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The Journal of Neuroscience, December 15, 2001, 21(24):9930-9943
cAMP Response Element-Binding Protein Is Required for
Dopamine-Dependent Gene Expression in the Intact But Not the
Dopamine-Denervated Striatum
Malin
Andersson1,
Christine
Konradi2, and
M.
Angela
Cenci1
1 Department of Physiological Sciences, Neurobiology
Division, Lund University, Wallenberg Neuroscience Centre, 221 84 Lund,
Sweden, and 2 Laboratory of Neuroplasticity, McLean
Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Belmont, Massachusetts 02478
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ABSTRACT |
The cAMP response element-binding protein (CREB) is believed
to play a pivotal role in dopamine (DA) receptor-mediated nuclear signaling and neuroplasticity. Here we demonstrate that the
significance of CREB for gene expression depends on the experimental
paradigm. We compared the role of CREB in two different but related
models: L-DOPA administration to unilaterally
6-hydroxydopamine lesioned rats, and cocaine administration to
neurologically intact animals. Antisense technology was used to produce
a local knockdown of CREB in the lateral caudate-putamen, a region
that mediates the dyskinetic or stereotypic manifestations associated
with L-DOPA or cocaine treatment, respectively. In intact
rats, CREB antisense reduced both basal and cocaine-induced expression
of c-Fos, FosB/ FosB, and prodynorphin mRNA. In the
DA-denervated striatum, CREB was not required for L-DOPA to
induce these gene products, nor did CREB contribute considerably to DNA
binding activity at cAMP responsive elements (CREs) and CRE-like
enhancers. FosB-related proteins and JunD were the main contributors
to both CRE and AP-1 DNA-protein complexes in
L-DOPA-treated animals. In behavioral studies,
intrastriatal CREB knockdown caused enhanced activity scores in intact
control animals and exacerbated the dyskinetic effects of acute
L-DOPA treatment in 6-OHDA-lesioned animals. These data
demonstrate that CREB is not required for the development of
L-DOPA-induced dyskinesia in hemiparkinsonian rats.
Moreover, our results reveal an unexpected alteration of nuclear
signaling mechanisms in the parkinsonian striatum treated with
L-DOPA, where AP-1 transcription factors appear to
supersede CREB in the activation of CRE-containing genes.
Key words:
Parkinson's disease; immediate-early genes; direct
pathway; opioid precursor; psychostimulant; sensitization; protooncogenes; motor stereotypies
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INTRODUCTION |
Drugs that stimulate dopamine (DA)
receptors have the potential to produce long-lasting behavioral and
neural alterations. L-DOPA pharmacotherapy of Parkinson's
disease is associated with a high incidence of motor complications,
such as wearing-off fluctuations and dyskinesias, the development of
which is closely paralleled by changes in striatal gene expression (for
review, see Calon et al., 2000 ). Animal studies have shown that both
L-DOPA-induced dyskinesia and DA-dependent stereotypies are
associated with an induction of prodynorphin (PDyn) and fos family
genes in striatal projection neurons of the "direct pathway" (for
review, see Graybiel et al., 2000 ). Multiple lines of evidence suggest
that such an induction is mediated by cAMP response element-binding
protein (CREB) phosphorylation through activation of
D1 receptors and protein kinase A (PKA) (Cole et
al., 1994 , 1995 ; Simpson and McGinty, 1995 ; Konradi et al., 1996 ).
Phosphorylated CREB has been detected in the DA-denervated rat striatum
after treatment with L-DOPA (Cole et al., 1994 ) and in the
intact striatum after psychostimulant drug administration (Cole et al.,
1995 ; Konradi et al., 1996 ). Moreover, amphetamine-induced striatal
c-Fos expression can be blocked by knockdown of CREB mRNA (Konradi et
al., 1996 ). Furthermore, in striatal protein extracts, CREB accounts
for DNA binding activity at cAMP responsive element (CRE) sites (Cole
et al., 1995 ; Konradi et al., 1996 ), which are present in both the
c-fos (Curran et al., 1987 ) and the PDyn promoter
(Douglass et al., 1994 ). These and other findings have prompted the
notion of CREB as a critical mediator of drug-induced neuroplasticity
in the striatum (for review, see Pierce and Kalivas, 1997 ; Calon et
al., 2000 ). However, the requirement of CREB for DA receptor-induced
cellular and behavioral plasticity may not hold true in all
experimental paradigms.
Here, we have used antisense technology to assess whether
L-DOPA-induced changes in fos and PDyn gene expression,
and/or the concomitant dyskinetic manifestations in hemiparkinsonian
rats (Cenci et al., 1998 ; Andersson et al., 1999 ), can be blocked by CREB knockdown. We have also performed a parallel experiment to investigate whether CREB is required for both basal and cocaine-induced expression of the same genes in neurologically intact animals. The
information provided by antisense experiments was complemented by an
analysis of DNA-protein interactions in striatal protein extracts. In
agreement with currently held notions, CREB was found to be essential
for cocaine-induced gene expression in the intact striatum, where it
accounted for most protein binding activity to CRE-like elements. By
contrast, in the DA-denervated striatum, CREB was not required for
L-DOPA to induce c-fos, fosB, and
PDyn gene expression, and both CRE- and AP-1-binding activity was
mainly accounted for by FosB-related proteins and JunD. The present results show that CREB is not a critical mediator of
L-DOPA-induced gene expression changes in the
parkinsonian striatum, where AP-1 transcription factors appear to
supersede CREB in the activation of CRE-containing genes.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Subjects. Female Sprague Dawley rats (BK Universal,
Stockholm, Sweden; ~225 gm body weight at the beginning of
experiment) were housed under a 12 hr light/dark cycle with ad
libitum access to food and water. The number of animals and
experimental groups in the present study is shown in Table
1.
Dopamine denervating lesions. All rats receiving
L-DOPA treatment had sustained unilateral
injections of 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA-HCl; Sigma-Aldrich Sweden
AB) into the right ascending DA fiber bundle at least 4 weeks
before drug treatment, as described previously (Cenci et al., 1998 ).
Briefly, 6-OHDA was dissolved in 0.02% ascorbic acid/saline at a
concentration of 3 µg/µl and injected at the following coordinates
(in mm, relative to bregma and the dural surface): (1) anterior
(A) = 4.0, lateral (L) = 0.8, ventral (V) = 8.0,
toothbar = +3.4 (6 µg deposit); and (2) A = 4.4, L = 1.2, V = 7.8, toothbar = 2.3 (7.5 µg deposit).
To evaluate the extent of DA denervation, the rats were tested for
amphetamine-induced rotation at 2 weeks after lesion. Turning behavior
was recorded in an automated rotometer over a 90 min period after an
injection of 5 mg/kg dexamphetamine sulfate (Apoteksbolaget Sweden AB).
Only rats that showed more than seven full turns per minute ipsilateral
to the lesion (corresponding to >97% DA depletion in the
caudate-putamen) (Schmidt et al., 1982 ) were selected for the study.
Drugs. DA-denervated rats received
L-DOPA methyl ester (3-8 mg/kg, i.p.;
Sigma-Aldrich) mixed with the peripheral DOPA-decarboxylase inhibitor,
benserazide hydrochloride (15 mg/kg; kindly provided by Hoffman-La
Roche, Basel, Switzerland). Neurologically intact rats were injected
with cocaine (15 or 30 mg/kg, i.p.; Apoteksbolaget Sweden AB). All
drugs were dissolved in physiological saline and injected immediately.
