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The Journal of Neuroscience, September 15, 1999, 19(18):7889-7900
Rapid Nuclear Responses to Target-Derived Neurotrophins Require
Retrograde Transport of Ligand-Receptor Complex
Fiona L.
Watson1, 2, 4,
Heather M.
Heerssen1, 2, 4,
Daniel B.
Moheban1, 2, 4,
Michael Z.
Lin5,
Claire M.
Sauvageot1, 2, 3,
Anita
Bhattacharyya1, 3, 4,
Scott L.
Pomeroy5, and
Rosalind A.
Segal1, 2, 4
1 Program in Neuroscience, 2 Department of
Neurobiology, and 3 Department of Microbiology and
Molecular Genetics, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts
02115, 4 Department of Pediatric Oncology, Dana-Farber
Cancer Institute, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, and
5 Division of Neuroscience, Department of Neurology,
Children's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts 02115
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ABSTRACT |
Target-derived neurotrophins initiate signals that begin at nerve
terminals and cross long distances to reach the cell bodies and
regulate gene expression. Neurotrophin receptors, Trks,
themselves serve as retrograde signal carriers. However, it is not yet
known whether the retrograde propagation of Trk activation reflects movement of Trk receptors from neurites to cell bodies or reflects serial activation of stationary Trk molecules. Here, we show that neurotrophins selectively applied to distal neurites of sensory neurons
rapidly induce phosphorylation of the transcription factor cAMP
response element-binding protein (CREB) and also cause a slower
increase in Fos protein expression. Both nuclear responses require
activation of neurotrophin receptors (Trks) at distal nerve endings and
retrograde propagation of Trk activation to the nerve cell bodies.
Using photobleach and recovery techniques to follow biologically
active, green fluorescent protein (GFP)-tagged BDNF receptors
(TrkB-GFP) in live cells during retrograde signaling, we show that
TrkB-GFP moves rapidly from neurites to the cell bodies. This rapid
movement requires ligand binding, Trk kinase activity, and intact
axonal microtubules. When they reach the cell bodies, the activated
TrkB receptors are in a complex with ligand. Thus, the retrograde
propagation of activated TrkB from neurites to cell bodies, although
rapid, reflects microtubule-dependent transport of
phosphorylated Trk-ligand complexes. Moreover, the relocation
of activated Trk receptors from nerve endings to cell bodies is
required for nuclear signaling responses. Together, these data support
a model of retrograde signaling whereby rapid vesicular transport of
ligand-receptor complex from the neurites to the cell bodies mediates
the nuclear responses.
Key words:
retrograde signaling; retrograde transport; c-fos; neurotrophin; Trk; DRG
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INTRODUCTION |
Neurons and the targets they
innervate develop coordinately. Target tissues release neurotrophins
and other trophic factors critical for the survival and differentiation
of presynaptic cells (Levi-Montalcini, 1987 ; Barde, 1989 ; Oppenheim,
1991 ). Neurotrophins initiate these cellular responses by binding and
activating specific receptor tyrosine kinases, Trks, embedded
within the plasma membrane (Kaplan and Stephens, 1994 ; Barbacid, 1995 ;
Bothwell, 1995 ; Kaplan and Miller, 1997 ). NGF preferentially binds TrkA
(Cordon-Cardo et al., 1991 ), BDNF and neurotrophin (NT) 4/5 bind
TrkB (Klein et al., 1991 ), and NT3 binds TrkC (Lamballe et al., 1991 ).
Binding of ligand to receptor causes receptor dimerization and
autophosphorylation (Jing et al., 1992 ; Clary et al., 1994 ). In neurons
with long axons, target-derived neurotrophins bind to Trk receptors at
axonal terminals that can be located up to a meter away from the cell bodies. How then do trophic factors inform the cell bodies of events
occurring at the distal axon terminals?
Classical experiments established that neurotrophins are taken up at
nerve terminals and transported to the cell bodies (Schwab, 1977 ;
Johnson et al., 1987 ). Functional consequences of NGF uptake were
demonstrated recently. Riccio et al. (1997) showed that soluble NGF
applied selectively to the neurites of sympathetic neurons could
initiate a nuclear response in distant cell bodies, but NGF linked to
beads could not do so. These studies indicate that ligand endocytosis
is required to initiate remote signaling in neurons with long axons. It
is possible that the process of endocytosis itself initiates a
signaling cascade (Vieria et al., 1996 ; Saragovi et al., 1998 ) critical
for a retrograde response. Alternatively, the physical transport of an
endocytosed ligand-receptor complex from the neurites to the cell
bodies may indeed be required for nuclear responses.
Recent studies show that stimulation of neurites also initiates an
activation-state change in Trk receptors that propagates rapidly
through axons in a retrograde direction (Ehlers et al., 1995 ;
Bhattacharyya et al., 1997 ; Riccio et al., 1997 ; Senger and Campenot,
1997 ). Surprisingly, the velocity of this retrograde wave of Trk
activation was faster than expected based on published rates of
neurotrophin transport. The rate of ligand transport, determined
in vivo and in vitro using
I125-NGF, has been calculated as 0.2-2
µm/sec, or 2-20 mm/hr (Hendry et al., 1974 ; Claude et al., 1982 ;
Korsching and Thoenen, 1983 ; Palmatier et al., 1984 ; Richardson and
Riopelle, 1984 ; Yip and Johnson, 1986 ; Ure and Campenot, 1997 ). The
rapidity of the Trk response could reflect the use of transport systems
quicker than those hitherto appreciated or could reflect a novel
mechanism of signal propagation involving sequential activation of
stationary Trk molecules.
To define the mechanisms whereby retrograde signals elicit nuclear
responses, we used dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons grown in
compartmented cultures. The compartmented culture system (Campenot, 1977 ) allows selective stimulation of either cell bodies or distal neurites. Here, we show that selective application of neurotrophin to
neurites acts at a distance to induce two nuclear events: rapid phosphorylation of the transcription factor c-AMP response element binding protein (CREB) and subsequent expression of the immediate early
gene product c-fos. We show that both of these nuclear events require activation of Trk receptors in the cell bodies, as well as in
the neurites. Furthermore, using photobleach and recovery to follow
green fluorescent protein (GFP)-tagged receptors in living cells, we
demonstrate that activated Trk receptors use a microtubule-dependent
process to move from the neurites to the cell bodies. These data
support a model of retrograde signaling in which signaling from nerve
terminal to nuclei is achieved by rapid vesicular transport of a
ligand-receptor complex.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Materials and antibodies. BDNF and NGF were a gift
from Dr. Andrew Welcher (Amgen, Thousand Oaks, CA). High molecular
weight marker proteins were purchased from Life Technologies
(Gaithersburg, MD). Acrylamide was purchased from National Diagnostics
(Atlanta, GA). SuperSignal chemiluminescent substrate (ECL) was
purchased from Pierce (Rockford, IL) and enhanced chemifluorescence
(ECF) reagents were purchased from Amersham Pharmacia Biotech
(Arlington Heights, IL). K252a was purchased from Calbiochem (San
Diego, CA). Colchicine and all other reagents were purchased from Sigma (St. Louis, MO).
