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The Journal of Neuroscience, October 1, 1999, 19(19):8300-8311
Differences in the Ways Sympathetic Neurons and Endocrine Cells
Process, Store, and Secrete Exogenous Neuropeptides and
Peptide-Processing Enzymes
Ruth
Marx1,
Rajaâ
El Meskini1,
David C.
Johns3, and
Richard E.
Mains1, 2
Departments of 1 Neuroscience,
2 Physiology, and 3 Medicine, The Johns Hopkins
University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland 21205-2185
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ABSTRACT |
Most neurons store peptides in large dense core vesicles
(LDCVs) and release the neuropeptides in a regulated manner.
Although LDCVs have been studied in endocrine cells, less is known
about these storage organelles in neurons. In this study we use the endogenous peptide NPY (neuropeptide Y) and the endogenous
peptide-processing enzyme PAM (peptidylglycine -amidating
monooxygenase) as tools to study the peptidergic system in cultured
neurons from the superior cervical ganglion (SCG). Once mature, SCG
neurons devote as much of their biosynthetic capabilities to
neurotransmitter production as endocrine cells devote to hormone
production. Unlike pituitary and atrium, SCG neurons cleave almost all
of the bifunctional PAM protein they produce into soluble
monofunctional enzymes. Very little PAM or NPY is secreted under basal
conditions, and the addition of secretagogue dramatically stimulates
the secretion of PAM and NPY to a similar extent. Although endocrine
cells typically package "foreign" secretory products together with
endogenous products, pro-opiomelanocortin- and PAM-derived products
encoded by adenovirus in large part were excluded from the LDCVs
of SCG neurons. When expressed in corticotrope tumor cells and primary anterior pituitary cultures, the same virally encoded products were
metabolized normally. The differences that were observed could reflect
differences in the properties of neuronal and endocrine peptidergic
systems or differences in the ability of neurons and endocrine cells to
express viral transcripts.
Key words:
superior cervical ganglion; PAM; ACTH; neuropeptide Y; PC1; PC2; regulated secretion
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INTRODUCTION |
Nearly all neurons secrete bioactive
peptides along with conventional neurotransmitters (Jahn and Sudhof,
1993 ; Calakos and Scheller, 1996 ; Klumperman et al., 1996 ; Xu et al.,
1996 ; Dannies, 1999 ; Mains and Eipper, 1999 ; Polgar et al., 1999 ). At
least two types of secretory organelles, small synaptic vesicles (SSV)
and large dense-core vesicles (LDCVs), are involved in the secretion process. SSVs originate from the endosomal compartment, contain classical neurotransmitters, and recycle locally in nerve terminals. LDCVs emerge from the trans-Golgi network (TGN) and are
transported down the axon to release soluble contents, including
proteins and peptides acting as neuromodulators and hormones. Although both SSVs and LDCVs undergo regulated secretion, there are significant differences between these two processes. Recent work revealed some of
the molecular mechanisms underlying SSV biogenesis, secretion, and
recycling; much less is known about the biogenesis and secretion from
LDCVs in neurons (Calakos and Scheller, 1996 ; Mains and Eipper, 1999 ).
The diversity and low levels of neuropeptides make them difficult to
study, so we used primary neurons in culture and a processing enzyme
common to many of the neuropeptides (peptidylglycine -amidating monooxygenase; PAM) to facilitate these studies. Neuropeptide Y (NPY)
is the most abundant peptide in the brain and in the superior cervical
ganglion (SCG) (McGreevey and Seeley, 1999 ; Tajti et al., 1999 ). Most
SCG neurons are catecholaminergic, and two-thirds of the neurons
coexpress norepinephrine and NPY plus smaller amounts of enkephalin,
somatostatin, galanin, pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating peptide,
vasoactive intestinal peptide, and substance P (Marek and Mains, 1989 ;
Freidin et al., 1993 ; Hyatt-Sachs et al., 1993 ; Hall and MacPhedran,
1995 ; May and Braas, 1995a ; Mehler et al., 1995 ; Shadiack et al., 1995 ;
Brandenburg et al., 1997 ). NPY is a highly conserved 36 residue
amidated peptide with pre- and postsynaptic actions (Tatemoto et al.,
1982 ; Lundberg, 1996 ). Like most neuropeptides, NPY is synthesized as a
larger precursor molecule; pro-NPY requires cleavage by prohormone
convertase 2 (PC2) plus the actions of carboxypeptidase E (CPE) and PAM
to generate mature NPY (Paquet et al., 1996 ). The NPY biosynthetic rate
in culture reaches the rate for adult SCG neurons in vivo
(Marek and Mains, 1989 ). SCG neurons devote approximately one-fourth of
all of the tyrosine they metabolize to the production of
catecholamines, comparable to the fraction of protein synthesis devoted
to pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC) by pituitary melanotropes (Mains and
Patterson, 1973 ; Mains and Eipper, 1979 ).
PAM is the only enzyme known to -amidate peptides (Eipper et al.,
1993 ); because many peptides produced by SCG neurons are amidated, PAM serves as a useful tool to study the peptidergic system.
Peptide -amidation is a two-step reaction catalyzed by the
two distinct catalytic domains within PAM,
peptidylglycine- -hydroxylating monooxygenase (PHM) and
peptidyl- -hydroxyglycine -amidating lyase (PAL). PAM is an
integral membrane protein expressed in a wide variety of cell
types, including endocrine, glial, and endothelial cells, and in many
neurons. In peripheral and central neurons PAM is localized to LDCVs in
axons and nerve terminals (Oyarce and Eipper, 1993 ; Quatacker et al.,
1993 ).
