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The Journal of Neuroscience, April 15, 2003, 23(8):3234
Cell Type-Specific Roles for Tissue Plasminogen Activator
Released by Neurons or Microglia after Excitotoxic Injury
Chia-Jen
Siao1,
Susana
R.
Fernandez2, and
Stella E.
Tsirka1, 2
1 Department of Pharmacological Sciences, Program in
Molecular and Cellular Pharmacology, and 2 Program in
Molecular and Cellular Biology, University Medical Center at Stony
Brook, Stony Brook, New York 11794-8651
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ABSTRACT |
Tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) plays important roles in the
brain after excitotoxic injury. It is released by both neurons and
microglia and mediates neuronal death and microglial activation. Mice
lacking tPA are resistant to excitotoxicity and show very limited
microglial activation. Activated microglia are neurotoxic in culture,
but this phenomenon is not well documented in vivo. To
further understand the sequence of events through which tPA mediates
microglial activation and neurodegeneration, we have generated mice
that exhibit restricted expression of tPA through introduction of tPA
transgenes under the control of neuronal- or microglial-specific
promoters into tPA-deficient mice. Neither strain of transgenic mice
shows abnormal brain morphology or inflammation in the absence of
injury, and unilateral intrahippocampal kainate injections into the
transgenic mice induced excitotoxicity and microglial activation
reminiscent of wild-type mice. However, there are differences in the
kinetics of the resulting pathology. The neuronal tPA-expressing mice
exhibit accelerated microglial activation compared with wild-type or
microglial tPA-expressing mice. However, microglial tPA-expressing mice
exhibit greater neurodegeneration. These data suggest a model in which
tPA plays different roles after kainate injection depending on whether
it is released by neurons or microglia. We propose that tPA, initially secreted from injured neurons, acts as a cytokine to activate microglia
at the site of injury. These activated microglia then secrete
additional tPA, which promotes extracellular matrix degradation, neurodegeneration, and self-proliferation. We suggest that an approach
to attenuate microglia-mediated neuronal death in vivo might be to pharmacologically prevent microglial activation.
Key words:
cell-cell interactions; microglial activation; transgenic mice; hippocampus; neurodegeneration; in
vivo
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Introduction |
Excitotoxicity is a key component in
many neurodegenerative diseases, including Alzheimer's disease
(Mattson et al., 1992 ), ischemic stroke (Dirnagl et al., 1999 ), and
multiple sclerosis (Pitt et al., 2000 ). Normally, extracellular levels
of glutamate are tightly regulated by brain cells via glutamate
transporters (Noda et al., 1999 ). Excess glutamate released from
injured cells upsets this balance and results in hyperdepolarization of
neurons causing necrosis and apoptosis (Olney, 1986 ). Furthermore,
injury leads to activation of microglia, the resident immune cells of the CNS.
Reactive microglia play beneficial and detrimental roles in the
CNS. Activated microglia present antigen and phagocytose cell debris
after injury, thereby preventing damaging molecules from injuring
surrounding cells (Banati and Graeber, 1994 ; Kreutzberg, 1995 ). After
neuronal injury, the cells release chemokines, which diffuse and
recruit microglia locally and from other regions of the brain (Blevins
and Fedoroff, 1995 ). Reactive microglia secrete neurotoxic factors as
they become activated, including interleukin-1 , tumor necrosis
factor (TNF)- , nitric oxide (NO), and proteases (Chao and Hu, 1994 ;
McMillian et al., 1997 ). We used the protease tissue plasminogen
activator (tPA) to study the microglial response to neuronal injury.
tPA is expressed by neurons and microglia in the mouse CNS and, with
other extracellular proteases (such as plasmin and thrombin), participates in neurite outgrowth and neuronal development by cleaving
proteins of the extracellular matrix and potentially forming a path for
extending processes (Wu et al., 2000 ; Jacovina et al., 2001 ). In
addition, tPA is important in modulating the late phase of long-term
potentiation (Frey et al., 1996 ; Baranes et al., 1998 ).
tPA mediates excitotoxic neurodegeneration by cleaving plasminogen into
plasmin and initiating a proteolytic cascade that leads to neuronal
death (Tsirka et al., 1995 , 1997 ; Chen and Strickland, 1997 ). tPA is
also involved in microglial activation during excitotoxicity, but this
function does not require proteolytic properties of tPA (Rogove
et al., 1999 ). Using a mouse model, we showed that excitotoxic injury
is accompanied by full microglial activation, as assayed by microglial
morphological changes and protein upregulation 5 d after kainate
(KA) injection (Tsirka et al., 1995 ). We have also shown in primary
cell cultures that microglia, as proposed by Kreutzberg (1996) , act as
effective sensors of injury (Siao and Tsirka, 2002 ). Furthermore,
previous reports and our cell culture data indicate that tPA released
by activated microglia mediates neurodegeneration in a paracrine manner
(Rogove and Tsirka, 1998 ; Flavin et al., 2000 ; C.-J. Siao and S. E. Tsirka, unpublished observations).
Because tPA is released by both neurons and microglia, the question
posed is whether tPA performs multiple roles in vivo, or whether it, as released by different cell types, undertakes distinct
temporal and functional roles. Addressing this issue is important in
understanding how microglia react to injury.
To study the role of tPA in the brain in vivo, we have
generated transgenic mice expressing tPA, either in neurons or
microglia, in a tPA-deficient (tPA / )
background. Here, we characterize these transgenic mice and induce
excitotoxicity to examine their neuronal and microglial responses to injury.
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Materials and Methods |
All work with animals followed National Institutes of Health
guidelines and was approved by the Department of Laboratory Animal Research at the State University of New York (SUNY, Stony Brook, NY). Mice had ad libitum access to food and water and
were placed on a 12 hr light/dark schedule.
