Previous Article | Next Article 
The Journal of Neuroscience, June 15, 1999, 19(12):4718-4726
Temperature Modulation Reveals Three Distinct Stages of
Wallerian Degeneration
Jack W.
Tsao ,
Edwin B.
George, and
John W.
Griffin
Department of Neurology, Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore,
Maryland 21287
 |
ABSTRACT |
After peripheral nerve transection, axons distal to the cut site
rapidly degenerate, a process termed Wallerian degeneration. In
wild-type mice the compound action potential (CAP) disappears by 3 d. Previous studies have demonstrated that cold temperatures and lower
extracellular calcium ion (Ca2+) concentrations can
slow the rate of Wallerian degeneration. We have incubated isolated
sciatic nerve segments from wild-type and C57BL/Wld mice (which carry a
gene slowing Wallerian degeneration) in vitro at 25 and
37°C. At 25°C we found that the degeneration rate of wild-type
axons was slowed dramatically, with the CAP preserved up to
7 d post-transection. In contrast, at 37°C the CAPs were minimal
at 2 d. When the temperature of wild-type nerves was raised to
37°C after 24-72 hr at 25°C, degeneration occurred within the
subsequent 24 hr. Wld nerves, too, were preserved longer at 25°C but,
on return to 37°C, degenerated promptly. Cooling the nerve within 12 hr after axotomy enhanced axonal preservation. Neither wild-type nor
Wld nerves showed different degeneration rates when they were incubated
with 250 µM or 5 or 10 mM extracellular Ca2+ for 1-2 d, suggesting that an abrupt increase
in intracellular Ca2+ occurs at the time of axonal
destruction. Wallerian degeneration, thus, appears to progress through
three distinct stages. Initiation occurs at the time of injury with
subsequent temperature-dependent and -independent phases. Nerves appear
to remain intact and are able to exclude Ca2+ from
entering until an as yet unknown process finally increases axolemmal permeability.
Key words:
Wallerian degeneration; temperature; C57BL/Wld mice; axonal degeneration; calcium; in vitro
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Transection of a peripheral nerve
initiates the processes of Wallerian degeneration. In giant squid,
crayfish, and fish the isolated axons may be preserved for months, with
proteins continuing to be transported in the axoplasm and supplied by
surrounding glia (Sheller and Bittner, 1992
; Tanner et al., 1995a
,b
;
Raabe et al., 1996
). In contrast, injured axons in rodents degenerate within 3 d, and the nerve consequently becomes unable to conduct a
compound action potential (CAP) on application of an external electrical stimulus (Luttges et al., 1976
). For a CAP to be conducted, the plasma membrane and the transmembrane voltage-gated ion channels must remain intact, and the normal intracellular ion levels must be
preserved. The existence of the C57BL/Wld (formerly known as the
C57BL/Ola) mouse strain, carrying an autosomal dominant mutation (Wlds) slowing the rate of Wallerian degeneration
(CAPs can be conducted up to 3 weeks post-transection), demonstrated
for the first time that rapid degeneration in mammals is not a
necessary consequence of axotomy (Lunn et al., 1989
; Perry et al.,
1990a
; Tsao et al., 1994
). It is also clear that Wallerian degeneration
is an active process, with an initiating mechanism that sets into
motion a cascade of events leading to the final destruction of axons.
The precise sequence of events that leads to axonal destruction is not known.
Experiments on Wallerian degeneration in mammalian, lower vertebrate,
and invertebrate axons have all demonstrated that cold temperatures can
slow the rate of progression (Gamble et al., 1957
; Gamble and Jha,
1958
; Usherwood et al., 1968
; Wang, 1985
; Bittner, 1988
; Sea et al.,
1995
). This effect has been attributed variously to an alteration in
the activity of degradative enzymes (changing the Q10 by
threefold) or the rate of axoplasmic transport (Cancalon, 1982
, 1985
).
Additionally, researchers have demonstrated a link between the
intracellular and extracellular calcium ion concentration
([Ca2+]i/o) and the time course
of axonal sealing and degeneration (Schlaepfer and Bunge, 1973
;
Schlaepfer, 1974
, 1977
; Krause et al., 1994
; Fern et al., 1995
; George
et al., 1995
; Eddleman et al., 1997
, 1998
). Axoplasmic
Ca2+ concentrations of 100 µM induce
vesicle-mediated sealing, although a higher
[Ca2+]i may be needed for the
deleterious effects (Krause et al., 1994
; Eddleman et al., 1997
, 1998
).
The experiments of Schlaepfer and Bunge (1973)
, Glass et al. (1994)
,
and George et al. (1995)
suggest that degeneration proceeds only when
[Ca2+]o is >300 µM.
