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Volume 17, Number 13,
Issue of July 1, 1997
pp. 4987-4993
Copyright ©1997 Society for Neuroscience
Appican Expression Induces Morphological Changes in C6 Glioma
Cells and Promotes Adhesion of Neural Cells to the Extracellular
Matrix
Anfan Wu,
Menelas N. Pangalos,
Spiros Efthimiopoulos,
Junichi Shioi, and
Nikolaos K. Robakis
Department of Psychiatry and Fishberg Research Center for
Neurobiology, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, New York 10029
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
MATERIAL AND METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
FOOTNOTES
REFERENCES
ABSTRACT
Appicans are secreted or cell-associated brain chondroitin
sulfate proteoglycans produced by glia cells and containing Alzheimer amyloid precursor protein (APP) as a core protein. Here, we report that
rat C6 glioma cells transfected with appican displayed a dramatic
change in their phenotypic appearance compared with untransfected cells
or cells transfected with APP. Appican-transfected cells lost the round
appearance of the untransfected control C6 cells, acquired a flat
morphology, and elaborated more processes than control cells.
Untransfected, or APP-transfected C6, cells were completely dissociated
from their substrate after 40 min of treatment with cell dissociation
solution. Under the same conditions, however, <20% of the
appican-transfected C6 cells were dissociated from their substrate,
suggesting that the appican-transfected glia cells attach more avidly
to their substrate than do untransfected or APP transfected control
cells. In contrast, appican-transfected fibroblast cells showed no
morphological changes and dissociated from their substrate similarly to
untransfected fibroblast cells. Extracellular matrix (ECM) prepared
from appican-transfected C6 cell cultures contained high levels of
appican and was a significantly better substrate for the attachment of
C6 cells than ECM from either untransfected or APP-transfected
cultures. Furthermore, cell adhesion to ECM was independent of the
level of appican expression of the plated cells. ECM from
appican-transfected C6 cultures stimulated adhesion of other neural
cells including primary astrocytes, Neuro2a neuroblastoma, and PC12
pheochromocytoma, but not fibroblast cells. Conditioned media from
appican-transfected C6 cultures failed to promote cell adhesion.
Together, these data suggest that secreted appican incorporates into
ECM and promotes adhesion of neural cells. Furthermore, our data
suggest that the chondroitin sulfate chain engenders APP with novel
biological functions.
Key words:
Alzheimer disease;
appican;
APP;
cell adhesion;
extracellular matrix, proteoglycan
INTRODUCTION
The amyloid precursor proteins (APPs) are a family
of type I transmembrane glycoproteins involved in the development of
Alzheimer disease (AD). They are the precursors of A peptide, which
aggregates to form the amyloid deposition characteristic of AD
pathology (for review, see Robakis, 1994 ). In addition, certain APP
mutations seem to be sufficient for the induction of the AD phenotype
(for review, see St. George-Hyslop et al., 1994 ). The APP gene contains at least 19 exons, and several distinct APP species have been detected
as a result of alternative exon splicing. APPs are expressed ubiquitously and have been shown to regulate cell growth (Saitoh et
al., 1989 ), promote cell adhesion (Schubert et al., 1989 ; Breen et al.,
1991 ; Chen and Yankner, 1991 ), and enhance neurite extension (Robakis
et al., 1990 ; Milward et al., 1992 ; Qiu et al., 1995 ).
Appicans are brain chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans (CSPGs) containing
APP as a core protein and are mainly expressed by glia cells (Shioi et
al., 1992 , 1995 ; Pangalos et al., 1995a ). Recent reports showed that
appicans contain one chondroitin sulfate (CS) chain attached to L-APP,
a splicing variant of APP without exon 15. Absence of this exon is
essential for the formation of the appropriate consensus sequence that
allows the attachment of the CS glycosaminoglycan chain to the core
L-APP protein (Pangalos et al., 1995b ). Therefore, APP isoforms
containing exon 15 are not expected to be present in the proteoglycan
form. Appican core proteins containing the Kunitz protease inhibitor
(KPI) insert of APP are called KL-APP. In KL-APP733
protein, which contains 733 amino acid residues, the CS chain of
appican is attached to residue Ser619 located 16 amino acids N terminus
to the A sequence. Construction of a KL-APP733 mutant
containing alanine instead of serine at position 619, called
KL-APP733S/A, failed to produce any appican (Pangalos et
al., 1995b ). It was reported recently that other members of the APP
family of proteins including APLP2 may also occur as CSPGs (Thinakaran
and Sisodia, 1994 ; Pangalos et al., 1995a ).
