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The Journal of Neuroscience, July 15, 2002, 22(14):5797-5802
BRIEF COMMUNICATION
Role for Reelin in the Development of Granule Cell Dispersion in
Temporal Lobe Epilepsy
Carola A.
Haas1,
Oliver
Dudeck2,
Matthias
Kirsch1,
Csaba
Huszka1,
Gunda
Kann1,
Stefan
Pollak3,
Josef
Zentner2, and
Michael
Frotscher1
1 Institute of Anatomy, 2 Department of
Neurosurgery, and 3 Institute of Forensic Medicine,
University of Freiburg, D-79001 Freiburg, Germany
 |
ABSTRACT |
The reelin signaling pathway plays a crucial role during the
development of laminated structures in the mammalian brain. Reelin, which is synthesized and secreted by Cajal-Retzius cells in the marginal zone of the neocortex and hippocampus, is proposed to act as a
stop signal for migrating neurons. Here we show that a decreased
expression of reelin mRNA by hippocampal Cajal-Retzius cells
correlates with the extent of migration defects in the dentate gyrus of
patients with temporal lobe epilepsy. These results suggest that reelin
is required for normal neuronal lamination in humans, and that
deficient reelin expression may be involved in migration defects
associated with temporal lobe epilepsy.
Key words:
human hippocampus; extracellular matrix; neuronal
migration disorder; Cajal-Retzius cells; dentate gyrus; Ammon's horn
sclerosis
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Newborn forebrain neurons migrate
from their site of origin to their definitive positions in the cortical
plate. Defects in neuronal migration are often associated with
epileptic disorders (Palmini et al., 1991 ). Temporal lobe epilepsy
(TLE), one of the most common neurological disorders in humans
(Margerison and Corsellis, 1966 ), is accompanied by Ammon's horn
sclerosis (AHS) and granule cell dispersion (GCD), a defect in granule
cell migration (Houser, 1990 ; Armstrong, 1993 ). A similar altered
granule cell migration is observed in a mouse mutant, the
reeler mouse (Rakic and Caviness, 1995 ).
Recently, the gene deleted in this mouse mutant was cloned and the
protein it encodes was named reelin (D'Arcangelo et al., 1995 ;
Hirotsune et al., 1995 ). Reelin is synthesized and secreted by
Cajal-Retzius (CR) cells in the marginal zones of the neocortex and
hippocampus (D'Arcangelo et al., 1995 , 1997 ; Hirotsune et al., 1995 ).
Mice lacking reelin and its lipoprotein receptors apolipoprotein E
receptor 2 (ApoER2) and very low density lipoprotein receptor (VLDLR)
as well as mice deficient in the adaptor protein disabled 1 (dab1) show
severe migration defects in the neocortex, hippocampus, and cerebellum
(Rakic and Caviness, 1995 ; Howell et al., 1997 ; Sheldon et al., 1997 ;
D'Arcangelo et al., 1999 ; Trommsdorff et al., 1999 ). Reelin deficiency
in humans is associated with autosomal recessive lissencephaly that is
characterized by malformations of the cerebellum, hippocampus, and
brainstem (Hong et al., 2000 ). Recently, increased numbers of CR cells
were found both in reeler mice (Coulin et al., 2001 ) and in
tissue samples from TLE patients (Blümcke et al., 1999 ), raising
the possibility that alterations in CR cells and in the reelin pathway
underlie neuronal migration defects in reeler mutants and in
humans with TLE.
To this end, we have studied the expression of reelin, VLDLR, ApoER2,
and dab1 in tissue samples of hippocampus removed from TLE patients for
therapeutic reasons. We correlated reelin expression to the extent of
GCD and compared these data with control tissue from tumor patients and
with tissue from autopsy cases with no identified neurological abnormalities.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Patient selection. A total of 22 patients (mean age,
36.9 ± 9.6 years) undergoing selective
amygdalohippocampectomy or two-thirds temporal lobectomy with
amygdalohippocampectomy for medically intractable TLE were
included in this study (Table 1). In all patients, the removal of the hippocampus was clinically warranted to
achieve seizure control. Presurgical assessment consisted of the
documentation of a detailed history and neurological examination. All
patients experienced pharmacoresistant complex partial seizures (CPS).
The epileptogenic focus was localized to the temporal lobe in all
patients. For comparison, the hippocampi from seven subjects (mean age,
28.3 ± 9.2 years) with no history of neurological or psychiatric
disorder were collected at autopsy within 48 hr of death. Informed
consent was obtained from patients and families of controls according
to the declaration of Helsinki. The Ethics Committee at the University
Clinic Freiburg (Freiburg, Germany) approved the selection process and
procedures.
