 |
Previous Article | Next Article 
The Journal of Neuroscience, March 15, 2001, 21(6):1949-1963
Evidence for Redox Regulation of Cytochrome c Release during
Programmed Neuronal Death: Antioxidant Effects of Protein Synthesis and
Caspase Inhibition
Rebecca A.
Kirkland and
James L.
Franklin
Department of Neurological Surgery, University of Wisconsin Medical
School, Madison, Wisconsin 53706
 |
ABSTRACT |
Sympathetic neurons die by apoptosis when they are deprived of
nerve growth factor (NGF). Activation of caspases by cytochrome c
released from mitochondria is central to this death. In this report we
present evidence that cellular redox state regulates cytochrome c
redistribution in these neurons. An increase of mitochondrial-produced reactive oxygen species (ROS) occurred in rat sympathetic neurons in
cell culture within 3 hr of NGF withdrawal. Caspase inhibitors blocked
this ROS burst. By 6 hr after NGF deprivation, glutathione (GSH) levels
had increased, neutralizing elevated hydrogen peroxide levels and
returning cellular redox state to basal levels. By 12 hr after
deprivation, ROS levels had again increased and remained elevated
during the rest of the apoptotic process. The later ROS burst appeared
to have both caspase-dependent and caspase-independent components and
was coincident with the period of cytochrome c release. Inhibition of
protein synthesis with cycloheximide (CHX) and treatment with the
antioxidant compound, N-acetyl-L-cysteine (L-NAC), blocked both the early and late ROS bursts by
increasing cellular GSH levels (Ratan et al., 1994 ; Tan et al., 1998 ).
Both compounds, and a membrane-permeant form of GSH, also inhibited cytochrome c release and death. Treatment of NGF, CHX-,
L-NAC-, and GSH-saved cells with hydrogen peroxide caused
rapid cytochrome c release. These data suggest a role for cellular
redox state in regulating cytochrome c release during apoptosis induced
by NGF withdrawal.
Key words:
reactive oxygen; mitochondria; caspase; cytochrome c; apoptosis; redox
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Approximately 50% of neurons
produced during embryogenesis die by apoptosis (Oppenheim, 1991 ). This
programmed death is characterized by atrophy, internucleosomal DNA
fragmentation, dependence on caspase activity (Alnemri et al., 1996 )
and, in many cases, dependence on protein synthesis (Martin et al.,
1988 ; Deckwerth and Johnson, 1993 ; Deshmukh et al., 1996 ). Availability
of a sufficient quantity of a required neurotrophic factor provided by
target, or other tissues, is a primary determinant of which neurons
survive the period of developmental apoptosis (Oppenheim, 1991 ). Only
those cells that obtain sufficient quantities of the neurotrophin live.
The prototypical model for investigating the cellular and molecular
events underlying apoptosis during neurogenesis is embryonic sympathetic neurons in cell culture (Martin et al., 1988 ). These neurons undergo apoptotic death, either in vivo or in
vitro, when they do not obtain enough of their required
neurotrophic factor, nerve growth factor (NGF). Release of
cytochrome c from the intermembrane space of mitochondria into the
cytoplasm is central to the apoptotic death of many cell types,
including NGF-deprived sympathetic neurons (Reed, 1997 ; Deshmukh and
Johnson, 1998 ; Martinou et al., 1999 ). Once in the cytoplasm,
cytochrome c activates caspase proteases (Alnemri et al., 1996 ),
presumably by binding onto the caspase regulatory protein, apoptosis
protease activating factor-1 (Apaf-1), or a related protein (Li et al.,
1997 ). Caspases, in turn, cleave many important substrates and are
directly responsible for cellular demise.
Suppression of protein synthesis has a potent anti-apoptotic effect on
NGF-deprived sympathetic neurons (Martin et al., 1988 ). Recent evidence
shows this effect is entirely mediated via block of cytochrome c
release from mitochondria (Deshmukh and Johnson, 1998 ; Neame et al.,
1998 ), implying that protein synthesis suppression blocks production of
one or more proteins that are required for cytochrome c redistribution.
In this report, we present evidence suggesting an alternate mode of
protection by protein synthesis blockade. Withdrawal of NGF from rat
sympathetic neurons caused elevated levels of mitochondrial-produced
reactive oxygen species (ROS). These ROS caused a cellular pro-oxidant
state that appeared to be necessary for cytochrome c release.
Inhibition of protein synthesis increased cellular glutathione (GSH)
concentration (Ratan et al., 1994 ) and, thereby, inhibited ROS
accumulation (Tan et al., 1998 ). Thus, much of the anti-apoptotic
effect of blocking protein synthesis in NGF-deprived sympathetic
neurons may be caused by antioxidant inhibition of cytochrome c
discharge from mitochondria rather than by block of pro-apoptotic
protein production.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Reagents. Monochlorobimane, Mitotracker Red CMXRos,
2', 7'-bis(2-carboxyethyl)carboxyfluorescein (BCECF), and
5-(and-6)-chloromethyl-2', 7'-dichlorodihydrofluorescein diacetate
(CM-H2DCFDA) were purchased from
Molecular Probes (Eugene, OR). Caspase inhibitor,
boc-aspartyl(OMe)-fluoromethylketone, was purchased from Enzyme Systems
Products (Livermore, CA), and nerve growth factor 2.5S was purchased
from Harlan Bioproducts (Indianapolis, IN). Radioactive amino acids
were purchased from ICN (Costa Mesa, CA). U74500A was a gift from
Pharmacia and Upjohn (Kalamazoo, MI). All other reagents were purchased
from Sigma (St. Louis, MO) unless otherwise stated.
Cell culture and survival assay. Superior cervical ganglia
were dissected from embryonic day 20 or 21 Sprague Dawley (Harlan Bioproducts) rat fetuses. Neurons were dissociated from the ganglia as
described (Johnson and Argiro, 1983 ; Franklin et al., 1995 ). Cells for
survival and protein synthesis assays were plated on a collagen
substrate in 24 well Costar tissue culture dishes (Corning, Corning,
NY). Cells to be used for fluorescent or confocal microscopy experiments were plated on a collagen substrate coated on number 1 glass coverslips glued with SILASTIC medical adhesive (Dow
Corning, Midland, MI) over holes cut in the bottoms of 35 mm Falcon
tissue culture dishes (Beckton Dickinson, Franklin Lakes, NJ).
Approximately one-half ganglion was plated per culture well for all
experiments except for whole-culture GSH assays in which three to five
ganglia were plated per culture (in 35 mm culture dishes). Cultures
were maintained in medium containing Eagle's minimum essential medium with Earle's salts (Life Technologies, Gaithersburg, MD) supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum, 100 U/ml penicillin, 100 µg/ml
streptomycin, 20 µM fluorodeoxyuridine, 20 µM uridine, 1.4 mM
L-glutamine, and 50 ng/ml 2.5S NGF.
Cultures were deprived of NGF by incubation in the standard culture
medium lacking NGF and containing a polyclonal NGF-neutralizing antibody (Harlan Bioproducts; Franklin and Johnson, 1998 ). At the end
of all survival experiments, treatment media was replaced with standard
culture medium containing NGF. After 5-7 d in this medium, cultures
were fixed by exposing them for 30 min at 4° C to 4%
paraformaldehyde in PBS, pH 7.2. They were then stained with 0.1%
crystal violet to enhance visualization (Franklin et al., 1995 ).
Counting by a naive observer determined number of surviving neurons.
All counts were normalized to the number of neurons in sibling cultures
maintained since the time of plating in standard culture medium
containing NGF. Adding NGF back to the culture medium after survival
experiments resulted in significant hypertrophy of living neurons while
dead ones degenerated, allowing unambiguous determination of cells
saved from death by the various experimental treatments. Therefore, the
moment of death in this rescue paradigm was the time at which
readdition of NGF no longer promoted long-term survival. All
experiments were begun when cells had been in culture for 6-9 d.
Confocal and fluorescent microscopy. For confocal
microscopy, neurons were visualized with a 60× plan oil immersion lens
(numerical aperture 1.4) on an inverted microscope (Nikon
Diaphot 200). Confocal imaging was accomplished by a Bio-Rad (Hercules,
CA) MRC 1024 confocal laser-scanning microscope equipped with a mixed
gas argon-krypton laser. The scan head of the confocal microscope was
mounted transversely onto the inverted microscope. The laser emitted
three strong lines in exact coalignment at 488, 568, and 647 nm. A
motorized wheel with neutral density filters was controlled by computer
software to vary laser intensity. The microscope and its settings were controlled by 24 bit MRC-1024 Laser Sharp software (version 3.0; Bio-Rad) running on a Compac Prosignia 300 computer.
Neurons, chosen at random with phase-contrast microscopy, were scanned
by the confocal microscope at 512 × 512 pixel resolution. Digitized images were stored on computer hard drives or zip drives (Iomega, Roy, UT) for later analysis. Generally, eight separate fields
of view were scanned per plate. Image quantification was accomplished
by measuring raw pixel intensity of stained neuronal somas with
Sigmagel software (SPSS, Chicago, IL) set to square spot operation
mode. In all cases, the quantified spot covered a 60 µm2 area of the soma. Because we were
interested in cytoplasmic changes, nuclei were excluded from
measurements. The measured intensity of each neuron was normalized to
that of control neurons maintained in the standard culture medium
containing NGF and receiving the same concentration of dye for the same
period as did the experimental cells. Control neurons were always from
the same plating as the experimental cells. Presentation versions of
saved images were prepared with Adobe Photoshop 5.0 (Adobe Systems, San
Jose, CA).
All fluorescence microscopy was accomplished with a Nikon TE300
inverted microscope. Light was provided by a mercury lamp, and images
were captured by a cooled CCD camera (MicroMAX; Princeton Instruments,
Trenton, NJ) using Metamorph software (Universal Imaging Corporation,
West Chester, PA) running on a Compaq 400 MHz computer. Filter cubes
were changed manually. The 380 ± 15, 440 ± 15, and 490 ± 15 nm excitation filters were controlled by a Lambda 10-2 optical
filter changer (Sutter Instruments, Novato, CA). Fluorescence intensity
was measured in a 33 µm2 area of the
soma of each cell with the Metamorph elliptical region tool. All
microscopy was done at room temperature.
ROS measurement. We used the redox-sensitive dye
CM-H2 DCFDA. This dye is nonfluorescent in
reduced form and is readily membrane-permeant. Once in a cell,
esterases cleave its acetate groups. The thiol-reactive chloromethyl
group then binds to cellular thiols trapping the dye inside the cell
where oxidation converts it to the fluorescent form.
CM-H2 DCFDA is oxidized by cellular hydrogen
peroxide, hydroxyl radicals, and various free radical products lying
downstream from hydrogen peroxide. It is relatively insensitive to
oxidation by superoxide (Royall and Ischiropoulis, 1993 ).
However, because hydrogen peroxide is produced by dismutation of
superoxide (Halliwell and Gutteridge, 1999 ),
CM-H2 DCFDA serves as an indirect indicator of
superoxide production. Therefore, in this report, when we refer to ROS
detected by this dye we denote mostly hydrogen peroxide, hydroxyl
radicals, or their downstream free radical products.
Most cultures were incubated for 20-25 min at 35°C in the
appropriate experimental medium containing CM-H2
DCFDA (10 µM). They were then washed two or three times
with Leibovitz's L-15 medium containing the experimental treatments
and left in the last wash for confocal microscopy. To determine how
well the dye was retained, cells loaded with
CM-H2 DCFDA were treated with 10 mM
H2O2 to oxidize the dye.
After 20 min of this treatment, CM-H2 DCFDA
intensity was determined, and the
H2O2 was washed out. The
average fluorescence intensity of these neurons was about the same 30 min after washout as it was 20 min after the beginning of the treatment
(4.8 ± 0.41-fold and 5.0 ± 0.29-fold increases before and
after washout respectively; p > 0.55 by t
test; n = 28-32 neurons). Thus, there appeared to be
no significant leakage of dye from cells. We also found that
CM-H2 DCFDA was relatively insensitive to
photo-oxidation when laser intensity was kept at low levels, also
making it superior to earlier versions of the dye (data not shown). For
the experiments described here, CM-H2 DCFDA was
also superior to the redox-sensitive dye dihydrorhodamine. Staining
with the latter dye, unlike CM-H2 DCFDA, depends
on mitochondrial membrane potential, which changes during the apoptotic
process (Neame et al., 1998 ). Cultures treated with
N-acetyl-L-cysteine (L-NAC) were loaded with
CM-H2DCFDA in medium lacking
L-NAC out of concern that interaction of
CM-H2DCFDA with L-NAC
thiols might lower loading concentration. After treatment with the dye,
cultures were returned to L-15 medium containing the appropriate
L-NAC concentrations. The
CM-H2DCFDA was excited with the 488 nm line of
the confocal laser. The FITC photomultiplier of the confocal scope was
used for image acquisition.
Immunocytochemistry. Neurons were immunostained for
cytochrome c by a modification of the techniques described by Easton et al. (1997) , Deshmukh and Johnson (1998) , and Putcha et al. (1999) . At
the end of experiments, cells were fixed for 30 min at 4°C with 4%
freshly made paraformaldehyde in PBS, pH 7.2. Cultures were then washed
three times with Tris-buffered saline containing 100 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.6, and 0.9% NaCl. Washing was
followed by incubation for at least 30 min at room temperature in
blocking buffer (Tris-buffered saline containing 0.3% Triton X-100 and 5% normal goat serum). Cultures were then incubated overnight at 4°C
in the same solution containing the anti-cytochrome c primary antibody
(200 ng/ml; PharMingen, San Diego, CA). After washing three times with
blocking buffer, cultures were incubated for 2-4 hr at 4°C in
blocking buffer containing an FITC-conjugated anti-mouse secondary
antibody (1.7 µg/ml; PharMingen). Cultures were then washed two times
with Tris-buffered saline, left in this medium, and viewed by
fluorescence or confocal microscopy.
Glutathione assays. Reduced GSH concentrations were
estimated by fluorescence microscopic imaging of single cells stained with monochlorobimane (MCB), a dye that is enzymatically bound to GSH
(Fernandez-Checa and Kaplowitz, 1990 ). In most MCB experiments, cultures were stained for 30 min at room temperature in L-15 medium containing MCB (5 µM). They were then washed
two times in the same medium lacking MCB and left in the second wash
for recording the fluorescence intensity of incorporated MCB. During
the last 30 min of some experiments, cultures were incubated at 35°
in a 5% CO2 atmosphere in the appropriate
experimental medium containing MCB (5 µM). No
difference in results was noted with the two staining methods. MCB was
excited at 380 ± 15 nm. Emission filter was 510 ± 20 nm.
This technique allowed determination of relative GSH levels in the
somas of individual neurons without interference from GSH in
non-neuronal cells.
Total GSH and oxidized (GSSG) glutathione concentrations were
determined in whole cultures by a modification of the method of Tietze
(1969) . In this assay, the sulfhydryl group of GSH reacts with
5,5'-dithiobis-(2-nitrobenzoic acid) (DTNB) to produce yellow 5-thio-2-nitrobenzoic acid (TNB). The mixed disulfide, GSTNB (GSH and
TNB) that is produced is subsequently reduced by glutathione reductase
to recycle the GSH and produce more TNB. The rate of TNB production is
proportional to the recycling reaction which was, in turn, proportional
to GSH concentration. Because of the use of glutathione reductase,
which reduces GSSG to GSH, this assay measured both GSH and GSSG and,
therefore, gave total glutathione concentration. Cells (from three to
five ganglia) were lysed in 10 mM HCl by freezing
( 70°C) and thawing at room temperature three times. The resultant
lysates were deproteinated to eliminate interference from protein
sulfhydryl groups. Deproteination was accomplished by precipitating
proteins with 5% sulfosalycilic acid followed by centrifugation. The
supernatant was removed, and pH was corrected to 7.0 with 4.0 N
triethanolamine. Absorbance was read at 414 nm with a Bio-Rad model 550 microplate reader. Total GSH plus GSSG concentration was determined
from standard curves.
Effects of compounds on protein synthesis. Protein synthesis
was assayed by incorporation of radiolabeled amino acids as described (Franklin and Johnson, 1998 ). Labeling medium contained the appropriate concentrations of compounds and 10 µCi/ml TRAN
35S-label (70%
L-methionine, 15%
L-cysteine) or 10 µCi/ml
[3H]leucine.
pH measurement. Intracellular pH was measured by
fluorescence microscopy of cells loaded with the pH-sensitive dye
BCECF. Cultures were exposed for 15 min to medium appropriate for the experimental treatments and containing 8 µM
BCECF. After loading, and 2× washout of the dye with L-15 medium,
cultures were exposed to L-15 medium containing the appropriate
experimental treatments. The BCECF was alternately excited at 440 ± 10 and 490 ± 10 nm. Emission filter was 515 ± 10 nm. The
ratios of emission intensities at the two different excitation
wavelengths was determined in a 33 µm2
area of individual cells. As a positive control, intracellular pH was
altered by exposing cells to L-15 medium, pH 6.0-8.0, containing the
protonophore nigericin (5 µM; Molecular Probes).
Statistical analysis. Statistical analysis was done with
SigmaPlot 5.0 (SPSS) or by SigmaStat 2.0 (SPSS). As appropriate, statistical comparisons were made by t test or by
Kruskal-Wallis one-way ANOVA on Ranks with Dunn's multiple
comparisons test. Other types of statistical comparisons are noted in
the text or figure legends. Means in all figures are shown as
±SEM.
 |
RESULTS |
Increased ROS levels in NGF-deprived sympathetic neurons were
blocked by protein synthesis inhibition and attenuated by caspase
inhibition
Elevated levels of ROS occur in rat sympathetic neurons in
cell culture within 3 hr of NGF deprivation (Greenlund et al., 1995 ;
Dugan et al., 1997 ). This ROS increase appears transient, with levels
declining to baseline by 8 hr after NGF withdrawal. Because none of
these cells commit to apoptotic death until ~18 hr after NGF removal
(Deckwerth and Johnson, 1993 ), it was of interest to determine ROS
levels at later periods. For these experiments we used the
redox-sensitive dye 5-(and-6)-chloromethyl-2',
7'-dichlorodihydrofluorescein diacetate
(CM-H2 DCFDA), which fluoresces upon oxidation.
Consistent with the reports of a transient increase in ROS levels after
NGF deprivation, average CM-H2 DCFDA intensity
was 1.22 ± 0.18-fold above average control intensity by 3 hr
after deprivation but had returned to baseline levels by 6 hr after
withdrawal (Fig. 1A).
By 12 hr after NGF deprivation, average
CM-H2DCFDA intensity was again well above
baseline and continued to increase with time, reaching a peak average
of threefold to fourfold above control intensity by 24-30 hr after
withdrawal. Many individual cells showed much larger increases, with
CM-H2DCFDA intensity rising by as much as 22-fold
(Fig. 1B). Because intensity of fluorescein-based dyes can be affected by pH (Nedergaard et al., 1990 ; Reynolds and
Hastings, 1995 ), we used the pH-sensitive dye BCECF to determine whether cellular pH changed after NGF deprivation. Table
1 shows there were no alterations of pH
after withdrawal (p < 0.001 compared with pH of
cells maintained in NGF). Treatment of CM-H2
DCFDA-loaded cells with
H2O2 (10 mM) for 30 min caused an average 7.4 ± 0.9-fold increase of dye intensity. Therefore, the elevated
CM-H2 DCFDA fluorescence after NGF deprivation
was not caused by alterations of cellular pH but was, likely,
attributable solely to dye oxidation caused by increased ROS
levels.

