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The Journal of Neuroscience, September 15, 1999, 19(18):7999-8008
Dynamic Regulation of cpg15 during
Activity-Dependent Synaptic Development in the Mammalian Visual
System
Roderick A.
Corriveau1,
Carla J.
Shatz1, and
Elly
Nedivi2
1 Howard Hughes Medical Institute and Department of
Molecular and Cell Biology, University of California at Berkeley,
Berkeley, California 94720, and 2 Center for Learning and
Memory, Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, Massachusetts
Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139
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ABSTRACT |
During visual system development, neural activity regulates
structural changes in connectivity including axonal branching and
dendritic growth. Here we have examined a role for the
candidate plasticity gene
15 (cpg15), which encodes an
activity-regulated molecule that can promote dendritic growth, in this
process. We report that cpg15 is expressed in the cat
visual system at relatively high levels in the lateral geniculate
nucleus (LGN) but at very low levels in its synaptic target, layer 4 of
the visual cortex. Prenatally, when cpg15 mRNA in the
LGN is most abundant, expression is insensitive to action potential
blockade by tetrodotoxin. Postnatally, activity regulation of
cpg15 emerges in the LGN coincident with development of
ocular dominance columns in the visual cortex. cpg15 can
be detected in layers 2/3 and 5/6 of visual cortex postnatally, and
expression in layers 2/3 is activity-regulated during known periods of
activity-dependent plasticity for these layers. Localization and
regulation of cpg15 expression in the visual system are
consistent with a presynaptic role for CPG15 in shaping dendritic
arbors of target neurons during activity-dependent synaptic
rearrangements, both in development and adulthood.
Key words:
visual system; cpg15; lateral geniculate
nucleus; dendritic growth; visual cortex; neuron
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INTRODUCTION |
During the final phases of visual
system development, adult patterns of neuronal connectivity are
achieved via an activity-driven process of synaptic rearrangement (for
review, see Constantine-Paton et al., 1990 ; Shatz, 1990 ; Goodman and
Shatz, 1993 ; Katz and Shatz, 1996 ). Neuronal activity profoundly
influences the growth of axonal terminals, contributing to their final
size, form, and restriction to characteristic postsynaptic locations
(Shatz and Stryker, 1978 ; LeVay et al., 1980 ; Meyer, 1982 ; Reh and
Constantine-Paton, 1985 ; Stryker and Harris, 1986 ). Less is known about
how neural activity ultimately shapes dendritic morphology. Rapid
effects on spine and filopodia structure can be seen in
vitro after changes in activity levels or induction of long-term
potentiation (Engert and Bonhoeffer, 1999 ; Maletic-Savatic et al.,
1999 ; McKinney et al., 1999 ). There are indications that during
development elaboration of dendritic arbors is also regulated by input
activity (Tieman and Hirsch, 1982 ; Katz and Constantine-Paton, 1988 ;
Lund et al., 1991 ; Bodnarenko and Chalupa, 1993 ; Kossel et al., 1995 ;
Rocha and Sur, 1995 ; Rajan and Cline, 1998 ), but results vary. Several reports suggest that blocking NMDA receptor-mediated synaptic transmission can increase dendritic growth (Rocha and Sur, 1995 ; McAllister et al., 1996 ), whereas others report the opposite (Vogel and
Prittie, 1995 ; Rajan and Cline, 1998 ). In visual cortex, the action of
neurotrophins on dendritic growth requires neural activity (McAllister
et al., 1996 ). In some cases, action potential blockade with
tetrodotoxin (TTX) does not affect dendritic development but can affect
spine density (Dalva et al., 1994 ; Kossel et al., 1997 ).
At the cellular level, little is known about molecular mechanisms
underlying activity-evoked axonal and dendritic remodeling. In recent
years, forward genetic screens using adult models for synaptic
plasticity have identified activity-regulated candidate molecules whose
function could mediate activity-dependent modification of neuronal
structure (Nedivi et al., 1993 ; Qian et al., 1993 ; Link et al., 1995 ;
Lyford et al., 1995 ; Tsui et al., 1996 ). Some of these molecules are
also expressed in the developing brain (Nedivi et al., 1993 ; Lyford et
al., 1995 ; Tsui et al., 1996 ), consistent with the hypothesis that
there may be overlap between mechanisms of developmental and adult
plasticity (Kandel and O'Dell, 1992 ). Candidate
plasticity gene 15 (cpg15),
a 115 amino acid glycosylphosphatidylinositol-linked cell surface
protein (Naeve et al., 1997 ), was identified in the hippocampus after
experimentally induced seizure (Nedivi et al., 1993 ). cpg15
was subsequently found to be expressed at high levels during postnatal
cortical development and also regulated by light-driven neural activity in the adult rat visual cortex (Nedivi et al., 1996 ). During
development in Xenopus, CPG15 protein staining is present in
tectal cells and is intense in retinal ganglion cell (RGC) axons within
the optic tract and tectal target area (Nedivi et al., 1998 ). When overexpressed in the Xenopus retinotectal system in
vivo, CPG15 promoted exuberant dendritic arbor growth in
developing tectal neurons (Nedivi et al., 1998 ). These observations
suggest that endogenous CPG15 on both pre- and postsynaptic sides of
the retinotectal synapse may be available to promote dendritic arbor
elaboration of developing tectal neurons.
