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The Journal of Neuroscience, April 15, 2000, 20(8):2835-2844
ATP-Mediated Glia Signaling
Maria Luisa
Cotrina1,
Jane H.-C.
Lin2,
Juan
Carlos
López-García3,
Christian C. G.
Naus4, and
Maiken
Nedergaard1
Departments of 1 Cell Biology and Anatomy and
2 Pathology, New York Medical College, Valhalla, New York
10595, 3 Center for Neurobiology and Behavior, Columbia
University, New York, New York 10032, and 4 Department of
Anatomy and Cell Biology, The University of Western Ontario, London,
Ontario N6A 5C1, Canada
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ABSTRACT |
Glia calcium signaling has recently been identified as a potent
modulator of synaptic transmission. We show here that the spatial
expansion of calcium waves is mediated by ATP and subsequent activation
of purinergic receptors. Ectopic expression of gap junction proteins,
connexins (Cxs), leads to an increase in both ATP release and the
radius of calcium wave propagation. Cx expression was also associated
with a phenotypic transformation, and cortical neurons extended longer
neurites when co-cultured with Cx-expressing than with Cx-deficient
cells. Purinergic receptor activation mediated both these effects,
because treatment with receptor antagonists restored the glia phenotype
and slowed neurite outgrowth. These results identify a key role
of ATP in both short-term calcium signaling events and in long-term
differentiation regulated by glia.
Key words:
astrocytes; purinergic receptors; neuron; intracellular
calcium; glioma; connexin
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INTRODUCTION |
Astrocytes can propagate long-range
calcium signals to distant cells by means of calcium waves
(Cornell-Bell et al., 1990 ; Charles et al., 1991 ). Astrocytic calcium
signaling is transmitted to neurons (Nedergaard, 1994 ; Parpura et al.,
1994 ; Hassinger et al., 1995 ), and recent reports have confirmed a
direct role of astrocytes in modulating synaptic transmission.
Astrocytic calcium signaling reduced the magnitude of action
potential-evoked EPSCs and IPSCs in cultures (Araque
et al., 1998a ,b ), modulated light-evoked spike activity of
ganglion cells in intact retina (Newman and Zahs, 1998 ), and
potentiated inhibitory synaptic transmission between synaptically
coupled pairs of interneurons and CA1 pyramidal cells (Kang et al.,
1998 ).
Originally, it was debated to which extent astrocyte-to-neuron
signaling was mediated by gap junctions (Nedergaard, 1994 ), by release
of extracellular glutamate (Parpura et al., 1994 ), or by a combination
of both mechanisms (Charles, 1994 ; Smith, 1994 ). Gap junctions
connecting astrocytes and neurons have been identified by electron
microscopy in brain (Morales and Duncan, 1974 ; Nadarajah et al.,
1996 ), and functional gap junctions have been visualized by diffusion
of permeable tracers from neurons to astrocytes in cultures
(Fróes et al., 1999 ). On the other hand, glutamate is released
from astrocytes in a Ca2+-dependent
manner, and astrocyte-to-neuron signaling is sensitive to
glutamate receptor antagonists (Araque et al., 1998a ,b ; Bezzi et
al., 1998 ). Thus, both connexin- and glutamate-mediated pathways may
contribute to astrocyte-to-neuron signaling. These discussions were,
however, based on the assumption that astrocytic calcium waves are
propagated by diffusion of intracellular messengers, such as
Ca2+ and IP3, across
gap junctions. Very recently it has been demonstrated that astrocytic
calcium waves are mediated by extracellular ATP and subsequent
activation of purinergic receptors (Cotrina et al., 1998b ; Guthrie et
al., 1999 ). Accordingly, intercellular calcium signaling does not
appear to require physical contact or formation of functional gap
junctions (Hassinger et al., 1996 ). It is at present not established
whether ATP participates in glial-neuronal communication or what role
connexin (Cx) expression plays in propagating versus receiving calcium signals.
In this study, we have used C6 glioma cells as a model system for
Cx-mediated cell signaling. Using co-cultures of transfected clones
with high and low Cx expression or co-cultures of transfected clones
and cortical rat neurons, we have attempted to mimic signaling events
from astrocytes to other cell types in brain. The use of this
simplified system has allowed us to establish the contribution of
connexins and ATP in propagating versus receiving
calcium signals. C6 cells and young neurons do not increase cytosolic
calcium in response to glutamate (Choi et al., 1987 ; Brismar, 1995 ; our
unpublished observations) and are thus a suitable model to study
calcium signaling events that involve connexin proteins in isolation.
In addition, we have evaluated how Cx proteins affect not only
short-term signaling but also long-term phenotypic characteristics of
transfected cells and co-cultured neurons. Our observations demonstrate
that calcium signals are readily transmitted from Cx-expressing to
co-cultured cells, possibly explaining why Cx-expressing cells promoted
neuronal maturation. Collectively our observations indicate that
connexin proteins, over and above providing the substrate for gap
junction formation, have profound impact on ATP release and thereby on glial signaling events.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
C6 glioma cell culture and transfection. Rat cortical
neurons were prepared as described earlier (Nedergaard et al., 1991 ). Neuronal cultures and rat C6 glioma cells (American Type Culture Collection, Manassas, BA) were grown in DMEM-F-12 (Life Technologies, Gaithersburg, MD) supplemented with 1.6% glucose,
antibiotic-antimycotic (Life Technologies), and 10% fetal bovine
serum (Atlanta Biologicals) and kept in a 5% CO2
humidified incubator at 37°C. Cells were passaged every 4 d.
cDNAs for Cx43 and Cx32 (kindly provided by K. Willecke, Bonn
University, Bonn, Germany) were ligated into the expression vectors
pcDNA1 and pBEHpac18 containing the genes for geneticin and puromycin
resistance, respectively (Elfgang et al., 1995 ), and stable
transfectants were selected with 2 mg/ml Geneticin or 2 µg/ml
puromycin. One Cx43 clone (Cx43-13) was cultured as described
earlier (Zhu et al., 1991 ). As mock controls, cells transfected with
the vector alone were used.