Tissue preparation. Hippocampi were collected in isotonic
saline, and 2 mm coronal sections at the midlevel of the hippocampus were cut. Slices for PCR and Western blot analysis were immediately frozen and kept at 80°C. Tissue for morphological analysis was immersion-fixed in buffered 4% paraformaldehyde followed by cryoprotection.
In situ hybridization histochemistry. Serial sections
(coronal plane, 40 µm) were cut on a cryostat and alternately
processed for cresyl violet staining or for in situ
hybridization (ISH). Reelin, synapsin I, and dab1 mRNAs were detected
with digoxigenin-labeled riboprobes (Haas et al., 2000 ).
Measurement of GCD. The average width of the granule
cell layer (GCL) of the dentate gyrus was determined in cresyl
violet-stained sections of epileptic (n = 22) and
autopsy (n = 7) hippocampi. Twenty consecutive
measurements were taken at 50 µm intervals covering a region of 1000 µm within the lower (infrapyramidal), relatively straight limb of the
dentate gyrus (Houser, 1990 ). The distances from the inner
(hilar) border of the GCL to the outer border of the most distal
granule cell somata were determined using an image analysis system
(StereoInvestigator; MicroBrightField Inc., Colchester, VT). The mean
and SD of 20 measurements in five sections were calculated for each case.
Cell counting. Reelin mRNA-positive cells were counted along
the hippocampal fissure in five consecutive sections of epilepsy (n = 15) and autopsy (n = 7)
hippocampal specimens at 200× magnification using a counting grid,
defining an area of interest to a width of 500 µm along the
hippocampal fissure.
Microdissection of the dentate gyrus for PCR analysis.
Cryosections (50 µm) of the hippocampus were collected on RNase-free slides and fixed in 20°C ethanol (75%; 20 min). Three sections were used for measurements of GCD, and three sections were stained with
toluidin blue (1% in 75% ethanol; 20°C) for microdissection. For
this, the dentate gyrus was excised using a scalpel blade and collected
in Trizol (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA). The remainder of the
section was kept for measurements of the microdissected volume, which
was determined with an image analysis system. The averaged volume from
three sections per patient was used for normalization.
RNA extraction and reverse transcription. Total RNA was
isolated according to the manufacturer's instructions along with 0.5 ng of Drosophila poly(A+) RNA
(Clontech, Palo Alto, CA) added as external standard. RNA was treated
with DNase (Invitrogen), and reverse transcription (RT) was performed
in 30 µl reactions containing 2 µg of RNA, 1 µg of oligo(dT),
500 µM deoxyNTPs, 30 U of RNase
inhibitor, and 200 U of Moloney murine leukemia virus-reverse
transcriptase (all from Promega, Madison, WI) for 60 min at 40°C
following a standard protocol.
Real time quantitative RT-PCR. Abundance of transcripts was
determined by real-time quantitative PCR on a GeneAmp 5700-System with
SYBR Green (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA). Primers [human reelin: forward 5'-GCACCAGCCAAAGGACTTCA-3', reverse
5'-GTTGCCACCAGCGCAGTAA-3'; human VLDLR: forward
5'-CCAG-TGGCCTAACGGAATTACA-3', reverse
5'-CCTACGATCTTGGCC-ATTCAAG-3'; human ApoER2: forward
5'-GCTGAGCCAGCGCT- TGTACT-3', reverse 5'-GGAGGAGATCAGCGTCTTTCTG-3'; human dab1: forward 5'-ATCGCAGTGAAGCCACTTTGATA-3', reverse
5'-AGCTGCGGAAACTTCATCAATC-3'; Drosophila
glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase: forward
5'-ACACCGCCCTGGATCTCATA-3', reverse 5'-ACGAACGTGTGCGGAATCTT-3']
were used at 250 nM. Cycling conditions were as
follows: 10 min at 95°C followed by 40 cycles of 1 min at 95°C and
1 min at 60°C. Monitoring the fluorescence signal, which is
proportional to the amount of double-stranded product, yielded complete
amplification profiles. Melting curves of the amplified products were
used to control for specificity of the amplification reaction.
From the amplification curves obtained, a threshold cycle number (Ct)
was calculated, corresponding to the cycle number at which a
user-defined fluorescence signal is reached. Differences in Ct values
were used to calculate relative amounts of PCR product. Details of this
relative quantification can be found at:
http://www.appliedbiosystems.com/support/(Relative quantitation of gene
expression; User Bulletin #2). Because of heterogeneity of
the tissue samples with respect to disease-related cell loss, an
internal standard was found to be unreliable for normalization.