In wild-type axons axonal inability to continue conducting CAPs occurs
simultaneously with axonal destruction (McDonald, 1972
). In Wld mice
the first electrophysiologically detectable event in Wallerian
degeneration is axonal inability to continue conducting CAPs although
the morphology remains relatively preserved (Tsao et al., 1994
). Via
monitoring the disappearance of CAPs and axonal morphology, this study
also demonstrated that axonal degeneration had similar rates in
vivo and in vitro. Using an in vitro system (described in Tsao et al., 1994
), we have investigated the effect of
temperature and media [Ca2+] on the time course of
axonal degeneration (duration of prolonged CAP and, in some
experiments, the rate of decline). We asked whether axonal loss in
mouse nerves could be delayed by cooling the external media temperature
to 25°C and, if so, when, after injury, cooling had to be initiated
to prolong axonal survival. Finally, by varying [Ca2+]o, we addressed the
question of whether intra-axonal Ca2+ increases
gradually after axotomy or whether there is an abrupt transition from
low [Ca2+]i concentrations to high
concentrations, accompanied by loss of the CAP and axonal cytoskeleton.
Parts of this paper have been published previously (Tsao and
George, 1996
; Tsao et al., 1997
).
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Sciatic nerve preparation. C57BL/Wld mice were bred
in the Johns Hopkins Hospital (Baltimore, MD) from mice originally
supplied by Harlan-Olac (Bicester, UK). C57BL/6N mice (control,
wild-type) were supplied by Harlan Sprague Dawley (Indianapolis, IN).
Twelve-week-old mice were used in the experiments and were killed by
cervical dislocation. The sciatic nerves were removed and, for the
Ca2+ concentration experiments, desheathed with a
microsurgical knife (Roboz Surgical Instrument, Rockville, MD) and then
placed into 1 ml of serum-free Optimem I medium (Life Technologies,
Gaithersburg, MD) or DME/F-12 medium (Sigma, St. Louis, MO)
supplemented with CaCl2 to give a Ca2+
concentration of 250 µM or 5 or 10 mM. Both
media contained penicillin and streptomycin (Life Technologies), each
at a concentration of 5 IU/ml. Media were gassed with 95%
O2/5% CO2 to give a pH of 7.4 at 25 and
37°C in a humidified incubator and were changed every 3 d. All
animals were cared for under the guidelines issued by Johns Hopkins
University (Baltimore, MD).
To investigate the effect of temperature on the rate of Wallerian
degeneration, we cultured one nerve from each mouse (Wld and 6N)
at 25°C, with the contralateral nerve cultured at 37°C. To
determine whether cooling nerves for a period of time at 25°C could
slow or halt Wallerian degeneration subsequently at 37°C, we
incubated wild-type nerves at 25°C for 24, 48, and 72 hr, followed by
24 hr at 37°C. Conversely, the time when degeneration could no longer
be slowed by cooling was determined by incubating wild-type nerves for
3, 6, 9, 12, 14, 16, 18, and 24 hr at 37°C, followed by incubation at
25°C, for a total of 48 hr in vitro.
To examine the role of extracellular (media) Ca2+
concentrations on the degeneration rate, we incubated wild-type and Wld
nerves for 48 hr in 250 µM or 5 or 10 mM
Ca2+. Other nerves were incubated first for 24 hr in
5 or 10 mM Ca2+, followed by 24 hr in
250 µM Ca2+, or for 24 hr in 250 µM Ca2+, followed by 24 hr in 5 or 10 mM Ca2+. A further permutation was
introduced by using two temperatures, 25 and 37°C.
Electrophysiology and tissue examination. Between 1 and
11 d, both A (rapidly conducting, large myelinated fiber) and C
(slowly conducting, small unmyelinated fiber) waves of the CAP were
measured by placing the sciatic nerves in Ringer's solution
[containing (in mM) 135 NaCl, 2.5 KCl, 10 D-glucose, 1 MgCl2, 2.5 CaCl2, and 6 HEPES, pH 7.4] at room
temperature. The proximal and distal ends were placed onto bipolar
silver electrodes (proximal end to the stimulating electrode and distal
end to the recording electrode) while the middle of the nerve remained
immersed in Ringer's solution. An inter-electrode distance of 0.5-1
cm was established so that the stimulating electrode did not interfere
with the recorded signal. Adipose tissue adherent to the nerve at
either the stimulating or recording end was found to decrease the CAP
intensity; thus, care was taken to dissect the nerve free of such tissue.
