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The Journal of Neuroscience, November 1, 2002, 22(21):9445-9452
Developmental Regulation of Neurotransmitter Phenotype through
Tetrahydrobiopterin
Beth A.
Habecker1,
Michael G.
Klein1,
Nathan
C.
Sundgren1,
Wei
Li1, and
William R.
Woodward2
Departments of 1 Physiology and Pharmacology and
2 Neurology, Oregon Health and Sciences University School
of Medicine, Portland, Oregon 97239
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ABSTRACT |
During development, sympathetic neurons innervating rodent sweat
glands undergo a target-induced change in neurotransmitter phenotype
from noradrenergic to cholinergic. Although the sweat gland innervation
in the adult mouse is cholinergic and catecholamines are absent, these
neurons continue to express tyrosine hydroxylase (TH), the
rate-limiting enzyme in catecholamine synthesis. The developmental
suppression of noradrenergic function in these mouse sympathetic
neurons is not well understood. We investigated whether the
downregulation of the enzyme aromatic L-amino acid
decarboxylase (AADC) or the TH cofactor tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4) could
account for the loss of catecholamines in these neurons. AADC levels
did not decrease during development, and adult cholinergic sympathetic neurons were strongly immunoreactive for AADC. In contrast, BH4 levels
dropped significantly in murine sweat gland-containing footpads during
the time period when the gland innervation was switching from making
norepinephrine to acetylcholine. Immunoreactivity for the rate-limiting
BH4 synthetic enzyme GTP cyclohydrolase (GCH) became undetectable in
the sweat gland neurons during this phenotypic conversion, suggesting
that sweat glands reduce BH4 levels by suppressing GCH expression
during development. Furthermore, extracts from sweat gland-containing
footpads suppressed BH4 in cultured mouse sympathetic neurons, and
addition of the BH4 precursor sepiapterin rescued catecholamine
production in neurons treated with footpad extracts. Together, these
results suggest that the mouse sweat gland-derived cholinergic
differentiation factor functionally suppresses the noradrenergic
phenotype during development by inhibiting production of the TH
cofactor, BH4. These data also indicate that GCH expression, which is
often coordinately regulated with TH expression, can be controlled
independently of TH during development.
Key words:
tetrahydrobiopterin; GTP cyclohydrolase; sympathetic
neuron; development; noradrenergic; cholinergic differentiation
factor
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INTRODUCTION |
Neuronal transmitter and peptide
phenotype can be developmentally regulated by postsynaptic
environmental influences, including neurotrophins, and target-derived
differentiation factors that induce a new transmitter phenotype while
suppressing the initial transmitter phenotype. An example is the
target-induced noradrenergic to cholinergic/peptidergic switch in the
sympathetic neurons innervating rodent sweat glands (Landis, 1990 ;
Schotzinger and Landis, 1990 ; Rao and Landis, 1993 ). Neurons
innervating the sweat glands initially exhibit a noradrenergic
phenotype, but in response to a sweat gland-derived cholinergic
differentiation factor (CDF), catecholamine histofluorescence
disappears, while cholinergic and peptidergic properties appear. In the
rat, the acquisition of cholinergic properties is accompanied by
decreased tyrosine hydroxylase (TH), the rate-limiting enzyme in
catecholamine synthesis (Landis et al., 1988 ). In the mouse, however,
this functional switch is not accompanied by the loss of TH (Rao et
al., 1994 ; Guidry and Landis, 1995 , 1998 ). Although the idea that TH
was not rate limiting for catecholamine synthesis in these neurons was
first proposed several years ago (Rao et al., 1994 ), the factor
limiting catecholamine synthesis has remained unclear.
Several things could account for the loss of catecholamines in murine
TH-containing sympathetic neurons. Tyrosine hydroxylase, a tightly
regulated enzyme, could be inhibited so that no
L-dihydroxyphenylalanine (L-DOPA) is produced.
Alternatively, the enzyme aromatic L-amino acid
decarboxylase (AADC) could be absent, thereby preventing the conversion
of L-DOPA to dopamine. Finally, the vesicular monoamine transporter (VMAT2) could be missing, resulting in the breakdown of
catecholamines by monoamine oxidase (MAO). Although we cannot rule out
any of these or other explanations for the absence of catecholamines in
murine TH-positive neurons, some are more likely than others.
Tyrosine hydroxylase activity is dependent on the cofactor
tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4) (Kaufman, 1978 ; Zigmond et al., 1989 ). The
sweat gland-derived CDF is part of a family of cytokines (Habecker et
al., 1997 ) that decreases BH4 content in sympathetic neurons by
suppressing the expression of GTP cyclohydrolase (GCH) (Stegenga et
al., 1996 ), the rate-limiting enzyme in BH4 production (Thöny et
al., 2000 ). Therefore, developmental downregulation of BH4 is a good
candidate for catecholamine suppression in the sweat gland innervation.