To investigate further a role for CPG15 in activity-dependent synaptic
changes during development, we examined cpg15 expression and
regulation in the cat visual system at times when two of the best-studied examples of developmental plasticity occur: segregation of
RGC axonal arbors into eye-specific laminae in the lateral geniculate
nucleus (LGN) of the thalamus and segregation of LGN axons into ocular
dominance columns (ODCs) within layer 4 of primary visual cortex (Hubel
and Wiesel, 1970 ; LeVay et al., 1978 ; Shatz and Stryker, 1978 , 1988 ;
Shatz, 1983 ; Shatz and Kirkwood, 1984 ; Sretavan and Shatz, 1986 ;
Stryker and Harris, 1986 ; Sretavan et al., 1988 ; Penn et al., 1998 ;
Hata et al., 1999 ). The timing, location, and regulation of
cpg15 expression in the visual system are consistent with a
role in translating neural activity into structural rearrangements in connectivity.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Animal manipulations and tissue isolation. All
surgical procedures for the prenatal manipulations, including osmotic
minipump perfusions of TTX, have been described previously (Shatz,
1983 ; Shatz and Stryker, 1988 ; Campbell et al., 1997 ; Corriveau et al., 1998 ) and were approved by the University of California Berkeley Animal
Care and Use Committee.
For intraocular injections of TTX postnatally, anesthesia was induced
and maintained by isoflurane/O2 via mask. Topical
ophthaine (Choice Medical Supplies) was applied to the eye in
preparation for injection. A sterile solution of TTX (or vehicle) was
injected over a period of 1-2 min into the posterior chamber of the
eye using a 30 gauge needle attached to a 10 µl Hamilton syringe via silastic tubing. After the eye injection was complete, the kitten recovered from anesthesia under observation. Monocular activity blockade was maintained by injecting the right eye every 48 hr for the
duration of the manipulation; e.g., for blockade from postnatal day 89 (P89) to P99, TTX was injected on P89, P91, P93, P95, and P97. For
younger animals, amounts of 3 mM TTX administered per
injection were as follows: P6-P11, 2 µl; P20-P23, 2.5 µl; P38, 3 µl; P40, 3.5 µl; P40-P46, 4 µl; and P60-P64, 8 µl. For older
animals (P89-P99 and adult), 7 ul of 5 mM TTX per
injection was used. Vehicle-injected controls received equivalent
volumes of vehicle solution (sodium citrate buffer, pH 4.8): 18.6 mM citrate for younger animals and 31 mM
citrate for the older animals. Tissue was obtained for in
situ hybridization as described above.
Cloning of feline cpg15. Total RNA was extracted from P22
cat visual cortex with an acid guanidinium
thiocyanate-phenol-chloroform mixture as described previously
(Chomczynski and Sacchi, 1987 ). Poly(A+)
RNA was selected by a standard oligo-dT-cellulose method (Sambrook et
al., 1989 ). First-strand cDNA synthesis was primed using an oligo-dT-XbaI primer adaptor (Promega, Madison, WI) and
superscript II RNase H-reverse transcriptase (Life Technologies,
Gaithersburg, MD) according to the manufacturers' instructions except
that 5-methyldeoxycytidine 5'-triphosphate (5-Me dCTP) and trace
amounts of [32P]dCTP replaced standard
dCTP. After alkaline hydrolysis of mRNA and removal of unincorporated
nucleotides by a G-50 column and precipitation, polyA tailing of
first-strand cDNA was performed using terminal transferase (Promega).
Second-strand cDNA synthesis was by Klenow (Boehringer Mannheim,
Indianapolis, IN) and primed using the oligo-dT-XbaI primer
adaptor (Promega). After phenol/ChCl3 extraction
and precipitation, double-stranded cDNA was resuspended, digested with
XbaI (Life Technologies), phenol/ChCl3-extracted, precipitated, resuspended, and size-selected on a Sephacryl S-500 HR
cDNA size fractionation column (Life Technologies). Several fractions
were selected, and T4 ligase (Boehringer Mannheim) was used for
ligation into XbaI-digested and calf alkaline phosphatase (Stratagene, La Jolla, CA)-treated ZAP express vector (Stratagene). Ligated DNA was packaged using Gigapack III gold packaging extract (Stratagene); 600,000 independent plaque-forming units were obtained and amplified. In a sampling experiment, 16 of 16 phage selected had
inserts that could be released by XbaI digestion, with an average insert size of 2.3 kb.
By the use of a 450 bp cDNA probe containing the coding region of rat
cpg15, 5 × 105 plaques of
the above library were screened by conventional filter lifts hybridized
at medium stringency (Sambrook et al., 1989 ). A 1.5 kb cDNA containing
the entire feline cpg15-coding region was isolated. Partial
sequencing determined that at the nucleotide level, the coding region
of feline cpg15 is ~94% identical to that of rat
cpg15. A 750 bp EcoRI/Xcm fragment was subcloned
into pBSK , appropriately linearized, and used as a template to
generate 35S-labeled riboprobes for
in situ hybridization.
