathways in the wobbler
mutant. They support the hypothesis that experimental and pathological
motoneuronal death are dependent on different cellular mechanisms.
Key words:
wobbler;
Bcl-2;
developmental
neuronal death;
axotomy-induced cell death;
excitotoxicity;
neurotrophic factors
INTRODUCTION
An intense effort is being made to understand the
mechanisms of motoneuronal death and to identify agents with
therapeutic potential in human degenerative motoneuron diseases. Most
results have been obtained from two experimental models in rodents:
axotomy-induced motoneuron death in neonates and naturally occurring
cell death in embryos. These models have proven instrumental in
demonstrating the protective effect of several factors, including
ciliary neurotrophic factor (CNTF) (Sendtner et al., 1990 ; Oppenheim et
al., 1991 ), brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) (Oppenheim et al.,
1992 ; Sendtner et al., 1992 ; Yan et al., 1992 ; Koliatsos et al., 1993 ),
and glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor (Henderson et al.,
1994 ; Oppenheim et al., 1995 ; Yan et al., 1995 ); however, extension of
the conclusions drawn from these two models to pathological
motoneuronal death, such as that observed in mutant mice, has proved
difficult. For example, few beneficial effects were observed on
motoneuronal survival in the wobbler mutant with CNTF or
BDNF, respectively, despite an improvement in the motor function (Ikeda
et al., 1995a ,b). These relatively negative results raise the question
of the existence of different pathways leading to either experimental
or pathological motoneuronal death.
One molecule that plays a key role in interfering with mechanisms
leading to motoneuronal death in experimental models is Bcl-2
(Dubois-Dauphin et al., 1994 ; Martinou et al., 1994 ; Farlie et al.,
1995 ). Bcl-2 interferes with cell apoptosis in a wide variety of cases
(for review, see Reed, 1994 ). There are, however, Bcl-2-insensitive
pathways for cell death (Reed, 1994 ), in particular for some neurons
(Allsopp et al., 1993 ). Moreover, although the neuroprotective effects
of some factors are mediated by Bcl-2 (e.g., BDNF), those of others are
not (e.g., CNTF) (Allsopp et al., 1995 ). The neuroprotective efficiency
of Bcl-2 thus may represent one way to differentiate pathways for
neuronal death.
Whether Bcl-2 is able to interfere with the mechanisms leading
to pathological motoneuronal death is yet to be determined. In a recent
paper, Sagot et al. (1995) obtained paradoxical results in the
progressive motor neuronopathy (pmn)
mutant mouse overexpressing Bcl-2. Facial motoneurons appeared
preserved, whereas the number of motor axons was not. The mechanisms
leading to neuronal damage in the pmn mouse are poorly
understood, however, and this complicates the interpretation of these
complex results. Although not fully explored, the wobbler
mouse, which results from an inherited autosomal recessive mutation
leading to the progressive degeneration of spinal and brainstem
motoneurons (Duchen and Strich, 1968 ; La Vail et al., 1987 ), offers a
clearer mechanistic picture. In particular, it has been suggested that
the Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase (SOD), an enzyme that shares with Bcl-2
the capacity to protect cells from oxidative stress (Lipton et al.,
1993 ; Kane et al., 1993 ; Hockenbery et al., 1993 ; Cadet et al., 1994 ;
Sarafian et al., 1994 ; Greenlund et al., 1995 ), exerts a partial
protective effect on motoneurons in the murine mutant
wobbler (Ikeda et al., 1995c ). It seemed appropriate,
therefore, to evaluate the ability of Bcl-2 to affect pathological
motoneuronal death in this mouse.
