 |
Previous Article | Next Article 
The Journal of Neuroscience, February 1, 2003, 23(3):777
An Extranuclear Locus of cAMP-Dependent Protein Kinase Action Is
Necessary and Sufficient for Promotion of Spiral Ganglion Neuronal
Survival by cAMP
Jinwoong
Bok1,
Xiang-Ming
Zha1,
Yang-Sun
Cho1, 2, and
Steven H.
Green1
1 Departments of Biological Sciences and
Otolaryngology, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa 52242, and
2 Department of Otorhinolaryngology, Samsung Medical
Center, Sungkyunkwan University School of Medicine, Seoul, Korea
135-710
 |
ABSTRACT |
We showed previously that cAMP is a survival-promoting stimulus for
cultured postnatal rat spiral ganglion neurons (SGNs) and that
depolarization promotes SGN survival in part via recruitment of cAMP
signaling. We here investigate the subcellular locus of cAMP
prosurvival signaling. Transfection of GPKI, a green fluorescent protein (GFP)-tagged cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) inhibitor, inhibits the ability of the permeant cAMP analog cpt-cAMP
[8-(4-chlorophenylthio)-cAMP] to promote survival, indicating that
PKA activity is necessary. Transfection of GFP-tagged PKA (GPKA) is
sufficient to promote SGN survival, but restriction of GPKA to the
nucleus by addition of a nuclear localization signal (GPKAnls) almost
completely abrogates its prosurvival effect. In contrast, GPKA targeted
to the extranuclear cytoplasm by addition of a nuclear export signal
(GPKAnes) promotes SGN survival as effectively as does GPKA. Moreover,
GPKI targeted to the nucleus lacks inhibitory effect on SGN survival
attributable to cpt-cAMP or depolarization. These data indicate
an extranuclear target of PKA for promotion of neuronal survival.
Consistent with this, we find that dominant-inhibitory CREB mutants
inhibit the prosurvival effect of depolarization but not that of
cpt-cAMP. SGN survival is compromised by overexpression of the
proapoptotic regulator Bad, previously shown to be phosphorylated in
the cytoplasm by PKA. This Bad-induced apoptosis is prevented by
cpt-cAMP or by cotransfection of GPKA or of GPKAnes but not of GPKAnls.
Thus, cAMP prevents SGN death through a cytoplasmic as opposed to
nuclear action, and inactivation of Bad proapoptotic function is a
mechanism by which PKA can prevent neuronal death.
Key words:
membrane depolarization; spiral ganglion neuron; cell survival; cAMP; cAMP-dependent protein kinase; PKA; apoptosis; Bad; intracellular signal; CREB
 |
Introduction |
In neurons, the second
messenger cAMP mediates prosurvival signaling, evidenced by the
ability of permeant cAMP analogs, e.g., cpt-cAMP
[8-(4-chlorophenylthio)-cAMP], to maintain neuronal survival in the
absence of other trophic factors (Rydel and Greene, 1988 ; Michel and
Agid, 1996 ; Hanson et al., 1998 ; Nakao, 1998 ). In particular, we showed
that neonatal rat spiral ganglion neuron (SGN) survival is promoted
in vitro by cpt-cAMP and by membrane depolarization, with
the latter being more effective (Hansen et al., 2001 ). This complements
other studies showing that direct electrical stimulation in
vivo reduces the death of SGNs that would otherwise occur after the loss of hair cells (Leake et al., 1999 ; Miller, 2001 ).
Ca2+ influx consequent to membrane
depolarization leads to increased intracellular cAMP (Kalix and Roch,
1976 ; Iuvone et al., 1991 ; Nakao, 1998 ; Shen et al., 1999 ), and
promotion of the survival of SGNs (Hansen et al., 2001 ) and CNS neurons
(Meyer-Franke et al., 1995 ; Hanson et al., 1998 ) in vitro by
membrane depolarization is reduced by a cAMP antagonist. Thus, cAMP is
a prosurvival signal and mediates part of the prosurvival effect of depolarization.
The cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) is an effector of cAMP
signaling, and we show here that PKA is the major effector of cAMP
prosurvival signaling. After elevation of intracellular cAMP
concentration, the inactive PKA complex dissociates, releasing catalytic subunits, which then phosphorylate substrate proteins (Francis and Corbin, 1994 ). Although initially released in the cytoplasm, catalytic subunits translocate to the nucleus and so can
phosphorylate and regulate transcription factors in addition to
cytoplasmic effectors (Bacskai et al., 1993 ). An important nuclear
target of PKA is the Ca2+-cAMP-responsive
element binding protein (CREB) family of transcription factors (De
Cesare and Sassone-Corsi, 2000 ). CREB, in particular, is phosphorylated
on serine-133 (Ser133), which allows it to recruit the coactivator CREB
binding protein (CBP) and activate transcription. CREB is a mediator of
the prosurvival effect of neurotrophins in sympathetic and cerebellar
granule neurons (Bonni et al., 1999 ; Riccio et al., 1999 ) and plays a
critical role in transcriptional activation of prosurvival genes such
as BDNF (Shieh et al., 1998 ; Tao et al., 1998 ) and Bcl-2 (Wilson et
al., 1996 ; Riccio et al., 1999 ). PKA can also exert a prosurvival
effect by phosphorylating cytoplasmic targets such as the proapoptotic
regulator Bad, a BH3 domain-only Bcl-2 family member (Harada et al.,
1999 ; Lizcano et al., 2000 ; Virdee et al., 2000 ). PKA is one of several
protein kinases capable of functionally inactivating Bad and thus
inhibiting apoptosis (Datta et al., 1997 ; del Peso et al., 1997 ; Bonni
et al., 1999 ).
Because PKA can act both in the nucleus and in the cytoplasm, PKA could
contribute to neuronal survival through regulation of transcription,
e.g., activation of CREB-dependent transcription, or by
posttranslational modification of apoptotic regulators, e.g.,
inhibition of the proapoptotic Bad protein. To determine the relative
contribution of nuclear and cytoplasmic PKA function, we used green
fluorescent protein (GFP)-tagged PKA catalytic subunits (GPKA) and
GFP-tagged PKA inhibitor protein (GPKI) that were restricted to the
nucleus or cytoplasm, respectively, by insertion of a nuclear localization signal (nls) or nuclear export signal (nes). [In the case
of PKI, the nes is endogenous but was removed in adding the nls (Wen et
al., 1994 ).] Expression of these constructs in transfected spiral
ganglion neurons in vitro shows that cytoplasmic activity of
PKA is necessary and sufficient for its prosurvival effect but that
nuclear activity is dispensable. Consistent with this, we observed
that, although CREB is phosphorylated by cAMP signaling in SGNs, CREB
activity is not necessary for the prosurvival effect of cAMP.
Conversely, cAMP signaling effectively inactivates the proapoptotic
function of Bad, indicating a prosurvival role for PKA in
posttranslational control of cytoplasmic apoptotic regulators.
 |
Materials and Methods |
Spiral ganglion neuron culture and transfection. Our
basic culture medium consisted of high-glucose (4.5 mg/ml) DMEM,
0.1 mg/ml penicillin, 0.1 mg/ml streptomycin, N2 supplement, and 10 µg/ml insulin and is designated here as "5K" because in this
medium, [K+] = 5.4 mM. We also used a depolarizing medium in which
Na+ was replaced with equimolar
K+ to raise
[K+] to 25 or 30 mM while maintaining osmolarity. These media are designated here as "25K" or "30K," respectively. (Survival is equivalent in either medium.) Before and during transfection, the
cultures were maintained in 25K to which 5% fetal bovine serum was
added ("25K+S"). The DMEM, antibiotics, and serum were obtained from the University of Iowa Diabetes and Endocrinology Research Core,
and the other supplements were from Sigma (St. Louis, MO) or Invitrogen
(Carlsbad, CA).
Dissociated cultures of SGNs were prepared from postnatal day 4-5 rats
and maintained by a modification of the methods described previously
(Hegarty et al., 1997 ). Briefly, rat cochleae were removed from the
temporal bone and placed in ice-cold PBS. Each spiral ganglion was
isolated from the cochlea by sequential removal of the bony cochlear
capsule, the spiral ligament, and the organ of Corti, leaving the
spiral ganglion within the modiolus. These were collected in HBSS on
ice and then transferred to
Ca2+-Mg2+-free
HBSS with 0.1% trypsin and 0.1% collagenase at 37°C for 20 min to
enzymatically dissociate the cells. After three washes with culture
medium, an additional mechanical dissociation was performed by
trituration using either fire-polished glass Pasteur pipettes or a
mechanical pipettor with 1 ml pipette tips. The dissociated cells were
plated in 25K+S. Neurons were plated in tissue culture dishes (Falcon
or Corning, purchased from Fisher Scientific, Houston, TX) or slides
(Lab-Tek, Rochester, NY) previously coated sequentially with
polyornithine (Sigma) (0.1 mg/ml in 10 mM borate buffer, pH
8.4) for 1 hr at room temperature, followed by laminin (Invitrogen) (20 µg/ml in HBSS) overnight at 4°C. Typically, the cells were plated
in 48-well culture plates at a density of approximately one ganglion
per well. Thus, there are ~5000 neurons per well (~28% plating
efficiency), and these are ~10% of the total number of cells. The
low plating efficiency for SGNs is presumably a result of the extensive
dissection and treatment required to separate the ganglion from the bone.