To allow cell identification in cocultures, neurons or C6 cells
were prelabeled with the membrane dye DiIC18
(DiD, 10 µM; Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR) or with the
cell-tracking dye
(5-(6)-(((4-chloromethyl)benzoyl)amino))tetramethylrhodamine (CMTMR, 2 µM; Molecular Probes). Cortical neurons were
prepared from embryonic day 15 (E15)-E16 rat embryos and labeled
immediately after tissue dissociation. Labeled cells were mixed with
unlabeled cells at a 1:100 or 1:250 ratio before plating and fixed when confluent 2 d later. The purinergic receptor agonist
2MeSATP, reactive blue, and suramin were reapplied every 12 hr
by a complete media change containing freshly prepared inhibitors.
Numbers and lengths of neurites were quantified using Image-1 software
(Universal Imaging, West Chester, PA).
Actin staining and immunocytochemistry. Cells were grown to
confluence on 12 mm glass coverslips and fixed with 4%
paraformaldehyde. For visualization of actin, the cells were
permeabilized with 0.1% Triton X-100 and incubated with Texas
Red-phalloidin (Molecular Probes) for 30 min. A polyclonal antibody
directed against the intracellular domain of Cx43 (residues 302-319;
kindly supplied by Dr. B. Nicholson, State University of New
York, Buffalo, NY; Charles et al., 1992 ), a monoclonal antibody
directed against the intracellular domain of Cx32 (residues 95-125;
Dr. D. Paul, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA; Goodenough et
al., 1988 ), or a monoclonal antibody against myosin light chain (MY-21;
Sigma, St. Louis, MO) was used for immunocytochemical detection of
connexin or myosin as previously described (Zhu et al., 1991 ; Cotrina
et al., 1998a ). The signal was visualized by confocal microscopy (MRC1000; Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA) and quantified using Image-1 software.
Functional coupling assay. The dye transfer assay was
modified from that of Goldberg et al. (1995) . Briefly, C6 cells were labeled with two dyes, carboxy-dichlorofluorescein (CDCF, 2 µM; Molecular probes), a nonpolar, membrane-permeable dye
that diffuses freely across gap junctions, and DiD (10 µM), a lipophilic dye that is incorporated into
the plasma membrane. Labeled cells were mixed with nonlabeled cells at
a 1:250 ratio and plated on poly-L-lysine-coated dishes. When cell mixtures formed a confluent monolayer (between 30 and
90 min) the extent by which unlabeled cells received CDCF from the
CDCF- and DiIC18-labeled donor cells was
evaluated using a krypton-argon laser of a Bio-Rad MRC1000 confocal
microscope. For quantification, at least 200 labeled cells were visualized.
Gap junctional function during cytochalasin D treatment was assessed by
the scrape loading assay (El-Fouly et al., 1987 ; Giaume et al.,
1991b ). Briefly, several cuts were made with a razor blade while
confluent glial cells were incubated in a calcium-free HBSS containing
10 µM CDCF. The solution was removed 90 sec later by several washes. The extent of CDCF diffusion was assessed under confocal microscopy after 15 min incubation in HBSS
(+Ca2+).
Intercellular calcium signaling. In initial experiments it
was observed that local application of ATP consistently evoked calcium
waves as previously reported (Guthrie et al., 1999 ). We were in this
study interested in the mechanism of wave propagation, not
initiation. Calcium waves were initiated by mechanic stimulation, because locally applied ATP also might contribute to wave propagation. Confluent monolayers of homogeneous or heterologous cultures were loaded with the calcium indicator fluo-3 (10 µM
for 1 hr; Molecular Probes), and calcium signaling was monitored by
confocal microscopy (Cotrina et al., 1998a ). Waves were quantified by
counting the number of cells in the field that engaged in the calcium
wave (>20% increase in F/F)
after stimulation and was expressed as number of cells per wave. In
mixed cultures, the calcium increases of DiIC18-
or CMTMR-labeled cells within the range of the calcium wave but located
more than two cells away from the stimulated cell were quantified. This
number was expressed as percentage of labeled cells receiving calcium
signal. All the experiments were performed in culture media at room
temperature. Pharmacological interference with calcium signaling was
evaluated by first evoking three to five calcium waves during control
conditions. The inhibitor was then added, and five to eight waves were
then elicited in the presence of the drug. After several washes in
HBSS, cultures were returned to fresh media, and calcium waves
were evaluated again. Control signaling was also tested in the presence
of the respective carrier solutions (DMSO, maximum 0.2%).
Electrophysiology. After 1-2 d in culture, cells grown on
12 mm glass coverslips were transferred to the stage of an inverted microscope (Axiovert 100; Zeiss, Thornwood, NY). Junctional currents were recorded from pairs of adjacent cells using the perforated patch
recording technique using two Axopatch-1D amplifiers (Axon Instruments,
Foster City, CA) (López-García et al., 1996 ). Recording pipettes (4-6 M resistance) were filled with a solution containing (in mM): 110 K+-gluconate, 5 MgCl2, 10 KCl, 0.6 EGTA, 0.06 CaCl2, 5 HEPES, and amphotericin B (0.24 mg/ml,
final concentration), pH 7.2, 315 mOsm, adjusted with sucrose. Both
cells were clamped at 40 mV. Voltage steps from 120 to + 100 mV of
40 msec durations were applied to one of the cells in the absence or
presence of 1 µg/ml cytochalasin D, and corresponding currents were
measured from the other cell.
