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The Journal of Neuroscience, August 15, 1998, 18(16):6358-6369
Upregulation of a New Microglial Gene, mrf-1, in
Response to Programmed Neuronal Cell Death and Degeneration
Shuuitsu
Tanaka1,
Kazuhiko
Suzuki1,
Masahiko
Watanabe2,
Akira
Matsuda3,
Sigenobu
Tone4, and
Tatsuro
Koike1
1 Molecular Neurobiology Laboratory, Graduate Program
in Biological Sciences, Departments of 2 Anatomy and
3 Ophthalmology, Faculty of Medicine, Hokkaido University,
Sapporo 060-0810, Japan, and 4 Tokyo Metropolitan
Institute of Medical Science, Tokyo 113-0021, Japan
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ABSTRACT |
Cerebellar granule neurons isolated from postnatal day 7 (P7) rats
and grown in normal K+ medium begin to degenerate at
approximately 4 d in vitro (DIV) and die. To search
for genes upregulated in the process of neuronal cell death,
differential hybridization was performed with subtracted cDNA probes
and a cDNA library from 5 DIV. One of the genes isolated was microglial
response factor-1 (mrf-1), which encoded a sequence of
177 amino acids with a single EF-hand calcium-binding motif. By
Northern blots, the transcript was upregulated in cerebellar culture at
4 DIV, peaked at 6 DIV, and decreased at 7 DIV. Upregulation was also
found when the apoptosis of granule cells was induced by replacing high
K+ medium with normal K+ medium.
However, when non-neuronal cells were thoroughly eliminated with
aphidicolin, an antimitotic agent, the upregulation at 4-7 DIV did not
occur. By immunocytochemistry, MRF-1 was detected at 5 DIV in
OX-42-positive cells (microglia), and it exhibited an increase in
response to granule cell death. MRF-1 levels in microglia purified from
cerebral cortex also upregulated in the presence of 5 DIV granule
cells. In the developing cerebellum in vivo, levels of
mrf-1 mRNA transiently increased in the early postnatal
stages, reaching a peak at P7 when cerebellar neurons and astrocytes
undergo extensive apoptosis. In adult brain sections, MRF-1 was
detected in the perikarya and processes of ramified/resting microglia,
and peripheral motor nerve dissection prominently increased the
expression in activated microglia surrounding injured central motoneurons. Therefore, mrf-1 appears to be one of the
microglial genes that respond to neuronal cell death and
degeneration.
Key words:
microglia; neuron; degeneration; apoptosis; programmed
cell death; gene expression
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INTRODUCTION |
Microglia/brain macrophages are
involved in brain function under both normal and pathological
conditions (Dickson et al., 1993 ; McGeer et al., 1993 ). In the adult
brain, resident ramified/resting microglia are activated to become
rod-shaped or ameboid types in response to injury, infection, and
inflammation of the nervous system. Activated microglia proliferate,
engulfing degenerating elements (Giulian et al., 1989 ; Stoll et al.,
1989 ), while secreting cytotoxic agents that induce neuronal death and
demyelination (Thery et al., 1991 ; Giulian et al., 1994 ).
In the development of the mammalian nervous system, supernumerary
neurons typically die around the time of their functional contact with
targets via apoptosis (Oppenheim, 1991 ; Johnson and Deckwerth, 1993 ;
Henderson, 1996 ). This is referred to as programmed cell death (PCD) in
neurons. Apoptosis is characterized morphologically (Kerr and Harmon,
1991 ; Jacobson et al., 1997 ) by cell shrinkage and chromatin
condensation, followed by cytoplasmic condensation. The degenerated
cytoplasmic organelles become compartmentalized into a membrane-bound
apoptotic body. Microglia are capable of recognizing these degenerated
neurons and clearing them out through their phagocytic activity. The
genes involved in these activities, however, have not been adequately
characterized.
PCD in the development of Caenorhabditis elegans is subject
to strict genetic regulation (Ellis et al., 1991 ): seven genes, including ced-7, are defined as genes that relate to the
engulfment of dead cells. Luciani and Chimini (1996) have reported that
the ATP binding cassette 1 transporter (ABC1) is expressed in
macrophages localized in areas that contain cells undergoing
developmental PCD in mice. Moreover, they have shown that ABC1 is
required for the engulfment of dead cells and may possibly be a
mammalian homolog to ced-7. These results suggest that
engulfment is also genetically controlled in PCD, occurring as a
natural part of mammalian development.
It is known that cultured cerebella granule neurons are a good model
system for studying neuronal apoptosis. If granule neurons dissociated
from postnatal day 7-8 (P7-8) rats are incubated under a high
K+ (25-30 mM) concentration, which
induces depolarization, the neurons grow to their differentiated state
at approximately 10 d in vitro (DIV). When the
K+ concentration of the culture medium is shifted to
normal (5.4 mM), the cultured granule neurons undergo
apoptotic cell death (D'Mello et al., 1993 ; Miller and Johnson, 1996 ;
Armstrong et al., 1997 ). In addition, granule neurons grown in
vitro under normal K+ conditions mimic the
in vivo situation (Gallo et al., 1987 ; Balazs et al., 1988 ;
Koike, 1991 ): granule neurons undergo the initial differentiation steps
and then begin to degenerate at approximately 4 DIV and die
progressively via an apoptotic cascade by 8 DIV. This neuronal death is
an active process requiring RNA and protein synthesis (Suzuki and
Koike, 1997 ). We have searched for genes that are upregulated in the
process of cell death by differential hybridization and have found a
new microglial gene, microglial response factor-1 (mrf-1).
An extensive Northern blot analysis and immunocytochemical and
immunohistochemical analyses using anti-MRF-1 antibody were performed,
with the results indicating that the MRF-1 protein is localized in the
microglia and upregulated in response to neuronal cell death or
degeneration.
These results have been published previously in abstract form (Tanaka
et al., 1997 ).
