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The Journal of Neuroscience, June 1, 2002, 22(11):4509-4521
In Vivo Analysis of Schwann Cell Programmed Cell
Death in the Embryonic Chick: Regulation by Axons and Glial Growth
Factor
Adam K.
Winseck1,
Jordi
Calderó2,
Dolors
Ciutat2,
David
Prevette1,
Sheryl A.
Scott3,
Gouying
Wang3,
Josep E.
Esquerda2, and
Ronald W.
Oppenheim1
1 Department of Neurobiology and Anatomy and
Neuroscience Program, Wake Forest University, School of Medicine,
Winston-Salem, North Carolina 27157, 2 Unitat de
Neurobiologia Cellular, Department de Ciencies Mediques Basiques,
Facultat de Medicina, Universitat de Lleide, 25198 Lleida, Catalonia,
Spain, and 3 Department of Neurobiology and Anatomy,
University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, Utah 84132
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ABSTRACT |
The present study uses the embryonic chick to examine in
vivo the mechanisms and regulation of Schwann cell programmed
cell death (PCD) in spinal and cranial peripheral nerves. Schwann cells are highly dependent on the presence of axons for survival because the
in ovo administration of NMDA, which excitotoxically
eliminates motoneurons and their axons by necrosis, results in a
significant increase in apoptotic Schwann cell death. Additionally,
pharmacological and surgical manipulation of axon numbers also affects
the relative amounts of Schwann cell PCD. Schwann cells undergoing both
normal and induced PCD display an apoptotic-like cell death, using a caspase-dependent pathway. Furthermore, axon elimination results in
upregulation of the p75 and platelet-derived growth factor receptors in mature Schwann cells within the degenerating ventral root.
During early development, Schwann cells are also dependent on
axon-derived mitogens; the loss of axons results in a decrease in
Schwann cell proliferation. Axon removal during late embryonic stages,
however, elicits an increase in proliferation, as is expected from
these more differentiated Schwann cells. In rodents, Schwann cell
survival is regulated by glial growth factor (GGF), a member of the
neuregulin family of growth factors. GGF administration to chick
embryos selectively rescued Schwann cells during both normal PCD and
after the loss of axons, whereas other trophic factors tested had no
effect on Schwann cell survival. In conclusion, avian Schwann cells
exhibit many similarities to mammalian Schwann cells in terms of their
dependence on axon-derived signals during early and later stages of development.
Key words:
Schwann cells; programmed cell death; chick embryo; proliferation; peripheral nerves; neuregulin
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INTRODUCTION |
During nervous system development,
programmed cell death (PCD) is a process that entails the selective
elimination of large numbers of initially overproduced neurons. The
death of these neurons, primarily by apoptosis, has conventionally been
attributed to a failure in competition for limited amounts of
target-derived trophic factors. Consequently, PCD promotes construction
of the functionally mature nervous system by establishing appropriate neuronal population sizes and proper matching of their connections (for
review, see Burek and Oppenheim, 1996 ). Throughout the past several
decades, extensive work has been done regarding the mechanisms and
regulation of PCD in neurons. More recently, however, the study of PCD
in glia of the CNS and in Schwann cells, the glia of the peripheral
nervous system (PNS), has begun to receive attention in the context of
establishing quantitative matching between neurons and ensheathing or
myelinating glia.
Schwann cell PCD has primarily been studied in the rodent, in which it
has been demonstrated that, in vitro, both embryonic precursors (Jessen et al., 1994 ; Gavrilovic et al., 1995 ; Dong et al.,
1995 , 1999 ), and early postnatal Schwann cells (Syroid et al., 1996 ,
1999 ; Nakao et al., 1997 ) undergo apoptosis when deprived of growth
factors. Complementary in vivo work has also shown the
presence of early postnatal Schwann cell death and its regulation by
axon-derived trophic factors (Grinspan et al., 1996 ; Trachtenberg and
Thompson, 1996 ). These studies have proposed that, during development,
early Schwann cells compete for limited supplies of trophic factors
produced by their target axons, where the losers undergo PCD in an
effort to establish proper Schwann cell numbers for achieving an
optimal ratio of Schwann cells to axons.
The survival of developing mammalian Schwann cells is regulated by a
variety of factors, but responsiveness depends on their developmental
age. Whereas mature Schwann cells rely on the autocrine production of
factors such as insulin-like growth factor-1, neurotrophin-3, and
platelet-derived growth factor-BB (Meier et al., 1999 ; Syroid et al.,
1999 ), Schwann cell survival during earlier stages of development is
primarily regulated by growth factors known as the neuregulins. Through
alternative splicing of the NRG-1 gene (Marchionni et al., 1993 ), many
neuregulins, such as glia growth factor (GGF), can influence Schwann
cell survival. Specifically, neuregulins increase the survival of
Schwann cells in vitro when cultured in the absence of serum
(Dong et al., 1995 ; Syroid et al., 1996 ), and in vivo when
administered after neonatal axotomy (Grinspan et al., 1996 ;
Trachtenberg and Thompson, 1996 ; Kopp et al., 1997 ).
In the present study we investigated Schwann cell PCD in the developing
chick embryo, which, in contrast to mammals, provides a more
advantageous model for studying embryonic Schwann cells in
vivo during even the earliest stages of development and with the
greater possibility of experimental manipulations. Previous studies of
the chick embryo have described the existence of Schwann cell death in
the spinal ventral roots (Chu-Wang and Oppenheim, 1978 ; Ciutat et al.,
1996 ), and suggested that axons were necessary for survival. The
current study further examines the mechanisms and regulation of Schwann
cell PCD in the ventral root and oculomotor nerve. The results indicate
that Schwann cells undergo an apoptotic-like programmed cell death that
is regulated by axons and neuregulin signaling.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Eggs and embryos
Fertilized eggs were purchased from local suppliers (COPAGA,
Lleida, Catalonia, Spain; Tyson Farms, North Wilksboro, NC) and incubated in the laboratory at 37°C and 60% relative humidity until
the desired embryonic age. The age of embryos was determined according
to the Hamburger and Hamilton (1951) stage series.
Embryonic surgery and pharmacological experiments
Limb bud removal. In one group of embryos, the
unilateral removal of the right hindlimb bud was performed on embryonic
day 2 (E2) (stage 16), using a procedure described previously (Chu-Wang and Oppenheim, 1978 ; Caldero et al., 1998 ). Briefly, embryos were exposed through a window in the shell, and small strips of neutral red-agar were applied briefly over the area to be operated to obtain
better visualization. The hindlimb bud was then removed with a
flame-sharpened tungsten needle. Only embryos later determined to have
a complete hindlimb deletion were used for further analysis. The side
contralateral to the limb removal, together with sham limb bud removals
(LBRs), were used as controls to compare the effects of the
ablation on Schwann cell survival.
Neural tube removal. The neural tube was removed from
embryos on E3-3.5 (stage 20-21) as previously described (Landmesser and Honig, 1986 ; Wang and Scott, 2000 ). Briefly, motoneurons were eliminated by aspirating the neural tube when neural crest migration was primarily complete, thereby leaving sensory ganglia intact. In some
embryos only partial ablation of the neural tube was achieved, leaving
one side of the ventral neural tube intact. These embryos were included
in the analysis of Schwann cell death by using the intact ventral
neural tube as a control.
Curare treatments. Some embryos were treated daily from E3
to E7 with D-tubocurarine (curare; Sigma, St.
Louis, MO). The doses of curare were: 1 mg on E3 and E4, 1.5 mg on E5,
and 2 mg on E6 and E7.
NMDA treatments. In another set of experiments, embryos of
different ages were treated with a single dose of 1-2.5 mg of
NMDA (Sigma). We have previously shown that 0.5-1 mg of NMDA is
sufficient to produce massive axonal degeneration and necrotic
motoneuron death (Ciutat et al., 1996 ). Embryos were killed at
different times after NMDA application.