Stimulating pulses of 200 µsec duration were delivered at 1 sec
intervals via an optical isolation unit (Isoflex, A.M.P.I., Jerusalem,
Israel), and the maximum fast monophasic A wave and the slower C wave
were recorded. Using previously described methods (Perry et al., 1990b
,
1992
), we analyzed the maximal peak height and peak area of both A and
C waves with the Sigavg Program (Cambridge Electronic Design,
Cambridge, UK) after digitization (CED 1401) at 80 kHz and found them
to be equivalent (Tsao et al., 1994
). Selected nerves were fixed in 2%
paraformaldehyde, osmicated for 2 hr, infiltrated with glycerol, and
then teased apart and examined by light microscopy.
Statistical analysis. Data were analyzed with the Statview
4.0 program (Abacus Concepts, Berkeley, CA). Significance
(p < 0.05) was assessed by using either ANOVA,
followed by the Student's t test if ANOVA showed
significance, or the paired t test.
 |
RESULTS |
Axonal degeneration in vivo and
in vitro
We confirmed that axonal degeneration in vivo and
in vitro in 6N nerves was comparable, with ~2.5% of the
CAP (relative to control) remaining at 2 d, as previously reported
(Tsao et al., 1994
). The act of axotomy and removing the nerves for
culturing was found to reduce the CAP A wave by ~30% within 3 hr,
after which the nerve was stable for the next 21 hr (Fig.
1A,B). In vivo the CAP after axotomy was found to remain constant for the first 24 hr, actually rising in the first 6 hr (Fig.
2A,B). In all, 80% of
the CAP was lost between 24 and 36 hr. A similar time course was found
in vitro (Fig. 2A,B).

View larger version (9K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 1.
Compound action potential (CAP) from C57BL/6N
sciatic nerves incubated for 0, 1, 2, 3, 6, 9, and 24 hr at 37°C in
Optimem I medium. The CAP values demonstrate a decrease in CAP size in
the first 3 hr after removal of the nerve to culture but stable values
during the next 21 hr. A, A wave (from myelinated
fibers). B, C wave (from unmyelinated fibers).
*p < 0.05, relative to time 0 hr.
|
|

View larger version (12K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 2.
CAP from C57BL/6N sciatic nerves axotomized 0-48
hr in vivo and in vitro.
A, A wave. B, C wave. In the first 6 hr
after axotomy the CAP actually is increased. This is unlikely to be
attributable to decreased temporal dispersion because the area of the
waveform is increased. In both A and C waves, 80% of the CAP is lost
between 24 and 36 hr. A similar time course for loss of the CAP is
seen in vivo and in vitro.
*p < 0.05.
|
|
The effect of temperature changes on the rate of
axonal degeneration
Nerves from 6N mice maintained at 25°C showed a prolonged
presence of CAPs (A and C waves) (Fig.
3A,B). Light microscopic examination of teased fibers confirmed that myelinated axons remained intact (data not shown). The incubation of nerves at 25°C for 1-3 d,
followed by 37°C for 1 d, demonstrated that previous cooling could not prevent the subsequent decrease in the CAP (Fig.
4A,B), because at the
end of this additional 24 hr only small CAPs could be detected. The CAP
at intermediate time points after the return to 37°C was not
significantly different from that seen in nerves incubated continuously
at 37°C.

View larger version (13K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 3.
CAP from C57BL/6N sciatic nerves maintained at 25 and 37°C in Optimem I medium for 1-8 d. A, A wave.
B, C wave. Note that the CAP disappears within 3 d
at 37°C, whereas it is preserved to 7 d at 25°C.
*p < 0.05.
|
|

View larger version (22K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 4.
CAP from C57BL/6N sciatic nerves maintained at
25°C in Optimem I medium for a period from 6 hr to 3 d, followed
by 1 d at 37°C. A, A wave. B, C
wave. The CAP for nerves maintained for the duration of the experiment
at both 25 and 37°C (from Fig. 1) is shown for comparison. Note that
the CAP disappears within the subsequent 24 hr rather than the
customary 48 hr seen with newly axotomized nerves.
|
|
If they were cooled to 25°C within 12 hr, 6N nerves that were
incubated initially at 37°C had complete and prolonged preservation of the CAP A and C waves (mimicking the rate seen with continuous incubation at 25°C) (Fig.
5A,B). If the nerves were
cooled after this time had elapsed, the CAP amplitude was found to be
diminished at 48 hr.

View larger version (23K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 5.
CAP from C57BL/6N sciatic nerves at 48 hr
incubation in Optimem I medium. Nerves were incubated for 3-24 hr at
37°C before being cooled to 25°C. The CAP values at time 0, 3, and
24 hr at 37°C are shown for comparison to demonstrate
the decrease in CAP size in the first 3 hr after removal of the nerve
to culture. A, A wave. B, C wave.
