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Previous Article | Next Article 
The Journal of Neuroscience, September 15, 2001, 21(18):7099-7109
Caspases 3 and 9 Send a Pro-Apoptotic Signal from Synapse to Cell
Body in Olfactory Receptor Neurons
Catherine M.
Cowan1,
Jimmy
Thai1,
Stanislaw
Krajewski3,
John C.
Reed3,
Donald W.
Nicholson4,
Scott H.
Kaufmann2, and
A. Jane
Roskams1
1 Centre for Molecular Medicine and Therapeutics,
Department of Psychiatry, University of British Columbia, Vancouver,
British Columbia, Canada V5Z 4H4, 2 Department of
Molecular Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics, Mayo Graduate
School, Rochester, Minnesota 55905, 3 The Burnham
Institute, La Jolla, California 92037, and 4 Merck Frosst
Centre for Therapeutics, Dorval, Montreal, Quebec, Canada H9R 4P8
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ABSTRACT |
Caspase-9, an initiator caspase, and caspase-3, an effector
caspase, have been suggested to mediate the terminal stages of neuronal
apoptosis, but little is known about their activation in
vivo. We examined temporal and spatial aspects of caspase-9 and
-3 activation in olfactory receptor neurons (ORNs) undergoing apoptosis
after target removal in vivo. After removal of the
olfactory bulb, enhanced expression of procaspase-9 and -3 is observed
in ORNs, followed by activation initially at the level of the lesion, then in axons, and only later in the ORN soma. We established the
amyloid precursor-like protein-2 (APLP2) as a caspase substrate that is
cleaved in an identical spatiotemporal pattern, suggesting its cleavage
is the result of retrograde propagation of a pro-apoptotic signal in a
caudorostral wave from the synapse through the axon to the ORN cell
body. A null mutation in caspase-3 causes a change in axonal patterning
indicative of an overall developmental expansion of the ORN population,
and mature ORNs of caspase-3 knock-outs do not undergo
caspase-dependent terminal dUTP nick end labeling-positive apoptosis
after olfactory bulb removal. These results demonstrate that ORNs
require caspase-3 activation to undergo normal developmental and mature
target-deprived apoptosis. In addition, we demonstrate an axonal site
of action for caspase-3 and -9 and show that regulation and activation
of caspase-3 and -9 leading to apoptosis is a highly ordered process
that occurs initially at the presynaptic level and only later at the
cell body after deafferentation.
Key words:
olfactory receptor neuron; caspases; amyloid
precursor-like protein-2; neuronal apoptosis; retrograde signaling; degeneration
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INTRODUCTION |
Olfactory receptor neurons (ORNs) in
the olfactory epithelium (OE) of the nasal cavity are the only
described neurons in the mature nervous system that functionally turn
over (Graziadei and Graziadei, 1979 ; Farbman, 1990 ). Individual ORNs
die (by an as yet unexplained mechanism) every 4-6 weeks and are
replaced by new neurons derived from a precursor population at the base
of the OE (Schwartz Levey et al., 1991 ; Carr and Farbman, 1992 ; Calof et al., 1996 ; Roskams et al., 1996 ; Huard et al., 1998 ). Surgical removal of the ORN target, the olfactory bulb, causes a massive and
synchronous wave of retrograde apoptosis in the distant population of
8-10 million ORNs within 72 hr of lesion (Michel et al., 1994 ; Roskams
et al., 1996 ). This lesion-induced apoptosis of ORNs can be modulated
by Bcl-2 (Jourdan et al., 1998 ), a regulator of the cytochrome
c-Apaf-1-caspase-9 pathway (Earnshaw and Kaufmann, 1999 ; Gross et
al., 1999 ; Krajewski et al., 1999 ). Thus, the OE has become a valuable
model for studying neuronal degeneration and regeneration in
vivo because of (1) its accessibility, (2) its exclusive location,
distancing its cell body from all other neuronal cell types, and (3)
its unique ability to constantly regenerate neurons throughout
mammalian life (Moulton, 1974 ; Graziadei and Graziadei, 1979 ; Farbman,
1997 ).
Neuronal apoptosis is important in the developmental sculpting of a
normal nervous system and also in the loss of neurons caused by
neurodegenerative disease, ischemia, or trauma (Rink et al., 1995 ;
Choi, 1996 ; Stefanis et al., 1997 ) (for review, see Oppenheim, 1991 ;
Stefanis et al., 1997 ). Despite considerable progress in elucidating
the cellular pathways of apoptosis, it is not yet known whether
immature and mature neurons from the same lineage use identical
cellular pathways to mediate apoptosis. Developmental neuronal cell
death is thought to occur when an excess of immature neurons compete
for limiting quantities of neurotrophic factors in their immediate and
target environment (Burek and Oppenheim, 1998 ). Trophic support is also
required from various sources throughout the neuraxis to ensure
neuronal survival both before and after the critical period of
naturally occurring cell death (Davies, 1997 ; Wang and Tessier-Lavigne, 1999 ). Regardless of the initiating stimulus, the terminal stages of
apoptosis involve activation and action of caspases, a family of
aspartate-directed intracellular cysteine proteases. This highly conserved protease family contains 14 mammalian family members, at
least six of which have a clearly defined role in apoptosis (Earnshaw
and Kaufmann, 1999 ). Knock-out mice have been used to highlight the
critical importance of caspase-9, an initiator caspase, and caspase-3,
an effector caspase, in neuronal apoptosis during development (Kuida et
al., 1996 , 1998 ; Hakem et al., 1998 ). These same caspases have been
implicated in distant neuronal and glial apoptosis after ischemia and
spinal cord injury, although the manner in which they transmit
apoptotic signals in these in vivo models has yet to be
revealed (Endres et al., 1998 ; Clark et al., 1999 ; Springer et al.,
1999 ).
Despite significant progress in understanding the enzymological process
of neuronal apoptosis, essentially nothing is known about how a neuron,
which exists in a complex three-dimensional environment in
vivo, integrates the pro- and anti-apoptotic signals that are
received from different parts of the neuraxis. In the present study, we have taken advantage of the unique structural and
organizational features of the primary olfactory neuraxis to examine
where caspases are activated in mature ORNs after deafferentation and
how this activity is propagated in space and time.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Bulbectomies and tissue preparation. Olfactory
bulbectomies were performed on adult CD-1 mice as described previously
(Roskams et al., 1996 ). Bulbs were removed unilaterally for subsequent analysis of OE by immunohistochemistry, terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated biotinylated UTP nick end labeling (TUNEL), or
in situ hybridization (ISH) (n = 3-4 per
time point); or bilaterally for OE protein preparation
(n = 6 per time point). Animals were killed 0, 4, 8, 12, 24, 36, 48, or 72 hr after surgery. For partial bulbectomies, the
center of the olfactory bulb (including the mitral cell bodies) was
removed stereotaxically, leaving the nerve fiber layer and glomerular
layer relatively intact (confirmed both visually on dissection and histologically).
