Abstract
Recycling synaptic vesicles are already present in isolated axons of developing neurons (Matteoli et al., 1992; Zakharenko et al., 1999). This vesicle recycling is distinct from the vesicular traffic implicated in axon outgrowth. Formation of synaptic contacts coincides with a clustering of synaptic vesicles at the contact site and with a downregulation of their basal rate of exo-endocytosis (Kraszewski et al., 1995; Coco et al., 1998) We report here that tetanus toxin-mediated cleavage of synaptobrevin/vesicle-associated membrane protein (VAMP2), previously shown not to affect axon outgrowth, also does not inhibit synaptic vesicle exocytosis in isolated axons, despite its potent blocking effect on their exocytosis at synapses. This differential effect of tetanus toxin could be seen even on different branches of a same neuron. In contrast, botulinum toxins A and E [which cleave synaptosome-associated protein of 25 kDa. (SNAP-25)] and F (which cleaves synaptobrevin/VAMP1 and 2) blocked synaptic vesicle exocytosis both in isolated axons and at synapses, strongly suggesting that this process is dependent on “classical” synaptic SNAP receptor (SNARE) complexes both before and after synaptogenesis. A tetanus toxin-resistant form of synaptic vesicle recycling, which proceeds in the absence of external stimuli and is sensitive to botulinum toxin F, E, and A, persists at mature synapses. These data suggest the involvement of a tetanus toxin-resistant, but botulinum F-sensitive, isoform of synaptobrevin/VAMP in synaptic vesicle exocytosis before synapse formation and the partial persistence of this form of exocytosis at mature synaptic contacts.
Major characteristics of synaptic transmission are high spatial precision, speed, and great fidelity. These features are dependent on exocytosis taking place at restricted and well defined areas of the neuronal membrane. They rely on the presence of an extremely specialized machinery, allowing very rapid triggering and switching off of synaptic vesicle (SV) exocytosis in response to depolarization-evoked calcium influx (Barrett and Stevens, 1972). Regulated SV exocytosis at mature synaptic sites has been widely investigated, and several proteins that participate in this process have now been identified (Sollner et al., 1993; Bennett and Scheller, 1994; Ferro-Novick and Jahn, 1994; Südhof, 1995). It is well established that SV exocytosis involves the interaction of the synaptic vesicle membrane proteins synaptobrevin/vesicle-associated membrane protein (VAMP) 1 and 2 [v-SNAREs (soluble N-ethylmaleimide factor-attached protein (SNAP) receptors (SNARE)] with the plasma membrane proteins syntaxin and SNAP-25 (t-SNAREs). Synaptic SNARE proteins are targets for the proteolytic action of clostridial tetanus and botulinum neurotoxins (TeNT and BoNTs), which potently block exocytosis in nerve terminals (Blasi et al., 1993a,b; Schiavo et al., 1992, 1993a,b, 1995).
The molecular mechanisms involved in the development of CNS synapses are still poorly understood. A powerful experimental system to investigate these mechanisms is represented by primary cultures of hippocampal neurons. In these neurons, SVs, which release neurotransmitter and undergo high basal exo-endocytotic recycling, are already present at very early developmental stages when axons grow in isolation. Formation of synaptic contacts coincides with a clustering of synaptic vesicles, with a downregulation of their basal recycling rate (Kraszewski et al., 1995; Coco et al., 1998), with a change in the calcium sensitivity of the exocytotic process (Coco et al., 1998), and with a switch in the population of calcium channels controlling neurotransmitter (glutamate) release (Scholz and Miller, 1995; Verderio et al., 1995).
