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The Journal of Neuroscience, January 1, 1998, 18(1):147-155
Response of Postmitotic Neurons to X-Irradiation: Implications
for the Role of DNA Damage in Neuronal Apoptosis
Glenn T.
Gobbel1, 2,
Mattia
Bellinzona1,
Axel R.
Vogt2,
Nalin
Gupta1,
John R.
Fike1, and
Pak H.
Chan1, 2
Brain Tumor Research Center and CNS Injury and Brain Edema Research
Center, Departments of 1 Neurological Surgery and
2 Neurology, University of California, San Francisco,
California 94143
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ABSTRACT |
The molecular changes responsible for inducing neuronal apoptosis
are unknown. Rat cortical neurons were treated with x-irradiation 7 d after isolation to test for the role of DNA damage in neuronal death. The response of neurons to x-irradiation was compared with that
of astrocytes that had been isolated 3 weeks earlier from newborn rats.
At the time of irradiation, the neurons appeared well differentiated
morphologically and were predominantly (90-95%) noncycling, based on
flow cytometric analysis. There was a similar, linear increase in DNA
double-strand breaks with increasing radiation dose in neurons and
astrocytes. However, whereas doses as low as 2 Gy induced typical
apoptotic changes in neurons, including nuclear fragmentation and/or
internucleosomal DNA fragmentation, doses as high as 32 Gy caused
little or no apoptosis in astrocytes. Radiation-induced apoptosis of
neurons started 4-8 hr after irradiation, was maximal at 12 hr, and
was dependent on dose up to 16 Gy. It was prevented when cycloheximide,
a protein synthesis inhibitor, was added up to 6 hr after irradiation.
In addition to their distinct apoptotic response, neurons rejoined
radiation-induced DNA double-strand breaks more slowly than astrocytes.
Treatment with benzamide to inhibit ADP-ribosylation and strand break
repair increased apoptosis; splitting the dose of radiation to allow
increased time for DNA repair decreased apoptosis. These data suggest
that DNA damage may induce neuronal apoptosis, that the extent of
damage may determine the degree of apoptosis induced, and that slow
repair of damage may play a role in the susceptibility of neurons to
apoptosis.
Key words:
rat; neuron; astrocyte; ADP-ribosylation; benzamide; DNA
damage; apoptosis; x-irradiation
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INTRODUCTION |
Neurons appear to be particularly
susceptible to injury from insults to the CNS. However, the sequence of
events leading from the initial insult to neuronal dysfunction and
death has not been established in many cases. It is important to
identify these events so that methods of preventing or reducing injury
can be developed.
There are at least two mechanisms by which neurons can die, apoptosis
and necrosis. Apoptosis commonly is distinguished from necrosis in that
the former generally is considered to be an active process requiring
synthesis of particular proteins responsible for cell killing (Villa et
al., 1994 ). Furthermore, internucleosomal cleavage of DNA and nuclear
fragmentation often accompanies apoptosis, whereas cellular swelling,
membrane disruption, and random cleavage of the DNA typically accompany
necrosis (Wyllie et al., 1980 ). Many insults, including cerebral
ischemia (MacManus et al., 1993 ; Hill et al., 1995 ; Islam et al., 1995 ;
Li et al., 1995 ; Linnik et al., 1995 ; Du et al., 1996 ), trauma (Rink et
al., 1995 ), and exposure to glutamate receptor agonists (Pollard et
al., 1994 ; Gillardon et al., 1995 ) or -amyloid (Loo et al., 1993 ),
appear to induce neuronal death via apoptosis. Neuronal apoptosis also appears to occur in the brains of individuals with Huntington's disease (Portera-Cailliau et al., 1995 ) and in animal models of Parkinson's disease (Mitchell et al., 1994 ).
The precise stimuli responsible for the induction of neuronal apoptosis
remain unclear, but oxidative stress and the accompanying free radicals
may contribute to the induction. Many neuropathological conditions that
are characterized by neuronal apoptosis, including stroke, Alzheimer's
disease, and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, are accompanied by
oxidative stress (Bowling et al., 1993 ; Kumar et al., 1994 ; Gunasekar
et al., 1995 ; Yan et al., 1995 ; Chan, 1996 ). Furthermore,
downregulation of Cu-Zn-superoxide dismutase (SOD), a free radical
scavenger, increased apoptosis of neuron-like PC12 cells (Troy and
Shelanski, 1994 ), and increased concentrations of Cu-Zn-SOD in
sympathetic neurons can delay apoptosis induced after withdrawal of
nerve growth factor (Greenlund et al., 1995 ).
