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The Journal of Neuroscience, May 1, 2000, 20(9):3191-3199
Protein Aggregation after Transient Cerebral Ischemia
B. R.
Hu1,
M. E.
Martone2,
Y. Z.
Jones2, and
C. L.
Liu1
1 Laboratory of Neurochemistry, Center for the Study of
Neurological Disease, Queen's Medical Center, Honolulu, Hawaii
96813, and 2 National Center for Microscopy and Imaging
Research at San Diego, University of California, La Jolla, CA
92093-0608
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ABSTRACT |
Protein aggregates containing ubiquitinated proteins are commonly
present in neurodegenerative disorders and have been considered to
cause neuronal degeneration. Here, we report that transient cerebral
ischemia caused severe protein aggregation in hippocampal CA1 neurons.
By using ethanolic phosphotungstic acid electron microscopy (EM)
and ubiquitin immunogold EM, we found that protein aggregates were
accumulated in CA1 neurons destined to die 72 hr after 15 min of
cerebral ischemia. Protein aggregates appeared as clumps of
electron-dense materials that stained heavily for ubiquitin and were
associated with various intracellular membranous structures. The
protein aggregates appeared at 4 hr and progressively accumulated at 24 and 48 hr of reperfusion in CA1 dying neurons. However, they were
rarely observed in dentate gyrus neurons that were resistant to
ischemia. At 4 hr of reperfusion, protein aggregates were mainly
associated with intracellular vesicles in the soma and dendrites, and
the nuclear membrane. By 24 hr of reperfusion, the aggregates were also
associated with mitochondria, the Golgi apparatus, and the dendritic
plasmalemma. High-resolution confocal microscopy further demonstrated
that protein aggregates containing ubiquitin were persistently and
progressively accumulated in all CA1 dying neurons but not in neuronal
populations that survive in this model. We conclude that proteins are
severely aggregated in hippocampal neurons vulnerable to transient
brain ischemia. We hypothesize that the accumulation of protein
aggregates cause ischemic neuronal death.
Key words:
brain ischemia; protein aggregation; ubiquitin; neuronal
death; intracellular vesicles; mitochondrion; dendritic membranes; ethanolic phosphotungstic acid; electron microscopy; confocal
microscopy
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INTRODUCTION |
In rat cerebral ischemia models, a
period of ischemia followed by reperfusion causes neuronal degeneration
selectively in hippocampal CA1 pyramidal neurons after 48 hr of
reperfusion but leaves dentate gyrus (DG), CA3, and most cortical
neurons intact (Kirino, 1982 ; Pulsinelli et al., 1982 ; Smith et
al., 1984 ). During the 48-72 hr delay period, the neurons destined to
die look normal under the light microscope. At the ultrastructural
level, however, disaggregation of polyribosomes, abnormalities of the
Golgi apparatus, deposition of dark substances, and modification of
postsynaptic densities have been reported (Kirino et al., 1984 ; Petito
and Pusinelli, 1984 ; Rafols et al., 1995 ; Hu et al., 1998 ;
Martone et al., 1999 ).
Protein polypeptide chains need to be folded into their native
conformations to avoid aggregation. When newly synthesized polypeptide
chains are in unfolded or misfolded states, their sticky hydrophobic
segments are exposed on the surface. Without protection, these
non-native proteins remain abnormal and are prone to aggregate.
Abnormal proteins can be recognized and ubiquitinated by the ubiquitin
system through a series of ATP-dependent reactions (Hershko and
Ciechanover, 1998 ). Ubiquitination targets abnormal proteins to form
ubiquitinated proteins (ubi-proteins) for degradation rather than
chaperone-like protec- tion. Under pathological conditions, when
abnormal proteins in cells are too numerous to be protected or quickly
removed, they will aggregate through their hydrophobic segments.
Abnormal protein aggregates have been observed consistently in almost
all neurodegenerative diseases by ubiquitin immunogold electron
microscopic (EM) analysis (Kakizuka, 1998 ). Thus, immunogold EM
analysis has been used to identify protein aggregates associated with
neurodegenerative disorders (Alves-Rodrigues et al., 1998 ).
