The Journal of Neuroscience, July 30, 2003, 23(17):6810-6818
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The Human Immunodeficiency Virus-1 Protein Tat and Its Discrete Fragments Evoke Selective Release of Acetylcholine from Human and Rat Cerebrocortical Terminals through Species-Specific Mechanisms
Marco Feligioni,1
Luca Raiteri,1
Roberto Pattarini,4
Massimo Grilli,1
Santina Bruzzone,2
Paolo Cavazzani,5
Maurizio Raiteri,1,3 and
Anna Pittaluga1,3
1Pharmacology and Toxicology Section, Department
of Experimental Medicine, 2Biochemistry Section,
Department of Experimental Medicine, and 3Center of
Excellence for Biomedical Research, University of Genova, 16148 Genova, Italy,
4Division of Neurovirology, University of Manitoba,
Manitoba, Canada R3T 2N2, and 5Division of
Neurosurgery, Galliera Hospital, 16128 Genova, Italy
 |
Abstract
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The effect of the human immunodeficiency virus-1 protein Tat was
investigated on neurotransmitter release from human and rat cortical nerve
endings. Tat failed to affect the release of several neurotransmitters, such
as glutamate, GABA, norepinephrine, and others, but it evoked the release of
[3H]ACh via increase of cytosolic [Ca2+]. In
human nerve terminals, the Tat effect partly depends on
Ca2+ entry through voltage-sensitive
Ca2+ channels, because Cd2+ halved
the Tat-evoked release. Activation of group I metabotropic glutamate receptors
(mGluR) and mobilization of Ca2+ from
IP3-sensitive intraterminal stores are also involved, because the
Tat effect was prevented by mGluR antagonists
2-methyl-6-(phenylethynyl)pyridine hydrochloride and
7-(hydroxyimino)cyclopropa[b]chromen-1a-carboxylate ethyl ester and by the
IP3 receptor antagonists heparin and xestospongin C. Furthermore,
the group I selective mGlu agonist (RS)-3,5-dihydroxyphenylglycine enhanced
[3H]ACh release. In rat nerve terminals, the Tat-evoked release
neither depends on external Ca2+ ions entry nor on
IP3-mediated mechanisms. Tat seems to cause mobilization of
Ca2+ from ryanodine-sensitive internal stores because
its effect was prevented by both 8-bromo-cyclic adenosine diphosphate-ribose
and dantrolene. The Tat-evoked release from human synaptosomes was mimicked by
the peptide sequences Tat 32-62, Tat 49-86, and Tat 41-60. In contrast, the
Tat 49-86 and Tat 61-80 fragments, but not the Tat 32-62 fragment, were active
in rat synaptosomes. In conclusion, Tat elicits
Ca2+-dependent [3H]ACh release by
species-specific intraterminal mechanisms by binding via discrete amino acid
sequences to different receptive sites on human and rat cholinergic
terminals.
Key words: HIV-1; Tat; acetylcholine release; human cerebrocortex; rat cerebrocortex; calcium; inositoltrisphosphate receptors; ryanodine receptors; mGlu receptor
 |
Introduction
|
|---|
During human immunodeficiency virus (HIV-1) infection,
50% of patients
develop motor, cognitive, and behavioral impairments, the origins of which are
poorly understood. Because neurons can rarely, if ever, be infected by the
virus, it is hypothesized that indirect mechanisms are primarily involved in
the neuronal deficits and in the neurotoxic events that often occur during
acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) infection
(Kaul and Lipton, 1999
;
Valle et al., 2000
;
Bezzi et al., 2001
;
Kaul et al., 2001
;
Mollace et al., 2001
),
although direct effects of HIV-1 proteins have been reported as well (see
below).
The occurrence of neurotoxic events is sustained by postmortem histological
observations made in cerebral tissue from HIV-1-positive patients, where loss
of neurons has clearly been described (Masliah et al.,
1992
,
1997
;
Adle-Biassette et al., 1995
;
Glass et al., 1995
;
Petito and Roberts, 1995
;
Fox et al., 1997
;
Everall et al., 1999
). These
dramatic effects may, however, not be necessary to explain the above-mentioned
neuropsychiatric deficits; in fact, relatively subtle changes in central
neurotransmission induced by HIV-1 itself or by viral proteins might be at the
basis of various functional impairments.
In the last decade, evidence has been provided suggesting that HIV-1
proteins, in particular the coat protein gp120, could directly influence
central neuronal functions, causing changes in neurotransmitter release or
affecting receptor-mediated mechanisms
(Müller et al., 1992
;
Savio and Levi, 1993
;
Ushijima et al., 1993
;
Pittaluga and Raiteri, 1994
;
Lannuzel et al., 1995
;
Nath et al., 1995
;
Pittaluga et al., 1996
;
Fontana et al., 1997
;
Pattarini et al., 1998
;
Kaul and Lipton, 1999
;
Xin et al., 1999
;
Gemignani et al., 2000
;
Bezzi et al., 2001
;
Kaul et al., 2001
).
