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The Journal of Neuroscience, November 1, 1999, 19(21):9218-9227
Knockdown of AMPA Receptor GluR2 Expression Causes Delayed
Neurodegeneration and Increases Damage by Sublethal Ischemia in
Hippocampal CA1 and CA3 Neurons
Keiji
Oguro,
Noriko
Oguro,
Takashi
Kojima,
Sonja Y.
Grooms,
Agata
Calderone,
Xin
Zheng,
Michael V. L.
Bennett, and
R. Suzanne
Zukin
Department of Neuroscience, Albert Einstein College of Medicine,
Bronx, New York 10461
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ABSTRACT |
Considerable evidence suggests that
Ca2+-permeable AMPA receptors are critical mediators
of the delayed, selective neuronal death associated with transient
global ischemia and sustained seizures. Global ischemia suppresses mRNA
and protein expression of the glutamate receptor subunit GluR2 and
increases AMPA receptor-mediated Ca2+ influx into
vulnerable neurons of the hippocampal CA1 before the onset of
neurodegeneration. Status epilepticus suppresses GluR2 mRNA and protein
in CA3 before neurodegeneration in this region. To examine whether
acute downregulation of the GluR2 subunit, even in the absence of a
neurological insult, can cause neuronal cell death, we performed GluR2
"knockdown" experiments. Intracerebral injection of antisense
oligodeoxynucleotides targeted to GluR2 mRNA induced delayed death of
pyramidal neurons in CA1 and CA3. Antisense-induced neurodegeneration
was preceded by a reduction in GluR2 mRNA, as indicated by in
situ hybridization, and in GluR2 protein, as indicated by
Western blot analysis. GluR2 antisense suppressed GluR2 mRNA in the
dentate gyrus but did not cause cell death. The AMPA receptor
antagonist 6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxiline-2,3-dione (CNQX) and the
Ca2+-permeable AMPA receptor channel blocker
1-naphthyl acetyl spermine protected against antisense-induced cell
death. This result indicates that antisense-induced cell death is
mediated by Ca2+-permeable AMPA receptors. GluR2
antisense and brief sublethal global ischemia acted synergistically to
cause degeneration of pyramidal neurons, consistent with action by a
common mechanism. These findings demonstrate that downregulation of
GluR2 is sufficient to induce delayed death of specific neuronal populations.
Key words:
antisense oligonucleotides; neurodegeneration; AMPA
receptors; gene expression; hippocampus; excitotoxicity; cerebral
ischemia; status epilepticus
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INTRODUCTION |
Transient severe global ischemia,
occurring in patients during cardiorespiratory arrest or induced
experimentally in animals, causes selective and delayed neuronal cell
death, particularly of the hippocampal CA1 (Schmidt-Kastner and Freund,
1991 ; Hsu and Buzsaki, 1993 ). The delayed cell death after ischemia
requires an initial translocation of Zn2+
(Koh et al., 1996 ) and is associated with a late influx of toxic amounts of Ca2+ into vulnerable neurons,
which may be mediated by Ca2+-permeable
AMPA receptors (Pellegrini-Giampietro et al., 1997 ). During the
ischemic episode, cells depolarize, exhibit a rise in intracellular
Ca2+ (Silver and Erecinska, 1992 ), and
become inexcitable. After reperfusion, cells appear morphologically
normal, exhibit normal intracellular Ca2+
(Silver and Erecinska, 1992 ), and are again able to generate action
potentials for 24-72 hr after the ischemic insult (Gorter et al.,
1997 ). Ultimately, intracellular Ca2+
again rises in vulnerable neurons, and cell death ensues, exhibiting a
number of the hallmarks of apoptosis (Kirino, 1982 ; Takei and Endo,
1994 ; Choi, 1995 ; Chen et al., 1998 ; but see Colbourne et al., 1999 ).
Delayed neurodegeneration is also seen after kainate-induced status
epilepticus, but in this paradigm, it is the pyramidal neurons of CA3
that are selectively vulnerable (Friedman et al., 1994 ).
AMPA receptors containing an edited form of the glutamate receptor
subunit GluR2 (or GluR-B) are relatively impermeable to divalent
cations; receptors lacking this subunit are much more permeable to
Ca2+ (and
Zn2+) (Hollmann et al., 1991 ; Verdoorn et
al., 1991 ; Burnashev et al., 1992 ; Bowie and Mayer, 1995 ;
Washburn et al., 1997 ). Most principal neurons of adult hippocampus
express heteromeric AMPA receptors that contain edited GluR2 and have
low permeability to Ca2+ (Bochet et al.,
1994 ; Jonas et al., 1994 ; Geiger et al., 1995 ). In these cells, an
acute reduction in GluR2 expression could act as a "molecular
switch," leading to increased Ca2+
permeability of AMPA receptors and enhanced toxicity of endogenous glutamate.
A number of studies provide evidence that
Ca2+-permeable AMPA receptors are
mediators of the delayed neurodegeneration associated with global
ischemia and status epilepticus. AMPA receptor antagonists, but not
NMDA antagonists, protect against ischemia-induced neuronal death, even
when administered many hours after a brief ischemic insult (Pulsinelli
et al., 1993 ; Sheardown et al., 1993 ). The relevance of this finding,
however, is unclear, because protection may be caused by
antagonist-induced hypothermia rather than by block of
Ca2+-permeable AMPA receptors in
vulnerable neurons (Nurse and Corbett, 1996 ). Global ischemia
induces downregulation of GluR2 mRNA and protein expression in
vulnerable neurons before cell death (for review, see Bennett et al.,
1996 ; Pellegrini-Giampietro et al., 1997 ). In slices from postischemic
animals, CA1 neurons with robust action potentials exhibit greatly
enhanced AMPA-elicited rises in intracellular
Ca2+ compared with those in cells from
control animals (Gorter et al., 1997 ). EPSCs in postischemic CA1
neurons exhibit an enhanced Ca2+-dependent
component that appears to be mediated by
Ca2+-permeable AMPA receptors (Tsubokawa
et al., 1994 , 1995 ). These studies provide evidence of
Ca2+ influx through AMPA receptors in
neurons destined to die. Kainate-induced status epilepticus also leads
to downregulation of GluR2 mRNA and protein expression before the onset
of delayed neuronal death in CA3 (Friedman et al., 1994 , 1997 ).
