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The Journal of Neuroscience, May 15, 2002, 22(10):4045-4056
Late-Stage Immature Neocortical Neurons Reconstruct
Interhemispheric Connections and Form Synaptic Contacts with
Increased Efficiency in Adult Mouse Cortex Undergoing
Targeted Neurodegeneration
Rosemary A.
Fricker-Gates,
Jennifer
J.
Shin,
Cindy C.
Tai,
Lisa A.
Catapano, and
Jeffrey D.
Macklis
Division of Neuroscience, Children's Hospital, and Department of
Neurology and Program in Neuroscience, Harvard Medical School, Boston,
Massachusetts 02115
 |
ABSTRACT |
In the neocortex, the effectiveness of potential cellular
repopulation therapies for diseases involving neuronal loss may depend
critically on whether newly incorporated cells can differentiate appropriately into precisely the right kind of neuron, re-establish precise long-distance connections, and reconstruct complex functional circuitry. Here, we test the hypothesis that increased efficiency of
connectivity could be achieved if precursors could be more fully
differentiated toward desired phenotypes. We compared embryonic neuroblasts and immature murine neurons subregionally dissected from
either embryonic day 17 (E17) (Shin et al., 2000
) or E19 primary
somatosensory (S1) cortex and postnatal day 3 (P3) purified callosal
projection neurons (CPNs) with regard to neurotransmitter and receptor
phenotype and afferent synapse formation after transplantation into
adult mouse S1 cortex undergoing targeted apoptotic degeneration of
layer II/III and V CPNs.
Two weeks after transplantation, neurons from all developmental stages
were found dispersed within layers II/III and V, many with
morphological features typical of large pyramidal neurons. Retrograde
labeling with FluoroGold revealed that 42 ± 2% of transplanted E19 immature S1 neurons formed connections with the contralateral S1
cortex by 12 weeks after transplantation, compared with 23 ± 7%
of E17 neurons. A greater percentage of E19-derived neurons received
synapses (77 ± 1%) compared with E17-derived neurons (67 ± 2%). Similar percentages of both E17 and E19 donor-derived neurons
expressed neurotransmitters and receptors [glutamate, aspartate, GABA,
GABA receptor (GABA-R), NMDA-R, AMPA-R, and kainate-R] appropriate for
endogenous adult CPNs progressively over a period of 2-12 weeks after
transplantation. Although P3 fluorescence-activated cell
sorting-purified neurons also expressed these mature phenotypic markers
after transplantation, their survival in vivo was poor.
We conclude that later-stage and region-specific immature neurons
develop a mature CPN phenotype and make appropriate connections with
recipient circuitry with increased efficiency. However, at postnatal
stages of development, limitations in survival outweigh this increased
efficiency. These results suggest that efforts to direct the
differentiation of earlier precursors precisely along specific desired
neuronal lineages could potentially make possible the highly efficient
reconstruction of complex neocortical and other CNS circuitry.
Key words:
neocortex; neural transplantation; migration; integration; connectivity; targeted degeneration; apoptosis; neuronal
degeneration; neurotransmitters; receptors; glutamate; aspartate; GABA; kainate-R; NMDA-R; AMPA-R; GABA-R
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Neural transplantation offers an
approach for cellular repair in the adult mammalian brain. Such repair
could circumvent the generally limited capacity of the mature CNS to
generate new neurons in response to degeneration or injury. Both rodent
and primate studies have shown that immature neurons and their
precursors can survive, mature, and extend functional axonal
connections after transplantation to areas of neuronal degeneration,
replacing lost neurons both structurally and functionally in the mature CNS (for review, see Dunnett and Björklund, 2000
). However, for the replacement of highly specified neuronal populations and optimal reconstruction of complex circuitry, the choice of donor cells may play
a crucial role. In the neocortex, the effectiveness of potential
transplantation therapy for diseases involving neuronal loss may depend
critically on whether donor cells can differentiate appropriately,
re-establish precise long-distance connections, and reconstruct
functional circuitry.
During the development of specific neuronal populations, neural
precursors undergo defined stages of restriction: first, restriction to
a neuronal phenotype, and subsequently further refinement of their
morphological features and molecular phenotype (e.g., neurotransmitter and receptor expression), to enable their specific role in functional neural processing. Therefore, in selecting the optimal cell types for
reconstruction of specific neuronal circuitry, more differentiated donor neuroblasts and later-stage immature neurons, derived from the
appropriate regions of the CNS, may have an increased efficiency of
appropriate, specific, and fully competent maturation. For example,
embryonic day 17 (E17) neuroblasts transplanted to adult mouse
neocortex undergoing apoptotic neuronal degeneration of callosal
projection neurons (CPNs) can respond to developmental signal molecules
re-expressed in this region, differentiate into projection neurons, and
re-form specific distant projections (Macklis, 1993
; Sheen and Macklis,
1995
; Hernit-Grant and Macklis, 1996
; Wang et al., 1998
; Shin et al.,
2000
).
Such results notwithstanding, the relatively limited capacity of
survival, migration, integration, and proliferation of immature neurons
after transplantation has prompted considerable research into the
potential use of less differentiated precursor cells. These early
precursors, taken at premigratory stages of development, can make use
of available substrates or pathways for migration and integration in
the recipient CNS (Gage et al., 1995
; Brüstle and McKay, 1996
;
Lundberg et al., 1997
; Snyder et al., 1997
; Winkler et al., 1998
;
Zigova et al., 1998
; Fricker et al., 1999
; Leavitt et al., 1999
).
Undifferentiated precursors have other distinct advantages for
potential transplantation therapies, including their greater ability
for proliferation and greater survival in vivo. Ultimately,
neural precursors may provide a relatively unlimited source of neuronal
substrates that allow transplantation to be clinically feasible. For
example, after transplantation into adult mouse neocortex undergoing
targeted apoptosis of projection neurons, early stage neural precursors
can respond with many of the same features as more mature neuroblasts,
showing neuronal differentiation, afferent synapse formation, and
extension of long-distance axonal projections. However, such precursors
undergo differentiation and axon projection with decreased efficiency
compared with later-stage neuroblasts and immature neurons
(Hernit-Grant and Macklis, 1996
; Snyder et al., 1997
; Sheen et al.,
1999
; Shin et al., 2000
).
For neural or neuronal precursors to be a feasible alternative for
transplantation, it will be crucial to understand more fully their
intrinsic properties, how these properties change during progressively
restricted neuronal differentiation, and how these changes affect the
interactions of the cells with external signals in the surrounding
environment. Therefore, we tested the hypothesis that increased
efficiency of connectivity with the recipient brain could be achieved
in vivo if neuroblasts and immature neurons could be more
fully and precisely differentiated toward the desired phenotype. We
compared populations of increasingly committed immature neocortical
neurons, either subregionally dissected neuroblasts or immature CPNs
purified from the developing mouse brain, with regard to their ability
to undergo precise maturation and establish appropriate long-distance
connectivity with the recipient brain after transplantation. In
particular, we investigated the ability of the donor neurons to (1)
extend specific, long-distance axonal projections to the contralateral
cortex in adult mice undergoing apoptotic degeneration of CPNs and (2)
differentiate to a mature phenotype, expressing appropriate
neurotransmitters and their receptors present in normal adult CPNs.