Transfection was performed when the neurons had firmly attached to the
substrate, ~6 hr after plating. We used a calcium phosphate-based protocol modified from that by Gabellini et al. (1992) as we described previously (Zha et al., 2001 ). Briefly, plasmids (see below for description of plasmids used) were mixed with 1.25 M
CaCl2 solution, and then sterile deionized water
was added to bring the CaCl2 concentration to
0.25 M. An equal volume of 2× depolarizing HEPES buffer
(in mM: 50 HEPES, 220 NaCl, 1.5 Na2HPO4, and 60 KCl, pH 7.1) was added slowly and with agitation. The
DNA-Ca2+-PO4
mixture was left for 20 min at room temperature to allow precipitates
to form and then added to the culture medium (25K+S) on the cells at a
1:10 (v/v) ratio, the final concentration of DNA being 9.1 µg/ml.
After 6 hr, the culture medium containing DNA mixture was washed once
with DMEM and replaced with 25K medium. We found that the presence of
serum before and during the transfection improves the viability of the
neurons but that removal of the serum after the incubation with
DNA-Ca2+-PO4
improves the transfection efficiency. Typically, 5-10% of the SGNs
were transfected. In some cases, multiple plasmids were cotransfected.
In experiments performed using two plasmids that both encode a
detectable product, we found that >95% of the transfected cells
expressed both gene products.
Immunocytochemistry. After culture for the times indicated,
the cells were fixed for 15 min with 4% paraformaldehyde in PBS, washed with PBS, and incubated with blocking buffer (PBS, 2% BSA, 5%
normal goat serum, and 0.1% NaN3) for 1 hr at
37°C, then with primary antibodies in blocking buffer for 1 hr at
37°C or overnight at 4°C, and then with fluorescently labeled
secondary antibodies in blocking buffer for 1 hr at 37°C. After
washing with PBS, the nuclei were stained with Hoechst 33342 (10 µg/ml in PBS) for 15 min, washed again with PBS, and viewed with a
Leica Leitz DMR microscope equipped for fluorescence optics (Leica,
Nussloch, Germany). The images were captured using a Photometrics CH250 cooled CCD camera with IPLab Spectrum software (Signal Analytics, Vienna, VA). The images were prepared for publication using Adobe Photoshop and Illustrator (Adobe Systems, San Jose, CA). NIH Image on a
Macintosh computer or the equivalent Image J software on a Windows
computer were used to quantify phospho-CREB immunofluorescence. In the
program, a circle was drawn just inside the boundary of each
neuronal nucleus, and the intensity of the phospho-CREB
immunofluorescence was determined as the average pixel density within
the circle. Background fluorescence was determined as the average pixel
density within a circle of equal diameter just outside of the nucleus, and this background was subtracted from the value obtained for nuclear
fluorescence. The scale used was arbitrary but linear and consistent
among all experiments.
The primary antibodies used in this study were rabbit
anti-phospho-CREB antibody, which specifically detects CREB
phosphorylated at Ser133 (Upstate Biotechnology, Waltham, MA) (1:1000
dilution) and mouse anti-neurofilament 200 kDa isoform (NF200) antibody (Sigma) (1:400 dilution) to identify neurons. Secondary antibodies used
were Alexa Fluor 488 goat anti-rabbit IgG and Alexa Fluor 350 or 568 goat anti-mouse IgG antibodies (Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR) (1:400 dilution).
Assay of neuronal survival-apoptosis. For survival
assays, replicate wells were prepared for each plasmid or combination
of plasmids transfected. Two wells were fixed 18 hr after the start of
transfection, by which time expression of the introduced genes was
already apparent, and were used to establish the transfection efficiency of that combination of plasmids. The remaining wells (in
separate multiwell plates) were washed three times with PBS and then
maintained for 48 hr under the indicated experimental conditions: 5K
medium, 25K medium, or 5K plus 1 mM cpt-cAMP
(Calbiochem, La Jolla, CA). The cells were then fixed, permeabilized,
and stained with anti-NF200 antibody, as described above. All
transfected (GFP-expressing) neuron (NF200-positive) cells in each well
were counted to assess survival. This number was corrected for
differing transfection efficiencies among different combinations of
plasmids. As noted above, a significant number of neurons die rapidly
within the first 24 hr after plating (our unpublished observations)
(Kim et al., 2001 ). This is presumably because of the trauma of
removing the ganglion from the bone, because it occurs regardless of
the conditions in which the cultures are maintained. Therefore, the survival of SGNs maintained in 25K for 48 hr is actually ~25% of
those that survive plating. However, to allow for comparison among
experiments, the number of SGNs transfected with GFP only and
maintained in 25K was arbitrarily set to 100%, to which relative survival in other experimental conditions was normalized.
For apoptosis assays, SGNs were cotransfected with combinations of
plasmids, described below, including those encoding wild-type or mutant
Bad and those encoding GFP or GFP-tagged PKA constructs. After recovery
from transfection, the cultures were maintained for 48 hr in 5K plus
1% FBS, fixed, and stained with anti-NF200 antibody and Hoechst 33342. SGN apoptosis was established by the presence of condensed nuclei and
of collapsed cytoskeletal organization (see Fig. 8).
Expression constructs. Enhanced green fluorescent protein-C1
(EGFP-C1) was purchased from Clontech (Cambridge, UK). Wild-type CREB,
CREBm1, and KCREB expression vectors were kindly provided by Drs. Marc
Montminy (University of California, San Diego, Salk Institute, La
Jolla, CA) (Montminy et al., 1990 ) and Richard Goodman [Oregon
Health Sciences University (OHSU), Vollum Institute, Portland, OR]
(Walton et al., 1992 ). The PKI and PKInls expression plasmids were
kindly provided by Dr. Philip Stork (OHSU, Vollum Institute, Portland,
OR) (Billiard et al., 2001 ). The wild-type BAD expression vector was
kindly provided by Dr. Gabriel Nuñez (University of Michigan, Ann
Arbor, MI) (del Peso et al., 1997 ).
A cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) catalytic subunit
expression vector (RSV-PKA-C ) was kindly provided by Dr. Richard Maurer (OHSU, Portland, OR) (Howard et al., 1991 ). This was used as a
template for PCR amplification of the PKA-C using the following primers: 5'-AAGTCCGGAGGCGGCACCATGGGCAACGCCG-3' (forward) and
5'-TTGAGCTCGAGAAAACTCAGTAAACTCCTTGCCACACTTCT-3' (reverse).
After PCR amplification, the PKA catalytic subunit cDNA was subcloned
into pEGFP-C1 between BspEI and XhoI, which
places the PKA catalytic subunit at the C-terminus of enhanced GFP.
This construct was called GPKA. GPKAnls was constructed by adding a double-stranded oligonucleotide encoding the SV40 large T antigen nls
(PPKKKRKVPG) (Kalderon et al., 1984 ) at the C-terminus of GPKA
between HindIII and BamHI. The oligonucleotides
used were as follows: 5'-AGCTGGCGGCACGCCACCTAAGAAGAAGAGAAAGGTGG3'
and 5'-GATCCCACCTTTCTCTTCTTCTTAGGTGGGCTGCCGCC-3'.
To make GPKAnes, a double-stranded oligonucleotide encoding the
MEK (mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase) nes
(EALQKKLEELELDE) (Wu et al., 1992 ) was added to the C-terminus of the
GPKA between HindIII and BamHI. The
oligonucleotides used were as follows: 5'-AGCTTTGCAGAAGAAGCTGGAGGAGCTGGAGCTGGACGAGGGATC-3' and
5'-GATCCCTCGTCCAGCTCCAGCTCCTCCAGCTTCTTCTGCAA-3'.
BadARK, an inactive Bad mutant, was constructed by mutating three
conserved amino acids at the BH3 domain of wild-type Bad: leucine 151 to alanine (A), aspartate 156 to arginine (R), and glutamate 157 to
lysine (K). This was done by PCR-mediated mutagenesis. The primers used
were
5'-CCCCAATCTCTGGGCAGCGCAGCGCTACGGCCGTGAGGCCCGAAGGATGAGCCGTAAGTTTGAGGG-3' (forward) and 5'-TCTAGCGAATTCACTGGGAGGGGGT-3' (reverse). The italicized nucleotides indicate the mutated sequences. The mutated PCR product contained unique restriction sites, PflMI and
EcoRI. The wild-type Bad sequence between PflMI
and EcoRI was replaced by the PCR product. Unlike wild-type
Bad, overexpression of BadARK did not induce apoptosis in the
transfected SGNs (see Results).
 |
Results |
Targeting of the PKA catalytic subunits to specific
subcellular locations
Addition of permeant cAMP analogs, such as cpt-cAMP, to
cultured neurons, including SGNs, is sufficient to promote their
survival in the absence of other trophic support (Rydel and Greene,
1988 ; Michel and Agid, 1996 ; Hanson et al., 1998 ; Nakao, 1998 ; Hansen et al., 2001 ). This implies that PKA, a major downstream effector of
cAMP, exerts a prosurvival effect. To test this hypothesis, we
transfected SGNs with a construct encoding GPKA, causing overexpression of PKA activity in the neurons and identifying the transfected cells
with GFP fluorescence. Because PKA exerts distinct actions in both the
nucleus and the cytoplasm, we distinguished between them by targeting
GPKA to the nucleus or cytoplasm exclusively. To target GPKA to the
cytoplasm, we added an MEK nes to the C-terminus of GPKA (GPKAnes). To
target GPKA to the nucleus, we added a SV40 nuclear localization signal
to the C-terminus of GPKA (GPKAnls). The construction of these cDNAs is
described in Materials and Methods.
The presence of GFP in the encoded proteins allowed verification of
both their expression in transfected cells and their desired subcellular localization, as shown in Figure
1. Hoechst was used to mark the nuclei,
and anti-NF200 antibody was used to mark the cytoplasm of the neurons
in the culture. As shown in Figure 1, GPKA, like GFP, was present in
both the nucleus and cytoplasm, coinciding with Hoechst fluorescence
and NF200 immunofluorescence. In some neurons, GPKA was preferentially
distributed in the cytoplasm rather than in the nucleus (see Fig. 8).