Generation of transgenic mice
Microglial tPA construct. Tam2.5 contains the
full-length tPA cDNA, 87 nt of the 5'-untranslated region (UTR),
and 746 nt of the 3'-UTR, including the polyadenylation sequence
(Rickles et al., 1988 ). It was linearized using NotI and
SmaI. The promoter used to generate microglial
tPA-expressing mice was the macrophage colony-stimulating factor
(M-CSF) (c-fms) protooncogene. It is a
monocyte/macrophage-specific promoter that becomes upregulated in acute
and chronic injury in the CNS (Akiyama et al., 1994 ; Raivich et al.,
1998 ). The promoter was released from pSK-cFms (a gift from Dr. Toru
Miyazaki, Friedrich Miescher Institute, Basel, Switzerland) using
NotI and EcoRV and ligated 5' to the tPA cDNA.
Neuronal tPA construct. Tam2.5 was linearized with
SalI and HindIII and inserted 3' to the
neuronal-specific neurofilament light chain (NF-L) promoter to generate
neuron-specific expression. This promoter is most active during
embryogenesis, but expression of NF-L promoter-driven transgenes is
also detectable after birth (Schlaepfer and Bruce, 1990 ; Akassoglou et
al., 1997 ). The plasmid containing the promoter was a generous gift
from Drs. William Asch and Nisson Schechter (SUNY, Stony Brook, NY).
Generating transgenic mice. NotI and
EcoRV (Fms-tPA) or SalI and SmaI
(NF-L-tPA) were used to release the promoter-tPA fragments, which were
then microinjected into fertilized pronuclei of
tPA / mice (on a C57BL/6 background).
Five potential founders were generated for each construct; after
Southern blotting to confirm genomic integration of transgenes, three
lines for each transgene were bred for additional analyses. All of the
NF-L-tPA and Fms-tPA lines gave similar results. One line for each
construct is described in detail below. Compared with the C57BL/6 and
tPA / mice, the NF-L-tPA and Fms-tPA
strains were equally fertile and produced live young in the expected numbers.
Characterization of transgenic mice
Tail biopsy and genotyping. Mouse pups at postnatal
day 10 (P10)-P15 were tail-clipped, and the genomic DNA was extracted. Briefly, proteinase K was added to a final concentration of 100 µg/ml
in lysis buffer (100 M Tris, pH 8.5, 5 M EDTA, 0.2% SDS, and 200 M NaCl). After incubation at 65°C overnight,
the resulting suspension was centrifuged at maximal speed for 20 min at
4°C. The DNA in the supernatant was precipitated with isopropanol, washed with cold 70% ethanol, and dissolved in 200 µl of 10 mM Tris HCl and 1 mM EDTA, pH 7.4. One
microliter was used for genotyping by PCR using the following primers:
Fms-tPA: F1, 5'-TAAAAGGGGAAGAAGAGGATCAGC-3'; R1,
5'-GCAGACAAAGTCAGAGAAATACAG-3'; NF-L-tPA: F5,
5'-GATCGATCACAGTCTGCGTCAG-3', and R1. Furthermore, the following
internal tPA genotyping primers were used: tPA1,
5'-CCACCTGTGGCCTGAGGCAGTACAA-3'; tPA2, 5'-ATGCCTCATGCTTGCCGTAGCCAGA-3'. In wild-type mice, the tPA1/2 primers produce a 750 bp band, because there are two introns in the genomic sequence between the two primers,
whereas in transgenic mice these primers produce a 470 bp band (from
the tPA cDNA). To confirm the tPA /
background, the neo cassette was amplified using neo 3 (5'-CTGAATGAACTGCAGGACGA-3') and neo 4 (5'-ATACTTTCTCGGCAGGAGCA-3').
In situ hybridization. Fresh-frozen coronal sections (20 µm) were postfixed in 4% paraformaldehyde, permeabilized with 20 µg/ml proteinase K, fixed again in paraformaldehyde, and acetylated. Prehybridization was performed at room temperature (RT) using the following solution: 50% formamide, 5× SSC, 5× Denhardt's
solution, 250 gm/ml baker's yeast mRNA, and 500 µg/ml herring sperm
DNA/DEPC distilled water (dH2O). Two of
the probes used were generated from linearized pASP, which contains the
3'-UTR of tPA and the T7 promoter generated an antisense probe, whereas
the T3 promoter generated sense probe. Another probe used was generated
from the PCR product from tPA1/2, because tPA2 has attached at its 5'
end a T7 promoter. The probes were prepared using the MaxiScript
in vitro transcription kit (Ambion, Austin,
TX) with digoxygenin (DIG)-labeled UTP according to the
manufacturer's instructions and added to the hybridizing sections,
which were then incubated at 72°C overnight. The anti-DIG antibody
(Roche Products, Hertforshire, UK) was used at a 1:2000
dilution, and the secondary alkaline phosphatase-conjugated anti-sheep
antibody (Sigma, St. Louis, MO) was used at 1:200.
Detection was performed using 5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl phosphate/nitroblue tetrazolium (Roche Products) or
diaminobenzadine/peroxide (DAB/H2O2; Sigma).
Primary cell culture. Hippocampal neuronal cultures were
established as published previously (Siao and Tsirka, 2002 ). Briefly, embryonic day 17 (E17)-E19 embryos were dissected from killed pregnant mice, and their hippocampi were removed and placed into cold
HBSS. After successive trypsin and trypsin-inhibitor incubations, the
hippocampi were triturated through a fire-polished pipette. The
resulting single-cell suspension was plated onto
poly-L-lysine (PLL)-precoated glass coverslips
with G3 medium (neurobasal/B27 supplement, 0.5 mM
glutamine, 25 µM glutamate, and 10 mg/l
gentamicin). Three to 5 hr later, the medium was completely changed
into fresh G3. Three to 5 d later, the medium was half-changed
into G2 (G3 minus glutamate). After 7 d in culture, neurons were
stimulated with 25 µM glutamate for 4 hr and
then total RNA was extracted as described below.
