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Volume 16, Number 21,
Issue of November 1, 1996
pp. 6908-6918
Copyright ©1996 Society for Neuroscience
Conditional Ablation of Cerebellar Astrocytes in Postnatal
Transgenic Mice
Catherine L. Delaney1,
Michael Brenner2, and
Albee Messing1
1 Neuroscience Training Program and Department of
Pathobiological Sciences, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of
Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin 53706, and 2 Stroke
Branch, National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke,
National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
FOOTNOTES
REFERENCES
ABSTRACT
Astrocytes have been proposed to have multiple roles in the
development and maintenance of the vertebrate CNS. To facilitate
documentation of these roles, we designed a transgene to enable their
ablation at selectable times. The transgene consists of the coding
region for the herpes simplex virus-thymidine kinase (HSV-TK) under the
control of the human glial fibrillary acidic protein gene promoter. The
HSV-TK is innocuous but converts the antiherpetic agent ganciclovir
(GCV) to a toxic product that interferes with DNA replication in
proliferating cells. In a developmental study, transgenic mice were
treated with GCV during the first postnatal week, with evaluation at
P19. Treated mice displayed severe ataxia. Histological examination
revealed disrupted astrocyte development, particularly in the
cerebellum, with marked secondary effects on other cell types.
Cerebellar defects included a loss in the numbers of astrocytes and an
overall reduction in cerebellar size and disruption of the normally
well defined cellular layers. Radial glia were disordered, Purkinje
cells were ectopically distributed and displayed abnormal dendritic
trees, and granule cells were markedly depleted. These effects were
more severe in animals treated on postnatal day 1 versus treatment at
day 5. A major factor causing granule cell death was excitotoxicity
attributable to activation of NMDA receptors. These results suggest a
critical role for astrocytes in cerebellar development.
Key words:
astrocyte;
cerebellum;
development;
glial
fibrillary acidic protein;
herpes simplex virus-thymidine kinase;
transgenic
INTRODUCTION
Astrocytes are the most abundant cell type in the
vertebrate CNS, yet their versatility and importance are only beginning
to be appreciated. These cells display a range of receptors for
neurotransmitters and express several ion channels and transporters
(MacVicar et al., 1989 ; Oh and Waxman, 1994 ; Rothstein et al., 1994 ),
suggesting that they respond to and participate in a variety of
physiological processes. In addition, after injury to the CNS,
astrocytes are activated to proliferate, hypertrophy, and secrete
cytokines and growth factors. Whether this glial response promotes or
hinders neural regeneration is not certain (Gage et al., 1988 ; Kawaja
and Gage, 1991 ; Norenberg, 1994 ). During development, astrocytes are
believed to provide radial scaffolding to guide cell migration (Rakic,
1971 ) and also to secrete factors that regulate the growth and
differentiation of neurons and oligodendrocytes (Noble et al., 1988 ;
Raff et al., 1988 ; Richardson et al., 1988 ; Bogler et al., 1990 ;
McKinnon et al., 1990 ).
Surprisingly, although multiple critical roles now have been assigned
to astrocytes, few CNS defects have been attributed specifically to
faulty functioning of these cells. For instance, generation of
GFAP-null mice by gene targeting revealed relatively normal development
of the mutant mice (Gomi et al., 1995 ; Pekny et al., 1995 ; McCall et
al., 1996 ) but subtle changes in both cerebellar long-term depression
(Shibuki et al., 1996 ) and hippocampal long-term potentiation (McCall
et al., 1996 ). In addition, astrocytes have been implicated in the
pathogenesis of both hepatic encephalopathy (Butterworth, 1993 ) and
Alexander's disease (Borrett and Becker, 1985 ). A useful strategy to
understand the role of cell-cell interactions is to ablate an
individual cell type specifically. Such an approach has been used
widely in Drosophila and Caenorhabditis elegans
(Sentry et al., 1993 ; Hutter and Schnabel, 1995 ). Previous strategies
for inactivating vertebrate glial cells in vivo have
included radiation (Kalderon et al., 1990 ; Pippenger et al., 1990 ) or
antimitotic agents (Politis and Houle, 1985 ) to kill dividing cells or
toxic agents such as fluorocitrate or aminoadipic acid to inhibit
metabolism (Khurgel et al., 1996 ; Largo et al., 1996 ). However, each of
these approaches has its drawbacks. Antimitotic agents and radiation
are also likely to kill proliferating oligodendrocytes, adult
progenitor cells, and microglia, complicating interpretation of
results. In addition, the radiation doses used may not harm radial glia
(Pippenger et al., 1990 ). Aminoadipic acid may kill neurons at high
doses (Olney et al., 1980 ).