To prepare tissue for immunohistochemistry, TUNEL, or in
situ hybridization, mice (n = 3-4 per time point,
genotype, or treatment group) were anesthetized with Xylaket [25%
ketamine HCl (MTC Pharmaceuticals), 2.5% xylazine (Bayer, Wuppertal,
Germany), 15% ethanol, 0.55% NaCl) and rapidly perfused with PBS.
Brains, olfactory bulbs, and olfactory epithelia were dissected,
equilibrated in Tissue-Tek embedding medium (Sakura Finetek, Torrance,
CA) for 10 min, and frozen in liquid nitrogen. Coronal and sagittal
sections (10 µm) of OE and brain were prepared by cryostat sectioning
and stored at 20°C for subsequent analysis.
For protein preparation, mice were killed by decapitation after
anesthesia as above. Olfactory tissue and control brain areas were
dissected out without perfusion, snap frozen in liquid nitrogen, and
homogenized in buffer A (50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8, 150 mM NaCl, 1% Triton X-100, 1 µg/ml aprotinin, 1 µg/ml
leupeptin, 100 µg/ml PMSF). Each set (time point, genotype, or
treatment group) consisted of pooled tissues of three animals. Western
blot analysis was performed on at least two different sets of animals
(total n = 6 per time point). After estimation of
protein concentration by the BCA method (Pierce), tissue homogenates
were frozen at 80°C for subsequent analysis.
Caspase-3-deficient mice. Caspase-3-deficient mice were
generated as previously described (Keramaris et al., 2000 ). Briefly, exons 2-7 of the caspase-3 gene were targeted for deletion by homologous recombination in C 57BL/6J mice. Homozygous disruption of
the Casp 3 gene was confirmed by PCR genotyping (30 sec at 94°C, 1 min at 60°C, and 1 min at 72°C) with primers F108 and WCPR21. Heterozygous males and females that were generated from this
line were backcrossed through two generations to produce the long-lived
Casp 3 / variant reported here, which has now been propagated by sibling mating through an additional 12 generations. Absence of detectable caspase-3 expression was also confirmed by
reverse transcription (RT)-PCR and Western blotting as described below.
Developmental studies within this line have confirmed that a low
percentage of the null mice (<10%) do not survive embryonic development.
Immunoblotting and immunoprecipitation. Aliquots of tissue
homogenates (25 µg of protein) were subjected to SDS-PAGE and
transferred to Immobilon membrane (Millipore, Bedford, MA). Equal
loading of lanes was confirmed by Ponceau S staining. Membranes were
blocked for 1 hr at room temperature with 5% nonfat milk in
Tris-buffered saline (TBS), incubated 12-20 hr at 4°C in primary
antibody in 2% milk/TBS, washed three times for 5 min each in 0.1%
Tween 20 in TBS, and incubated for 1 hr at room temperature in
peroxidase-coupled goat anti-rabbit IgG (Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA) diluted
in 2% milk/TBS. Signals were detected with chemiluminescence reagents
(Pierce, Rockford, IL). The following primary antisera were used:
rabbit-anti-caspase-3 (MF393) (Samali et al., 1998 ) or anti-human p17
(Mesner et al., 1999 ), rabbit-anti-caspase-9 (MF 443) and
C9/Bur 49 (raised against cleaved recombinant human caspase-9), rabbit
antiserum raised against the caspase-9 peptide neoepitope PEPD (Mesner
et al., 1999 ) and the -C neoepitope antibody (Gervais et al., 1999 ) that recognizes the C-terminal VEVD peptide product generated from
amyloid precursor protein (APP) and APLP2 by caspase-3 cleavage.
Immunoprecipitation of -C APP cleavage products was performed by
incubating 200 µg of tissue lysate (prepared as described above) with
affinity-purified D2-II APLP2 specific antibody (gift from Gopal
Thinakaran, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL) at a dilution of 1:250
in a final volume of 500 µl of modified RIPA buffer (150 mM NaCl, 1% NP-40, 0.5% deoxycholate, 0.1% SDS, 50 mM Tris, pH 8.0, 1 µg/ml aprotinin, 1 µg/ml leupeptin,
100 µg/ml PMSF). After incubation at 4°C, APLP2-containing
immunocomplexes were isolated by further incubation at 4°C with
protein A-conjugated Sepharose CL-2B beads (Sigma, St. Louis, MO),
washed, and separated on gel containing a 4-20% polyacrylamide gradient.
Immunohistochemistry and TUNEL. Fresh frozen sections were
fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde, permeablized in 0.1% Triton X-100, blocked with 4% normal serum, and incubated at 4°C for 12-20 hr in
primary antibody (Roskams et al., 1994 ). Immunohistochemistry was
performed using the Vectastain Elite anti-rabbit and anti-mouse kits
(Vector Laboratories, Burlingame, CA) and Vector VIP peroxidase substrate chromagen to give a pink-purple color. Immunofluorescence was performed by incubating sections with primary antibody as described
above, followed by a 1 hr incubation at room temperature with the
following secondary antibodies: Cy2-conjugated goat or donkey
anti-rabbit IgG, Texas Red-labeled rabbit anti-goat or anti-mouse IgG
(all from Jackson ImmunoResearch, West Grove, PA), or cascade
blue-conjugated goat anti-mouse-IgG (Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR).
Where multiple secondary antibodies were used, they were used
sequentially in the order given above. Then, sections were coverslipped
using citiflour mounting medium (Marivac, Halifax, NS, Canada). Primary
antisera used for immunocytochemistry included rabbit
anti-active-caspase-3, MF 397 (Black et al., 1998 ) (and PharMingen 67341A), rabbit anti- C neoepitope serum (Gervais et al.,
1999 ), rabbit anti-caspase-9 (Bur 49), anti-synaptophysin (Boehringer
Mannheim, Mannheim, Germany), and anti-neuron specific ( III)
tubulin (TuJ1; Chemicon, Temecula, CA). TUNEL was performed as
previously described (Pieper et al., 1999 ). Briefly, slides were
incubated with digoxigenin (DIG)-conjugated UTP and
terminal transferase enzyme, incubated with anti-DIG antibodies,
and visualized using nitroblue tetrazolium chloride x-phosphate
(NBT) and 5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl-phosphate (BCIP) substrate for the
antibody-coupled alkaline phosphatase.