BAF treatments. Embryos were treated with a 40 µg dose of
Boc-Asp-CH2F (BAF, Enzyme Systems Products,
Livermore, CA) on E7 to inhibit caspase activation.
Trophic factor treatments. In some experiments, embryos were
treated on E5 and E6 with a 5 µg dose of one of the following factors: (1) brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF; Amgen, Inc., Thousand Oaks, CA), (2) insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1; Cephalon, Inc., West Chester, PA), (3) human recombinant basic fibroblast growth
factor (bFGF; California Biotechnology, Inc., Mountain View, CA), (4)
nerve growth factor (NGF; a generous gift from Dr. Eugene
Johnson), (5) neutralizing antibody to p75, a generous gift from
Dr. Louis Reichardt), (6) neutralizing antibody to NGF (a
generous gift from Dr. Yves Barde), and human recombinant GGF (a
generous gift from Dr. Mark Marchionni, Cambridge Neuroscience, Boston, MA).
The neurotoxins and trophic factors were dissolved in saline and
dropped directly onto the choroallantoic membrane (CAM; volumes of
100-200 µl) through a small window made in the shell. Embryos treated with identical volumes of physiological saline were used as
controls. After treatments, the windows were sealed with adhesive tape,
and the eggs were returned to the incubator.
Histology and cell counts
Light microscopy. Embryos were fixed overnight in
Carnoy's solution and processed for paraffin embedding. Serial
transverse sections of 6-12 µm were obtained through both the entire
lumbosacral segments of spinal cord for ventral root analysis and the
rostral hindbrain for oculomotor nerve analysis, and both were stained with thionin. By using either a 60× or 100× oil-immersion objective, all normal pyknotic cells and all normal nuclear profiles present in a
segment of the L3 ventral nerve roots located between their exit from
the spinal cord and their contact with the dorsal root ganglia were
drawn with a camera lucida and then counted in alternate serial
sections. In the hindbrain, the same quantification of pyknotic and
normal nuclei was done in the oculomotor nerve using a 100×
oil-immersion objective. For E6-E8 embryos, the entire length of both
bilateral oculomotor nerves was quantified in every other section. For
E9-E16 embryos, which had very large oculomotor nerves, pyknotic and
normal nuclei within a single field of view at the exit point of the
nerves from the hindbrain were quantified for both oculomotor nerves
(E9-E10) or for a single nerve (E12-E14) within every other section.
The criteria used to identify pyknotic cells were the same as those
described by Clarke and Oppenheim (1995) .
Electron microscopy. Embryos were fixed by immersion in
2.5% glutaraldehyde in 0.1 M phosphate buffer,
pH 7.4, overnight at 4°C. After washing with phosphate buffer,
ventral or dorsal roots or the most proximal part of the sciatic nerves
were dissected, removed, and cut into small pieces. Samples were then
post-fixed in 1% osmium tetroxide for 2 hr, dehydrated, and embedded
in Durcupan ACM (Fluka, Buchs, Switzerland). Ultrathin sections were
collected on copper grids, counterstained with uranyl acetate and lead
citrate, and observed with a Zeiss EM 910 electron microscope (Zeiss,
Oberkochen, Germany).
Immunohistochemistry
For immunohistochemistry, embryos were fixed by immersion in 4%
paraformaldehyde in 0.1 M phosphate buffer (PB), pH 7.4, overnight at 4°C. After cryoprotection with 30% sucrose in PB,
embryos were embedded in Tissue-Tek OCT embedding medium (Miles,
Elkhart, IN), frozen, and transversely sectioned (20 µm thick) with a
cryostat. Sections were washed in PBS containing 0.1% Triton
X-100 and incubated for 30 min with 10% normal goat serum (NGS; Sigma
and Vector Laboratories, Burlingame, CA) in PBS to prevent nonspecific staining.
To specifically immunolabel the Schwann cells, sections were incubated
with the 1E8 monoclonal antibody (a generous gift from Dr. Nancy
Ratner, University of Cincinnati Medical School and the Developmental
Studies Hybridoma Bank, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA), which
recognizes chick P0 protein, an early marker of embryonic
Schwann cells (Bhattacharyya et al., 1991 ) (diluted 1:10-1:100 in
PBS-0.1% Triton X-100). Sections were then incubated sequentially with
either (1) biotin-labeled anti-mouse IgG (diluted 1:200 in PBS) for 1 hr and rhodamine-avidin DCS (diluted 1:100 in PBS; Vector
Laboratories), or (2) Cy3-conjugated
AffiniPure goat anti-mouse IgG (H + L) (Jackson ImmunoResearch Laboratories, West Grove, PA). Some sections were further treated for
simultaneous demonstration of P0 and DNA fragmentation by using
terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated dUTP-digoxigenin nick-end labeling (TUNEL) technique (fluorescent in situ
detection kit for cell death from Boehringer Mannheim, Mannheim,
Germany). For this procedure sections were incubated for 60 min at
37°C in a mixture containing terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase and FITC-labeled dUTP according to the manufacturer's instructions. Sections were examined in a Zeiss LSM 310 confocal microscope (Zeiss,
Oberkochen, Germany) using 543 nm helium-neon or 488 argon-ion excitation sources and appropriate selective barrier filters.
In other experiments, double label immunohistochemistry was performed
with the 1E8 primary antibody (diluted 1:10) in conjunction with one of
the following primary antibodies: (1) rabbit polyclonal IgG against
c-Jun/sc45 (Santa Cruz Biotechnology; diluted 1:200) or (2) rabbit
polyclonal IgG against cleaved-activated caspase 3 (New England
Biolabs, Beverly, MA; diluted 1:200). Primary antibody dilutions were
done in PBS-0.1% Triton X-100 and incubated at 4°C overnight. After
washing in PBS, sections were incubated with the appropriate secondary
antibody, either Cy3-conjugated AffiniPure
goat anti-mouse IgG (H + L) (Jackson ImmunoResearch Laboratories, West
Grove, PA) or Alexa 488 goat anti-rabbit IgG (H + L) conjugate
(Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR; diluted 1:200) for 1 hr at room
temperature. After staining, sections were washed, dehydrated,
coverslipped, and analyzed on an Olympus America (Melville, NY) BX60
epifluorescent microscope with the appropriate fluorescent filters.
Some sections were also processed for immunocytochemistry by using the
following primary antibodies: (1) monoclonal antibody against
p75NGFR (a generous gift from Dr. Louis
Reichardt; diluted 1:100), (2) rabbit polyclonal IgG against
platelet-derived growth factor receptor- (sc-338, Santa Cruz
Biotechnology; diluted 1:200), (3) monoclonal antibody against
microtubule-associated protein-5 (MAP-5; Boehringer Mannheim; diluted
1:50) or (4) rabbit polyclonal IgG against c-Jun/sc45 (Santa Cruz
Biotechnology; diluted 1:200). Primary antibody dilutions were done in
PBS-0.1% Triton X-100. Incubation was performed overnight at 4°C.
After washing in PBS, sections were incubated with the appropriate
secondary antibodies: fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)-labeled goat
anti-mouse IgG (Southern Biotechnology Associates, Birmingham, AL;
diluted 1:50) or FITC-labeled goat anti-rabbit IgG (Southern Biotechnology Associates; diluted 1:50). After washing, sections were
counterstained with propidium iodide (5 µg/ml in PBS containing 100 µl/ml of ribonuclease type I-A; Sigma). Sections were examined in a
Zeiss LSM 310 confocal microscope (Zeiss, Oberkochen, Germany) using
543 nm helium-neon or 488 argon ion excitation sources and appropriate
selective barrier filters.
