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The Journal of Neuroscience, September 15, 2001, 21(18):7161-7170
Leukemia Inhibitory Factor Determines the Growth Status of
Injured Adult Sensory Neurons
William B. J.
Cafferty1,
Natalie J.
Gardiner1,
Isabella
Gavazzi2,
James
Powell1,
Stephen B.
McMahon1,
John K.
Heath3,
John
Munson4,
James
Cohen2, and
Stephen W. N.
Thompson1
1 Centre for Neuroscience Research and
2 Medical Research Council Centre for Developmental
Neurobiology, Guy's, King's, and St. Thomas' School of Biomedical
Science, King's College London, London SE1 1UL, United Kingdom,
3 School of Biosciences, University of Birmingham,
Birmingham B15 2TT, United Kingdom, and 4 Department of
Neuroscience, University of Florida College of Medicine, Gainesville,
Florida 32610
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ABSTRACT |
Conditioning injury to adult mammalian sensory neurons enhances
their regeneration potential. Here we show that leukemia inhibitory factor (LIF) is a fundamental component of the conditioning
response. Conditioning injury in vivo significantly
increases the intrinsic growth capacity of sensory neurons in
vitro from LIF+/+ mice. This conditioning effect is
significantly blunted in sensory neurons from LIF / mice. Enhanced
growth is rescued in vitro in LIF / mice by the
addition of exogenous LIF, and the effect blocked by human
LIF-05, an LIF receptor antagonist. Furthermore, we demonstrate that LIF promotes elongating but not arborizing neurite outgrowth in vitro and is required for normal regeneration of
injured adult sensory neurons in vivo. LIF is also
functionally protective to peptidergic sensory neurons after nerve
damage in vivo. Our results indicate that the alteration
in intrinsic growth status of injured sensory neurons depends, at least
in part, on LIF.
Key words:
leukemia inhibitory factor; gp130; regeneration; conditioning lesion; axotomy; sensory neuron
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INTRODUCTION |
The regenerative capacity of sensory
neurons is determined by their intrinsic growth status and access to a
permissive growth substrate. An increase in the intrinsic growth status
of adult sensory neurons can be achieved by delivering a conditioning
lesion to peripheral nerves (McQuarrie and Grafstein, 1973 ; McQuarrie et al., 1977 ). Such conditioning lesions increase the ability of adult
dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons to successfully regenerate into
peripheral nerves (Carlson, 1983 ), nerve grafts (McQuarrie and
Grafstein, 1973 ; Carlson, 1983 ; Richardson and Issa, 1984 ; Sjoberg and
Kanje, 1990 ; Chong et al., 1996 ) across the dorsal root entry zone into
the spinal cord (Richardson and Verge, 1987 ), and within spinal tracts
(Neumann and Woolf, 1999 ). The increase in intrinsic growth status can
also be detected in vitro as an earlier, and enhanced, rate
of neurite elongation in dissociated adult DRG neurons or explants
after previous conditioning injury in vivo (Hu-Tsai et al.,
1994 ; Edstrom et al., 1996 ; Smith and Skene, 1997 ).
Successful regeneration requires that neurons survive and initiate
rapid and directed neurite outgrowth. Damaged adult DRG neurons survive
and mount a two-phase regenerative response. Within the first 48 hr
in vitro, adult sensory neurons have a constitutive capacity
for short, highly arborized sprouting with limited linear extension
(Smith and Skene, 1997 ). The second phase, commencing after a 48 hr
delay, is characterized by a dramatically enhanced neurite elongation
with a reduction in neurite branching. This switch from arborizing to
elongating growth is dependent on novel gene transcription (Smith and
Skene,1997 ), which changes the intrinsic growth status of the injured
neuron. Although recent work has shown that re-expression of growth
cone proteins can enhance the growth capacity of injured spinal axons
(Bomze et al., 2001 ), the factors responsible for altered growth states
in adult regenerating DRG neurons remain largely unknown.
Several candidate molecules exist. Leukemia inhibitory factor (LIF) is
the prototypic member of the gp130 family of cytokines that also
includes interleukin-6, ciliary-derived neurotrophic factor, oncostatin
M, cardiotrophin-1, and cardiotrophin-like-cytokine. LIF is
absent from the adult mammalian nervous system but is upregulated by
Schwann cells after injury (Banner and Patterson, 1994 ; Curtis et al.,
1994 ; Dowsing et al., 1999 ), is retrogradely transported by, and
accumulates within sensory neurons in the DRG (Thompson et al., 1997 ).
Here it induces transcription-dependent changes that may underlie the
ability of neurons to survive injury and promote regeneration. LIF is
known to regulate the expression of galanin (Corness et al., 1996 ; Sun
and Zigmond, 1996 ; Thompson et al., 1998 ), peripherin (Lecomte et al.,
1998 ), and Reg-2 (Livesey et al., 1997 ). Furthermore, gp130 family
members promote survival of embryonic motor and sensory neurons (Arce
et al., 1999 ; Thier et al., 1999 ). LIF therefore fulfills several of
the criteria required of a neurotrophic factor.
