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Previous Article | Next Article 
The Journal of Neuroscience, January 1, 2000, 20(1):326-337
Hepatocyte Growth Factor/Scatter Factor Is a Neurotrophic
Survival Factor for Lumbar But Not for Other Somatic Motoneurons in the
Chick Embryo
Kristine D.
Novak,
David
Prevette,
Siwei
Wang,
Tom W.
Gould, and
Ronald W.
Oppenheim
Department of Neurobiology and Anatomy and the Neuroscience
Program, Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Winston-Salem,
North Carolina 27157
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ABSTRACT |
Hepatocyte growth factor/scatter factor (HGF/SF) is expressed in
the developing limb muscles of the chick embryo during the period of
spinal motoneuron (MN) programmed cell death, and its receptor c-met is
expressed in lumbar MNs during this same period. Although cultured
motoneurons from brachial, thoracic, and lumbar segments are all
rescued from cell death by chick embryo muscle extract (CMX) as
well as by other specific trophic agents, HGF/SF only promotes the
survival of lumbar MNs. Similarly, treatment of embryos in
ovo with exogenous HGF/SF rescues lumbar but not other somatic
MNs from cell death. Blocking antibodies to HGF/SF (anti-HGF) reduce
the effects of CMX on MN survival in vitro and decrease
the number of lumbar MNs in vivo. The expression of
c-met on MNs in vivo is regulated by a limb-derived
trophic signal distinct from HGF/SF. HGF/SF is a potent, select, and
physiologically relevant survival factor for a subpopulation of
developing spinal MNs in the lumbar segments of the chick embryo.
Key words:
cell death; motoneurons; HGF/SF; chick embryo; spinal
cord; trophic factor
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INTRODUCTION |
It has long been recognized that MNs
in the spinal cord and brainstem can be distinguished at the cellular
level by the location of their cell bodies in the CNS (e.g., a motor
pool) and by their peripheral target projections. Although somatic MNs
appear homogenous by a number of criteria (e.g., cholinergic phenotype,
innervation of skeletal muscle, etc.), their diversity at the cellular
level provides a beginning framework for defining the mechanisms that control the diversification of this single class of CNS neurons (Pfaff
and Kitner, 1998 ).
Within the spinal cord, motor neuron (MN) subtypes are located in more
or less discrete columns that may span a few or several segments and
that have relatively stereotyped rostral-caudal, dorsal-ventral, and
medial-lateral positions. Additionally, MNs that share projection
pathways to specific muscle groups (e.g., to the dorsal musculature of
a limb) colocalize into columns, and within columns, subclasses of MNs
that innervate a specific target muscle (e.g., the gastrocnemius)
comprise a cluster of MN cell bodies, the motor pool (Landmesser, 1978 ;
Oppenheim, 1981 ; Hollyday, 1990 ).
Recent studies have identified a number of genes that are
differentially expressed in subpopulations of early developing MNs and
likely to contribute to MN specialization. One major class of genes is
the Islet family of LIM homeobox transcription factors that can
also serve as molecular markers for MN subtypes. These markers appear
early in development (Tsuchida et al., 1994 ; Tokumoto et al.,
1995 )and are initiated by inductive signals from paraxial mesoderm and
by interactions between migrating MN subtypes, before the projection of
MN axons to their target muscles (Matise and Lance-Jones, 1996 ; Tanabe
and Jessell, 1996 ; Ensini et al., 1998 ; Sockanathan and Jessell, 1998 ).
From these and related studies, a general program of MN specification
is being revealed in which sonic hedgehog signals derived from
notochord and floorplate induce a generic ventral MN phenotype that is
then followed by specification of MN subtypes that reflect their
position within the spinal cord, peripheral projection pathways, and
choice of synaptic targets (Pfaff and Kitner, 1998 ).
Once MNs begin to innervate their appropriate muscle targets, a period
of programmed cell death (PCD) ensues during which approximately
one-half of the neurons of each subtype degenerate by a genetically
regulated program of apoptosis (Oppenheim, 1991 , 1998 ; Henderson,
1998 ). The decision to live or die appears to be initiated by
competition between MNs for target as well as for non-target-derived
sources of neurotrophic molecules (Nishi, 1994 ; Burek and Oppenheim,
1998 ). Although a large number of trophic factors comprising several
distinct gene families have been shown to promote MN survival in
vitro and in vivo (Arakawa et al., 1990 ; Hughes et al.,
1993 ; Oppenheim et al., 1993 ; Henderson, 1996 ; Oppenheim, 1996 ; Zurn et
al., 1996 ; Hanson et al., 1998 ), it has generally been assumed that
regardless of the MN subtype all somatic MNs in the brainstem and
spinal cord have the same trophic requirements. That is, cranial,
cervical, thoracic, and lumbar MNs, for example, as well as MN subtypes
within a region (e.g., all motor pools in the lumbar region), were
thought to share responsiveness to particular trophic factors.
Notwithstanding previous assumptions on this matter, however, evidence
from peripheral sensory neurons is not consistent with this idea and,
in fact, provides compelling support for distinct trophic requirements
of sensory neuron subtypes based on functional and other phenotypic
characteristics (Mu et al., 1993 ; Snider, 1994 ; Oakley et al., 1997 ).
Additionally, the molecular diversity of MNs at stages before the onset
of PCD (e.g., LIM/Islet expression) suggests that a similar diversity
may exist in the later trophic requirements of MNs. Although previous
observations have also provided evidence that does not support the idea
of homogeneous trophic support for all MNs (Oppenheim et al., 1993 ; Johnson et al., 1995 ), until very recently there have been no systematic attempts to directly test this notion or to determine whether in fact MN subtypes have distinct trophic requirements.
HGF/SF is a 90 kDa heterodimeric protein that is structurally similar
to plasminogen but does not have enzymatic activity (Nakamura et al.,
1989 ; Weidner et al., 1993 ). The only known receptor for HGF/SF is the
tyrosine receptor kinase c-met, and recent studies have shown that
HGF/SF-c-met interaction elicits a complex set of signal transduction
pathways. HGF/SF has been identified as a mitogen for mature
hepatocytes and was subsequently shown to be a morphogen and mitogen
for renal tubules, epithelia cells, keratinocytes, meleanocytes, and
pancreatic B cells, as well as an angiogenic factor, an inducer of
osteoblastic differentiation, and a stimulant of migration and invasion
by various types of carcinoma cells (Matsumoto and Nakamura, 1997 ;
Birchmeier and Gherardi, 1998 ; Maina and Klein, 1999 ). HGF/SF has also
been implicated in sensory and sympathetic neuron development, acting
synergistically with NGF to enhance axonal outgrowth and survival of
mammalian DRG neurons (Maina et al., 1997 ) and as an autocrine factor
for axonal outgrowth of sympathetic neurons (Yang et al., 1998).