Cell surface appican contains full-length L-APP, whereas secreted
appican contains a truncated APP without the transmembrane and
cytoplasmic regions produced after the core protein of cellular appican
is cleaved by -secretase (Shioi et al., 1992 , 1993 ). Although the
biological function(s) of appicans is not known, CSPGs have been
postulated to be involved in a number of key cellular functions
(Jackson et al., 1991 ; Oohira et al., 1994 ; Small et al., 1996 ). In the
brain, CSPGs have been suggested to have neuroprotective properties and
to modulate cell adhesion, axonal growth, and neural patterning (Snow
et al., 1990 ; Brittis et al., 1992 ; Margolis and Margolis, 1993 ).
Proteoglycans, including heparan, dermatan, and CSPGs, have been found
in and around senile plaques and neurofibrillary tangles, suggesting
that they may play a role in the pathogenesis of AD (Snow et al., 1992 ;
Su et al., 1992 ; Dewitt et al., 1993). Appicans were found in human and
rat brains, and they are produced by glial cells rather than by neurons
in rat brain primary cultures (Shioi et al., 1995 ). Expression of
appican in transformed cell lines is also cell-type specific and
depends on the growth conditions of the culture (Pangalos et al.,
1995a ). In the present study, we show that transfection of glial cells
with appican changes dramatically both their morphology and cell
adhesion properties. Moreover, extracellular matrix (ECM) prepared from
appican-transfected glia cultures stimulated adhesion of both glia and
neuronal cells.
MATERIAL AND METHODS
Cell cultures and transfections. All cell lines were
from ATCC cell bank (Shioi et al., 1993 ). Transformed cell lines rat C6
glioma, mouse Neuro2a (N2a) neuroblastoma, or human embryonic fibroblasts 293 cells were grown either in DMEM (Life Technologies, Gaithersburg, MD) supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum (FBS, JRH
Biologicals, Lenexa, KA) or in DMEM supplemented with 1 mg/ml transferrin, 5 µg/ml insulin, 30 nM sodium selenite, 20 nM progesterone, and 100 µM putrescine, and
maintained at 37°C in an atmosphere of 5% CO2 and 100%
relative humidity. Rat pheochcromocytoma PC12 cells were grown in
RPMI-1640 medium plus 10% horse serum (Gemini Bio-Products, Calabasas,
CA) and 5% FBS. Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells were grown in McCoy
5A medium (Sigma, St. Louis, MO) supplemented with 10% FBS. Primary
astrocyte cultures were prepared from rats at postnatal day 2 as
described (Shioi et al., 1995 ). cDNA species encoding
K-APP751 (the KPI and exon 15 containing APP),
KL-APP733, or KL-APP733S/A, where serine
619 is mutated to alanine, were subcloned into vector pRc-CMV, and the
resultant plasmids were used to transfect the appropriate cell lines as described (Pangalos et al., 1995b ). Transfectants were maintained in
400 µg/ml Geneticin (Life Technologies). To eliminate clonal effects,
experiments were performed initially on pooled colonies of stable
appican transfectants and then repeated on individual colonies.
Cell dissociation assay. Untransfected or stably transfected
cells were plated at a cell density of ~5 × 105 cells per 35 mm Falcon tissue culture dish
(Falcon Primaria, Lincoln Park, NJ). Cells were grown in the presence
of 10% FBS, until they were ~80% confluent, and then washed with
DMEM and cultured for an additional 2-3 d in DMEM medium with
supplements in the absence of serum. At the end of the incubation,
cells were washed carefully with 1 ml PBS and then treated with 0.8 ml
of the nonenzymatic EDTA-containing cell dissociation solution (Sigma) for various times on a shaker. Detached cells were aspirated, and cells
that remained attached to the plate were dissociated by trypsinization
and counted using a hemocytometer.
