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The Journal of Neuroscience, May 15, 2002, 22(10):4153-4162
Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor Is Essential for Opiate-Induced
Plasticity of Noradrenergic Neurons
Schahram
Akbarian1, 2, *,
Maribel
Rios1, *,
Rong-Jian
Liu3,
Stephen J.
Gold4,
Hiu-Fai
Fong1,
Steve
Zeiler5,
Vincenzo
Coppola6,
Lino
Tessarollo6,
Kevin R.
Jones5,
Eric J.
Nestler4,
George K.
Aghajanian3, and
Rudolf
Jaenisch1
1 Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research,
Cambridge, Massachusetts 02142, 2 Brudnick Neuropsychiatric
Research Institute, Department of Psychiatry, University of
Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester, Massachusetts 01613-2795, 3 Department of Psychiatry, Yale University, New Haven,
Connecticut 06520, 4 Department of Psychiatry, University
of Texas Southwestern, Dallas, Texas 75390, 5 Department of Molecular, Cellular and Developmental
Biology, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado 80309, and
6 National Cancer Institute, Frederick, Maryland
21702
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ABSTRACT |
Chronic opiate exposure induces numerous neurochemical adaptations
in the noradrenergic system, including upregulation of the
cAMP-signaling pathway and increased expression of tyrosine hydroxylase
(TH), the rate-limiting enzyme in catecholamine biosynthesis. These
adaptations are thought to compensate for opiate-mediated neuronal
inhibition but also contribute to physical dependence, including
withdrawal after abrupt cessation of drug exposure. Little is known
about molecules that regulate the noradrenergic response to opiates.
Here we report that noradrenergic locus ceruleus (LC) neurons of
mice with a conditional deletion of BDNF in postnatal brain
respond to chronic morphine treatment with a paradoxical downregulation
of cAMP-mediated excitation and lack of dynamic regulation of TH
expression. This was accompanied by a threefold reduction in opiate
withdrawal symptoms despite normal antinociceptive tolerance in the
BDNF-deficient mice. Although expression of TrkB, the receptor for
BDNF, was high in the LC, endogenous BDNF expression was absent
there and in the large majority of other noradrenergic neurons.
Therefore, a BDNF-signaling pathway originating from non-noradrenergic
sources is essential for opiate-induced molecular adaptations of the
noradrenergic system.
Key words:
norepinephrine; locus coeruleus; Cre recombinase; loxP; BDNF; opiates; plasticity; cAMP
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INTRODUCTION |
The noradrenergic system plays a
central role in the neurobiology of several major psychiatric diseases,
including mood disorders (Aston-Jones et al., 1999 ), chronic pain
conditions, and opiate dependence (Maldonado, 1997 ). Chronic opiate
exposure induces numerous neurochemical adaptations in various
neurotransmitter systems (for review, see Williams et al., 2001 ),
including the noradrenergic system. These include increased adenylyl
cyclase (AC) expression and upregulation of the cAMP pathway, increased expression of tyrosine hydroxylase (TH), the rate-limiting enzyme in
norepinephrine biosynthesis (for review, see Nestler and Aghajanian, 1997 ), altered neuropeptide expression (Zachariou et al., 2000 ), and
opiate receptor desensitization (for review, see Tsao et al., 2001 ).
These adaptive responses are thought to counterbalance the inhibitory
effects of activated opiate receptors and therefore restore the
baseline activity of noradrenergic neurons during opiate exposure.
However, they also contribute to the development of physical
dependence: when drug exposure is stopped abruptly, these adaptations,
in conjunction with an increased excitatory afferent input, cause a
disinhibition of the noradrenergic system and a withdrawal reaction
(Maldonado, 1997 ; Nestler and Aghajanian, 1997 ; Saiepour et al., 2001 ;
Williams et al., 2001 ). Because the 2-adrenoreceptor agonist
clonidine and other drugs that downregulate noradrenergic neuron
activity are very effective for the treatment of opiate withdrawal
(Washton and Resnick, 1983 ; Maldonado, 1997 ), it is clear that the
disinhibition of noradrenergic neurons is a key factor in the
neurobiology of opiate withdrawal.
Very little is known about endogenous factors that regulate
opiate-induced adaptations of noradrenergic neurons. Drug-induced adaptations in reward and addiction circuitry could be viewed as a form
of neuronal plasticity (for review, see Koob et al., 1998 ) and thus may
depend on similar molecular mechanisms that operate in learning and
memory centers such as the hippocampus. For example,
neurotrophin-signaling pathways that use molecules from the nerve
growth factor family such as BDNF play a key role for some forms of
long-term potentiation at hippocampal synapses [Kang and Schuman,
1995 ; Kang et al., 1997 ; Minichiello et al., 1999 ; Patterson et al.,
2001 (and references therein)].
Neurons of the locus ceruleus (LC), which is the largest noradrenergic
cell cluster in the brainstem, express very high levels of TrkB, the
high-affinity receptor tyrosine kinase for BDNF (Numan et al., 1998 ;
King et al., 1999 ; Yamuy et al., 2000 ). This may raise the question
that BDNF, which is expressed at high levels in adult brain
(Maisonpierre et al., 1990 ), is an important regulator of noradrenergic
neuron function. In vitro studies with fetal tissue
demonstrated that addition of BDNF to the cell culture medium increases
noradrenergic neuron survival (Friedman et al., 1993 ) and upregulates
the expression of noradrenergic markers (Sklair-Tavron and Nestler,
1995 ). However, in vivo evidence for a role of BDNF in
noradrenergic neuron function and plasticity is still lacking. Studies
with BDNF-deficient mice would be ideal for these purposes but until
recently were hampered by the fact that conventional BDNF
null-mutant mice do not survive into adulthood (Ernfors et al., 1994 ;
Jones et al., 1994 ). Using a conditional knock-out strategy with
Cre/loxP-mediated BDNF gene deletion in postnatal mouse
brain (Rios et al., 2001 ), we analyzed the physiological adaptations to
chronic opiate exposure in the absence of BDNF. We report that LC
neurons of BDNF-deficient mice had a highly abnormal response to
morphine treatment, as evidenced by a profound dysregulation of
cAMP-mediated cellular signaling and a failure to upregulate TH
expression. These abnormalities occurred in conjunction with a strongly
attenuated opiate withdrawal reaction and provide, for the first time,
evidence that BDNF is essential for drug-related plasticity in the
noradrenergic system.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Conditional deletion of BDNF in postnatal brain.
Details of the generation of the BDNF conditional allele
(BDNF2lox) were reported previously (Rios et al., 2001 ).