Animals were killed at 3 hr after injection. This survival period was
chosen on the basis of previous literature showing that upregulation of
Fos family proteins and PDyn mRNA can be detected in the striatum at
this time after DA agonist administration (Hurd and Herkenham, 1992 ;
Andersson et al., 1999 ; Cenci et al., 1999 ).
Antisense experiments. The CREB antisense (AS;
5'-TGGTCATCTAGTCACCGGTG-3') and CREB sense
(5'-CACCGGTGACTAGATGACCA-3') sequences were published previously
(Konradi et al., 1994 ). The "scrambled" control sequence was a
random assortment of the bases that composed the AS
(5'-TGCTGAACTTGTCGCCAGTG-3'). This sequence showed no homology to any
known mammalian gene. All oligonucleotides were partially phosphorothioate modified (sulfur substitutions at both the 5' and 3'
terminal phosphodiester linkage) and were purchased from Scandinavian
Gene Synthesis.
For single injections, oligonucleotides were dissolved in sterile PBS
at a concentration of 2.5 mM. One microliter of the solution was injected over 2 min (the cannula being left in place for
an additional 2 min) at the following coordinates (in mm, relative to
bregma and the dural surface): A = +0.6, L = ±3.5, V = 4.7, tooth bar at 2.3. Surgery was performed on rats
anesthetized with a mixture of Hypnorm (Janssen Pharmaceutical) and
Dormicum (Hoffman-La Roche) that was dissolved in sterile water (1:1:2 solution; 2.7 ml/kg, i.p). Analgesic treatment (Temgesic,
Apoteksbolaget AB; 0.167 ml/kg body weight, s.c.,) was given ~20 min
before the rats awakened.
For continuous infusions, oligonucleotides were dissolved in sterile
PBS at 0.2 mM concentration and infused through Alzet osmotic minipumps (Model 2002, 14 d duration; Alza Corporation, Palo Alto, CA) into the striatum at a rate of 0.5 µl/hr (2.5 nmol in
12 µl per day). Implantation surgery was performed on anesthetized rats as described above. The injection cannulas were implanted in the
lateral caudate-putamen at the following coordinates; A = +0.6,
L = +4.0, V = 5.0, tooth bar at 2.3. The cannulas were secured to the skull using screws and dental acrylic. The reservoirs were inserted subcutaneously in the neck. Rats were treated with antibiotics (Borgal, 1:500 in the drinking water; Hoechst) from 1 d before to 6 d after pump implantation.
Dyskinesia and stereotypy rating. An investigator who was
completely unaware of the rat group membership (experimentally blinded) performed all behavioral testing. L-DOPA-induced
abnormal involuntary movements (AIMs) were rated using a rat dyskinesia
scale that we introduced recently (Cenci et al., 1998 ; Andersson et
al., 1999 ; Lee et al., 2000 ). This scale only takes into account
purposeless movements that are clearly abnormal for the rat, whereas
enhanced manifestations of normal motor activities, such as grooming,
gnawing, rearing, and sniffing, are not included in the rating.
Briefly, rats were observed individually for 1 min every 20 min after
an injection of L-DOPA. Each rat was scored on a
severity scale from 0 to 4 on each of four subtypes of dyskinetic-like
movements (axial, orolingual, forelimb, and locomotive AIMs).
Motor activity and stereotypies were rated according to Creese and
Iversen (1973) . Rats were observed for 30 sec every 10 min after an
injection of cocaine or saline. Every rat was scored on a scale from 0 to 6 (0 = asleep or stationary; 1 = active; 2 = very
active with bursts of intense sniffing; 3 = stereotyped sniffing
along a fixed path in the cage; 4 = stereotyped sniffing or
rearing in a fixed location; 5 = stereotyped behavior in one location with bursts of gnawing and licking; and 6 = continual gnawing and licking of the cage bars in a fixed location). Note that
scores of 0-2 in this scale reflect generic motor activation, whereas
scores 3 reflect a clearly stereotypic behavior (i.e., repetition of
single or multiple movements according to an inflexible pattern).
Dyskinesia and activity-stereotypy ratings were performed at 60-120
min after drug injection, corresponding to the peak of the time-action
curve for both L-DOPA (Lee et al., 2000 ) and cocaine
(our unpublished data).
Histological procedures. The rats were deeply anesthetized
with sodium pentobarbitone (240 mg/kg, i.p.; Apoteksbolaget AB) and
killed by decapitation. The brains were rapidly removed and frozen on
dry ice. Coronal sections (16 µm thick) were cut through the striatum
using a cryostat, thaw-mounted onto microscope slides (SuperFrost Plus;
Menzel Glazer), and stored at 20°C.
Screening for unspecific tissue damage after oligonucleotide
delivery to the striatum. In the antisense study, one series of
sections per animal was stained using cresyl violet to verify the
location of the cannula track and the extent of the surrounding inflammation. The amount of monocyte infiltration at the injection site
did not differ between the three oligonucleotide sequences used in this
study. A total of eight animals showing severe inflammation and
hemorrhage were excluded from the study.
To assess ongoing neuronal death, another series of sections was
stained using Fluoro-Jade B histochemistry according to Schmued and
Hopkins (2000) . Briefly, sections were treated with 1% NaOH in 80%
ethanol for 5 min, rinsed sequentially in ethanol and water, transferred to a solution of 0.06% potassium permanganate for 10 min,
and rinsed in water. Thereafter, the sections were incubated for 20 min
with Fluoro-Jade B (Histo-Chem Inc., AR; 0.0004% in 0.1%
acetic acid/water), rinsed repeatedly, and dried in a slide warmer.
Cells along the needle track in the striatum and the cortex were
clearly fluorescent at 32 hr after a single oligonucleotide injection.
In contrast, no fluorescent neurons could be detected after 14 d
of continuous oligonucleotide infusion, indicating that the
oligonucleotides per se did not exert cytotoxic effects during the
infusion time.
Immunohistochemistry. Immunohistochemistry was performed
using a standard peroxidase-based method (Vectastain Elite ABC Kit, Vector Laboratories, Burlingame, CA) with 3,3'-diaminobenzidine (Sigma-Aldrich Sweden AB) as a chromogen.
The following primary antisera were used at the indicated dilutions:
CREB (1:5000; rabbit polyclonal from Upstate Biotechnology, Lake
Placid, NY); c-Fos (1:1000, sheep polyclonal from Sigma-Genosys); FosB/ FosB (1:15000, rabbit polyclonal from Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Santa Cruz, CA); neuron-specific nuclear protein (NeuN, 1:100, mouse
monoclonal from Chemicon, Temecula, CA); and JunD (1:5000, rabbit
polyclonal from Santa Cruz Biotechnology). Before immunohistochemistry, cryostat sections were fixed by a 10 min immersion in
phosphate-buffered 4% paraformaldehyde at 4°C, pH 7.4, rinsed three
times in potassium PBS, and incubated with an avidin-biotin blocking
kit (Vector Laboratories; 1 hr incubation in each solution, avidin and biotin).