Further details regarding cDNA library construction and feline
cpg15 cloning are available on request.
In situ hybridization. In situ hybridization
was performed as described (Simmons et al., 1989 ). Cryostat sections
(12 µm) were cut, air dried, fixed for 30 min in sodium
phosphate-buffered 4% paraformaldehyde, dehydrated with ethanol, and
stored at 80°C. Sections were thawed, permeabilized by proteinase K
treatment, acetylated, dehydrated with ethanol, and hybridized at
57°C for 12-15 hr with riboprobe labeled with
35S-UTP (1250 Ci/mmol; Dupont NEN, Boston,
MA). The sections were then incubated with 50 µg/ml RNase A for 30 min at 37°C and then washed with a series of SSC solutions; the
highest stringency wash was 0.1× SSC, 60°C for 30 min. After
exposure to Kodak XAR-5 film at room temperature, sections were coated
with NTB-2 emulsion and developed after 7-10 d. For negative controls,
hybridization of radiolabeled feline cpg15 antisense probe
was specifically eliminated by competition with a 10,000-fold excess of
nonradiolabeled antisense cRNA, resulting in only background levels of
silver grains.
The feline BDNF probe was a gift from Ed Lein.
Quantitative data analysis. Data were analyzed by scanning
each slide under dark-field illumination with a Diagnostics Instruments Spot Camera. The images were saved in TIFF file format and opened in
NIH Image (version 1.62b7), and the relevant area was quantified (black = 255 and white = 0). Pixel gray scale values were
converted to a brightness scale by subtracting the resulting value from 255. Background values were obtained (taken over either a
nonhybridizing region of the section or the slide itself; both regions
giving essentially identical readings) and subtracted out to yield net signal.
Developmental results (see Fig. 3 for summary) are based on mean
signal ± SEM for all slides run in two separate experiments that
analyzed independent sets of animals; within a given run, sections from
all ages were processed simultaneously. To allow compilation of the two
experiments, we normalized data within each run to a value obtained for
the signal in the superficial layers of visual cortex at the oldest age
examined. The ages of the animals used and the number of sections
examined (not including negative controls) are presented below as
follows: age (number of animals, number of sections). First experiment:
embryonic day 43 (E43) (1, 4), E52 (1, 3), P0 (1, 3), P10 (1, 4), P25
(1,3), P40 (1, 4), and P91 (1, 4). Second experiment: E52 (2, 4 and 4), P11 (1, 5), P22 (1, 4), P42 (1, 4), and P96 (1, 4). For clarity of
presentation, small age differences between postnatal animals in the
first and second experiments are not noted in the figure (i.e., P10 + P11, P25 + P22, P40 + P42, and P91 + P96). A third experiment that
included slides from most of the animals used for the first two
experiments confirmed the results shown (see Fig. 3).
For comparison of feline cpg15 signals obtained from control
versus activity-blocked LGNs (prenatal manipulations) or control and
activity-blocked eye-specific layers (postnatal manipulations), slides
were scanned, and the net signal was calculated as above. In the case
of the prenatal LGN ± TTX, one control and one activity-blocked section were mounted on each slide, and a ratio of the signals was
obtained in a pairwise manner. In two separate experiments including
three sets of pairwise comparisons (TTX and vehicle, TTX and citrate,
and TTX and citrate), for a total of six animals and 11 slides,
mean ± SEM for TTX/control = 1.16 ± 0.10; i.e., no
significant difference was observed. For postnatal manipulations, ratios of signal between control and activity-blocked eye-specific layers were calculated within sections, and the resulting ratios were
averaged across sections. These data are presented (see Fig. 6) with
each column representing data from a separate animal. Note that an
identical analysis was performed for LGNs ipsilateral to the blocked
eye (data not shown), yielding results indistinguishable from those
presented for the contralateral analysis. Statistical analysis was
performed by equal-tails t tests.
Fluctuations in feline cpg15 signal in primary visual cortex
layers 2/3 were quantified as follows. Dark-field images were imported
from microscope slides as above. By the use of NIH Image, the TIFF
images were first smoothed (3 × 3), and the pixel brightness values along a line parallel to the pial surface approximately midway
between the bottom of layer 1 and the top of layer 4 were exported to
SuperScope II and processed with a low-pass filter (fc = 10%) twice.
Data were plotted versus distance (see Fig. 6B) using
Microsoft Excel. Distances measured from midtrough to midtrough for
monocular TTX-treated animals are (mean ± SEM): P40-P43,
1049 ± 45 µm; P61-P64, 1190 ± 71 µm; and P90-P92,
1353 ± 46 µm, values very close to the expected width for two
ocular dominance columns (~1 mm).
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RESULTS |
Expression of cpg15 in the LGN and visual cortex of the
cat during normal development and through maturation of adult
connectivity was characterized by in situ hybridization.
Next, to distinguish between activity-independent and -dependent modes
of cpg15 regulation during development, we investigated the
effect of TTX-induced activity blockade on cpg15 mRNA levels
at developmental times when neural activity is required for the
formation of appropriate synaptic connections in the visual system.
