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The Journal of Neuroscience, May 1, 1999, 19(9):3326-3336
Transcription Factors in Neuroendocrine Regulation: Rhythmic
Changes in pCREB and ICER Levels Frame Melatonin Synthesis
Erik
Maronde1,
Martina
Pfeffer1,
James
Olcese2,
Carlos A.
Molina3,
Florence
Schlotter3,
Faramarz
Dehghani1,
Horst-Werner
Korf1, and
Jörg H.
Stehle1
1 Dr. Senckenbergische Anatomie,
Institute for Anatomy II, Johann Wolfgang Goethe-University Frankfurt,
60590 Frankfurt, Germany, 2 Institute for Hormone and
Fertility Research, University of Hamburg, 22529 Hamburg, Germany, and
3 Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of
Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, New Jersey Medical School,
Newark, New Jersey 07103-2714
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ABSTRACT |
Neurotransmitter-driven activation of transcription factors is
important for control of neuronal and neuroendocrine functions. We show
with an in vivo approach that the norepinephrine
cAMP-dependent rhythmic hormone production in rat pineal gland is
accompanied by a temporally regulated switch in the ratio of a
transcriptional activator, phosphorylated cAMP-responsive
element-binding protein (pCREB), and a transcriptional
inhibitor, inducible cAMP early repressor (ICER). pCREB accumulates
endogenously at the beginning of the dark period and declines during
the second half of the night. Concomitant with this decline, the amount
of ICER rises. The changing ratio between pCREB and ICER shapes the
in vivo dynamics in mRNA and, thus, protein levels of
arylalkylamine-N-acetyltransferase, the rate-limiting
enzyme of melatonin synthesis. Consequently, a silenced ICER expression
in pinealocytes leads to a disinhibited arylalkylamine-N-acetyltransferase transcription and a
primarily enhanced melatonin synthesis.
Key words:
pineal gland; CREB (cAMP-responsive
element-binding protein); melatonin; arylalkylamine-N-acetyltransferase; transcription
factor; ICER (inducible cAMP early repressor); circadian rhythm; antisense; cAMP signaling
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INTRODUCTION |
Neurotransmitter-driven activation
of transcription factors (TFs) of the cAMP-signaling pathway is a
widespread phenomenon in nervous tissue. In particular, the TFs
cAMP-responsive element-binding protein (CREB) (Montminy et al., 1990 )
and inducible cAMP early repressor (ICER) (Stehle et al., 1993 ) have
been shown to operate selectively in time and space and often in an
antagonistic way on cAMP-linked cellular phenomena (Sassone-Corsi,
1998 ). In the rat pineal gland the activity state of the cAMP-signaling
pathway determines the rhythmic synthesis of the hormone melatonin
(Klein, 1985 ), suggesting that cAMP-linked TFs are part of regulatory mechanisms (Stehle, 1995 ; Florez and Takahashi, 1996 ; Foulkes et al.,
1997 ).
A central oscillator located in the hypothalamic suprachiasmatic
nucleus drives a nocturnally elevated release of norepinephrine (NE)
from the sympathetic nerve endings (Drijfhout et al., 1996 ) that
reaches the pineal gland (Klein et al., 1991 ; Korf, 1996 ). NE induces a
large increase of cAMP levels in pinealocytes in vitro
(Vanecek et al., 1985 ). cAMP is the essential second messenger for
control of transcription and activity of the rate-limiting enzyme
for melatonin synthesis, the
arylalkylamine-N-acetyltransferase (AA-NAT) (Stehle,
1995 ; Klein et al., 1996 ). After the NE challenge, AA-NAT mRNA levels
start to rise in vivo and in vitro within 1 hr
(Borjigin et al., 1995 ; Coon et al., 1995 ; Roseboom et al., 1996 ).
Three to four hours later, AA-NAT mRNA levels in the rat pineal gland
are 150-fold higher than control levels, succeeded by an increase of
similar magnitude in AA-NAT enzymatic activity. Before the end of the
night, AA-NAT mRNA levels decrease dramatically (Borjigin et al., 1995 ;
Coon et al., 1995 ; Roseboom et al., 1996 ). Thus, two critical
time domains exist in vivo within the dynamics of up- and
downregulation in melatonin synthesis, (1) the postdusk domain and (2)
the predawn domain.
During the postdusk domain, a temporal gap is evident between the
NE-induced activation of the cAMP-signaling pathway and the stimulation
of AA-NAT transcription and activity. In vitro studies
demonstrated that the phosphorylation of the activating TF CREB at
serine 133 (Gonzalez and Montminy, 1989 ) falls into this gap (Roseboom
and Klein, 1995 ; Tamotsu et al., 1995 ). Notably, a functional
CREB-binding site has recently been characterized as an AA-NAT promoter
element (Foulkes et al., 1996 ; Baler et al., 1997 ).
The rapid decline of elevated AA-NAT mRNA levels in rat pineal gland
during the predawn domain indicates a tuned impact of inhibiting TFs of
the cAMP-signaling pathway, and indeed, NE elicits an increased
transcription of a very potent inhibitor of cAMP-inducible genes, the
TF ICER (Stehle et al., 1993 ).
To unravel molecular links between the cAMP-signaling pathway and the
rhythmic AA-NAT transcription in the rat pineal gland, we initially
investigated the levels of cAMP, the catalytic subunit of the
cAMP-dependent protein kinase (cPKA), CREB, phosphorylated CREB
(pCREB), ICER and AA-NAT mRNA and protein, and melatonin. We
detected 24 hr rhythms for pCREB and ICER, distinctly out-of-phase, that gate the nocturnally elevated AA-NAT mRNA level and corroborated the inhibitory role of ICER within this neuroendocrine transduction in
an in vitro approach.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Animal maintenance, treatments, and tissue sampling.