Mitotic activity
To examine the proliferation of cells in the L3 ventral nerve
roots of normal embryos and in embryos treated with either saline or
NMDA, 5-bromo-2'-deoxyuridine (BrdU; Sigma) was used to label cells in
S-phase of the mitotic cycle. A pulse of a nontoxic dose of BrdU (10 µg on E4-E10, 20 µg on E12 or 30 µg on E16) was administered onto the CAM. Two hours later embryos were killed, staged, fixed overnight in Carnoy's solution, embedded in paraffin, and serially sectioned at 6 µm (E4-E7), 8 µm (E8-E10), or 12 µM
(E12 and E16). Sections were deparaffinized, treated with 0.07N NaOH
for 2 min, rinsed in 0.1 M PBS, pH 8.5, and incubated with
a mouse monoclonal anti-BrdU antibody (Becton Dickinson, Mountain View,
CA) diluted 1:20 in 1% normal horse serum (NHS;
Sigma)-PBS-0.1% Triton X-100. After washes in distilled
H2O and PBS, sections were incubated with a
biotin-conjugated goat anti-mouse IgG (Vector Laboratories) diluted
1:200 in 1% NHS-PBS-0.1% Triton X-100. After several washes in PBS,
sections were incubated with the ABC complex (ABC elite; Vector
Laboratories) according to manufacturer's instructions. Peroxidase
activity was visualized by using
3,3'-diaminobenzidine-H2O2 procedure. Sections were finally counterstained with hematoxylin. All
heavily labeled BrdU cells and normal nuclei present in areas of 1 mm2 of the L3 ventral nerve root were
counted in every other section with the help of a camera lucida. To
analyze the BrdU incorporation in cells of the L3 ventral nerve roots
of embryos treated with either saline or NMDA, a pulse of BrdU was
administered 2 hr before killing the embryos. In some cases, paraffin
sections from embryos fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde in 0.1 M phosphate buffer, were double stained with TUNEL and
BrdU. In this case, after the TUNEL procedure, sections were treated
with 0.1% protease type XXIV (Sigma) in PBS at 37°C for 10 min.
before incubation with the mouse monoclonal anti-BrdU antibody; a
tetramethylrhodamine isothiocyanate-conjugated goat anti-mouse
Ig (H + L) (Southern Biotechnology Associates) diluted 1:50 in 1%
NHS-PBS-0.1% Triton X-100 was used as a secondary antibody.
In one experiment, E7.5 tissue containing sections of the hindbrain
processed with thionin staining were examined, and mitotic figures were
quantified in every other section throughout the entire length of both
bilateral oculomotor nerves. Mitotic figures were present in all
thionin-stained tissue and exhibit darkly stained chromatin arranged in
formations characteristic of discrete phases of the mitotic cycle. The
thionin-labeled mitotic figures were quantified instead of using BrdU
analysis because this allowed for the identification of proliferating
Schwann cells throughout many phases of the mitotic cycle, and not just
the S-phase, which BrdU selectively labels. Additionally, mitotic
figures were quantified in the oculomotor nerves in the same sections
used for the analysis of pyknotic and normal cell numbers from the E7.5
embryos that received saline, NMDA, or GGF (see Fig. 11); processing
tissue for BrdU precludes such an analysis.
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RESULTS |
NMDA treatment induces Schwann cell death in the ventral nerve root
and oculomotor nerve
It has previously been shown that embryonic chick Schwann cells
undergo a developmentally regulated period of PCD in the lumbar (L3)
ventral nerve roots, exhibiting a biphasic profile with peaks of cell
loss on E5-6 and E8.5 (Fig.
1A, taken from Ciutat
et al., 1996 ). Furthermore, Schwann cell death could be augmented by
in ovo treatment of 1 mg of NMDA on E7, which
excitotoxically eliminated spinal motoneurons and caused the
degeneration of their respective axons (Ciutat et al., 1996 ). In the
present study, the effects of NMDA on Schwann cell death were further
examined to demonstrate the critical role of axons in regulating
embryonic Schwann cell survival. First, in serially sectioned
Nissl-stained tissue, the relative density of Schwann cells that
displayed a pyknotic morphology was quantified after NMDA
administration at several developmental stages. As shown in Figure
1B, Schwann cell death in the L3 ventral roots is
greatest at E10.5 after a single dose of NMDA (2.5 mg) given 12 hr
earlier. Subsequent ages show a gradual decrease in Schwann cell death
induced after NMDA with little, if any death occurring by E16.5 (Fig.
1B), despite massive loss of motoneurons and their
axons by necrosis (data not shown) at all ages. Additionally, the time
course of Schwann cell death at E10 was also determined by quantifying
pyknotic Schwann cells at several time intervals after NMDA treatment
(2.5 mg) at E10. Relatively low levels of Schwann cell death were
observed up to 9 hr after NMDA treatment. Subsequently a large increase
in cell death occurred with a peak at 12 hr, followed by a decrease in
cell death over the next 12 hr (Fig. 1C). The association of
dying Schwann cells and degenerating ventral root axons can be seen in
sections immunostained with an antibody to the axonal marker MAP-5 and
counterstained with propidium iodine 7 hr after NMDA treatment on E7
(Fig. 1D,E). Dying Schwann cells, displaying
condensed chromatin, can often be found associated with defasciculated
axons after NMDA treatment (Fig. 1D). Embryos treated
with saline, however, exhibit equivalent amounts of cell death to
untreated nerves (Fig. 1E).

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Figure 1.
Schwann cell death in L3 ventral roots
of the embryonic chick after NMDA administration. Normally occurring
Schwann cell death in the developing chick embryo displays a biphasic
profile with peaks of death at E5-6 and E8.5
(p < 0.01 vs E8) (A, Ciutat
et al., 1996 ). Induction of Schwann cell death in L3 ventral nerve root
12 hr after acute NMDA administration (2.5 mg) illustrates the
developmentally regulated responsiveness of Schwann cells to NMDA
(B). The time course of Schwann cell death
induction after administration of NMDA (2.5 mg) on E10
(C); embryos taken at different time points after
NMDA treatment show a peak of cell death after 12 hr, followed by a
decrease over the next 12 hr. Ventral nerve root of E7 chick embryos
immunostained with the axonal marker MAP-5
(green) and counterstained with propidium iodide
(red) in embryos either treated with saline
(E) or NMDA (D) 7 hr
earlier. Below the ventral root there is a single degenerating axon
segregated from the main ventral root fascicle associated with several
dying Schwann cells (arrows). The circle delineates a
dying Schwann cell with hemilunar caps of condensed chromatin,
characteristic of apoptosis. SC, Spinal cord;
VR, ventral root. In A, each point
represents the mean ± SEM of 4-10 embryos, and in
B and C, each point represents the
mean ± SEM, with the number of embryos indicated.
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Ultrastructural analysis provides additional evidence for the presence
of embryonic Schwann cell PCD occurring both naturally during
development, and experimentally induced by the loss of axons following
NMDA treatment. At E3 and E6 healthy Schwann cells can be seen in close
association with normal axons (Fig.
2A,C). Schwann cells
undergoing normal PCD are also observed at these ages, and they exhibit
chromatin condensation, often in the form of peripheral crescents (Fig.
2D), as well as an electron-dense cytoplasm and
nuclear degradation (Fig. 2B). These naturally dying Schwann cells are often found to lack direct axon contact (Fig. 2B). At E10.5, after a 1 mg dose of NMDA on E10,
numerous dying Schwann cells, similar to those dying in normal or
saline-treated embryos, could be found at the electron microscopic
level. In contrast to the healthy Schwann cells associated with
surviving axons in E10.5 saline-treated tissue (Fig.
2E), NMDA-treated embryos exhibited dying Schwann
cells, often in close association with degenerating axon bundles, which
exhibit focal swellings, varicosities, and other regressive changes
(Fig. 2F-H).

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Figure 2.