Developmental regulation of cpg15 expression
cpg15 mRNA is present in LGN neurons throughout
development and in the adult. cpg15 expression is highest at
the earliest time point examined (E43), when RGC axons have entered the
LGN but are not segregated into eye-specific layers. cpg15
mRNA levels in LGN neurons remain high through E52, the peak of the
period for RGC axon segregation into eye-specific layers in the LGN, until P0 when eye-specific layer formation in the LGN is virtually complete (Shatz, 1983 ) (Fig. 1). Although
postnatal expression levels of cpg15 in the LGN continue to
decrease until P10, they remain relatively high into adulthood (P91;
Fig. 1), long after activity-dependent synaptic rearrangement of the
retinogeniculate projection is complete (Dubin et al., 1986 ; Shatz and
Stryker, 1988 ; Sretavan et al., 1988 ).

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Figure 1.
Regulation of feline cpg15
mRNA expression in the LGN during normal development. In
situ hybridization (using an 35S-labeled antisense
riboprobe) was performed on brain sections at the level of the LGN
(black arrows) from animals of the
indicated ages. Results are presented in dark field. Sections were cut
either in the horizontal [E43, E52, P0; anterior
(A) and medial (M)
are indicated] or coronal [P10, P25, P40, P91; dorsal
(D) and M are indicated] plane.
The white arrow in E43 and P0 is the
visual cortex. Scale bar, 1 mm.
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Within the developing visual cortex, cpg15 mRNA is present
at low levels prenatally in the differentiating cortical plate (Fig.
1). By P10, when the majority of LGN axons have grown into layer 4 from
the subplate (Shatz and Luskin, 1986 ), cpg15 can be detected
in the superficial and deep layers of cortex (Fig. 2). Signal continues to increase in these
layers throughout LGN axon segregation into ODCs in layer 4 (P20-P40;
Fig. 2). cpg15 expression is undetectable in layer 4 at
birth (P0; Fig. 1). It is first detectable in layer 4 at P40, near the
completion of ODC formation, but at very low levels that are maintained
in mature layer 4 (Fig. 2).

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Figure 2.
Regulation of feline cpg15 mRNA
expression in the primary visual cortex during normal development.
In situ hybridization was performed as described in
Figure 1. A, Horizontal sections of visual cortex, with
arrowheads delimiting the cortical plate. Results are
presented in dark field. The boxed area
indicates the approximate region shown in B. Anterior
(A) and medial (M)
are indicated. B, High magnification of feline
cpg15 in situ hybridization signal at P91
(dark field, left) and the image of an adjacent cresyl
violet-stained section (bright field, right). Note that
the vast majority of signal is found in layers 2/3, 5, and 6. The pial
surface is up. wm, White matter. Scale
bars: A, 1 mm; B, 0.5 mm.
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To characterize these results quantitatively, we obtained images of
tissue sections after autoradiography with a digital camera, and signal
intensity was expressed as units of pixel gray values. The examples
shown in Figures 1 and 2 are representative of the combined
quantitative results summarized in Figure
3. Quantitative analysis shows that
cpg15 mRNA levels in the LGN progressively decrease with
age, until P10 when they stabilize at their adult level. Conversely,
from P10, cpg15 mRNA levels in the superficial and deep
layers of cortex gradually increase with age. The onset of
cpg15 expression in layer 4 is delayed with respect to that in other cortical layers, and levels are significantly lower. In both
the LGN and visual cortex (as in the hippocampus see Fig. 2),
cpg15 expression is maintained well into maturity.

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Figure 3.
Feline cpg15 mRNA levels decrease
in the LGN (filled diamonds) and
increase in primary visual cortex (filled and
open circles) during development. Error
bars represent the SEM for 7-11 determinations (slides) obtained in
two independent experiments, except for the E43 and P0 values, which
are based on analysis of 4 and 3 determinations, respectively. Because
results obtained for layers 2/3 and 5/6, quantified separately, were
essentially identical, the numbers presented are only for layers 2/3
(filled circles).
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Activity-dependent regulation of cpg15
cpg15 expression in the LGN is unaltered by blockade of
Na+-dependent action potentials at the
earliest times examined in prenatal development (Fig.
4A). Action potential
blockade was achieved by minipump infusion of TTX into the ventricle of
fetal cats between E42 and E52 (birth is E65), a time when spontaneous
retinal waves drive ganglion cells and LGN neurons to fire
Na+-dependent action potentials (Meister
et al., 1991 ; Wong et al., 1995 ; Mooney et al., 1996 ; Penn et al.,
1998 ) and are required for LGN axons to segregate into eye-specific
layers (Penn et al., 1998 ). Even immediately after birth, monocular
injections of TTX between P6 and P11 did not alter cpg15
expression in LGN layers receiving input from the injected eye (Fig.
4B). To confirm that activity had indeed been blocked
in the injected eye, we examined the expression of BDNF, known to be
regulated by activity in many structures. BDNF expresses at low levels
in the LGN at early ages and increases steadily as development proceeds
(E. Lein, A. Hohn, and C. J. Shatz, personal communication).
Monocular blockade between P6 and P11 clearly decreases BDNF expression
in LGN layers receiving input from the TTX-treated but not
vehicle-treated eye in the same experiment in which there was no
detectable regulation of cpg15 (Fig.
