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The Journal of Neuroscience, October 15, 2001, 21(20):8082-8090
Late-Onset Corticohippocampal Neurodepletion Attributable to
Catastrophic Failure of Oxidative Phosphorylation in MILON Mice
Lene
Sörensen1,
Mats
Ekstrand1,
José
P.
Silva1,
Eva
Lindqvist2,
Baoji
Xu3,
Pierre
Rustin4,
Lars
Olson2, and
Nils-Göran
Larsson1
1 Departments of Medical Nutrition and Biosciences,
Karolinska Institutet, Novum, Huddinge Hospital, S-141 86 Huddinge,
Sweden, 2 Department of Neuroscience, Retzius Laboratory,
Karolinska Institutet, S-171 77 Stockholm, Sweden,
3 Department of Physiology, Howard Hughes Medical
Institute, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco,
California 94143, and 4 Unite de Recherches sur les
Handicaps Genetiques de l'Enfant, Institut National de la Santé
et de la Recherche Médicale U393, Hôpital des Enfants
Malades, F-75015 Paris, France
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ABSTRACT |
We generated mitochondrial late-onset neurodegeneration (MILON)
mice with postnatal disruption of oxidative phosphorylation in
forebrain neurons. They develop normally and display no overt behavioral disturbances or histological changes during the first 5 months of life. The MILON mice display reduced levels of mitochondrial DNA and mitochondrial RNA from 2 and 4 months of age, respectively, and
severely respiratory chain-deficient neurons from 4 months of age.
Surprisingly, these respiratory chain-deficient neurons are viable for
at least 1 month without showing signs of neurodegeneration or major
induction of defenses against oxidative stress. Prolonged neuronal
respiratory chain deficiency is thus required for the induction of
neurodegeneration. Before developing neurological symptoms, MILON mice
show increased vulnerability to excitotoxic stress. We observed a
markedly enhanced sensitivity to excitotoxic challenge, manifest as an
abundance of terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated
biotinylated UTP nick end labeling (TUNEL) reactive cells after kainic
acid injection, in 4-month-old MILON mice, showing that respiratory
chain-deficient neurons are more vulnerable to stress. At ~5-5.5
months of age, MILON mice start to show signs of disease, followed by
death shortly thereafter. The debut of overt disease in MILON mice
coincides with onset of rapidly progressive neurodegeneration and
massive cell death in hippocampus and neocortex. This profound
neurodegenerative process is manifested as axonal degeneration,
gliosis, and abundant TUNEL-positive nuclei. The MILON mouse model
provides a novel and powerful tool for additional studies of the role
for respiratory chain deficiency in neurodegeneration and aging.
Key words:
mitochondria; respiratory chain; reactive
oxygen species; ROS; neurodegeneration; oxidative stress; apoptosis; oxidative phosphorylation; OXPHOS; cre-loxP; Tfam; mitochondrial transcription factor A; MILON; neocortex; hippocampus
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INTRODUCTION |
Deficient function of the
mitochondrial respiratory chain is increasingly recognized as an
important cause of neurodegeneration (Larsson and Clayton, 1995 ;
Larsson and Luft, 1999 ; Wallace, 1999 ). The respiratory chain is
located in the mitochondrial inner membrane, and it generates most of
the cellular ATP through the process of oxidative phosphorylation. The
respiratory chain consists of ~100 different polypeptides distributed
in five enzyme complexes, which are encoded by either nuclear or
mitochondrial genes. The mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) encodes 13 subunits
of respiratory chain complexes I, III, IV, and V, whereas nuclear DNA
encodes all of the remaining respiratory chain proteins and all
proteins needed for maintenance and expression of mtDNA. More than 50 point mutations and hundreds of rearrangements of mtDNA, as well as a
variety of nuclear gene mutations, have been found in patients with
mitochondrial disease (Larsson and Clayton, 1995 ; Larsson and Luft,
1999 ; Wallace, 1999 ). Mitochondrial dysfunction has also been
implicated in the pathogenesis of age-associated neurodegenerative
diseases, such as Parkinson's, Huntington's, and Alzheimer's
diseases, as well as in naturally occurring aging (Wallace, 1992 ).
Somatic mtDNA mutagenesis has been proposed to contribute to the aging
process by creating a vicious circle, in which such mutations impair
the synthesis of respiratory chain subunits and thus reduce respiratory chain function, leading to increased production of reactive oxygen species (ROS), which, in turn, additionally damages mtDNA.
