The Journal of Neuroscience, June 1, 2003, 23(11):4601-4612
Previous Article | Next Article 
The Chemokine Stromal Cell-Derived Factor-1 Promotes the Survival of Embryonic Retinal Ganglion Cells
Sreekanth H. Chalasani,1
Frédéric Baribaud,2
Christine M. Coughlan,2
Mary J. Sunshine,4
Virginia M. Y. Lee,3
Robert W. Doms,2
Dan R. Littman,4 and
Jonathan A. Raper1
1 Department of Neuroscience, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania 19104,
2 Department of Microbiology, School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania,
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104,
3 Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine and Center for
Neurodegenerative Diseases Research, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania 19104, and
4 Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Skirball Institute of Biomolecular Medicine,
New York University School of Medicine, New York, New York 10016
 |
Abstract
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The chemokine receptor CXCR4 is expressed in the embryonic and mature CNS,
yet its normal physiological function in neurons remains obscure. Here, we
show that its cognate chemokine, stromal cell-derived factor-1 (SDF-1),
promotes the survival of cultured embryonic retinal ganglion cell neurons even
in the absence of other neurotrophic factors. This survival effect is mediated
primarily through a cAMP-dependent pathway that acts through protein kinase A
and MAP kinase. Addition of SDF-1 to a human neuronal cell line induces
phosphorylation of p44/p42 MAP kinase and GSK3
. Mouse embryos lacking
the CXCR4 receptor have a reduced number of retinal ganglion cells. The ligand
of CXCR4, SDF-1, may therefore provide generalized trophic support to neurons
during their development and maturation.
Key words: SDF-1; slit-2; RGC; cAMP; survival; neurotrophic
 |
Introduction
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Neurons are overproduced early in development, and their excessive numbers
are reduced as they compete for a limited supply of trophic factors in their
environment (Hamburger and
Levi-Montalcini, 1949
). Access to sufficient trophic support is
thought to prevent the activation of an inherent suicide program common to all
cells (Meyer-Franke et al.,
1998
; Raff, 1998
;
Shen et al., 1999
). It has
been recognized for some time that elevating intracellular levels of cAMP can
promote the survival of cultured neurons
(Wakade et al., 1983
;
Rydel and Greene, 1988
;
Meyer-Franke et al., 1998
).
The survival-promoting effect of elevating cAMP is direct in some neurons,
whereas in others, it is attributable to an increased sensitivity to trophic
peptides (Wakade et al., 1983
;
Hanson et al., 1997
;
Meyer-Franke et al., 1998
;
Rydel and Greene, 1988
).
Activation of seven transmembrane G-protein-coupled receptors is one way in
which an elevation of cAMP can be achieved. In this study, we explored the
possibility that activating a subfamily of G-protein-coupled receptors, the
chemokine receptors, promotes neuronal survival. Chemokines are relatively
short peptide hormones that were originally defined as chemoattractants for
leukocytes but have since been found to have a broader spectrum of activities
that includes triggering degranulation of leukocytes, cerebellar granule cell
migration, angiogenesis, and T-cell differentiation
(Luster, 1998
;
Nanki and Lipsky, 2000
;
Luther and Cyster, 2001
;
Mackay, 2001
). There are
50 chemokines and 20 chemokine receptors identified to date
(Luster, 1998
;
Murphy et al., 2000
).
Recently, the chemokine receptors CXCR4 and CCR5 have been shown to play an
important role in the entry of HIV-1 into CD4+ T cells and macrophages
(Alkhatib et al., 1996
;
Choe et al., 1996
;
Doranz et al., 1996
;
Dragic et al., 1996
;
Feng et al., 1996
).
Chemokines are classified into four major families on the basis of the
positions of structurally important cysteine residues. The CXC family contains
the chemokine stromal cell-derived factor-1 (SDF-1), also named CXCL12
(Murphy et al., 2000
). Unlike
most other chemokines that activate multiple receptors, SDF-1 is thought to
act exclusively through its receptor CXCR4. This is supported by the
observation that both SDF-1 and CXCR4 knock-out mice die at approximately
embryonic day 17 (E17) and are characterized by very similar defects in
B-lymphopoiesis, myelopoiesis, cardiac ventricular septum formation, and
vascular remodeling (Nagasawa et al.,
1996
; Ma et al.,
1998
; Tachibana et al.,
1998
; Zou et al.,
1998
).
CXCR4 is expressed abundantly on neurons and other cell types within the
CNS (McGrath et al., 1999
).
Among the neural defects described in CXCR4 mutant embryos are misplaced
cerebellar and dentate granule cells, leading to the suggestion that this
receptor plays a role in neuronal cell migration
(Zou et al., 1998
;
Bagri et al., 2002
). Consistent
with this hypothesis are the findings that SDF-1 acts as an attractant for
cerebellar granule cells in vitro
(Lu et al., 2001
) and that
ectopic expression of SDF-1 in slice cultures induces the mislocalization of
migrating dentate granule neurons (Bagri et
al., 2002
). Our recent analysis of CXCR4 knock-outs has revealed
that sensory axons expressing the neurotrophin receptor TrkA are misguided in
the embryonic spinal cords of CXCR4 knock-outs. We have also shown recently
that SDF-1 significantly reduces the responsiveness of multiple axons to
several different repellent guidance cues in culture
(Chalasani et al., 2003
).
Although these findings indicate that SDF-1 has an important role in the
guidance of migrating cells and axons in the developing CNS, here, we
demonstrate a very different additional function for SDF-1/CXCR4 signaling,
the promotion of neuronal survival.
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Materials and Methods
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Cell culture and survival assay. Retinal ganglion cell (RGC)
cultures were made by dissociating E6 chick neural retinas and plating them on
poly-L-lysine-treated laminin-coated glass coverslips at a density
of 1000 neurons per well (48 well dish, Costar, Cambridge, MA). The medium
(F-12) was supplemented with 6 mg/ml glucose, 2 mM glutamine, 100
U/ml penicillin, 100 U/ml streptomycin, 5 ng/ml transferrin, and 5 ng/ml
selenium along with different conditions as indicated. Chemokines were
purchased from Peprotech (Rocky Hill, NJ). The cultures were fixed and stained
with an antibody to islet-1 [39.4D5; Developmental Studies Hybridoma Bank
(DSHB), Iowa City, IA]. Three coverslips were set up for each experiment, and
10 random fields were counted on each coverslip. The average number of
islet-1-positive RGCs was compared between 72 and 24 hr. The data are the
average of four experiments, with all the error bars representing an estimate
of the SEM. Probability values were calculated using a two-tailed t
test with different variances (heteroscedastic). Human teratocarcinoma (NT2N)
cells were differentiated for 5 weeks in retinoic acid to induce neuronal
properties (Pleasure et al.,
1992
). The cells were then treated with trypsin and plated on
Matrigel-coated wells in 50% conditioned medium and 50% DMEM with 5% FBS, 1%
penicillin-streptomycin, and the mitotic inhibitors FuDR, UR, and AraC
overnight at a density of 30,000 cells per well (four-well dishes; Costar).