An alternative approach to selective ablation of cells in
vivo uses transgenic techniques to target expression of a toxic
gene product. Expression of diphtheria toxin has been used previously
in this manner to study cell lineage and cell-cell interactions in the
pancreas, lens, pituitary, retina, cerebellum, and peripheral nerve
(Breitman et al., 1987 ; Palmiter et al., 1987 ; Behringer et al., 1988 ;
Lem et al., 1991 ; Messing et al., 1992 ; Smeyne et al., 1995 ). Although
diphtheria toxin is a powerful killing agent, it has the disadvantage
that cells are killed when they first express the transgene, which may
produce undesirable lethal phenotypes. Several attempts have been made
to devise conditional ablation strategies that permit cell killing at
selected times during the life of the animal. For instance,
photoablation of lacZ-expressing cells has been used
conditionally to kill postmitotic neurons in transgenic mice but
requires direct access to the tissue for illumination (Nirenberg and
Cepko, 1993 ). In addition, expression of the human interleukin-2
receptor under the control of the dopamine -hydroxylase promoter
allowed selective ablation of some neuronal populations by immunotoxins
(Kobayashi et al., 1995 ). Evans and colleagues (Borrelli et al., 1988 ,
1989 ; Heyman et al., 1989 ) developed an alternative method for
conditional ablation based on the cell-specific expression of the
herpes thymidine kinase (TK) gene. Expression of the herpes TK in
mammalian cells is innocuous unless an antiherpes drug is administered.
For example, ganciclovir (GCV) is one of a family of drugs that are
phosphorylated by the TK to toxic metabolites that kill
DNA-synthesizing cells.
During the past few years we (Brenner et al., 1994 ) and others (Mucke
et al., 1991 ) have identified regulatory regions in the human and mouse
GFAP genes that direct expression of the Escherichia coli
lacZ reporter gene to astrocytes in vivo. More
recently, these GFAP regulatory regions have been used to modify
functional properties of astrocytes to produce disease models (reviewed
in Brenner and Messing, 1996 ) by directing expression of genes such as
the gp120 of HIV-1 (Toggas et al., 1994 ), interleukin-6 (Campbell et
al., 1993 ), human -amyloid precursor (Mucke et al., 1994 ), and
transforming growth factor- (Galbreath et al., 1995 ; Wyss-Coray et
al., 1995 ). To develop an improved system in which to explore the
contribution of astrocytes to CNS development, we generated transgenic
mice expressing the herpes TK gene under the control of the human GFAP
promoter. We have focused our analysis of these mice to the cerebellum
because of its simple cytoarchitecture relative to other regions of the
CNS and because the majority of its cells mature postnatally, making it
accessible for experimental perturbations. In addition, development of
the cerebellum has been described in detail, including the birth dates
and migration patterns of neuronal populations (Miale and Sidman, 1961 ;
Fujita et al., 1966 ; Yuasa et al., 1991 ; Ryder and Cepko, 1994 ), and
glial cells have been postulated to be significant contributors to its
development (Rakic, 1971 , 1972 ; Hatten and Liem, 1981 ; Edmondson and
Hatten, 1987 ; Gao et al., 1991 ; Baptista et al., 1994 ).
We report here that treatment of GFAP-TK transgenic mice with
ganciclovir during the early postnatal period results in ataxia, marked
abnormalities in cerebellar granule cell survival, and fewer
astrocytes. Excitotoxicity attributable to excess activation of NMDA
receptors was a major factor in causing the granule cell death.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Transgenic mouse production. Plasmid pGfa2-TK1 was
constructed by excising the metallothionein promoter from
pMK (Stuart et al., 1984 ) by cleavage with
EcoRI and BglII and replacing it with the gfa2
promoter obtained by digestion of pGfa2-CAT (formerly called pGfaCAT-2;
Besnard et al., 1991 ) with BglII and HindIII.
Both fragments were blunt-ended by filling in before ligation. The
injection fragment was excised from the plasmid by partial digestion
with PvuII and by complete digestion with SspI.
Plasmid pGfa2-TK2 was constructed by excising the lacZ
coding region from pGfa2-lacZ (Brenner et al., 1994 ) by
digestion with BamHI and replacing it with HSV-TK sequences
consisting of the 1150 base pair (bp)
BglII/BssHII fragment isolated from
pMK joined to a synthetic 52 bp (including single-stranded
ends) deoxyoligonucleotide extending from the BssHII site to
12 nucleotides downstream of the TK protein stop codon (Wagner et al.,
1981 ). The antisense strand of the oligonucleotide had a GA added to
its 5 end to commence with a single-stranded GATC for BamHI
ligation. The injection fragment was excised from the plasmid with
BglII. For both plasmids, proper joining of the fragments
was confirmed by sequencing.
Transgenic mice were produced according to standard techniques by
microinjecting 2 pl of a solution of DNA into the male pronucleus of
fertilized eggs obtained from the mating of FVB/N mice (Brinster et
al., 1985 ). Founder mice and subsequent offspring within lines were
identified by PCR analysis of DNA prepared from tail biopsies.
Nuclease protection assay. Transgene mRNA was detected by a
probe protection assay. Both the riboprobes and the RNA standards were
produced by in vitro transcription with SP6 RNA polymerase
in the presence of 32P-UTP of PCR-generated templates.
Probe protection experiments were performed by solution hybridization,
followed by digestion with T1 nuclease and resolution of the products
on a denaturing polyacrylamide gel.