Such analysis directly investigates the ability of transplanted
immature neurons at progressively committed stages of differentiation
both to re-establish appropriate connectivity within the recipient
neocortical circuitry and to potentially function appropriately within
that circuitry to replace injured or degenerating neocortical
projection neurons.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
This study is based on data from 71 mice and 26,270 analyzed
neurons. Adult male and female C57BJ/6 mice were used according to an
institutionally approved protocol. Fifty-nine mice were recipients of
dissociated embryonic cells and postnatal neurons into neocortex
undergoing targeted neural degeneration. Of these, 12 mice received
transplants of E19 S1 immature neurons (n = 4 per group
examined at each time point), and another 7 mice received postnatal day
3 (P3) fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS)-purified CPNs
(n = 2-3 per group examined at each time point). These
results were compared with those of 40 mice that received transplants of E17 S1 neuroblasts (n = 7-8 per group examined at
each time point) (Shin et al., 2000
). Twelve mice received transplants
of neuroblasts and immature neurons into intact neocortex as
age-matched controls. These controls underwent FluoroGold (FG;
Fluorochrome, Inc., Englewood, NJ) retrograde labeling at 12 weeks.
Induction of targeted neuronal degeneration. Details of
chlorin e6 injection and exposure to
long-wavelength laser light have been described previously (Macklis,
1993
; Sheen and Macklis, 1995
). For surgery, neonatal 2- to 4-d-old
mouse pups were anesthetized by hypothermia. Glass micropipettes with
tip diameters of 30-60 µm were used to introduce fluorescein latex
nanospheres (LumaFluor, Naples, FL) conjugated with the
long-wavelength-absorbing chromophore chlorin
e6 into the left primary somatosensory
cortex (S1), using bregma and the coronal suture as landmarks.
Nanospheres were microinjected at depths between 150 µm and the
surface, at 10 sites spaced evenly throughout S1 cortex, depositing 230 nl total volume to the hemisphere. The pups were subsequently returned
to their dams. During the following days, chlorin
e6-conjugated nanospheres were
retrogradely transported across the corpus callosum to the
contralateral hemisphere, as described previously (Macklis, 1993
; Sheen
and Macklis, 1995
).
At the age of 6-8 weeks, mice were deeply anesthetized with Avertin
(0.02 ml/gm). A small craniotomy (~2.5 × 2.5 mm) was created above the noninjected hemisphere. The somatosensory cortex was subsequently exposed, through intact dura, to light from a
continuous-wave 674 nm near-infrared laser with custom collimating
optics. This light exposure initiated the selective degeneration of
CPNs, primarily in layer II/III and to a smaller extent in layer V,
over the following 1-2 weeks (Fig.
1A) (Macklis, 1993
;
Madison and Macklis, 1993
; Sheen and Macklis, 1994
, 1995
).

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Figure 1.
Migration, neuronal differentiation, and
synapse formation by E19 immature S1 anlage neurons transplanted to
adult S1 cortex undergoing targeted neuronal degeneration.
A, Low-magnification image of glutamatergic CPNs in the
targeted region of S1 8 weeks after induction of neuronal apoptosis.
Arrowheads indicate the region of glutamatergic CPN loss
in layer II/III of cortex. B, Camera lucida of a coronal
section through an experimental adult mouse brain 6 weeks after
transplantation. The inset shows two transplantation
sites with transplanted E19-derived neurons double-labeled with PKH 26 and rhodamine fluorescent nanospheres. C, Area boxed in
B shows a PKH 26- and nanosphere-labeled E19-derived
neuron after migration from the transplantation site
(inset at higher magnification). Transplanted neurons
developed large, pyramidal cell bodies typical of adult CPNs.
D-G, High-magnification confocal images of E19-derived
neurons 12 weeks after transplantation. Arrowheads
indicate PKH 26- and nanosphere-labeled E19-derived neurons
(D) that are immunopositive for NeuN
(E) and retrogradely labeled with FG from the
contralateral S1 cortex (F). G,
Confocal overlay image of the triple-labeled neurons.
Inset shows a triple-labeled neuron
(asterisk) at higher magnification.
Arrows in D-G indicate a NeuN-positive
transplanted neuron that is not labeled with FG. H-K,
High-magnification confocal images of E19-derived neurons 12 weeks
after transplantation. Arrowheads indicate PKH 26- and
nanosphere-labeled E19-derived neurons (H)
that colocalize synaptophysin (I) and are
retrogradely labeled with FG (J).
K, A confocal overlay image of triple-labeled neurons.
Inset shows a triple-labeled neuron
(asterisk) at higher magnification. At both 6 and 12 weeks, the injection sites were observed spanning layers II/III through
V (B, L, and O).
L, Injection track showing PKH 26- and
nanosphere-labeled E19-derived immature neurons (red) 12 weeks after transplantation. M, FG injections to the
contralateral cortex 12 weeks after transplantation led to widespread
retrograde labeling throughout layer II/III on the transplanted side,
distributed well beyond the regions that contained both
transplants and endogenous recipient CPNs. N,
Negative control immunocytochemistry for aspartate and GABA, omitting
the primary antibodies, revealed no cellular labeling.
O, Region of experimental cortex at 12 weeks, showing
one injection site (red), with aspartate-positive
endogenous recipient and donor neurons (green),
and FG retrograde labeling within layer II/III. P-R,
E19 donor-derived neurons transplanted to intact control neocortex
(injection track indicated by small arrows in
P-R) did not form contralateral projections,
although they were located centrally among endogenous recipient CPNs
that were retrogradely labeled with FG (arrowheads in
Q and R). S, Higher
magnification of an E19 donor neuron (outlined by
arrowheads; layer V) prelabeled with PKH 26 and
nanospheres in intact, control cortex; donor neurons in intact cortex
were not retrogradely labeled by FG, but surrounding endogenous
recipient CPNs were FG-labeled (small arrows).
PKH, PKH 26; nano, rhodamine fluorescent
nanospheres; syn, synaptophysin; ASP,
aspartate. Scale bars: A, 100 µm; C, 20 µm; D: 10 µm (applies to E-K);
L-R, 100 µm; S, 8 µm.
Staining procedure for all antibodies: free-floating sections were
incubated in primary antibodies for 17-19 hr at 4°C. Labeling was
revealed with fluorescent secondary antibodies (1:200 anti-mouse IgG
Alexa 488 and 1:250 anti-rabbit IgG Alexa 488), with 2 hr incubation at
4°C. For more details regarding antibody dilutions and sources, see
Materials and Methods.
|
|
Mice undergoing targeted neuronal degeneration are referred to as
"experimental" mice in the text.
Preparation of embryonic cell suspensions. The methods for
preparation of subregionally dissected S1 cortical cell suspensions and
their transplantation to the adult mouse cortex undergoing targeted
neurodegeneration have been described previously (Shin et al., 2000
).
All transplantations were performed 8 d after initiation of
neuronal death. Timed E19 pregnant C57B6/J mice were terminally anesthetized, and embryos were removed. The developing S1 region from
each cortex was dissected out and placed in dissection medium: buffer supplemented with 0.36% glucose, 0.8 mM
magnesium kynurenate, 50 µm APV, 50 U/ml penicillin, and 50 µg/ml
streptomycin. Tissue pieces underwent enzymatic treatment with 100 U
papain for 30 min at 37°C, followed by mechanical trituration with a
1 ml plastic Falcon pipette (BD Biosciences, Bedford, MA).