In previous studies, we characterized an affinity-purified polyclonal
antibody [(pY490 or phosphorylated Trk (pTRK)] that recognizes
the phosphorylated Tyr 490 within the Shc recognition motif of Trks A,
B, and C (Segal et al., 1996 ). The pCREB antibody was a generous gift
from Dr. Michael Greenberg (Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA). The
pCREB antibody recognizes CREB when the transcription factor is
phosphorylated on serine 133 residue (Ginty et al., 1993 , 1994 ). A
polyclonal anti-c-fos antibody was purchased from Santa Cruz
Biotechnology (Santa Cruz, CA) and from Upstate Biotechnology (Lake
Placid, NY). An anti-platelet-derived growth factor receptor antibody
(PDGF-R) was purchased from Santa Cruz Biotechnology. Anti-GFP was
purchased from Clontech Laboratories (Palo Alto, CA). Compartmented
cultures, pin rake, and grease loader were purchased from Tyler
Research (Edmonton, Alberta, Canada).
Cell culture. HeLa cells were maintained in DMEM
containing 5% fetal calf serum, 5% glutamine, and 1% penicillin and
streptomycin at 37°C, 5% CO2. For receptor
activation experiments, HeLa cells were incubated for 1 hr in DMEM and
then exposed to NGF at a final concentration of 100 ng/ml for 5 min.
Compartmented cultures (Campenot cultures) were set up as described by
Campenot (1977 , 1992 , 1997 ). Briefly, the compartmented cultures
consist of a Teflon divider that is fixed with grease to a
collagen-coated 35 mm tissue culture dish. DRG neurons were dissected
from embryonic day 14 rat, dissociated, and plated at ~5.5 × 104 cells per compartmented culture.
Dissociated cells were plated into the center compartment and, over the
course of 4 d, the neurons extended their neurites through the
grease to the side compartments. In this way, the cell bodies are
separated from the neurites by a 0.5 mm Teflon divider. Cells were
plated in DMEM, 5% horse serum, 1% penicillin-streptomycin, and
1 × 10 5 M
5-fluoro-5'-deoxyuridine containing 100 ng/ml BDNF and 100 ng/ml NGF.
On day 2 (D2), the neurotrophin concentration in the media over the
cell bodies was reduced to 10 ng/ml BDNF and 10 ng/ml NGF in the center
compartment while maintaining a 100 ng/ml neurotrophin concentration in
the adjacent side compartments containing the neurites. On D5 in
vitro, the DRG neurons were progressively deprived of
neurotrophins by reducing the neurotrophin concentration to 2.5 ng/ml
at the neurites (side compartments) and 0 ng/ml at the cell bodies
(center compartment). These starved DRG neurons were stimulated and
used on D8 or D9.
A critical feature of this system is that the media bathing the
neurites do not communicate with the media bathing the cell bodies.
Here, we used three methods to ensure that the remote activation of Trk
at the cell bodies did not result from leakage of neurotrophin-rich
media between compartments. First, we added media to the side
compartments for 2 d before plating the cells and used only the
compartmented cultures that showed no leakage. Second, we added
I125-NGF to the side compartments of
cultures in which the neurites of the DRGs are located. We then assayed
the media in the center compartment (in which the cell bodies are
located) for radioactivity. Over the course of 60 min, no detectable
radioactive ligand was recovered in the media bathing the cell bodies
(data not shown). Finally, we applied neurotrophin to the
neurites in the side compartment and then collected the media overlying
the cell bodies from the center compartment. We tested this media for
biological activity, by adding it directly to DRG cell bodies. The
media was unable to induce increases in pTrk, Fos, or pCREB, indicating
that leakage could not account for our results (negative data not shown).
Cell stimulation and drug treatment. Cells were selectively
stimulated with either DMEM containing 100 ng/ml neurotrophin (NGF and
BDNF) or a vehicle control [0.1 ng/ml bovine serum albumin (BSA)].
Inhibitors (K252a, colchicine) were applied for either 30 or 60 min
before stimulation as indicated. To control for effects of inhibitors
on downstream signal transducers such as c-fos, inhibitors were applied
to both vehicle control- and neurotrophin-stimulated cultures. After
stimulation, DRG neurons were rinsed once in ice-cold 1× Tris-buffered
saline (TBS), pH 7.4, with 1 mM vanadate before harvesting for biochemical or immunofluorescence analysis.
Immunoblot analysis. DRG neurons were lysed in 20 mM Tris, pH 7.4, 137 mM
NaCl, 1% SDS, 10% glycerol, 5% -mercaptoethanol containing 1 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, 1 mM leupeptin, 10 µg/ml aprotinin, and 1 mM sodium orthovanadate for 20 min on ice. The
protein lysates from the neurites and cell bodies were removed
separately from the compartmented cultures, and a final concentration
of 0.1% bromophenol blue was added. The protein lysates were
size-fractionated through a 10% SDS-acrylamide gel and transferred to
Immobilon-P membrane (Millipore, Bedford, MA). The blots were incubated
with primary antibodies, processed with secondary antibodies, and
visualized using either the ECL kit (Pierce) as per the manufacturer's
instructions or the ECF kit (Amersham) in conjunction with a Molecular
Dynamics (Sunnyvale, CA) Storm system (Storm 840).
Coimmunoprecipitation. Neurites of DRG neurons grown in
compartmented cultures were stimulated with BDNF for 20 or 40 min. Neurons were lysed in nondenaturing buffer containing 20 mM Tris, pH 8.0, 137 mM
NaCl, 1% Nonidet P-40 (NP-40), 10% glycerol containing 1 mM phenylmethylsulfonylfluoride, 1 mM leupeptin, 10 µg/ml aprotinin, and 1 mM sodium orthovanadate. Lysates were
immunoprecipitated using either anti-BDNF or anti-PDGF-R for 2 hr at
4°C. Then, 25 µl of a 50% solution of protein A Sepharose beads in
the nondenaturing lysis buffer was added to each sample, and samples
were rotated at 4°C for 1 hr and washed once in lysis buffer and
twice in 10 mM Tris, pH 7.5, containing 1 mM phenylmethylsulfonylfluoride, 1 mM leupeptin, 10 µg/ml aprotinin, and 1 mM sodium orthovanadate. After the final wash,
samples were resuspended in 125 mM Tris HCl, pH
6.8, 4% SDS, 20% glycerol, 5% -mercaptoethanol, and 0.004% bromophenol blue, boiled 5 min, separated on a 7.5% polyacrylamide gel, transferred to Immobilon-P membrane, and immunoblotted with anti-pTrk.
Immunofluorescence. DRG neurons immunostained with the pTrk
antibody were fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde and 1 mM vanadate in TBS. For immunostaining with the
pCREB antibody, cells were fixed using 10% paraformaldehyde and 1 mM vanadate in TBS, washed with TBS, and
permeabilized using 100% methanol at 20°C for 10 min. After
fixation, cells were washed with TBS, blocked, and permeabilized (5%
normal goat serum, 0.5% NP-40, and 10 mM glycine in TBS) for 1 hr at room temperature. Cells were rinsed in TBS and
incubated with primary antibodies, anti-pCREB (1:1000) and anti-pTrk
(anti-pY490; 1:100), overnight at 4°C. Subsequently, cells were
washed in TBS and incubated with a Cy3-conjugated goat anti-rabbit
antibody (1:1000 in 5% normal goat serum in TBS; Jackson ImmunoResearch, West Grove, PA) for 1 hr at room temperature. Cells
were washed and mounted in Immu-Mount (Shandon Inc., Pittsburgh, PA)
and 4% 1,4-diazabicyclo-[2.2.2]octane (Sigma).