Microglia were isolated from cultures of mixed cortical cells as
described previously (Siao and Tsirka, 2002 ). Briefly, cortices from
E18 or P0 mice were trypsinized and triturated, and the resulting single-cell suspension was plated into PLL-coated 75 cm2 tissue-culture flasks. The medium
(DMEM, 10% FBS, and 40 mg/l gentamicin) was changed every 3 d.
After 10-14 d in culture, the mixed cortical cells establish a
confluent layer with bright rounded microglial cells visible on top of
the layer. These microglia were removed by 15 mM lidocaine
treatment with gentle shaking; after centrifugation, the pellet was
resuspended in complete medium and plated onto PLL-coated glass
coverslips. After 2 d in culture, microglia were stimulated with
100 ng/ml bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS; strain O55:B5;
Sigma) for 16 hr and then total RNA was extracted as
described below.
Reverse transcriptase PCR. Total RNA was prepared from total
brain, cultured primary neuronal, or microglial cells using the Trizol
reagent (Invitrogen, San Diego, CA) according to the
manufacturer's directions. First strands were synthesized using
Superscript II reverse transcriptase (Invitrogen)
according to the manufacturer's instructions and using 100 ng of
poly-dT primer. Reactions were incubated at 37°C for 1 hr, 42°C for
30 min, and 72°C for 10 min. PCR was performed using 1 µl of the
reverse transcriptase reaction product. The PCR products were separated
on a 1% agarose gel and stained with ethidium bromide. To ascertain
cDNA quality, -actin was amplified. In addition to the tPA1/2 or
transgenic tPA primers used above, the following additional
primers were used: F4/80, 5'-GACGGTTGAGCAGACAGTGA-3' and
5'-TGCTAGTGGAGGCAGTGATG-3'; BDNF, 5'-CCTGGATGCCGCAAACATG-3' and
5'-CCACTATCTTCCCCTTTTAATGG-3'; actin, 5'-GGCCACTGCCGCATCCTCTT-3' and
5'-AGAGCCTCAGGGCATCGGAAC-3'.
In vivo studies
Induction of excitotoxicity. For intrahippocampal
injections, adult mice were injected intraperitoneally with atropine
(0.6 mg/kg), anesthetized with 2.5% avertin (0.02 ml/gm), and 0.75 nmol KA (Alexis Biochemicals, San Diego, CA) in 300 nl (or
the same volume of PBS control, or 0.25 nmol of KA as a low dose) was
injected into the following coordinates from bregma: 2.5 mm
anteroposterior, 1.7 mm mediolateral, and 1.6 mm dorsoventral. The
injection lasted for 1 min, and the needle was left in place for an
additional 2 min to prevent reflux. Mice were killed at various
indicated times after injection, and their brains were removed. Each
brain was first trimmed so that some tissue from both the injected and
the noninjected sides could be frozen for RNA purification and protein
extraction. The remainder of the brain was frozen on dry ice in optimal
cutting temperature compound (Tissue-Tek; Miles,
Elkhart, IN). All of the NF-L-tPA and Fms-tPA lines gave similar
results. One line for each construct is described in detail below.
Cresyl violet staining. To detect neuronal survival/death,
fresh-frozen sections were postfixed in 4% paraformaldehyde and then
dipped in cresyl violet dye (2.5 gm of cresyl violet, 30 ml of 1 M sodium acetate, 170 ml of 1 M acetic acid, and 300 ml of
dH2O) for 5-10 min. Sections were serially
dehydrated in graded ethanol and then defatted in xylenes. Finally,
sections were coverslipped with Permount (Fisher
Scientific, Houston, TX). The stained sections were photographed
using a digital camera (Nikon CoolPix 990; Nikon, Tokyo,
Japan) on a Nikon Eclipse TS100 microscope under bright-field optics
and then converted into an uncompressed tagged image file using Adobe
Photoshop (Adobe Systems, San Jose, CA). The degree of
neurodegeneration was measured using the freeware Scion Image beta 4.02 (Scion, Frederick, MD), downloadable at
http://www.scioncorp.com/index.htm. Briefly, the TIF file was
loaded into Scion Image, and the freehand tool was used to define the
length of pyramidal neuronal loss and measured as arbitrary units. The
entire length of the hippocampal pyramidal layer was measured in the
same manner, and the percentage loss of neurons on the injected side
was calculated. A minimum of five sections was quantified for each time
point per genotype.
Immunohistochemistry. Fresh-frozen coronal sections (20 µm) were cut using a Leica (Nussloch, Germany) cryostat,
mounted onto slides (Fisher SuperFrost Plus; Fisher
Scientific), air dried, and postfixed in 4%
paraformaldehyde/PBS. Endogenous peroxidase activity was quenched with
peroxide treatment (3%
H2O2 in PBS, 30 min). After
blocking in serum of the host of the secondary antibody [5% serum in
PBS-T (0.5% Triton X-100 in PBS)], the primary antibody was added
(into 5% serum in PBS-T) at the following dilutions: 1:1000 50.1 tPA
(generated in-house); 1:200 F4/80 (microglia/monocytes; Serotec, Indianapolis, IN); 1:500 5D4 [activated
microglia in brain (Jander and Stoll, 1996 ; Bertolottoa et al., 1998 ),
activated microglia, macrophages, and precursors of oligodendrocytes in the spinal cord (Jones and Tuszynski, 2002 ); Seikagaku Kogyo, Tokyo,
Japan]; 1:500 neuronal-specific nuclear protein (neuronal nuclei; Chemicon, Temecula, CA). Sections were incubated
in primary antibody overnight at 4°C. After a 10 min wash in PBS,
appropriate biotinylated secondary antibodies were added in serum/PBS-T
and incubated for 30 min. After washing in PBS for 10 min, the ABC reagent was added to conjugate avidin-peroxidase to the immune complex
(Vector Laboratories, Burlingame, CA) according to
manufacturer's directions for 30 min. The blot was washed for 10 min,
and the signal was visualized using
DAB/H2O2. Sections were
successively dehydrated in ethanol, defatted in xylenes, and
coverslipped with Permount (Fisher Scientific). To enhance
the DAB signal, a silver/gold method was used before dehydration
(Kritzer, 2000 ). Briefly, sections were incubated in 1% silver
nitrate, pH 7.0, at 55°C in the dark for 50 min, rinsed in
dH2O, incubated in 0.2% gold chloride in the
dark for 15 min, rinsed again in dH2O, and then
incubated in 5% sodium thiosulfate for 10 min. Slides were dehydrated
and mounted as described above. To perform semiquantitative analysis, the slides were treated at the same time with the same reagents, and
different fields of view at the same magnification were photographed and digitized as described above. To quantify cells, we counted the
number of nuclei whose cell bodies were stained with 5D4. We then used
the freehand shape tool in the Image software to delineate the
microglial cell and subsequently measured the area that is taken up by
the cell as pixels squared. We present this data as relative
measurements and for comparisons across groups.