Briefly, in this line of mice, exon 5 of the BDNF gene was
flanked by loxP sites. Exon 5 is the single coding exon of
BDNF, and thus its Cre-mediated deletion results in a null
BDNF allele (Rios et al., 2001 ). To achieve BDNF gene
deletion in postnatal CNS neurons, we used the calmodulin-kinase II
(CamK)-cre transgenic mice in which cre expression is under the
control of the neuronal CamK promoter (Chen et al., 2001 ; Fan et al.,
2001 ). Regional and cellular expression patterns were monitored by
crossing the CamK-cre transgenic line to a lacZ reporter line for
cre/loxP-mediated recombination (Soriano, 1999 ). In all experiments,
12- to 16-week-old conditional mutants and wild-type (wt) littermate
controls were used, in accordance with an approved animal protocol. The
genetic backgrounds of all mutant and control mice were mixed but were
predominantly 129/Sv. Breeding strategies were chosen to obtain
littermates with two functional BDNF alleles (wt/wt or
wt/2lox) as control for the BDNF conditional mutants, to
minimize the variability in genetic background.
Behavioral studies. For the behavioral studies, a minimum of
10 animals per genotype per test were used. For somatic withdrawal ratings, opiate dependence was induced by a progressive intraperitoneal treatment schedule of morphine every 6-10 hr (day 1, 20-40-60 mg/kg;
day 2, 80-100-100 mg/kg; day 3, 100 mg/kg). Withdrawal was
precipitated 4-5 hr after the last morphine injection with a
subcutaneous injection of naloxone HCl (1 mg/kg). The overall withdrawal score was determined by the total number of checked signs
(diarrhea, rhinorhea, lacrimation, abnormal posture, ptosis) and the
frequency of each counted sign (wet dog shakes, freezing, grooming,
rear, dig, jumping, tremors) over a period of 20 min by a trained
observer, who was blind to experimental treatment and genotype.
Acute and chronic opiate tolerance were assessed by measuring
nociceptive hot plate latency (56°C) as described by Bohn et al.
(2000) . In the acute tolerance paradigm, mice were treated with
morphine (100 mg/kg, s.c.) or with saline. Twenty-four hours later, the
mice were challenged with low-dose morphine (10 mg/kg, s.c.). Hot plate
latencies were measured at baseline under drug-naïve conditions
and 30 min after the low-dose morphine. To prevent burn injuries and
tissue damage, plate exposure was kept to a 30 sec artificial maximum
time. Data were recorded as the "maximum possible effect" (%MPE):
100% × [(drug response time basal response time)/(30
sec basal response time)]. In the chronic tolerance paradigm,
mice were treated daily with 10 mg/kg morphine subcutaneously for
5 d. Each day, antinociception was measured 30 min after the morphine injection, using the hot plate assay as described above. Statistical differences between mutants and controls were calculated by
using two-tailed t tests.
Electrophysiology. A minimum of 12 animals was used for each
genotype and animal treatment (saline or chronic morphine). Morphine dependence was induced by a subcutaneous implantation of a single 75 mg
morphine pellet (Bohn et al., 2000 ), and recordings were conducted 65 hr after implantation. In pilot experiments, we compared electrophysiological adaptations of pellet-treated animals with those
treated with repeated daily injections of morphine (total morphine dose
500 mg/kg). Results were indistinguishable between these two morphine
administration protocols, and here we report the data using the pellet protocol.
Electrophysiological recordings from LC neurons were performed as
described previously (Lane-Ladd et al., 1997 ). Brainstem slices were
transferred onto the stage of a gas-liquid interface brain slice
chamber under constant flow of humidified 95%
O2/5% CO2 and
physiological buffer. The A6 (LC) were visually identified, and
single-unit extracellular potentials were recorded with glass microelectrodes filled with 2 M NaCl. Recordings began not
earlier than 90 min after setting up the slice preparation. This
waiting period ensured complete wash-out of morphine in the
drug-treated animals, as described elsewhere (Kogan et al., 1992 ).
Transient inhibition of spontaneous firing after brief application of
the short-lived, endogenous opiate receptor agonist enkephalin (100 µM) was used to confirm that recordings were done from LC
neurons. Consecutive cells were sampled by multiple electrode tracks
randomly positioned within the A6 and recorded for a minimum of 3-5
min to ensure that the firing rates were stable. Firing rates of LC neurons were recorded before and during bath application (for at least
10 min) of forskolin (10 µM). At this forskolin
concentration, maximum electrophysiological responses from A6 neurons
are elicited. Additional recordings were conducted in the presence or
absence of the opiate receptor antagonist naloxone (1 µmol).
Furthermore, µ-(opioid) receptor inhibition was examined by
dose-response curves with the synthetic agonist [D-Ala2,
NMePhe4, Gly-ol]-enkephalin (DAMGO). For statistical analysis, the
firing rates of 10-14 neurons from a single LC were averaged and
considered as a single data point. Statistical significance of
differences between mutants and controls was then tested by simple,
two-tailed t tests.
cAMP ELISA. Mice were treated with saline or with morphine
intraperitoneally three times per day (day 1, 20-40-60 mg/kg; day 2, 80-100-100 mg/kg; day 3, 100 mg/kg) with a total dose of 500 mg/kg
during 65 hr. Animals were killed, and tissue from the dorsal pons in the area of the LC was homogenized by polytron in 10 mM Tris, pH 7.4, 5 mM EDTA
buffer and pooled (six animals/experimental group and treatment), and
membrane extracts were prepared by centrifugation at 20,000 × g for 15 min at 4°C. Membranes were washed repeatedly in
this buffer, and then adenylyl cyclase activity was assessed using a
protocol that is similar to the one described by Hausdorff et al.
(1990) . First, membranes were resuspended in 2× assay buffer (75 mM Tris, pH 7.4, 15 mM
MgCl2, 2 mM EDTA, 500 µM
IBMX). Membrane protein aliquots (10 µg per tube) were then assayed
for forskolin-stimulated adenylyl cyclase activity for 10 min at
25oC in 1× assay buffer containing 50 µM GTP, 100 µM ATP, 2.7 mM phosphoenolpyruvate, 20 U/ml myokinase
(Sigma), 4 U/ml pyruvate kinase, and 10 µM
forskolin (Calbiochem) in a final volume of 50 µl. Samples were
frozen at 20°C for a period of 12 hr, and then the concentration of
cAMP was quantified using the BIOTRAK EIA system (RPN 225; Amersham
Biosciences) according to the manufacturer's instructions (Protocol I:
non-acetylation EIA procedure; see RPN 225 manual). Assays were
conducted in triplicate, and animals of each genotype and treatment
were assayed in parallel experiments. Statistical significance of
differences was calculated using two-tailed t tests.
Western blots. A minimum of five animals per genotype per
treatment were used. Mice were anesthetized with isofluorane on days 1 and 3, morphine pellets (25 mg; NIDA) were implanted subcutaneously, and the incision was closed with wound clips. Sham animals were anesthetized similarly and incised but did not receive pellets. Mice
were decapitated on day 5, and 14 gauge needle punch samples of the
locus ceruleus were obtained from chilled 1 mm coronal slabs of brain.
