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The Journal of Neuroscience, May 15, 1999, 19(10):3791-3800
Nature of the Retrograde Signal from Injured Nerves that Induces
Interleukin-6 mRNA in Neurons
Patricia G.
Murphy1,
Lindsay S.
Borthwick1,
Robert S.
Johnston1,
George
Kuchel2, and
Peter M.
Richardson1
Divisions of 1 Neurosurgery and
2 Geriatrics, Montreal General Hospital and McGill
University, Montreal, Canada H3G 1A4
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ABSTRACT |
In previous studies, interleukin-6 was shown to be synthesized in
approximately one-third of lumbar dorsal root ganglion neurons during
the first week after nerve transection. In present studies, interleukin-6 mRNA was found to be induced also in axotomized facial
motor neurons and sympathetic neurons. The nature of the signal that
induces interleukin-6 mRNA in neurons after nerve injury was analyzed.
Blocking of retrograde axonal transport by injection of colchicine into
an otherwise normal nerve did not induce interleukin-6 mRNA in primary
sensory neurons, but injection of colchicine into the nerve stump
prevented induction of interleukin-6 mRNA by nerve transection.
Therefore, it was concluded that interleukin-6 is induced by an injury
factor arising from the nerve stump rather than by interruption of
normal retrograde trophic support from target tissues or distal nerve
segments. Next, injection into the nerve of a mast cell degranulating
agent was shown to stimulate interleukin-6 mRNA in sensory neurons and
systemic administration of mast cell stabilizing agents to mitigate the
induction of interleukin-6 mRNA in sensory neurons after nerve injury.
These data implicate mast cells as one possible source of the factors
that lead to induction of interleukin-6 mRNA after nerve injury.
In search of a possible function of inducible interelukin-6, neuronal
death after nerve transection was assessed in mice with null deletion
of the interleukin-6 gene. Retrograde death of neurons in the fifth
lumbar dorsal root ganglion was 45% greater in knockout than in
wild-type mice. Thus, endogenous interleukin-6 contributes to the
survival of axotomized neurons.
Key words:
axotomy; dorsal root ganglion; interleukin-6; mast cells; peripheral nerve injury; neuronal death
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INTRODUCTION |
Interleukin-6 (IL-6) is virtually
absent in the peripheral nervous system (PNS) of normal mature animals
but after sciatic nerve transection is induced for ~1 d in the nerve
(Zhong and Heumann, 1995 ; Bourde et al., 1999 ) and ~1 week in a
subpopulation of medium and large lumbar dorsal root ganglion (DRG)
neurons (Murphy et al., 1995 ). IL-6 mRNA persists in axotomized neurons much more briefly than growth-associated protein-43 (GAP-43)
mRNA and other induced mRNAs. This relative brevity suggests that the inductive signal from the injured nerve might be unusual.
After nerve transection, nerve cell bodies undergo many retrograde
reactions (Lieberman, 1971 ), including alteration of neuropeptides and
ion channels (Hökfelt et al., 1994 ; Verge et al., 1995 ; Zhang et
al., 1997 ; Cummins and Waxman, 1998 ), and synthesis of molecules that
promote regeneration (McQuarrie and Grafstein, 1973 ; Richardson and
Issa, 1984 ; Skene, 1989 ). Most of these responses can be attributed to
interruption of normal retrograde trophic support from target tissues
and/or distal nerve segments (Lieberman, 1974 ; Gordon et al., 1991 ).
Pharmacological inhibition of retrograde axonal transport with
microtubule-binding proteins, such as colchicine or vinblastine, mimics
many of the neuronal and perineuronal responses of DRG neurons to nerve
transection (Landmesser and Pilar, 1974 ; Aldskogius and Svensson, 1988 ;
Woolf et al., 1990 ; Leah et al., 1991 ). Some of the changes in DRG
neurons can be attributed to loss of retrograde influence of specific
molecules, such as NGF (Fitzgerald et al., 1985 ; Verge et al.,
1995 ) and glial-derived neurotrophic factor (Bennett et
al., 1998 ). Other changes are caused by interruption of
retrograde transport of unknown molecules (Verge et al., 1990 ).