Adenovirus constructs. To construct a TrkB enhanced GFP
fusion protein, a fragment of the mouse TrkB cDNA was excised
with StuI and AvrII, which cut in the 5' UTR and
in the last two codons of the coding sequence, respectively, filled in
with Klenow, and cloned into the SmaI site in the polylinker
of pEGFP-N1 (Clontech). The resulting construct, pmTrkB-GFP, encodes
full-length TrkB fused in frame to EGFP via a linker derived from the
polylinker of pEGFP-N1 with the amino acid sequence DPPVAT.
To construct adenovirus expressing TrkB-GFP, the TrkB-GFP cDNA was
excised from an EcoRI site in the 5' polylinker to a
DraI site in the 3' UTR and cloned into the EcoRI
and SwaI polylinker sites downstream of the human
cytomegalovirus promoter in the high recombination efficiency
adenovirus shuttle vector pMZL5 (M. Z. Lin, unpublished data).
This construct, pmTrkB-EGFP/5, was cotransfected with pBHG10 (Microbix
Biosystems, Toronto, Ontario, Canada) into a 24-well plate of
HEK293 cells grown in DMEM with 5% calf serum, and virus from
an isolated plaque was amplified once on a 10 cm plate of HEK293 cells
(Bett et al., 1994 ). Details of the construction and complete sequences
of the plasmids are available on request.
HeLa cells and DRG neurons grown in culture were infected with 50 transducing units per cell for 2 hr. Then, media containing 10% fetal
calf serum in DMEM was added to HeLA cells, and media containing 5%
horse serum, 1% penicillin-streptomycin, 50 ng/ml BDNF, and 50 ng/ml
NGF in DMEM was added to DRG neurons for 48 hr. Two days later, HeLa
cells were deprived of serum for 1 hr and then stimulated with 100 ng/ml BDNF or vehicle control for 5 min. Protein extracts were prepared
as described above, immunoprecipitated with anti-GFP, separated on
SDS-PAGE, and transferred to Immobilon. The blots of the
immunoprecipitated proteins were visualized with anti-pTrk
(anti-pY490). For visualizing TrkB-GFP expression in DRG neurons,
2 d after infection, DRG neurons were fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde for 20 min, and the fluorescence of the TrkB-GFP was visualized.
The cell bodies of DRG neurons grown in compartmented cultures were
infected at 100 transducing units per cell for 2 hr, followed by
addition of 5% horse serum and 1% penicillin-streptomycin in DMEM
for 48 hr. After 48 hr, ~5% of the DRG neurons were fluorescent. DRG
neurons were washed once in ice-cold 1× TBS with 1 mM
vanadate, fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde, and immunostained with
pTrk as described above.
TrkB-GFP fluorescence measurements and receptor
photobleaching. Cell bodies of DRG neurons were bleached by
exposure to high-intensity fluorescent light (infrared laser) for 1-6
min until the fluorescence of the cell bodies had decreased to 10-40
intensity units, ~90% decrease in fluorescence. To ensure that
photobleaching did not cause significant toxicity, after
photobleaching, the cells were tested for the ability to exclude trypan
blue dye. The photobleach-recovery techniques used here did not cause
any detectable cell toxicity, and similar results were obtained with
and without photobleaching.
The fluorescence emitted from cell bodies for both bleached and
unbleached DRG neurons was sampled every 2 min for 16 min. A baseline
light intensity of cell bodies was measured for 6 min, after which
neurites were stimulated with either 100 ng/ml neurotrophin (BDNF and
NGF) or vehicle control (0.1 ng/ml BSA in DMEM). Cell body fluorescence
was measured over the course of 10 min after stimulation.
Neurotrophin-induced change in fluorescence was calculated as follows.
First, background fluorescence was subtracted from the measured
fluorescence at each time point. Second, percent change in fluorescence
was calculated as the difference between the corrected fluorescence at
the indicated time after stimulation and the corrected baseline
fluorescence divided by the corrected baseline fluorescence. Finally,
the neurotrophin-induced change in cell body fluorescence equals the
change in cell body fluorescence in neurotrophin-stimulated cultures
minus the change in cell body fluorescence in control-stimulated
cultures. Comparison between the fluorescence emitted by DRG neurons
from neurotrophin-stimulated and from that of the unstimulated (vehicle
control) cultures was done using a two-sample t test
assuming unequal variance.
To detect the recovery of TrkB-GFP within the cell over time, images
taken as described above were compiled, and the baseline image was
subtracted from all subsequent images (Inoue, 1986 ). The baseline is
defined as the first image after photobleaching. The images were
colorized using a blue, red, and green scale that varied according to
pixel intensity. All manipulations were performed using the
two-dimensional analysis module Oz confocal laser scanning imaging
system (Noran Instruments, Middleton, WI).
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RESULTS |
Application of neurotrophins to neurites of DRG neurons rapidly
induces remote Trk activation and CREB phosphorylation
In a previous study, we showed that activated TrkB functions as a
retrograde signal carrier in sciatic nerve axons, and the retrograde
signal is propagated more rapidly than expected based on known rates of
neurotrophin transport (Bhattacharyya et al., 1997 ). To develop an
analogous in vitro system, we use embryonic DRG neurons
grown in compartmented cultures (Kimpinski et al., 1997 ). Because DRG
neurons respond to multiple neurotrophins, we can assess retrograde
signaling by both BDNF and NGF in this system. The DRG neurites grown
in the compartmented cultures were primarily axonal in that they
express acetylated tubulin, an axonal marker (data not shown) (Chitnis
and Kuwada, 1990 ). Previous studies have used compartmented cultures of
sympathetic neurons to study retrograde signaling in vitro
(Riccio et al., 1997 ; Senger and Campenot, 1997 ; Toma et al.,
1997 ).
To determine whether the response of DRG neurons to neurotrophin
stimulation was similar to that described for sympathetic neurons
to NGF stimulation, we first examined Trk phosphorylation in
embryonic DRG neurons grown in compartmented cultures. We applied neurotrophin or a vehicle control either directly to the DRG cell bodies or to the neurites and visualized the activated Trk by immunofluorescence with anti-pTrk (pY490). This antibody selectively recognizes Trk receptors phosphorylated at the critical Shc binding site, a major and persistent site of autophosphorylation (Segal et al.,
1996 ). Phosphorylation at this site initiates the
Ras-mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) signaling pathway
and the subsequent phosphorylation of transcription factors, such as
CREB (Obermeier et al., 1993 ; Stephens et al., 1994 ). After selective
neurotrophin stimulation at the neurites, Trk is activated at both the
neurites and the cell bodies within 20 min (Fig.
1A). Similar results
were obtained by immunoblotting (Fig. 1B).
Quantitation of immunoblot data indicates that remote activation of Trk
within the cell bodies occurs as early as 5 min after neurite
stimulation and is maximal at 20 min (Fig.
1B,C).

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Figure 1.
Trk is rapidly activated in response to
neurotrophin stimulation. A, Selective neurotrophin
stimulation of DRG neurites results in pTrk immunostaining in neurites
and cell bodies of DRG neurons. After a 20 min neurotrophin
(+NT) or vehicle control
( NT) (0.1 ng/ml BSA) stimulation at the
neurites, DRG neurons were fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde and
immunostained using the anti-pTrk antibody in conjunction with a
Cy3-conjugated secondary antibody. B, Trk
phosphorylation is detected in the cell body as early as 5 min after
selective neurotrophin (+NT) or vehicle control
( NT) (0.1 ng/ml BSA) stimulation at the
neurites. DRG neuron lysates from the neurites and from the cell bodies
were pooled from nine compartmented cultures, separated on 10%
SDS-PAGE gel, transferred to Immobilon-P membrane, and immunoblotted
with anti-pTrk. C, Time course of Trk phosphorylation at
the cell body in response to neurite stimulation. Intensity of the pTrk
band was quantitated with the Molecular Dynamics Storm 860 imaging
system using Image Quant (version 2.0; Molecular Dynamics) and
normalized for protein loading. The time course of pTrk induction
(calculated as the ratio between pTrk in neurotrophin- and
control-stimulated cultures) was calculated from several experiments
(n = 3-10 for each time point;
*p < 0.05). Diagram (top) is a
schematic representation of neurons; black bar indicates
presence of the Teflon divider. Area of DRG neurons analyzed is
indicated by dashed lines.