To examine whether acute reduction in the level of GluR2 is sufficient
to cause neurodegeneration, even in the absence of the other changes
caused by global ischemia or status epilepticus, we performed
"knockdown" experiments with GluR2 antisense oligonucleotides targeted to GluR2 mRNA. Knockdown of receptor subunits has proven valuable in investigation of receptor function in vivo and
in vitro (for review, see Wahlestedt, 1994 ; Weiss et al.,
1997 ). Intracerebroventricular injection of GluR2 antisense induced
delayed degeneration of pyramidal neurons in CA1 and CA3, regions
vulnerable to global ischemia and status epilepticus, respectively.
Degeneration in these regions was preceded by a significant reduction
in the levels of GluR2 mRNA and protein. Blockers of AMPA receptors
protected against antisense-induced death. Moreover, GluR2 antisense
acted synergistically with brief, sublethal ischemia to cause
degeneration of pyramidal neurons, consistent with the mediation of
postischemic death by downregulation of GluR2.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Antisense oligodeoxynucleotides.
Oligodeoxynucleotides (21 bases in length) corresponding to specific
sequences in the 5'-coding region of the GluR2 cDNA were synthesized in
the antisense orientation (Genosys Biotechnologies, The Woodlands,
TX). The specific antisense oligonucleotide designated AS1
(5'-CTGTATGCTGTTAGAAGAGAC-3'), complementary to positions 64-84 of rat
GluR2 cDNA (GenBank M36419), was designed to target the 5'-coding
region of GluR2 mRNA just after the signal sequence. The specific
antisense designated AS2 (5'-AACCATTTTATCCACTTCACT-3'),
complementary to positions 1168-1188 of the GluR2 cDNA, was designed
to target the region of GluR2 mRNA encoding a unique sequence in the
N-terminal domain recognized by polyclonal antibody GluR2-23 (Wenthold
et al., 1992 ). SC1 or "scrambled" antisense
(5'-CTAACCTCCAATCTTATTCTA-3'), in which the bases of the 21-mer AS2
were randomized, was synthesized for use as a control. A search of
GenBank revealed no rodent sequence, other than that of the GluR2 gene,
that was identical to any of the three oligonucleotides for a length of
15 or more base pairs. Identity over shorter sequences was not
considered, because the predicted Tm of 15 mers would be ~15°C or lower, well below rodent body temperature.
Specificity of the oligos can also be inferred from their effects
described in the Results. To increase stability of the injected
oligonucleotides, phosphorothioate bonds were incorporated between
three terminal nucleotides at the 5' and 3' ends. For stereotaxic
injections, oligonucleotides were dissolved in saline (0.9% NaCl).
Each single injection was 10 nmol in 5 µl for rats or 2 nmol in 3 µl for gerbils.
Intracerebroventricular administration of GluR2 antisense in
rats. For administration of antisense oligonucleotides, adult male
Sprague Dawley rats (Charles River Laboratories, Wilmington, MA), weighing 260-280 gm, were anesthetized with 5% halothane, after
which they were transferred to a surgical chamber and maintained in 2%
halothane in a mixture of
N2O/O2 (70:30) by means of
a Vapomatic anesthetic vaporizer (CWE, Ardmore, PA). Body
temperature and anesthesia level were monitored continuously during
surgery. Animals were positioned in a stereotaxic frame, and a cannula
(28 gauge; stainless steel; inner diameter, 0.18 mm; outer diameter,
0.36 mm) was lowered stereotaxically into the right cerebral ventricle to a position defined by the following coordinates: 0.92 mm posterior from bregma, 1.2 mm lateral to bregma, and 3.6 mm below the skull
surface. Specific GluR2 antisense AS1, antisense AS2, or randomized
(scrambled) antisense SC1 (10 nmol in 5 µl of saline) or saline (5 µl) was delivered via the cannula at a flow rate of 1 µl/min. A
single injection of antisense or saline was given, or four injections
were given at 12 hr intervals. Both specific and scrambled antisense
caused some reduction in activity of the animals for several hours
after each injection; animals were never observed to exhibit seizures.
Administration of antisense oligonucleotides and sublethal global
ischemia in gerbils. To examine the combined effects of GluR2
antisense oligonucleotide administration and transient, forebrain
ischemia, we anesthetized adult male Mongolian gerbils (Charles River
Laboratories), weighing 60-80 gm, with 4% halothane and then
maintained them in 2% halothane in a mixture of
N2O/O2 (70:30) as described
above. For intracerebroventricular injection, animals were held in a
stereotaxic frame, and the injection cannula was inserted to a position
defined by the following stereotaxic coordinates: 0.4 mm posterior
from bregma, 1.2 mm lateral to bregma, and 2.2 mm below the skull
surface. Specific GluR2 antisense AS2 or randomized (scrambled)
antisense SC1 (2 nmol in 3 µl of saline) or saline (3 µl) was
delivered via the cannula at a flow rate of 1 µl/min. A single
injection of antisense or saline was given, or four injections were
given at 12 hr intervals. One-half of the animals received no further
treatment, and one-half were subjected to sublethal (2 min) forebrain
ischemia immediately after the last injection. The ischemia was
produced by temporary bilateral occlusion of the carotid arteries using
a modification of our previously described method (Oguro et al., 1995 ).
The common carotid arteries were exposed by means of a ventral midline
neck incision and occluded for 2 min with nontraumatic aneurism clips. At the end of the occlusion period, the clamps were released, allowing
restoration of carotid blood flow, and the incision was sutured.
Halothane administration was discontinued immediately after carotid
occlusion. Body temperature was monitored and maintained close to
37.5 ± 0.5°C with a rectal thermistor and heat lamp until the
animal had fully recovered from anesthesia.
Animal care. Animals were maintained in a temperature- and
light-controlled environment with a 14:10 hr light/dark cycle and were
treated in accordance with the principles and procedures of the
National Institutes of Health Guidelines for the Care and Use of
Laboratory Animals.