In response to sufficient stimuli, mast cells quickly release many
products from preformed granules and initiate several inflammatory processes, in addition to acute hypersensitivity (Wershil et al., 1988 ;
Galli, 1993 ; Echtenacher et al., 1996 ; Malaviya et al., 1996 ; Kubes and
Granger, 1996 ). After peripheral nerve crush, mast cells in the
immediate vicinity are rapidly degranulated (Olsson, 1967 ).
Degranulation of mast cells contributes to the pain elicited by NGF
(Lewin and Mendell, 1994 ; Woolf et al., 1996 ) and to other pathological
processes in peripheral nerves (Brosman et al., 1985 ; Zochodne et al.,
1994 ; Dines and Powell, 1997 ).
An extreme neuronal response to axonal interruption is death, at least
sometimes because of apoptosis (Berkelaar et al., 1994 ). Neuronal death
is thought to be caused by loss of retrograde trophic support from
target tissues and/or glial cells (Lieberman, 1974 ; Pettmann and
Henderson, 1998 ) and can be reduced by exogenous trophic agents (Li et
al., 1994 ).
Data presented here indicate that the induction of IL-6 mRNA in DRG
neurons is initiated by an injury factor from the nerve stump to which
mast cells may contribute and that endogenous inducible IL-6 attenuates
the death of axotomized neurons.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Surgery for nerve manipulations in rats. Adult female
Sprague Dawley rats weighing ~200 gm were anesthetized with Pentothal (50 mg/kg, i.p.) and submitted to a variety of microsurgical
procedures. (1) The right sciatic nerve was exposed in midthigh and
either transected (three rats) or crushed (three rats) with jeweler's forceps for 10 sec, while the left sciatic nerve was uninjured. Rats
were killed 4-7 d later. (2) In three rats, the L5 dorsal root
was sectioned with microscissors 2 mm from its DRG. Rats were killed
4-7 d later. (3) In three rats, the right facial nerve was exposed
near the stylomastoid foramen and transected with removal of a 2 mm
segment to impede regeneration. The completeness of the transection was
confirmed by observations of whisker paralysis and failure of eye
closing. Rats were killed 2-7 d later. (4) In four rats, the external
and internal postganglionic nerves were transected several
millimeters from the superior cervical ganglion, or the
preganglionic cervical sympathetic trunk was severed proximal to the
ganglion. Rats were killed 4 d later.
Nerve injections. Two to 5 µl of 5 mM
colchicine, 0.25-1.0 µg of the mast cell degranulating compound
48/80 (Sigma, St. Louis, MO), normal rat serum, or saline were
injected slowly into the right sciatic nerve in midthigh through a
glass micropipette with a tip diameter of ~50 µm attached to a
manual pressure injection system filled with mineral oil (Beitz and
King, 1979 ). Colchicine was injected in uninjured nerves (three rats),
in the stump or distal segment of transected nerves (three rats), or in
contralateral nerves (three rats). Colchicine, injected intraneurally
at this dose, has been shown to block axonal transport for at least
5 d (Richardson and Verge, 1986 ). A total of 14 rats were injected with 48/80. In three rats, recombinant tumor necrosis factor- (TNF- ) was injected into the sciatic nerve and, in three rats, IL-1 .
Intraperitoneal injections. Two mast cell stabilizing agents
were injected individually and intraperitoneally in combination with
sciatic nerve transection at midthigh in an attempt to influence the
induction of IL-6 mRNA in DRG neurons. Cromolyn sodium (1 ml/kg of a
1% solution) (Sigma) or ketotifen (1 ml/kg of a 1% solution) were
injected twice a day for 5 d before surgery and for a further
5 d until the rats were killed. Three rats were injected in each
of the two groups, and three control rats underwent nerve transection alone.