Relative tyrosine hydroxylase protein levels were determined by Western
blot analysis. Briefly, samples were solubilized by sonication in
buffer containing 0.5% SDS, lima bean trypsin inhibitor (10 µg/ml),
leupeptin (10 µg/ml), phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride (15 µg/ml),
N-p-Tosyl-L-phenylalanine chloromethyl ketone
(15 µg/ml), N -p-Tosyl-lysine chloromethyl ketone
(15 µg/ml), and MG-132 (10 µM). Protein concentrations
were determined by the method of Lowry with bovine serum albumin as
standard, and for each sample 20 µg of protein was electrophoresed on
a denaturing 7% polyacrylamide gel and transferred to nitrocellulose.
Subsequently, nitrocellulose membranes were blocked in PBS containing
3% non-fat milk and 0.1% Tween 20. TH was detected by incubating
overnight at 4°C in rabbit polyclonal anti-tyrosine hydroxylase
antiserum (1:2500; Chemicon, Temecula, CA), washing repeatedly with
PBS/01.% Tween 20 (PBS-T), and incubating in horse radish
peroxidase-conjugated goat anti-rabbit (1:5000; Vector Labs,
Burlingame, CA) for 30 min at room temperature. Immunoreactive bands
were detected by enhanced chemiluminescence and quantitated
densitometrically using NIH image software. Subtracted background
densities were obtained immediately below each band. Relative levels of
protein were analyzed by ANOVA followed by post hoc analysis
with Tukey's multiple comparison test.
To control for sample loading, membranes were reprobed with a rabbit
polyclonal antibody recognizing catalytic subunits and of
protein kinase A (PKA-c) (1:1000; Santa Cruz Biotechnology), using a
procedure similar to the one described for TH immunolabeling. We choose
PKA-c immunolabeling as a control because we observed that in mice,
PKA-c levels are not differentially regulated between drug-naïve and morphine-treated animals.
Immunohistochemistry. For immunohistochemical experiments,
drug-naïve mutant and control mice were compared (minimum of
five animals per genotype). All mutant and controls brains were
perfusion-fixed with phosphate-buffered 4% paraformaldehyde, postfixed
in the same fixative for 2 hr, then cryoprotected in phosphate-buffered 30% sucrose and frozen in dry ice. Blocks containing pons and medulla
were cut in series of 15-µm-thick coronal sections, which were
permeabilized with 0.3% Triton X-100 in 0.1 M
PO4, pH 7.4. Free-floating sections were
incubated at room temperature for 12-24 hr, with a mouse monoclonal
antibody against tyrosine hydroxylase (1:1000; Incstar), in combination
with rabbit antiserum against phospho-cAMP-responsive DNA element
binding protein (CREB) (1:500; Upstate Biotechnology). Sections
were washed repeatedly, incubated at room temperature for 60 min with
two secondary antibodies (FITC-coupled horse anti-mouse antibodies and
Texas Red-coupled goat anti-rabbit; 1:200; both from Vector Labs), and
then washed repeatedly, mounted on slides, and visualized with a
confocal microscope (Zeiss) and LSM (Zeiss) software.
Additional immunohistochemical experiments were conducted in mice in
which the single coding exon of BDNF had been replaced with a
lacZ reporter coding sequence (Farinas et al., 2001 ).
Coronal sections from the area of the pons and of the medulla of adult BDNF/lacZ reporter mice brains were prepared as described
above, processed for immunohistochemistry using the anti-TH antibody (1:1000; Incstar) and a rabbit anti-lacZ antiserum (1:500; Molecular Probes), and then further processed with secondary antibodies using a
protocol similar to the one described above.
Cell counting studies. Drug-naïve mutant and control
animals were used for cell counting studies (minimum of five animals for each genotype). Brains were processed as described above, and for
each brain the entire pons and medulla were cut into series of
15-µm-thick free-floating sections and processed for TH
immunohistochemistry, mounted on slides, and counterstained with
4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole for labeling of nuclei. Every second
section was used for counting. Because both A6 and A2 showed
considerable variability in neuronal distribution and density along the
rostrocaudal axis in all mutants and controls, optical dissector and
volume-based cell counting methods that rely on constant cell densities
in a given volume were inaccurate for the present study. Instead,
TH-immunoreactive neurons cut through the level of the nucleus
were counted in each section, and total neuronal numbers were
calculated by adding counts of single sections. The noradrenergic cell
group A2 was localized using the detailed cytoarchitectonic
descriptions of Kalia et al. (1985) .
In situ hybridization. Brains of wild-type mice were
perfusion fixed with phosphate-buffered 4% paraformaldehyde, incubated overnight in 10% phosphate buffered formalin, cut into blocks, and
embedded in paraffin. Coronal sections (8 µm thick) were obtained from blocks containing the dorsal pons, mounted on Fisher Superfrost slides, and processed for in situ hybridization
histochemistry as described by Tessarollo and Parada (1995) . Briefly,
slides were deparaffinized in xylene and rehydrated in graded
(100-30%) ethanol solutions. After fixing in 4% paraformaldehyde,
the tissues were pretreated with proteinase K (20 µg/ml) (Boehringer
Mannheim), refixed, immersed in triethanolamine buffer containing
acetic anhydrate, and dehydrated. Sections were hybridized with
antisense cRNA probes (5 × 105 cpm) in a
buffer containing 50% formamide, 0.3 M NaCl, 20 mM Tris-Cl, pH 7.4, 1× Denhardt's solution, 0.5 mg/ml yeast tRNA, and 10 mM DTT at 50°C for 20 hr. After hybridization, washes were performed in 4× SSC and 10 mM DTT at 50°C. The slides were then incubated
for 30 min at 37°C with RNase A (20 µg/ml) and RNase T1 (2 µg/ml)
followed by a 30 min incubation at 55°C in 50% formamide, 0.2× SSC,
10 mM DTT, washed twice for 30 min in 0.2× SSC,
1% NaPyrophosphate (w/v), 10 mM DTT, and
dehydrated. The slides were dipped in Kodak emulsion NTB-2 and exposed
for 7 and 14 d at 4°C for the TrkB and BDNF probes,
respectively. The slides were then developed in Kodak D-19, fixed as
recommended by the manufacturer. Sense and antisense probes labeled
with 35S were prepared by standard
procedures by using UTP as the labeled nucleotide. The BDNF probe was
synthesized from a full-length BDNF-specific rat cDNA. The TrkB probe
was derived from a 450 bp fragment from the extracellular domain, as
described in detail by Klein et al. (1989) , that recognizes the active
kinase receptor and also truncated forms (Middlemas et al., 1991 ).