View larger version (22K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 1.
Increased Ros levels in NGF-deprived rat
sympathetic neurons in cell culture. A, Average ROS
levels, as measured by fluorescence intensity of the redox-sensitive
dye CM-H2 DCFDA, showed a transient early increase after
NGF deprivation followed by a later sustained increase. The protein
synthesis inhibitor CHX (1 µg/ml), blocked both the early and delayed
ROS bursts, whereas the pan-caspase inhibitor BAF (30 µM)
completely blocked the early burst but only attenuated the later one.
Data are shown as fold change from control values. B,
Single-cell CM-H2 DCFDA values used for the averages in
A. The data from the NGF-deprived cells is above the
time point, and the CHX and BAF values for that time point are to the
right of these values. There is no data shown for NGF-deprived cultures
later than 30 hr after withdrawal because most cells had died by that
time. The values shown are from cells that appeared intact when
observed by phase-contrast microscopy. Except for the 24 hr time point
for NGF deprivation, n = 93-290 neurons taken from
three or four separate platings for the different conditions and time
points. n = 383 neurons from six separate platings
for the 24 hr NGF-withdrawal time point. Control CM-H2
DCFDA intensity and intensity at T0 was that
of cells maintained continuously in the presence of NGF. For each cell,
CM-H2 DCFDA intensity was normalized (as a percentage) to
the average CM-H2 DCFDA intensity of cells measured in
sibling NGF-maintained cultures at the same time. Fold change from the
average was then obtained for each cell by subtracting 100 from this
and then dividing by 100 ([%CM-H2 DCFDA intensity 100%]/100%). For example, the increase at 3 hr after NGF deprivation
was ~222% of control. This technique was used in all subsequent
figures. Error bars for fold change are SEM in this and subsequent
figures.
|
|
It was recently shown that inhibition of protein synthesis with
cycloheximide (CHX) blocks an increase in ROS that occurs during the
glutamate-induced death of a hippocampal cell line (Tan et al., 1998 ).
To determine whether a similar block occurred in NGF-deprived
sympathetic neurons, cultures were exposed to 1 µg/ml CHX, a
concentration that causes a rapid, sustained, and complete suppression
of protein synthesis in these cells and that also blocks apoptosis
(Martin et al., 1988 ; Franklin and Johnson, 1998 ). Figure 1,
A and B, shows that CHX caused a profound
inhibition of both the early and the late ROS bursts occurring after
NGF deprivation. Average CM-H2DCFDA intensity in
CHX-maintained cultures was at, or below, control levels for at least
the first 30 hr after NGF withdrawal. However, by 48-72 hr after
deprivation, CHX had become somewhat less effective at suppressing ROS.
Average CM-H2DCFDA intensity was 0.28 ± 0.08-fold above control level by 48 hr and 0.66 ± 0.14 by 72 hr
(p < 0.01 for both). No cells in the
CHX-maintained cultures had CM-H2DCFDA
intensities more than threefold above control average at any time point
(Fig. 1B). The pH of cells deprived of NGF and
exposed for 24 hr to CHX was the same as that of cells maintained in
the presence of NGF (Table 1; p > 0.1), indicating
that there was no pH-dependent quenching of
CM-H2DCFDA fluorescence. The average
CM-H2DCFDA intensity of NGF-deprived, CHX (1 µg/ml for 24 hr)-maintained neurons exposed to
H2O2 (10 mM) for 30 min was not significantly different
from that of NGF-maintained cells exposed to 10 mM
H2O2 for the same period
(7.4 ± 0.93- and 6.4 ± 1.4-fold increases, respectively; p > 0.5; n = 33-35 neurons).
Therefore, the block of increased CM-H2DCFDA
fluorescence intensity by CHX could not be explained by CHX-mediated
alterations of dye loading or changes in the ability of the dye to
fluoresce upon oxidation. The protein synthesis inhibitor anisomycin
(100 ng/ml; Franklin and Johnson, 1998 ) and the transcription inhibitor
actinomycin D (100 ng/ml; Franklin and Johnson, 1998 ) also decreased
ROS to near baseline levels in cells deprived of NGF and exposed to
these compounds for 24 hr. The average CM-H2DCFDA
intensity in the anisomycin-exposed cells was 0.22 ± 0.13-fold of
NGF control levels (p > 0.4 compared with
control; n = 35 neurons) and was reduced to 0.6 ± 0.07-fold of control in the actinomycin D-exposed cells
(p < 0.001 compared with control;
n = 38 neurons). Therefore, inhibition of
macromolecular synthesis had potent antioxidant effects on the ROS
levels of NGF-deprived cells.
Inhibition of caspase activity also blocks increased ROS levels in
glutamate-induced cell death (Tan et al., 1998 ). The pan-caspase inhibitor boc-aspartyl (OMe)-fluoromethylketone (BAF) has a potent anti-apoptotic effect on NGF-deprived sympathetic neurons (Deshmukh et
al., 1996 ), indicating that this death is caspase-mediated. To
determine whether caspases influenced ROS levels in these cells, we
treated cultures from the time of withdrawal with 30 µM
BAF, a concentration that blocks ~80% of apoptotic death for 3 d after deprivation (Deshmukh et al., 1996 ). Surprisingly, BAF
treatment completely blocked the early ROS burst
(p > 0.1 compared with control) and greatly
reduced, but did not prevent the late burst (Fig.
1A,B). Average CM-H2DCFDA
intensity peaked at 1.59 ± 0.13-fold above those in control cells
24 hr after deprivation. It then declined to a steady-state level that
averaged 0.59 ± 0.05-fold above control levels by 48 hr and
0.38 ± 0.08-fold above control by 72 hr after the withdrawal
(p < 0.01 compared with control in both cases).
Although not as effective as CHX at preventing high
CM-H2DCFDA intensities, BAF, nevertheless,
limited CM-H2DCFDA values in NGF-deprived cells
to no more than approximately eightfold above average control level.
The pH of BAF-saved cells was the same as control cells (Table 1), and
they responded with a similar increase of
CM-H2DCFDA intensity when exposed to
H2O2 (10 mM) for 30 min (6.4 ± 1.4- and 6.3 ± 0.6-fold for control and BAF, respectively; p > 0.3;
n = 35-38 neurons). Therefore, the suppression in
CM-H2DCFDA intensity by BAF cannot be explained
by nonspecific effects of the caspase inhibitor on cellular pH, dye
loading, or on the ability of the dye to fluoresce when oxidized. The
effect of the pan-caspase inhibitors, z-VAD-fmk (100 µM), and VAD-CHO (100 µM) on ROS levels was similar to that of BAF.
Twenty-four hours after NGF withdrawal, average
CM-H2DCFDA intensity in z-VAD-fmk-maintained cells was 0.98 ± 0.24-fold above that of control
(p < 0.001). This value was well below that of
NGF-deprived cells at 24 hr without the inhibitor (Fig.
1A). The average CM-H2DCFDA
intensity at 3 hr after NGF deprivation in VAD-CHO-treated cells was
0.28 ± 0.09-fold of the average intensity in control cells, not
significantly different from that of NGF-maintained cells
(p > 0.2). Twenty-four hr after NGF withdrawal,
average CM-H2DCFDA intensity in
VAD-CHO-maintained cells was 1.98 ± 0.31-fold above that of
control cells, well below that of cells deprived without presence of
the inhibitor (p < 0.001). These data suggest
that the early transient ROS burst after NGF deprivation was entirely
dependent on caspase activity, whereas the later burst was only
partially caspase-dependent. Inhibiting protein synthesis with CHX
potently suppressed all components of the ROS bursts.
ROS derived from the mitochondrial electron transport chain
The primary source of ROS production in most cells is the electron
transport chain of mitochondria (Halliwell and Gutteridge, 1999 ).
Electrons can "leak" from this chain to cause a univalent reduction
of elemental oxygen to the free radical, superoxide (O2 ). To determine
whether the ROS bursts were of mitochondrial origin, we treated cells
with carbonyl cyanide p-trifluoromethoxyphenylhydrazone (FCCP), a protonophore that uncouples oxidative phosphorylation and
decreases O2 formation
(Turrens, 1997 ; Tan et al., 1998 ). Acute application of FCCP (5 µM) to cultures deprived of NGF for 3-24
hr potently inhibited both the early and late ROS bursts (Fig.
2A). ROS levels in
BAF-maintained cells peaked 24 hr after NGF deprivation and subsequently declined but stayed above control levels (Fig.
1A,B; p < 0.01). Acute application
of FCCP (5 µM), blocked the residual ROS
production remaining in BAF-saved neurons 48 hr after NGF removal (Fig.
2A), suggesting that even at this time mitochondria were the source of ROS.