In situ hybridization. In most experiments, L4 and L5 DRG
were removed, frozen immediately in N-methyl butane at
55°C, embedded in Tissue-Tek (Miles, Elkhart, IN), and stored at
70°C. DRG to be compared were embedded in the same mold. Where
appropriate, superior cervical ganglia or the brainstem were removed,
in the latter case, after perfusion of the rats per aorta with
PBS. Antisense oligonucleotides for IL-6 (Murphy et al., 1995 )
or GAP-43 (Verge et al., 1990 ), ~50 nucleotides in length, were
labeled with 33P by the terminal transferase reaction.
Frozen sections cut on a cryostat set at 5-10 µm were thaw mounted
on Probe-On slides (Fisher Scientific, Houston, TX) and hybridized
16-18 hr at 42°C with a solution containing 500,000 cpm
oligonucleotide, 50% formamide, 4× SSC, 100 mg/ml dextran sulfate,
1% sarcosyl, 500 µg/ml salmon sperm DNA, and 200 mM DTT.
After hybridization, the sections were washed four times in 1× SSC at
55°C for 15 min, fixed briefly in 65 and 95% ethanol, dried, dipped
in radiosensitive emulsion (Kodak NTB2; Eastman Kodak, Rochester, NY),
exposed in the dark at 4°C for 4-6 weeks, developed, fixed, and
stained with 0.002% toluidine blue.
Neuronal labeling for IL-6 mRNA was quantified with a computerized
image analysis system (Richardson et al., 1989 ) for groups of two to
four sections on the same slide. Only cells with a visible nucleolus
were quantified. The percentage of cross-sectional area covered by
silver grains was measured, and a correction factor was applied to
yield a parameter linearly related to grain number. Labeling index
refers to the ratio of grain density over neurons to grain density over
non-neuronal regions of the DRG.
Neuronal cell counts after nerve transection in mice. Nine
male C57BL6/129 mice aged 9 weeks and nine mice of the same strain with
null mutation of the IL-6 gene (Kopf et al., 1994 ) were anesthetized by
intramuscular injection of 0.75 mg/gm ketamine and 0.01 mg/gm xylazine.
Through a midline dorsal incision, the right sciatic nerve was
transected at its origin from the L4 and L5 spinal nerves, while the
left sciatic nerve was uninjured.
Fourteen days after nerve transection, ipsilateral and contralateral L5
DRG were removed from deeply anesthetized mice. The DRG were fixed
overnight in 4% formaldehyde, washed three times with PBS, protected
overnight in 18% sucrose, and frozen in cryomolds at 55°C in
N-methyl butane. Serial frozen sections were cut on a
cryostat set at 5 µm, thaw mounted onto gelatin-coated slides, and
stained with 0.002% toluidine blue. Neurons with clearly visible nucleoli were counted under oil immersion light microscopy in every
fifth section by an observer blinded to the mouse genotype. No
correction was made for split nucleoli. Percentage survival was
calculated from the ratio of ipsilateral to contralateral counts.
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RESULTS |
Motor and sympathetic neurons synthesize IL-6 mRNA after
nerve injury
Experiments were performed to determine whether nerve injury
induces IL-6 mRNA in PNS neurons that were not DRG neurons.
In sections of the brainstem from rats killed 2-4 d after facial nerve
transection, IL-6 mRNA was detected by in situ hybridization in neurons of the ipsilateral, but not contralateral, facial motor nucleus (Fig. 1). In semiquantitative
analysis of two nuclei, 64 (89 of 141) and 65% (90 of 138) of neurons
were deemed to be labeled, including few or no small motoneurons. With
this technique of in situ hybridization, IL-6 mRNA was not
detected in non-neuronal cells. The data support a prediction (Klein et
al., 1997 ) that at least some of the IL-6 mRNA detected in the facial
motor nucleus after nerve transection (Kiefer et al., 1993 ) is in
neurons.

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Figure 1.