Drug treatment. A stock solution of ganciclovir (GCV) (gift
from Syntex, Palo Alto, CA) was prepared at 0.25 mg/ml in PBS. Pregnant
females were checked daily, and the day of birth was considered as day
0. Neonatal mice received a single subcutaneous injection of 50 µl of
stock solution/gm body weight (12.5 mg/kg) at postnatal day 1 (P1), P3,
or P5. At P19, all animals were killed for collection of tissues.
In some experiments, treatment with GCV at P5 was followed immediately
by MK-801 (NMDA receptor antagonist), CNQX (non-NMDA receptor
antagonist), or PBS (vehicle). Stock solutions (1.2 mM) of
MK-801 and CNQX (Research Biochemicals, Natick, MA) were prepared at
0.4 mg/ml in PBS and 0.28 mg/ml in dimethylsulfoxide, respectively.
Neonatal mice received a single subcutaneous injection of 50 µl of
MK-801 (20 mg/kg) or CNQX (14 mg/kg). Animals were killed 48 hr later
(P7) for collection of tissues.
Histology and immunohistochemistry. For routine histology,
the brain was removed rapidly and immersion-fixed in 10% neutral
buffered formalin overnight and embedded in paraffin. Sections (6 µm)
were stained with hematoxylin and eosin H&E. For immunohistochemistry,
unstained paraffin sections were mounted on
poly-L-lysine-coated slides (Cel-Tek, Glenviev, IL). Slides
were deparaffinized in xylenes, dehydrated in graded ethanols, and
washed in 0.009% hydrogen peroxide with 0.25% Triton X-100 in PBS
followed by overnight incubation in 3% normal goat serum in PBS. The
primary antibody was applied at a dilution of 1:500 for GFAP (Dako,
Carpinteria, CA) or 1:5000 for calbindin (S Want, Bellinzona,
Switzerland) for 1 hr at room temperature. The product was visualized
via the Vector ABC system (Vector Laboratories, Burlingame, CA) and DAB
(0.001% in PBS) as a chromagen, according to the manufacturers'
recommendations.
In situ hybridization. The DNA template for preparing a
35S-UTP-labeled riboprobe was obtained by PCR amplification
of a 625 bp fragment from the HSV-TK coding region spanning bp +480 to
+1104 relative to the transcriptional start site. A T7 RNA polymerase
promoter sequence was incorporated into the beginning of the antisense
primer for use in generating the riboprobe. Animals, the tissues of
which were to be used for in situ hybridization, were deeply
anesthetized with Avertin and perfused transcardially through the left
ventricle with 50 ml (adults) or 10 ml (newborns) of freshly prepared
4% paraformaldehyde in 0.1 M phosphate buffer. Tissues
were removed, fixed overnight at 4°C, and embedded in paraffin.
Unstained sections (6 µm) were mounted on
poly-L-lysine-coated slides, hybridized, and washed as
described previously (Lyons et al., 1991 ). Then slides were dipped in
NTB-2 emulsion (Kodak, Rochester, NY) diluted 2:1 in 0.6 M
ammonium acetate and exposed in a light-tight box at 4°C for 2 weeks.
The slides were developed with D-19 developer (Kodak), fixed,
coverslipped, and viewed under light and dark-field microscopy.
Astrocyte cell counts. To identify astrocyte nuclei for cell
counts, we crossed the GFAP-TK transgenic mice with a previously
described transgenic line (TgN3Mes) carrying a nuclear form of the
lacZ reporter gene under the control of the gfa2 promoter
(Brenner et al., 1994 ). Offspring from such crosses were treated with
GCV, as described above, and the tissues were processed for
lacZ histochemistry. After killing, brains were rapidly
removed and immersion-fixed in 10% ice-cold neutral buffered formalin
for 2-3 hr and then stored in PBS until embedding. Brains were
embedded in 2% Difco agar in PBS to facilitate cutting of vibratome
sections (50 µm). Floating sagittal sections were washed three times
for 15 min in a rinse buffer that consisted of 0.1 M PBS,
2.0 mM MgCl2, 0.24 mM Na
deoxycholate, and 0.02% Nonidet P-40. The sections then were stained
in the rinse buffer with the addition of 5 mM potassium
ferricyanide, 5 mM potassium ferrocyanide, and 1 mg/ml
X-gal for 3-4 hr at room temperature. The sections were washed three
times for 15 min in the rinse buffer, mounted in glycerol/PBS (1:1),
and viewed with light microscopy.
Cell counts were made in two anterior folia of the cerebellum,
the central lobule and the culmen. These folia provided discrete and
consistent anatomical locations in midline sagittal sections. Counts
were restricted to the distal 500 µm length of each folium. The X-gal
(blue)-stained nuclei in all cell layers within this length were
counted. No correction was used for counting of partial nuclei in the
sections. Triplicate counts were performed on each section and
typically varied by <4% of the mean. A total of four lacZ
transgenic (control) and four lacZ-TK double transgenic
(experimental) mice were analyzed, derived from four separate litters.
To allow calculation of astrocyte density in the cerebellum, we
determined the area of each folia in which cell counting was performed
by tracing the outline on a Zidas digitizing tablet. To account for
possible interlitter variability in precise age, we performed a nested
ANOVA.