In situ zymography. Fresh-frozen coronal sections (20 µm)
were overlaid with a mixture consisting of 1% low-melting agarose, 1 mg/ml plasminogen, amiloride [which inhibits urokinase (uPA)], 0.1 mM Tris-Cl, pH 7.5, and nonfat dry milk. A
coverslip was added to flatten the overlay, and the sections were
incubated at 37°C in a humidified chamber. Activity of tPA is
visualized where there is degradation of casein (a clearing of the
white matrix) by the activation of plasminogen into plasmin.
Amidolytic assay. Brain lysate from wild-type and both
transgenic strains (all transgenic lines) of mice were homogenized with
0.25% Triton X-100, and cell debris was centrifuged and removed. The
supernatant (30 µl) was added to microplate wells containing 170 µl
of the master mix [0.1 M Tris, pH 8.0, 0.1%
Tween 80, and 0.3 mM S-2288 (fluorescent
amidolytic substrate; Chromogenix, Milano, Italy)]. Absorbance (405 nm) was read at t = 0 and 3 hr. Relative tPA activity
was measured using recombinant tPA protein as a control at the same
time point.
Statistics. In all quantification procedures, n
refers to the number of animals under each condition. The observers
were blinded to the nature of the experimental manipulation.
Statistical analysis was performed using a two-tailed t
test; p < 0.05 is considered significant. Experiments
were performed in duplicate or triplicate.
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Results |
Cell type-specific expression of tPA in transgenic mice.
Transgenic mice that express tPA only from neurons or microglia
were generated in a tPA-deficient mouse strain. For neuron-specific tPA
expression, the murine tPA cDNA (mtPA) was fused to the promoter of the
NF-L gene. Figure 1 shows the transgenic
construct schematic (a) and representative genotyping PCR
results from tail-biopsy DNA (c). tPA genomic DNA gives rise
to a 750 bp PCR product, whereas the introduced cDNA generates a 470 bp
band. Similar results were observed for three independent lines (A-C).
Results for line A will be shown in this study.

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Figure 1.
Characterization of transgenic mice.
a, A neuron-specific transgenic construct. The promoter
for the neurofilament light chain gene was fused to mtPA, and relevant
restriction enzyme sites are labeled. b, A
microglia-specific transgenic construct. The promoter for the gene
encoding the receptor for M-CSF (also known as c-fms) was fused to
mouse tPA cDNA. c, Genotyping PCR results for NF-L-tPA
founder mice. , No DNA; p, transgenic plasmid; tg , nontransgenic
littermate control. The primers that amplify the transgene (5' primer
in the promoter and 3' primer in tPA cDNA) specifically produce a 512 bp product, whereas the primers for tPA cDNA amplify a 470 bp product.
d, Genotyping PCR results for Fms-tPA founder mice. The
transgene-specific promoters amplified a 590 bp product.
e, The transgenic mice express cell-specific tPA.
Primary microglia or neurons were cultured as described, and then total
RNA was extracted and reverse transcribed. Primers for BDNF (B,
neuronal), F4/80 (F, microglial), or tPA (t) were used to amplify
specific products to show that the cells express tPA only from neurons
(NF-L-tPA mice) or microglia (Fms-tPA mice). f,
In situ hybridization results for transgenic mice. The
NF-L-tPA section shows a strong tPA RNA presence in the CA1 pyramidal
neurons. The Fms-tPA sections show a more diffuse tPA RNA presence
around the CA3 subfield (arrowheads) as well as in the CC
(arrowheads). Original magnification, 100×.
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tPA mRNA and protein are present at high levels in different regions of
the brain, including the hippocampus, amygdala, and cerebellum, and are
expressed by both neurons and microglia (Sappino et al., 1993 ; Seeds et
al., 1995 ; Tsirka et al., 1997 ). To express tPA in
monocytes/macrophages, we used the promoter for the receptor for M-CSF,
also known as the protooncogene c-fms. Figure 1 shows the transgenic
construct schematic (b) and representative genotyping PCR
results (d). Similar results were observed for three
independent lines (E, J, K); data for line E are shown below.
Reverse transcriptase PCR (Fig. 1e) and in situ
hybridization (Fig. 1f) analyses were used to
determine whether the transgenes are expressed in the intended cell
types. Purified primary neurons or microglia from wild-type,
tPA / , NF-L-tPA, and Fms-tPA mice were
prepared. Microglia were primed with 100 ng/ml LPS for 16 hr, and
neurons were stimulated with 25 µM glutamate
for 3.5 hr. RNA was then extracted and reverse transcribed, and the
cDNA was subjected to PCR using primers for tPA, BDNF (for neurons),
and F4/80 (for microglia). As shown in Figure 1e, the
NF-L-tPA mice expressed tPA in neurons but not in microglia, whereas
the Fms-tPA mice expressed tPA only in microglia. In situ
hybridization on transgenic brain sections (Fig. 1f)
demonstrated an intense tPA signal over NF-L-tPA neurons in the CA1
subfield. In the Fms-tPA mice, the tPA signal was distributed in a
punctate pattern across the hippocampus, consistent with the
distribution of microglia, with particularly strong staining in the
corpus callosum (CC). In addition, the Fms-tPA signal colocalized with cells that stain with the antibody F4/80, which is specific for macrophages and microglia (data not shown). No signal was observed in
the tPA / mice (data not shown). These
results confirm that the constructs were expressed in the restricted
manner intended by the choice of promoters.