This study focuses on the processing, storage, and secretion of PAM in
neurons that develop both axons and dendrites in culture. Differences
in the peptidergic system between neuronal (extremely polarized) and
endocrine (not polarized) cells are addressed. NPY was used as a marker
for the neuronal LDCVs, and, as anticipated for a neuropeptide that
resides in the granules, NPY secretion was increased dramatically on
stimulation. To understand more about the peptidergic system in
neurons, we used recombinant adenoviruses to overexpress POMC and PAM
in the neurons. The adenovirus system has proven to be a very efficient
tool for the delivery of foreign genes to many different cell types
(Moriyoshi et al., 1996 ; Paquet et al., 1996 ; Slack and Miller, 1996 ;
Slack et al., 1996 ; Marx and Mains, 1997 ; Johns et al., 1999 ).
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Preparation of SCG and pituitary cultures. SCG
cultures were prepared as previously described (Paquet et al., 1996 ).
Briefly, SCGs were dissected from 2-d-old neonatal rat pups (Sprague
Dawley rats purchased from Charles River, Wilmington, MA) and
dissociated for 20 min at 37°C in DMEM-air medium containing 4 mg/ml
collagenase, 1 mg/ml hyaluronidase, 0.1 U/ml benzonase, and 10 mg/ml
fatty acid-free bovine serum albumin (BSA), followed by a 15 min
dissociation in medium containing 3 mg/ml trypsin (T-0646, Sigma, St.
Louis, MO). The dissociated cells were plated onto collagen-coated
dishes (Bornstein, 1958 ) in DMEM/F-12 supplemented with 10% FBS
and 200 ng/ml nerve growth factor (NGF; kindly provided by Dr. David
Ginty, Johns Hopkins University) for the first 24 hr and then
maintained in DMEM/F-12, 10% FBS, 200 ng/ml nerve growth factor, and
10 µM cytosine arabinoside. A similar method was used to
prepare anterior pituitary cultures from adult male rats (Oyarce and
Eipper, 1995 ). Mouse corticotrope AtT-20 cells were grown in DMEM/F-12
supplemented with 10% Fetal Clone I (HyClone, Logan, UT) and 10%
Nu-Serum (Collaborative Research, Bedford, MA), as described previously
(Milgram et al., 1994 ).
Recombinant adenovirus (Ad): construction and use of AdPOMC and
AdPAM-1 and viral infections. Mouse POMC (nucleotides 1-920) (Uhler and Herbert, 1983 ) and rat PAM-1 (nucleotides 293-3245, as used
for transfecting PAM-1 stable lines) (Milgram et al., 1992 ) cDNAs were
subcloned into the virus shuttle vector. HEK293-CRE8 cells were
cotransfected with the shuttle vector (AdLox) and purified 5
adenoviral DNA to create the recombinant viruses (Hardy et al., 1997 ).
The 2-week-old SCG cultures, 3-d-old anterior pituitary cultures, and
mouse corticotrope AtT-20 cells were infected via a 1:5000 dilution of
the viral stock (1 × 107 pfu/ml) of
recombinant adenovirus encoding POMC (AdPOMC) or PAM-1 (AdPAM-1). The next day the medium was replaced; 24 hr later the infected cells were used for immunostaining, secretion, and
biosynthetic labeling experiments.
Biosynthetic labeling and immunoprecipitations. Metabolic
labeling of the cells was performed as described previously (Milgram et
al., 1994 ; Marx and Mains, 1997 ). Cultures were incubated in Complete
serum-free medium (CSFM: DMEM/F12 with 2 mg/ml fatty acid-free BSA, 1 µg/ml insulin, and 0.1 µg/ml transferrin) lacking methionine for 5 min and then labeled for 30 min with 210-300 µCi of
[35S]methionine (Amersham, Arlington
Heights, IL) in 300 µl of Met medium.
Cells either were harvested immediately (pulse) or were incubated
further in CSFM (114 µM methionine) for different times. Spent media were centrifuged to remove debris, and a mixture of protease inhibitors was added (Milgram et al., 1992 ). Cells were extracted in 5 M acetic acid/BSA and lyophilized overnight.
Cell extracts were resuspended in 50 µM Na-phosphate, 1%
Triton X-100. Aliquots of the cell extract or spent media were
incubated with 10 µl of rabbit polyclonal antiserum to NPY (JH3) or
ACTH(1-17) (JH93) for 4 hr at 4°C (Milgram et al., 1996a ).
Immune complexes were collected after being shaken with 20 µl of
protein A-Sepharose beads (Sigma) in 50 µM Na-phosphate,
1% Triton X-100, pH 7.5, for 1 hr and then were analyzed by SDS-PAGE.
Gels were fixed in 30% isopropanol/10% acetic acid and prepared for
fluorography by incubation in Amplify (Amersham).
Immunofluorescent staining. The localization of PAM, NPY,
TGN38, MAP2, tau, and POMC in the SCG neurons was detected by using indirect immunofluorescence (Milgram et al., 1997 ). Cells were fixed by
using 4% paraformaldehyde in PBS, followed by permeabilization with 0.075% Triton X-100, or they were fixed by using 20°C
methanol (for TGN38 staining); blocking was performed with 2 mg/ml BSA in PBS for 1 hr. Monoclonal antibodies against MAP2 (clone HM-2, Sigma)
and tau (clone tau-1, Boehringer Mannheim, Indianapolis, IN) and rabbit
polyclonal antisera against PAM (JH629), NPY (JH3), TGN38 (JH1481), and
POMC (JH44; JH93; Georgie; monoclonal from Novocastra Labs UK) were
used at a dilution of 1:1000 or more for 2 hr at room temperature
(Schnabel et al., 1989 ; Milgram et al., 1996b , 1997 ).