Animal use. All animal protocols were approved by the
Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee of the University of
Wisconsin-Madison.
RESULTS
Generation of transgenic mice
We generated transgenic mice expressing the herpes TK gene
under the control of a human GFAP promoter (Gfa2) that was shown
previously to direct astrocyte-specific expression of a lacZ
reporter gene in vivo (Brenner et al., 1994 ). The Gfa2
promoter spans base pairs 2163 to +47 relative to the transcriptional
start site of the GFAP gene. The HSV-TK was derived from a
metallothionein-TK construct shown previously to express well in
transgenic mice (Brinster et al., 1981 ). A diagram of the Gfa2-TK1
transgene is shown in Figure 1. In a separate series of
experiments, we generated transgenic mice with mouse protamine-1
sequences on the 3 end of the transgene (Gfa2-TK2), as used in the
original Gfa2-lacZ mice (Brenner et al., 1994 ).
Fig. 1.
GFAP-HSV-TK transgene. The transgene
consists of the human glial fibrillary acidic protein gfa2 promoter
joined to the HSV-TK gene. The gfa2 fragment spans bp 2163 to +47
relative to the transcriptional start site, with the natural-initiating
ATG at bp +15 converted to TTG by site-directed mutagenesis so that
protein translation initiates within the TK. The
filled-in portion of the
box corresponds to the TK coding region. The Gfa2-TK2
transgene is essentially identical, except that the 3 flanking region
of the TK gene has been replaced by part of the mouse protamine-1 gene,
which supplies an intron and polyadenylation site.
[View Larger Version of this Image (8K GIF file)]
Transgenic mice were generated by microinjection of fertilized
mouse eggs, and 18 offspring that carried either the TK1 or TK2
transgenes were identified by PCR analysis of tail DNA. Most of the
transgenic males failed to transmit the gene to offspring, a phenotype
documented previously in several other HSV-TK transgenics that results
from expression of TK from an internal promoter in round spermatids of
testis (Braun et al., 1990 ; Al-Shawi et al., 1991 ). Breeding lines were
established from nine founders, and RNA from brain was analyzed for the
presence of transgene transcripts by nuclease protection assay (Fig.
2). Offspring from three of the female founders (Tg1.8,
Tg60.8, and Tg76.3) produced RNA in brain that protected the expected
length of the probe (Tg1.8 and Tg76.3 carry the Gfa2-TK1 transgene, and
Tg60.8 carries the Gfa2-TK2 transgene). No protection was observed in a
nontransgenic control or in the liver of a transgenic line. The Tg1.8
line has been designated TgN(GFAPTK)5Mes, according to the rules for
standardized genetic nomenclature of transgenic animals (Committee on
Transgenic Nomenclature, 1992 ), and is referred to as TgN5Mes hereafter
in this report. As expected, the transgenic males in these lines fail
to transmit the transgene to their offspring, and the lines have been
maintained by mating transgenic females with nontransgenic FVB/N males.
In the absence of drug treatment, the TK transgenic mice develop
normally, and, except for the male infertility, seem phenotypically
normal as adults.
Fig. 2.
Nuclease protection assay. Representative mice of
three transgenic lines were tested for production of transgene mRNA by
a riboprobe protection assay, as described in Materials and Methods.
Lane 1, Size standards; lane 2, Tg1.8
(referred to as TgN5Mes in this paper); lane 3, Tg76.3;
lane 4, Tg60.8; lane 5, nontransgenic
control; lane 6, Tg1.8. All RNA samples tested were from
brain, except for lane 6, which was from liver. Either
10 µg of RNA purified by CsCl centrifugation (lanes 2,
5, 6) or 20 µg of RNA purified
by STAT-60 (Tel-Test ``B,'' Friendswood, TX) (lanes 3,
4) was used. The predicted size of the riboprobe
fragment protected by the Gfa2-TK1 transcript (lines
Tg1.8 and Tg76.3) is 149 nucleotides, and that
protected by the Gfa2-TK2 transcript (Tg60.8) is 113 nucleotides. Both probes were added to the assay of the nontransgenic
control.
[View Larger Version of this Image (53K GIF file)]
Phenotype of GCV-treated mice
In initial experiments, neonatal mice were given multiple
injections of GCV during the first week after birth. However, these
mice became very sick and often died by P10. To simplify our analysis,
we then examined the effects of single drug treatments during the same
early postnatal period. For each experiment, an entire litter of mouse
pups received a single subcutaneous dose of GCV (see Materials and
Methods) at either P1, P3, or P5. All litters were killed at P19.
Because only one parent was transgenic in these matings, each litter
contained both transgenic and nontransgenic pups, providing age-matched
controls.
At the time of killing (P19), approximately one-half of the animals
within each litter had developed characteristic motor deficits. They
seemed ataxic and had difficulty standing up against the side of the
cage and maintaining their balance on uneven surfaces. In all of the
GCV-treated litters, every animal with ataxia was later confirmed as
transgenic by PCR analysis, and every animal without ataxia was
confirmed as nontransgenic (data not shown).