We have designed experiments to determine the effect of LIF on neurite
growth of adult sensory neurons in vitro, to determine the
effect of conditioning injuries on neurite outgrowth in the absence or
presence of LIF signaling, and the ability of LIF to rescue the
phenotype of damaged sensory neurons in vivo. We identify LIF as an injury-induced conditioning factor capable of mediating the
elongation phase of sensory neuron regeneration in vitro, and therefore, is essential for normal regeneration of injured sensory
neurons in vivo.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Neuronal cultures. Adult homozygous LIF / and
LIF+/+ mice and 28-d-old male Wistar rats were used in this study. The
strain of LIF knock-out (KO) mice used in this study was that of
Steward et al. (1992) intermittently backcrossed to maintain viability [(C57BL6xBALB/C) × (CBA/CaxC57BL6J)]. Animals of either sex
were used in all experiments because sexually dimorphic alterations within the sciatic nerve after injury have not been reported (Sugiura et al., 2000 ). The left sciatic nerve of LIF / and +/+ mice
(n = 8) was axotomized at mid-thigh level, 14 d
before culture. DRG cells were isolated from both rats and mice using
identical techniques. Ganglia were removed from L4 and L5 spinal levels
from anesthetized animals, cleared of connective tissue, and chemically
dissociated in 0.125% collagenase for 1.5 hr at 37°C in 5%
CO2. The ganglia were mechanically dissociated by
gentle trituration in 1 ml of modified Bottenstein and Sato's medium
(BS; serum free) in Ham's F-12 (Life Technologies, Gaithersburg,
MD) then centrifuged through 15% BSA at 600 rpm for 6 min.
Dissociated neurons were resuspended in
Ca2+- and
Mg2+-free HBSS (Life Technologies),
containing 50 µg/ml DNase (type I; Sigma, Poole, UK) and 250 µg/ml
soybean trypsin inhibitor (type II; Sigma) and diluted in BS to a final
concentration of 1500-2500 cells/ml. Cells were cultured under the
following conditions. BS alone (control) or BS supplemented with one or
more of the following factors: NGF (10 ng/ml), trkA-IgG (100 ng/ml;
Genentech, San Francisco, CA), LIF (100 pg and 100 ng/ml; a gift from
A. Vernallis, University of Aston, UK), and recombinant human
LIF (rhLIF)-05 (100 ng/ml, gift from A. Vernallis). Cells were
plated onto Lab-Tek (Nunc, Fisher Scientific, Loughborough, UK)
chamber slides coated with poly-L-lysine (2 mg/ml; Sigma) and Englebreth-Holm-Swarm laminin (10 µg/ml;
Sigma). Cultures were incubated for 18 hr at 37°C in a humidified
atmosphere containing 5% CO2. Salient
non-neuronal (Schwann) cells were identified by S100 immunoreactivity
(data not shown). Schwann cells are present at very low density and were found not to associated with neurons of any phenotype regardless of culture conditions. The fact that neurons cultured in control media
fail to extend neurites indicates the inability of these non-neuronal
cells to influence growth responses over the culture time period in the
present study.
Cell survival and viability assays. Cell counts were
performed 18 hr after plating to determine whether cells were being
lost or becoming nonviable during incubation period. Total cell numbers per well were determined. To determine cell survival, a Trypan Blue
exclusion assay was performed. Cells cultured under the above conditions were gently washed with warmed F-12 media and then incubated
for 5 min in a 0.4% solution of Trypan Blue (Sigma). The cells were
subsequently washed three times with F-12 before counting under a light
microscope. Cells demonstrating dye uptake were classed as nonviable.
Immunohistochemistry. Cells were fixed with 4% ice-cold
paraformaldehyde solution for 15 min, then permeabilized with methanol at 20°C for 3 min. Monoclonal antibodies against GAP-43
(1:1000; a gift G. Wilkin) or (III)tubulin
(1:1000; Sigma) were used as pan neuronal markers. To identify
specific neuronal subpopulations, antibodies against N52
(1:4000; Sigma), P2X3 (1:500; a gift Roche Bioscience), or CGRP (1:8000; Sigma) were used. Cells were
incubated with a combination of primary antibodies for 4 hr, then
incubated for 1 hr with appropriate Cy3- and FITC-conjugated secondary
antibodies. All incubations were conducted at room temperature.
Four parameters of cell growth were assessed: percentage of
neurite-bearing neurons, neurochemical phenotype of neurite-bearing cells, length of longest neurite, and density of dendritic growth around the soma. Soma that extended neurites greater than two cell body
diameters were classified as process-bearing neurons. Length of longest
neurite and density of dendritic growth were measured from digitized
images acquired from a CCD camera (model FA87; Grundig, UK)
using a frame grabber (DT2876; Data Translation, Marlboro, MA) and
quantified using an image analysis program (SigmaScan 4.01.003; SPSS,
Chicago, IL). For measurements of dendritic density, neurite-bearing cells had their fluorescence set to a threshold, thereby eliminating variations in staining intensity. Over the dichrome
image, two axes of uniform width were superimposed on opposite sides of
the soma (random axis) extending along the entire neurite length.
Average fluorescence intensity along each axis was plotted against
distance. This provided a measure of mean fluorescence intensity
(neurite density) in relation to distance from the cell body.
Animal surgery: mice. Anesthetized (sodium pentobarbital; 50 mg/kg, i.p.) adult LIF+/+ (n = 4) and LIF /
(n = 6) mice of both sexes underwent a unilateral crush
injury of the sciatic nerve at midthigh level. The nerve was crushed
with the tips of watchmakers forceps protected by a SILASTIC cuff (10 sec). Two days later the sciatic nerve was re-exposed, and 0.2 µl of
2% wheat germ agglutinin (WGA) was injected midpoint between the DRG
and crush site. After 24 hr animals were reanesthetized and transcardially perfused with heparinized saline followed by 4% paraformaldehyde. Ipsilateral sciatic nerves and L4 and L5 DRGs were
removed, post-fixed for 2 hr, and cryoprotected overnight in 20%
sucrose at 4°C. Longitudinal sections of frozen sciatic nerve
(30-µm-thick) were cut and thaw mounted. Double immunostaining was
performed using anti-GAP-43 (1:2000) and anti-WGA (20 µg/ml; Vector
Laboratories, UK). Sections were incubated with primary antibodies overnight at 4°C, then incubated with appropriate
tetramethyl rhodamine isothiocyanate (TRITC)- and
FITC-conjugated secondary antibodies (1:100; Jackson ImmunoResearch,
West Grove, PA) for 1 hr at room temperature. Nerve sections were
visualized and acquired from a CCD camera (Hamamatsu, Tokyo, Japan)
using a frame grabber (DT2876; Data Translation, Marlboro, MA). Digital
images were quantified using an image analysis program (SigmaScan
4.01.003; SPSS).