Increasing attention has been focused on Tat, a nonstructural viral protein
known to be produced and actively released by HIV-1-infected cells
(Ensoli et al., 1993
). Tat has
been detected in the brain of animals with viral encephalitis, and its
encoding mRNA has been found in the CNS of HIV-1-infected patients exhibiting
AIDS-dementia symptoms (Hudson et al.,
2000
; Valle et al.,
2000
).
Tat can apparently induce both neurological impairments and neurotoxicity
because it was shown both to excite and kill human and rodent cerebrocortical
neurons (Nath et al., 1996
;
Kruman et al., 1998
) by
mechanisms involving neuronal Ca2+ homeostasis (Haughey
et al., 1999
,
2001
). The protein binds to
and depolarizes neuronal membranes
(Sabatier et al., 1991
),
allowing increases in cytosolic Ca2+ through
receptor-operated channels and mobilization from IP3-sensitive
internal stores (Nath et al.,
1996
; Haughey et al.,
1999
,
2001
).
We investigated whether Tat can affect brain neurotransmission by affecting
transmitter release from fresh human and rat cortical nerve endings. We first
explored the release of several transmitters present in brain cortical areas
and potentially involved in neuronal functions that can be impaired during
HIV-1 infection (McGaugh,
1989
; Hasselmo and Bower,
1993
; Collingridge and Bliss,
1995
; Garg, 1999
;
Gruslin et al., 1999
;
Pascual Sedano et al., 1999
).
Most of the work then focused on ACh, the release of which appears to be
selectively targeted by Tat.
 |
Materials and Methods
|
|---|
Human brain tissue samples. Samples of human cerebral cortex were
obtained from informed and consentient HIV-1-negative patients undergoing
neurosurgery, each on a different day, to reach deeply seated tumors. The
samples represented parts of frontal (n = 9) and temporal (n
= 7) lobes obtained from 11 women and 5 men (age, 30-70 years). Immediately
after removal, the tissue was placed in a physiological salt solution at
2-4°C, and crude synaptosomal fractions were prepared within 90 min. The
experimental procedures were approved by the Ethical Committee of the
University of Genoa.
Rat brain tissue samples. Adult male rats (Sprague Dawley; 200-250
gm) were housed at constant temperature (22 ± 1°C) and relative
humidity (50%) under a regular light/dark schedule (light, 7:00 A.M. to 7:00
P.M.). Food and water were freely available. The animals were killed by
decapitation, and the tissue was rapidly removed. The experimental procedures
were approved by the Department Ethical Committee, in accordance with European
legislation (European Communities Council directive of November 24, 1986;
86/609/EEC).
Preparation of synaptosomes. Crude synaptosomal fractions were
prepared essentially according to Raiteri et al.
(1984
). Briefly, the tissue
was homogenized in 40 volumes of 0.32 M sucrose, buffered with
phosphate to pH 7.4; the homogenate was first centrifuged (5 min at 1000
x g), and the synaptosomal fraction was isolated from the
supernatant by centrifugation (20 min at 12,000 x g). In a set of
experiments, the tissue was homogenized in buffered sucrose containing 1
mM BAPTA or 40 µM heparin, to entrap these
membrane-impermeant agents into subsequently isolated synaptosomes
(Raiteri et al., 2000
). Based
on estimates made by entrapping [3H]sucrose, the intrasynaptosomal
concentration of the compounds are
5% of the original concentration in
the homogenization medium. The synaptosomal pellets were resuspended in a
physiological medium having the following composition (in mM): 125
NaCl, 3 KCl, 1.2 MgSO4, 1.2 CaCl2, 1
NaH2PO4, 22 NaHCO3, and 10 glucose (aerated
with 95% O2 and 5% CO2), pH 7.2-7.4. Synaptosomal
protein contents were determined according to Bradford
(1976
).
Release experiments. Human or rat cortical synaptosomes were
labeled with [3H]choline (final concentration, 30-60 nM;
in experiments of [3H]ACh release), with
[3H]norepinephrine ([3H]NE; final concentration, 30-50
nM), or with [3H]D-aspartate (final
concentration, 40-60 nM). In other experiments, synaptosomes were
incubated without radioactive markers, when the release of endogenous
aspartate, glutamate, GABA, or serine had to be monitored. Incubation was
performed at 37°C, for 15 min, in a rotary water bath, and in an
atmosphere of 95% O2 and 5% CO2. Incubation with
[3H]NE was performed in the presence of the transporter blockers
citalopram (0.1 µM) and GBR 12909 (0.1 µM) to
avoid false labeling with [3H]NE of serotonergic and dopaminergic
nerve terminals, respectively. After the labeling period, identical portions
of the synaptosomal suspensions were distributed on a set of parallel
superfusion chambers maintained at 37°C
(Raiteri and Raiteri, 2000
).
Superfusion was then performed at a flow rate of 0.5 ml/min, using media
aerated with 95% O2 and 5% CO2, for a total period of 51
min.
Synaptosomes were first equilibrated during 36 min of superfusion; five
consecutive 3-min fractions (termed "b1 to b5") were then
collected. Tat or its fragments were introduced at the end of the first
fraction (b1; t = 39 min), whereas glutamate receptor antagonists
xestospongin C, dantrolene, oligomycin, or 8-bromo-cyclic adenosine
diphosphateribose (Br-cADP-ribose) were present from 8 min before Tat or its
fragments until the end of superfusion.