To determine whether Bcl-2 could arrest motoneuronal death in
wobbler mice as it does in experimental models, we produced
wobbler mutants overexpressing high levels of the human
Bcl-2 protein in neurons. The results of this study support the
hypothesis that experimental and pathological motoneuronal death are
dependent on different cellular mechanisms.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
We previously described NZB-elicited wobbler (NEW)
mice carrying the double allele wobbler
(wr/wr) and allowing genetic diagnosis before the
onset of the disease (Des Portes et al., 1994 ). We now describe
wobbler and transgene (WAT) mice, derived from NEW mice and
carrying the human bcl-2 transgene.
Animals
Production of mice of the WAT lineage. The hybrid NEW
mice came from the cross between NZB
(GNZB/GNZB; +/+) and C57Bl/6J
(GC57/GC57; +/wr) mice carrying the
wr mutation. By means of this cross, a genetic polymorphic
marker, a microsatellite of the glutamine synthetase gene
(glns), was introduced close to the wr
gene. The NEW (wr/wr) animals carried the alleles
GC57/GC57 of glns, and wild-type
animals were either heterozygotes (GC57/GNZB)
or homozygotes (GNZB/GNZB) for glns.
The scheme of the cross (Fig. 1) shows how the human
bcl-2 transgene was introduced first into mice of the NZB
strain and then into heterozygote mice of the NEW lineage. At the third
generation, a hybrid carrying the two copies of the mutated alleles of
wr, the two copies of the GC57 alleles of
glns, and one copy of the human bcl-2 transgene
was obtained. The cDNA of the human bcl-2 transgene was
under the control of the neuron-specific enolase promoter, so that only
neuronal cells expressed the human Bcl-2 protein.
Fig. 1.
Scheme of the cross used to obtain WAT mice. Only
selected mice are represented. Mice of the NZB strain were first
crossed with a mouse transgenic for the human bcl-2 gene
(Martinou et al., 1994 ). At the first generation, heterozygotes for
glns (GNZB/GC57), which carry
the human bcl-2 transgene, were selected by PCR
(dotted frame) and crossed with mice of the NZB-elicited
wobbler (NEW) colony,
heterozygotes for glns
(GNZB/GC57) and for wr
(+/wr). At the second generation, two types of
transgenic mice heterozygous for glns were selected by
PCR. One carried a mutated allele of wr (dotted
frame), and the other did not (not represented). To identify
the one that carried the mutated allele, a backcross with a
heterozygous mouse of the NEW colony was necessary. The individual
carrying the wr allele was selected if
wobbler mice with evident clinical signs of the disease
were present in its progeny. At the third generation, all mice
heterozygous for glns were heterozygotes for
wr (not represented). Heterozygotes transgenic for
bcl-2 were used to perpetuate the colony. All mice
homozygous for the allele GC57 of glns
carried the double allele of the wr mutation. WAT mice
are represented in the dark frame.
[View Larger Version of this Image (25K GIF file)]
DNA analysis. DNA from tails of 4-d-old mice was obtained
using the Genereleaser assay (BioVentures, Murfreesboro, TN). Alleles
of both glns and the human bcl-2 transgene were
analyzed through a double PCR amplification. Primers amplifying the
glns microsatellite and those detecting the presence of the
human bcl-2 transgene are described in Table
1.
According to the results of the double PCR analysis, we defined four
distinct groups of animals on which all experiments were performed
(Table 2): (1) wild type (GNZB/?;
bcl-2 ); (2) wild type-transgenic (GNZB/?;
bcl-2 +); (3) wobbler
(GC57/GC57; bcl-2 ); and (4) WAT
(GC57/GC57; bcl-2 +)
Table 2.