Recently, HGF/SF was also shown to be a diffusible limb-derived MN
chemoattractant (Ebens et al., 1996 ) as well as a trophic factor for
cultured rat MNs (Ebens et al., 1996 ; Wong et al., 1997 ; Yamamoto et
al., 1997 ) and dopaminergic neurons (Hamanoue et al., 1996 ). The study by Yamamoto et al. (1997) is of particular interest in that they report
that HGF/SF is a potent survival factor for cultured rat limb-innervating MNs but only weakly supports the survival of non-limb
(thoracic) MNs. Using in situ hybridization, they report that c-met is only expressed in limb-innervating MNs. In the present study, we have examined the role of HGF/SF in the survival of chick
embryo MNs in vitro and in vivo and show for the
first time that HGF/SF promotes the in vivo survival of
subpopulations of spinal MNs.
Portions of this work have appeared previously in abstract form
(Prevette et al., 1997 ).
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
In vitro motoneuron cultures. Motoneurons were
isolated from stage 27-28 [embryonic day 5.0 (E5.0)] chick
embryos as determined by the staging criteria of Hamburger and Hamilton
(1951) . Briefly, the ventral portion of the lumbar, thoracic, or
brachial region of the spinal cord was removed by dissection using
tungsten needles. Ventral spinal cords were then treated with trypsin
[0.25% in PBS (Life Technologies, Gaithersburg, MD)] for 15 min, and
the tissue was dissociated by passing it several times through a 1.0 ml
pipette tip. The cell suspension was layered onto a 6.8% metrizamide (Serva, Heidelberg, Germany) cushion and centrifuged at 1600 rpm. The
cell layer at the top of the metrizamide, containing predominantly large MNs and forming a visible white band, was collected and added to
5 ml of media. BSA (4%) was then gently added beneath the cell
suspension and centrifuged at 1000 rpm for 10 min. Once the supernatant
was discarded, the pellet was then resuspended in 1 ml media and
filtered through a 50 µM nylon filter. A portion of this
preparation was loaded onto a hemocytometer for an initial cell count.
From this initial count the cells were diluted appropriately and plated
in 35 mm Petri dishes, each with four wells, 10 mm in diameter
[greiner dishes (Bellco)], which were precoated with polyornithine (1 µg/ml; Sigma, St. Louis, MO) and laminin (20 µg/ml; Life
Technologies). A serum-free culture medium containing Leibovitz's L15
media (Life Technologies) supplemented with sodium bicarbonate (625 µg/ml), glucose (20 mM), progesterone (2 × 10 8
M; Sigma), sodium selenite (3 × 10 8
M; Sigma), putrescine
(10 4
M; Sigma), conalbumin (0.1 mg/ml; Sigma), insulin (5 µg/ml; Sigma), and penicillin-streptomycin (Life Technologies) was
used. Cultures were incubated in a 5% CO2
incubator at 37°C with saturated humidity. Treatment with HGF or
muscle extract was accomplished by adding the appropriate concentration
to the cells 2 hr after initial plating. The data presented represent
the summed results from three to four independent replications.
Initially, MNs were identified by immunostaining using either SC-1 or
Islet-1/2 antibodies as specific MN markers (Milligan et al., 1994 ). On
the basis of Islet immunolabeling 5-7 hr after plating, 78.5% of the
cells were identified as MNs. After 2 d in culture, MN counts were
made from 20 predetermined 20× fields in a phase-contrast microscope.
To be included in the counts, an MN had to exhibit two or more neurites
per soma that were twice the length of the soma diameter and contain no
vacuoles or other signs of degeneration (e.g., beaded, disintegrating
neurites). In this way, only apparent viable MNs were included in the
counts. The number of surviving MNs at 48 hr after treatment with
optimal amounts (20 µg/ml) of chick embryo muscle extract (CMX),
prepared as described (Oppenheim et al., 1988 ), was arbitrarily
considered to be 100% survival.
In one experiment, cultures were treated with a nonsurvival-promoting
dose of CMX (5 µg/ml) together with an optimal dose (1 ng/ml) of HGF
to assess for cooperative effects, and in a separate experiment both
Islet-labeled and unlabeled cells were counted 48 hr after treatment
with 1 ng/ml HGF/SF.
Antibody blocking experiments. A blocking antibody to HGF/SF
(anti-human HGF/SF monoclonal antibody 294) was purchased from R&D
Systems and shown to block the activity of recombinant chicken HGF/SF
(rcHGF) (see Results). rcHGF was prepared as described by Théry
et al., (1995) and generously provided by Claudio Stern (Columbia
University, New York). The blocking antibody was incubated together
with recombinant human HGF/SF (rhHGF), rcHGF/SF, or CMX for 1 hr before
the addition of MNs to the culture wells (see Table 1). For in
vivo treatment with the HGF antibody, 15 µg in 100 µl BSA was
injected onto the chorioallantoic membrane through a window in the
shell on E5 (stage 26) or on E7 (stage 31). Embryos were killed on
either E6 (stage 29) or E8 (stage 34), and the brachial or lumbar
spinal cord was processed for paraffin sectioning as described below.
Surviving and degenerating (pyknotic) MNs were counted in every 10th
section as described in Clarke and Oppenheim (1995) . Controls were
injected with 100 µl of BSA.
In ovo treatment with trophic agents. Optimal doses of
trophic agents (5-10 µg) or CMX (150 µg) were administered daily
(E6-E9 or E6-E11) onto the vascularized chorioallantoic membrane
through a window in the shell as previously described (Oppenheim et
al., 1988 , 1993 ). Embryos were killed on E10 or E12, fixed in Carnoys solution, processed, serial-sectioned (10 µm), and stained with thionin. To examine the effect of HGF/SF on cranial MNs, embryos were
treated with 5 µg daily from E9 to E13, and the following nuclei were
examined on E14: oculomotor (III), trochlear (IV), trigeminal (V),
abducens (VI), facial (VII), glossopharyngeal/vagus (IX-X), and
hypoglossal (XII). A reliable and accurate cell counting procedure was
used to assess healthy and pyknotic MN numbers in brachial, thoracic,
and lumbosacral regions of the spinal cord and in the brainstem (Clarke
and Oppenheim, 1995 ). Brachial and lumbosacral regions were identified
by the beginning and end of the lateral motor column (LMC), and the
thoracic was identified as the region between brachial and
lumbosacral segments. Sensory neurons in the dorsal root ganglia (DRG)
were counted on E10 in the third lumbar ganglion (L3). The trophic
agents used here were kindly provided by Amgen (Thousand Oaks, CA)
(BDNF, CNTF) and Genentech (South San Francisco, CA) (GDNF, HGF). In a
separate in vivo experiment, HGF/SF (5 µg) was
administered on E4 and E5, and embryos were killed on E6.5 to examine
the possible effects of HGF/SF on brachial and lumbar MNs before the
main period of cell death.