Dark- and light-field photomicrographs of IL-6
in situ hybridization preparations from sections through
the ipsilateral (A, E) or contralateral
(C) facial motor nucleus of a rat killed 4 d
after unilateral facial nerve transection and of sections through the
ipsilateral (B, F) and
contralateral (D) superior cervical ganglion of
rats killed 4 d after external and internal carotid nerve
transection. Note that many neurons in the ipsilateral facial motor
nucleus and some neurons in the superior cervical ganglion contain IL-6
mRNA. Magnification: A, 230×; B-D,
290×; E, F, 1120×.
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After transection of the postganglionic sympathetic nerves, but not
after transection of the preganglionic trunk, IL-6 mRNA was found in
many sympathetic neurons in the superior cervical ganglion (Fig. 1).
Again, no hybridization signal was detected in non-neuronal cells of
the superior cervical ganglion. In contrast to a previous report (Marz
et al., 1996 ), we did not detect IL-6 mRNA in sympathetic neurons of
uninjured mature rats or contralateral superior cervical ganglia.
The results of these experiments indicate that, after nerve injury,
IL-6 mRNA is induced in many neurons in the corresponding motor nucleus
or sympathetic ganglion.
IL-6 mRNA is induced in some DRG neurons by nerve crush or dorsal
spinal nerve root transection
After sciatic nerve crush, IL-6 mRNA was detected in L5 DRG
neurons, albeit in fewer neurons than after nerve transection (data not
shown). Transection of the L5 dorsal spinal root elicited clear IL-6
mRNA labeling in a few (2-5%) L5 DRG neurons. After section of a
dorsal spinal nerve root, most neurons in the corresponding DRG are not
visibly perturbed (Carmel and Stein, 1969 ; but Hare and Hinsey, 1940 )
GAP-43 (Chong et al., 1994 ) and c-jun (Jenkins et al., 1993 ) are found
in a few neurons, as is IL-6 mRNA. IL-6 mRNA is induced in DRG neurons
after nerve crush or dorsal spinal nerve root transection but in fewer
neurons than after nerve transection.
A signal from injured nerves stimulates IL-6 synthesis in
DRG neurons
Colchicine was injected intraneurally to investigate whether
interruption of retrograde axonal transport mimics or blocks the
induction of nerve transection. Injections were either into a
previously uninjured nerve or immediately proximal to the site of nerve
transection. Three days after the rats were killed, GAP-43 and IL-6
mRNAs were analyzed in L5 DRG by in situ hybridization. As
anticipated, GAP-43 mRNA was induced in DRG neurons by simple intraneural injection of colchicine, and its induction by nerve transection was not blocked by proximal injection of colchicine (Fig.
2). This is the expected pattern of
responses for a molecule that is induced (directly or indirectly) by
interruption of retrograde transport to the nerve cell body of normal
trophic influence from the distal nerve or target tissues. For IL-6
mRNA, very different responses were obtained (Figs. 2,
3). Injection of colchicine into the
uninjured sciatic nerve did not induce IL-6 mRNA, and injection of
colchicine into the stump of a transected nerve blocked induction of
IL-6 mRNA in L5 DRG neurons. In other control experiments, injection of
colchicine into the distal segment of the transected nerve or into the
contralateral nerve did not interfere with the induction of IL-6 in
axotomized DRG neurons (data not shown). Therefore, the blockage by
colchicine of induction of IL-6 after nerve injury is not a nonspecific
toxic effect. In previous experiments (Richardson and Verge, 1986 ),
intraneural injection of 5 mM colchicine was
shown to cause considerable axonal degeneration. This
action of colchicine does not invalidate the conclusions of these
experiments because IL-6 is not induced, despite axonal degeneration.
The results of these experiments suggest that the induction of IL-6 in
injured DRG neurons is triggered by a positive signal from the injury
site rather than from loss of retrograde inhibition by molecule(s)
arising from the distal nerve or target tissues.

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Figure 2.