Groups of animals on which all experiments were
performed
| Group |
Name |
wr
alleles |
glns alleles |
Presence of the human
bcl-2
transgene |
|
| 1 |
Wild
type |
+/+ or
+/wr |
GNZB/GNZB or
GNZB/GC57 |
 |
| 2 |
Wild type
transgenic |
+/+ or +/wr |
GNZB/GNZB or
GNZB/GC57 |
+ |
| 3 |
wobbler |
wr/wr |
GC57/GC57 |
 |
| 4 |
WAT
|
wr/wr |
GC57/GC57 |
+ |
|
Facial nerve transection. Two-day-old mice from the same
litter were anesthetized by hypothermia and subjected to a unilateral
transection of the right facial nerve. The small branch that innervates
the caudal auricular muscle and corresponds to motoneurons in the
ventromedial part of the facial nucleus was not sectioned. Mutants and
wild-type mice could not be distinguished either clinically or
histologically at this age, because pathological degeneration of
motoneurons in wobbler mice begins in the third week of
life; therefore, they were identified by genetic analysis. Animals were
killed 7 d after nerve section. Three pups of each group were
anesthetized with sodium pentobarbitone (50 mg/kg) and perfused
transcardially with 20 ml of PBS (0.1 M), pH 7.4, followed
by 20 ml of 4% (w/v) paraformaldehyde in PBS (0.1 M). The
brainstem of each pup was removed, postfixed for 4 hr in the same
fixative, and cryoprotected in 20% (w/v) sucrose in PBS at 4°C for
12 hr. Serial coronal 20-µm-thick sections were cut, recovered onto
gelatinized slides, and stained with cresyl violet. All sections were
observed at the facial nucleus level, and motoneurons with clearly
defined nuclei and nucleoli were counted on each section, on both the
lesioned and the unlesioned sides. No correction was applied for split
nucleoli, because the size of the nucleoli did not vary in the
different groups and was very small by comparison with the thickness of
the section. No more than one nucleolus was observed per motoneuron.
Three animals were studied for each of the four groups described
previously. The unpaired Student's t test was used for
statistical analysis.
Grip-strength test. Grip strength was measured by placing
mice on a vertical grid and grading as follows. 0, Animals grip but
fall in <5 sec; 1, animals are able to grip but not climb; and 2, animals grip and climb to the top of the grid.
Histological procedures
Immunostaining of human Bcl-2 protein. In each of the
four groups, four animals (one 2-d-old and three 5-week-old mice) were
treated for immunofluorescence detection of the human Bcl-2 protein.
Mice received 50 mg/kg sodium pentobarbitone and were perfused
transcardially as described above. Brainstems and cervical spinal cords
were dissected out immediately, postfixed for 4 hr at 4°C in the same
fixative, and cryoprotected with 20% sucrose in PBS.
Twenty-micrometer-thick sections were cut on a cryostat and put on
gelatin-coated slides. Sections were permeabilized by soaking in
20°C cooled acetone for 5 min, rinsed in PBS, and incubated in BSA
(3% in PBS) for 1 hr at room temperature to block nonspecific sites.
Sections were then incubated for 2 hr at room temperature with a mouse
monoclonal antibody specific for the human Bcl-2 protein (1:80
dilution; Cambridge Research Biochemicals, Cheshire, UK), followed by a
90 min incubation with a fluorescein isothiocyanate-conjugated antibody
(F(ab )2 fragment) raised against mouse IgG (1:200 dilution, Sigma
F-8646; Sigma, St. Louis, MO).
Quantification of facial motoneurons in 5-week-old
wobbler mice. Five-week-old WAT and wobbler
nontransgenic mice were perfused transcardially with 80 ml PBS (0.1 M), pH 7.4, followed by 80 ml of 4% (w/v)
paraformaldehyde. Brainstems were removed, and a protocol similar to
the one described above was followed. Motoneurons of one facial nucleus
per animal that displayed no morphological sign of the disease were
counted. In addition, vacuolized motoneurons were quantified. Three
animals were analyzed in the wobbler nontransgenic group,
and four animals were analyzed in the WAT group. The unpaired
Student's t test was used for statistical analysis.