In contrast, GPKAnls was present almost exclusively in the nucleus,
primarily coinciding with Hoechst fluorescence, whereas GPKAnes
was present almost exclusively in the cytoplasm, not overlapping with
Hoechst staining and coinciding with NF200 immunoreactivity.

View larger version (25K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 1.
Expression of subcellularly targeted GFP-tagged
PKA catalytic subunit in SGNs. SGNs were transfected with GFP, GPKA,
GPKAnes, a GFP-tagged PKA to which a nuclear export signal was added,
or GPKAnls, a GFP-tagged PKA to which a nuclear localization signal was
added, as indicated. After fixation, neurons were incubated with
anti-NF200 antibody, followed by Alexa Fluor 568-conjugated secondary
antibody. The nuclei were labeled by staining with Hoechst 33342. The
cultures were photographed sequentially with a red filter to detect
NF200 immunofluorescence, a blue filter to detect Hoechst 33342 fluorescence, and a green filter to detect GFP fluorescence. The
diagrams above each pair of images show the general structure of the
construct transfected. The left panel of each pair shows
a composite of the NF200 and nucleus images. The corresponding GFP or
GPKA images are shown at right. The
arrows identify the location of neuronal nuclei and
indicate identical positions in both panels of each
pair. Green fluorescence is evident in the nucleus and cytoplasm of
neurons transfected with GFP or GPKA but is evident primarily in the cytoplasm of the
GPKAnes-transfected neuron and primarily in the nucleus of the
GPKAnls-transfected neuron. The arrowheads indicate the
position of two non-neuronal cells fortuitously transfected with
GPKAnes, showing primarily cytoplasmic localization of GPKAnes in this
glial cell and in the neuron.
|
|
Cytoplasmic but not nuclear PKA promotes SGN survival
SGNs were transfected in serum-containing medium, with GFP, GPKA,
or targeted GPKA expression plasmids, and after a recovery period of
18-20 hr, the serum was washed out and the culture medium was replaced
with one devoid of neurotrophic factors and containing nondepolarizing
5K. As a control, SGNs were also maintained in depolarizing culture
medium containing 25K, previously shown to maintain SGN survival. SGN
survival was determined 48 hr later by counting only transfected
neurons (green fluorescent and NF200-expressing cells) to determine
directly the consequence of expression of GPKA constructs. GPKA
expression significantly enhanced the survival of SGNs over that of
SGNs expressing only GFP (Fig. 2). This
indicates that PKA activity is sufficient to promote neuronal survival, implying that PKA may be responsible for the prosurvival effect of
cAMP. We show below (see Fig. 4) that PKA activity is necessary for the
prosurvival effect of cAMP.

View larger version (40K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 2.
Expression of cytoplasmic but not nuclear PKA is
sufficient to promote SGN survival. SGNs were transfected with GFP
plasmid or with a 1:4 mixture of GFP and GPKA, GPKAnls, or GPKAnes
plasmids and maintained in 5K or 25K culture conditions, as indicated,
for 48 hr. The cultures were then fixed and immunolabeled with
anti-NF200 antibody and fluorescent secondary antibody. Surviving
transfected SGNs (i.e., cells that were both GFP-expressing and
NF200-immunoreactive) were counted. To allow combining of results from
multiple experiments, SGN survival was normalized to and expressed as a
percentage of survival in the 25K condition, which was arbitrarily
assigned a value of 100%. The survival of SGNs maintained in 5K and
transfected with GPKA or GPKAnes was significantly
(p < 0.005) different from survival of SGNs
maintained in 5K and transfected with GFP or GPKAnls. Results shown are
means of three or more separate experiments, each performed in
duplicate. In this and all figures showing quantification of
survival-apoptosis experiments, the error bars show SD.
|
|
We next determined survival of SGNs expressing subcellularly targeted
GPKAs. Expression of GPKAnes significantly enhanced SGN survival over
that of SGNs expressing GFP (Fig. 2) to an extent comparable with that
of expression of GPKA. This indicates that cytoplasmic PKA activity
alone is sufficient for the survival-promoting effect of PKA. In
contrast, transfection of GPKAnls failed to promote SGN survival; the
survival of SGNs expressing GPKAnls was not significantly different
from that of SGNs expressing GFP alone (Fig. 2). Thus, nuclear PKA
activity does not promote neuronal survival, implying an essential role
for cytoplasmic PKA activity.
In this study of the promotion of survival by cAMP-PKA signaling, we
scored SGN survival after 48 hr in experimental conditions. This time
point was chosen because cAMP-PKA resulted in shrinkage of the SGN
somata and neurites, increasing with time, making it more difficult to
identify neurons after 48 hr. However, because the process of cell
death was still continuing at this time, SGN survival in the control 5K
condition was somewhat greater in these experiments than what we
observed previously (Hegarty et al., 1997 ; Hansen et al., 2001 ). Also,
these experiments all involved transfection, and, as noted in Materials
and Methods, this required maintaining the cultures in serum-containing
medium to improve viability. The inclusion of serum early in the
culture process reduces the rate of SGN death after subsequent transfer
to serum-free conditions, presumably because we are unable to wash
sufficiently vigorously to completely remove serum components. This
further increased SGN survival in the control 5K condition, reducing
the difference between minimal and maximal survival. However, the differences obtained were significant in all cases, with
p < 0.001.
Cytoplasmic but not nuclear PKI inhibits the ability of cAMP and of
depolarization to promote survival
We showed previously that the membrane-permeant, specific cAMP
antagonist Rp-cAMPS prevents promotion of SGN
survival by cpt-cAMP and reduces promotion of SGN survival by
depolarization (Hansen et al., 2001 ). Although use of this reagent
established cAMP as a mediator of the survival-promoting effect of
depolarization, it did not distinguish between cAMP signaling via PKA
and cAMP signaling via other effectors, e.g., Rap1 (Vossler et al.,
1997 ; Grewal et al., 2000 ). To determine whether PKA is the principal mediator of the survival-promoting effect of cAMP and to determine where in the cell PKA activity is required, we used the PKA inhibitor protein PKI (Walsh et al., 1971 ). PKI is an endogenous protein that
binds to the PKA catalytic subunit and inhibits its kinase activity
with great specificity and efficacy (Walsh et al., 1971 ; Whitehouse and
Walsh, 1983 ). PKI contains an endogenous nes (Wen et al., 1994 ),
causing it to be generally excluded from the nucleus. This also allows
it to prevent entry of the PKA catalytic subunit into the nucleus
(Wiley et al., 1999 ), thus blocking nuclear and cytoplasmic PKA
activity (Wiley et al., 1999 ; Billiard et al., 2001 ). In particular,
cAMP-dependent CCAAT/enhancer-binding protein (C/EBP )
translocation to the nucleus is prevented by cytoplasmic PKI but not by
nuclear PKI, but nuclear PKA does prevent C/EBP -dependent transcription (Billiard et al., 2001 ).
A construct consisting of PKI fused to the C-terminus of GFP (GPKI) was
transfected into SGNs. The GFP tag allowed us to verify the non-nuclear
location of the GPKI (Fig.
3A). Because PKI prevents both
cytoplasmic and nuclear PKA activity, we also used a modified GPKI, one
with the nes replaced with a dual nls (GPKInls). Nuclear-restricted PKI
blocks nuclear but not cytoplasmic actions of PKA (Billiard et al.,
2001 ). GPKInls was transfected into SGNs, and its nuclear location was
verified by means of the GFP tag (Fig.
3A). To verify that the expressed PKI
constructs blocked PKA function in transfected SGNs, we transfected
GPKI or GPKInls into SGNs, exposed the cultures to 1 mM cpt-cAMP for 30 min to activate PKA, fixed
them, and then determined phospho-CREB immunoreactivity using an
anti-phospho-CREB antibody. Because cells with active PKA phosphorylate
CREB in response to cpt-cAMP, lack of phospho-CREB immunoreactivity
indicates PKA inhibition. We compared phospho-CREB immunoreactivity in
adjacent transfected (GFP-positive) and untransfected SGNs in 10 pairs of SGNs in GPKI-transfected cultures and 10 pairs of SGNs in
GPKInls-transfected cultures. In all cases, the two PKI constructs
blocked CREB phosphorylation; representative examples are shown in
Figure 3B. These data confirm the efficacy of the PKI
constructs. Moreover, this extends the previous study of C/EBP
(Billiard et al., 2001 ) to show that CREB activation by cAMP is blocked
by either inhibition of PKA in the nucleus or prevention of PKA
translocation to the nucleus.

View larger version (27K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 3.
Expression and function of subcellularly targeted
GFP-tagged PKI constructs in SGNs. SGNs were transfected with GPKI,
which contains an intrinsic nuclear export signal, or with GPKInls, in
which the nuclear export signal was deleted and replaced with two
nuclear localization signals, as indicated. A, After
allowing 24 hr for expression, the cultures were fixed, and nuclei and
neuronal cytoplasm were labeled with Hoechst 33342 and anti-NF200,
respec- tively, as in Figure 1. The diagrams above each pair of
images show the general structure of the construct transfected. The
left panel of each pair shows a composite of the nuclei
and NF200 images. The corresponding GPKI or GPKInls images are shown at
right. The arrows identify the location
of neuronal nuclei and indicate identical positions in both
panels of each pair. The arrowhead
indicates the nucleus of a fortuitously transfected glial cell. Green
fluorescence is evident primarily in the cytoplasm of the
GPKI-transfected neuron and primarily in the nucleus of the
GPKInls-transfected neuron. B, Cultures transfected with
GPKI (top) or GPKInls (bottom), as in
A, were treated for 30 min with 1 mM
cpt-cAMP before fixation. Two neighboring SGNs are shown in each set of
panels, one (top) transfected and one
(bottom) untransfected. In each set,
left, superimposed blue (NF200) and red (phospho-CREB)
images identifying SGNs and showing phospho-CREB immunoreactivity.