In a series of experiments, performed to study the
Ca2+ dependency of the Tat-induced release, the
superfusion medium was replaced, starting from t = 20 min, with a
medium containing 0.1 mM Ca2+ and in which
the Mg2+ concentration was increased to 10 mM
to prevent the entry of Ca2+ through voltage-sensitive
Ca2+ channels (VSCCs).
Fractions collected and superfused synaptosomes were finally counted for
radioactivity or analyzed for their endogenous amino acid content.
Endogenous amino acid determination. Endogenous amino acids were
determined by HPLC analysis (Waters 715 Ultrawisp; Waters Associates, Milford,
MA) after automatic derivatization with o-phthalaldehyde and
resolution through a C18 reverse-phase chromatographic column (Chrompack,
Middleburg, The Netherlands; 10 x 4.6 mm, 3 µm; 30°C), coupled
with fluorimetric detection (Shimadzu, Tokyo, Japan; RF551; excitation
wavelength, 350 nm; emission wavelength, 450 nm). The compounds were eluted
with a Waters 600 MS gradient system after a ternary gradient program, as
described previously (Pittaluga et al.,
1997
). Homo-serine was used as internal standard.
Endogenous cADP-ribose determination. Rat cortical synaptosomes
(0.3 mg of protein/tube) were incubated for 8 min at 37°C in a rotary
water bath in the absence (control) or in the presence of Tat (1
nM). At the end of the incubation period, HClO4 (final
concentration, 0.6 mM) was added to stop the enzymatic reactions,
and samples were rapidly frozen until cADP-ribose determination. Synaptosomal
c-ADP-ribose content was analyzed according to Graeff and Lee
(2002
).
Denaturation or immunoprecipitation of Tat. Tat was denaturated by
heating at 90°C for 30 min. Immunoprecipitation was performed by
incubating the protein (100 nM) with a rabbit anti-Tat polyclonal
antibody (1:500) in the presence of goat anti-rabbit IgG agarose for 90 min at
room temperature. The suspension was then centrifuged, and the supernatant was
immediately used in release experiments.
Calculations. The amounts of endogenous amino acids released into
each superfusate fraction were expressed as picomoles per milligram of
protein. The effects of Tat on the release of endogenous transmitters were
evaluated by calculating the ratio between the amino acid content in the
fraction in which the maximal effect was reached (usually b4, the fourth
fraction collected) and the amount in the first fraction (b1) and comparing
this ratio with the corresponding ratio obtained under control conditions (no
drug added).
The amount of radioactivity released into each superfusate sample was
expressed as a percentage of the total synaptosomal radioactivity content at
the start of the fraction collected (fractional efflux). When the time course
of the Tat effect is described, the amount of radioactivity into each
superfusate fraction collected was expressed as the percentage of the first
fraction collected (b1). When results are expressed as percentage of increase
over basal release, drug effects were evaluated from the ratio between the
percentage of release in b4 and that in b1. This ratio was compared with the
corresponding ratio obtained under control conditions (no drug added). ANOVA
was performed, followed by Dunnett's test or Newman-Keuls multiple comparisons
test, as appropriate.
The amount of endogenous c-ADP-ribose present in each sample was expressed
as picomoles per milligram of protein. ANOVA was performed by direct
comparisons with two-tailed Student's t test.
Drugs. [methyl-3H] Choline chloride (specific activity,
83 Ci/mmol), [3H]NE (specific activity, 38 Ci/mmol), and
[3H]D-aspartate (specific activity, 16.3 Ci/mmol) were
obtained from Amersham Radiochemical Centre (Buckinghamshire, UK).
(RS)-3,5-Dihydroxyphenylglycine (3,5-DHPG), AMPA,
2,3-dioxo-6-nitro-1,2,3,4-tetrahydrobenzo [f]quinoxaline-7-sulfonamide (NBQX),
2-methyl-6-(phenylethynyl)pyridine hydrochloride (MPEP), and
7-(hydroxyimino)cycloprop-a[b]chromen-1a-carboxylate ethyl ester (CPCCOEt)
were obtained from Tocris Cookson (Bristol, UK). Heparin, dantrolene,
oligomycin, Br-cADP-ribose, and goat anti-rabbit IgG agarose (IgG fraction of
antiserum) were from Sigma (St. Louis, MO); BAPTA was from Fluka Biochemika
(Milan, Italy), and xestospongin C was from Calbiochem (Darmstadt, Germany).
The following drugs were kindly provided by the companies indicated:
cis-4-(phosphonomethyl)-2-piperidinecarboxilic acid (CGS19755;
Novartis Pharmaceutical Corporation, Summit, NJ);
(R)-5-(4-aminophenyl)-7-methylcarbamoyl-8-methyl-8,9-dihydro-7H-1,3-dioxolo[4,5-h][2,3]-benzodiazepine
(LY303070; Eli Lilly, Indianapolis, IN); citalopram (H. Lundbeck A/S,
Copenhagen, Denmark); GBR 12909 (Gist-Brocades, Delft, The Netherlands).