All animal experimentation reported in this manuscript was conducted in
accordance with the Policy on the Use of Animals in Neuroscience Research and the Policy on Ethics as approved by the Society for Neuroscience. Male Wistar rats (n = 95; 150-250 gm
body weight) were maintained under a standard 12:12 hr light/dark
schedule [LD; lights off at Zeitgeber time 12 (ZT12)] with food and
water available ad libitum. Rats were killed by decapitation
under bright white light during the daytime or under dim red light
(wavelength > 620 nm) during nighttime at selected time points
over a 24 hr cycle according to the experimental paradigm. Additional
animals (n = 18) were transferred from LD into constant
darkness (DD) 1 d before the experiments and were killed at
indicated time points under dim red light. Additional animals
(n = 15) were acutely exposed to light in the middle of
the night (6 hr after lights off) and killed 30 min later. For
experiments requiring unfixed material, brains were processed as
described (Stehle et al., 1995 ; Pfeffer and Stehle, 1998 ).
In vitro culture of pineal glands or isolated
pinealocytes. For the in vitro experiments, pineal
glands were removed from adult male Wistar rats during early subjective
light phase (n = 52; 150-200 gm body weight) as
described (Tamotsu et al., 1995 ). At the end of the experiments,
samples were either fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde for the
immunocytochemical investigations or sonicated for protein gel
electrophoresis (for details, see below).
Antibody preparation and immunocytochemical investigations.
For immunocytochemical detection of pCREB and ICER in brain and pineal
sections, animals were transcardially perfused with 4% paraformaldehyde, and brains were removed and processed as described (Brednow and Korf, 1998 ). Fixed cell preparations were incubated with a
rabbit polyclonal pCREB antibody (Ginty et al., 1993 ) (lot 9190/001;
1:500; New England Biolabs, Beverly, MA), recognizing Ser-133-phosphorylated CREB and the phosphorylated form of the related
protein ATF-1. Additionally, a rabbit polyclonal ICER antibody was used
(1:60,000) that was raised against the whole ICER-II protein (Razavi
et al., 1998 ). Antibody specificity was assessed by incubating the
diluted antibody overnight at 4°C with bacterially expressed
ICER-II peptide in 100-fold excess before the immunohistochemical
procedure. Binding of the antibody was visualized as described (Tamotsu
et al., 1995 ). Second and third antibodies and all other chemicals were
obtained from Sigma (Deisenhofen, Germany), unless indicated otherwise.
Routinely, the fraction of pinealocytes in the cell preparations was
identified by means of the cytoplasmic S-antigen immunoreaction and
found to be >95% (for details, see Tamotsu et al., 1995 ).
Immunoblotting. To obtain immunoblots from ex
vivo and in vitro experiments, we sonicated tissue
samples or cells directly in 50 µl of sample buffer. Electrophoresis
and blotting were done as described (Rittenhouse and Marcus, 1983 ;
Szewcyk and Kozloff, 1985 ). The membranes were incubated with
polyclonal antibodies against cPKA (1:50,000) (Schwoch et al.,
1980 ), pCREB (1:5000), ICER (1:100,000) (Razavi et al., 1998 ), and
AA-NAT (serum 2500; 1:30,000; kind gift of Dr. D. C. Klein,
National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD) (Gastel et al., 1998 ). To
standardize semiquantitative optical density (OD) analyses, we stripped
protein blots and reprobed the blots with a CREB antibody that detects
total CREB irrespective of the phosphorylation state (1:5000; New
England Biolabs). The membranes were subsequently incubated with
a horseradish peroxidase (HRP)-conjugated secondary antibody (New
England Biolabs) diluted 1:100,000. The signals were detected by
chemiluminescence (UltraSignal; Pierce, Rockford, IL). ICER antibody
specificity was assessed by incubating the diluted antibody overnight
at 4°C with bacterially expressed ICER-II peptide in 250-, 25-, and 2.5-fold excess.
In situ hybridization. A partial rat AA-NAT cDNA (373 bp) was generated by PCR and subcloned, and 35S-labeled
sense and antisense ribonucleotide probes were generated by in
vitro transcription with T3 or T7 polymerase (Boehringer Mannheim,
Mannheim, Germany) after plasmid linearization with HindIII
or EcoRI, respectively, as described (Pfeffer and Stehle, 1998 ). In situ hybridization was performed according to
published procedures (Stehle et al., 1993 ; Pfeffer and Stehle, 1998 ;
Pfeffer et al., 1998 ).
Gel mobility shift analysis. Gel mobility shift assays and
preparation of nuclear extracts were performed as described (Foulkes et
al., 1991 ; Molina et al., 1993 ; Roseboom and Klein, 1995 ). Briefly, 10 µg of nuclei extracted from six pineal glands was incubated with a
synthetic 18 bp oligonucleotide containing the rat somatostatin CRE
[5'-CTTGGCTGACGTCAGAGA-3' (Stehle et al., 1993 )] or with
a synthetic 23 bp oligonucleotide containing the rat AA-NAT CRE
[5'-CCACCGATGACGCCAGCCCTCAG-3' (Baler et al., 1997 )] (all
primers were purchased from MWG Biotech, Munich, Germany) in a total
volume of 20 µl as described (Molina et al., 1993 ; Stehle et al.,
1993 ). Oligonucleotides were end-labeled with
[ -32P]ATP, using T4 polynucleotide kinase. To test for
the presence of ICER among the nuclear proteins complexed with the
AA-NAT CRE, we added the ICER antibody (1 µl) to pineal extracts
before gel mobility shift assays. To ensure equal loading, we
determined protein concentrations in nuclear extracts before loading
them onto 10% polyacrylamide gels (Foulkes et al., 1991 ; Molina et al., 1993 ; Roseboom and Klein, 1995 ).