4B).

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Figure 4.
Prenatal and early postnatal analyses of feline
cpg15 regulation by endogenous neural activity in the
LGN. A, In situ hybridization demonstrates little if any
change in feline cpg15 mRNA levels in the prenatal LGN
after 10 d (E42-E52) of intracranial application of the
voltage-gated sodium channel blocker TTX. Black arrows
indicate LGNs. B, Top, After 5 d of monocular TTX
applied to the right eye between P6 and P11 (data shown for right LGN),
the feline cpg15 signal remains unchanged in the
eye-specific LGN layer corresponding to the blocked eye (layer
A1; compare with control layer A).
Middle, On an adjacent section BDNF mRNA levels
decreased in layer A1, demonstrating that a successful
activity blockade had been achieved. Bottom, Moreover,
in an animal treated in parallel with vehicle only, BDNF mRNA levels
remain unchanged in layer A1 (injection in right eye;
right LGN shown). Note that at this time in development BDNF mRNA
levels are low in the LGN. Scale bars, 1 mm.
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Monocular TTX injections at progressively later ages starting at P20
decrease but do not abolish completely cpg15 expression in
LGN layers innervated by the blocked eye (Figs.
5, 6).
Regulation of cpg15 expression by activity in the LGN
persists throughout and beyond the critical period for segregation of
geniculocortical afferents into ODCs in the cortex and continues after
maturation of adult patterns of thalamocortical connectivity as
documented quantitatively in the histograms of Figure 6. These data
indicate that initially cpg15 is not regulated by action
potential activity in the LGN. Later in development, coincident with
the critical period for activity-dependent segregation of LGN axons
within layer 4 of visual cortex, the levels of cpg15
expression in the LGN decline, and a significant fraction becomes
sensitive to regulation by activity.

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Figure 5.
Regulation of feline cpg15 mRNA
levels in the LGN by visual experience. Monocular activity blockade was
maintained for the indicated times by injection of TTX into the
posterior chamber of the right eye. Dark-field photomicrographs of
selected in situ hybridization results. An
asterisk indicates the eye-specific LGN layer receiving
synaptic input from the treated eye (layer
A on the left, contralateral to the
blocked eye, and layer A1 on the
right, ipsilateral to the blocked eye). Controls (LGNs
ipsilateral to the injected eye; treatment was from P38 to P48) show a
dramatic decrease in BDNF mRNA in layer
A1, confirming the effectiveness of the activity
blockade; no decrease is observed in feline cpg15 mRNA
levels when vehicle alone is injected. All sections are in the coronal
plane. Medial is toward the center of the figure (except for the BDNF
control, in which medial is left), and dorsal is
up. Scale bar, 1 mm.
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Figure 6.
Quantitation of feline cpg15 mRNA
regulation in the LGN after monocular blockade. Data are presented for
the left LGN, i.e., contralateral to the blocked eye. An index of
activity regulation of feline cpg15 mRNA expression was
obtained by dividing signal obtained in the eye-specific layer
corresponding to the treated eye (A) by that obtained in
the control layer (A1) (see Materials and
Methods). Each column represents the mean ± SEM
for three to five determinations from two to three independent animals.
Asterisks indicate feline cpg15 ratios
that are significantly different from controls shown on the
left (p < 0.01). The
P38-P48 BDNF A/A1 ratio
(number symbol) is significantly
different from all other ratios (p < 0.001). The results indicate that feline cpg15 mRNA
levels in the LGN are specifically regulated by visual experience after
P20 and into adulthood. Analysis of data for the LGN ipsilateral to the
injected eye (data not shown, but see Fig. 5) resulted in identical
conclusions.
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A possible concern is that the decrease in levels of cpg15
expression in LGN layers receiving input from the blocked eye is caused
by cell shrinkage of LGN neurons and a general decrease in protein
synthesis as a consequence of the well known competition with active
eye inputs within layer 4 of cortex during the critical period (Hubel
and Wiesel, 1970 ; Guillery, 1972 ). However, several observations argue
strongly that shrinkage alone cannot account for the decrease in
cpg15 mRNA levels. First and most notably, similar decreases
in cpg15 expression occur at P90 and even in adults (Figs.
5, 6), long after the period of susceptibility of LGN neurons to
shrinkage caused by monocular eye closure. Second, 10 d monocular
TTX blockades result in a downregulation of cpg15 expression
virtually identical to those produced by 3 d blockades (P40-P43
and P38-P48 in Fig. 6), whereas LGN cell shrinkage and effects on
ocular dominance after monocular eye closure are known to increase with
length of closure (Hubel and Wiesel, 1963 ). Finally, levels of BDNF
mRNA in the same animals are much more dramatically affected by
monocular TTX injections than are those of cpg15 (P38-P48 TTX and P38-P48 TTX BDNF in Fig. 6), indicating that expression of
these two genes can be regulated differentially. This observation would
not be expected if there were simply an overall decline in metabolism.
Thus, we conclude that at least some if not all of the decrease in
cpg15 mRNA is caused by an activity-dependent regulation of
gene expression.