Quantification of axons in the brachial musculocutaneous
nerve. In each of the four groups, five mice (5 week old) were
used to quantify axons in the brachial musculocutaneous nerve. Nerves
were fixed in situ for 5 min with 2.5% glutaraldehyde in
PBS (0.1 M) and dissected out. The main branch of the
brachial musculocutaneous nerves was taken just before its division
into two branches; extreme precautions were taken to remove the same
portion of the nerve in each case. After removal, nerves were fixed in
2.5% glutaraldehyde for 1 hr at 4°C and conserved in 0.6%
glutaraldehyde. Before and after postfixation in 2% osmium tetroxide
for 1 hr at room temperature, nerves were rinsed three times in a wash
solution containing 8% glucose in phosphate buffer (0.1 M), pH 7.2. Nerves were dehydrated in graded ethanol
solutions and embedded in Embed 812 Epoxy resin (TAAB) for 24 hr at
55°C. One-micrometer-thick semithin sections were collected, and
myelinated axons were stained with 1% toluidine blue. Axons were
pointed manually with use of a camera lucida and counted. To establish
the reliability of the methodology, pilot experiments were performed in
wild-type animals to determine that the number of axons on different
sections of the same portion of nerve was identical and that the number
of axons was similar in sections of different wild-type animals. Axons
of one section per nerve were counted. The unpaired Student's
t test was used for statistical analysis.
RESULTS
Four generations of mice were produced, and animals from the third
and fourth generations (30 litters) were analyzed. A large number of
wobbler mice (transgenic or not) died between the fourth and
sixth week after birth, as already described for mutants of the NEW
strain (Des Portes et al., 1994 ). This high death rate justified the
need for a large production of mice so that a significant number of
5-week-old animals could be analyzed.
Genetic analysis
Gel electrophoresis showing the products of the double PCR
amplification is shown in Figure 2. It revealed one to
three bands. The 180 base pair (bp) band and the 200 bp band
corresponded to the GC57 and GNZB alleles,
respectively, of glns. The 400 bp band was specific for the
human bcl-2 transgene. The presence of the single 180 bp
band was characteristic of homozygotes for the
wr/wr mutation, whereas the presence of the
single 200 bp band characterized wild-type homozygotes (+/+). The two
co-amplified bands of 180 bp and 200 bp defined heterozygotes
(+/wr). Because wild-type homozygotes and heterozygotes
presented the same normal clinical characteristics (the mutation is
recessive), they have been grouped together and defined as wild-type.
The presence or the absence of the 400 bp band allowed separation of
transgenic from nontransgenic mice. On the basis of these results,
animals were divided into four groups (Table 2): (1) wild type
(GNZB/?; +/?; bcl-2 ); (2) wild
type-transgenic (GNZB/?; +/?; bcl-2 +); (3)
wobbler (GC57/GC57;
wr/wr; bcl-2 ); and (4) WAT
(GC57/GC57; wr/wr;
bcl-2 +).
Fig. 2.
Example of electrophoresis on a 2% agarose gel of
the double PCR amplification products used for the genetic
identification of animals at the third generation. M,
Molecular weight markers. Lane 1, control; lanes
2, 4, 7, 10, wild-type mice (group 1). Note one 200 bp band or
two 180/200 bp bands representative of the GNZB and
GC57/GNZB alleles of glns,
respectively. Lanes 5, 9, wild-type mice (group 2). The
glns bands are the same as described previously. A band
at 400 bp shows the presence of the human bcl-2
transgene. Lane 8, wobbler mice (group
3). The single 180 bp band is characteristic of the GC57
allele of glns and therefore of homozygotes for the
wobbler mutation. Lanes 3,6, WAT mice
(group 4) characterized by a 180 bp and a 400 bp band.
[View Larger Version of this Image (63K GIF file)]
Functional expression of the human bcl-2 transgene
The human Bcl-2 protein was detected by immunofluorescence in both
the ventral and dorsal horn neurons of 5-week-old transgenic mice
carrying, or not carrying, the wobbler mutation (Fig.