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Cell culture. A cerebellar cell culture was prepared
from the cerebella of P7 rats (Sprague Dawley), as described previously (Suzuki and Koike, 1997 ). In brief, dissected cerebella were minced, treated with Dispase (250 U/ml; Godo Shusei Co., Ltd., Tokyo, Japan) at
37°C for 30 min, and then triturated in a
Ca2+-free Krebs'-Ringer's bicarbonate buffer. The
dissociated cells were collected by centrifugation and resuspended in
Eagle's MEM (Life Technologies, Grand Island, NY) containing 10%
heat-inactivated fetal calf serum (FCS; J.R.H. Biosciences, Lenexa,
KS), 50 U/ml penicillin, and 50 µg/ml streptomycin (Sigma, St. Louis,
MO). The cells were plated on poly-L-lysine (Sigma)-coated
60 mm dishes (1 × 107 cells/dish), 35 mm
dishes (0.3 × 107 cells/dish), or 13.5 mm
plastic sheets (5 × 105 cells/sheet) (Celldesk
LF1; Sumitomo Bakelite Inc., Tokyo, Japan) for RNA isolation, sandwich
culture, or immunocytochemistry, respectively. The plated cells were
cultured at 36°C in a humidified atmosphere of 5%
CO2/95% air, and the medium was changed only once
at 3 DIV. To minimize proliferation of non-neuronal cells, neurons were treated with 50 µM fluorodeoxyuridine (FudR) for 1 d
at 2 DIV, and then maintained in a 10% FCS MEM containing 10 µM FudR (standard culture) (Suzuki and Koike, 1997 ).
Alternatively, to thoroughly eliminate the contamination of
non-neuronal cells, cerebellar cells were incubated in the presence of
10 µM aphidicolin from 2 DIV (Miller and Johnson, 1996 ).
Unless noted otherwise, cerebellar cells were grown in the standard
culture. For a long-time culture (~10 d) of granule neurons, a high
concentration of potassium (at final 30 mM) was added to
the culture medium at 2 DIV. The contamination of Vimentin-positive (or
GFAP-positive) cells in the 7 DIV culture maintained with a high
potassium medium for 5 d was 8.9 ± 0.8 (2.0 ± 0.2)%
or 3.3 ± 0.2 (0.6 ± 0.1)% for the standard culture or the
culture in the presence of aphidicolin, respectively. When ~60% of
the granule neurons died in 7 DIV standard culture with a normal
potassium medium, the rate of Vimentin-positive cells among surviving
granule neurons was ~20%.
Microglia were isolated and purified according to the method of
Suzumura et al. (1984) , with some modifications. The cerebral cortices
were dissected from neonatal rat pups. Special care was taken to remove
all meninges and blood vessels during dissection to minimize
contamination by blood monocytes and macrophages. The dissected
cortices were dissociated with 250 U/ml Dispase for 60 min at 37°C
and then triturated. The dissociated cells were collected by
centrifugation and resuspended in DMEM nutrient mixture F-12 Ham
(Sigma) containing 10% heat-inactivated FCS and penicillin/streptomycin. The cells were plated on a flask and cultured
until confluency (~8-10 d). Microglia were collected by shaking (60 rpm for 1.5 min) and centrifugation, and then they were replated on 35 mm dishes or plastic sheets ( 13.5 mm, Celldesk LF1). For
sandwich culture, both purified cortical microglia and cerebellar cells
were separately prepared on plastic sheets and dishes, respectively.
The plastic sheets on which microglia were cultured were turned upside
down and laid over 3 or 5 DIV cerebellar cells in plastic dishes. They
were then co-incubated for 12 hr with the two cell populations in
contact with each other. Conditioned medium was obtained from the
culturing medium of 5 DIV cerebral cells. After filtration (0.2 µm
pore size), the medium was added directly to purified microglial
culture. For an immunocytochemical assay, the replated purified
microglia were cultured for >2 d before use in the experiments.
Identification of the microglia was performed by an immunocytochemical
method using the marker OX-42 (mouse monoclonal antibody; BMA,
Tavistock Square, London, UK) (Robinson et al., 1986 ). The microglia
constituted >95% of all cells on the culture plate after
replating.
Extraction and purification of RNA. Cells were washed with a
Ca2+-free, Mg2+-free PBS, pH 7.2, and solubilized with 4 M guanidinium thiocyanate, pH 7.0, containing 25 mM sodium citrate, 0.5% sarkosyl, and 0.1 M 2-mercaptoethanol (Chomczynski and Sacchi, 1987 ). The
total RNA fraction was extracted from one or two 60 mm dishes (1 × 107 cells per dish at plating) for cerebellar
cell culture or 1 × 105 cells for microglia
culture, and precipitated by isopropanol. After centrifugation for 15 min, the pellet was washed with 70% ethanol and dried with flowing
air. Poly(A+) RNA was purified by
oligo(dT)-cellulose affinity column chromatography (Pharmacia Biotech,
Piscataway, NJ).
Differential hybridization and isolation of a partial cDNA
fragment of the mrf-1 clone.
Poly(A+) RNA was isolated from both 3 DIV and 5 DIV
cells of the original cerebellar cell culture, in which granule neurons
were surviving and degenerating, respectively (Suzuki and Koike, 1997 ).
To construct each of the cDNA libraries, the cDNAs were synthesized
using a TimeSaver cDNA Synthesis Kit (Pharmacia), and
EcoRI/NotI adaptor-ligated double-strand
cDNAs were ligated into a gt11 vector followed by in
vitro packaging using Gigapack II Gold (Stratagene, La Jolla, CA).
Differential hybridization was performed using a subtracted cDNA probe
to screen a cDNA library from 5 DIV mRNA, as described (Sambrook et
al., 1989 ). In brief, we isolated mRNA from 5 DIV cells (degenerating
cells) and generated 32P-labeled cDNA from it by reverse
transcription with random hexamer as a primer. After hydrolysis of RNA
with alkali, the labeled cDNA was hybridized with ~50-fold excess of
mRNA isolated from 3 DIV cells (healthy cells), and then unhybridized
labeled cDNA was purified as a probe with a hydroxyapatite column.
These steps for the construction of subtracted cDNA probe were repeated
twice. Approximately 5000 plaques of the cDNA library of 5 DIV cells were screened with the subtracted probe. Clones that expressed messages
only in the culture containing degenerating-granule neurons were
subcloned into pUC18 plasmid vectors with the SureClone Ligation Kit.
The nucleotide sequence of the 3'-partial cDNA clone of
mrf-1 (421 bp) was determined using a DNA sequencing system
with dye primer cycle sequencing (model 373A; Applied Biosystems,
Foster City, CA).