Therefore, we used an external standard and the dissected tissue volume
to normalize gene expression levels from different patients.
Western blot analysis. Protein extracts were prepared
from isolated human dentate gyrus, size-fractionated by SDS-PAGE, and transferred to nylon membrane by electroblotting. Immunodetection of
dab1 was performed by treatment with an anti-dab1 antibody (1:5000;
Chemicon International, Temecula, CA) followed by incubation with an
alkaline phosphatase-coupled secondary antibody and enhanced chemiluminescence for detection.
 |
RESULTS |
In hippocampal sections of control tissue (Fig.
1a-c), many reelin
mRNA-expressing neurons were found by ISH. Reelin mRNA-positive cells
showed a bipolar morphology resembling CR cells and were predominantly
located at the hippocampal fissure (Fig. 1c). To test for
RNA integrity in the autoptic hippocampi, ISH for synapsin I mRNA was
performed in parallel with the tissue samples probed for reelin.
Synapsin I mRNA, encoding for a neuron-specific protein, could be
detected in virtually every neuron of the dentate gyrus, confirming the
RNA integrity of the autoptic tissue (data not shown).

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Figure 1.
Reelin mRNA expression in a representative sample
of a human control hippocampus. a, Hippocampal areas in
cresyl violet stain. The inset is shown in
b. Scale bar, 400 µm. b, Portion of the
dentate gyrus framed in a. The GCL is densely packed.
Scale bar, 80 µm. c, ISH for reelin mRNA. Many reelin
mRNA-positive cells with bipolar morphology resembling CR cells are
observed at the hippocampal fissure (arrows). Same
magnification as in b. CA1, CA2, CA3,
Hippocampal subfields; ML, Dentate molecular
layer.
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Next, we investigated the expression of reelin mRNA in hippocampal
specimens from patients with TLE. In specimens with mild GCD
(visualized by cresyl violet staining), many reelin mRNA-positive cells
were observed, located predominantly at the hippocampal fissure (Fig.
2a,b). In contrast, in TLE
cases with severe GCD, we found only very few reelin mRNA-positive
cells (Fig. 2c,d). In a quantitative analysis of 15 TLE
patients and seven autopsy cases (see also Table 1), the number of
reelin mRNA-expressing neurons was counted. In parallel, the width of
the GCL, used as an indicator of GCD, was measured in cresyl
violet-stained serial sections of the same hippocampi. This analysis
revealed a striking correlation: In epileptic hippocampi with little
GCD, many reelin mRNA-positive cells were counted, similar to values of
nonepileptic controls. In contrast, in hippocampal sections from
patients with severe GCD, we found only low numbers of reelin
mRNA-expressing neurons, indicating an inverse correlation between the
extent of GCD and reelin mRNA expression in individual cases of
epileptic disorder (Fig. 2e,f).

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Figure 2.
Reelin mRNA expression in the dentate gyrus of
control and epileptic cases. a-d, Reelin mRNA
expression in representative samples of epileptic hippocampi with mild
(a, b) and severe (c, d) GCD. Consecutive
sections are shown in cresyl violet stain and after ISH for reelin
mRNA. Arrows point to reelin mRNA-positive cells at the
hippocampal fissure. Scale bars: a, b, 100 µm;
c, d, 50 µm. e, f, Correlation of the
GCD (width of the GCL) and number of reelin mRNA-expressing CR cells in
sections of seven control hippocampi (white bars) and 15 epileptic hippocampi with AHS (gray bars). Data
are represented as mean ± SD. ML, Dentate
molecular layer.
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To substantiate this semiquantitative result obtained by cell counting,
we applied a quantitative RT-PCR approach. Because the epileptic
material varied considerably with respect to cell death and gliosis, we
developed a quantification procedure that included three additional
steps: (1) microdissection of the dentate gyrus, (2) morphometric
measurement of the microdissected volume, and (3) addition of an
external, unrelated standard RNA [Drosophila poly(A+)] before reverse transcription
and PCR analysis. This procedure made it possible to normalize gene
expression levels from different patients.
This quantitative RT-PCR approach was used to measure reelin mRNA
expression in sections of seven epileptic hippocampi. The PCR results
were compared with the extent of GCD measured in cresyl violet-stained
sections of the same cases. The relative abundance of reelin mRNA
varied considerably between the individual epileptic hippocampi (Fig.