Numerous molecular changes can accompany free radical damage,
including protein oxidation, lipid peroxidation, and DNA alterations (Dizdaroglu, 1992 ; Floyd and Carney, 1992 ; Buettner, 1993 ), but the
specific changes that induce neuronal apoptosis after cerebral injury
are unknown. However, there is considerable interest in the role of DNA
damage in neurodegenerative processes (Chopp et al., 1996 ). We
hypothesized that if DNA damage induces apoptosis in neurons, then
x-rays, which cause DNA damage in part via the generation of free
radicals (Marin and Bender, 1963 ; Munro, 1970 ; Hall, 1988 ; Bump and
Brown, 1990 ), also should induce apoptosis in neurons. Furthermore, we
postulated that if DNA damage were responsible for apoptosis, then the
processing of that damage in neurons should differ from the processing
in cells that are resistant to apoptosis. In the present study we used
x-rays to generate DNA damage in neurons isolated from embryonic rat
cortex and astrocytes isolated from newborn rat pups, and we compared and contrasted the response of these two cell types to the resultant damage.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Cell isolation and cultivation. Primary neuronal
cultures were established from the cerebral cortex of Sprague Dawley
rats at day 15-17 of gestation, using a modification of a previously described method (Yu et al., 1986 ). Pregnant rats were killed by
CO2 inhalation, followed by decapitation, and the uterus
was removed aseptically. The fetuses were collected, and the cerebral cortices were removed carefully under a dissecting microscope and then
pooled and minced into fragments <1 mm3. The
tissues were digested for 6 min by placing them in 0.2% trypsin in
Puck's balanced salt solution that was free of Ca2+
and Mg2+. Digestion was stopped by adding a solution
of modified Eagle's medium (MEM) containing 10% horse serum. The
cells were centrifuged at 1000 × g for 10 min, and the
resultant pellet was resuspended and passed through an 80 µm nylon
filter. The cell filtrate was diluted in MEM with an additional 25 mM D-glucose and 2 mM
L-glutamine. The cells were plated into plastic dishes that
had been precoated with poly-L-lysine (1 ml of 50 µg/ml
solution per 10 cm2 dish) 24 hr earlier. The plating
density was such that there was one brain for each 10 cm2 dish. At 1 d after plating, the cells were
treated for 24 hr with 10 µM cytosine arabinoside (Ara-C)
to remove actively dividing cells. The medium was changed the next day
to remove any cells that had degenerated as a result of Ara-C
treatment. The cells were fed with fresh medium 5 d after cell
isolation. Experiments were performed 7 d after isolation. This
method of isolation typically produces cultures that are >95% neurons
on the basis of positive immunocytochemical staining for neuronal
markers, neuron-specific enolase and neurofilament protein, and
negative staining for an astrocytic marker, glial fibrillary acid
protein (data not shown).
Primary astrocyte cultures were established from the cerebral cortex of
newborn (postnatal day 1) rat pups as previously described (Yu et al.,
1986 ). After decapitation, the cerebral cortices were removed
aseptically and minced into fragments <1 mm3 in MEM
with 20% fetal calf serum (astrocyte growth medium). The tissue was
disrupted by mixing on a vortex for 1 min and sequentially was passed
through an 80 and a 10 µm nylon filter. The plating density was such
that each brain was plated into ~30 of the 28 cm2
dishes. Unlike the previous astrocyte isolation procedure (Yu et al.,
1986 ), there was no treatment with dibutyryl cyclic AMP 2 weeks after
isolation. The cells were plated into plastic dishes and fed with
astrocyte growth medium that was changed every 3-4 d. Experiments were
performed 3 weeks after isolation when the cultures were confluent.
This method of isolation typically produces cultures that are >99%
astrocytes, based on immunocytochemical staining for glial fibrillary
acid protein (data not shown).
Irradiation. Cultures were irradiated with an orthovoltage
x-ray generator operating at 150 peak kilovoltage and 19.2 mA. Dose
rate was 1.2 Gy/min except for the experiment on lactate dehydrogenase
(LDH) release in which a dose rate of 3.5 Gy/min was used because of
the high doses (up to 64 Gy) used in that experiment.
Drug treatment. Cycloheximide, benzamide, and aminobenzamide
were all obtained from Sigma (St. Louis, MO). The drugs were dissolved
at 100× the final concentration in water (cycloheximide) or ethanol
(benzamide and aminobenzamide), passed through a 0.2 µm pore filter
to remove any contamination by microorganisms, and added directly to
the medium overlying the cells. An equal volume of sterile water or
ethanol was added to cultures used as controls.
Measurement of nuclear fragmentation. Cells that had been
plated into 24-well culture dishes were fixed in 3.7% buffered
formalin and stained with 2 µg/ml of Hoechst Dye 33258 (Sigma) in
PBS, pH 7.0, for 10 min. A single field from each well (50-200 cells) was selected at random from each well and photographed with
epi-fluorescence. The fraction of cells within each well showing
evidence of nuclear fragmentation was estimated from the photographs by
an observer blinded to the treatment. Nuclear fragmentation was defined
as the presence of two or more distinct nuclear lobes within a single cell.
Measurement of cell viability. Cell viability was measured
on the basis of the retention of LDH, an intracellular enzyme, by
viable cells and the release of LDH into the medium by damaged cells
with increased membrane permeability. The amount of LDH within the
medium overlying the cells and within the cells was measured as
previously described (Gobbel et al., 1994 ). The fraction of LDH
retained by the cells was determined by dividing the amount of
intracellular LDH by the total amount (released plus intracellular) of
LDH present in the culture.
Detection of internucleosomal fragmentation of DNA. Neurons
and the overlying media from five Petri dishes (100 mm diameter) were
placed in ice-cold Tris-buffered saline, pH 7.4, and spun at 500 × g. The pellet was incubated overnight in lysis buffer (10 mM Tris-HCl, 10 mM NaCl, 10 mM
EDTA, and 1% SDS) with 300 µg/ml of proteinase K at 50°C. DNA was
extracted with phenol:chloroform:isoamyl alcohol (25:24:1) and
precipitated overnight at 20°C with 70% alcohol containing 0.3 M sodium acetate and 10 mM MgCl2.
The precipitate was centrifuged at 12,000 × g for 30 min at 4°C, dried, and suspended in TE buffer (10 mM
Tris-HCl with 1 mM EDTA, pH 8.0) containing 100 µg/ml of
DNase-free RNase for 1 hr at room temperature. Then the DNA was
reextracted as before. A 25 µl volume (~20 µg of DNA) of each
sample was separated electrophoretically (100 V for 2 hr) in a 1.8%
agarose gel containing TBE buffer (4.5 mM Tris-borate and 1 mM EDTA) with ethidium bromide (2.5 µg/ml).