During our previous study of synaptic structures using ethanolic
phosphotungstic acid (EPTA) electron microscopy (Hu et al., 1998 ;
Martone et al., 1999 ), we found that EPTA not only stained synapses and
nuclei, but also additional dark aggregates throughout the soma and
dendrites of postischemic dying neurons. These aggregates were not
present in neurons destined to survive after ischemia or in
sham-operated control neurons. This observation prompted us to conduct
a series of experiments to investigate the nature of the aggregates and
to study the mechanism of their formation. Because EPTA stains proteins
rich in basic amino acids, we hypothesized that the aggregates may be
composed of abnormal proteins. In the present study, this hypothesis is
supported by the fact that the aggregates contain ubi-proteins, as
demonstrated by ubiquitin-immunogold EM. These protein aggregates
persistently accumulated on the membranes of mitochondria, vesicles,
and dendrites in all CA1 dying neurons but not in the rest of surviving
neurons after ischemia. We also provide evidence that ubi-proteins are
persistently and progressively aggregated in CA1 dying neurons by
high-resolution confocal microscopy. We hypothesize that persistent
protein aggregation may cause neuronal death after ischemia.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Ischemia model. Brain ischemia was produced using the
two-vessel occlusion model in rats. All experimental procedures
were approved by the committee on animal studies of the Queen's
Medical Center (Honolulu, HI). Male Wistar rats (250-300 gm) were
fasted overnight. Anesthesia was induced with 3% halothane followed by maintenance with 1-2% halothane in an oxygen/nitrous oxide (30/70%) gas mixture. Catheters were inserted into the external jugular vein,
tail artery, and tail vein to allow blood sampling, arterial blood
pressure recording, and drug infusion. Both common carotid arteries
were encircled by loose ligatures. Fifteen minutes before ischemia
induction and 15 min after ischemia, blood gases were measured and
adjusted to PaO2 >90 mmHg and
PaCO2 35-45 mmHg, pH 7.35-7.45, by adjusting
the tide volume of respirator. Bipolar EEG was recorded before
ischemia, continuously during the ischemic insult, and after ischemia
until the rat recovered from the anesthesia. At the beginning of a 10 min steady-state period before induction of ischemia, the inspired
halothane concentration was decreased to 0.5% and 150 IU/kg heparin
was administered intravenously. Blood was withdrawn via the jugular
catheter to produce a mean arterial blood pressure of 50 mmHg,
and both carotid arteries were clamped. Blood pressure was maintained
at 50 mmHg during the ischemic period by withdrawing or infusing blood
through the jugular catheter. At the end of the ischemic period, the
clamps were removed and the blood was reinfused through the jugular
catheter, followed by 0.5 ml of 0.6 M sodium
bicarbonate. In all experiments, brain temperature was maintained at
37°C before, during, and after ischemia (15 min of reperfusion). For
biochemical studies of events occurring during 15 min of ischemia,
tissue was obtained by freezing the brains in situ with
liquid nitrogen at the end of 15 min ischemia. For rats subjected to
reperfusion, halothane was discontinued at the end of ischemia and all
wounds were sutured. The rats were reanesthetized, tracheotomized, and
artificially ventilated at 2, 4, 24, and 48 hr of reperfusion. Rats
were perfused with ice-cold 2% paraformaldehyde and 2.5%
glutaraldehyde in 0.1 M cacodylate buffer for
electron microscopy, with ice-cold 4% paraformaldehyde plus 0.1%
glutaraldehyde in 0.1 M phosphate buffer for
immunoelectron microscopy, and with ice-cold 4% paraformaldehyde in
0.1 M phosphate buffer for confocal microscopy.
Sham-operated rats were subjected to the same surgical procedures but
without induction of brain ischemia. Each experimental group consisted
of at least three rats.
Electron and immunoelectron microscopy. Tissue sections from
experimental and control animals were stained by either 1% EPTA (Fisher Scientific, Houston, TX) (Bloom and Aghajanian, 1968 ) or
conventional osmium-uranium-lead staining. Briefly, coronal brain
sections were cut at a thickness of 200 µm with a vibratome through
the level of the dorsal hippocampus and post-fixed for 1 hr with 4%
glutaraldehyde in 0.1 M cacodylate buffer, pH
7.4. For conventional osmium-uranium-lead staining, sections
were post-fixed for 2 hr in 1% osmium tetroxide in 0.1 M cacodylate buffer, rinsed in distilled water,
and stained with 1% aqueous uranyl acetate overnight. Tissue sections
were then dehydrated in an ascending series of ethanol to 100%
followed by dry acetone, and embedded in Durcupan ACM resin.
Thin sections were counterstained with lead citrate before examination
in the electron microscope. For EPTA staining, sections were dehydrated
in an ascending series of ethanol to 100% and stained for 50 min with
1% phosphotungstic acid (PTA) prepared by dissolving 0.1 gm of PTA in
10 ml of 100 ethanol and adding four drops of 95% ethanol. The EPTA
solution was changed once after a 25 min interval during the staining. The sections were then further dehydrated in dry acetone and embedded in Durcupan ACM resin.