RT-PCR. Total RNA was purified from E5, E6, E7, E8, E10, and
E14 chick embryos, staged according to Hamburger and Hamilton (1951) ,
that were removed from the shell and dissected in PBS (138 mM NaCl, 2.7 mM KCl, pH 7.4) containing 2 mM EGTA. Skin and bones were removed from the forelimbs and
hindlimbs, and the muscles were dissected and placed in Ultraspec RNA
solution (Biotecx Laboratories, Houston TX) on ice. Total RNA was then
purified from the limb muscles using the Ultraspec RNA isolation system
according to the manufacturer's instructions. To ascertain that all
RNA samples would be DNA-free, samples were treated with RQ1 DNase I
(Promega, Madison WI) for 1 hr at 37°C. The purified RNA was measured
and checked on a formaldehyde gel (Ausubel et al., 1996 ) to confirm that it was not degraded and that quantifications were accurate.
Measurements of GAPDH and HGF/SF gene expression were made using the
Access RT-PCR System (Promega) according to manufacturer's instructions. The 50 µl reactions included 1 µg of total RNA, Promega AMV/Tf1 reaction buffer, 0.2 mM dNTP mix, 5 U AMV
reverse transcriptase, 5 U Tfl DNA polymerase, 50 pmol each of forward and reverse primers, and 1 mM MgSO4.
The GAPDH forward primer encompassed nucleotides (nt) 77-99 of the
chicken GAPDH gene (GenBank accession no. K01458), and the reverse
primer encompassed nt 502-523. The HGF/SF forward primer encompassed
nt 905-927 of the chick HGF/SF gene (GenBank accession no. X84045),
and the reverse primer encompassed nt 1352-1332. cDNAs were first
created from each RNA sample by allowing the reverse transcription
reaction to occur at 48°C for 45 min, followed by a 2 min incubation
at 94°C. The polymerase chain reaction then took place using the following thermal cycler programs: 35 cycles of 94°C for 30 sec, 60°C for 1 min, and 68°C for 2 min for GAPDH primers, and 40 cycles of 94°C for 30 sec, 56°C for 1 min, and 68°C for 2 min for HGF/SF primers. PCR products were analyzed on 3% agarose gels. Negative controls included PCR reactions lacking primers or reverse
transcriptase. The RT-PCR results shown were repeated in four separate experiments.
In situ hybridization. Plasmids containing portions of
the chick c-met gene (c-met/pcDNA) and chick HGF/SF gene (pollo 199F) were generously provided by Claudio Stern. Digestion of c-met/pcDNA with PstI and BamHI yielded a 1.8 kb fragment
encompassing nt 1695-3573. This fragment was ligated to
PstI/BamHI-digested pBluescript KS (Stratagene, La Jolla, CA) to create
the plasmid c-met/BS. The plasmid pollo 199F contains 1.2 kb of 5'
HGF/SF coding sequence in the pBluescript
KS vector. Digoxygenin (DIG)-labeled
riboprobes were prepared from linearized c-met/BS and pollo 199F
plasmids according to manufacturer's instructions (Boehringer
Mannheim, Indianapolis, IN), followed by RQ1 DNase I (Promega)
digestion. Riboprobe size was confirmed on formaldehyde gels (Ausubel
et al., 1996 ), and optimal probe concentration was determined by serial
dilution. DIG-labeled c-met sense riboprobes were used as negative controls.
Spinal cords were dissected from E4, E5, E6, E7, E8, E10, and E12 chick
embryos and brains from E13 embryos into PBS containing 2 mM EGTA [staged according to Hamburger and Hamilton
(1951) ] and immediately placed in PBS, pH 7.4, containing 4%
paraformaldehyde. Spinal cords were then cryoprotected sequentially in
5% sucrose/PBS, 15% sucrose/PBS, and 20% sucrose/PBS for 4 hr each
at 4°C. They were then embedded in O.C.T. (Tissue Tek), and frozen on
dry ice. Serial sections (20 µm) were cut at 20°C and stored at
80°C. In situ hybridization was performed according to
Yamamoto et al. (1997) . The E4, E5, E6, E7, E8, E10, and E12 sections
from brachial, thoracic, and lumbar regions and E13 brain were all
included in each of three independent experiments, and sections of each
time point and spinal cord region were all hybridized with sense and antisense c-met probes.
Immunohistochemistry. Islet-1/2 immunohistochemistry was
performed on spinal cords of chick embryos dissected in PBS, fixed, cryoprotected, embedded, and sectioned as described above. Sections were rehydrated in PBS at room temperature two times for 5 min each.
Endogenous peroxidase activity was quenched in 3%
H2O2, 10% MeOH, 10 mM Tris, pH 7.5, two times for 15 min each. Sections were
washed once for 10 min in PBS and blocked in complete buffer (10%
normal goat serum, 0.1% Triton-X 100 in PBS) for 1 hr at room
temperature. The Islet-1/2 reactive antibody 4D5 (Developmental Studies
Hybridoma Bank, Iowa City, IA) was diluted 1:250 in complete buffer,
applied to sections, and allowed to incubate overnight at 4°C.
Sections were then treated with the secondary antibody, biotinylated
goat anti-mouse IgG (Vector Laboratories, Burlingame, CA), at a 1:100
dilution in complete buffer for 1 hr at 4°C. Sections were washed
three times for 5 min each in PBS at room temperature, and antibody
reactivity was observed using the Vectastain ABC and DAB kits (Vector),
an avidin DH, and biotinylated horseradish peroxidase detection system.
Limb bud removal. Limb bud removal (LBR) experiments were
performed on E3 as previously described (Caldero et al., 1998 ). After LBR, some embryos were allowed to survive until E5.0 (stage 25),
when the lumbar region of the spinal cord was dissected, fixed,
cryoprotected, and sectioned as described above. In situ hybridization of the c-met antisense riboprobe was performed as described above, and results shown were repeated in at least five separate in situ hybridization experiments, performed on
spinal cord sections from three different embryos. Other LBR embryos were treated with HGF (5 µg) alone, a nonoptimal dose of MEX (15 µg) alone, or HGF (5 µg) plus a nonoptimal dose (15 µg) of CMX on
E4, E5, E6, and E7 and killed on E7.5. The spinal cord was processed
and sectioned, and MNs were counted as described above.