Animal surgery: rats. Adult male Wistar rats (200-250 gm)
underwent unilateral axotomy of either sciatic or tibial nerves combined with intrathecal infusion of either vehicle (saline) or LIF.
Peripheral nerves were exposed under sodium pentobarbital (50 mg/kg,
i.p.) anesthesia and ligated at midthigh level. Concurrently a small
laminectomy was performed at T11/T12, and a SILASTIC tube (0.6 mm outer
diameter) was inserted intrathecally so that its tip lay approximately
adjacent to the L2/3 of the DRG. Its exterior end was attached to an
osmotic minipump (type 2002; mean pumping rate, 0.55 µl/hr; Alzet;
Alza, Palo Alto, CA) filled with either saline (n = 11)
or rhLIF (0.33 mg/ml; n = 7). Electrophysiological analysis was performed on three groups of animals: a naive group (n = 4) in which the tibial nerve was intact with an
intrathecal cannula infusing saline, a group in which the tibial nerve
was cut 2 weeks earlier with an intrathecal cannula infusing saline (n = 4), and a group with tibial nerve axotomy and an
intrathecal cannula infusing rhLIF (3.96 µg/d; n = 4). Immunohistochemical analysis of CRGP-IR was performed on two groups
of animals: a group in which the sciatic nerve was cut with an
intrathecal cannula infusing saline (n = 3) and a group
with sciatic nerve axotomy and an intrathecal cannula infusing rhLIF
(3.96 µg/d; n = 3). Two weeks after axotomy animals
were perfused with 4% paraformaldehyde as previously described.
Ipsilateral and contralateral L4 and L5 DRGs were removed, post-fixed
for 2 hr, and cryoprotected overnight at 4°C in 20% sucrose. Serial
sections of frozen DRG were cut at a thickness of 15 µm and mounted
onto slides. Sections were incubated with anti-CGRP (1:4000; Affiniti)
then TRITC-conjugated anti-rabbit IgG (1:200; Jackson ImmunoResearch).
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RESULTS |
LIF does not initiate neurite growth in DRG cultures
First, we have examined the components of neurite outgrowth in
cultures of adult rat DRG neurons. The appearance of adult rat DRG
cultures has been previously well described (Lindsay, 1988 ; Hu-Tsai et
al., 1994 ). Acutely dissociated adult mammalian sensory neurons survive
in vitro in the absence of serum or exogenous growth factors
(Lindsay, 1988 ; Mulderry, 1994 ; Gavazzi et al., 1999 ) for periods of up
to 2.5 months (Sosa et al., 1998 ). Using a Trypan blue exclusion cell
viability assay, we also show that after 18 hr in vitro in
serum-free cultures, the vast majority of neurons are viable at this
time point (Table 1). Regardless of
culture conditions, there was no significant difference in the
percentage of neurons displaying dye uptake (Table 1). Terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated biotinylated UTP nick end labeling staining of cell cultures also failed to demonstrate significant cell death after 18 hr in culture in any culture condition (data not shown).
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Table 1.
Cell survival and viability data for sensory neurons
isolated from adult rats, LIF+/+, and LIF / mice cultured for 18 hr
in the presence or absence of trophic factors
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After an initial quiescent period of 24 hr, adult sensory neurons
initiate neurite outgrowth (Smith and Skene, 1997 ). We have used this
window of quiescence to assess the growth-promoting activity of
exogenous LIF. The addition of exogenous LIF alone (1 pg to 100 ng/ml;
18 hr) failed to alter the percentage of neurons extending neurites
compared with control medium (7.7 ± 3.6 vs 5.6 ± 0.8%,
respectively) (Figs.
1B,
2E). In contrast, NGF
(10 ng/ml; 6 and 18 hr) initiated neurite outgrowth in 44.3 ± 3.3% of cells (Fig. 1C-E). The addition of LIF (1 pg to
100 ng/ml) in combination with NGF (10 ng/ml) did not significantly
alter the percentage of neurite-bearing cells when compared with the effects of NGF alone (43.3 ± 3.4%) (Fig.
1E,F). LIF was therefore unable to influence the percentage of neurite-bearing cells either alone or in combination with NGF.

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Figure 1.
LIF does not initiate neuronal sprouting or
influence the population of rat sensory neurons that respond to NGF.
Dark-field photomicrographs of cultured adult sensory neurons showing
immunofluorescence for (III)tubulin. a, Naive, adult
rat sensory neurons in serum-free conditions and absence of trophic
factors do not sprout within the 18 hr culture period.
b, LIF alone (100 pg/ml) did not initiate growth after
18 hr in culture. c, d, NGF (10 ng/ml), for either the
entire culture period (18 hr) or the first 6 hr only, significantly
increased the percentage of neurite-bearing sensory neurons when
assessed at the 18 hr time point (p < 0.05;
ANOVA). There was no significant difference in the percentage of
neurite-bearing sensory neurons after 18 hr exposure to NGF compared
with 6 hr exposure (e). There was no further
significant change in the percentage of neurite-bearing sensory neurons
in the presence of NGF (10 ng/ml; 18 hr) plus LIF (100 pg/ml; 18 hr)
(e, f).
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Figure 2.