Recombinant Tat (HIV-1 strain HxB2) and rabbit anti-Tat (HIV-1 strain HxB2)
polyclonal antibody were from Intracell (London, UK). Tat peptide 32-62 (HIV-1
strain LAI), Tat peptide 49-86 (HIV-1 strain LAI), and the 10 amino acids
overlapping Tat 20mers (HIV-1 strain LAI) were kindly donated by the
"AIDS Reagent Project" (ARP 7004.2 and 7005) and by the European
program EVA (779.1-779.1-8) (NIBSC, Hertfordshire, UK). The amino acid
sequence of the Tat protein strain LAI perfectly overlaps that of Tat strain
HxB2.
 |
Results
|
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Tat selectively enhances [3H]ACh release
We first investigated the effects of Tat on the release of different
transmitters from human and rat cortical superfused synaptosomes. As shown in
Table 1, Tat, added to the
superfusion medium at 1 or 3 nM, did not affect the release of
endogenous aspartate, glutamate, GABA, or serine. The protein also had no
effect on the release of previously taken up [3H]NE or
[3H]D-aspartate from either human or rat synaptosomes.
On the contrary, Tat evoked the release of [3H]ACh from human and
rat synaptosomes prelabeled with [3H]choline. The releasing effect
of 1 or 3 nM Tat was significantly higher in human than in rat
nerve endings (Table 1; see
also Fig. 1).
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Table 1. Effects of Tat on the spontaneous release of endogenous or preloaded
tritiated neurotransmitters from human and rat cortical synaptosomes
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Figure 1. Effects of Tat on [3H]ACh release from human (A) and
rat (B) cortical synaptosomes: time course of release and
inactivation after Tat immunoprecipitation or heat shock denaturation. Gray
circles, Control (no Tat added); solid circles, Tat (1 nM); open
triangles, heat shock-denatured Tat (1 nM); open squares, Tat (1
nM) after immunoprecipitation. For the sake of clarity, basal
release from rat synaptosomes (B) is not indicated. Results are
expressed as percentages of the first superfusion fraction collected (b1).
Data are means ± SEM of three to nine experiments run in triplicate (3
superfusion chambers for each experimental condition). Insets (C,D),
Concentration-dependent effects of Tat on the release of [3H]ACh
from human (C) and rat (D) cortical synaptosomes. Results
are expressed as the percentage of increase over basal release. Data are means
of three to six experiments run in triplicate. *p <
0.05 versus control; **p < 0.01 versus control;
#p < 0.05 versus Tat; ##p < 0.01 versus Tat.
|
|
As shown in Figure
1A, the Tat-induced [3H]ACh release from human
cortical synaptosomes reached a maximal effect at b3 (i.e., after 6 min of
exposure to the protein); heat shock denaturation or immunoprecipitation of
Tat prevented its releasing effect. The protein also elicited release of
[3H]ACh from rat cortical synaptosomes
(Fig. 1B). Similarly,
the releasing effect produced by 1 nM Tat was prevented by
immunoprecipitation or heat shock denaturation. When tested at varying
concentrations (0.1-3 nM), Tat appeared to reach a maximum effect
at
1 nM (Fig.
1C,D).
Calcium dependence of the Tat-evoked release from human cortical
nerve endings
The [3H]ACh release provoked by 1 nM Tat in human
cortical synaptosomes was analyzed for its dependence on external
Ca2+ ions. Drastic reduction of
Ca2+ (to 0.1 mM) in the superfusion medium
and the simultaneous increase of Mg2+ ions to 10
mM prevented the Tat-induced release by
55%
(Fig. 2A). Moreover,
Cd2+ ions (10 µM) diminished to the same
extent the releasing effect of the protein in human nerve endings. In
contrast, the Tat-induced release was almost completely (
85%) prevented
when the membrane-impermeant Ca2+ chelator BAPTA was
entrapped in the synaptosomes, suggesting that Ca2+
release from internal stores also contributes to the releasing effect of Tat
from human nerve endings (Fig.
2A).

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Figure 2. Ca2+ dependency of the Tat-induced release of
[3H]ACh from human (A) and rat (B) cortical
synaptosomes. Synaptosomes were staffed with BAPTA or heparin during cortical
tissue homogenization, whereas antagonists or Cd2+ ions
were added during superfusion, 8 min before Tat. At the concentrations used,
these drugs did not modify, on their own, the [3H]ACh release (data
not shown). Results are expressed as the percentage of increase over basal
release; data are means ± SEM of 3-12 experiments run in triplicate.