3). No signal was observed in neurons of nontransgenic
animals (inset in Fig. 3). The human Bcl-2 immunostaining
was observed as early as postnatal day 2, as tested in the brainstem of
transgenic mice (data not shown).
Fig. 3.
Human Bcl-2 immunostaining in the cervical spinal
cord of 5-week-old wild-type animals. Note the strong immunostaining in
large neurons of the ventral horn of transgenic mice.
Inset, No immunostaining was present in nontransgenic
mice. This photomicrograph was taken at high magnification because the
field is completely dark at low magnification. Scale bars: 76 µm in
the figure; 53 µm in the inset.
[View Larger Version of this Image (129K GIF file)]
The functionality of the human Bcl-2 protein was assayed by evaluating
its effect on neonatal axotomy-induced facial motoneuron death. The
examination of facial nuclei of nontransgenic mice (wild type and
wobbler) 7 d after transection of the nerve revealed a
dramatic reduction in the number of cells (Figs.
4C,E). Seventy-five percent of facial
motoneurons were lost (Fig. 5). The number of
motoneurons was strongly affected, except in the ventromedial part of
the nucleus (dark arrowhead), which corresponds to the
nonsectioned caudal auricular branch of the facial nerve. The 25% of
cells remaining corresponded mainly to the motoneurons in this
ventromedial region. In contrast, in wild type-transgenic and WAT mice,
the number of motoneurons on the lesioned side was similar to that on
the unlesioned side (Figs. 4B,D,F, 5). The facial
nucleus on the side of the lesion, however, presented a dense aspect
and a reduced size as compared with the intact nucleus (Fig.
4B,D,F), apparently resulting from a reduced
size of the soma of the motoneurons.
Fig. 4.
Photomicrographs showing the facial nuclei
(dark arrows) in representative 9-d-old animals of each
of the four groups after transection of the right facial nerve.
Unlesioned side: (A) wild type, (B) wild
type-transgenic. Lesioned side: (C) wild type,
(D) wild type-transgenic, (E)
wobbler, (F) WAT. The black
arrowhead points to the ventromedial facial motoneurons, the
axons of which are preserved by the transection. Scale bar, 180 µm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (138K GIF file)]
Fig. 5.
Quantification of facial motoneurons on the
unlesioned and lesioned sides after nerve transection in the four
genetically differentiated groups. Data are the mean ± SD of three
9-d-old animals in each group. ***p < 0.001;
**p < 0.02; Student's t test
analysis.
[View Larger Version of this Image (59K GIF file)]
The quantification of motoneurons also revealed an increased number of
cells on the unlesioned side in transgenic mice as compared with
nontransgenic mice (Figs. 4A,B, 5).
Phenotypic differences among mice of the four groups
Clinical characteristics
Transgenic individuals could not be recognized by clinical
examination, because Bcl-2 overexpression did not modify their behavior
compared with that of paired nontransgenic mice. Wild-type-transgenic
mice bred normally. In the wobbler mutants, the first
clinical signs of the disease appeared 3-4 weeks after birth. The
mutants were characterized by a reduced body weight, an unsteadiness,
and a diminished muscular strength. The age of onset of the disease and
the time course of its evolution seemed to be similar in WAT as
compared with wobbler nontransgenic mice. When they were
weighed (Fig. 6) or assayed for muscular strength, the
two groups of 5-week-old animals were indistinguishable. All
wobbler animals were graded 0 (fall in <5 sec), whereas all
non-wobbler animals were graded 2 (climb to the top) in the
grip-strength test.
Fig. 6.
Comparison of the weight of three 5-week-old
animals in each of the four groups. ****p < 0.0001; ***p < 0.001.
[View Larger Version of this Image (36K GIF file)]
Histological characteristics
Histological analysis of the facial nucleus and of the cervical
spinal cord of 5-week-old animals revealed that overexpression of the
human bcl-2 gene did not alter the morphology of the
motoneurons, as revealed by cresyl violet staining (data not shown).