Ultrastructural analysis of Schwann cell death
during normal development and after NMDA administration. Healthy
Schwann cells (sc) are found associated with axons
(ax) at E3 (A) and E6
(C). A Schwann cell undergoing PCD at E3
(large arrow) (B), exhibiting
nuclear degradation and condensed chromatin, is separated from a
healthy axon bundle (+) by a cellular process (small
arrow), whereas, healthy Schwann cells (sc) are
in close contact with normal bundles of axons (*) and in some cases
extend processes between axons (arrowheads). Schwann
cells undergoing PCD are also observed at E6 (D).
Whereas E10.5 saline-treated embryos display healthy Schwann cells
associated with normal axons bundles (ax) (E),
dying Schwann cells (arrows) can often be found at
E10.5, after NMDA treatment at E10, in close association with
degenerating axons (*) (F-H). At E16.5 in
saline-treated embryos, Schwann cells can be seen as ensheathing
(arrow) normal axons (*)
(I). However, at E16.5, after NMDA
treatment on E16, Schwann cells exhibit the morphology of Wallerian
degeneration, in which deteriorating myelin (arrow) can
be seen around a degenerating axon (*)
(J).
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Although NMDA treatment on E16 also results in the elimination of
motoneurons (Llado et al., 1999 ) and the degeneration of their axons by
E16.5 (Fig. 2J), Schwann cells responded differently at this age (vs E10). Myelination begins in the chick around E14 (Saxod
and Bouvet, 1982 ), and many Schwann cells at E16.5 in the L3 ventral
root ensheath axons with multiple layers of myelin (Fig.
2I). After axon loss by NMDA treatment, E16.5 Schwann
cells exhibit myelin degeneration (Fig. 2J), but do
not undergo cell death. This response by Schwann cells is
characteristic of their response during Wallerian degeneration (Muller
and Stoll, 1998 ) and supports the idea that these Schwann cells have
differentiated sufficiently to maintain their own survival through
autocrine mechanisms (Jessen and Mirsky, 1999 ; Meier et al., 1999 ).
To determine the generality of our observations regarding Schwann cell
PCD, we have also examined a cranial motor nerve in the chick embryo,
the oculomotor nerve (nIII). This nerve was chosen because of its large
size and accessibility in the developing chick (Fig.
3A). The glial cells in this
nerve are of the Schwann cell lineage because they are reliably
immunolabeled with the avian-specific 1E8 antibody (Fig.
3B), which identifies the P0 protein expressed both in early
and mature chick Schwann cells (Bhattacharyya et al., 1991 ). Initially,
Schwann cells in the oculomotor nerve were analyzed in serial-sectioned
Nissl-stained tissue at several developmental stages to determine the
period of naturally occurring cell death. Here, as with ventral
root Schwann cells, there are two distinguishable peaks of
cell death, one occurring first around E6, and a smaller peak at E14
(Fig. 3C). In the developing chick, the normal period of
oculomotoneuron PCD occurs between E10 and E15 (Steljes et al., 1999 ).
Therefore, Schwann cell PCD in the oculomotor nerve, similar to the
ventral root, occurs both before and during oculomotor neuron PCD.

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Figure 3.
Naturally occurring and NMDA-induced Schwann cell
death in the embryonic chick oculomotor nerve. The bilateral chick
oculomotor nerves (arrows) exit the hindbrain and are
easily accessible at E8 (A). Schwann cells of the
oculomotor nerve express the avian-specific homolog of the Schwann cell
specific P0 protein (B), and display a
developmentally regulated period of PCD with peaks at E6 and E14
(C). NMDA treatment induces a 75-fold increase in
the relative density of dying Schwann cells (D).
Each point in C and D indicates the
mean ± SEM for three to seven embryos. Oculomotor nuclei in E7.5
saline-treated embryos (enclosed by dotted line, E)
exhibit motoneuron PCD (arrow, F),
as well as Schwann cell PCD in the nerve (arrowheads,
G). NMDA treatment, however, induced an excitotoxic loss of
motoneurons in all oculomotor nuclei except the parasympathetic
preganglionic neurons of the accessory oculomotor nucleus
(arrows, H), which exhibit
characteristics of a necrotic death (I),
such as hyperchromatic nuclei, cytoplasmic swelling and vacuolization,
and loss of Nissl substance. After NMDA administration at E7, extensive
numbers of pyknotic Schwann cells (arrowheads) can be
seen throughout the E7.5 oculomotor nerve
(J).
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Similar to lumbar spinal motoneurons, the oculomotoneurons are also
affected by NMDA administration, exhibiting massive cellular loss in
all oculomotor nuclei, except in the preganglionic neurons within the
chick accessory oculomotor nucleus, the avian homolog of the mammalian
Edinger-Westphal nucleus (Fig. 3H). Compared with
saline controls (Fig. 3E), which exhibit normal apoptotic oculomotoneuron PCD (Fig. 3F), E7.5 oculomotoneurons,
after NMDA (1 mg) treatment at E7, display cytoplasmic swelling, loss
of Nissl substance, and hyperchromatic nuclei, which are all
characteristics of a necrotic cellular death (Fig.
3I). Schwann cells of the oculomotor nerve are also
affected indirectly by NMDA (via axon loss), demonstrating a 75-fold
increase in the relative density of dying (pyknotic) Schwann cells
(Fig. 3D,J), as compared with saline-treated controls (Fig. 3D,G).
Axon presence influences Schwann cell death
To further address the role of axons in regulating Schwann cell
PCD, several experiments were done in which axonal number was
manipulated in the embryonic chick ventral root. It has long been
appreciated that the removal of the embryonic limb bud, before axon
innervation, will induce massive amounts of motoneuron PCD from
E6-E10, because of the removal of target-derived trophic signals
(Hamburger, 1958 ; Chu-Wang and Oppenheim, 1978 ; Caldero et al., 1998 ).
In the present study, LBR was used to reduce the number of axons,
present during later stages of the Schwann cell death period (E5-E9).
The hindlimb bud was removed on embryonic day 2, and afterwards Schwann
cell death was quantified in both the ipsilateral and contralateral
ventral roots in serial-sectioned Nissl stained tissue. Whereas a
normal density of Schwann cell death was observed from E5 to E6, a
large increase in Schwann cell PCD occurred on E7.5 and E8.5 in the
ipsilateral ventral nerve roots after LBR (Fig.
4A), as compared with
both the contralateral side and normal controls. Thus, decreasing the
number of axons, specifically during the time of heightened motoneuron
PCD (E6-E10) results in an increase in Schwann cell death during that
same period.

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Figure 4.
Manipulation of axon number influences
Schwann cell PCD. A reduction in the number of ventral root axons,
after induced motoneuron PCD by limb bud removal at E2, results in an
increase in Schwann cell PCD in the ipsilateral ventral roots at E7.5
(p < 0.001) and E8.5
(p < 0.01), as compared with Schwann cell
PCD in the contralateral ventral roots of the same embryos
(A). Conversely, an increased in the number of
ventral root axons, following the prevention of motoneuron PCD by
activity blockade with daily curare treatment from E3 to E7, results in
a decrease in Schwann cell PCD on E9 (p < 0.01) and E10 (p < 0.03), as compared with
age-matched saline-treated control embryos (B).
Each point represents the mean ± SEM of 4-11 embryos.
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To determine if an increase in the number of axons could influence
Schwann cell PCD, neuronal activity in embryos was blocked with curare,
a nicotinic acetylcholine receptor-blocking agent. Curare treatment has
been shown to prevent normal motoneuron PCD from E6 to E10, thereby
increasing the number of axons in the ventral root (Pittman and
Oppenheim, 1978 ; Oppenheim et al., 2000 ). Embryos were treated daily
with curare from E3 to E7, and the relative density of Schwann cell
death was determined in the ventral roots in Nissl-stained tissue.