Histological analysis. In rats, neuronal damage was
monitored by histological examination of brain sections at the level of the hippocampus of animals killed at 1, 2, and 7 d after specific antisense treatments and at 7 d after control treatments (saline or scrambled antisense). In gerbils, histological analysis was of
animals killed at 7 d after experimental and control treatments. Animals were fixed by transcardiac perfusion with 4% paraformaldehyde in 10 mM PBS (200 ml/30 min) under deep chloroform
anesthesia, and their brains were removed and immersed in fixative at
4°C overnight. Coronal sections (30 µm) were cut with a vibratome and stained with toluidine blue. Hippocampal injury was assessed quantitatively by counting the number of pyramidal cells appearing histologically normal at a position distant to the site of antisense infusion (rats, 3.3 mm from bregma; gerbils, 1.5 mm from bregma). Cell counts from a minimum of four microscopic sections for each animal
were statistically analyzed by means of the Student's unpaired t test.
In situ hybridization. An
[35S]UTP-labeled RNA probe directed
against GluR2 was transcribed by incubation (1 hr at 37°C) of the rat
GluR2 cDNA with T7 polymerase in the presence of labeled and unlabeled
nucleotides using a Stratagene transcription kit (La Jolla, CA).
Radiolabeled probe was purified by phenol and chloroform extraction.
For quantitation of GluR2 mRNA expression, antisense-injected rats were
anesthetized with chloroform and decapitated 6, 12, 24, 48, and 72 hr
after the last injection. Saline-injected rats (four injections at 12 hr intervals) were killed 6 hr after the last injection. GluR2 mRNA
expression was assessed by in situ hybridization on sections
of brain at the level of the hippocampus (Pellegrini-Giampietro et al.,
1992a ). In brief, brains were rapidly removed, frozen by immersion in
2-methylbutane at 35°C, and stored at 70°C until sectioned.
Coronal sections (18 µm) were cut on a cryotome and thaw-mounted on
gelatin- or poly-L-lysine-coated slides. After
fixation with 4% paraformaldehyde in 10 mM
PBS with 5 mM MgCl2
for 15 min, sections were rinsed in PBS, dehydrated in graded ethanols,
and stored in 95% ethanol (4°C) until use. Before application of
riboprobes, slides were subjected to acetylation and incubated for 2 hr
at 50°C with prehybridization solution. For hybridization, slides
were incubated overnight at 50°C with 35S-labeled RNA probe
(106 cpm/section; 1 ng/ml). Sections were
washed, treated (30 min at room temperature) with RNase A (20 µg/ml),
and again dehydrated in graded ethanols. Slides were apposed to Kodak
XAR 5 film (Eastman Kodak, Rochester, NY) for 48 hr.
Signal specificity was assessed by competition experiments with excess
unlabeled oligonucleotides (Pellegrini-Giampietro et al., 1992a ). These
resulted in virtually blank autoradiograms. In separate control
studies, application of sense RNA probes to sections pretreated with
RNase A (100 µg/ml) showed no detectable labeling. The GluR2 probe is
a "pan" probe in that it labels both flip and flop splice variants.
For quantitation of GluR2 mRNA levels, autoradiograms were analyzed
with a Scan Jet 4-C computing densitometer using NIH Image 1.61 image-processing and analysis software. Films were scanned at 600 dots
per inch resolution, and images of each section (~1 × 106 pixels) were created. Mean optical
densities in regions of maximal labeling of individual hippocampal
subfields were averaged from a minimum of two sections from each
animal, and film background was subtracted. Optical density values were
expressed as grand means (± SDs) of individual means from three rats
for each time point and were normalized to optical density values for
the corresponding regions of control brains. To enable comparisons
between groups for any time points, sections were cut from brains of
control and experimental rats in the same session, incubated with the same solutions of RNA probes, and apposed to the same sheet of film.
Mean optical density values were statistically analyzed by the
Student's unpaired t test. The rationale of the
quantitative analysis was based on the following considerations: (1)
optical density readings taken from the region of interest varied
little among sections from a single animal, (2) the concentration of RNA probe (106 cpm/section) used in the
experiment produced saturating levels of hybridization and a maximal
signal-to-noise ratio, and (3) density readings of
[35S]UTP-labeled standards made of brain
paste indicated that exposure times were in the linear response range
of the film (Pellegrini-Giampietro et al., 1992a ).
Western blotting. For quantitation of protein expression
levels, rats were anesthetized with chloroform and killed by
decapitation 6, 12, 24, 48, and 72 hr after the last (fourth) injection
of GluR2 antisense or 6, 12, and 24 hr after a single injection of antisense AS2. Control rats receiving a single injection or four injections of saline at 12 hr intervals were killed 6 hr after the last
injection. Hippocampi were quickly dissected out and placed in ice-cold
PBS, and thick slices of dorsal hippocampus (1 mm) were cut on a
Mcllwain tissue chopper. CA1 and the bend region of CA3 were rapidly
separated from the slices by microdissection and stored at 70°C
before use. Tissue was placed in a sonicator in 200 µl of 1 mM NaHNO3 buffer, pH 6.8, containing
the protease inhibitor PMSF (phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, 1 mM; Sigma, St. Louis, MO) and sonicated until the solution
was uniform. The tissue sample was lysed overnight at 4°C in Laemmli
sample buffer (0.025 M Tris-HCl, 5% glycerol, 1% SDS,
0.05% bromphenol blue, 0.1 M dithiothreitol, 2.5%
-mercaptoethanol, 1 mM PMSF, and 0.5 mM NaHNO3 buffer, pH 6.8). Protein concentration was
measured using the bicinchoninic acid protein assay kit (Pierce,
Rockford, IL), and protein samples (10 µg) were loaded on 10%
polyacrylamide minigels (Bio-Rad, Richmond, CA) and separated by gel
electrophoresis. Protein bands were transferred from the gel to
nitrocellulose (Bio-Rad) in blotting buffer containing 0.192 M glycine and 20% methanol. After blocking for 30 min with
25 mM Tris-HCl buffer, pH 8.0, 125 mM NaCl,
0.1% Tween 20, and 4% skim milk, the membrane was incubated for 1 hr
at room temperature with the primary antibody diluted 1:1000 in PBS.