In situ hybridization histochemistry. In
situ hybridization histochemistry (ISHH) was performed using
synthetic oligomers complementary to nucleotides 934-982 of the cloned
PDyn gene (Civelli et al., 1985 ), nucleotides 322-360 of the cloned
preproenkephalin (PPE) cDNA (Howells et al., 1984 ), nucleotides
1286-1333 of feline glutamic acid decarboxylase cDNA (GAD67; Kobayashi
et al., 1987 ), nucleotides 767-803 of the dopamine D1 receptor cDNA
(Monsma et al., 1990 ), and nucleotides 1587-1629 of an orphan opiate
receptor cDNA (Wang et al., 1994 ). Oligonucleotides (0.2 µM) were labeled at the 3' end with 4 µM [ -35S]dATP
(>37 TBq/mmol; Amersham Pharmacia Biotech) using 15 U of terminal
deoxynucleotidyltransferase (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech) for 2 hr at
37°C. The labeled probes were purified by spin-column chromatography
(Chroma Spin Columns, Clontech Laboratories, Palo Alto, CA) to specific
activities of >109 cpm/µg. Specificity
of the oligomers used had previously been determined by Northern blot
analysis, homology screens of the sequences in GenBank, and comparisons
of the anatomical distribution of the hybridization signal with
previous studies attempting to localize the same mRNA transcripts.
Specificity of hybridization was determined by competition experiments
in which the 35S-labeled probe was diluted
with an excess of either the same unlabeled oligonucleotide or an
unlabeled unrelated oligonucleotide.
The slide-mounted sections were air dried and incubated with the
hybridization mixture, which comprised 50% formamide (deionized), 4×
SSC (1× SSC = 0.15 M NaCl and 0.015 M
sodium citrate), 1× Denhardt's solution (0.02% Ficoll, 0.02%
polyvinyl pyrolidone, 10 mg/ml of RNase-free bovine serum albumin), 1%
sarcosyl, 10% dextran sulfate, 500 µg/ml sheared and denatured
salmon sperm DNA, 25 µl/ml tRNA, 200 mM dithiothreitol,
0.2 mg/ml heparin, and 107 cpm/ml of
35S-labeled oligonucleotide probe. Forty
microliters of hybridization mixture were added to each section (240 µl per slide). Slides were coverslipped with Parafilm and incubated
for 18 hr at 42°C in a humid chamber. After hybridization, the
Parafilm coverslips were floated off in 1× SSC at 55°C, and the
sections were given four 15 min washes in 1× SSC at 55°C, plus a
final wash beginning at 55°C; they were then cooled down to room
temperature. The slides were then rinsed twice in distilled water,
dehydrated in 70 and 95% ethanol (2 min each). The slides were
exposed to Fuji imaging plates (see below) and subsequently dipped in
photographic emulsion (LM-1, Amersham Pharmacia Biotech).
Emulsion-coated sections were exposed for 2-7 weeks at 20°C,
developed in Kodak D-19 at 18°C, fixed, and coverslipped with D.P.X.
mountant (BDH).
Image analysis and cell counts. Quantitative analyses of
ISHH or immunohistochemical specimens were performed by an investigator who was completely unaware of the rat group membership (experimentally blinded). An analysis of the antisense effect on various cellular markers was performed on two striatal sections per animal spanning rostrocaudal levels 0.2 to +0.70 mm relative to bregma, according to
Paxinos and Watson (1997) . Measurements were performed in two 0.54-mm2-large rectangular areas flanking
the cannula track. Additional measurements were taken in control areas,
having the same coordinates, on the contralateral side.
To measure ISHH labeling, the hybridized sections were exposed to Fuji
imaging plates (Fujifilm Sweden AB) for 1-12 hr. The plates
were scanned in a BAS-5000 phosphorimager (Fujifilm Sweden AB) to
obtain digitized autoradiographs. The photo-stimulated luminescence
emitted by the hybridized sections was calibrated against radioactivity
levels (kilobecquerels per gram) using simultaneously exposed
14C standards (Amersham Pharmacia
Biotech). The hybridization signal was analyzed using the program TINA
(Fujifilm Sweden AB).
Counts of immunostained cells were performed using the program NIH
Image 1.61. Sample areas (0.54 mm2 in
size) were digitized through a ProgRes3012 video camera (Kontron) connected to an Olympus microscope (20× magnification). Data are expressed as number of positive cells per square millimeters.
Electrophoretic mobility shift assay. Anesthetized rats were
killed by decapitation; the brains were rapidly extracted and immediately frozen on dry ice. Striata were dissected at 20°C in a
cryostat, and left and right striata were collected separately. Whole-cell protein extracts were prepared by Dounce homogenization in
ice-cold homogenization buffer (20 µl/mg tissue; 20 mM HEPES, 25% glycerol, 1.5 mM MgCl2, 0.4 mM EDTA, 1 mM DTT, 0.5 mM PMSF). The homogenate was centrifuged at
10,000 x g for 3 min at 4°C. The preparation was
homogenized once more and centrifuged at 10,000 x g for 10 min at 4°C. The supernatant was collected and protein concentration
was determined using the Bio-Rad Protein Assay (Bio-Rad Laboratories,
Hercules, CA).
Oligonucleotides were synthesized with two G-overhangs and annealed in
the presence of 20 mM NaPO4, 1 mM EDTA, and 100 mM KCl. Double-stranded
oligonucleotides were radioactively labeled with
32P-dCTP by reverse transcription (Moloney murine
leukemia virus reverse transcriptase, Promega, Madison,
WI). The dynCRE3 used (nucleotides 1562 to 1522 of the rat
PDyn promoter; 5'-CCTGCTGCGTCAGAGCATGA-3') (Douglass et al., 1994 ) has
been shown to be important for CREB-regulated PDyn gene expression in
various cell culture systems (Collins-Hicok et al., 1994 ; Messersmith
et al., 1994 ). The dynAP-1 element is a noncanonical AP-1 site mapping
to oligonucleotides 257 to 249 of the PDyn promoter
(5'-TTTGAAGTGACAAACAGCGCT-3') (Naranjo et al., 1991 ). Two additional
sequences were used for comparison, namely, the consensus sequence for
the palindromic CRE/ATF site, here called consensus CRE (Konradi
et al., 1993 )(5'-GCTGACGTCAGGG-3'), and a canonical AP-1 sequence from
the human collagenase promoter (5'-TTCCGGCTGACTCATCAAGCG-3') (Vallone
et al., 1997 ).
To examine DNA-protein interactions, protein extracts (3 µg) were
preincubated on ice for 10 min in gel-shift buffer (10 mM HEPES, 10% glycerol, 0.1 mM EDTA, 67 mM KCl,
150 ng poly(dI-dC), 5 mM MgCl2, 2 mM DTT, and 100 mM PMSF). After preincubation,
1 ng of 32P-labeled double-stranded
oligonucleotide was added, and the samples were incubated for 10 min at
room temperature. DNA-protein complexes were separated on a 4%
nondenaturing polyacrylamide gel (29.5:1 acrylamide/bisacrylamide) in
0.25× TBE buffer (1× TBE contains 0.0045 M Tris-borate
and 0.002 M EDTA). The gel was dried onto a filter paper
and exposed to autoradiographic films or phosphorimager plates
(Fujifilm Sweden AB) that were later used for computer-assisted measurements of the optical density of shifted bands.