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Phosphorylation of the transcription factor CREB at Ser 133 has been
shown to be a critical nuclear response to neurotrophins (Ginty et al.,
1994 ; Bonni et al., 1995 ; Finkbeiner et al., 1997 ). Increased CREB
phosphorylation can be detected by immunoblot analysis 5 min after
neurotrophin stimulation of the DRG cell bodies (data not
shown). CREB also becomes phosphorylated
at the cell bodies as early as 5 min after selective neurotrophin
stimulation of the neurites and is maximal at 20 min after stimulation
(Fig. 2B,C). Remote activation of nuclear CREB in response
to neurotrophin stimulation of the neurites was also demonstrated by
immunostaining using the phosphorylated Ser 133 CREB (pCREB) antibody
(Fig. 2A). Of note, pCREB is only detectable in
nuclei and was never seen in the neurites by either immunostaining or
immunoblot analysis.

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Figure 2.
Neurite stimulation evokes a rapid nuclear
response. A, Selective neurotrophin stimulation of DRG
neurites results in pCREB immunostaining of DRG neuron cell bodies.
After a 20 min neurotrophin (+NT) or vehicle
control ( NT) (0.1 ng/ml BSA) stimulation at the
neurites, DRG neuron cell bodies were fixed in 10% paraformaldehyde
and immunostained using the anti-pCREB antibody in conjunction with a
Cy3-conjugated secondary antibody. B, CREB
phosphorylation is detected in the cell body within 5 min after
selective neurotrophin (+NT) or vehicle control
( NT) (0.1 ng/ml BSA) stimulation at the
neurites. Cell body lysates from nine compartmented cultures were
pooled, separated on an SDS-PAGE gel, transferred to Immobilon
membrane, and immunoblotted with anti-pCREB. C, Time
course of CREB phosphorylation at the cell body in response to
neurotrophin stimulation at the neurite. The intensity of the pCREB
band was quantitated with the Molecular Dynamics Storm 860 imaging
system using Image Quant (version 2.0; Molecular Dynamics), and
normalized for protein loading. The time course of pCREB induction in
response to neurotrophin stimulation at the neurites (calculated as the
ratio between pCREB in neurotrophin and control-stimulated cultures) was calculated from
several experiments (n = 4-10 for each time point;
*p < 0.05). Diagram (top) is a
schematic representation of neurons; black bar indicates
presence of the Teflon divider. Area of DRG neurons analyzed is
indicated by dashed lines.
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If activated Trk is the signal carrier leading to this nuclear
response, then an increase in pTrk at the cell bodies should precede or
coincide with CREB phosphorylation. As shown, both Trk and CREB
phosphorylation at the cell bodies were first detectable at 5 min after
neurite stimulation and were maximal at 20 min after stimulation. This
is somewhat earlier than the time course reported for pCREB
immunoreactivity in sympathetic neurons after selective stimulation of
the neurites (Riccio et al., 1997 ). This difference in kinetics is
likely to reflect the sensitivity of pCREB immunoblotting compared with
the sensitivity of immunostaining. By immunoblotting, we detect CREB
phosphorylation in the cell bodies in response to neurotrophin
stimulation of the neurites as early as 5 min, but by immunostaining we
do not detect significant CREB phosphorylation until 20 min after
neurite stimulation. Together, these studies indicate that BDNF and NGF
applied to the neurites can induce rapid and coincident phosphorylation
of both Trk and CREB in the distant cell bodies.
Induction of immediate early genes
As shown, neurotrophins, acting at nerve terminals, can initiate
CREB phosphorylation at Ser 133 (Fig. 2). Phosphorylation at this site
has previously been shown to activate the transcription factor CREB,
leading to de novo transcription of immediate early genes in
response to neurotrophins (Greenberg et al., 1985 ; Ginty et al., 1994 ;
Bonni et al., 1995 ; Finkbeiner et al., 1997 ). Although phosphorylation
of CREB has been shown to be necessary for induction of immediate early
genes, it is not always sufficient to initiate new transcription (Bonni
et al., 1995 ). To determine whether neurite stimulation and the
subsequent CREB phosphorylation can initiate transcription, we chose to
examine induction of the immediate early gene c-fos. The
c-fos immediate early gene family encode transcription
factors that are rapidly and transiently induced in response to a wide
array of extracellular stimuli, including the neurotrophins (Greenberg
et al., 1985 ). To determine whether the retrograde signal can induce
immediate early genes, neurotrophins were applied to DRG neurons grown
in compartmented cultures. Protein lysates from the cell bodies of the
stimulated or control cultures were analyzed for the presence of c-fos
by immunoblot. As shown, neurotrophins applied selectively to the
neurites or applied globally to both the neurites and cell bodies each
induce c-fos protein (Fig. 3). Expression
of c-fos protein in the cell bodies is detected 5 and 7 hr after
neurotrophin stimulation at the neurites but is not detected at 2.5 hr
(Fig. 3A). In contrast, neurotrophins applied globally to
both the cell bodies and the neurites induces Fos proteins at 2.5 hr
(Fig. 3B). Thus, neurotrophins, whether applied to neurites
alone or to the whole cells, upregulate the c-fos immediate
early gene. However, the timing of the response varies greatly
depending on the location of stimulation.

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Figure 3.
Neurotrophins applied to the neurites induce
immediate early genes. Neurotrophins (+NT) or a
vehicle control ( NT) (0.1 ng/ml BSA) were
applied to the distal neurites of DRG neurons grown in compartmented
tissue cultures for 2.5, 5, and 7 hr (A) or were
applied globally to both the DRG cell bodies and the neurites for 2.5 hr (B). Cell body protein lysates from five
compartmented cultures were separated on a 10% polyacrylamide gel,
transferred to membrane, and blotted with anti-c-fos. Similar results
were obtained by applying BDNF or NGF alone to the distal neurites
(data not shown). Diagram (top) is a schematic
representation of neurons; black bar indicates presence
of the Teflon divider. Area of DRG neurons analyzed is indicated by
dashed lines.
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Nuclear responses to neurite stimulation require that Trk receptor
activation be propagated from neurites to cell bodies
The data demonstrate that, in response to neurotrophin stimulation
of the neurites, Trk is rapidly activated at both the neurites and the
cell bodies, and pCREB and c-fos are induced in the nuclei. To
determine whether activation of Trk is required in both locations to
elicit these nuclear responses, we selectively pretreated either the
neurites or the cell bodies with a Trk kinase inhibitor, K252a. At 20 min after neurotrophin stimulation of neurites, we analyzed cell body
lysates for pCREB by immunoblot analysis. Treatment of either the
neurites or cell bodies with K252a abolishes the remote induction of
CREB phosphorylation (Fig.