Compared with control levels, normal amounts of Schwann cell death
occurred from E5 to E8, however, on E9 and E10 when motoneuron and axon
numbers are greatly increased, Schwann cell death was significantly
decreased (Fig. 4B). Therefore, increasing the number
of axons, by preventing motoneuron cell death from E6 to E10 results in
a reduction of normal Schwann cell death during this time period. The
differences in the timing of altered Schwann cell death after limb bud
removal versus activity blockade (Fig. 4, compare A,
B) are likely caused by the different methods used to
perturb axon numbers.
Evidence that axons are critical for Schwann cell survival was also
demonstrated by the removal of axons during the early peak period of
ventral root Schwann cell PCD (E3-E6). To accomplish this, lumbar
neural tubes were carefully removed from embryos on E3, resulting in
the loss of ventral horn motoneurons and their axons, while leaving
sensory ganglia intact (Fig.
5B,F). Embryos with
neural tube removal, as well as control embryos with intact neural
tubes and ventral roots (Fig. 5A,E), were examined for changes in Schwann cell PCD. Other embryos in the analysis included those with incomplete neural tube removal, resulting in an intact contralateral ventral horn (Fig. 5C) and an ablated
ipsilateral ventral horn (Fig. 5D). An increase in the
number of pyknotic Schwann cells in the ipsilateral ventral roots could
be seen within 1-2 hr after neural tube removal (Fig. 5). An even
greater amount of Schwann cell death was observed 6-8 hr after neural
tube removal (Fig. 5F,H,J), as compared with either
control or contralateral ventral roots (Fig. 5E,G,J).
Thus, removing axons during the early phase of Schwann cell PCD by way
of neural tube removal also results in a significant increase in
Schwann cell death.

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Figure 5.
Neural tube removal at E3 in the chick embryo
results in an increase in Schwann cell death in the spinal ventral
roots. Compared with intact neural tubes displaying normal ventral
roots (arrow, A), neural tubes surgically
removed at E3, leave only the sensory ganglia (g)
and ventral roots intact (arrow, B) by 2 hr after surgery. In some embryos, neural tube removal was incomplete
and often resulted in one intact contralateral ventral horn with
associated nerve root (arrow, C) and one
ablated ipsilateral ventral horn (D), containing
many pyknotic cells within its nerve root (arrows).
Similar results were observed 6-8 hr (vs 1-2 hr) after neural tube
removal on E3 (E-H). A control embryo with an
intact neural tube (E) displays intact ventral
roots (arrows), and an embryo 6-8 hr after complete
neural tube removal exhibits intact sensory ganglia
(g) and ventral roots (arrows,
F). Little, if any, Schwann cell death is found
in control embryo ventral roots (G), whereas 6-8
hr after complete neural tube removal there is a large increase in
pyknotic Schwann cells (arrows, H)
in the ventral roots. Quantification of pyknotic Schwann cells revealed
a significant increase in the ipsilateral ventral roots as compared
with both control and contralateral roots at 1-2 hr
(I) and 6-8 hr (J)
after neural tube removal. c, Central canal;
g, sensory ganglia; n, notochord;
vh, ventral horn; fp, floor plate;
sc, spinal cord. In I and
J, the number in the bars
represents sample size.
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Schwann cells display an apoptotic-like cell death
To further examine if Schwann cell death is apoptotic, several
experiments were conducted to identify apoptotic-related protein expression and morphological characteristics of dying Schwann cells
during both normal development and after induction by NMDA administration. As previously described, E7.5 Schwann cells,
immunolabeled with the 1E8 antibody, a Schwann cell marker, display DNA
fragmentation, a hallmark of apoptosis (Gavrieli et al., 1992 ), when
examined with the TUNEL technique after NMDA treatment on E7 (Fig.
6A) (Ciutat et al.,
1996 ). Many 1E8-labeled Schwann cells on E7.5 can also be identified by
the sc45 antibody, which appears to label a specific downstream
caspase-3 cleavage substrate, providing additional evidence for an
apoptotic type of cell death (Fig. 6B) (Casas et al.,
2001 ). Dying Schwann cells also exhibit an apoptotic morphology when
conventionally stained sections are examined with the light microscope
(Fig. 6C). Schwann cells in the oculomotor nerve of normal
control embryos also undergo an apoptotic form of PCD. Many Schwann
cells throughout the nerve at E8 are labeled with an antibody to the
activated form of caspase-3, which is a common effector caspase
activated in later stages of apoptosis (Fig. 6D)
(Harvey and Kumar, 1998 ). Dying Schwann cells in the oculomotor nerve
at E8 can also be identified by the sc45 antibody (Fig.
6E). Finally, dying oculomotor nerve Schwann cells in
Nissl-stained tissue also display a pyknotic morphology (Fig. 6F).

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Figure 6.
Schwann cells display
characteristics of an apoptotic death in normal and NMDA-treated
embryos and use a caspase-dependent pathway. Ventral root Schwann cells
labeled with the 1E8 antibody (red) at E7.5, after
treatment with NMDA on E7, display numerous TUNEL-positive cells
(green), indicating DNA fragmentation
(a). Also after NMDA treatment, dying Schwann
cells are labeled with the sc45 antibody (green),
which labels a downstream caspase-3 cleavage protein
(b). Pyknotic Schwann cells in the ventral root,
displaying darkly stained condensed nuclei are abundant in
Nissl-stained tissue after NMDA treatment (c). In
the oculomotor nerve, dying Schwann cells labeled with 1E8
(red) are colabeled with an antibody to activated
caspase-3 (green) (d), as
well as with the antibody to sc45 (green)
(e). Normally dying Schwann cells in the
oculomotor nerve in Nissl-stained tissue display a pyknotic morphology
with darkly stained, condensed nuclear chromatin (arrow,
f). Inset in f
shows a pyknotic Schwann cell at higher magnification. Embryos were
treated at E7 with either saline or NMDA, followed by a 40 µg dose of
BAF to prevent caspase activation. Analysis at E7.5 showed significant
reductions in Schwann cell death after BAF treatment in both
saline-treated (p < 0.01) and NMDA-treated
(p < 0.001) embryos (g). Bars
represent the mean ± SEM for four to seven embryos. The scale in
a is for a-f.
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To further demonstrate that Schwann cells use an apoptotic pathway for
cell death, embryos were treated in ovo with
Boc-Asp-CH2F (BAF; 40 µg), a general caspase
inhibitor. Embryos were initially treated with either saline or NMDA
together with BAF on E7, and Schwann cell death was then examined at
E7.5 in the spinal ventral roots. As assessed in serial sections of
Nissl-stained tissue, BAF treatment significantly reduced the density
of dying Schwann cells in both saline- and NMDA-treated embryos
compared with controls without BAF treatment (Fig. 6G).
Taken together, these data indicate that Schwann cells undergo PCD by
an apoptotic, caspase-dependent pathway.
Schwann cells upregulate the PDGF receptor and the p75 receptor in
response to degenerating axons
Early postnatal Schwann cells in the rat have been found to
express both PDGF and the PDGF receptor (PDGF-R), which has been implicated as a potential mechanism for autocrine-mediated survival (Meier et al., 1999 ; Lobsiger et al., 2000 ). Additionally, after loss
of axon contact, Schwann cells upregulate the low-affinity nerve growth
factor receptor, p75, (Taniuchi et al., 1986 ; Lemke and Chao, 1988 ),
which may also be involved in Schwann cell death postnatally
(Soilu-Hänninen et al., 1999 ; Syroid et al., 2000 ). In the
present study, the expression of the p75 receptor and the PDGF receptor
were examined by immunolabeling in Schwann cells in the ventral root
after NMDA treatment on E16. Embryos were given a 1 mg dose of NMDA on
E16, and tissue from the ventral nerve roots was examined 48 and 96 hr
later. The tissue was immunostained using either an antibody to PDGF-R,
or an antibody to p75, and counterstained with propidium iodide to
identify cell nuclei. Schwann cells associated with degenerating motor
axons exhibit a cytoplasmic upregulation of the PDGF-R within 48 hr
after NMDA treatment (Fig.