Cold competition assays were performed using two different mixes of
protein extracts, pooled from the striatum either ipsilateral (lesioned
side) or contralateral (intact side) to the 6-OHDA lesion of three
chronically L-DOPA-treated rats. Samples of 3 µg of
pooled protein extracts were incubated with nonradioactively labeled consensus CRE or canonical AP-1 oligonucleotides at 5× and 50× the
concentration of the radioactively labeled probe.
In supershift assays, the preincubation was extended in the presence
of antisera overnight, and proteinase inhibitors were added [500
µM 4-(2-aminoethyl)-benzenesulfonylfluoride, 150 nM aprotinin, 1 µM leupeptin, 0.5 mM EDTA, 1 µM E-64; Proteinase Inhibitor
Cocktail Set I, Calbiochem].
Western immunoblotting. Striatal protein extracts were
prepared as described above. Proteins (7.5 µg) were loaded onto a
12% acrylamide resolving gel/4% stacking gel for SDS-PAGE and
electroblotted onto polyvinylidene difluoride membranes
(Amersham Pharmacia Biotech). Membranes were blocked in TBS-T (20 mM Tris, pH 7.6, 0.9% NaCl, 0.01% Tween 20)
containing 3% non-fat dry milk and then incubated overnight at 4°C
with antiserum. After four 15 min rinses in TBS-T, membranes were
incubated with horseradish peroxidase-conjugated anti-rabbit antibodies
(Amersham Pharmacia Biotech; 1:2000 in TBS-T) for 1 hr at room
temperature. The membranes were washed four times for 15 min each in
TBS-T and developed with the enhanced chemoluminescence method (ECL;
Amersham Pharmacia Biotech), and exposed to Hyperfilm-ECL (Amersham
Pharmacia Biotech) for 5-45 min. The following antisera were used at
the indicated dilutions: FosB/ FosB (1:10 000, rabbit polyclonal from
Santa Cruz Biotechnology), FosB/ FosB (1:7500, rabbit polyclonal from
Research Biochemicals International, Natick, MA), and panFos (1:5000,
kind gift of Dr. E. Vaudano, Lundbeck A/S).
Statistical analysis. Image-analysis data from
antisense-treated and control rats were compared using Student's
two-tailed t test. Statistical comparisons between more than
two groups were performed using one-factor ANOVA and post
hoc Newman-Keuls test. Correlations were estimated using simple
regression analysis. Group comparisons of dyskinesia and stereotypy
rating scores were performed using the Mann-Whitney U test.
The null hypothesis was rejected when p < 0.05.
 |
RESULTS |
Regional specificity, time dependence, and dose dependence of
antisense-mediated CREB knockdown
In agreement with previous studies (Konradi et al., 1994 ; Konradi
and Heckers, 1995 ), we found that a single antisense injection produced
a downregulation of striatal CREB immunoreactivity, which was maximal
at ~32 hr after injection. At this time, a single dose of CREB
antisense (2.5 nmol) had reduced the number of CREB-immunoreactive neurons by 23.4 ± 9.5% in a region extending up to 300 µm
around the injection site (p < 0.01 vs control
group) (Fig.
1A-A",C). By comparison, the number of cells immunoreactive for the
neuron-specific marker NeuN was the same in the AS and control
(Ctrl) groups (Fig. 1B-B").

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Figure 1.
Different methods of CREB antisense delivery
produce different extents of CREB knockdown in the striatum. The
effects of single oligonucleotide injections are shown in
A-D, whereas those produced by a 14 d oligonucleotide infusion are shown in
E-H. The number of CREB-immunoreactive
cells in the region flanking the injection cannula is shown in
A (single injection) or E (continuous
infusion), and the corresponding photomicrographs are shown in
A' or E' (antisense group), and
A" or E" (control oligonucleotide).
NeuN-immunoreactive neurons within the same regions are shown in
B-B" and
F-F". Camera lucida drawings illustrate
the regional distribution of CREB knockdown after single
oligonucleotide injection (C, antisense;
D, control) or continuous oligonucleotide infusion
(G, antisense; H, control).
#p < 0.01; n 7 in all groups; values give means + SEM. Asterisks in
A', A", B',
B", E', E", F', and
F" mark the cannula track. AS, CREB antisense;
Ctrl, control oligo. Scale bars in B" and
F", 200 µm.
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|
Continuous infusion of CREB antisense over 14 d (2.5 nmol/d)
produced a dramatic downregulation of CREB-immunoreactive cell numbers
( 80 ± 5% vs Ctrl group) (Fig
1E-E"). The knockdown of CREB was still
evident at 1 mm distance from the cannula (compare AS with Ctrl in Fig.
1, G and H, respectively). The antisense effect
was not caused by unspecific cell death, because there was no
difference in the number of NeuN-immunoreactive neurons between the AS
and Ctrl groups (Fig. 1F-F"). In
addition, the expression of constitutively expressed transcription
factors (JunD) or mRNA transcripts (PPE, GAD, D1-receptor, and an
orphan opiate receptor mRNA) did not differ between the two groups
(p > 0.27 in AS vs Ctrl oligo group; data not
shown). Moreover, using Fluoro-Jade B histofluorescence as a method to
detect degenerating neurons (Schmued and Hopkins, 2000 ), we did not
find ongoing cell death in the region adjoining the chronic
oligonucleotide infusion, although we saw a number of fluorescent
neurons after acute oligonucleotide injections (data not shown).
CREB is not required for L-DOPA-induced changes in
c-fos, fosB, and prodynorphin gene expression in the DA-denervated
striatum
Before studying the effects of CREB antisense, we set out to
determine whether single doses of L-DOPA, which lie within
the therapeutic range for the treatment of Parkinson's disease (3, 5, and 8 mg/kg), were sufficient to induce changes in the expression of
the genes under investigation. Drug-induced expression of
c-fos and fosB was monitored at the protein
rather than mRNA level because the interval after injection that was
chosen in this study (3 hr) is beyond the peak of mRNA induction.
L-DOPA was found to induce c-Fos, FosB/ FosB, and PDyn
mRNA expression in the DA-denervated striatum in a dose-dependent
manner (Fig.
2A-C).
Doses of 5 and 8 mg/kg L-DOPA induced a
significant increase in c-Fos and FosB/ FosB immunoreactivity (Fig.
2A,B), as well as in PDyn mRNA
levels (Fig. 2C), whereas the lowest dose tested did not
produce any detectable effects.

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Figure 2.
L-DOPA regulates c-Fos, FosB/ FosB,
and prodynorphin independently of CREB in 6-OHDA-lesioned rats. The
effects of acute doses of L-DOPA on the number of c-Fos
(A) or FosB/ FosB (B)
immunoreactive cells and on the levels of PDyn mRNA
(C) were measured on the cross-sectional area of
the caudate-putamen at mid-rostrocaudal levels. L-DOPA
induced levels of Fos family proteins (A,
B) and PDyn (C) mRNA dose
dependently. A single injection of CREB antisense oligonucleotides did
not prevent the induction of c-Fos (D),
FosB/ FosB (E), or PDyn mRNA
(F) by L-DOPA. CREB antisense-treated
animals are marked as AS + and represented using
bars with diagonal stripes, whereas animals
receiving control oligonucleotides are marked as AS and
represented using bars with no texture. Antisense
effects were measured in 0.54-mm2-large areas next
to the injection track. *p < 0.01 versus
lesion-only; #p < 0.05 versus 5 mg/kg;
and §p < 0.05 versus 3 mg/kg
L-DOPA; n = 3-5 per group in
A-C, and 5 per group in
D-F; values give means + SEM.