3a); however, when compared
with the width of the GCL, a clear correlation was observed. In cases
with small GCD (Fig. 3a,c, case 1), high levels
of reelin mRNA were found. In contrast, in cases with severe GCD (Fig.
3a,c, case 7), only small amounts of
reelin mRNA were measured. In conclusion, a similar inverse correlation
between reelin mRNA expression and GCD as observed by cell counting was
found by quantitative RT-PCR (Fig. 3e).

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Figure 3.
Expression profiles of reelin
signal-transduction components in epileptic human hippocampi.
a, Histogram showing the amounts of reelin mRNA in the
dentate gyrus of individual epileptic human hippocampi
(n = 7). Reelin mRNA levels were determined by
quantitative RT-PCR in extracts from microdissected dentate gyri. Two
measurements for each individual case were performed. Quantification
included the addition of an external standard and volume measurement of
the microdissected region. b, d, f, Histograms showing
the expression levels of VLDLR (b), ApoER2
(d), and dab1 (f) mRNA in
the dentate gyrus of individual epileptic human hippocampi. The
epileptic cases (n = 7) were identical to the ones
shown in a. c, Histogram showing the
width of the GCL in the dentate gyrus of individual epileptic
hippocampi. The width of the GCL was measured in cresyl violet-stained
sections of the same cases (n = 7) as shown in
a. e, Correlation of reelin mRNA levels
and the width of the GCL. The reelin mRNA levels shown in
a were plotted against the width of the GCL
(c). g, Expression of dab1 mRNA in
granule cells of a normal human dentate gyrus visualized by ISH.
h, Expression of dab1 mRNA in the dentate gyrus of a TLE
patient. Note dab1 mRNA in dispersed granule cells. Scale bars, 80 µm
(g, h). ML, Dentate molecular
layer.
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Reelin, acting as a stop signal for migrating neurons, requires the
presence of reelin receptors on the respective target cells. Therefore,
we investigated simultaneously the expression of VLDLR (Fig.
3b), ApoER2 (Fig. 3d), and dab1 (Fig.
3f) mRNAs in the same epileptic cases by quantitative
RT-PCR. All three mRNA species are expressed in human hippocampi with
AHS. The relative dab1 mRNA levels were high in contrast to the low
expression levels of VLDLR and ApoER2 mRNA. No correlation to GCD was
observed for these three mRNA species. However, dab1 mRNA was localized
to dentate granule neurons in the human dentate gyrus by ISH (Fig. 3g,h), and dab1 protein was detected by immunoblotting in
extracts from human hippocampus (data not shown), suggesting that
reelin signaling takes place in granule cells.
 |
DISCUSSION |
Our results show an inverse correlation between reelin expression
and GCD in human epileptic hippocampal tissue. Lack of reelin during
development prevents the formation of a densely packed GCL in
reeler mice. We observed very few reelin mRNA-synthesizing CR cells and low reelin mRNA levels in tissue samples from TLE patients
with pronounced GCD, indicating that reelin is also essential in humans
for the formation of a densely packed GCL. It should be pointed out,
however, that reelin expression is reduced, not absent, in the present
tissue samples from TLE patients. A defect in the human
reelin gene resulting in a lack of reelin expression is associated with autosomal recessive lissencephaly (Hong et al.,
2000 ). We do not know whether reelin expression is similarly reduced in
other brain regions of the present patients with TLE. Alternatively,
focal lesions (e.g., focal ischemic insults) may have caused CR cell
degeneration or dysfunction in the affected regions, eventually
leading to local deficits in reelin expression and, as a result, to
local migration defects. Focal ischemia during development is
associated with local migration defects (Gressens et al., 1996 ), which
in turn are known to underlie the development of certain forms of
epileptic disorders (Gleeson and Walsh, 2000 ). Moreover, ischemia leads
to increased release of the excitatory neurotransmitter glutamate
(Nishizawa, 2001 ), and glutamate agonists have been shown to cause CR
cell degeneration (Del Rio et al., 1997 ). Morphological analysis of our
samples from TLE patients revealed no similar dispersion of nearby
hippocampal pyramidal cells, thus being in favor of locally restricted
processes underlying GCD.