Center, Same field using a green filter to detect GFP
and shows the upper neuron of each pair expressing the indicated
GFP-tagged PKI construct. Right, Merged
left and center images. For either
construct, the transfected neuron exhibits greatly reduced phospho-CREB
immunoreactivity relative to the untransfected.
|
|
After verifying the subcellular localization and function of GPKI
and GPKInls in SGNs, we determined their effect on the survival of SGNs
maintained by cAMP signaling. As shown in Figure
4, GPKI but not GPKInls inhibited the
survival-promoting effect of cpt-cAMP. This result shows that the
prosurvival effect of cAMP signaling is mediated principally by PKA but
not by other putative cAMP effectors, which would not have been
inhibited by PKI. Moreover, because inhibition of any nuclear PKA
activity by nuclear-restricted GPKInls had no effect on survival, PKA
activity in the nucleus must not be necessary for neuronal survival. To
verify that the GPKInls had no effect on cytoplasmic PKA signaling, we
cotransfected it with GPKAnes, and, predictably, there was no
significant reduction of SGN survival (Fig. 4).

View larger version (42K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 4.
Expression of cytoplasmic but not nuclear
GFP-tagged PKA inhibitor protein inhibits SGN survival. SGNs were
transfected with GFP (open bars) or with a 1:1 mixture
of GFP and GPKI (light gray bars) or GPKInls
(dark gray bars) and maintained in 5K, 1 mM
cpt-cAMP, or 25K culture conditions, as indicated, for 48 hr. Also,
SGNs were transfected with a 1:1 mixture of GPKAnes and GFP, GPKI,
GPKInls. Surviving transfected SGNs (i.e., cells that were both
GFP-expressing and NF200-immunoreactive) were counted as in Figure 2
and normalized, in each experiment, to the number of surviving SGNs in
the control 25K condition. The ability of cpt-cAMP, GPKAnes, or 25K to
promote SGN survival was significantly (p < 0.005) reduced by GPKI. GPKInls did not significantly affect SGN
survival under these conditions: survival was comparable with that of
SGNs transfected with GFP only. Results shown are means of three or
more separate experiments, each performed in duplicate.
|
|
We noted previously that cAMP signaling mediates part of the
survival-promoting effect of depolarization (Hansen et al., 2001 ). We
therefore asked whether this is a consequence of PKA activation and, if
so, whether nuclear or cytoplasmic PKA was required. As shown in Figure
4, GPKI but not GPKInls partially inhibited the prosurvival effect of
depolarization (i.e., culture in 25K medium). This supports previous
studies implicating PKA as a mediator of depolarization-promoted
survival and indicates that nuclear PKA activity, in particular, is not
involved. Blockade of PKA activity throughout the cell inhibits the
survival-promoting effect of cAMP and of depolarization, but blockade
only in the nucleus has no effect. This indicates a cytoplasmic locus
of PKA action in promotion of neuronal survival, consistent with the
results described above showing that overexpression of PKA catalytic
subunit in the cytoplasm but not in the nucleus promotes survival.
CAMP and depolarization induce CREB phosphorylation in SGNs
Previous studies (Gonzalez and Montminy, 1989 ) have shown that PKA
activates CREB-dependent transcription by directly phosphorylating CREB
in the nucleus. This phosphorylation is on serine 133 (Gonzalez and
Montminy, 1989 ), so we used the antibody that specifically recognizes
CREB phosphorylated on serine 133 to determine immunocytochemically whether CREB is phosphorylated by cAMP in SGNs. Phospho-CREB
immunoreactivity was detected with a fluorescent secondary antibody.
Both depolarization and cpt-cAMP caused increased CREB phosphorylation
(Fig. 5). CREB phosphorylation caused by
cpt-cAMP was blocked by the cAMP antagonist Rp-cAMPS, but CREB
phosphorylation was still evident in depolarized neurons incubated with
Rp-cAMPS (Fig. 5). Thus, although cAMP-dependent signaling partially
accounts for the prosurvival effect of depolarization, a
cAMP-independent mechanism must also exist to mediate CREB
phosphorylation in response to depolarization.

View larger version (41K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 5.
CREB phosphorylation on Ser133 in SGNs treated
with cpt-cAMP or depolarized. SGNs were cultured in control medium
containing no trophic additions (5K) or exposed for 15 min to 1 mM cpt-cAMP or depolarizing (30K) medium, as indicated.
Additional cultures included Rp-cAMPS, a cAMP antagonist, which was
added 30 min before and throughout the 15 min incubation with cpt-cAMP
or 30K. The cultures were fixed, and neurons were identified by NF200
immunoreactivity (red). Nuclei of all cells were labeled
with Hoechst 33342 (blue). Phosphorylation of CREB on
Ser133 was detected by immunofluorescence (green fluorescence
superimposed on the blue nuclear Hoechst 33342 fluorescence appears
cyan). Increased phospho-CREB immunoreactivity is
evident in nuclei in the cpt-cAMP and 30K conditions relative to the 5K
condition. The increase in phospho-CREB immunoreactivity caused by
cpt-cAMP but not that caused by depolarization was blocked by Rp-cAMPS,
indicating that a cAMP-independent pathway must exist for
phosphorylation of CREB by depolarization.
|
|
Phospho-CREB immunofluorescence was quantified (using NIH Image) for
SGNs transfected with GPKA constructs or control GFP, allowed 18 hr to
express the proteins, and then maintained for 12 hr in 25K or 5K
culture medium. The immunofluorescence level was determined separately
for transfected and untransfected neurons in the cultures and was
expressed as a value on a scale that was arbitrary but consistent among
all of the experiments. The data were then plotted in the form of
histograms (Fig. 6). Expression of GPKA
and culture in 25K both resulted in a large increase in the percentage
of neurons exhibiting higher levels of phospho-CREB immunoreactivity.
Transfection by itself did not cause an increase in CREB
phosphorylation, because transfection of GFP or of inactive kinases
resulted in no change in phospho-CREB immunoreactivity (data not
shown). Thus, depolarization and cAMP signaling both cause a
significant increase in CREB phosphorylation in SGNs.

View larger version (44K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 6.
Quantification of CREB phosphorylation
caused by depolarization or PKA transfection. SGNs were transfected
with GFP or GPKA, as indicated, and allowed 18 hr to express the
proteins. After 12 hr incubation in control 5K or depolarizing 25K
culture conditions, the cultures were fixed and stained for nuclei,
NF200, and phospho-CREB immunoreactivity as in Figure 5. The NF200
immunoreactivity and Hoechst 33342 images were used to identify the
positions of neuronal nuclei on the corresponding phospho-CREB image.
The intensity of the phospho-CREB immunoreactivity was determined as
the average pixel density within the circle. Background fluorescence
was determined and corrected for background using NIH Image or Image J
as described in Materials and Methods and plotted here as a histogram
of the number of neuronal nuclei displaying each intensity value. The
histograms for neurons cultured in depolarizing medium and for neurons
transfected with GPKA show a shift from a condition in which most SGNs
have low levels of phospho-CREB immunoreactivity to one in which all
SGNs have varying but much higher levels of phospho-CREB
immunoreactivity.
|
|
CREB mediates part of the prosurvival effect of
depolarization but is dispensable for the prosurvival effect of
cAMP
It has been shown previously (Bonni et al., 1999 ; Riccio et
al., 1999 ) that CREB is required for promotion of neuronal survival by
peptide neurotrophic factors. Because we found that both depolarization and cAMP caused increased CREB phosphorylation in SGNs, we asked whether CREB is also required for all or part of the prosurvival effect
of these stimuli. To test for a requirement for CREB function, we
inhibited endogenous CREB by transfecting into the SGN cDNAs encoding
one of two types of dominant-inhibitory CREB mutants, CREBm1 (Struthers
et al., 1991 ) and KCREB (Walton et al., 1992 ). These two mutants were
chosen because they inhibit CREB function by different mechanisms.
Also, they inhibit the function of CREB family members other than CREB
itself (Walton et al., 1992 ; Jean et al., 1998 ), including
factors such as CREM (cAMP response element modulator) or ATF-1
(activating transcription factor 1) that can also be regulated
by cAMP. Both mutants blocked expression from a CRE reporter in
response to cpt-cAMP in PC12 cells (data not shown).
After transfection, the cultures were maintained in nondepolarizing
(5K) medium, in 5K medium containing cpt-cAMP, or in 25K medium. After
48 hr, the cultures were fixed, and transfected neurons were counted as
before. Inhibition of CREB function by either CREBm1 or KCREB
significantly reduced the prosurvival effect of 25K (Fig.
7). In contrast, inhibition of CREB
function had little effect on cAMP-promoted survival (Fig. 7). Thus,
although cAMP causes CREB activation, this appears to be dispensable
for the prosurvival effect of cAMP. This is consistent with the
observations described above showing that nuclear PKA activity fails to
promote survival and that blockade of PKA activity in the nucleus,
which prevents it from activating CREB, does not significantly affect neuronal survival.

View larger version (37K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 7.
Expression of dominant-inhibitory CREB mutants
inhibits the prosurvival effect of depolarization but not that of
cpt-cAMP. SGNs were transfected with a 1:3 mixture of GFP plasmid and
plasmid encoding either wild-type CREB (open bars),
CREBm1 (light gray bars), or KCREB (dark gray
bars); the latter two are dominant-inhibitory CREB mutants. The
cultures were maintained in control (5K), depolarizing (25K), or 1 mM cpt-cAMP culture conditions, as indicated, for 48 hr.