Because it has been shown recently that there appears to be signaling
going through the truncated forms of the Trk B receptor (Yacoubian and Lo, 2000 ), it is important to look at expression localization of all
forms of the receptor.
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RESULTS |
Conditional deletion of BDNF
The spatial and temporal distribution pattern of CamK-cre-mediated
recombination was examined in mice carrying the CamK-cre transgene and
a lacZ reporter for Cre/loxP-mediated recombination (Soriano, 1999 ). In
2.5-week-old transgenic mice, the CamK-cre-mediated gene deletion was
widespread in the forebrain, midbrain, and hindbrain, with the
exception of the cerebellar cortex (Fig.
1A). As described previously (Chen et al., 1991), the lacZ+, blue cells
were morphologically CNS neurons, confirming the neuronal specificity
of the CamK-cre transgene. Cre-mediated recombination was also detected
in several noradrenergic nuclei, including the locus ceruleus (A6) in
the dorsal pons (Fig. 1B, LC) and the
A2/C2 group in the dorsal medulla.

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Figure 1.
Regional pattern of CamIIK-cre transgene
expression. A, Representative parasagittal sections of
P18 (left) and E19 animal (bottom right)
showing widespread activation of the Rosa-26 Cre/lox lacZ
reporter by the CamIIK-cre transgene in P18 but not in E19 animal.
B, Representative coronal section of dorsal pons of
adult mouse, showing activation of the Rosa-26 Cre/lox lacZ
reporter in the locus ceruleus (LC) and surrounding
structures by the CamIIK-cre transgene. Notice that the CamIIK-cre
transgene is not active in mesencephalic trigeminal tract nucleus and
cerebellar cortex. CB, Cerebellar cortex;
CC, cerebral cortex; LC, locus ceruleus;
MeV, mesencephalic trigeminal tract nucleus;
OB, olfactory bulb; R, rostral;
V, ventral; asterisk, IVth
ventricle. Scale bars: A, 2.5 mm; B, 0.25 mm.
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In perinatal brain, few blue cells were observed (Fig.
1A), confirming previous observations that the bulk
of recombination in this CamK-cre transgenic line occurs after birth
(Chen et al., 2001 ; Fan et al., 2001 ). The spatial and temporal
distribution pattern of the lacZ-positive cells in the
CamK-cre;lacZ reporter transgenic mice is also in
accordance with Southern blot analysis for the deletion of the
conditional BDNF allele in various brain regions of
CamK-cre;BDNF conditional mutants (Rios et al., 2001 ). Adult
conditional BDNF mutants were recovered at the expected Mendelian ratio, indicating that BDNF deficiency in postnatal CNS
neurons did not affect animal viability.
Attenuated opiate withdrawal in BDNF mutant mice
We examined opiate withdrawal behavior in mutant and control mice.
A withdrawal reaction was induced in 12- to 16-week-old mice after 65 hr of a progressive treatment of morphine (total dose 500 mg/kg) with a
subcutaneous injection of naloxone (1 mg/kg) 4 hr after the last
morphine injection. Wild-type mice showed symptoms characteristic of
opiate withdrawal, including signs of autonomic hyperactivity, wet
dog shakes, forepaw tremors, digging, and other withdrawal-related
behaviors. The total withdrawal score for the mutant mice was threefold
lower in comparison to age-matched littermate controls [total score
mutant 18.3 ± 4.0 (mean ± SE); controls 53.7 ± 3.2;
p < 0.01] (Fig. 2 A). As
shown in Figure 2B, the BDNF conditional mutant mice
scored, in comparison to wild-type mice,
40% lower on ratings for autonomic hyperactivity. Furthermore, mutants
had a threefold decrease in various behavioral symptoms, including
tremors (Fig. 2C) and wet dog shakes (Fig. 2D). Similar results were obtained when withdrawal
was induced 65 hr after implantation of a single, 75 mg morphine pellet
(data not shown).

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Figure 2.
Attenuated opiate withdrawal reactions in
BDNF mutant mice. A-D summarize the
observer-based ratings of naloxone-precipitated withdrawal in
BDNF conditional mutant mice (black bars) in
comparison to littermate wild-type controls (open bars)
after chronic morphine administration (500 mg/kg, total dose).
A, Total overall withdrawal score; B,
total number of checked signs (diarrhea, rhinorhea, lacrimation,
ptosis, abnormal posture); C, tremors; D,
wet dog shakes; over a 20 min period. Differences between
naloxone-treated mutants and controls in A-D are
significant (t tests; *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01). E, Acute
antinociceptive tolerance in BDNF conditional mutants and
controls, measured as maximum possible effect (%MPE) of
hot plate latencies 30 min after administration of morphine (10 mg/kg,
i.p.) and 24 hr after a one-time challenge with saline or morphine (100 mg/kg). F, Chronic antinociceptive tolerance in
BDNF conditional mutants and controls, measured as %MPE in
hot plate assay 30 min after administration of morphine (10 mg · kg 1 · d 1) over
the course of 5 d. Filled bars, Mutants;
open bars, controls. Data are expressed as mean ± SE.
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This attenuated withdrawal reaction in the mutant mice could be caused
by either a generalized failure to develop tolerance or a dysfunction
in the neural circuitry mediating withdrawal, or both. To distinguish
between these two possibilities, we examined morphine tolerance to a
single low dose (10 mg/kg) after a single high-dose challenge (100 mg/kg) administered 24 hr previously. Both mutant and control mice
exhibited a 40% decrease in antinociception after a single high-dose
challenge (Fig. 2E). Next, we monitored the
development of tolerance over the course of several days, by subjecting
mice to daily injections of 10 mg/kg morphine and measuring
antinociception with the hot plate assay. Both mutant and control mice
developed a greater than threefold decline in morphine responsiveness
over the course of 5 d (Fig. 2F). Therefore, the
attenuated withdrawal observed in the BDNF-deficient mice is not caused
by a generalized failure to develop tolerance.
BDNF deficiency results in a paradoxical downregulation of cAMP
signaling after chronic opiate exposure
The noradrenergic system plays a key role in the neurobiology of
opiate withdrawal, and therefore a dysfunction of noradrenergic signaling in BDNF-deficient mice could contribute to the observed withdrawal deficits. To examine whether genetic BDNF ablation alters LC
noradrenergic neuron function, we conducted single-unit electrophysiological recordings from brainstem slice preparations. We
first examined the function of G-protein-coupled opiate receptors that
mediate inhibition of noradrenergic neurons. Activation of the
µ-(opioid) receptor is well known to decrease the firing rate of LC
neurons (Williams et al., 1988 ). When we studied the suppression of
spontaneous neuronal firing by successively increased concentrations of
the synthetic µ-(opioid) receptor agonist DAMGO in LC neurons, no
reduction in response was found in drug-naïve mutants as
compared with controls (Fig. 3). In addition, application of 100 µM enkephalin to the perfusate resulted in
complete cessation of neuronal firing in
all mutants and control neurons (data not shown). We conclude that the
mechanisms of opiate-mediated neuronal inhibition are preserved in the
LC of BDNF-deficient mice.