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RESULTS |
HGF/SF supports the in vitro survival of
lumbar MNs
To investigate the role of HGF/SF in promoting survival of
specific MN subpopulations, we first tested the ability of HGF/SF to
support survival of different MN populations in vitro.
Motoneurons were purified from the ventral region of brachial,
thoracic, and lumbar chick spinal cord at E5.0. In the absence of
muscle extract (CMX) or trophic factors, virtually all chick MNs
in vitro die within 48-72 hr. Recombinant human HGF/SF was
added to cultured MNs, and the number of surviving cells was compared
with control cultures. After 48 hr of treatment with different
concentrations of HGF/SF, we observed a dose-dependent increase in the
survival of lumbar-derived MNs (Fig.
1A). By contrast, HGF,
even at doses as high as 100 ng/ml (data not shown), failed to promote
the survival of brachial or thoracic MNs (Fig. 1B).
Treatment with CMX, however, promoted the survival of all three
populations (brachial, thoracic, and lumbar) of MNs (data not shown).
Thus, HGF/SF appears to promote the survival of lumbar but not brachial
or thoracic MNs in vitro. To examine whether HGF/SF might be
acting indirectly on MNs in vitro via a survival effect on
the other cells (non-MNs), some cultures were immunolabeled with
Islet-1/2, and the number of unlabeled cells was counted. After 48 hr
exposure to HGF/SF, the number of unlabeled cells was unchanged
(control = 220 ± 25 vs HGF = 200 ± 35).
Therefore, we conclude that changes in the number of non-MNs after HGF
treatment are not responsible for increased MN survival. In comparing
the effects of HGF/SF with previous studies of BDNF (Becker et al.,
1998 ), GDNF, and CNTF (Oppenheim et al., 1995 ), HGF/SF appears to be
more potent than CNTF or GDNF but is equally as potent as BDNF (Fig.
1B). That is, lower optimal doses of HGF and BDNF
were required for maximum survival compared with GDNF and CNTF.
However, HGF was less efficacious (i.e., rescued fewer MNs at optimal
doses) than either BDNF or GDNF. Co-treatment with HGF (1 ng/ml) and a
suboptimal dose of CMX (5 µg/ml), which by itself has no
survival-promoting effect, increased the survival effects of HGF from
60 to 75% (Fig. 1C). Recombinant chicken HGF/SF also
promoted the survival of lumbar MNs in vitro (Fig.
1D), although higher doses were required, probably
because of the fact that the chicken protein had been stored frozen
( 80°C) for several years and had lost activity (C. Stern, personal
communication).

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Figure 1.
The percentage survival (mean ± SD) of
cultured MNs at 48 hr relative to CMX (A,
horizontal line) after treatment of lumbar-derived
cultures (A) or (B) after
treatment of lumbar (L)-, brachial
(B)-, or thoracic
(T)-derived MNs with HGF/SF. In B
the data for L-, B-, and T-derived MNs (bars) represent
treatment with a dose of 10 ng/ml of HGF/SF. Data for CMX, BDNF, GDNF,
and CNTF (B, horizontal lines) represent
percentage survival of lumbar MNs using optimal doses of each factor.
The data for BDNF are extrapolated from Becker et al. (1998) .
*p < 0.05; **p < 0.01 (A) or p < 0.001 (B); ***p < 0.001. (t tests vs control, CON).
C, MN survival after treatment with CMX (5 µg/ml), HGF
(5 ng/ml), or HGF + CMX. *p < 0.01 versus CON;
**p < 0.05 versus HGF. D, MN
survival after treatment with rcHGF. *p < 0.001 versus CMX; **p < 0.05 versus CON;
***p < 0.01 versus CON.
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Antibody blocking experiments
Anti-HGF (10-30 µg/ml) blocked the in vitro MN
survival-promoting effects of 100 ng/ml recombinant human HGF/SF and of
recombinant chicken HGF/SF and significantly reduced the
survival-promoting effects of CMX (Table
1). After in vivo treatment
with anti-HGF on E5, MN numbers in both brachial and lumbar spinal cord
on E6 were similar to control values (Table
2). By contrast, anti-HGF treatment on E7
resulted in a significant decrease in the number of lumbar MNs on E8
but no change in brachial MNs (Table 2). The relatively small absolute
reduction in lumbar MNs was to be expected, considering the short
duration of treatment (30 hr) and the fact that HGF/SF is probably
acting on only a subpopulation of lumbar MNs. Treatment with anti-HGF
was without effect on the number of degenerating MNs on E6 but
increased the number of pyknotic lumbar MNs on E8 (Table 2). The lack
of effect of anti-HGF in the brachial region provides a negative
control against the possible nonspecific effects of anti-HGF in
reducing MNs in the lumbar spinal cord.
HGF/SF promotes spinal MN survival in ovo
Although HGF/SF has been shown to be a survival factor for
mammalian and avian MNs in vitro (Ebens et al., 1996 ; Wong
et al., 1997 ; Yamamoto et al., 1997 ; present results), its in
vivo role in MN survival has not yet been examined. The ability to
add drugs, chemicals, and growth factors to the developing chick embryo
in ovo makes this system ideal for such experiments.
Accordingly, HGF/SF was administered in vivo via the highly
vascularized chorioallantoic membrane that surrounds the embryo and is
connected to the embryonic circulatory system. Agents administered in
this way have access to both peripheral and central neurons, and this
method has proven to be an efficient and effective means for the
systemic administration of various agents, including neurotrophic
factors (Oppenheim et al., 1988 , 1993 ). Embryos were treated daily with
an optimal dose of HGF/SF (5 µg), whereas control embryos received
equal volumes of a physiological saline solution. At E10 or E12, the
embryos were killed, and the number of surviving MNs in the brachial, lumbar, and thoracic spinal cord was counted (Clarke and Oppenheim, 1995 ). We observed that HGF/SF promoted the survival of a significant number of MNs in the lumbar LMC compared with saline-treated controls but had no affect on MNs in the brachial or thoracic region of the
spinal cord (Fig. 2A).
HGF/SF and BDNF were less efficacious than CNTF, GDNF, or CMX in
promoting lumbar MN survival in ovo (Fig. 2C).
HGF/SF reduced the number (mean ± SD) of pyknotic-degenerating lumbar MNs per 1000 surviving MNs on E8.0 (HGF/SF = 12.5 ± 1.5, n = 5 vs control = 18.7 ± 3.1, n = 5; p < 0.05, t
test).