Transgenic mice express active tPA protein
To confirm that the transgenic mice expressed tPA specifically in
the hippocampus, we performed in situ zymographic analyses on sections of wild-type, tPA / , and
transgenic mouse brains. Figure
2a shows that in wild-type mice, tPA activity localizes to the CA3 and the hilus of the
hippocampus (dark areas, arrows) (Sappino et al., 1993 ; Tsirka et al.,
1995 ; Sallés and Strickland, 2002 ). No plasminogen activator
activity was detected in the tPA /
sections (Fig. 2b). tPA activity localized in NF-L-tPA mice
in a pattern similar to what had been observed for endogenous tPA in
wild-type mice (Fig. 2c). Although this result may seem
unexpected given that the NF-L promoter should be driving expression in
all neuronal cells, it is actually consistent with findings from
wild-type mice: tPA mRNA is localized in all neuronal pyramidal
subfields in the hippocampus (Tsirka et al., 1997 ), but protein
activity is only detected in the CA3 and hilus, possibly because of the presence elsewhere of protease inhibitors such as plasminogen activator
inhibitor-1 and neuroserpin (Cuzner et al., 1996 ; Hastings et al.,
1997 ; Krueger et al., 1997 ). Robust tPA activity in Fms-tPA mice was
observed in the stratum radiatum (Fig. 2d, arrows) as well
as in the CA3 subfield.

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Figure 2.
tPA secreted by transgenic mice is active. An
in situ zymographic assay was used on sections from
wild-type (a), tPA /
(b), NF-L-tPA (c), and
Fms-tPA (d) mice to visualize endogenous
tPA proteolytic activity. All sections except for
tPA / showed tPA activity in the CA3/hilus
regions of the hippocampus (arrows). The arrows in d
also indicate the stratum radiatum. Endogenous uPA activity was
inhibited with amiloride. Original magnification, 10×.
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To quantitate the amount of tPA synthesized by the transgenic mice
under basal conditions, we used the amidolytic assay to compare the
activity of tPA expressed in protein extracts from brains of the
transgenic and wild-type animals. We found that the transgenic
mice express lower amounts of tPA than do the wild-type animals (which
physiologically express both neuronal and microglial tPA): 0.7 µg/mg
for C57BL/6, 0.5 µg/mg for NF-L-tPA, 0.3 µg/mg for Fms-tPA.
KA-injected transgenic mice expressed higher amounts of tPA. For mice
from both the neuronal and microglial genotypes, the amidolytic assay
reported 1.5 µg tPA/mg total protein; this represents a threefold
increase in active tPA in NF-L-tPA mice and a fivefold increase in
active tPA in Fms-tPA mice (n = 2 for each genotype in
each condition).
Neurons and microglia from uninjured transgenic mice
appear normal
tPA expression is tightly regulated in the CNS under basal
conditions. Therefore, the constitutive expression of transgenic tPA
under the selected promoters could sensitize neurons and microglia to
injury and degeneration even in the basal state. However, we examined
naive uninjured mice and did not observe spontaneously degenerating
neurons or constitutively active microglia (Fig. 3a-d). We also injected
transgenic mice unilaterally with PBS. In all genotypes (wild-type,
tPA / , NF-L-tPA, and Fms-tPA), the
injury caused by the injection did not induce neurodegeneration.
Furthermore, parenchymal microglia did not become activated (Fig.
3e-h) (data not shown for wild-type and
tPA / mice), indicating that low
constitutive expression of tPA does not suffice to sensitize the cells
even to mechanical injury. These results also demonstrate a lack of
activated microglia or infiltrating macrophages, indicating that the
blood-brain barrier (BBB) is not compromised and parenchymal tissue is
not inflamed.

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Figure 3.
Transgenic mice show no neuronal death or
microglial activation without injury. Cresyl violet stained hippocampal
sections show an intact CA pyramidal neuronal layer in mice that were
untreated (a, c) or injected with PBS
only (e, g). b,
d, f, h, In addition,
sections (boxed insets) from the same mice were immunodetected with
F4/80 antibody, which recognizes microglia/macrophages; the lack of
specific staining shows that the brain parenchyma is not injured.
Dorsal is at the top of all panels. Original magnifications: cresyl
violet panels, 20×; immunohistochemistry panels, 400×. The
high-magnification panels are from the CA1 subfield of the hippocampus.
uninj., Uninjected; inj., injected.
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Kainic acid induces neurodegeneration in transgenic mice
We injected 25 nmol of KA unilaterally into the hippocampus of
C57BL/6 animals and both strains of transgenic mice (all transgenic lines) and examined neuronal survival at several times from 6 hr to
5 d after injury using cresyl violet staining (Fig.
4A). The left panel
shows representative wild-type (C57BL/6) sections as a reference,
whereas the middle and right panels show NF-L-tPA (line A) and Fms-tPA
(line E) sections, respectively. Results from other lines, although not
performed in numbers equal to those described and quantified for lines
A and E, suggest that they react in a similar manner to this dose of KA
(Fig. 4B). The quantification of neuronal survival is
summarized in Figure 5 as the percentage of neuronal death, and relevant measurements from wild-type mice are
included as a reference. Interestingly, the NF-L-tPA mice exhibited a
lower degree of neurodegeneration at 1 d after injection of the
excitotoxin (29.3%) compared with the Fms-tPA (62.2%) and wild-type
(59.8%) mice. NF-L-tPA mice also exhibited a slower rate of
neurodegeneration compared with the Fms-tPA mice (Fig. 5, bottom
panel). Both strains of transgenic mice showed a similar extent of
neuronal death by day 5 (67.9 and 69.9%), although neither appeared to
be as high as that of the wild-type mice (86.4%). In control
experiments, a low dose of KA (0.25 nmol) was injected into these mice.