We developed a system for tissue-specific inactivation of mtDNA
expression in the mouse by conditional knock-out of the nuclear mitochondrial transcription factor A gene (Tfam), which
encodes a mitochondrial protein necessary for transcription and
replication of mtDNA (Larsson et al., 1998 ). Previous reports from our
laboratory have established that animals homozygous for a
loxP-flanked Tfam allele
(TfamloxP/TfamloxP),
which also harbor a transgene directing tissue-specific expression of
bacteriophage P1 recombinase (cre), will develop a profound tissue-specific mtDNA depletion and respiratory chain deficiency (Wang
et al., 1999 ; Li et al., 2000 ; Silva et al., 2000 ). We demonstrated recently that decreased mtDNA expression in vivo is
associated with induction of antioxidant defenses and increased
apoptosis in Tfam knock-out mouse hearts (Wang et al.,
2001 ). There is a connection between respiratory chain deficiency, ROS
production, and apoptosis induction (Geromel et al., 2001 ), but the
molecular pathways are poorly understood. Correlative data
suggest that these processes are linked by unknown pathways and are
involved in the pathophysiology of various types of age-associated
neurodegeneration (Wallace, 1992 ). We now investigated this issue
further by postnatal disruption of Tfam in neurons of
hippocampus and neocortex to create mitochondrial late-onset
neurodegeneration (MILON) mice.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Matings and genotyping of transgenic animals.
TfamloxP/TfamloxP
mice of mixed genetic background (Larsson et al., 1998 ; Wang et al., 1999 ) were mated to +/CaMKII-cre mice (Xu et al., 2000 ).
Compound heterozygotes (+/TfamloxP,
+/CaMKII-cre) were identified and backcrossed to the
TfamloxP/TfamloxP
strain to generate MILON mice with the genotype
TfamloxP/TfamloxP,
+/CaMKII-cre. This mating gave rise to normal
litter sizes (mean litter size, 10.3 pups) with genotypes of the
expected Mendelian distribution (of 542 animals, the distribution was
as follows: TfamloxP/TfamloxP,
25.5%; +/TfamloxP,
+/CaMKII-cre, 26.6%; MILON, 23.2%; and
+/TfamloxP, 24.7%). The Tfam
genotype and the cre recombinase gene were identified at
weaning by PCR analyses (Larsson et al., 1998 ; Wang et al., 1999 ).
Animal studies were approved by the animal welfare ethics committee and
performed in compliance with Swedish law.
Southern, Northern, and Western blot analyses. Southern,
Northern, and Western blot analyses were performed as described
previously (Larsson et al., 1996 ). Phosphoimaging (BAS 1500; Fujifilm,
Toyko, Japan), and appropriate software (Image Gauge v3.41; Fujifilm) were used to measure relative levels of mtDNA and mitochondrial RNA
(mtRNA) in brain samples of neocortex and cerebellum from TfamloxP/TfamloxP;
+/TfamloxP, +/CaMKII-cre and
MILON animals of ages 1, 2, 4, and 6 months (n = 4-6).
The mtDNA levels were normalized to the nuclear 18S rRNA gene, whereas
the complete smear of mtRNA was normalized to 18S rRNA transcript
levels. Southern blots were also probed with Tfam cDNA to
calculate the relative Tfam gene recombination frequency, as
described previously (Wang et al., 1999 ). For gene expression studies,
RNA from neocortex was extracted and Northern blots were performed as
described previously (Wang et al., 2001 ). One-sided, unpaired
t tests were used to assess statistical significance. Western blot analyses of Tfam protein levels were performed on total
protein extracts from neocortex of MILON mice and
TfamloxP/TfamloxP
littermate controls at the age of 2, 3, 4, and 5 months as described previously (Larsson et al., 1996 ).
In situ hybridization. Probes against the mitochondrial
transcripts cytochrome c oxidase subunit I (5'-TGGGT CCCCT CCTCC AGCGG GATCA AAGAA AGTTG TGTTT AGGTT GCGG-3') and nicotineamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH) dehydrogenase subunit 4 (5'-CCATT TGAAG TCCTC GGGCC
ATGAT TATAG TACGG CTGTG GATCC GTTCG-3') were 3'-end labeled with
35S and used to detect mtRNA in 14 µm
cryostat sections from fresh frozen brains by in situ
hybridization (Dagerlind et al., 1992 ). A random oligonucleotide probe
was used as a negative control. Hybridizations were performed at 42°C
for 16-18 hr, and sections were rinsed five times in 1× SSC,
dehydrated, and exposed to photographic emulsion (Kodak NTB2; Eastman
Kodak, Rochester, NY) for 4 d.