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Figure 2.
A, B, The number (mean ± SD)
of MNs on E10 (A) and E12
(B) after daily in ovo treatment
with 5-10 µg of HGF/SF from E6. Values in bars = number of animals. *p < 0.005. C,
The number (mean ± SD) of lumbar MNs on E10 after daily in
ovo treatment from E6 with saline (CON),
BDNF (5 µg), HGF (5 µg),
CNTF (5 µg), GDNF (5 µg), or
CMX (150 µg). *p < 0.01;
**p < 0.005; ***p < 0.001; vs
CON; p < 0.01 vs GDNF
(t tests). At comparable doses (5 µg) CNTF and GDNF
rescued more MNs than BDNF or HGF (CNTF and GDNF vs BDNF,
p < 0.02; CNTF and GDNF vs HGF,
p = 0.05). The horizontal line
represents the number of MNs present on E6 (21,000).
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Because MNs in the brachial region of the spinal cord begin PCD ~1-2
d later than lumbar MNs (E7-E8 vs E6) and cell loss continues to about
E13 (Oppenheim and Majors-Willard, 1978 ), treatment with HGF/SF was
also extended to the later cell death period. HGF/SF was administered
in ovo from E6 to E12, and the number of MNs in brachial,
lumbar, and thoracic regions of the spinal cord was counted on E12.5.
Despite the more prolonged treatment period, HGF/SF still did not
promote survival of either brachial or thoracic MNs but did
significantly increase MN number in the lumbar region (Fig.
2B). Thus, HGF/SF has a specific effect of only promoting survival of MNs from the lumbar region of the spinal cord during the
period of their naturally occurring cell death. Treatment with HGF/SF
from E6 to E10 or E12 also had no effect on cell size (nuclear area) of
lumbar MNs (control = 150 ± 25 µm2 vs HGF = 147 ± 12 µm2; n = 200 cells
per group). Finally, treatment with HGF/SF (5 µg) on E4 and E5,
before the main cell death period of brachial and lumbar MNs, was
without effect on the number of surviving MNs on E6.5 (brachial
control = 15,100 ± 861, n = 4 vs brachial HGF/SF = 15,416 ± 610, n = 4; lumbar
control = 20,293 ± 1,019, n = 4 vs lumbar
HGF/SF = 19,875 ± 862, n = 4).
Motoneurons were also counted in different rostral-caudal regions of
the lumbar spinal cord to determine whether subsets of lumbar MNs have
a differential survival response to HGF/SF. When MN numbers were
counted in 10 different equal regions along the rostral-caudal axis of
the lumbar spinal cord on E10 and E12, we observed an increase in the
number of MN cell bodies in the caudalmost two-thirds of the lumbar
region, whereas the rostralmost third of the lumbar region did not have
an increased number of MNs above that of the saline-treated controls
(data not shown). Finally, daily HGF/SF treatment (5 µg) from E6 to
E12 failed to promote the survival of lumbar sensory neurons in the L3
DRG (10,570 ± 1,129, n = 5 vs control = 11,141 ± 1,090, n = 5).
HGF/SF does not promote cranial motor neuron survival
in ovo
We also tested the effects of HGF/SF on cranial MN survival. In
the chick embryo, cranial MN cell death occurs from E9 to E15
(Oppenheim et al., 1993 ; Johnson et al., 1995 ). To test the in
vivo effects of HGF/SF on cranial MN survival, 5 µg HGF/SF was
added to embryos in ovo from E9 to E13. Embryos were killed on E14, and MNs were counted in the nuclei of cranial nerves III (oculomotor), IV (trochlear), V (trigeminal), VI (abducens), VII (facial), IX (glossopharyngeal), X (vagus), and XII (hypoglossal). No
differences were observed in the number of surviving MNs for any of the
cranial motor nuclei as compared with saline-treated controls (Fig.
3). This was surprising, because c-met
expression was observed at several ages between E9 and E14 in cranial
motor nuclei III, IV, V, VII, IX, and X (data not shown). Additionally, although not shown here, c-met staining was also observed in the ventral lateral geniculate nucleus, the nucleus dorsolateralis anterior
thalami, the nucleus rotundus, and the optic tectum (layer 4 and layers
8-10 of the stratum griseum at fibrosum superficiale), all of which
are visual relay nuclei (Nieuwenhuys et al., 1998 ). The significance of
this expression is unknown.

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Figure 3.
The number (mean ± SD) of cranial MNs on E14
after daily HGF treatment (5 µg) from E9 to E13. C,
Control; H, HGF.
|
|
The HGF/SF receptor c-met is expressed in MN subsets
during PCD
Because only a subset of MNs were capable of responding to HGF/SF,
we sought to determine the expression pattern of the receptor tyrosine
kinase c-met, the receptor for HGF/SF (Botarro et al., 1991;
Naldini et al., 1991 ). Previous studies have shown that c-met is
expressed in the ventral horn of mouse embryo spinal cord (Sonnenberg
et al., 1993 ), and detailed studies in rat embryos have revealed that
c-met is expressed only in MNs in limb-innervating segments (Yamamoto
et al., 1997 ). We performed in situ hybridization with the
c-met antisense riboprobes on brachial, thoracic, and lumbar spinal
cord sections at ages throughout the period of PCD. Immunohistochemistry with an antibody against the Islet-1/2, LIM-family transcription factors expressed by developing MNs (Tsuchida et al.,
1994 ), was used to clearly distinguish the LMC where the MN cell bodies
reside (Fig. 4F).

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Figure 4.
In situ hybridization was performed
using the c-met antisense probe on sections of lumbar spinal cord at E4
(A), E5 (B), E6
(C), E7 (D), E8
(G), E10 (H), E12
(I). A c-met sense probe was hybridized
with E7 lumbar sections as a negative control
(E), and immunohistochemistry with the
anti-Islet-1/2 antibody was used to clearly mark MNs in the lumbar LMC
on E7 (F). Dotted lines delineate the
ventral horn. Scale bar in A = 200 µm for A-I
and 100 µm for G-I. M-O, Spinal cord sections from
E7 brachial (M) and thoracic
(N) regions were also examined for c-met
expression by in situ hybridization with the c-met
antisense probe, and compared to E7 lumbar sections
(O). Dotted lines and
arrows delineate the ventral horn. J-L, High
magnification photomicrographs of the mid-lumbar LMC on E7 after
in situ hybridization was performed with an antisense
c-met probe (J), a c-met sense probe
(K), and after immunohistochemistry with the
Islet-1/2 antibody (L). Data shown are indicative
of four independent experiments on at least three different embryos.