Although AADC activity is not tightly regulated like TH activity, the
absence of AADC activity would prevent the formation of dopamine in
TH-containing neurons. Conditioned media containing CDFs decrease AADC
expression in cultured sympathetic neurons (Swerts et al., 1983 ;
Raynaud et al., 1987 ), suggesting that suppression of AADC is also a
candidate for inhibiting catecholamine production during development.
In contrast, VMAT2 is not decreased in sympathetic neurons by CDFs
(Habecker et al., 2000 ), suggesting that the loss of VMAT2 is unlikely
to account for the absence of catecholamines in the sweat gland innervation.
We investigated whether the developmental suppression of AADC or the TH
cofactor BH4 was associated with the loss of catecholamines in the
sweat gland innervation. We found that AADC levels did not decrease
during development, but that BH4 levels dropped significantly during
the switch from norepinephrine (NE) to ACh. Extracts from sweat
gland-containing footpads (FPs) suppressed BH4 production in cultured
sympathetic neurons, and the BH4 precursor sepiapterin restored
catecholamine production in those neurons. These results suggest that
the sweat gland-derived CDF suppresses the noradrenergic phenotype
during development by inhibiting production of the TH cofactor BH4.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Cell culture reagents were obtained from Invitrogen (Carlsbad,
CA) and Centricon 10 kDa filters were provided by Amicon (Danvers, MA).
Biochemicals and hormones were purchased from Sigma (St. Louis, MO)
except as noted. Dispase was obtained from Boehringer Mannheim
(Indianapolis, IN), collagenase type II from Worthington Biochemicals
(Freehold, NJ), leukemia inhibitory factor (LIF) and ciliary
neurotrophic factor (CNTF) from R & D Systems (Minneapolis, MN), and
NGF from Austral Biologicals (San Ramon, CA). Rabbit anti-GCH was a
kind gift from Dr. Gregory Kapatos (Wayne State University, Detroit,
MI), guinea pig anti-VIP was a kind gift from Dr. Story Landis
(National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, Bethesda,
MD), rabbit anti-AADC was from Protos Biotech (New York, NY), rabbit
anti-TH was from Chemicon (Temecula, CA), and goat anti-rabbit
secondary antibodies were from Cappel (Durham, NC). Horseradish
peroxidase-conjugated IgG was also from Cappel, and chemiluminescence
reagents were from DuPont NEN (Wilmington, DE). Protein concentrations
were determined using a protein assay kit from Pierce (Rockford, IL).
Preparation of tissue extracts. Extracts of soluble protein
were prepared from the hindlimb footpads of adult mice by a procedure described previously (Rao et al., 1992 ; Habecker et al., 1995 ). The
procedure was modified as follows: frozen footpad tissue was pulverized
with a stainless steel mortar and pestle and chilled on dry ice, before
homogenization with a Polytron. Soluble proteins were concentrated by
centrifugation through Centricon 10 kDa filters. For tissue extracts to
be used for Western blot analysis, frozen footpads were pulverized with
a stainless steel mortar and pestle and homogenized 40 times with a
ground-glass homogenizer in disruption buffer (7.5 mM
Na2HPO4, 10 mM EDTA, and 1% SDS) supplemented with the
protease inhibitors leupeptin (1 µg/ml), pepstatin (1 µg/ml), and
phenylmethylsulfonylfluoride (100 µg/ml). Debris was removed by
low-speed centrifugation, and supernatants were collected for protein
assays and either stored at 20°C or diluted in loading buffer for
immediate Western blot analysis.
Primary cell culture. Cultures of sympathetic neurons were
prepared from the superior cervical ganglia of newborn mice,
essentially as described previously (Hawrot and Patterson, 1979 ; Rao
and Landis, 1990 ). Cells were grown in
L15-CO2-complete, supplemented with NGF (50 ng/ml), penicillin G (100 U/ml), streptomycin sulfate (100 µg/ml),
and either 10% fetal bovine serum or 10% rat serum. Neurons were
preplated for 2 hr and grown in 96 well plates coated with
poly-L-lysine and laminin or 96 well BioCoat
plates. Cells were maintained in the antimitotic agent
fluorodeoxyuridine/uridine (10 µM) for
2 d to reduce the number of non-neuronal cells. There were
~1000-2000 neurons per well. Cytokines and tissue extracts were
diluted in culture medium and filter sterilized before addition to the
culture dishes. Sepiapterin was dissolved in DMSO and diluted in medium
before addition to cultures. N-acetyl serotonin (NAS) was
dissolved in ethanol and diluted in medium. The final volume of DMSO
and/or ethanol in cultures was <1%.