Antigen-antibody complexes were visualized by using FITC-conjugated
goat anti-rabbit IgG (Caltag, San Francisco, CA) and Cy3-conjugated
donkey anti-mouse IgG (Jackson ImmunoResearch, West Grove, PA). Samples
were viewed with a Zeiss Axioskop microscope (Carl Zeiss, Thornwood,
NY) and photographed with a Micromax CCD camera (Princeton Instruments,
Princeton, NJ).
Secretion experiments and analysis. Noninfected SCG neurons
and neurons infected with either AdPOMC or AdPAM-1 were fed with CSFM
with 200 ng/ml NGF overnight. Wells initially were rinsed (Ratovitski
et al., 1999 ) for three 30 min periods in CSFM with 200 ng/ml NGF. The
experiment was begun with two successive 2 hr basal collections that
used CSFM with 200 ng/ml NGF, followed by one 2 hr period of stimulated
secretion that used CSFM with 200 ng/ml NGF and 1 mM
BaCl2 (May et al., 1998 ; Ratovitski et al.,
1999 ). The collected medium was centrifuged to
remove the few nonadherent cells, and protease inhibitors were added.
Cells for PHM and PAL activity analyses or Western analyses were
extracted by using 20 mM
Na-N-Tris[hydroxymethyl]methyl-2-aminoethanesulfonic acid
(TES), 10 mM mannitol, and 1% Triton X-100, pH
7.4 (TMT), to which protease inhibitors were added. Cell extracts were
frozen and thawed three times and centrifuged for 5 min to remove cell debris. For ACTH and NPY radioimmunoassay (RIA), the cells were extracted in 5 M acetic acid/BSA, lyophilized,
and resuspended in RIA buffer with protease inhibitors. Samples were
stored at 80°C until assay. Secretion experiments with AtT-20 cells
were performed in a similar way, except that CSFM without NGF was used for the medium collections, and each collection was for 30 min. RIAs
were performed by using spent medium collections or cell extracts,
antibody to NPY (JH3, 1:40,000) and
125I-NPY (Amersham) (Marek and Mains,
1989 ); antibody to ACTH (Kathy, 1:20,000) and
125I-ACTH (Amersham) or
125I-CLIP (iodinated with Iodobeads)
(Eipper et al., 1983 ; Schnabel et al., 1989 ); or antibody to all POMC
derivatives (Bertha, 1:30,000) and
125I-ACTH (1-39, NEN Life Science
Products) (Mains and Eipper, 1976 ). Antiserum Kathy only recognizes
POMC products in which the COOH-terminal end of ACTH(1-39) is exposed
(Schnabel et al., 1989 ), and antibody Bertha recognizes the intact
precursor as well as the processed products (Mains and Eipper, 1976 ).
Data were analyzed with an Excel program that used the logit-log
transformation (Davis et al., 1980 ; Marschner et al., 1980 ).
Protein analyses. Cell extracts and medium collections were
subjected to 12% SDS-PAGE and Western blot analysis that used a PHM
antiserum (JH1761, 1:1000), a PAL antiserum (JH471, 1:1000), an Exon A
antiserum (JH629, 1:1000), or monoclonal antibody to PAM-CD (6E6,
1:20), followed by enhanced chemiluminescence detection (Amersham)
(Milgram et al., 1996b , 1997 ). Enzyme assays were performed as
described previously; samples (spent medium and cell extract) were
assayed in duplicate (Milgram et al., 1992 ). PHM and PAL reactions were
performed in a final volume of 40 µl for 2 hr.
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RESULTS |
PAM is found in soma and axons of the SCG neurons
We first tested whether endogenous PAM levels are detectable in
the SCG neurons in culture, using indirect double immunofluorescence staining. Similar punctate staining is observed by using either antibodies to PAM (Fig.
1A) or to neuropeptide
Y (NPY) (Fig. 1C); simultaneous localization with the axonal
marker tau identifies many of the PAM-NPY-stained processes as axons.
PAM staining is relatively more intense in cell bodies than NPY is. As
additional markers, we used antibodies to microtubule-associated
protein 2 (MAP2), a neuronal-specific marker for dendrites, and an
antibody to a TGN marker protein (TGN38). TGN38 was localized to the
perinuclear region of the neuron, while no TGN38 staining in processes
was observed (Fig. 1B). The pattern of PAM staining
within the cell bodies resembles TGN38 staining. Antibody to MAP2
stains cell bodies and processes, and those processes were designated
thereby as dendrites (Fig. 1B,D). Punctate NPY
staining of cell bodies and processes was observed (Fig.
1D). Many of the NPY-positive processes showed no
MAP2 staining, which indicated the localization of the majority of NPY
in axons.

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Figure 1.
Localization of PAM, NPY, and TGN38 in cultured
SCG neurons. Primary SCG cultures were fixed and permeabilized. Cells
were incubated simultaneously with monoclonal antibody to tau and
either polyclonal antibody to PAM (A) or
polyclonal antibody to NPY (C). Cells were
incubated simultaneously with monoclonal antibody to MAP2 and either
polyclonal antibody to TGN38 (B) or polyclonal
antibody to NPY (D). The higher power
insets in A and C were
adjusted to avoid overexposing the cell body.
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The level of PAM expression in SCG is as high as
anterior pituitary
To evaluate the level of PAM expression in SCG neurons and to
select the optimal time for studying PAM processing, storage, and
secretion in the SCG cultures, we performed Northern analyses, using total RNA from SCG, brain, and adrenal (Fig.