Cell suspensions were labeled with the lipophilic dye PKH 26 red
(Sigma, St. Louis, MO) and custom-synthesized latex nanospheres containing rhodamine, which label neurons selectively (Macklis, 1993
;
Sheen and Macklis, 1995
). PKH 26 initially localizes to the membrane,
outlining cell somata and processes, and is later concentrated in
lysosomes (Honig and Hume, 1989
; Ashley et al., 1993
). The neuronally
incorporated nanospheres are also eventually concentrated in lysosomes
and persist in neurons indefinitely (Macklis, 1993
; Sheen and Macklis,
1995
). Cell suspensions were made at a density of ~5 × 107 cells/ml and were kept on ice to
optimize cell viability.
Purification of P3 CPNs using FACS. To investigate the
ability of increasingly late-stage differentiated CPNs already
committed to a callosal neuron phenotype, we took advantage of a
recently developed purification, via FACS, of early postnatal callosal neurons that have already formed their contralateral projections (Catapano et al., 2001
). In brief, we retrogradely labeled the young
neurons via microinjection of fluorescent microspheres directly into
their axonal target regions in the contralateral cortex and subsequently purified these neurons by FACS. Purified CPNs were used in
preference to mixed P3 cell suspensions to allow investigation of the
performance of maximally committed immature callosal neurons, while
allowing the earlier-stage E17 and E19 results to be directly comparable with those of previous studies (Hernit-Grant and Macklis, 1996
; Shin et al., 2000
). In a series of pilot experiments, we also
compared P3 cortical cell suspensions from subregionally dissected S1
cortex, including all cell types. The survival of neurons in these
mixed S1 cortical dissociations was extremely poor, much poorer than
that of the FACS-purified P3 neurons. This compromised survival was
potentially attributable to overwhelming glutamate in the
medium, which was eliminated by dilution and glutamate blockade in the
FACS protocol used. Because of the poor neuronal survival with mixed S1
cortical dissociations, we did not perform further investigations of
this type.
To retrogradely label developing CPNs, rhodamine fluorescent latex
microspheres (LumaFluor) were injected into the left S1 cortex of
1-d-old mouse pups according to the protocol outlined above (Catapano
et al., 2001
). Pups were returned to their dams for 48 hr to allow
transport of the microspheres to the contralateral cortex. P3 pups were
killed by rapid decapitation, and the S1 cortex contralateral to the
injected side was removed. A single-cell suspension was prepared as for
the embryonic tissue. FACS was used to isolate and purify the CPNs,
selecting for neurons, both by presence of fluorescence labeling and by
large cell soma size (>10 µm diameter). Purified CPNs were collected
in growth medium supplemented with fetal calf serum and kept on ice to
optimize their viability during the transplantation procedure. The
density of these cell suspensions was lower than that of the mixed cell suspensions (~1 × 107
cells/ml).
Transplantation of cell suspensions. Cell suspensions were
transplanted to regions of adult S1 cortex undergoing targeted neuronal
degeneration. Injection tracks spanned layers II/III through V. Micropipettes were used to introduce 50 nl of donor cells at intervals
of 50 µm, from a depth of 500-100 µm (total 300 nl per injection
site). Each mouse received six injections, spaced evenly in S1 cortex,
with ~90,000 E19 cells and 18,000 P3 CPNs injected per mouse. Control
transplantations were performed in the same manner into age-matched
intact adult mice.
FG injections into transplant recipients. Twelve weeks after
transplantation, FG was injected into the contralateral cortex of
transplanted mice (both experimental mice that had received chlorin
e6 and laser exposure and previously
intact adult controls) to retrogradely label neurons extending axons to
the contralateral hemisphere. A craniotomy (~2.5 × 2.5 mm) was
created overlying the S1 cortex contralateral to the transplanted
region. Micropipettes were used to deliver 60 nl of FG (a 3% solution
in distilled water) in a grid of 11 sites, placed at intervals of 50 µm, from a depth of 500-100 µm. Four days were allowed for
transport to the cell somata in the contralateral hemisphere.
Tissue preparation. At 2, 6, and 12 weeks after
transplantation, mice were perfused for immunocytochemical analysis.
Mice were terminally anesthetized with Avertin (0.04 ml/gm) and
transcardially perfused with 10 U/ml heparin in 0.9% NaCl, followed by
4% paraformaldehyde/0.4% glutaraldehyde. Brains were post-fixed in
the same solution for 24-41 hr. Series of 30 µm coronal sections
were obtained with a Vibratome (Technical Products International Inc.,
O'Fallon, MO) and stored in PBS at 4°C.
Immunocytochemistry. Sets of 10 sections (distributed evenly
throughout anterior and posterior regions) were obtained from each
mouse for immunocytochemistry. Free-floating sections were incubated
with a blocking solution of 5% bovine serum albumin, 3% goat serum,
and 0.5% Tween 20 for 2 hr. Samples were subsequently incubated
with the primary antibody diluted in blocking solution for 17-19 hr.
The following primary antibodies were used, at the following dilutions:
(1) anti-NeuN IgG (1:100; Chemicon, Temecula, CA; mouse monoclonal);
(2) anti-synaptophysin IgG (20 µg/ml; Boehringer Mannheim,
Indianapolis, IN; mouse monoclonal); (3) anti-glutamate IgG (1:500;
Incstar, Stillwater, MN; mouse monoclonal); (4) anti-aspartate IgG
(1:500; Sigma; rabbit polyclonal); (5) anti-GABA IgG (1:500; Incstar;
rabbit polyclonal); (6) anti-GABAA receptor
chain IgG1 (10 µg/ml; Boehringer Mannheim; mouse monoclonal); (7)
anti-NMDA-R1 IgG2a (1:250; PharMingen, San Diego, CA; mouse
monoclonal); (8) anti-glutamate receptor 2/3 IgG (AMPA-R) (1:125;
Oncogene Sciences, Uniondale, NY; rabbit polyclonal); and (9)
anti-glutamate receptor 5, 6, and 7 IgM (KA-R) (1:250; Pharminogen;
mouse monoclonal). Samples were also processed with omission of primary
antibodies as negative controls (Fig. 1N); there was
no nonspecific labeling. Sections were rinsed four times with PBS
and incubated with the matching secondary antibody for 2 hr. The following secondary antibodies were used at the following
dilutions: (1) anti-rabbit IgG Alexa 488 (1:250; Molecular Probes,
Leiden, The Netherlands) and (2) anti-mouse IgG Alexa 488 (1:200;
Molecular Probes). Sections were subsequently rinsed four times with
PBS. All steps were performed at 4°C. Sections were subsequently
mounted and coverslipped with aqueous-based Fluoromount G (Electron
Microscopy Sciences, Fort Washington, PA).
Analysis of transplanted neurons. Neuronal counts were
performed with either a 40× or 100× high-numerical-aperture objective on a Zeiss (Thornwood, NY) microscope equipped with epifluorescence. The following custom excitation and emission filters were used for
visualization of fluorescent labeling to eliminate nonspecific fluorescence: (1) excitation, 350-380 nm; barrier, >380 (FG); (2)
excitation, 450-490 nm; barrier, 510-540 (Alexa 488, FITC); and (3)
excitation, 538-553 nm; barrier, 590-620 (Cy3, rhodamine).