*p < 0.05 versus respective control;
**p < 0.01 versus respective control.
|
|
Involvement of IP3 in the Tat-evoked release from human
nerve endings
Tat has recently been proposed to mobilize Ca2+ from
the endoplasmic reticulum through activation of IP3-sensitive
receptors (Haughey et al.,
1999
). To verify the occurrence of such a process in our system,
we incorporated the membrane-impermeant IP3 receptor
(IP3r) antagonist heparin (40 µM in the
homogenization medium; estimated internal concentration,
200
nM) into human synaptosomes. As shown in
Figure 2A, heparin
prevented
75% of the Tat-induced [3H]ACh release. At the
concentration used, heparin was previously found to prevent the
somatostatin-induced NMDA receptor potentiation of NE release from rat
hippocampal synaptosomes (Pittaluga et
al., 2000
). The involvement of IP3-sensitive
Ca2+ stores is also indicated by the finding that
xestospongin C, a recently available membrane-permeant IP3r
antagonist (Gafni et al.,
1997
), inhibited the Tat-induced release of [3H]ACh
from human synaptosomes (Fig.
2A).
Calcium dependence of the Tat-evoked release from rat cortical nerve
endings
Surprisingly, the Tat-induced release of [3H]ACh from rat
cortical synaptosomes seems not to depend on the presence of extra-terminal
Ca2+ ions. As shown in
Figure 2B, superfusion
with a Ca2+-deprived Mg2+-enriched
medium did not significantly prevent the Tat-mediated effect. Moreover, the
addition of Cd2+ did not modify the Tat-induced release.
In contrast, entrapping BAPTA into rat nerve endings blocked
the[3H]ACh release elicited by Tat by
70%
(Fig. 2B), suggesting
that Tat provokes Ca2+ mobilization from internal stores
and that the resulting increase in cytosolic Ca2+
facilitates release of [3H]ACh. Finally, neither entrapped heparin
nor exposure to xestospongin C prevented the effect of Tat on
[3H]ACh release in the rat cortex
(Fig. 2B). Because
intraterminal Ca2+ may originate from sources other than
IP3-sensitive stores (for review, see
Berridge, 1998
;
Mattson et al., 2000
), we
investigated the effect of dantrolene, an antagonist at ryanodine receptors
(RYRs), and of oligomycin, an inhibitor of the mitochondrial ATPase. As shown
in Figure 2B,
dantrolene dramatically reduced the Tat-evoked release from rat synaptosomes,
whereas oligomycin had no effect. At the concentrations used, dantrolene and
oligomycin were previously found to inhibit the external
Ca2+-independent K+-induced GABA release from
rat cortical synaptosomes (Raiteri et al.,
2002
) as well as NGF-mediated potentiation of
K+-induced glutamate release
(Raiteri et al., 2003
).
The Tat-evoked [3H]ACh release from human and rat cortical
nerve endings does not involve activation of glutamate ionotropic
receptors
It had been proposed that Tat can directly excite human and rodent neurons
via activation of non-NMDA receptors
(Magnuson et al., 1995
). We
found that human cortical nerve endings are endowed with AMPA/kainate
receptors, activation of which causes [3H]ACh release; this effect
is prevented by NBQX, an AMPA/kainate-preferring antagonist (100
µM AMPA = 28.4 ± 2.1%; 100 µM AMPA + 10
µM NBQX = 0.3 ± 5.8%; p < 0.01; results were
expressed as the percentage of increase over basal release). Release-mediating
AMPA/kainate receptors also are present on rat cortical nerve endings
(Pittaluga et al., 1997
).
We investigated whether the effect of Tat on [3H]ACh release
from human and rat cortical synaptosomes could depend, at least in part, on
the activation of ionotropic glutamatergic receptors; however, the selective
AMPA/kainate receptor antagonists NBQX (10 µM) and LY303070 (10
µM), as well as the competitive NMDA receptor antagonist
CGS19755 (10 µM), failed to significantly affect the Tat-induced
release (Table 2). At the
concentrations indicated, the antagonists did not affect, on their own, the
spontaneous release of tritium.
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Table 2. Lack of antagonism by NBQX, LY303070, or CGS19755 on the Tat-induced
[3H]ACh release from superfused human or rat cortical
synaptosomes
| |
The Tat-evoked [3H]ACh release involves activation of
group I glutamate metabotropic receptors in human, but not in rat cortical
nerve endings
Because of the involvement of IP3-sensitive
Ca2+ stores in the Tat-releasing effect from human nerve
endings, we evaluated whether IP3-linked metabotropic receptors of
group I metabotropic glutamate (mGlu) might mediate [3H]ACh
release. Human cortical synaptosomes prelabeled with [3H]choline
were exposed to Tat in the presence of MPEP or CPCCOEt, two antagonists at
IP3-linked mGlu receptors (mGluRs) of group I. As reported in
Table 3, MPEP (1
µM) and CPCCOEt (5 µM) inhibited by
68% and
62%, respectively, the Tat-evoked release of [3H]ACh; the
antagonist effects were not additive. At the concentrations used, the
antagonists did not affect, on their own, the basal release of
[3H]ACh.
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Table 3. Effects of the mGluR antagonists MPEP and CPCCOEt on the Tat-induced
[3H]ACh release from human cortical synaptosomes
| |
Consistent with these results, the compound 3,5-DHPG, a selective agonist
at group I mGluR, concentration-dependently released [3H]ACh from
human cortical nerve endings as shown in
Table 4; the releasing effect
induced by 3,5-DHPG (100 µM) was almost totally antagonized by
MPEP (1 µM) and CPCCOEt (5 µM). Of note, 3,5-DHPG
(100 µM) did not cause the release of [3H]ACh from
rat cortical nerve endings (30 µM 3,5-DHPG = 1.5 ± 2.4;
100 µM 3,5-DHPG = 7.4 ± 4.5; results were expressed as
the percentage of increase over basal release).