7A,B) but do not show
increased expression within the intact sensory fibers, which are not
affected by NMDA (Fig. 7C). The p75 receptor exhibits a
similar response, in which upregulation occurs in Schwann cells
adjacent to the degenerating motor fibers 96 hr after NMDA treatment,
but not in Schwann cells ensheathing normal sensory fibers (Fig.
7D). Confocal analysis of the general pattern of
immunostaining for both PDGF-R and p75 indicate that Schwann cells are
the source of these receptors versus degenerating axons. These data
indicate that, in response to axon loss, Schwann cells of late
embryonic ages upregulate the PDGF and p75 receptors, which may be
involved in an autocrine-mediated survival response, as previously
shown in rodents (Meier et al., 1999 ; Syroid et al., 2000 ).

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Figure 7.
Mature Schwann cells upregulate the
PDGF receptor and the p75 receptor in response to axon loss induced by
NMDA treatment. Schwann cells, labeled with propidium iodine
(red), upregulate the PDGF receptor
(green) in the ventral root 48 hr after a 1 mg
dose of NMDA on E16 (A). PDGF receptor
immunoreactivity is increased in the cytoplasmic regions of elongated
Schwann cells, often delineating nodes of Ranvier
(arrow), adjacent to degenerating motor axons in the
ventral root (B), but not in the dorsal root,
which contain normally ensheathed sensory axons unaffected by NMDA
(C). Schwann cells also exhibit upregulation
of the p75 receptor (green) in the ventral root,
but not in the dorsal root 96 hr after NMDA treatment at E16
(D). VR, Ventral root;
DR, dorsal root; DRG, dorsal root
ganglia.
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Axons provide Schwann cells with a mitogenic signal
The following experiments were conducted to determine if Schwann
cell proliferation, similar to PCD, is also regulated by axon-derived
signals. Initially, the developmental profile of Schwann cell
proliferation was established by using the mitotic marker, BrdU. The
relative density of Schwann cells heavily labeled with BrdU, compared
with quiescent nuclei, is greatest on E4 and E5, and followed by a
gradual decrease throughout the remainder of incubation (Fig.
8A). To investigate the
role of axons in regulating Schwann cell proliferation, NMDA was
administered at different developmental stages to eliminate ventral
root axons, and the density of heavily labeled BrdU Schwann cells was
quantified 12 hr after NMDA treatment at each specific age. On E10,
NMDA treatment resulted in a decrease in the density of heavily
BrdU-labeled Schwann cells, however, NMDA treatment on E16 increased
the density of proliferating Schwann cells when examined 24 hr later
(Fig. 8B).

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Figure 8.
Axons regulate Schwann cell
proliferation during development. Schwann cell proliferation in the
lumbar ventral root is greatest at E4-E5, followed by a gradual
reduction throughout the remainder of incubation
(A). Although NMDA treatment reduces Schwann cell
proliferation at E10, an increase in proliferation at E16 is evident by
24 hr after NMDA treatment (*p < 0.05)
(B). The absence of BrdU (red) and
TUNEL (green) double labeling at E10.5 indicates
that mitotic Schwann cells do not undergo cell death after NMDA
treatment at E10 (C). In A, each
point represents the mean ± SEM for three to six embryos, and in
B, numbers in bars
indicate sample size.
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To determine whether proliferating Schwann cells are susceptible to
cell death, BrdU labeling was done in conjunction with the TUNEL
technique. In embryos treated with NMDA on E10, followed by BrdU
administration 10 hr later, and analyzed at E10.5 we have been unable
to detect double labeling of BrdU-positive and TUNEL-positive Schwann
cells (Fig. 8C). This finding suggests that the decrease in
proliferating Schwann cells after NMDA treatment may be attributable directly to the loss of an axon-derived mitogen, rather than to the
loss of mitotically active Schwann cells by PCD.
Glial growth factor selectively regulates Schwann cell death
Because axons of the developing chick appear to regulate several
aspects of Schwann cell development, we next asked whether specific
axon-derived trophic factors are involved in Schwann cell PCD. In the
first experiments, various trophic factors were administered to
developing chick embryos in ovo on both E5 and E6. To
determine the effects of these trophic factors on normal Schwann cell
PCD, the relative density of pyknotic Schwann cells was quantified at
E6.5 in the L3 ventral roots in serial sectioned Nissl-stained tissue.
Most of the trophic factors tested had no effect on Schwann cell PCD as
compared with controls, including BDNF, IGF-1, bFGF, and NGF (Fig.
9B). Additionally,
neutralizing antibodies against p75 and NGF both failed to affect
Schwann cell PCD (Fig. 9A). Because early Schwann cell
precursors in mammals have been shown to be highly dependent on
neuregulins for survival (Dong et al., 1995 ), chick embryos were
treated with GGF, a member of the neuregulin family of proteins. GGF
treatment resulted in a significant decrease in the relative density of
dying Schwann cell in the ventral root compared with controls (Fig.
9A).

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Figure 9.
GGF selectively reduces Schwann cell
death in the ventral root in both normal and NMDA-treated embryos. In
controls, doses of GGF (5 µg) on E5 and E6 significantly decrease
Schwann cell PCD, whereas other growth factors or neutralizing
antibodies to p75 and NGF are ineffective (A, B). After
NMDA (1 mg) treatment in ovo on E7 plus GGF (5 µg),
Schwann cell death is not significantly reduced on E7.5
(C). However, after administration of a second
dose of GGF at E7.25, ~50% of Schwann cells are rescued from
NMDA-induced cell death (D). Bars represent the
mean ± SEM and the number of embryos is indicated
within bars.
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To further examine the role of GGF in regulating Schwann cell PCD,
embryos were treated at E7 with both NMDA (1 mg), to induce Schwann
cell death, and GGF (5 µg). These treatments were then followed by
administration of either saline or a second dose of GGF 6 hr later
(E7.25). Analysis was performed on Schwann cell PCD in both the ventral
roots and the oculomotor nerve in serial sectioned Nissl-stained tissue
at E7.5. The relative density of pyknotic Schwann cells in the ventral
root did not change after a single treatment with NMDA plus GGF at E7
followed by saline treatment at E7.25 (Fig. 9C). However,
embryos treated twice with GGF (E7.0 and E7.25), exhibited a
significant decrease in the relative density of dying Schwann cells
(Fig. 9C).
In the oculomotor nerve, the PCD of Schwann cells after NMDA was
reduced by either a single GGF treatment on E7.0 or double GGF
treatment on E7.0 and E7.25 (Fig.
10A). The GGF
double-treatment group exhibited a larger reduction in the density
of pyknotic Schwann cells compared with both the single GGF treatment
group and the NMDA-only group (Fig. 10A).

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Figure 10.
GGF regulates Schwann cell death, but not
proliferation, in the oculomotor nerve after NMDA administration.
Schwann cell death was significantly reduced at E7.5 after NMDA
treatment (1 mg) on E7 by either a single dose of GGF (5 µg) on E7,
or two doses of GGF on E7 and E7.25 (A). GGF
treatment did not significantly affect Schwann cell proliferation, as
assessed by quantification of mitotic figures
(B). Examples of mitotic figures of proliferating
Schwann cells found in S-phase (C), metaphase
(D), and anaphase (E) that
were included in the mitotic counts in (B). All
bars represent mean ± SEM for four to seven embryos.