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Figure 3.
Opiate receptor-mediated inhibition is preserved
in mutant LC. Dose-response curve for µ-(opioid) receptor agonist
DAMGO, measured as percentage suppression of baseline firing rate
(y-axis) after successive increase in DAMGO
concentration in perfusate (x-axis) in mutant ( ) and
control ( ) mice. Note similar dose-response curves in mutant and
control. Data shown as mean ± SE.
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Superactivation of the cAMP pathway after chronic morphine treatment
has been studied as a cellular hallmark of opiate withdrawal in animals
(Nestler and Aghajanian, 1997 ; Chieng and Williams, 1998 ) and in cell
culture [Finn and Whistler, 2001 (and references therein)]. We
hypothesized that the attenuated withdrawal reaction of the
BDNF-deficient mice could be caused by altered cAMP signaling in
noradrenergic neurons. To examine this, we recorded from single units
in saline- and morphine-treated animals in the absence and presence of
forskolin (10 µM) in the perfusate. Forskolin activates adenylyl cyclases that generate cAMP, resulting in activation of
nonselective ion channels and neuronal excitation (Nestler and
Aghajanian, 1997 ).
Representative tracings from saline-treated wild-type and mutant LC
neurons are shown in Figure 4,
A and B, respectively. Baseline LC neuron firing
rates of wild-type and mutant mice were not significantly different
[controls 0.52 ± 0.14 (SE) Hz or 5.2 ± 1.4 spikes/10 sec
vs mutants 0.42 ± 0.11 Hz) (Fig.
4E,F). When forskolin was
added to the slice perfusate, neuronal firing in saline-treated
wild-type and saline-treated mutant LC neurons was increased more than
threefold (Fig.
4A,B,E,F).
Therefore, the cAMP-signaling pathway in mutant LC neurons appeared to
be normal when studied under drug-naïve conditions.

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Figure 4.
Morphine downregulates cAMP signaling in
BDNF-deficient mice. A-D, Representative traces of
single-unit recordings of LC neurons in wild-type animals (A,
C) and BDNF conditional mutant mice (B,
D) treated with saline (A, B) or chronic
morphine (C, D). The y-axis shows firing
rate (spikes/10 sec); the horizontal axis represents running time
(calibration: 5 min); arrows mark time period when
forskolin (10 µM) was added to the perfusate. Notice
decrease in firing in conditional mutant (D).
Bar graph in E summarizes recording data
for saline- and morphine-treated controls, and bar graph
in F summarizes recording data for saline- and
morphine-treated BDNF mutants. Open bars in
E and F show neuronal firing rate in the
absence of forskolin; black bars indicate neuronal
firing rate with forskolin (Fo) added to the perfusate.
G summarizes forskolin-stimulated AC enzymatic activity
(picomoles per milligram of tissue per minute) in saline- and
morphine-treated conditional mutants (hatched bars) and
controls (diagonal line bars). Sal.,
Saline; Morph., morphine. Data shown as mean ± SE.
*p < 0.05; **p < 0.01 (t tests).
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To examine the superactivation of the cAMP pathway, we next recorded
from LC neurons of mice that were treated for 72 hr with morphine
pellets. Representative tracings from morphine-treated wild-type and
mutant neurons are shown in Figure 4, C and D,
respectively. The firing rate of wild-type LC neurons in the absence of
forskolin in the perfusate was 0.72 ± 0.21 Hz (Fig.
4C,E). Addition of forskolin to the perfusate
caused a robust increase in neuronal firing in morphine-treated
wild-type mice that was, on average, stronger than the
forskolin-induced neuronal firing in saline-treated wild-type mice
(2.55 ± 0.46 vs 1.63 ± 0.20 Hz) (Fig.
4E). This increase was significant
(p < 0.05). This upregulation of the cAMP
pathway in morphine-treated wild-type mice is consistent with previous results in rats (Kogan et al., 1992 ; Osborne and Williams, 1996 ; Lane-Ladd et al., 1997 ) and in mice (Akbarian et al., 2001 ).
Unexpectedly and in striking contrast to morphine-treated controls, LC
neurons of morphine-treated conditional mutants had a very low spike
rate at baseline (0.23 ± 0.06 Hz) (Fig.
4D,F). After addition of
forskolin to the perfusate, the absolute spike rate of morphine-treated mutant LC neurons was 0.90 ± 0.11 Hz (Fig.
4D,F), which represents a
twofold decrease in comparison to saline-treated mutants (Fig. 4,
compare
B,D,F) and
a threefold decrease in comparison to morphine-treated controls (Fig.
4E). These differences were significant
(p < 0.05-0.01).
Thus, morphine treatment in wild-type animals induced an expected
significant increase in cAMP-mediated excitation but induced a
paradoxical significant decrease in cAMP-mediated excitation in the
BDNF-deficient mice. The dramatic decrease in neuronal firing in the
mutant LC is not explained by an abnormal activation of inhibitory
opiate receptors because all slices were subjected to a 90 min wash-out
period to remove residual morphine. Furthermore, we repeated the
electrophysiological recordings after adding 1 µM
naloxone, an opioid receptor antagonist, to the perfusate. We found
that naloxone did not increase the firing rate in slices from
morphine-treated mutant or control mice (data not shown), in agreement
with previous studies on morphine-treated rats (Kogan et al., 1992 ).
Therefore, we conclude that chronic morphine administration results in
failure to upregulate the cAMP signal transduction pathway in the BDNF
mutant mice.
Opiate-induced superactivation of the cAMP pathway is caused, in part,
by increased expression and activity of several ACs (for review, see
Nestler and Aghajanian, 1997 ). To examine whether a dysregulation in AC
enzymatic activity contributes to the paradoxical downregulation of
cAMP-mediated excitation in the BDNF mutant mice, we measured AC
activity in tissue extracts of the dorsal pons at the level of the LC.
Tissue from wild-type mice showed a 1.7-fold increase in AC activity
after chronic morphine treatment, but this upregulation was completely
absent in morphine-treated mutants (Fig. 4G). Therefore,
lack of AC upregulation contributes to the neuronal hypoactivity and
the altered cAMP signaling in the morphine-treated mutant mice.