4A). To verify that
K252a only acts at the site of application, we monitored pTrk in these
cultures. Trk phosphorylation in the neurites was not inhibited by
K252a applied to the cell bodies (Fig. 4B). To determine whether activation of Trk is also required in both locations to elicit Fos induction, we again selectively pretreated either the
neurites or the cell bodies with K252a. At 7 hr after neurotrophin stimulation of neurites, we analyzed cell body lysates for c-fos by
immunoblot analysis. Treatment of either the neurites or cell bodies
with K252a abolishes the remote induction of Fos protein in response to
neurotrophin (Fig. 4C). Because there is variability in
background c-fos expression, we show results of both K252a in
control-stimulated cultures and K252a in neurotrophin-stimulated cultures. We again verified that Trk phosphorylation in the neurites was not inhibited by K252a applied to the cell bodies (data not shown).
These data indicate that Trk activity is required at both the neurites
and the cell bodies to elicit Fos induction, as well as pCREB
activation.

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Figure 4.
Trk activity is required at both
the neurites and the cell bodies to elicit a nuclear response.
A, K252a applied to either the neurites or the cell
bodies abolishes neurotrophin-induced CREB phosphorylation at the cell
body. Neurotrophins (+NT) or a 0.1 ng/ml BSA
control ( NT) was applied to the neurites for 20 min after selective pretreatment of the neurites
(1) or the cell bodies (2)
with K252a for 30 min. Cell body protein lysates from eight
compartmented cultures were pooled and separated on SDS-PAGE and
immunoblotted using a pCREB antibody. B, K252a applied
to neurites blocks Trk phosphorylation in the neurites, whereas K252a
applied to cell bodies does not interfere with Trk phosphorylation at
the neurites. Lysates from neurites of eight compartmented cultures
were pooled and separated on 10% SDS-PAGE and immunoblotted using a
pTrk antibody. C, K252a applied to neurites, cell
bodies, or both before distal neurotrophin stimulation at the neurites
abolishes c-fos induction. Neurotrophins (+NT) or
a 0.1 ng/ml BSA control ( NT) were applied to
the neurites for 7 hr after selective pretreatment of the neurites
(1), the cell bodies (2),
or both (global; 1 & 2) with K252a
for 30 min. Cell body protein lysates from eight compartmented cultures
were pooled, separated on SDS-PAGE, and immunoblotted using a c-fos
antibody. D, K252a applied globally before global
neurotrophin stimulation at the cell body and neurite inhibits
neurotrophin-induced c-fos induction. Neurotrophins
(+NT) or a 0.1 ng/ml BSA control
( NT) were applied globally to the cell bodies
and neurites for 7 hr after pretreatment of the both the cell
bodies and the neurites (global; 1 & 2) with K252a for 30 min. Cell body protein lysates from eight
compartmented cultures were pooled, separated on SDS-PAGE, and
immunoblotted using a c-fos antibody. Diagram (top) is a
schematic representation of neurons; black bar indicates
presence of the Teflon divider. Area of DRG neurons analyzed is
indicated by dashed lines.
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TrkB is retrogradely transported from the neurites to the
cell body
How then is the activated Trk signal conveyed to the cell body?
Previous studies have suggested that the signal might be conveyed by
retrograde vesicular transport (Ehlers et al., 1995 ; Grimes et al.,
1996 , 1997 ). However, the remote responses to neurotrophin stimulation
of neurites occur more rapidly than predicted by this model.
Alternatively, rapid retrograde signaling could reflect the sequential
activation of Trk receptors distributed along the axons. To determine
whether Trk receptors are physically transported from neurites to the
cell bodies to elicit a nuclear response, we developed a method for
following Trk receptors in live cells in real time. To do this, we
constructed an adenovirus that encodes the full-length TrkB receptor
fused at the C terminus to enhanced GFP. The adenovirus was first
tested in HeLa cells, which express no endogenous neurotrophin
receptors. HeLa cells, infected with the adenovirus, were stimulated
with BDNF or vehicle control. Protein lysates were immunoprecipitated
with an antibody to GFP and blotted with anti-pTrk. As shown, the
fusion protein displays ligand-dependent phosphorylation (Fig.
5A). This indicates that the
tagged receptor is inserted into the plasma membrane, can bind ligand,
and becomes autophosphorylated. The adenovirus was then used to infect
cultures of DRG neurons. Two days after infection, TrkB-GFP expression
was visible throughout the DRG neurons, in both neurites and cell
bodies (Fig. 5B). Thus, the tagged receptor localizes
appropriately in neurons, as previously demonstrated for a GFP-tagged
TrkA (Nakata et al., 1998 ).

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Figure 5.
pTrk localized to the neurites is
transported to the cell body. A, Uninfected HeLa cells
(lanes 1, 2) or HeLa cells expressing
TrkB-GFP (lanes 3, 4) were treated
with PBS control ( ) or 100 ng/ml BDNF (+) for 5 min. Cell lysates
were immunoprecipitated with anti-GFP, followed by immunoblotting with
anti-pTrk. B, Three days after infection of DRG neurons,
expression of TrkB-GFP is visible in the cell bodies and the neurites
as fluorescence. C-E, DRG cell bodies of neurons
expressing TrkB-GFP grown in compartmented cultures were bleached until
the fluorescence was reduced by 90% (C) or left
unbleached (D, E). Fluorescence emitted
by the cell bodies was measured after addition of 100 ng/ml BDNF and
100 ng/ml NGF or vehicle control to the neurites. Cell body
fluorescence at 10 min after neurite stimulation was calculated as a
percent of cell body fluorescence at time 0. Neurotrophin-induced
change in cell body fluorescence equals mean change in cell body
fluorescence in neurotrophin-stimulated cultures minus mean change in
cell body fluorescence in control-stimulated cultures. The experiment
was repeated using DRG neurons expressing GFP alone (C,
D). The kinase inhibitor K252a was applied to neurites
30 min before neurotrophin stimulation of DRG neurons expressing
TrkB-GFP (D). To test whether the TrkB-GFP is
transported from the neurites to the cell bodies, we repeated the
experiment in the presence of colchicine or a vehicle control
(DMSO). Colchicine (125 µM) or DMSO was applied to
neurites 60 min before neurotrophin stimulation
(E). The percent change in fluorescence over the
course of 10 min was compared between the neurotrophin- and
control-stimulated cells using a two tailed t test
assuming unequal variance (n >15 for each point;
*p < 0.05).
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DRG neurons were grown in compartmented cultures and infected with the
TrkB-GFP adenovirus vector. Two days later, we photobleached the cell
bodies of individual DRG neurons expressing TrkB-GFP. We then monitored
the recovery of cell body fluorescence in response to 10 min of
neurotrophin or control stimulation of the neurites (Fig.
5C). A significant increase in fluorescence was detected in
the cell bodies of neurotrophin-stimulated DRG neurons compared with
cultures stimulated with a vehicle control. To ensure that photobleaching did not cause significant toxicity, after
photobleaching, the cells were tested for the ability to exclude trypan
blue dye. The photobleach-recovery techniques used here did not cause
any detectable cell toxicity. Furthermore, similar results were
obtained when TrkB-GFP was followed without previous photobleaching
(Fig. 5D,E). These results indicate
that a rapid accumulation of TrkB in cell bodies is initiated by
neurotrophin stimulation of the neurites.
To verify that these results reflect specific rapid transport of Trk
receptors, we used an adenovirus encoding enhanced GFP only. When DRG
neurons were infected with the adenovirus expressing GFP, no difference
in fluorescence was detected between the neurotrophin- and the vehicle
control-stimulated cells (Fig. 5C,D). These
results demonstrate that TrkB is rapidly and specifically transported to the cell bodies in response to neurotrophin stimulation of the neurites.