Immunolabeling was considered positive by criteria defined a
priori: (1) if the signal was substantially and distinctly above background and (2) if the signal was distinctly above the negative omission-of-primary-antibody controls. Furthermore, the established criteria were that neurotransmitter immunofluorescence was classified as positive only if staining was homogeneous throughout the cytoplasm, and receptor staining was considered positive only if staining was
uniform throughout the cell membrane. To be considered double-labeled, morphological features as delineated by FG and fluorescent secondary antibody had to be similar. Rare indeterminately labeled neurons were
not included in the analysis.
In individual series of sections (1:10 for sections containing
E19 donor immature neurons and 1:5 for sections containing P3
CPNs), donor-derived neurons were identified and their positions relative to the transplantation site were determined. The vertical central line of the narrow injection sites was delineated by use of
low-power optics to define the precise placement of each
individual micropipette track through the cortex (Fig.
1B,L,O). Only neurons that had migrated >50 µm
from the vertical central line of the injection site into layers II/III
and V of somatosensory cortex were included in the analysis (Fig.
1C). This criterion was derived from previous studies
indicating that the subpopulation of transplanted neuroblasts that
actively migrate from the implantation site differentiate into mature
neurons and extend axons across the corpus callosum to the
contralateral cortex (Macklis, 1993
; Sheen and Macklis, 1995
;
Hernit-Grant and Macklis, 1996
). In addition, for transplantations of
E17 neuroblasts and E19 immature neurons, only neurons that had
sufficient PKH 26 and nanosphere labeling to delineate >50% of the
cell circumference were included so as to be certain of the position of
the neuronal somata. For P3 purified CPNs, neurons containing
3
lysosomes containing fluorescent microspheres were included in the analysis.
Because of the use of microtransplantation of only a few thousand cells
per injection site, and therefore the readily quantifiable number of
cells per phenotypic marker per animal, all PKH 26- and
nanosphere-labeled cells were counted for each series. The mice were
recoded so that each investigator remained blinded to the identity of
each specimen, and in selected cases, two investigators analyzed the
same series of sections to ensure accuracy and reproducibility. Interobserver reproducibility was extremely high.
Image acquisition. Fluorescence micrographs of transplanted
immature neurons were obtained with a cooled CCD digital camera (Optronics International, Chelmsford, MA). Confocal images were obtained using a Noran laser confocal system (Noran Instruments, Middleton, WI) on a Nikon (Tokyo, Japan) Diaphot microscope equipped with both an argon/krypton laser (Midwest Laser Products, Frankfort, IL) and a UV argon laser (Coherent-AMT, Kitchener, Ontario,
Canada), with Intervision software (Noran Instruments). For
two-dimensional overlays, fluorescence images from rhodamine,
fluorescein, and FG excitation and emission spectra for one plane of
tissue were combined, and a composite image was prepared.
Statistical analysis. Statistical tests with ANOVA were
performed using the statistical package Genstat 5, release 3.2 (Lawes Agricultural trust, Rothamsted, UK). Two-tailed values of
p < 0.05 were considered significant in the ANOVA
models. After ANOVA, additional post hoc analyses were
performed using the Student-Newman-Keuls t test for more
precise identification of significant differences between groups.
 |
RESULTS |
Induction of specific CPN degeneration
We induced specific apoptotic neuronal degeneration of CPNs in the
adult mouse S1 cortex. A substantial loss of the large glutamatergic
CPNs occurred specifically in lamina II/III, using glutamate as a
marker for mature CPNs. Neuronal apoptosis occurred only within the
region exposed to light by the laser optics (Fig. 1A). For clarity in the text, cortex undergoing
targeted CPN degeneration is termed "experimental cortex," to
distinguish this from "intact" cortex (recipient cortex for
"control" transplants).
E19 immature S1 anlage neurons survive, migrate, differentiate into
mature neurons, and form synapses with other neurons
Survival and migration
E19 S1 anlage neurons transplanted to regions of adult mouse
cortex undergoing targeted neurodegeneration (experimental cortex) showed good survival at all time points investigated. Donor-derived neurons were well integrated with morphologically healthy features 12 weeks after transplantation, indicating good long-term survival of the
transplanted immature neurons. There was no reduction in the number of
E19 donor-derived neurons observed at longer times after
transplantation (1182 ± 656 PKH- and nanosphere-labeled neurons
observed per mouse at 2 weeks vs 1466 ± 331 neurons per mouse at
12 weeks after transplantation). This is in contrast to previous
studies using E17 donor-derived neurons in which the number of donor
neurons identified decreased with time after transplantation (774 ± 189 neurons per mouse at 2 weeks, 539 ± 113 neurons per mouse
at 8 weeks, and 460 ± 58 neurons per mouse at 12 weeks after transplantation) (Shin et al., 2000
). Therefore, the viability of E19
S1 donor-derived neurons in vivo was not compromised by either the later developmental stage or the cellular dissociation and
labeling procedures themselves.
By 2 weeks after transplantation into regions of experimental
neocortex, E19 immature neurons migrated specifically to laminas II/III
and V (Sheen and Macklis, 1995
; Leavitt et al., 1999
). Almost all
donor-derived neurons were located in layer II/III, with only a few
scattered donor-derived neurons located in layer V (Fig.
1B,C). Although we cannot directly determine from the present data alone whether the migration to layer II/III was specific versus the result of preferential survival of neurons in layer II/III
over neurons that migrated to other layers, previous studies have
investigated this issue directly and found active and specific migration over a period of 2-3 weeks (Sheen and Macklis, 1995
; Leavitt
et al., 1999
). In several mice in the present study, donor-derived neuronal profiles were so dense in layer II/III that the region of
degeneration appeared to be totally repopulated with donor-derived neurons. Previous studies have found that transplanted E17 neuroblasts undergo a similar pattern of migration (Macklis, 1993
; Sheen and Macklis, 1995
; Hernit-Grant and Macklis, 1996
; Leavitt et al., 1999
;
Shin et al., 2000
).
Neuronal differentiation
As reported previously with E17 transplanted neuroblasts (Macklis,
1993
; Sheen and Macklis, 1995
; Hernit-Grant and Macklis, 1996
; Shin et
al., 2000
), many transplanted E19 immature neurons developed
morphological features typical of CPNs. This differentiation included
large pyramidal cell bodies with apical dendrites and basal axons (Fig.
1C). Two weeks after transplantation, the majority of E19
immature neurons that had migrated >50 µm from the injection site
were double-labeled for the neuronal marker MAP2 and had clear apical
dendrites present. At 6 and 12 weeks after transplantation, the
neuronal marker neuronal-specific nuclear protein (NeuN) was used to
identify mature neurons. Twelve weeks after transplantation, 66 ± 0.5% of migrated neurons were NeuN-positive (Fig.
1D-G). However, many additional transplanted neurons
that did not demonstrate NeuN labeling had morphological features of
large pyramidal neurons. It is likely that these were also mature
neurons but did not become labeled with NeuN because of poor
penetration of the antibody through the tissue after glutaraldehyde fixation.
After control transplants of the same E19 S1 anlage immature neurons to
intact adult mouse cortex that received no laser exposure, substantially fewer E19 immature neurons migrated to layers II/III and
V of neocortex. Twelve weeks after transplantation, the number of
NeuN-positive neurons present in the control transplants was ~10% of
the number of neurons in transplants to regions of adult mouse cortex
undergoing apoptotic neuronal degeneration.