Computer-assisted semiquantitative analysis of the
immunocytochemical investigations. Data obtained by immunoblot and
immunocytochemical experiments were analyzed semiquantitatively, using
a computer-assisted image analysis system and a combined densito- and
planimetric analysis (KS 300; Kontron, Eching, Germany) (Pfeffer et
al., 1998 ; Wicht et al., 1999 ). The product of density and area of a
given signal is called the SUMDENS value. In immunocytochemical
preparations an additional correction for the total area covered by the
cells was used; the resulting parameter is called corrSUMDENS (Pfeffer et al., 1998 ; Wicht et al., 1999 ). Amounts of detectable CREB protein in extracts from pineal glands varied only marginally after
stimulation and did not fluctuate diurnally (see Results; see Figs. 2,
3). These observations are consistent with the current understanding of CREB as a housekeeping gene (Montminy et al., 1990 ).
We therefore used the OD values derived from autoradiographic images of
the CREB-specific band at 43 kDa in the immunoblots as a quantitative
marker for the amount of loaded total protein and corrected the OD
values of pCREB- and ICER-specific bands, accordingly.
Transfection of pinealocytes. Primary pinealocytes were
transfected with the eukaryotic expression vector pRcCMV
(Invitrogen, San Diego, CA) carrying a PCR-generated partial cDNA of
the ICER 5'-end in either the antisense (pICERas) or sense
(pICERs) orientation as described (Pfeffer et al., 1998 ).
Briefly, the pinealocyte culture medium was supplemented for 5 hr with
20 µg of the vector pRcCMV without insert, with pICERs, or
with pICERas. Subsequently, cultures were washed and after a
recovery period of 16 hr stimulated with 10 6
M NE for up to 24 hr. After stimulation, cell extracts were
prepared by the freeze-and-thaw technique and frozen at 80°C until
further use for RNA extraction (Chomczynski and Sacchi, 1987 ).
Melatonin secretion was analyzed by radioimmunoassay (see below).
Semiquantitative RT-PCR. RT-PCR was validated and performed
as described (Pfeffer et al., 1998 ). The specific AA-NAT PCR was performed with 0.5-2 µl of the RT-generated cDNA in a reaction volume of 100 µl containing 1.5 µM forward and reverse
primer (see primers above). The PCR conditions were optimized to
cycling conditions of denaturation at 95°C for 2 min, 25 cycles for 1 min at 95°C, 1 min at 58°C, and 1 min at 74°C and terminated at 74°C for 7 min. Because agarose gel electrophoresis of PCR products indicated that the AA-NAT RT-PCR amplification was approximately quantitative between 25 and 75 ng of template RNA, amounts within this
range were used routinely. Subsequently, an additional PCR for the
housekeeping gene glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate-dehydrogenase (GAPDH) was
conducted for each experiment to control for quantitative amplification
conditions (for details, see Pfeffer et al., 1998 ). PCR products were
electrophoresed, visualized by UV irradiation, and photodocumented.
Radioimmunoassays. Melatonin was measured either after
extraction from trunk blood serum or in the medium collected from each well after termination of the experiment. Newly synthesized melatonin was measured by means of an ELISA based on a commercial
radioimmunoassay (Osceola). The detection limit for melatonin in this
assay is 1.5 pg/ml (for details, see Maronde et al., 1995 ).
Extracellular cAMP was measured on the basis of a commercial
radioimmunoassay with slight modifications (Olcese et al., 1997 ). For
all experiments samples were collected in at least three independent experiments.
Statistical analysis. Data in all figures are expressed as
the means (± SEM) evaluated from at least three independent
experiments with two to five samples each as indicated in the figure
legends. Statistical analysis (Graph Pad, San Diego, CA) involved
either a Student's t test or an ANOVA with subsequent
Bonferroni tests for multiple comparisons with p 0.05 as the criterion of significance.
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RESULTS |
The cAMP-signaling cascade in rat pineal gland: a sequential
analysis in vitro
The NE-induced increase in cAMP levels stimulates phosphorylation
of the activating transcription factor CREB within minutes in explanted
rat pineal glands and pinealocytes (Roseboom and Klein, 1995 ; Tamotsu
et al., 1995 ). The subsequent increase in AA-NAT expression and
melatonin biosynthesis shows high values at the latest after 6 hr
(Roseboom et al., 1996 ). Therefore, we first analyzed molecular events
in cultured rat pineal glands at these two selected time points. The
production rate of cAMP was increased >200-fold within 30 min after NE
stimulation (Fig. 1a;
p < 0.001; n = 3). No further increase
in cAMP production rate could be observed within the next 360 min of NE
stimulation. The amount of cPKA remained unaltered after
stimulation (Fig. 1b). However, analysis of nuclear extracts
revealed a considerable nuclear translocation of cPKA within 30 min
after the NE challenge (E. Maronde and H.-W. Korf, unpublished
observations). The OD analysis of signals obtained from immunoblots
revealed that overall levels of total CREB in pineal extracts varied
only marginally after stimulation (Fig. 1c). In contrast NE
induced a robust and maximal pCREB immunoreaction within 30 min in
immunoblots from cultured hemidissected pineal glands (Fig.
1d; p < 0.001) (see also Roseboom and
Klein, 1995 ; Tamotsu et al., 1995 ). The maximal amount of pCREB was
estimated semiquantitatively by dividing the SUMDENS values for pCREB
by the corresponding values for total CREB obtained in the same blot
after stripping of the signal and reprobing. Such calculations showed
that maximally 15% of the total CREB present in rat pinealocytes is
phosphorylated both in vitro under NE stimulation and
in vivo at night. Thus, a maximally stimulated cAMP pathway
leads to only a relatively small increase in the amount of pCREB as
compared with the available amount of CREB (see Fig.