Conductance was calculated as the slope of the best linear fit of the
I-V relationship data points. The number of open
channels was estimated assuming a unitary conductance value of 50 pS
(Giaume et al., 1991a ).
ATP quantification. ATP determinations were performed using
a bioluminescent ATP assay kit as previously described (Cotrina et
al., 1998b ). The ATP analog 2MeSATP and the purinergic receptor antagonists reactive blue and suramin, were purchased from Research Biochemicals (Natick, MA) and prepared immediately before use.
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RESULTS |
Functional gap junction channels required for calcium
wave propagation
Rat C6 glioma is a cell line originally initiated from tumor
growth induced by injection of nitrosomethylurea (Benda et al., 1968 ).
C6 cells are believed to be of glial origin, and the expression of most
ion channels and receptors is very similar to that of primary rat
astrocytes (Brismar, 1995 ). A major difference is that C6 cells, like
most other anaplastic cell types, are poorly coupled (Zhu et al.,
1991 ). We found here, in accordance with earlier reports, that C6 cells
express a low level of endogenous Cx43, whereas Cx32 and Cx26 were not
detectable (Zhu et al., 1991 ; Sullivan and Lo, 1995 ). After stable
transfection with cDNA for Cx43 or Cx32 placed under the control of the
strong constitutive cytomegalovirus promoter, C6 cells expressed
abundant Cx protein (C6-Cx43 or C6-Cx32 cells). Functional coupling
increased in parallel with the expression level of Cx. In the dye
transfer assay, wild-type C6 cells transferred the gap
junction-permeable dye CDCF to a mean of 0.3 unlabeled cells, whereas
as many as 7 and 18 cells received CDCF from C6-Cx43 and C6-Cx32 cells,
respectively (Fig. 1, Table
1). The extent of calcium signaling in C6
cells was a direct function of coupling. Wild-type or mock-transfected
C6 cells were unable to propagate calcium waves (Charles et al., 1992 ;
Fig. 1), whereas C6-Cx43 or C6-Cx32 cells consistently propagated calcium waves that migrated farther than 140 µm and engaged >50 cells (Fig. 1, Table 1).

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Figure 1.
Cx expression is associated with an increase in
functional coupling and a transformation of cellular phenotype.
Morphology and functional coupling of mock-, Cx43-, and
Cx32-transfected C6 cells are shown. Left panels,
Phase-contrast micrographs of representative cultures. Control or
null-transfected cultures are composed of elongated compact cells with
little cell-cell contact. In contrast, both Cx43 and Cx32 cells are
large, flat cells with an abundance of cellular contacts. Middle
panels, Gap junctional coupling demonstrated by transfer of
CDCF (green) from DiIC18-labeled
cells (red) to unlabeled identical cells. Donor cells
appear yellow because of the merge of red and green
labeling. The mock-transfected clone is completely devoid of gap
junctional coupling, whereas both C6-Cx43 and C6-Cx32 cells are
extensively coupled. Insets, Cx43 immunoreactivity in
mock and C6-Cx43 clones and Cx32 immunoreactivity in C6-Cx32 cells.
Right panels, C6 cells acquire the ability to propagate
long-distance calcium waves after Cx transfection. Four representative
waves in control mock-transfected and C6-Cx43 or C6-Cx32 cells were
color coded and digitally superimposed to demonstrate the extent of
calcium signaling after mechanical stimulation in each transfectants
(asterisks indicate point of stimulation). Scale bar:
left and middle panels, 30 µm;
right panel, 60 µm; insets, 15 µm.
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Phenotypic transformation of C6 cells after overexpression of gap
junction proteins
Wild-type or mock-transfected C6 cells are compact cells with
little cellular contact (Fig. 1). We noted a profound morphological reorganization of C6 cells after forced expression of either Cx43 or
Cx32. High Cx-expressing clones invariably organized as flat epitheloid
monolayers that covered the substrate completely (Fig. 1). To
characterize electrical properties, isolated cells without physical
contact to other cells were voltage clamped using perforated patch.
Although membrane potential was relatively similar in all groups,
membrane resistance decreased consistently 3- to 15-fold in
Cx-expressing cells compared with Cx-deficient C6 cells (Table 1). The
decrease in membrane resistance may reflect an increased number of open
Cx hemichannels in the transfected cells (Trexler et al., 1996 ).
Actin and myosin in C6 cells become highly organized after
Cx expression
Control or null-transfected C6 cells were almost devoid
of phalloidin-positive fibers. In contrast, C6-Cx43 or C6-Cx32 clones exhibited a highly organized pattern of actin fiber bundles (Fig. 2). This pattern of organization was
indistinguishable from the parallel arrays of phalloidin-positive
fibers in primary astrocytes (Cotrina et al., 1998a ). An abundance of
myosin fibers co-localized with actin in the transfected clones, in
sharp contrast to the low levels of myosin immunoreactivity in
null-transfected C6 cells (Fig. 2). Taken together, forced expression
of gap junctions had profound effects on cellular phenotype and
cytoskeletal organization.

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Figure 2.
Ectopic Cx expression is associated with a
dramatic reorganization of actin and myosin in C6 glioma cells.