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Table 4. Effects of the group I mGluR agonist 3,5-DHPG on the release of
[3H]ACh from human cortical synaptosomes: reversal by MPEP and
CPCCOEt
| |
The Tat-evoked release from rat nerve endings involves
cADP-ribose
RYRs are thought to be endogenously activated by cADP-ribose
(Galione et al., 1993
;
Fossier et al., 1999
;
Higashida et al., 2001
;
Lee, 2001
). Data are present
in the literature demonstrating that in the cholinergic system of frog motor
nerve terminals (Brailoiu and Miyamoto,
2000
) and Aplysia buccal ganglion neurons
(Mothet et al., 1998
), the
injection of cADP-ribose facilitates ACh release in a
Ca2+-dependent manner. To investigate whether the Tat
effect in rat cerebrocortex synaptosomes is mediated by cADP-ribose,
synaptosomes were exposed to Tat in the presence of Br-cADP-ribose, a
membrane-permeant competitive antagonist of the cADP-ribose-binding site
(Walseth and Lee, 1993
). As
reported in Table 5,
Br-cADP-ribose prevented the Tat-induced release of [3H]ACh. At the
concentrations used, the compound did not affect, on its own, the release of
[3H]ACh (data not shown). Exposure of rat synaptosomes to Tat (1
nM) caused a moderate, but significant, increase in the cADP-ribose
content [control: 2.49 ± 0.12 pmol/mg protein, n = 8; with
added Tat (1 nM): 3.18 ± 0.24, n = 10; p
< 0.05]. This effect is probably underestimated, if one assumes that the
cADP-ribose increase essentially occurs in cholinergic synaptosomes,
representing only a small percentage of the cortical population of nerve
endings. The cADP-ribose detected in the synaptosomal fraction is consistent
with the cADP-ribose level reported in the CNS by Walseth et al.
(1991
).
In contrast, the Tat-evoked release of [3H]ACh from human
cortical nerve endings was insensitive to Br-cADP-ribose (1 nM Tat
= 77.3 ± 4.5; 1 nM Tat in the presence of 10
µM Br-cADP-ribose = 86.6 ± 8.7; results are expressed as
the percentage of increase over basal release).
Different peptide fragments mimic Tat in human versus rat nerve
endings
To identify the peptide sequences responsible for the effects of Tat on the
release of [3H]ACh, different fragments of the protein were tested
on human and rat cortical synaptosomes prelabeled with
[3H]choline.
Figure 3A shows
that Tat 32-62 (1 nM) and Tat 49-86 (1 nM) elicited
[3H]ACh release from human synaptosomes. In contrast, rat
synaptosomes only released [3H]ACh when exposed to 1 nM
Tat 49-86, whereas the response to Tat 32-62 was very weak and barely
significant (Fig. 3B).
Indeed, Tat 49-86 (1 nM) increased [3H]ACh release from
rat beginning at 0.1 nM, whereas Tat 32-62 was unable to release
[3H]ACh, even when up to 10 nM were added
(Fig. 3B, inset).

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|
Figure 3. Effects of Tat 32-62 and Tat 49-86 on [3H]ACh release from human
(A) and rat (B) cortical synaptosomes. Gray circles, Control
(no Tat added); open triangles, Tat 32-62 (1 nM); solid circles,
Tat 49-86 (1 nM). Results are expressed as the percentage of the
first fraction collected (b1). Data are means ± SEM of three to seven
experiments run in triplicate. B, Inset, Concentration dependency of
the effect of Tat 32-62 (white bars) or Tat 49-86 (black bars) on
[3H]ACh release from rat cortical synaptosomes. Results are
expressed as the percentage of increase over basal release; data are means
± SEM of five experiments run in triplicate. *p
< 0.05 versus respective control; **p < 0.01 versus
respective control.
|
|
Finally, rat cortical synaptosomes were exposed to different partially
overlapping amino acid fragments collectively spanning the entire Tat
sequence. All peptides were applied at the final concentration of 1
nM. As shown in Figure
4, the [3H]ACh release was significantly increased only
by Tat 61-80, whereas the other peptides were ineffective. The effects of four
consecutive 20mers spanning the entire Tat sequence were also evaluated on the
release of [3H]ACh from human cortical synaptosomes.
Figure 4 shows that only the
sequence Tat 41-60 was able to evoke [3H]ACh release, whereas the
other sequences, including Tat 61-80, were much less effective or
ineffective.

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|
Figure 4. Effects of eight peptidic fragments (spanning the entire Tat sequence) on
the release of [3H]ACh from human and rat cortical synaptosomes.