A unique feature of the granule cells is their enduring postnatal
generation (Altman and Das, 1965 ), which is even stimulated by
epileptic activity in the dentate gyrus (Parent et al., 1997 ). Thus,
local GCD could represent abnormal migration of newly generated neurons. One is tempted to speculate that seizures in epileptic patients might have caused CR cell degeneration (and hence reduced reelin expression) followed by an altered migration of recently generated granule cells. This interpretation is supported by the finding that in slice culture experiments CR cells were selectively caused to degenerate after application of excitotoxic drugs (Del Rio et
al., 1997 ). Moreover, in a mouse model of TLE, GCD can be provoked by
kainic acid injection (Bouillert et al., 2000 ). If seizures caused CR
cell death, one would expect to see fewer CR cells and lower reelin
mRNA levels in early onset epilepsies and in patients with frequent
seizures than in cases with rare seizures. No such correlation was
found in the present material. However, besides seizure frequency, the
intensity and duration of seizures may vary considerably among
patients. Along this line, the lack of immunostaining in our tissue
samples for caspase-3, a marker for neuronal degeneration (C. A. Haas, unpublished observation), does not rule out seizure-induced
degeneration of CR cells followed by an altered migration of recently
generated granule cells.
The observed decrease in reelin expression is not contradictory to
previous studies that reported an increased number of CR cells in TLE
patients (Blümcke et al., 1999 ) and reeler mice (Coulin et al., 2001 ). Unlike in the present study, CR cells were immunostained for calretinin in these studies, and we have to be aware
of different CR cell types (Meyer and Goffinet, 1998 ; Chen et al.,
2001 ) and different types of calretinin-positive neurons
(Maglóczky et al., 2000 ). Double labeling of the present human
tissue for reelin mRNA and calretinin indicated that there is only a
partial overlap of reelin mRNA-expressing CR cells and the
calretinin-positive CR cell population in the dentate gyrus (Haas,
unpublished observation).
In conclusion, the reelin pathway seems to be important for granule
cell lamination in the human dentate gyrus, because decreased reelin
expression in tissue samples from epileptic patients was found to be
directly correlated to the extent of GCD. Moreover, we demonstrated
here that the various molecules of the reelin signaling cascade, reelin
receptors and dab1, are expressed in the human dentate gyrus. Although
these data provide evidence for a role of reelin deficiency in the
development of GCD in AHS, they do not explain why this migration
defect is accompanied by epileptic disorder. Additional studies will
have to analyze whether or not a loss of dense granule cell packing is
accompanied by an increased synaptic coupling of these neurons.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Feb. 26, 2002; revised May 1, 2002; accepted May 3, 2002.
This work was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
(Transregio Sonderforschungsbereich TR-3). We are grateful to Dr.
Patrick Carroll for the gift of a dab1 plasmid. We thank H. Banse and
S. Huber for excellent technical assistance.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Carola A. Haas, Institute of
Anatomy I, University of Freiburg, Albertstrasse 17, D-79104 Freiburg,
Germany. E-mail: Carola.Haas{at}anat.uni-freiburg.de.
 |
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Copyright © 2002 Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474/02/22145797-06$05.00/0
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D. Mayer, H. Fischer, U. Schneider, B. Heimrich, and M. Schwemmle
Borna Disease Virus Replication in Organotypic Hippocampal Slice Cultures from Rats Results in Selective Damage of Dentate Granule Cells
J. Virol.,
September 15, 2005;
79(18):
11716 - 11723.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
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J.-A. Kim, R. Koyama, R. X. Yamada, M. K. Yamada, N. Nishiyama, N. Matsuki, and Y. Ikegaya
Environmental Control of the Survival and Differentiation of Dentate Granule Neurons
Cereb Cortex,
December 1, 2004;
14(12):
1358 - 1364.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
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H. Abraham, C. G. Perez-Garcia, and G. Meyer
p73 and Reelin in Cajal-Retzius Cells of the Developing Human Hippocampal Formation
Cereb Cortex,
May 1, 2004;
14(5):
484 - 495.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
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R. A. Bender, S. V. Soleymani, A. L. Brewster, S. T. Nguyen, H. Beck, G. W. Mathern, and T. Z. Baram
Enhanced Expression of a Specific Hyperpolarization-Activated Cyclic Nucleotide-Gated Cation Channel (HCN) in Surviving Dentate Gyrus Granule Cells of Human and Experimental Epileptic Hippocampus
J. Neurosci.,
July 30, 2003;
23(17):
6826 - 6836.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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M. Frotscher, C. A. Haas, and E. Forster
Reelin Controls Granule Cell Migration in the Dentate Gyrus by Acting on the Radial Glial Scaffold
Cereb Cortex,
June 1, 2003;
13(6):
634 - 640.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
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