Preparation of ECM. ECM was prepared as described (Fairbairn
et al., 1985 ). Briefly, untransfected or transfected C6 cells were
trypsinized, resuspended, and counted. Cells were then plated at a
density of 3× 105 cells per plate on 35 mm tissue
culture dishes in DMEM containing 10% FBS and were grown for 3 d
until they were ~80% confluent. Cells were then fed with DMEM
containing 1% FBS and cultured for an additional 2-3 d. At the end of
the incubation, cells were washed once with 2 ml of PBS containing 5 mM EDTA (buffer A) and then incubated in the same solution
at room temperature with gentle shaking until all cells detached from
the plate. Plates were washed twice with PBS and then fixed and
sterilized for 15 min in 70% ethanol followed by 20 min of UV
irradiation. Plates were stored in sterile PBS at 4°C and kept for a
maximum of 10 d before use.
Cell adhesion assay. Untransfected or transfected cells were
trypsinized and suspended in DMEM containing 10% FBS (C6, N2a, and 293 cells) or 10% FBS plus 5% horse serum (PC12 cells). Approximately 1×
106 cells were pipetted on to 35 mm ECM plates
prepared as described above. Cells were allowed to adhere to the plates
for 30 min or 2 hr, depending on the cell type, and unattached cells
were removed by aspiration. Plates were then washed once with PBS, and
attached cells were trypsinized and counted as above.
Determination of ECM appican. Approximately 2 × 106 C6 cells were plated on a 100 mm dish and grown
in DMEM plus 10% FBS. At 70-80% confluency, cells were changed to
DMEM medium containing 1% FBS and cultured until they reached
confluency. Cells were then incubated for 24 hr in sulfate-free DMEM
plus serum-free supplements in the presence of
[35SO4] (carrier-free, NEN, 400 µCi/5 ml). At the end of the incubation, cells were dissociated from
plates with buffer A and gentle shaking, and the dissociated cells were
collected and cellular protein was determined as described (Pangalos et
al., 1995a ). Plates were then washed several times with buffer A to
ensure removal of all cells, and the remaining ECM fraction was
extracted as described, with modification (Kahari et al., 1991 ).
Briefly, 500 µl of a buffer containing 0.125 M Tris-Cl,
pH 6.8, 2% SDS, 1 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride
(Boehringer Mannheim, Indianapolis, IN), 25 µg/ml pepstatin (Boehringer Mannheim), 25 µg/ml leupeptin (Sigma), 50 µg/ml
aprotinin (Sigma), and 1 mM 1,10-phenanthroline (Sigma)
were added to each plate, and the ECM was then extracted into the
buffer by scraping with a rubber cell scraper. Extracts were collected,
and plates were rinsed three times with PBS to completely remove the
ECM. More than 95% of the SDS was then removed using the Extrati-Gel D
Detergent Removing Gel system according the manufacture's directions (Pierce, Rockford, IL). After the final centrifugation, the supernatant was collected and ECM appican was then immunoprecipitated using anti- 5 antibody, which is specific for human APP (Pangalos et al.,
1995b ). Chondroitinase ABC treatment of the sample was performed as
described (Shioi et al., 1995 ).
Statistics. Nonlinear regression was used to fit an
exponential increase curve to dissociation data. Means were obtained
from at least three independent experiments and were compared with Student's t test and judged for significance
(p < 0.05). Error bars indicate SD.
RESULTS
It was reported recently that C6 glioblastoma cells transfected
with KL-APP733, the KPI-containing isoform of L-APP,
produce and secrete high levels of appican compared with untransfected, K-APP751-transfected, or
KL-APP733S/A-transfected C6 cells (Pangalos et al., 1995b ;
see also introductory remarks). We observed that C6 cells transfected
with the appican-producing KL-APP733 displayed a clear
change in their morphology compared with either untransfected cells or
cells transfected with nonappican-producing APP. At low confluency,
untransfected or KL-APP733S/A-transfected C6 cells appeared
round with few processes when grown for 3-4 d in the presence of
nonserum DMEM plus supplements (Fig.