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Surprisingly, a single injection of CREB antisense had no effect on the
ability of either 5 or 8 mg/kg L-DOPA to induce c-Fos, FosB/ FosB, or PDyn in striatal neurons (Fig.
2D-F). We therefore asked whether
a more pronounced downregulation of CREB would be required to block the
effects of L-DOPA. CREB antisense was
continuously infused into the DA-denervated striatum for 14 d,
during which time the rats received either acute (on day 14) or chronic
treatment (on days 2-14) with L-DOPA (8 mg/kg
per injection). Continuous CREB antisense infusion neither blocked nor
attenuated the effects of acute or chronic
L-DOPA treatment on
striatal gene expression (Table 2, Fig.
3A-F).

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Figure 3.
CREB knockdown differentially affects the
induction of c-Fos (A, B,
G, H), FosB/ FosB
(C, D, I,
J), or PDyn mRNA (E,
F, K, L) by
L-DOPA or cocaine. In the absence of CREB,
L-DOPA was able to induce all gene expression markers in
the 6-OHDA-lesioned striatum (compare antisense group in
A, C, and E with control
group in B, D, and
F), whereas cocaine was unable to induce the same gene products in the
intact striatum (G, I, K,
antisense group; H, J, L,
control group). Photomicrographs were taken under bright-field
(A-D,
G-J) or dark-field illumination
(E, F, K,
L) from animals that sustained intrastriatal
oligonucleotide infusion and acute drug injections.
Asterisks mark the cannula track. Scale bar, 100 µm.
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Behavioral testing showed that continuous CREB antisense infusion
exacerbated the dyskinetic effects of L-DOPA (Fig.
4). After intrastriatal CREB knockdown,
acute L-DOPA injections produced severe AIMs of the
trunk, limb, and orofacial region, i.e., body parts that are
somatotopically related to the lateral striatal subregion targeted by
the antisense (p = 0.003 in AS vs Ctrl group) (Fig. 4A). A trend toward more severe dyskinesias
after CREB AS infusion was also seen when L-DOPA
was given chronically on days 2-14 after pump implantation (but
p = 0.112) (Fig. 4B). Thus, in
contrast with our initial hypothesis and that of others (Calon et al.,
2000 ), these data demonstrate that CREB is not required for the
development of dyskinesia and that its knockdown causes greater
sensitivity to the dyskinesiogenic effects of
L-DOPA.

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Figure 4.
Loss of CREB increases abnormal involuntary
movements (orolingual, limb, and axial AIMs) in 6-OHDA-lesioned rats
treated with L-DOPA. In the acutely
L-DOPA-treated rats (A), CREB
antisense produced levels of AIM scores that were similar to chronic
L-DOPA-treated rats (compare AS group in
A with Ctrl group in B). A
trend toward more severe dyskinesias in the CREB AS group was also seen
during chronic L-DOPA treatment (B).
AIMs scores were collected during a single testing session in
A and during four testing sessions in B
(the AIM score in the last of these sessions is shown in the diagram).
Each dot in the scattergram represents one single
animal; the group median is shown as a horizontal bar.
#p < 0.01.
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CREB is essential for both basal and cocaine-induced c-fos, fosB,
and prodynorphin gene expression in the intact striatum
The failure of CREB antisense to block gene expression changes
produced by L-DOPA was not compatible with the proposed
critical role of CREB in DA-dependent nuclear signaling. This prompted us to examine the requirement for CREB as a mediator of DA-dependent gene expression in the intact striatum using our knockdown paradigm. Previous studies had shown that CREB antisense could block
amphetamine-induced striatal c-Fos expression in normal rats (Konradi
et al., 1996 ). However, no data were available on the role of CREB in
PDyn and fosB gene induction by DA agonists in the striatum
in vivo.
A single, intrastriatal injection of CREB AS oligonucleotides
attenuated the inductive effect of 15 mg/kg cocaine on c-Fos and
FosB/ FosB immunoreactivity (Fig.
5A,B,D,E)
and caused a ~40% reduction in PDyn mRNA levels within the targeted
striatal subregion (Fig. 5F). The latter effect
represents a downregulation of basal PDyn gene expression, because
15 mg/kg cocaine did not have a significant inductive effect on the
PDyn transcript [Fig. 5C (compare black and
shaded bars)]. We thus tested a higher dose of cocaine (30 mg/kg, i.p.), which produced a marked induction of all the genes under
investigation (Fig. 5A-C, white
bars). In this experiment, CREB AS oligonucleotides were
delivered chronically into the striatum for 14 d using osmotic
minipumps. c-Fos, FosB/ FosB, and PDyn mRNA induction by 30 mg/kg
cocaine was completely blocked by CREB AS infusion (Fig.
5D-F; photomicrographs are shown in Fig.
3G-L). An analysis of animals injected with saline instead
of cocaine on the 14th day of antisense infusion confirmed that CREB
was required to maintain basal expression of PDyn mRNA in the striatum (Fig. 5F, shaded bars).

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Figure 5.
Cocaine-induced expression of c-Fos, FosB/ FosB,
and PDyn mRNA is dependent on CREB. Acute treatment with cocaine
produced a dose-dependent increase in the number of c-Fos
(A) and FosB/ FosB immunoreactive cells
(B), and in the levels of PDyn mRNA
(C), as measured on the cross-sectional area of
the caudate-putamen at mid-rostrocaudal levels. Knockdown of CREB
prevented the cocaine-stimulated increase in c-Fos
(D), FosB/ FosB (E), and
PDyn mRNA (F). CREB antisense-treated animals are
marked as AS + and represented using bars with
diagonal stripes, whereas animals receiving control
oligonucleotides are marked as AS and represented using
bars with no texture. The data presented here are
derived from two sets of experiments. Animals injected with 15 mg/kg
cocaine received a single intrastriatal injection of CREB AS, whereas
animals injected with 30 mg/kg cocaine or saline received a 14 d
intrastriatal oligonucleotide infusion. *p < 0.05 versus saline; §p < 0.01 versus 15 mg/kg cocaine; #p < 0.05 versus
control oligo; n 5 in each group; values give
means + SEM.
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Behavioral testing showed that CREB AS infusion significantly enhanced
the activity/stereotypy scores recorded from control animals injected
with saline (Fig. 6A)
(p = 0.020 for AS vs
Ctrl). On single monitoring periods, CREB AS rats
reached scores of 2, whereas the highest scores recorded from control
rats never exceeded 1 [note that scores of 1-2 in the Creese and
Iversen (1973) scale indicate motor activation rather than stereotypy;
see Materials and Methods]. CREB AS, however, did not produce a
significant effect on cocaine-induced stereotypies (Fig.
6B) (p = 0.243; maximal stereotypy scores per monitoring period amounted to 4-5 in CREB AS
rats and 3-4 in the controls).

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Figure 6.
Loss of CREB increases activity/stereotypy scores
in intact rats challenged with an injection of saline
(A) but not cocaine (B).