View larger version (22K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 2.
Increased ROS after NGF deprivation derived from
the mitochondrial electron transport chain. A, Block of
all components of the ROS burst by the protonophore FCCP (5 µM) suggested that the ROS derived from the mitochondrial
electron transport chain. Cells deprived of NGF for 3, 24, or 48 hr
(with 30 µM BAF) were exposed to FCCP during the time of
CM-H2 DCFDA loading. FCCP was also included in the
recording medium. Data were normalized as in Figure 1.
n = 59-162 neurons from three to five separate
platings. B, Acute effects of rotenone
(Rot; 10 µM) and antimycin A (Ant
A; 1 µM) on the ROS bursts at 3 and 24 hr after
NGF deprivation. Also shown is the effect of Ant A on ROS in
NGF-maintained neurons. Compounds were added to the culture medium
during CM-H2 DCFDA loading and were also included in the
recording medium. n = 59-145 neurons from three
platings. C, Time course of suppression of the late ROS
burst by CHX (1 µg/ml) and NGF (+NGF indicates 50 ng/ml NGF here and throughout the manuscript). Either CHX or NGF were
added to the culture medium at the indicated times after NGF
deprivation. The CM-H2 DCFDA intensity was then measured at
24 hr after the withdrawal. For the 24 hr time point, CHX or NGF were
added during the CM-H2 DCFDA loading. Data are normalized
to average CM-H2 DCFDA intensity of cells deprived of NGF
for 24 hr. n = 87-163 neurons from three
platings.
|
|
As a control, we exposed NGF-deprived (24 hr) neurons loaded with
CM-H2DCFDA and acutely treated with FCCP (5 µM was included in CM-H2DCFDA
loading medium and in recording medium) to 10 mM H2O2 for 30 min. This
treatment increased CM-H2DCFDA intensity to that
of H2O2 (10 mM)-treated cells deprived of NGF for the same period and
not exposed to FCCP (5.9 ± 0.5-fold increase for FCCP;
p > 0.5). There was a significant, acidification of
FCCP-treated cells (Table 1). It was conceivable that this
acidification quenched CM-H2DCFDA fluorescence
(Reynolds and Hastings, 1995 ) and that H2O2 blocked the quenching
by causing the cells to become less acidic. To test this possibility,
we measured pH in cells deprived of NGF for 24 hr and acutely exposed
to FCCP (5 µM was included in BCECF loading
medium and in recording medium) and
H2O2 (10 mM for 30 min). The BCECF 490:440 ratios in these
neurons were not significantly different from those of similar
FCCP-treated cells not exposed to
H2O2 (Table 1;
p > 0.4; n = 24 neurons). Therefore,
the H2O2 treatment did not
alter cellular pH. These data indicate that the level of acidification
caused by FCCP did not quench the dye and that suppression of
CM-H2DCFDA intensity by FCCP was not caused by
nonspecific effects of altered pH. Therefore, attenuation of
CM-H2DCFDA intensity was probably caused by
suppression of mitochondrial ROS production. Because no other treatment
reported herein altered cellular pH (except for a small acidification
caused by antimycin A; Table 1), pH-dependent changes of
CM-H2DCFDA intensity cannot explain any of the
data in this manuscript.
To further explore the role of mitochondria in causing increased ROS
levels after NGF deprivation, we used specific inhibitors of electron
transport through mitochondrial respiratory complexes. Acute
application of the complex 1 (NADH coenzyme Q reductase) inhibitor,
rotenone (10 µM), almost completely blocked both the early and late ROS bursts (Fig. 2B). Rotenone did not
affect the ability of H2O2
(10 mM for 25 min) to increase
CM-H2DCFDA intensity to that measured in cells
deprived of NGF for 24 hr and treated for the same time with 10 mM
H2O2 (6.6 ± 0.4-fold
increase for rotenone; p > 0.5; n = 23 neurons). Acute application of antimycin A (1 µM), a respiratory complex 3 (coenzyme
Q-cytochrome c reductase) inhibitor, enhanced the early ROS burst in
NGF-deprived cells and also greatly increased ROS in NGF-maintained
cells (Fig. 2B). It did not influence the late ROS
burst (p > 0.5).
In the course of doing controls for the experiments described in this
report we found that many unrelated compounds suppressed protein
synthesis in sympathetic neurons and also inhibited apoptotic death
(Table 2 lists some of the compounds that
we tested; Martin et al., 1988 ; Deckwerth and Johnson, 1993 ; Franklin
and Johnson, 1998 ). Because CHX blocked the ROS bursts, it was possible
that the effects of FCCP and rotenone on the bursts resulted from such a nonspecific effect. Indeed, we found that FCCP (5 µM)
and rotenone were potent inhibitors of protein synthesis in these cells
(Table 2). However, Figure 2C shows that the effects of FCCP and
rotenone on protein synthesis could not explain their effects on the
ROS bursts because they suppressed ROS far more quickly than CHX (1 µg/ml). Thus, the acute effects of FCCP and rotenone on ROS were not
caused by protein synthesis inhibition. These data suggest that most,
if not all, of both the early and late ROS bursts were produced by
"leakage" from the mitochondrial electron transport chain.
Additionally, because block of electron flow through complex 1 decreased ROS, whereas block of flow through complex 3 either increased
ROS levels (3 hr after deprivation) or had no effect (24 hr after
deprivation), they suggest that the electrons entered the chain at
complex 1 and leaked to molecular O2 to form
O2 between complexes 1 and 3 (at coenzyme Q; Dugan et al., 1997 ; Halliwell and Gutteridge
1999 ). The lack of effect of antimycin on the late burst may indicate
that ROS production was at a maximum and could not be further
increased.
Increased GSH concentration was, at least partially, responsible
for the apparent transience of the early ROS burst
It seemed likely to us that the early and late ROS bursts were
associated. We hypothesized that the early burst appeared transient not
because of a decrease in production of ROS by mitochondria but, rather,
because it was masked by an increase in antioxidant defenses by cells
(Lin et al., 1995 ). Consistent with this hypothesis, Deckwerth and
Johnson (1994) reported that GSH concentration increases in these cells
after NGF deprivation. Because CM-H2DCFDA detects H2O2, (but not
O2 ), which is removed
by an enzymatic reaction involving GSH (Royall and Ischiropoulis, 1993 ;
Halliwell and Gutteridge, 1999 ), an increase in GSH concentration might
account for the apparent transience of the ROS burst. That is,
H2O2 production might
remain elevated but total cellular
H2O2 concentration would
decrease because of increased GSH levels. To test this hypothesis, we
deprived cells of NGF and, at various times after the deprivation,
stained them with the GSH-sensitive dye MCB (Fernandez-Checa and
Kaplowitz, 1990 ; Ratan et al., 1994 ). Figure
3A shows that average MCB
intensity increased 0.45 ± 0.15-fold above that of NGF-maintained
cells by 6 hr after NGF deprivation (p < 0.05).
The average intensity reached a peak of 0.58 ± 0.10 above control
average by 12 hr after NGF removal (p < 0.05 compared with control). It then declined somewhat but remained elevated
with respect to average control intensity for the entire time course of
death. Increased MCB intensity after NGF deprivation was completely
blocked in cultures treated with
L-buthionine-[S,
R]-sulfoximine (BSO; 200 µM), a
potent, irreversible inhibitor of -glutamylcysteine synthetase, a
key enzyme in the GSH biosynthetic pathway (Griffith and Meister, 1979 ). A population-based assay for reduced and oxidized glutathione (GSH plus GSSG) showed a similar increase in whole cultures (Fig. 3B). These findings were consistent with the hypothesis that
continued ROS production
(O2 ) was masked by a
GSH-mediated reduction of
H2O2 concentration. To
further test this hypothesis, we measured the effect of BSO (200 µM) on CM-H2DCFDA
intensity after NGF withdrawal. Figure 3C shows that this
treatment prevented the return of ROS levels to baseline. However,
average CM-H2DCFDA intensity in these cells was
not as high as in cells not treated with BSO (Fig.
1A), indicating some suppression of ROS levels by
this compound. These data suggest that the early ROS burst appeared
transient not because of an actual decrease in ROS production but, at
least in part, because elevated GSH concentration decreased
H2O2 accumulation.