Evaluation of caudorostral progression of apoptosis. For
temporal evaluation of olfactory neuron loss, we evaluated the number of TUNEL+ neurons in the OE of the mediolateral turbinate 2.5 (±0.45)
mm from the cribiform plate at 12-72 hr after bulbectomy. Adjacent
sections were assayed for the expression or olfactory marker protein
(OMP) (by in situ hybridization).
All cell counts were tabulated and analyzed statistically for
mean ± SD using Microsoft Excel. For spatial evaluation of
apoptotic patterns, sections were evaluated for the number of TUNEL+
cells in the superior (S), mediolateral (ML) and inferior (I)
turbinates at 24 hr after bulbectomy from three sites (1, 2, 3) at 1, 2.5, and 4 mm from the cribiform plate.
ISH was performed as previously described (Blackshaw and Snyder, 1997 )
using DIG (Boehringer Mannheim) -labeled full-length sense and
antisense probes (2 Kb) to the OMP (gift of F. Margolis, University of
Maryland, Baltimore, MD). The signal was detected by 12 hr incubation
with anti-DIG antibody, followed by overnight color development with
NBT/BCIP as described above.
Image capture. All nonconfocal images were captured using a
Zeiss Axioskop 2 MOT SPOT digital camera (Diagnostic Instruments, Sterling Heights, MI) and Northern Exposure software on a Pentium II
personal computer (PC). Then, they were imported into Adobe Photoshop
5/6 for final compilation. Confocal microscopy was performed using a
Zeiss Axiovert S100 TV microscope fitted with Bio-Rad Radiance Plus
confocal hardware and LaserSharp software running on a Dell Pentium II
PC. Confocal Z-series were processed using NIH Image software version
1.62 (Wayne Rasband, National Institutes of Health) and imported into
Adobe PhotoShop 5.0 for colorization and determination of signal colocalization.
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RESULTS |
Mature olfactory neurons undergo a caudorostral gradient of
apoptosis after bulbectomy
To define a spatiotemporal pattern for ORN apoptosis after
bulbectomy, we used several techniques to follow the loss of the mature
neuron population. Agarose gel electrophoresis of OE-derived DNA first
revealed DNA laddering characteristic of apoptosis at 12 hr after
bulbectomy, peaking from 24-36 hr after bulbectomy (data not shown), a
profile slightly earlier than previously reported (Michel et al.,
1994 ). We used this profile for subsequent immunocytochemical and
immunoblotting experiments in which the use of unilateral bulbectomy
(Fig. 1G) allows us to
directly compare expression patterns of lesioned and unlesioned neurons
within each animal.

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Figure 1.
Temporal analysis of olfactory neuron apoptosis by
TUNEL labeling and in situ hybridization. Olfactory
epithelia were analyzed after unilateral bulbectomy (site of olfactory
bulb removal marked by red arrow) by TUNEL staining to
detect nicked DNA (dark nuclei). A,
TUNEL+ ORNs in the OE (black arrows) at 24 hr after
bulbectomy on sagittal. Arrowhead marks the turbinate
shown in high-power coronal section (B), in which
the contralateral unlesioned side is shown across the nasal septum
(Sep). C, By 36 hr, higher densities of
TUNEL-labeled cells in the neuronal layer are seen extending further
from the lesioned bulb throughout each turbinate (small
arrows), and density of TUNEL+ ORNs on coronal section
(D) has increased compared with B.
From 24 hr (E) to 48 hr
(F), the density of OMP-expressing neurons
(detected by in situ hybridization for OMP) decreases
significantly on the lesioned (L) side of the
nasal septum. For temporal evaluation of apoptosis, three independent
sites within the mediolateral turbinates on coronal section were
assessed for TUNEL+ neurons per linear millimeter. G,
Mouse head indicating site of bulbectomy and planes of coronal section.
Assessments of TUNEL+ and OMP+ at a single distance (2.5 ± 0.45 mm; position 2 on mouse head) from the cribiform plate
(n = 3 animals per group) were plotted
(H). H, Numbers
shown on y-axes are overall mean ± SD for each group. OMP+ cells
are displayed as a percentage of the total cells above the basal lamina
per linear millimeter of OE. Tu+, TUNEL+. Scale bars:
A, C, 500 µm;
B, D-F, 20 µm.
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TUNEL staining identified that cells responsible for the DNA laddering
pattern lie within the ORN cell layer (Fig. 1). Apoptosis temporally
progressed in a caudorostral gradient in which ORNs closest to the
olfactory bulb removal site (on sagittal section) underwent apoptosis
earlier than more distal ORNs. The same turbinate (Fig.
1A,B, arrowhead) is also
shown on coronal section at 24 and 36 hr, in which unlesioned OE across
the medial septum is essentially devoid of TUNEL+ neurons.
TUNEL-labeling of ORNs increases from 24 to 36 hr in all turbinates
shown (Fig. 1A-D). ISH confirmed that
cells being lost because of apoptosis were expressing OMP, an exclusive
marker for mature olfactory neurons (Fig.
1E,F). The contralateral OE
retains OMP expression and does not become TUNEL-positive. As ORNs
undergo apoptosis (between 24 and 48 hr), the thickness of the OE
decreases as the number of ORNs expressing OMP mRNA are lost (Fig.
1E,F). Adjacent sections,
assayed for OMP expression and TUNEL-positivity, demonstrate the peak
of loss of the mature ORN population from 24 to 36 hr after bulbectomy and complete loss of mature ORNs by 72 hr (Fig.
1H).
Axonal activation of caspase-3 during apoptosis in ORNs
TUNEL positivity reflects, in part, the action of
caspase-3-activated deoxyribonuclease (CAD), a unique endonuclease that is liberated in its active form after caspase-3-mediated cleavage of
its inhibitor, ICAD (Enari et al., 1998 ). To assess caspase-3 proenzyme
expression and activation during ORN apoptosis, protein extracts from
unlesioned and bulbectomized mouse OE were examined by immunoblotting.
Using two different antisera to caspase-3, we observed that caspase-3
proenzyme is present (32 kDa) in normal OE (Fig.
2A-C, time 0). Over
the first 24 hr after bulbectomy, endogenous levels of procaspase-3
increased significantly (Fig. 2A). By 48 hr after
deafferentation, proteolytic cleavage of the zymogen to produce active
caspase-3 could be readily detected on immunoblot (Fig.
2B,C). These results clearly
demonstrated an accumulation in procaspase-3 immediately before maximal
cleavage and activation but did not provide any information about the
site of this process in ORNs. To determine the site of caspase-3
activation, immunohistochemistry was performed using two antisera that
specifically recognize only active caspase-3 (Fig.