The next day, the medium was removed, and serum-free medium with or without
SDF-1 was added. These cultures were stained live using 1 µl/well of Syto16
(Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR), and living cells in 50 random fields were
counted. Cells were counted in two wells for each condition, and data from
four independent experiments are shown.
CREB phosphorylation. Neural retinas from E6 chicks were
dissociated and plated in minimal medium as described above. After 24 hr,
these cultures were stimulated for 30 min with SDF-1 with and without 20
µM AMD 3100, 100 ng/ml pertussis toxin (PTX), 200 nM
PKI, or 20 µM PD98059. The cultures were then fixed for 20 min
with 3.7% paraformaldehyde and stained with anti-islet-1 (1:200, 39.4D5, DSHB)
and anti-phospho-specific CREB (ser-133, a kind gift from Dr. Judy Meinkoth).
These antibodies were then detected by anti-mouse Alexa Fluor 488 and
anti-rabbit Alexa Fluor 546 (Molecular Probes).
Immunohistochemistry. Frozen sections of E6 chick eyes were made
at 30 µm and stained with antibodies to neurofilament (4H6, a gift from Dr.
William Halfter, University of Pittsburgh) at 1:1000 and anti-islet-1 (39.4D5,
DSHB) at 1:200. Similar sections were made of mouse embryos at E13.5 and
stained with anti-neurofilament (2H3, DSHB) at 1:200 and anti-islet-1/2
(guinea pig polyclonal, a gift from Dr. Thomas Jessell, Columbia University)
at 1:10,000. In the terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated
biotinylated UTP nick end labeling (TUNEL) experiment, cultures were set up
with or without SDF-1 and stained for islet-1 as described along with TUNEL
reagent, TMR Red (Boehringer Mannheim, Indianapolis, IN). A total of 100
islet-positive nuclei were scored for each condition, and data from four
independent experiments are shown. In the bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) experiment,
cultures were set up with or without SDF-1, and BrdU at 10 µM
was added for 1 hr. These cultures were fixed 24 hr later, and BrdU-positive
cells were detected using an anti-BrdU antibody conjugated to fluorescein
(Boehringer Mannheim). An anti-islet-1 antibody detected RGC neurons. However,
no RGC neurons were found to be BrdU-positive. For the TrkB experiment,
cultures were set up in the manner described above. After 24 hr, they were
left untreated or treated for 30 min with forskolin (10 µm) or SDF-1 (100
ng/ml). All the cultures were then stained live with an antibody to TrkB (a
gift from Dr. Francis Lefcort, University of Montana) at 1:1000, washed,
fixed, and then processed for islet-1 staining.
Inhibitor assays. RGC cultures were set up as described with or
without SDF-1 and specific inhibitors. A protein kinase A inhibitor, PKI
(Calbiochem, La Jolla, CA) at 200 nM; a PKG inhibitor, KT5823
(Calbiochem) at 1 µM; a cAMP antagonist, Rp-cAMPS (Sigma, St.
Louis, MO) at 20 µM;a cGMP antagonist, Rp-cGMPS (Sigma) at 20
µM; a MAP kinase inhibitor, PD98059 (Calbiochem) at 20
µM; a PI-3 kinase inhibitor, LY294002 (Calbiochem) at 20
µM; an SDF-1 antagonist, AMD3100 (AIDS Research and Reference
Reagent Program, National Institutes of Health, contributed by AnorMed,
Langley, British Columbia, Canada) program, 24) at 20 µM; CXCR4-
and CCR5-tropic glycoproteins, HxB-gp120 and JRFL-gp120 at 100 ng/ml, and PTX
(Sigma) at 100 ng/ml were used. After 48 hr, these cultures were fixed and
stained for islet-1 to identify RGCs. Data from four independent experiments
are shown. The src family inhibitor PP1 was used at 1 µm with or without
BDNF at 100 ng/ml and SDF-1 at 100 ng/ml. Cultures were fixed at 24 hr and
another set at 72 hr, and the number of islet-1-positive cells counted in 10
random fields in each coverslip were compared. Data from four independent
experiments are shown. These cultures were fixed at 48 hr, stained for
islet-1, and counted in a similar manner as the rest of the inhibitor
experiments. For slit-2 inhibition, protein was produced from transiently
transfected 293T cells. The amount of protein was quantified by collapse assay
on retinal growth cones. Equivalent volumes of slit-2 and mock-transfected
supernatants were added to the cultures at the same time as SDF-1. These
cultures were also processed in a similar manner as the rest of the inhibitor
experiments.
RGC counts in mice. Cryostat sections (30 µm) from wild-type
and CXCR4 mutant E13.5 embryos were stained with islet-1 antibodies
(guinea-pig polyclonal, a kind gift from Dr. Thomas Jessell). A single 2 µm
optical section was reconstructed in every second 30 µm section for the
whole eye with images obtained with a Leica confocal microscope (Leica,
Nussloch, Germany). All islet-1-positive cells were counted in each optical
section in which the lumen of the eye could be visualized. The number of
sections in the table represents the number of alternate sections that were
counted for each eye. The nonparametric MannWhitney test was used to
test the hypothesis that sampled RGC counts from wild-type and mutant eyes
were no different within litters.
RNA probes and in situ hybridization. Probes of length
1300, 1200, and 300 bp, representing the entire coding sequences of the chick
CXCR4, mouse CXCR4, and mouse SDF-1, were made and used on frozen sections of
E6 chick and E13.5 mouse embryos. The expression was detected using an
anti-DIG-AP (Boehringer Mannheim). Representative sections of expression are
shown. After the sections were developed for in situ hybridization,
they were then processed for islet-1 expression to stain all of the RGC
neurons.