Dotted lines in J and K
delineate the LMC. The asterisks in J
indicate regions containing MNs but with little, if any, apparent c-met
expression. Scale bar (shown in J for
J-L): 30 µm.
|
|
The HGF/SF receptor c-met was observed to be expressed in the lumbar
LMC of E5 embryos (Fig. 4B) but not on E4 (Fig.
4A), which was the youngest age examined, and
expression appeared to increase as development progressed, with clearly
detectable levels of c-met expression in E6, E7, and E8 lumbar spinal
cord (Fig. 4C-G). Although c-met was expressed
throughout the LMC, it appeared to be more highly expressed in distinct
areas of the LMC, which may correspond to subsets of lumbar MNs (Fig.
4J-L). However, there was no apparent
difference in c-met expression in lumbar MNs at different locations
along the rostral-caudal axis. Expression levels appeared to decrease
toward the end of PCD, because c-met expression was lower in the
ventral horn by E10 (Fig. 4H) and could no longer be
detected in E12 lumbar spinal cord (Fig. 4I). The
c-met sense riboprobe (negative control) did not cross-react with any
specific regions of the spinal cord (Fig. 4E). High
magnification photomicrographs of c-met and Islet-1/2 expression in the
lumbar LMC on E7 are shown in Figure
4J-L.
C-met staining was not observed in thoracic spinal cord sections at E7
(Fig. 4N) or on E4, E5, E6, E8, E10, or E12 (data not shown). Compared with lumbar spinal cord (Fig. 4O), only a
small region of c-met expression was consistently observed in the
lateralmost region of the LMC in the brachial region on E7 (Fig.
4M), with little if any expression at the other
ages examined, including E4-E6 and E8-E12 (data not shown). Weak
expression was also observed to be diffusely distributed throughout the
gray matter of the entire spinal cord (brachial, thoracic, lumbar) from
E4 to E10, although it is not clear whether this staining is specific
to neurons or glia.
HGF/SF is expressed in the limbs during PCD
HGF/SF was observed to promote MN survival both in
vitro and in vivo, and the HGF/SF receptor c-met was
expressed at the proper time and in the appropriate location to act as
a trophic factor specific for lumbar MNs. Because lumbar MNs innervate
the muscles of the lower limb, we asked whether HGF/SF is expressed in
lower limb musculature during the same time period that c-met
expression is observed. Using whole-mount in situ
hybridization with HGF/SF antisense riboprobes, we detected HGF/SF in
both upper and lower limb buds, in the heart, and in the brain, as
previously observed (Thèry et al., 1995 ), as well as in branchial
arches and apparent muscle precursor cells around the eye, of stage 17 (E2.5) embryos (data not shown). After E2.5, however, we were unable to
consistently demonstrate HGF/SF expression in the limbs either by whole
mount or on sections using in situ hybridization.
Because of the failure of in situ hybridization to detect
HGF/SF in the limbs after E2.5, we also assayed HGF/SF expression in
the developing chick limb using RT-PCR, which is a more sensitive method than in situ hybridization for detecting low amounts
of mRNA. Wings and legs were dissected from E3, E5, E6, E7, E10, and
E14 embryos, and total RNA was purified after digestion of DNA. Equal
amounts of RNA were used in RT-PCR reactions to quantify HGF/SF
expression in upper and lower limbs during the period of naturally
occurring cell death. RT-PCR with GAPDH primers yielded a 447 bp
product and confirmed that equal amounts of RNA were included in each
reaction (Fig. 5A). RT-PCR
reactions with HGF/SF primers yielded the predicted 448 bp product,
with clearly detectable expression levels in E3 and E5 limbs (Fig.
5B), and lower but still detectable levels of HGF/SF mRNA
were present until the final time point tested on E14. Negative control
reactions without primers or reverse transcriptase confirmed that the
amplified product was not caused by DNA contamination. Thus,
whole-mount in situ hybridization and RT-PCR data reveal
that HGF/SF is expressed in the limbs before and during PCD of lumbar
MNs.

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Figure 5.
RT-PCR was used to assess HGF/SF expression
(B) in wing (W) and
leg muscle (L) from E3, E5, E6, E7, E10, and E14
embryos. GAPDH primers were used as a positive control
(A). RT-PCR reactions with HGF/SF primers yielded
the predicted 448 bp product (B). Negative
controls included reactions with no primers or no reverse
transcriptase. Results shown are representative of four independent
experiments. DNA base pair markers are shown at
left.
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HGF/SF does not rescue MNs from cell death in response to limb
bud removal
Target-derived trophic factors play a central role in determining
MN survival during development. Removal of the chick hindlimb bud (LBR)
at E3, before axonogenesis, results in the near total loss of
ipsilateral MNs by E8.0-E9.0 (Oppenheim et al., 1978 ; Caldero et al.,
1998 ). Addition of CMX and trophic factors such as GDNF after LBR
partially reverses this cell loss, increasing MN survival (Caldero et
al., 1998 ). We tested the ability of HGF/SF to prevent MN cell loss
after LBR. LBR was performed on E3, followed by treatment with 5 µg
HGF/SF or physiological saline solution on E4, E5, E6, and E7. Embryos
were killed on E7.5, and the number of surviving MNs was counted in the
LMC ipsilateral and contralateral to the LBR. Surprisingly, HGF/SF
increased the number of surviving MNs on the contralateral side but had
no effect on MN survival on the LBR (ipsilateral) side (Fig.
6A).

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Figure 6.
A, The number (mean ± SD) of
lumbar MNs contralateral and ipsilateral to LBR on E7.5 after in
ovo treatment with either HGF/SF (5 µg) or physiological
saline (SAL). *p < 0.005 (t test). B-E, In situ
hybridization for c-met on E5.5 after LBR with either HGF/SF
(B) or CMX (C) treatment.
Dotted areas indicate the LMC ipsilateral
(arrow) and contralateral to LBR. In D
and E, MNs in the ipsilateral (arrow) and
contralateral LMC are immunolabeled (Islet-1/2) after either HGF
(D) or CMX (E) treatment.
Scale bar, 150 µm.
|
|
Because c-met expression appears between E4 and E5 in control embryos
(Fig. 4), we examined whether the lack of response of developing MNs to
HGF/SF after LBR could be attributable to a loss of c-met expression
caused by the loss of a putative limb-derived signal. LBR was again
performed on E2, and embryos were allowed to develop until E5.5, the
beginning of LBR-induced PCD. At this time the embryos were killed, and
c-met expression was examined in lumbar spinal cord sections by
in situ hybridization. We observed intense c-met expression
on the side contralateral to the LBR (Fig. 6B),
whereas the ipsilateral side exhibited greatly reduced c-met
expression. Islet-1/2 staining revealed that the reduced c-met
expression ipsilateral to the LBR was not caused by MN cell loss (Fig.