Cell cycle analysis. The fraction of cells in various phases
of the cell cycle was determined by flow cytometry. Propidium iodide
(PI) staining was used to quantify DNA content, and bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) uptake was used to quantify the fraction of cells in S-phase. A
1 mM sterile solution of BrdU in PBS was added to the
medium overlying the cells to a final concentration of 10 µM. For pulse-labeling experiments, the cells were
collected 1 hr after BrdU addition by trypsinization (0.25% in saline
with 0.02% EDTA) and then fixed in 70% ethanol. After centrifugation
at 400 × g for 3 min, the cells were resuspended and
incubated in 2.5 M HCl with 0.5% Triton X-100 for 30 min.
After the cells were washed three times by suspension in wash buffer
(0.5% Tween 20 in Ca2+- and
Mg2+-free PBS), followed by centrifugation at
400 × g for 5 min, they were exposed to the primary
antibody against BrdU (IU-4; Dako, Carpinteria, CA) diluted 1:500 in
PBS with 0.5% Tween 20, 1.5% dried milk, and 0.02% sodium azide for
30 min at room temperature, and then washed twice. They were incubated
in the dark at room temperature in a solution of PBS with 0.5% Tween
20, 1.5% dried milk, and 0.02% sodium azide that contained a 1:500
dilution of the secondary antibody, a goat anti-mouse antibody
conjugated to fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC; Sigma), for 30 min.
After being washed twice, the cells were suspended in a solution of PI
(10 µg/ml in PBS) for 30 min in the dark and then filtered through a
37 µm nylon mesh. The amount of BrdU incorporation and PI staining of
10,000 cells was analyzed under dual parameter (FITC vs PI) with a
Becton Dickinson FACScan (Becton Dickinson, San Jose, CA). Raw data
were refined by plotting the area of the PI fluorescence signal versus
width and then selecting only the single cell population for further
analysis. Cell cycle phase fractions were estimated by identifying and
counting cell populations on a plot of FITC fluorescence versus PI
fluorescence, using the CellQuest software package (Becton
Dickinson).
A malignant glioma cell line, U251-MG, was used as a positive control
for BrdU incorporation by cycling cells. U251-MG cells were maintained
in MEM with 10% fetal calf serum and 1% nonessential amino acids. For
this experiment BrdU (10 µM) was added to both neurons
and U251-MG cells for 0, 1, 6, 12, 24, or 48 hr.
Measurement of DNA strand breaks. Induction and rejoining of
DNA double-strand breaks were quantified by subjecting the DNA isolated
from the cells, before and after irradiation, to pulsed-field gel
electrophoresis (PFGE). Double-strand breaks reduce the molecular weight of the DNA and increase the efficacy with which the DNA can be
eluted into an electrophoretic gel. Therefore, the extent of DNA
double-strand breaks can be quantified on the basis of the percentage
of DNA that is eluted into the gel.
DNA was isolated via a technique that does not involve handling
of naked DNA and thus should minimize the artificial introduction of
breaks. Cells were irradiated on ice to inhibit DNA repair during the
induction of DNA damage. They were collected immediately after
irradiation to measure induction of DNA damage or at various times
after incubation at 37°C following irradiation to measure repair of
DNA damage. The cells were harvested by scraping and were centrifuged
at 500 × g for 5 min. The pellet was washed twice by
resuspending it in Ca2+- and
Mg2+-free PBS and repeating the centrifugation. DNA
concentration in the suspension was adjusted to 1-7 µg/ml, based on
the binding of the dye To-Pro-1 (Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR), as
compared with its binding to a known amount of calf thymus DNA. Bound
dye was measured by using a Perkin-Elmer spectrofluorometer (excitation wavelength, 515 nm; emission wavelength, 531 nm). Then the samples were
mixed with an equal volume of 2% agar heated to 65°C and were
injected into Tygon tubing and placed on ice. The hardened agar was
extruded and cut into 5-mm-long plugs. To release the DNA, we placed
the plugs overnight in a lysis solution of 1% N-lauroyl sarcosine and 0.1% proteinase K. Then the sample plugs were stored in
buffer at 4°C.
Electrophoresis of the plugs was performed on a clamped homogeneous
electric field (CHEF; Bio-Rad, Richmond, CA) unit at neutral pH at
14°C for 25 hr by using a pulse size of 60 V and pulse time of 75 min. The gels were stained with ethidium bromide (3 µg/ml in
distilled and deionized H2O) and photographed, and the
negatives were scanned with a densitometer (Molecular Dynamics,
Sunnyvale, CA).
The fraction of DNA eluted into the gel from the plug was used as an
index of double-strand breaks. To calculate this index, we subtracted
the background fluorescence of an adjacent part of the gel containing
no DNA from the fluorescence of the plug and from the fluorescence of
the DNA that elutes out of the plug and into the gel. The percentage of
DNA remaining in the plug of the irradiated (Ir) samples was
normalized to the percentage remaining in the plug of the unirradiated
(Un) samples so that the percent retained in the plug after
irradiation was given by the formula:
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(1)
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The percentage eluted from the plug because of irradiation was
then given as:
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(2)
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Statistical analysis. The fraction of cells
undergoing apoptosis or the fraction of LDH retained after the various
treatments with radiation was compared by ANOVA with a statistical
software package (SuperANOVA Statistical Software, Abacus Concepts,
Berkeley, CA), and differences between individual treatment groups were examined with Scheffé's test. The amount of radiation-induced apoptosis occurring in the presence of benzamide or aminobenzamide was
compared with that in the control group at each radiation dose by a
test of contrasts. Statistical significance was assigned at the
p < 0.05 level.