Histopathology of GCV-treated mice
On histological examination of the brain, the most dramatic
lesions in GCV-treated TK transgenic mice were found in the cerebellum;
consequently, our analysis has focused on this region. In all of the
experiments described below, the lesions were most severe in animals
treated at P1 and were progressively less severe with treatments at P3
and P5. In each case the overall size of the cerebellum was reduced
(Fig. 3a-d). In addition, the number of
granule cells and the width of the molecular layer was decreased
markedly (Fig. 3e-h), particularly in transgenic animals
treated with GCV at P1 (Fig. 3f). All characteristics
examined (ataxia, cerebellar hypoplasia, and loss of granule cells
after neonatal GCV treatments) were identical in all three lines of
transgenic mice, indicating that it is independent of the integration
site. The data presented below are from the TgN5Mes line of mice.
Fig. 3.
Ablation of astrocytes disrupts development of
other cell types of the cerebellum. Cerebella of nontransgenic mice
were treated with GCV at P1 [a, e, i, m (column
1)], or transgenic mice were treated at either P1 [b,
f, j, n (column 2)], P3 [c, g, k,
o (column 3)], or P5 [d, h, l,
p (column 4)]. a-d,
Low-power H&E paraffin sections show overall reduction in size of
cerebellum of transgenic versus nontransgenic mice treated with GCV on
P1, P3, or P5, with decreasing severity the later the treatment.
e-h, H&E paraffin sections show loss of granule cells
in transgenic mice. The Purkinje cells fail to align in a single layer
in the animals treated at P1, and there is no distinct molecular layer.
Both the granule cell loss and Purkinje cell disorganization become
gradually less severe in animals treated at P3 and P5.
i-l, GFAP immunocytochemistry displays disorganized
radial Bergmann glia (especially in animals treated at P1) and apparent
increase in GFAP immunoreactivity in animals treated at P3 and P5.
m-p, Calbindin immunocytochemistry illustrates aberrant
Purkinje cell dendritic morphology. In animals treated at P1, the
dendrites project randomly rather than toward the pial surface. In
animals treated at P3 or P5, the Purkinje cell primary dendrite
projects toward the pial surface, but dendritic tree seems simplified,
and many distal branches curve back and away from the pial surface
(``weeping willow,'' arrow in o). Scale
bars: a-d, 500 µm; e-p, 100 µm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (128K GIF file)]
Because the primary effect of GCV treatment was expected to involve
astrocytes, we performed immunohistochemical staining for GFAP to
visualize astrocyte morphology. As seen in Figure 3i-l,
GFAP content of transgenics was not clearly diminished as the result of
drug treatment and may even have increased in animals treated at P5
(Fig. 3k-l). However, there was marked disorganization of
the radial fibers of Bergmann glia, especially in animals treated at
P1, which had little or no molecular layer when examined at
P19.
There was no decrease in the number of Purkinje cells (data not shown);
however, their distribution and morphology were abnormal (Fig.
3e-h). Purkinje cell bodies were distributed ectopically
throughout the molecular layer in cerebella from transgenic animals
treated at P1 (Fig. 3f,n). Purkinje cell dendritic
morphology, evaluated by immunohistochemical detection of calbindin
(Fig. 3m-p), was perturbed after all three treatment times.
The primary dendrites in transgenics treated at P1 were multipolar and
projected in random directions (Fig. 3n) instead of toward
the pial surface. Animals treated at later stages had Purkinje cell
dendrites with ``weeping willow'' appearances, with distal branches
that turned back and away from the pial surface (Fig.
3o,p).
Cerebellar histology seemed completely normal in untreated transgenic
animals (data not shown) and in nontransgenic animals treated with the
same dose of GCV (Fig. 3a,e,i,m). Some transgenic animals
were examined at 6 months of age after a single GCV treatment at P3.
These animals were still ataxic, and their cerebella showed the same
loss of granule cells as in animals examined at P19, indicating a lack
of regeneration (data not shown).
Localization of transgene expression
Because the most dramatic effects of GCV treatment of GFAP-TK
transgenic mice were on developing granule cells, we considered the
possibility that the transgene was expressed ectopically in the granule
cell precursors that are mitotically active during the period of drug
treatment. To localize sites of transgene expression in postnatal mice,
we performed in situ hybridization with a riboprobe specific
for the TK portion of the transcript. As a positive control, we used
testis from the transgenic mice, which were presumed to express the
transgene because of the male sterility (see above; Fig.
4c). Nontransgenic littermates hybridized
with the same antisense probe served as negative controls (Fig.
4d-f). As shown in Figure 4 (a,b),
neither the immature granule cell precursors in the external granule
cell layer of the P1 mouse nor the mature granule cells in the internal
granule cell layer of the adult mouse displayed detectable levels of
labeling above background. The highest grain density was in the
Purkinje cell layer, a localization consistent with expression in
Bergmann glia, the cell bodies of which reside in this region. In
addition, labeling over the white matter was higher in the transgenic
mice, presumably reflecting expression in more dispersed populations of
astrocytes throughout the cerebellum. This pattern of transgene
expression is also consistent with that observed previously with the
gfa2-lacZ transgene (Besnard et al., 1991 ). These data
suggest that the granule cell loss is not the result of ectopic
expression of the transgene in cells of the EGL but rather is a
secondary effect of astrocyte and/or Bergmann glial expression.