2). PAM mRNA is expressed at higher
levels in the SCG than in the whole brain. The expression of PAM mRNA
increases postnatally to adulthood in both the brain and in the SCG,
similar to the expression pattern of NPY mRNA in the SCG (Marek and
Mains, 1989 ). The specific activity of the rate-limiting initial enzyme
in PAM, the monooxygenase, was higher in SCG than in adult anterior
pituitary or heart atrium (10 nmol/mg protein per hour in SCG; 3-5
nmol/mg protein per hour in anterior pituitary and atrium) (Maltese and
Eipper, 1992 ; Mueller et al., 1993 ; Oyarce and Eipper, 1995 ). Thus we
used 2-week-old SCG cultures for this work, because then PAM and NPY
levels approximate their adult values.

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Figure 2.
Northern blot analysis of total RNA samples.
Tissues dissected from the animal were placed into RNA STAT-60 reagent
(Tel-Test, Friendswood, TX). Total RNA was extracted according to the
manufacturer's instructions. Then 10 µg of total RNA from each
sample was fractionated on a 1% agarose gel, and Northern blot
analyses were performed as described before (Paquet et al., 1996 ),
using samples from adult adrenal; neonatal and adult brain; and
neonatal, 2-week-old, and adult SCG. The blot was probed with PAM cDNA
(top) and S26 ribosomal protein cDNA
(bottom).
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PAM is stored in highly stimulatable granules in cultured
SCG neurons
To determine whether PAM proteins are stored in the LDCVs, we
studied the stimulation of secretion of both PHM and PAL enzyme activities from the SCG neurons and compared it with the secretion of
NPY, which is known to be stored and secreted through the LDCVs (May et
al., 1995b ). Stimulation of secretion experiments included two basal
collections (2 hr each), followed by the addition of a medium
containing barium (Ba2+) to activate
secretion (May et al., 1998 ; Johns et al., 1999 ); all results were
normalized for the length of time of secretion. Basal NPY secretion was
very low compared to NPY cell content (50-100 fmol/culture per hour),
<1% of the cell content of NPY per hour. On stimulation, NPY
secretion increased 20-fold (Fig. 3A). NPY was stored very
efficiently in the LDCVs, as indicated by the low rate of basal
secretion, and the release of NPY from the neurons increased
dramatically on stimulation.

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Figure 3.
Secretion of NPY immunoreactivity and PHM and PAL
enzyme activities from cultured SCG neurons. Medium was collected
overnight and after two consecutive 2 hr periods of basal secretion,
followed by 2 hr of stimulated secretion (1 mM
BaCl2). A, The levels of NPY were
determined in all medium samples by RIA. PHM (B)
and PAL (C) enzyme activities were measured in
duplicate samples of the collected medium samples. Data are the
mean ± SD for four determinations. Similar results were obtained
in four independent experiments. All experiments were done with 15- to
18-d-old cultures. o.n., Overnight.
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Levels of PHM and PAL activities were tested in the same basal and
stimulated medium samples. For both PHM and PAL activities the SCG
neurons yielded a 20-fold stimulation of secretion (Fig. 3B,C). The extents of stimulation of secretion of NPY, PHM,
and PAL activities are in excellent agreement with each other.
PAM is processed to soluble, secretable PHM and PAL in cultured
SCG neurons
Western blot analysis of extracts from primary SCG neurons shows
the expression of intact PAM-1 and its processed products: PAL-TMD-CD,
PHM, PAL, and TMD-CD (Fig.
4A). Western blot
analysis of cultured SCG neuron cell extracts that use an antibody to
the PHM domain indicates the expression of PAM-1 but no significant amount of PAM-2 (which is smaller and lacks the noncatalytic domain Exon A; data not shown). Thus, the main PAM isoform expressed in the
SCG primary neuronal cultures is PAM-1, a type 1 membrane protein. Two
lysine-lysine (KK) sites found within the PAM-1 protein (within Exon A
and in the COOH-terminal of PAL) are likely to be used specifically to
give rise to the different proteins detected on the Western blot
(Eipper et al., 1993 ).

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Figure 4.
PAM expression in the SCG. A,
Western blot analysis of PAM proteins in primary SCG culture. Cell
extract prepared in TES/mannitol/Triton X-100 (TMT) was subjected to
Western blot analysis with an antibody to Exon A (JH629,
top of the gel) and an antibody to PAM-CD (mAb 6E6,
bottom of the gel). B, Medium samples
collected after BaCl2 stimulation were visualized by using
antibodies to PHM (JH1761), PAL (JH471), and Exon A (JH629). Similar
results were obtained in two independent experiments. The schematic
diagram (bottom of the figure) of PAM-1 indicates the
different domains and the antibodies that were used.
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Secretion of PHM and PAL activities from the neurons is dependent on
cleavage events that occur in the TGN and in the granules, generating
soluble proteins from membrane PAM. To study the processing of PAM
further, we have characterized secreted PAM fragments, using Western
blot analysis of stimulated medium samples (Fig. 4B).
Separate soluble PHM and PAL proteins are released to the medium,
although no bifunctional PAM is secreted (e.g., PHM-Exon A-PAL from
PAM-1, Mr = 70-100 kDa) (Fig.
4B). Furthermore, the approximately 2:1 ratio between
PAL/PHM secreted activity (see Fig. 2B,C) indicates
good cleavage and secretion of the PAL fragment, because the PAL domain
of PAM-1 is known to have a higher turnover number than the PHM domain
(Eipper et al., 1993 ). PAM is cleaved extensively and stored
efficiently in highly stimulatable granules in cultured SCG neurons.
Subcellular distribution of exogenous POMC products in SCG neurons
in culture
So that the processing and sorting of proteins in neuronal LDCVs
could be investigated, the POMC precursor molecule has been introduced
into SCG neurons, using a recombinant adenovirus system (Fig.