Immunoelectron microscopy was performed on postischemic and control
brain tissues using a postembedding protocol. Brains were fixed in 4%
paraformaldehyde containing 0.1% glutaraldehyde without secondary
fixation with osmium tetroxide. Blocks of hippocampal tissue were
dehydrated through 100% ethanol without osmication and then embedded
in Durcupan ACM resin as above. Sections were cut at a thickness
of 0.1 µm and collected on 300 mesh gold grids. Immunolabeling
consisted of the following steps: (1) 5 min wash in 0.1 M
PBS, pH 7.2; (2) 10 min in PBS containing 0.001% Triton X-100
(TX100); (3) 20 min blocking step in 1% BSA in PBS; (4) 2 hr
incubation in anti-ubiquitin diluted 1:1000 in PBS [the monoclonal antibody against ubiquitin (MAB1510, Chemicon, Temecula, CA) has been
extensively characterized by Western blot and immunocytochemistry and
recognizes both free and bound ubiquitin (Morimoto et al., 1996 )]; (5)
three washes for 5 min each in PBS; (6) 5 min wash in 3% normal
goat serum in PBS; (7) 1 hr incubation in 1:40 goat anti-mouse
IgG conjugated to 10 nm gold (Stonybrook, NY) diluted in PBS;
(8) three washes for 5 min wash each in PBS; and (9) three washes for 5 min each in double-distilled H2O. Grids were
air-dried and counterstained with uranyl acetate and Satoh lead before
examination in a JEOL (Peabody, MA) 100CX electron microscope. Some
grids were also counterstained with ethanolic or aqueous
phosphotungstic acid. Negative controls in which the primary antibody
was omitted from the labeling sequence were also performed in both
sham-operated and postischemic tissue.
Laser-scanning confocal microscopy. Double-labeled
fluorescence immunocytochemistry was performed on coronal brain
sections (50 µm) from sham-operated controls and animals subjected to
15 min of ischemia followed by 30 min, and 2, 4, 24, and 72 hr of reperfusion. The sections were transferred into a 24-well microtiter plate filled halfway with 0.01 M citric
acid-sodium citrate buffer, pH 6.0, heated for 10 sec in a microwave
set to 30% power. The sections were washed twice with 0.2% TX100-PBS
for 10 min. Nonspecific binding sites were blocked with 3% BSA in
PBS-0.2% TX100 for 30 min and incubated with the monoclonal
anti-ubiquitin at a dilution of 1:400 in PBS containing 0.1% TX100
overnight at 4°C. The sections were washed three times for 10 min
each in PBS containing 0.1% TX100 at room temperature and
incubated in a mixture of fluorescein-labeled anti-mouse IgG (Jackson
ImmunoResearch, West Grove, PA) at a dilution of 1:200 and 15 µg/ml
propidium iodide for 1 hr at room temperature. The sections were washed
three times in PBS-0.1% TX100, mounted on glass slides, and
coverslipped using Gelvatol. The slides were analyzed on a
Bio-Rad (Hercules, CA) MRC 1024 laser-scanning confocal microscope.
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RESULTS |
EPTA stained protein aggregates in postischemic CA1 neurons
In our previous studies, we stained postsynaptic densities using
EPTA in sham-operated control and postischemic brains (Hu et al., 1998 ;
Martone et al., 1999 ). In this protocol, tissues are dehydrated through
absolute ethanol without previous osmication, leading to extraction of
much of the lipid content of membranes. Under these conditions, EPTA
selectively stains synaptic structures and nuclei in normal brain
tissue (Fig. 1, CA1, DG Sham).
However, in the postischemic brains, EPTA strongly stained not only
synapses and nuclei but also intracellular aggregates in the cell soma and dendrites in CA1 neurons (Fig. 1, CA1, 4h,
24h). As will be described below,
these aggregates were associated with membranous structures,
particularly vesicles and mitochondria (Figs. 1, 2). Although membranes
were not directly visible in the EPTA-stained material because
of lack of osmium and lipid extraction, they were often visible
in negative contrast, allowing for easy identification of subcellular
structures (Fig. 2). EPTA-stained aggregates were also present on the
cytosolic face of the nuclear membrane at both 4 and 24 hr of
reperfusion (Fig. 1, CA1, 4h,
24h).