Synapse formation
To investigate the level to which newly incorporated neurons
integrated into cortical circuitry, we assessed the formation of
synapses on donor-derived neurons with an antibody against the
presynaptic vesicle protein synaptophysin. This presynaptic marker has
been used in multiple studies as a marker of synaptic density in cortex
as well as other areas of the brain (Saito et al., 1994
). We used
immunocytochemistry directed against synaptophysin as a marker for
synaptic input from other neurons onto the donor-derived neurons.
Many E19 donor-derived neurons transplanted to experimental neocortex
had synaptophysin localized to terminals surrounding the cell somata at
both 6 and 12 weeks after transplantation (Fig. 1H-K). At 12 weeks after transplantation,
77 ± 1% of the E19 donor-derived neurons colocalized
synaptophysin. This is significantly more than the 67 ± 2% of
E17 donor-derived neurons shown previously to colocalize synaptophysin
at 12 weeks after transplantation (F(6,4) = 19.88; p = 0.004). These data provide evidence that neurons formed synaptic inputs
to the transplant-derived neurons, further supporting their anatomic
and functional integration within neocortical circuitry.
E19 donor-derived S1 anlage neurons develop large numbers of
long-distance callosal projections
We quantified the number of transplanted neurons that projected
axons to the contralateral cortex by injecting the retrograde label FG
into the contralateral S1 cortical laminas II/III through V at 12 weeks
after transplantation. Labeling of CPNs extended throughout layers
II/III and V of the contralateral cortex (Fig. 1M)
and corresponded to regions in which both donor-derived neurons and
endogenous recipient CPNs were located (Fig. 1O). Of 4689 donor-derived neurons counted in experimental cortex (n = 4 mice), 42 ± 2.2% were retrogradely labeled with FG,
indicating that their axons projected to the appropriate S1 region of
contralateral cortex (Fig. 2). In
contrast, no callosal projections were formed by donor-derived neurons
from transplants of either E17 or E19 to intact adult cortex by 12 weeks after transplantation (0%; 0 of 241 neurons; n = 8 mice). Therefore, the cellular and molecular signals induced by
synchronous apoptosis of adult CPNs created an environment that was
permissive and potentially instructive for the regeneration of
long-distance projections to appropriate target sites.

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Figure 2.
Percentage of E17 and E19 donor-derived neurons
that formed long-distance axonal projections to the contralateral S1
cortex, after transplantation into control, intact cortex, or
experimental cortex, by retrograde tracing with FG.
Asterisks indicate significant differences between
groups (*p < 0.05; **p < 0.001).
|
|
Previous results using E17 S1 anlage neuroblasts demonstrated that
23 ± 6.8% of E17 donor-derived neurons made specific and appropriate contralateral projections 12 weeks after transplantation to
the adult mouse cortex undergoing targeted neurodegeneration (47 of 156 neurons; n = 4 mice). Statistical comparison of the present results with those previous findings indicates that
significantly more transcallosal projections are formed by E19
donor-derived neurons (F(9,2) = 3.82;
p < 0.05) (Fig. 2). Therefore, the later-stage E19
donor-derived neurons are able to regrow a substantial and significantly greater number of long-distance axonal projections to
appropriate target regions in the contralateral cortex compared with
donor neuroblasts taken at an earlier stage of development. This
significant increase in the efficiency of long-distance connectivity may be a result of a greater competence by the later-stage, more developmentally restricted neurons to respond to the environmental signals in the degenerating cortex.
E19 immature S1 anlage neurons develop appropriate
neurotransmitter and neurotransmitter receptor expression to enable
communication with other neurons
E19 immature S1 anlage neurons transplanted to experimental adult
cortex developed the morphological features, neurotransmitters, and
neurotransmitter receptor complement of adult CPNs by 12 weeks after
transplantation. These donor-derived neurons expressed the excitatory
neurotransmitters glutamate and aspartate in percentages appropriate
for adult endogenous CPNs (Fig.
3A-G). These results are
similar to those reported previously with E17 neuroblasts (Shin et al.,
2000
). In addition, appropriate percentages of E19 transplanted neurons
expressed NMDA receptors and the non-NMDA receptors kainate-R and
AMPA-R, and near-normal percentages expressed GABA-R (Fig.
4). Together, these results indicate that
the donor-derived neurons expressed the appropriate complement of
cellular machinery not only to transmit efferent synaptic information
to other neurons in their circuitry (i.e., appropriate excitatory
neurotransmitter expression) but also to receive afferent information
from neurons forming synapses with them (via appropriate receptor
expression).

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Figure 3.
High-magnification confocal images of E19-derived
neurons 12 weeks after transplantation expressing each of the
neurotransmitters glutamate, aspartate, and GABA.
Arrowheads indicate PKH 26- and nanosphere-labeled E19
neurons (red fluorescence in A) that
colocalize glutamate (green fluorescence in
B) and are retrogradely labeled with FG
(blue fluorescence in C) from the
contralateral S1 cortex. D, A confocal overlay image of
the triple-labeled neurons. Inset shows a triple-labeled
neuron (asterisk) at higher magnification.
Arrows in A-D indicate a donor-derived
neuron that is glutamate immunopositive but FG negative (i.e., that has
not projected an axon to reach target sites in the contralateral
cortex). E, Line graph comparing the percentage of E19
donor-derived neurons and E17 donor-derived neurons expressing
glutamate versus time after transplantation and the percentage of
normal adult CPNs that express glutamate. F, Confocal
overlay image of PKH 26- and nanosphere-labeled E19 donor-derived
neurons (red fluorescence), aspartate expression
(green fluorescence), and FG retrograde labeling
(blue fluorescence). Arrowheads indicate
triple-labeled neurons. G, Line graph comparing the
percentage of E19 donor-derived neurons and E17 donor-derived neurons
expressing aspartate versus time after transplantation and the
percentage of normal adult CPNs that express aspartate.
H, Confocal overlay image of PKH 26- and
nanosphere-labeled E19 donor-derived neurons (red
fluorescence), GABA expression (green
fluorescence), and FG retrograde labeling (blue
fluorescence). Arrowheads indicate a triple-labeled
neuron. I, Line graph comparing the percentage of E19
donor-derived neurons and E17 donor-derived neurons expressing GABA
versus time after transplantation and the percentage of normal adult
CPNs that express GABA. PKH, PKH 26;
nano, rhodamine fluorescent nanospheres. Scale bar
(shown in H): A-D, 20 µm; F,
H, 10 µm.
|
|

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Figure 4.
High-magnification confocal images of E19-derived
neurons 12 weeks after transplantation, expressing each of the
neurotransmitter receptors NMDA-R, AMPA-R, KA-R, and GABA-R. A,
C, E, G, Confocal images of PKH 26- and nanosphere-labeled E19
donor-derived neurons (red fluorescence), receptor
expression (green fluorescence), and FG
retrograde labeling from the contralateral S1 cortex
(blue fluorescence). Arrowheads indicate
triple-labeled neurons. B, D, F, H, Line graphs
comparing the percentage of E19 donor-derived neurons and E17
donor-derived neurons expressing each receptor versus time after
transplantation and the percentage of normal adult CPNs that express
each receptor. PKH, PKH-26; nano,
rhodamine fluorescent nanospheres. Scale bar: G, 15 µm
(applies to A, C, E).
|
|
The development of neurotransmitter and receptor expression by E19
donor-derived neurons generally followed a time course similar to that
seen previously with E17 donor-derived neurons (Shin et al., 2000
),
with few significant differences between the two groups at any time
point after transplantation (Figs. 3E,G,I,
4B,D,F,H). However, differences were observed
in the percentages of E19 versus E17 donor-derived neurons expressing
the excitatory neurotransmitters glutamate and aspartate when compared
12 weeks after transplantation (Fig. 3E,G). Significantly
higher percentages of E19 donor-derived neurons expressed both
glutamate and aspartate than did E17 donor-derived neurons (glutamate
at 12 weeks, 56 ± 6% of E19 vs 39 ± 3% of E17-derived
neurons, p < 0.05; aspartate at 12 weeks, 56 ± 8% of E19 vs 36 ± 5% of E17-derived neurons, p < 0.01).