Cloning of mrf-1 cDNA. Based on a 3'-partial
mrf-1 cDNA fragment, the mrf-1 cDNA clones were
isolated by the rapid amplification of cDNA ends (RACE) (Frohman, 1993 )
using the Marathon cDNA Amplification Kit (Clontech, Palo Alto, CA).
The RACE cDNA library was constructed from the total RNA of the 5 DIV
cerebellar cell culture. The RACE reaction products were subjected to a
6% PAGE, and specific products were excised, which was followed by
subcloning to pUC18. A nucleotide sequence analysis was performed as
described above. Sequence searches of the nucleotides and the predicted
amino acids of the GenBank database were performed using fasta software
(DDBJ, Mishima, Sizuoka, Japan), and motif searches were generated
using GENETYX-MAC software (Ver. 8; Software Development Co. Ltd.,
Shibuya, Tokyo, Japan).
Northern blot. Equal amounts of total RNA (10-20 µg) or
poly(A+) RNA (3 µg) were loaded per lane onto
formaldehyde denaturing gel (1% agarose) and separated by
electrophoresis. The RNAs were transferred to a nylon membrane
(Hybond-N+; Amersham, Arlington Heights, IL). Hybridization was
performed as described previously (Suzuki and Koike, 1997 ). The cDNA
probes were labeled with 32P-dCTP to a specific activity of
1-1.5 × 106 dpm/ng by the random priming
method using the Ready-To-Go DNA Labeling Kit (Pharmacia). The
mrf-1 or G3PDH probe was prepared from a
cloned-3' partial cDNA fragment (421 bp, as described above), or a PCR
product subcloned into pUC18 (983 bp) (Suzuki and Koike, 1997 ),
respectively. The washed membranes were visualized, and the amount of
radioactivity of specific transcripts was measured using a Bio-imaging
Analyzer (BAS2000; Fuji Photo Film Corp., Tokyo, Japan).
In situ hybridization. Under deep pentobarbital
anesthesia, adult rat brains were freshly obtained 5 d after
axotomy of the right hypoglossal nerve. Fresh frozen sections through
the hypoglossal nuclei were prepared in the coronal plane by cryostat
(20 µm in thickness). As specific probes for mrf-1 mRNA,
two nonoverlapping antisense oligonucleotides were synthesized with
sequences complementary to the mrf-1 nucleotide residues at
85-129 and 439-483. Oligonucleotides were radiolabeled with
35S-dATP using terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (Life
Technologies). Fixation, prehybridization, and hybridization of
sections were performed as described previously (Watanabe et al.,
1993 ). Briefly, hybridization occurred overnight at 42°C in
hybridization buffer containing 50% formamide, 50 mM
Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, 1× Denhardt's solution, 0.6 M NaCl,
0.025% SDS, 200 µg/ml tRNA, 1 mM EDTA, 10% dextran
sulfate, 0.1 M dithiothreitol, and 10,000 dpm/µl
radiolabeled probe. After washing with 0.1× SSC containing 0.1%
sarkosyl at 55°C, sections were dipped in nuclear track emulsion
(NTB-2, Kodak) and exposed for 2 months. After development, sections
were photographed by dark-field and bright-field microscopy.
Protein expression studies and Western blot. Full-length
recombinant MRF-1 was expressed as glutathione S-transferase
(GST) fusion proteins, using a pGEX-4T-2 plasmid vector (Pharmacia) and
Escherichia coli BL21. The fusion proteins were purified
with glutathione Sepharose 4B, according to the manufacturer's
instruction (Pharmacia). After thrombin digestion, the MRF-1
polypeptide was separated from GST by reversed-phase HPLC. The purified
polypeptides (100-300 µg) were emulsified with Freund's complete
adjuvant (Difco, Detroit, MI), and were injected subcutaneously into
female New Zealand White rabbits at intervals of 2 weeks. From antisera
sampled 2 weeks after the sixth injection, immunoglobulins were
separated using Protein G-Sepharose (Pharmacia). Antibodies specific to the MRF-1 were then affinity-purified using fusion proteins coupled to
CNBr-activated Sepharose 4B (Pharmacia). Tissues or cultured cells were
homogenized in a 1× SDS sample buffer. Protein extracts (50 µg) were
separated on 15% SDS-polyacrylamide gels and then transferred to a
polyvinylidene difluoride membrane (PVDF) (Mirripore, Bedford, MA).
Immunostaining was performed with an enhanced chemoluminescence detection kit (ECL; Amersham) according to the manufacturer's directions, with a 1 µg/ml concentration of the primary
antiserum.
Immunocytochemical analysis. Cultured cells on plastic
sheets were fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde (PFA)/0.12 M
Na+-phosphate buffer, pH 7.2. After being washed
free of the fixative, the cells were preincubated with PBS containing
10% horse serum for 1 hr. The cells were then incubated with
anti-MRF-1 antibody (0.5 µg/ml) or OX-42 (mouse IgG, 1:300 dilution)
for 1 hr at room temperature. Detection of the primary antiserum was
performed using biotinylated IgG according to the procedure provided by the manufacturer (Histofine kit; Nichirei, Tokyo, Japan). Staining was
made visible by horseradish peroxidase-conjugated streptavidin and
aminoethercarbazol (AEC) reaction product (Zymed, South San Francisco,
CA). Finally, the cells were exposed to counterstaining with Mayer's
hematoxylin solution. The numbers of AEC-stained cells were counted at
three to four randomly selected, nonoverlapping areas ( 2.5 mm circle, 5.0 mm2). The number of OX-42-positive
cells per area was ~200 for the cerebellar cell culture at 7 DIV.
When both anti-MRF-1 antibody and OX-42 were used for the same sample,
the former antibodies were detected with horseradish
peroxidase-conjugated anti-rabbit IgG (1:200 dilution) and visualized
with AEC reaction product. The latter primary antibodies were detected
with biotinylated anti-mouse IgG (Nichirei) and then visualized with
both alkaline phosphatase-conjugated streptavidin (Zymed) and the
newfuchsine substrate kit (Nichirei).