Human (empty bars) and rat (black bars) synaptosomes were exposed to peptides
(1 nM). Results are expressed as the percentage of increase over
basal. Data are means ± SEM of three to nine experiments run in
triplicate. *p < 0.05 versus respective control.
|
|
 |
Discussion
|
|---|
Tat interacts with human and rodent brain neuronal membranes, leading to
depolarization and increase in cytosolic [Ca2+]
(Sabatier et al., 1991
;
Cheng et al., 1998
; Haughey et
al., 1999
,
2001
). In nerve endings, such
events could activate transmitter release
(Berridge, 1998
). To
investigate this possibility, human and rat synaptosomes were exposed to Tat,
and the release of various neurotransmitters was monitored.
The first finding of this work is that Tat can increase the basal release
of ACh from both human and rat nerve endings. The characteristics of the
technique used to monitor release (up-down superfusion of thin layers of
synaptosomes) (Raiteri and Raiteri,
2000
) permit the exclusion of indirect effects and lead to the
conclusion that Tat acts by binding to sites located on cholinergic axon
terminals.
Tat exhibits neuronal selectivity as determined by the protein-evoked
release of ACh but was unable to elicit release of glutamate, aspartate, GABA,
serine, and [3H]NE. These results indicate that, among the neuronal
families examined, only cholinergic neurons possess Tat recognition sites, the
activation of which leads to transmitter release. Note that the concentrations
of Tat (<1 nM) able to significantly enhance the release of ACh
approach those proposed to be present extracellularly during HIV-1 infection
(Gurwell et al., 2001
).
Buffering cytosolic Ca2+ ions with the
Ca2+ chelator BAPTA almost completely prevented the
releasing effect of Tat from both human and rat synaptosomes. Therefore, it is
reasonable to assume that the release of ACh provoked by Tat occurs by
vesicular exocytosis dependent on Ca2+ reaching the
cytosol when Tat binds to cholinergic terminals. One way to increase cytosolic
[Ca2+] is by entry of external
Ca2+ ions through activated VSCCs. In human nerve
endings, the releasing effect of Tat was about halved in low
Ca2+ medium or after the addition of
Cd2+ ions, which are known to block VSCCs. These
findings indicate that external Ca2+ ions and VSCC
activation contribute to the Tat-induced ACh release from human
cerebrocortical nerve endings in a consistent manner. In contrast, neither the
removal of external Ca2+ nor the addition of
Cd2+ ions significantly decreased the release of ACh
elicited by Tat from rat synaptosomes, indicating that this BAPTA-sensitive
release depends exclusively on Ca2+ mobilization from
intraterminal stores.
If intraterminal Ca2+ is the only source used by Tat
to evoke ACh release from rat synaptosomes,
50% of the Tat-evoked release
from human axon terminals depends on this source. Surprisingly, however, the
mechanisms involved in the two internal Ca2+-dependent
releases clearly differ between human and rat nerve endings.
It is well known that intraneuronal Ca2+ can be
mobilized from endoplasmic reticulum, through the activation of
IP3-sensitive and RY-sensitive receptors, as well as from
mitochondria (for review, see Berridge,
1998
; Mattson et al.,
2000
).
In human cholinergic nerve endings, Tat causes Ca2+
mobilization from IP3-sensitive stores because heparin and
xestospongin C, two IP3r antagonists, strongly prevented the
Tat-induced release of ACh. Intracellular IP3 production usually
requires activation of membrane metabotropic receptors. We found that
cholinergic human, but not rat, terminals are endowed with group I mGluRs,
mediating the Tat-releasing effect, because antagonists at group I mGluRs
potently prevented the Tat-evoked release of [3H]ACh. The finding
is compatible with the idea that Tat binds to mGluRs located on human cortical
cholinergic terminals and causes IP3-mediated
Ca2+ release from intraterminal stores with consequent
exocytosis of ACh.
Unlike for human nerve endings, Ca2+ mobilization
from IP3-sensitive stores can be excluded when Tat releases ACh
from rat terminals because IP3r antagonists were unable to
significantly prevent the Tat effect. The release of ACh elicited by Tat from
rat nerve terminals was instead almost abolished by dantrolene, a RYR
antagonist, indicating that intraterminal Ca2+ in rat
cholinergic nerve terminals is essentially mobilized after activation of RYRs.
As mentioned previously, the endogenous agonist at RYRs is likely to be
cADP-ribose (Galione et al.,
1993
; Lee, 2001
).
The involvement of this intracellular second messenger in the Tat effect on
rat cholinergic terminals is supported by the findings that (1) Br-cADP-ribose
almost totally prevented the Tat-mediated releasing effect, and (2) Tat
increased cADP-ribose synthesis in rat cortical synaptosomes. Oligomycin, a
mitochondrial ATPase blocker, had no effect on Tat-evoked ACh release,
indicating that mitochondrial Ca2+ contributes little,
if any, to the effect of Tat.
It had been proposed that Tat 1-72 can induce intracellular
Ca2+ mobilization from IP3-sensitive stores
in human fetal neurons and astrocytes
(Haughey et al., 1999
),
whereas contradictory results are present in the literature concerning the
rodent brain (Kruman et al.,
1998
). Recently, Haughey et al.