Surviving transfected SGNs were counted as in Figure 2 and normalized,
in each experiment, to the number of surviving SGNs in the control 25K
condition. Results shown are means of three separate experiments, each
performed in duplicate. The ability of 25K to promote SGN survival was
significantly (p < 0.005) reduced by either
CREB mutant but was not affected by wild-type CREB. In contrast, the
survival-promoting effect of cpt-cAMP was unaffected by the CREB
mutants.
|
|
Cytoplasmic activity of PKA rescues SGNs from apoptosis caused by
Bad overexpression
The data described above indicate that nuclear actions of PKA are
not necessary for its prosurvival effect. This is consistent with the
observation that CREB family transcription factors are dispensable for
the prosurvival effect of PKA, although they are important nuclear
targets of PKA and are implicated in neuronal survival mediated by
other stimuli. The data implicate a cytoplasmic effector for the
prosurvival effect of PKA, and we next sought to identify at least one
candidate. The proapoptotic regulator Bad has been shown to be
phosphorylated by PKA, and this phosphorylation can inactivate the
proapoptotic function of Bad (Harada et al., 1999 ; Lizcano et al.,
2000 ; Virdee et al., 2000 ). Although we could show that GPKA or GPKAnes
expression or treatment with cpt-cAMP all caused Bad phosphorylation in
PC12 cells (X.-M. Zha, D. Li, J. Bok, and S. H. Green,
unpublished observations), the small number of cells and the presence
of non-neuronal cells and neurons precluded such a biochemical
determination using these spiral ganglion cultures. Nevertheless, we
were able to ask whether PKA could prevent cell death specifically by
functionally inactivating Bad. To do this, we maintained spiral
ganglion cultures in 5K medium containing 1% FBS, which marginally
supports SGN survival, delaying their death. Under these conditions,
overexpression of wild-type Bad caused a large and rapid increase in
the number of apoptotic SGNs (Figs. 8,
9), whereas higher concentrations of FBS (e.g., 5-10%)
prevented SGN death regardless of Bad
overexpression and lower FBS concentrations resulted in rapid apoptosis
in all cells. The use of 1% FBS allowed us to readily assess the
ability of various agents to suppress the Bad-induced increase in SGN apoptosis and use this as a measure of their ability to inactivate Bad.

View larger version (28K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 8.
Expression of cytoplasmic GPKA rescues SGNs from
apoptosis caused by Bad overexpression. SGNs were transfected with
wild-type Bad or inactive mutant Bad plasmids in a 1:1 mixture with
GFP-tagged PKA or control GFP plasmids, as indicated. Eighteen hours
after transfection, the cultures were switched to culture medium
containing 1% horse serum and, 48 hr later, were fixed and stained as
in Figure 2. Transfected cells were identified by green GFP
fluorescence, shown in the right panel of each pair of
images. Neurons were identified by NF200 immunoreactivity
(red), and nuclei were stained with Hoechst 33342 (blue). These images were superimposed and are shown in
the left panel of each pair. Arrows point
to neuronal nuclei and indicate identical positions in each pair of images. The
images were chosen so that each shows a typical transfected and a
typical untransfected neuron. Untransfected neurons are indicated by
white arrows. Transfected neurons that are apoptotic
(identified by their condensed nuclei and collapsed cytoplasm) are
indicated by red arrows. Transfected nonapoptotic
neurons are indicated by green arrows. Shown in the
image pairs from top to bottom:
transfection of wild-type Bad results in apoptosis but BadARK does not.
Cotransfection of GPKA or GPKAnes with Bad results in nonapoptotic
cells, but cotransfection of GPKAnls with Bad does not prevent
Bad-induced apoptosis.
|
|

View larger version (40K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 9.
Quantification of rescue of SGNs by PKA from
apoptosis caused by Bad overexpression. SGNs were transfected with GFP
plasmid (first column) or a 1:1 mixture of GFP
with either Bad or BadARK (second and third
columns) or a 1:1 mixture of wild-type Bad with GFP-tagged PKA
constructs (fourth through sixth
columns). Eighteen hours after transfection, the cultures were
switched to culture medium containing 1% horse serum and, 48 hr later,
were fixed and stained as in Figure 8 to distinguish apoptotic and
nonapoptotic transfected SGNs. Randomly selected neurons were scored,
and the percentage of apoptotic SGNs in each condition was calculated.
Each column shows the mean and SD of at least three
separate determinations, each performed in duplicate. The total number
of SGNs counted is shown above each bar; the
number in parentheses is the number of
separate experiments pooled to obtain this number of SGNs. Expression
of Bad but not of BadARK caused a significant
(p < 0.001) increase in the number of
apoptotic SGNs. This increase, in turn, was prevented by transfection
of GPKA or GPKAnes but not by transfection of GPKAnls: the percentage
of apoptotic transfected neurons was significantly lower
(p < 0.001 and p < 0.01, respectively) in cultures transfected with Bad and GPKA or
GPKAnes than in those transfected with Bad and GFP or GPKAnls. There
was no significant difference in the percentage of apoptotic
transfected neurons between cultures transfected with Bad plus GFP and
those transfected with Bad plus GPKAnls. There was no significant
difference in the percentage of apoptotic transfected neurons among
cultures transfected with GFP only, BadARK plus GFP, Bad plus GPKA, or
Bad plus GPKAnes.
|
|
Bad-transfected cells were identified by cotransfecting GFP. Apoptosis
was determined in transfected neurons by staining with Hoechst 33342 and observing nuclear pyknosis and by staining with anti-NF200 and
observing collapse of the cytoskeleton. Typical examples are shown in
Figure 8. Nuclear and cytoskeletal condensation was apparent in
Bad-transfected SGNs but was uncommon in untransfected cells in the
same culture (Fig. 8A). Transfection of GFP alone (data not shown) or of BadARK, an inactivated Bad mutant, did not cause
increased apoptosis (Fig. 8B,C).
Increased apoptosis was not observed in SGNs cotransfected with Bad and
GPKA or GPKAnes (Fig. 8D,E) but was
observed in SGNs cotransfected with Bad and GPKAnls (Fig.
8F).
These data are quantified in Figure 9. For cultures maintained in 1%
FBS, transfection of wild-type Bad increased the percentage of
apoptotic SGNs from ~30 to ~70%. This increase was entirely a
result of overexpression of Bad, because transfection of an inactivated
mutant Bad (BadARK) resulted in no change in the percentage of
apoptotic SGNs. This increase in apoptosis was almost entirely reversed
by cotransfection of GPKA or GPKAnes but was unaffected by
cotransfection of GPKAnls. Thus, cytoplasmic PKA but not nuclear PKA
activity results in functional inactivation of Bad, which suggests that
Bad inactivation is a means by which PKA can promote neuronal survival.
 |
Discussion |
cAMP promotes survival through cytoplasmic PKA activity
The second messenger cAMP has been shown to be a prosurvival
signal, suggesting that stimuli, e.g., hormones or neurotransmitters, that raise intracellular cAMP levels could use cAMP to promote survival. This seems to be the case for at least one critically important prosurvival stimulus, membrane depolarization: the
Ca2+ increase that is the immediate
consequence of membrane depolarization can increase cytosolic cAMP
levels via Ca2+-calmodulin-dependent
adenylyl cyclase (Antoni, 2000 ). This has been observed in the
promotion of motor neuron survival by depolarization (Hanson et al.,
1998 ). Blockade of cAMP signaling prevents or reduces the ability of
depolarization to promote the survival of retinal ganglion cells
(Meyer-Franke et al., 1995 ), motor neurons (Hanson et al., 1998 ), and
SGNs (Hansen et al., 2001 ), indicating that cAMP signaling is
necessary, at least in part, for depolarization to promote the survival
of CNS and PNS neurons.
CAMP can act via both PKA-dependent and -independent pathways,
and PKA itself can act in both the cytoplasm and the nucleus. To
distinguish among these alternative pathways by which cAMP could
promote survival, we used a specific PKA inhibitor protein (PKI)
directed to either a nuclear or cytoplasmic location and catalytic PKA
subunits likewise directed to either a nuclear or cytoplasmic location.
The effect of these constructs on SGN survival indicates that cAMP
exerts its survival-promoting effect via PKA and more specifically via
cytoplasmic PKA. This is not consistent with a role for CREB in cAMP
prosurvival signaling, in contrast to the CREB requirement for
prosurvival signaling by neurotrophins (Bonni et al., 1999 ; Riccio et
al., 1999 ). Indeed, we find that direct blockade of CREB with
dominant-negative mutants did not compromise the ability of cAMP to
promote survival. That PKA acts in the cytoplasm to promote survival is
consistent with previous studies, discussed below, that have identified
means by which cAMP signaling can promote survival through various
actions that seem to take place in the cytoplasm. One of these is
phosphorylation of the BH3 domain-only Bcl-2 family member Bad by PKA
(Harada et al., 1999 ; Lizcano et al., 2000 ; Virdee et al., 2000 ).
Indeed, we found that cytoplasmic but not nuclear PKA causes Bad
phosphorylation in a neuronal cell line (Zha, Li, Bok, and Green,
unpublished observations), and we show here that cytoplasmic but not
nuclear PKA inactivates the proapoptotic effect of Bad in spiral
ganglion neurons.
CREB activity is not required for the prosurvival effect
of cAMP
An unexpected result of these studies is that blockade of CREB
activity with dominant-negative mutants did not affect the ability of
cAMP to maintain neuronal survival, indicating that CREB activity is
not required. This is surprising in view of previous studies showing
that CREB is required for the prosurvival effect of neurotrophins
(Bonni et al., 1999 ; Riccio et al., 1999 ) and of our present
observation that CREB is required for at least part of the
prosurvival effect of depolarization (Fig. 7). The inability of these
CREB dominant-negative mutants to inhibit the prosurvival effect of
cAMP is unlikely to be caused by incomplete inhibition of CREB, because
the same mutants did inhibit the prosurvival effect of depolarization
in this study and the prosurvival effect of neurotrophins in other
studies (Bonni et al., 1999 ; Riccio et al., 1999 ). The lack of a CREB
requirement for the survival-promoting effect of cAMP is not caused by
a lack of CREB activation by cAMP: cAMP and PKA cause CREB
phosphorylation in SGNs comparable with that caused by depolarization
(Figs. 5, 6) and, in a neuronal cell line, induce transcription from a
CRE reporter comparable with that induced by depolarization or
neurotrophins (Bok, Li, and Green, unpublished observations).