Surprisingly, we found that ~20% of the donor-derived neurons
expressed the neurotransmitter GABA (Fig. 3H,I).
Control immunocytochemical staining omitting the primary antibody
revealed no nonspecific labeling whatsoever, and there was absolutely
no GABA staining in the vast majority of neurons when primary antibody
was included. Together, these findings indicate that the GABA
expression, although unexpected, was specific. We have previously
observed this frequency of GABA expression by pyramidal neurons in
layer II/III of cortex in adult mice and by neurons derived from E17
neuroblasts transplanted to the adult mouse cortex undergoing targeted
neurodegeneration (Shin et al., 2000
). There do not appear to be
previous studies reporting such a high percentage of adult CPNs
expressing GABA. However, the immunofluorescence methods and newer
glutaraldehyde-cross-linked primary antibodies we used may be more
sensitive than those used previously. It is well known that a
substantial percentage of developing cortical projection neurons
express GABA throughout the neonatal period, and it has been thought
that they cease expression. It is possible that they downregulate GABA
expression but that this lower-level expression is still readily
detectable by our methods. From these results, we are unable to predict
the role of GABA expression by this low but consistent number of CPNs.
Purified P3 CPNs can survive, migrate, and differentiate into
mature CPNs after transplantation in the adult neocortex
undergoing targeted neurodegeneration
To assess whether even further differentiated yet still immature
callosal neurons would integrate, differentiate, and form transcallosal
connections with even higher efficiency, we investigated whether these
already partially differentiated neurons with newly formed callosal
projections would survive, migrate, and continue to differentiate into
mature CPNs after transplantation to regions of experimental cortex. We
isolated and purified postnatal day 3 immature CPNs by FACS. At both 2 and 6 weeks after transplantation, a small number of FACS-purified P3
CPNs were observed immediately adjacent to the injection sites in each
recipient mouse. The percentage of surviving neurons was much lower
than that observed with either E19 immature neurons or E17 neuroblasts
(see Discussion). Despite the poor viability of P3 CPNs in
vivo, those neurons that did survive for 6 weeks after
transplantation demonstrated the ability to integrate with neocortical
circuitry, receiving synapses from other neurons and expressing the
appropriate neurotransmitter phenotype of mature CPNs.
Migration
Because of the poor survival of transplanted P3 CPNs, most of
these neurons were located only 50-100 µm from the transplantation site. However, occasional FACS-purified P3 CPNs were observed at
distances farther from the transplantation site, suggesting that
some P3 CPNs maintained the ability to migrate like neuroblasts isolated at E17 and immature neurons isolated at E19.
Phenotypic differentiation and synapse formation
Transplanted P3 CPNs also developed morphological features typical
of adult CPNs by 2 weeks after transplantation, with large pyramidal
cell bodies and a primary apical dendrite (Fig.
5A,B). Six weeks after
transplantation, FACS-positive neurons were observed that were
immunopositive for NeuN (Fig. 5C).

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Figure 5.
Differentiation of FACS-purified P3 CPNs at 2 and
6 weeks after transplantation. A, Donor-derived,
FACS-purified CPNs labeled with rhodamine fluorescent microspheres
displaying morphological features typical of adult CPNs, with a large
pyramidal cell body and prominent apical dendrite.
Arrowheads in A and B
outline the neuronal soma and apical dendrite. B, Same
neuron viewed under Nomarski differential interference contrast
(DIC) optics. C, Six weeks after
transplantation, donor-derived CPNs prelabeled and FACS-purified with
rhodamine microspheres (red) expressed the mature
neuronal marker NeuN (green). Donor-derived
P3 CPNs expressed the excitatory neurotransmitter glutamate
(green) (D) and colocalized
the presynaptic marker synaptophysin (green)
(E). synapto, Synaptophysin;
+ve, positive. Scale bar in E:
A-C, E, 15 µm; D, 10 µm.
|
|
To investigate whether transplanted P3 CPNs acquired the precise
phenotype of mature CPNs over time, immunocytochemical analysis was
performed for the neurotransmitters glutamate, aspartate, and GABA.
Many surviving P3 CPNs expressed glutamate (Fig. 5D), with a
small number also expressing aspartate or the inhibitory neurotransmitter GABA. Quantification of neurotransmitter expression was not performed because of the small numbers of surviving P3 CPNs in
each experimental cortex after transplantation. By 6 weeks after
transplantation, many of the donor-derived P3 CPNs colocalized with the
presynaptic marker synaptophysin (Fig. 5E), indicating that
these surviving neurons received synaptic input from other neurons.
Analysis of long-distance axonal projections was not performed on P3
CPNs transplanted to the adult experimental cortex because of poor
long-term survival of these donor neurons.
 |
DISCUSSION |
The central finding of this study is that later-stage,
progressively restricted neurons from the E19 S1 cortex can
differentiate precisely and with increased efficiency compared with
earlier-stage donor neurons. E19 S1 anlage neurons transplanted to the
adult mouse cortex undergoing targeted CPN degeneration are able to differentiate precisely into a mature CPN phenotype to replace lost
neurons, receive synaptic input on an extremely high percentage of the
newly incorporated neurons, and extend long-distance axonal projections
to appropriate target sites in the contralateral cortex with high
efficiency. These later-stage E19 immature neurons demonstrated increased efficiency of reconstruction of long-distance connections compared with earlier-stage E17 neuroblasts taken from the equivalent cortical region. E19 neurons also received significantly more synapses
from other neurons than did E17 donor-derived neurons. Although
FACS-purified postnatal CPNs are also able to differentiate into mature
CPNs after transplantation, their survival in vivo is
greatly reduced compared with either E19 immature neurons or E17
neuroblasts. Together, these results suggest that in adult neocortex
undergoing cell type-specific synchronous neuronal loss, partially
developmentally restricted, later-stage immature neurons are able to
complete a program of differentiation and circuitry reconstruction with
increased efficiency, as long as donor neuron survival is not compromised.
Re-formation of long-distance axonal projections to appropriate
target sites
To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study regarding
replacement of complex neuronal circuitry in which such a substantial
number (42%; several hundred per experimental mouse) of transplanted
neurons successfully re-formed long-distance axonal projections. In
many examples of transplantation to the adult cortex using embryonic
neurons, either as cell suspensions or as blocks of tissue,
investigators have often reported afferent connections to the
transplanted cells but no evidence for efferent connections back to the
recipient brain (Gonzalez and Sharp, 1987
; Gates et al., 2000a
).