2D-F). Both reagents yielded identical results. Active caspase-3 was clearly detected in some axon
bundles and cell bodies of ORNs from which the target had been removed
24 hr earlier (Fig. 2D), but was not detectable in the contralateral (unlesioned) ORNs (Fig. 2E), in
which axons and ORN cell bodies still retain expression of OMP (Fig.
2G). The immunocytochemical activation profile of caspase-3
for both antisera mirrored the pattern of activation observed on
Western blot, i.e., active caspase-3 in some axons and cell bodies at 24 hr after bulbectomy, with more widespread (maximal) immunoreactivity throughout every axon bundle and maximal ORN soma activation at 48 hr
after bulbectomy (Fig. 2F).

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Figure 2.
Caspase-3 proenzyme expression and
activation after bulbectomy. Caspase-3 proenzyme is detected by Western
blot analysis of pooled olfactory epithelium from mice recovering from
bilateral bulbectomies (n = 3 per group).
A, The endogenous level of caspase-3 proenzyme (detected
with MF 393) increases during the first 24 hr after bulbectomy and then
falls (because of activation). Using MF 393 (B)
and previously described serum raised against the large subunit of
human caspase-3 (C), the 32 kDa proenzyme is
clearly present in nonlesioned olfactory epithelium (0) and at 24 and
48 hr after bulbectomy. In addition, maximal activation of caspase-3 is
demonstrated by the 17 kDa large subunit ( ), detected 48 hr after
bulbectomy. Blots were reprobed with a -actin loading control.
D, With the more sensitive technique of
immunocytochemistry, submaximal levels of active caspase-3 were found
in a subpopulation of axons (Ax, partially stained axon
bundles indicated with * and some ORN cell bodies
(ORN) at 24 hr after unilateral bulbectomy (MF
397 antisera). E, Axons and cell bodies of the side
contralateral to the lesion at 24 hr (Unlesioned) do not
contain detectable levels of active caspase-3 (MF 397).
F, At 48 hr, there is a concomitant increase in axonal
caspase-3 activation, in which all axon bundles now contain active
caspase-3 (PharMingen 67341A), and in partially labeled axon bundles
(*) some breakdown in the integrity of the axon bundle can be seen.
G, The unlesioned side still has a stable population of
ORNs, expressing OMP throughout their cell bodies and axon bundles.
Scale bars, 50 µm.
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Caspase-3-dependent cleavage of axonal APLP2
Because the detection of active caspase-3 in axonal bundles was
unanticipated, we wanted to examine whether active caspase-3 was being
transported retrogradely without cleaving targets, or whether it was
actively cleaving downstream targets throughout the neuraxis during ORN
apoptosis. Few specific caspase-3 targets have been localized to ORNs
and, in particular, their axons. The APP is cleaved by caspase-3 to
reveal an epitope (VEVD) recognized by the C-APP antiserum (Gervais
et al., 1999 ). The epitope recognized by the C-APP antiserum is
detected by immunocytochemistry in subsets of axons and cell bodies of
apoptotic ORNs, but not their unlesioned counterparts, at 24 hr after
bulbectomy (Fig.
3A-C, low and high
magnification). This pattern resembles the cellular distribution of
activated caspase-3 (Fig. 2), but is actually more useful, because it
allows us to visualize where caspase-3 is being activated and where it
has been activated (the cleavage product persists during degeneration,
whereas the caspase-3 activation is more transient). At low power, the
C-APP epitope first appears most predominantly in subsets of axon
bundles and dying ORNs at 24 hr after bulbectomy (Fig. 3A).
The epitope is distributed in distinct regions of axon bundles of
apoptotic ORNs (Fig. 3B) and, in ORN cell bodies,
accumulates in a c-shape deposit surrounding the nucleus (Fig.
3C).

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Figure 3.
Amyloid precursor-like protein 2 (APLP2) is cleaved in the axons and cell bodies of
apoptotic olfactory neurons. A, The C-APP neoepitope
antiserum recognizes a caspase-3-dependent epitope found in axons
(arrowheads) and cell bodies (small
arrows) of ORNs, only on the lesioned side of the septum.
B, At higher power, there is a clear and distinct
mesaxon subcompartmentalization of the product in each axon bundle
(arrowhead), and in the box indicated at
higher magnification (C), there is a clear perinuclear
distribution of the cleavage product (arrow) in the ORN
soma. The basal cell layer (BC) is free of apoptotic
cells containing this product. D, Cell lysates from
unlesioned OE, OE 48 hr after bulbectomy (OE48), and
olfactory bulb (OB) were immunoprecipitated (IP) with an
APLP2 affinity-purified N-terminal antiserum
(D2-II) and probed (IB) with -C antiserum to
confirm that the VEVD epitope is revealed within APLP2 during ORN
apoptosis. To confirm that caspase-3 is required for APLP2 cleavage, OE
extracts that were similarly prepared from wild-type (+/+) and
caspase-3 null ( / ) mice were blotted with an APLP2 C-terminal
antiserum, CT-12, which detects the cleavage product in wild-type (+/+)
mice but not their caspase-3 null ( / ) littermates. Scale bars:
A, B, 100 µm; C, 20 µm.
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Because APP is only found in embryonic olfactory neurons, it is not
likely to be responsible for the C-APP epitope revealed in
apoptotic ORNs. Its homolog, APLP2, is predominantly expressed throughout the axons of ORNs in development and adulthood and also
contains the conserved cleavage site (VEVD) for caspase-3-mediated cleavage (Thinakaran et al., 1995 ). To determine whether APLP2 might be
responsible for the observed staining, antisera to the N-terminal
(D2-II) and C-terminal (CT12 APLP2) fragments that could be produced by
caspase-mediated cleavage of APLP2 were used to immunoprecipitate
APLP2. Blotting with the C-APP antisera confirmed that this reagent
does recognize an APLP2 cleavage product in apoptotic ORNs (Fig.
3D). In addition, the C terminus (CT-12) of APLP2 is also
liberated in OE extracts from bulbectomized wild-type mice, but not
from mice with a null mutation for caspase-3 (Fig. 3D).
Collectively, these results demonstrate that caspase-3-dependent cleavage of APLP2 occurs in a similar spatial pattern to the appearance of activated caspase-3, i.e., predominantly in the axons and later in
cell bodies.