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RESULTS |
Induction of DNA double-strand breaks
We first measured the extent of x-ray-induced DNA damage and
determined whether there was a difference between astrocytes and
neurons. The percentage of DNA eluted by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis increased with radiation dose (Fig.
1). The increase was linear such that the
percentage eluted approximately doubled for each twofold increase in
dose. There was no significant difference in the percentage of DNA
eluted out for astrocytes and neurons, indicating that there was no
difference between these two cell types in the number of double-strand
breaks induced by radiation.

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Figure 1.
The number of DNA double-strand breaks induced by
x-irradiation was similar in astrocytes and neurons. Radiation-induced
DNA double-strand breaks were quantified on the basis of the percentage of DNA isolated from neurons and astrocytes that eluted into the gel
after pulsed-field electrophoresis. There was no significant difference
(ANOVA; p > 0.10) between astrocytes and neurons.
Each point represents the mean ± SEM of three
independent cultures.
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Nuclear and DNA fragmentation after irradiation
We next examined the morphological changes induced in astrocytes
and neurons after irradiation. Although there were no apparent changes
in neuronal or astrocytic cell morphology immediately after irradiation
with 32 Gy, by 1 d later the vast majority of the neurons were
shrunken, showed evidence of neurite beading, or were detached from the
plate (Fig. 2B). In
addition, there was an increase in nuclear fragmentation in irradiated
neurons (Fig. 2D). There were no apparent changes in
the astrocytes at that time (Fig. 2F).
Astrocytes also were treated with 0, 2, 8, and 32 Gy and examined 6, 12, 24, 48, and 72 hr later to assure that nuclear fragmentation was
not occurring in astrocytes at earlier or later times or in response to
other doses than in the neurons. Although there did appear to be an
increase in nuclear fragmentation 6-12 hr after irradiation, the
incidence was extremely low (<0.5%), as compared with that occurring
in the neurons. By 48-72 hr after irradiation, there were occasional
(1-2%) astrocytes with swollen or disrupted nuclei, but there was no
evidence of increased nuclear fragmentation.

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Figure 2.
X-irradiation induced cellular degradation and
nuclear fragmentation in neurons, but not in astrocytes. Phase-contrast
microscopy revealed that irradiation of neurons was followed 24 hr
later by neurite beading and cellular shrinkage
(B) relative to unirradiated controls
(A). In comparison, there were no cellular
morphological changes observed in astrocyte cultures by phase-contrast
microscopy (data not shown). Irradiation increased the percentage of
cells with fragmented nuclei in neuron (D), but
not in astrocyte (F), cultures relative to
control, unirradiated neuron (C), and astrocyte (E) cultures. The arrowhead
indicates a typical example of nuclear fragmentation. Several other
apoptotic cells are visible within the irradiated neuronal cultures.
Scale bar: A-D, 20 µm; E, F, 25 µm.
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Neuronal DNA was isolated and subjected to conventional
electrophoresis, and there was a clear ladder-like pattern in the DNA
from the irradiated neurons (Fig. 3),
indicating that radiation can induce internucleosomal DNA
fragmentation, a common characteristic of apoptosis. Because it has
been reported that Ara-C can induce apoptosis (Dessi et al., 1995 ), we
tested whether the treatment of neurons with Ara-C during isolation was
responsible for their response to radiation. Astrocytes were treated
for 24 hr with 10 µM Ara-C and irradiated 1 week later
with 32 Gy to parallel the treatment of the neuronal cultures. However,
there was still no evidence of apoptosis in the astrocytes on the basis
of morphology and Hoechst staining. Furthermore, when the neurons were
not treated with Ara-C after isolation, the isolated cells still
underwent nuclear fragmentation in response to irradiation, and the DNA isolated from these neurons still exhibited a ladder-like pattern when
subjected to electrophoresis (data not shown).

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Figure 3.
X-irradiation induced internucleosomal
fragmentation in neuronal DNA. Electrophoretic separation of DNA from
neurons irradiated with 32 Gy (32, middle
lane) resulted in a ladder-like pattern of DNA fragments that
are multiples of ~200 bp in length. There was only slight evidence of
a ladder-like pattern in the control 0 Gy neuronal cultures
(0, left lane). A standard
(STD, right lane) with DNA lengths that
are multiples of 123 bp is shown for comparison.
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Time and dose-response of radiation-induced apoptosis
To characterize the time course of the apoptotic response of
neurons, we scored the fraction of apoptotic cells at various times
after irradiation. There was an increase in apoptotic cells as early as
8 hr after irradiation, with the peak incidence occurring at ~12 hr
(Fig. 4A). By 24 hr,
the fraction of cells displaying nuclear fragmentation had diminished.
The time course was similar regardless of radiation dose (Fig.
4A), but the percentage of cells undergoing apoptosis
appeared to be dose-dependent. Although the magnitude of the
differences between the individual dose groups varied depending on the
time of evaluation, when the response over the entire 24 hr period was
assessed (Sheffé's test), there was a significant increase in
apoptotic neurons after as little as 2 Gy, and the apoptotic fraction
was significantly greater after 32 than after 2 Gy. When cells were
treated with 10 µM cycloheximide 5-10 min before 8 Gy to
inhibit protein synthesis, there was a significant reduction in the
level of radiation-induced apoptosis (Fig. 4A).