Biochemistry and enzyme histochemistry. The activities of
the respiratory chain complexes were measured in fresh frozen samples of neocortical and hippocampal tissue from MILON and
TfamloxP/TfamloxP
control mice at 2, 4, and 5 months of age (n = 4) as
described previously (Rustin et al., 1994 ). Glutathione peroxidase
(Gpx) and mitochondrial superoxide dismutase (Sod2) activities were determined as described previously (Wang et al., 2001 ). Enzyme histochemical analyses of succinate dehydrogenase (SDH) and cytochrome c oxidase (COX) activities were performed on 14 µm cryostat sections of fresh frozen brains of MILON and control mice as described previously (Wang et al., 1999 ).
Histochemistry and immunohistochemistry. MILON and
TfamloxP/TfamloxP
littermate controls were perfused with
Ca2+-free Tyrode's solution, followed by
4% paraformaldehyde with 0.4% picric acid in 0.16 M phosphate buffer. The brains were dissected out, post-fixed overnight, and equilibrated to 10% sucrose containing 0.1% sodium azide. Primary antibodies used for indirect
immunohistochemistry (Hökfelt et al., 1973 ; Zetterström et
al., 1994 ) included polyclonal antibodies against neurofilament-10
(NF-10) (1:100; Sigma, St. Louis, MO), glial fibrillary acidic protein
19 (GFAP-19) (1:500; Sigma), von Willebrand factor (1:300; Dako,
Glostrup, Denmark), cleaved caspase 3 (1:100; Cell Signaling
Technology, Beverly, MA), cleaved caspase 7 (1:100; Cell Signaling
Technology), and nitrotyrosine (1:50; Cell Signaling Technology).
Cryostat sections (14 µm) were incubated with primary antibodies
overnight at 4°C, rinsed, and incubated with appropriate FITC-labeled
secondary antibodies. Sections were analyzed by fluorescence
microscopy. Proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) expression was
studied with a monoclonal antibody (1:50; Dako). Brain sections were
permeabilized with ice-cold ethanol/acetic acid (1:2) and blocked
(M.O.M Immunodetection kit; Vector Laboratories, Burlingame, CA) before
application of specific antibodies. Peroxidase activity was detected
with 3,3'-diaminobenzidine (DAB substrate kit for peroxidase; Vector
Laboratories), and the sections were counterstained with methyl green
(Dako). Controls included omitting the primary antibody.
Terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated biotinylated UTP
nick end labeling and DNA ladder gel electrophoresis. Terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated biotinylated UTP nick end labeling (TUNEL) (Apoptag in situ Apoptosis Detection kit;
Intergen, Purchase, NY) was performed according to the instructions of
the manufacturer. DNA from neocortex and hippocampus was extracted, and
the DNA ladder assay performed as described previously (Wang et al.,
2001 ). We also used a kit (ApoAlert LM-PCR Ladder Assay; Clontech, Palo
Alto, CA) for detection of DNA ladders in samples containing small
fractions of apoptotic cells following the instructions of the manufacturer.
Kainic acid induction of seizures. Kainic acid was dissolved
in Ringer's isotonic saline (pH 6) and administered intraperitoneally at a dose of 20 or 30 mg/kg body weight in MILON and control mice at
the age of 4 months. Mice were monitored continuously for 2-3 hr after
injection to determine the onset and level of seizures. Seizure levels
were rated (Sperk et al., 1985 ): level 1, immobility; level 2, forelimb
and/or tail extension, rigid posture; level 3, repetitive movements,
head bobbing; level 4, rearing; and level 5, rearing and falling. Mice
injected with saline were included as negative controls. Brains were
collected 24 hr after seizure onset.
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RESULTS |
Forebrain-specific disruption of the Tfam gene
We generated mice with disruption of Tfam in forebrain
neurons by mating
TfamloxP/TfamloxP
mice (Wang et al., 1999 ) to mice heterozygous for a transgene expressing cre recombinase from the calcium-dependent
calmodulin kinase II promoter, +/CaMKII-cre (Xu et al.,
2000 ). The resulting MILON mice (genotype
TfamloxP/TfamloxP,
+/CaMKII-cre) displayed a highly tissue-specific pattern of Tfam knock-out as determined by PCR (Fig.
1a) and Southern blot analyses
(data not shown). The knock-out (Tfam )
allele was present in neocortex but, with the exception of testis, not
in other tissues, including cerebellum (Fig. 1a). The
CaMKII-cre transgenic mouse used in this study has been
shown previously to express cre recombinase from postnatal
day 14 (P14), and maximal recombination of loxP-flanked
alleles was observed at P29 in neocortex, hippocampus, and some other
regions (Xu et al., 2000 ). The CaMKII-cre transgene causes
recombination in ~50% of neocortical and hippocampal neurons
harboring a loxP-flanked allele (Xu et al., 2000 ).