Evidence that proteolysis starts at the presynaptic complex
The preceding results suggest that caspase-3 activation may begin
in ORN axons and is propagated in a retrograde fashion to ORN cell
bodies from the site of lesion. To confirm this hypothesis, we altered
our lesion paradigm to that of a partial bulbectomy (removing the cell
bodies of the target neurons, but leaving their synaptic complexes
intact) in an attempt to encompass the pattern of caspase activation in
a complete single slice. After partial bulbectomy, frozen sections of
olfactory bulb and epithelium were initially examined at the planes
indicated in Figure 4F
by TUNEL, followed by coimmunolocalization of the C-APLP2 cleavage
product and the axonal protein type III (neuron-specific) tubulin (Fig. 4A,C) (Roskams et al., 1998 ).

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Figure 4.
Caspase-3-mediated APLP2 cleavage occurs first in
the synaptic complexes, then axons and cell bodies of olfactory
receptor neurons. Twenty-four hours after partial unilateral removal of
the internal layers of the OB, transverse and sagittal sections (site
and direction of section indicated on F) of OB
(A, B) and OE (C, D) were analyzed for
the compartmentalization of the APLP2 C- epitope
(green, using the -C antibody) in comparison
with TUNEL+ cells (black nuclei in A,
C) and neuron-specific tubulin (NST,
red in A, C),
Synaptophysin (Syn, red in
B), and active caspase-3 (aCasp3,
red in D) expression. In the lesioned OB,
the C epitope is concentrated in the synaptic glomerular complexes
(Gl) and axons (Ax) of the nerve
fiber layer (NFL), in which the signal becomes
yellow where colocalization with axonal NST
(A) or glomerular synaptophysin
(B) occurs. A, NST+
(red) axons and glomeruli of the unlesioned bulb (the
midline between bulbs indicated by white dotted line) do
not show any evidence of caspase-3 activation or APLP2 cleavage.
C, By 36 hr after bulb lesion, a low-power image of a
mediolateral turbinate shows that the C epitope
(green) production is highest in NST+
(red) axon bundles (overlap in
yellow) closest to the olfactory bulb (marked To OB). Neurons (ORN) most distant
from the midline were less immunoreactive for C
(green) and TUNEL+ (*) and lie adjacent to axons
with minimal C/NST overlap (red). D,
A retrograde pattern of caspase-3 activation is represented on sagittal
section of turbinate immediately adjacent to the septum, in which
active caspase-3 (red) is transiently activated in axons
and cell bodies (ORN), leaving cleaved C
(green) in its axonal wake. OB
marks direction of olfactory bulb location, and arrow
aligns the plane of section with that shown on F.
E, Sections of successive mediolateral turbinates were
sorted into quadrants, based on axonal C/NST labeling on a scale
from 0 to 100%. 0% represents NST+ only (red), and
100% represents an entirely yellow axon bundle (complete overlap). ORN
soma within each quadrant were then assessed for activation of
caspase-3 (green) and TUNEL+ (black
nuclei) in correlation with their adjacent axonal caspase-3
activation (mean per quadrant ± SD; three independent sections
per animal). Scale bars: A-D, 50 µm;
F, 500 µm.
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In the olfactory bulb, 24 hr after partial lesion (Fig.
4A), the caspase-3-liberated C-APLP2 neoepitope
first appears as bright, punctate dots of immunoreactivity in
glomerular complexes, each of which contains the synapses of up to 1000 different ORNs. The intensity of the neoepitope also forms a gradient
back from the glomeruli into some neuron-specific tubulin
(NST)-positive axons of the nerve fiber layer projecting back to the OE
(Fig. 4A). The C neoepitope is only seen in axons
of lesioned OB and OE, whereas unlesioned axons appear NST-positive
(red) only. The synaptic complex localization of the C
neoepitope at 24 hr after partial lesion is confirmed by colocalization
with synaptophysin in the glomeruli (Fig. 4B). In the
OE, 36 hr after bulbectomy, axons displaying the highest degree of
caspase-3-mediated cleavage ( C+) are most prominent close to where
the olfactory nerve (NST+) exits a mediolateral turbinate (Fig.
4C). C+/NST (green) and TUNEL+ ORN
cell bodies are clustered closest to the axons of highest caspase-3
activation (Fig. 4C, yellow). Axons adjacent to
neurons in the part of the turbinate farthest from the bulb, however, are not yet labeled for active caspase-3. To further assess the direction of caspase-3 activation, we examined sagittal slices of OE
for the presence of active caspase-3 and coordinate production of the
-C neoepitope. Figure 4D shows caspase-3
activation (red) carried through the axon bundle and into
ORN cell bodies distant from the olfactory bulb. Caspase-3 activation,
which is transient, occurs in advance of the detection of C, for
which the neoepitope is seen left behind in the axon
(green) in the wake of the active caspase-3 signal.
To assess the relationship between axonal caspase activation and the
likelihood of an ORN to undergo apoptosis, we divided successive
turbinates, represented by that in Figure 4C, into quadrants
in which axon bundles demonstrated -C/NST
(yellow) overlap of <20% (red), 20-50%
(orange), 50-75% (yellow-orange), and
75-100% (completely yellow) (Fig. 4E).
By comparing the number of TUNEL+ neurons and green C+ neuronal
soma with adjacent axonal caspase activation, we demonstrate that those
axons displaying maximal axonal caspase-3 activation
(yellow, 75-100%) are adjacent to regions of OE
with maximal cell body caspase activation (green) and
maximal TUNEL-labeling (black). Conversely, the areas of OE most distant from the OB display minimal soma caspase-3 activation and
minimal TUNEL-positivity and are adjacent to the axons of lowest
caspase-3 activation. Collectively, these results suggest that
caspase-mediated cleavage begins in the synaptic complexes, is
propagated through the axons, and reaches the ORN cell bodies, which
then become TUNEL+ last.
Activation of caspase-9 during apoptosis in ORNs
Given that caspase-9 is thought to be the preferential, although
not sole, activator of neuronal caspase-3 in vitro and
in vivo, we examined caspase-9 expression and activation in
ORNs by using multiple different caspase-9 antisera for immunoblotting and immunolocalization. Two different antisera that recognize full-length procaspase-9 demonstrated that levels of this zymogen increase significantly in the OE from 4 to 24 hr after bulbectomy and
then drop to barely detectable levels by 72 hr (Figs.
5 A, B).

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Figure 5.
Axonal caspase-9 expression increases before
maximal caspase-9 activation during apoptosis in olfactory neurons.
A-C, examination of caspase-9 levels in OE after
bulbectomy using three different antisera. Caspase-9 zymogen levels
rise significantly in OE at 4-24 hr after bulbectomy as assessed using
two different sera raised against recombinant human caspase-9
(A, MF 443) and anti-C9/Bur 49 (B). In addition, a cleavage product
(C, 221 B) corresponding to the 35 kDa activated form of
caspase-9 is detected initially at 4 hr and maximally at 24 hr after
bulbectomy. C, A neoepitope antiserum recognizing the cleavage junction between the p19 and p12 subunits of
caspase-9 detects the 35 kDa product representing the large subunit and
prodomain, as well as a 19 kDa product that could represent the
individual large subunit, at 4 and 24 hr (maximal) after bulbectomy.