Immunohistochemical analysis. Under deep pentobarbital
anesthesia, adult rats were perfused transcardially with 4% PFA in a
0.1 M sodium phosphate buffer, pH 7.2. Fixed brains were
sectioned by microslicer (50 µm in thickness) or embedded in paraffin
wax to prepare paraffin sections (5 µm). After they were blocked with 3% normal goat serum, sections were incubated overnight at room temperature with anti-MRF-1 antibody at 0.5 µg/ml for
immunofluorescence or at 0.1 µg/ml for immunoperoxidase. For
immunofluorescence, sections were then incubated with FITC-labeled
anti-rabbit IgG for 2 hr (1:100, Jackson ImmunoResearch, West Grove,
PA) and photographed with a confocal laser scanning microscope (MRC
1024, Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA). For immunoperoxidase, sections were
processed by the ABC method, using a Histofine kit, and photographed
with a bright-field microscope (AX-80, Olympus, Japan).
Phagocytotic activity. The cells were incubated in a medium
containing 10 µg/ml fluorescein-conjugated particles [Zymosan A
(Saccharomyces cerevisiae) BioParticle; Molecular Probes,
Eugene, OR] for 12 hr, washed with PBS, and then fixed with 4% PFA
for immunocytochemical analysis.
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RESULTS |
Isolation and characterization of mrf-1 cDNA clone
In cerebellar cell culture with normal (5.4 mM)
K+ medium, granule neurons begin to degenerate
around 4 DIV, and most of the neurons die by 8 DIV (Gallo et al., 1987 ;
Balazs et al., 1988 ; Koike, 1991 ; Suzuki and Koike, 1997 ). This
in vitro cell death shares major features with that of
developing sympathetic and sensory neurons undergoing apoptosis after
NGF deprivation: it requires protein and RNA synthesis (Suzuki and
Koike, 1997 ); chronic depolarization with a high concentration of
K+ prevents neuronal death via
Ca2+ influx through L-type Ca2+
channels (Gallo et al., 1987 ); and BDNF prevents neuronal death (Suzuki
and Koike, 1997 ). To investigate the specific genes that are regulated
during neuronal cell death, mRNAs from both 3 and 5 DIV [~70%
survival of granule neurons (Suzuki and Koike, 1997 )] cells of the
cerebellar cell culture were isolated and analyzed by differential
hybridization. We isolated five upregulated genes that were
specifically induced in 5 DIV cells. The 3'-partial mrf-1
cDNA fragment, one of the five genes, was subcloned and sequenced. This
subcloned fragment has 421 bp and contains a
poly(A+) tail. On the basis of information from this
partial sequence, we designed specific primer sets and performed a RACE
reaction to isolate full-length clones of mrf-1. The
full-length cDNA (Fig. 1) was 665 bp long
and contained a 116 bp 5'-untranslated region, an entire open-reading
frame of 441 bp encoding 117 amino acid residues, and a 108 bp
3'-untranslated region including a polyadenylation signal 20 bp
upstream from the poly(A+) tail.

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Figure 1.
Nucleotide and deduced amino acid sequences of
mrf-1 cDNA. Both nucleotide numbering and amino acid
numbering (on only the right side) are indicated. The
boxed area indicates the region of the putative EF-hand
calcium-binding motif. With regard to other putative motifs of
mrf-1 (number): 1, casein kinase II
phosphorylation site (6); 2, tyrosine kinase
phosphorylation site (1); 3, protein kinase C
phosphorylation site (1).
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Database searches revealed a homology with three different genes.
Figure 2 shows the homology of the
alignment of the MRF-1 amino acid sequence and others: allograft
inflammatory factor-1 [AIF-1; Utans et al. (1995) ], ionized calcium
binding adapter molecule-1 (Iba-1; Imai et al., 1996 ), and balloon
angioplasty responsive transcript-1 [BART-1; Autieri et al. (1996) ]
have a 100, 94.1, or 54.1% similarity to the MRF-1 sequence,
respectively. There is a difference in the nucleotide sequences between
mrf-1 and AIF-1 cDNA; mrf-1 mRNA is 46 bp longer
than AIF-1 in the 5' upstream region. Moreover, MRF-1 has one
EF-hand-like motif that is characteristic of an evolutionary family of
calcium-binding proteins (Strynadka and James, 1989 ), and this domain
is completely conserved within all four transcripts mentioned above.
These transcripts may consist of a protein subfamily having a single
EF-hand motif, because these region are also homologous with calmodulin
(Heinzmann and Hunziker, 1991 ).

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Figure 2.
Comparison of the amino acid sequences among
MRF-1, AIF-1, Iba-1, and BART-1. Amino acid numbering is indicated on
both sides. Amino acids that are fully conserved are indicated by
shadowed boxes. Dashes denote gaps. The
EF-hand-like motif is indicated by an open box.
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Upregulation of mrf-1 during PCD of cultured
granule neurons
To study the expression pattern of an mrf-1 gene during
the PCD of granule neurons in cerebellar cell culture, we examined the
relative transcript levels as a function of incubation time by Northern
blot analysis. The mrf-1 mRNA was detected at ~0.7 kilobase pair (kbp) in Northern blots, which is consistent with the expected length of the full-length mrf-1 cDNA. As shown
in Figure 3A, in the
cerebellar culture containing a normal concentration of
K+, the transcript level was upregulated at 4 DIV,
at which point the granule neurons began to degenerate, and had a peak
at 6 DIV, followed by a decrease at 7 DIV, at which time many granule
neurons died and were left on the surface of the dishes. It is known
that granule neurons maintained in a medium that contains a high
concentration of K+ will undergo apoptosis when the
high K+ medium is replaced with a normal
K+ medium (D'Mello et al., 1993 ; Yan et al., 1994 ;
Miller and Johnson, 1996 ). Upregulation of mrf-1 mRNA was
also detected in this "low" K+-induced apoptosis
of granule neurons (Fig. 3B). These results indicate that
the expression of the mrf-1 gene is upregulated in response
to the neuronal death of granule neurons.

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Figure 3.
Northern blot showing the upregulation of
mrf-1 mRNA in cerebellar cell culture during the PCD of
granule neurons. Sister cerebellar cells were incubated in normal
K+ (5.4 mM) medium for 3-7 d
(A) or in high K+ (30 mM) medium for 10 d following a switch from the high
K+ medium to a serum-free, normal
K+ medium (B). At each day or
hour indicated at the top of the autoradiograms, the
cells were subjected to RNA isolation according to the
guanidinium thiocyanate method. Total RNA (20 µg) was run on a 1%
agarose gel and transferred to a nylon membrane.
32P-labeled mrf-1 or G3PDH
cDNA was used as a hybridization probe. Both mrf-1 (0.7 kbp) and G3PDH (1.3 kbp) mRNAs were detected on the same
membrane. The positions of the rRNA are indicated on the
left. The amount of separated rRNA in each lane was
almost equal when the transferred membrane was stained with methylene
blue.