Reports of the extent of efferent connectivity from the graft to
recipient tissue have varied widely, from no efferent projections
(Gonzalez and Sharp, 1987
; Schulz et al., 1993
; Grabowski et al., 1995
)
to sparse or moderate (Bermudez-Rattoni et al., 1987
; Isacson et al.,
1988
; Kelche et al., 1988
; Escobar et al., 1989
; Sofroniew et al.,
1990
; Sørensen et al., 1990
, 1996
; Fernandez-Ruiz et al., 1991
;
Isacson and Sofroniew, 1992
; Schulz et al., 1993
) to more extensive
innervation of recipient target regions (Gibbs and Cotman, 1987
; Guitet
et al., 1994
; Hernit-Grant and Macklis, 1996
). Indeed, in many
behavioral studies in which experimental animals did not show
improvement after transplantation, investigators have concluded that
the lack of functional recovery is most likely attributable to the lack
of efferent projections from the transplanted neurons to appropriate
recipient target sites.
However, it has been demonstrated previously that embryonic neurons
transplanted to a variety of regions in the adult brain are able to
extend small numbers of axonal projections successfully and that these
projections can be at least partially directed toward appropriate
target sites. In the hippocampal formation of mature rodents,
"microtransplants" of embryonic tissue send projections into
appropriate terminal areas of lesioned entorhinal cortex (Zhou et al.,
1985
, 1989
). Human neurons transplanted in cortex or ventricle
(Stromberg et al., 1992
) or in the pathway of the lesioned
nigrostriatal system in adult rats (Wictorin et al., 1992
) can extend
axons toward nigral targets; these axons can travel along white-matter
tracts of the median forebrain bundle and internal capsule for
distances of up to 20 mm, avoiding areas that are not normal targets
for nigral neurons. Similarly, transplanted embryonic neurons from
either rodent or porcine striatum (Wictorin et al., 1989
; Deacon et
al., 1994
) or human progenitor cells (Fricker et al., 1999
) can extend
axons specifically toward their targets, the globus pallidus and
substantia nigra, using white-matter tracts of the internal capsule and
median forebrain bundle.
In previous studies from our laboratory transplanting E17 embryonic
neuroblasts to the adult S1 cortex undergoing synchronous CPN
degeneration, 21 ± 5% (Hernit-Grant and Macklis, 1996
) or 23 ± 6.8% (Shin et al., 2000
) of donor-derived neurons projected axons specifically to the appropriate contralateral S1 cortex, with no
projections observed to three alternative, normal targets of other
subpopulations of neurons located in S1 (ipsilateral thalamus, S2
cortex, and motor cortex) (Hernit-Grant and Macklis, 1996
). These
results have been confirmed recently (Shin et al., 2000
). The studies
reported here on the survival of E19 immature neurons and P3 purified
CPNs were performed in parallel with the previously reported studies
with E17 neuroblasts (Shin et al., 2000
), using identical techniques,
and therefore can be compared directly. The present results confirm and
extend these previous findings, demonstrating that embryonic S1 anlage
neurons transplanted at a later stage in their development (E19) can
re-form precise connections to contralateral targets with highly
increased efficiency compared with younger E17 neuroblasts.
The mechanisms that guide donor-derived neurons to develop specific and
substantial numbers of long-distance axonal projections are currently
not well identified. Clearly, both intrinsic and extrinsic factors are
likely to play a role in this efficient maturation and reconnection of
complex circuitry (Lanier et al., 1999
; Gates et al., 2000b
). At the
time of dissociation, E19 immature S1 CPNs have already formed initial
axonal projections, with most CPN axons having reached the midline or
contralateral cortex. Therefore, at the time that we removed these
immature neurons for transplantation, axons of those destined to become
CPNs were already actively developing and seeking appropriate pathways
for extension to target sites. E17 neuroblasts are at an earlier stage of development and are just beginning the process of axon formation. The significantly greater number of contralaterally projecting axons
formed from the later-stage E19 immature neurons compared with E17
neuroblasts (approximately twofold more) suggests that cell-intrinsic
developmental pathways of projection neuron development that were
already under way were able to continue after transplantation of these
neurons in vivo in the adult brain undergoing targeted neurodegeneration. The younger E17 neuroblasts either were not as far
along their developmental pathway to be able to continue this intrinsic
developmental program as efficiently or, alternatively, did not respond
to external signals as efficiently to enable this later developmental
process of axonal elongation. Other transplantation experiments suggest
that specification of corticocortical connections by cerebral tissue
grafts is also linked to the timing of neurogenesis, with postmitotic
neurons increasingly adopting a pattern of connectivity consistent with
their having already initiated a specific differentiation program
(Barbe and Levitt, 1995
).
An alternative explanation is that the younger E17 neuroblasts may
require >12 weeks after transplantation to develop full axonal
projections because they were dissociated at an earlier stage of
development. If this were the case, at later survival times, E17
donor-derived neurons would be predicted to show increased numbers of
axonal projections similar to those seen with E19 neurons. This is
unlikely, however, because data on the development of neurotransmitter
and receptor phenotype by E17 neuroblasts parallel those of the E19
immature neurons within a few days. Furthermore, the percentage of
transplanted E17 neuroblasts expressing most neurotransmitters and
receptors reaches that seen in the adult CPNs by 4-8 weeks after
transplantation, indicating that an adult CPN phenotype is already
present (Shin et al., 2000
).
It is likely that there are extracellular signals that control and
permit the mature differentiation and axon elongation of the
transplanted embryonic neurons. In mice that received transplants of
either E17 neuroblasts or E19 S1 immature neurons into intact cortex,
no contralateral projections were observed, indicating that the
environment produced by synchronous apoptotic degeneration of CPNs
facilitated the projection of axons from donor-derived neurons.
Previous experiments have shown that during synchronous, targeted
degeneration of CPNs in the adult mouse cortex, there is local
upregulation of a specific set of both known developmental genes and
novel genes, now under investigation (Wang et al., 1998
; L. Li,
Arlotta, T. Deuel, T. Chae, J. D. Macklis, unpublished observations).
The genes for brain-derived neurotrophic factor, neurotrophin 4/5, and
neurotrophin 3 are dramatically upregulated by adjacent synaptically
connected interneurons (Wang et al., 1998
). Neurotrophins are known to
regulate both the neurotransmitter and receptor phenotype of neurons
(Widmer and Hefti, 1994
; Thoenen, 1995
; Takei et al., 1997
; Y. X. Li et al., 1998
; Pellegri et al., 1998
; Sala et al., 1998
), axon
elongation (LeRoux and Reh, 1994
; Segal et al., 1995
; Bosco and Linden,
1999
), and synapse formation (Wang and Poo, 1997
; Vicario-Abejon et
al., 1998
). Therefore, it is likely that both neurotrophins and as yet
unidentified factors may play a role in stimulating and/or supporting
the projection of axons of donor-derived neurons to distant denervated
target sites.
Development of a mature CPN phenotype
Both E19 immature S1 anlage neurons and P3 purified CPNs developed
the phenotype of mature CPNs after transplantation to the adult
experimental cortex. With E19 donor-derived neurons, the developmental
expression of both neurotransmitters and receptors paralleled that seen
with previous studies using E17 neuroblasts from the same region of S1
cortex (Shin et al., 2000
). Two exceptions to this parallel
differentiation were the higher percentages of E19 donor-derived
neurons expressing the excitatory neurotransmitters glutamate and
aspartate 12 weeks after transplantation. Therefore, these later-stage
developing CPNs were able to differentiate to a highly specified and
appropriate phenotype to replace adult CPNs induced to degenerate by
targeted apoptosis, completing a complex program of projection neuron
differentiation, even after being placed in a novel environment
in vivo.