Dark-field photomicrographs of in
situ hybridization preparations for IL-6 (A,
C, E, G) or GAP-43
(B, D, F,
H) mRNA, all of sections of L5 DRG. DRG are
contralateral (A, B) or ipsilateral
(C, D) to sciatic nerve transection,
ipsilateral to intraneural injection of colchicine (E,
F), or ipsilateral to nerve transection plus
injection of colchicine into the nerve stump (G,
H). Note that IL-6 mRNA is induced by nerve
transection but not by intraneural injection of colchicine and that the
effect of nerve transection on IL-6 mRNA is blocked by more proximal
injection of colchicine. GAP-43 mRNA is also induced by nerve
transection. However, in contrast to IL-6 mRNA, GAP-43 mRNA is induced
by intraneural injection of colchicine, and its induction by nerve
transection is not blocked by more proximal injection of colchicine.
Despite longer exposure times, the signal for IL-6 mRNA is consistently
weaker than that for GAP-43 mRNA, presumably because the latter is much
more abundant. Magnification, 180×.
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Figure 3.
Quantification of IL-6 mRNA labeling by in
situ hybridization. Each point represents a single DRG neuron,
with labeling index as the y-axis and volume as the
x-axis (log-log scale). A, Normal DRG.
B, DRG removed 3 d after nerve transection.
C, DRG removed 3 d after injection of colchicine.
D, DRG removed 3 d after nerve transection plus
injection of colchicine into the nerve stump. Note that many neurons
with clear presence of IL-6 mRNA (more than threefold background) are
found after simple nerve transection, but few or none are found in
either of the experiments involving colchicine injection.
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Degranulation of mast cells influences IL-6 mRNA in neurons
Injection of the mast cell degranulating agent 48/80, but not
saline, into the uninjured sciatic nerve induced IL-6 mRNA in medium
and large neurons in the ipsilateral DRG (Figs.
4, 5). IL-6
mRNA was seen in L5 DRG removed 24 or 48, but not 6, hr after injection
of 48/80. Approximately one-fifth of neurons were seen to contain IL-6
mRNA after 48/80 injection. Given that 48/80 disrupts the blood-nerve
barrier (Harvey et al., 1994 ), we investigated whether intraneural
injection of serum or surgical disruption of the blood-nerve barrier
(Gentili et al., 1981 ) was a sufficient stimulus for IL-6 induction in
neurons. Neither neurolysis nor injection of up to 5 µl of serum into
the nerve induced IL-6 in DRG neurons (data not shown). These
observations suggest that degranulation of endoneurial mast cells
induces IL-6 mRNA in neurons by a mechanism more complicated than
simple increase in vascular permeability.

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Figure 4.
A, Light-field photomicrograph of
IL-6 in situ hybridization preparation of L5 DRG
ipsilateral to a sciatic nerve that had been injected with 48/80, a
mast cell degranulating agent. One heavily labeled neuron is seen.
B, Dark-field photomicrograph of IL-6 in
situ hybridization preparation of DRG ipsilateral to transected
sciatic nerve. C, Dark-field photomicrograph of IL-6
in situ hybridization of DRG ipsilateral to sciatic
nerve transection in a rat that had also been injected
intraperitoneally with a mast cell stabilizing agent, cromolyn sodium.
Note that the labeling evident after nerve transection is reduced by
injection of cromolyn sodium. Magnification: A, 1120×;
B, C, 180×.
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Figure 5.
Quantification of IL-6 mRNA labeling to show the
effects of 48/80 and cromolyn sodium. Again, each point represents a
single DRG neuron, with labeling index as the y-axis and
volume as the y-axis (log-log scale). A,
DRG associated with nerve injected with 48/80. B, DRG
associated with nerve injected with saline. C, DRG
associated with nerve transected 5 d previously. D,
DRG associated with nerve transected 5 d previously with
intraperitoneal injection of cromolyn for 5 d before and after
nerve transection. Note that 48/80 mimics and cromolyn sodium blocks
the induction of IL-6 mRNA by nerve transection.
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Not only does degranulation of endoneurial mast cells induce IL-6 mRNA
in DRG neurons, but agents that stabilize mast cells attenuate the
induction of IL-6 mRNA. Injected for 5 d before and after nerve
transection, cromolyn sodium (Fig. 4) or ketotifen (data not shown)
substantially reduced the induction of IL-6 mRNA (Figs. 4, 5).