Western blots. Cell lysates were made from NT2N cells that were
plated at a density of 100,000 cells per well, serum starved for 6 hr, and
treated with or without SDF-1 and the inhibitors for 20 min. Proteins were
separated on 10% Bis-Tris Nupage gels (Invitrogen, San Diego, CA) and
transferred to Immobilon-P membranes (Millipore, Molsheim, France). These were
then probed with antibodies to phospho-GSK3
(New England Biolabs,
Beverly, MA), stripped in 62.5 mM Tris at a pH of 6.7 with 100
µM
ME and 2% SDS for 30 min at 60°C, and then reprobed
with anti-GSK3
(Transduction Laboratories, Lexington, KY).
Alternatively, blots were probed with antibodies to phospho-MAP kinase p44/42
(New England Biolabs) and then stripped and reprobed with anti-MAP kinase
p44/42 (Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Santa Cruz, CA). A composite from two
separate blots is shown in the figure. These results were confirmed with
multiple blots.
 |
Results
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SDF-1 promotes the survival of cultured embryonic retinal ganglion
neurons
RGCs provide a convenient model system in which to study neuronal survival.
RGC neurons can be identified in cultures of dissociated E6 chick retinas by
their expression of the transcription factor islet-1
(Fig. 1B,C)
(Ericson et al., 1992
;
Halfter, 1998
). RGCs die over
the course of several days when cultured in serum-free medium without added
neurotrophic factors. The adenylate cyclase activator forskolin promotes their
survival, suggesting that signaling molecules that induce an elevation of cAMP
could act as survival factors
(Meyer-Franke et al., 1998
;
Shen et al., 1999
) (see
Fig. 3A, below). To
test whether chemokines and their G-protein-coupled receptors might elevate
cyclic nucleotide levels and thereby prevent neuronal death, we assayed a
broad spectrum of chemokines for their ability to enhance RGC survival. Of
those tested, only SDF-1 has a strong survival-enhancing effect.

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Figure 1. SDF-1 promotes the survival of cultured embryonic chick RGCs, and its
receptor CXCR4 is expressed in the embryonic retina. A, SDF-1
promotes the survival of RGCs in a dose-dependent manner. Shown are the
percentages of surviving RGCs at 72 compared with 24 hr in the presence of 100
ng/ml selected chemokines or of 4 (p = 0.028), 20 (p =
0.008), or 100 ng/ml (p = 0.001) SDF-1. p values were
calculated by comparing each population with the untreated one using a
two-tailed test with different variances. B, Identification of RGCs
in culture with anti-islet-1. C, Visualization of RGC neurons with an
antibody to islet-1 in a cross section of an E6 chick embryo. The hash marks
represent the ganglion cell layer. D, Visualization of
CXCR4-expressing cells in the RGC layer of this same section by in
situ hybridization. E, Merged image showing CXCR4 in all
islet-1-positive cells.
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Figure 3. SDF promotes the survival of cultured RGCs without promoting the
translocation of TrkB to the cell surface. A, RGC survival is
enhanced by 10 µM forskolin (p = 0.002) to the same
degree as by 100 ng/ml SDF-1 (p = 0.001). The average percentages of
surviving RGCs at 72 hr compared with 24 hr are shown for three independent
experiments. p values were calculated by comparing each population
with the untreated one using a two-tailed test with different variances.
B, SDF-1-promoted survival is not affected by the src family
inhibitor PP1, whereas BDNF survival is completely blocked.
CE, Forskolin but not SDF-1 induces the translocation of TrkB
to the surface of RGCs. After 24 hr, cultures were left untreated (C1,
C2) or treated for 30 min with 10 µM forskolin
(D1,D2) or 100 ng/ml SDF-1 (E1,E2). All cultures were then
stained live with anti-rabbit TrkB antibody. RGCs are visualized in green with
anti-islet-1 (C1E1), and surface TrkB is visualized in the
same fields in red (C2E2) (20x). Although both forskolin
and SDF-1 promote the survival of RGCs, forskolin induces the translocation of
TrkB to the surface of retinal cells, whereas SDF-1 does not.
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Figure 1A shows the
survival of RGC neurons plated on poly-L-lysine-treated
laminin-coated glass coverslips and cultured in defined medium along with
representative CXC class chemokines. Fractalkine, a member of the CX3C family,
was also tested because it has been reported to rescue cultured hippocampal
neurons damaged by exposure to the HIV-1 envelope protein gp120
(Meucci et al., 2000
). For
this, 100 ng/ml SDF-1 (CXCL12), interleukin-8 (IL-8; CXCL8), MIP-3
(CCL20), eotaxin-1 (CCL11), RANTES (CCL5), GRO
(CXCL1), Fractalkine
(CX3CL1), IP-10 (CXCL10), or MIP-1
(CCL4) was added to these cultures.
The four chemokines for which data are shown act through different receptors:
IL-8 via CXCR1 and CXCR2, IP-10 via CXCR3, Fractalkine via CX3CR1,
and SDF-1 via CXCR4. The percentage of RGCs surviving at 72 hr compared with
those present at 24 hr is shown. Less than 20% of the RGCs present at 24 hr
survive for 72 hr without any added chemokine. IL-8, IP-10, and Fractalkine
exhibit little survival-promoting activity. In contrast, SDF-1 dramatically
enhances neuronal survival, rescuing essentially all RGCs cultured under these
conditions. Additional experiments demonstrated that SDF-1 also enhances the
survival of cultured E8 chick sympathetic neurons (data not shown). The
survival-promoting effect of SDF-1 is dose dependent in RGCs with a
half-maximal effective concentration of
20 ng/ml. This concentration is
similar to that needed to induce chemotaxis of activated T cells and also
comparable with the measured Kd for the interaction of
SDF-1 with the CXCR4 receptor
(Hesselgesser et al.,
1998b
).
The known biological effects of SDF-1 are mediated through the activation
of its receptor CXCR4 (Bleul et al.,
1996
; Feng et al.,
1996
). To determine whether CXCR4 is expressed in RGC neurons, we
first cloned chick CXCR4 from a chick brain cDNA library using a mouse probe
from a region of the receptor that is highly conserved among different
species. The coding sequence we obtained is an exact match with the recent
GenBank accession number AAG09054
[GenBank]
. This sequence was used to make a probe
complementary to the full coding sequence of CXCR4 mRNA. Hybridization with
this probe demonstrates that CXCR4 is expressed strongly within the RGC layer
of E6 embryonic chick retinas (Fig.