Consistent with these observations, we found that the levels of
Tfam alleles were equal in 1-month-old
(relative level, 24 ± 3%) and 5-month-old (25 ± 2%)
presymptomatic MILON mice, demonstrating that maximal Tfam
recombination was obtained by 1 month after birth. Tfam protein levels
were clearly reduced in neocortex of MILON mice from 2 months of age
and throughout life as shown by Western blot analysis (Fig.
1b). The MILON mice appeared normal and showed no overt
behavioral abnormalities until the age of 5-6 months, when they
started to display signs of deteriorating physical condition
progressing rapidly until death within 1-2 weeks. There was thus a
surprisingly long time span of ~4-5 months between the completed
Tfam recombination and obvious signs of disease in the MILON
mice.

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Figure 1.
Characterization of Tfam
recombination, Tfam protein expression, mtDNA copy number,
and mtRNA levels in MILON mice and controls.
a, PCR analysis to determine the tissue-specific
recombination pattern in a 2-month-old MILON mouse. The
Tfam knock-out allele
(Tfam ) is only present in neocortex
and testis. b, Western blot analyses of cortical
protein extracts from MILON (M;
TfamloxP/TfamloxP,
+/CaMKII-cre) and control (C;
TfamloxP/TfamloxP)
animals. Tfam protein is detected with a polyclonal anti-mouse Tfam
antibody, whereas a monoclonal anti-actin antibody is used as a loading
control. The Tfam protein levels are notably decreased in the MILON
mice from 2 months of age. c, Results from
phosphoimager quantification of Southern blots to
determine mtDNA copy number in neocortex of control (C;
black bars), heterozygous knock-out (H;
+/TfamloxP,
+/CaMKII-cre; gray bars), and MILON
(M; white bars) mice. All values are
normalized to the nuclear 18S rRNA gene and depicted as the percentage
of the mean value of age-matched controls (n = 4-6
pairs of MILON and control mice). *p < 0.05;
**p < 0.01. The levels of mtDNA are significantly
decreased in MILON mice from 2 months of age. d, Results
from phosphoimager quantification of Northern blots to determine mtRNA
levels in neocortex of control (C; black
bars), heterozygous knock-out (H; gray
bars), and MILON (M; white bars)
mice. All values are normalized to 18S rRNA and depicted as the
percentage of the mean value of age-matched controls
(n = 4-6 pairs of MILON and control mice).
**p < 0.01; ***p < 0.001. The
levels of mtRNA are significantly decreased in MILON mice from 4 months
of age.
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Reduced mtDNA expression in neocortex and hippocampus of
MILON mice
There was an ~40% reduction of mtDNA copy number and mtRNA
levels in neocortex at 2 and 4 months of age, respectively, and onward
(Fig. 1c,d). Furthermore, in situ
hybridizations showed a drastic decrease in mtRNA levels in neocortex
and hippocampus, especially in the CA1 and CA3 regions (Franklin and
Paxinos, 1997 ) at age 4 months (Fig.
2b). The CA2 region of
hippocampus and the polymorphic layer of the dentate gyrus displayed no
evident reduction of mtRNA levels. Analyses of respiratory chain enzyme
activities in neocortical samples demonstrated decreased activities of
NADH dehydrogenase (complex I) and COX (complex IV), which both contain critical mtDNA-encoded subunits, in 4- and 5-month-old MILON mice (Fig.
2a). The activity of SDH (complex II), which is exclusively nucleus encoded, remained unchanged in MILON mice (Fig. 2a).
Severe respiratory chain deficiency in individual cells was
demonstrated by enzyme histochemistry to determine COX and SDH
activities on brain tissue sections. Hippocampus, piriform cortex, and
amygdala in 4-month-old MILON mice contained many COX-deficient cells. In hippocampus, the CA3 region was most affected with massive amounts
of COX-deficient cells, but also CA1 and the dentate gyrus contained
numerous COX-deficient cells (Fig. 2b). A large number of
COX-deficient cells were also seen throughout neocortex and were
particularly abundant in cingulum cortex of 4-month-old MILON mice
(data not shown).

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Figure 2.
Biochemical and histochemical assessment of
respiratory chain function and in situ hybridization to
detect mtRNA. a, Enzyme activities of respiratory chain
complexes I, II, and IV in neocortex from 2-, 4-, and 5-month-old
control (C; black bars) and MILON
(M; white bars) mice. Values are depicted
as the percentage of the mean value of age-matched controls.
**p < 0.01. The activity of complexes I and IV are
significantly decreased in MILON mice from 4 months of age.
b, Top row, In situ
hybridization to detect the mtDNA-encoded COXI transcript (mtRNA) in
brain from a 4-month-old presymptomatic MILON mouse and a littermate
control. Scale bars, 1 mm. NCX, Neocortex;
DG, dentate gyrus. The levels of mtRNA are decreased in
neocortex and hippocampus in MILON mice. Bottom row,
Enzyme histochemical double staining for COX and SDH activities. Cells
with COX and SDH activity appear brown, whereas cells
with deficient COX activity appear blue. Scale bars, 0.2 mm.