BDNF is required for opiate-induced upregulation of
tyrosine hydroxylase
TH is the rate-limiting enzyme in norepinephrine
biosynthesis. During chronic morphine exposure, TH expression is
upregulated in noradrenergic neurons of rats and mice, presumably as a
compensatory mechanism for increased neuronal inhibition (Boundy et
al., 1998 ). To examine whether BDNF is required for this dynamic
regulation of TH, we compared TH expression in LC of wild-type and
BDNF-deficient mice. Morphine pellets (25 mg, s.c.) were administered
on days 1 and 3 to mutant and control mice that were killed later on
day 5. Changes in TH levels in microdissected LC were examined and compared with those of drug-naïve, sham-operated animals using Western blot analysis. At baseline, under drug-naïve
conditions, TH immunoreactivity was similar in wild-type and mutant LC
(Fig. 5A,B).
Morphine-treated wild-type mice showed a robust increase in TH
expression in comparison to drug-naïve wild-type mice (Fig. 5A). This on average 2.5-fold increase in TH protein content
was significant (p < 0.05) (Fig.
5B). In contrast, TH immunolabeling in morphine-treated
conditional BDNF mutant mice was similar to the labeling observed in
drug-naïve mutant and control mice (Fig. 5A), and no
significant differences in TH immunolabeling between drug-naïve
and morphine-treated mutant mice were observed (Fig. 5B). We
conclude that opiate-induced upregulation of TH requires BDNF.

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Figure 5.
Noradenergic neurons of BDNF-deficient mice lack
dynamic regulation of TH. A, Representative Western blot
showing TH immunolabeling and PKA (catalytic subunit) immunolabeling as
loading control in LC of wild-type and BDNF-deficient mutant mice
chronically treated with morphine (+) or sham ( ) surgeries. Notice
increased TH immunolabeling in morphine-treated wild type but not in
morphine-treated mutant. B, Relative TH-immunoreactivity
(y-axis) as determined densitometrically in
mutant and wild-type mice. Bars with diagonal
lines indicate drug-naïve animals (sham surgery), and
hatched bars indicate morphine-treated mice. Data are
expressed as mean ± SE. *p < 0.05.
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BDNF-deficient mice maintain normal numbers of
noradrenergic neurons
In cell culture studies, BDNF has been implicated in the survival
of noradrenergic neurons (Friedman et al., 1993 ). To determine whether
increased death of noradrenergic neurons contributes to the attenuated
opiate withdrawal reaction in the BDNF-deficient mice, we analyzed
total neuronal numbers in noradrenergic cell groups of adult mutant and
controls. Coronal sections from the brainstem of BDNF
conditional mutant mice (Fig.
6A) and controls (Fig.
6D) were immunostained for TH. Total numbers of LC
(A6) neurons in the dorsal pons and of A2 neurons in the medial
solitary tract nucleus, as outlined by Kalia et al. (1985) , were
counted. There was no significant difference between mutants and
controls in the number of A6 neurons (controls, 933 ± 76;
mutants, 866 ± 57) and A2 neurons (controls, 265 ± 91;
mutants, 313 ± 110) (Fig. 6F). We conclude that
BDNF is not essential for survival of noradrenergic neurons in adult
brain.

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Figure 6.
Total numbers of noradrenergic neurons are
maintained in BDNF-deficient mice. A-E, Representative
examples of coronal sections, double stained for TH and for CREB
immunoreactivity. LC of BDNF mutant
(A) and littermate control
(D) shows Texas Red-labeled TH immunoreactive
neurons that show robust expression of FITC-labeled phospho-CREB
(B, E). Note robust expression of CREB in
nuclei of mutant (C). F, Total
numbers of TH+ neurons
(y-axis) in unilateral LC
(A6) and A2 noradrenergic cell
groups. Filled bars, BDNF mutant mice;
open bars, wild-type littermate controls. Images were
taken at 10 × 20 magnification (A, B, D, E) and at
100 × 10 magnification (C).
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CREB is a transcription factor known to be expressed by noradrenergic
neurons (Widnell et al., 1994 ) and many other CNS neurons (Takeda et
al., 1991 ; Konradi and Heckers, 1995 ). In peripheral sensory and
sympathetic neurons, normal levels of neurotrophins are required to
maintain phosphorylated CREB, which promotes gene expression (Riccio et
al., 1999 ; Watson et al., 1999 ). To examine whether BDNF
deficiency alters CREB expression in central noradrenergic neurons, we
conducted immunohistochemical studies using an antibody that
specifically recognized phosphorylated CREB. Immunoreactivity was fully
preserved in LC (Fig. 6B,C), A2,
and all other noradrenergic cell groups of the BDNF mutant mice. No
detectable differences in immunohistochemical staining were found in
comparison to controls (Fig. 6E), suggesting that
central noradrenergic neurons do not require normal levels of
neurotrophins to maintain CREB phosphorylation.
Regional distribution pattern of BDNF expression implies
target-derived supply for noradrenergic neurons
Our studies suggest that BDNF is essential for drug-induced
molecular adaptations of the noradrenergic system. Noradrenergic neurons are known to have widespread projections throughout the CNS and thus could derive BDNF from non-noradrenergic neuronal populations or express BDNF themselves, or both. To examine these possibilities, we analyzed by in situ hybridization the mRNA
expression pattern for BDNF and TrkB (the BDNF high-affinity receptor)
in the area of the wild-type LC. In emulsion-dipped sections from wild-type pons hybridized with radiolabeled TrkB antisense RNA, the
strongest labeling was observed over the full dorsoventral extension of
the locus ceruleus (Fig. 7A,
arrows), whereas labeling in other areas of the dorsal pons
and in the overlying cerebellar cortex was less intense. In sections
from wild-type pons hybridized with radiolabeled BDNF antisense RNA,
the strongest labeling was observed in the granule cell layer of the
cerebellar cortex, whereas labeling in the dorsal pons was more
scattered and included a loose cluster of labeled cells in the vicinity
of the ventral border of the locus ceruleus (Fig.
7B,C, arrows). These
results are in accordance with previous studies describing BDNF
mRNA-expressing cells in the dorsal pons by means of film and emulsion
autoradiography (Castren et al., 1995 ; Conner et al., 1997 ; Numan et
al., 1998 ).

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Figure 7.
Expression pattern of BDNF and TrkB in dorsal
pons. A-C, Representative examples of emulsion-dipped
coronal sections of adult wild-type mice hybridized with TrkB cRNA
(A) and BDNF cRNA (B, C). Notice
very strong TrkB mRNA expression over the locus ceruleus
(A, arrows) and BDNF mRNA-expressing
cells in ventrolateral position to IVth ventricle (B, C,
arrows). D-F show coronal sections of mice
carrying a lacZ reporter knock-in into the endogenous BDNF
locus (Farinas et al., 2001 ). Sections were double stained with Texas
Red-labeled lacZ and FITC-labeled TH immunoreactivity.
D, Dorsal pons in area of the LC; E,
higher magnification of D; arrow in
D and E points to the same neuron.
F, Dorsal medulla in the area of A2.