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Immunocytochemical localization of the MRF-1 antigen in the
cerebellar cell culture
To assess which cell type in the cerebellar cell culture
synthesizes the MRF-1, a recombinant MRF-1 protein was prepared and immunized to a rabbit. The purified antiserum was analyzed by Western blot. A single band of ~17 kDa was detected with anti-MRF-1 antibody in extracts from cerebellar cell cultures, an infant whole
brain, and an adult rat spleen (Fig. 4).
Spleen tissues have many monocytes or macrophages. This Western blot
shows that the MRF-1 level increased in response to granule cell death.
The anti-MRF-1 antibody was used for the immunostaining of cultured cerebellar cells. When cells of a 5 DIV cerebellar cell culture were
immunostained with this rabbit anti-MRF-1 antibody, partial cytoplasmic
areas of non-neuronal cells, which are morphologically characteristic
of ameboid microglia, were detected. The cells were then immunostained
with both anti-MRF-1 antibody and OX-42 (Robinson et al., 1986 ), as a
marker for microglia (Fig.
5A); MRF-1 positive cells were
overlapped with a population of OX-42 positive cells. MRF-1 was not
detected in all microglia, as shown in Figure 5Da,
indicating that the mrf-1 mRNA was expressed in a
subpopulation of microglia but not granule neurons. To examine whether
the PCD of granule neurons influences the immunoreactivity of MRF-1 in
microglia, sets of sister cerebellar cells were fixed at 3, 5, 7, and 9 DIV and immunostained with anti-MRF-1 antibody or OX-42. The
photographs of the 3 and 5 DIV cells treated with anti-MRF-1 antibody
are shown in Figure 5B. The number of MRF-1-positive cells
increased and peaked on the 7 DIV cell; the cell number relative to
that of the 3 DIV cell was ~4, 6, and 4 on the 5, 7, and 9 DIV cells,
respectively. Because the number of OX-42-positive cells increased
slightly during the incubation from 3 to 7 DIV (~1.4-fold) (Table
1), the ratio of MRF-1-positive cells to
the OX-42-positive cells became 0.2, 0.5, 0.8, and 0.5 on the 3, 5, 7, and 9 DIV cells, respectively. The increase in number of MRF-1-positive cells from 3 to 7 DIV is summarized in Table 1. As shown in Figure 5B, the immunoreactivity of MRF-1-positive cells also
increased dramatically from the 3 DIV to the 5 DIV cells. The
upregulation of MRF-1 in response to neuronal death was further
confirmed by the following sandwich culture (Fig. 5C). Both
purified cortical microglia and cerebellar cells (3 or 5 DIV) were
prepared separately and then co-incubated for 12 hr with the two cell
populations in contact with each other. After fixation, the cortical
microglia were immunostained with anti-MRF-1 antibody. Upregulation of
MRF-1 was observed when the sandwich culture of cortical microglia was performed with 5 DIV but not 3 DIV cerebellar granule neurons (Fig. 5Cb,c). This indicates that degenerated granule
neurons stimulate the synthesis of MRF-1 in microglia, although
morphological alterations do not occur under these conditions.
Moreover, induction of MRF-1 did not occur when cortical microglia were
incubated with a conditioned medium of 5 DIV cerebellar cells for 12 hr (Fig. 5Cd). Similar data were obtained from the culture
cells of purified cerebellar microglia (data not shown). These data indicate that mrf-1 transcripts in microglia are upregulated
in response to the PCD of granule neurons and that this induction may
require cell-to-cell contact between the microglia and the degenerated
granule neurons or secreted signals that lose their activity because of
the extreme diffusion.

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Figure 4.
Western blot showing immunoreactivity of the
anti-MRF-1 antibody. Granule cells were cultured until 5 DIV in the
presence of a high concentration (30 mM;
HK+) or normal (5.4 mM;
Normal) K+. Proteins (50 µg)
extracted from the cultured cells or the indicated tissues were run on
a 15% acrylamide gel and then transferred to a PVDF membrane.
Chemoluminescent detection (see Materials and Methods) shows a band of
~17 kDa in each extract. The positions of molecular markers
(kD) are indicated on the
left.
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Figure 5.
Immunocytochemical analysis of MRF-1 synthesis in
cultured cells. A, Immunocytochemical staining showing
that the synthesized MRF-1 was localized in the microglia but not in
the granule neurons in the cerebellar cell culture. Cerebellar cells
cultured in normal K+ medium were fixed at 5 DIV and
treated with anti-MRF-1 antibody. Staining of MRF-1 was made visible by
the AEC reaction product (dark red). The cells were
exposed to counterstaining with Mayer's hematoxylin solution and
photographed (Aa). The cells were then treated with
OX-42, a microglial marker. Staining of OX-42 was made visible by the
newfuchsine reaction product (pink)
(Ab). Arrowheads show MRF-1-positive
cytoplasmic areas. Asterisks show OX-42-positive
cells/microglia. Scale bar, 50 µm. B,
Immunocytochemical staining showing the upregulation of the MRF-1 on
microglia during the PCD of granule neurons in cerebella cell culture.
Cerebellar cells cultured in normal K+ medium were
fixed at 3 DIV (Ba) or 5 DIV (Bb) and
treated with anti-MRF-1 antibody. Cells were stained as described
above. Arrowheads show the MRF-positive microglia.
C, Immunocytochemical staining showing upregulation of
MRF-1 on microglia during the PCD of granule neurons in cortical
microglia culture. Purified-cortical microglia cells were
sandwich-cultured with 3 DIV (Cb) or 5 DIV
(Cc) cerebellar cells (see Results) or incubated in a
conditioned medium of 5 DIV cerebellar cells (Cd) for 12 hr. The cells were stained as described above. No morphological changes
in the microglia were observed after any of the treatments. Untreated
microglia (control) are shown in Ca. D,
Immunostaining showing that upregulation of MRF-1 on microglia is not
associated with microglial phagocytic activity. Cultured cerebellar
cells (5 DIV) were exposed to fluorescein-conjugated beads, Zymosan A,
for 12 hr, and then fixed and immunostained with anti-MRF-1 antibody.