Fig. 4.
In situ hybridization showing
localization of transgene expression by autoradiography and dark-field
microscopy in nondrug-treated mice. a, d, P1 transgenic
and nontransgenic cerebellum, respectively. b, e, Adult
transgenic and nontransgenic cerebellum, respectively. c,
f, Adult transgenic and nontransgenic testes, respectively.
Note that there is no specific labeling in the external granule layer
in the P1 transgenic cerebellum (a) nor in the internal
granule cell layer of the adult transgenic cerebellum
(b), as compared with the background level seen in
nontransgenic controls (d, e). Specific
labeling is highest in the Purkinje cell layer, which contains the cell
bodies of Bergmann glia but is also apparent in white matter.
Expression in postmitotic spermatids of the testis (c)
has been observed previously in other TK transgenic models.
p, Pial surface; arrow points to Purkinje
cell layer in P1 and adult cerebella.
[View Larger Version of this Image (121K GIF file)]
Evaluation of astrocyte loss
The premise of this project was that GCV treatment of the GFAP-TK
transgenic mice would result in killing of dividing astrocytes.
However, immunohistochemistry showed that there was no decrease, and
perhaps even an increase, in GFAP staining in GCV-treated mice. As it
was possible that a gliotic response in the treated animals obscured a
decrease in cell numbers, we counted astrocytes by genetically marking
their nuclei. This was accomplished by crossing the TgN5Mes mice with a
previously described line, TgN3Mes (Brenner et al., 1994 ), which
expresses a nuclear form of the lacZ reporter gene in
astrocytes. Astrocytes then could be identified by their blue nuclei
after histochemical staining.
In these experiments we focused on a single treatment with GCV at P3,
because treatment at this time point yielded cerebella that still
developed sufficiently to have clearly recognizable folia. Treatment of
double transgenic TgN5Mes × TgN3Mes offspring with GCV at P3
yielded the same behavioral and histological phenotype described above
for TgN5Mes single transgenic mice. To quantitate the effect of GCV
treatment on astrocyte numbers, we counted X-gal-stained nuclei in
vibratome sections prepared from lacZ single transgenic and
lacZ-TK double transgenic mice, focusing on the central
lobule and culmen. To minimize the potential artifact of counting off
the midline where folia are shorter, only cells lying in the distal 500 µm of each folium were counted. Figure 5 shows the
effects of GCV on lacZ expression in the central lobule (the
second anterior folia of the mouse cerebellum) of a single transgenic
lacZ transgenic mouse, which served as a control (Fig.
5a), and the double transgenic lacZ-TK mouse
(Fig. 5b). In the control cerebellum, there was an organized
row of labeled nuclei in the Purkinje cell layer, which have previously
been identified as Bergmann glia (Brenner et al., 1994 ). In addition,
there were dispersed nuclei of astrocytes in the internal granule cell
layer and the white matter. In the cerebellum from the double
transgenic animal (Fig. 5b), there was a clear decrease in
the number of astrocytes and no distinct Bergmann glial cell layer.
Counts of the astrocyte nuclei revealed that the double transgenic mice
contain approximately one-half the number of astrocytes of the single
lacZ transgenic mice (Fig. 6a).
Additionally, the astrocyte density in the double transgenics was
~19-40% less than that in single lacZ transgenic mice
(Fig. 6b).
Fig. 5.
Histochemical detection of astrocyte nuclei with
gfa2-nlacZ transgenic mice. a, Central
lobule of cerebellum from nlacZ transgenic mouse
(control) treated with GCV at P3. b, Central lobule of
cerebellum from nlacZ-TK double transgenic mouse
(experimental) treated with GCV at P3. Note the overall smaller size of
the folia, the disorganization of the nuclei in the Purkinje cell
layer, and the decrease in nlacZ-stained nuclei.
CL, Central lobule; scale bar, 100 µm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (136K GIF file)]
Fig. 6.
Statistical representation of astrocyte loss
in TK transgenic mice. All counts were performed on 50 µm vibratome
midline sagittal sections and included only the distal 500 µm of the
folia. Shown are box plots of mean and variance of
astrocyte number (a) or density (b) in
the culmen and central lobule. Squares in
center of boxes represent the mean in
that group of data. The second and third quartile are represented by
the area above and below the
center line, respectively. The bars
extend to the minimum and maximum. a, With mean cell
counts in the control folia of 601 and 625 for the central lobule and
culmen, respectively, nested ANOVA suggested an average cell loss of
354 ± 54 in the central lobule and 360 ± 48 in the culmen
(99.5% confidence interval). b, With mean density in
the control of 2202 and 2081 astrocytes/mm2 for the central
lobule and culmen, respectively, nested ANOVA suggested an average
decrease in density of 876 ± 393 in the central lobule and
386 ± 116 in the culmen (99.7% confidence interval).