Western blots. Neuron or footpad extracts were diluted in
SDS loading buffer (2% SDS, 60 mM Tris, pH 6.8, 0.01% bromophenol blue, 5% -mercaptoethanol, and 10% glycerol)
and denatured at 60°C for 30 min. Equivalent amounts of each extract
were separated on 8.5% SDS-polyacrylamide gels and then transferred to
nitrocellulose blots for identification of AADC or TH. All incubations
were performed at room temperature. Blots were incubated for 1 hr in
blocking solution (5% nonfat dry milk in 10 mM
Tris, pH 8.0, 150 mM NaCl, and 0.1% Tween 20;
TBS-T) and then incubated overnight in blocking solution with rabbit
anti-AADC (1:1000) or rabbit anti-TH (1:1000). Bound antibodies were
detected using horseradish peroxidase-conjugated IgG (1:10,000) and
visualized by chemiluminescence. Unsaturated films were scanned, and
the pixel density of the image was analyzed using LabWorks software
(UVP, Upland, CA).
HPLC analysis of (6R)-5,6,7,8-BH4.
Tetrahydrobiopterin was quantified by an HPLC procedure using
electrochemical detection (ED) described by Hylands et al. (Howells et
al., 1986 ; Howells and Hyland, 1987 ). Footpad tissue was frozen on dry
ice and homogenized in acid-washed glass homogenizers at 4°C in the
HPLC mobile phase consisting of 50 mM sodium
acetate, 5 mM citric acid, pH 5.22, and 50 µM EDTA, supplemented with 1 mg/ml of both
dithioerythritol (DTE) and diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid (DTPA)
(Howells and Hyland, 1987 ). Residual protein was removed by
centrifugation at 4°C through 10 kDa Centricon filters (Howells et
al., 1986 ). Sympathetic neuron cultures were homogenized at 4°C by
trituration in the HPLC mobile phase, supplemented with DTE and DTPA,
and spun down at 4°C to remove cell debris. The BH4 in the samples was stable under these conditions for 5 hr at 4°C and for 1 month at 70°C. Tetrahydrobiopterin was chromatographed by reversed-phase HPLC-ED on a C18 column (15 × 0.46 cm, 5 µm particle size;
Rainin, Ridgefield, NJ) (Howells et al., 1986 ; Howells and Hyland,
1987 ). An ESA Coulochem multielectrode detector (Chelmsford, MA) was used to quantify the BH4 with the electrodes set as follows: electrode 1, +0.18 V; electrode 2, 0.07 V. Solutes in the column eluents were
first oxidized by electrode 1, and then BH4 was reduced by electrode 2. The limits of detection for the BH4 reduction signal in electrode 2 were ~60 fmol.
HPLC analysis of catecholamines. Catecholamines were
measured by HPLC-ED (Felice et al., 1978 ; Woodward et al., 1987 ).
Sympathetic neurons were triturated through a pipette tip in 75 µl of
ice-cold 0.2 M perchloric acid containing 0.2 mM EDTA, 1 µM ascorbate, and 250 nM dihydroxyl-benzylamine (an internal
standard) and were centrifuged. An aliquot of the supernatant was
chromatographed by HPLC on a C18 reversed-phase column (15 × 0.46 cm, 5 µm; Rainin) using a mobile phase containing 50 mM sodium phosphate and 50 mM sodium acetate, pH 3.0, 360 mg/l sodium octane
sulfonate, 100 µl/l triethylamine, and 30% (v/v) acetonitrile.
Catecholamines were quantified using an ESA Coulochem detector with the
electrode potential set at +0.18 V. The detection limit for dopamine
was estimated to be <50 fmol. Although norepinephrine is the
catecholamine produced by sympathetic neurons in vivo,
dopamine is the predominant catecholamine produced by these neurons
in vitro and was quantified as a measure of noradrenergic
function in the sympathetic neurons (Woodward et al., 1987 ).
Immunohistochemistry. Mice of the appropriate age were
perfused through the heart with 4% paraformaldehyde in 0.1 M phosphate buffer, pH 7.4, for 10 min. Footpads
were postfixed in 4% paraformaldehyde for 1 hr and cryoprotected
overnight in a solution of 30% sucrose in 0.1 M
phosphate buffer, pH 7.4. Ten micrometer cryostat sections were thaw
mounted onto charged slides, rinsed in PBS, preincubated in dilution
buffer (2% BSA, 0.1% sodium azide, and 0.3% Triton X-100 in PBS) for
1 hr, and incubated overnight with primary antisera raised against AADC
(rabbit anti-AADC diluted 1:300), VIP (guinea pig anti-VIP diluted
1:300), TH (rabbit anti-TH diluted 1:300), or GCH (rabbit anti-GCH
diluted 1:300) (Hirayama and Kapatos, 1998 ). Sections were then rinsed
in PBS, incubated for 1-2 hr with species-specific fluorescent
secondary antibodies diluted 1:300 in dilution buffer containing 5%
goat serum, and rinsed again with PBS before visualization by
fluorescence microscopy.
Statistics. Statistical analyses were performed with Prism
3.0 Graphpad Software (San Diego, CA).
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RESULTS |
Although postganglionic sympathetic neurons innervate the sweat
glands of adult mice, these neurons are cholinergic and peptidergic and
do not contain catecholamines (Rao et al., 1994 ; Francis et al., 1997 ).