In SGNs, the ability of depolarization to activate CREB does not
require cAMP (Fig. 5) and may depend primarily on
Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase (CaMK)
signaling (Hansen et al., 2003 ). Both cAMP and CaMKIV
phosphorylate CREB, allowing it to recruit CBP and so promote
transcription (Chrivia et al., 1993 ; Kwok et al., 1994 ). However,
recruitment of CBP may not be sufficient: although a VP16-CREB fusion
protein, which directly activates transcription, could promote survival
of CNS neurons (Bonni et al., 1999 ; Riccio et al., 1999 ) and SGNs (Bok,
J. Huang, and Green, unpublished observations), a mutant that
constitutively binds CBP (Cardinaux et al., 2000 ) could not promote SGN
survival (Bok, Huang, and Green, unpublished observations). This
suggests that additional posttranslational modification of CBP is
necessary for prosurvival function of CREB-dependent transcription, and this may distinguish cAMP and CaMKIV signaling.
Both CaMKIV and cAMP signaling potentiate CREB-dependent
transcription (Chawla et al., 1998 ; Cardinaux et al., 2000 ; Impey et
al., 2002 ) at the level of CBP or downstream of CBP. However, although
CaMKIV has been shown to directly phosphorylate CBP on Ser301 (Impey et
al., 2002 ), the region of CBP containing this site is entirely
dispensable for transcription induction by PKA (Zanger et al., 1999 ).
Moreover, although Xu et al. (1998) implicated the consensus PKA
phosphorylation site in CBP, Ser1772, in transcriptional activation by
PKA, Zanger et al. (1999) showed transcriptional activation by PKA in
CBP mutants lacking this site. Therefore, depolarization and CaMKIV may
differ from PKA in the mechanism by which they potentiate
CREB-dependent transcription, and this could result in distinct
patterns of CREB-dependent transcription in which CaMKIV-activated but
not PKA-activated genes contribute to survival. Alternatively, the
pattern of CREB-dependent transcription is the same between CaMKIV and
cAMP, but CaMKIV might activate, in addition to CREB, effectors that
allow CREB-dependent transcription to contribute to neuronal survival.
Thus, CREB would be necessary in the context of promotion of survival
by depolarization but not in the context of promotion of survival by cAMP.
CREB knock-out compromises the survival of certain peripheral neurons
(Lonze et al., 2002 ), e.g., sympathetic neurons, at a developmental
stage at which they are dependent on target-derived neurotrophic
factors. This is consistent with the observed CREB requirement for
support by NGF of cultured neonatal sympathetic neurons (Riccio et al.,
1999 ). As neurons mature and lose their dependence on peptide
neurotrophic factors, stimuli such as electrical activity or
neurotransmitters that use cAMP signaling may become more important for
maintenance of survival. We speculate that this also involves a shift
away from a completely CREB-dependent prosurvival mechanism, which may
be essential in allowing a role for CREB in neuronal plasticity and
other functions in mature neurons.
Cytoplasmic effectors of cAMP prosurvival signaling
Protein kinase B (PKB, Akt) is a multifunctional prosurvival
signal (Datta et al., 1999 ). Because cAMP can activate PKB (Sable et
al., 1997 ; Filippa et al., 1999 ), it might represent a possible cytoplasmic target of PKA for prosurvival signaling. Another potential prosurvival signaling pathway, activated in the cytoplasm, is the
MEK-ERK (extracellular signal-regulated kinase) pathway, and this pathway has been shown to be activated by PKA (Impey et al., 1998 ). However, inhibition of PI-3-OH kinase, an upstream activator of
PKB, or of PKB itself does not significantly reduce cAMP-promoted survival in sympathetic (Crowder and Freeman, 1999 ), cerebellar granule
(Miller et al., 1997 ; Li et al., 2000 ), or spiral ganglion neurons
(Hansen et al., 2001 ), and inhibition of MEK also does not
significantly reduce cAMP-promoted survival in these diverse types of
neurons (Creedon et al., 1996 ; Hansen et al., 2001 ). Thus, cAMP
signaling can promote survival without recruiting these signal pathways
recruited by peptide neurotrophic factors. This is in contrast to
retinal ganglion neurons in which cAMP has been shown to promote
survival by inducing translocation of a neurotrophin receptor (TrkB) to
the cell membrane, thus enhancing the responsiveness of the neurons to
exogenous BDNF (Meyer-Franke et al., 1998 ). Moreover, the ability of
cAMP to promote SGN survival is not affected by using TrkB-IgG or
TrkC-IgG fusion proteins to block neurotrophin binding to neurotrophin
receptors on SGNs (Hansen et al., 2001 ). Thus, the mechanism operating
in retinal ganglion neurons for response to cAMP may be a distinctive
feature of those cells and, possibly, other types of CNS neurons, as
has been suggested (Meyer-Franke et al., 1995 , 1998 ).
The data presented here suggest that cAMP, acting through PKA,
can directly affect the apoptotic regulatory apparatus. Here, we
identified the proapoptotic regulator Bad as a target of cAMP signaling
that allows cAMP, via PKA, to affect the apoptotic decision in neurons.
Specifically, we show that PKA can rescue SGNs from apoptotic death by
functionally inactivating Bad that has been overexpressed in the
neurons. This is consistent with previous studies (Harada et al., 1999 ;
Lizcano et al., 2000 ; Tan et al., 2000 ; Virdee et al., 2000 ; Zhou et
al., 2000 ) that have shown that PKA can phosphorylate Bad in a manner
that potentially interferes with the ability of Bad to interact with
other Bcl-2 family apoptotic regulatory proteins on the mitochondrion
and perform a proapoptotic function. Although they indicate that PKA
can promote survival via Bad inactivation, these data do not rule out
other mechanisms by which PKA can, in parallel, suppress cell death by
targeting cytoplasmic effectors. For example, glycogen synthase kinase
3 is a proapoptotic effector that has been shown to be phosphorylated and inactivated by PKA in cerebellar granule neurons (Li et al., 2000 ).
Moreover, although the data argue against a nuclear role for PKA in
maintaining neuronal survival, they do not completely exclude
transcription-dependent mechanisms; PKA might regulate transcription
while in the cytoplasm. One example of this is activation of nuclear
factor (NF)- B, which can act as a prosurvival effector (Foehr et
al., 2000 ; Yang et al., 2000 ; Sarmiere and Freeman, 2001 ). PKA can act
in the cytoplasm to stimulate the DNA-binding ability of NF- B and
its translocation from cytoplasm to nucleus (Shirakawa and Mizel,
1989 ). Cytoplasmic PKA activity is sufficient to cause nuclear
translocation of C/EBP , although nuclear PKA is required for its
transcriptional activity (Billiard et al., 2001 ). Additional studies,
focused on such cytoplasmic targets of PKA, should define the
mechanisms by which cAMP promotes neuronal survival.
Additivity among survival-promoting factors
Neurons are normally exposed to multiple potential
survival-promoting factors, e.g., peptide neurotrophic factors and
stimuli, such as membrane depolarization, that can raise cAMP levels.
These can cooperate to promote survival, and we showed that this is indeed the case for spiral ganglion neurons for which cAMP,
depolarization, and neurotrophins promote survival in an additive
manner (Hegarty et al., 1997 ). Neurotrophins promote survival, at least
in part, via a nuclear mechanism, recruitment of CREB (Bonni et al.,
1999 ; Riccio et al., 1999 ), whereas cAMP apparently promotes survival via cytoplasmic targets. We suggest that the additivity observed is not
a result of their convergence on a common target but rather of their
targeting different points in the sequence of molecular events that
control survival. Neurotrophins and CaMKIV control the synthesis of
apoptotic regulators, whereas cAMP posttranslationally controls the
activity of apoptotic regulators in the cytoplasm.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received July 3, 2002; revised Nov. 8, 2002; accepted Nov. 12, 2002.
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health (NIH) Grant
DC02961 (S.H.G.), and facilities and services were provided by the
University of Iowa Diabetes and Endocrinology Research Core, funded by
NIH Grant DK25295. We thank Dr. Stefan Strack for comments on this
manuscript. We also thank Drs. Richard Goodman, Richard Maurer, Marc
Montminy, Gabriel Nuñez, and Philip Stork for generously
providing plasmids used in these studies.
Correspondence should be addressed to Steven H. Green, Department of
Biological Sciences, University of Iowa, 138 Biology Building, Iowa
City, IA 52242-1324. E-mail: steven-green{at}uiowa.edu.
 |
References |
-
Antoni FA
(2000)
Molecular diversity of cyclic AMP signalling.
Front Neuroendocrinol
21:103-132[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Bacskai BJ,
Hochner B,
Mahaut-Smith M,
Adams SR,
Kaang BK,
Kandel ER,
Tsien RY
(1993)
Spatially resolved dynamics of cAMP and protein kinase A subunits in Aplysia sensory neurons.
Science
260:222-226[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Billiard J,
Grewal SS,
Lukaesko L,
Stork PJS,
Rotwein P
(2001)
Hormonal control of insulin-like growth factor-I gene transcription in human osteoblasts: dual actions of cAMP-dependent protein kinase on CCAAT/enhancer binding protein
.