As in wild-type mice, negligible neuronal death was observed after this
milder injury (data not shown), suggesting that these transgenic mice
can be compared directly with their wild-type or
tPA / genetic background controls.

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Figure 4.
Characterization of neuronal death in wild-type
and transgenic mice after excitotoxicity. Mice were injected with KA
and then killed at the indicated time points. Neuronal death was
determined using cresyl violet, which outlines an intact pyramidal
neuronal layer. Lack of staining indicates that the cells are dead.
A, Left column, wild-type (wt) sections; middle column,
NF-L-tPA sections; right column, Fms-tPA sections. Dorsal is at the top
of all panels. Insets, Higher magnification of the CA1 subfield showing
shrunken soma of dead neurons compared with larger stronger-staining
cell bodies of neurons that survived the KA injection. Original
magnification: large panels, 10×; insets, 200×. The hippocampal
measurements were performed by investigators blind to the genotypes of
the mice as well as to the time points after KA injection for each
sample. B, A response comparable with that seen for KA
injection is observed in the other transgenic lines as well at all time
points. The sections presented are from 1 d after KA
injection.
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Figure 5.
Quantification of neuronal death after KA
injection. Sections treated as in Figure 4 were grouped by time points.
The amount of neurodegeneration was measured using Scion Image and
presented as the percentage of total hippocampal length of the
ipsilateral injected side (SEM). These data are graphically presented
as well. Note that the NF-L-tPA mice show a slower increase of neuronal
loss at early time points (up to 2 d) compared with wild-type or
Fms-tPA mice, although they match the percentage lost by Fms-tPA mice
by 5 d.
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The difference in the time of neuronal degeneration between NF-L-tPA
and Fms-tPA neurons in their response to the normal dose of KA
suggested either that the neuronal tPA transgene does not synthesize
enough tPA to initiate the extracellular proteolytic cascade necessary
for neuronal death, or that the initial tPA release from injured
neurons serves a role in addition to that of cleaving plasminogen to
plasmin. To address the first possibility, we injected tPA (120 ng/ml)
into the transgenic mice in conjunction with KA and then examined
whether they responded to the KA insult with a restored (i.e.,
wild-type) rate and degree of neurodegeneration (n = 2 mice per time point per transgenic strain; numbers given are the mean
percentage of neuronal loss). With 120 ng/ml tPA, NF-L-tPA mice
exhibited increased neuronal death at 6 (10.2%) and 12 (40.2%) hr,
consistent with an acute role of tPA in cleaving plasminogen and
mediating anoikis [derived from the Greek word for "homelessness,"
a term used to describe apoptosis that is induced when cells lose
integrin-mediated contacts with the extracellular matrix (Cardone et
al., 1997 )], leading to cell death. There was no decrease in survival
with a lower dose of tPA (12 ng/ml); 56% of the cells died by 1 d
after injection. Coinjection of tPA (120 ng/ml) and KA into the Fms-tPA
mice resulted in exacerbation of early neuronal death: 43.5% at 6 hr
and 51.5% at 12 hr after injection. These observations are in
agreement with previous data that showed that increased extracellular
levels of tPA are directly responsible for neuronal death and suggest
that the microglial component is very important in mediating the early
acute neurodegeneration after excitotoxic injury. Therefore, it appears
that the lower amount of tPA from the NF-L transgene caused the
decreased rate of neuronal death in the NF-L-tPA mice. However, because
activated microglia may also play an important, although not well
characterized, role in neurodegeneration, we also examined this
cellular response to the KA injection.
Excitotoxicity induces microglial activation in
transgenic mice
The progress of microglial activation was followed during the same
time points as neuronal death, using the 5D4 and F4/80 antibodies (Fig.
6). 5D4, which recognizes activated
microglia, was used for earlier time points (6 hr to 1 d) and
F4/80, which stains mature macrophages and microglia, was used for the
2-5 d time points. The 5 d time point was chosen because it
represents in the KA-injection excitotoxicity model the earliest time
point at which maximal morphologically visible microglial activation is
observed (Andersson et al., 1991 ). Despite the lesser degree of
neurodegeneration, the NF-L-tPA mice exhibited 5D4-staining microglia
beginning 12 hr after KA injection, compared with wild-type and the
microglial tPA-expressing mice, which exhibited activated microglia
only subsequently at 2 d after injury. These 5D4-staining cells
are not macrophages that infiltrated the brain parenchyma, because the
F4/80 antibody, which recognizes all cells of the macrophage/monocyte
lineage (Lawson et al., 1990 ), did not stain cells at the earlier time
points (data not shown). It was reported recently that 5D4 also stains
precursors of oligodendrocytes (OPCs) in the rat spinal cord (Jones and
Tuszynski, 2002 ). We fluorescently doubly stained brain sections for
the established marker of OPCs, the chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan
NG2, and 5D4 for microglia. No obvious colocalization of the two
fluorophores was observed by confocal microscopy, possibly because we
are using different fixation and staining protocols.

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Figure 6.
Characterization of microglial activation in
wild-type (wt) and transgenic mice after excitotoxicity. Mice were
processed as described in Materials and Methods and Figure 4.
Sections were immunodetected using either 5D4 (6 hr to 1 d) or
F4/80 (2-5 d) antibodies. Note that even by 12 hr some activated
microglia are visible, although not in the proximity of dying neurons
in the CA1 field. Both antibodies recognize antigen in the
microvasculature (small arrows), but activated microglia are clearly
defined (large arrows, insets). Left column, Wild-type sections; middle
column, NF-L-tPA sections; right column, Fms-tPA sections. Dorsal is
located at the top of each panel. Original magnification: large panels,
200×; insets, 400×.