6D). Thus, it appears that some factor or factors
other than HGF/SF present in the developing limb bud are required to induce c-met expression and subsequent HGF/SF responsiveness.
Accordingly, we next asked whether a signal present in extracts from
developing limb muscle (CMX) could be involved in inducing c-met
expression. Once again, LBR was performed at E3, followed by addition
of CMX (150 µg) in ovo on E4 and E5. Embryos were then
killed at E5.5. In situ hybridization performed on lumbar spinal cord sections from three embryos in five separate experiments using the c-met antisense probe revealed that CMX treatment restored intense levels of c-met expression in the ipsilateral LMC after LBR
(Fig. 6C,D). Thus, some factor or factors present
in developing limb muscle is required to induce c-met expression in MNs
located in the lumbar LMC, which then allows them to respond to HGF/SF and promote MN survival. Because continued treatment with HGF/SF from
E5 to E7 failed to promote MN survival (Fig. 6A),
HGF/SF is not likely to be the limb-derived factor needed for c-met expression.
Finally, to directly examine whether CMX could reinstate a biological
survival response to HGF after LBR, HGF (5 µg) was administered daily
together with a nonsurvival-promoting dose of CMX (15 µg) to LBR
embryos on E4, E5, and E6, and MN survival was assessed on E7.
Combinations of CMX plus HGF promoted survival of MNs on the side
ipsilateral to the LBR (MN numbers, mean ± SD: control saline,
4309 ± 1011, n = 4; CMX, 4206 ± 981, n = 4; HGF, 3815 ± 1123, n = 4;
HGF + CMX, 7597 ± 888, n = 5; p < 0.01 HGF vs HGF + CMX, t test).
 |
DISCUSSION |
HGF/SF is a multifunctional growth factor known to be involved in
many early developmental systems, including development of skeletal
muscle and the neural crest, as well as MN innervation of the limb.
Several in vitro studies have also reported that HGF/SF is a
muscle-derived MN survival factor for mammalian MNs (Ebens et al.,
1996 ; Wong et al., 1997 ; Yamamoto et al., 1997 ). We have investigated
the in vivo function and regulation of HGF/SF and its
receptor c-met in the spinal cord of the developing chick embryo.
Our results demonstrate that HGF/SF selectively promotes the survival
of lumbar MNs during the period of programmed cell death, both in
vitro and in vivo. Experiments with in vitro
cultures of chick MNs purified at the beginning of the period of
naturally occurring cell death demonstrate that HGF/SF promotes the
survival of lumbar-derived but not thoracic- or brachial-derived MNs.
Comparison of the survival response of MNs treated with HGF/SF or CMX
reveals that optimal concentrations of HGF/SF support the survival of ~60% as many motor neurons as CMX. This is in comparison with CNTF,
BDNF, and GDNF, which save on the average 50, 90, and 70%, respectively, of MNs compared with CMX. These results in the chick are
in general agreement with previously published observations of rat MN
cultures, where limb-innervating MNs are more sensitive to HGF/SF than
thoracic MNs (Yamamoto et al., 1997 ). However, in cultured rat MNs, low
concentrations of HGF/SF promote the in vitro survival of
both brachial and lumbar-derived MNs, and higher concentrations also
promote the survival of thoracic MNs. In contrast, we observed in the
chick that even high doses of HGF/SF support only the in
vitro survival of lumbar-derived MNs. Treatment of MN cultures and
embryos in ovo with CMX potentiated the effects of HGF/SF,
suggesting that HGF/SF is not the only muscle-derived factor that
promotes lumbar MN survival. This potentiation may also reflect the
role of muscle-derived signals in c-met expression (see below).
Although the anti-HGF antibody used here to block HGF/SF activity was
made against rhHGF, it also blocked the activity of rcHGF/SF and
significantly reduced the survival-promoting effects of CMX on cultured
MNs. More importantly, in vivo treatment with anti-HGF
selectively reduced the survival of lumbar MNs during the normal cell
death period but was without effect on MN numbers when administered
before that time. Additionally, as expected, anti-HGF treatment was
without effect on brachial MNs either before or during the period of
normal PCD. Accordingly, HGF/SF is not required for the survival of
either brachial or lumbar MNs before the onset of target-dependent PCD
in these populations. This differs from sympathetic neurons that
require HGF/SF for survival early in development, before axonal
outgrowth (Maina et al., 1998 ). Taken together, these anti-HGF
experiments are consistent with the role of endogenous HGF/SF as a
physiologically relevant muscle-derived trophic factor for chicken
lumbar MNs.
We have also demonstrated for the first time that exogenously supplied
HGF/SF acts as a trophic factor for MN subtypes in vivo. In
ovo treatment of chick embryos with optimal concentrations of
HGF/SF during PCD resulted in increased survival of lumbar but not
brachial or thoracic MNs. Even within the lumbar LMC, not all MNs
appear to express the HGF/SF receptor c-met and not all MNs are rescued
from PCD. Previously, it has been difficult to assess the in
vivo role of HGF/SF on MN survival because HGF/SF or c-met null
mutant mice die before the start of programmed cell death, and HGF/SF
is also required for myoblast migration to the developing limb (Schmidt
et al., 1995 ; Uehara et al., 1995 ). Accordingly, the
present data provide the first evidence that exogenous HGF/SF can
prevent the death of developing MNs in vivo and that
reductions in endogenous HGF/SF decrease MN survival. Although HGF/SF
can act on glial cells via the c-met receptor (Maina and Klein, 1999 ) and therefore could also indirectly affect MN survival in
vivo, the in vitro data using highly enriched cultures
of MNs show that HGF/SF can act directly on MNs (Ebens et al., 1996 ;
Yamamoto et al., 1997 ; present data) and does not promote the survival
of non-MNs in our cultures. These in vitro data also
indicate that HGF/SF can act on MNs independent of its role in
regulating the proliferation of secondary muscle fibers (Maina et al.,
1996 ).