1D). Immunohistochemical analysis revealed that all
islet-positive cells in the retina express CXCR4
(Fig. 1E). Thus, RGC
neurons express the receptor through which SDF-1 acts in other systems. As
shown below, an antagonist of SDF-1 binding to CXCR4 interferes with the
survival-enhancing effect of SDF-1. These results are consistent with CXCR4
serving as the SDF-1 receptor that promotes survival activity.
SDF-1 reduces the number of TUNEL-positive RGCs
The ability of SDF-1 to promote the survival of RGCs in culture could in
principle be ascribed to the maintenance of already existing RGCs or to the
enhanced proliferation or differentiation of progenitors that replace RGCs
that die in culture. To distinguish between these two possibilities, we first
determined whether SDF-1 reduces the rate of RGC death as determined by TUNEL
staining (Fig. 2). As shown in
Figure 2C, threefold
fewer islet-1-expressing RGCs are TUNEL-positive when cultured with SDF-1
(Fig. 2C), suggesting
that SDF-1 helps prevent or delay RGC death. To determine whether SDF-1 could
also act as a mitogen that helps replenish dying RGCs from a pool of
progenitors, SDF-1-treated cultures were pulsed with BrdU to detect dividing
cells. BrdU at 10 µM was added for 1 hr to RGC cultures with or
without SDF-1; 24 hr later, these cultures were fixed and processed to detect
BrdU-labeled cells. No dividing cells were detected in our chick retinal
cultures even in the presence of SDF-1. BrdU-labeled cells were easily
detected in dividing cell lines cultured and processed in parallel (data not
shown). We conclude that SDF-1 prevents or delays the death of already
existing RGCs in culture.

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Figure 2. SDF-1 reduces the percentage of TUNEL-positive RGCs. Dissociated E6 chick
neural retinas were cultured for 48 hr, fixed, and processed for TUNEL
staining (red) and islet-1 expression (green). A representative field is shown
in phase-contrast optics (A) and in fluorescence (B). Some
islet-1-expressing nuclei are also TUNEL-positive (arrows). C, The
percentages of islet-1-positive cells with TUNEL staining were determined in
the presence or the absence of 100 ng/ml SDF-1 (p = 0.002). The
average percentages of TUNEL-positive RGCs are shown from four independent
experiments. p values were calculated by comparing each population
with the untreated one using a two-tailed test with different variances.
Approximately threefold more TUNEL-positive RGCs were detected in the absence
than in the presence of SDF-1.
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Enhancement of RGC survival by SDF-1 does not depend on other
neurotrophins
Previous work has shown that increasing cAMP levels with forskolin in
cultured postnatal day 8 (P8) rat RGCs has only a small direct effect on their
survival. Instead, elevated cAMP induces existing Trk receptors to move to the
cell surface, thereby rendering RGCs more responsive to neurotrophins
(Meyer-Franke et al., 1998
;
Shen et al., 1999
). In
contrast, our results indicate that SDF-1 promotes robust survival of
embryonic chick RGCs even in defined medium that contains no neurotrophins
(Figs. 1 A,
3A). Nevertheless,
because forskolin treatment promotes the survival of RGCs to the same degree
as SDF-1 (Fig. 3A), we
addressed the question of whether SDF-1 activates Trk receptors even in the
absence of neurotrophins (Lee and Chao,
2001
). The src family inhibitor PP1 was tested for its ability to
block the trophic effect of SDF-1. This inhibitor reduces baseline RGC
survival at all time points in our assays and effectively blocks the survival
effects of BDNF. However, PP1 has no effect on SDF-1-induced survival
(Fig. 3B). We next
examined cell surface expression of TrkB receptors in response to SDF-1.
Although elevating cAMP levels with forskolin induces a dramatic translocation
of TrkB to the surfaces of chick RGCs (Fig.
3D1,D2), no such translocation of TrkB is induced by
SDF-1 (Fig. 3E1,E2).
This implies that the two treatments are not identical. Perhaps forskolin
elevates cAMP to a different degree than SDF-1, or perhaps SDF-1 activates
additional parallel signaling pathways that are unaffected by forskolin. In
either case, these results imply that SDF-1 promotes the survival of embryonic
chick RGCs through a mechanism that is independent of TrkB redistribution or
activation.
Enhancement of RGC survival by SDF-1 is mediated by the CXCR4
receptor
Selected inhibitors were used to begin characterizing the signaling pathway
through which SDF-1 promotes RGC survival. We allowed cultures with or without
SDF-1 and a variety of specific inhibitors to grow for 48 hr. In the absence
of SDF-1,
50% of RGCs die, whereas death is negligible in its presence.
The survival-promoting effects of SDF-1 are reduced by the small molecule
CXCR4 specific antagonist AMD3100 (Gerlach
et al., 2001
) (Fig.
4A, compare columns 4 and 5). This, coupled with the
expression of CXCR4 on RGCs (Fig.
1E), indicates that the survival-promoting activity of
SDF-1 is mediated via CXCR4. Because CXCR4 is a seven-transmembrane
G-protein-coupled receptor, PTX was used to test whether the survival effects
of SDF-1 require a Gi/Go-type intermediary. We found
that PTX blocks the survival-promoting effects of SDF-1
(Fig. 4A, compare
columns 4 and 6). The HIV envelope (Env) glycoprotein HxB-gp120 has been
reported to have toxic effects on cultured neurons and NT2N cells, although
the mechanisms by which this occurs are not clear (Hesselgesser et al.,
1997
,
1998a
;
Kaul and Lipton, 1999
).
Hxb-gp120 can displace SDF-1 from the CXCR4 receptor
(Staudinger et al., 2001
).
JRFL-gp120 is another HIV Env protein that binds CCR5 instead of CXCR4 and
does not affect SDF-1 binding to CXCR4
(Berger et al., 1999
). Purified
HxB-gp120 but not JRFL-gp120 reduced the survival-promoting activity of SDF-1
(Fig. 4B, compare
columns 46). Neither HxB-gp120 nor JRFL-gp120 has any detectable toxic
activities of its own in this assay (Fig.
4B, compare columns 13). These results confirm
that SDF-1 acts through CXCR4 to mediate its survival-promoting activity and
also suggest that HxB-gp120-induced toxic effects could sometimes arise by its
ability to block SDF-1-mediated neurotrophic action.