Complete preservation of both A and C waves is seen only if the cooling
occurs by 12 hr after axotomy. *p < 0.05.
|
|
Wld nerves also showed a delay in the degeneration rate on cooling to
25°C (Fig. 6A,B). On
returning the nerves to 37°C after 3-4 d at 25°C, the CAP also
returned to values not significantly different from those nerves
incubated for the same length of time at 37°C (data not shown),
similar to the effect seen in wild-type nerves. At 37°C in
vitro the nerve survival was prolonged to 9 d, further
extending previous data (Perry et al., 1990b
; Tsao et al., 1994
).

View larger version (15K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 6.
CAP from C57BL/Wld sciatic nerves maintained at 25 and 37°C in Optimem I for 1-11 d. A, A wave.
B, C wave. Both waves are preserved with cooler
temperatures. *p < 0.05.
|
|
The effect of extracellular calcium ion concentration on the rate
of Wallerian degeneration
Incubation of wild-type nerves in the presence of 250 µM or 5 or 10 mM external
Ca2+ did not affect the degeneration rate (Fig.
7). Altering Ca2+
concentrations after 24 hr, with or without temperature adjustment, also failed to influence the rate of degeneration (data not shown). Similarly, the rate of axonal degeneration in Wld nerves was unaffected by the three Ca2+ concentrations (data not
shown).

View larger version (12K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 7.
CAP from C57BL/6N sciatic nerves (desheathed)
incubated with either 250 µM or 5 or 10 mM
CaCl2 for 48 hr at 37°C. A, A wave.
B, C wave. *p < 0.05.
|
|
 |
DISCUSSION |
The effect of cooling on the rate of Wallerian degeneration
The effect of cool external temperatures slowing Wallerian
degeneration in vivo is well known (Gamble et al., 1957
;
Gamble and Jha, 1958
; Usherwood et al., 1968
; Wang, 1985
; Sea et al., 1995
). In rats, Sea and colleagues (1995)
showed that the time course
for myelinated axons to degenerate after axotomy was 3 d at 32°C
and 6 d at 23°C. The current results confirm that lowering the
temperature in vitro can delay the progression of Wallerian degeneration (see Fig. 3A,B). The onset of degeneration
appears to be halted in wild-type nerves in the first 1-4 d by
maintaining an external media temperature of 25°C. On raising the
temperature to 37°C, however, the time to complete degeneration was
not the customary 48 hr seen with a constant temperature of 37°C.
Instead, loss of CAP occurred within 24 hr, with a rate similar to that seen in nerves continuously incubated at 37°C between 24 and 48 hr
(see Fig. 4A,B). This suggests that cooling delays a
"final" stage of Wallerian degeneration, but when that stage
commences, it progresses rapidly to completion.
Knowing that a media temperature of 25°C would allow for the
preservation of the axons and, thus, the CAP up to 7 d in
vitro, we asked when after axotomy the cooling had to be initiated
to delay Wallerian degeneration. We found that 100% of the CAP was preserved if the axotomized nerve was cooled from 37 to 25°C within the first 12 hr (all measurements were made at 48 hr for both A and C
waves) (see Fig. 5A,B). These results suggest that there is
a critical period, early after the initial injury and before the
effects of Wallerian degeneration are manifest, during which activation
of the sequence of events leading to axonal destruction may have begun
but is not evident until later. One study supporting this hypothesis is
that of Majno and Karnovsky (1958)
, which showed changes in nerve lipid
composition within the first 6-12 hr after injury, a time when the CAP
appears to be unaffected (see Fig. 2A,B). A change in
temperature to 25°C would result in an alteration of both degradative
enzymes and axonal transport along the Q10's (Cancalon,
1982
, 1985
), either of which might affect the subsequent degeneration
rate. Alternatively, Wallerian degeneration might begin only after an
initial period of time, after which the necessary degradative enzymes,
such as calpains, become active.
Of note also are experiments on neural damage in head trauma that have
revealed that axotomy from shear injury generally does not occur.
Instead, subtle changes
an increase in axolemmal permeability, neurofilament compaction, and impairment of axoplasmic
transport
appear within 1-6 hr, a time when axons still appear
morphologically intact (Povlishock, 1992
; Povlishock and Christman,
1995
; Povlishock and Pettus, 1996
; Povlishock et al., 1997
). The
injured axons finally begin separating from their cell bodies only
after 6-12 hr. The current data are consistent with the hypothesis
that changes in the first 12 hr are responsible for triggering the
subsequent breakdown of the axolemma and cytoskeleton. Additionally,
for the first time on the basis of these results, one could theorize that intervention during this early time might allow Wallerian degeneration to be reversed or halted completely. After 12 hr have
elapsed, it appears that a second stage of Wallerian degeneration has
begun, which either is temperature-independent or requires even lower
temperatures to stop (see Fig. 5A,B).