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Figure 1.
Electron micrographs of EPTA staining in the cell
soma of CA1 pyramidal neurons and in DG granule cells in
sham-operated controls (Sham) and rats subjected to 15 min ischemia followed by 4 and 24 hr of reperfusion. EPTA-stained
materials were extensively distributed in the cytoplasm of postischemic
CA1 neurons but not in control neurons. Many of the EPTA-stained
proteins were attached to the membranes of intracellular vesicles,
visible in negative contrast (arrowheads in
CA1) at both 4 and 24 hr of reperfusion. At 24 hr of
reperfusion, aggregates appeared on the membranes of mitochondria
(M) as well (arrowheads in
CA1). Dark aggregates were also attached to the
cytoplasmic face of the nuclear membrane (small arrows)
at both 4 and 24 hr in postischemic CA1 neurons but not in the control.
The extensive EPTA-stained aggregates seen in postischemic CA1 neurons
were not present in DG neurons, although intensely stained small, round
structures were sometimes seen after ischemia (arrows in
DG, 4h, 24h).
n, Nucleus. Scale bar, 1 µm.
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Figure 2.
Electron micrographs of EPTA staining in the cell
soma (A, C) and apical dendrite
(B, D) of CA1 pyramidal neurons in the
postischemic brain at 24 hr reperfusion. EPTA-stained protein
aggregates (arrows in A,
B) were associated with the outer membranes of
mitochondria (m), recognized by their double
membrane and cristae visible in negative contrast against the lightly
stained matrix. In many cases, the stained deposits were localized at
the poles of mitochondria (small arrows in
B). EPTA-stained aggregates were also associated with
the membranes of numerous round, clear vesicles, stained in negative
contrast (arrows in C, D).
In some cases, stained deposits on the membranes of the Golgi apparatus
(g in C) were also observed. The
vesicles surrounded the Golgi apparatus in the cell soma
(arrows in C) and were close to the
plasma membrane in dendrites (arrow in
D). The arrowhead in D
points to what appears to be a vesicle outlined by EPTA-stained
aggregates partially fused with the plasmalemma, suggesting that
vesicles are shuttling between the Golgi apparatus and plasma membrane.
n, Nucleus. Scale bars: A,
C, D, 0.5 µm; B, 1 µm.
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EPTA-stained aggregates were observed in almost all CA1 pyramidal
neurons, and the results were consistent in all three animals examined
at 24 hr of reperfusion after 15 min of ischemia. We have not seen any
similar EPTA-stained aggregates in CA1 neurons in any of the
sham-operated control rats in this study or in our previous studies on
synaptic modifications (Hu et al., 1998 ; Martone et al., 1999 ), nor
have they been reported in numerous studies using the EPTA staining
technique (Bloom and Aghajanian, 1966 , 1968 ; Jones et al., 1974 ;
Burry and Lasher, 1978 ). Compared with CA1 neurons, EPTA-stained
aggregates were rarely found in DG granule neurons in all three animals
in each experimental group after ischemia (Fig. 1, DG). Only
small numbers of dark vesicles resembling lysosomes could be found
surrounding the nuclei in DG neurons at 4 and 24 hr of reperfusion
(Fig. 1, DG). Similarly, EPTA-stained aggregates were rarely
found in CA3 and most neocortical neurons after ischemia (data not
shown). Both of these populations are relatively resistant to ischemic
cell death in this model.
By 24 hr of reperfusion, the aggregates were frequently attached to the
cytoplasmic face of the outer mitochondrial membrane in both the soma
and apical dendrites (Fig. 2A,B).
Mitochondria were identified by their inner and outer membrane, clearly
visible in negative relief (Fig.
2A,B). EPTA also slightly stained
the mitochondrial matrix, rendering the cristae visible as well. The aggregates were not distributed on all the mitochondrial membranes but
were often located only on the poles (Fig.
2A,B). Few aggregates were
associated with mitochondria at 4 hr of reperfusion in either the cell
soma or dendrites (Fig. 1, CA1, 4h).
EPTA aggregates were consistently observed attached to the cytoplasmic
face of vesicles in the cell soma, ranging in size from 50 to 200 nm
(Fig. 2C). Occasionally, EPTA also stained the membrane
stacks of the Golgi apparatus (Fig. 2C), which were next to
concentrations of stained vesicles. In dendrites, vesicles of similar
size with associated aggregates were also found close to and attached
to the cell membrane in CA1 dendrites (Fig. 2D), suggesting that they shuttled between the Golgi apparatus in the soma
and the dendritic membrane, and were likely derived from the Golgi
apparatus. In the region of CA1 stratum radiatum, EPTA-stained aggregates attached to the dendritic plasmalemma, as well as
mitochondrial outer membranes, at 24 hr of reperfusion (Fig.