In addition to the peptides VIP and calcitonin gene-related peptide
(Rao et al., 1994 ; Guidry and Landis, 1995 ; Francis et al., 1997 ), the
neurons innervating sweat glands synthesize ACh and express
acetylcholinesterase (Rao et al., 1994 ; Francis et al., 1997 ) and the
vesicular ACh transporter (Guidry and Landis, 1998 ). Despite the
cholinergic and peptidergic phenotype and the lack of catecholamines,
however, these neurons contain abundant tyrosine hydroxylase
immunoreactivity (TH-IR) (Rao et al., 1994 ; Guidry and Landis, 1995 ,
1998 ).
To determine whether the absence of catecholamines in the TH-containing
mouse sweat gland innervation could be attributed to the loss of AADC,
footpad tissue was examined for the presence of AADC by Western blot.
Extracts from sweat gland-containing footpads were collected before
[postnatal day 5 (P5)], during (P10), and after (P21, adult) the loss
of catecholamines and blotted for AADC. Footpad AADC protein increased
throughout development and appeared to be highest in the adult (Fig.
1A). Because the footpad tissue used for Western blot analysis contains many cell types,
it is possible that a loss of AADC in the sweat gland innervation is
compensated for by increases in AADC in other cell types in the tissue.
AADC immunohistochemistry, however, confirmed that the enzyme was
present in the neurons innervating adult sweat glands (Fig.
1B) along with the neuropeptide VIP (Fig.
1C), which is induced during the switch from noradrenergic
to cholinergic function. Factors related to the sweat gland-derived CDF
decrease transcription of the human AADC promoter (Chireux et al.,
1994 ) and inhibit expression of AADC protein (Swerts et al., 1983 ;
Raynaud et al., 1987 ), but there is no evidence that cholinergic
differentiation factors decrease AADC activity (Berry et al., 1996 ).
Therefore, although we have not directly demonstrated that the AADC
present in this tissue can decarboxylate L-DOPA
to form dopamine, we think it unlikely that the AADC is inactive in the
adult sweat gland innervation.

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Figure 1.
Developmental expression of AADC in the sweat
gland innervation. A, Western blot analysis of AADC in
mouse sweat gland-containing FPs. Aliquots of tissue extracts (5 µg
of protein) from adult adrenal gland and from the hindlimb footpads of
P5, P10, P21, and adult mice were separated on 8.5% SDS-polyacrylamide
gels and blotted for AADC. Footpad extracts from all ages contained
AADC. Data shown are representative of results from three animals at
each age. Immunohistochemistry of AADC (B) and
VIP (C) in adult mouse footpad is shown. Ten
micrometer cryostat sections were stained with an antibody directed
against AADC (diluted 1:300) or VIP (diluted 1:300). Cholinergic fibers
innervating sweat glands are strongly immunoreactive for AADC
(B, arrowheads) and the neuropeptide VIP
(C, arrowheads). Similar results were
obtained in four animals.
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Tyrosine hydroxylase requires the cofactor BH4; therefore, the loss of
BH4 could block catecholamine synthesis. To determine whether BH4
production was suppressed during the switch from noradrenergic to
cholinergic phenotype in the gland innervation, BH4 levels were
measured in sweat gland-containing footpads collected before (P4 and
P7), during (P10 and P14), and after (P21 or P22) the change in
phenotype. A significant decrease in footpad BH4 levels was observed in
both the mouse (Fig.
2A) and the rat (Fig.
2B), and this decrease correlated with the
disappearance of catecholaminergic properties and the appearance of
cholinergic properties in the respective species. These data suggest
that suppression of BH4 may be a common feature of cholinergic
differentiation. Although BH4 did not disappear completely from footpad
extracts (Fig. 2), and BH4 content was increased in adult footpads
compared with P21 or P22 animals [BH4 levels in adult mouse, 282 ± 49 pmol/gm (n = 5); BH4 levels in adult rat,
246 ± 31 pmol/gm (n = 3); mean ± SEM], the
developmental time course of BH4 suppression was nonetheless consistent
with a role for BH4 in the downregulation of catecholamine production
in cholinergic sympathetic neurons.

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Figure 2.
Developmental expression of BH4 in sweat
gland-containing footpads. BH4 levels were quantified in hindlimb
footpads from mice (A) or rats
(B) collected before (P4 and P7), during (P10 and
P14), and after (P21 and P22) the phenotypic switch in the gland
innervation. Data shown are the mean ± SEM of three animals.
A, In mouse footpad, BH4 decreased by ~44% between P7
(396 ± 49 pmol/gm) and P21 (174 ± 8 pmol/gm)
(p = 0.01; two-tailed unpaired
t test). B, In rat footpad, BH4 decreased
by 50% between P7 (266 ± 29 pmol/gm) and P14 (133 ± 19 pmol/gm) (p < 0.05; two-tailed unpaired
t test).