LIF induces neurite elongation in
NGF-primed cells. Dark-field photomicrographs of cultured adult sensory
neurons showing immunofluorescence for (III)tubulin.
a, Rat DRG neurons exposed to NGF alone (10 ng/ml) for
18 hr display characteristically dense neurite outgrowth. Neurons
exposed to NGF alone for 6 hr also display the same characteristic
outgrowth with no significant difference in mean neurite radius.
b, DRG neurons grown in NGF (10 ng/ml) for 6 hr and then
exposed to LIF (100 pg/ml) for the remaining period of culture showed a
dramatic change in neurite morphology and significant increase in
neurite length at 18 hr compared with the effect of NGF alone.
c, Graph shows mean neurite length after 18 hr in the
presence of NGF (10 ng/ml), NGF (10 ng/ml) plus LIF (100 pg/ml), and
NGF (10 ng/ml) plus LIF (100 pg/ml) plus hLIF-05 (100 ng/ml). Neurite
length after LIF supplementation was significantly increased compared
with the effect of NGF alone (*p < 0.01;
Student's t test). This effect was prevented by
hLIF-05. d, Plot of neurite density with respect to
distance from cell body of cells treated with NGF (10 ng/ml), NGF (10 ng/ml) plus LIF (100 pg/ml), or NGF (10 ng/ml) plus LIF (100 pg/ml)
plus hLIF-05 (100 ng/ml). There was a significant difference in the
distance at which neurite density fell to half maximum value between
NGF-treated groups and those treated with NGF plus LIF
(p < 0.05; ANOVA). The elongating effect of
LIF was prevented by inclusion of hLIF-05. Arrows
represent the distance at which mean density fell to zero in NGF plus
LIF-treated group. Each curve represents mean values from 40 cells from
a minimum of three cultures.
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LIF induces neurite elongation in NGF-primed cells
Despite the inability of LIF to initiate arborization, LIF
dramatically restructured neurite morphology of NGF-primed sensory neurons. In the presence of NGF alone (10 ng/ml; 18 hr), a dense neuritic halo extended from the cell bodies (mean radius, 249 ± 25 µm; n = 42) (Fig.
2A,C). The addition of LIF (1 pg to
100 ng/ml; 12 hr) to cells exposed to NGF (10 ng/ml) resulted in
dramatic neurite restructuring. Neurite length was significantly
enhanced compared with the effect of NGF alone (mean radius, 428 ± 13 µm; n = 30) (Fig.
2B,C). We have demonstrated that
LIF-induced elongation does not require the continued presence of NGF,
because inclusion of the NGF sequestering antibody trkA-IgG (100 ng/ml; 12 hr) after an initial priming period (NGF 10 ng/ml; 6 hr) did
not prevent the enhanced neurite elongation. Neurite elongation was
however inhibited by rhLIF05 (100 ng/ml), resulting in a morphology
similar to that observed with NGF alone (10 ng/ml; 161 ± 9 vs
249 ± 24 µm; n = 42) (Fig. 2C),
confirming LIF, and not NGF, to be a neurite-elongation factor. Mean
neurite density was assessed in each treatment group. There was a
significant difference in the distance at which neurite density fell to
50% of its maximum value between neurons treated with NGF alone
(113 ± 10 µm; n = 10) and those supplemented
with NGF plus LIF (69 ± 15 µm; n = 10; ANOVA)
(Fig. 2D).
Neurochemical phenotype of sprouting DRG neurons
in vitro
Polyclonal antibodies against the sensory neuropeptide CGRP (Fig.
3A), the purinoreceptor
P2X3 (Fig. 3B), and the heavy chain neurofilament protein N52 (Fig. 3C) were used as markers for
nonpeptidergic small-diameter, peptidergic small-diameter, and
large-diameter cells, respectively, to specifically identify three main
groups of neurochemically distinct neurons within the DRG. Figure
3D shows the percentage of neurite-bearing cells expressing
each marker. In the presence of NGF alone (10 ng/ml; 18 hr) 65 ± 8% of neurite-bearing cells were CGRP-IR. In the presence of NGF plus
LIF (6 hr NGF + 12 hr LIF), 69 ± 2% of neurite-bearing cells were CGRP-IR. In contrast, the percentage of neurite-bearing cells that
were P2X3-IR or N52-IR after exposure to NGF or
NGF plus LIF was very low (12 ± 1 and 4 ± 1%,
respectively) (Fig. 3D). The effect of LIF on neurite
elongation is therefore confined to small-diameter sensory neurons that
express the sensory neuropeptide CGRP, respond to NGF, and are
considered to be nociceptive in function.

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Figure 3.
DRG neurons that extend neurites in the presence
of NGF and LIF predominantly express CGRP. a-c, Dual
immunofluorescence photomicrographs showing immunoreactivity for
-III tubulin (red) and CGRP
(a), P2X3 (b),
or N52 (c, green). Cells and dendrites expressing
both markers appear yellow. Neurons have been cultured
for 18 hr in NGF plus LIF. a, A yellow cell body and
neurites reveal costaining for both CGRP and neurite growth.
b, Cells expressing P2X3 and N52
(c) also express neurofilament and are therefore
yellow. However, they do not display neurite growth.
d, Graph showing the percentage of neurite-bearing cells
that are immunopositive for one of the three cell markers after
supplementation with NGF alone or NGF plus LIF. The majority of neurons
extending neurites in the presence of NGF plus LIF are immunoreactive
for CGRP.
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The effect of conditioning nerve injuries is impaired in LIF
knock-out mice
Our data describing the effects of exogenous LIF suggests that
this cytokine may be responsible for elongating neurite growth, a
particular growth mode that is representative of an enhanced growth
status. To assess whether LIF is responsible for the enhanced growth
capacity of adult sensory neurons that follows a conditioning nerve
injury, we compared the extent of neurite elongation after 18 hr in
culture between LIF+/+ and LIF / mice 2 weeks after a previous
sciatic nerve axotomy in vivo. In the absence of trophic factors and in serum-free conditions, sensory neurons from naive (unconditioned) LIF+/+ or LIF / DRG failed to exhibit neurite outgrowth (Fig.