Two primary antibodies were used: a mouse monoclonal antibody directed
to a sequence within the N-terminal domain of the GluR2 subunit
(Vissavajjhala et al., 1996 ) (gift of John H. Morrison, Mt. Sinai, NY)
and a rabbit polyclonal antibody directed to a sequence within the
C-terminal domain of the GluR1 subunit (Wenthold et al., 1992 )
(PharMingen, San Diego, CA). The membrane was then incubated for 1 hr
at room temperature with secondary antibody diluted 1:1000 in PBS and
enhanced chemiluminescence reagents to visualize the antibody reaction
(ECL; Amersham, Arlington Heights, IL) and finally exposed to XAR 5 x-ray film (Eastman Kodak). Secondary antibodies used were, for GluR2,
a horseradish peroxidase (HRP)-conjugated anti-mouse IgG and, for
GluR1, an HRP-conjugated anti-rabbit IgG (Vector Laboratories,
Burlingame, CA).
For quantitation of GluR1 and GluR2 protein levels, Western blots were
analyzed with a Scan Jet 4-C computing densitometer using NIH Image
1.61 image-processing and analysis software. Mean optical densities of
bands for two samples per animal were determined, and the film
background was subtracted. Optical density values were expressed as
grand means (± SDs) of individual means from a minimum of three rats.
Changes in optical density for antisense-injected rats were normalized
to optical density values for the corresponding brain region of control
rats to enable comparisons of band densities of immunoblots apposed to
different films. Mean band densities were statistically analyzed with
the Student's unpaired t test to determine significance.
Administration of glutamate receptor antagonists. For
pharmacological studies of neuroprotection by glutamate antagonists, antagonist (10 mM in 5 µl of saline) or saline was
injected into the right lateral ventricle at the time of the second or
fourth antisense injection or 24 hr after the fourth (last) antisense injection. Antagonists used were as follows: 1-naphthyl acetyl spermine (Naspm), channel blocker of
Ca2+-permeable AMPA receptors (Research
Biochemicals, Natick, MA); 6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxiline-2,3-dione
disodium (CNQX), AMPA receptor antagonist (Research Biochemicals); and
D-2-amino-5-phosphonovalerate (AP-5), NMDA receptor
antagonist (Tocris, Ballwin, MO).
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RESULTS |
GluR2 antisense induces neuronal cell death in the hippocampal CA1
and CA3
To examine the effect of GluR2 knockdown on the morphology and
viability of the principal neurons of the hippocampus, we administered GluR2 antisense oligonucleotides AS1 and AS2 into the right ventricle of rats, either as a single injection or as four injections at 12 hr
intervals. Control rats were administered four injections of scrambled
antisense SC1 or saline at 12 hr intervals. Experimental rats were
killed at 1, 2, and 7 d after the last injection, control rats
were killed at 7 d after the last injection, and brain sections were examined histologically.
The specific GluR2 antisense AS1 induced selective, delayed
neurodegeneration in the pyramidal cell layer of the hippocampus (Figs.
1, 2). At
1 d after the last of four antisense injections, cell counts of
toluidine blue-stained brain sections did not yet reveal any indication
of cell death in the pyramidal cell layers in CA1 or CA3 (histology not
shown; cell counts in Fig. 2; n = 5). At 2 d after
the last antisense injection, the number of normal-appearing cells was
reduced by one-third in both CA1 and CA3 on both right and left sides
compared with that in saline- or scrambled antisense-injected controls
(Figs. 1E,F, 2; n = 5;
p < 0.01 for each region, right and left CA1 and CA3;
saline injected, n = 5; SC1 injected, n = 5; control animals killed at 7 d). At this time the
deteriorating cells showed nuclear pyknosis and shrinkage of cytoplasm.
At 7 d after the last AS1 injection, the entire pyramidal cell
layer of the hippocampus was reduced in thickness, and loss of ~50% of cells was evident in CA1 and CA3 (Figs. 1H,I, 2;
n = 5; p < 0.01 for each region). Cell
loss was not associated with inflammation. There was no indication of
degeneration or inflammation in the controls, and cell counts were not
significantly different from those in untreated animals (data not
shown). Although there was a slight trend toward greater cell death on
the injected (right) side versus the contralateral side and in CA1
versus CA3, the extent of neuronal damage did not differ significantly
on the two sides or in the two regions at any time examined (Fig.
2A,B). There was no histologically detectable
degeneration in the granule cell layer of the dentate gyrus at any time
examined.

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Figure 1.
GluR2 antisense induces selective, delayed
neurodegeneration in hippocampal CA1 and CA3. Toluidine blue staining
of coronal brain sections shows the dorsal hippocampus.
A-C, Control brain from an animal killed at 7 d
after the last of four injections of saline is shown.
D-F, By 2 d after the last of four injections of
GluR2 antisense AS1, the pyramidal cell layer of CA1 and CA3 exhibited
loss of neurons and degenerative changes. G-I, By
7 d after the last antisense injection, there was further cell
loss in CA1 and CA3. Scale bars: A, D, G, 100 µm;
B, C, E, F, H, I, 50 µm.
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Figure 2.
Quantitation of antisense-induced cell loss. Cell
number per millimeter on the right (rt), injected side,
and on the left (lt) side of CA1
(A), CA3 (B), and the
dentate gyrus (DG; C) is shown. Each
filled circle represents a single animal.
Control animals received four injections of saline at 12 hr intervals
or four injections of scrambled antisense SC1 at 12 hr intervals and
were killed at 7 d. Controls showed no sign of neurodegeneration.
GluR2 antisense AS1 was injected four times at 12 hr intervals, and
animals were killed at 1, 2, and 7 d after the last injection.
GluR2 antisense caused degeneration in the pyramidal cell layer in CA1
and CA3 on both sides of the brain. There was no degeneration in either
DG. Cell loss relative to controls was observed after 2 d and was
greater after 7 d. The number of pyramidal cells in CA1 and CA3
was reduced to ~70% of the control value at 2 d and 50% of the
control value at 7 d (**p < 0.01).
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The specific GluR2 antisense AS2 (four injections at 12 hr intervals)
induced a similar pattern of selective neurodegeneration in the
pyramidal cell layer measured at 7 d (n = 5; data
not shown). However, a single injection of either AS1 or AS2 did not
produce any detectable neurodegeneration at 7 d in any region
examined (for AS1, n = 5; for AS2, n = 4; data not shown).