Synaptic vesicle exocytosis, which occurs in developing axons, is clearly distinct from the constitutive exocytosis of vesicles that mediate axon elongation. Whereas the latter occurs primarily at the axon ending (Pfenninger and Maylie-Pfenninger 1981; Futerman et al., 1993; Craig et al., 1995; Zakharenko and Popov 1998), the former occurs along the entire distal axonal arbor (Matteoli et al., 1992; Kraszewski et al., 1995; Zakharenko et al., 1999). It was shown previously that axonal outgrowth and synaptogenesis in cultured CNS neurons is not inhibited by tetanus toxin (Ahnert-Hilger et al., 1996; Osen Sand et al., 1996), strongly suggesting that the v-SNARE(s) implicated in this process are distinct from the classical synaptic v-SNARE(s). We report here that, surprisingly, even synaptic vesicle exocytosis is insensitive to the action of tetanus toxin in developing axons. This tetanus toxin-resistant form of SV recycling partially persists at mature synapses as spontaneous SV exocytosis. These findings suggest that the different properties of nonsynaptic and synaptic exocytosis of SVs correlate with a switch in v-SNARE isoforms underlying SNARE complex formation.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Hippocampal cell cultures. Primary neuronal cultures were prepared from the hippocampi of 18-d-old fetal rats as described by Banker and Cowan (1977) and Bartlett and Banker (1984). Briefly, hippocampi were dissociated by treatment with trypsin (0.25% for 15 min at 37°C), followed by trituration with a fire-polished Pasteur pipette. Dissociated cells were plated on poly-l-lysine-treated (Sigma, Milano, Italy) glass coverslips in MEM with 10% horse serum at densities ranging from 10,000 to 20,000 cells/cm2. After few hours, coverslips were transferred to dishes containing a monolayer of cortical glial cells (Booher and Sensenbrenner, 1972), so that they were suspended over the glial cells but not in direct contact with them (Bartlett and Banker, 1984). Cells were maintained in MEM (Life Technologies, S. Giuliano, Italy) without sera, supplemented with 1% N2 (Life Technologies), 2 mm glutamine, and 1 mg/ml BSA (neuronal medium). A modification of the method used byFurshpan et al. (1976) was used to grow single neurons on small islands of substrate, consisting in a fine mist of poly-l-lysine sprayed on glass coverslips.
Experimental treatments. Neuronal cultures were exposed to 10 nm TeNT for 5 min in the presence or absence of 55 mm KCl in the external medium, thoroughly washed, maintained in regular medium at 37°C for 2–18 hr, fixed, and double stained for synaptobrevin/VAMP2 and for synaptophysin. In some experiments, neurons were also exposed to 20 nmBoNT/A, 80 nm BoNT/E, and 60–100 nm BoNT/F. An immunocytochemical assay based on the use of antibodies directed against the intravesicular domain of rat synaptotagmin I (Syt-ecto Abs) was used to test the efficacy of the toxins in blocking synaptic vesicle recycling. In particular, cultures were incubated with Syt-ecto Abs for 5 min or 1 hr at 37°C in the presence or absence of 55 mm KCl. Cells were then fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde in 0.12 m phosphate buffer containing 0.12 m sucrose for 25 min at 37°C. Fixed cells were detergent-permeabilized and labeled with rhodamine-conjugated anti-rabbit antibodies as described previously (Matteoli et al., 1992). Counterstaining of neurons with antibodies directed against total synaptotagmin I (Syt mono), followed by fluorescein-conjugated anti-mouse antibodies, was performed as described previously (Matteoli et al., 1992). Coverslips were mounted in 70% glycerol in phosphate buffer containing 1 mg/ml phenylendiamine. Preparations were examined with a Zeiss(Oberkochen, Germany) microscope equipped with epifluorescence and photographed with T-MAX 400 (Kodak, Milano, Italy). Quantitative analysis was performed as described previously (Matteoli et al., 1996;Coco et al., 1998; Verderio et al., 1999a). For each experiment, 60–80 neurons were examined. Values obtained in different experiments were averaged and plotted.
Immunoblotting. Cultured hippocampal neurons were solubilized in 1% SDS, 5% 2-mercaptoethanol, 65 mm Tris-HCl, pH 6.8, and 10% sucrose as described previously (Coco et al., 1997). SDS-PAGE electrophoresis and Western blotting were performed as described previously (Laemmli, 1970;Towbin et al., 1979). Briefly, cell extracts (30 μg) were subjected to SDS-PAGE (10% polyacrylamide gels) and transferred by electroblotting to nitrocellulose (Sartorius, Gottingen, Germany). Blots were blocked in 5% nonfat dry milk, 0.1% Tween 20, 20 mm Tris, and 150 mm NaCl, pH 7.5, at room temperature. Blots were incubated with antibodies for 2 hr at room temperature in blocking buffer. Blots were then thoroughly washed, incubated (1 hr) with horseradish peroxidase-conjugated anti-rabbit IgG or horseradish peroxidase-conjugated anti-mouse IgG (1:5000 in blocking buffer; Sigma), and finally washed with Tris-NaCl. The immunoreactive proteins were visualized with enhanced chemiluminescence (Amersham, Milano, Italy).