The TrkB-GFP provides a unique system to analyze the steps required for
rapid retrograde transport of receptor. We therefore performed a series
of experiments to determine whether ligand stimulation, receptor kinase
activity, and microtubule-dependent transport were required. As shown,
the rapid increase in fluorescence was only seen in response to
neurotrophin stimulation of the neurites. Control stimulation did not
induce an increase in fluorescence after photobleaching (Fig.
5C) or in unbleached cells (Fig. 5D), indicating
that neurotrophins, acting at the neurites, induce rapid and specific
movement of Trk receptors to the cell bodies.
Ligand binding to receptor stimulates Trk kinase catalytic activity
(Barbacid, 1995 ; Bothwell, 1995 ). To determine whether the increase in
TrkB-GFP requires receptor kinase activity, we first pretreated the
neurites with K252a, an inhibitor of the Trk kinase. As shown, K252a
prevented the neurotrophin-induced increase in fluorescence (Fig.
5D), indicating that receptor kinase activity is required
for retrograde transport.
The data presented indicate that the rapid retrograde propagation of
activated Trks reflects ligand-induced translocation of receptors from
neurites to the cell bodies. Does this translocation require
microtubule-dependent transport of endocytosed receptor? To address
this question, we used colchicine, a pharmacological agent that causes
depolymerization of microtubule formation. This drug has been used
extensively to disrupt retrograde vesicular transport (Paulson and
McClure, 1975 ). To determine whether the increase in TrkB-GFP within
the cell bodies is caused by microtubule-dependent transport of
TrkB-GFP from the neurites, we pretreated neurites with colchicine and
then applied neurotrophin or vehicle control to the neurites.
Pretreatment with colchicine prevented the neurotrophin-induced increase in fluorescence (Fig. 5E). Together, these data
indicate that the increase in fluorescence at the cell body reflects
microtubule-dependent movement of activated TrkB-GFP initiated by
neurotrophin stimulation at the neurites.
It was surprising to see such rapid movement of the TrkB-GFP receptors.
To monitor the speed of the signal, we performed a time course
experiment with photobleach recovery (Fig.
6A). A comparison of
the time course seen in stimulated cells (n = 29) and
unstimulated controls (n = 23) indicates that the two
lines diverge at 4 min. Within 8 min of stimulation, there is a
significant increase in cell body fluorescence in
neurotrophin-stimulated cells that is not seen in unstimulated cells.
Thus, the movement of Trk receptors occurs rapidly enough to account
for retrograde propagation of Trk phosphorylation initiated by
neurotrophin stimulation of neurites (Fig. 1).

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Figure 6.
TrkB-GFP accumulates in the cell body after
neurite stimulation. DRG cell bodies were photobleached, and their
fluorescent recovery was monitored. A, A time course
experiment with photobleach recovery. Neurotrophin stimulation of the
neurites induced a significant increase in fluorescence within 8 min.
The percent change in fluorescence was compared between neurotrophin
(black)- and control (red)-stimulated
cells at each time point using a two-tailed t test
assuming unequal variance (n > 23 for each time
point; *p < 0.05). B, Colorized
image of a single DRG neuron after photobleaching. The first image in
the series (top left, time 0) represents baseline after
cell body bleaching. Neurites are stimulated with neurotrophin (100 ng/ml) after acquisition of baseline image. Using confocal microscopy,
images are captured sequentially every 2 min. TrkB-GFP fluorescence
increases within the interior of the cell beginning at the axon
hillock. Background has been subtracted from images, and the change in
fluorescence over time was colorized according to fluorescence
intensity. The color scale (left) indicates the relative
fluorescence intensity. Scale bar, 2 µm.
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An advantage of using GFP to follow the Trk receptors in live cells is
that we can monitor the intracellular location of Trk receptors during
photobleach recovery. By following fluorescent receptors within an
individual neuron over time, we can see that the fluorescence increases
within the interior of the cell (Fig. 6B). The
increase is first seen near the axon hillock and then accumulates
unevenly within the cell body, excluding the nucleus. These experiments
using a tagged receptor suggest that neurotrophin stimulation of the
neurites induces a very rapid movement of Trk receptors from the axons
to the cell body by intracellular vesicular transport.
Active receptor, pTrk, in the cell bodies is associated with ligand
after neurite stimulation
If the activated Trk receptor reaches the cell bodies by
retrograde vesicular transport, then we would expect activated Trk to
remain in a ligand-receptor complex. However, Ure and Campenot (1997) ,
using sympathetic ganglia grown in compartmented cultures, showed that
I125-NGF applied to the neurites of
sympathetic neurons only accumulates in the cell bodies after 60 min.
We repeated these experiment in DRG neurons grown in the
compartmentalized cultures and found no detectable accumulation of
I125-NGF in the cell bodies before 60 min
(data not shown). We therefore chose another approach to examine
transport of a ligand-receptor complex. To determine whether activated
receptors at the cell bodies were traveling alone or in a
ligand-receptor complex, we used an antibody to BDNF to
immunoprecipitate lysates from DRG cell bodies 20 (Fig.
7) and 40 (data not shown) min after
stimulation at the neurites with BDNF alone. We then analyzed
immunoprecipitates on SDS-PAGE and immunoblotted with an antibody to
pTrk. As shown, the antibody to BDNF coprecipitates pTrk. The pTrk band
was not precipitated from unstimulated cells or from stimulated cells immunoprecipitated with an unrelated antibody (Fig. 7A).
Similarly, activated receptors in rat sciatic nerve axon traveling in a
retrograde direction can be coprecipitated with their ligands (A. Bhattacharyya, unpublished observations). Although we cannot exclude
the possibility that the receptor-ligand complex forms after cell
lysis, it is more likely that this complex forms in vivo
given the relatively low concentration of both ligand and receptors
in the lysates. These data suggest that activated Trks reach the cell
bodies as part of ligand-receptor complexes and further support a
model in which rapid retrograde vesicular transport conveys a signal from the targets to distant cell bodies.

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Figure 7.
pTrk in the cell bodies is associated with ligand
after neurite stimulation. Neurites of DRG neurons were stimulated with
100 ng/ml BDNF (+) or a 0.1 ng/ml BSA control ( ) for 20 min. After
neurite stimulation, cell body lysates were collected from
compartmented cultures (A), and whole-cell
lysates were collected from mass cultures (B) in
nondenaturing lysis buffer as described in Materials and Methods. These
lysates were immunoprecipitated using either anti-BDNF
(B) or anti-PDGFR (P),
separated on a 7.5% SDS-PAGE, and immunoblotted with anti-pTrk.
Diagram (top) is a schematic representation of neurons;
black bar indicates presence of the Teflon divider. Area
of DRG neurons analyzed is indicated by dashed
lines.
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Activation of Trk is unidirectional
Axonal transport systems are directional and require an intact
microtubule scaffold (Wang et al., 1995 ; Hirokawa, 1998 ). If the
propagation of Trk phosphorylation reflects axonal transport, then Trk
activation should propagate only in one direction. To test this
prediction, we selectively stimulated DRG neurons at the cell bodies.
After neurotrophin stimulation of the cell bodies, Trk is locally
activated in the cell bodies (Fig. 8).