5). Double immunofluorescent staining of
infected SCG neurons has been performed with an antibody that
recognizes the COOH-terminal end of the ACTH while not detecting intact
POMC (see schematic diagram, Fig. 5), along with antibodies to MAP2
(dendritic marker) or to tau (axonal marker). The staining reveals a
distribution of ACTH in cell bodies and axons similar to tau staining
(Fig. 5A) and distinct from MAP2 staining (Fig.
5B). The punctate ACTH staining and distribution resemble
the pattern of PAM staining in the axons, which suggests some ACTH
localization in LDCVs. Similar staining was seen with two other ACTH
antisera with distinct specificities and with one antiserum to the
N-terminal region of POMC.

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Figure 5.
Localization of POMC-processed products in
AdPOMC-infected SCG cultures. Primary SCG cultures were infected with
AdPOMC virus, fixed, and permeabilized. Cells were incubated
simultaneously with polyclonal antibody to C-ACTH and either monoclonal
antibody to tau (A) or monoclonal antibody to
MAP2 (B). Shown is the schematic diagram of the
POMC precursor molecule and the processed products recognized by the
C-ACTH antibody.
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Secretion of exogenous POMC and endogenous NPY is different
POMC-infected SCG neurons were tested for ACTH and NPY secretion
to compare the secretion of the virally encoded products and the
endogenous proteins. Secretion of immunoreactive ACTH was determined
under both basal and stimulated conditions. The levels of ACTH (Fig.
6A) detected in the
basal medium collection were at least 10-fold lower than the levels of
NPY (Fig. 6B). However, when expressed as a
percentage of the cell content of peptide, ACTH basal secretion rates
were higher than NPY basal secretion rates (Fig. 6C).
Unexpectedly, ACTH secretion showed only a twofold stimulation in
response to BaCl2, much lower than the 10-fold
stimulation seen for NPY from the same culture (Fig. 6A,B). When secretion from noninfected and infected
neurons was compared, the NPY secretion was stimulated by 10- to
20-fold from infected neurons and noninfected cells (Fig.
6B).

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Figure 6.
Secretion of ACTH immunoreactivity from
POMC-infected cultured SCG neurons. Cultures either were infected with
AdPOMC virus or were not infected. Then 48 hr later the medium was
analyzed from an overnight collection, and a secretion experiment was
begun; after two consecutive 2 hr periods of basal secretion, the
medium was collected during a 2 hr period of stimulated secretion (1 mM BaCl2). A, Cleaved
ACTH levels were determined in all medium samples from POMC-infected
cultures by RIA. B, The levels of NPY were determined in
all medium samples, as described in Materials and Methods.
C, Basal and stimulated levels of secretion of NPY and
ACTH are expressed as a percentage of cell content. Data are the
mean ± SD for four determinations. Similar results were obtained
in four independent experiments.
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In an effort to understand the limited stimulation of ACTH secretion,
as well as the difference between the NPY and ACTH responses to
secretagogue, we performed RIAs with two different ACTH antibodies; one
antibody recognized only the exposed COOH-terminal of ACTH, and the
other recognized the intact POMC precursor and any of its derivatives
that contain ACTH. The RIA data predicted that cleaved ACTH levels are
only ~15% of the total POMC levels (Fig. 7A), suggesting that cleavage
of POMC is limited.

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Figure 7.
Secretion of ACTH and POMC from AdPOMC-infected
SCG cultures. A, Basal secretion rates of immunoactive
POMC (intact + cleaved), ACTH (only cleaved
products), and NPY were determined in the same medium samples.
Data are the mean ± SD for four determinations. B,
POMC-infected cells were labeled with 300 µCi of
[35S]methionine for 30 min and harvested
(P, pulse) or chased (C) in CSFM
for 2 hr; spent medium (M) was collected.
Cells were extracted in 5N acetic acid and lyophilized.
Immunoprecipitations of the spent medium and cell extract were
performed by using the antibody to the N-terminal of ACTH (JH93,) as
described. Samples were fractionated by SDS-PAGE and visualized by
fluorography. Similar results were obtained in four independent
experiments.
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To compare better the synthesis and processing of POMC and pro-NPY, we
performed biosynthetic labeling of POMC-infected SCG neurons.
Precursors and products are isolated by immunoprecipitation, using
antibodies to ACTH and NPY, and are fractionated by SDS-PAGE. On a
molar basis the POMC precursor biosynthetic rate in infected neurons
has ranged from a few percent up to three times higher than the pro-NPY
biosynthetic rate in different experiments. Regardless of the level of
expression, the vast majority of POMC molecules is secreted as
intact unprocessed POMC, with only a small portion cleaved to
glycosylated ACTH (Fig. 7B). As expected, pro-NPY is processed extensively to NPY within the cells, and NPY is the major
secreted form (Marek and Mains, 1989 ; Paquet et al., 1996 ) (data not
shown). The SCG neurons express POMC at high levels and process POMC
very inefficiently to ACTH; the vast majority of the POMC molecules is
rapidly secreted intact from the cells. By contrast to mature NPY,
cleaved mature ACTH is present in a very low levels and is stored only
poorly in a stimulatable pool.
Normal processing, storage, and secretion of POMC products in
pituitary cells
Viral infection with AdPOMC does not alter endogenous NPY or PAM
storage and secretion in the SCG neurons significantly, but the virally
encoded POMC in large part is excluded from LDCVs and remains as intact
POMC. To test whether these results indicate some defect in the AdPOMC
virus, we have infected primary anterior pituitary and AtT-20
corticotrope tumor cells with the AdPOMC virus (Fig.