4A,B,G). In
contrast, neurons from preconditioned LIF+/+ and LIF / mice
exhibited neurite outgrowth within this 18 hr period (Fig.
4C,D,G). Neurite outgrowth from preconditioned LIF / sensory neurons, however, was significantly impaired in comparison to preconditioned LIF+/+ neurons (793 ± 122 vs
1352 ± 175 µm; n = 4; respectively) (Fig.
5G) (*p < 0.05, t test). The addition of LIF (100 pg/ml) to
preconditioned LIF / sensory neurons significantly rescued the
impaired neurite elongation (preconditioned LIF / , 793 ± 122 µm vs preconditioned LIF / plus LIF, 1427 ± 82 µm;
#p < 0.05) (Figs. 4F,
5G). Restoration of neurite elongation was prevented
by inclusion of rh-LIF05 (100 ng/ml) (749 ± 64 µm, data not
shown). rhLIF05 is a synthetic LIF molecule that binds LIFR- in
nonsignaling complexes (Vernallis et al., 1997 ). rh-LIF05 had no
influence on neurite length of preconditioned LIF+/+ DRG neurons (data
not shown) nor was there any further effect of LIF on neurite length in
preconditioned LIF+/+ DRG cells (Fig.
4E,G).

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Figure 4.
Enhanced, injury-induced neurite elongation is
absent in LIF / mice. a, b, Naive, LIF+/+, and
LIF / mouse adult sensory neurons in serum-free conditions and
absence of trophic factors do not display growth responses within the
18 hr culture period. c, Neurite elongation is
significantly enhanced after 18 hr in culture in DRG neurons from
LIF+/+ mice subject to a conditioning sciatic axotomy 2 weeks before
culture. d, Neurite elongation in cells from LIF /
mice after conditioning sciatic injury is significantly reduced
compared with wild-type growth. There was a significant difference
between length of the longest neurite in LIF+/+ and LIF / mice under
these conditions (g, no factors preconditioned
+/+ vs no factors preconditioned / ; *p < 0.05;
t test). f, Addition of LIF (100 pg/ml)
to neuronal cultures for 18 hr restored the effect of preconditioning
in LIF / mice. Compared with the effect of conditioning alone, there
was a significant increase in neuronal length (g;
/ preconditioning no factors vs / preconditioning plus LIF;
#p < 0.05; t test). e,
g, Supplementation of LIF (100 pg/ml) to preconditioned LIF+/+
DRG neurons for 18 hr did not further enhance neurite outgrowth. The
effect of a previous nerve lesion was partially mimicked in naive DRG
neurons from both LIF+/+ and LIF / mice by the addition of NGF (10 ng/ml). Mean neurite length was lower, however, in both LIF+/+ and
LIF / mice (518 ± 60 and 494 ± 50 µm, respectively)
compared with preconditioned sensory neurons from both genotypes
(g). Addition of NGF (10 ng/ml) plus LIF (100 pg/ml) to naive sensory neurons further enhanced neurite elongation in
both genotypes (LIF+/+ and LIF / ; 906 ± 79 and 782 ± 100 µm, respectively; g, ##, **), compared with the effect
of NGF alone. However, addition of NGF plus LIF failed to fully
recapitulate the effect of previous nerve injury on neurite elongation
in either genotype.
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Figure 5.
Peripheral nerve regeneration is
retarded in LIF / mice in vivo. Immunofluorescence
photomicrographs of sciatic nerves 3 d after complete nerve crush
from LIF+/+ (a-d) and LIF / (e-h)
mice. Site of nerve crush is indicated by dark-field inserts (b,
f) distal to the left. In LIF+/+ mice, GAP-43 antibody
reveals regenerating axons penetrating into the distal nerve segment
(a). A proportion of these fibers also display
immunoreactivity for anterogradely transported WGA
(c). The ratio of distance achieved by
WGA-transporting to GAP-43-IR fibers is close to unity.
Arrowheads indicate double-labeled nerve fascicles.
Retrograde transport of WGA to L5 DRG confirms that WGA-IR axons arise
from small-diameter neuronal profiles (d).
GAP-43-IR fibers also penetrate into distal nerve segment in LIF /
mice (e). In contrast to LIF+/+ mice, the growth
of WGA-transporting fibers is significantly retarded in LIF / mice
(h). Arrowheads indicate WGA-IR
fascicles. WGA-transport is unimpaired in LIF / mice
(g). WGA-IR is detected within the L5 DRG,
several millimeters proximal to the injection site. Examination of DRG
sections also confirmed that WGA-transporting fibers in LIF / mice
also arise predominantly from small-diameter neuronal profiles within
the DRG.
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Addition of NGF (10 ng/ml) partially mimicked the effect of a previous
nerve lesion by inducing neurite arborization in naive DRG neurons from
both LIF+/+ and LIF / mice. Mean neurite length was lower however in
LIF+/+ and LIF / mice (518 ± 60 and 494 ± 50 µm,
respectively) (Fig. 4G) compared with preconditioned sensory
neurons from both genotypes. Addition of NGF (10 ng/ml) plus LIF (100 pg/ml) significantly enhanced neurite elongation in both LIF+/+ and
LIF / mice (906 ± 79 and 782 ± 100 µm, respectively; ##, ** p < 0.05) (Fig. 4G), compared with
the effect of NGF alone. Addition of NGF plus LIF however failed to
totally recapitulate the effect of previous nerve injury on neurite
elongation. The synergistic effect of LIF on neurite outgrowth was
negated by rhLIF-05 (100 ng/ml) in both LIF+/+ and LIF / mice
(508 ± 76 and 399 ± 49 µm, respectively) (Fig.