Within primary visual cortex, no effect of monocular TTX injections
could be detected within layer 4 at any age, consistent with the very
low level of cpg15 signal there throughout life. However, as
ocular dominance columns form in layer 4, the activity of all cortical
neurons within a given column, including those located in layers 2/3
and to a lesser extent layers 5/6, comes to be dominated by one eye
(Hubel and Wiesel, 1977 ; Shatz, 1990 ; Katz and Shatz, 1996 ). By P40,
anatomical segregation of LGN axons into ODCs within layer 4 is nearing
completion (LeVay et al., 1978 ; Antonini and Stryker, 1993 ). We
therefore examined cpg15 expression patterns in layers 2/3
and 5/6 after brief periods of monocular TTX injections at P40 or later
(Fig. 7, top). Such injections
between P40 and P43 resulted in periodic fluctuations in
cpg15 signal intensity in cortical layers 2/3. To examine
whether these fluctuations might correspond to ocular dominance columns driven by the TTX-treated (low-intensity signal) versus the active (high-intensity signal) eyes, we quantitated signal variation along a
distance within layer 2/3 and derived its spatial frequency (Fig. 7,
bottom). The measured frequency, ~1 mm, corresponds well with the width of ocular dominance columns assessed either anatomically (LeVay et al., 1978 ; Anderson et al., 1988 ) or physiologically (Shatz
and Stryker, 1978 ; Hubener et al., 1997 ). Similar results were obtained
after monocular blockades at either P61-P64 or P90-P92, well after
ODC formation in layer 4 is complete but still during times when
monocular eye closure can cause modest physiological shifts in ocular
dominance outside of layer 4 (Daw et al., 1992 ) (see Discussion). Note
that no such regular periodicity in signal was observed when the
analysis was performed on visual cortex from an animal monocularly
treated with vehicle (P61-P64:Vehicle; Fig. 7, bottom,
D). These data indicate that cpg15 expression in
superficial cortical layers is sensitive to TTX-mediated activity blockade not only during the critical period for geniculocortical axon
segregation in layer 4 but also afterward in the mature primary visual
cortex.

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Figure 7.
Activity regulation of feline cpg15
in primary visual cortex. Top, After monocular activity
blockade for the indicated times, horizontal sections through the
visual cortex, optimal for viewing ODCs, were prepared and analyzed by
in situ hybridization. Results are presented in
dark-field optics. Note the periodicity of signal intensity, with
several regions of decreased signal indicated by
arrowheads on each panel.
A, Anterior. M, medial. Scale bar, 1 mm.
Bottom, Signal intensity was quantified in the
superficial layers (described in Materials and Methods) and found to
have a spatial frequency of ~1 mm, as would be expected if the
periodicity observed corresponds to inputs from the control (higher
signal) and activity-blocked (lower signal) eyes and therefore ocular
dominance columns. Note that no such regular periodicity in signal was
observed when the analysis was performed on visual cortex from an
animal monocularly treated with vehicle from P61 to P64
(D).
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DISCUSSION |
Here we have explored a possible role for cpg15 in the
structural remodeling of visual system connections by examining its developmental and activity-dependent regulation in the cat's visual system. A major finding is that regulation of cpg15 by
electrical activity is a dynamic property that changes during
development. Expression in the LGN is highest prenatally during the
period of RGC axon segregation into eye-specific layers but is
unaffected by TTX-induced action potential blockade at these times.
Activity-independent expression in the LGN remains high during the
early postnatal period when layer 4 neurons in visual cortex begin
elaborating their dendritic arbors (Meyer and Ferres-Torres, 1984 ).
Activity-dependent regulation of cpg15 mRNA levels appears
in the LGN only later, coincident with a decline in expression and the
onset of LGN axon segregation into ODCs in layer 4 of visual cortex. In
contrast, expression of cpg15 in layer 4 neurons the
synaptic targets of LGN axons is low at all ages examined and not
regulated by neural activity. In the Xenopus retinotectal
system, CPG15 protein is concentrated in RGC axons at developmental
stages when target tectal cell dendritic growth is sensitive to CPG15
expression (Nedivi et al., 1998 ). Taken together, these observations
are consistent with a role for CPG15 in axon terminals promoting
dendritic growth in postsynaptic target neurons. We suggest that CPG15
supplied by LGN neurons acts to promote dendritic arbor growth first in subplate neurons and subsequently in layer 4 cortical partners. At
early stages CPG15 supplies are abundant and activity independent, but
as maturation progresses they become limited and activity dependent,
consistent with a role in coordinating the final rearrangements of pre-
and postsynaptic elements that are driven by activity-dependent competition.