Interestingly, Wld nerves also showed a temperature dependence in the
degeneration rate (see Fig. 6A,B), suggesting that
the Wlds mutation actively acts to slow the
progression of degeneration. A comparison of Figures 3 and 6 suggests
that the early stages of Wallerian degeneration are prolonged similarly
by cooling in both the 6N and Wld nerves. In contrast, the final stage
in Wld nerves is slow and relatively unaffected by cooling, whereas the final stage of Wallerian degeneration in 6N nerves is rapid at 37°C
but slowed by cooling. The data indicate that the signal initiating
Wallerian degeneration is transduced in Wld axons but does not appear
to propagate as rapidly as in wild-type axons.
The effect of extracellular calcium ion concentration on the rate
of Wallerian degeneration
Intra- and extracellular Ca2+ concentrations
are important in determining the rate of Wallerian degeneration and
activation of degradative enzymes (Schlaepfer, 1974
, 1977
; George et
al., 1995
). Calcium ions are required both to help seal the damaged axon and to induce degeneration later. Axotomy is accompanied by the
entry of calcium ions into the axoplasm, allowing the formation of
membrane vesicles that help to seal the injured axon; this process
requires a minimum axoplasmic Ca2+ concentration of
100 µM (Krause et al., 1994
; Eddleman et al., 1997
,
1998
). An external level of <250 µM
Ca2+ has been shown to retard degeneration of axons
after axotomy (Schlaepfer and Bunge, 1973
; George et al., 1995
).
However, it is not known whether Ca2+ enters axons
at a constant rate after injury or whether the ion exclusion is
maintained until a time when large amounts of Ca2+
suddenly enter, reaching a concentration necessary for degradative enzyme activation. A [Ca2+]o of 5 or
10 mM provides a larger ionic driving force for
Ca2+ entry than a concentration of 250 µM does (physiological
[Ca2+]o is 1-2 mM). Our
experiments examined whether or not maintenance of intact, desheathed
sciatic nerves in low and high external Ca2+
concentrations could affect the rate of Wallerian degeneration and loss
of the CAP. Incubation of nerves in both 5 and 10 mM external Ca2+ did not speed the time course for
axonal degeneration in either wild-type or Wld nerves. Conversely,
incubation of matched contralateral nerves in 250 µM
Ca2+ also did not delay Wallerian degeneration (see
Fig. 7). We were unable to lower media Ca2+ below
250 µM, because this caused the CAP to disappear within 6 hr (our unpublished observations). In both high and low
Ca2+ concentrations, the size of CAPs was similar at
all of the time points that were studied. Because the rate of axonal
degeneration is independent of the driving force for
Ca2+ entry, either the transporter for
Ca2+ influx is saturated easily even at 250 µM Ca2+, or Ca2+
influx is a briefer event for which the duration does not impact on the
overall rate of axonal degeneration. In the latter case plasmalemmal
integrity may be maintained until a point, late in axonal degeneration,
when there is rapid entry of extracellular Ca2+ and
a culminating final catastrophic moment of axonal destruction, rather
than a gradual creeping upward of
[Ca2+]i leading to a crescendoing
degeneration rate.
Further supporting this hypothesis is an x-ray microprobe elemental
analysis of rat sciatic nerves post-transection, which demonstrated a
decrease in intracellular potassium (K+) and
chloride (Cl
) ions and an increase in phosphorus
(P) at 8 hr after injury in myelinated fibers (LoPachin et al., 1990
).
At 16 hr post-transection, elemental values remained the same as at 8 hr, with the exception of a newly elevated intracellular sodium ion
(Na+) concentration. The Ca2+
content of the axoplasm was unaltered at 8 and 16 hr, but its level in
mitochondria was elevated significantly at 16 hr. Only after 48 hr,
when all fibers had degenerated, was increased axoplasmic Ca2+ detected, with mitochondria at that time
showing a >80-fold elevation in Ca2+. This
disruption of elemental homeostasis appears to be concurrent with a
neuronal energy deficit seen 24-48 hr after peripheral nerve axotomy,
which is accompanied by decreased activity of the membrane
Na+-K+-ATPase (Stewart et al.,
1965
; Bachelard and Silva, 1966
). The elemental changes noted by
LoPachin et al. (1990)
are consistent with
Na+-K+-ATPase inhibition; with an
intact plasma membrane Na+ would be excluded,
whereas K+ still would continue to leak through open
ion channels, with Cl
following passively to
maintain electroneutrality. With the K+ gradient
dissipated, Na+ then could enter the axon, leading
to the entry of Ca2+ via
Na+/Ca2+ exchange or the failure
of pumping mechanisms for Ca2+ extrusion or sequestration.