Five-week-old WAT mice displayed histological characteristics identical
to those of wobbler nontransgenic mice. Numerous
motoneurons, although expressing the human Bcl-2 protein, were filled
with vacuoles, a landmark of the wobbler disease (Fig.
7), and a strong reactive astrogliosis was present
throughout the gray matter, as revealed by glial fibrillary acidic
protein immunoreactivity (data not shown).
Fig. 7.
Vacuolized motoneurons in the cervical
spinal cord of 5-week-old WAT mice. (A) Human Bcl-2
immunostaining. Note that motoneurons exhibiting numerous vacuoles
(arrows) show a positive immunostaining for the human
Bcl-2 protein. (B) Cresyl violet staining showing
vacuolized motoneuron (arrows) surrounded by glial
cells. Scale bar, 20 µm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (71K GIF file)]
As shown in table 3, the same proportion of motoneurons
was lost or exhibited morphological signs of the disease in 5-week-old
wobbler mice in the nontransgenic and transgenic groups. A
loss of 15% and 13%, respectively, of motoneurons was observed, as
compared with the number of cells present before the onset of the
degenerative process.
Table 3.
Quantification of facial motoneurons in wobbler
transgenic and wobbler nontransgenic mice at a time that
precedes (9-d-old) and during (5-week-old) the course of the
disease
|
wobbler
nontransgenic
|
wobbler
transgenic
|
| 9-d-old |
5-week-old |
9-d-old |
5-week-old |
|
| Number
of facial motoneurons |
3607
± 188 |
3073 ± 69 |
4814 ± 252 |
4171 ± 11 |
| Number
of vacuolized motoneurons |
|
111 ± 34 |
|
71 ± 5 |
|
|
Data are the mean counts of motoneurons displaying any intact, or
else affected (vacuolized), morphology in three animals in the
wobbler nontransgenic group and four animals in the
wobbler transgenic group (±SEM). Comparison was made
between 5-week-old and 9-d-old mice using the Student's t
test: p = 0.05 in the wobbler nontransgenic
group; p = 0.03 in the wobbler transgenic group.
The number of vacuolized motoneurons was not statistically different
between wobbler nontransgenic and wobbler
transgenic mice.
|
|
Examination of sections of the musculocutaneous nerve showed a loss of
myelinated axons, mainly large fibers, in the two groups of
wobbler mice, compared with the two groups of wild-type mice
(Fig. 8). This loss was 23% in nontransgenic mice and
17% in transgenic mice (Fig. 9). The transgenic mice
always possessed more axons than the nontransgenic: 832 ± 44 for
wild-type-transgenic versus 709 ± 33 for wild-type nontransgenic
and 696 ± 63 for WAT versus 551 ± 27 for wobbler
nontransgenic mice.
Fig. 8.
Photomicrographs showing semithin sections of the
musculocutaneous nerve in representative 5-week-old animals of each
group. (A) Wild-type mice; (B)
wild-type-transgenic mice; (C) wobbler
mice; (D) WAT mice. Scale bar, 25 µm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (139K GIF file)]
Fig. 9.
Quantification of myelinated axons in
musculocutaneous nerves of 5-week-old animals of the four genetically
differentiated groups. Results are the mean ± SD of five distinct
animals in each group. ***p < 0.001;
**p < 0.01; Student's t test
analysis.
[View Larger Version of this Image (76K GIF file)]
DISCUSSION
To assess the ability of the Bcl-2 protein to interfere with
motoneuronal pathology in the wobbler mutant,
wobbler mice overexpressing the human bcl-2
transgene were generated by specific crossing and compared with
relevant controls. Our results show that Bcl-2 neither arrests nor
delays the pathological degeneration of motoneurons, although it
protects these same cells against both naturally occurring cell death
and degeneration induced by neonatal axotomy. These results favor the
existence of a Bcl-2-insensitive pathway leading to pathological
motoneuronal death in the wobbler mutant, and they point to
major mechanistic differences between this pathological death and death
induced experimentally by axotomy; therefore, caution should be
exercised when extrapolation to the former is on the basis of results
obtained with the latter.