Arrow in F points to double-labeled
neuron (TH+, lacZ+).
Notice lack of double-labeled neurons in the LC (D, E).
CBL, Cerebellum; asterisk, IVth
ventricle. Images taken at 2 × 10 magnification in
A; 4 × 10 magnification in B, C;
10 × 10 magnification in D;
100 × 10 magnification in E,
F.
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To examine whether the BDNF-expressing cells in the dorsal pons overlap
with the population of noradrenergic LC neurons, we used mice that
express the lacZ reporter coding sequence under the control
of the endogenous BDNF promoter (Farinas et al., 2001 ). Sections that
were processed for lacZ immunoreactivity contained lacZ+ cells in an area medial
to the LC (Fig. 7D) that corresponded to the area that
contains BDNF mRNA-expressing cells in wild-type mice (Fig.
7B,C, arrows). In
sections that were double labeled for lacZ and TH
immunoreactivity, lacZ+ cells
were found in close spatial proximity medial to
TH+ neurons, but double-labeled cells were
not observed in the area of the LC (Fig.
7D,E). A similar analysis in
sections obtained from the dorsal medulla revealed that a small portion
(<15%) of catecholaminergic cells in the area of A2 were
lacZ+ positive (Fig. 7F). We
conclude that most of the noradrenergic neurons, including the entire
population of LC neurons, do not express BDNF. However, gene expression
for TrkB, the BDNF high-affinity receptor, is comparatively high in the LC.
 |
DISCUSSION |
We report genetic evidence for a role of BDNF in noradrenergic
neuron function and opiate withdrawal. Loss of BDNF expression in
postnatal brain dramatically alters the response of the noradrenergic system to chronic opiate exposure, as evidenced by an abnormal decrease
in neuronal firing rates, a paradoxical downregulation of cAMP-mediated
excitation, and a failure to upregulate levels of enzymes that are
important for noradrenergic signal transduction, including adenylyl
cyclase and tyrosine hydroxylase, the rate-limiting enzyme for
norepinephrine biosynthesis. In contrast to the profound abnormalities
after chronic opiate exposure, no abnormalities were found in LC
neurons of drug-naïve BDNF-deficient mice. Notably, wild-type
LC neurons do not express BDNF, but they express high levels of TrkB,
the high-affinity receptor for BDNF. These results suggest that
opiate-induced adaptations of the noradrenergic system depend on a
BDNF-signaling pathway that emanates from non-noradrenergic target cell
populations or afferent projections.
BDNF deficiency causes an abnormal cellular adaptation to
opiate exposure
Upregulated cAMP signaling in noradrenergic neurons restores
neuronal activity and compensates for cellular inhibition caused by
activated opiate receptors but also contributes to noradrenergic disinhibition and withdrawal behavior when opiate exposure is stopped
abruptly (for review, see Nestler and Aghajanian, 1997 ). Drugs
disrupting cAMP-mediated signaling, such as the PKA inhibitor Rp-cAMPS,
when infused directly into the LC, attenuate opiate withdrawal
reactions (Punch et al., 1997 ) and suppress the withdrawal hyperactivity of LC neurons (Ivanov and Aston-Jones, 2001 ). Conversely, drugs that activate the cAMP pathway, such as the PKA activator Sp-cAMPS, induce withdrawal-like behaviors when infused into the LC
(Punch et al., 1997 ). Therefore, we predicted that the threefold reduction in opiate withdrawal behaviors in the BDNF-deficient mice
could be caused by a dysregulation of cAMP-mediated excitation in the
mutant noradrenergic neurons. This is what we observed. Chronic opiate
exposure resulted in a significant reduction in neuronal firing, a
paradoxical downregulation of cAMP-mediated excitation, and a failure
to upregulate AC enzyme activity in mutant LC neurons.
Activated opiate receptors inhibit the cAMP pathway by the release of
the GTP-bound G i subunits, blocking AC enzyme
activity. The resulting decrease in cAMP levels then inhibits
nonselective cation channels, causing a downward shift of the
intracellular potential (for review, see Williams et al., 2001 ) (Fig.
8). Interestingly, the reduction in LC
neuron firing in the drug-treated mutant mice persisted even after a
complete wash-out of morphine from the slice preparation. This finding
suggests that chronic opiate exposure resulted in other maladaptations
in the mutant LC neurons, in addition to the dysregulation of AC
levels. Abnormal activation of potassium channels or inhibition of
voltage-sensitive Ca2+ channels, which are
regulated by G / subunits (North et al., 1987 ; Williams et al.,
2001 ), and altered endocytosis (Tsao et al., 2001 ) or constitutive
activation of opiate receptors (Liu and Prather, 2001 ) may contribute
to the observed inhibition of mutant LC neurons after chronic morphine
treatment. Given the fact that the recordings were conducted on coronal
slice preparations that disrupt afferent inputs of the LC, it is
unlikely that the observed decrease in LC neuronal firing in the
mutants is caused by an imbalance between GABAergic and glutamatergic
excitatory signal transmission (Van Bockstaele et al., 2000 ) to the LC.
At present, it is unclear whether a defect in LC neuron synchronization (Zhu and Zhou, 2001 ) contributes to the observed alterations in the
mutant LC.

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Figure 8.
A model whereby neurotrophins regulate
opiate-induced adaptations in noradrenergic neurons. Ligand-activated
opiate receptors, through G I subunits, inhibit adenylyl
cyclase (AC) activity, and this results in decreased
depolarization currents through nonselective cation channels
(NSC). Opiate receptors reduce neuronal activity further
through G / subunits that activate potassium channels and inhibit
voltage-sensitive calcium channels (Williams et al., 2001 ). In the
drug-adapted state, BDNF offsets opiate-mediated neuronal inhibition by
increasing levels of ACs and by restoring neuronal firing rates. NT-3,
which plays a less dominant role in the noradrenergic system, appears
to have a weak inhibitory effect on the cAMP pathway after chronic
opiate exposure (Akbarian et al., 2001 ). Both BDNF and NT-3 increase TH
expression in the drug-adapted state. It is yet unclear whether the
neurotrophins regulate TH and AC expression at the level of gene
transcription and whether mitogen-activated protein kinase
(MAPK) pathways are involved. Both BDNF and NT-3
are released by non-noradrenergic neurons and activate TrkB
(BDNF) and TrkC (NT-3) receptors
by dimerization and phosphorylation either at the somal membrane or in
distal processes of noradrenergic neurons.