View larger version (19K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 3.
Increased GSH concentration at least partially
caused the transience of the early ROS burst. A,
Glutathione levels increased within several hours after NGF
deprivation. The inhibitor of GSH production, BSO (200 µM), blocked this increase. Neurons were deprived of NGF
for the indicated times. During the last 30 min of the incubation,
cultures were exposed to the GSH-sensitive dye MCB (5 µM). Neurons were then viewed with an inverted
microscope, and images were captured by a CCD camera. Intensity of MCB
staining in single cells was determined with MetaMorph software and is
shown as fold change from that of control cells maintained in the
presence of NGF. The BSO-treated neurons appeared phase-bright and
healthy for the first 12 hr after NGF deprivation. However, by 18 hr,
many had died. Data are normalized to MCB intensity of NGF-maintained
neurons stained and measured at the same time as the experimental
cells. n = 67-137 neurons from three or four
separate platings. B, The concentration of GSH plus GSSG
in whole cultures increased after NGF deprivation, independently
confirming the single-cell results in A. The GSH plus
GSSG concentration is shown as fold increase above that measured in
NGF-maintained cells sampled at the initial time point.
n = 10-14 cultures from three separate platings.
C, Inhibition of the GSH increase by BSO (200 µM) at least partially blocked the transience of the ROS
burst after NGF deprivation. Data are shown as fold change of
CM-H2 DCFDA intensity in NGF-replete or -deprived neurons
exposed to BSO for the indicated times after withdrawal.
n = 99-140 neurons from three or four separate
platings.
|
|
The late ROS burst occurred at about the same time as cytochrome
c release
Exit of cytochrome c from mitochondria into the cytoplasm is
central to the apoptotic death of NGF-deprived sympathetic neurons (Deshmukh and Johnson, 1998 ; Neame et al., 1998 ; Martinou et al., 1999 ). To ascertain the temporal relationship between the ROS bursts
and cytochrome c release, we deprived cells of NGF and used
immunocytochemistry to determine the time course of cytochrome c
redistribution. Figure
4A shows the three
criteria that were used for scoring the status of cytochrome c in these
experiments: (1) neurons showing intense punctate staining when viewed
by confocal microscopy were scored as having retained at least some
cytochrome c in their mitochondria, (2) cells showing no punctate
staining when viewed by confocal microscopy were scored as having
completely lost cytochrome c from their mitochondria and, (3) cells
that exhibited homogeneous cytoplasmic staining when viewed by
fluorescence microscopy were scored as having released at least some
cytochrome c from mitochondria. The latter neurons tended to stain much
more faintly than cells that retained cytochrome c in mitochondria, consistent with reports that cytochrome c rapidly degrades in these
cells once it is released into the cytoplasm (Deshmukh and Johnson,
1998 ; Neame et al., 1998 ). Surprisingly, confocal micrographs generally
revealed only two mitochondrial staining patterns after NGF
deprivation; intense, punctate staining or no staining at all.
Intermediate staining patterns were seldom observed. Using these
criteria, we determined the time course of appearance of cytochrome c
in the cytoplasm and of complete loss of cytochrome c from the
mitochondria after NGF withdrawal (Fig. 4B). The time course of the appearance of cytoplasmic staining for cytochrome c was
only slightly earlier than that of complete loss from the mitochondria,
suggesting that rapid release from the mitochondrial pool was followed
by rapid degradation in the cytoplasm. It was not possible to determine
cytochrome c status in cells later than 30 hr after NGF deprivation
because of extensive cell death. To circumvent complications from cell
loss, we maintained cells (alive) with BAF (30 µM) and determined the time course of
appearance of cytoplasmic cytochrome c staining and of complete loss of
cytochrome c from the mitochondria. By 48 hr after NGF deprivation,
94.0 ± 2.7% of BAF-saved cells had no detectable cytochrome c.
During the first 30 hr after NGF withdrawal there were no apparent
differences in the rate of release in the presence or absence of the
caspase inhibitor. Therefore, caspase activity was, apparently, not
required for cytochrome c release. The time courses of the late ROS
burst and release of cytochrome c into the cytoplasm were nearly
identical (Fig. 5). These data indicate
that the period of maximal rate of cytochrome c release coincided with
the peak of the late ROS burst.

View larger version (37K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 4.
Time course of cytochrome c release from
mitochondria after NGF deprivation. A, Micrographs
demonstrating the criteria used to score cytochrome c localization. The
bottom two panels on the left are fluorescent
micrographs of clusters of neurons immunostained for cytochrome c. The
cells had been maintained in culture medium containing or lacking NGF
as indicated. The micrographs above them are the same cells viewed with
phase-contrast microscopy. Note the intense punctate staining in the
control (+NGF) cells and the faint homogeneous
staining in neurons deprived of NGF for 30 hr. The +NGF cells are
representative of neurons that were scored as having not released
cytochrome c. The cells deprived of NGF for 30 hr are representative of
ones scored as having released cytochrome c into the cytoplasm. The two
panels on the right show confocal micrographs of neurons in separate
cultures immunostained for cytochrome c. The cultures were maintained
continuously in the presence of NGF or in medium containing BAF (30 µM) and no NGF for 48 hr. The top cluster
of cells is representative of neurons that were scored as having
cytochrome c-replete mitochondria, whereas the bottom
cluster of cells is representative of those that were scored as having
completely lost cytochrome c from mitochondria. B, Time
courses of the appearance of homogeneous staining for cytochrome c in
the cytoplasm and complete loss of cytochrome c staining in the
mitochondria. Scoring for homogeneous cytoplasmic staining for
cytochrome c was done, as in A, with fluorescence
microscopy. Neurons were scored as having punctate (no cytochrome c
release) or homogeneous (Hom; cytochrome c in the
cytoplasm) staining by a naive observer. Scoring for complete loss of
cytochrome c (None) from mitochondria was done, also as in
A, by confocal microscopic imaging of immunostained
cells. All cytochrome c loss was blocked by CHX (1 µg/ml). BAF
concentration was 30 µM. n = 292-345
neurons from three separate platings for the different time points for
homogeneous staining. n = 169-287 neurons from
three or four platings for complete loss of cytochrome c staining
except for the 48 hr CHX treatment where n = 99 from two platings.
|
|

View larger version (30K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 5.
Comparison of the time courses of changes in ROS
(CM-H2 DCFDA) and cytochrome c staining (Cyt c) in
NGF-deprived neurons receiving the indicated treatments. The data are
from Figures 1A and 4B. To
allow easier comparison of time courses, all data are normalized to the
maximal changes observed. Symbols and error bars are omitted to improve
visual clarity.
|
|
Effects of CHX and L-NAC on the ROS burst, cytochrome c
release, and death were closely correlated
Complete suppression of protein synthesis in NGF-deprived
sympathetic neurons in culture with 1 µg/ml CHX completely blocks release of cytochrome c from mitochondria. This block appears to be the
sole means by which protein synthesis inhibition suppresses apoptosis
in these cells because microinjecting cytochrome c into CHX-saved cells
causes rapid death (Deshmukh and Johnson, 1998 ; Neame et al., 1998 ;
Fig. 4B). To determine how closely the abilities of
CHX to inhibit protein synthesis, the ROS burst, cytochrome c release,
and death were associated, we determined the effects of different
concentrations of CHX on these parameters. To circumvent any
complications from dying cells in the cytochrome c experiments, we
maintained neurons in a viable state with BAF (30 µM). Cytochrome c release or retention after
2 d was determined by immunostaining. Other BAF-maintained
cultures received the same concentrations of CHX, and BAF-insensitive
ROS production was determined during the peak of the late ROS burst, 24 hr after deprivation. There was a close relationship between the
concentration-dependent inhibition of the BAF-insensitive ROS burst by
CHX, block of cytochrome c release in the BAF-saved cells by CHX, and
block of apoptotic death by CHX in NGF-deprived cells without BAF (Fig.
6A). Significant inhibition of both death and cytochrome c release occurred when protein
synthesis was suppressed to less than ~20% of the control rate (300 ng/ml CHX). These values corresponded to >60% suppression of the
BAF-insensitive ROS burst by CHX.