3).

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Figure 3.
Electron micrographs of EPTA staining in dendrites
(d) of CA1 pyramidal neurons in postischemic
brains after 24 hr of reperfusion. EPTA preferentially stained
postsynaptic densities in the neuropil of hippocampal stratum radiatum
(arrows in A and B) The
majority of EPTA-stained deposits in dendrites were associated with
mitochondria (M) and the cytoplasmic face
of the dendritic plasmalemma (arrowheads in
B). Scale bars, 0.5 µm.
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Comparison with osmium-uranium-lead staining
In material stained with conventional heavy metals
(osmium-uranium-lead), electron-dense deposits were found in
CA1 dying neurons (Fig. 4). Some of the
osmium-uranium-lead-stained deposits seemed to colocalize with
multivesicular bodies, whereas others appeared to distribute along with
membranous structures, such as vesicles and the endoplasmic reticulum
(Fig. 4, 24h). The osmium-uranium-lead-stained deposits
were superimposed with other stained subcellular structures, and it was
usually difficult to determine the relationship between them. The dark
aggregates were more prominent and extensively distributed in the
EPTA-stained material, and some notable differences in their appearance
and distribution were present between the two methods. For example, the
dark band surrounding the nuclear membrane observed in the EPTA
sections at 4 and 24 hr of reperfusion (Fig. 1, CA1,
4h, 24h) was barely visible in the
osmium-uranium-lead-stained sections (Fig. 4). The
osmium-uranium-lead-stained deposits were discrete and round in
appearance with soft edges, whereas the EPTA-stained aggregates were
directly apposed to membranous structures and more flocculent in
appearance. However, the general distribution and the timing of
appearance of the osmium-uranium-lead-stained deposits was similar to
the aggregates in the EPTA sections, as was their selective presence in
CA1 neurons but not DG neurons (data not shown).

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Figure 4.
Electron micrographs of conventionally stained
pyramidal cell somas in area CA1 from sham-operated controls
(Sham) and in postischemic brains at 24 hr reperfusion
(24h). Numerous round, electron-dense deposits were
observed in the postischemic soma (arrows in
24h) associated with membranous structures, including
vesicles and the endoplasmic reticulum. Similar deposits were not
visible in the control brain. n, Nucleus. Scale bar, 1 µm.
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Immunolocalization of ubiquitin
Because EPTA stains protein enriched with basic amino acid
residues (Bloom and Aghajanian, 1966 , 1968 ), the EPTA-stained
aggregates in the postischemic neurons are likely composed of abnormal
protein. Taking advantage of the observation that ubi-proteins are
commonly present in protein aggregates in neurodegenerative diseases,
we conducted ubiquitin immunogold electron microscopy (Fig.
5). Immunolabeling was initially
performed on material that had been stained using EPTA. However, the
EPTA labeling was washed out of the tissue during the immunolabeling
procedure. We then performed immunolabeling on sections that had been
embedded without either osmication or EPTA staining and then
counterstained the grids with a variety of methods, including PTA,
osmium, and uranium-lead. In all cases, gold labeling for ubiquitin
was clustered over heavy metal-stained aggregates in the postischemic
brain. The best contrast was achieved with poststaining with
uranium-lead so most analyses were performed on this tissue. Labeled
aggregates were found close to the plasmalemma in dendrites (Fig.
5A, arrowheads) and apposed to mitochondria and
vesicles whose membranes stained in negative relief (Fig. 5B), similar to the distribution of the EPTA-stained
aggregates. In controls, ubiquitin immunogold labeling was randomly
present in all neurons, as its name implies (Fig. 5C,
arrowhead). Although several structures in the control
tissue were stained with uranium and lead, these structures did not
contain ubiquitin immunoreactivity (Fig. 5C). Negative
controls in which the primary antibody was omitted showed very low
amounts of nonspecific labeling (Fig. 5D). It should be
pointed out that the density of the ubiquitin immunogold labeling in
the brain sections is less than the densities of protein aggregates
seen in EPTA staining and ubiquitin immunostaining of confocal
microscopy (see below). This may be because of the limitations of the
immunogold staining. It is known that secondary antibody-linked gold
particles are often too big to penetrate into tissue efficiently,
particularly for the dense protein aggregates. We believe that both
EPTA and the secondary antibody for the confocal microscopy (see below)
have much more chance to access the antigen relative to the
immunogold-linked secondary antibody.