Pathological motoneuronal death in the wobbler mutant
is Bcl-2-insensitive
It has been shown recently that the administration of the Cu/Zn
SOD, an antioxidant enzyme, to the wobbler mouse slows the
degeneration of its motoneurons (Ikeda et al., 1995c ). The fact that
Bcl-2 shares with SOD the capacity to protect cells from an oxidative
stress (Hockenbery et al., 1993 ; Kane et al., 1993 ; Lipton et al.,
1993 ; Cadet et al., 1994 ; Sarafian et al., 1994 ; Greenlund et al.,
1995 ), and thus seems to act along the same pathway of neuroprotection,
suggested that Bcl-2 might also rescue motoneurons of the
wobbler mutant. The results here show that
wobbler mice overexpressing the human bcl-2 gene
present clinical and histological characteristics identical to those of
wobbler nontransgenic mice, including age of onset of the
disease, time course of its evolution, vacuolar degeneration of
motoneurons, loss of motoneurons and of myelinated axons, and
astrogliosis. Thus, the pathological motoneuronal death in WAT mice is
neither stopped nor delayed.
One could assert that this lack of neuroprotection was attributable to
the fact that the introduction of the human bcl-2 transgene
into wobbler mice did not lead to the expression of the
transgene in relevant motoneurons nor to the synthesis of an efficient
Bcl-2 protein. Two explanations argue against this hypothesis, however,
and support the validation of our experimental model.
First, the human Bcl-2 protein was immunodetected in facial motoneurons
as early as 2 d after birth, a time that clearly precedes the
appearance of degenerative motoneurons in the third week of life.
Moreover, it was also detected in vacuolized motoneurons of 5-week-old
WAT mice, showing that even degenerative motoneurons synthesize the
human Bcl-2 protein.
Second, we demonstrated the functionality of the human Bcl-2 protein in
transgenic mice of the WAT lineage using the same experimental models
of motoneuronal death as those used to demonstrate its functionality in
the original strain of transgenic mice, namely axotomy-induced cell
death (Dubois-Dauphin et al., 1994 ) and developmental cell death
(Martinou et al., 1994 ).
Altogether, these results demonstrate that the human Bcl-2 protein
synthesized in transgenic mice of the WAT lineage is functional. It is
possible, however, that this functionality is limited to motoneurons in
the perinatal period. Indeed, one major difference between models used
to demonstrate the functionality of the Bcl-2 protein and the
wobbler model is the age of mice at the time of the
occurrence of motoneuronal degeneration. It might be argued that
factors necessary for Bcl-2 protection are present only at specific
times during development and are not present or not present in
sufficient amounts in the adult. This seems unlikely, because cortical
neurons in adult mice have been shown to be protected by Bcl-2 from
experimental ischemia-induced death (Martinou et al., 1994 ). To go one
step further, motoneurons might specifically lose Bcl-2 sensitivity in
the adult. Again, this hypothesis does not seem warranted, because
Bcl-2 overexpression protects adult motoneurons in pmn mice
(Sagot et al., 1995 ).
These observations indicate that adult motoneurons, as is the case for
motoneurons during the perinatal period, possess all of the metabolic
machinery necessary for the action of Bcl-2. Thus, our results argue in
favor of the existence of a Bcl-2-insensitive pathological death
pathway in the wobbler mutant.