Antibodies. Rabbit polyclonal antibodies directed against the intravesicular domain of rat synaptotagmin I (Syt-ecto Abs) were generated as described previously (Matteoli et al., 1992) using a synthetic peptide corresponding to the residue 1–19 of the protein. Antibodies against synaptobrevin/VAMP1 and 2 were generated in rabbit as described previously (Rossetto et al., 1996). Polyclonal antibodies against synaptophysin and monoclonal antibodies against synaptobrevin/VAMP2, rab3a, and synaptotagmin I were a kind gift from Dr. R. Jahn (Gottingen, Germany). Polyclonal antibodies against syntaxin I and SNAP-25 were raised and used as described previously (Chilcote et al., 1995; Papini et al., 1995). Anti-rabbit rhodamine-conjugated antibodies were purchased from Boehringer Mannheim (Milano, Italy). Anti-mouse fluorescein-conjugated antibodies were from Jackson ImmunoResearch (West Grove, PA).
RESULTS
Synaptic v- and t-SNAREs are already expressed by neurons at early developmental stages
When maintained in primary cultures, embryonic hippocampal neurons develop through a series of well characterized developmental stages (Dotti et al., 1988). After few days in culture, they establish a clear axo-dendritic polarity and, eventually, form a network of functional synaptic contacts characterized by presynaptic clusters of SVs and by the postsynaptic accumulation of glutamate receptors (Craig and Banker, 1994; Verderio et al., 1999b). Figure 1shows that the SV proteins synaptotagmin I, synaptophysin, and rab3a, together with the three SNARE proteins synaptobrevin/VAMP2, SNAP-25, and syntaxin I, are already expressed by cultured hippocampal neurons at early developmental stages. For all of them, an increase in the levels of expression takes place in parallel with the time of differentiation in culture. A similar increase in synaptic protein expression was found to take place also during brain development, as indicated by Western blot analysis of total homogenates from embryonic day 18 (E18), postnatal day (P1), and adult rat brains. In contrast, we could not detect any synaptobrevin/VAMP1 immunoreactivity in cultured hippocampal neurons before synaptogenesis (data not shown). Immunofluorescence experiments revealed that, before synaptogenesis, synaptobrevin/VAMP2 immunoreactivity was localized on vesicular structures dispersed along the axon (see Fig. 3A). These vesicular structures, which are immunoreactive for synaptotagmin I (see Fig. 3B), synaptophysin, and rab3a (data not shown), have been already identified as bona fide SVs (Fletcher et al., 1991; Matteoli et al., 1991, 1992, 1996; Kraszewski et al., 1995; Coco et al., 1998). Syntaxin I and SNAP-25 were found to be present throughout all neuronal compartments (data not shown) (Galli et al., 1995).
TeNT blocks recycling of SVs clustered at synapses but does not block SV recycling before synaptogenesis
To monitor SV recycling, we used an assay based on antibodies directed against the intravesicular domain of the SV protein synaptotagmin I (Syt-ecto Abs), which become internalized in the lumen of SVs when they undergo exocytosis and compensatory endocytosis (Matteoli et al., 1992). As already shown, Syt-ecto Abs become internalized by an activity-dependent mechanism at synaptic contacts of cultured hippocampal neurons (Fig.2B) and are also actively taken up by recycling vesicles in the axon of developing neurons (Fig. 2F). Mature cultures were incubated with 10 nm TeNT for 5 min under depolarizing conditions and assayed for SV recycling 2 hr later, when the TeNT substrate synaptobrevin/VAMP2 is completely cleaved (Matteoli et al., 1996). Virtually no internalization of Syt-ecto Abs at synaptic sites was detected (n = 15 experiments) (Fig.2D, I, quantitative analysis), consistent with a block of exocytosis produced by TeNT treatment. In contrast, when applied to neurons before synaptogenesis, TeNT was actively internalized (data not shown) (Matteoli et al., 1996) but did not produce any relevant inhibitory effect on SV recycling (n = 7) (Fig. 2H, I, quantitative analysis).
The lack of effect of TeNT on SV recycling in neurons before synaptogenesis could result from inaccessibility of synaptobrevin/VAMP2 to the proteolytic action of the toxin. To test this possibility, hippocampal neurons were stained for synaptobrevin/VAMP2 after TeNT treatment. In control neurons, synaptobrevin/VAMP2 was localized on vesicles dispersed throughout the distal axonal arbor (Fig.3A). These vesicles colocalized with internalized Syt-ecto Abs (Fig. 3B), thus supporting their identification as recycling SVs. After 6 hr of TeNT treatment, a substantial reduction (up to 77%) of synaptobrevin/VAMP 2 staining was detected (Fig. 3C, E, quantitative analysis). An even more pronounced cleavage (up to 90%) was obtained 18 hr after TeNT treatment (Fig. 3E). Surprisingly, however, this reduction did not correlate with an impairment in SV recycling (Fig. 3E, quantitative analysis). In contrast, BoNT/F, which cleaves VAMP2 as well but at a different peptide bond, significantly inhibited SV exocytosis in developing axons in a dose-dependent manner (Fig. 3F). Moreover, when hippocampal cultures at early developmental stages were incubated in the presence of 20 nm BoNT/A or 80 nm BoNT/E, which both cleave SNAP-25 (Blasi et al., 1993a; Schiavo et al., 1993a), a substantial reduction of Syt-ecto Ab internalization could be detected (n = 6) (Fig. 4B,C, quantitative analysis). Thus, SV exocytosis before synaptogenesis requires SNAP-25 and a TeNT-insensitive, but BoNT/F-sensitive, isoform of synaptobrevin/VAMP2 isoform.