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It should be emphasized that the CaMKII-cre transgene causes
recombination of loxP-flanked alleles in neurons but not in
the other cell types of neocortex and hippocampus (Xu et al., 2000 ). It
is thus likely that the moderate reduction of respiratory chain function (Fig. 2a) in tissue extracts of neocortex,
containing many different cell types, is explained by the profound COX
deficiency present in individual Tfam knock-out neurons
(Fig. 2b).
Corticohippocampal nerve cell loss and gliosis in MILON mice
Next, we investigated the neuropathological consequences of
respiratory chain deficiency in forebrain neurons. Early-stage (age
5-5.5 months) and end-stage (age 5.5-6 months) symptomatic MILON mice
displayed a progressive marked nerve cell loss in neocortex and
hippocampus (Fig. 3). There was
substantial degeneration in neocortex and a severe disruption of
cortical organization in end-stage MILON mice as determined by cresyl
violet staining (Fig. 3). Early-stage symptomatic MILON mice displayed
a substantial nerve cell loss, as well as a cellular infiltration
indicative of an inflammatory response in the CA1 region of hippocampus
(Fig. 3). This was further supported by the observation of macrophages, including characteristic gitter cells. Other hippocampal areas appeared
normal in these animals. In end-stage animals, the pyramidal cell layer
of the medial part of CA1 was completely absent, CA2 was intact, and
CA3 only slightly affected. Although the granule cell layer of the
dentate gyrus was present, many of the nuclei appeared condensed. Such
pyknotic nuclei, which could be consistent with apoptosis, were found
in all affected areas of the hippocampal formation.

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Figure 3.
Characterization of cell loss in neocortex and
hippocampus of a 5-month-old control mouse, a 5-month-old early
symptomatic MILON mouse, and a 5.5-month-old end-stage MILON mouse
stained with cresyl violet or TUNEL. NCX, Neocortex;
DG, dentate gyrus The arrowheads indicate
cell loss in the CA1 and CA3 regions. The boxes are
close-ups of indicated areas. Scale bars, 0.5 mm. There is cell loss
and cell infiltration in the CA1 area of hippocampus of early
symptomatic MILON mice. There is extensive cell loss and degenerative
changes in neocortex and in the CA1, CA3, and dentate gyrus areas of
the hippocampal formation of end-stage MILON mice.
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We used the cell cycle S-phase marker PCNA to detect dividing cells.
Numerous PCNA-positive cells were found in hippocampus, especially in
early-stage symptomatic MILON animals, and in neocortex (data not
shown). The majority of these dividing cells in hippocampus were glia
or inflammatory response cells, as judged from morphological appearance. Some labeled cells were found clustered in the subgranular zone of the dentate gyrus, indicative of increased neurogenesis.
Immunohistochemistry further supported the presence of
neurodegeneration and an inflammatory response in end-stage MILON mice (Fig. 4). Neurofilament (NF-10)
immunohistochemistry showed extensive axonal degeneration, as evidenced
by increased axonal beading and fragmentation in both early- and
end-stage symptomatic MILON mice. Axonal degeneration was unevenly
distributed in neocortex, being more pronounced anteriorly and also
increasing with the progression of disease. Early-stage animals showed
signs of axonal degeneration in hippocampus, as well as neocortex. In
end-stage animals having lost the medial pyramidal cell layer of CA1,
axonal degeneration was no longer noted in this area of hippocampus, but there was neurofilament accumulation in some granular cell somata
of the dentate gyrus. This was probably the result of a loss of axonal
connections to CA3.

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Figure 4.
Characterization of neurodegenerative changes and
gliosis in a MILON and a control mouse at the age of 5.5 months.
Neurofilaments were detected with a polyclonal antibody against NF-10,
and astrocytes were detected with a polyclonal antibody against GFAP.
Antibody reactivity was visualized with immunofluorescence.
CC, Corpus callosum; DG, dentate gyrus.
Scale bars, 0.25 mm. NF-10 immunofluorescence shows extensive axonal
beading in neocortex and accumulation of neurofilaments in granular
cell somata of dentate gyrus in MILON mice. GFAP immunofluorescence
shows extensive gliosis in corpus callosum and hippocampus.
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We demonstrated the presence of gliosis by using GFAP antibodies to
detect reactive astrocytes (Fig. 4). Neocortex did not contain any
significant amount of reactive astrocytes, but there was a large
increase of GFAP-immunoreactive cells in corpus callosum, with many
astrocytes having processes directed into the degenerating neocortex.