View larger version (25K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 6.
Concentration-dependent block of the late
ROS burst by CHX or L-NAC was similar to the
concentration-dependent block of cytochrome c release and death by
these compounds. A, Block of increased ROS
(CM-H2 DCFDA intensity), cytochrome c release, death, and
protein synthesis by the indicated CHX concentrations. The
CM-H2 DCFDA intensity is that of neurons deprived of NGF
and maintained in BAF (30 µM)- and CHX-containing medium
for 24 hr. The data are normalized to average CM-H2 DCFDA
intensity of BAF-saved cells not exposed to CHX. n = 71-141 neurons from three or four separate platings for each
concentration. Cytochrome c data are from cells maintained in BAF (30 µM) and the indicated CHX concentrations for 48 hr. This
time point was chosen because we found no difference in the percentage
of release at later time points. Therefore, cells that were going to
release cytochrome c had done so by 48 hr after NGF deprivation.
Cytochrome c status was determined by confocal microscopy as described
in Figure 4. Data are shown as percentage of cells with no cytochrome c
staining. n = 26-115 neurons from three or four
separate platings for each concentration. Death was determined by
depriving cells of NGF for 3 d (a time when most NGF-deprived
cells have died; Deckwerth and Johnson, 1993 ) and maintaining them in
medium containing the indicated CHX concentrations. Cultures were then
returned to NGF-containing medium, and survival was assayed 5-7 d
later, as described in Materials and Methods. Death is normalized to
the percentage occurring in NGF-deprived cells not exposed to CHX for
48 hr. n = 6-9 cultures from three separate
platings for each concentration. Protein synthesis data are from
NGF-maintained cells exposed for 72 hr to the indicated CHX
concentrations. Data are normalized to that of NGF-maintained cells not
exposed to CHX. n = 26-32 cultures from three or
four separate platings for each concentration. The dose-response curve
for suppression of protein synthesis by exposure to these
concentrations of CHX for 72 hr is nearly identical to that of cultures
exposed to the same concentrations of CHX for 4 hr and 24 hr (Franklin
and Johnson, 1998 ). B, Block of increased ROS
(CM-H2 DCFDA intensity), cytochrome c release, and death by
the indicated L-NAC concentrations. n = 82-154 neurons from three or four separate platings for each
concentration. Cytochrome c data are from cells maintained in BAF (30 µM) and the indicated L-NAC concentrations
for 48 hr. Cytochrome c status, CM-H2 DCFDA intensity, and
death were determined and normalized as described in A.
n = 117-176 neurons from three separate platings
for each concentration of L-NAC in cytochrome c experiments
and 6-15 cultures from three or four separate platings for each
concentration in cell death experiments. Protein synthesis data are
from cultures exposed to L-NAC (30 mM) for 24 hr. n = 20 cultures.
|
|
Cytochrome c shuttles electrons from respiratory complex 3 to
respiratory complex 4 (cytochrome oxidase) in the mitochondrial electron transport chain. Loss of cytochrome c from mitochondria blocks
flow of electrons between these two complexes and, therefore, can
enhance ROS production in a manner similar to that of antimycin A
treatment (Fig. 2B; Cai and Jones, 1998 ). Therefore,
it seemed possible that loss of cytochrome c from mitochondria could
have caused the BAF-insensitive component of the late ROS burst. The increase in ROS could, thus, have been an epiphenomenon largely irrelevant to apoptotic death. Alternatively, the burst could have been
an essential component of apoptosis, even if caused by cytochrome c
loss. To determine whether increased ROS production might contribute to
apoptosis, we tested the effects of a number of antioxidant compounds
on the survival of NGF-deprived cells. All of them, except for two
nitric oxide synthase inhibitors, potently blocked apoptosis after NGF
withdrawal. However, most of these compounds also potently inhibited
protein synthesis (Table 2). An exception was the membrane-permeant
analog of cysteine, N-acetyl-L-cysteine
(L-NAC; Ferrari et al., 1995 ).
L-NAC did not cause suppression of protein
synthesis so it could not have blocked apoptosis of NGF-deprived cells
via that mechanism. Therefore, we determined the effects of different
concentrations of L-NAC on death of NGF-deprived
cells, the ROS burst, and on cytochrome c release in BAF-maintained
cells. All three parameters were inhibited by
L-NAC (Fig. 6B). Exposure of
NGF-deprived, L-NAC-maintained (30 mM for 24 hr) neurons to
H2O2 (30 mM for 20 min) caused an average increase of
CM-H2DCFDA intensity that was not significantly different from that caused by treating NGF-maintained cells not exposed
to L-NAC the same way (p > 0.5; n = 35-59 neurons). Therefore, L-NAC did not alter dye loading or the ability of
the dye to respond to oxidation. As with CHX, no effect on cytochrome c
release or death was observed unless BAF-insensitive ROS production was
suppressed by >60%.
N-acetyl-L-alanine (30 mM) had no effect on survival of NGF-deprived
cells, indicating that the cysteine thiol was necessary for survival
promotion by L-NAC (data not shown). These data
and the CHX findings suggest that, whatever the cause of the late ROS
burst, it may have been involved in inducing cytochrome c release and death.
Both CHX and L-NAC blocked the ROS burst by increasing
cellular GSH concentration
Ratan et al. (1994) reported that inhibition of protein synthesis
by CHX blocks oxidative stress-induced death of cortical neurons in
cell culture by shunting cysteine from incorporation into protein to
GSH synthesis. To determine whether a similar effect was responsible
for the block of the ROS burst by CHX in NGF-deprived sympathetic
neurons, we determined relative GSH concentrations in CHX-treated
neurons by MCB staining. Neurons were deprived of NGF and maintained
for 24 hr in medium containing different concentrations of CHX and BAF
(30 µM; to prevent death at lower CHX concentrations).
Figure 7A shows that the
effect of these CHX concentrations on the ROS burst was functionally
related to the effect of each concentration on MCB staining. Higher MCB
intensities correlated with lower CM-H2DCFDA
intensities. This finding suggests that CHX decreased ROS by increasing
cellular GSH. A similar relationship between ROS levels and MCB
staining was observed in cultures deprived of NGF and supported for 24 hr in medium containing BAF and different concentrations of
L-NAC. Thus, L-NAC also
appeared to decrease ROS by increasing GSH. Inhibition of GSH synthesis
with BSO (200 µM) completely blocked the
ability of CHX and L-NAC to increase MCB staining
(Fig. 7B), clearly indicating that both CHX and
L-NAC blocked the ROS burst by increasing
cellular GSH concentration. Increased glutathione as a function of
increased CHX or L-NAC concentrations was
independently confirmed by measuring GSH plus GSSG in whole cultures
with the glutathione reductase assay (Fig. 7C). Long-term
exposure of NGF-deprived cultures to L-NAC (30 mM) was as effective as CHX (1 µg/ml) in
causing sustained suppression of ROS (data not shown).

View larger version (16K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 7.
The ability of CHX and L-NAC to block
the ROS burst derived from their ability to regulate cellular GSH
levels. A, The abilities of different concentrations of
CHX and L-NAC to block the ROS burst (CM-H2
DCFDA intensity) was closely correlated with the ability of these
concentrations to increase MCB staining. Cultures were deprived of NGF
for 24 hr in medium containing different CHX or L-NAC
concentrations and BAF (30 µM). The
CM-H2DCFDA data are from Figure 6, A and
B, and are matched to MCB staining resulting from
treatment with the same CHX or L-NAC concentrations.
n = 88-173 neurons from three separate platings.
B, Increased MCB staining was caused by increased GSH
concentration. The inhibitor of GSH production, BSO (200 µM), prevented CHX (1 µg/ml) and L-NAC (30 mM) from increasing MCB intensity. Cultures were treated
with CHX (18 hr) or L-NAC (24 hr) before MCB staining.
n = 77-123 from three separate platings.
C, Effects of CHX (1 µg/ml) and L-NAC (30 mM) on GSH plus GSSG concentration in whole cultures. Cells
were exposed to the compounds in the absence of NGF and BAF for 12 hr.
This early time point was chosen to avoid complications from loss of
cells caused by the apoptosis that would occur in the absence of BAF
(Deckwerth and Johnson, 1993 ). Data are normalized to GSH plus GSSG
concentration in cultures deprived of NGF without the compounds for the
same period. n = 9-11 cultures from three separate
platings for each treatment.
|
|
Increased GSH concentration blocked both apoptotic and
oxidative death
In an attempt to ascertain whether upregulation of GSH
concentration by CHX and L-NAC was related to block of
apoptosis by these compounds, we treated cultures of NGF-deprived
neurons maintained by CHX (1 µg/ml) or L-NAC (30 mM) with BSO (200 µM). This treatment almost
completely prevented the ability of both compounds to block death,
suggesting the importance of GSH (Fig.
8A). However, it remained possible that BSO reduced GSH to levels inconsistent with
survival under any circumstance or that it had toxic effects unrelated
to prevention of GSH synthesis. Indeed, most cells in NGF-maintained
cultures also died after 2 d of treatment with BSO (200 µM; Fig. 8A). To further
explore the role of GSH in survival, we maintained NGF-deprived
cultures in medium containing GSH ethyl ester (10 mM), a membrane-permeant form of GSH. This
treatment potently inhibited apoptosis and also blocked cytochrome c
release (Figs. 8B, 9C). Like
L-NAC, GSH ethyl ester had little effect on
protein synthesis (Table 2). Because BSO inhibits the synthesis of GSH
rather than its activity, treating NGF-deprived neurons saved from
death by GSH ethyl ester with BSO should not affect the ability of the
GSH to promote survival. Figure 8B shows that such
BSO (200 µM) treatment did not significantly
alter the GSH ethyl ester block of apoptosis (p > 0.1 compared with GSH ethyl ester alone). Therefore, block of
survival by BSO was mediated by decreased GSH concentration rather than
by nonspecific toxic effects.

View larger version (21K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 8.
Increased GSH concentration blocked apoptosis.
A, BSO (200 µM) inhibited the abilities of
NGF to support survival and of CHX and L-NAC to prevent
apoptosis of NGF-deprived cells. n = 9-13 cultures
from three separate platings. B, A membrane-permeant
form of GSH, GSH ethyl ester (10 mM), prevented apoptosis
after NGF deprivation. Treatment of GSH ethyl ester-saved cultures with
BSO (200 µM) had little effect on survival, indicating no
nonspecific toxic effects of BSO. This concentration of GSH ethyl ester
was the optimal survival-promoting concentration tested.
n = 9-12 cultures from three platings.
C, CHX (1 µg/ml) blocked oxidative death caused by
cystine-methionine depletion. Cultures were incubated in medium
containing no cystine or methionine except for that contained in 10%
added fetal bovine serum. Consistent with an oxidative, rather than an
apoptotic death, neurons treated in this manner had a grainy appearance
and did not atrophy before death (data not shown). Two bars on the
left show data from cells maintained in normal medium.
BAF concentration was 30 µM. n = 8-11 cultures from three platings. Cells in A-C
received the indicated treatments for 48 hr before NGF rescue.
|
|
To determine whether suppression of protein synthesis by CHX could
protect sympathetic neurons from oxidative as well as apoptotic death,
we induced oxidative death by incubating cultures in medium containing
no added cystine or methionine except for that contained in fetal
bovine serum. Such treatment deprives cells of required reducing
equivalents for maintaining an antioxidant state (Tan et al., 1998 ).
Neurons maintained in NGF or deprived of NGF and exposed to BAF (30 µM) died within 24 hr after the beginning of this
treatment (Fig. 8C). Cycloheximide (1 µg/ml) almost
completely prevented this death. Treatment with BSO (200 µM) blocked the inhibition of oxidative death
by CHX, indicating a requirement for GSH (data not shown). Taken
together, these data suggest that increasing cellular GSH levels, by
whatever means, potently suppressed both the apoptotic and oxidative
death of these cells. L-NAC (20 mM) increased GSH to about the same level as the
most potent saving concentrations of CHX (Fig. 7A) and saved
~60% of neurons from death (Fig. 6B). Therefore,
at least one means by which CHX blocks death of these neurons is via
increased cellular GSH concentration.
A pro-oxidant state caused rapid cytochrome c release
The effect of increased GSH concentration on cytochrome c
redistribution and death of NGF-deprived neurons along with the close
correlation between the time courses of the late ROS burst and
cytochrome c release suggested that a pro-oxidant state might be
conducive to cytochrome c release in these cells. To more directly determine whether this was the case, we treated cultures maintained with NGF, or deprived of NGF for 24 hr and maintained in medium containing CHX (1 µg/ml), L-NAC (30 mM), GSH
ethyl ester (10 mM), or BAF (30 µM) with
H2O2 (10 mM).
Immunocytochemistry demonstrated that, in all these culture conditions,
treatment with H2O2 for 1 hr caused extensive loss of cytochrome c from mitochondria (Fig. 9A,B). The mitochondria in
cells treated for 1 hr with
H2O2 retained a membrane
potential (Fig. 9A) as revealed by staining of mitochondria with the membrane potential-dependent dye, Mitotracker Red CMXRos (Neame et al., 1998 ). One hundred percent of NGF-maintained neurons (n = 96) and NGF-maintained neurons treated with
H2O2 (n = 97) exhibited intense, punctate Mitotracker Red CMXRos staining. Thus, there was no general disruption of mitochondria caused by the H2O2 treatment.
NGF-deprived cells maintained by L-NAC for 24 hr
and then exposed to 10 mM
H2O2 had an average
CM-H2DCFDA intensity of 30 ± 8% of cells
deprived of NGF for the same period. This finding suggests that ROS
levels experienced by NGF-deprived cells are sufficient to cause
cytochrome c release.