However, Trk activation does not propagate to the neurites in response to neurotrophin stimulation of the DRG cell bodies (Fig. 8). Even in
the presence of neurotrophin stimulation at the cell bodies for up to 7 hr, we were unable to detect pTrk at the neurites in response to
stimulation of cell bodies (data not shown). Thus, activation of Trk
propagates only in the retrograde direction and does not propagate in
the anterograde direction. In contrast, activation of Trk in the
neurites spreads rapidly in the retrograde direction and reaches the
cell bodies (Fig. 1). The unidirectional propagation of pTrk is
consistent with motor-driven transport.

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Figure 8.
Activation of Trk is unidirectional. To determine
the direction of Trk phosphorylation, neurotrophins were applied to the
cell bodies for 20 min. A, After neurotrophin
stimulation of cell bodies, Trk phosphorylation is detected only at the
cell body. DRG neurons were fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde,
immunostained using anti-pTrk, and visualized using a Cy3-conjugated
secondary antibody. B, After neurotrophin stimulation of
cell bodies, protein lysates from the cell bodies and the neurites from
eight compartmented cultures were pooled, separated on SDS-PAGE, and
immunoblotted using anti-pTrk. Compare with Figure 1. Diagram
(top) is a schematic representation of neurons;
black bar indicates presence of the Teflon divider. Area
of DRG neurons analyzed is indicated by dashed
lines.
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Colchicine blocks retrograde neurotrophin-induced
Trk signaling
We have shown that the rapid transport of Trk receptors from the
neurites to the cell bodies is blocked by the microtubule depolymerizing agent colchicine (Fig. 5E). To determine
whether the activated Trk required for pCREB induction travels to the cell bodies by microtubule-dependent transport, DRG neurons were treated with 125 µM colchicine for 60 min before
neurotrophin stimulation. After colchicine treatment, neurotrophin was
added to neurites for 20 min and then lysates of DRG cell bodies or neurites were immunoblotted with pTrk. Colchicine treatment did not
interfere with local Trk phosphorylation in response to neurotrophin stimulation. However, this treatment did inhibit remote Trk
phosphorylation at the cell bodies in response to neurite stimulation
(Fig. 9A). Control
experiments showed that colchicine did not interfere with cell body Trk
phosphorylation in response to stimulation of the cell bodies (Fig.
9B). The fact that the propagation of activated Trk is
disrupted by colchicine is consistent with a model of signal propagation by retrograde transport of activated Trk-ligand
complexes.

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Figure 9.
Colchicine blocks the neurotrophin-induced nuclear
response. The cell bodies and neurites of DRG neurons were pretreated
with 125 µM colchicine or DMSO control for 60 min.
Neurons were selectively stimulated at the neurites
(A) or at the cell bodies (B)
with neurotrophin (+NT) or 0.1 ng/ml BSA control
( NT) after global colchicine treatment. DRG
cell body lysates were separated on 10%SDS-PAGE and immunoblotted
using anti-pTrk and anti-pCREB. Diagram (top) is a
schematic representation of neurons; black bar indicates
presence of the Teflon divider. Area of DRG neurons analyzed is
indicated by dashed lines.
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To determine whether the transport of activated Trk receptors is
required for nuclear responses, we analyzed CREB phosphorylation. Colchicine blocked CREB phosphorylation in response to neurite stimulation, consistent with a model of retrograde transport (Fig. 9A). Surprisingly however, whereas colchicine blocked Trk
phosphorylation of cell bodies only in response to neurite stimulation,
colchicine blocked CREB phosphorylation in response to stimulation of
the cell bodies, as well as the neurites (Fig. 9B). These
studies suggest that there are two microtubule-dependent processes in retrograde signaling. The first microtubule-dependent step is retrograde transport of activated Trk receptors through the axons. The
second microtubule-dependent step is an intermediate event between
receptor activation and CREB phosphorylation that is required regardless of the site of stimulation. The colchicine effect on CREB
phosphorylation complicates the interpretation of the effect of
colchicine in this system. However, when taken together, the data
presented here demonstrating that colchicine and K252a inhibit pTrk
propagation, Trk-GFP movement, and nuclear responses, suggest that
retrograde microtubule-dependent transport of activated Trk-ligand complexes is required to initiate nuclear responses to target-derived neurotrophins.
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DISCUSSION |
We used compartmented cultures of DRG neurons to study the nature
and mechanism of retrograde signaling in neurons with long axons.
Neurotrophins selectively applied at the neurites rapidly induce
phosphorylation of CREB, and this is followed by c-fos induction. These
responses require retrograde propagation of Trk receptor activation.
Using GFP-tagged TrkB receptors and activation-state-specific antibodies to Trk receptors, we show that this retrograde propagation requires microtubule-dependent transport of receptors from the neurites
to the cell bodies. These data demonstrate that a neurotrophin-induced remote signal is propagated to the nucleus by rapid retrograde vesicular transport of an activated receptor-ligand complex.
Activated Trk is the retrograde signal carrier leading to
pCREB induction
Selective neurite stimulation with the neurotrophins NGF and BDNF,
applied together or individually, results in the phosphorylation of Trk
in both DRG neuron cell bodies and neurites. Trk is phosphorylated on a
Tyr 490, a docking site for Shc, and initiates subsequent signaling
cascades, including the Ras-MAP kinase pathway (Obermeier et al.,
1993 ; Stephens et al., 1994 ; Segal et al., 1995 ; Segal and Greenberg,
1996 ).
Both NGF and BDNF induce phosphorylation of CREB at Ser 133 and thereby
promote new gene expression (Ginty et al., 1994 ; Bonni et al., 1995 ;
Finkbeiner et al., 1997 ). As shown here in DRG neurons, neurotrophins
induce nuclear CREB phosphorylation and c-fos expression when
neurotrophins are selectively presented at neurite endings, as well as
when neurotrophins are applied to cell bodies. We have found that the
time course with which neurotrophins applied to neurites initiate Trk
phosphorylation in cell bodies (Fig. 1), TrkB-GFP movement from
neurites to cell bodies (Fig. 6A), and CREB
phosphorylation (Fig. 2) closely coincide. Furthermore, blocking Trk
receptor activity using K252a at either neurites or cell bodies abolishes CREB phosphorylation and Fos induction. These data indicate that Trk phosphorylation is required at both the neurites and the cell
bodies for remote signaling to occur. Similarly, Riccio et al. (1997)
showed that NGF presented to neurites of sympathetic neurons elicits
Trk activation at the cell bodies, and this activation is required for
CREB phosphorylation. Thus, although the timing and functions of the
Ras-MAP kinase pathway differ when comparing the neurotrophin-induced
signaling used by sympathetic and sensory neurons (Borasio et al.,
1993 ; Klinz and Heumann, 1995 ), the role of Trk as a signal carrier
appears to be a conserved mechanism in retrograde signaling.
The rapidity of remote responses shown here is consistent with our
previous study investigating the neurotrophin-induced activation of Trk
along sciatic nerve axons in vivo (Bhattacharyya et al., 1997 ) and with studies on sympathetic neurons grown in compartmented cultures (Senger and Campenot, 1997 ). Although the rate of retrograde signaling in DRG neurons grown in compartmented cultures is extremely rapid (3-16 µm/sec), it overlaps the range for vesicular retrograde transport kinetics (0.5-7 µm/sec) (Breuer et al., 1992 ; Wang et al.,
1995 ).