In all hippocampal regions, we observed massive gliosis, corresponding
fully to the increased cellularity noted with cresyl violet staining.
There was no difference in the distribution of reactive astrocytes
between early symptomatic and end-stage MILON mice. However, the amount
of gliosis was clearly larger in end-stage MILON mice. Pathological
vascularization, as indicated by large abnormal vessels, particularly
in neocortical areas, could also be seen using antibodies against the
von Willebrand factor (data not shown). None of the different
neuropathological changes described above were present in 2-, 3-, or
4-month-old MILON mice, in heterozygous knock-out animals, or in controls.
To assess the magnitude of cell death at different time points, we
performed TUNEL. No TUNEL-positive nuclei could be detected in 2-, 3-, or 4-month-old presymptomatic MILON mice, further supporting that
Tfam knock-out neurons are viable for several months. In early- and end-stage symptomatic animals (age 5-6 months),
TUNEL-positive nuclei were seen in all areas suffering from cell loss,
as demonstrated by cresyl violet staining (Fig. 3). Moreover, TUNEL
reactivity was often observed before any cell loss was evident using a
cresyl violet stain. TUNEL in neocortex was limited to the outer
layers, corresponding well to the areas most depleted of mtRNA, as seen with in situ hybridization. The first areas of
hippocampus to display TUNEL-positive cells were CA1 and to some extent
also CA3. Later, when medial CA1 was completely lost and CA3 was
slightly affected, most TUNEL-positive cells were seen in the granule
cell layer of the dentate gyrus. Because TUNEL may detect necrotic as
well as apoptotic cell death, we used complementary methods to detect
apoptosis. DNA gel electrophoresis of cortical and hippocampal samples
from symptomatic 5- to 6-month-old MILON mice yielded a smear, and a
DNA ladder was faintly visible. By using a sensitive PCR assay, we
detected DNA ladders in cortical and hippocampal samples of MILON mice
at the age of 5-6 months but not in MILON mice at the age of 4 months
or in control mice (Fig. 5d).
Northern Blot analysis did not show any increase in transcripts
encoding the proapoptotic Bax or anti-apoptotic Bcl-xL proteins in 2-, 4-, and 5-month-old mutants (Fig. 5a,b). We could
not detect activated caspase 3 or 7 by immunohistochemistry of brain
sections from MILON mice at different ages (data not shown). Northern
blot analyses showed normal levels of transcripts for
glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (Gapdh) (Fig. 5a),
suggesting that upregulation of glycolysis does not occur in MILON
mice.

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Figure 5.
Gene expression profiles, enzyme activities, and
DNA ladder gel analysis in MILON and control mice of different ages.
a, Results from phosphoimager quantification of Northern
blots to determine mitochondrial Sod2, Gpx, Bax, Bcl-xL, Gapdh, and
mtRNA transcript levels in neocortex of control (C;
black bars) and MILON (M; white
bars) mice at the age of 2, 4, and 5 months. Transcript levels
were normalized to 18S rRNA and are presented as the percentage of the
mean value of age-matched controls. **p < 0.01;
***p < 0.001. b, Northern blot
analysis of transcript levels in neocortex from controls
(C) and MILON (M)
mice at different ages. The same blot was reprobed to detect different
transcripts as indicated in the panel. c,
Sod2 and Gpx enzyme activities in neocortex from controls
(C; black bars) and MILON
(M; white bars) mice at different ages.
Values are presented as the percentage of the mean enzyme activity of
age-matched controls. d, PCR DNA ladder gel assay of DNA
prepared from neocortex of MILON (M) and
control (C) mice at different ages. DNA
fragmentation is present in neocortex of 5- to 6-month-old symptomatic
MILON mice, as indicated by arrowheads. A
staurosporine-treated human osteosarcoma cell line 143B was used as a
positive control.
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MILON mice display a low induction of antioxidant defenses
We next evaluated whether respiratory chain deficiency in neurons
affect ROS production and ROS defense mechanisms. Northern blot
analyses of RNA samples from neocortex of MILON mice showed moderately
increased Gpx transcript levels at 5 months of age and a tendency
toward increased Sod2 transcript levels at 2, 4, and 5 months of age
(Fig. 5a,b). We also measured the Sod2 and Gpx enzyme
activities at different ages and found no significant differences
between MILON and control mice (Fig. 5c).
Western blot analysis and immunohistochemistry to detect protein
nitrosylation, another marker for oxidative stress induced by the
conversion of superoxide and nitric oxide to peroxynitrite, did not
show any difference between 4-to 6-month-old mutant and control animals
(data not shown). The activity of the nucleus-encoded respiratory chain
complex II, an iron-sulfur group-containing enzyme readily impaired by
oxidative stress, was unchanged in the mutants (Fig. 2). These results
suggest unexpectedly low levels of ROS production in the MILON mice.