Cycloheximide was able to prevent radiation-induced apoptosis even when
it was added up to 6 hr after irradiation (Fig. 4B),
just before the onset of apoptosis (Fig. 4A).

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Figure 4.
Radiation-induced apoptosis was dependent on time
after irradiation and radiation dose, and it was inhibited by
cycloheximide. A, The fraction of cells in neuronal
cultures undergoing apoptosis after irradiation was time- and
dose-dependent (ANOVA; p < 0.001). The fraction of
cells undergoing apoptosis began to increase between 4 and 8 hr after
irradiation, peaked at ~12 hr, and decreased by 24 hr. Cycloheximide
(CHX; 10 µM added just before irradiation) significantly diminished the apoptotic response that followed 8 Gy
(ANOVA; p < 0.001). Apoptotic fraction was
determined by staining the cultures for nuclear fragmentation with
Hoechst 33258 dye. Each point represents the mean ± SEM determined from four cultures, except that n = 3 at 8 hr after irradiation for the 8 and 32 Gy treatment groups.
B, Cycloheximide (10 µM) prevented apoptosis even when added up to 6 hr after 8 Gy. Cycloheximide was
added once at 0-10 hr after irradiation, and the fraction of neurons
undergoing apoptosis was scored at 12 hr after irradiation in all
cases. The apparent decrease in apoptosis in the control cultures
treated with saline at >4 hr after irradiation likely was related to
decreased adherence of apoptotic cells so that some cells were
dislodged and lost into the medium during saline treatment. Each
point represents the mean ± SEM of four
cultures.
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Because the increase in apoptosis from 2 to 8 Gy 12 hr after
irradiation was substantially greater than the increase from 8 to 32 Gy, we evaluated the apoptotic response to variations in radiation dose
more carefully. We chose to use release of LDH as a measure of the
proportion of cells undergoing apoptosis instead of using neuronal
morphology because of our finding that many of the cells undergoing
apoptosis detach from the plate. Because the neuronal morphology of
detached cells cannot be determined, measures of the fraction of
apoptosis based on neuronal morphology may underestimate the true
amount of apoptosis induced. The fraction of apoptosis induced by
irradiation did not increase continually with increasing dose on the
basis of measurements of LDH retention and release. The fraction of LDH
retained in the neuronal cultures at 24 hr after irradiation fell
exponentially to ~0.7 from 0 to 16 Gy (Fig.
5) and then decreased at a much slower
rate (from 0.7 to 0.6) with increasing radiation doses from 16 to 64 Gy. The decrease in LDH retention in response to radiation doses up to
32 Gy could be eliminated by the previous administration of cycloheximide (10 µM; data not shown), suggesting that
the response was attributable to apoptosis.

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Figure 5.
The fraction of lactate dehydrogenase
(LDH) retained intracellularly decreased
exponentially at a relatively rapid rate from 0 to 16 Gy and then more
slowly from 16 to 64 Gy. To compensate for LDH release in control
cultures, we normalized the fraction of LDH retained after irradiation
to the level in control (0 Gy) cultures. A double-exponential curve was
fit to the data by minimizing the squared differences between the fit
and the experimental data. The resultant equation was fraction LDH
retained = 0.29e 0.204D + 0.74e 0.004D, where D was the
radiation dose in Gy. Each point represents the
mean ± SEM of four cultures.
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Cell cycle analysis by flow cytometry
We used flow cytometry to determine whether the isolated neurons
were postmitotic. Because most studies on apoptosis involve cycling
cells, we wanted to know if the neurons used in the present study,
which were isolated from embryonic tissue, might contain some
primordial, dividing cells or neuronal precursors. Our analysis revealed that most of the isolated neurons were noncycling. The proportion of cells in S and G2/M combined was relatively low at
3.3 ± 0.7% (mean ± SD; n = 2) in
unirradiated neuronal cultures. In comparison, the proportion of S and
G2/M cells in the astrocyte cultures was 12.6 ± 0.6%
(n = 2). Continuous labeling with BrdU for up to 48 hr
also indicated that the neurons were predominantly noncycling. Whereas
there was >90% labeling with BrdU in the U251-MG tumor cell line by
24 hr, only 2.5 and 8.1% of the neurons were labeled at 24 and 48 hr,
respectively (Fig. 6). To determine
whether irradiation might stimulate the neurons to enter into the cell cycle, possibly leading to mitotic catastrophe, we examined the neuronal cultures up to 12 hr after 32 Gy. However, there was relatively little change in the proportion of cells in the various phases of the cell cycle. At 2, 6, and 12 hr after irradiation the
percentages of cells in S and G2/M remained relatively low at 5.8, 3.8, and 4.3%, respectively.

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Figure 6.
Bromodeoxyuridine labeled virtually all U251-MG
cells but very few neurons. The percentage of U251-MG cells, a
malignant glioma cell line, that incorporated bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU),
increased rapidly, such that by 24 hr >90% of the cells were labeled
with anti-BrdU antibodies as determined by flow cytometry. In contrast, there was very little evidence of BrdU incorporation by neurons, and
only 8.1% of the cells showed evidence of BrdU incorporation even
after 48 hr of exposure to 10 µM BrdU. Each
point represents the proportion of a sample of 10,000 cells.
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DNA double-strand break rejoining after irradiation
We next determined whether there was a difference in how the
astrocytes and neurons rejoined radiation-induced strand breaks, because the induction of damage could be important not only in the
response to irradiation but also in the ability of the cell to respond
to such damage. Neurons and astrocytes were irradiated with 32 Gy to
produce a sufficient number of double-strand breaks and to allow us to
detect accurately the changes in the number of breaks remaining at
various times after irradiation. Although there was no significant
difference in induction of DNA double-strand breaks in neurons, as
compared with that in astrocytes (see Fig. 1), there was a difference
in how the cells rejoined the breaks (Fig.