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Inasmuch as BH4 is a cofactor for several enzymes, including nitric
oxide synthase (NOS), we expected that even if BH4 synthesis was
suppressed completely in neurons innervating the adult sweat glands,
BH4 production in other tissues within the developing footpad might be
maintained or even increased, thereby accounting for the elevation of
BH4 in adult footpad. Therefore, we examined the immunolocalization of
GCH, the rate-limiting enzyme in the synthesis of BH4, to ascertain the
sites of BH4 production within the footpad tissue. Mouse footpad
sections were collected before (P5), during (P10), and after (adult)
the change in phenotype and were analyzed by immunohistochemistry using
an affinity-purified antibody directed against GCH (a generous gift
from Dr. Gregory Kapatos, Wayne State University). GCH-IR was present
in nerve fibers projecting to the developing glands at P5 and P10 (Fig. 3A,B)
but was undetectable in the sympathetic innervation of the adult sweat
glands, despite its presence in other tissues within the adult footpad
(Fig. 3C). The lack of GCH-IR is in contrast to the presence
of TH-IR in neurons innervating adult sweat glands (Fig.
3D). The loss of GCH-IR in sympathetic neurons innervating sweat glands and the decreased BH4 content in footpad extracts suggest
that BH4 is absent from the sympathetic neurons innervating sweat
glands in the adult. It is, however, still present in other cells in
the adult footpad tissue, including the noradrenergic vascular
innervation (Fig. 3C, arrowhead) and endothelial
cells (Fig. 3C, inset), which require BH4 as a
cofactor for NOS.

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Figure 3.
Developmental expression of GCH in the sweat gland
innervation. Sections of mouse footpad from P5
(A), P10 (B), and adult
(C, D) animals were stained with an
antibody directed against GTP cyclohydrolase (A-C;
diluted 1:300) or tyrosine hydroxylase (D; diluted
1:300). GCH immunoreactivity was present in the neurons innervating
developing gland anlage at P5 and P10 (A,
B, arrowheads). Although GCH was not
detected in the innervation of the adult sweat glands
(C, arrows), it was found in other
tissues within the footpad (C, arrowhead)
and in vascular endothelial cells (C,
inset). The absence of GTP cyclohydrolase is in contrast
to abundant TH immunoreactivity in the adult sweat gland innervation
(D, arrowheads). Similar results were
obtained with at least three animals of each age. Scale bar, 10 µm.
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In vitro treatment of rat sympathetic neurons with extracts
of sweat gland-containing footpads, LIF, or CNTF induces a switch in
neurotransmitter phenotype from noradrenergic to cholinergic that is
similar to the one observed in the sweat gland innervation in
vivo (Fukada, 1985 ; Saadat et al., 1989 ; Rao and Landis, 1990 ; Rao
et al., 1992 ; Rohrer, 1992 ). To determine whether the developmental loss of BH4 was caused by the action of a sweat gland-derived cholinergic differentiation factor, mouse sympathetic neurons were
grown in vitro and treated with soluble extracts from murine sweat gland-containing footpads. Extracts of mouse footpads, LIF, and
CNTF caused a switch from noradrenergic to cholinergic phenotype in
mouse sympathetic neurons in vitro (Fig.
4). LIF substantially decreased TH
immunoreactivity ( 63%) (Fig. 4A) and dopamine
levels ( 60%) (Fig. 4B) in mouse sympathetic
neurons but had no significant effect on AADC levels ( 8%) (Fig.
4A). Footpad extracts also significantly decreased
dopamine ( 60%) (Fig. 4B) but only slightly
decreased TH immunoreactivity and AADC immunoreactivity ( 13 and
13%, respectively) (Fig. 4A). Footpad extracts and
CNTF decreased BH4 content significantly ( 70 and 80%,
respectively; p < 0.01) (Fig. 4C), as did
LIF (data not shown) (Stegenga et al., 1996 ). Thus, mouse footpad
extracts caused a pattern of neurochemical changes in murine
sympathetic neurons that was similar to that observed in the sweat
gland innervation during development. These data are consistent with
the notion that a sweat gland-derived CDF suppresses synthesis of
catecholamines primarily by inhibiting production of BH4.

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Figure 4.