Excitotoxic stress induces marked neuronal cell death in
MILON mice
Surprisingly, there were no signs of neurodegeneration, as
determined by cresyl violet, TUNEL, GFAP, NF-10, and PCNA labeling of
brain sections (Figs. 3, 4), in 4-month-old MILON mice with widespread
and profound respiratory chain deficiency in forebrain neurons (Fig.
2). We therefore challenged MILON mice with kainic acid injections to
determine whether they would be more susceptible to stress-induced
neuronal death.
We injected 16 mice (MILON, n = 8; controls,
n = 8) with 20 mg/kg kainic acid at the age of 4 months
and observed that three MILON and three control mice developed level 4 or 5 seizures, whereas the remaining mice developed level 2 seizures.
Next, we injected 13 mice (MILON, n = 6; controls,
n = 7) with 30 mg/kg kainic acid at the age of 4 months
and observed that six MILON and six control mice developed level 3-5
seizures, whereas no seizures were induced in one of the control
animals. There was thus no significant difference in the probability to
develop high-level (grade 3-5) seizures after kainic acid injections
between MILON and control mice at the age of 4 months in response to 20 or 30 mg/kg kainic acid.
Next, we investigated the neuropathological consequences of seizures by
harvesting brains 24 hr after kainic acid injection and performing
TUNEL staining. There was no difference in the low amount of
TUNEL-positive cells that could be seen in hippocampus of MILON
(n = 2) and control (n = 2) mice with
level 2 seizures. MILON mice (n = 2) injected with
saline displayed no TUNEL-positive cells in hippocampus. However, MILON
mice (n = 5) with grade 3-5 seizures displayed larger
numbers of TUNEL-positive cells in the CA3 region of hippocampus than
did controls (n = 5) (Fig.
6). There was no overlap between the five
MILON specimens with abundant TUNEL-reactive cells in the CA3 area of
hippocampus and the five control specimens with much less TUNEL
reactivity, when the amount of TUNEL-reactive cell profiles in
hippocampus was rated by two independent observers using a
semiquantitative scale on coded slides.

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|
Figure 6.
TUNEL analysis of neuronal cell death 24 hr after
injection of kainic acid in MILON and control mice at the age of 4 months. Scale bars, 0.2 mm. MILON mice consistently display more
TUNEL-labeled cells in the CA3 area compared with controls with similar
seizure activity.
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|
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DISCUSSION |
Neurodegenerative diseases in man typically become manifest late
in life. There are few animal models that replicate the late-onset and
progressive features of this major group of human CNS diseases. Here,
we characterize the MILON mice, who are apparently healthy well into
adulthood, at which time they develop progressive lethal corticohippocampal neurodegeneration. Before the development of overt
neurological symptoms, the MILON mice are considerably more vulnerable
to excitotoxic challenge. We also characterized some of the mechanisms
leading to nerve cell death in the MILON mice and found that neurons
are able to survive for at least 1 month after shutting off oxidative
phosphorylation and that nerve cell death is preceded by only minimal
activation of defense mechanisms against reactive oxygen species.
Human mitochondrial disorders have an overall incidence (~1:10,000)
comparable with other common genetic forms of neurodegeneration (Chinnery et al., 2000 ; Darin et al., 2001 ). Point mutations or deletions affecting tRNA genes of human mtDNA will impair mitochondrial translation and result in the same type of respiratory chain deficiency affecting multiple complexes as in the MILON mice. Affected patients mainly have encephalomyopathic syndromes and display mosaic
tissue-specific patterns of respiratory chain deficiency that, at least
partly, are determined by the distribution of mutated mtDNA in
different cell types (Larsson and Clayton, 1995 ). We reported
previously that cell type-specific disruption of Tfam in
mouse heart (Wang et al., 1999 ; Li et al., 2000 ) and pancreatic
-cells (Silva et al., 2000 ) faithfully mimics phenotypes found in
humans with syndromes caused by mtDNA deletions ( mtDNA). Similar to
the MILON mouse, neuropathological findings in patients with
mitochondrial disorders include nerve cell loss, gliosis, and white
matter changes (Leigh, 1951 ; Oldfors et al., 1990 ; Oldfors et al.,
1995 ). There is typically a time lag between the occurrence of
respiratory chain deficiency and onset of mitochondrial
neurodegeneration in human patients. In some cases, this can be
attributed to heteroplasmy, i.e., a mixture of normal and mutated
mtDNA, with increasing levels of mutated mtDNA with time in affected
organs (Larsson et al., 1990 ). However, this time lag is also observed
in mitochondrial neurodegeneration syndromes attributable to nuclear
mutations, such as Friedreich's ataxia (Rotig et al., 1997 ), in which
temporal differences in gene dosage is not an issue. Similar to humans,
prolonged respiratory chain deficiency is also required for the
induction of neurodegeneration in MILON mice and therefore probably
reflects an inherent property of neurons to withstand long periods of
respiratory chain deficiency. Interestingly, MILON mice exhibited
marked neuronal cell death in response to exogenous stress; similarly,
patients with Leigh syndrome and other mitochondrial
encephalomyopathies may exhibit profound clinical deterioration in
response to moderate stress, e.g., viral infections.