8). There is a small amount of POMC
expressed in the few corticotropes in the anterior pituitary cultures
(Fig. 8A, left), and virtually all of the POMC is
stored in the cells during the 2 hr chase. After the anterior pituitary
cells have been infected, the amount of POMC expressed is vastly
increased, and the complete retention of the POMC in the cells during
the chase is striking (Fig. 8A, right).
The majority of the POMC in the virally infected cultures is found by
immunostaining to be in endocrine cells other than the corticotropes,
as expected (data not shown). The AtT-20 cell line also was used to
test the AdPOMC virus; POMC is endogenously expressed and processed to
ACTH in this neuroendocrine cell line, and ACTH is stored and secreted
from the LDCVs on stimulation (Fig. 8B, left)
(Ratovitski et al., 1999 ). Under basal conditions, POMC-infected AtT-20
cells secrete three to four times as much immunoreactive ACTH as the
noninfected cells (Fig. 8B, right). Secretion of ACTH
from POMC-infected cells is stimulated three- to fourfold, as observed
for noninfected AtT-20 cells (as shown before) (Ratovitski et al.,
1999 ). In contrast to the SCG neurons, virally encoded POMC is
processed, stored, and secreted as efficiently from the pituitary LDCVs
as is the endogenous POMC. Thus, expressing more POMC molecules does
not prevent pituitary cells from processing, storing, and releasing the
exogenous POMC in the same manner as the endogenous POMC. Similarly,
efficient processing and storage of exogenous POMC were seen, using
stably transfected AtT-20 cells (Noel et al., 1991 ).

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Figure 8.
Secretion of ACTH immunoreactivity from
POMC-infected pituitary cells. Primary anterior pituitary and AtT-20
cells either were infected with AdPOMC virus or were not infected and
were analyzed after 48 hr. A, Anterior pituitary
cultures were labeled and analyzed as in Figure 7B.
B, AtT-20 cells were analyzed for secretion during the
overnight period and after two consecutive 30 min periods of basal
secretion, followed by a 30 min period of stimulated secretion (1 mM BaCl2). ACTH levels were determined
by RIA for cleaved ACTH. Data are the mean ± SD for four
determinations. Similar results were obtained in two independent
experiments.
|
|
Overexpressed PAM-1 is not processed in SCG neurons
POMC normally is not expressed in the SCG neurons; hence its
failure to undergo effective cleavage and storage might reflect this
fact. To study the expression of a virally derived protein that is
identical to an endogenous SCG protein, we have overexpressed PAM-1 by
using recombinant adenovirus (AdPAM-1) and studied how the SCG neurons
process, store, and secrete the additional PAM-1. Western blot analysis
of the medium and cell extract samples shows higher levels of intact
PAM-1 within the cell extracts of PAM-1-infected neurons as compared
with cell extracts from noninfected cells (Fig.
9A, asterisk). No increase in
the level of the smaller, cleaved PAM proteins is observed. PHM
activity detected in cell extracts from PAM-1-infected cells is
several-fold higher than in cell extracts from noninfected cells (Fig.
9B).

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Figure 9.
PAM-1 overexpression in primary SCG cultures. SCG
cultures either were infected with AdPAM-1 or were not infected. Then
48 hr later the medium was collected from the overnight period and
after two consecutive 2 hr periods of basal secretion, followed by a 2 hr period of stimulated secretion (1 mM
BaCl2). The cells were extracted by using TMT
buffer. A, Medium samples (Mdm) and cell
extracts were subjected to Western blot analysis, using an antibody to
Exon A (JH629). B, PHM enzyme activity was measured in
duplicate samples of the collected medium samples and cell extracts.
Similar results were obtained in three independent experiments.
|
|
Surprisingly, no changes in the levels of PAM-1 processed products are
detected in either basal or stimulated medium samples (Fig.
9A). PHM enzyme activity measured in medium collections is
in agreement with the Western blot results (Fig. 9A,B). Thus overexpression of virally derived PAM-1 in the SCG neurons results in
much higher levels of PAM-1 protein within the cell without more
processing and secretion of PAM proteins, as compared with noninfected
cells. The lack of cleavage of overexpressed PAM-1 in the SCG neurons
is consistent with the very limited processing of POMC to ACTH.
Virally derived PAM-1 is processed and stored in AtT-20 cells
As an additional control for the application of the adenovirus
system to study protein expression, we have infected AtT-20 cells with
the AdPAM-1 virus and compared virally infected AtT-20 cells with PAM-1
stable cell lines. PAM protein is expressed endogenously in AtT-20
cells at low levels that are readily detectable by using the enzymatic
assays for both PHM and PAL but that are undetectable by using standard
immunostaining conditions (Mains and Eipper, 1984 ; Milgram et al.,
1992 ). As observed via immunostaining (Fig. 10A), virally derived
PAM-1 is localized in the perinuclear region (TGN area) and at the tips
of cellular processes (where the LDCVs are located), as previously
shown for stably transfected PAM-1 (Milgram et al., 1992 , 1997 ).

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Figure 10.
PAM-1 overexpression in AtT-20 cells.
A, AtT-20 cells were infected with the AdPAM-1 virus.
Then 48 hr later the cells were fixed and permeabilized. Cells were
incubated simultaneously with polyclonal antibody to Exon A (JH629) and
monoclonal antibody to PAM-CD (6E6). AtT-20 cells either were infected
with AdPAM-1 or were not infected. The medium was collected 48 hr later
from the overnight period and after two consecutive 30 min periods of
basal secretion, followed by a 30 min period of stimulated secretion (1 mM BaCl2). Cells were extracted by using
TMT buffer. B, Medium samples and cell extracts were
subjected to Western blot analysis, using an antibody to Exon A (JH629,
top) and an antibody to PAM-CD (mAb 6E6,
bottom). C, PHM activity was measured in
duplicate samples of cell extracts. Similar results were obtained in
two independent experiments.
|
|
Virally derived PAM-1 is cleaved and stored in the AtT-20 LDCVs (Fig.