4c; compare SUMDENS values for pCREB with that for CREB from
animals maintained in darkness). The immunoblot analysis revealed that
the antibody detects predominantly pCREB (43 kDa; also Fig.
2). A distinct additional band, smaller
than that of pCREB, was occasionally observed that may account for the
phosphorylated form of the related transcription factor ATF-1 (New
England Biolabs protocol). Our OD analysis showed that this additional
band, which always fluctuates in parallel to that of pCREB, represents
<10% of the overall signal. It was blocked by preabsorption of the
antibody with the antigenic peptide (Tamotsu et al., 1995 ). All results
suggest pCREB immunoreactivity as a reliable marker for an activated
cAMP-signaling pathway in rat pineal gland.

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Figure 1.
Sequential analysis of signaling events in rat
pineal gland in vitro. Explanted rat pineal glands were
stimulated with NE (10 7 M) for 30 min
or 6 hr. b-d, f,
h, Semiquantitative analyses of SUMDENS values as
analyzed from immunoblots (n = 3-7).
e, RT-PCR analysis of RNA extracts using
AA-NAT-specific primers. Equal loading was confirmed by
coamplification of template cDNA with GAPDH primers (Pfeffer et al.,
1998 ). g, Melatonin values analyzed from the culture
medium by ELISA. Co, control; M,
molecular weight markers. **p < 0.001 versus
control.
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Figure 2.
Twenty-four hour NE stimulation of explanted
pineal glands. Top, Representative immunoblots for CREB,
pCREB, and ICER in protein extracts from NE-stimulated rat pineal
glands (10 6 M). Blots were run
simultaneously with extracts from the same pineal gland. Protein sizes
are indicated on the left. Bottom, Images
from the top analyzed by semiquantitative densitometry.
The obtained SUMDENS values were corrected for CREB signals. For
comparison, values were normalized so that the peak SUMDENS values for
pCREB (squares with dashed line) and ICER
(triangles with solid line) equal
100%.
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RT-PCR for AA-NAT mRNA amplified a fragment of the expected size (373 bp; Fig. 1e; also in situ hybridization in Fig.
3) and revealed a large increase in
transcript number 30 min after stimulation that persisted throughout
the experiment, confirming a previous report using Northern blot
analysis (Roseboom et al., 1996 ). AA-NAT protein (Fig. 1f;
p < 0.001) (Gastel et al., 1998 ), melatonin synthesis
(Fig. 1g; p < 0.001) (Rüppel and
Olcese, 1991 ; Maronde et al., 1997 ), and ICER immunoreactivity
(Fig. 1h; p < 0.001) were elevated after 6 hr of NE stimulation. In the ICER immunoblots, two specific bands were
detected that correspond in size to the various ICER and ICER
isoforms described (Desdouets et al., 1995 ; Lalli and Sassone-Corsi,
1995 ; Foulkes et al., 1996 ; Razavi et al., 1998 ) (see also Figs. 2,
3).

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Figure 3.
Diurnal rhythms in pCREB, AA-NAT, and ICER.
Representative immunoblots for CREB, pCREB, AA-NAT, and ICER in rat
pineal glands taken ex vivo at the indicated time points
are shown. The two bands in the ICER immunoblots likely represent the
isoforms ICER and ICER (Molina et al., 1993 ; Foulkes et al., 1996 ;
Razavi et al., 1998 ). In addition, autoradiographic images from a
representative in situ hybridization with an antisense
AA-NAT cDNA ribonucleotide probe and ICER immunocytochemical images of
sections from rat pineal glands are shown. Animals were maintained
under 12:12 hr light/dark conditions with lights off at ZT12. Scale
bars: AA-NAT in situ hybridization, 200 µm; ICER
immunocytochemistry, 20 µm.
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To investigate late molecular events within pineal signaling, we
stimulated explanted pineal glands with NE and monitored the dynamics
of CREB phosphorylation and ICER protein levels over the following 24 hr (Fig. 2). Despite the continuous presence of NE, we regularly
observed a rapid decline in pCREB levels 10 hr after stimulation
started, possibly because of increased phosphatase activity (Hagiwara
et al., 1992 ). ICER protein levels began to rise 4 hr after NE
stimulation. The amount of ICER protein reached maximum values after 14 hr of NE stimulation and declined after 18 hr of stimulation,
supporting the autoregulatory mechanisms for this transcription factor
suggested previously (Molina et al., 1993 ; Stehle et al., 1993 ; Foulkes
et al., 1997 ).
Rhythm in CREB phosphorylation, AA-NAT mRNA, and AA-NAT and
ICER protein levels in rat pineal gland in vivo
Because of the sequence of molecular events observed in our
in vitro experiments, we reasoned that the nocturnal
increase in NE release from intrapineal sympathetic nerve fibers
(Drijfhout et al., 1996 ) elicits CREB phosphorylation at the beginning
of the night. Indeed, we found dramatic changes in pCREB levels over a
24 hr light/dark period, whereas no day/night variation in CREB protein
levels was seen (see Figs. 3, 8). pCREB levels were low during the
light phase and highly increased within 5 hr after lights off (ZT17).
Individual time course experiments showed temporal variability in the
rise of pCREB levels in both the immunochemical (Fig. 3;
n = 8) and immunohistochemical (Fig.
4a; n = 6)
analyses of CREB phosphorylation in rat pineal gland. The onset of an
increased phosphorylation of CREB varied considerably from one to the
other experiment between 30 and 180 min after lights off (see Figs. 3,
4a, 8). It is worth mentioning that a delayed onset in CREB phosphorylation was always accompanied by a time-matched delay in
elevated melatonin synthesis (see Figs. 1, 8). We attribute these
observations to interindividual differences, e.g., different suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) activity patterns between animals. The semiquantitative densitometric analysis of different individual protein blots revealed a dynamic change in CREB phosphorylation with
elevated values between 30 min and 9 hr after the beginning of the dark
period (see Figs. 3, 4a, 8) as compared with daytime levels.