4G). These results suggest that LIF promotes a distinct
phase of neurite elongation that manifests as a change in growth status
of sensory neurons observed after conditioning injury.
Sensory neuron survival and viability in
vitro is not impaired in LIF / mice
Our data regarding the failure of neurite outgrowth after injury
in LIF / mice may represent a lack of relative survival or viability
of sensory neurons from these animals in vitro. To determine
whether sensory neurons cultured from LIF / mice survive as well as
those from LIF+/+ we have determined cell counts in LIF / and LIF+/+
mice, in the presence or absence of LIF. We have also assayed cell
viability in each group after 18 hr with Trypan blue exclusion. After
18 hr in culture, average LIF / sensory neuron counts were not
significantly different between LIF-containing (100 nM) or LIF-excluding cultures (Table 1). Neither
were these values significantly different from similar cultures from
LIF+/+ mice (Table 1). Trypan blue exclusion demonstrated equal
viability across all genotype and culture conditions. Regardless of
culture conditions there was no significant difference in the percentage of neurons displaying dye uptake (Table 1). These data
indicate equal survival and viability of sensory neurons in LIF /
and LIF+/+ mice and suggest that lack of neurite outgrowth is not
attributable to these factors in LIF / mice.
Peripheral nerve regeneration is impaired in LIF / mice
in vivo
We have further assessed the role of LIF in regeneration of
injured peripheral axons in vivo. We have used WGA to
determine the rate of sensory neuron regeneration across a crush injury to the sciatic nerve in LIF+/+ and LIF / mice. WGA is anterogradely and retrogradely transported predominantly by unmyelinated fibers (Swett and Woolf, 1985 ). Three days after injury WGA-IR fibers were
visible proximal to the crush site in both LIF+/+ and LIF / mice
(Fig. 5B,F). In all LIF+/+
mice the WGA-IR fibers penetrated through the crush site into the
distal nerve stump (Fig. 5C). In contrast, in LIF / mice
WGA-IR fibers failed to penetrate beyond the crush site (Fig.
5H). WGA transport was unimpaired in LIF / mice
because robust retrograde transport to the DRG was observed several
millimeters proximal to the injection site (Fig. 5G).
Examination of DRG sections also confirmed that the regenerating fibers
in these experiments arose predominantly from small-diameter profiles
within the DRG (Fig. 5G). The regenerating peripheral nerve
was co-stained with anti-GAP-43. GAP-43 is a developmentally regulated
protein that is upregulated in all regenerating neurons. GAP-43-IR
neurites were observed in both LIF+/+ and LIF / mice penetrating
through and beyond the crush site into the distal nerve stump (Fig.
5A,E). There was a significant
difference in the ratio of distance achieved by WGA transporting to
GAP-43-IR fibers in LIF+/+ mice (0.9 ± 0.03; n = 5) compared with LIF / mice (0.29 ± 0.01; n = 4). These data indicate that regeneration of WGA-transporting sensory
neurons was significantly retarded in LIF / mice.
LIF is protective for CGRP expressing C-fibers after adult rat
sciatic nerve injury
Finally we assessed the ability of exogenous LIF to ameliorate
axotomy-induced changes in sensory neurons. LIF (0.33 µg/ml; n = 4) or saline vehicle (n = 4) was
delivered intrathecally for 2 weeks after axotomy of the tibial nerve
of adult Wistar rats. In intact animals, the conduction velocities
(CVs) of myelinated fibers are uniformly distributed between 10 and 60 m/sec, and the CVs of unmyelinated fibers are distributed between 0.5 and 2.0 m/sec. These distributions are plotted as cumulative sum plots (Fig.
6A,B).
After axotomy there is typically a decrease in CV because of
alterations in ion channel and neurofilament expression. In axotomized
animals treated with saline, both groups of sensory fibers showed
significant decreases in CV (shown as a shift to the left;
p < 0.05; Kolmogorov-Smirnov; n = 4)
(Fig. 6A,B). LIF did not prevent the decrease in the
CV of the myelinated fibers (Fig. 6A) but completely
prevented the reduction in CVs of the unmyelinated fibers
(p < 0.05 compared with vehicle-treated group; Kolmogorov-Smirnov; n = 4) (Fig.
6B).

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|
Figure 6.
LIF is protective in vivo against
injury-induced electrophysiological and neurochemical changes in DRG
neurons. The CVs of A-fibers (a) and C-fibers
(b) were measured by electrical stimulation of
the axotomized peripheral nerve and recording and averaging electrical
activity in strands of the L4 or L5 dorsal root. Animals were treated
continuously for 2 weeks with intrathecal saline or LIF (0.33 µg/ml).
Cumulative sum (cusum) plots were constructed showing the average CV
distributions from groups of three to five animals. Axotomy results in
the slowing in conduction velocity of both fast conducting A-fibers
(a) and slowly conducting C-fibers
(b) shown as a shift to the left of the cusum
plots (Axotomy+Sal.). Intrathecal administration of LIF
completely prevented the drop in C-fiber CVs, whereas it was completely
ineffective in preventing the fall in A-fiber CVs after axotomy
(Axotomy+LIF). Axotomy also results in the loss
of CGRP immunoreactivity from cell bodies within the DRG
(c, Saline; intact vs 14 d axotomy).