Elements of the excitotoxic cascade, such as glutamate (Behl et al.,
1993 ; Zhong et al., 1993a ), reactive oxygen species (Hockenbery et al.,
1993 ; Kane et al., 1993 ), and calcium influx (Miyashita and Reed, 1992 ;
Zhong et al., 1993b ) lead to a Bcl-2-sensitive death. The existence of
a Bcl-2-insensitive mechanism for motoneuronal death in the
wobbler mouse suggests that excitotoxicity is not implicated
in the wobbler pathology. This conclusion is in agreement
with that of Krieger et al. (1992) , who showed that application of an
NMDA receptor antagonist does not improve the wobbler
mutant.
Existence of different pathways that lead to
motoneuronal death
Our results show that motoneurons in the wobbler mouse
can die by taking two different pathways. One is Bcl-2-sensitive,
exemplified by axotomy-induced cell death and developmental cell death,
and the other is Bcl-2-insensitive, exemplified by pathological death.
The demonstration of the existence of different pathways leading to
motoneuronal death suggests that motoneurons could respond differently
to therapeutic agents depending on the specific mechanisms
involved.
Evidence for the existence of different pathways leading to neuronal
death has been provided by Allsopp et al. (1993) , who showed that the
same cells, neurons of the trigeminal mesencephalic nucleus, placed
under different experimental conditions could go down either a
Bcl-2-sensitive or a Bcl-2-insensitive death pathway. Martinou et al.
(1994) also showed the existence of two motoneuronal death pathways
during developmental cell death, because a proportion of motoneurons
were unprotected by Bcl-2.
The demonstration that axotomy-induced cell death, to date the most
frequently used to evaluate the effect of therapeutic agents on the
survival of motoneurons, and pathological death in the
wobbler mutant result from different mechanisms calls for
caution to avoid overgeneralization of results obtained with the first
model and application of those results to a pathological model such as
wobbler or in general to other experimental or pathological
motoneuronal degeneration.
In line with this idea, it is interesting to note that BDNF, whose
neuroprotective effects seem to be mediated by Bcl-2 (Allsopp et al.,
1995 ), was protective for axotomized motoneurons but did not prove
efficient for the survival of wobbler motoneurons. In
wobbler, BDNF treatment slowed the rate of axonal depletion
but did not prevent the death of anterior horn cells (Ikeda et al.,
1995b ). Because neurotrophin 4/5 (NT4/5) shares with BDNF the common
trkB receptor (Soppet et al., 1991 ) and the same survival effect on
motoneurons in vitro (Henderson et al., 1993 ) and in
vivo (Koliatsos et al., 1994 ), we postulated that NT-4/5 would not
protect motoneurons of the wobbler mutant. This seemed to be
the case, because in preliminary studies administered NT4/5 did not
protect motoneurons in wobbler mice (our unpublished
observations).
The recent demonstration showing that Bcl-2 is able to protect the cell
bodies of motoneurons but not the axons in pmn mice (Sagot
et al., 1995 ) is yet another type of effect of Bcl-2 on motoneurons
that differs from both that observed after axotomy and that observed in
wobbler. This adds to the caution that must be taken before
results obtained in one model are generalized and applied to another
model and, even more so, before they are applied to diseases.
In conclusion, our data underline the fact that in vivo as
in vitro, two pathways for neuronal death can be
distinguished on the basis of their sensitivity to Bcl-2. This
mechanistic difference, which is probably one of many, clearly calls
for caution when the results obtained in a particular model are
extrapolated to another.
FOOTNOTES
Received Feb. 12, 1996; revised July 1, 1996; accepted July 9, 1996.
This work was supported by grants from the Institut National de la
Santé et de la Recherche Médicale and the Association
Française contre les Myopathies (AFM) (M.P., P.A.D.) and a
fellowship from AFM (M.C.). We are greatly indebted to Dr. J. C. Martinou for providing Bcl-2 transgenic mice. We thank E. Parrish for
revision of this manuscript.
Correspondence should be addressed to Patrick A. Dreyfus, Institut
National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale U421, IM3,
8 Rue du Général Sarrail, 94010 Créteil Cedex,
France.
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