Left panels, Texas Red-phalloidin staining was combined
with immunolabeling of gap junction proteins in control mock
transfectants and in C6-Cx43 or C6-Cx32 cells. Top and
middle panels are stained against Cx43, whereas the
lower panel is stained against Cx32 (all
fluorescein-labeled). Scale bar, 25 µm. Right panels,
Texas Red-Phalloidin staining combined with immunoreactivity against
myosin light chain in the same field. Actin and myosin fibers are
absent in null transfectants but abundantly co-expressed in both
C6-Cx43 and C6-Cx32 cells. Scale bar, 10 µm.
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A functional cytoskeleton is required for calcium signaling in
Cx-expressing C6 cells
We next tested the requirement of a cytoskeletal organization in
calcium signaling (Fig. 3). Exposure of
C6-Cx43 cells to cytochalasin D (1 µg/ml) for 5 or 10 min reduced
calcium signaling by 58 ± 13% (p < 0.05)
and 76 ± 11% (p < 0.01), respectively, and was paralleled by a profound degradation of actin fibers (Fig. 3).
Transjunctional currents between C6-Cx43 cells were not altered (Fig.
3), confirming that gap junctional coupling remains unchanged after
cytochalasin D treatment (Cotrina et al., 1998a ).

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Figure 3.
An intact cytoskeleton is a required for
long-distance calcium signaling. A, Texas Red-phalloidin
staining of control, untreated C6-Cx43 cells (top
panel) and after exposure to cytochalasin D (1 µg/ml)
for 5 min in a sister culture (bottom panel).
B, Calcium wave propagation in an untreated C6-Cx43
culture (top panel) and after exposure to
cytochalasin D in the same culture. C, Current through
gap junction channels is not changed by cytochalasin D treatment.
Junctional currents were recorded from pairs of adjacent cells using
the perforated patch recording technique. Both cells were clamped at
40 mV. Voltage steps from 120 to + 100 mV of 40 msec duration
(top-most traces) were applied to one of the cells in
the absence or presence of cytochalasin. These voltage steps elicited a
current on the first pair of the cell (middle traces)
that was accompanied by a current of inverse sign on the adjacent cell
(bottom-most traces). D, Plots of
currents measured in the second cell of 10 different pairs as a
function of voltage applied to the first cell, before and after 5 min
of exposure to cytochalasin D. Values are mean ± SEM.
Current-voltage traces are before and after 5 min cytochalasin D
exposure. Junctional currents were recorded from pairs of adjacent
cells using the perforated patch recordings. Both cells were clamped at
40 mV. Voltage steps from 120 to + 100 mV of 40 msec duration were
applied to one of the cells in the absence or presence of cytochalasin
D, and corresponding currents were measured from the adjacent cell.
D, Plots of current measured in the second cell of the
pair as a function of voltage applied to the first before and after 5 min exposure to cytochalasin D. Gap junction coupling was not reduced
by cytochalasin D.
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Actin-myosin complexes mediate contractility events in muscle and
nonmuscle cells (Kamm and Stull, 1985 ). Contractility requires phosphorylation of myosin light chain by its kinase, MLCK (Adelstein and Eisenberg, 1980 ). MLCK is inhibited by ML7, an agent that has a 100-fold higher affinity to MLCK than to other kinases (Saitoh et
al., 1987 ; Shrode et al., 1995 ). To test the requirement for myosin-actin interactions in intercellular signaling, we evoked calcium waves in C6-Cx43 cells that had been preincubated with ML7 (50 µM). ML7 treatment reduced the radius of
mechanical-induced calcium waves by 67 ± 6% in C6-Cx43 cells
(p < 0.004). Coupling during MLCK inhibition
was evaluated using the scrape loading technique. Dye diffusion
averaged 73 ± 3 µm in control compared with 72 ± 3 µm
in MLCK-treated cultures. Calcium mobilization was evaluated by
measuring relative calcium increases in MLCK-treated cultures
(88 ± 12%; n = 5) versus controls (82 ± 14%). Thus, MLCK inhibition suppressed calcium signaling without
affecting coupling or calcium mobilization. Combined, the observations
indicate that a functional cytoskeleton is required for
Ca2+ wave propagation.
Calcium wave characteristics in Cx-expressing C6 cells
versus astrocytes
Pharmacological characterization of wave propagation in
Cx-expressing C6 cells versus astrocytes suggested that signaling is
mediated by very similar signaling cascades in the two cell types.
Thapsigargin, a potent inhibitor of astrocytic signaling, completely
abolished wave propagation in C6 cells (Charles et al., 1992 ; Table
2). Likewise, chelating intracellular
Ca2+ by BAPTA effectively attenuated
signaling in both astrocytes and C6 cells (Wang et al., 1997 ; Table 2).
In the opposite direction, removal of extracellular
Ca2+ or Cl
potentiated wave propagation in both C6 cells and astrocytes (Cotrina
et al., 1998b ; Table 2). Removal of both
Ca2+ and Cl
had no synergistic effect (data not shown). Collectively, calcium waves
in astrocytes and Cx-expressing C6 cells were modulated in
parallel.
ATP mediates Ca2+ signaling in Cx-expressing
C6 cells
Further studies supported the notion that ATP mediates calcium
wave propagation in C6 cells (Cotrina et al., 1998b ). Waves evoked in
the presence of 100 µM suramin, a competitive antagonist of the P2X and P2Y subclasses of purinergic receptors, were reduced by
>70% in both C6-Cx43 and C6-Cx32 cells (Table 2). Similarly, apyrase
(15 U/ml), an enzyme that scavenges extracellular ATP, decreased the
wave propagation by 70% in C6-Cx43 cells and by >90% in C6-Cx32
cells (Table 2). Purinergic receptors are characterized by rapid and
sustained desensitization (Abbracchio et al., 1995 ), and previous
exposure to ATP blocked wave propagation by 92% in C6-Cx43 cells and
by 96% in C6-Cx32 cells with respect to control values (Table 2).