[View Larger Version of this Image (17K GIF file)]
Rescue of granule cells
The presence of astrocytes has been shown to protect cultured
neurons from the excitotoxic effects of glutamate (Rosenberg and
Aizenman, 1989 ). It is thus possible that the loss of cerebellar
granule cells in the transgenic mice could be, in part, attributable to
an accumulation of glutamate resulting from a reduction in astrocyte
numbers. Because activation of the NMDA receptor has been implicated in
the glutamate toxicity of neurons (Choi, 1992 ), we examined the effect
of the NMDA receptor antagonist MK-801 on granule cell survival.
Wild-type and transgenic mice were treated with GCV in the presence or
absence of MK-801 at P5, and their cerebella were examined 48 hr later.
Figure 7a-c shows the base of the cerebellar
folia between the culmen and the declive from a nontransgenic animal
treated with GCV and MK-801, a transgenic animal treated with GCV and
PBS, and a transgenic animal treated with GCV and MK-801, respectively.
In the nontransgenic animal, the external granule cell layer (EGL) is
7-9 cells thick (Fig. 7a), whereas in the cerebellum of a
transgenic animal treated with GCV and PBS, the EGL is reduced to 0-3
cells thick (Fig. 7b). In transgenic animals treated with
GCV and MK-801, the EGL is 5-7 cells thick (Fig. 7c).
Transgenic animals treated with GCV and CNQX (a non-NMDA receptor
antagonist) have EGLs that are 0-3 cells thick, similar to animals
treated with GCV and PBS (data not shown). These results suggest that
NMDA receptor-mediated excitotoxicity is at least partially responsible
for the death of cells in the EGL.
Fig. 7.
Effect of MK-801 on cell death in the EGL after
GCV treatment. Animals were treated with GCV and either PBS or MK-801
at P5, and tissue was taken for analysis 48 hr later. Each panel shows
a photomicrograph of an H&E-stained paraffin section through the base
of the cerebellar folia between the culmen and declive, near the
midline. a, Nontransgenic mouse treated with GCV and
MK-801 at P5, 48 hr survival; the EGL is 7-9 layers thick.
b, TgN5Mes treated with GCV and PBS; the EGL is 0-3
layers thick. c, TgN5Mes treated with GCV and MK-801;
the EGL is 5-9 layers thick. Scale bar, 50 µm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (106K GIF file)]
DISCUSSION
We have produced GFAP-TK transgenic mice so that dividing
astrocytes can be ablated at selected times to evaluate their role in
CNS function. In this initial study we have focused on the development
of the cerebellum, which undergoes significant morphogenesis for
several days after birth. GCV treatment of transgenic animals shortly
after birth resulted in marked deficits in cerebellar development;
Purkinje cells were ectopically distributed and had deranged dendritic
trees, Bergmann glia were fewer in number and had disorganized
processes, and granule cells were severely depleted. Although not the
subject of the present study, GCV treatment also seemed to reduce
myelination significantly (C.L. Delaney, M. Brenner, A. Messing,
unpublished observations).
The effects of GCV treatment on cerebellar development progressively
decreased as the interval between birth and drug administration
increased. This declining effectiveness is consistent with the gradual
decline in astrocyte proliferation in the cerebellum after birth (Korr,
1986 ). In adult animals, in which astrocyte mitosis is rare, even
100-fold higher doses of GCV than that used at P1-P5 produced no
phenotype or histopathological effects (data not shown). These results
are consistent with the toxicity of GCV being specific to dividing
cells.
When evaluated at P19, a clear decrease in astrocyte numbers could be
documented by counting nuclei genetically marked by expression of a
GFAP-lacZ transgene. For technical reasons, the recorded
decrease of ~50% is probably an underestimate of the actual
percentage of astrocytes that are lost. For instance, no correction was
used for counting of partial nuclei in the sections. Because nuclei of
reactive astrocytes are likely larger than those of normal astrocytes
(Fedoroff et al., 1984 ), partial nuclei would be more likely in the
GCV-transgenic mice than in controls. We also limited our cell counts
to the distal portions of the folia to avoid artifacts from counting
off the midline, where folia would be shorter than in the center.
Because the GCV-transgenic group had a much smaller molecular layer
than the control group and because this layer was relatively poor in
astrocytes, the bias again would be toward minimizing the difference
between the two groups. It is also possible that the loss of astrocytes
produced by GCV treatment is compensated partially by a decrease in the
extent of natural cell death that occurs during this period (Krueger et
al., 1995 ). Additionally, because the half-life of GCV in blood is <1
hr (Paul and Dummer, 1992 ) and the half-life of the phosphorylated-GCV
is slower but still <24 hr (Biron et al., 1985 ), there could be
replenishment by proliferation of reactive astrocytes. These
considerations suggest that the ~50% decrease in astrocyte numbers
observed at P19 in treated animals is a minimal estimate of the initial
loss. Compounding the effects of astrocyte loss, some of the surviving
astrocytes may have been dysfunctional. Such a sublethal effect was
demonstrated recently in a transgenic study of TK expression in thyroid
follicular cells (Wallace et al., 1994 ).