None of the animals exhibited seizure activity, and postictal processes
are unlikely to have contributed to the observed degeneration.
GluR2 antisense decreases GluR2 mRNA levels in CA1 and CA3
pyramidal layers
To investigate whether GluR2 antisense depresses GluR2 mRNA
levels, we performed in situ hybridization on brain sections
from AS2- and saline-injected rats with a riboprobe specific for GluR2 mRNA. In saline-injected control animals (four injections; killed 6 hr
after the last injection), autoradiograms of coronal sections at the
level of the dorsal hippocampus showed high levels of GluR2 mRNA
throughout the pyramidal cell layers of CA1 and CA3 and in the granule
cell layer of the dentate gyrus (Fig. 3,
top left; right hippocampus, side of injection), as reported
previously in untreated animals (see Pellegrini-Giampietro et al.,
1992a ). At 6 and 12 hr after the fourth antisense injection, GluR2 mRNA expression was reduced throughout the hippocampus, including the dentate gyrus (DG), but recovered to control values at 24-48 hr. Quantitation of film densities of autoradiograms showed reduction of
GluR2 mRNA in the right CA1 to 70 ± 3.9% of control at 6 hr (n = 3; p < 0.01) and to 74 ± 1.4% of control at 12 hr (n = 3; p < 0.01; Fig. 3, bottom).

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Figure 3.
Decreases in the GluR2 mRNA level in the
hippocampus induced by injection of GluR2 antisense.
Top, Film autoradiograms of in situ
hybridization of coronal sections of the dorsal hippocampus of a
control rat (4 saline injections at 12 hr intervals) and GluR2
antisense AS2-injected rats (4 injections at 12 hr intervals) at 6, 12, 24, 48, and 72 hr after the last of four injections are shown. The
autoradiograms indicate GluR2 knockdown in the entire right hippocampus
(injected side) at 6 and 12 hr and recovery by 48 hr.
Bottom, Mean densities in CA1 normalized to the mean
value for control rats (data from the right, injected side) show that
the relative abundance of mRNA declined to a minimum of 70 ± 3.9% of control at 6 hr after the last injection and largely recovered
by 24 hr (n = 3 for each time point;
**p < 0.01). C, Control.
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There was a trend toward greater reduction in the GluR2 mRNA level on
the injected (right) side compared with that on the contralateral side,
but the difference was not statistically significant (data not shown).
GluR2 antisense did not induce any detectable alteration in GluR2 mRNA
levels in the piriform cortex or in the hypothalamus (measured in the
same sections used for Fig. 3).
GluR2 antisense reduces the GluR2 protein level in CA1 and CA3
Antisense-induced effects in GluR1 and GluR2 protein levels in CA1
and the bend region of CA3 were examined by quantitative Western blot
analysis with subunit-specific antibodies (Wenthold et al., 1992 ;
Vissavajjhala et al., 1996 ). Antisense treatment produced a substantial
reduction in the level of GluR2 protein in CA1 relative to that in
control animals (representative blots for four injections are shown in
Fig. 4A, top; the
control received four injections of saline and was killed at 6 hr after
the last injection). A single antisense injection produced little
reduction in GluR2 protein at 6 hr and maximal reduction at 12 hr (to
68 ± 7.0% of the saline-injected control value;
p < 0.01; n = 3 for each time point
and control) with partial recovery by 24 hr (Fig. 4A,
bottom left). Four injections of antisense produced reductions in
the GluR2 protein in CA1 at 12 and 24 hr after the last injection that
did not differ significantly from those after a single injection (Fig.
4A,bottom right; n = 3),
indicating that the effects of successive injections were not
cumulative. GluR2 protein at 6 hr after the last of four injections was
lower than that at 6 hr after a single injection but higher than that
at 12 hr after either regimen. This observation suggests that there is
partial recovery of GluR2 protein between successive injections.
Because GluR2 mRNA recovers somewhat by 12 hr after the last of four
injections (Fig. 3), it would be expected to recover between injections
at 12 hr intervals with a small time lag for uptake and action of each
additional antisense injection. GluR2 protein should also recover, but
with an additional time lag for protein synthesis. By 48 and 72 hr
after the last of four injections, GluR2 protein had largely recovered.
The small (but not statistically significant) residual depression may
have been caused by cell morbidity. The reduction in GluR2 protein was
bilateral and did not differ significantly in ipsilateral versus
contralateral CA1 (data not shown). Similar changes were observed in
CA3 bend region (data not shown).

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Figure 4.
Injection of GluR2 antisense decreases GluR2
protein levels in CA1 but does not affect GluR1 protein levels.
A, Film autoradiograms of Western blotting for GluR2
protein in the right CA1 (injected side) of control (4 saline
injections at 12 hr intervals; rat killed at 6 hr after the last
injection) and antisense AS2-injected rats at 6, 12, 24, 48, and 72 hr
after the last of four injections (top) and relative
band densities after a single saline or antisense injection
(bottom left; saline control killed at 6 hr) or after the multiple injections of saline or antisense
(bottom right) are shown. Band densities
are normalized to that of the saline-injected controls. The GluR2
protein level of antisense-injected rats was significantly decreased at
12 hr after either a single injection or the last of four injections
(**p < 0.01) and then recovered toward control
levels (n = 3 for each time point).
B, Film autoradiograms of Western blotting for
GluR1 protein expression (top) and density measurements
(bottom) showed no significant alteration in GluR1
protein expression in the right CA1 after four GluR2 antisense
injections (same animals used in A).
|
|
The GluR2 antisense treatment did not alter the level of GluR1 protein
in CA1 (Fig. 4B) or in CA3 (data not shown) at any time examined. This finding indicates that the effects of GluR2 antisense were specific and not simply caused by toxicity.
Naspm and CNQX protect against GluR2 antisense-induced
neuronal death
To examine whether cell death induced by multiple injections of
GluR2 antisense was mediated by
Ca2+-permeable AMPA receptors, we
administered glutamate receptor antagonists at the time of the second
or fourth injection or at 24 hr after the fourth injection (Fig.