The decrease in the amount of pCREB was predictable and occurred always
well before the end of the dark period (see Figs. 3, 8). The day/night
switch in CREB phosphorylation was preserved in animals kept under
constant darkness (Fig. 4b), indicating an endogenous
circadian regulatory mechanism. This endogenous rise in the amount of
pCREB in rat pineal gland was blocked when animals were injected with
the 1-adrenergic antagonist propranolol before the onset
of darkness, when the gland was chronically deprived of its sympathetic
input by ganglionectomy or when rendered arrhythmic by bilateral
destruction of the SCN (data not shown).

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Figure 4.
Phosphorylation of CREB in rat pineal gland is a
circadian event. a, The phosphorylation of CREB occurs
under conditions of 12:12 hr light/dark (LD) shortly
after the onset of the dark period (lights off at ZT12), as shown with
immunocytochemical images from sections of rat pineal glands taken
ex vivo at the indicated time points. Scale bar, 50 µm. b, The onset of CREB phosphorylation persists
under constant darkness (DD). For comparison of CREB
with pCREB, SUMDENS values are normalized from immunoblot analyses
(n = 3) so that peak values equal 100%. The
open bar (11.5) represents a time point during
subjective daytime; the closed bars represent time
points at subjective night. c, A 30 min exposure
of animals to light during subjective nighttime (ZT18) leads to the
expected decline of AA-NAT protein levels (rightmost
column) (see also Gastel et al., 1998 ); however, CREB, pCREB,
and ICER levels remain unaltered. n.d., Not
detectable.
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AA-NAT mRNA levels in rat pineal gland were analyzed by in
situ hybridization (Fig. 3) as described (Pfeffer and Stehle,
1998 ). The semiquantitative densitometric analysis (n = 4) of the autoradiographic images from rat coronal brain sections
revealed a sharp increase in the amount of AA-NAT mRNA after the
beginning of the dark period. Maximum values for AA-NAT mRNA occurred 6 hr after the onset of darkness. AA-NAT mRNA levels started to decline 3 hr before the end of the dark phase and reached daytime values before
the beginning of the following light period (see Figs. 3, 8). The
dynamics of this decline is slightly different from that in a previous
report using Northern blot analysis (Roseboom et al., 1996 ) and may be attributable to the different photoperiodic regimes used in the two
studies [14:10 hr (Roseboom et al., 1996 ) and 12:12 hr (this study)].
AA-NAT protein levels showed a very similar pattern as compared with
the phosphorylation of CREB (see Figs. 3, 8). The observed decline in
AA-NAT protein occurred before the decline in AA-NAT mRNA levels,
confirming a previous report (Roseboom et al., 1996 ) and indicating a
post-translational mechanism (Gastel et al., 1998 ) of AA-NAT protein
degradation in vivo.
The ex vivo immunoblot analysis showed a drastic increase in
ICER protein 7 hr after the beginning of the dark period that stayed
elevated thereafter into the early light phase (Fig. 3). The amount of
the larger ICER isoform was increased up to eightfold at nighttime as
compared with daytime values. The nuclear ICER immunoreactivity present
at the dark/light transition declined gradually as the light phase
progressed and was low at the end of the day. Similarly, strong nuclear
staining for ICER protein was already present in almost all
pinealocytes 5 hr after the onset of darkness and still increased
during the second half of the night (Fig. 3). It is noteworthy that the
temporal onset of ICER immunoreactivity in rat pineal gland was rather
constant between individual experiments (see Figs. 3, 8). This
indicates that rhythmic ICER expression is controlled more tightly by
the NE challenge than the rhythmic phosphorylation of CREB (see above).
A 30 min exposure of animals to light during the dark period (6 hr
after lights off) led to a rapid decline in AA-NAT activity (Klein and
Weller, 1972 ) and protein (Fig. 4c), possibly because of
proteasomal proteolysis of the AA-NAT protein (Gastel et al., 1998 ).
Unlike AA-NAT protein, the amount of pCREB, CREB, and ICER protein was not affected by the light treatment (Fig.
4c).
Characterization of the ICER antibody
Preincubation of the ICER antibody with the bacterially generated
antigenic peptide abolished ICER signals in both immunoblot (Fig.
5a) and immunohistochemical
(Fig. 5b) preparations. Gel mobility shift analyses with
nuclear extracts of rat pineal gland and a labeled AA-NAT CRE
consequently revealed a specific band of retarded mobility (Fig.
5c, lower arrow) that comigrated
with bacterially generated ICER-II (Fig. 5c, compare
lanes 1, 4 with lanes 2, 3, 7-12). Minor bands
could also be observed (Fig. 5c, upper
arrow) that may account for AA-NAT CRE binding to related TFs (Baler and Klein, 1995 ). Coincubation with the ICER antibody generated a low mobility complex (Fig. 5c, lanes 2, 3, star), an observation consistent with a previously
published characterization of other TFs binding to the AA-NAT CRE
(Baler et al., 1997 ). Excess of unlabeled AA-NAT CRE (100×) competed
with specific binding (Fig. 5c, compare lanes 5, 6 with lanes 7, 8). The labeled AA-NAT CRE (Fig.
5c, lanes 9-12) showed higher binding to nuclear
extracts as compared with that of a labeled somatostatin-CRE (Fig.