7). In the astrocytes there was a decline
in the percentage of DNA eluted as early as 5 min after irradiation,
indicating that there was rejoining of double-strand breaks. In
contrast, there was little or no evidence of double-strand break
rejoining in the neurons until 6 hr after irradiation.

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Figure 7.
Rejoining of DNA double-strand breaks was slower
in neurons than in astrocytes. The percentage of initial double-strand
breaks remaining at 5, 60, and 360 min after 32 Gy was significantly lower in astrocytes than neurons (ANOVA; p < 0.001), indicating that astrocytes rejoin DNA strand breaks more
rapidly than neurons. Each point represents the mean ± SEM of
three cultures, except for the point representing neurons at 5 min, in
which n = 2.
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Effect of inhibition of ADP-ribosylation
We next determined if the induction of neuronal apoptosis by
radiation might be related to the stimulation of ADP-ribosylation. DNA
damage stimulates ADP-ribosylation, which can deplete ATP and NADPH and
exacerbate neuronal injury (Zhang et al., 1994 ). Two inhibitors of
ADP-ribosylation, benzamide and aminobenzamide, were added, and the
percentage of neurons undergoing apoptosis after irradiation was
determined. Treatment with benzamide, the more potent of the two
inhibitors (Banasik et al., 1992 ), actually caused a significant
increase in the number of neurons undergoing apoptosis in response to
radiation (Fig. 8A),
whereas aminobenzamide had no apparent effect. To determine whether the
severity of injury because of radiation might be overcoming any
protective effects of inhibition of ADP-ribosylation, we repeated the
experiment with doses of 0, 1, 2, and 4 Gy and a single dose (0.5 mM) of benzamide and aminobenzamide. As before, only
benzamide had an effect, and it significantly increased the number of
neurons undergoing apoptosis in response to irradiation (Fig.
8B). The effect of benzamide on radiation-induced
neuronal apoptosis also was examined at 12 hr after irradiation, when
the incidence of nuclear fragmentation appeared to be maximal (see Fig.
4A). The neurons used in this experiment were not
treated with Ara-C after isolation, because preliminary experiments
examining LDH release and nuclear fragmentation after irradiation
suggested that untreated cells were more sensitive to radiation, and we
postulated that they also might be more sensitive to benzamide-induced
alterations in radiation sensitivity. At 12 hr after 0, 2, 4, or 6 Gy
the percentage of neurons that were not treated with benzamide and had
fragmented nuclei was 1.5 ± 1.0%, 23.3 ± 6.2%, 45.3 ± 14.8%, and 46.9 ± 12.8% (mean ± SD; n = 6), respectively. Treatment with 0.5 mM benzamide did not appear to alter the percentage of cells with nuclear fragmentation in
unirradiated cultures (1.6 ± 1.3%), but it did significantly increase (ANOVA; p < 0.025) the percentage of neurons
undergoing nuclear fragmentation after 2, 4, or 6 Gy (33.1 ± 7.1%, 52.3 ± 9.7%, 55.2 ± 8.5%, respectively;
n = 6).

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Figure 8.
Benzamide, an ADP-ribosylation inhibitor,
exacerbated radiation-induced apoptosis of neurons. The percentage of
cells undergoing apoptosis at 8 hr after 4-8 Gy
(A) was increased significantly by benzamide
(ANOVA; p < 0.005), but not by aminobenzamide. The significant effect of benzamide on radiation-induced apoptosis and lack
of effect by aminobenzamide was also present when tested at lower
radiation doses of 1-4 Gy (B; ANOVA;
p < 0.05). Each bar represents the
mean ± SEM of three (A) or four
(B) cultures, except for controls in
A (n = 6). From 100 to 200 cells per
culture were examined for the presence of nuclear fragmentation typical of apoptosis. The same controls (0 mM drug) were used for
both benzamide and aminobenzamide, and bars representing
the mean ± SEM of the control values are repeated in both
left and right graphs of A
for ease of comparison. An asterisk indicates that the
fraction of apoptotic cells is significantly different from controls by
a test of contrasts.
|
|
Effect of splitting radiation dose
We hypothesized that benzamide might exacerbate radiation damage
by interfering with the ADP-ribosylation needed for DNA repair. Furthermore, if the slow rate of repair in neurons relative to astrocytes was contributing to the apoptotic response, then reducing the rate at which the radiation was delivered should decrease the
amount of apoptosis. Neurons that had not been treated with Ara-C were
irradiated with doses of 0, 1, 2, or 4 Gy that were split into two
equal fractions delivered 4 hr apart. The percentage of LDH retained by
these cells 22 hr after the second radiation dose was compared with the
LDH retention of cells that had been irradiated with a single dose of
0, 1, 2, or 4 Gy either 22 or 26 hr earlier. There was no consistent or
significant difference between the 22 and 26 hr controls (data not
shown). However, in the cells in which the radiation dose was split by
4 hr to allow time for repair of the damage induced by the initial
treatment, there was significantly less damage than in the 22 and 26 hr
controls (Fig. 9).

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Figure 9.
When the radiation dose was split into equal
fractions separated by 4 hr to allow for repair of the initial damage
induced by the first dose, the fraction of lactate dehydrogenase
(LDH) retained intracellularly after irradiation
was increased significantly (ANOVA; p < 0.001).