In contrast to the LGN, in the visual cortex cpg15 mRNA
levels are undetectable until early postnatal times. cpg15
expression then appears in layers 2/3 and 5/6, where it progressively
increases until reaching adult levels around P40. Little, if any,
expression is detected in layer 4 until P40, when LGN axons have almost
completely segregated from each other into ODCs (LeVay et al., 1978 );
at this age and thereafter, low levels of signal can be observed that
are maintained in the adult. Although the segregation of input
according to eye preference is most complete in layer 4 (Hubel and
Wiesel, 1972 ; Wiesel et al., 1974 ; Shatz et al., 1977 ), neurons in
other layers also acquire a certain degree of eye preference by virtue
of intracortical connections. This preference can be seen in the system
of physiologically defined ODCs present in all cortical layers (Hubel
and Wiesel, 1977 ; Crair et al., 1998 ). Our observation here that
monocular TTX injections lead to regulation of cpg15
expression in alternating patches within layers 2/3 at P40 and
thereafter and the periodicity of expression (~1 mm) are both
consistent with downregulation of cpg15 expression within ODCs representing the blocked eye. In the cat visual system, the period
of susceptibility to the physiological effects of monocular eye closure
in layers 2/3 extends far longer than that in layer 4, and shifts in
ocular dominance after eye closure can be detected physiologically even
at 6 months postnatally (Daw et al., 1992 ). The activity-dependent
regulation of cpg15 expression in layers 2/3 coincides well
with this well known period of experience-dependent synaptic plasticity
and also with the fact that the horizontal connections made by layer
2/3 neurons can undergo long-term facilitation (Hirsch and Gilbert,
1993 ) and perhaps structural changes (Darian-Smith and Gilbert, 1994 ).
Thus as with geniculocortical connections at earlier ages, here too
cpg15 expression and modulation by neural activity are
consistent with a presynaptic role for this molecule in
activity-dependent remodeling of intracortical connections.
It is important to note that the TTX-insensitive component of
cpg15 expression, observed here at early ages, may represent expression that can be regulated by forms of activity that are independent of voltage-gated sodium channels. There is evidence that
synaptic activity can influence dendritic arbor development in the
absence of sodium-dependent action potentials. In studies in which TTX
and glutamate receptor blockers were tested in parallel, in some
conditions APV had a strong effect on dendritic branch dynamics,
whereas TTX had no detectable influence (McAllister et al., 1996 ; Rajan
and Cline, 1998 ). Activation of gene expression by increased
intracellular calcium may also be generated by alternative mechanisms
to synaptic transmission such as Ca+2
influx through voltage-gated calcium channels. At early developmental times, spontaneous activation of one or a few cells can generate a
synchronous rise of intracellular calcium in domains of coactive cortical neurons, even in the presence of TTX (Yuste et al., 1995 ). In
view of these considerations, we can only conclude that
Na+-dependent action potentials are not
required for cpg15 expression at early times in development,
whereas at later times they are required.
Gene expression studies show that only a fraction of genes tested,
including many that are regulated by seizure activity in the adult, can
also be regulated by sodium action potential activity during visual
system development (Corriveau et al., 1998 ). Among these genes,
developmental patterns of regulation and expression vary widely (Worley
et al., 1990 ; Castren et al., 1992 ; Yamagata et al., 1993 , 1994a ,b ;
Robner et al., 1994 ; Schoups et al., 1995 ; Nedivi et al., 1996 ; Tsui et
al., 1996 ; Corriveau et al., 1998 ). This observation suggests that
regulation of gene expression by visual system activity is implemented
at the transcriptional level on a gene-by-gene basis, in a way that is
relevant to the function of each specific gene. Studies of regulated
expression of an individual gene such as this one on cpg15
may therefore provide predictions as to its mechanism of action.
We propose a general model in which CPG15 is supplied by the
presynaptic neuron, thereby influencing dendritic growth of its postsynaptic partner. During early development, high levels of cpg15 expression may be permissive for rapid dendritic
growth in a manner independent of sodium action potentials. This
suggestion is consistent both with previous studies demonstrating that
early dendritic growth is relatively insensitive to TTX activity
blockade (Dalva et al., 1994 ) and with the observation that
overexpression of CPG15 promotes the growth of tectal cell dendrites
(Nedivi et al., 1998 ). After the initial circuitry of neuronal
connections has been established by activity-independent mechanisms and
neurons have laid down the basic structure of their dendritic arbor, we propose that activity-dependent regulation comes into play.
Stabilization, maintenance, and plasticity of specific synaptic
connections become the prominent themes during the final transition of
the developing nervous system to its mature sets of connections. At
this developmental time there is a decline in constitutive
cpg15 expression in the LGN, accompanied by emergence of an
activity-dependent regulation that persists into adulthood. At this
point the balance between activity-independent levels of
cpg15 expression in all neurons and the additional
activity-dependent cpg15 expression present in active
neurons may determine the extent to which synaptic connections are
merely maintained versus strengthened via addition of new neuronal
processes. The advent of an activity-dependent mode of cpg15
regulation could allow local increases in CPG15 levels only at synapses
of active presynaptic neurons, thus permitting the specific changes in
dendritic arbor structure that are associated with synaptic plasticity.
This model could resolve some of the inconsistencies reported for the
effects of activity on dendritic structure because activity blockade at
different developmental times would have different effects on the
induction of genes that influence dendritic growth such as
cpg15. Direct proof for this model will require
manipulations of cpg15 expression and exploration of the
consequent effects on synaptic plasticity.