10B), and up to 10-fold more PHM activity is present in cell extracts from PAM-1-infected cells as compared with noninfected AtT-20 cells (Fig. 10C). Furthermore, several TMD-CD
fragments are detected in the PAM-1-infected cell extracts (see #, Fig. 10B, PAM-CD Ab). Western blot analyses of the basal
medium collections reveal the release of a bifunctional PHM/PAL
fragment (Fig. 10B, asterisk) and the monofunctional
PHM domain (Fig. 10B, arrow) by PAM-1-infected cells.
Secretion of the PHM domain is stimulated threefold in response to
BaCl2 (Fig. 10B, arrow); the
level of PAM expression in these experiments was maintained below the
level that interferes with stimulated secretion (Ciccotosto et al., 1999 ). None of the PAM isoforms is detectable in basal medium collections from noninfected cells, whereas a faint doublet of PHM is
observed in the stimulated medium sample. A fraction of the virally
derived PAM is cleaved near the transmembrane domain and constitutively
secreted as a bifunctional PHM/PAL molecule; similar cleavages are seen
in fibroblasts expressing PAM-1 (Yun and Eipper, 1995 ).
 |
DISCUSSION |
The bifunctional enzyme PAM post-translationally modifies
approximately one-half of all mammalian neuropeptides by converting a
COOH-terminal glycine into an essential -amide group (Eipper et al.,
1992 ). This modification is critical to the bioactivity of the
neuropeptides and hormones, occurring primarily in immature secretory
granules. Therefore, PAM is an excellent marker for the peptidergic
phenotype, and these data demonstrate that the SCG metabolism of PAM is
not identical to the pituitary metabolism of PAM. Specifically,
although the level of PAM in SCG is comparable to the very high level
of PAM in anterior pituitary, the PAM-1-processing pattern in the SCG
neurons is quite different from that obtained with pituitary, where the
PHM domain is released from the integral membrane PAM-1 and the PAL
domain is retained bound to the membrane. Monofunctional PHM and PAL
domains of PAM are secreted from cultured SCG neurons, whereas no
bifunctional form of PAM is secreted; both domains are cleaved from the
initial integral membrane PAM-1. This is consistent with the expression
of PC2 in the SCG neurons (Paquet et al., 1996 ), and PC2 apparently
cleaves both in Exon A and after the PAL domain, whereas the anterior
pituitary and AtT-20 have only PC1 and perform the cleavage only within
Exon A (Bloomquist et al., 1991 ). It is interesting that the soluble PAL purified from bovine samples was from neurointermediate
pituitary extracts, and both the intermediate and neural lobes of the
pituitary contained abundant PC2 (Bloomquist et al., 1991 ; Day et al.,
1992 ; Eipper et al., 1993 ).
Immunostaining indicates that PAM proteins reside in punctate
vesicle-like structures distributed throughout the perinuclear area and
axons in a similar way to NPY. In addition, secretion studies show that
the cleaved PAM-derived products (PHM and PAL) and NPY are stored in
highly stimulatable granules. For both PAM and NPY the storage is also
extremely efficient, with basal secretion rates ~0.5-1% of the
cellular content per hour and with a 10- to 20-fold stimulation of the
rate of secretion in response to secretagogue. These data demonstrate
that PAM proteins in the SCG neurons are stored in the LDCVs with NPY.
The mechanisms involved in the processing and trafficking of proteins
into the LDCVs in highly polarized cells, such as SCG neurons, are not
fully understood. Recent advances in neuronal gene transfer by viral
infection have made it possible to deliver foreign genes with high
efficiency and low toxicity and, therefore, to study different aspects
of neuronal cell biology (Kochanek et al., 1996 ; Moriyoshi et al.,
1996 ; Paquet et al., 1996 ; Slack and Miller, 1996 ; Marx and Mains,
1997 ; Pahl and Baeuerle, 1997 ; Johns et al., 1999 ). We have used the
adenoviral system to overexpress POMC and PAM-1. POMC has been
expressed at various levels in the SCG neurons, from a few percent of
the endogenous NPY level up to three times the level of NPY, and
punctate immunostaining of ACTH is seen in axons. However, regardless
of the level of expression, quantitative studies reveal that the
majority of the POMC molecules is secreted constitutively without
cleavage, whereas only a small percentage of the POMC molecules is
processed to ACTH and secreted through the regulated LDCVs. These POMC
results seem extremely puzzling in the context of continued excellent
cleavage, storage, and stimulation of secretion for the endogenous NPY
and PAM by the same neurons. Thus the exogenous POMC and the endogenous
NPY and PAM are handled quite differently by the SCG neurons.
One possible explanation of these results might have been significant
non-neuronal cell contamination of the SCG neuron cultures, because
non-neuronal cells would not be expected to cleave or store POMC.
However, non-neuronal cells are not present, based on phase-contrast
microscopy and visualization with FITC-phalloidin, which shows
brilliant illumination of the actin fiber bundles in non-neuronal
cells. Less than 5% of the cells in the culture were non-neuronal,
ruling out this explanation of the data. In addition, immunostaining
with antibody to POMC in cultures infected with the POMC virus
uncovered no non-neuronal cells. Adenovirus-mediated damage to the
ability of the SCG neurons to process, store, and secrete peptides and
proteins could explain the inability of adenovirally encoded POMC to
undergo cleavage and storage in SCG neurons. However, the ability of
the neurons to process, store, and secrete endogenous NPY and PAM
essentially was unaltered by the viral treatments. A defect in the
adenoviral POMC construction was ruled out because adenoviral POMC is
processed, stored, and secreted normally in AtT-20 cells, which express
and process POMC endogenously, and also is stored extremely efficiently
by primary anterior pituitary cells.