Depletion of intracellular Ca2+ stores
could not account for the inhibition, because subsequent application of
bradykinin promoted robust Ca2+ increments
in the cultures that failed to propagate calcium waves. The average
increase in F/F after bradykinin exposure was
66 ± 17% in ATP-exposed cultures versus 82 ± 10% in
controls (no ATP pre-exposure). These observations suggest that a
releasable polyphosphate, likely ATP, mediates the propagation of
calcium waves in Cx-expressing C6 cells.
ATP functions as a trophic factor, and its release is regulated
by connexins
We have previously demonstrated that purinergic-stimulated ATP
release is facilitated by Cx expression (Cotrina et al., 1998b ). Here
we found that ATP during resting conditions (unstimulated) was 20- to
100-fold higher in culture medium of Cx-expressing C6 cells compared
with otherwise identical Cx-deficient control cells (Fig.
4). Possibly, a positive feedback loop
exists, in which the increased levels of extracellular ATP promotes
additional ATP release from Cx-expressing cells.

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Figure 4.
ATP released from glia acts as an autocrine
trophic factor. A, Baseline release (unstimulated) from
confluent cultures of C6-Cx43, C6-Cx32, and C6-mock 1 and 2. The
cultures were washed six times, and samples were collected 1 hr later.
Cx-expressing cells consistently released more ATP than the two C6-mock
clones. *p < 0.01, ANOVA for group comparison with
post hoc t test to establish a
significant difference between the groups. B-D, The
phenotypic characteristics of C6 cells are sensitive to purinergic
receptor antagonists. The cultures were stained with Texas
Red-phalloidin to visualize actin organization. B,
Control vehicle-treated C6-Cx43 culture. C, Loss of
actin organization after treatment with the purinergic receptor
antagonist reactive blue (30 µM, 24 hr).
D, Recovery of phenotypic characteristics of C6-Cx43
cells after removal of reactive blue (24 hr recovery).
E, Reactive blue did not affect the phenotype or actin
organization of C6-mock 1 cells (30 µM reactive blue, 24 hr; compare with Fig. 1). Gain and laser power were increased to
display the less-intense phalloidin staining in C6-mock cells compared
with Cx43-C6 cells in B-D. F-H,
Stellation and GFAP expression of cortical astrocytes are also
modulated by the level of purinergic receptor activation. Cultures were
stained against GFAP. An astrocyte exposed to 30 µM
reactive blue (F, 30 µM) displayed few and
short processes compared with astrocytes in matched control cultures
(G). F, 2MeSATP (100 µM) induced stellation and elongation of GFAP-positive
processes in sister cultures. Cultures illustrated in
B-E were fixed 72 hr after plating. Scale bar:
B-E, 30 µm; F-H, 40 µm.
Magnification, 200×.
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Growing evidence supports a role of nucleotides as trophic factors
(Abbracchio et al., 1995 ). Also, the phenotype of C6 cells was
sensitive to purinergic receptor antagonists. Both C6-Cx43 and C6-Cx32
cells lost their flat epitheloid appearance and, in part, actin
organization when exposed to reactive blue or suramin. Also, the number
of cellular contacts decreased (Fig. 4). After removal of either of the
antagonists the Cx-expressing cells resumed normal epitheloid
morphology (results not shown). In contrast, the phenotype of C6-mock
cells was not sensitive to purinergic receptor antagonists (Fig. 4). As
reported earlier, exposure of cortical astrocytes to the relatively
hydrolysis-resistant ATP analog 2MeSATP resulted in stellation and
elongation of glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP)-positive processes
(Abbracchio et al., 1995 ; Fig. 4). Long-term treatment of astrocytes
with either reactive blue (30 µM) or suramin (50 µM) reduced the number and length of astrocytic processes
compared with vehicle-treated controls. Also, GFAP immunoreactivity was
reduced in astrocytes exposed to reactive blue or suramin (Fig. 4). We
evaluated the intensity of GFAP immunoreactivity by confocal microscopy
with a fixed gain and pinhole (fluorescein-tagged secondary). Pixel intensities of 52 ± 21, 97 ± 42, and 187 ± 44 were
found in matched samples of reactive blue-treated (30 µM), control untreated, and 2MeSATP-treated (30 µM) cultures.
Cx-deficient cells can receive but not propagate
calcium signals
The experiments so far support the notion that Cx expression is
required for purinergic-mediated calcium waves but have not questioned
the role Cx plays in receiving calcium signaling. This issue
is of particular interest because the brain is composed of multiple
cell types with highly variable expression levels of Cxs. In the adult
brain, Cx expression in neurons and oligodendrocytes is low compared
with astrocytes, which may be the only cell type that express Cxs at a
level high enough to support propagation of calcium waves (Dermietzel
and Spray, 1998 ). To define the role of Cx in receiving calcium
signals, we next constructed a culture system composed of cells with
both high and low Cx expression. To this end, prelabeled cortical
neurons or C6-mock cells were mixed with unlabeled Cx-expressing cells
at a 1:100 or 1:250 ratio. As shown in Figure
5, waves evoked in a monolayer of C6-Cx43
cells were capable of inducing calcium increases in >60% of the
control mock-transfected or wild-type cells (Fig. 5, Table
3). C6-Cx43-labeled cells (positive
controls) received calcium signals at a frequency of 93 ± 3%,
indicating that the existence of gap junctions between donor and
recipient cells did increase the cell-cell transfer of
Ca2+ signals. Both oligodendrocytes and
neurons express Cx32 (Dermietzel and Spray, 1998 ). Interestingly,
although C6-Cx32 cells among themselves propagated robust calcium
waves, no further increase in receiving calcium signaling was observed
when labeled Cx-deficient cells were exchanged with C6-Cx32 cells.