1B,C). At high confluency, these cells appeared small and round and adhered to each
other in clumps, which caused large areas of the plate to be free of
cells (Fig. 1E,F). In
contrast, C6 cells transfected with the appican-producing
KL-APP733 displayed a cellular morphology distinctly
different from that of the untransfected or
KL-APP733S/A-transfected cultures (Fig.
1E,D). At low confluency, the
appican-transfected cells appeared flattened and were larger than
control cells. In addition, appican-transfected cells had substantially
more processes than control cells and elaborated fillopodia-like
projections that were not observed in control cultures (Fig.
1A). At high confluency, these cells also appeared
flattened out, did not form clumps, and covered the entire area of the
tissue culture plate (Fig. 1D). C6 cells transfected
with K-APP751, the KPI isoform of APP, which
contains exon 15, showed morphological characteristics similar to those
observed in untransfected or KL-APP733S/A-transfected C6
cells (data not shown), suggesting that the morphological changes observed in the KL-APP733-transfected C6 cultures are related to the
appican production rather than to the absence of exon 15 from the
KL-APP (Pangalos et al., 1995b ). Fibroblast cell line 293 transfected
with KL-APP733 also produced and secreted significantly higher levels of appican than either untransfected or
KL-APP733S/A-transfected 293 fibroblasts (Pangalos et al.,
1995b ). However, all fibroblast cultures maintained their original
round appearance (data not shown), suggesting that the morphological
changes observed in the appican-transfected C6 cells may be cell-type
specific.
Fig. 1.
Morphological changes of appican-transfected C6
cells. Untransfected or transfected C6 cells were cultured in DMEM plus
10% FBS for 2 d. After ~100% confluency, the culture medium
was changed to DMEM plus supplements in the absence of serum for an
additional 3-4 d. Pictures were then taken under a phase-contrast
microscope at 200× magnification.
A-C, Cells cultured at low
density. D-F, Confluent cell cultures.
A, D, C6 cells transfected with the
appican-producing KL-APP733. B,
E, C6 cells transfected with KLAPP733S/A.
C, F, Untransfected C6 cells.
Arrow in A indicates a cell elaborating several processes.
[View Larger Version of this Image (176K GIF file)]
The change in the morphological characteristics of the C6 cells
transfected with KL-APP733 suggested that appican may
modulate the substrate adhesion of these cells. To examine this
hypothesis, we took advantage of a nonenzymatic EDTA-containing cell
dissociation solution (see Materials and Methods) used routinely to
suspend attached cells. It can be seen in Figure 2 that
untransfected C6 cells dissociated rapidly from the tissue culture
plates, with ~70% of the total number of starting cells detached
from the plate after 5 min of incubation with the dissociation
solution. After 30 min of treatment, practically all cells were
detached from the substrate. KL-APP733S/A-transfected C6
cells detached somewhat slower than the untransfected cells.
Approximately 30% of the total starting cells dissociated from the
plates after 5 min of treatment and >70% of the total cells detached
after 30 min. C6 cells transfected with the appican-producing
KL-APP733, however, detached from the plates at the
slowest rate, with ~5% or 20% of the total number of starting cells
detached from the plates after 5 or 30 min of treatment with
dissociation solution, respectively. C6 cells transfected with
K-APP751 showed a dissociation rate similar to that of C6
cells transfected with KL-APP733S/A. The slower
dissociation rate of cells transfected with either
KL-APP733S/A or K-APP751, compared with
untransfected C6 cells, is in agreement with data indicating that APP
itself may act as a cell adhesion agent (Schubert et al., 1989 ; Breen
et al., 1991 ; Chen and Yankner, 1991 ). Determination of the total APP
secreted by each one of our cultures showed that all transfectants
produced comparable levels of APP (data not shown) (see also Pangalos
et al., 1995b ), suggesting that the observed differences in
dissociation are not attributable to differences in APP expression. The
specificity of the effects of appican on cell-substrate dissociation
was examined using fibroblast 293 and CHO cells. Although
KL-APP733-transfected cell cultures of both cell lines
produced high levels of appican (Pangalos et al., 1995b ) (M. Pangalos
and N. Robakis, unpublished observations), they dissociated from their
substrate in a manner similar to that of untransfected control cultures
(data not shown). These data suggest that as with the morphological
changes (see above), the appican effects on cell dissociation may be
cell-type specific.