Mouse footpad extracts suppress BH4 in sympathetic
neurons. Mouse sympathetic neurons were treated for 5-7 d with 10 ng/ml LIF or CNTF or 300 µg/ml soluble extracts from mouse footpad
(mFP Ext.). Cells from each treatment were assayed for
TH and AADC, dopamine content, or BH4 content. A, One
microgram aliquots of neuron extracts were separated on
SDS-polyacrylamide gels, transferred to nitrocellulose, and blotted for
identification of TH and AADC. LIF decreased TH to a greater extent
( 63%) than mouse FP ( 13%), but neither treatment significantly
altered AADC. The blots shown are representative of results obtained in
three experiments. B, LIF and mouse FP extracts
decreased dopamine, as measured by HPLC-ED, by ~60% compared with
control cells (*p < 0.01; ANOVA with
Dunnett multiple comparison post hoc test). Data shown are
the mean ± SEM of three experiments. C, CNTF and
mouse FP extracts decreased BH4 content, as measured by HPLC-ED, by
~80 and 70%, respectively, compared with control cells
(*p < 0.01, ANOVA with Dunnett multiple
comparison post hoc test). Data shown are from a single
experiment (n = 4-6; mean ± SEM) and are
representative of three separate experiments.
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To establish that BH4 levels control the production of catecholamines
in neurons innervating mouse sweat glands, sympathetic neurons were
grown in the presence or absence of the BH4 precursor sepiapterin (Fig.
5A). Sister cultures, also
grown under these conditions, were treated with either CNTF or footpad
extracts. In each case, the addition of sepiapterin caused a
severalfold increase in dopamine levels when compared with neurons of
the same treatment condition that did not receive sepiapterin (Fig. 5B). In the case of CNTF or footpad extract-treated neurons,
the increased dopamine levels in the presence of sepiapterin
significantly exceeded the dopamine content of control neurons not
grown in the presence of sepiapterin. This suggests that BH4 is rate
limiting for catecholamine production in these sympathetic neurons.

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Figure 5.
Sepiapterin (SEP) rescue of
dopamine and tetrahydrobiopterin production. A, BH4
synthesis: GTP is converted to 6-pyruvoyl-5,6,7,8-tetrahydropterin
(PTP) by GCH. 6-Pyruvoyl-5,6,7,8-tetrahydropterin is
converted to sepiapterin by the enzyme 6-pyruvoyl-tetrahydropterin
synthase (PTPS). Sepiapterin is then reduced to BH4 by
sepiapterin reductase (SR), which is inhibited by NAS.
B, Sympathetic neurons were treated for 5-7 d with 10 ng/ml CNTF or 300 µg/ml mouse footpad extract (mFP
Ext.), with or without 20 µM sepiapterin. CNTF
and FP extracts decreased dopamine (DA) content by 50 and 90%, respectively, compared with control cells
(p < 0.01; ANOVA; Dunnett multiple
comparison of cells without SEP). The addition of sepiapterin increased
dopamine compared with control cells without sepiapterin and within
each treatment condition (p < 0.001; ANOVA;
Tukey multiple comparison of all conditions). The fold increase in
dopamine after sepiapterin addition is indicated in
parentheses above each set of bars. The data
shown are from a single experiment (n = 6-8;
mean ± SEM) and are representative of four independent
experiments. C, Cellular BH4 levels increased
approximately threefold with sepiapterin addition
(p < 0.001; ANOVA; Dunnett multiple
comparison post hoc test). Administration of the sepiapterin
reductase inhibitor NAS (2.5 mM) (Kapatos et al., 1992 )
decreased BH4 production, even in the presence of exogenous sepiapterin
(p < 0.001; ANOVA; Dunnett multiple
comparison post hoc test). Data shown are from a single
experiment (n = 3-4; mean ± SEM) and are
representative of three independent experiments.
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To strengthen the linkage between BH4 and catecholamine production and
to confirm that sepiapterin was not having an effect on catecholamine
production that was independent of the BH4 synthetic pathway, we
measured BH4 levels in sympathetic neurons grown in the presence and
absence of sepiapterin. The presence of sepiapterin in the culture
medium significantly increased (approximately threefold) the BH4
content of the sympathetic neurons (Fig. 5C). Moreover, the
sepiapterin reductase inhibitor NAS (Fig. 5A) reduced BH4 levels, probably by blocking the endogenous synthesis of BH4, and the
addition of sepiapterin along with the inhibitor did not result in any
increase in BH4 levels (Fig. 5C). In sister cultures treated
with NAS, the dopamine content was significantly reduced, regardless of
whether the neurons were grown in the presence or absence of
sepiapterin ( 52 or 60%, respectively) (data not shown). Similar
changes in BH4 and dopamine content were observed in neurons treated
with FP extracts, although the levels of BH4 and dopamine were lower in
these neurons, because of the extract treatment (data not shown). These
results demonstrate that sepiapterin increases BH4 levels in
sympathetic neurons by bypassing GCH, the rate-limiting step in BH4
synthesis. Furthermore, these results provide compelling evidence that
BH4 regulates catecholamine production in these neurons.
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DISCUSSION |
The sympathetic neurons innervating rodent sweat glands undergo a
switch from noradrenergic to cholinergic neurotransmission. In the
mouse, this functional switch is not accompanied by a decrease in
immunoreactivity for tyrosine hydroxylase (Rao et al., 1994 ; Guidry and
Landis, 1998 ), the enzyme that is rate-limiting in catecholamine
synthesis. This suggests that some other aspect of catecholamine
synthesis is responsible for blocking catecholamine production during
the developmental switch to acetylcholine, an idea that was first
proposed by Rao et al. (1994) .