View larger version (32K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 9.
Treatment of cultures with
H2O2 caused rapid cytochrome c redistribution.
A, First row, Paired Nomarski and
fluorescent micrographs of NGF-maintained neurons stained for
cytochrome c. The nucleus was stained with bisbenzimide (10 µg/ml in
TBS buffer for 30 min; Hoechst 33258). Second row,
Paired Nomarski and fluorescent micrographs of NGF-maintained cells
showing cytochrome c and bisbenzimide staining 1 hr after treatment
with H2O2 (10 mM). Note the faint,
homogenous staining for cytochrome c and lack of fragmented apoptotic
nuclei. Third row, Paired Nomarski and fluorescent
micrographs of NGF-deprived (24 hr), L-NAC (30 mM)-maintained cells showing cytochrome c and bisbenzimide
staining 1 hr after treatment with H2O2 (10 mM). Note the faint, homogenous staining for cytochrome c
and the fragmented apoptotic nuclei in one cell. The other two cells
had not released cytochrome c. Fourth row, Confocal
micrographs showing Mitotracker Red CMXRos staining in NGF-maintained
cells (left) and NGF-maintained cells exposed for 1 hr
to H2O2 (10 mM;
right). The Mitotracker Red CMXRos (20 ng/ml) was added
to the culture medium for 20 min at the end of
H2O2 treatment. B, Loss of
cytochrome c after 1 hr of treatment with H2O2
(10 mM). Except for the control
(+NGF), cultures were deprived of NGF and
maintained in medium containing CHX (1 µg/ml), L-NAC (30 mM), GSH ethyl ester (10 mM), or BAF (30 µM) for 24 hr before H2O2
treatment. Cells were scored as having retained or lost cytochrome c
from mitochondria by confocal or fluorescence microscopy as detailed in
Figure 4. n = 64-186 neurons from three
platings.
|
|
Many NGF-deprived neurons maintained in medium containing CHX,
L-NAC, or GSH ethyl ester exhibited fragmented nuclei
characteristic of apoptotic death after only 1 hr of
H2O2 treatment (Fig.
9A; 19, 53, and 44% had apoptotic nuclei respectively;
n = 95-165 neurons), suggesting that cytochrome c
redistribution induced apoptosis. Consistent with a report showing that
cytoplasmic cytochrome c cannot induce apoptosis in these cells when
NGF is present (Deshmukh and Johnson, 1998 ), none of the NGF-maintained
cells treated with H2O2 had
apoptotic nuclei (n = 117 cells). No cells maintained in BAF (30 µM)-containing medium without NGF
(n = 82) had apoptotic nuclei after
H2O2 treatment. These data
suggest that the cytochrome c released into the cytoplasm of
NGF-deprived cells by H2O2
treatment activated caspases. They also suggest that it is the
oxidative state of the cell rather than GSH concentration, per se, that regulates cytochrome c release during the apoptotic death of these neurons. Moreover, they demonstrate that a pro-oxidant state caused cytochrome c release when protein synthesis was completely suppressed. Therefore, under these conditions, no newly produced proteins were
necessary for cytochrome c redistribution.
The late, but not early, ROS burst appeared to regulate cytochrome
c release
Greenlund et al. (1995) hypothesized that the early ROS burst
occurring in sympathetic neurons after NGF deprivation initiates a
sequence of events leading to gene induction. The protein products of
this induction then cause apoptotic death. Should this be true, block
of ROS production by L-NAC or CHX should block death only if cells are exposed to these compounds during the time of the early
ROS burst (3 hr after NGF deprivation). Figure
10A shows the time
courses of the abilities of L-NAC, CHX, and NGF
to block death after NGF withdrawal. Both L-NAC
and CHX inhibited death almost as effectively when added to the culture
medium 6 hr after NGF deprivation as when added at the time of
withdrawal. The time course of rescue from death after NGF deprivation
for both L-NAC and CHX were nearly identical,
suggesting similar mechanisms of action. The time at which 50% of
neurons could be rescued from death by addition of these compounds to
the culture medium occurred at 19-20 hr after withdrawal. Fifty
percent of neurons deprived of NGF could be rescued by addition of NGF
to the culture medium 24 hr after deprivation. Therefore, antioxidant
treatment after the end of the early ROS burst was sufficient for block
of most apoptotic death.

View larger version (20K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 10.
The late, but not early ROS burst appeared to
regulate cytochrome c release. A, The time course of
rescue from death induced by NGF deprivation was nearly identical for
CHX (1 µg/ml) and L-NAC (30 mM). Either CHX,
L-NAC, or NGF were added back to NGF-deprived cultures at
the indicated times. Seventy-two hours after the initial withdrawal all
media were replaced with NGF-containing medium, and the neurons were
allowed to recover for at least 5 d before survival was
determined. Data are normalized to the maximal block of death by each
agent when it was added at the time of deprivation.
n = 9-11 cultures from three separate platings for
CHX and L-NAC. The rescue time course for NGF was similar
to that reported by Deckwerth and Johnson (1993) for these cells and
was, therefore, repeated only once. n = 3-16
cultures for each time point. B, Addition of NGF, but
not CHX (1 µg/ml) or L-NAC (30 mM), to
NGF-deprived cells immediately blocked cytochrome c release. Cultures
were deprived of NGF and maintained in BAF (30 µM)-containing medium for 18 hr. At this time, medium
containing BAF and either CHX, L-NAC, or NGF was added to
the cultures. Forty-eight hours after the initial withdrawal, cultures
were immunostained, and percentage of cells exhibiting complete loss of
cytochrome c was determined as in Figure 4. The time course of complete
loss of cytochrome c in BAF-saved, NGF-deprived neurons (open
circles) was taken from Figure 4B.
C, Time courses of the abilities of L-NAC
(30 mM) and CHX (1 µg/ml) to block cytochrome c release
were nearly identical. Data were obtained as in B except
for the varying durations of deprivation before treatment with the
agents. n = 101-159 neurons from three separate
platings for B and C. Legend at
top applies to A-C.
|
|
Deshmukh and Johnson (1998) reported that acute addition of NGF to
NGF-deprived, BAF-maintained cultures of mouse sympathetic neurons
caused an immediate block of additional cytochrome c loss in those
cells. We repeated this experiment in rat sympathetic neurons with
similar results. When NGF was added to NGF-deprived, BAF-maintained
cultures 18 hr after deprivation, further cytochrome c loss from
mitochondria was completely prevented (Fig. 10B).
However, similar treatment at 18 hr with CHX or
L-NAC did not immediately block release. Whereas
only 20% of cells had lost cytochrome c staining by 18 hr after
deprivation, ~60% of cells exposed to CHX or
L-NAC at this time had lost cytochrome c staining
by 48 hr after withdrawal. Figure 10C shows that the time
course of the loss of the abilities of both CHX and
L-NAC to block cytochrome c release after NGF
withdrawal were nearly identical. Both compounds blocked loss of
cytochrome c in ~50% of NGF-deprived neurons when added to the
culture medium 18 hr after withdrawal, whereas readdition of NGF
blocked loss from ~50% of neurons 24 hr after withdrawal. Thus, the
abilities of CHX, L-NAC, and NGF to block
cytochrome c loss from NGF-deprived cells correlated closely with their
abilities to block death. The inability of CHX to cause immediate block of cytochrome c release may have been related to the time required for
it to upregulate GSH and block the ROS burst (Fig.
2B). Nerve growth factor blocked cytochrome c release
immediately, whereas its antioxidant effects took as long to develop as
those of CHX. Thus, NGF must have blocked through mechanisms other
than, or in addition to, antioxidant effects.
The data presented to this point suggested that the late ROS burst was
involved in inducing cytochrome c redistribution in these cells. The
potent, GSH-dependent, survival-promoting effects of protein synthesis
suppression on apoptotic and oxidative death along with the antioxidant
block of cytochrome c release in apoptosis suggested that much of the
anti-apoptotic effect of CHX was mediated via antioxidant effects
rather than by inhibition of production of pro-apoptotic proteins
(Martin et al., 1988 ). Consistent with this hypothesis, the ability of
CHX to inhibit ROS production after NGF deprivation diminished after
several days of exposure to CHX (Fig. 1A,B), and
neurons began to die (Fig.
11A). On the third
day after deprivation in the presence of CHX, 87 ± 7% of neurons could be rescued by NGF. By the seventh day only 23 ± 5%
could be rescued. Few CHX-treated neurons exhibited nuclei characteristic of apoptosis 3 d after NGF deprivation, but by 5 d after withdrawal, 47 ± 7% of cells had fragmented or
missing nuclei, suggesting that the death was apoptotic (Fig.
11B). Because the concentration of CHX (1 µg/ml)
used in these experiments causes complete, long-term block of protein
synthesis in sympathetic neurons (Franklin and Johnson, 1998 ),
apoptosis occurred in these cells with no new protein production. These
data suggest that protein synthesis suppression by CHX blocked
apoptosis caused by NGF deprivation, at least in part, via the
antioxidant effects of GSH upregulation.

View larger version (23K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 11.
Apoptosis appeared to occur even in the presence
of CHX. The ability of CHX (1 µg/ml) to block apoptosis appeared to
decrease with time. Cultures for survival experiments were deprived of
NGF and maintained for 3 or 7 d in the presence of CHX.
Medium was then replaced with one containing NGF, and survival was
assayed by blinded counting several days later. n = 8-13 cultures from three platings. For determination of the status of
the nucleus, neurons maintained for 3 or 7 d in CHX-containing
medium were fixed and stained with bisbenzimide (10 µg/ml TBS buffer
for 30 min). Cells were scored as having fragmented, apoptotic nuclei
or as having no visible nuclei (ghost cells) as described by Edwards
and Tolkovsky (1994) . n = 398-469 neurons from
three platings.
|
|
 |
DISCUSSION |
Evidence suggests a role for redox state in the apoptotic death of
many, but not all, cell types (Hockenbery et al., 1993 ; Kane et
al., 1993 ; Jacobson and Raff, 1995 ; Beal et al., 1997 ; Polyak et al.,
1997 ; Tan et al., 1998 ). We conducted a study of the role of ROS in the
apoptotic death of NGF-deprived sympathetic neurons in cell culture.
Increased ROS production occurred within 3 hr of NGF withdrawal (Fig.
12). The pan-caspase inhibitor BAF completely blocked this increase. Between 3 and 12 hr after NGF deprivation, ROS production appeared to decline to basal, or lower, levels. This decrease was caused, at least in part, by decreased H2O2 levels secondary to
increased GSH concentration rather than to an actual reduction of ROS
production. A further increase of ROS began ~12 hr after NGF. This
second burst had both BAF-sensitive and -insensitive components,
suggesting caspase-dependent and -independent ROS production. Because
GSH levels increased within a few hours after NGF deprivation and
remained elevated for the entire time course of apoptosis, an
additional increase of ROS production must have caused the late burst
rather than a decrease in cellular antioxidant capabilities. Uncoupling
of oxidative phosphorylation with the protonophore FCCP blocked all
components of the ROS bursts, suggesting that the ROS derived from the
mitochondrial electron transport chain. The inhibitor of respiratory
complex 1, rotenone, also blocked all components of the ROS bursts,
whereas the complex 3 inhibitor, antimycin A, augmented ROS. These data suggest the ROS derived from electrons that leaked to
O2 to form O2 between respiratory
complexes one and three.