Continuous intrathecal administration of LIF completely prevented the
loss of CGRP-IR from sensory neuron cell bodies within the DRG, 14 d after peripheral nerve injury. d, The percentage of
CGRP-immunoreactive profiles within the L4 and L5 DRG was significantly
different 2 weeks after nerve injury and after treatment with saline
vehicle (*p < 0.01; t test;
n = 4). There was no significant difference in the
percentage of CGRP-IR profiles 2 weeks after nerve injury in those
animals treated continuously with intrathecal LIF compared with
nerve-intact controls.
|
|
The expression of the sensory neuropeptide CGRP in the DRG was assessed
2 weeks after sciatic nerve axotomy and continuous intrathecal delivery
of LIF or saline. Vehicle-treated animals displayed a significant
decrease in the percentage of CGRP-IR-positive profiles compared with
control uninjured ganglia (31 ± 1% ipsilateral vs 55 ± 3%
contralateral; n = 3; p < 0.05;
Students t test) (Fig. 6C,D). In
contrast, there was no significant difference between the percentage of
CGRP-IR-positive profiles within axotomized ganglia in those animals
treated with intrathecal LIF compared with contralateral uninjured
DRGs (42 ± 3% ipsilateral vs 48 ± 2% contralateral;
n = 3; p < 0.05; unpaired
t test). Importantly, a significant difference was present
between the percentage of CGRP-IR-positive profiles within
saline-treated axotomy group compared with the LIF-treated axotomy
group (31 ± 0.5% saline group vs 42 ± 3% LIF group;
n = 3; p < 0.05; unpaired t
test). This effect of LIF was limited to the CGRP-expressing
subpopulation of DRG neurons. Fluoride-resistant acid phosphatase
(FRAP) is an enzyme present within nonpeptide-expressing sensory
neurons and is depleted after axotomy. FRAP activity was depleted 2 weeks after peripheral nerve injury equally in both vehicle and
LIF-treated animals (24 ± 2% ipsilateral vs 42 ± 1%
contralateral, vehicle-treated; 24 ± 5% ipsilateral vs 46 ± 1% contralateral, LIF-treated; data not shown). LIF is therefore
able to rescue axotomy-induced functional and phenotypic changes within
the peptidergic, unmyelinated sensory neurons.
 |
DISCUSSION |
LIF promotes a distinct "elongation" phase of axon growth in
injured adult sensory neurons
In the developing nervous system, LIF supports the survival of
embryonic sympathetic, motor, and sensory neurons (Ernsberger et al.,
1989 ; Martinou et al., 1992 ; Murphy et al., 1993 , 1997 ; Cheema et al.,
1994 ) In our current study it is important to distinguish this survival
effect from true growth responses in our adult cultures in
vitro. We have shown that the percentage of adult rat sensory neurons surviving and remaining viable after 18 hr in vitro
is identical in serum-free and LIF-treated cultures. We have also shown
that there was no difference in the percentage of neurons expressing
the markers CGRP, P2X3, and N52 between culture
conditions, suggesting that the three main groups of neurochemically
distinct rat sensory neurons are present and approximate to the
distribution found in vivo (Gavazzi et al., 1999 ).
Furthermore, we have also shown that there is no impaired survival or
lack of viability of sensory neurons grown from adult LIF / mice.
Therefore, although studies have demonstrated that LIF may regulate
sensory neuron survival in developing systems (Murphy et al., 1993 ,
1997 ), we suggest that our study with fully differentiated adult
neurons represents true growth-promoting effects rather than survival or viability issues.
In the adult nervous system, distinct phases of axon growth are now
considered to exist. When observed in vitro, two distinct modes of axon outgrowth have been described for adult sensory neurons.
First, an arborizing neurite growth characterized by highly branched
processes with limited linear extension. This is followed by an
elongating regenerative growth phase (Smith and Skene, 1997 ). These
differing forms of growth may have different trophic factor
requirements. Our data confirm previous in vitro reports
that initial neurite sprouting is neurotrophin-dependent (Mohiuddin et
al., 1994 ; Gavazzi et al., 1999 ). Our data are also in line with
evidence from in vivo studies illustrating that collateral branching of sensory neuron terminals, considered analogous to arborizing neurite growth in vitro, is dependent on NGF
(Diamond et al., 1992a ,b ). Other factors are likely to be involved in
long axon extension. Elegant studies using double knock-out mice for NGF/Bax or trkA/Bax, for example, suggest that extension of central processes of DRG axons into dorsal roots takes place in the absence of
NGF signaling (Patel et al. 2000 ). In our study the elongating phase of
neurite extension also continued in the absence of NGF signaling. Again
this is consistent with work in vivo whereby, regenerative
long-axon growth of injured peripheral neurons, considered analogous to
elongating growth in vitro, is independent of NGF (Diamond
et al., 1992a ,b ). This type of growth represents a switch to a rapid
growth mode and depends on novel gene transcription (Smith and Skene,
1997 ). The notion of NGF-dependent and -independent components of
neurite outgrowth is also supported from studies using long-term
compartmentalized culture systems (Kimpinski et al., 1997 ). Under these
circumstances the regrowth and arborization of severed neurites was
strongly supported by NGF, however neurite extension into distal
compartments proceeded in neurotrophin-free conditions. In our present
experiments, neurite elongation continued in the presence of LIF and
specific NGF sequestering antibodies supporting the notion that LIF was
acting directly on sensory neurons and not via the production of NGF by
neurons or nonneuronal cells. Although other possible regulators of
sensory axon elongation and branching are known (e.g., Slit2; Wang et
al., 1999 ), the present study has provided direct evidence that the
injury-associated cytokine LIF may be responsible for this elongating
phase of neurite extension. An effect of LIF on neuronal morphology has
been observed in the sympathetic nervous system and within the CNS (Guo
et al., 1997 ; Gadient et al., 1998 , 1999 ).
Conditioning-injury-induced growth is impaired in
LIF / mice
It has been known for many years that conditioning lesions enhance
the regeneration of peripheral nerves (McQuarrie and Grafstein, 1973 ).
To clinically exploit this response we clearly need to understand the
mechanisms underlying the phenomenon. Conditioning injuries enhance
growth by increasing the intrinsic growth status of the sensory neuron.