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Figure 4. Signaling pathways required for SDF-1-mediated RGC survival. The average
number of RGCs per field 48 hr after plating is shown for each condition in
four independent experiments. Each inhibitor was tested in the presence or
absence of 100 ng/ml SDF-1. A, AMD3100 (20 µM), an
antagonist of SDF-1 binding to CXCR4, does not affect RGC survival by itself
but blocks the survival-enhancing effect of SDF-1. The Gi inhibitor
PTX (100 ng/ml) does not affect RGC survival by itself but blocks the
survival-enhancing effect of SDF-1. B, HxB-gp120 (100 ng/ml),
anantagonist of SDF-1 binding to CXCR4, does not affect RGC survival by itself
but blocks the survival-enhancing effect of SDF-1. JRFL-gp120 (100 ng/ml) does
not antagonize SDF-1 binding and does not block its survival effect
C, The cAMP antagonist Rp-cAMPS (20 µM) does not affect
RGC survival by itself but blocks the survival-enhancing effect of SDF-1. The
cGMP antagonist Rp-cGMPs (20 µM) has a lesser effect on SDF-1
activity than the cAMP antagonist. D, The PKA inhibitor PKI (200
nM) does not affect RGC survival by itself but blocks the
survival-enhancing effect of SDF-1, whereas a 1 µM concentration
of the PKG inhibitor KT5823 is less effective in blocking the effect of SDF-1.
E, The survival effect of SDF-1 is also blocked by a 20
µM concentration of the MAP kinase inhibitor PD98059. In
contrast, a 20 µM concentration of the PI-3 kinase inhibitor
LY294002 does not reduce the effect of SDF-1. p values were
calculated by comparing each population with the untreated one, and those with
an asterisk were obtained comparing each population with the SDF-1-treated one
using a two-tailed test with different variances.
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Enhancement of RGC survival by SDF-1 is mediated by a cAMP-dependent
pathway
The survival-promoting effect of SDF-1 is completely blocked by an
antagonist of cAMP, Rp-cAMPS (Fig.
4C, compare columns 4 and 5) and an inhibitor of PKA, PKI
(Fig. 4D, compare
columns 4 and 5). An antagonist of cGMP, Rp-cGMPS
(Fig. 4C, compare
columns 4 and 6) or an inhibitor of PKG, KT58230
(Fig. 4D, compare
columns 4 and 6) only partially reduced the effectiveness of SDF-1. A MAP
kinase inhibitor, PD98059 (Fig.
4E, compare columns 4 and 5) significantly reduces the
SDF-1-induced survival effect, whereas a PI3 kinase inhibitor, LY 294002,
(Fig. 4E, compare
columns 4 and 6) does not. None of these agents affected RGC survival in the
absence of SDF-1, indicating that nonspecific and toxic effects of these
agents are minimal as used. These results are consistent with the hypothesis
that SDF-1 induces most of its survival-enhancing effects in RGC neurons by
binding to the CXCR4 receptor and that activation of the receptor stimulates a
cAMP-mediated signaling cascade ultimately promoting RGC survival.
SDF-1 induces the phosphorylation of CREB
A convenient readout for the elevation of cAMP is cAMP-stimulated
phosphorylation of CREB and the translocation of phospho-CREB from the
cytoplasm into nuclei (Gonzalez and
Montminy, 1989
; Hagiwara et
al., 1993
). An antibody specific to the phosphorylated form can
identify activated CREB. Retinal neurons were plated in fully defined minimal
medium for 24 hr. RGC neurons were identified by staining with an islet-1
antibody. There is almost no phosphorylated CREB in RGC nuclei under these
baseline conditions (Fig. 5,
compare A1 and A2). In contrast, phospho-CREB is clearly
detected in RGC nuclei after exposure to 100 ng/ml SDF-1 for 30 min
(Fig. 5, compare B1
and B2). SDF-1-dependent phosphorylation of CREB is blocked by the
SDF-1 antagonist AMD3100 (Fig.
5, compare C1 and C2), the
Gi/Go inhibitor PTX
(Fig. 5, compare D1
and D2) and the PKA inhibitor PKI
(Fig. 5, compare E1
and E2). In some instances, CREB can be activated in a
PKA-independent manner via MAP kinase
(Grewal et al., 2000
). The MAP
kinase inhibitor PD98059 does not block SDF-1-induced CREB phosphorylation in
RGCs (Fig. 5, compare
F1 and F2), although it can block SDF-1-mediated cell
survival (Fig. 4E),
indicating that this alternative pathway for CREB activation is not activated
by SDF-1. These results support a pathway in which SDF-1 activates its
receptor CXCR4, acts through a Gi/Go intermediary, and
induces an elevation in cAMP.

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Figure 5. SDF-1 induces phosphorylation and translocation of CREB into the nucleus.
E6 retinal neurons were cultured in defined minimal medium for 24 hr
(A1A3) and then exposed to 100 ng/ml SDF-1
(B1B3), SDF-1 plus a 20 µM concentration of the
CXCR4 antagonist AMD3100 (C1C3), SDF-1 plus 100 ng/ml PTX
(D1D3), SDF-1 plus a 200 nM concentration of the
PKA inhibitor PKI (E1E3), or SDF-1 plus a 20 µM
concentration of MAP kinase inhibitor PD98059 (F1F3). After 30
min, the cultures were fixed and stained for islet-1 (A1F1)
(green) and phosphorylated CREB (A2F2) (red). Merged images
are shown in A3F3. SDF-1 induces translocation of
phosphorylated CREB into the nuclei of retinal neurons that is blocked by all
three pharmacological agents.
|
|
Enhancement of NT2N survival by SDF-1 is associated with
phosphorylation of MAP kinase and GSK3b
To better define the signaling pathway through which SDF-1 promotes
neuronal survival, it was necessary to identify a neuronal cell line whose
survival is similarly enhanced. NT2 neurons (NT2N) are differentiated
teratocarcinoma cells that have neuronal properties that include axonal and
dendritic process outgrowth, synapse formation, and the ability to integrate
into neural tissues in vivo
(Pleasure et al., 1992
;
Hartley et al., 1999
;
Philips et al., 1999
). NT2N
cells have also been shown to express CXCR4 and respond to SDF-1 by activating
strong calcium transients (Coughlan et
al., 2000
). When cultured in serum-free medium, they begin to die
within the first day of culture. Very high concentrations of SDF-1 have been
reported to induce cell death in NT2N cells
(Hesselgesser et al., 1998a
).