The increased number of E19 transplanted neurons that expressed
glutamate and aspartate compared with their E17 counterparts may be
attributable to the intrinsic state of the immature neurons themselves.
Developmental programs for the expression of each particular cortical
neurotransmitter phenotype may be both separate and activated in a
time-dependent manner (for review, see Levitt et al., 1993
). It is
possible that the progression of expression of the neurotransmitters
and neurotransmitter receptors investigated here reflects their normal
developmental order of expression. The transplanted immature neurons
may have already initiated a program of progressive gene expression by
the time of transplantation. The E17 neuroblasts dissociated for
transplantation may be less well equipped to respond to the
environmental signals present to initiate intrinsic programs required
for the development of expression of specific neurotransmitters or
receptors than when taken at the slightly later stage of E19. Indeed,
it has been suggested previously that during development, distinct
classes of cortical projection neurons are already formed before
neuronal migration from the neuroepithelium to their specific lamina
within the cortex (Koester and O'Leary, 1993
). In that case, the local environment in the experimental mice might be especially supportive of
the survival of these later-stage neurons during their differentiation.
Synapse formation
The colocalization of synaptophysin to the donor-derived E19
neurons and P3 CPNs indicates the development of afferent synaptic contacts onto the transplanted neurons. Synaptic contacts potentially derive from endogenous local interneurons or contralateral CPNs or from
other donor-derived neurons. The significantly greater number of
synapses formed on the later-stage E19 immature neurons again suggests
that intrinsic developmental programs that were already under way at
the time of transplantation were able to continue after transplantation
of the neurons in vivo in the adult brain undergoing
targeted neurodegeneration. It is known, for example, that synapse
formation occurs at the same time as clustering of postsynaptic
receptors preferentially at synaptic sites (J. H. Li et al.,
1998
). It is not clear whether neurotransmitter receptor expression
precedes synaptogenesis or, alternatively, is a consequence of synapse
formation on the postmitotic neuron itself (Poulter and Brown, 1999
).
Whichever is the case, the developmental programs already under way in
the later-stage E19 neurons most likely increased their efficiency both
to develop a fully mature phenotype (as described above) and to form
both afferent and efferent connections with other neurons compared with
less developed, E17 neuroblasts.
The presence of the receptors GABA-R, NMDA-R, AMPA-R, and KA-R on
donor-derived neurons suggests that these neurons have the appropriate
postsynaptic machinery to allow functional synaptic contacts (i.e., the
ability to receive information from other neurons). The measurement of
electrophysiological activity in donor-derived neurons or the
activation of downstream molecules in signaling pathways will indicate
whether the synapses formed on transplanted neurons are able to
function normally. This awaits additional investigation.
Evidence for complex circuit reconstruction
The reconstruction of lost neuronal circuitry may be an important
prerequisite for the restoration of neural function in regions of the
adult brain that have undergone neurodegeneration. The ability of E19
donor-derived neurons to develop a mature CPN phenotype with high
fidelity, to receive synapses from other neurons, and to produce a
substantial number of appropriate long-distance callosal projections to
the contralateral cortex provides compelling evidence that these
immature neurons can effectively reconstruct the complex cortical
circuitry lost by the degeneration of adult CPNs. The expression of the
excitatory neurotransmitters glutamate and aspartate by appropriate
numbers of transplanted E19 neurons suggest the competence of the
neurons to transmit appropriate, excitatory information to the
contralateral cortex. The expression of appropriate neurotransmitter
receptors in appropriate numbers indicates that transplanted E19
immature neurons are competent to receive information from other
neurons. Together, the presence of a substantial number of axonal
projections to appropriate target regions from these later-stage E19
immature neurons and the substantial number of synapses formed from
other neurons onto the transplanted neurons suggest that the complex
cortical system of the corpus callosum has been at least partially
rewired, both accurately and efficiently.
The effects of developmental stage on the survival of
donor-derived neurons in vivo
The percentage of surviving donor-derived P3 CPNs after
transplantation was much lower than that observed with either E19 donor-derived neurons or E17 donor-derived neurons. This low level of
neuronal survival is probably a result of a number of different factors. These postnatal CPNs are extremely sensitive to both physical
trauma, such as axotomy, and glutamate toxicity. Although such purified
P3 CPNs survive well in culture after isolation and FACS purification,
these neurons require protection from exposure to substantial glutamate
via glutamate depletion of the medium and glutamate blockade, specific
growth factor support, and stable attachment to a substrate (Catapano
et al., 2001
). Maintaining P3 CPNs as a single-cell suspension led to a
rapid decrease in viability over the time required for transplantation
into multiple recipients (from 75% to 35% over a period of 2 hr).
Stress to these P3 CPNs may have been further increased by their low
density, both in the dissociated cell suspension and once transplanted into the adult neocortex. This low density most likely reduced the
ability of neighboring neurons to provide trophic support. In addition,
the absence of glia from the transplantation suspension may have
removed an important source of growth factor and other trophic support
to these immature but fragile P3 CPNs.
Choice of donor cells for the replacement of degenerating neurons
in vivo
The data reported here indicate that transplanted later-stage,
progressively restricted neurons isolated from the appropriate region
of developing S1 cortex can efficiently re-form afferent and efferent
connections with recipient brain circuitry, as long as neuronal
survival is not compromised. Highly efficient neuronal circuit
reconstruction, and hence functional recovery, may be most successful
with transplanted neurons or precursors that are most competent to
complete specific, complex developmental programs accurately and with
high fidelity in vivo. The use of more differentiated but
still immature neurons for in vivo neuronal replacement is complicated by issues of tissue isolation, neuron viability, and ease
of manipulation. However, our results and those of others argue
strongly that immature neurons at later stages of development are able
to complete their developmental program with increased efficiency
compared with earlier-stage immature neurons. It may be important to
reconcile these two issues by guiding more flexible, less
differentiated neurons or precursors along highly specific differentiation paths of specific desired neuronal lineages.
Investigation of cellular and molecular controls over precise
development restriction and maturation (Catapano et al., 2001
) may
allow isolation and directed manipulation of isolated precursors or
stem cells either in vitro or in vivo or their
manipulation in situ (Magavi et al., 2000
; Scharff et al.,
2000
) toward specific and efficient replacement of complex neuronal
circuitry in the adult brain.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received June 1, 2001; revised March 1, 2002; accepted Feb. 28, 2002.
This research was supported by National Institutes of Health Grants
NS41590 and HD28478, by Mental Retardation Research Center Grant
HD18655, and by the Alzheimer's Association. R.A.F. was supported by
fellowships from the Wills Foundation and the Lefler Center. J.J.S. was
supported by a Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) medical
student fellowship, and L.A.C. was supported by an HHMI predoctoral
fellowship. We thank Dr. Monte Gates for scientific advice and input
throughout the project, Farren Briggs for excellent technical
assistance, and Drs. Bartley Mitchell and Sanjay Magavi for advice and
help with digital imaging.
Correspondence should be addressed to Jeffrey D. Macklis, Division of
Neuroscience, Enders 354, Children's Hospital, 320 Longwood Avenue,
Boston, MA 02115. E-mail: jeffrey.macklis{at}tch.harvard.edu.
R. A. Fricker-Gates's present address: Cardiff School of
Biosciences, Cardiff University, Biomedical Sciences Building, Museum Avenue, P.O. Box 911, Cardiff CF10 3US, UK.
 |
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