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Because Schwann cell death was measured as a relative density compared
with healthy nuclei, the present results cannot establish whether GGF
has reduced cell death, or increased proliferation, a previously
described role of GGF (Minghetti et al., 1996 ; Cheng et al.,
1998 ; Maurel and Salzer, 2000 ). Therefore, proliferation in the
oculomotor nerve was assessed by quantifying the relative density of
Schwann cells that displayed mitotic profiles in Nissl-stained tissue.
These mitotic figures exhibit chromatin condensation morphologies consistent with mitosis (Bergman and Afifi, 1974 ), such as large, darkly stained nuclei containing balls of heterochromatin (Fig. 10C) and chromatin separation resembling distinct phases of
mitosis, such as metaphase and anaphase (Fig. 10D,E).
Quantification of these mitotic figures in the different treatment
groups resulted in no significant differences between the groups (Fig.
10B). Because there was no change in the relative
density of mitotic figures after GGF treatment, it seems likely that
GGF in this situation acts directly to reduce Schwann cell PCD without
affecting proliferation.
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DISCUSSION |
In the present series of experiments we have examined the
mechanisms and regulation of Schwann cell death in the embryonic chick.
This avian model provides an advantage over mammalian models in that it
allows for in vivo experimentation and analysis of individual embryos during the earliest time periods of Schwann cell
development. Consistent with the previous studies in mammals, our
results demonstrate that axons are major regulators of Schwann cell
survival and suggest that the neuregulin family of peptide growth
factors (GGFs) may be an important axon-derived signal for regulating
Schwann cell survival.
Axons regulate Schwann cell survival
In the present study we have shown that Schwann cells in the
embryonic chick are highly dependent on the presence of axons for their
survival, which is a finding in accord with our previous report (Ciutat
et al., 1996 ). The pharmacological or surgical manipulation of
motoneuron and axon numbers resulted in complementary results for
Schwann cell survival, in that (1) increases in Schwann cell PCD
occurred after axon elimination and (2) decreases in Schwann cell PCD
occurred when axon number was increased by preventing motoneuron PCD by
activity blockade. Additionally, observations at the ultrastructural
level revealed that dying Schwann cells were often found in association
with degenerating axons rather than with healthy axons. Induced Schwann
cell PCD, as well as normal Schwann cell PCD, displays many
characteristics of an apoptotic-like death including TUNEL-positive
staining, immunolabeling of c-Jun/sc45, and cleaved caspase-3, rescue
by caspase inhibition, as well as morphological features highly
characteristic of apoptotic PCD (Kerr et al., 1995 ). These experiments
demonstrate that axons are key regulators of embryonic Schwann cell
survival and suggest that a major function of Schwann cell death is for
establishing optimal Schwann cell numbers for ensheathment and myelination.
After treatment with NMDA, all dying Schwann cells were found to be in
close contact with degenerating axons, however, in rare cases seemingly
healthy Schwann cells were in close proximity with degenerating axons.
In these cases it is assumed that these normal appearing Schwann cells
are likely to degenerate and die later. Additionally, the elimination
of axons by NMDA treatment does not appear to have a direct effect on
Schwann cell survival. Although it is not currently known whether
embryonic Schwann cells of the ventral root or oculomotor nerve at
these ages express functional NMDA receptors, this seems unlikely. For
example, as we have shown previously (Ciutat et al., 1996 ), Schwann
cells display apoptotic-like cell death in response to NMDA, whereas the motoneurons undergo a necrotic cell death. Additionally, although spinal motoneurons exhibit developmental differences in their susceptibility to NMDA, in that even very large doses fail to affect
motoneurons before E7 (Caldero et al., 1997 ), with the doses and ages
examined in the present study virtually all motoneurons underwent
necrotic cell death.
The fact that Schwann cells are rescued from both naturally occurring
and NMDA-induced cell death by treatment with BAF, a general caspase
inhibitor, has the potential caveat that motoneuron survival may also
be affected by caspase inhibition. This seems unlikely, however,
because NMDA-induced motoneuron death is necrotic (Ciutat et al.,
1996 ), and BAF or other caspase inhibitors fail to prevent necrotic
motoneuron death (Y.-M. Chan, W. Wu, H. K. Yip, K.-F. So, and
R. W. Oppenheim, unpublished observations).
Axons also play a critical role in mediating the survival of developing
Schwann cells in the rodent. However, because of the limitations of
in utero experimentation on mammalian embryos, much of the
evidence concerning axon regulation of Schwann cell survival in
vivo is restricted to early postnatal ages. For example, postnatal
Schwann cells undergo normal PCD, which can be significantly increased
in both the distal stumps and nerve terminal upon sciatic nerve
transection (Grinspan et al., 1996 ; Syroid et al., 1996 ; Trachtenberg
and Thompson, 1996 ). Additional evidence has come from work done
in vitro where both embryonic Schwann cell precursors (Jessen et al., 1994 ; Gavrilovic et al., 1995 ; Dong et al., 1995 , 1999 )
and neonatal Schwann cells (Syroid et al., 1996 , 1999 ; Nakao et al.,
1997 ; Maurel and Salzer, 2000 ) undergo rapid apoptosis if cultured
without axons or trophic support. These studies support our findings
that Schwann cells in the embryonic chick in vivo are
dependent on axons for survival during early development.
It is currently thought that Schwann cell precursors compete for
trophic support from outgrowing axons and that failure to achieve axon
contact results in PCD (Marchionni et al., 1993 ; Grinspan et al., 1996 ;
Syroid et al., 1996 ). Our results support this model and provide
evidence for two distinct phases of normal Schwann cell PCD in the
chick (Fig. 11). In normal embryos,
Schwann cell PCD displays a biphasic developmental profile in both the ventral root (E5.5 and E8.5) and in the oculomotor nerve (E6-7 and
E14). The first peak, or wave, of Schwann cell PCD likely occurs
because Schwann cell precursors fail to associate with and acquire
adequate trophic support from axons. This wave of Schwann cell PCD
occurs before the onset of PCD in both the spinal (E6-E10) and
oculomotor motoneurons (E10-E15). It is followed by a
transient decrease in Schwann cell death because the remaining Schwann
cells have now obtained trophic support. Subsequently, as motor axons
begin to reach their target areas and motoneuron PCD
ensues, those Schwann cells in contact with the axons of the sub-population of motoneurons that degenerate lose their trophic support and exhibit a second wave of Schwann cell PCD, which peaks shortly after the onset of motoneuron PCD.

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Figure 11.
Possible models of axon regulation of Schwann
cell PCD based on the present experiments and available
literature.
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The current study has discovered many similarities between avian and
mammalian Schwann cell survival regulation, including the comparable
roles of axons and GGF, presumably acting as a limiting axon-derived
trophic molecule. The major differences between these species, however,
are the timing of both Schwann cell death and maturation. Whereas much
of chicken Schwann cell death and differentiation occurs in
ovo, Schwann cell development in the mouse and rat occurs both
prenatally and postnatally. In vitro analysis has shown that
early Schwann cell precursors are most susceptible to cell death at E12
in the mouse (Dong et al., 1999 ) and at E14 in the rat (Jessen et al.,
1994 ), and that cell death of immature Schwann cells extends into early
postnatal ages as well (Syroid et al., 1996 ). Although quantification
of in vivo Schwann cell death throughout development has not
yet been performed in mammals, the in vitro results suggest
that much Schwann cell death occurs in coincidence with the PCD periods
of their motoneuron counterparts, which occurs from E13 to E18 in the
mouse spinal cord (Lance-Jones, 1982 ; Oppenheim et al., 1986 ) and
between E15 and E19 in the rat (Harris and McCaig, 1984 ; Oppenheim et
al., 1986 ). Whether a distinct earlier phase of cell death occurs in mammals as in the chick is not known.