Aging is associated with increased levels of mtDNA, attributable to
somatic mutagenesis, and some studies have shown a decline of
respiratory chain function with increasing age (Wallace, 1992 ). There
are always multiple forms of mtDNA in old subjects with high levels
in postmitotic tissues, such as brain and skeletal muscle. An uneven
distribution of mtDNA with clonal expansions within single cells has
been reported in several studies (Oldfors et al., 1993 ; Brierley et
al., 1998 ; Cottrell et al., 2000 ). A recent enzyme histochemical study
of brains from old subjects demonstrated an age-related increase of
respiratory chain-deficient pyramidal neurons in hippocampus (Cottrell
et al., 2001 ), further supporting the concept of uneven distribution of
age-associated mtDNA mutations in postmitotic cells. It is likely that
presumptive functional impairment and neuropathological changes caused
by mtDNA will be determined by the fraction of respiratory
chain-deficient neurons. It is also possible that affected neurons may
impair the function of many respiratory-competent neurons through
transneuronal degeneration mechanisms. The generation of chimeras
between MILON and control mice should enable us to establish threshold
fractions of respiratory chain-deficient cortical neurons needed to
induce severe neurodegeneration and thus shed light on the role of the increasing numbers of COX-deficient neurons during aging.
We reported previously that disruption of Tfam in mouse
cardiomyocytes causes dilated cardiomyopathy with heart conduction blocks (Wang et al., 1999 ; Li et al., 2000 ). Interestingly, these severely respiratory chain-deficient hearts display signs of apoptosis, as manifested by moderate increase of TUNEL-reactive cells, expression of activated caspase 3 and 7, increased levels of transcripts for Bax
and Bcl-xL, and DNA fragmentation on gels (Wang et al., 2001 ). We
observed much more abundant TUNEL-reactive cells in the MILON mice than
in the mitochondrial cardiomyopathy mice, but, surprisingly, activated
caspase 3 or 7 was not detected by immunohistochemical assays, the
levels of transcripts for Bax and Bcl-xL were not changed, and DNA
fragmentation was only observed by using a sensitive PCR assay in
symptomatic MILON mice. These findings suggest that the pathways
leading to cell death may be different in respiratory chain-deficient
cardiomyocytes and neurons. It is known that differences in
intracellular ATP levels are of importance for the execution of
apoptosis (Leist et al., 1997 ). Consistent with this hypothesis, we
found massive upregulation of transcripts encoding the glycolytic
enzyme Gapdh in respiratory chain-deficient cardiomyocytes (Wang et
al., 2001 ) but not in MILON mice neurons. Future studies of MILON mice,
including pharmacological treatments as well as breeding to other
transgenic mouse strains, should help elucidate molecular pathways
leading to neuronal cell death. The MILON mice should thus help unravel
the molecular mechanisms leading to death of nerve cells with defective
mitochondrial function and model CNS aspects of mitochondrial diseases.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received May 23, 2001; revised July 12, 2001; accepted July 20, 2001.
N.-G.L. was supported by Swedish Medical Research Council Grants
13X-12197 and 13P-12204 and funds from the Karolinska Institutet, Torsten and Ragnar Söderbergs Stiftelse, the Human Frontiers Science Program, and the Swedish Foundation for Strategic Research. L.S. was supported by a stipend from the Swedish Foundation for Strategic Research. P.R. was supported by the Association
Françaises contre les Myopathies (AMF). L.O. was supported by
grants from the Swedish Medical Research Council, United States Public
Health Service, the AMF, Hedlunds Stiftelse, the Human Frontiers
Science Program, and funds from the Karolinska Institutet. B.X was
supported by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute and National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke Grant P01-16033.
L.S. and M.E. have contributed equally to this work.
Correspondence should be addressed to Nils-Göran Larsson,
Department of Medical Nutrition, Karolinska Institutet, Novum, Huddinge
Hospital, S-141 86 Huddinge, Sweden. E-mail:
nils-goran.larsson{at}mednut.ki.se.
 |
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