J Biol Chem
276:31238-31246[Abstract/Free Full Text]. -
Bonni A,
Brunet A,
West AE,
Datta SR,
Takasu MA,
Greenberg ME
(1999)
Cell survival promoted by the Ras-MAPK signaling pathway by transcription-dependent and -independent mechanisms.
Science
286:1358-1362[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Cardinaux JR,
Notis JC,
Zhang Q,
Vo N,
Craig JC,
Fass DM,
Brennan RG,
Goodman RH
(2000)
Recruitment of CREB binding protein is sufficient for CREB-mediated gene activation.
Mol Cell Biol
20:1546-1552[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Chawla S,
Hardingham GE,
Quinn DR,
Bading H
(1998)
CBP: a signal-regulated transcriptional coactivator controlled by nuclear calcium and CaM kinase IV.
Science
281:1505-1509[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Chrivia JC,
Kwok RPS,
Lamb N,
Hagiwara M,
Montminy MR,
Goodman RH
(1993)
Phosphorylated CREB binds specifically to the nuclear protein CBP.
Nature
365:855-859[Medline].
-
Creedon DJ,
Johnson Jr EM,
Lawrence Jr JC
(1996)
Mitogen-activated protein kinase-independent pathways mediate the effects of nerve growth factor and cAMP on neuronal survival.
J Biol Chem
271:20713-20718[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Crowder RJ,
Freeman RS
(1999)
The survival of sympathetic neurons promoted by potassium depolarization, but not by cyclic AMP, requires phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase and Akt.
J Neurochem
73:466-475[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Datta SR,
Dudek H,
Tao X,
Masters S,
Fu H,
Gotoh Y,
Greenberg ME
(1997)
Akt phosphorylation of BAD couples survival signals to the cell-intrinsic death machinery.
Cell
91:231-241[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Datta SR,
Brunet A,
Greenberg ME
(1999)
Cellular survival: a play in three Akts.
Genes Dev
13:2905-2927[Free Full Text].
-
De Cesare D,
Sassone-Corsi P
(2000)
Transcriptional regulation by cyclic AMP-responsive factors.
Prog Nucleic Acid Res Mol Biol
64:343-369[Web of Science][Medline].
-
del Peso L,
Gonzalez-Garcia M,
Page C,
Herrera R,
Nuñez G
(1997)
Interleukin-3-induced phosphorylation of BAD through the protein kinase Akt.
Science
278:687-689[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Filippa N,
Sable CL,
Filloux C,
Hemmings B,
Van Obberghen E
(1999)
Mechanism of protein kinase B activation by cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase.
Mol Cell Biol
19:4989-5000[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Foehr ED,
Lin X,
O'Mahony A,
Geleziunas R,
Bradshaw RA,
Greene WC
(2000)
NF-
B signaling promotes both cell survival and neurite process formation in nerve growth factor-stimulated PC12 cells.
J Neurosci
20:7556-7563[Abstract/Free Full Text]. -
Francis SH,
Corbin JD
(1994)
Structure and function of cyclic nucleotide-dependent protein kinases.
Annu Rev Physiol
56:237-272[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Gabellini N,
Minozzi M-C,
Leon A,
Dal Toso R
(1992)
Nerve growth factor transcriptional control of c-fos promoter transfected in cultured spinal sensory neurons.
J Cell Biol
118:131-138[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Gonzalez GA,
Montminy MR
(1989)
Cyclic AMP stimulates somatostatin gene transcription by phosphorylation of CREB at serine 133.
Cell
59:675-682[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Grewal SS,
Fass DM,
Yao H,
Ellig CL,
Goodman RH,
Stork PJ
(2000)
Calcium and cAMP signals differentially regulate cAMP-responsive element-binding protein function via a Rap1-extracellular signal-regulated kinase pathway.
J Biol Chem
275:34433-34441[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Hansen MR,
Zha X-M,
Bok J,
Green SH
(2001)
Multiple distinct signal pathways, including an autocrine neurotrophic mechanism, contribute to the survival-promoting effect of depolarization on spiral ganglion neurons.
J Neurosci
21:2256-2267[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Hansen MR, Bok J, Devaiah AK, Zha X-M, Green SH (2003)
Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinases II and IV both
promote survival but differ in their effects on axon growth in spiral
ganglion neurons. J Neurosci Res, in press.
-
Hanson Jr MG,
Shen S,
Wiemelt AP,
McMorris FA,
Barres BA
(1998)
Cyclic AMP elevation is sufficient to promote the survival of spinal motor neurons in vitro.
J Neurosci
18:7361-7371[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Harada H,
Becknell B,
Wilm M,
Mann M,
Huang LJ,
Taylor SS,
Scott JD,
Korsmeyer SJ
(1999)
Phosphorylation and inactivation of BAD by mitochondria-anchored protein kinase A.
Mol Cell
3:413-422[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Hegarty JL,
Kay AR,
Green SH
(1997)
Trophic support of cultured spiral ganglion neurons by depolarization exceeds and is additive with that by neurotrophins or cyclic AMP, and requires elevation of [Ca2+]i within a set range.
J Neurosci
17:1959-1970[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Howard P,
Day KH,
Kim KE,
Richardson J,
Thomas J,
Abraham I,
Fleischmann RD,
Gottesman MM,
Maurer RA
(1991)
Decreased catalytic subunit mRNA levels and altered catalytic subunit mRNA structure in a cAMP-resistant Chinese hamster ovary cell line.
J Biol Chem
266:10189-10195[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Impey S,
Obrietan K,
Wong ST,
Poser S,
Yano S,
Wayman G,
Deloulme JC,
Chan G,
Storm DR
(1998)
Cross talk between ERK and PKA is required for Ca2+ stimulation of CREB- dependent transcription and ERK nuclear translocation.
Neuron
21:869-883[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Impey S,
Fong AL,
Wang Y,
Cardinaux JR,
Fass DM,
Obrietan K,
Wayman GA,
Storm DR,
Soderling TR,
Goodman RH
(2002)
Phosphorylation of CBP mediates transcriptional activation by neural activity and CaM kinase IV.
Neuron
34:235-244[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Iuvone PM,
Gan J,
Avendano G
(1991)
K+-evoked depolarization stimulates cyclic AMP accumulation in photoreceptor-enriched retinal cell cultures: role of calcium influx through dihydropyridine-sensitive calcium channels.
J Neurochem
57:615-621[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Jean D,
Harbison M,
McConkey DJ,
Ronai Z,
Bar-Eli M
(1998)
CREB and its associated proteins act as survival factors for human melanoma cells.
J Biol Chem
273:24884-24890[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Kalderon D,
Roberts BL,
Richardson WD,
Smith AE
(1984)
A short amino acid sequence able to specify nuclear location.
Cell
39:499-509[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Kalix P,
Roch P
(1976)
Evidence of depolarization-induced cAMP increase in the superior cervical ganglion of several mammalian species.
Gen Pharmacol
7:267-270[Medline].
-
Kim MS,
Chung W-H,
Cho Y-S,
Shin D-B,
Bang E-G,
Lyoo SH,
Hong SH
(2001)
Effect of neurotrophins and depolarization on survival of spiral ganglion neurons in dissociated culture.
Korean J Otolaryngol
44:1133-1139.
-
Kwok RPS,
Lundblad JR,
Chrivia JC,
Richards JP,
Bächinger HP,
Brennan RG,
Roberts SGE,
Green MR,
Goodman RH
(1994)
Nuclear protein CBP is a co-activator for the transcription factor CREB.
Nature
370:223-226[Medline].
-
Leake PA,
Hradek GT,
Snyder RL
(1999)
Chronic electrical stimulation by a cochlear implant promotes survival of spiral ganglion neurons after neonatal deafness.
J Comp Neurol
412:543-562[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Li M,
Wang X,
Meintzer MK,
Laessig T,
Birnbaum MJ,
Heidenreich KA
(2000)
Cyclic AMP promotes neuronal survival by phosphorylation of glycogen synthase kinase 3.
Mol Cell Biol
20:9356-9363[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Lizcano JM,
Morrice N,
Cohen P
(2000)
Regulation of BAD by cAMP-dependent protein kinase is mediated via phosphorylation of a novel site, Ser155.
Biochem J
349:547-557[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Lonze BE,
Riccio A,
Cohen S,
Ginty DD
(2002)
Apoptosis, axonal growth defects, and degeneration of peripheral neurons in mice lacking CREB.
Neuron
34:371-385[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Meyer-Franke A,
Kaplan MR,
Pfrieger FW,
Barres BA
(1995)
Characterization of the signaling interactions that promote the survival and growth of developing retinal ganglion cells in culture.
Neuron
15:805-819[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Meyer-Franke A,
Wilkinson GA,
Kruttgen A,
Hu M,
Munro E,
Hanson Jr MG,
Reichardt LF,
Barres BA
(1998)
Depolarization and cAMP elevation rapidly recruit TrkB to the plasma membrane of CNS neurons.
Neuron
21:681-693[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Michel PP,
Agid Y
(1996)
Chronic activation of the cyclic AMP signaling pathway promotes development and long-term survival of mesencephalic dopaminergic neurons.
J Neurochem
67:1633-1642[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Miller AL
(2001)
Effects of chronic stimulation on auditory nerve survival in ototoxically deafened animals.
Hear Res
151:1-14[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Miller TM,
Tansey MG,
Johnson Jr EM,
Creedon DJ
(1997)
Inhibition of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase activity blocks depolarization- and insulin-like growth factor I-mediated survival of cerebellar granule cells.
J Biol Chem
272:9847-9853[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Montminy MR,
Gonzalez GA,
Yamamoto KY
(1990)
Regulation of cAMP-inducible genes by CREB.
Trends Neurosci
13:184-188[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Nakao N
(1998)
An increase in intracellular levels of cyclic AMP produces trophic effects on striatal neurons developing in culture.