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Figure 5.
Ubiquitin immunogold labeling in the apical
dendrites (d) of CA1 pyramidal neurons in the
postischemic brain at 24 hr reperfusion (A,
B) and in sham-operated control
(C). Immunolabeling was performed on sections of
brain that were not osmicated before embedding and were then
counterstained with uranyl acetate and lead citrate. Heavy
immunolabeling for ubiquitin was observed over the dark materials
distributed along the dendritic plasmalemma
(arrowheads in A) and associated with
mitochondria (m in B) and vesicles
(arrowhead in B). Immunolabeling in the
control brain was usually present in the cytoplasm
(arrowhead in C) and not with
electron-dense structures. Immunostaining controls in which the primary
antibody was omitted showed very little nonspecific labeling
(D). Scale bar, 0.5 µm.
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To further study the time course and distribution of protein
aggregation after ischemia, we investigated ubi-protein aggregation in
brain sections by high-resolution laser scanning confocal microscopy using an objective of PlanApo, 100×/1.40 oil. The brain sections were
double-labeled with a monoclonal anti- ubiquitin antibody (green) and propidium iodide (red).
Ubiquitin immunolabeling was evenly distributed in control neurons and
30 min of reperfusion in CA1, DG (Fig. 6,
Sham, 30m), and CA3 and cortical neurons (Fig. 7, Sham, 30min). At
4 hr of reperfusion, the immunolabeling pattern was clearly changed
from an even distribution to a heterogeneous distribution, with
anti-ubiquitin-positive aggregates scattered around the nuclei and in
the dendrites, but disappeared in the nuclei (Fig. 6,
4h). By 24 hr of reperfusion, the ubiquitin-positive aggregates were further enlarged to form patchy aggregates surrounding nuclei and close to the dendritic plasma membrane in CA1 neurons (Fig.
6, 24h). However, in most DG, CA3, and cortical neurons, the
ubiquitin immunolabeling had returned to a more even distribution but
was induced to greater than control levels (Figs. 6, 7,
24h). By 72 hr of reperfusion, the ubiquitin immunolabeling
(green) was virtually absent in most CA1 pyramidal
neurons (Fig. 6, 72h) but returned to control intensity in
most DG, CA3, and cortical neurons (Figs. 6, 7, 72h). The
nuclei of CA1 neurons stained with propidium iodide (red)
were condensed, because the CA1 neurons were dead at this time point
(Fig. 6, 72h).

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Figure 6.
Confocal microscopic images of hippocampal neurons
double labeled with anti-ubiquitin (green) and
propidium iodide (red) in area CA1 (top
panels) and the DG (bottom panels). Sections are
shown from sham control (Sham) and from 30 min, and 4, 24, and 72 hr of reperfusion after 15 min of ischemia. The labeling
pattern is clearly altered from an even to an aggregated distribution,
persistently in CA1 neurons but transiently in DG neurons during
reperfusion. Ubiquitin-labeled aggregates first appear as small dots at
4 hr reperfusion and progressively increase in size over time. By 24 hr
of reperfusion, the aggregates form a patchy pattern surrounding the
nuclei and close to the dendritic membrane. Ubiquitin immunostaining in
the nuclei disappears after 4 hr of reperfusion in CA1 neurons.
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Figure 7.
Confocal microscopic images of hippocampal area
CA3 (top panels) and the neocortex (bottom
panels) double labeled with anti-ubiquitin
(green) and propidium iodide
(red). Sections are shown from sham control
(Sham) and from 30 min, and 4, 24, and 72 hr of
reperfusion after 15 min of ischemia. The labeling pattern is
transiently altered from an even to an aggregated distribution at 4 hr
of reperfusion.
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DISCUSSION |
In this study, we demonstrated that intracellular membranous
proteins were severely aggregated in dying CA1 neurons but not in
neurons destined to survive after transient cerebral ischemia. These
protein aggregates did not exist in control brains. The protein
aggregates were clearly visible in postischemic CA1 neurons stained
with EPTA and progressively accumulated during the postischemic phase
until cell death. They were mainly located on membranes of
intracellular vesicles and distributed in the cytoplasm of the cell
body and close to dendritic membranes at 4 hr of reperfusion. By 24 hr
of reperfusion, these aggregates also appeared on the membranes of
mitochondria, the Golgi apparatus, and dendritic plasmalemma. The
aggregates were strongly labeled with a ubiquitin antibody by
immunogold electron microscopy. High-resolution confocal microscopy
further confirmed that ubiquitin-immunoreactive aggregates were
strongly and progressively accumulated around nuclei and close to the
dendritic membrane in most CA1 neurons until their death. However, in
neurons destined to survive, ubiquitin immunoreactivity showed only a
transient redistribution at 4 hr of reperfusion. The pattern of
ubiquitin immunostaining seen in the confocal images in the later
period of reperfusion is similar to the distribution of EPTA-stained
protein aggregates observed under the electron microscope.