We set out to determine what mediated the target-induced suppression of
catecholamine accumulation in the TH-IR mouse sweat gland innervation.
There are at least three possible explanations: (1) there is inhibition
of TH activity caused by the loss of cofactor or post-translational
modification of the enzyme, (2) there is inhibition at the second step
in catecholamine synthesis (i.e., the conversion of L-DOPA
to dopamine by AADC), or (3) there is a loss of vesicular uptake for
catecholamines, resulting in rapid metabolism of catecholamines by MAO.
Although we cannot ignore the latter two possibilities, they seem less
attractive, inasmuch as blocking the first step in catecholamine
biosynthesis, a branch point in metabolism, would be the most
parsimonious use of the energy resources of the cell. We examined the
regulation of both TH and AADC because in vitro studies
indicated that cholinergic differentiation factors suppressed GCH, BH4,
and AADC in sympathetic neurons (Swerts et al., 1983 ; Raynaud et al.,
1987 ; Stegenga et al., 1996 ).
Our results are consistent with inhibition of catecholamine synthesis
occurring at the TH-catalyzed step in the biosynthetic pathway. We
found that as catecholamine production waned during cholinergic
differentiation of sweat gland innervation, there was a concomitant
loss of BH4 content in sweat gland-containing footpads. Moreover,
immunohistochemical localization of GCH suggested that the loss of BH4
was confined to the sympathetic neurons innervating sweat glands and
not to other tissues in the vicinity, such as blood vessels, which
contain enzymes requiring BH4 as a cofactor. However, there was no
detectable decrease in AADC during this developmental period.
Neuronal culture studies supported the conclusion that the loss of BH4
inhibited catecholamine synthesis in sympathetic neurons. Extracts of
sweat gland-containing footpads reduced the levels of BH4 and
catecholamines in cultured sympathetic neurons, but catecholamine
production could be partially restored in these neurons by the addition
of sepiapterin to the culture medium, which increased cellular BH4
content. The sepiapterin-induced restoration of catecholamine
production in extract-treated neurons demonstrates that TH and AADC are
both present and functional. Furthermore, the accumulation of cellular
catecholamine stores in the absence of MAO inhibitors implies that
vesicular uptake of catecholamines is not impaired in these cells.
Together, our data strongly suggest that the primary action of the
sweat gland-derived CDF is to suppress the noradrenergic phenotype by
inhibiting the production of the TH cofactor BH4, and that the other
cellular machinery for catecholamine synthesis and packaging is present and remains functional in these cholinergic sympathetic neurons.
This conclusion differs from the current thinking, based on the rat
model, that cholinergic differentiation factors inhibit noradrenergic
function by decreasing the expression of catecholamine synthetic
enzymes, especially tyrosine hydroxylase. The latter model was based on
in vivo and in vitro data from the rat indicating that cholinergic differentiation factors suppress TH expression and
activity. The switch from noradrenergic to cholinergic phenotype during
rat sweat gland innervation is characterized by decreased TH-IR (Landis
et al., 1988 ). Likewise, culture studies indicate that CDFs, including
LIF, CNTF, and footpad extracts, suppress TH mRNA and protein in
cultured rat sympathetic neurons (Saadat et al., 1989 ; Rao and Landis,
1990 ; Nawa et al., 1991 ; Lewis et al., 1994 ). Although TH-IR does not
disappear completely from the gland innervation in vivo or
from sympathetic neurons in vitro, these data are consistent
with a role for the suppression of TH in the regulation of
catecholamine synthesis and have led to the model that decreased TH
expression is the crucial step in the loss of noradrenergic function.
The observation that TH content in the sympathetic innervation of mouse
sweat glands did not change suggested that an alternative model was
needed to explain the developmental suppression of catecholamine production, at least in mice (Rao et al., 1994 ). Our data provide an
explanation for the loss of catecholamines in TH-containing cholinergic
neurons during development. BH4 is decreased in mouse and rat neurons
because of the loss of GCH, and this loss of TH cofactor is likely to
be the factor responsible for curtailing catecholamine production in
both species. These results are consistent with studies of genetically
engineered replacement of dopamine in rats and mice which indicate that
the genes encoding GCH and TH are both required for behavioral rescue
of dopamine deficits (Bencsics et al., 1996 ; Mandel et al., 1998 ;
Szczypka et al., 1999 ). Although a decrease in BH4 levels does not
necessarily result in a proportional decrease in TH activity (Kapatos
et al., 1992 ), the absence of GCH and BH4 prevents catecholamine
production in cells containing TH (Nagatsu et al., 1997 ).