The in vivo and in vitro response of lumbar MNs
to HGF/SF treatment correlates with the observed expression pattern of
the HGF/SF receptor c-met. We observed that c-met is expressed in lumbar MNs during the period of PCD. The initial expression of c-met
occurred between E4 and E5, as postmitotic lumbar MNs begin to
innervate the leg. A similar temporal pattern of c-met expression has
been observed in mouse embryo lumbar MNs (Ebens et al., 1996 ). Expression of c-met was not observed at any time in thoracic segments, and only a small region of c-met expression was consistently observed in the brachial LMC at E7 but not at other earlier or later ages. These
brachial cells may represent a small MN pool capable of responding to
HGF/SF for a very short window of time and thus would not make enough
of a contribution to the survival of the total brachial MN population
to be detected in our assays. Because the c-met receptor is not
detectable in brachial MNs before E7 (i.e., between E4 and E6), and
because neither exogenous HGF/SF administered in vivo
beginning 2-4 d before the onset of normal brachial MN PCD on E7-E8
nor treatment with a neutralizing antibody against HGF/SF on either E5
or E7 affects brachial MN survival, HGF/SF is not likely to be involved
in the survival of brachial MNs either before or after the onset of
PCD. The failure of HGF/SF to rescue brachial MNs in vitro
or in vivo may indicate that HGF/SF is involved in axonal
guidance or other developmental events of a subset of c-met-expressing
brachial MNs (Ebens et al., 1996 ).
We have also demonstrated for the first time that HGF/SF mRNA is
expressed in both upper and lower limbs during MN PCD. HGF/SF expression occurs early in chick development, initially appearing in
Hensen's node at stage 3, in the developing neural tube at stage 8, in
notochord at stage 9, and in floor plate up to stage 21 (Thèry et
al., 1995 ). We and others have observed HGF/SF mRNA expression by
in situ hybridization in the developing limb bud from stage
13 until stage 24 (Thèry et al., 1995 ). However, RT-PCR analysis
revealed that detectable levels of HGF/SF continue to be expressed in
both upper and lower limbs throughout the time of PCD. Our data are in
agreement with other studies reporting that HGF/SF is expressed in
chick and mouse limb but not axial muscle cells during PCD (Sonnenberg
et al., 1993 ; Thèry et al., 1995 ; Andermacher et al.,
1996 ).
In addition to their expression in the developing neuromuscular system,
HGF/SF and c-met are also found in the brain of developing and adult
rodents (Sonnenberg et al., 1993 ; Jung et al., 1994 ; Honda et al.,
1995 ). In the chick embryo, we observed c-met expression in certain
cranial motor nuclei as well as in visual relay nuclei of the midbrain
and thalamus. Although we have not examined neuronal survival in these
visual nuclei, exogenous treatment with HGF/SF failed to rescue cranial
MNs from PCD. HGF/SF and c-met in these brain areas may play some other
nonsurvival role (Ebens et al., 1996 ).
The chick embryo is an excellent model for identification of
target-derived factors required for MN survival because of the ability
to assay the survival-promoting activity of various factors in
vivo after LBR or after axotomy. Removal of chick limb bud at
E2.0, before axonogenesis, results in the near total loss of ipsilateral MNs by E8.0-E9.0 (Caldero et al., 1998 ). Addition of
HGF/SF in ovo after LBR promoted MN survival contralateral to the LBR, but failed to rescue MNs from cell death ipsilateral to the
LBR. It seems likely that this was due to the fact that LBR is
associated with the absence of c-met expression by MNs in the LMC of
the ipsilateral lumbar spinal cord and that some unknown muscle-derived
factor is required to induce c-met expression in lumbar MNs. In the
absence of this signal, MNs fail to express c-met and are unresponsive
to exogenous HGF/SF. In support of this, we have shown that CMX
treatment induces c-met expression and combined treatment with CMX and
HGF reinstates a survival response to HGF after LBR. Because the
in vitro experiments with cultured lumbar MNs also deprive
MNs of this putative muscle-derived signal, the rescue of MNs in
vitro by HGF/SF may appear counterintuitive. However, cultured MNs
were taken on E5 when c-met expression is already present. Recently, a
limb-derived signal has also been shown to be required for the
expression of ETS transcription factors in chick embryo MNs (Lin
et al., 1999 ).
Although a large number of trophic factors from different gene families
have been shown to promote MN survival in vitro and in
vivo (Oppenheim, 1996 ; Hanson et al., 1998 ), no single factor is
able to rescue all MNs. Furthermore, genetic deletion of single trophic
factors or their receptors results in only a partial (20-30%) loss of
MNs (DiChiara et al., 1995 ; Liu et al., 1995 ; Moore et al., 1996 ;
Cacalano et al., 1998 ). Taken together, these data indicate that the
trophic requirement of developing MNs is complex and may depend on (1)
their state of differentiation and developmental stage, (2) their CNS
location and peripheral targets, and (3) their dependence on multiple
factors from diverse sources. Although there is evidence consistent
with each of these possibilities (Hughes et al., 1993 ; Mettling et al.,
1995 ; Henderson, 1996 ; McKay et al., 1996 ; Zurn et al., 1996 ; Arce et
al., 1998 ; Becker et al., 1998 ; Hanson et al., 1998 ), there have
been no systematic attempts to examine whether MN subtypes, on the
basis of their maturation, location, or synaptic targets, have distinct
trophic factor requirements for survival. Our observations that a
subset of lumbar but not other spinal or cranial somatic MNs exhibit a
survival response to HGF/SF in vitro and in vivo,
together with the related evidence for cultured rat MNs (Yamamoto et
al., 1997 ), provide the first evidence consistent with this idea. The
molecular heterogeneity of MNs and their targets (Tsuchida et al.,
1994 ) may reflect a similar heterogeneity in trophic factor
responsiveness, in which competitive interactions only occur among MNs
within a subpopulation that shares certain features in common such as developmental age (e.g., birth date), location (e.g., spinal vs cranial
or limb vs nonlimb), or peripheral targets (e.g., dorsal vs ventral,
flexor vs extensor, or fast vs slow muscles). If correct, this provides
a new, more complex perspective on the regulation of MN survival that
was hardly imaginable a few years ago but one that is consistent with
the emerging picture for the trophic requirements of specific
populations of peripheral sensory neurons (Snider, 1994 ).
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received May 3, 1999; revised Sept. 20, 1999; accepted Oct. 19, 1999.
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grants NS20402
(R.W.O.) and NS10538 (K.D.N.). We thank Carol FloresDeValgaz for
technical help; Claudio Stern for sharing chicken probes for HGF/SF and
c-met and for the kind gift of rcHGF/SF; and Amgen (BDNF, CNTF) and
Genentech (GDNF, HGF/SF) for the generous gifts of recombinant human
neurotrophic factors.
Correspondence should be addressed to Ronald W. Oppenheim, Department
of Neurobiology and Anatomy, Wake Forest University School of Medicine,
Medical Center Boulevard, Winston-Salem, NC 27157-1010. E-mail:
roppenhm{at}wfubmc.edu.
 |
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