Fig. 2.
Dissociation kinetics of appican-transfected C6
cells. Untransfected or transfected C6 cells were cultured in DMEM plus
10% FBS for 3-4 d until the cells became ~80% confluent. The
culture medium was then changed to DMEM plus nonserum supplements for another 2-3 d. Cells were dissociated at different time points using a
nonenzymatic cell dissociation solution with gentle shaking and the
number (A) (see equation in legend to Fig. 3) of cells remaining
attached on the plates were determined (see Materials and Methods). The
total number (B) of cells on the plates was obtained by direct
trypsinization and counting. The detached cell number was calculated by
subtracting A from B. Solid circles, KL-APP733-transfected C6 cells; open
circles, KL-APP733S/A-transfected C6 cells;
solid triangles, K-APP751-transfected C6
cells; open triangles, untransfected C6 cells.
[View Larger Version of this Image (16K GIF file)]
To study further the effects of appican on cell adhesion, we examined
the rate of attachment of untransfected and
KL-APP733-transfected C6 cells on tissue culture plates.
Approximately 50% of the suspended untransfected C6 cells attach to
tissue culture dishes within the first 30 min of plating (A. Wu and N. Robakis, unpublished observations). Using this system, no difference in
the rate of attachment was observed among untransfected C6 cells or
cells transfected with KL-APP733,
KL-APP733S/A, or K-APP751 (data not shown),
suggesting that the level of intracellular appican does not affect the
rate at which C6 cells attach to their substrate. Furthermore, when
suspensions of untransfected cells were allowed to attach to tissue
culture dishes in the presence of conditioned media obtained either
from untransfected or from any of the APP-transfected C6 cultures, no
difference was detected in the rate of cell attachment (data not
shown), even though the conditioned media from the
KL-APP733-transfected C6 cells contained significantly
higher levels of appican than conditioned media from the other cell
cultures (Pangalos et al., 1995b ). These observations suggest that the
levels of the soluble appican in the culture media do not affect the
adhesion of the C6 cells. All C6 cells, however, untransfected or
transfected, attached at a significantly higher rate to ECM plates (see
Materials and Methods) prepared from C6 cultures transfected with the
appican-producing protein KL-APP733 than to ECM plates
prepared from either untransfected or
KL-APP733S/A-transfected C6 cultures (Fig.
3). Furthermore, all C6 cells attached at a similar rate
to each specific ECM, irrespective of their APP transfection,
suggesting that ECM, rather than production of cellular appican, was
the critical factor in the adhesion of these cells. C6 cells attached
slightly better to ECM from the APP-transfected cells than to ECM from
wild-type cells (compare far left and far right
sets of bars in Fig. 3). This result is in accord with the mild cell
adhesion properties of the APP proteins (see above).
Fig. 3.
Cell attachment on ECM from appican-transfected
cultures. All three types of C6 cells, untransfected (open
bars), KL-APP733-transfected (hatched
bars), and KL-APP733S/A-transfected (dotted
bars), were plated on each ECM prepared from untransfected,
KL-APP733-transfected, or
KL-APP733S/A-transfected C6 cells. The total number (B) of cells plated was determined and after 30 min of incubation at 37°C,
media were aspirated and cells were washed once with PBS. The number
(A) of cells attached on the ECM plates was determined as described in
Figure 2. The percentage (C) of cells attached was calculated using the
formula: C = (A/B) · 100%.
[View Larger Version of this Image (25K GIF file)]
Together, these observations suggested that ECM-incorporated appican,
rather than secreted or cellular appican, was the mediator of the
observed increased cell adhesion of C6 cells transfected with
KL-APP733. To examine whether appican actually incorporates into the ECM and to determine its levels in the ECM of untransfected, KL-APP733-, or KL-APP733S/A-transfected C6
cells, appican was labeled with
[35SO4], which incorporates in the CS
chain of appicans (Shioi et al., 1993 ), and ECM plates were prepared
from each culture. The ECM levels of appican were then determined by
immunoprecipitation using -5 antibody (see Material and Methods). As
shown in Figure 4, the characteristic diffuse banding
pattern of appican between 100-200 kDa (Shioi et al., 1992 , 1995 ;
Pangalos et al., 1995a ,b ) was clearly detected in the ECM from the
KL-APP733--transfected C6 cultures (lane 2) but
not in the ECM from either wild-type or
KL-APP733S/A-transfected cells (lanes
1,4). As expected (Shioi et al., 1992 , 1993 ,
1995 ), chondroitinase ABC digestion of the samples resulted in the
degradation of the appican and the concomitant appearance of the core
APP protein, which is labeled because of a sulfated tyrosine residue
(Weidemann et al., 1989 ). Combined, our data indicated that appican
incorporates into ECM and mediates the attachment of C6 cells to their
substrate.