Effects of cytokines on IL-6 induction
TNF- is present in the granules of resident mast cells, (Gordon
and Galli, 1990 ), mediates the initiation of some inflammatory reactions by mast cells (Echtenacher et al., 1996 ; Malaviya et al.,
1996 ), and stimulates IL-6 synthesis in many cell types (Brach et al.,
1990 ), including cortical neurons in vitro (Ringheim et al.,
1997 ). Therefore, TNF- was deemed to be one candidate signaling molecule from injured nerves to stimulate IL-6 synthesis in neurons. However, a single intraneural injection of TNF- (100 ng) did not
induce enough IL-6 mRNA in DRG neurons to be detected by in situ hybridization. In a similar manner, intraneural injection of
IL-1 (100 ng) failed to stimulate IL-6 mRNA in DRG neurons. Although
not supportive of the hypothesis that endogenous IL-1 and/or TNF-
are responsible for IL-6 mRNA induction after nerve injury, these
negative results with a single technique do not exclude the possibility.
Increased death of axotomized DRG neurons in IL-6 / mice
Survival of neurons in L5 DRG after sciatic nerve transection was
compared in IL-6 / and wild-type mice. IL-6 / mice breed well
and appear normal but react abnormally to traumatic or infectious challenge (Fattori et al., 1994 ; Kopf et al., 1994 ; Ramsay et al.,
1994 ; Chai et al., 1996 ; Cressman et al., 1996 ).
Two weeks after transection of the sciatic nerve at its origin in nine
wild-type mice, the mean ratio of neuron counts in ipsilateral versus
contralateral L5 DRG decreased by 30% (Table 1). In previous studies in rats, death of
L5 DRG was estimated by cell counting as 14 or 23% at 10 or 30 d
after sciatic nerve transection at midthigh (Arvidsson et al., 1986 ;
Himes and Tessler, 1989 ) and, by stereology, as 22% at 15 d after
spinal nerve transection (Vestergaard et al., 1997 ). The level of
transection in rats in the latter study is similar to that in mice in
the present study. These data indicate that, in C57BL6/129 mice, death
of axotomized DRG neurons is comparable to that in rats.
The mean decrease in ratio of counts in ipsilateral versus
contralateral L5 DRG after sciatic nerve transection in nine IL-6 /
mice was 43% (Table 1), translating to 45% more neuronal loss than in
wild-type mice. We interpret the excessive decrease in neuronal numbers
in L5 DRG after sciatic nerve transection in IL-6 / mice to
indicate that endogenous IL-6 induced by nerve injury contributes to
the survival of injured neurons.
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DISCUSSION |
IL-6 is induced in neurons by a positive injury signal
The effects of intraneural injection of colchicine indicate that
IL-6 induction is triggered by a positive rather than negative signal
from injured nerves. Three other examples establish a precedent for
this mechanism. The induction of p75 mRNA in motoneurons also appears
to depend on a positive retrograde axonal signal (Moix et al., 1991 ;
Greeson et al., 1992 ), although for these neurons, it is not possible
to exclude an influence from degenerating terminals of the central
projections of sensory neurons. The induction of galanin in DRG neurons
depends in part on release of leukemia inhibitory factor (LIF)
from the nerve stump (Corness et al., 1996 ; Sun and Zigmond, 1996 ) but
also on release from a chronic inhibition by NGF (Verge et al., 1995 ;
Corness et al., 1998 ). Perhaps the best documentation of a positive
inductive signal from injured axons is for long-term hyperexcitability
in Aplysia neurons (Gunstream et al., 1995 ).
The positive nature of the initial signal and the brief duration of
IL-6 induction are unusual among the consequences of nerve injury on
nerve cell bodies. Perhaps other growth factors with relatively brief
induction in neurons after nerve injury, such as BDNF (Kobayashi et
al., 1996 ; Verge et al., 1996 ; Averill et al., 1997 ; Tonra et al.,
1998 ) and basic FGF (Ji et al., 1995 ), also are induced by a
positive signal from the nerve and are involved in neuronal survival
after axotomy.