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Using a DAB enhancement method, we semiquantitatively measured the
amount of microglial activation (Table 1)
using cell counts (nuclei present per field of view per section; middle
column) and cell size (area covered by each microglial cell in pixels squared; right column). Because very few cells are visible by 5D4
staining at 12 hr for the wild-type and Fms-tPA sections, this time
point was omitted from analysis. As Table 1 shows, more cells
accumulated in wild-type sections compared with transgenic mice by
3 d after KA injury, despite the fact that at 1 d after injury, no activated microglia were detectable. The average number found per field of view by 3 d was higher in wild-type sections than in either transgenic strain. The NF-L-tPA microglia were activated
to a greater extent earlier, as Figure 6 shows pictorially. The size of
these visible activating microglia also increased for all genotypes
over the first 3 d after injury (Table 1, area in
px2). NF-L-tPA microglia occupy a larger
area and appear more activated in morphology compared with wild-type or
Fms-tPA mice at 1 d.
When NF-L-tPA mice were coinjected with tPA and KA, microglia were
visible as ramified cells by 12 hr after injury, although their
morphological changes were not complete (data not shown). This
upregulation of the 5D4 epitope occurred at the same time as in
NF-L-tPA mice injected with KA alone (Fig. 6). The ramified microglia
were not visible at 6 hr after KA injection, suggesting that although
morphologically these (12 hr) ramified microglia are not activated,
they are upregulating certain proteins (such as the 5D4 keratan sulfate
epitope) in response to the injury by 12 hr after excitotoxic injury.
Furthermore, the extracellular levels of tPA in the NF-L-tPA CNS
parenchyma are enough to mediate microglial activation and cell-cell signaling.
Semiquantification of the number of microglia in NF-L-tPA mice at 12 hr
after either KA alone (10 per field of view) or with tPA plus KA
coinjection (15-16 per field) suggested that increasing extracellular
tPA concentration can either recruit more microglia or induce
proliferation among microglia already present at the injury site (data
not shown). The Fms-tPA mice coinjected with tPA and KA also show a
general upregulation of microglial staining using 5D4 by 12 hr (to 15 cells per field), whereas such upregulation was not observed when the
mice were injected with KA alone (Fig. 6).
Perineuronal cells appeared to activate later than more distal
microglia that migrate toward the site of neuronal injury from the
corpus callosum or stratum radiatum (NF-L-tPA) (Fig. 6, 1 d). These perineuronal cells are not astrocytes or
oligodendrocyte precursor cells, because they did not colocalize with
GFAP or NG2 antibodies, respectively (data not shown).
 |
Discussion |
Microglial activation is a contributor to neuronal death in a
variety of neurodegenerative diseases, and a recent push aims at ways
to decrease or inhibit it. Microglia receive and send signals to
neurons during trauma and disease. tPA links these cell types, because
it is expressed by both and mediates neuronal death and microglial
activation. Here, we used an experimental model of neuronal death, that
of intrahippocampal excitotoxin injection. Although experimental
excitotoxicity does not necessarily represent the clinical aspects of
neurodegenerative diseases, it does provide a means to dissect the
mechanism by which cell death progresses, and it is excitotoxicity that
has been hypothesized to contain the mechanisms by which several
neurodegenerative diseases develop.
Transgenic mice expressing active tPA from either neurons or microglia
on a tPA / background were produced and
characterized. The expression pattern of tPA activity differs slightly
between the two strains of mice: in addition to a weak CA3/hilar
localization, Fms-tPA mice also express active tPA in the stratum
radiatum, consistent with observations that in wild-type mice, many
activated microglia arise from this region and migrate toward the
injured neurons in the CA1-CA3 subfields.
One concern with these transgenic mice is the constitutive promoters
used. The zymography (Fig. 2) and amidolytic assay results suggest that
neither strain of transgenic mice expresses tPA at levels higher than
wild-type mice, yet higher than normal levels of tPA by itself do not
appear to be detrimental to mice (Madani et al., 1999 ). The available
tPA protein extracellularly is very low without stimulation, because
tPA is normally sequestered in vesicles in neurons, and chemical
depolarization by potassium causes its release (Gualandris et al.,
1996 ; Parmer et al., 1997 ). Similar sequestration could be possible in
microglia, but the subcellular localization of tPA in resting or
activated microglia has not been determined.
We characterized the response of the transgenic mice to excitotoxicity
by examining neuronal survival and microglial activation after KA
injection. Both strains of transgenic mice respond to KA injury in a
manner similar to that seen for wild-type mice: a high percentage of
CA1 and CA3 pyramidal neurons die, and the microglia are fully
activated (as evidenced by morphological and immunohistochemical
analyses) by 5 d after the injection.
Two differences were evident among these transgenic mice: first, a
slower progression of neuronal death with the NF-L-tPA mice, and
second, an earlier microglial reaction to the injury in NF-L-tPA mice,
when compared with Fms-tPA and wild-type mice. The first difference
(slower progression of neuronal death) would suggest that the amount of
tPA made and released by the NF-L-tPA neurons is insufficient to
promote plasminogen cleavage and mediate the initial neuronal death.
However, this may not be the case, because infusion of a low
concentration of tPA (12 ng/ml) into tPA / mice before KA injection did not
result in a linear reduction of the extent of neurodegeneration
compared with that observed when wild-type mice were injected with KA
(or when tPA / mice were infused with
120 ng/ml tPA before KA injection). When NF-L-tPA mice were coinjected
with tPA and KA, increased neuronal death was observed by 12 hr
(~50% of the pyramidal neurons were dead) compared with those
injected with KA alone (~10%). Microglia in these mice were as
activated morphologically as their counterparts in mice injected with
KA alone; however, higher numbers of microglial cells were detectable
after the tPA-KA coinjection.