In contrast, we find that lower concentrations of SDF-1 promote NT2N survival.
Roughly 40% of NT2N cells die during a 24 hr time period, but many of these
dying cells are rescued by SDF-1 (Fig.
6A). To investigate the signaling pathway affected by
SDF-1, Western blots of NT2N cell lysates were made from cultures without
SDF-1, with SDF-1, and with SDF-1 plus selected inhibitors. These blots were
then probed for the phosphorylated and nonphosphorylated forms of two kinases
reported to be in the downstream pathway of CXCR4 activation: Akt and MAP
kinase p44/42 (Ganju et al.,
1998
). The phosphorylation of GSK3
was also monitored
because both it and MAP kinase have been reported to be activated by forskolin
and have been proposed to promote cell survival in other systems. Although
GSK3
is normally considered a downstream effector of Akt, MAP kinase has
also been reported to directly phosphorylate GSK3
in cortical neurons
(Li et al., 2000
).
SDF-1 induces the phosphorylation of both GSK3
and MAP kinase
(Fig. 6B, compare
columns 1 and 2 in rows 1 and 3), consistent with the ability of the MAP
kinase inhibitor PD98059 to block the SDF survival effect
(Fig. 4E). Indeed,
phosphorylation of both MAP kinase and GSK3
was greatly inhibited by the
same inhibitors of PKA and MAP kinase that blocked the survival-promoting
effects of SDF-1 on chick RGCs (Fig.
6B, compare column 1 with columns 3 and 4 in rows 1 and
3). No phosphorylation of Akt was detected on our blots (data not shown). MAP
kinase appears to be upstream from GSK3
, because inhibiting MAP kinase
activity prevents SDF-1 from inducing GSK3
phosphorylation. A PKG
inhibitor did not block phosphorylation of either MAP kinase or GSK3
(Fig. 6B, compare
columns 1 and 5 in rows 1 and 3). These results support the hypothesis that
SDF-1 activates a cAMP-triggered signaling cascade that promotes neuronal
survival through MAP kinase and GSK3
. Under similar conditions, however,
we were unable to detect a significant increase in cAMP levels using a
radioimmunoassay in NT2N cells treated with SDF-1. The CXCR4-tropic
glycoprotein HxB-gp120 prevents SDF-1-induced phosphorylation of MAP kinase
and GSK3
in NT2N cells, whereas the CCR5-tropic glycoprotein JRFL-gp120
had no such effect (Fig.
6C, compare column 1 with columns 5 and 6 in rows 1 and
3). Neither of the two glycoproteins alone have any effect on the
phosphorylation of either GSK3
or MAP kinase
(Fig. 6C, compare
column 1 with columns 3 and 4 in rows 1 and 3). These results are consistent
with the idea that Hxb-gp120 blocks SDF-1 neurotrophic effects by preventing
SDF-1 from binding and activating CXCR4.
SDF-1-induced survival can be blocked by slit-2
We then analyzed the effects of another molecule, slit-2, on SDF-1-induced
RGC survival. Slit-2 was originally described in vertebrates as a branching
factor, promoting branching of DRG axons, and a chemorepellent for migrating
cells in the CNS (Wang et al.,
1996
; Hu, 1999
).
Since then, it has been shown to repel a variety of axons, including retinal
axons, olfactory bulb axons, and fore-brain axons
(Li et al., 1999
;
Nguyen Ba-Charvet et al.,
1999
; Niclou et al.,
2000
). It has been shown recently that the chemotaxis of T cells
toward a source of SDF-1 in a Boyden chamber assay is reduced in the presence
of slit-2 (Wu et al., 2001
).
Similarly, we find that slit-2 antagonizes the trophic effect of SDF-1 on
RGCs. Approximately six collapsing units of slit-2 reverse the
survival-promoting activity of SDF-1 (Fig.
7, compare columns 7 and 11). A collapsing unit is defined as the
amount of protein needed to cause 50% of embryonic chick retinal growth cones
to collapse in a collapse assay. The half-maximal dose for slit-2 reversal of
SDF-1 activity is approximately three collapsing units. These results
demonstrate that slit-2 reverses the survival-promoting effects of SDF-1 when
applied at doses somewhat higher than those required to obtain growth cone
collapse.

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Figure 7. SDF-1-induced survival is blocked by slit-2. Increasing concentrations of
slit-2 (≥6 collapsing units) can block SDF-1-induced survival. p
values were calculated by comparing each population with the untreated one
using a two-tailed test with different variances.
|
|
RGC number is reduced in the CXCR4 knock-out mice
If SDF-1 promotes neuronal survival through the activation of CXCR4 in
vivo, then the absence of CXCR4 should lead to increased neuronal loss
during development. To investigate this possibility, the numbers of RGCs in
the retinas of wild-type and CXCR4 knock-out embryonic mouse littermates were
compared. First, however, we confirmed that SDF-1 promotes the survival of
cultured E16.5 mouse RGCs without the addition of any other trophic factors.
SDF-1 at 100 ng/ml increases the proportion of surviving RGCs from <50 to
70% after 24 hr in culture (Fig.
8A) and from
10 to 30% after 72 hr in culture
(Fig. 8B). CXCR4 mRNA
is expressed in the E13.5 mouse RGC layer
(Fig. 8C), and SDF-1
is expressed outside the eye in tissues surrounding the optic nerve
(Fig. 8D). Thus, as in
chick, CXCR4 is expressed in mouse RGCs, and SDF-1 promotes their survival
in vitro.

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Figure 8. SDF-1 enhances the survival of embryonic mouse RGCs. After 24 (A;
p = 0.001) or 72 (B; p = 0.005) hr in culture, an
increased percentage of RGCs survive in the presence of 100 ng/ml SDF-1.
p values were calculated by comparing each population with the
untreated one using a two-tailed test with different variances. C,
CXCR4 mRNA is expressed in the RGC cell layer of E13.5 mouse retina.
D, At the same embryonic stage, SDF-1 mRNA is expressed in connective
tissues surrounding the eye.
|
|
We used islet-1 as a marker for RGC neurons in the embryonic mouse retina
(Erskine et al., 2000
).