CREB AS was infused continuously for 14 d before the acute
challenge. The rats were neurologically intact. Each dot
in the scattergram represents one single animal; the group median is
shown as a horizontal bar.
#p < 0.01.
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DNA binding activity in the DA-denervated striatum: effects of
L-DOPA treatment
In agreement with previous studies (Cole et al., 1995 ; Carlezon et
al., 1998 ), our antisense data showed that the PDyn gene is an
important target of CREB in the intact striatum, but indicated that
transcription factors other than CREB regulate PDyn expression in the
parkinsonian striatum treated with L-DOPA. We were
therefore interested in studying striatal DNA binding activity at two
enhancer elements from the PDyn promoter: the noncanonical dynCRE3
element (Collins-Hicok et al., 1994 ; Douglass et al., 1994 ; Messersmith et al., 1994 ; Cole et al., 1995 ) and the noncanonical dynAP-1 (Naranjo
et al., 1991 ). Both enhancer elements have been shown to mediate
induction of PDyn in different cell culture systems. We compared
binding at these two elements with binding at a consensus CRE (Konradi
et al., 1993 ) and at a canonical AP-1 element (Vallone et al.,
1997 ).
The specificity of DNA binding activity at dynCRE3 and dynAP-1 was
verified by cold competition with nonradioactively labeled consensus
CRE or canonical AP-1 oligonucleotides, using protein extracts prepared
from both the DA-denervated and the intact striatum of
L-DOPA-injected animals. The canonical AP-1 and consensus
CRE oligonucleotides competed with both PDyn-enhancer elements in a
dose-related manner (Fig.
7A,B).
By contrast, an unrelated AP-4 oligonucleotide did not compete for but
rather enhanced the specific dynCRE3 and dynAP-1 binding (Fig. 7).

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Figure 7.
Gel mobility shift assay and competition
experiment determine the specificity of DNA-protein complexes formed
with dynCRE3 (A) and dynAP-1
(B). Unlabeled consensus AP-1, CRE, and the
unrelated AP-4 sequences were used to compete for proteins bound to
radiolabeled dynCRE3 (A) and dynAP1
(B) promoter elements. Striatal samples were
pooled from several L-DOPA-treated rats. The experiment was
repeated three times.
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In line with previous studies (Hope et al., 1994 ; Doucet et al., 1996 ;
Kashihara et al., 1996 ), DA denervation alone produced a slight
induction of DNA binding to the consensus AP-1 on the lesioned side
(Fig. 8A). In addition,
we found a small increase of binding to the dynCRE3 (Fig.
8C, compare lanes 1, 2).

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Figure 8.
Acute and chronic treatment with
L-DOPA induces striatal DNA binding activity to the
canonical AP-1 (A), the dynCRE3
(C), the dynAP-1 (E), and
the consensus CRE (F). Optical densities of
specific bands are expressed as the fold induction on the lesioned over
the intact side. *p < 0.05 versus saline
group; §p < 0.05 versus intact side;
values give means + SEM; n 5 in all groups but
chronic n-dys (i.e., chronically
L-DOPA-treated but nondyskinetic case). As shown in
B and D, only one animal remained
nondyskinetic (0 cumulative dyskinesia scores) during chronic
L-DOPA treatment. In B and D,
levels of binding to the canonical AP-1 (B) and
dynCRE3 (D) in the chronic L-DOPA
cases are plotted on the cumulative axial, limb, and orolingual AIM
scores recorded from the same animals. The probability value
(p) and correlation coefficient
(R) of the corresponding simple regression
equation are given in the bottom right corner. L,
6-OHDA-lesioned side; I, contralateral intact side.
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Both acute and chronic L-DOPA treatment produced a further
increase in binding of striatal proteins from the lesioned side to all
the promoter elements tested, particularly to the dynCRE3 and the
canonical AP-1 (Fig. 8A,C, compare
L-DOPA, lanes 3 and 5, and
saline, lane 1). The increase in DNA binding activity
induced by chronic L-DOPA treatment was
associated with the development of abnormal involuntary movements
during the drug treatment period (Fig.
8B,D). Animals that did not develop
dyskinesias showed levels of DNA binding activities comparable to those
found in saline-injected (lesion-only) controls (Fig.
8A,C, compare nondyskinetic rat in lane 7 and dyskinetic rat in lane 5).
In addition, both acute and chronic L-DOPA treatment
induced striatal DNA binding activity to the dynAP-1 (Fig.
8E) and to the consensus CRE probe (Fig.
8F).
FosB-related proteins account for striatal CRE- and AP-1-binding
activity in DA-denervated animals treated with L-DOPA
Striatal protein extracts from DA-denervated and chronically
L-DOPA-treated animals were incubated with antibodies
against CREB or FosB/ FosB-related antigens (before the addition of a radioactive oligonucleotide probe) to determine which of these proteins
interacted with the enhancer elements under investigation. The
FosB/ FosB antibody was particularly interesting to test, because of
previous findings in our lab demonstrating that intrastriatal infusion
of fosB antisense prevents PDyn gene induction by
L-DOPA (Andersson et al., 1999 ). In the
DA-denervated and L-DOPA-treated striatum,
FosB/ FosB-related antigens were the main contributors to binding
activity at each of the four enhancer elements under investigation
(Fig.
9A,C,E,G).
The CREB antiserum had no effect on the binding activity to the dynAP-1
and canonical AP-1 probes (Fig.
9A,C) and reduced the specific
dynCRE3- and consensus CRE-binding to a much lesser extent than the
FosB antiserum did (Fig. 9E,G, lesion). This was in contrast to cocaine-treated animals, in
which CREB was the major protein binding at the enhancer elements under investigation (Fig.
9D,F,H) (see
results below).

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Figure 9.
FosB/ FosB-related proteins are the predominant
transcription factors bound to CRE and AP-1 enhancers in
L-DOPA-treated rats. To study the contribution of CREB- or
FosB/ FosB-related proteins to the DNA binding activity induced by
L-DOPA (A, C,
E, G) or cocaine (B,
D, F, H),
supershift assays were performed using antisera against CREB or
FosB/ FosB. Antibodies were preincubated with striatal
protein extracts before addition of the radioactively labeled promoter
elements dynAP-1 (A, B), canonical AP-1
(C, D), dynCRE3 (E,
F), and consensus CRE (G,
H). The experiments were repeated at least three
times with samples from different rats. In the left-hand
pictures, s1 and s2 are protein
extracts from intact striata of two chronically
L-DOPA-treated rats, whereas s1' and
s2' are extracts from the corresponding 6-OHDA-lesioned
side. Rats treated with acute L-DOPA showed comparable
results. In the right-hand pictures, s,
a, and c are protein extracts from
animals treated with saline, acute cocaine, or chronic cocaine,
respectively.
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Supershift analyses from acutely L-DOPA-treated rats
produced identical results, i.e., FosB/ FosB-related proteins were
the main contributors to AP-1 and CRE binding in the DA-denervated striatum (data not shown). Because acute L-DOPA treatment
induces c-Fos in addition to FosB, an antibody against c-Fos was also tested in supershift analysis. A small supershift at the canonical AP-1
oligonucleotide could be detected after acute L-DOPA
treatment; however, c-Fos proteins did not contribute to the DNA
binding activity at the other enhancer elements (data not shown).