View larger version (28K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 12.
Summary of mitochondrial events suggested by data
in the previous figures. Within 3 hr of NGF deprivation a
caspase-dependent burst of mitochondrial
O2 production occurred. Dismutation
converted the O2 to
H2O2. By 6 hr after deprivation GSH
concentrations increased, masking continued increased production of
O2 and H2O2.
Later than 12 hr after NGF withdrawal a further increase of ROS
production occurred. This burst had both caspase-dependent and
independent components. The late increase of ROS production appeared to
promote cytochrome c release.
|
|
Sources of increased ROS production
The late ROS burst was concurrent with release of cytochrome c.
Because much of this burst was BAF-sensitive, it probably lay
downstream of cytosolic caspase activity induced by the discharged cytochrome c. How caspases may have caused increased mitochondrial ROS
production is unknown. It is possible that loss of outer mitochondrial membrane barrier function concurrent with cytochrome c release allowed
activated caspases to enter the mitochondrial intermembrane space and
affect components of the respiratory complexes. Alternatively, caspases
may have activated one or more cytosolic factors that increased
mitochondrial ROS production (Tan et al., 1998 ). The early ROS burst
was, evidently, completely dependent on caspase activity but occurred
long before any apparent cytochrome c redistribution. Recent evidence
shows that many caspases are found in mitochondria as well as the
cytosol (Mancini et al., 1998 ; Krajewski et al., 1999 ; Samali et
al., 1999 ; Susin et al., 1999 ). A cytochrome
c-independent, Bcl-2-regulated caspase-3 localized to mitochondrial
membranes was recently described, demonstrating that alternate pathways for activation of caspases in subcellular organelles do exist (Krebs et
al., 1999 ). Such a caspase may have caused the early increase of
mitochondrial ROS production in NGF-deprived sympathetic neurons
reported here.
A possible cause of the late, BAF-insensitive ROS was a shift of
mitochondria from four-electron reduction of O2
to one-electron reduction subsequent to cytochrome c release (Cai and
Jones, 1998 ). Such a shift could cause elevated
O2 production secondary
to increased leakage of electrons from the electron transport chain.
However, the peak of the late burst coincided with the appearance of
cytochrome c in the cytoplasm but preceded total depletion from
mitochondria. After complete loss, BAF-insensitive ROS production
greatly declined rather than increased. This finding suggests that
leakage of electrons from mitochondria depleted of cytochrome c did not
make a major contribution to the BAF-insensitive ROS burst.
The role of ROS and GSH in cytochrome c release
Treatment of neurons with
H2O2 caused rapid
redistribution of cytochrome c from mitochondria into the cytoplasm.
This finding demonstrates that a pro-oxidant state can cause cytochrome
c release in these cells and suggests that increased ROS in
NGF-deprived neurons may have induced release. The membrane-permeant
analog of cysteine, L-NAC, blocked ROS, death, and
cytochrome c release at similar concentrations, supporting this
hypothesis. The block of ROS by L-NAC was mediated by
increased GSH concentration. Further supporting a role for cellular
redox state in regulating cytochrome c redistribution, a
membrane-permeant form of GSH potently blocked both cytochrome c
release and apoptosis.
Inhibition of protein synthesis by CHX blocked increased ROS,
cytochrome c release, and death after NGF deprivation. An increase in
cellular GSH concentration caused by CHX was responsible for suppressing ROS. Like L-NAC, similarity in the
concentration-dependent effects of CHX on ROS, cytochrome c release,
and death suggested that CHX blocked apoptosis, at least partially, via
an antioxidant effect on cytochrome c release. The time course for
block of death and cytochrome c redistribution by CHX and
L-NAC were nearly identical. Acute addition of NGF
immediately blocked cytochrome c release in cells deprived of NGF.
However release continued for a while after the addition of CHX or
L-NAC to NGF-deprived neurons. The time course for loss of
the abilities of CHX or L-NAC to block cytochrome c release
began several hours before the peak of the late ROS burst (Figs. 5,
10C). Addition of CHX to NGF-deprived neurons did not
immediately block the burst. Rather, several hours were required for
full block (Fig. 2B). Lack of the ability of CHX to
immediately block cytochrome c release may have resulted, at least in
part, from the slow effect of CHX on ROS. The NGF block of cytochrome c
release must have occurred via another mechanism as NGF treatment took
as long as did CHX to block the late ROS burst in NGF-deprived neurons,
yet immediately blocked cytochrome c release.
Greenlund et al. (1995) proposed that the early burst of ROS production
occurring after NGF withdrawal from sympathetic neurons contributes to
death by causing induction of pro-apoptotic genes (Martin et al., 1988 ;
Estus et al., 1994 ). Consistent with a role for the early ROS burst in
death, microinjection of superoxide dismutase inhibits death only if
done during the period of the early burst (Greenlund et al., 1995 ).
However, we found that CHX and L-NAC blocked most apoptotic
death when added long after this time. Additionally, although BAF
completely blocked the early ROS burst, it did not affect the rate of
cytochrome c release. Because blocking protein synthesis prevents
apoptosis in these cells solely by block of cytochrome c redistribution
(Deshmukh and Johnson, 1998 ), this finding seems to indicate that the
early ROS burst was irrelevant for apoptosis, controverting the
findings of the previous report. Moreover,
O2 production was not
transient, making it unclear why injection of superoxide dismutase
early after NGF deprivation should promote survival whereas later
injection did not.
The ability of CHX to act as an antioxidant decreased with time, and
neurons maintained for several days in the presence of CHX died with
apoptotic characteristics. Because the concentration of CHX used in
these experiments causes complete, long-term block of protein synthesis
in these cells (Franklin and Johnson, 1998 ), production of new protein
could not have been required for the death. These data further suggest
that suppression of protein synthesis by CHX is anti-apoptotic, at
least in part, because of antioxidant effects. However, CHX was a
significantly more potent anti-apoptotic agent than was
L-NAC, although L-NAC (30 mM)
increased GSH concentration much more than CHX (Figs.
6A,B, 7A,C). These data suggest that CHX
had death-suppressant effects in addition to those resulting from
increased GSH concentration. Therefore, our data do not completely
preclude a role for de novo protein synthesis in the death
of these cells. However, the data do seem to indicate that the early
ROS burst was not involved in inducing production of pro-apoptotic proteins.
How redox state may regulate cytochrome c release is unknown. Both
inhibition of protein synthesis and deletion of the pro-apoptotic protein BAX block apoptosis of NGF-deprived mouse sympathetic neurons
solely by preventing cytochrome c release (Deckwerth et al., 1996 ;
Deshmukh and Johnson, 1998 ). Inhibition of protein synthesis hinders
association of BAX with mitochondria in these cells (Putcha et al.,
1999 ). Therefore, one possible explanation for the effects of redox
state on cytochrome c release was that it regulated association of BAX
with the mitochondria. Such association could, ostensibly, lie
downstream from redox-sensitive signaling pathways (Yan and Greene,
1998 ; Tournier et al. 2000 ). Alternatively, BAX could have been
responsible for causing the late ROS burst. Events downstream from the
ensuing pro-oxidant state, possibly oxidation of critical thiols in
mitochondrial proteins (Marchetti et al., 1997 ), might then have caused release.
In conclusion, we present evidence suggesting that increased ROS levels
after withdrawal of NGF from sympathetic neurons promoted release of
cytochrome c from mitochondria in these cells. Cytoplasmic cytochrome
c, in turn, activated caspases that further increased mitochondrial ROS
production. We also present data suggesting that much of the effect of
protein synthesis inhibition on apoptosis of NGF-deprived sympathetic
neurons may be mediated via an antioxidant block of cytochrome c
release. Many diseases are associated with increased free radical
production (Halliwell and Gutteridge, 1999 ). Should the findings
reported here be applicable to other cell types, it is possible that
free radicals contribute to pathological states, at least in part, by
causing release of cytochrome c from mitochondria.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Sept. 14, 2000; revised Dec. 20, 2000; accepted Dec. 22, 2000.
This work was supported by a grant to the University of Wisconsin
Medical School under the Howard Hughes Medical Institute Research
Resources Program for Medical Schools and by National Institutes of
Health Grant NS37110. We thank Dr. Peter Lipton for critical review of
this manuscript and Drs. Eugene M. Johnson Jr., Thomas Deckwerth,
Mohanish Deshmukh, and Mr. Girish Putcha for helpful conversations. We
also thank Adam Pelzek for technical support.
Correspondence should be addressed to James L. Franklin, Department of
Neurological Surgery, University of Wisconsin Medical School, 4640 MSC,
1300 University Avenue, Madison, WI 53706. E-mail: jlfrankl{at}facstaff.wisc.edu.
 |
REFERENCES |
-
Alnemri ES,
Livingston DJ,
Nicholson DW,
Salvesen G,
Thornberry NA,
Wong WW,
Yuan J
(1996)
Human ICE/CED-3 protease nomenclature.
Cell
87:171[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Beal MF,
Howell N,
Bodis-Wollner I
(1997)
In: Mitochondria and free radicals in neurodegenerative diseases. New York: Wiley.
-
Braughler JM,
Pregenzer JF,
Chase RL,
Duncan LA,
Jacobsen EJ,
McCall JM
(1987)
Novel 21-amino steroids as potent inhibitors of iron-dependent lipid peroxidation.
J Biol Chem
262:10438-10440[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Cai J,
Jones DP
(1998)
Superoxide in apoptosis: mitochondrial generation triggered by cytochrome c loss.
J Biol Chem
273:11401-11404[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Crossin KL
(1991)
Nitric oxide (NO); a versatile second messenger in brain.
Trends Biochem Sci
16:81-82[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Deckwerth TL,
Johnson Jr EM
(1993)
Temporal analysis of events associated with programmed cell death (apoptosis) of sympathetic neurons deprived of nerve growth factor.
J Cell Biol
123:1207-1222[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Deckwerth TL,
Johnson Jr EM
(1994)
Changes in glutathione metabolism suggest a critical role for the redox equilibrium in programmed neuronal death after trophic factor deprivation.
Soc Neurosci Abstr
20:682.
-
Deckwerth TL,
Elliot JL,
Knudson CM,
Johnson Jr EM,
Snider WD,
Korsmeyer SJ
(1996)
BAX is required for neuronal death after trophic factor deprivation and during development.
Neuron
17:401-411[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Deshmukh M,
Johnson Jr EM
(1998)
Evidence of a novel event during neuronal death: development of competence-to-die in response to cytoplasmic cytochrome c.
Neuron
21:695-705[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Deshmukh M,
Vasilakos J,
Deckwerth TL,
Lampe PA,
Shivers BD,
Johnson Jr EM
(1996)
Genetic and metabolic status of NGF-deprived sympathetic neurons saved by an inhibitor of ICE-family proteases.
J Cell Biol
135:1341-1354[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Dugan LL,
Creedon DJ,
Johnson Jr EM,
Holtzman DM
(1997)
Rapid suppression of free radical formation by nerve growth factor involves the mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway.
Proc Natl Acad Sci USA
94:4086-4091[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Dwyer MA,
Bredt DS,
Snyder SH
(1991)
Nitric oxide synthase: irreversible inhibition by L-NG-Nitroarginine in brain in vitro and in vivo.
Biochem Biophys Res Commun
176:1136-1141[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Easton RM,
Deckwerth TL,
Parsadanian AS,
Johnson Jr EM
(1997)
Analysis of the mechanism of loss of trophic factor dependence associated with neuronal maturation: a phenotype indistinguishable from BAX deletion.
J Neurosci
17:9656-9666[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Edwards SN,
Tolkovsky AM
(1994)
Characterization of apoptosis in cultured rat sympathetic neurons after nerve growth factor withdrawal.
J Cell Biol
124:537-546[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Estus S,
Zaks WJ,
Freeman RS,
Gruda M,
Bravo R,
Johnson Jr EM
(1994)
Altered gene expression in neurons during programmed cell death: Identification of c-jun as necessary for neuronal apoptosis.
J Cell Biol
127:1717-1727[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Fernandez-Checa JC,
Kaplowitz N
(1990)
The use of monochlorobimane to determine the hepatic GSH levels and synthesis.
Anal Biochem
190:212-219[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Ferrari G,
Yan CYI,
Greene LA
(1995)
N-acetylcysteine (D- and L-stereoisomers) prevents apoptotic death of neuronal cells.
J Neurosci
15:2857-2866[Abstract].
-
Franklin JL,
Johnson Jr EM
(1998)
Control of neuronal size homeostasis by trophic factor-mediated coupling of protein degradation to protein synthesis.
J Cell Biol
142:1313-1324[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Franklin JL,
Sanz-Rodriguez C,
Juhasz A,
Deckwerth TL,
Johnson Jr EM
(1995)
Chronic depolarization prevents programmed death of sympathetic neurons in vitro but does not support growth: requirement for Ca2+ influx but not Trk activation.
J Neurosci
15:643-664[Abstract].
-
Greenlund LJS,
Deckwerth TL,
Johnson Jr EM
(1995)
Superoxide dismutase delays neuronal apoptosis: a role for reactive oxygen species in programmed neuronal death.
Neuron
14:303-315[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Griffith OW,
Meister A
(1979)
Potent and specific inhibition of glutathione synthesis by buthionine sulfoximine (S-n-butyl homocysteine sulfoximine).
J Biol Chem
254:7558-7560[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Halliwell B,
Gutteridge JMC
(1999)
In: Free radicals in biology and medicine third edition. Oxford: Oxford UP.
-
Henderson JF,
Lardy HA
(1970)
Bongkrekic acid an inhibitor of the adenine nucleotide translocase of mitochondria.
J Biol Chem
245:1319-1326[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Hockenbery DM,
Oltvai ZN,
Yin X-M,
Milliman CL,
Korsmeyer SJ
(1993)
Bcl-2 functions in an antioxidant pathway to prevent apoptosis.
Cell
75:241-251[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Jacobson MD,
Raff MC
(1995)
Programmed cell death and Bcl-2 protection in very low oxygen.
Nature
374:814-816[Medline].
-
Johnson MI,
Argiro V
(1983)
Techniques in the tissue culture of rat sympathetic neurons.
Methods Enzymol
103:334-347[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Kane DJ,
Sarafian TA,
Anton R,
Hahn H,
Gralla EB,
Valentine JS,
Örd T,
Bredesen DE
(1993)
Bcl-2 inhibition of neural death: decreased generation of reactive oxygen species.
Science
262:1274-1277[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Krajewski S,
Krajewska M,
Ellerby LA,
Welsh K,
Xie Z,
Deveraux QL,
Salvesen GS,
Bredesen DE,
Rosenthal RE,
Fiskum G,
Reed JC
(1999)
Release of caspase-9 from mitochondria during neuronal apoptosis and cerebral ischemia.
Proc Natl Acad Sci USA
96:5752-5757[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Krebs JF,
Armstrong RC,
Srinivasan A,
Aja T,
Wong AM,
Aboy A,
Sayers R,
Pham B,
Vu T,
Hoang K,
Karanewsky DS,
Leist C,
Schmitz A,
Wu JC,
Tomaselli KJ,
Fritz LC
(1999)
Activation of membrane-associated procaspase-3 is regulated by Bcl-2.
J Cell Biol
144:915-926[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Li P,
Nijhawan D,
Budihardjo I,
Srinivasula SM,
Ahmad M,
Alnemri ES,
Wang X
(1997)
Cytochrome c and dATP-dependent formation of Apaf-1/caspase-9 complex initiates an apoptotic protease cascade.
Cell
91:479-489[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Lin KI,
Lee SH,
Narayanan R,
Baraban JM,
Hardwick JM,
Ratan RR
(1995)
Thiol agents and Bcl-2 identify an alphavirus-induced apoptotic pathway that requires activation of the transcription factor NF-kappa B.
J Cell Biol
131:1149-1161[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Mancini M,
Nicholson DW,
Roy S,
Thornberry NA,
Peterson EP,
Casciola-Rosen LA,
Rosen A
(1998)
The caspase-3 precursor has a cytosolic and mitochondrial distribution: implications for apoptotic signaling.
J Cell Biol
140:1485-1495[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Marchetti P,
Decaudin D,
Macho A,
Zamzami N,
Hirsch T,
Susin SA,
Kroemer G
(1997)
Redox regulation of apoptosis: impact of thiol oxidation status on mitochondrial function.
Eur J Immunol
27:289-296[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Martin DP,
Schmidt RE,
DiStefano PS,
Lowry OH,
Carter JG,
Johnson Jr EM
(1988)
Inhibitors of protein synthesis and RNA synthesis prevent neuronal death caused by nerve growth factor deprivation.
J Cell Biol
106:829-844[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Martinou I,
Desagher S,
Eskes R,
Antonsson B,
André E,
Fakan S,
Martinou JC
(1999)
The release of cytochrome c from mitochondria during apoptosis of NGF-deprived sympathetic neurons is a reversible event.
J Cell Biol
144:883-889[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Neame SJ,
Rubin LL,
Philpott KL
(1998)
Blocking cytochrome c activity within intact neurons inhibits apoptosis.
J Cell Biol
142:1583-1593[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Nedergaard M,
Desai S,
Pulsinelli W
(1990)
Dicarboxy-dichlorofluorescein: a new fluorescent probe for measuring acidic intracellular pH.
Anal Biochem
187:109-114[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Oppenheim RW
(1991)
Cell death during development of the nervous system.
Annu Rev Neurosci
14:453-501[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Polyak K,
Xia Y,
Zweier JL,
Kinzler KW,
Vogelstein B
(1997)
A model for p53-induced apoptosis.
Nature
389:300-305[Medline].
-
Putcha GV,
Deshmukh M,
Johnson Jr EM
(1999)
BAX translocation is a critical event in neuronal apoptosis: regulation by neuroprotectants, Bcl-2, and caspases.
J Neurosci
19:7476-7485[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Ratan RR,
Murphy TH,
Baraban JM
(1994)
Macromolecular synthesis inhibitors prevent oxidative stress-induced apoptosis in embryonic cortical neurons by shunting cysteine from protein synthesis to glutathione.
J Neurosci
14:4385-4392[Abstract].
-
Reed JC
(1997)
Cytochrome c: can't live with it-can't live without it.
Cell
91:559-562[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Reynolds IJ,
Hastings TG
(1995)
Glutamate induces the production of reactive oxygen species in cultured forebrain neurons following NMDA receptor activation.
J Neurosci
15:3318-3327[Abstract].
-
Royall JA,
Ischiropoulis H
(1993)
Evaluation of 2', 7'-dichlorofluorescin and dihydrorhodamine123 as fluorescent probes for intracellular H2O2 in cultured endothelial cells.
Arch Biochem Biophys
302:348-355[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Samali A,
Cai J,
Zhivotovsky B,
Jones DP,
Orrenius S
(1999)
Presence of pre-apoptotic complex of pro-caspase-3, Hsp60 and Hsp10 in the mitochondrial fraction of Jurkat cells.
EMBO J
18:2040-2048[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Susin SA,
Lorenzo HK,
Zamzami N,
Marzo I,
Brenner C,
Larochette N,
Prévost M-C,
Alzari PM,
Kroemer G
(1999)
Mitochondrial release of caspase-2 and -9 during the apoptotic process.
J Exp Med
189:381-393[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Szabó I,
Zoratti M
(1991)
The giant channel of the inner mitochondrial membrane is inhibited by cyclosporin A.
J Biol Chem
266:3376-3379[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Tan S,
Sagara Y,
Liu Y,
Maher P,
Schubert D
(1998)
The regulation of reactive oxygen species production during programmed cell death.
J Cell Biol
141:1423-1432[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Tietze F
(1969)
Enzymatic method for quantitative determination of nanogram amounts of total and oxidized glutathione.
Anal Biochem
15:502-522.
-
Tournier C,
Hess P,
Yang DD,
Xu J,
Turner TK,
Nimnual A,
Bar-Sagi D,
Jones SN,
Flavell RA,
Davis RJ
(2000)
Requirement of JNK for stress-induced activation of the cytochrome c-mediated death pathway.
Science
288:870-877[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Turrens JF
(1997)
Superoxide production by the mitochondrial respiratory chain.
Bioscience Rep
17:3-8[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Yan CYI,
Greene LA
(1998)
Prevention of PC12 cell death by N-acetylcysteine requires activation of the ras pathway.
J Neurosci
18:4042-4049[Abstract/Free Full Text].
Copyright © 2001 Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474/01/2161949-15$05.00/0
This article has been cited by other articles:

|
 |

|
 |
 
D. J. Lomb, L. A. Desouza, J. L. Franklin, and R. S. Freeman
Prolyl Hydroxylase Inhibitors Depend on Extracellular Glucose and Hypoxia-Inducible Factor (HIF)-2{alpha} to Inhibit Cell Death Caused by Nerve Growth Factor (NGF) Deprivation: Evidence that HIF-2{alpha} Has a Role in NGF-Promoted Survival of Sympathetic Neurons
Mol. Pharmacol.,
May 1, 2009;
75(5):
1198 - 1209.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
V. A. Campanucci, A. Krishnaswamy, and E. Cooper
Mitochondrial Reactive Oxygen Species Inactivate Neuronal Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptors and Induce Long-Term Depression of Fast Nicotinic Synaptic Transmission
J. Neurosci.,
February 13, 2008;
28(7):
1733 - 1744.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
Y. Duan, R. A. Gross, and S.-S. Sheu
Ca2+-dependent generation of mitochondrial reactive oxygen species serves as a signal for poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase-1 activation during glutamate excitotoxicity
J. Physiol.,
December 15, 2007;
585(3):
741 - 758.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
R. A. Kirkland, G. M. Saavedra, and J. L. Franklin
Rapid Activation of Antioxidant Defenses by Nerve Growth Factor Suppresses Reactive Oxygen Species during Neuronal Apoptosis: Evidence for a Role in Cytochrome c Redistribution
J. Neurosci.,
October 17, 2007;
27(42):
11315 - 11326.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
H. Fukui and C. T. Moraes
Extended polyglutamine repeats trigger a feedback loop involving the mitochondrial complex III, the proteasome and huntingtin aggregates
Hum. Mol. Genet.,
April 1, 2007;
16(7):
783 - 797.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
I. Komuro, T. Yasuda, A. Iwamoto, and K. S. Akagawa
Catalase Plays a Critical Role in the CSF-independent Survival of Human Macrophages via Regulation of the Expression of BCL-2 Family
J. Biol. Chem.,
December 16, 2005;
280(50):
41137 - 41145.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
S. Vesce, M. B. Jekabsons, L. I. Johnson-Cadwell, and D. G. Nicholls
Acute Glutathione Depletion Restricts Mitochondrial ATP Export in Cerebellar Granule Neurons
J. Biol. Chem.,
November 18, 2005;
280(46):
38720 - 38728.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
R. Chaturvedi, Y. Cheng, M. Asim, F. I. Bussiere, H. Xu, A. P. Gobert, A. Hacker, R. A. Casero Jr., and K. T. Wilson
Induction of Polyamine Oxidase 1 by Helicobacter pylori Causes Macrophage Apoptosis by Hydrogen Peroxide Release and Mitochondrial Membrane Depolarization
J. Biol. Chem.,
September 17, 2004;
279(38):
40161 - 40173.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
S. JAYANTHI, X. DENG, P.-A. H. NOAILLES, B. LADENHEIM, and J. L. CADET
Methamphetamine induces neuronal apoptosis via cross-talks between endoplasmic reticulum and mitochondria-dependent death cascades
FASEB J,
February 1, 2004;
18(2):
238 - 251.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
M. V. Sanchez-Gomez, E. Alberdi, G. Ibarretxe, I. Torre, and C. Matute
Caspase-Dependent and Caspase-Independent Oligodendrocyte Death Mediated by AMPA and Kainate Receptors
J. Neurosci.,
October 22, 2003;
23(29):
9519 - 9528.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
Y.-H. Ling, L. Liebes, Y. Zou, and R. Perez-Soler
Reactive Oxygen Species Generation and Mitochondrial Dysfunction in the Apoptotic Response to Bortezomib, a Novel Proteasome Inhibitor, in Human H460 Non-small Cell Lung Cancer Cells
J. Biol. Chem.,
September 5, 2003;
278(36):
33714 - 33723.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
J. P. Vrabec, C. J. Lieven, and L. A. Levin
Cell-Type-Specific Opening of the Retinal Ganglion Cell Mitochondrial Permeability Transition Pore
Invest. Ophthalmol. Vis. Sci.,
June 1, 2003;
44(6):
2774 - 2782.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
R. A. Kirkland, J. A. Windelborn, J. M. Kasprzak, and J. L. Franklin
A Bax-Induced Pro-Oxidant State Is Critical for Cytochrome c Release during Programmed Neuronal Death
J. Neurosci.,
August 1, 2002;
22(15):
6480 - 6490.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|
|

|