Also, calcium waves propagated in Cx32 cells transferred with an
efficacy of 66-80% to labeled C6-mock or C6-Cx43 cells (Table 3). In
summary, although coupling increased cell-cell signaling, the
capability to receive calcium signals occurred for the most part
independently of endogenous Cx expression (>60%) and did not require
the potential to generate calcium waves.

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Figure 5.
ATP mediates transfer of calcium
signals to labeled C6-mock cells. C6-mock cells were labeled with
DiIC18 and mixed with unlabeled C6-Cx43 cells at a ratio of
1:250. Two days later, the co-cultures were loaded with fluo-3, and the
extent of Ca2+ signal transfer from waves propagated
in unlabeled C6-Cx43 cells to labeled C6-mock cells was quantified.
A, Top panel, The calcium wave propagated
in C6-Cx43 cells engaged two labeled C6-mock cells. Their calcium
levels increased in the wake of the calcium wave, evident in the image
frame captured 14 sec after focal mechanical stimulation (white
arrows). The DiIC18 labeling is omitted in the
frame collected at 24 sec to visualize the increase in
Ca2+ levels of the C6-mock cells. Bottom
panel, The ATPase apyrase was added to the bathing solution (2 U/ml). This concentration of apyrase was insufficient to block the
propagation of calcium wave in unlabeled C6-Cx43 cells. However, in the
presence of a low concentration of apyrase the calcium wave failed to
engage five labeled C6-mock cells in Ca2+ signaling
(white arrows). Again, the DiIC18 labeling
is omitted in the frame collected at 24 sec after stimulation to
visualize the lack of increases in Ca2+ levels.
B, Relative changes of calcium levels in labeled C6-mock
cells during control condition (red; experiment
shown in A, top panel) and in the
presence of 2 U/ml apyrase (green; experiment
shown in A, bottom panel).
C, Histogram summarizing result of three independent
experiments (n = 16-52). Low concentrations of
apyrase effectively blocked Ca2+ signaling to
labeled C6-mock cells.
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Coupling among Cx-deficient and Cx-expressing cells
To define the extent of gap junction coupling between C6-Cx43 and
C6-mock clones, dye transfer from C6-Cx43 cells to C6-mock clones was
next evaluated. Table 3 shows that dye coupling did not increase
compared with transfer among Cx-deficient clones. Similar results were
obtained from C6-Cx32 to C6-mock cells. It could, however, be argued
that the sensitivity of the dye transfer assay is not sufficient to
observe a minor increase in coupling that could well be critical for
transfer of calcium signals. We therefore extended the analysis to
include measurement of current transfer between cell pairs. These
measurements confirmed the observations obtained from the dye coupling
assays, because transjunctional current was close to the detection
limits among C6-mock cell pairs (0.36 ± 0.1 nS; n = 8) and among pairs of C6-Cx43 and C6-mock cells (0.09 ± 0.02 nS; n = 22; clone 1). We estimate that no or very few
(no more than one or two) functional gap junctions connect these cell
pairs. In comparison, current between pairs of Cx43 cells averaged
2.2 ± 0.3 nS (n = 18), indicating that
~45 open gap junctional channels connected the cells.
Ca2+ signaling to Cx-deficient cells is mediated
by ATP
To evaluate the pathway(s) that mediate
Ca2+ signaling to Cx-deficient cells, we
next quantified signaling events in the presence of a low concentration
of apyrase (2 U/ml). Low concentrations of apyrase did not
significantly reduce wave radius in C6-Cx43 cells. Wave propagation in
C6-Cx32 cells was reduced to ~60% of controls in accordance with the
higher sensitivity of C6-Cx32 cells to apyrase. Importantly, transfer
of calcium signals to Cx-deficient cells was markedly reduced by
apyrase. (Fig. 5). In contrast, uncoupling concentrations of the gap
junction blocker -glycerrhetinic acid (10 µM;
n = 21 waves) or glutamate receptor antagonist (AP-5,
50 µM; n = 15 waves; CNQX, 100 µM; n = 9 waves) had no effect
on the efficacy by which Cx-deficient cells received calcium signals
(data not shown). Removal of extracellular calcium resulted in a minor
but significant increase in signaling transfer to Cx-deficient cells
(138 ± 4% of matched controls; p < 0.05), in
accordance with increased calcium signaling and ATP release in
calcium-free medium (Zanotti and Charles, 1997 ; Cotrina et al., 1998b ).
Collectively, the data are compatible with the notion that calcium
signaling from Cx-expressing cells to Cx-deficient cells is
communicating via extracellular ATP and not via diffusion of
intracellular messengers through gap junction channels. Half-maximal activation (EC50) of intracellular
Ca2+ responses occurred at 2.3 ± 0.9 µM ATP in C6 cells. Cx expression was not
associated with a significant change of EC50 to
ATP exposure (p > 0.67).
ATP promotes neurite outgrowth
To analyze the impact of calcium signaling events, the maturation
of neurons in cocultures with Cx-expressing and Cx-deficient C6 cells
was evaluated. After tissue dissociation, neurons derived from rat
forebrain (E15-E16) were immediately labeled with CMFDA and plated
with unlabeled C6-Cx32, C6-Cx43, or C6-mock cells at a ratio of 1:100.