D, E, Control blots used antibodies to
Apaf-1 (Stressgen, Victoria, BC, Canada) (D) and
mouse anti- -actin (Sigma) (E).
F, Using the antiserum from B, caspase-9
(green) is expressed in axons (Ax)
of the normal adult OE, emanating from OMP-positive
(red) cell bodies (ORN) and
colocalizing with axonal OMP as olfactory axons cross the cribiform
plate (CP), course through the nerve fiber layer
(NFL) and enter the glomeruli (Gl) of the
olfactory bulb. G, Caspase-9 (red)
colocalizes at the presynaptic compartment of OMP+
(green) olfactory neurons with synaptophysin
(blue) to produce a purple overlap that
is highly localized to the inner layers of glomeruli. White
areas indicate regions of triple overlap of caspase-9,
synaptophysin, and OMP. Scale bars, 100 µm.
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|
An antiserum that recognizes recombinant human caspase-9 (Fig.
5B, Bur 49) and another that recognizes a neoepitope that
becomes detectable at the C terminus of the large subunit of caspase-9 after proteolytic liberation of the small subunit (Fig. 5C)
indicate that multiple species of cleaved caspase-9 were detectable at early (4 hr) and late (24 hr) stages of apoptosis after bulbectomy. These species included the large catalytic subunit linked to the N-terminal prodomain (active caspase-9, 35 kDa) (Fig.
5B,C) as well as the p19 large
catalytic subunit alone (Fig. 5C). After maximal caspase-9
activation (24 hr), the expression of full-length caspase-9 was
significantly reduced (Fig. 5A,B).
Blots were reprobed with -actin and Apaf-1. Note that the levels of
Apaf-1 (a known activator of caspase-9 that complexes with it to form
an apoptosome) do not change after bulbectomy (Fig.
5D,E).
The appearance of maximal caspase-9 activation, immediately before
maximal caspase-3 activation and TUNEL-positivity of ORNs, suggests
that caspase-9 activation is a significant part of the pro-apoptotic
program of deafferented ORNs. For this to be the case, caspase-9 would
have to be distributed throughout the neuraxis to activate caspase-3 in
response to appropriate extracellular stimuli. Immunofluorescent
detection with anti-caspase-9 antiserum (green)
combined with OMP (red) shows that caspase-9 is excluded from the ORN cell body, but is highly expressed in ORNs and clearly distributed throughout olfactory axons all the way into olfactory glomeruli (Fig. 5F). The overlap of caspase-9 (Fig.
5G, red) with OMP (green) and
synaptophysin (blue, magenta on overlap with
caspase-9), a protein enriched in presynaptic membranes, confirms that
caspase-9 has a synaptic localization. White regions occur
where caspase-9, synaptophysin, and OMP all overlap.
Do ORNs develop normally in the absence of caspase-3?
The preceding results suggest a role for the caspase-9-caspase-3
pathway in execution of mature ORNs after deafferentation. Caspase-3
knock-out mice have many neurodevelopmental abnormalities but no
reported olfactory impairment (Kuida et al., 1996 ). To examine whether
caspase-3-mediated pathways are used to restrict the number of ORNs
during development, we compared sagittal and coronal sections of OE
from 1 week-old wild-type and caspase-3 / mice by
immunohistochemical analysis of sibling groups (n = 3).
A measurable increase in the already high levels of caspase-9 was
evident throughout the neuraxis of the caspase-3 null ( / ) mice at
P7 when equivalent sagittal sections are compared with their wild-type
(+/+) littermates (Fig.
6A). The olfactory bulb is larger in the null mice, but average glomerular size does not appear
to be significantly different (data not shown). The synaptic glomeruli
are, however, distributed more evenly around the P7 olfactory bulb,
making the glomeruli appear less dense in caspase-3 knock-outs than in
littermates (arrowheads). Fluorescence confocal microscopy
(Z-series) was used to concurrently visualize and quantify OMP and
procaspase-9 expression in these same groups of / and +/+
littermates (see Fig. 6B,C for
pseudocolored image). OMP expression was almost twofold (1.8×) greater
in the caspase-3 null mice than in littermates, and caspase-9
expression was almost fivefold (4.6×) higher. This suggests an
expansion of the mature neuron population in the absence of caspase-3,
but above that, a specific increase in caspase-9 expression in the
axons emanating from each neuron. Because the population density within
the OE (in the vertical dimension) is tightly controlled by local
factors, we did not initially measure any significant difference in the
ORN cell body number per linear millimeter of OE between knock-outs and
littermates (data not shown). As a population expansion could be
accommodated by additional folding of OE turbinates (instead of
increasing the thickness of epithelium), we chose to examine axon
bundle number, size, and area at distinct sites in the nasal turbinates of littermates. We selected a series of sites within the turbinates of
coronal OE sections selected from position "2" in Figure
1G that were subsequently processed for solid phase
(peroxidase-VIP) immunohistochemistry for OMP (Fig.
6A). Comparing knock-out mice with their littermates
(n = 3) allowed us to assess potential changes in the
number of olfactory axons projecting from a given turbinate back to the
OB. Contrary to what may have been predicted, caspase-3 knock-outs have
an overall lower number of axon bundles than their littermates, but
each of these axon bundles is significantly larger (two to six times
those of littermates) throughout each turbinate examined (Table
1). The 1.5 to 2-fold expansion in total
axon area seen in the knock-out, coupled with the twofold increase in
OMP expression by confocal analysis, suggests that caspase-3 does play
a role in controlling the cellular dynamic of the ORN population during
development.

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Figure 6.
Viable caspase-3 / mice have an expanded
olfactory neuron population with increased expression of procaspase-9.
A, Low-power sagittal sections from 1 week postnatal
wild-type (+/+) and caspase-3 null ( / ) mice were simultaneously
stained for caspase-9. The caspase-3 null mice have a higher axonal
(Ax) expression level of caspase-9 projecting into an
enlarged olfactory bulb (OB). Formation of glomeruli
(Gl) is also less advanced in the knock-out.