5c, lanes 13-16) (Razavi et al., 1998 )
(lanes 9, 11, 13, 15, 1 µg of nuclear extract; lanes
10, 12, 14, 16, 10 µg of nuclear extract). Similar results were
obtained from three separate nuclear extract preparations.

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Figure 5.
Characterization of the ICER antibody.
a, b, ICER immunoreaction could be
abolished by preincubation of the antibody with the antigenic peptide
in a dose-dependent manner in immunoblots (a)
(2.5- to 250-fold excess of ICER protein) and immunohistochemical
preparations (b) (250-fold excess of ICER
protein). Similar results were obtained in two additional experiments.
Scale bar, 20 µm. c, Gel mobility shift analyses with
nuclear extracts obtained from rat pineal glands incubated with a
labeled AA-NAT CRE always revealed a specific band of retarded mobility
(lower arrow) that comigrated with bacterially generated
ICER-II (compare lanes 1, 4 with lanes 2, 3, 7-12). An additional ICER-specific signal of unknown quality
is indicated by the upper arrow. Coincubation with the
ICER antibody generated an additional low mobility complex
(lanes 2, 3; indicated by a star). Excess
of unlabeled AA-NAT CRE (100×) suppressed specific binding (compare
lanes 5, 6 with lanes 7, 8). Notably, the
labeled AA-NAT CRE (lanes 9-12) has a higher affinity
for nuclear extracts as compared with that of a labeled
somatostatin-CRE (lanes 13-16) (lanes 9, 11, 13, 15, 1 µg of nuclear extract; lanes 10, 12, 14, 16, 10 µg of nuclear extract). Similar results were obtained
from four separate nuclear extract preparations.
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Transfection of primary pinealocyte cultures
NE stimulation resulted in a strong nuclear staining for pCREB and
ICER (Fig. 6, compare columns
1 and 2). Transfection of pinealocytes with a
given construct did not affect NE-induced phosphorylation of CREB
(Figs. 6a,
7a). Transfection of
pinealocytes with the vector carrying a partial ICER cDNA in antisense
orientation (pICERas) greatly diminished NE-induced ICER
immunoreactivity as compared with that of cells transfected with
pICERs or the vector only (pRcCMV) (Fig.
6b). In unstimulated cells no AA-NAT mRNA and only a
very low pCREB level were detectable. Stimulation of
pICERas-transfected pinealocytes with NE resulted in a
greatly enhanced AA-NAT mRNA level as compared with that of
pICERs- or vector-transfected pinealocytes (Fig.
7a). The NE-induced melatonin synthesis showed an almost
twofold superinduction after 4 hr when pinealocytes were transfected
with pICERas as compared with that of vector- or
pICERs-transfected cells (Fig. 7b). Similar time course dynamics were obtained with the 1-adrenergic
agonist isoproterenol (10 7 M;
n = 2) or forskolin (10 2
M; n = 2) (data not shown).

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Figure 6.
Silencing of ICER in rat pinealocytes primarily
diminishes inducibility in ICER immunoreactivity. Top
panels, NE induces nuclear pCREB (a) and
ICER (b) immunoreactivity in isolated
pinealocytes (compare columns 1 and 2).
Bottom panels, The SUMDENS values from semiquantitative
image analyses (n = 12) corrected for the total
area covered by the cells [corrSUMDENS (Wicht et al., 1999 )] are
shown. Similar results were obtained with the
1-adrenergic agonist isoproterenol (data not shown).
Column 1, Unstimulated pinealocytes (control).
a, The NE-induced increase in pCREB immunoreactivity in
pinealocyte preparations (compare columns 1 and
2) is independent of transfected DNA (compare
columns 2 and 3-5). b,
Silencing ICER (column 5, pICERas)
decreases NE-induced ICER immunoreactivity, as compared with that of
NE-stimulated pinealocytes that were untransfected (column
2) or transfected with control DNA (column 3,
pRcCMV) or with pICERs (column
4).
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Figure 7.
NE-induced AA-NAT mRNA levels and melatonin
synthesis are disinhibited in pICERas-transfected
pinealocytes. a, CREB and pCREB immunoblots from
unstimulated (control) and stimulated (NE, 10 6
M; 5 hr) pinealocytes transfected with control DNA
(pRcCMV), pICERs, or pICERas are
shown. The amount of pCREB protein is highly induced in transfected and
NE-stimulated cells (columns 2-4), as compared
with control. Semiquantitative analysis of autoradiographic images from
Northern blots probed for AA-NAT mRNA and corrected for the GAPDH
signal revealed a fivefold superinduction in
pICERas-transfected cells (column
4) as compared with controls (columns 2, 3). b, NE-induced (10 6
M; 2 hr; n = 7) melatonin synthesis in
pinealocytes is primarily increased in amplitude by silencing ICER. For
equalizing differences between experiments in the absolute amounts of
net melatonin synthesis, data are normalized so that the peak values
equal 100%. **p < 0.01; ***p < 0.001 versus the basal value at 0 hr.
|
|
 |
DISCUSSION |
The 24 hr rhythm of CREB phosphorylation in rat pineal gland is
the first in vivo description of a neuronally driven,
transient activation of this TF in cells of the CNS (Fig.
8). The accumulation of a
cAMP-dependent intermediate a phosphorylated (nuclear) protein that bridges the time gap between adrenergic stimulation and the rise in
transcription in rat pineal gland was postulated as early as 1977 (Winters et al., 1977 ). In vivo, pCREB levels stay
elevated throughout the first half of the night, indicating the demand of a maintained high pool of the activated transcription factor for the
nocturnally elevated pineal metabolism. These observations support the
notion of a causal relationship between elevated levels of pCREB and an
increased transcription of cAMP-inducible genes in the rat pineal gland
in general (Stehle et al., 1993 ; Stehle, 1995 ; Pfeffer et al., 1998 )
and of the AA-NAT gene in particular (Borjigin et al., 1995 ; Roseboom
et al., 1996 ).