The present studies have emphasized cellular rather than molecular
signals that induce IL-6 mRNA in DRG neurons. In a variety of cell
types, IL-6 synthesis is stimulated strongly by several extracellular
molecules, including lipopolysaccharide (Zhang et al., 1994 ), IL-1
(Zhang et al., 1990 ), TNF- (Brach et al., 1990 ; Ringheim et al.,
1997 ), LIF (Villiger et al., 1993 ), cardiotrophin-1 (Robledo et al.,
1997 ), oncostatin-1 (Brown et al., 1991 ), interferon- (Faggioli et
al., 1997 ), granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (Cicco et
al., 1990 ), stem cell factor, (Gagari et al., 1997 ), histamine (Mor et
al., 1995 ; Takamatsu and Nakao, 1998 ), leukotriene B4 (Brach et al.,
1992 ), prostaglandins (Leal-Berumen et al., 1995 ; Fiebich
et al., 1997 ), and reactive oxidative species (Shibanuma et al., 1994 ).
With respect to intracellular signaling, IL-6 gene expression is
dominated by NF- B (Zhang et al., 1990 ; Lord et al., 1991 ; Sha et
al., 1995 ) but is influenced by other transcription factors, such as
NF-IL-6 (Matsusaka et al., 1993 ; Zhang et al., 1994 ), Sp1 (Kang et al.,
1996 ), and AP-1 (Dendorfer et al., 1994 ), plus the transcription
repressor recombination signal sequence binding protein (Kannabiran et
al., 1997 ). NF- B is constitutively expressed in neurons (Kaltschmidt
et al., 1994 ), where it is perturbed by nerve injury (Doyle and Hunt,
1997 ; Ma and Bisby, 1998 ). Candidate molecules for the initiation of
the signaling that induces IL-6 in neurons must be present in injured nerves, are likely to be among those that are known to stimulate IL-6
synthesis in non-neuronal cells, probably activate the NF- B signaling pathway, and should have receptors on some but not all axons.
Possible implication of mast cells in induction of IL-6 mRNA
in neurons
Intraneural injection of 48/80 was sufficient stimulus to induce
IL-6 mRNA in neurons. It seems probable that this effect of 48/80 was
attributable to mast cell degranulation rather than nonspecific tissue
damage or inflammation. Doses of 48/80 slightly higher than used here
do not induce gross axonal damage or wallerian degeneration, and axonal
interruption alone is not sufficient to induce IL-6 synthesis in
neurons. One possible mechanism of action of 48/80 is breakdown of the
blood-nerve barrier (Harvey et al., 1994 ). However, neither increasing
of the permeability of nerve vasculature by surgical manipulation nor
injection of serum was sufficient to induce IL-6 mRNA in DRG neurons.
We conclude that one or more of the molecules released from
degranulated mast cells triggers a retrograde axonal signal that
induces IL-6 mRNA.
Two agents that interfere with mast cell degranulation also mitigate
the induction of IL-6 in neurons after nerve injury. Although the
actions of these pharmacological agents may not be restricted to mast
cells, the observations again are consistent with the hypothesis that
mast cells in the stump of a transected nerve are a source of
retrograde signals that induce IL-6 synthesis in DRG neurons.
Mast cells are known best for IgE-dependent responses to parasites and
detrimental allergic reactions. However, mast cells have been shown
recently to counteract bacterial infection and stimulate neutrophil
extravasation, both actions mediated through the release of TNF-
(Echtenacher et al., 1996 ; Malaviya et al., 1996 ). Results of the
present experiments raise the possibility that mast cells have a
beneficial action in the PNS: stimulation of synthesis of IL-6 to
support axotomized neurons.