The cultures were fixed 2 d later, and the numbers and lengths of
neurites were counted in the CMFDA labeled neurons. As demonstrated in
Figure 6, the neurites were longer in
neurons co-cultured with C6-Cx32 or C6-Cx43 than with Cx-deficient
cells. The purinergic receptor antagonists suramin and reactive blue blocked neurite extension. The inhibitory effect of both reactive blue
and suramin was reversible, because an increase in neurite extension
occurred after removal of either of the agents (data not shown).
Furthermore, exposure of pure neuronal cultures to 2MeSATP increased
neurite extension, demonstrating a direct trophic effect of purinergic
receptor activation (Fig. 6). Collectively, the observations are
consistent with the notion that Cx-expressing glia cells have the
potential to both signal with and modulate the phenotype of co-cultured
neurons.

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|
Figure 6.
Primary cortical neurons expand longer processes
when co-cultured with Cx-expressing than with Cx-deficient C6 cells in
a pathway sensitive to the purinergic receptor antagonists. Neurons
were prelabeled with the cell tracker CMTMR before co-culturing with C6
cells. A, Neurons in co-cultures with C6-Cx43 cells
(immunoreacted against Cx43). B, Neurons in cocultures
with C6-Cx32 cells (immunoreacted against Cx32), C,
Neurons in cocultures with C6-mock cells (immunoreacted against Cx43,
gain of laser was increased to display the C6-mock cells devoid of
Cx43), D, Neurons in cocultures with C6-Cx43 cells
exposed to reactive blue (30 µM). Purinergic receptor
blockade attenuated the trophic effect of Cx proteins in co-cultures.
Few and short neurites were present in neurons raised in co-cultures
with C6-Cx43 cells and exposed to reactive blue
(D) compared with matched controls
(A). E, Histogram summarizing
results. Data represent means ± SEM of four independent
experiments. *p < 0.01 compared with matched
control (C6-mock 1). Reactive blue and suramin attenuated the trophic
effect of C6-Cx43 in co-cultures. Pure neuronal cultures mature faster
when exposed to the ATP analog 2MeSATP (100 µM), compared
with matched controls. *p < 0.01, neurite
length in 2MeSATP-treated cultures compared with control
(vehicle-treated pure neuronal cultures). Scale bar, 30 µm.
|
|
 |
DISCUSSION |
This study analyzed the impact and function of Cx proteins and
extracellular ATP in calcium signaling events and in neuronal maturation. We found that Cx proteins were required for propagation of
glial calcium waves but not for reception of calcium signals (Fig. 1,
Table 1). Cx expression potentiated both resting and stimulated release
of ATP (Fig. 4), and purinergic receptor antagonists blocked wave
propagation (Table 2). These results combined support the notion that
Cx proteins support purinergic-mediated calcium signaling, not as a
substrate for formation of gap junctions but, rather, as a facilitator
of ATP release. Cx expression also led to morphological transformation
of transfected cells (Naus et al., 1996 ) and promoted neurite
outgrowth of co-cultured neurons (Figs. 1, 6). The trophic effects of
Cxs were sensitive to purinergic receptor antagonists (Figs. 4, 6).
Taken together, these studies suggest a prominent role of both ATP and
Cx proteins in glial-glial and glial-neuronal communication.
ATP in glial-neuronal communication
Calcium wave propagation in both astrocytes and Cx-transfected C6
cells is mediated by release of ATP and subsequent activation of
purinergic receptors (Cotrina et al., 1998b ; Guthrie et al., 1999 ;
Table 2). We found here that ATP also is likely to participate in
signaling to neurons and Cx-deficient cells, because low concentrations of the ATP scavenger apyrase effectively reduced signal reception in
mixed cultures (Fig. 5). In brain, ATP may also participate in
astrocyte-to-neuron signaling, because neuronal ionotropic P2X
purinergic receptors are widely distributed in cortex, cerebellum, and
spinal cord (Bo and Burnstock, 1994 ; Balcar et al., 1995 ; Le et al.,
1998 ). ATP acts as a fast excitatory neurotransmitter (Gu and
MacDermott, 1997 ; Mateo et al., 1998 ) and is co-released with
acetylcholine or noradrenaline in the peripheral nervous system
(Zimmermann 1994 ; Burnstock, 1997 ) and with GABA from dorsal horn
neurons (Jo and Schlichter, 1999 ). Moreover, ectonuclease activity in
the extracellular space is high, resulting in a rapid accumulation of
adenosine (Zimmermann et al., 1998 ). Thus, ATP released from glia may
have diverse modulatory roles in synaptic transmission, which
include excitatory neurotransmission and depression of synaptic release
by activation of presynaptic A1 adenosine receptors (Jo and Schlichter,
1999 ).