LDH retention was measured 22 hr after the second dose of irradiation
for the split dose group, and it was measured both 22 and 26 hr after
irradiation in the single dose group. There was no significant
difference between the 22 and 26 hr dose groups, and the data were
combined for the graph. The graph represents one result from three
repetitions of this experiment. Each point represents
the mean ± SEM of 12 cultures. An asterisk indicates that the fraction of LDH retained after a specific dose of
radiation was significantly different between the single dose and the
split dose groups.
|
|
 |
DISCUSSION |
Our data demonstrate that x-irradiation can induce apoptosis in
noncycling neurons. This conclusion is based on the finding that
radiation induced nuclear fragmentation typical of apoptosis. Furthermore, electrophoretic separation of DNA isolated from irradiated cells showed evidence of the ladder pattern that is associated with
internucleosomal cleavage of DNA, a characteristic of apoptosis. Last,
nuclear fragmentation after irradiation was abolished by cycloheximide,
suggesting that the reaction to irradiation was an active process
requiring de novo protein synthesis.
This is the first report to our knowledge to characterize the
radiation-induced apoptotic response of neurons growing in
vitro. There have been reports of radiation-induced apoptosis in
the CNS, although the cell types undergoing apoptosis were not
identified clearly. Ferrer (1992) noted that radiation-induced
apoptosis occurred within the cerebral cortical gray matter of young
(postnatal days 0-15), but not adult, rats, and it was suggested that
both neurons and glia were involved. An earlier study of apoptosis within the developing rat forebrain suggested that the radiosensitive population consisted primarily of cells that were nearing cell division
or recently had completed mitosis and were beginning to differentiate
(Hicks et al., 1961 ). Our previous report (Bellinzona et al., 1996 )
demonstrated that radiation can induce apoptosis even in adult rats,
but the apoptosis is confined to cells in the subependymal region, a
mitotically active area that generates glial and neuronal progenitors
(Lewis, 1969 ; Lois and Alvarez-Buylla, 1993 ). Our present results
demonstrate that in vitro even neurons that are well
differentiated with extensive neuritic processes undergo
radiation-induced apoptosis.
The finding that radiation induces apoptosis in neurons is unusual in
that apoptosis generally is confined to proliferating tissues
(Meikrantz and Schlegel, 1995 ). Our cell cycle analysis indicated that
most of our neurons were postmitotic. The only other postmitotic cells
that have been reported to undergo radiation-induced apoptosis are
mature lymphoid cells (Yamada et al., 1981 ) and acinar cells of
salivary glands (Stephens et al., 1991 ). We considered whether
radiation-induced DNA damage might induce the neurons to reenter the
cell cycle many of the morphological features of apoptosis are similar
to those present after mitotic catastrophe, which can occur when a cell
is stimulated to undergo mitosis prematurely (Evan et al., 1995 ).
Additionally, it has been reported that at least one factor involved in
the cell cycle, cyclin D1, is upregulated during the
programmed cell death of sympathetic neurons (Freeman et al., 1994 ).
However, we found that, although BrdU labeling increased slightly from
3.3% before irradiation to 3.8-5.3% after 32 Gy, this increase was
much less than the percentage of cells undergoing apoptosis in response
to this dose of radiation (see Fig. 4A). These
findings suggest that radiation probably does not stimulate neurons to
reenter the cell cycle or at least not sufficiently to stimulate DNA
synthesis.
The percentage of neurons undergoing apoptosis appeared to be
dose-dependent up to ~16 Gy. The fraction of nonapoptotic cells decreased at a relatively rapid rate from 0 to 16 Gy (see Fig. 5). An
exponential decrease was expected because x-rays interact with matter
stochastically so that the chances of a cell surviving generally should
decrease exponentially as dose increases (Johns and Cunningham, 1983 ).
However, the decrease in viability as dose increased from 16 to 64 Gy
was comparatively small. Although the percentage of LDH retention never
fell to 0%, preliminary experimental findings (data not shown) with a
staining method that distinguishes viable from nonviable cells (Gobbel
et al., 1994 ) indicate that doses of 32 Gy result in virtually complete
cell killing.
X-rays generate free radicals (Hall, 1988 ) and cause cellular damage in
a manner similar to other types of oxidative stress. Our data thus
support previous reports showing that increased oxidative stress,
including depletion of the antioxidant glutathione (Ratan et al., 1994 )
and administration of the pro-oxidant hydrogen peroxide (Whittemore et
al., 1994 ), can lead to neuronal apoptosis. Exposure to hydrogen
peroxide resulted in apoptosis only after a delay of 3-4 hr. Likewise,
x-rays induced apoptosis only after a delay of >4 hr, suggesting that
x-rays and hydrogen peroxide-induced oxidative stress may induce a
similar set of cellular events leading to neuronal apoptosis.
Our finding that cycloheximide inhibits apoptosis even when added after
irradiation (see Fig. 4B) suggests that some proteins needed for apoptosis are not synthesized until >6 hr after radiation exposure. However, Ratan and colleagues (Ratan et al., 1994 ) suggested that effects of cycloheximide on apoptosis might be attributable to
decreased incorporation of cysteine into proteins and increased incorporation into glutathione, resulting in elevated glutathione levels and reduced damage from oxidative stress. Because free radicals
generated by x-rays have half-lives on the order of nanoseconds (Hall,
1988 ), the protective effects of cycloheximide in our system cannot be
attributed to effects of antioxidants on the initial radiation-induced
oxidative burst.