Retrograde transport of a ligand-receptor complex
Does the neurotrophin-induced signal generated at neurite endings
travel to the cell body by vesicular retrograde transport? In studies
on sympathetic neurons, Riccio et al. (1997) demonstrated that NGF
linked to beads could induce CREB phosphorylation if the beads were
applied to the cell bodies but not if applied to neurites. NGF linked
to beads binds and activates receptors but cannot be endocytosed. Thus,
ligand internalization is required for retrograde signaling. However,
these data do not directly address whether the signal is conveyed to
the cell bodies by retrograde vesicular transport.
Several lines of evidence presented here indicate the signal reaches
the cell bodies by retrograde transport of activated Trk receptors.
First, increases in pTrk only travel in a retrograde direction. Using
the pTrk antibody for both immunostaining and immunoblotting, we show
activated Trk does not move in the anterograde direction, even in
response to neurotrophin stimulation of the cell bodies. The
directional nature of signal propagation is consistent with an
energy-dependent transport system, such as dynein-based motility (Wang
et al., 1995 ; Hirokawa, 1998 ).
Experiments with the microtubule depolymerizing agent colchicine
provide a second line of evidence that the signal is propagated by
retrograde transport. Colchicine inhibits movement of GFP-tagged Trk
receptors and also inhibits the translocation of activated Trk
receptors from neurites to cell bodies. Colchicine also blocked the
nuclear response to neurotrophin stimulation of neurites, consistent
with the model that retrograde transport of activated Trk receptors
mediates the nuclear response. We noted that CREB phosphorylation in
response to cell body stimulation was also blocked by colchicine. These
data suggest that there is another microtubule-sensitive step
downstream of the receptor. For example, there could be
microtubule-associated kinases located downstream of Trk or nuclear
translocation of MAPKs and ribosomal S6 kinase (Rsks) could
require microtubules (Gundersen and Cook, 1999 ).
A third line of evidence supporting retrograde transport is the
demonstration that pTrk arrives at the cell bodies in a complex with
ligand. By immunoprecipitating cell body lysates with anti-BDNF followed by immunoblotting with anti-pTrk, we detected a
ligand-receptor complex in the cell bodies. This is consistent with a
model in which neurotrophin binding induces Trk internalization, and
vesicles containing both ligand and activated receptor are then
transported to the cell bodies. A surprising finding is that
accumulation of the ligand-receptor complex occurs earlier than
predicted based on the transport rate of
I125-NGF (Ure and Campenot, 1997 ). This
result most likely reflects improved sensitivity by the methods used here.
The final line of evidence implicating transport of receptors in
retrograde signaling, is the demonstration that individual Trk
receptors are physically translocated from neurites to cell bodies
during retrograde signaling. Using GFP to tag Trk receptors in DRG
neurons, we show TrkB is transported from neurites to cell bodies as
early as 8 min after neurotrophin stimulation. Control studies indicate
that the increase in cell body fluorescence reflects specific transport
of Trk receptors in response to ligand stimulation. Similar results
were not seen with GFP alone. The rapid transport required ligand
stimulation. Furthermore, pretreatment of neurites with colchicine or
K252a abolished neurotrophin-stimulated transport of Trk receptors,
indicating that receptor kinase activity and intact microtubule
scaffolding are required for retrograde signaling. Thus, TrkB-GFP is
transported to the cell body by microtubule-dependent retrograde
transport in response to ligand stimulation at a time consistent with
the initial appearance of pTrk and consistent with the earliest nuclear
response. Together, these four lines of evidence indicate that the
rapid nuclear responses to target-derived neurotrophin use an unusually
fast method of microtubule-dependent transport of ligand-receptor complexes.
The colorized image showing the location of newly transported TrkB-GFP
molecules suggests that receptors arrive at the cell bodies in an
intracellular compartment, such as an endosome. The images do not
suggest that receptors reinsert into the plasma membrane at early time
points. Therefore, activated Trk receptors may relay their signal from
discrete vesicles inside the cell. This could allow differential
pathways to be induced in response to neurite stimulation compared with
cell body stimulation. Further experiments will be needed to address
this possibility.
Induction of new gene transcription
Many of the critical effects that neurotrophins exert on neurons
require changes in gene expression (Segal and Greenberg, 1996 ;
Finkbeiner et al., 1997 ). Increased expression of c-fos requires CREB
activation and is one of the earliest neurotrophin-induced transcriptional responses (Greenberg et al., 1985 ; Ginty et al., 1994 ;
Bonni et al., 1995 ). Application of K252a to neurites or to cell bodies
blocked both Fos induction and CREB phosphorylation. Thus, pTrk is a
necessary signal carrier for both nuclear responses. Because activation
of CREB is first detected as early after neurite stimulation as after
cell body stimulation, it is surprising that a 2.5 hr time lag exists
in the Fos response to neurite stimulation. The delay in c-fos may
represent a threshold effect. In sympathetic neurons grown in
compartmented cultures, NGF increases expression of two delayed
response genes, tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) and the neurotrophin receptor
p75 (Toma et al., 1997 ). The magnitude of the TH and p75 responses are
significantly lower after NGF stimulation of neurites than after NGF
stimulation of cell bodies (Toma et al., 1997 ). Thus, at early time
points, detectable increases in p75 and TH are only seen in response to
cell body stimulation. A similar scenario is possible for c-fos
induction. However, because the c-fos response elicited by selective
neurotrophin stimulation at the neurites is similar in magnitude to the
response elicited by applying neurotrophin directly to cell bodies, the
delay seems unlikely to represent a threshold effect.
Alternatively, the delay may signify that CREB phosphorylation is not
sufficient to induce Fos expression in response to neurite stimulation,
and an additional slower component of retrograde signaling is necessary
for induction of immediate early genes. This suggests the intriguing
possibility that the location of stimulation could alter the nature of
the biological response. In studies on PC12 cells, activation of CREB
works in cooperation with other transcription factors, such as serum
response factor (SRF) and ets-like transcription factor (Elk-1)
to activate transcription of c-fos (Bonni et al., 1995 ). However, in
primary cultures of cortical neurons, BDNF-mediated CREB
phosphorylation is sufficient to induce c-fos transcription (Finkbeiner
et al., 1997 ). The DRG neurons selectively stimulated at the neurites
may resemble PC12 cells and require activation of other transcription
factors, as well as CREB. Further experiments will be required to
define additional slower retrograde signaling mechanisms that might be
responsible for the delay in Fos induction and to determine whether
other genes are also differentially regulated depending on the location of the stimulus. Nonetheless, the data presented here demonstrate that
physical transport of activated receptors is a required step for
nuclear responses to target-derived neurotrophins.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received April 27, 1999; revised July 7, 1999; accepted July 8, 1999.
This work was funded by National Institutes of Health Grants NS35148
(R.A.S., F.L.W., D.B.M., A.B.) and NS35701 (S.L.P.) and the
Robert Ebert Scholar award from the Klingenstein Foundation (R.A.S.).
Additional support was supplied from Mental Retardation Research Center
Grant HD 18655. F.L.W. was supported by a Lefler Fellowship, H.M.H. was
supported by a predoctoral fellowship from the National Science
Foundation, and M.Z.L. was supported by a National Defense and
Engineering Graduate Fellowship. We thank A. Myerov, J. Fiala, and S. Finkbeiner for help with the confocal microscope, T. Bradlee for
technical assistance, and R. Campenot for help with the compartmented
cultures. We also thank C. D. Stiles, M. E. Greenberg, T. Roberts, and members of R. A. Segal's laboratory for helpful discussion.
Correspondence should be addressed to Rosalind Segal, Department of
Pediatric Oncology, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, 44 Binney Street,
Boston, MA 02115.
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