(2001
) reported that Tat did
not affect the basal levels of intracellular calcium on its own but that it
facilitated the glutamate-triggered calcium flux through an
IP3-dependent mechanism.
Involvement of RYRs in Ca2+ mobilization by Tat has
so far not been reported. Haughey et al.
(2001
) demonstrated that the
Tat facilitatory effect on the glutamate-mediated Ca2+
mobilization in rat hippocampal neurons was RYR independent. The inhibition of
the Tat-induced ACh release by dantrolene as well as by Br-cADP-ribose
observed here indicates that activation of RYRs plays a significant role.
However, it remains to be understood how Tat can stimulate cADP-ribose
production and consequent Ca2+ mobilization from
RY-sensitive stores. Tat can act both intracellularly or extracellularly
(Ensoli et al., 1993
;
Milani et al., 1998
;
Lindgren et al., 2000
), but an
intracellular action of the protein seems unlikely in our system because
entrapped heparin, a Tat scavenger
(Rusnati et al., 1997
), failed
to prevent the releasing effect. If Tat binds extracellularly, it might be
recognized by as yet unidentified sites on rat cholinergic neurons, the
activation of which leads to cADP-ribose production.
The Tat-releasing effect on human synaptosomes is retained by the peptide
fragments 32-62, 49-86, and 41-60, suggesting that Tat binds at human cortical
cholinergic terminals through a sequence encompassing positions between 49 and
60. The three peptides contain the arginine-rich basic region (Tat 49-57) that
not only is critical for efficient trans-activation
(Ensoli et al., 1993
), but is
also required to induce depolarization in human fetal neurons
(Nath et al., 1996
), making it
a potential candidate for the effect on ACh release. At variance with this
possibility, the effect of Tat on rat cortical nerve endings maps to another
region, because Tat 49-86, but not Tat 32-62, potentiated the release of ACh;
this ability was retained by the peptide 61-80, but not by the flanking
regions 51-70 and 71-80.
 |
Conclusions
|
|---|
In conclusion, we found that the HIV-1 protein Tat can evoke release of ACh
from human and rat cerebrocortex cholinergic axon terminals with remarkable
neuronal selectivity. The mechanisms involved in the release from human
terminals differ strikingly from those in rodent terminals. In human
terminals, Tat behaves as an extremely potent agonist at IP3-linked
mGluRs of group I, able to mobilize intraterminal Ca2+
and consequently to elicit exocytotic-like ACh release. The binding of Tat to
rat terminals leads to ACh release that is also dependent on intraterminal
Ca2+ but which is mobilized after RYR activation,
possibly via their putative endogenous agonist cADP-ribose. If this is the
case, Tat could be considered a potent activator of an as yet unidentified
membrane receptor linked to the second messenger cADP-ribose. That Tat binds
to different recognition sites on human versus rat cholinergic terminals is
also indicated by the finding that the releasing effect of Tat in human
terminals is mimicked by peptide fragments different from those mimicking it
in rat terminals. Previously, we found that the HIV-1 coat protein gp120
potentiates the release of norepinephrine from human
(Pittaluga et al., 1996
) and
rat (Pittaluga and Raiteri,
1994
) cortical axon terminals. In contrast with Tat, gp120 acts,
in both human and rat terminals, on glutamate NMDA receptors as a very potent
agonist of the glycine site. The present data on Tat indicate that, although
the protein elicits ACh release from both human and rat cholinergic terminals,
the mechanisms are different and, therefore, the rodent model should be
exploited with caution. Of note, the disease state of patients seems not to be
involved in the species difference observed here, because data obtained from
different patients did not differ significantly from each other. In contrast,
species differences among presynaptic receptors mediating neurotransmitter
release have been reported to occur in mammalian brains
(Hoyer and Middlemiss,
1989
).
The pathophysiological significance of the Tat effect on ACh release
observed here is presently unknown. The Tat concentrations used are likely to
be lower than those causing overt neurotoxicity. However, it must be noted
that, once present in the brain extracellular fluid, Tat may not be easily
inactivated and may, therefore, provoke release of ACh outside of the
physiological range and with abnormal kinetic characteristics, potentially
contributing to the cognitive disturbances characteristic of AIDS
dementia.
 |
Footnotes
|
|---|
Received Feb. 24, 2003;
revised May. 19, 2003;
accepted May. 29, 2003.
This work was supported by grants from Istituto Superiore di Sanitá
(Programma nazionale di ricerca sull'AIDSProgetto "Patologia,
clinica e terapia dell'AIDS") and from Center of Excellence, University
of Genoa (to M.R.). We thank AIDS Reagent Project and National Institute for
Biological Standards and Control for the kind gift of Tat peptides and Tat
20mers, respectively. We thank Maura Agate for excellent assistance in
preparing this manuscript and Fabio Longordo for skillful technical
assistance.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. A. Pittaluga, Dipartimento di
Medicina Sperimentale, Sezione di Farmacologia e Tossicologia,
Università di Genova, Viale Cembrano 4, 16148 Genova, Italy. E-mail:
pittalug{at}pharmatox.unige.it.
Copyright © 2003 Society for Neuroscience
0270-6474/03/236810-09$15.00/0
 |
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