Identity of the aggregates
At the electron microscopic level, the presence of abnormal
protein aggregates in CA1 pyramidal neurons was most clearly
demonstrated using the EPTA staining method of Bloom and Aghajanian
(1966 , 1968 ). It has been known for a long time that EPTA strongly
stains proteins in synapses and nuclei but only slightly reacts with other subcellular structures as viewed by electron microscopy (Bloom
and Aghajanian, 1968 ). Protein aggregates in cells consist of
non-native polypeptide chains with very high density and are generally
believed to aggregate through their hydrophobic segments. It is likely
that the hydrophobic segments are concentrated inside, whereas segments
rich in polar amino acids are exposed outside of the aggregates. Thus,
staining of the aggregates with EPTA may be attributed to the very high
density of the amino acid chains, as well as to the rearrangement of
basic amino acids in the aggregates in the postischemic neurons. The
identification of the stained deposits as aggregates of abnormal
proteins is supported by the finding that the aggregates were strongly
labeled with a ubiquitin antibody.
The present study is pertinent to two previous studies. It was first
described in an early conventional (osmium-uranium-lead) EM study by
Kirino et al. (1984) that dark substances exist in postischemic
neurons, which was later confirmed (Deshpande et al., 1992 ). However,
the identity of these dark substances and their mode of formation were
unknown. Also, the relationship of the dark substances with the
subcellular structures was unclear. We also found the presence of
osmium-uranium-lead-stained deposits in the CA1 neurons from the same
brain tissues for the EPTA EM. Based on their overall distribution and
their selective localization in CA1 neurons, we believe that the
osmium-uranium-lead-stained deposits are a combination of normal
membranous structures and some protein aggregates. This explanation
is consistent with the finding that the ubiquitin immunogold-labeled
aggregates can be stained with both PTA and uranium-lead. The protein
aggregates were both more prominent and more extensively distributed in
the EPTA-stained material and, as noted in Results, clearly differed somewhat in appearance. Part of the difference in stained materials between the two methods can be attributed to the lack of osmication before dehydration in the EPTA-stained sections. The lack of osmium leads to both extraction of many lipids from the tissue and also a lack
of contrast of remaining membranous and other osmiophilic structures.
Thus, EPTA-stained materials stand out from a relatively unstained
background. Part of the difference between the two methods may also be
attributable to differing affinities of heavy metal stains for certain
subcellular structures. This may explain that why the EPTA EM
shows some protein aggregates that cannot be seen with conventional EM.
Distribution of protein aggregates
ETPA-stained protein aggregates accumulate over time in almost all
CA1 pyramidal neurons but rarely in DG, CA3, and most cortical neurons
in the postischemic phase. They are not present in control neurons. The
localization of the large ubiquitin-immunoreactive aggregates
surrounding nuclei and along the dendritic membrane seen by confocal
microscopy (Fig. 6, 24h) resembles the distribution of
EPTA-stained aggregates under EM in the late period of reperfusion (Fig. 3), as is consistent with the labeling of the heavy metal-stained deposits with ubiquitin by immunoelectron microscopy (Fig. 5).
It is intriguing that ubiquitin immunostaining pattern transiently
changes from relatively even to heterogeneous at 4 hr of reperfusion in
most DG, CA3, and cortical neurons, but these populations do not show
EPTA-stained aggregates under the electron microscope. On Western
blots, increases in ubi-proteins in the membrane fraction peak as early
as 30 min of reperfusion (earliest reperfusion point we studied) and
then declines after 4 hr of reperfusion in CA1 neurons (B. R. Hu
and B. K. Siesjö, unpublished data). The changes of ubi-proteins
also occur, although to a less extent, in the surviving neuronal
populations. However, even in CA1 neurons, EPTA-stained protein
aggregates are not present at 30 min but appear at 4 hr and then
progressively accumulate until neuronal death selectively in CA1
neurons. The evidence suggests that abnormal proteins become
ubiquitinated on the membranous structures immediately after ischemia.