The cells were stained as described above, photographed with
differential interference contrast [contrast micrograph
(Da)] and under UV light [fluorescent photographs
(Db)]. Arrowheads or an
arrow show MRF-1-positive or -negative microglia,
respectively. All three microglia were fluorescence positive
(Db).
|
|
Microglial upregulation of mrf-1 mRNA under conditions
inhibiting the proliferation of microglia
Microglia proliferated to a slight extent under our standard
culture where FudR was supplemented as an antimitotic agent; contamination of OX-42-positive microglia was ~5% of the number of
granule neurons surviving at 7 DIV. To exclude the possibility that
this mrf-1 upregulation was simply caused by the
proliferation of microglia, we examined the mrf-1 mRNA level
in the presence of a DNA polymerase inhibitor aphidicolin (Miller and
Johnson, 1996 ). When cerebellar cells were cultured for 6 d under
high K+ condition in the presence of aphidicolin (10 µM), contamination of Vimentin-positive non-neuronal
cells was reduced to 3.3 ± 0.2%. Aphidicolin completely
inhibited the incorporation of bromodeoxyuridine to microglia, and the
contamination of OX-42-positive microglia in the presence of
aphidicolin was reduced to one-fifth (37.3 ± 2.1 cells/5
mm2) of the standard culture at 7 DIV in normal
K+ medium. This number of OX-42-positive cells was
<1% of the surviving granule neurons. Northern blot shows that the
mrf-1 mRNA was undetectable at 4 DIV cerebellar culture,
when granule neurons normally begin to degenerate (Fig.
6), and had not upregulated at 5-7 DIV
in the presence of aphidicolin. However, when purified microglia were
added to the 3 DIV cerebellar culture and incubated for 18 hr in the
presence of aphidicolin, mrf-1 mRNA was upregulated (Fig.
6). These results indicate that the microglial upregulation of
mrf-1 in response to neuronal cell death is independent of the proliferation of microglia.

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Figure 6.
Autoradiogram showing the upregulation of
mrf-1 mRNA under the inhibitory condition of cell
proliferation. Both granule cells (35 mm dishes) incubated in the
presence of 10 µM aphidicolin, and cortical cells were
prepared separately. Purified microglia obtained from the cortical
culture (1 × 105 cells) were replated or added
into the 3 DIV granule culture and incubated for an additional 18 hr in
the presence of aphidicolin. All RNA was extracted from 4 DIV granule
cells (GN), 18 hr incubated purified microglia
(MG), or the mixed cells (GN+MG), and
separated in an agarose gel. Hybridization was performed as shown in
the legend of Figure 3. The rRNA positions are indicated on the
left. rRNA was visualized by stain with methylene
blue.
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The relationship between MRF-1 induction and the phagocytic
activity of microglia
To determine whether the phagocytic activity of microglia is
associated with MRF-1 induction, we exposed cultured cerebellar cells
(5 DIV) to fluorescein-conjugated beads, Zymosan A, for 12 hr. After
fixation, the cells were immunostained with anti-MRF-1 antibody. As
shown in Figure 5D, not all microglia cells labeled with
beads were MRF-1-positive cells. Moreover, when purified cortical
microglia were exposed to the fluorescein-conjugated beads, the level
of MRF-1 protein was unaltered in the microglia engulfing the beads
(data not shown). These data indicate that the induction of MRF-1 may
not be associated with the phagocytic activity of microglia.
Transient increase in the mrf-1 message in the
postnatal development of the cerebellum
To explore the expression level of mrf-1 in
vivo, its mRNA levels were examined by Northern blot as a function
of the postnatal development of the cerebellum. As shown in Figure
7, the mrf-1 mRNA was detected
at all postnatal days examined (P0-28), although its level of
expression varied dramatically. The expression level reached a peak at
P7 and was then downregulated at later postnatal days. We then prepared
a section of P7 rat cerebella and immunostained it with anti-MRF-1
antibody (Fig. 8). Most of the
MRF-1-positive signals were detected in the white matter (WM) and/or
internal granular layer (IGL). These MRF-1-positive signals did not
overlap with GFAP-positive cells and were present in the interior of
the calbindin-positive Purkinje cell layer (data not shown). Because the anti-MRF-1 antibody specifically recognizes microglia in the adult
rat brain (see below) as well as in in vitro culture, it is
thought that the distribution of MRF-1-positive signals in a cerebellar
section suggests the presence of MRF-1-positive microglia. The
immunohistochemical data with anti-MRF-1 antibody in P7 cerebellum is
consistent with the finding that in the rat cerebellum, programmed cell
death occurs most prominently at approximately P7 in these regions
(Krueger et al., 1995 ). These results indicate a temporally increased
expression of mrf-1, suggesting the possibility that MRF-1
plays an important role in cerebellar development.

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Figure 7.
Autoradiogram showing the expression of
mrf-1 mRNA in postnatal development of the cerebellum.
Cerebella were dissected from rat pups on the indicated postnatal days
and homogenized in guanidinium thiocyanate solution. Poly
(A+) RNA (3 µg) was run on a 1% agarose gel and
transferred to a nylon membrane. Hybridization was performed as shown
in the legend of Figure 3. The presumed rRNA positions are indicated on
the left.
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Figure 8.
Confocal microscopic image showing the
distribution of MRF-1-immunoreactive antigen in P7 rat cerebellum. A
section of the P7 rat cerebellum was immunostained with anti-MRF-1
antibody and photographed. Scale bar (shown in A): 50 µm. i, Internal granule layer and/or white matter;
p, Purkinje cell layer; e, external
granule layer.
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|
Localization of the MRF-1 antigen in ramified microglia and its
upregulation after axotomy
In adult brain sections, the distribution of cells expressing
MRF-1 and their morphology were examined by immunohistochemistry (Fig.
9A,B). Immunostained cells
were found in various brain regions. In the cerebellum, they were
evenly distributed in the molecular layer, granular layer, and
medullary zone (Fig. 9A). Their cell bodies were
spindle-shaped and contained an elongated nucleus (Fig. 9B).
From the cell body, a few thin processes extended in different
directions and were further branched in the periphery. No significant
staining was detected in any of the neuronal elements in the cerebellum
and other brain regions. From the characteristic morphology, MRF-1 was
judged to be localized in ramified or resting microglia in the adult
normal rat brain.

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Figure 9.