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|
Chronic morphine administration has been shown to increase TH
expression and catalytic activity (Guitart et al., 1990 ; Lane-Ladd et
al., 1997 ; Boundy et al., 1998 ) in the LC. This upregulation of TH
would be expected to increase the capacity of noradrenergic neurons to
synthesize norepinephrine, which then could contribute to the dramatic
increase in norepinephrine release and to associated behavioral changes
described during opiate withdrawal (Koob et al., 1992 ; Grasing et al.,
1997 ). Therefore, one would predict that the lack of TH upregulation in
the LC of BDNF-deficient mice would contribute to an attenuated opiate
withdrawal reaction, which is what we observed. It is yet unclear how
the disruption of the BDNF-signaling pathway abolishes the dynamic
regulation of TH expression during opiate exposure. It has been
suggested that TH expression is controlled by transcriptional
regulation (Boundy et al., 1998 ). Interestingly, cAMP-dependent
transcription factors and repressors appear to modulate the activity of
the TH promoter (Tinti et al., 1996 ). When levels of CREB in the LC are
decreased by infusion of antisense oligonucleotides, TH levels also
decrease (Lane-Ladd et al., 1997 ). However, levels of phosphorylated CREB, indicative of its active state, appeared to be preserved in the
nuclei of LC neurons of the BDNF-deficient mice, suggesting that in
addition to CREB, other factors are required for the dynamic regulation
of TH expression.
Notably, no abnormalities were found in LC neurons of
drug-naïve BDNF-deficient mice, and LC neuronal inhibition
after acute opiate exposure was fully preserved in the mutants.
Therefore, the paradoxical downregulation of the cAMP-signaling pathway
and the lack of TH upregulation in chronic morphine-treated mutants most likely reflects an alteration in drug-induced plasticity. The
precise timing of these opiate-induced adaptations in the LC, including
any effects of exogenous BDNF, remains a subject for future studies.
The neurochemical plasticity of noradrenergic neurons depends on
BDNF derived from non-noradrenergic sources
During withdrawal, an increased excitatory afferent input to the
LC and other noradrenergic cell groups contributes to the disinhibition
of noradrenergic neurons (Akaoka and Aston-Jones, 1991 ; Aghajanian et
al., 1994 ; Williams et al., 2001 ). In addition to modulating
noradrenergic neuron function in acute withdrawal, our results indicate
that non-noradrenergic systems, through a BDNF-signaling pathway, are
also essential for the adaptations of noradrenergic neurons during
chronic opiate exposure. Noradrenergic neurons have widespread
projections to many areas of the adult forebrain, midbrain, and
hindbrain that express BDNF (Maisonpierre et al., 1990 ), suggesting
that target-derived BDNF is a key factor for opiate-induced plasticity
of noradrenergic neurons. Therefore, one would expect that a widespread
genetic ablation of BDNF in the CNS results in functional abnormalities
of LC neurons after chronic morphine treatment, which is what we
observed. BDNF immunoreactivity is more readily detectable in
noradrenergic fibers than in perikarya of noradrenergic neurons
(Fawcett et al., 1998 ), which may be expected if BDNF is taken up but
not expressed by noradrenergic neurons. In analogy to the peripheral
nervous system, perhaps BDNF is transported back to noradrenergic
somata as phosphorylated Trk-ligand complex (Bhattacharyya et al.,
1997 ; Watson et al., 1999 ). Furthermore, BDNF is also
subject to anterograde axonal transport in the CNS (Altar et al., 1997 ;
Conner et al., 1998 ; Kohara et al., 2001 ), and therefore afferent
projections could serve as an additional source of BDNF for
noradrenergic neurons.
Notably, two separate neurotrophin-signaling pathways regulate the
neurochemical adaptations of the noradrenergic system in response to
opiate exposure (Fig. 8): a BDNF/TrkB-related signal, as shown in this
study, and a neurotrophin-3 (NT-3)/TrkC-related signal, as reported
previously (Akbarian et al., 2001 ). The observed LC neuron
abnormalities in morphine-treated NT-3-deficient mice appear to be less
severe and in part opposite to the observed alterations in the
BDNF-deficient mice, perhaps reflecting the fact that NT-3 expression
in adult brain is much lower in comparison to BDNF (Maisonpierre et
al., 1990 ). However, in close analogy to the BDNF/TrkB-signaling
pathway, the modulation of noradrenergic neuron function by NT-3 also
emanates from non-noradrenergic systems (Akbarian et al., 2001 ). By
using these neurotrophin-signaling pathways in variable combinations
and intensities, neuronal circuits that are interconnected with
noradrenergic neurons could adjust and fine-tune opiate-related
adaptations of the noradrenergic system, which may greatly increase the
response repertoire of the brain when it is exposed to opiates and
other psychoactive drugs.
The LC as a model system for opiate withdrawal
Pharmacological inhibition of noradrenergic neurons is a very
effective treatment for opiate withdrawal (Washton and Resnick, 1983 ;
Maldonado, 1997 ), and this observation has spurred considerable interest in the role of the noradrenergic system for opiate dependence and withdrawal. Traditionally, the LC as the largest noradrenergic cell
cluster in the brain has served as a model system for the pharmacology
and cellular basis of opiate tolerance, dependence, and withdrawal
(Nestler and Aghajanian, 1997 ). The LC was also the focus of our study.
However, noradrenergic neurons are organized in multiple clusters in
the pons and medulla, which may explain the observation that lesions of
individual clusters and fiber pathways, including those emanating from
the LC, do not abolish opiate withdrawal reactions (Christie et al.,
1997 ; Caille et al., 1999 ; Delfs et al., 2000 ).
Conclusion
Little is known about molecules that are key regulators of
noradrenergic neuron function in adult brain. Here we show that BDNF is
essential for adaptations of the noradrenergic system in response to
chronic opiate exposure, including superactivation of the cAMP pathway,
upregulation of tyrosine hydroxylase, and restoration of neuronal
firing. It remains to be elucidated whether BDNF mediates neuronal
plasticity in the noradrenergic system beyond these opiate-induced
adaptations and whether the molecular mechanisms resemble those that
operate, for example, in the Schaffer collateral-CA1 synapse in the
hippocampus, where the intracellular signaling cascades of
BDNF-dependent synaptic plasticity (Kang and Schuman, 1995 ) become
increasingly recognized (Kang and Schuman, 2000 ; Patterson et al.,
2001 ).
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Dec. 28, 2001; revised Feb. 22, 2002; accepted Feb. 26, 2002.
*
S.A. and M.R. contributed equally to this work.
This work was supported by the National Alliance for Research on
Depression and Schizophrenia, by National Institute of Drug Abuse Grant
1-K08-DA00479 to S.A., and by National Cancer Institute Grant
5-R35-CA44339 to R.J. We thank Ruth Flannery, Jeanne Reis, Jeannie
Smith, and Cathy Steffens for technical support and Dr. Haley Melikian
for helpful discussions and comments.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Schahram Akbarian,
Brudnick Neuropsychiatric Research Institute, 303 Belmont Street, Worcester, MA 01613-2795. E-mail:
schahram.akbarian{at}umassmed.edu.
 |
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