Neuroscience
82:1009-1020[Medline].
-
Riccio A,
Ahn S,
Davenport CM,
Blendy JA,
Ginty DD
(1999)
Mediation by a CREB family transcription factor of NGF-dependent survival of sympathetic neurons.
Science
286:2358-2361[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Rydel RE,
Greene LA
(1988)
cAMP analogs promote survival and neurite outgrowth in cultures of rat sympathetic and sensory neurons independently of nerve growth factor.
Proc Natl Acad Sci USA
85:1257-1261[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Sable CL,
Filippa N,
Hemmings B,
Van Obberghen E
(1997)
cAMP stimulates protein kinase B in a wortmannin-insensitive manner.
FEBS Lett
409:253-257[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Sarmiere PD,
Freeman RS
(2001)
Analysis of the NF-
B and PI 3-kinase/Akt survival pathways in nerve growth factor-dependent neurons.
Mol Cell Neurosci
18:320-331[Medline]. -
Shen S,
Wiemelt AP,
McMorris FA,
Barres BA
(1999)
Retinal ganglion cells lose trophic responsiveness after axotomy.
Neuron
23:285-295[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Shieh PB,
Hu SC,
Bobb K,
Timmusk T,
Ghosh A
(1998)
Identification of a signaling pathway involved in calcium regulation of BDNF expression.
Neuron
20:727-740[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Shirakawa F,
Mizel SB
(1989)
In vitro activation and nuclear translocation of NF-
B catalyzed by cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase and protein kinase C.
Mol Cell Biol
9:2424-2430[Abstract/Free Full Text]. -
Struthers RS,
Vale WW,
Arias C,
Sawchenko PE,
Montminy MR
(1991)
Somatotroph hypoplasia and dwarfism in transgenic mice expressing a non-phosphorylatable CREB mutant.
Nature
350:622-624[Medline].
-
Tan Y,
Demeter MR,
Ruan H,
Comb MJ
(2000)
BAD Ser-155 phosphorylation regulates BAD/Bcl-XL interaction and cell survival.
J Biol Chem
275:25865-25869[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Tao X,
Finkbeiner S,
Arnold DB,
Shaywitz AJ,
Greenberg ME
(1998)
Ca2+ influx regulates BDNF transcription by a CREB family transcription factor-dependent mechanism.
Neuron
20:709-726[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Virdee K,
Parone PA,
Tolkovsky AM
(2000)
Phosphorylation of the pro-apoptotic protein BAD on serine 155, a novel site, contributes to cell survival.
Curr Biol
10:1151-1154[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Vossler MR,
Yao H,
York RD,
Pan MG,
Rim CS,
Stork PJ
(1997)
cAMP activates MAP kinase and Elk-1 through a B-Raf- and Rap1-dependent pathway.
Cell
89:73-82[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Walsh DA,
Ashby CD,
Gonzalez C,
Calkins D,
Fischer EH
(1971)
Krebs EG: purification and characterization of a protein inhibitor of adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate-dependent protein kinases.
J Biol Chem
246:1977-1985[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Walton KM,
Rehfuss RP,
Chrivia JC,
Lochner JE,
Goodman RH
(1992)
A dominant repressor of cyclic adenosine 3', 5'-monophosphate (cAMP)-regulated enhancer-binding protein activity inhibits the cAMP-mediated induction of the somatostatin promoter in vivo.
Mol Endocrinol
6:647-655[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Wen W,
Harootunian AT,
Adams SR,
Feramisco J,
Tsien RY,
Meinkoth JL,
Taylor SS
(1994)
Heat-stable inhibitors of cAMP-dependent protein kinase carry a nuclear export signal.
J Biol Chem
269:32214-32220[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Whitehouse S,
Walsh DA
(1983)
Inhibitor protein of the cAMP-dependent protein kinase: characteristics and purification.
Methods Enzymol
99:80-93[Medline].
-
Wiley JC,
Wailes LA,
Idzerda RL,
McKnight GS
(1999)
Role of regulatory subunits and protein kinase inhibitor (PKI) in determining nuclear localization and activity of the catalytic subunit of protein kinase A.
J Biol Chem
274:6381-6387[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Wilson BE,
Mochon E,
Boxer LM
(1996)
Induction of bcl-2 expression by phosphorylated CREB proteins during B-cell activation and rescue from apoptosis.
Mol Cell Biol
16:5546-5556[Abstract].
-
Wu J,
Michel H,
Rossomando A,
Haystead T,
Shabanowitz J,
Hunt DF,
Sturgill TW
(1992)
Renaturation and partial peptide sequencing of mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAP kinase) activator from rabbit skeletal muscle.
Biochem J
285:701-705.
-
Xu L,
Lavinsky RM,
Dasen JS,
Flynn SE,
McInerney EM,
Mullen TM,
Heinzel T,
Szeto D,
Korzus E,
Kurokawa R,
Aggarwal AK,
Rose DW,
Glass CK,
Rosenfeld MG
(1998)
Signal-specific co-activator domain requirements for Pit-1 activation.
Nature
395:301-306[Medline].
-
Yang CH,
Murti A,
Pfeffer SR,
Basu L,
Kim JG,
Pfeffer LM
(2000)
IFN
/ promotes cell survival by activating NF- B.
Proc Natl Acad Sci USA
97:13631-13636[Abstract/Free Full Text]. -
Zanger K,
Cohen LE,
Hashimoto K,
Radovick S,
Wondisford FE
(1999)
A novel mechanism for cyclic adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate regulation of gene expression by CREB-binding protein.
Mol Endocrinol
13:268-275[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Zha X-M,
Bishop JF,
Hansen MR,
Victoria L,
Abbas PJ,
Mouradian MM,
Green SH
(2001)
BDNF synthesis in spiral ganglion neurons is constitutive and CREB-dependent.
Hear Res
156:53-68[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Zhou XM,
Liu Y,
Payne G,
Lutz RJ,
Chittenden T
(2000)
Growth factors inactivate the cell death promoter BAD by phosphorylation of its BH3 domain on ser155.
J Biol Chem
275:25046-25051[Abstract/Free Full Text].
Copyright © 2003 Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474/03/233777-11$05.00/0
Related articles in J. Neurosci.:
- This Week in The Journal
J. Neurosci. 2003 23: 0.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
This article has been cited by other articles:

|
 |

|
 |
 
N. Gerits, T. Mikalsen, S. Kostenko, A. Shiryaev, M. Johannessen, and U. Moens
Modulation of F-actin Rearrangement by the Cyclic AMP/cAMP-dependent Protein Kinase (PKA) Pathway Is Mediated by MAPK-activated Protein Kinase 5 and Requires PKA-induced Nuclear Export of MK5
J. Biol. Chem.,
December 21, 2007;
282(51):
37232 - 37243.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
H. Lang, B. A. Schulte, D. Zhou, N. Smythe, S. S. Spicer, and R. A. Schmiedt
Nuclear factor kappaB deficiency is associated with auditory nerve degeneration and increased noise-induced hearing loss.
J. Neurosci.,
March 29, 2006;
26(13):
3541 - 3550.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
S. R. Smukler, S. B. Runciman, S. Xu, and D. van der Kooy
Embryonic stem cells assume a primitive neural stem cell fate in the absence of extrinsic influences
J. Cell Biol.,
January 3, 2006;
172(1):
79 - 90.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
F. Lallemend, S. Hadjab, G. Hans, G. Moonen, P. P. Lefebvre, and B. Malgrange
Activation of protein kinase C{beta}I constitutes a new neurotrophic pathway for deafferented spiral ganglion neurons
J. Cell Sci.,
October 1, 2005;
118(19):
4511 - 4525.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
Z. Zhou, Q. Liu, and R. L. Davis
Complex Regulation of Spiral Ganglion Neuron Firing Patterns by Neurotrophin-3
J. Neurosci.,
August 17, 2005;
25(33):
7558 - 7566.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
S. Subramaniam, N. Shahani, J. Strelau, C. Laliberte, R. Brandt, D. Kaplan, and K. Unsicker
Insulin-Like Growth Factor 1 Inhibits Extracellular Signal-Regulated Kinase to Promote Neuronal Survival via the Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinase/Protein Kinase A/c-Raf Pathway
J. Neurosci.,
March 16, 2005;
25(11):
2838 - 2852.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
A. Venkateswaran, D. K. Marsee, S. H. Green, and S. M. Jhiang
Forskolin, 8-Br-3',5'-Cyclic Adenosine 5'-Monophosphate, and Catalytic Protein Kinase A Expression in the Nucleus Increase Radioiodide Uptake and Sodium/Iodide Symporter Protein Levels in RET/PTC1-Expressing Cells
J. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab.,
December 1, 2004;
89(12):
6168 - 6172.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
K.-i. Kimura, A. Kodama, Y. Hayasaka, and T. Ohta
Activation of the cAMP/PKA signaling pathway is required for post-ecdysial cell death in wing epidermal cells of Drosophila melanogaster
Development,
April 1, 2004;
131(7):
1597 - 1606.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
G. Kwon, K. L. Pappan, C. A. Marshall, J. E. Schaffer, and M. L. McDaniel
cAMP Dose-dependently Prevents Palmitate-induced Apoptosis by Both Protein Kinase A- and cAMP-Guanine Nucleotide Exchange Factor-dependent Pathways in {beta}-Cells
J. Biol. Chem.,
March 5, 2004;
279(10):
8938 - 8945.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
J. M.-Y. Lu, R. J. Deschenes, and J. S. Fassler
Saccharomyces cerevisiae Histidine Phosphotransferase Ypd1p Shuttles between the Nucleus and Cytoplasm for SLN1-Dependent Phosphorylation of Ssk1p and Skn7p
Eukaryot. Cell,
December 1, 2003;
2(6):
1304 - 1314.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|
|

|