Endogenous IL-6 contributes to neuronal survival after
nerve injury
Endogenous IL-6 mitigates the death of sensory neurons after
axotomy. This statement is justified by evidence that the decrease in
neuronal numbers in L5 DRG after nerve transection is 45% greater in
IL-6 / mice than in control mice.
Whereas the absence of endogenous IL-6 in mutant mice results in the
death of sensory neurons after axotomy, infusion of exogenous IL-6 was
not found to counteract death of facial motor neurons after injury in
newborn rats (Li et al., 1994 ). One possible explanation for this
paradox is that IL-6 is induced to biologically effective concentrations in the immediate vicinity of axotomized neurons (Murphy
et al., 1995 ) so that exogenous IL-6 is superfluous in this circumstance.
The lack of IL-6 in mutant mice is not compensated by CNTF or LIF,
which are active on DRG neurons and use gp130 as their signaling
receptor. In contrast, null mutation of the LIF or CNTF gene alone does
not impair neuronal survival after axotomy, although mutation of both
genes does lead to increased neuronal death (Sendtner et al., 1996 ).
Also, the absence of LIF in mutant mice has noncompensable consequences
on neuropeptide synthesis in axotomized sympathetic and sensory neurons
(Rao et al., 1993 ; Corness et al., 1996 ; Sun and Zigmond, 1996 ). The
lack of compensation in the present experiments may reflect different
sites of synthesis for the three cytokines; only IL-6 is synthesized in
DRG neurons after nerve injury (Sendtner et al., 1992 ; Seniuk et al.,
1992 ; Banner and Patterson, 1994 ; Curtis et al., 1994 ; Murphy et al.,
1995 ).
Although IL-6 is neurotoxic under some circumstances (Campbell et al.,
1993 ), endogenous IL-6 supports axotomized neurons just as another
cytokine with toxic properties, TNF- , supports ischemic neurons
(Bruce et al., 1997 ).
A major negative signal, interruption of retrograde trophic support,
leads to the death of many DRG neurons after nerve injury. Results of
our experiments indicate that an additional positive signal leads to
induction of IL-6, which counteracts the tendency to neuronal death.
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FOOTNOTES |
Received Aug. 10, 1998; revised March 1, 1999; accepted March 9, 1999.
This work was supported by grants to P.M.R. from the Medical Research
Council of Canada and the International Institute for Research in
Paraplegia. P.G.M was supported by a fellowship from the Rick Hansen
Man in Motion Foundation, and L.B. was supported by a studentship from
the Medical Research Council of Canada.
Correspondence should be addressed to Peter Richardson, Division of
Neurosurgery, Montreal General Hospital, 1650 Cedar Avenue, Montreal,
Canada H3G 1A4.
 |
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L. R. Watkins and S. F. Maier
Beyond Neurons: Evidence That Immune and Glial Cells Contribute to Pathological Pain States
Physiol Rev,
October 1, 2002;
82(4):
981 - 1011.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
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C. L. Parish, D. I. Finkelstein, W. Tripanichkul, A. R. Satoskar, J. Drago, and M. K. Horne
The Role of Interleukin-1, Interleukin-6, and Glia in Inducing Growth of Neuronal Terminal Arbors in Mice
J. Neurosci.,
September 15, 2002;
22(18):
8034 - 8041.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
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E. Juttler, V. Tarabin, and M. Schwaninger
Interleukin-6 (IL-6): A Possible Neuromodulator Induced by Neuronal Activity
Neuroscientist,
June 1, 2002;
8(3):
268 - 275.
[Abstract]
[PDF]
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S. Sallmann, E. Juttler, S. Prinz, N. Petersen, U. Knopf, T. Weiser, and M. Schwaninger
Induction of Interleukin-6 by Depolarization of Neurons
J. Neurosci.,
December 1, 2000;
20(23):
8637 - 8642.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
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Y. Y. Wu and R. A. Bradshaw
Activation of the Stat3 Signaling Pathway Is Required for Differentiation by Interleukin-6 in PC12-E2 Cells
J. Biol. Chem.,
January 21, 2000;
275(3):
2147 - 2156.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
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