It is known that developing neurons in culture form inefficient
synapses that require glial signals to become functional
(Pfrienger and Barres, 1997 ). Our observations here suggest that
ATP released from glia enhanced neuronal maturation. Neurons in
co-culture with either C6-Cx43 or C6-Cx32 cells had longer neurites
than when co-cultured with Cx-deficient C6-mock cells. The purinergic receptor blockers reactive blue and suramin abolished the trophic effects of surrounding glia (Fig. 6), indicating that the 20- to
100-fold increased levels of extracellular ATP promoted neuronal maturation (Fig. 5). Morphogenic effects of extracellular purines on
both astrocytes and neurons have been previously described (Neary et
al., 1996 ; Rathbone et al., 1998 ). Exposure of cultured astrocytes to
nondegradable ATP analogs resulted in stellation of GFAP-positive cells
and in a concentration-dependent and suramin-sensitive increase in the
mean length of GFAP-positive processes (Neary et al., 1994 ; Fig. 5). A
direct trophic effect of purines on human neuroblastoma cells (Wang et
al., 1990 ), PC12 cells (Soltoff et al., 1998 ), and myenteric neuronal
cells (Schafer et al., 1995 ) has also been demonstrated. Nucleotides
can act synergistically with polypeptides such as basic FGF (Abbracchio
et al., 1995 ). It remains to be established whether ATP in our system
acted directly or indirectly. Indirect effects may include that ATP
enhances the effect of other trophic factors or, alternatively,
increases their production by purinergic receptor activation.
Intriguingly, activation of purinergic receptors is in several systems
associated with increases of cAMP (Insel et al., 1996 ; Klinker et al.,
1996 ; Merten et al., 1998 ). cAMP elevation is in itself sufficient to promote survival of spinal motor neurons, and several lines of evidence
suggest that cAMP enhances trophic responsiveness (Hanson et al.,
1998 ). Indeed, a recent report demonstrated that cAMP elevation
enhances BDNF responsiveness of ganglion cells by recruiting trkB to
the plasma membrane (Meyer-Franke et al., 1998 ).
Calcium signaling events promoting phenotypic maturation have also been
described in a variety of systems. Calcium spikes and waves directly
control the extent of receptor and channel expression, as well as
neurite extension of amphibian spinal neurons in cultures (Gu et al.,
1994 ; Gu and Spitzer, 1995 ). Intracellular calcium spikes can also
modulate neuronal migration (Goldman et al., 1996 ; Komuro and Rakic,
1996 ) or neurogenesis of neocortical precursor cells (Owens and
Kriegstein, 1998 ). Similar to neurons, Xenopus myocyte
differentiation is regulated by spontaneous calcium transients (Ferrari
et al., 1996 ), and cytosolic calcium elevations associated with
differentiation events can be promoted by extracellular ATP in
undifferentiated macrophages (Yamaguchi et al., 1994 ) and HL-60 cells
(Cowen et al., 1991 ; Jiang et al., 1997 ). Spontaneous calcium signaling
activity is rare in our system, but we cannot exclude that
purinergic-dependent calcium signaling events rather than the tonic
increase in extracellular ATP mediate neurite outgrowth. Transfer of
conditioned media from Cx-expressing cells was not sufficient to
promote neuronal maturation (data not shown). However, ectonuclease
activity in conditioned medium is high (data not shown), and a
continued secretion of ATP may be required to reach an extracellular
level of ATP that is sufficient to promote neurite extension.
The connexin-ATP connection
A striking functional linkage between Cx expression and
ATP secretion was noted (Figs. 1 and 4). Forced Cx expression was invariably associated with a 20- to 100-fold increase of ATP release during resting conditions and after purinergic-stimulation (Fig. 4).
The simplest explanation is that the Cx hemichannels function as a
release pore for ATP. Support for this view comes from the observations
that membrane resistance of Cx-transfected cells decreased severalfold
in isolated single cells (Table 1) and that removal of extracellular
calcium both promotes opening of Cx hemichannels and increases ATP
release (Liu et al., 1995 ; Cotrina et al., 1998b ; Hofer and Dermietzel,
1998 ). The pore diameter of the Cx channel is sufficiently large to
allow passage of molecules with a weight of <1.2 kDa (Kumar and
Gilula, 1996 ).
Another plausible explanation is that Cx proteins indirectly increase
the cellular capacity for ATP release. ATP containing vesicles have
been observed in neurons (von Kugelgen et al., 1994 ), mast cells
(Osipchuck and Cahalan, 1992 ), and pancreatic -cells (Leitner et
al., 1975 ). Also, subcellular fractionation of cultured astrocytes have
shown that the organelle sediments contained relatively higher levels
of ATP (Mainschein et al., 1999 ). Organization of actin is necessary
for calcium-dependent secretion in both secretory cells and neurons
(Trifaró and Vitale, 1993 ). Forced expression of connexins was
accompanied by a profound reorganization of the actin and myosin
cytoskeleton(Fig. 2), and this transformation was critical for the
proper prop-agation of calcium waves (Fig. 3). In addition, proteins
for regulated exocytosis are present in primary astrocytes (Parpura et
al., 1995 ; Madison et al., 1996 , Mainschein et al., 1999 ; Queiroz et
al., 1999 ). Because actin-myosin organization closely accompanied
connexin expression, it is tempting to speculate that cytoskeletal
structure is required for the proper spatial organization and movement
of releasable vesicles within glia.
In summary, our studies of calcium signaling and cellular maturation
suggest that connexin proteins may have alternative roles in cell-cell
communication that are not mediated by gap junction coupling. Gap
junction proteins had profound effects on both short- and long-term
intercellular signaling events through pathways sensitive to purinergic
receptor blockage. As such, in addition to the trophic effects of ATP,
Cx proteins may be a new target in growth and differentiation.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Sept. 13, 1999; revised Jan. 10, 2000; accepted Jan 31, 2000.
This study was supported by National Institute of Neurological
Disorders and Stroke-National Institutes of Health Grants NS130007 and
NS135011 to M.N.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Maiken Nedergaard, Department
of Cell Biology and Anatomy, New York Medical College, Valhalla, NY
10595. E-mail: maiken_nedergaard{at}nymc.edu.
 |
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