MRF-1 in ramified/resting microglia in the
cerebellum (A, B) and its prominent upregulation in
activated microglia of the hypoglossal nucleus 5 d after right
hypoglossal nerve dissection (C-F). A,
B, Immunoperoxidase (A) and confocal
immunofluorescence (B) images showing the
distribution and morphology of MRF-1-positive, ramified/resting
microglia in the adult cerebellum. Arrowhead indicates
the cell body of immunostained microglia. Gr, Granular
layer; Pc, Purkinje cell layer; Mo,
molecular layer; P, pia matter. C-E,
In situ hybridization showing elevated
mrf-1 mRNA in ipsilateral, axotomized hypoglossal
nucleus (right). Strong signals for the
mrf-1 mRNA are found in small cells
(arrowheads) that surround cell bodies of injured
hypoglossal neurons (asterisks). 4,
Fourth ventricle; 12, hypoglossal nucleus.
F, Immunohistochemistry showing intensified MRF-1
immunoreactivity in activated microglia
(arrowheads) surrounding cell bodies of axotomized
hypoglossal neurons (asterisks). Scale bars: A,
D, 100 µm; B, E, F, 10 µm; C,
1 mm.
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|
Changes after neuronal injury were experimentally examined by
dissecting hypoglossal motor nerves at the hyoid bone. Five days after
the axotomy, the ipsilateral hypoglossal nucleus displayed a prominent
increase in mrf-1 mRNA (Fig. 9C,D). The signals
were detected in small cells around hypoglossal motoneurons having large cell bodies (Fig. 9E). By immunohistochemistry, strong
immunostainings were found in cell bodies and processes of activated
microglia, which surrounded the injured neuronal cell bodies (Fig.
9F). In the contralateral hypoglossal nucleus,
however, no significant changes were found in the levels of
mrf-1 mRNA and MRF-1 immunoreactivity (Fig.
9C,D). Moreover, cells with low mrf-1 mRNA and
immunoreactivity in the contralateral nucleus were distributed evenly
within the nucleus but not surrounded by neuronal cell bodies. These
histological findings indicate that mrf-1 is expressed in
ramified/resting microglia in vivo and that its expression
is prominently upregulated in microglia activated by neuronal
injury.
 |
DISCUSSION |
We searched for genes that are upregulated in the process of
neuronal death of granule cells in cerebellar cell culture. In this
study, we cloned one of these genes, mrf-1, which is a gene upregulated in response to granule cell death in microglia in vitro. In the developing cerebellum in vivo,
mrf-1 mRNA was transiently increased in the early postnatal
stages when cerebellar neurons and astrocytes undergo active
degeneration. In adult brain sections, MRF-1 was detected in
ramified/resting microglia, and upregulated in activated microglia
surrounding injured central motoneurons by peripheral nerve
dissection.
A homology search of the full-length mrf-1 sequence revealed
the presence of three cognate genes that are expressed in macrophages or microglia: AIF-1 (Utans et al., 1995 ), Iba-1 (Imai et al., 1996 ), or
BART-1 (Autieri et al., 1996 ). The AIF-1 protein has the same amino
acid sequence as MRF-1, although the 5' noncoding region of AIF-1 mRNA
is shorter than that of mrf-1 (Utans et al., 1995 ). Southern
blots using AIF-1 cDNA as a probe have revealed a single band with a
high intensity in rat genomic DNA (Utans et al., 1995 ). It is thus
likely that the difference between mrf-1 and AIF-1 mRNAs may
reflect an alternative start site derived from a single gene. MRF-1 is
different from the Iba-1 protein, which is also synthesized in
microglia, in the upstream region containing the 5' noncoding region
and some N-terminal amino acid sequences (Imai et al., 1996 ). This
indicates that, although the differences between these genes are small,
they may be subject to differential regulation at transcriptional
and/or translational levels. It is thought that these four genes,
including BART-1, code for one EF-hand-like motif. Two or more EF-hand
motifs are typical for the family of intracellular calcium-binding
proteins that includes calmodulin and troponin C (for review, see
Heinzmann and Hunziker, 1991 ). They may be members of a calcium-binding protein family that has a single EF-hand motif. Nevertheless, mrf-1 was the first of four genes to show that it is a
microglial gene responding to neuronal cell death.
The upregulated expression of mrf-1 in cerebellar cell
culture was correlated with the degeneration of granule neurons. The increased expression of mrf-1 mRNA peaked in the 6 DIV
cerebellar cells when the cells were cultured under conditions that
allowed a limited proliferation of non-neuronal cells. An
immunocytochemical analysis of the MRF-1 staining pattern revealed that
the protein was synthesized in the microglia and was upregulated in
response to neuronal degeneration. Compared with the mrf-1
mRNA level, which peaked at 6 DIV, the immunoreactivity of the MRF-1
peaked at 7 DIV under normal K+ conditions. The
1 d delay in MRF-1 synthesis may reflect the difference between
the transcription and translation of mrf-1. When purified
microglia were co-incubated with 5 DIV cerebellar cells under a
sandwich culture in which the two cell populations were in contact with
each other, MRF-1 in the purified microglia was upregulated. In
contrast, when purified microglia were incubated with culturing medium
obtained from a 5 DIV cerebellar cell culture, that is, conditioned
medium of 5 DIV cerebellar cells, there was no effect on MRF-1
synthesis in the purified microglia. These data suggest that the
upregulation of mrf-1 may require either cell-to-cell
contact between microglia and degenerated neurons or secreted signals
that are released from degenerated neurons or second stimulated
non-neuronal cells (e.g., astrocyte) and lose their activity because of
extreme diffusion.