Although islet-1 has been shown to stain both RGCs and displaced amacrine
cells at late embryonic ages (E21.5), at the earlier embryonic age used for
our analysis it is a specific marker for RGCs
(Galli-Resta et al., 1997
;
Erskine et al., 2000
). The
numbers of RGCs were compared in wild-type and CXCR4 knock-out littermates.
RGCs were counted in thin optical sections (
2 µm) made with a confocal
microscope from alternate 30 µm serial cryostat sections through entire
wild-type and mutant eyes. This provides a sample count proportional to the
total number of RGCs throughout each eye that does not depend on the precise
thickness of individual sections or require correction for nuclei spanning
more than one section. A representative reconstruction of a confocal section
from an E13.5 wild-type eye is shown in
Figure 9A. The
relative numbers of RGCs were estimated in four mutant and two wild-type eyes
from one litter and from two mutant and two wild-type eyes in a second litter
(Fig. 9B, table).
There is an
35% reduction in the number of sampled RGCs in CXCR4 mutant
compared with wild-type littermates. A parameter-free distribution was
assumed, and a MannWhitney test was used to estimate that there are 3.2
and 6.1% chances that there are no differences in RGC numbers between
wild-type and mutant embryos for each of the two litters. The weights of
mutant and wild-type embryos were not significantly different from one another
(data not shown), nor were the diameters of their eyes
(Fig. 9B). Our data
show that eyes in E13.5 CXCR4 mutants are of normal size but contain reduced
numbers of RGCs. We also compared the number of islet-1/2-positive neurons at
E11.5 wild-type and mutant littermates, a time when the first-born RGC neurons
begin extending axons in the retina (Young
1985
; Cepko et al.,
1996
). At this early time point, we find no difference in the
number of neurons between two knock-outs and four wild-type littermates. These
observations are consistent with the hypothesis that SDF-1 helps to promote
the survival of RGCs after E11.5; however, they do not eliminate the
possibility that RGC production is reduced in CXCR4 mutant embryos.

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Figure 9. Mice lacking CXCR4 have fewer RGCs. A, Confocal reconstruction of
a representative 2 µm optical section from an E13.5 wild-type eye.
B, Table comparing the number of islet-1-positive RGCs (see Materials
and Methods) in wild-type and CXCR4 mutant eyes. The number of RGCs in mutant
embryos is estimated to be 65% of those in wild-type littermates.
|
|
 |
Discussion
|
|---|
Neuronal survival is known to be enhanced in many neuronal types by the
elevation of cAMP, but ligands that promote neuronal survival in vivo
through this mechanism have been hard to identify. Our results suggest that
SDF-1 can promote the survival of RGC neurons through the activation of CXCR4
and the stimulation of a cAMP-mediated signaling pathway. This is the first
time that SDF-1 has been proposed to have a neurotrophic role during normal
development.
Our results are consistent with the hypothesis that SDF-1 acts directly on
RGC neurons. These are the only neurons within the retina that express SDF-1
receptor, CXCR4. Moreover, the survival-promoting effect of SDF-1 does not
require the presence of other more traditional neurotrophic factors, nor is it
mediated by the src kinases common to neurotrophin actions. However, it is
impossible to rule out the possibility that SDF-1 promotes neuronal survival
by inducing the synthesis or release of another neurotrophic factor.
That SDF-1 exerts its survival effects through the elevation of cAMP is
somewhat unexpected. This survival effect is clearly blocked by PTX, yet
PTX-sensitive pathways generally act through a Gi intermediary that
inhibits adenylate cyclase. However, a PTX-sensitive elevation of cAMP like
that seen in the survival-promoting pathway of SDF-1 is not without precedent.
For example, the metabotropic glutamate receptor mGluR1 can activate adenylate
cyclase through a PTX-sensitive Gi intermediary
(Conn and Pin, 1997
). SDF-1
may also activate an additional cGMP-mediated pathway in primary embryonic
neurons, because an antagonist of cGMP and an inhibitor of PKG each partially
reduce the survival-enhancing effects of SDF-1. Similarly, the chemotactic
effect of SDF-1 on T cells is mediated through PTX-sensitive activation of
both PKG and PKA (Jinquan et al.,
2000
), and SDF-1 activates a cAMP-dependent pathway to promote an
anti-inflammatory reaction in peripheral blood mononuclear cells
(Damas et al., 2002
). The
cAMP-activated pathway we describe seems to play the predominant role in
promoting neuronal survival, whereas a cGMP-mediated pathway appears to be
activated in parallel and enhances survival to a lesser extent.
The CXCR4-tropic HIV coat glycoprotein HxB-gp120 has been reported
previously to have toxic effects on cultured neurons and NT2N cells
(Hesselgesser et al., 1998a
;
Kaul and Lipton, 1999
). HIV
isolates that bind CXCR4 are toxic to neurons, whereas those that bind CCR5
appear to be less toxic (Ohagen et al.,
1999
). It has therefore been argued that HxB-gp120 produced by
HIV-infected tissue might have a directly toxic effect on nearby cells in the
CNS (Ohagen et al., 1999
).
This apparent toxic effect of HxB-gp120 is also detected in our studies by its
reduction in the survival of RGCs but only when SDF-1 is present in the
medium. Recent studies have indicated that Hxb-gp120 can cause toxicity to
neurons by two different pathways, a CXCR4-dependent PTX-sensitive pathway and
a second PTX-independent pathway (Zheng et
al., 1999
). Our experiments suggest that some of this glycoprotein
toxicity could be a result of its ability to block the binding of SDF-1 to
CXCR4 (Staudinger et al.,
2001
), thereby preventing SDF-1 from activating cAMP-mediated
survival pathways.
In contrast to our finding that SDF-1 promotes the survival of embryonic
chick and mouse RGC neurons, other studies have reported that SDF-1 has
neurotoxic effects on E15E17 rat cerebrocortical cultures
(Kaul and Lipton, 1999
) and on
1316 week human fetal neurons
(Zheng et al., 1999
). One
possible explanation for this discrepancy is that different neuron types might
behave dissimilarly. For example, SDF-1 might act as a trophic factor early in
embryogenesis and have different effects later in development. We have not
examined the effects of SDF-1 on older RGC neurons. In at least one instance,
SDF-1 has been shown to cause neurotoxicity indirectly via the release of
tumor necrosis factor from astrocytes in mixed cultures
(Bezzi et al., 2001
).