These ubi-proteins may not completely aggregate into the visible
EPTA-stained protein aggregates under the electron microscope.
Meanwhile, the cell defense system for abnormal proteins may come into
play to protect and/or to clear some of ubi-proteins immediately after
ischemia. For unknown reasons, the cell defense system might be weaker
or production of abnormal proteins might be greater in CA1 dying
neurons than in surviving neurons after ischemia, which may result in
severe and selective protein aggregation in CA1 dying neurons,
eventually visible with ETPA staining by EM.
Protein aggregation as a cause of neuronal death
The cause and effect relationship between protein aggregation and
subsequent neuronal death remains to be determined. This study has
mainly shown that the distribution and time courses of protein
aggregation correlate well with the distribution of the neuronal death.
The studies of biochemical, genetic, or pharmacological interventions
are essential for uncovering the roles of protein aggregation after
brain ischemia. For this reason, we have recently been studying
ischemic preconditioning on protein aggregation and the subsequent
neuronal death and survival. Our results show that ischemic
preconditioning can prevent both protein aggregation and neuronal death
after ischemia (B. R. Hu and C. L. Liu, unpublished data). Taking
into consideration that ischemic preconditioning induces heat shock
proteins (HSPs) and that chaperone function of most HSPs is to prevent
proteins from aggregation, ischemic preconditioning may protect neurons
through preventing protein aggregation. The results of the present
study suggest a new hypothesis for cell death occurring after ischemia.
We propose that the progressive accumulation of protein aggregates in
CA1 neurons may contribute to ischemic neuronal death in a number of
ways. (1) The protein aggregates observed on the nuclear membrane after
4 hr of reperfusion may impair nuclear membrane function. (2)
Accumulation of protein aggregates in the Golgi apparatus may damage
post-translational protein modification, packing, and transportation.
(3) Aggregation of abnormal proteins on mitochondrial membranes may
result in overproduction of reactive oxygen species and severe
secondary energy failure that initiates ischemic neuronal death. (4)
Finally, aggregation of abnormal proteins on the neuronal cell membrane may signal microglia or other inflammatory cells to kill the neuron.
The hypothesis that aggregation of abnormal proteins leads to ischemic
cell death is consistent with several other observations and mechanisms
proposed for ischemic cell death. (1) Induction of HSPs by either
preconditioning, viral infection, or transgenic overexpression before
ischemia protects the neurons against ischemic insults (Kato et al.,
1994 ; Hutter et al., 1996 ; Plumier et al., 1997 ; Yenari et al., 1998 ;
Sharp et al., 1999 ). We have found that ischemic preconditioning
inhibits formation of protein aggregates by confocal microscopy in the
same ischemic model (Hu and Liu, unpublished data). (2) Persistent
depression of protein synthesis may cause neuronal death
(Hossmann, 1993 ). Abnormal proteins can shut off overall
protein synthesis by phosphorylation of eIF-2 in cells of various
origins (Matts et al., 1993 ). Protein synthesis initiation is severely
depressed persistently in CA1 dying neurons but transiently in DG
neurons after ischemia (Hu and Wieloch, 1993 ; Burda et al., 1994 ;
DeGracia et al., 1997 ). (3) Ischemic acidosis and secondary energy
failure cause neuronal death (Siesjö et al., 1996 ). Ischemic
acidosis may contribute to protein aggregation because protein folding
is pH-dependent (Kraig and Wagner, 1987 ). (4) Production of
reactive oxygen species (Siesjö, 1988 ; Chan, 1996 ; Siesjö
et al. 1999 ) after brain ischemia may lead to additional protein oxidation and aggregation. (5) Finally, protein aggregation on
the dendritic membranes may activate microglia to induce an inflammatory reaction (Morioka et al., 1991 ; Gehrmann et al., 1992 ; Giulian, 1993 ).
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Nov. 29, 1999; revised Feb. 7, 2000; accepted Feb. 11, 2000.
This work was supported by National Institute of Health Grant NS36810
to B.R.H and by the Queen's Emma Foundation in Hawaii. The microscopy
was performed, in part, at the National Center for Microscopy and
Imaging Research, National Institutes of Health Grant RR04050.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Bing-Ren Hu, Laboratory of
Neurochemistry, Center for the Study of Neurological Disease, Queen's
Medical Center, 1356 Lusitana Street, 8th Floor, Honolulu, HI 96813. E-mail: bhu{at}cns.queens.org.
 |
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