Our data are not consistent with the hypothesis that the act of axotomy
leads to a transient, massive increase in
[Ca2+]i along the entire length of the
axon, which immediately activates the degradative proteases and lipases
involved in Wallerian degeneration. A rise in intra-axonal
Ca2+ concentration to >15 µM (a level
certainly sufficient enough to activate most degradative enzymes) has
been noted in Aplysia axons transected in vitro
(Ziv and Spira, 1993
). The authors of this study estimated that axonal
Ca2+ concentrations quickly returned to basal levels
of 0.05-0.1 µM after the 7-10 min that followed the
sealing of the cut end within 0.5-2 min. They also determined that the
elevation in Ca2+ was attributable to the influx of
extracellular Ca2+ through the cut end of the axon
and through the opening of voltage-gated Ca2+
channels along the entire length of the axon. If proteases and lipases
are activated at the initial time of axonal injury, the delayed
destruction of the axon that is seen (CAP remains nearly 100% at 24 hr
after axotomy and then declines by 80% over the next 12 hr) occurs
once sufficient plasmalemma and cytoskeleton have been degraded. In
this case the effects of cooling would be similar at all phases of
axonal degeneration, which our data do not support.
An alternative hypothesis is that the transient rise in
Ca2+ might activate axonal kinases and phosphatases.
The subsequent action of axonal transport on these modulators of
protein phosphorylation might lead to the activation of
Ca2+ channels or Ca2+ porters
located at the nodes of Ranvier or along the length of the axolemma.
The activation of mediators of Ca2+ influx later
during the process of Wallerian degeneration then allows a catastrophic
rise in axonal Ca2+ concentrations, leading to
sudden, rapid destruction of the axon. This hypothesis gives rise to at
least two phases of axonal degeneration and so is consistent with both
the observed temperature effect and the insensitivity to external
Ca2+ levels.
In the latter scenario, individual axons degenerate very rapidly at the
end of the multiphasic Wallerian degeneration. The distribution of
axonal calibers, concentration and rate of transport of the
"factor" responsible for Ca2+ channel
activation, and the ratio of the number of fibers of the sensory and
motor lineages all affect the percentage of fibers that remain at any
given time. The gradual decline in the measured CAP between
24 and 48 hr is, thus, a measure of a declining population of axons
able to conduct CAPs.
Conclusions
The data lead us to propose a three-stage model of Wallerian
degeneration (Fig. 8). The first stage
occurs during the first 12 hr after axotomy at 37°C and is prolonged
by low temperatures. Events during the first stage appear to initiate
the process leading to Wallerian degeneration or "light the fuse."
The second stage occurs during the period 12-24 hr after axotomy at
37°C. During this stage "the fuse is burning," because axonal
degeneration is not yet evident (the morphology is normal, and the CAP
remains close to 100% until 24 hr) but can no longer be delayed by
cooling. It may be that this stage is independent of stage 1, because a delayed stage 2 is not seen when cooled nerves are warmed. Instead, nerves cooled during stage 1 appear to enter stage 3 immediately on
warming, suggesting that the events of stage 2 may proceed despite the
prolongation of stage 1. Alternatively, an external temperature of
25°C may not be low enough to alter the events of stage 2.
The third and final stage, which encompasses the rapid degeneration of
axons during the period 24-48 hr (80% of the CAP is lost between 24 and 36 hr) at 37°C, occurs only after stages 1 and 2 are complete.
This stage appears to correspond to the rapid enzymatic digestion of
the axonal components. We speculate that catastrophic
Ca2+ entry marks the transition between stages 1 and
2, which enable the Ca2+ influx, and stage 3, which
results from protease and lipase activation by the
Ca2+ influx.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received March 10, 1999; accepted March 26, 1999.
This work was supported by a grant from the National Institutes of
Health to J.W.G. and a National Institutes of Health National Research
Service Award postdoctoral fellowship (Training Grant NS 14784) to
J.W.T. We thank C. W. Tsao for assistance with the teased nerve
fiber preparation.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. J. W. Tsao, 123 Edgewood
Avenue, San Francisco, CA 94117-3712.