5, bottom). As a control for
the injection of antagonists, saline was injected at 12 hr into a group
of antisense-treated animals. Cell counts were performed on animals
killed at 7 d after the last injection and normalized to counts in
untreated animals defined as 100%. Naspm, an open channel blocker
selective for Ca2+-permeable,
GluR2-lacking AMPA receptors (Koike et al., 1997 ), greatly reduced
antisense-induced neurodegeneration in CA1, i.e., increased cell
survival, when given at the time of the second or fourth injection of
antisense (Fig. 5). Rather than the ~50% cell loss observed in
antisense-injected animals (saline plus antisense in Fig. 5; see Fig. 2
for antisense alone), there was only ~10% cell loss in the protected
animals (p < 0.05 for each of the two times of
injection compared with antisense plus saline, i.e., significant
protection, or with untreated, i.e., still significant residual cell
loss; n = 5 for each group). CNQX, a competitive blocker of AMPA/kainate receptors injected at the time of the second or
the fourth antisense injection, also restricted cell loss in CA1 to
only ~10% (Fig. 5; p < 0.05 for each time of
injection compared with the antisense plus saline control and
p < 0.01 compared with untreated; n = 5 for each group). These data suggest that GluR2 antisense-induced cell
death is mediated by Ca2+-permeable,
GluR2-lacking AMPA receptors. Naspm and CNQX injected 24 hr after the
last antisense injection did not have a significant protective effect,
although analysis of a larger sample might establish a small degree of
protection. The failure of protection at 24 hr suggests that by this
time many neurons had had sufficient Ca2+
influx through GluR2-lacking receptors to initiate the processes of
dying, although there were no obvious morphological changes at this
time after antisense injection alone (compare Fig. 2). The role of AMPA
receptors was confirmed by the observation that AP-5, a competitive
NMDA receptor antagonist, administered at any of the three times during
or after antisense administration, failed to afford neuroprotection
against antisense-induced cell death at any of the times examined.
Similar effects of the glutamate antagonists were observed in CA3 and
on the left side contralateral to the injection site, but these results
were not quantified.

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Figure 5.
AMPA antagonists reduce antisense-induced
neurodegeneration. Naspm and CNQX were injected into the right cerebral
ventricle concomitantly with either the second or fourth of four
injections at 12 hr intervals of GluR2 antisense AS2 (i.e., at 12 or 36 hr after the first injection) or 24 hr after the last injection (at 60 hr after the first injection; see bottom for timing).
Animals were killed at 7 d after the last antisense injection.
Cell counts are normalized to the value for untreated rats defined as
100% (n = 5 for each treatment and time point).
Naspm and CNQX largely prevented antisense-induced delayed
neurodegeneration in CA1 (p < 0.05;
n = 5 for each antagonist) compared with saline
injection at the time of the second antisense injection, which had no
protective effect (compare Fig. 2). Protection was not complete at 12 or 36 hr (~10% residual loss; p < 0.05 for
Naspm; p < 0.01 for CNQX). Naspm or CNQX injected
at 60 hr after the first AS injection afforded no significant
neuroprotection. The NMDA receptor antagonist AP-5 administered at any
of the three time points afforded no significant neuroprotection
against GluR2 antisense-induced neurodegeneration.
*p < 0.05 for antisense plus antagonist versus
antisense plus saline-injected animals (labeled
saline).
|
|
GluR2 antisense injection and sublethal ischemia synergistically
induce neuronal death in CA1 and CA3
To investigate the possibility that GluR2 antisense treatment and
brief, sublethal ischemia summate to produce greater neuronal cell
death than is observed for either treatment alone, we administered GluR2 antisense AS2 to gerbils and subjected them to a sublethal episode of forebrain ischemia by a 2 min occlusion of the carotid arteries. A single injection of antisense AS2 induced little or no
neurodegeneration at 7 d after injection, and four injections produced a modest degree of degeneration of 25% or fewer of the pyramidal cells in CA1 and CA3 (data not shown). The lesser effect of
multiple antisense alone injections in the gerbil compared with the
rat, in spite of the higher quantity given per unit body weight (~30
vs ~20 nmol/kg), may reflect differences in the gerbil versus rat
sequence or other species differences. In separate control experiments,
a single injection or four injections of saline with or without 2 min
of ischemia and four injections of scrambled antisense with or without
2 min of ischemia (n = 3 for each group) produced no
neuronal death in the hippocampal CA1 or CA3 at 7 d. However, a
single injection of GluR2 antisense immediately followed by a 2 min
ischemic period induced pyramidal cell loss in CA1 (~50%;
p < 0.01; n = 3) but not CA3 (Figs.
6D-F, 7). Four antisense injections followed by
2 min of ischemia caused much greater cell loss in CA1 and CA3 (to ~5
and ~50%, respectively, of the values of controls injected
with saline and subjected to ischemia; Figs. 6G-I, 7;
p < 0.01; n = 3 for each group). Cell loss was much greater than the sum of the losses caused by each treatment alone, indicating synergistic action of the two
treatments.

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Figure 6.
GluR2 antisense and brief, sublethal ischemia
induce cell death in the hippocampus of gerbils. Toluidine blue
labeling of coronal brain sections at the level of the dorsal
hippocampus from gerbils at 7 d after 2 min of ischemia associated
with saline (A-C) or GluR2 antisense AS2
injection (D-I) are shown. Top
row, Low magnification view of the right hippocampus is shown.
Middle, bottom rows, Higher magnification views of CA1
and CA3, respectively, are shown. A-C, Two minutes of
ischemia immediately after four injections of saline produced no
neuronal death in any hippocampal region. D-F, A single
GluR2 antisense injection immediately followed by 2 min of ischemia
produced partial cell loss in the pyramidal cell layers of CA1 and CA3.
G-I, Four injections of antisense at 12 hr
intervals immediately followed by 2 min of ischemia produced virtually
complete loss of CA1 pyramidal cells and partial loss of CA3 pyramidal
cells. Scale bars: A, D, G, 100 µm; B, C, E, F,
H, I, 50 µm.
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|

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Figure 7.
Quantitation of cell loss after antisense
injection and sublethal ischemia. Cell counts are as described in
Figure 2 in the right CA1 and CA3 of sections represented in Figure 6.