Data from endocrine cells suggest that precursors are stored less
efficiently than cleaved products (Naggert et al., 1995 ; Furuta et al.,
1997 ; Arvan and Castle, 1998 ). If this were the explanation for the
POMC data, the lack of storage simply might reflect the fact that
neurons cannot cleave POMC. The initial cleavage of POMC usually is
mediated by PC1 in cells that make POMC endogenously, and SCG neurons
lack PC1 (Zhou et al., 1993 ). However, anterior pituitary cells store
adenovirally encoded POMC extremely efficiently and cleave only a small
fraction of the added POMC.
To test whether the SCG neurons discriminate against the exogenous POMC
in favor of the endogenous NPY, we introduced a product endogenous to
the neurons (PAM-1), using the adenoviral system. Although the
introduction of adenovirally encoded PAM-1 resulted in graded increases
in the SCG content of intact PAM-1, no increase in PAM-derived cleaved
products (soluble PHM and PAL) was observed in cell extracts or in
spent medium. That the PAM-1 virus is defective was ruled out by using
AtT-20 cells, which process and store the adenoviral PAM-1 in a manner
identical to PAM-1 expressed by inducible cell lines, as well as by
cell lines stably expressing PAM-1 (Ciccotosto et al., 1999 ). In
addition, the adenoviral PAM-1 has been introduced into primary
anterior pituitary cultures and was cleaved and stored very
efficiently, along with the initially high level of endogenous PAM-1
and PAM-derived products in anterior pituitary (R. El Meskini and B. Eipper, unpublished observations).
It is clear from these data that the expression of POMC and PAM-1 is
cell type-specific: neither AtT-20 nor primary anterior pituitary
endocrine cells show a pattern of discrimination against exogenous
proteins as reported here for SCG neurons. It is possible that the
viral mRNAs, which are shorter than the endogenous mRNAs and
deliberately lack potential elements controlling expression in the 5'
and 3' untranslated regions, are missing essential information targeting them to certain zones within the cell; therefore, the proteins do not enter the proper Golgi area that allow them to be
targeted to the LDCVs (Hegde and Lingappa, 1999 ; Martone et al., 1999 ;
Mohr, 1999 ). However, viral constructs limited to the protein-coding
region yield functional inwardly rectifying potassium channels targeted
normally to the membranes of dendrites and axons of SCG neurons (Johns
et al., 1999 ). The targeting of mRNAs in cells is known to be
dependent, at least in part, on small stretches of nucleotides in
untranslated regions (Ainger et al., 1997 ; Martone et al., 1999 ). There
is substantial evidence that the endoplasmic reticulum is
heterogeneous, that the Golgi is also very heterogeneous, and that
groups of proteins destined to one final site may be grouped together
early in the secretory pathway (Chanat et al., 1997 ; Rodriguez de Turco
et al., 1997 ; Urbe et al., 1997 ; Dannies, 1999 ; Hegde and Lingappa,
1999 ; Ladinsky et al., 1999 ). Similar to the overexpression of PAM-1,
recombinant GABAB receptors fail to be targeted
to the neuronal membrane, although those receptors are expressed
endogenously by the SCG neurons (Couve et al., 1998 ).
One plausible explanation is that the capacity of the LDCVs is
selective and limited, and, therefore, no more peptides or proteins can
be stored in the neuronal granules; this is quite surprising, given the
plasticity of sympathetic neurons with respect to neurotransmitter
phenotype (Fann and Patterson, 1998 ; Francis and Landis, 1999 ; Groves
and Bronner-Fraser, 1999 ). The PHM-specific activity in the SCG neurons
is very high (higher than the levels in anterior pituitary and atrium
and comparable to the level of PHM in the most extreme tumors) (Mueller
et al., 1993 ; Scopsi et al., 1998 ). It is also possible that the
targeting of more PAM-1, which is membrane-bound, is limited by
accessory protein or proteins that are involved in PAM trafficking
(Kalirin-like; P-CIP2) (Alam et al., 1996 ). It appears that POMC
molecules are less well targeted to LDCVs than NPY; in support of this
idea, overexpressed exogenous NPY was stored in AtT-20 LDCVs more
efficiently than the endogenous POMC (Dickerson et al., 1987 ). Another
possibility is that cleavage is required for the aggregation and
targeting of POMC products to LDCVs, and SCG neurons lack PC1, which
normally mediates POMC processing in corticotropes. However, exogenous PAM-1 is not treated identically to endogenous PAM-1 in the SCG neurons, and POMC is stored very well in anterior pituitary without being cleaved extensively, so the selectivity is quite sophisticated.
These data raise the following question: how does a cell sense the
number of LDCVs it possesses and adapt to the need for more (as when
expressing an exogenous protein)? Perhaps neurons need additional
signals to adjust the number of LDCVs upward, whereas endocrine cells
adapt more readily to an increased demand on the LDCV pool.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received May 14, 1999; revised June 23, 1999; accepted July 21, 1999.
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grant
DA-00266.We thank Betty Eipper, Angela Bruzzaniti, and Chenie Bell-Parikh for many constructive scientific suggestions and for comments on this manuscript. We also thank Lixian Jin and Marie Bell
for technical support and Dee Andryszak for administrative help.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Richard E. Mains, Department
of Neuroscience, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, 725 North Wolfe Street, Baltimore, MD 21205-2185.
 |
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