The apoptotic response of neurons to x-rays was most likely a result of
DNA damage, because there is considerable evidence that
radiation-induced cell killing is attributable to such damage. For
example, cells are much more sensitive to radiation targeted at the
nucleus than to radiation targeted at the cytoplasm or plasma membrane
(Marin and Bender, 1963 ; Munro, 1970 ). Furthermore, theoretical
considerations suggest that it is unlikely that lipid or proteins would
account for the response to x-rays, because doses up to 100 Gy would
damage only ~0.01% of these molecules (Bump and Brown, 1990 ). Our
findings suggest that DNA damage may be a common pathway for the
induction of apoptosis by oxidative stress. Other types of oxidative
stress, such as ischemia and reperfusion, can cause apoptosis within
the brain (MacManus et al., 1993 ; Hill et al., 1995 ; Islam et al.,
1995 ; Li et al., 1995 ; Linnik et al., 1995 ; Du et al., 1996 ), and Liu
et al. (1996) have demonstrated that cerebral ischemia and reperfusion
can cause DNA alterations in the brain.
If DNA damage is responsible for the apoptotic response in neurons,
then the genetic program induced by DNA damage and/or the generation
and processing of the damage must be different in astrocytes. We
focused in the present study on differences in the processing of DNA
damage, specifically rejoining of DNA double-strand breaks, because the
number of double-strand breaks remaining after irradiation is one of
the best predictors of chromosomal aberrations (Carrano, 1979 ; Wlodek
and Hittelman, 1988 ). Additionally, there is a direct correlation
between the number of radiation-induced chromosomal aberrations and
lethality (Hall, 1988 ). Although there was no apparent difference in
the induction of DNA double-strand by x-rays in astrocytes versus
neurons, neurons were significantly slower at rejoining the breaks.
Furthermore, inhibiting ADP-ribosylation, which can slow the rejoining
of DNA strand breaks (Ding et al., 1992 ; Palomba et al., 1995 ),
exacerbated radiation-induced apoptosis. This finding contrasts with
that of Zhang and colleagues, who reported that ADP-ribosylation
inhibitors protected against neuronal injury induced by activation of
NMDA receptors (Zhang et al., 1994 ). Their result suggested that DNA
damage resulting from NMDA receptor activation leads to
ADP-ribosylation, leading to depletion of ATP and NADPH. Our results
suggest that in our system the deleterious effects on DNA repair
resulting from inhibition of ADP-ribosylation may be greater than the
benefits resulting from preventing a decrease in energy stores. This
possibility would explain why splitting the dose of radiation, which
should allow for the repair of sublethal events induced by the initial
radiation, produced an apparent decrease in the number of cells
undergoing apoptosis as quantified by LDH retention (Fig. 9). However,
we cannot rule out the possibility that the first dose may have induced
the cells to be resistant to subsequent doses.
Our results suggesting that neurons are slower at rejoining DNA strand
breaks are supported by the findings of Wang and Wheeler, who reported
that there was slower repair of single-strand breaks by rat cerebellar
cells than by 9L brain tumor cells (Wang and Wheeler, 1978 ).
Unfortunately, the use of whole tissue in that study made it impossible
to verify whether the slow repair was attributable to the neurons or
some other cell type. However, Hanawalt and colleagues reported that
repair of cyclobutane dimers within genomic DNA after ultraviolet
irradiation was slower in neuron-like PC12 cells induced to
differentiate by nerve growth factor (Hanawalt et al., 1992 ). They also
found that repair rates actually were enhanced in induced genes and
decreased only in inactive genes, which suggests that a reduction in
the overall transcription of the DNA in the differentiating cells might
account for the relatively slow repair of the genome taken as a whole. If the repair rate of double-strand breaks within a region of DNA is
dependent on transcriptional activity, then a generalized reduction in
transcription within the neurons also might account for the slow repair
in those cells. Unfortunately, there are no known methods to determine
whether double-strand break repair is enhanced in actively transcribed
regions of the genome. Another possible explanation for the decreased
rate of repair in the neurons is that the activity of the so-called
DNA-dependent protein kinase (DNA-PK), an enzyme required for rejoining
of DNA double-strand breaks (Jeggo et al., 1995 ), might be decreased.
Decreases in DNA-PK activity are associated with increases in
sensitivity to radiation and also with defects in rejoining (Lee et
al., 1995 ).
We cannot yet say definitively whether there is a connection between
induction and repair of DNA damage and neuronal apoptosis. It is
possible that rejoining may appear to be slow in neurons after
irradiation because apoptotic cells may not repair double-strand breaks
at all or because the DNA fragmentation associated with the apoptotic
process may start very soon after irradiation. This possibility has
been suggested as a potential cause of the slow repair of strand breaks
in a lymphoblastic cell line, TK6, which is also subject to
radiation-induced apoptosis (Olive and Banáth, 1993 ).
Radiation-induced apoptosis of neurons should provide a useful model to
better understand the molecular changes that result in apoptosis. Our
current findings indicate that neurons process DNA damage differently
than astrocytes do, which supports the role of DNA damage as a possible
stimulus of neuronal injury and apoptosis. Further work is needed to
determine the types of DNA damage that may act as stimuli, why the
processing of DNA damage by neurons is slow, and the molecular
mechanisms by which DNA damage is translated into a signal for
apoptosis.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received May 23, 1997; revised Oct. 10, 1997; accepted Oct. 22, 1997.
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grants NS
35782, CA 13525, NS 14543, NS 25372, and AG 08938.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Glenn T. Gobbel, Health
Sciences West 783, Box 0520, University of California, 505 Parnassus
Avenue, San Francisco, CA 94143.
 |
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