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Figure 8.
Diurnal rhythms in elements determining melatonin
synthesis in rat pineal gland. a, SUMDENS values for
CREB (squares with dashed line) and pCREB
(circles with solid line) from immunoblot
analyses. For comparison, values were normalized so that the peak
SUMDENS values for pCREB and CREB equal 100%. The semiquantitative
analysis for AA-NAT mRNA (triangles with small
dashed line) from in situ hybridization was
corrected against the background signal and hybridization signal
obtained with the sense AA-NAT probe. b, SUMDENS values
for AA-NAT protein (squares with solid
line) and melatonin synthesis (circles with
dashed line). For comparison, values were normalized so
that the peak SUMDENS values for AA-NAT and maximum melatonin values
equal 100%. c, Semiquantitative analysis of ICER mRNA
(triangle with dashed line) as revealed
by in situ hybridization. The values were corrected
against the background signal and hybridization signal obtained with
the sense ICER probe. SUMDENS values for ICER protein
(circles with solid line) were normalized
so that peak SUMDENS values equal 100%.
|
|
The intensities of CREB- and pCREB-immunoreactive bands in parallel
immunoblots of pineal protein extracts reveal an interesting insight
into the stoichiometric activation of the cAMP-signaling pathway. Like
in other systems, CREB in the rat pineal gland represents a
constitutively expressed gene, whose transcriptional impact is
primarily independent of de novo protein synthesis (Montminy et al., 1990 ; Crosson et al., 1996 ). Because the CREB antibody is
antigenic against CREB and pCREB protein, the fraction of
post-translationally modified CREB after stimulation can be determined;
when AA-NAT transcription has reached high values, the pCREB fraction
is at most 15% of the total amount of CREB in pinealocytes. This
indicates that a minor fraction of post-translationally modified
transcription factor is sufficient to mediate a full stimulation of
AA-NAT transcription and, thus, to override the inhibitory impact of
ICER on the AA-NAT CRE. The low amount of phosphorylated CREB as
compared with the total amount of CREB may explain the notorious
difficulties that we have had in detecting the circadian rhythm in CREB
phosphorylation in the rat pineal gland. The high amount of
unphosphorylated CREB protein in the rat pineal gland may serve to
compensate for the demonstrated low efficiency of the cPKA to
phosphorylate CREB at Ser-133 (Hagiwara et al., 1992 , 1993 ).
Additionally, the large pool of unphosphorylated CREB might ensure a
broad dynamic range in CREB phosphorylation, in accordance with an
animal's environmental and physiological situation.
During the postdusk domain, the ratio between activating and inhibiting
transcription factors in the rat pineal gland is in favor of a
transcriptional stimulation because the drastically increased amounts
of pCREB override ICER protein levels. As the night progresses, the
intrapineal pool of pCREB declines despite a persisting NE challenge.
This dephosphorylation of pCREB is possibly related to increased
amounts and/or activities of protein phosphatases (Hagiwara et al.,
1992 ; E. Maronde and H. W. Korf, unpublished observations). In
conjunction with the decrease of pCREB at this stage of the night,
steadily increasing ICER protein levels gain influence, thereby
attenuating cAMP-inducible gene transcription. This link has been shown
previously for the transcription rate of ICER itself (Stehle et al.,
1993 ) and of the 1-adrenergic receptor (Pfeffer et al.,
1998 ). Notably, rhythmic transcription can lead to immediate [AA-NAT
(Borjigin et al., 1995 ; Roseboom et al., 1996 )] or delayed changes in
functional protein [ 1-adrenergic receptor (Pfeffer et
al., 1998 )]. Additional mechanisms like alternative splicing [ICER
(Foulkes et al., 1991 ; Molina et al., 1993 ; Stehle et al., 1993 )],
alternative translation start [ICER (Gellersen et al., 1997 )],
post-translational modifications [CREB (Gonzalez and Montminy,
1989 )], or proteolytic degradation [ICER (Folco and Koren, 1997 )]
can modulate TF efficiency. Still, ICER can affect AA-NAT transcription
because we show complexing of the AA-NAT CRE with ICER. Furthermore,
AA-NAT mRNA levels and melatonin synthesis increased drastically after
the selective silencing of ICER in rat pinealocytes, possibly because
of a disinhibited AA-NAT transcription. Notably, the NE-induced
phosphorylation of CREB remained unaffected in pinealocytes transfected
with the antisense ICER construct. Thus, liberating pCREB from its
nuclear competitor ICER results in a hormonal superinduction.
Principally, pCREB and ICER can scale the relative transcription rate
of the AA-NAT gene by heterodimerization (de Groot and Sassone-Corsi, 1993 ; Desdouets et al., 1995 ) or by a direct competition for the CRE
element in the AA-NAT promoter. It should be noted, however, that
additional TFs have been described in rat pineal gland [AP-1 (Carter,
1994 ), Fra-2 (Baler and Klein, 1995 ), and CRX (Li et al.,
1998 )] with a temporal dynamics similar to that shown here for the
phosphorylation of CREB. These TFs may complement the action of pCREB.
Our data provide strong evidence that the temporally regulated
variation in the ratio of pCREB and ICER shapes the diurnal rhythm in
AA-NAT transcription and that this rhythm provides a basis for the
diurnal variation in AA-NAT protein levels and activity. Thus, one
level of AA-NAT regulation is defined by a stable diurnal rhythm in
transcription pattern, on which, however, post-transcriptional regulatory mechanisms are superimposed to allow rapid changes on a
minute-to-minute basis. One mechanism for these rapid changes in AA-NAT
activity may be proteasomal proteolysis. Indeed, this mechanism holds
true for the acute light-induced inactivation of AA-NAT activity at
nighttime (Gastel et al., 1998 ), but it does not affect pCREB or ICER
levels (this study). Our finding that AA-NAT was hardly present at ZT23
despite detectable amounts of AA-NAT mRNA suggests that proteasomal
proteolysis acts as an inactivating post-transcriptional mechanism also
under a normal light/dark cycle.