Dr. Tsao's present address: Department of Neurology, University of
California-San Francisco, Box 0114, 505 Parnassus Avenue, San
Francisco, CA 94143.
Dr. George's present address: Department of Neurology, Wayne State
University School of Medicine, 6E University Health Center, 4201 St.
Antoine, Detroit, MI 48201.
 |
REFERENCES |
-
Bachelard HS,
Silva GD
(1966)
The Na+,K+-activated adenosine triphosphatase in degenerating peripheral nerve.
Arch Biochem Biophys
117:98-105[ISI][Medline].
-
Bittner GD
(1988)
Long-term survival of severed distal axonal stumps in vertebrates and invertebrates.
Am Zool
28:1165-1179.
-
Cancalon P
(1982)
Slow flow in axons detached from their perikarya.
J Cell Biol
95:989-992[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Cancalon P
(1985)
Influence of temperature on various mechanisms associated with neuronal growth and nerve regeneration.
Prog Neurobiol
25:27-92[ISI][Medline].
-
Eddleman CS,
Ballinger ML,
Smyers ME,
Godell CM,
Fishman HM,
Bittner GD
(1997)
Repair of plasmalemmal lesions by vesicles.
Proc Natl Acad Sci USA
94:4745-4750[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Eddleman CS,
Ballinger ML,
Smyers ME,
Fishman HM,
Bittner GD
(1998)
Endocytotic formation of vesicles and other membranous structures induced by Ca2+ and axolemmal injury.
J Neurosci
18:4029-4041[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Fern R,
Ransom BR,
Waxman SG
(1995)
Voltage-gated calcium channels in CNS white matter: role in anoxic injury.
J Neurophysiol
74:369-377[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Gamble HJ,
Jha BD
(1958)
Some effect of temperature upon the rate and progress of Wallerian degeneration in mammalian nerve fibers.
J Anat
92:171-177[ISI][Medline].
-
Gamble HJ,
Goldby F,
Smith GMR
(1957)
Effect of temperature on the degeneration of nerve fibers.
Nature
179:527.
-
George EB,
Glass JD,
Griffin JW
(1995)
Axotomy-induced axonal degeneration is mediated by calcium influx through ion-specific channels.
J Neurosci
15:6445-6452[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Glass JD,
Schryer BL,
Griffin JW
(1994)
Calcium-mediated degeneration of the axonal cytoskeleton in the Ola mouse.
J Neurochem
62:2472-2475[ISI][Medline].
-
Krause TL,
Fishman HM,
Ballinger ML,
Bittner GD
(1994)
Extent and mechanism of sealing in transected giant axons of squid and earthworms.
J Neurosci
14:6638-6651[Abstract].
-
LoPachin Jr RM,
LoPachin VR,
Saubermann AJ
(1990)
Effects of axotomy on distribution and concentration of elements in rat sciatic nerve.
J Neurochem
54:320-332[ISI][Medline].
-
Lunn ER,
Perry VH,
Brown MC,
Rosen H,
Gordon S
(1989)
Absence of Wallerian degeneration does not hinder regeneration in peripheral nerve.
Eur J Neurosci
1:27-33[ISI][Medline].
-
Luttges MW,
Kelly PT,
Gerren RA
(1976)
Degenerative changes in mouse sciatic nerves: electrophoretic and electrophysiologic characterizations.
Exp Neurol
50:706-733[ISI][Medline].
-
Majno G,
Karnovsky ML
(1958)
A biochemical and morphological study of myelination and demyelination. II. Lipogenesis in vitro by rat nerves following transection.
J Exp Med
108:197-213[Abstract].
-
McDonald WI
(1972)
The time course of conduction failure during degeneration of a central tract.
Exp Brain Res
14:550-556[ISI][Medline].
-
Perry VH,
Lunn ER,
Brown MC,
Cahusac S,
Gordon S
(1990a)
Evidence that the rate of Wallerian degeneration is controlled by a single autosomal dominant gene.
Eur J Neurosci
2:408-413[ISI][Medline].
-
Perry VH,
Brown MC,
Lunn ER,
Tree P,
Gordon S
(1990b)
Evidence that very slow Wallerian degeneration in C57BL/Ola mice is an intrinsic property of the peripheral nerve.
Eur J Neurosci
2:802-808[ISI][Medline].
-
Perry VH,
Brown MC,
Tsao JW
(1992)
The effectiveness of the gene which slows the rate of Wallerian degeneration in C57BL/Ola mice declines with age.
Eur J Neurosci
4:1000-1002[ISI][Medline].
-
Povlishock JT
(1992)
Traumatically induced axonal injury: pathogenesis and pathobiological implications.