Four injections of saline (salinex4) or
scrambled antisense SC1 (Scx4) followed by
2 min of ischemia caused no cell loss in CA1 or CA3. A single antisense
AS2 injection (ASx1) followed by 2 min of ischemia
caused ~50% cell loss in CA1 (**p < 0.01 compared with saline-injected plus ischemia; n = 3 for each group) and little if any loss in CA3. Four antisense
injections (ASx4) followed by 2 min of ischemia
caused nearly complete cell loss in CA1 and ~50% loss in CA3
(**p < 0.01 for both CA1 and CA3;
n = 3 for each group).
|
|
 |
DISCUSSION |
Antisense-induced neuronal death
Considerable evidence indicates that
Ca2+-permeable AMPA receptors are critical
mediators of ischemia-induced delayed neuronal death (Bennett et al.,
1996 ; Pellegrini-Giampietro et al., 1997 ). Transient forebrain ischemia
induces downregulation of GluR2 mRNA and protein expression and
enhanced AMPA-elicited Ca2+ influx into
vulnerable CA1 neurons before the onset of neurodegeneration. AMPA
antagonists protect the neurons but do not prevent downregulation of
GluR2. Suppression of GluR2 expression would be expected to lead to
increased formation of Ca2+-permeable AMPA
receptors and excessive entry of Ca2+
(and/or Zn2+) in response to endogenous
glutamate (the GluR2 hypothesis of delayed neurodegeneration).
Ca2+-permeable AMPA receptors are also
implicated in the delayed neurodegeneration associated with
kainate-induced status epilepticus (Friedman et al., 1994 , 1997 ). In
that experimental model, CA3 pyramidal neurons are more vulnerable to
degeneration, and GluR2 mRNA and protein expression are selectively
suppressed in them before they die.
The present study examined the consequences of intraventricular
administration of antisense oligonucleotides targeting GluR2 mRNA for
neuronal survival in the intact rat and gerbil. We sought to determine
whether a reduction in the level of GluR2 is in itself sufficient to
cause neuronal death in the absence of other changes caused by
neurological insults such as global ischemia and status epilepticus. We
demonstrated that GluR2 knockdown causes degeneration of pyramidal
cells in CA1 of the hippocampus (as occurs in global ischemia) and in
CA3 (as occurs in status epilepticus). We do not exclude that the other
changes in gene expression after global ischemia and status epilepticus
modulate the cell death caused by downregulation of GluR2; some of
these changes may be neuroprotective, e.g., upregulation of a
Zn2+ transporter (Tsuda et al., 1997 ),
whereas others may potentiate death.
To analyze molecular mechanisms underlying neurodegeneration caused by
GluR2 antisense, we examined the effects of GluR2 knockdown on the
levels of GluR2 mRNA by in situ hybridization and of GluR2 protein by Western blotting. Antisense treatment reduced GluR2 mRNA in
the hippocampal CA1 and CA3, regions that undergo degeneration, and in
the dentate gyrus, a region resistant to cell death (see below). GluR2
mRNA levels in the hypothalamus and piriform cortex were unaffected,
presumably because antisense oligonucleotide administered into the
right ventricle failed to reach these structures. Naspm and CNQX
protected against antisense-induced death. Thus, GluR2 knockdown in
vulnerable neurons is the most likely proximate cause of
antisense-induced death.
The degree and time course of GluR2 mRNA and
protein suppression
The level and duration of knockdown required for neuronal death
are issues that will require further investigation. In the present
study, GluR2 knockdown caused ~30% reduction in GluR2 mRNA and
protein in CA1, whereas global ischemia led to ~70% reduction in CA1
(Pellegrini-Giampietro et al., 1992a ; Gorter et al., 1997 ), and status
epilepticus caused ~40% reduction in CA3 (Friedman et al., 1994 ).
Maximal cell loss was ~50% after antisense treatment and close to
100% after global ischemia. After status epilepticus, cells were lost
entirely in some regions and survived in neighboring regions where
GluR2 recovered.
As would be expected, a reduction in GluR2 mRNA caused by antisense
preceded a reduction in the level of GluR2 protein. GluR2 mRNA was
maximally reduced at 6 hr after the last of four antisense injections.
The GluR2 protein level was maximally reduced 6 hr later or 12 hr after
the last injection, but the reduction was not greater than that at 12 hr after a single injection. Neuronal death was not produced by a
single injection and was first observed 48 hr after the last of the
four injections. Thus, a period of 36-48 hr of GluR2 protein
suppression is required to trigger neuronal cell death, consistent with
the time course in rats of delayed ischemia-induced neuronal death in
CA1 (Pellegrini-Giampietro et al., 1992a ) and of status
epilepticus-induced cell death in CA3 (Friedman et al., 1994 ). In both
paradigms, histopathological changes are detected 48-72 hr after the
insult (Nadler, 1981 ; Pulsinelli et al., 1982 ; Ben-Ari, 1985 ) or 36-48
hr after downregulation of GluR2 mRNA (Pellegrini-Giampietro et al.,
1992a ; Friedman et al., 1994 ).
The synergistic action of GluR2 antisense and sublethal
global ischemia
In the present study we also showed that GluR2 knockdown
and sublethal global ischemia act synergistically to cause degeneration of CA1 and CA3 pyramidal neurons. This observation is consistent with a
mechanism by which depression of GluR2 levels by antisense and by
sublethal ischemia summate to cause neuronal death. Although brief (10 min) global ischemia in rats does not cause neuronal death in CA3, it
does suppress GluR2 mRNA expression in this region to a lesser degree
than in CA1 (Pellegrini-Giampietro et al., 1992a ). Sublethal ischemia
would be also expected to cause some suppression of GluR2 expression.
Thus, the synergistic action of antisense and sublethal ischemia may
reflect a nonlinear response to GluR2 suppression by the two treatments.