Astrocytes have not yet differentiated in the retinas from which we prepare
cultured RGCs (Young, 1985
;
Cepko et al., 1996
). This and
the fact that CXCR4 is expressed on only RGCs at these early developmental
times may have enabled us to detect a direct trophic effect of SDF-1 on RGC
neurons in our cultures. Finally, a recent study has concluded that SDF-1
activates three separate signaling pathways in CD4 T cells, one being a
PTX-sensitive prosurvival pathway, whereas another is a competing
PTX-insensitive apoptotic pathway
(Vlahakis et al., 2002
). Our
results suggest that in our culture conditions, the PTX-sensitive prosurvival
pathway predominates in embryonic RGCs.
Slit-2, a known axonal repellent, has been shown recently to interfere with
the chemotactic activity of leukocytes toward SDF-1
(Wu et al., 2001
), and here we
show that slit-2 also interferes with the survival-promoting activity of SDF-1
on RGC neurons. Conversely, SDF-1 reduces the efficacy of multiple repellents
on several neuronal types (Chalasani et
al., 2003
). For example, concentrations of SDF-1 that promote RGC
survival reduce the sensitivity of RGC axons to slit-2 by
10-fold. The
first steps of the signaling pathway by which SDF-1 opposes repellent action
are identical to those through which it promotes RGC survival. Together, these
results suggest that the slit-2- and SDF-1-activated signaling pathways act in
opposition to one another. A more general antagonism between survival and axon
repellents is hinted at by reports that sema3A can have neurotoxic effects
(Fankhauser et al., 1999
;
Shirvan et al., 1999
). We
speculate that neurons with misdirected axons that are in contact with
repellents for long periods of time may become resistant to survival-promoting
signals. This effect, combined with the better known loss of target-specific
trophic signals (Purves et al.,
1988
; Barde, 1989
;
Bernstein and Lichtman, 1999
),
would help remove neurons whose axons were irretrievably lost. Conversely,
correctly routed axons with access to target-specific trophic factors may be
better able to ignore incidental or weak repellent cues.
The SDF-1 receptor CXCR4 is expressed in a wide variety of neuronal
tissues, including RGCs, sympathetic ganglia, dorsal root sensory ganglia,
spinal cord, hindbrain, midbrain, olfactory bulb, and the external granule
cell layer of the cerebellum (McGrath et
al., 1999
, and our results). SDF-1 therefore has the potential to
enhance neuronal survival among a wide variety of central and peripheral
neurons. SDF-1 itself is expressed primarily outside the developing CNS during
embryogenesis (McGrath et al.,
1999
). Thus, embryonic RGCs and other neurons will most often
encounter SDF-1 as their axons grow through non-neuronal tissues. Our in
vitro results suggest that SDF-1 provides trophic support to embryonic
retinal neurons after retinal axons first exit the eye at E11.5
(Young, 1985
;
Cepko et al., 1996
). This
expectation is supported by the reduced numbers of E13.5 RGCs in CXCR4
knock-outs compared with wild-type littermates. Other trophic factors such as
BDNF, NGF, and CNTF have been shown to promote RGC survival in vitro
(Lehwalder et al., 1989
;
Mansour-Robaey et al., 1994
),
and it is therefore not surprising that many RGCs persist within the embryo
even in the absence of SDF-1/CXCR4 signaling. Unfortunately, it is not
practical to determine whether RGC numbers are reduced further over time
during late embryonic and postnatal life, because loss of CXCR4 has an
embryonic lethal phenotype. This issue can be examined in greater detail when
eye-specific conditional knock-outs become available.
It is possible that SDF-1 could provide trophic support to neurons in the
mature nervous system. Both CXCR4 and SDF-1 are found in the postnatal CNS
(Gabuzda and Wang, 1999
;
McGrath et al., 1999
;
Zheng et al., 1999
;
Tham et al., 2001
). SDF-1 is
expressed in the cerebellum, olfactory bulb, cortex, dentate gyrus of the
hippocampus, and some thalamic nuclei. CXCR4 is widely expressed in CNS
neurons, microglia, and astrocytes. Again, it may be possible to determine
whether SDF-1 provides trophic support to these cells in mature animals when
conditional knock-outs or more potent CXCR4 antagonists become available.
There is some evidence to suggest that increased expression of CXCR4 is
correlated with neuropathogenesis induced by HIV-1 or by other forms of
injury, including trauma and stroke
(Gabuzda and Wang, 1999
;
Klein et al., 1999
;
Ohagen et al., 1999
;
Zheng et al., 1999
). Moreover,
a chemokine like SDF-1 is expected to be expressed in damaged or inflamed
tissues (Gonzalo et al., 2000
;
Evert et al., 2001
). We
therefore hypothesize that SDF-1 activation of CXCR4 not only provides
generalized trophic support to embryonic and mature neurons but also might
help support neurons damaged by injury or inflammation.
 |
Footnotes
|
|---|
Received Aug. 30, 2002;
revised Mar. 7, 2003;
accepted Mar. 17, 2003.
This research was supported by National Institutes of Health Grant
RO1-NS26527 to J.A.R. We gratefully acknowledge Pete Bannerman and Ashleigh
Hanna for help with the confocal microscope. We also thank Connie Page for
providing NT2N cells, Darlene Ghavimi for making the HIV glycoproteins, Drs.
Kimberly Sabelko and Andrea Webber for help with the mice, Cynthia Ito and
Radhia Ben-Mohamed for technical help, and Cynthia Ito and Thomas Kreibich for
their help in data analysis. We thank Dr. Morris Brinbaum and Eileen Whiteman
for the GSK, phospho-GSK, and AKT antibodies; Dr. Thomas Jessell for islet-1/2
antibodies; Dr. Francis Lefcort for TrkB antibodies; and Dr. William Halfter
for neurofilament antibodies. We thank Drs. David Manning and Judy Meinkoth
for their advice with the signaling pathway and LiJia, Thomas Kreibich, and
Drs. Kimberly Sabelko and Andrea Webber for their help with this
manuscript.
Correspondence should be addressed to Jonathan A. Raper, University of
Pennsylvania School of Medicine, 1115 BRB II/III, 421 Curie Boulevard,
Philadelphia, PA 19104. E-mail:
raperj{at}mail.med.upenn.edu.
C. M. Coughlan's present address: Biological Sciences Department, 257
Crawford Hall, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA 15260.
Copyright © 2003 Society for Neuroscience
0270-6474/03/234601-12$15.00/0
 |
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