Although a clear decrease in astrocyte numbers by P19 was demonstrated,
immunostaining for GFAP was not diminished at this time. This is likely
attributable to the upregulation of GFAP levels and hypertrophy of the
remaining astrocytes. Preliminary experiments involving additional drug
treatments to ablate astrocytes more completely resulted in much higher
mortality in the mice (unpublished observations). In several studies of
the immediate post-treatment period (for example, Fig. 7b),
we were unable to identify a significant increase in the numbers of
dying astrocytes. However, it may have been difficult to observe
GCV-mediated astrocyte death against the background of normal astrocyte
loss that occurs during this period of development (Krueger et al.,
1995 ) and the rapid clearing of apoptotic cells that typically takes
place.
Perhaps the most striking observation in our study was the dramatic
loss of granule cells and alteration of Purkinje cell dendrites after
GCV treatment. Elaboration of Purkinje cell dendrites coincides with
maturation of granule cells (Caddy and Herrup, 1990 ) and requires
afferent input from granule cell parallel fibers (Bradley and Berry,
1976 ; Baptista et al., 1994 ). Therefore, the Purkinje cell defect is
likely secondary to the loss of granule cells. We have considered
several possible mechanisms by which the nearly complete ablation of
granule cells could have occurred. A trivial explanation would be that
the granule cells or their precursors also express the GFAP-TK
transgene. Our in situ hybridization for TK mRNA did not
detect any significant signal from nonastrocytic cells, nor, in
extensive analyses of lacZ expression driven by the same
GFAP promoter, have we seen any evidence for expression in granule
cells or their precursors (Brenner et al., 1994 ). Thus, if these cells
express the transgene, it is at levels lower than we can detect.
Another possibility is that granule cells or their precursors are being
killed by a ``bystander effect,'' a phenomenon well documented in
tumor models (Caruso et al., 1993 ; Freeman et al., 1993 ), in which
cells in the vicinity of TK-expressing cells also are killed by
antiherpes drugs. The mechanism generally accepted for this process is
the transfer of the toxic phosphorylated GCV product to adjacent cells
via gap junctions (Culver et al., 1992 ; Bi et al., 1993 ; Mesnil et al.,
1996 ). This mechanism seems unlikely in this instance, because gap
junctions have not been noted between astrocytes and granule cells or
their precursors in any of multiple studies of cerebellar architecture
(Rakic, 1971 ; Rakic and Sidman, 1973a ). A caveat, however, is that the
detection of such junctions was not the primary focus of these studies.
An alternative but less favored mechanism for the bystander effect,
phagocytosis of apoptotic bodies from the TK-expressing cells (Freeman
et al., 1993 ), also cannot be dismissed.
The bystander effect can be excluded at least partially, however,
on the basis of the protection of granule cells by the NMDA antagonist
MK-801. The rescue of substantial numbers of granule cells by MK-801
indicates that excitotoxicity is a significant factor in the loss of
these cells. The putative increase in extracellular glutamate
triggering this loss could arise from one or a combination of sources,
including release of glutamate from dying astrocytes, a reduced ability
of surviving astrocytes to sequester glutamate, or release from dying
granule cells.
The dramatic loss of granule cells after GCV treatment resembles the
phenotypic effects of treatment with various toxins and in spontaneous
mutants affecting the cerebellum (Hatten and Heintz, 1995 ). However,
the roles that astrocytes play in these models has been difficult to
establish. For instance, the antimetabolite 6-aminonicotinamide
interrupts a metabolic pathway important in glial cells but damages
developing granule neurons as well (Sotelo and Rio, 1980 ). The
weaver mutation originally was considered to cause granule
cell loss secondary to a primary defect in Bergmann glia (Rakic and
Sidman, 1973b ) but recently has been identified as a potassium channel
expressed in granule cells (Patil et al., 1995 ). It is interesting that
meander tail mutants show loss of granule cells and
disoriented astroglia and Purkinje cells, abnormalities that are very
similar to those observed in the present study. The effects of
meander tail, however, are limited to the anterior lobes of
the cerebellum (Ross et al., 1990 ), and the molecular defect in this
mutant has not yet been identified. Nevertheless, our studies suggest
that meander tail may reflect a localized abnormality of
astrocytes.
In conclusion, we have developed a mouse model that allows the
selective ablation of dividing astrocytes. Postnatal ablations have
suggested that astrocytes play an important role in the survival and
maturation of neuronal populations examined in the cerebellum. This
ablation model should also be useful for addressing other questions
concerning the role of astrocytes during development and in response to
injury throughout the mammalian CNS.
FOOTNOTES
Received May 9, 1996; revised Aug. 7, 1996; accepted Aug. 15, 1996.
This work was supported by Grant RG 2487-A1 from the National Multiple
Sclerosis Society to A.M. We thank M. Blonski, E. Galbreath, G. Lyons,
H. Peickert, and D. Springman for technical assistance and R. Miller
for performing the statistical analysis. We also thank Syntex
Corporation for the gift of ganciclovir and Dr. R. D. Palmiter for the
gift of a metallothionein-TK plasmid.
Correspondence should be addressed to Catherine L. Delaney, School of
Veterinary Medicine, 2015 Linden Drive West, Madison, WI
53706.
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