What kind of role does MRF-1 play in neuronal apoptosis? It has been
reported that microglia are rapidly activated and proliferate around
damaged neurons in response to cerebral ischemia and peripheral neuronal injury (Svensson et al., 1993 ; Gehrmann et al., 1995 ). It is generally accepted that activated microglia engage in
phagocytotic activity to eliminate neuronal debris. Also, activated
microglia upregulate the expression of several surface molecules
[e.g., major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I and II
antigens], cytokines (e.g., interleukin-1, transforming growth factor
1), and cytotoxic substrate (e.g., reactive oxygen species, nitric oxygen). Some of these may contribute to repair of tissue or promotion of neuronal cell death. It is thought that cultured microglia is not in
a resting state. In our culture system, mrf-1 mRNA was upregulated in microglia under the inhibitory conditions for cell proliferation. This indicates that MRF-1 may not be associated with the
proliferational activity of microglia. Moreover, when fluorescein-conjugated particles were phagocytized to cultured microglia, not all of the fluorescein-labeled microglia were MRF-1 positive. These data indicate that MRF-1 may especially be synthesized in microglia that are capable of recognizing signs of neuronal damage,
and that the induction of MRF-1 is not directly related to phagocytotic
activity in microglia. Phagocytosis is a complex and still poorly
understood phenomenon (Savill et al., 1993 ). The first phase of
phagocytosis involves the specific recognition of the eliciting
particle via the engulfment of one or multiple surface receptors and is
followed by ingestion per se. It has been reported that six engulfment
genes controlling at least two distinct and parallel processes have
been identified by the genetic analysis of PCD-deficient mutants in
C. elegans. Recently, it has been shown that ABC1 is
required for the engulfment of corpses generated by apoptotic cell
death in mouse macrophage, and ABC1 might be a mammalian homolog to
ced-7, one of the engulfment genes of C. elegans
(Luciani and Chimini, 1996 ). It is possible that MRF-1 plays a role in
the pathway that allows the recognition or incorporation of neuronal
debris. This is further substantiated by the fact that MRF-1 is similar
to AIF-1, which has a possible functional role in macrophage activation
and function (Utans et al., 1995 ). Taking into account the similarities
between the two proteins, it is likely that these proteins are involved
in a converged signal transduction cascade elicited by the recognition
of tissues or cells. Utans et al. (1995) showed that the upregulation
of AIF-1 occurs when cardiac allografts, but not syngrafts, are
transplanted. This suggests that AIF-1 responds to the cells or debris
of another species. In contrast, MRF-1 responds to the degenerated
cells or debris derived from the same species. Another possible role for MRF-1 may be related to microglial cytotoxicity or the trophic effect for damaged neurons. We have found that the immunoreactivity of
MRF-1 is localized to a limited cytoplasmic region of microglia in our
cultures. The profile generated by the Kyte-Doolittle algorithm and
others predicted a hydrophilic polypeptide having a single EF-hand
motif without significant hydrophobic stretches. It is thus possible
that MRF-1 functions as a signal-transducing molecule regulated by the
level of intracellular Ca2+. It remains to be
determined, however, whether Ca2+ indeed binds to
the EF-hand motif of MRF-1 and regulates the expression of the
mrf-1 gene.
We also found that mrf-1 is expressed in resting microglia
on adult rat brain to a lesser extent compared with the level in ameboid microglia. All the markers currently available to identify microglia including MHC class II, complement type 3 receptor, etc., are
surface antigens located on the cell surface of microglia (for review,
see Streit, 1995 ). It is likely that the antibodies against MRF-1 offer
a unique tool to identify the cytoplasm of microglia both in
vivo and in vitro, although the exact function of MRF-1
remains to be resolved. Expression of mrf-1 mRNA in a hypoglossal nucleus was prominently upregulated in microglia that surrounded injured neuronal cell bodies activated by dissecting hypoglossal motor nerves. It is thought that hypoglossal motor nerves
degenerate, but do not die, after axotomy (for review, see Sevensson et
al., 1993 ). Activated microglia around axotomized motoneurons, at
least, will not have a neurotoxic effect. When non-neuronal cells were
thoroughly eliminated from cerebellar cell cultures in the presence of
aphidicolin (see the Materials and Methods), granule cell death
apparently proceeded with a time course similar to that in the standard
culture. Moreover, we found that the supplement of cultured microglia
to aphidicolin-treated cell cultures appeared to neither promote nor
suppress the cell death of granule neurons under our culture conditions
(data not shown). Thus, it is likely that the upregulation of
mrf-1 per se is not causally connected with granule cell
death but rather is probably secondary to this event.
We were able to show that mrf-1 mRNA increases temporally in
the developing cerebellum of rats. In particular, the mrf-1
mRNA level peaks at P7. In the postnatal development of the cerebellum, differentiating granule cells migrate from the external granular layer
(EGL) to the IGL and form synaptic contacts (Altman, 1972 ). Granule
neurons that do not have enough synaptic connections may be eliminated
at this stage by an apoptotic mechanism. Analysis of pyknotic cells in
the developing postnatal rat cerebellum have revealed that the majority
of pyknotic cells are in the developing WM, where their number peaks at
~P7, whereas those in the IGL peak at P10 (Krueger et al., 1995 ).
Moreover, it appears that 50-70% of the pyknotic cells in the WM and
IGL are astrocytes. The period of mrf-1 activation in the
cerebellum corresponded to the time of apoptotic death of the
astrocytes in the WM and/or IGL. It is possible that mrf-1
may respond to the death of astrocytes as well. The majority of
neuronal cell deaths for the granule neurons in the rat cerebellum
occur in the EGL at ~2-4 weeks postnatal. However, the number of
pyknotic cells in the EGL is less than that of WM and/or IGL around P7
(Krueger et al., 1995 ). For this reason, it is not clear that there is
an upregulation of mrf-1 expression levels in response to
the neuronal death in the EGL. The immunoreactivity of MRF-1 was also
detected in the ramified/resting microglia in the adult rat brain. This
expression of mrf-1 in the adult brain indicates that MRF-1
may have functions other than just the role it plays in cell death.
In summary, we have provided here evidence that a microglial gene,
mrf-1, is upregulated in response to neuronal cell death and
degeneration both in vitro and in vivo. The
specific physiological function of MRF-1 is unknown, although it may
possibly play a role both in developmental PCD and in recovery from
brain injuries.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Jan. 21, 1998; revised March 30, 1998; accepted May 27, 1998.
This work was supported in part by a special Grant-in-Aid for the
Promotion of Education and Research in Hokkaido University, Grants-in-Aid for the Ministry of Education, Science, Culture, and
Sports, and the Program for the Promotion of Fundamental Studies in
Health Sciences.
Correspondence should be addressed to Shuuitsu Tanaka, Molecular
Neurobiology Laboratory, Graduate Program in Biological Sciences, Hokkaido University, Faculty of Science, Kita 10 Nishi 8, Kita-ku, Sapporo 060-0810, Japan.
Mr. Suzuki's present address: Pharmaceutical Research Institute, Kyowa
Hakko Kogyo Co., Ltd., Sizuoka 411-8731, Japan.
 |
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