B, C, Double immunofluorescence for OMP and caspase-9
was performed on coronal sections (generated from position *) of OE
from caspase-3 wild-type and null mice (n = 3),
visualized by confocal Z-series and pseudo-colored for relative
intensity using NIH Image (see bar for scale). By this
scale, OMP expression is twofold greater in cell bodies (ORN) and axons
of the / than in the +/+, but the increase in intensity of C9 in
the enlarged population of axon bundles (Ax) is fivefold
higher in the / than in the +/+, when compared with OMP. Scale
bars: A, 1 mm; B, C, 100 µm.
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Do mature ORNs undergo apoptosis in caspase-3 null mice?
Despite published reports of embryonic and early postnatal
lethality in caspase-3 null mutants, we have been able (by backcrossing within our caspase-3 null colony) to generate a caspase-3 / mouse
that survives for at least 6-9 months. At no time have we detected
caspase-3 expression or downstream cleavage (of C or PARP) in the
/ mice, using the antisera reported in this study. To investigate
the spatial (in addition to temporal) dynamics of apoptosis in mature
wild-type ORNs in the absence of caspase-3, we first evaluated the
number of TUNEL+ cells in the S, ML, and I turbinates at 24 hr after
bulbectomy from three sites (Fig. 1G,
1,2,3) at 1 (±0.2) mm, 2.5 (±0.45)
mm, and 4 (±0.56) mm from the cribiform plate. A representative
section of a wild-type mouse is shown in Figure
7A. Within a given coronal
section, the S, ML, and I turbinates contain neurons situated at
increasing distances from the olfactory bulb, in which the number of
TUNEL+ cells (Fig. 7B) is greater close to the bulb
(superior turbinate of sections 1 and 2) and the least at further
distances from the bulb (Fig. 7B, inferior turbinate at each
position). We then repeated the same experiments on sets of caspase-3
/ mice and heterozygote littermates subjected to unilateral
bulbectomy. At 24 hr after bulbectomy (the beginning of the peak of
caspase-3-mediated ORN apoptosis), and 48 hr after bulbectomy (when
90% of olfactory neurons should have completed apoptosis), there were
no TUNEL+ ORNs within the OE in any of the knock-out mice tested (Fig.
7C,D). TUNEL+ non-neuronal cells in bony tissue
of the nasal cavity are, however, observed in these mice (data not
shown).

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Figure 7.
Caspase-3 deletion prevents bulbectomy-induced
apoptosis of mature ORNs. At 24 hr after bulbectomy, OE coronal
sections at defined distances (1, 2.5 ± 0.45, and 4 mm) from the
cribiform plate (designated 1, 2,
3 on the mouse head in Fig. 1) were assessed to provide
spatial patterns of the number of TUNEL-labeled ORNs after bulbectomy
in wild-type siblings of caspase-3 null mice. A,
Turbinates in a single section (Fig. 1D, position
2) were individually assessed as belonging to superior (close to bulb),
mediolateral, and inferior (distant from bulb) turbinates.
B, The number of TUNEL+ ORNs were plotted against
calculated distance from the olfactory bulb. These data were then used
as a baseline for assessing apoptosis in the caspase-3 null mice. The
data from the knock-out mice has not been plotted at 24 hr
(C) and 48 hr (D), and
there is no evidence for TUNEL+ ORNs on the lesioned side in any of the
knock-out mice (n = 3 per time point) analyzed.
S, Septum. Scale bars, 500 µm.
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|
 |
DISCUSSION |
ORNs undergo apoptosis after deafferentation in a spatiotemporal
manner in which a chief predictive factor determining the timing of
terminal neuronal apoptosis is the length of the ORN axon from the site
of lesion (Fig. 1). Because of the three-dimensional structure of the
OE, this profile has enabled us to track pro-apoptotic signals all the
way from the synapse to the cell body, and even across a single
turbinate, to provide data pinpointing where, and at what apoptotic
stage, terminal apoptotic pathways become activated. This analysis led
to several novel observations. First, endogenous levels of procaspase-3
and -9 increase, beginning as early as 4 hr after bulbectomy. Second,
caspase-3 activation is initially recorded at the synapse, then in axon
bundles, and only later in the cell bodies. Third, activated caspase-3
is capable of cleaving substrates like APLP2 throughout the olfactory
neuraxis. These data have important implications for current models of
a role for retrograde signaling in neuronal apoptosis.
In delineating the pathways that drive retrograde ORN apoptosis,
caspases 9 and 3 are both expressed by mature olfactory neurons throughout their axons, all the way into the presynaptic compartment (Figs. 4, 5). When the olfactory bulb is lesioned in such a way to
remove trophic support from the postsynaptic neuron and deafferent the
olfactory nerve, two responses are observed. The endogenous levels of
caspase-3 and -9 proenzymes increase, beginning as early as 4 hr after
bulbectomy. The peak of expression of caspase-9 (at 24 hr) coincides
with its maximal activation, after which proenzyme levels decrease
significantly. This peak of caspase-9 activation occurs immediately
before the peak of caspase-3 proenzyme expression and cleavage (at 48 hr after bulbectomy). We have not yet been able to generate evidence
demonstrating that the elevated proenzyme levels may be a result of
transcriptional upregulation, although this could occur marginally
within a timeframe allowed by fast retrograde transport. Given the
distribution of caspase-3 and -9 throughout the neuraxis before lesion,
we believe that it is more likely that the increased levels result from
a local upregulation of proenzyme production (at the level of
translation) or a change in the constitutive maintenance of caspase-3
and -9. Although further experiments are required to distinguish
between these possibilities, these data are the first to show that the commitment to death that occurs early at the initiation of neuronal apoptosis also includes procaspase-9 and -3 accumulation (Putcha et
al., 2000 ). At the time of maximal caspase proenzyme accumulation, caspase activation also becomes evident in these neurons. Strikingly, caspase-3 activation, detected by conformation-sensitive antibodies that recognize only the processed, active form of caspase-3, shows the
active enzyme as proximal as the synapse. Active caspase-3 then becomes
spatially detectable in axons and only later in ORN cell bodies.
Further support for the synapse to axon to soma propagation of the
apoptotic signal comes from use of the -C-APP neoepitope antibody,
which provides us with a sensitive way to demonstrate active cleavage
of caspase-3 target proteins in ORN synapses and axons in
vivo. Although it is conceivable that an alternative caspase
(e.g., caspase-6) could also cleave at the same target site, this
cleavage event can still be defined as caspase-3-dependent. Cleaved
APLP2 cannot be immunoprecipitated or detected immunohistochemically from the OE of lesioned caspase-3 knock-out mice (Fig. 3D).