Brain Pathol
2:1-12[ISI][Medline].
-
Povlishock JT,
Christman CW
(1995)
The pathobiology of traumatically induced axonal injury in animals and humans: a review of current thoughts.
J Neurotrauma
12:555-564[ISI][Medline].
-
Povlishock JT,
Pettus EH
(1996)
Traumatically induced axonal damage: evidence for enduring changes in axolemmal permeability with associated cytoskeletal change.
Acta Neurochir [Suppl]
66:81-86[Medline].
-
Povlishock JT,
Marmarou A,
McIntosh T,
Trojanowski JQ,
Moroi J
(1997)
Impact acceleration injury in the rat: evidence for focal axolemmal change and related neurofilament sidearm alteration.
J Neuropathol Exp Neurol
56:347-359[ISI][Medline].
-
Raabe TD,
Nguyen T,
Archer C,
Bittner GD
(1996)
Mechanisms of the maintenance and eventual degradation of neurofilament proteins in the distal segments of severed goldfish Mauthner axons.
J Neurosci
16:1605-1613[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Schlaepfer WW
(1974)
Calcium-induced degeneration of axoplasm in isolated segments of rat peripheral nerve.
Brain Res
69:203-215[ISI][Medline].
-
Schlaepfer WW
(1977)
Structural alterations of peripheral nerve induced by the calcium ionophore A23187.
Brain Res
136:1-9[ISI][Medline].
-
Schlaepfer WW,
Bunge RP
(1973)
Effects of calcium ion concentration on the degeneration of amputated axons in tissue culture.
J Cell Biol
59:456-470[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Sea T,
Ballinger ML,
Bittner GD
(1995)
Cooling of peripheral myelinated axons retards Wallerian degeneration.
Exp Neurol
133:85-95[ISI][Medline].
-
Sheller RA,
Bittner GD
(1992)
Maintenance and synthesis of proteins for an anucleate axon.
Brain Res
580:68-80[ISI][Medline].
-
Stewart MA,
Passonneau JV,
Lowry OH
(1965)
Substrate changes in peripheral nerve during ischaemia and Wallerian degeneration.
J Neurochem
12:719-727[ISI][Medline].
-
Tanner SL,
Storm EE,
Bittner GD
(1995a)
Maintenance and degradation of proteins in intact and severed axons: implications for the mechanisms of long-term survival of anucleate crayfish axons.
J Neurosci
15:540-548[Abstract].
-
Tanner SL,
Storm EE,
Bittner GD
(1995b)
Protein transport in intact and severed (anucleate) crayfish giant axons.
J Neurochem
64:1491-1501[ISI][Medline].
-
Tsao JW,
George EB
(1996)
Axonal degeneration in vitro: effects of temperature and inhibitory chemical compounds. Paper presented at the XVI International Winter Meeting of the Swiss Society of Neuropathology, St. Moritz, Switzerland, March
-
Tsao JW,
Brown MC,
Carden MJ,
McLean WG,
Perry VH
(1994)
Loss of the compound action potential: an electrophysiological, biochemical, and morphological study of early events in axonal degeneration in the C57BL/Ola mouse.
Eur J Neurosci
6:516-524[ISI][Medline].
-
Tsao JW,
George EB,
Griffin JW
(1997)
Temperature modulation shows three stages of Wallerian degeneration.
Soc Neurosci Abstr
23:1404.
-
Usherwood PNR,
Cochrane DG,
Rees D
(1968)
Changes in structural, physiological, and pharmacological properties of insect excitatory nerve-muscle synapses after motor nerve section.
Nature
318:589-591.
-
Wang GK
(1985)
The long-term excitability of myelinated nerve fibers in the transected frog sciatic nerve.
J Physiol (Lond)
368:309-321[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Ziv NE,
Spira ME
(1993)
Spatiotemporal distribution of Ca2+ following axotomy and throughout the recovery process of cultured Aplysia neurons.
Eur J Neurosci
5:657-668[ISI][Medline].
Copyright © 1999 Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474/99/19124718-09$05.00/0
This article has been cited by other articles:

|
 |

|
 |
 
S. Hall
The response to injury in the peripheral nervous system
J Bone Joint Surg Br,
October 1, 2005;
87-B(10):
1309 - 1319.
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
N. Goldenberg-Cohen, Y. Guo, F. Margolis, Y. Cohen, N. R. Miller, and S. L. Bernstein
Oligodendrocyte Dysfunction after Induction of Experimental Anterior Optic Nerve Ischemia
Invest. Ophthalmol. Vis. Sci.,
August 1, 2005;
46(8):
2716 - 2725.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|