Gerbils subjected to sublethal transient global ischemia exhibit
reduced hippocampal CA1 neuronal death after a more severe ischemic
insult 24-48 hr later, a phenomenon termed "ischemic tolerance"
(Heurteaux et al., 1995 ). Although molecular mechanisms underlying
ischemic tolerance are unclear, sublethal global ischemia is known to
prevent GluR2 downregulation after a subsequent more severe ischemic
insult (Heurteaux et al., 1995 ). This finding suggests that the
protection afforded by ischemic preconditioning involves a step in the
cascade of events "upstream" from GluR2 gene expression. If so, one
would predict that ischemic preconditioning would not protect against
subsequent GluR2 antisense-induced neuronal death. Similarly, a single
antisense injection would be unlikely to affect upstream processes and
therefore would not protect against ischemia-induced damage.
Neuronal survival and antisense and transgenic methods to
suppress GluR2
In recent years, antisense treatment has been used to study the
role of specific receptor subtypes both in vivo and in
vitro (for review, see Wahlestedt, 1994 ; Weiss et al., 1997 ). In
intact animals, antisense has been used to knockdown the µ opioid
receptor, the 5-HT-3 receptor, and the NMDA receptor (Wahlestedt et
al., 1993 ; Weiss et al., 1993 ). In the present study, GluR2 antisense was used to bypass the mechanisms underlying downregulation of GluR2
induced by ischemia or status epilepticus and to ask whether GluR2
downregulation is sufficient to kill neurons. Acute knockdown of GluR2
expression by antisense administration offers an important advantage
over targeted disruption or gene knockout in that it permits
examination of acute reduction in GluR2 levels in an animal that has
developed under normal conditions. The GluR2( / ) mouse has a normal
complement of pyramidal neurons in CA1 and CA3, although the
Ca2+ permeability of AMPA receptors is
high because of the absence of GluR2 (Jia et al., 1996 ). This mouse is
viable and does not exhibit seizures. Development of the brain in the
absence of GluR2 (or of its correctly edited form) may induce
compensatory changes, such as enhanced expression of
Ca2+-binding proteins and/or transporters.
The viability of hippocampal neurons in the GluR2 knockout mouse and of
GABAergic interneurons, which normally express GluR2-lacking receptors
(Bochet et al., 1994 ; Jonas et al., 1994 ; Geiger et al., 1995 ),
indicates that a rapid decrease in the level of GluR2 and a rapid
increase in AMPA receptor permeability to
Ca2+ may be necessary to induce death of
pyramidal cells. Other neurons, such as the granule cells of the DG,
are resistant to acute (but partial) GluR2 knockdown, and levels of
GluR2 protein may be maintained. Moreover, the
Ca2+-binding protein calbindin is found in
granule cells and may contribute to their lesser sensitivity to GluR2
knockdown (Freund et al., 1990 ).
Mice with editing-deficient GluR2 alleles show defects depending on the
expression level of the allele (Brusa et al., 1995 ; Feldmeyer et al.,
1999 ). Homozygotes with an allele having a low level of expression are
comparable with the GluR2( / ) animal, whereas heterozygotes carrying
an allele with a high level of expression exhibit epileptic seizures
and premature death. Higher levels of editing-deficient GluR2 lead to
larger AMPA currents, in addition to the increased
Ca2+ permeability of these receptors.
Editing-deficient alleles may also be more deleterious than knockout
because of the role of the GluR2 subunit in channel assembly and
targeting (Song et al., 1998 ; Sheng and Pak, 1999 ).
Technical problems inherent in the antisense approach
Several considerations support the specificity of targeting and
the lack of toxicity of the GluR2 antisense oligonucleotides used in
the present study: (1) The two specific oligonucleotides would not be
expected to bind to any other known rodent sequence. (2) These
oligonucleotides caused delayed degeneration of pyramidal neurons in
CA1 and CA3 but not of granule cells in the dentate gyrus. (3) Western
blot analyses indicated that the one oligonucleotide tested suppressed
GluR2, but not GluR1, protein before degeneration. (4) A scrambled
version of one oligonucleotide had no effect on cell viability.
Oligonucleotides in their unmodified form are phosphodiesters and are
subject to rapid degradation by nucleases in blood and CSF. To
enhance stability and minimize toxicity of the GluR2 antisense oligonucleotides used in this study, we introduced phosphorothioate groups at three positions at both the 5' and 3' ends (Campbell et al.,
1990 ; Agrawal, 1996 ). In situ hybridization and Western studies indicated the effectiveness of our GluR2 antisense
oligonucleotides in that GluR2 mRNA was suppressed for 24 hr and GluR2
protein for somewhat longer. Diffusion was extensive, because antisense actions extended to CA3 and were bilateral. Others have reported penetration of phosphothiorated oligonucleotides (but not of unmodified oligonucleotides) deep into the brain parenchyma after intraventricular injection (Yaida and Nowak, 1995 ; Gyurko et al., 1997 ).
Role of Ca2+-permeable AMPA receptors in
delayed neurodegeneration
Downregulation of GluR2 leading to formation of
Ca2+-permeable AMPA receptors has been
implicated in the pathogenesis associated with delayed selective
neuronal death after global ischemia and kainate-induced status
epilepticus (Bennett et al., 1996 ; Pellegrini-Giampietro et al., 1997 ).
The mechanisms underlying downregulation of GluR2 expression in these
paradigms remain to be determined; presumably, they are part of the
physiological controls under normal physiological conditions. GluR2
levels are low in early postnatal development (Pellegrini-Giampietro et
al., 1992b ), and GluR2 downregulation may represent a return to an
earlier developmental state. Perhaps such a change would be
advantageous in promoting neuronal regrowth but is clearly deleterious
after global ischemia or sustained seizures.
The present study indicates that a reduction in the level of GluR2 is
sufficient to cause neuronal death and provide new evidence that
Ca2+-permeable AMPA receptors are critical
mediators of delayed neurodegeneration.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received May 4, 1999; revised Aug. 2, 1999; accepted Aug. 13, 1999.
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grants NS
20752 and NS 31282 to R.S.Z. and NS 007412 to M.V.L.B. M.V.L.B. is
the Sylvia and Robert S. Olnick Professor of Neuroscience. We thank Dr.
Thoralf Opitz for his helpful comments.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Michael V. L. Bennett,
Department of Neuroscience, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, 1300 Morris Park Avenue, Bronx, NY 10461. E-mail: mbennett{at}aecom.yu.edu.
 |
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