Fig. 4.
Detection of appican in ECM. ECM was prepared from
untransfected, KL-APP733-transfected, and
KL-APP733S/A-transfected C6 cell cultures labeled with
[35SO4 ] for 24 hr. Labeled ECM
fractions were extracted and immunoprecipitated with -5 antibody,
and immunoprecipitates were analyzed on 6% SDS-PAGE (see Materials and
Methods). Lane 1, ECM fraction from untransfected C6
cells; lane 2, ECM fraction from
KL-APP733-transfected C6 cells; lane 3, ECM
fraction from KL-APP733-transfected C6 cells treated with
chondroitinase ABC; lane 4, ECM fraction from
KL-APP733S/A-transfected C6 cells.
[View Larger Version of this Image (53K GIF file)]
Appicans are found in brain and have been shown to be produced
mainly by astrocytes in vitro (Shioi et al., 1995 ).
Therefore, it was of interest to see whether ECM prepared from
appican-transfected cells would promote attachment of other neural
cells. Figure 5A shows that primary rat brain
astrocytes prepared as described (Shioi et al., 1995 ) attached
significantly faster to ECM plates prepared from C6 cultures
transfected with KL-APP733 than to ECM plates from
KL-APP733 S/A-transfected C6 cultures. Similar results were
obtained with PC12 and N2a cells, both of which are of neural origin
(Fig. 5B,C). However, 293 fibroblast cells attached equally well to both ECM preparations (Fig.
5D), suggesting that the appican-containing ECM specifically
promoted the adhesion of neural cells. Furthermore, ECM prepared from
appican-producing fibroblast 293 cells transfected with
KL-APP733 (Pangalos et al., 1995b ) did not promote adhesion of C6 cells, providing additional evidence for the cell specificity of
the observed cell-adhesion effects of appican (data not shown). Presently, it is not clear whether the inability of the ECM from appican-transfected fibroblasts to promote adhesion of C6 cells is
attributable to a lack of appican incorporation into this ECM or to
other differences between the C6 and fibroblast ECM preparations.
Fig. 5.
Attachment assay for primary astrocytes, PC12,
N2A, and 293 cells on appican-containing ECM. Attachment experiments
were performed as described in Figure 3. Primary astrocytes
(A), PC12 (B), N2a (C), and 293 cells
(D) were plated on ECM plates prepared from C6
cells transfected with KL-APP733 (hatched bars) or
KL-APP733S/A (open bars). The incubation
time for primary astrocytes, N2a cells, and 293 cells was 30 min,
whereas the time for PC12 cells was 2 hr, attributable to the slow
attachment displayed by these cells. Percentage of cells attached was
calculated as described in Figure 3.
[View Larger Version of this Image (40K GIF file)]
DISCUSSION
CSPGs participate in a wide range of cellular functions.
They have been found both on the cell surface, where they react with ECM molecules, thus promoting cell adhesion (Conget and Minguell, 1994 ;
Henke et al., 1996 ), and as components of the ECM in several tissues
including brain. Although it has been suggested that in the brain,
depositions of extracellular CSPGs may provide inhibitory cues for
growing neurites (Snow et al., 1990 ), ECM CSPGs seem essential for the
adhesion between neural retina and retinal pigmented epithelium
(Lazarus and Hageman, 1992 ). The experiments reported here show that
increased appican expression in glial cells changes profoundly both
their morphology and their process elaboration. Specifically,
appican-transfected C6 glioblastoma cells appeared larger, had a
flattened morphology, and elaborated more processes than either
untransfected C6 cells or cells transfected with nonappican-producing APP. Furthermore, in response to a standard cell dissociation solution,
appican-transfected glial cells dissociated from their substrate at a
significantly slower rate than either untransfected or APP-transfected
control cells, suggesting that appican increases the avidity of
substrate attachment of glial cells. On the contrary, increased appican
production in transfected fibroblasts or CHO cells affected neither
their morphological appearance nor their substrate dissociation,
indicating that the appican effects are cell-type specific. Taken
together, these data show that attachment of the CS chain on the core
APP protein changes profoundly the effects of APP on cell adhesion and
morphology.