Furthermore, the possibility that the low levels of tPA made may cause
a slower rate of degeneration in NF-L-tPA mice was ruled out for three
reasons: (1) many NF-L-tPA neurons die at earlier time points, (2)
NF-L-tPA neurons eventually degenerate to the same extent as Fms-tPA
neurons, and (3) Fms-tPA neurons die faster with apparently similar
amounts of tPA made.
We conclude that the microglial contribution in the early time points
after KA excitotoxicity is very important, if not key, to
differentiating between neuronal death and survival.
The combined delay in neuronal death and early microglial activation in
NF-L-tPA mice suggests that early neuronal release of tPA may be a
signal to activate microglia. However, these microglia are not able to
induce their own proliferation and become neurotoxic because they lack
the tPA-mediated paracrine/autocrine activation. Therefore, there is a
containment of the neurodegeneration occurring in the NF-L-tPA mice, at
least in the first few days after excitotoxicity. Eventually,
neighboring injured neurons may secrete sufficient tPA to activate
microglia to become neurotoxic.
In the Fms-tPA mice, although neurons are not expressing tPA, nearby
microglia can sense the initial insult sustained by these neurons
because of KA. We do not know what this signal may be, although
injured neurons secrete many factors. The microglia then become
activated and secrete sufficient amounts of tPA to both recruit
microglia to the vicinity of injury and cleave neuronally secreted
plasminogen into plasmin. One point of contention in this scenario is
that the mechanism by which neurons and microglia regulate their tPA
synthesis and release after KA insult may be different, and in our
case, the transgenes are not under endogenous tPA promoter controls.
We have hypothesized that a high concentration of tPA, acting along
with a yet unidentified costimulating molecule, activates microglia
after injury (Siao and Tsirka, 2002 ). Because it appears that the
ability of NF-L-tPA microglia to become activated is not diminished, we
presume that the threshold concentration has been met in
vivo (possibly by tPA secreted from nearby injured neurons). It is
still possible that the transgenic microglia from either genotype are
susceptible to tPA-mediated activation to a different degree than
wild-type microglia, because they may be exposed to higher levels of
constitutive tPA because of the transgene. We have begun to
characterize the population of microglia from these transgenic mice.
The results from NF-L-tPA mice imply that either there are
subpopulations of microglia, which play different roles after induction of excitotoxicity, or microglia can play dual roles in injury. There is
controversy concerning the first point (Streit et al., 1999 ).
An examination of the cells around the injury site in wild-type and
transgenic mice suggests that perineuronal microglia behave differently
from distal microglia. Using a marker that recognizes primarily
activated microglia (5D4), we noted that perineuronal microglia do not
change shape immediately. Morphologically full activation and
recruitment is observed with the more distal microglia from the corpus
callosum or stratum radiatum. One example of this observation is seen
in Figure 6 (NF-L-tPA at 12 hr after KA injection). In addition, even
in wild-type animals the microglia that become activated at 2 d
after KA injection are farther from the CA1 neuronal layer (Fig. 6), a
result that is in agreement with the findings of Andersson et al.
(1991) . Perineuronal microglia (in conjunction with injured neurons)
may act as amplifiers to signal to, or recruit, remote microglia, using
chemotactic gradients such as monocyte chemoattractant protein-1
(Galasso et al., 2000 ; Flugel et al., 2001 ). These microglia may not
present as fully activated cells morphologically, because they have not
had time to change shape. However, the morphological changes observed
are not the representation of early signs of activation. Changes in
gene expression occur first, resulting in the secretion of the factors
(i.e., TNF- , NO, proteases) that possibly enable activated microglia
to display neurotoxic properties. An output of these gene expression
changes is the morphological events observed, and they reach maximal
stage at day 5 after KA injection (Andersson et al., 1991 ). Therefore, it appears possible that activating rather than activated microglia are
neurotoxic. Eventually, all microglia become fully activated and
cluster around dying and dead neurons.
It is becoming apparent that microglia can play both neuroprotective
and neurotoxic roles in the CNS after injury. The NF-L-tPA transgenic
mice show less severe neurodegeneration but more activated microglia
immediately after excitotoxicity, although only neurons secrete tPA.
This observation suggests that tPA released soon after KA injection by
injured neurons acts as a signal to activate microglia, possibly to
contain apoptotic cells and cell debris. Therefore, the ability of
these microglia to limit initial neuronal injury or death may be significant.
NF-L-tPA neurons continue to die days after the KA injection,
concordant with an increase in microglial activation, suggesting that
activated microglia can also be neurotoxic. This observation, along
with the more severe early neurodegeneration seen in Fms-tPA mice after
KA injury, shows that activated microglia continue to recruit and
activate other microglia and secrete neurotoxic molecules. The
hyperactivated microglia can be detrimental to neighboring neurons,
which die a secondary apoptotic death (after the initial death
resulting from the KA insult). Our results suggest that there is a
window of opportunity for clinically relevant microglial activation
blockers to prevent such a bystander death. Given that there are
small-molecular-weight (and possibly able to cross the BBB) inhibitors
that interact with tPA, one could envision using those to inhibit
the neurotoxicity-inducing microglial activation. From these
data, we conclude that tPA and microglia are beneficial within moderate
amounts and cell numbers or within a certain time frame after injury,
but as the numbers of activated microglial cells increase, they become neurotoxic.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Sept. 10, 2002; revised Jan. 30, 2003; accepted Feb. 4, 2003.
This work was supported by grants from the National Institutes of
Health (NS42168) and the U.S. Army Medical Research and Material
Command to S.E.T. We thank Dr. T. Rosenquist and the University
Transgenic Facility at Stony Brook for help with generating the
transgenic mouse strains. We thank Y. Zhang, J. Sheehan, and Drs. M. Frohman and M. Kritzer for critical reading of this manuscript. S.R.F.
is partially supported by a Turner fellowship.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Stella E. Tsirka, Department
of Pharmacological Sciences, BST-7, Room 183, University Medical Center
at Stony Brook, Stony Brook, NY 11794-8651. E-mail: stella{at}pharm.sunysb.edu.
 |
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