Putative dimerization partners of FosB-related transcription factors
are JunB and JunD proteins (Chen et al., 1995 ; Vallone et al., 1997 ).
We thus performed a supershift analysis using JunB and JunD antibodies,
alone or in combination with the FosB/ FosB antiserum. Specific
dynCRE3-containing complexes were displaced to some extent by the JunD
antibody alone, and to an even larger extent by the JunD and FosB
antibodies in combination (Fig. 10). In
contrast, the JunB antibody did not displace any of the protein-DNA complexes, and the supershift produced by a combination of JunB and
FosB/ FosB antibodies was entirely accounted for by the latter (Fig.
10). This experiment was repeated with the dynAP-1 enhancer element
with similar results.

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Figure 10.
Like FosB/ FosB-related proteins, JunD can bind
at AP-1 and CRE enhancers in 6-OHDA-lesioned,
L-DOPA-treated rats. To characterize possible binding
partners to FosB/ FosB proteins in the L-DOPA-induced
dynCRE3 complex, supershift assays were performed with JunD or JunB
antisera. s1 and s2 are samples from the
lesioned striata of two L-DOPA-treated rats. This
experiment was repeated with samples from additional animals, and with
the dynAP-1 probe, it obtained similar results.
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DNA binding activity in the intact striatum after treatment
with cocaine
In agreement with previous findings (Hope et al.,
1994 ), both acute and chronic cocaine treatment induced an
approximately twofold increase in striatal protein binding to the
canonical AP-1 probe (Table 3, Fig.
9D, autoradiographs). DNA binding activity to the
dynCRE3 enhancer was induced, albeit slightly, only after acute cocaine
(Table 3, Fig. 9F), whereas no induction was found at
the consensus CRE element (Table 3, Fig. 9H). In agreement with previous findings (Cole et al., 1995 ), striatal protein binding to
the dynAP-1 promoter element could not be detected (Fig.
9B).
The CREB antiserum supershifted the specific bands not only from the
dynCRE3 and consensus CRE (Fig.
9F,H) but also from the canonical AP-1 enhancer element (Fig. 9D). The FosB/ FosB
antibody produced only a minor displacement of the specific AP-1 bands, which was much less pronounced than that seen in the 6-OHDA-lesioned and L-DOPA treated striatum (Fig. 9, compare
C, D). A c-Fos antiserum was found to supershift
small amounts of the AP-1 complex induced by acute cocaine treatment
(data not shown).
FosB/ FosB proteins are expressed at a higher level in the
L-DOPA-treated striatum
The data presented so far revealed dramatic differences between
L-DOPA- and cocaine-induced striatal DNA binding activity, in terms of which elements within the PDyn promoter were activated and
which proteins were bound to them. These data raised the question of
whether the difference between the two drug treatment paradigms could
be attributed to a differential induction of FosB/ FosB-related proteins on a quantitative or qualitative level. Striatal protein extracts therefore were analyzed by Western immunoblotting using two
different FosB/ FosB antisera (see Materials and Methods). Both
antisera showed striatal induction of FosB/ FosB-immunoreactive bands
with the same molecular weight (i.e., 33 and 35-37 kDa) after
treatment with cocaine and L-DOPA (Fig.
11A). However, the levels of induction were significantly higher in the
L-DOPA-treated animals (Fig.
11B). These results were confirmed using an antiserum that recognizes all Fos family proteins (Fig. 11C) and were
consistent with the results obtained in the quantitative
immunohistochemical analysis (compare FosB-positive cell numbers after
treatment with 8 mg/kg L-DOPA or 30 mg/kg cocaine
in Figs. 2B and 5B).

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Figure 11.
L-DOPA induces FosB/ FosB proteins
to a higher level than cocaine does. Immunoblots with an antibody to
FosB/ FosB are shown in A, and the corresponding
densitometric analysis is shown in B. All the
immunoblots used for analysis were processed simultaneously. A
representative immunoblot stained with a PanFos antibody
is shown in C. Arrows indicate the
expected molecular weights of c-Fos (55 kDa), FosB (33 kDa), and the
chronic FRAs (35-37 kDa). *p < 0.001 versus
saline, acute cocaine, and chronic cocaine group.
§p < 0.05 versus saline controls in
the cocaine paradigm. #p < 0.01 versus
saline controls in the L-DOPA paradigm;
n 5; values give means + SEM.
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DISCUSSION |
Current knowledge of DA agonist-induced signaling pathways is
mainly derived from studies performed in neurologically intact animals
and cultured neurons. However, conclusions from these model systems may
not be applicable to the DA-denervated striatum. Indeed, DA denervation
causes profound changes in the expression, functional coupling, and
state of phosphorylation of striatal DA and glutamate receptors (Narang
and Wamsley, 1990 ; LaHoste and Marshall, 1992 ; Dunah et al., 2000 ; and
see references therein), all of which are critical for DA-dependent
nuclear signaling (Graybiel et al., 1990 ; Konradi et al., 1996 ).
In this study, we have used an antisense approach to verify the
requirement of CREB for striatal PDyn and fos family gene induction, as
produced by L-DOPA in DA-denervated rats and cocaine in
neurologically intact animals. Knowing that the response to DA agonists
is supersensitive in parkinsonian subjects (see below), L-DOPA was titrated to just above the threshold dose for
induction of the genes under investigation. The doses of
L-DOPA tested here (3-8 mg/kg) are in the range used for
the treatment of Parkinson's disease. Cocaine was tested at 15 mg/kg,
a typical bolus dose in "binge" cocaine studies in rats
(Quinones-Jenab et al., 2000 ; Rosin et al., 2000 ), and at 30 mg/kg, a
dose that is among the highest used in the literature (Steiner and
Gerfen, 1993 ) and approximates half the LD50 for
cocaine in rats (Derlet et al., 1990 ).
In the first part of the study we used a single-injection method for
intrastriatal CREB antisense delivery. Because single antisense
injections may not be able to block gene expression changes by strong
inducing stimuli (Konradi et al., 1994 ), we also examined the effects
of continuous antisense infusion for 14 d. The two methods of
antisense delivery produced identical results: CREB knockdown reduced
basal and cocaine-induced PDyn, c-fos, and fosB
gene expression in the intact caudate-putamen but had no effect on the
gene expression changes produced by L-DOPA in the
6-OHDA-lesioned striatum.
A tight coupling between levels of CREB activity and PDyn gene
expression in intact striatal neurons has been demonstrated previously
with herpes virus-mediated gene transfer of native or mutated CREB in
the nucleus accumbens (Carlezon et al., 1998 ). Here we demonstrate that
in the sensorimotor striatum CREB is indeed required for basal PDyn
expression as well as for the induction of PDyn by cocaine. In
contrast, in the DA-denervated striatum, transcription factors other
than CREB, such as FosB-like proteins and JunD, are paramount for
the regulation of PDyn.