Examination of the rate of substrate attachment of medium-suspended
glial cells showed that increased levels of either cellular or medium
appican had no effect on this rate. However, glial cells attached
significantly faster to ECM substrates prepared from appican-transfected C6 cell cultures than to ECM prepared from either
untransfected or APP-transfected cultures. Combined, these observations
suggested that secreted appican may incorporate into the ECM and
promote adhesion of glial cells. This suggestion was strongly supported
by the high levels of appican detected in the ECM prepared from
appican-transfected C6 cultures. Importantly, ECM from
appican-transfected glial cultures promoted adhesion of other cell
lines of neural origin, including N2a neuroblastoma cells, whereas it
failed to promote adhesion of fibroblasts, providing additional support
for the conclusion that the appican effects on cell adhesion are
cell-type specific. The specificity of the appican effects is
consistent with the endogenous expression of this molecule in cells of
neural origin (Shioi et al., 1992 , 1995 ; Pangalos et al., 1995a ), as
well as with the absence of endogenous appican expression in
fibroblast. Because expression of appican was detected in the brain
(Shioi et al., 1995 ), this proteoglycan may also modulate the adhesion
and morphogenesis of glial cells in the CNS.
ECM, a structure that plays important roles in cellular
morphogenesis and differentiation, is a dynamic assemplance of
interacting molecules, and often a change in the expression of one ECM
component may alter the molecular composition and function of the ECM
(Reing et al., 1992 ). Our data show that appican incorporates into the ECM of glial cells and changes both their morphology and their adhesion. However, it is not clear whether appican functions directly as a cell adhesion molecule or whether it regulates the expression of
other ECM components, which, ultimately, may be responsible for the
observed appican effects on cell adhesion and morphology. We obtained
evidence that appican expression also enhanced adhesion of C6 cells to
laminin-coated plates (Pangalos and Robakis, unpublished observations).
Additional work should clarify whether the ECM appican interacts
directly with specific integrins on the surface of glia cells, thus
promoting cell-substrate adhesion, or whether its effects are mediated
through its interaction with other integrin ligands of the ECM.
Proteoglycans have been shown to bind the A peptide and modulate its
aggregation to amyloid fibers (Brunden et al., 1993 ; Buee et al.,
1993 ). In addition, CSPGs have been found in both senile plaques and
neurofibrillary tangles (DeWitt et al., 1993 ), suggesting that these
molecules, and possibly appicans, are involved in the pathology of AD.
Strong evidence in support of a direct role of APP in the development
of AD derives from genetic studies, indicating that certain APP
mutations are closely linked to AD in a small number of families (FAD).
However, it is not clear whether the FAD mutations cause AD by
increasing A production or by altering the biological properties of
APP (Regland and Gottfries, 1992 ; Robakis and Pangalos, 1994 ; Saitoh
and Brugge, 1994 ). Our results provide evidence that appicans may
mediate cell adhesion in the brain and may affect the morphology of
glia cells. It remains an interesting question whether the FAD
mutations of APP affect the cellular function of appican and its
relation to the development of AD.
FOOTNOTES
Received Feb. 2, 1997; revised April 2, 1997; accepted April 16, 1997.
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grants AG08200
and AG05138.
A.W. and M.N.P. contributed equally to this work.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Nikolaos K. Robakis, Mount
Sinai School of Medicine, Department of Psychiatry and Fishberg
Research Center for Neurobiology, One Gustave L. Levy Place, New York,
NY 10029.
Dr. Pangalos's present address: Janssen Pharmaceutica, Department of
Applied Molecular Biology, Turnhoutseweg 30, B-2340 Beerse, Belgium.
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