Attempts to substitute for the loss of cofactor in sympathetic neurons
in vitro by adding BH4 rather than sepiapterin caused an
unexpected decrease in dopamine production (data not shown). The
addition of 20 µM sepiapterin to the culture
medium resulted in a fivefold to 20-fold increase in catecholamines
(Fig. 5), whereas BH4 concentrations in the range of 6-600
µM either had little effect or decreased
catecholamine content. Concentrations of BH4 of >50
µM have been shown to inhibit TH activity in a
cell-free system (Alterio et al., 1998 ); thus, it seems likely that the excess BH4 added to the culture medium caused inhibition of TH activity. It is, however, less clear why the lower levels of BH4 were
not able to stimulate TH activity. A potential explanation comes from
work by Choi et al. (2000) , who reported that extracellular BH4 is
toxic to catecholamine-producing cells in culture because of the
generation of reactive oxygen species. In contrast, sepiapterin is able
to elevate intracellular BH4 levels, increase TH activity, and is not
toxic (Choi et al., 2000 ). Although our BH4-treated cultures did not
exhibit morphological changes, the decreases in dopamine levels may
have resulted from BH4 toxicity.
Attempts to regulate catecholamine production in vivo by
replacing BH4 also produced mixed results. Injection of BH4 into adult
mice (with or without MAO inhibitors) did not consistently stimulate
accumulation of catecholamines in the cholinergic innervation of the
sweat glands or the noradrenergic innervation of the salivary gland or
heart (data not shown). Other investigators have used BH4 in
vivo with varied results. Injections of BH4 into BH4-deficient hph mice increased central BH4 content but did not alter CNS
dopamine levels (Hyland et al., 1996 ). Viral coexpression of GCH and TH in the CNS produced behavioral rescue of feeding in dopamine-deficient mice, but peripheral administration of BH4 did not complement expression of TH and rescue behavior (Szczypka et al., 1999 ). Intravitreal injection of BH4 increased L-DOPA in
dark-adapted retinas but had no effect on L-DOPA
levels in light-adapted retinas (Iuvone et al., 1985 ). Likewise, oral
administration of BH4 increased nitric oxide production in
insulin-resistant rats but not control rats (Shinozaki et al., 2000 ).
Thus, the effectiveness of exogenous BH4 as a cofactor for TH or other
enzymes in vivo seems to be influenced by complex
environmental factors.
The differential regulation of TH and GCH during development of the
mouse sweat gland innervation is somewhat unique. Many factors that
control expression of these enzymes regulate both of them in a
coordinate manner. For example, LIF and CNTF suppress GCH and BH4
together with TH in cultured rat sympathetic neurons (Stegenga et al.,
1996 ), and our data indicate that LIF suppresses both TH and BH4 in
cultured mouse sympathetic neurons. Additional studies indicate that
nerve growth factor induces the expression of both GCH and TH in
sympathetic neurons (Hirayama and Kapatos, 1995 ) and in PC12 cells
(Anastasiadis et al., 1996 ). Likewise, the two enzymes are regulated
similarly by cAMP (Abou-Donia et al., 1986 ; Anastasiadis et al., 1998 )
and by some disease states (Serova et al., 1999 ).
The differential expression of TH and GCH seen during development is
particularly interesting given the coordinate regulation of these
enzymes by LIF and CNTF. Several lines of evidence suggest that the
mouse sweat gland-derived CDF uses the same receptor complex and
intracellular signaling pathways that are activated by LIF and CNTF
(Habecker et al., 1997 ). The observation that the mouse sweat
gland-derived CDF has little effect on TH expression in mouse
sympathetic neurons in vivo, whereas LIF suppresses TH in
mouse sympathetic neurons both in vitro (Fig. 4) and
in vivo (Bamber et al., 1994 ), suggests that there are
unanticipated differences in downstream signal transduction. This is
the first example of a functional difference between LIF, CNTF, and the
sweat gland-derived CDF with regard to the suppression of NE or
induction of ACh. Elucidation of the mechanisms involved will likely
require cloning the gland-derived differentiation factor.
The studies described here identify a novel role for BH4 in regulating
neurotransmitter phenotype during development. They also indicate that
GCH expression and activity can be regulated quite differently than TH
and other catecholamine synthetic enzymes. The revelation that
catecholamine content is controlled at the level of a cofactor rather
than an enzyme expands our understanding of the ways in which
environmental factors regulate neuronal differentiation.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Feb. 4, 2002; revised Aug. 21, 2002; accepted Aug. 23, 2002.
This work was supported by American Heart Association Grant 9750083N
and National Institutes of Health Grant HL68231 (B.A.H.). We thank Dr.
Gregory Kapatos of Wayne State University for the anti-GCH antibody and
Dr. Un Jung Kang of Northwestern University for the suggestion to use
sepiapterin in replacement experiments.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Beth A. Habecker,
Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, L334, Oregon Health and
Sciences University, 3181 Southwest Sam Jackson Park Road, Portland, OR
97239. E-mail: habecker{at}ohsu.edu.
 |
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