In the rat Parkinson model, upregulation of striatal PDyn mRNA by
L-DOPA is tightly associated with the development of
dyskinesia (Cenci et al., 1998 ). Accordingly, the present study shows a
close correlation between AIM scores induced by chronic
L-DOPA treatment and striatal DNA binding activity at AP-1
and CRE-like sites in the PDyn promoter (note, however, that an
increase in DNA binding activity was also detected in the acute
L-DOPA cases, which did not exhibit significant
dyskinesia). The importance of PDyn upregulation as a determinant of
AIM development is further supported by the anti-dyskinetic effect of
treatments that block or prevent striatal PDyn gene induction during
chronic L-DOPA treatment (Andersson et al., 1999 ; Henry et
al., 1999 ; Lee et al., 2000 ) (and our unpublished data). It is
therefore not surprising that striatal knockdown of CREB, which did not
block PDyn gene induction by L-DOPA, was ineffective in
reducing dyskinesia. On the contrary, CREB knockdown caused an even
greater sensitivity to the dyskinesiogenic effect of L-DOPA
in 6-OHDA-lesioned rats. Hyperkinetic effects of CREB knockdown
occurred also in intact animals, which showed increased motor
activation after a stressful stimulus (saline injection). Because this
response occurred in the absence of any drug treatment, it is most
likely caused by altered regulation of striatal genes that depend on
CREB for their basal expression. Indeed, CREB has been shown to
maintain constitutive expression of several genes in various tissues,
including brain (for review, see Herdegen and Leah, 1998 ), and basal
levels of CREB phosphorylation are found in the striatum (Sgambato et
al., 1998 ). In intact animals injected with cocaine, CREB knockdown did
not significantly augment the stereotypic behavior induced by the
treatment. This lack of effect may depend on two factors. First, in the
cocaine paradigm, CREB knockdown produces two parallel phenomena that
are likely to affect motor behavior in opposite directions, namely, a
dysregulation of constitutively expressed, CREB-dependent genes, and a
blockade of cocaine-induced gene expression. Second, the motor response to cocaine in intact rats involves DA-receptor stimulation in the
striata of both sides. Indeed, unilateral injections of DA agonists in
the lateral CPu have been shown to produce stereotypies half as intense
as those elicited by bilateral injections (Dickson et al., 1994 ). Thus,
bilateral knockdown of CREB may be required to fully uncover its role
in cocaine-induced stereotypies.
DA-dependent expression of c-Fos and PDyn has been shown to require
activation of CRE- and AP-1-like enhancers in the corresponding promoters (Naranjo et al., 1991 ; Konradi et al., 1994 ; Cole et al.,
1995 ). We therefore performed a study of DNA-protein interactions at
consensus CRE and AP-1 sites in the two drug treatment paradigms under
investigation. Because DNA binding affinity depends not only on the DNA
binding site per se but also on the adjacent bases (Ryseck and Bravo,
1991 ), we also used DNA probes reproducing an AP-1-like site and a
CRE-like element from the PDyn promoter. Both enhancers have been found
to mediate transactivation of the PDyn gene in cell cultures (Naranjo
et al., 1991 ; Messersmith et al., 1994 ). Both L-DOPA and
cocaine were found to increase AP-1 binding to the canonical AP-1 site,
whereas increased binding to the consensus CRE was detected only in
L-DOPA-treated rats. At the PDyn promoter, both cocaine and
L-DOPA induced protein binding to the dynCRE3 element,
although this increase was much larger in the 6-OHDA/L-DOPA
model. Moreover, only L-DOPA induced any binding to the
dynAP-1. An analysis of the protein composition of the induced
protein-DNA complexes provides an explanation for the observed
differences between drug treatment paradigms. In intact rats treated
with cocaine, striatal DNA binding activity was mainly accounted for by
CREB, which is constitutively expressed and is thought to bind to the
DNA regardless of its phosphorylation state (for review, see Shaywitz
and Greenberg, 1999 ). In 6-OHDA-lesioned animals treated with
L-DOPA, FosB-related proteins, in combination with JunD,
were the main contributors to striatal AP-1- and CRE-binding activity
and could target both CRE- and AP-1-like sites in the PDyn promoter.
AP-1 complexes containing FosB and JunD have been shown to bind
consensus CREs in vitro (Ryseck and Bravo, 1991 ). Our data show that such a phenomenon can occur in vivo in a specific
pathophysiological condition, i.e., the parkinsonian striatum treated
with a therapeutic dose of L-DOPA. As shown by
Western blot analysis, striatal expression of FosB (~33 kDa) and
its derivatives, the so-called chronic FRAs (~35-37 kDa) (Hope et
al., 1994 ), was induced to a much larger extent by
L-DOPA in DA-denervated rats than by cocaine in
intact animals. These high levels of expression, which reflect a
condition of DA-receptor supersensitivity at the gene induction level
(for review, see Gerfen, 2000 ), seem to enable FosB-like proteins to
compete for and regulate consensus CREs, in addition to AP-1 sites. Our
data show that JunD can also bind to these sites, presumably after
dimerization with the induced FosB-like proteins (Vallone et al.,
1997 ; Pérez-Otaño et al., 1998 ).
We propose that, in the parkinsonian striatum treated with
L-DOPA, dimers of FosB-like proteins and JunD can bypass
CREB in the transactivation of PDyn and fos family genes. Indeed,
intrastriatal knockdown of fosB (Andersson et al., 1999 ) but not CREB
(present study) blocks the striatal induction of PDyn by
L-DOPA. A switch from CREB- to FosB/chronic FRAs-driven
gene activation may explain the magnitude and peculiar dynamics of the
supersensitive gene induction response, which is seen in the
DA-denervated striatum after treatment with DA agonists. Indeed,
FosB-JunD dimers have a much longer half-life than phosphorylated
CREB (for review, see Herdegen and Leah, 1998 ) and persist at very high
levels both during and after long-term treatment with
L-DOPA (Westin et al., 2001 ) (and our unpublished
data). Accordingly, DA-agonist treatment to 6-OHDA-lesioned rats has
been shown to produce a persistent striatal induction of both PDyn and
early response genes (Steiner and Gerfen, 1996 ; Westin et al., 2001 ).
This persistent induction reflects the breakdown of homeostatic
mechanisms that would normally limit the gene expression changes
produced by repeated DA-agonist administration, as determined by
studies performed in intact animals (Steiner and Gerfen, 1993 ; for
review, see Gerfen, 2000 ).
In conclusion, by combining in vivo gene induction assays
and antisense technology, this study demonstrates that CREB is
essential for the expression of PDyn and fos family genes in intact but not DA-denervated striatal neurons. In the latter,
L-DOPA-induced FosB-like proteins, in
combination with JunD, can compete with CREB for binding to consensus
CRE sites. Thus, these data uncover a novel and unexpected alteration
of transcriptional regulatory mechanisms that occurs in the
supersensitive parkinsonian striatum treated with
L-DOPA.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received July 11, 2001; revised Sept. 19, 2001; accepted Sept. 24, 2001.
This study was supported by grants from the Swedish Medical Research
Council (Contract K2000-33X-13480-01A to M.A.C.), the Swedish
Association of the Neurologically Disabled, the Craaford Foundation,
the Greta and Johan Kock Foundations, the Thorsten and Elsa Segerfalk
Foundation, the Swedish Society For Medical Research, Åke Wiberg
Foundation, and the National Institute of Drug Abuse (Grant DA07134).We
thank Ulla Jarl for technical assistance and Thomas Herdegen for
helpful discussion.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Angela Cenci Nilsson,
Wallenberg Neuroscience Centre, Neurobiology Division, BMC A11, S-221
84 Lund, Sweden. E-mail:
Angela.Cenci_Nilsson{at}mphy.lu.se.
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