Our study has shown that this increase in growth status is blunted in
LIF / mice. Assuming the elongating phase of neurite growth in
vitro represents such an augmented growth phase, then again we
have data showing that LIF plays an important role in this neurite
extension phase. By what process is injury to a peripheral nerve
translated into enhanced growth status of the cell body? Damaged axons
are exposed to wide range of positive and negative regulatory signals
as they attempt regrowth. Exposure to this environment produces
enhanced rates of neurite growth (Chong et al., 1996 ; Lankford et al.,
1998 ; Sugiura et al., 2000 ). On the other hand, disruption of axon
transport was shown to be adequate for enhanced elongating growth,
albeit at a reduced level (Smith and Skene, 1997 ). Taken together with
data presented in the present study, these studies suggest that a
combination of reduced retrograde supply of target-derived trophic
factor(s) together with novel, injury-induced factor(s), regulate
elongating sensory neuron growth. These conditions are met after
conditioning nerve injuries. Previous exposure therefore, of sensory
neuron cell bodies to a lesion factor in vivo, is required
for elongating growth in vitro. Hence, the LIF sequestering
protein hLIF-05 failed to reduce the enhanced growth of sensory neurons
from wild-type mice in vitro after preconditioning in
vivo. This suggests that the responsible factor was not present at
the time of the culture conditions but that cell bodies had been
exposed to a retrogradely transported factor during the injury period
in vivo. This factor appears absent in LIF / mice.
Further support for a lesion-induced factor comes from other work
showing that in vivo-injured segments of sciatic nerve
promoted DRG axonal outgrowth in vitro far better if injured
nerve segments were from wild-type and not LIF KO mice (Ekström
et al., 2000 ). Using a different in vitro system and a
longer time point at which neurite outgrowth was assessed, this latter
study suggested that LIF deletion had no consequences for outgrowth
after conditioning nerve lesions. After several days growth in culture,
we and others (Lankford et al., 1998 ), find that differences between
conditioned and control cultures become blurred. Because the effect of
conditioning is to advance the timing and rate of neurite outgrowth
into a very early postplating period, we chose to analyze growth at
this time point and have demonstrated an effect of LIF deletion on
neurite elongation at this time. The putative role of LIF in neurite
elongation is entirely compatible with its known properties. Normally
absent from the PNS, LIFmRNA expression is
increased at the site of peripheral nerve injury (Sun and Zigmond,
1996 ), by dedifferentiating Schwann cells (Banner and Patterson, 1994 ).
It is retrogradely transported by sensory neurons (Hendry et al., 1992 ;
Thompson et al., 1997 ) and the degree of this transport regulated by
nerve injury (Curtis et al., 1994 ). LIF accumulates in sensory neurons
within the DRG (Thompson et al., 1997 ) and is capable of altering gene
transcription (Sun and Zigmond, 1996 ).
LIF may also have a role in the inflammatory component of peripheral
injury, and two studies have used LIF null mutant mice to investigate
this role (Banner et al., 1998 ; Sugiura et al., 2000 ). While showing
conflicting results, LIF appears proinflammatory in the injured sciatic
nerve (Sugiura et al., 2000 ). Therefore the infiltration of
inflammatory cells into the injured sciatic nerve, a process considered
beneficial to regeneration, is compromised in LIF KO mice (Sugiura et
al., 2000 ). It is a possibility that a component of the reduced
peripheral nerve regeneration observed in the present study is a result
of this impaired inflammatory response. On the other hand, our in
vitro data would suggest that the intrinsic growth state of
sensory neurons themselves is closely regulated by LIF.
Gp130 cytokines have potent trophic actions in the PNS
To date the trophic actions of gp130 cytokines has been mainly
confined to regeneration within the injured motor system (Arakawa et
al., 1990 ; Sahenk et al., 1994 ; Ulenkate et al., 1994 ; Hirota et al.,
1996 ; Newman et al., 1996 ; Tham et al., 1997 ; Zhong et al., 1999 ). Our
current study now provides evidence that LIF is a cornerstone for
regeneration of small-diameter sensory axons. These
neuropeptide-expressing neurons comprise ~50% of cells within adult
lumbar DRG and are likely to be nociceptors. Our data consistently points to the interaction of LIF with this population of adult sensory
neurons. Hence LIF promoted neurite growth in vitro,
specifically in neurons coexpressing CGRP, and exogenous LIF
in vivo ameliorated axotomy-induced CGRP loss and rescued
injury-associated conduction velocity decline in the slowest conduction
velocity group. These data are also consistent with previous reports
that LIF is retrogradely transported by small-diameter neurons in the
dorsal root ganglion that express trkA and CGRP (Thompson et al.,
1997 ).
Restoration of sensory function is an extremely desirable outcome of
peripheral nerve injury. Conditioning injury has been successfully
applied to promote regeneration of sensory axon branches across
barriers previously considered impassable (Richardson and Issa, 1984 ;
Richardson and Verge, 1986 , 1987 ; Neumann and Woolf, 1999 ). Our study
now demonstrates that the intrinsic growth status of sensory neurons
may be enhanced without previous injury.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received March 8, 2001; revised May 15, 2001; accepted May 31, 2001.
This work was supported by Action Research (United Kingdom) and by the
Cancer Research Campaign (London) . I.G. is in receipt of a Wellcome
Fellowship. W.B.J.C. is supported by the Biotechnology and Biological
Sciences Research Council and GlaxoSmithKline. We thank Dr. M. S. Ramer for analysis suggestions and Dr. A. Vernallis for recombinant LIF
and LIF-05 and K. Faulkner for expert maintenance of LIF / colony.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr S. W. N. Thompson,
Centre for Neuroscience Research, First Floor Hodgkin Building, Guy's
Hospital, King's College London, London SE1 1UL, UK. E-mail: Stephen.W.Thompson{at}kcl.ac.uk.
 |
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