It is surprising that cpg15 expression is regulated by
visual activity in the mature LGN, long after the critical period for development of the geniculocortical synapse comes to a close. At first
glance, this result appears to weaken the argument that CPG15 may be
involved in activity-dependent developmental plasticity. However, it is
important to remember that the critical period for development of the
geniculocortical projection has been defined anatomically in terms of
axonal, and not dendritic, morphological changes that can be induced by
alterations in electrical activity. Because our model proposes that
CPG15 on LGN axons affects the dendritic morphology of postsynaptic
layer 4 neurons, the finding that cpg15 expression is
activity-regulated in the mature LGN does not necessarily run counter
to previous findings demonstrating that activity-dependent LGN axonal
arbor rearrangements are confined to the critical period. In fact, the
persistent regulation of cpg15 predicts that
activity-dependent changes might occur locally on the dendrites or
spines of layer 4 neurons (as well as layer 2/3 neurons) well after it
is no longer possible to induce large-scale LGN axon terminal
rearrangements. It remains to be shown directly whether dendrites or
spines of layer 4 neurons in mature animals can respond to changes in
activity with structural rearrangements. Two-photon imaging of CA1
neurons in developing rat hippocampal slices has shown local and rapid
changes in dendritic structures in response to synaptic activity
(Engert and Bonhoeffer, 1999 ; Maletic-Savatic et al., 1999 ). Such
technology might be extended to mature cortical slices or to an
in vivo mammalian system.
Models of afferent segregation into eye-specific domains in the visual
system generally require coordinate interactions between pre- and
postsynaptic partners (Willshaw and Von der Malsburg, 1976 ; Whitelaw
and Cowan, 1981 ; Miller et al., 1989 ). Anatomical studies provide
evidence of such coordinate growth, in that dendritic arbors often
respect eye-specific boundaries defined by their presynaptic partners
(Katz and Constantine-Paton, 1988 ; Katz et al., 1989 ; Kossel et al.,
1995 ). Visual manipulations that alter the termination pattern of
afferent arbors can cause a corresponding shift in dendritic arbor
structure (Tieman and Hirsch, 1982 ; Kossel et al., 1995 ). Our results
suggest that in the mammalian visual system, CPG15 may be a molecular
mediator that can coordinate growth of postsynaptic dendritic partners
with their presynaptic counterparts, during both early
activity-independent and later activity-dependent development of
synaptic connectivity.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received June 25, 1999; accepted June 30, 1999.
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grants EY02858
to C.J.S. and EY11894 to E.N. and by an Alcon Research Institute Award
to C.J.S. who is an Investigator of the Howard Hughes Medical
Institute. We thank Sandra Wiese and Cynthia Cowdrey for excellent
technical assistance, Ed Lein for the feline BDNF probe, and Dr. Hollis
Cline for critical reviewing of this manuscript and helpful discussions.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Elly Nedivi, Department of
Brain and Cognitive Sciences, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 50 Ames Street, E18-670, Cambridge, MA 02139.
Dr. Corriveau's present address: Department of Anatomy and Cell
Biology, Wayne State University School of Medicine, 540 East Canfield,
Detroit, MI 48201.
 |
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Copyright © 1999 Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474/99/19187999-10$05.00/0
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W.-C. A. Lee and E. Nedivi
Extended Plasticity of Visual Cortex in Dark-Reared Animals May Result from Prolonged Expression of cpg15-Like Genes
J. Neurosci.,
March 1, 2002;
22(5):
1807 - 1815.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
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N. Mataga, S. Fujishima, B. G. Condie, and T. K. Hensch
Experience-Dependent Plasticity of Mouse Visual Cortex in the Absence of the Neuronal Activity-Dependent Marker egr1/zif268
J. Neurosci.,
December 15, 2001;
21(24):
9724 - 9732.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
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L. Morando, R. Cesa, R. Rasetti, R. Harvey, and P. Strata
Role of glutamate delta -2 receptors in activity-dependent competition between heterologous afferent fibers
PNAS,
August 1, 2001;
(2001)
171098398.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
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A. K. McAllister
Cellular and Molecular Mechanisms of Dendrite Growth
Cereb Cortex,
October 1, 2000;
10(10):
963 - 973.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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S. U. Walkley, M. Zervas, and S. Wiseman
Gangliosides as Modulators of Dendritogenesis in Normal and Storage Disease-affected Pyramidal Neurons
Cereb Cortex,
October 1, 2000;
10(10):
1028 - 1037.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
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A. L. Barth, M. McKenna, S. Glazewski, P. Hill, S. Impey, D. Storm, and K. Fox
Upregulation of cAMP Response Element-Mediated Gene Expression during Experience-Dependent Plasticity in Adult Neocortex
J. Neurosci.,
June 1, 2000;
20(11):
4206 - 4216.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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N. Sugiura, R. G. Patel, and R. A. Corriveau
N-Methyl-D-aspartate Receptors Regulate a Group of Transiently Expressed Genes in the Developing Brain
J. Biol. Chem.,
April 20, 2001;
276(17):
14257 - 14263.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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L. Morando, R. Cesa, R. Rasetti, R. Harvey, and P. Strata
Role of glutamate delta -2 receptors in activity-dependent competition between heterologous afferent fibers
PNAS,
August 14, 2001;
98(17):
9954 - 9959.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
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