Schwann cell proliferation during development
The results of our experiments examining Schwann cell
proliferation indicate that similarities exist between avian and mammal species concerning the regulation of Schwann cell proliferation. During
early embryonic stages in the chick, Schwann cell proliferation is
initially high followed by a gradual decrease in mitosis throughout incubation. An analogous pattern of Schwann cell proliferation has been
described in the rat sciatic nerve, where cell division is highest
during late embryonic ages and declines substantially during the first
two postnatal weeks (Stewart et al., 1993 ). We have also demonstrated
that axons regulate early Schwann cell proliferation. When examined 2 hr after BrdU administration, the absence of TUNEL and BrdU double
labeling suggest that axon elimination results in a decrease in mitosis
caused by the loss of a putative axon-derived mitogen. Although it is
possible that Schwann cells could undergo cell death later at the time
of G0/G1 arrest, these data are consistent with observations of
axon-driven Schwann cell proliferation in the rat (Wood and Bunge,
1975 ) and in cultured chick Schwann cells in the presence or absence of
neurons (McCarthy and Partlow, 1976 ). More recent work has shown that
the proliferation of human Schwann cells is also regulated by
neuregulin signaling derived from cocultured axons (Morrissey et al.,
1995 ).
Avian and mammalian Schwann cell proliferation is also comparable
during later stages of Schwann cell development. We have shown that
older avian Schwann cells (i.e., E16.5) respond to the loss of axons by
increased proliferation. Mature mammalian Schwann cells respond to axon
degeneration by undergoing morphological transformations (e.g., the
breakdown of myelin) and altered gene expression, followed by rapid
proliferation and the establishment of an environment favorable for
axon regeneration (Fawcett and Keynes, 1990 ). Our results suggest that
at E16.5 many avian Schwann cells are relatively mature and respond to
axon degeneration by initiating proliferation as part of the
regeneration process. Support for this conclusion comes from our
observations of Wallerian degeneration at the ultrastructural level in
which E16.5 Schwann cells display myelin sheath breakdown as they
surround degenerating axons. Therefore, Schwann cell proliferation in
the developing chick appears to follow rules similar to dividing
mammalian Schwann cells, providing further support for the chick embryo
as a useful model for the in vivo study of Schwann cell development.
Trophic factor regulation of Schwann cell survival
Our data demonstrate that the survival of developing Schwann cells
in the chick embryo can be selectively regulated by GGF, which is
likely to be one of the axon-derived factors mediating the previously
described regulation of Schwann cell survival by axons. The in
ovo administration of exogenous GGF, but not other trophic factors
tested by us, rescued dying chick Schwann cells during both normal
development and in response to axon degeneration. Additionally, we
found that two separate doses of GGF, given after NMDA treatment, had a
greater effect on Schwann cell survival then a single dose. This effect
is likely a dose-dependent response, but we cannot exclude the
possibility that the second dose is available at a time when Schwann
cells are more responsive to the survival effects of GGF. Although the
dose of GGF used here rescued Schwann cells without significantly
affecting proliferation, it is possible that a higher dose could also
induce proliferation as has been found to occur in cultured rat Schwann
cell precursors (Dong et al., 1995 ).
Previous studies have confirmed that neuregulins are survival factors
for developing mammalian Schwann cells both in vitro (Dong
et al., 1995 ; Syroid et al., 1996 ) and in vivo (Grinspan et
al., 1996 ; Trachtenberg and Thompson, 1996 ). The importance of
neuregulin signaling for Schwann cell survival has also been demonstrated in mice with mutations in either the NRG-1 gene (Meyer and
Birchmeier, 1995 ) or in the neuregulin ErbB receptors (Riethmacher et
al., 1997 ; Morris et al., 1999 ). In these mutants, peripheral axons are
devoid of Schwann cells by early embryonic ages. Furthermore, the
expression and anterograde transport of neuregulin isoforms in motor
and sensory neurons have been shown in both avian and mammalian species
(Marchionni et al., 1993 ; Loeb et al., 1999 ), indicating that
neuregulin signaling can occur at the juxtaposition of axon-Schwann
cell association.
Although many of the trophic factors we examined (IGF-1, BDNF, NGF, and
bFGF) did not display survival-promoting activity in the chick, many of
these factors have been shown to affect mammalian Schwann cell survival
(Mirsky and Jessen, 1999 ). Although species differences may be a factor
in the apparent discrepancies, it seems more likely that they may also
reflect Schwann cell maturation. Whereas early Schwann cell precursors
in rodents rely heavily on axon-derived neuregulin signaling for
survival (Mirsky and Jessen, 1999 ), developing mammalian Schwann cells
eventually become axon-independent and use IGF-1, IGF-2, PDGF-BB, and
NT-3 as part of an autocrine mechanism to regulate their own survival
(Meier et al., 1999 ; Syroid et al., 1999 ). We have found that after
axon elimination in the chick at E16, Schwann cells upregulate the PDGF receptor, which is likely to be a component of
autocrine-mediated survival in these more mature Schwann cells, similar
to the situation in rodents. Other factors such as BDNF have been shown
to be mainly involved in the response of mature mammalian Schwann cells
to regenerating axons (Zhang et al., 2000 ). Additionally, although bFGF
(FGF-2) has been shown to exhibit a survival effect on Schwann cell
precursors in vitro (Jessen et al., 1994 ), it does so
transiently and only in the presence of IGF-1 (Gavrilovic et al., 1995 )
and does not have the same potent survival-promoting abilities as the
neuregulins (Dong et al., 1995 ).
We have also demonstrated that neutralizing antibodies against the p75
receptor and NGF do not affect Schwann cell PCD in the embryonic chick.
During mammalian Schwann cell development NGF-p75 signaling has been
linked to the induction of apoptosis in cultured postnatal Schwann
cells (Soilu-Hänninen et al., 1999 ). Additional evidence from the
examination of p75-deficient mice, however, has shown that NGF-p75
signaling is more involved in injury-induced Schwann cell death than in
PCD during normal development (Ferri and Bisby, 1999 ; Syroid et al.,
2000 ). Furthermore, the survival of embryonic Schwann cells from
p75-deficient mice is comparable with wild-type mice, both in
vitro and in vivo (Syroid et al., 2000 ), indicating
that p75 is not required for survival regulation during early
development. Therefore, we conclude that NGF-p75 interactions in
embryonic chick Schwann cells are not involved in the regulation of
normal PCD. However, we have found that p75 is upregulated in Schwann
cells in response to axon elimination in older embryos (at E16).
Comparable upregulation of p75 has been shown in mature mammalian
Schwann cells after axon degeneration (Taniuchi et al., 1986 ). At
present the role of p75 in mature Schwann cells after axon degeneration
is not clearly understood. The p75 receptor may be involved in Schwann
cell migration (Anton et al., 1994 ; Bentley and Lee, 2000 ), in the
presentation of growth factors to regenerating nerves (Heumann et al.,
1987 ; Zhou et al., 1996 ), or in the regulation of Schwann cell death
during regeneration (Syroid et al., 2000 ).
In summary, we conclude that early developing Schwann cells in the
chick embryo are highly dependent on the presence of axons to regulate
both their survival and proliferation. Based on our present findings in
the chick, as well as on previous work with mammals, the neuregulin
family of glial growth factors are likely to be major axon-derived
molecules that regulate Schwann cell survival and ultimately control
the optimal number of Schwann cells that are available for myelination
and axon ensheathment.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Sept. 26, 2001; revised Feb. 14, 2002; accepted March 1, 2002.
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grants NS
36945 and NS20402 (R.W.O.) and grants from Ministerio de Ciencia y
Tecnología (SAF 2000-0168) and Fundació la Caixa
(J.E.E.).
Correspondence should be addressed to Ronald W. Oppenheim, Department
of Neurobiology and Anatomy, Wake Forest University School of
Medicine, One Medical Center Boulevard, Winston-Salem, NC 27157. E-mail: roppenheim{at}wfubmc.edu.
 |
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