Also, because the APLP2 cleavage product persists in cells and axons during degeneration, whereas active caspase-3 does not, examination of
cleaved APLP2 provides a useful map that shows where caspase-3 is
currently active and also has been active. The first site at which
APLP2 cleavage is detected is within the synaptic complexes of
olfactory bulb glomeruli, as evidenced by overlap with synaptophysin, a
synaptic protein that, within the glomeruli is primarily found in ORN
presynaptic terminals (Kasowski et al., 1999 ). The active caspase-3
signal is also seen spreading out from the synaptic glomeruli into the
nerve fiber layer of the olfactory bulb (Fig. 4A,B) and then into the axon
bundles of the lamina propria (Fig. 4C,D). The
persistence of the -C APP neoepitope in axon bundles after cleavage
of APLP2 reveals that there is a level of organization within ORN axon
bundles at which synchronously apoptotic ORNs are subtly divided into
groups of mesaxons (Fig. 3). Olfactory axons thus appear grouped
together on the basis of functional or developmental state, which may
underlie their differential vulnerability to apoptosis (Figs. 1,
3).
Collectively, the results demonstrating synaptic caspase-3 activation
lend strong in vivo support to earlier work targeting the
synapse as a focal point for initiation of pro-apoptotic signaling, either in a developing or in a lesion state (Mattson et al., 1998 ; Mattson and Duan, 1999 ). The synaptic junction has historically been
argued as a site at which positive trophic signals are used to
reinforce and stimulate survival of the presynaptic neuron during
development and maintenance of the CNS. Our data suggest that,
alternatively, the postsynaptic neuron (in this case, the mitral or
periglomerular neuron) could control turnover of the presynaptic
olfactory neuron population by manipulating the release of pro-survival
stimuli, thus shifting the balance of synaptic signaling pathways from
pro-survival to pro-apoptotic. The continued expression of caspases 3 and 9 at the highly plastic (NMDA receptor-mediated) olfactory synapse
also puts them in an ideal position to participate in the remodeling or
local dismantling of inactive synapses via the cleavage of target
proteins crucial for synaptic integrity, such as - and -spectrin
and -actin (Wang et al., 1998 ; Chan and Mattson, 1999 )
The colocalization of axonal caspase-9 with active caspase-3 (directly
mirroring the distribution of ORN mitochondria), coupled with a
dependence on Bcl-2 for ORN apoptosis, suggests a significant role for
the mitochondrial pathway in mature ORN apoptosis (Krajewski et al.,
1999 ). Procaspases 3 and 9 are also ideally situated to balance
pro-apoptotic pathways with those that drive neuronal plasticity,
because axonal caspase-9 is detected in many other neuronal axons
embryonically (S. Krajewski and C. Cowan, unpublished observations),
but is only retained at readily detectable levels postnatally in the
olfactory neuraxis. Now that caspase-3 and -9 have been placed at the
synapse, it will be important to determine which upstream signaling
mechanisms converge to balance synaptic survival and apoptotic pathways
in an intact olfactory neuraxis. A number of known pro- and
anti-apoptotic signaling proteins (e.g., the tyrosine kinase BDNF
receptor, Trk B, and the low-affinity nerve growth factor receptor,
P75) are present at the olfactory synapse (Roskams et al., 1996 ). It is
conceivable that differential stimulation of p75 (feeding into
mitochondrial apoptotic pathways) and kinase active-inactive Trk B, by
bulb-derived neurotrophins could synergistically serve to control
caspase-9 activation at the synapse. In addition, nitric oxide,
released from periglomerular neurons into a glomerular synapse could
directly regulate the activation of presynaptic procaspase-3 or -9 (Tenneti et al., 1997 ; Tamatani et al., 1998 ; Li et al., 1999 ). The
upstream signals that may stimulate axonal caspase pathways after
physical deafferentation are less obvious and require further
investigation. The compartmentalization of caspase-9 in the axon and
caspase-3 in axon and cell body introduces the possibility that
different pathways could be used for local and distant control of ORN
apoptosis, in which caspase-3 not only drives apoptosis of the soma but
also retrogradely dismantles proteins that maintain axonal integrity.
In contrast, in the mature optic nerve, the process of axonal
dismantling and Wallerian degeneration is caspase-3-independent, but
neuronal survival is caspase-3-dependent (Finn et al., 2000 ).
During the course of these studies we also generated caspase-3 null
mice that survived beyond the perinatal period. Examination of these
mice revealed that the OMP+ ORN population is expanded developmentally,
providing evidence that caspase-3 is ordinarily involved in regulating
ORN number (Fig. 6). The critical role of caspase-3 in regulating ORN
number is also illustrated by the lack of TUNEL+ ORNs in the OE of
caspase-3 / mice after bulbectomy (Fig. 7). Other cortical neuronal
populations are also expanded in long-lived caspase-3 null mice
generated by crossing into a black 6 background (G. Robertson, personal
communication). The variation in phenotype seen in caspase-3 null
mutants, including the upregulation of caspase-9 proenzyme levels,
suggests that olfactory neurons use pathways that attempt to compensate
for the loss of caspase-3. The identification of alternative
compensatory mechanisms in the olfactory system and other areas of the
CNS requires further study.
This study highlights the importance of how the location of a caspase
within a neuron dictates not only which local pathways may be capable
of activating it, but also which substrates are accessible, a key issue
when examining candidate neuronal caspase target proteins that could be
highly compartmentalized. These data also allow us to place caspase-9
and -3 in a more dynamic role in neuronal apoptosis than previously
demonstrated, simultaneously carrying pro-apoptotic signals from a
synapse to their final site of action at the neuronal nucleus and
actively dismantling axonal proteins. The identification of neuronal
caspase activation at the living synapse, coupled with the
identification of other apoptotic mediators in the synaptosome (Mattson
et al., 1998 ) now allows us to place caspase-mediated signaling at the
epicenter for target-derived trophic support, plasticity, and survival
of the olfactory receptor neuron.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Jan. 23, 2001; revised June 29, 2001; accepted July 3, 2001.
This work was supported by Centre for Molecular Medicine and
Therapeutics-Merck start-up funds (A.J.R.), a pilot project grant from
the British Columbia Health Research Foundation (A.J.R.), and United
States Public Health Service Grant NS36821 (S.K.). We thank Harinder
Janjua and Joellen Fung for technical assistance, Seth
Blackshaw for technical guidance for TUNEL, Murry Gilbert for
assistance with confocal microscopy, Frank Margolis for the OMP cDNA
and antibody, Gopal Thinakaran for APLP2-specific antibodies, and Phil
Hieter for making it possible for our laboratory to do this work.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Jane Roskams, Centre for
Molecular Medicine and Therapeutics, 950 W. 28th Avenue, Vancouver, BC,
Canada V5Z 4H4. E-mail: roskams{at}cmmt.ubc.ca.
 |
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