In conclusion, our study provides a conceptual framework to understand
the molecular basis of rhythmic neuroendocrine transduction; NE-dependent activation of the cAMP-signaling pathway in rat pineal gland affects (1) the very rapid post-translational modification of
preexisting TFs like the phosphorylation of CREB (Roseboom and Klein,
1995 ; Tamotsu et al., 1995 ; Korf et al., 1996 ), (2) the control of
AA-NAT protein and activity by rapid post-translational modifications,
and (3) the slower increase in the transcription and abundance of
inducible TFs (Stehle et al., 1993 ; Stehle, 1995 ; Foulkes et al.,
1997 ). The mammalian pineal gland will continue to serve as an
excellent model system to understand TF-directed up- and downregulation
of cAMP-inducible gene expression, to unravel concerted transcriptional
and post-transcriptional interactions, and to assess their importance
for the rhythmic synthesis and release of neurohormones and neurotransmitters.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Nov. 4, 1998; revised Feb. 5, 1999; accepted Feb. 11, 1999.
This work was supported by grants from the Deutsche
Forschungsgemeinschaft (J.O., H.-W.K., and J.H.S.) and the August
Scheidel-Stiftung (J.H.S.) and by Grant CA-69316 from the National
Institutes of Health (NIH) (C.A.M.). We thank P. Ruth for help with the
initial experiments, G. Schwoch (Göttingen, Germany) for the cPKA
antibody, and D. C. Klein and J. L. Weller (NIH, Bethesda,
MD) for the AA-NAT antibody. We thank D. C. Klein for helpful
discussion and H. Wicht, I. Schneider-Hüther, and A. Samalekos
for technical help.
Drs. E. Maronde and M. Pfeffer contributed equally to this work.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Jörg H. Stehle,
Dr. Senckenbergische Anatomie, Anatomisches Institut II, Johann Wolfgang Goethe-Universität, Theodor-Stern-Kai 7, 60590 Frankfurt, Germany.
Dr. Maronde's present address: Niedersächsisches Institut
für Peptidforschung, Feodor-Lynen-Straße 31, 30625 Hannover, Germany.
 |
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D. L. Terriff, C. L. Chik, D. M. Price, and A. K. Ho
Proteasomal Proteolysis in the Adrenergic Induction of Arylalkylamine-N-Acetyltransferase in Rat Pinealocytes
Endocrinology,
November 1, 2005;
146(11):
4795 - 4803.
[Abstract]
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K. Fricke, A. Schulz, H. John, W.-G. Forssmann, and E. Maronde
Isolation and Characterization of a Novel Proopiomelanocortin-Derived Peptide from Hemofiltrate of Chronic Renal Failure Patients
Endocrinology,
April 1, 2005;
146(4):
2060 - 2068.
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K. Fricke, A. Heitland, and E. Maronde
Cooperative Activation of Lipolysis by Protein Kinase A and Protein Kinase C Pathways in 3T3-L1 Adipocytes
Endocrinology,
November 1, 2004;
145(11):
4940 - 4947.
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W. A. Link, F. Ledo, B. Torres, M. Palczewska, T. M. Madsen, M. Savignac, J. P. Albar, B. Mellstrom, and J. R. Naranjo
Day-Night Changes in Downstream Regulatory Element Antagonist Modulator/Potassium Channel Interacting Protein Activity Contribute to Circadian Gene Expression in Pineal Gland
J. Neurosci.,
June 9, 2004;
24(23):
5346 - 5355.
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J. R. Man, S. Rustaeus, D. M. Price, C. L. Chik, and A. K. Ho
Inhibition of p38 Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase Enhances Adrenergic-Stimulated Arylalkylamine N-Acetyltransferase Activity in Rat Pinealocytes
Endocrinology,
March 1, 2004;
145(3):
1167 - 1174.
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M.-L. Garidou, E. Diaz, C. Calgari, P. Pevet, and V. Simonneaux
Transcription Factors May Frame Aa-nat Gene Expression and Melatonin Synthesis at Night in the Syrian Hamster Pineal Gland
Endocrinology,
June 1, 2003;
144(6):
2461 - 2472.
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V. Simonneaux and C. Ribelayga
Generation of the Melatonin Endocrine Message in Mammals: A Review of the Complex Regulation of Melatonin Synthesis by Norepinephrine, Peptides, and Other Pineal Transmitters
Pharmacol. Rev.,
June 1, 2003;
55(2):
325 - 395.
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D. M. Kemp, S. E. George, T. C. Kent, P. J. Bungay, and L. H. Naylor
The Effect of ICER on Screening Methods Involving CRE-Mediated Reporter Gene Expression
J Biomol Screen,
April 1, 2002;
7(2):
141 - 148.
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J. H. Stehle, C. von Gall, C. Schomerus, and H.-W. Korf
Of Rodents and Ungulates and Melatonin: Creating a Uniform Code for Darkness by Different Signaling Mechanisms
J Biol Rhythms,
August 1, 2001;
16(4):
312 - 325.
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M. Pfeffer, E. Maronde, C. A. Molina, H.-W. Korf, and J. H. Stehle
Inducible Cyclic AMP Early Repressor Protein in Rat Pinealocytes: A Highly Sensitive Natural Reporter for Regulated Gene Transcription
Mol. Pharmacol.,
August 1, 1999;
56(2):
279 - 289.
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