TeNT insensitivity is not related to the maturation stage of neurons in culture
Hippocampal neurons maintained in vitro for 2–3 weeks are endowed with a dense network of synaptic contacts. However, a few isolated axons containing dispersed SVs and lacking a postsynaptic target are occasionally detectable in mature cultures. Figure5, A and inset a, show examples of these isolated axons in cultures of synaptically connected neurons that have been labeled with antibodies directed against total synaptotagmin (Fig. 5A) or with antibodies directed against synaptophysin (inset a). SVs present in these isolated axons of otherwise mature neurons undergo an active exo-endocytotic recycling, as demonstrated by the active internalization of the Syt-ecto Abs (Fig. 5B). Treatment of mature cultures with TeNT produced an efficient cleavage of synaptobrevin/VAMP2 in the isolated axons (inset b), similar to what has been already shown for synaptobrevin/VAMP2 present at synaptic contacts (Matteoli et al., 1996). However, whereas TeNT strongly inhibited SV fusion at sites of synaptic contacts (Figs. 2D,I; 5B, arrowheads), it did not substantially reduce vesicle recycling in isolated axons (Fig. 5B). This observation argues against the possibility that the lack of TeNT effect on SV recycling before synaptogenesis is related to the immature stage of the neurons.
To further prove this point, we investigated whether different axonal branches of the same neuron may exhibit different sensitivity to the toxin. To this aim, hippocampal neurons were cultured on poly-l-lysine microislands, i.e., under conditions that allow the analysis of single neurons whose axons form autaptic contacts (Furshpan et al., 1976; Bekkers and Stevens, 1991). These single neurons often extend additional axons that lack a postsynaptic target, thus allowing a simultaneous analysis of synaptic and nonsynaptic SV exocytosis in a same cell (Fig. 5C–H). We found that exposure of these neurons to TeNT produced the typical inhibition of SV recycling at sites of synaptic contacts (Fig. 5D,small arrowheads, F). On the other hand, SV recycling in isolated processes was not impaired (Fig.5D, large arrowhead, H).
A TeNT-insensitive form of SV recycling persists at mature synapses
Mature cultures were incubated with TeNT and assayed for evoked SV recycling 2 hr later. A residual internalization of Syt-ecto Abs was detectable in <10% of synaptic sites (n = 15) (Fig.6C, evoked), consistent with a massive cleavage of the TeNT substrate synaptobrevin/VAMP2 (Matteoli et al., 1996). On the other hand, after TeNT intoxication, the majority of synapses (82%) maintained a residual SV recycling, resulting in a significant level of Syt-ecto Ab internalization after 1 hr incubation in the absence of depolarizing stimuli and in the presence of TTX (n= 4) (Fig. 6B, C, spontaneous). In contrast, pretreatment of mature cultures with BoNT/F, BoNT/E, or BoNT/A impaired to a similar extent Syt-ecto Ab internalization attributable to either spontaneous or depolarization-evoked SV recycling (Fig. 6C).
DISCUSSION
Bona fide SVs are present in isolated processes of developing neurons before synapse formation. These vesicles have the same size range of typical presynaptic SVs (Matteoli et al., 1992; Kraszewski et al., 1995), store and secrete neurotransmitter (Young and Poo 1983; Sun and Poo, 1987; Zakharenko et al., 1999), and, based on immunocytochemical results, have an SV protein composition (Fletcher et al., 1991; Matteoli et al., 1991, 1992). In developing processes, these vesicles are organized in small clusters that, similar to SVs of the presynapse, are disrupted by okadaic acid (Kraszewski et al., 1995). Moreover, they are excluded from the leading edge of the growth cone (Kraszewski et al., 1995), indicating that they do not participate to the elongation of the axon. Finally, they undergo active exo-endocytotic recycling (Matteoli et al., 1992; Kraszewski et al., 1995; Coco et al., 1998), and their fusion with the plasma membrane is partially stimulated by depolarization (Kraszewski et al., 1995; Coco et al., 1998; Zakharenko et al., 1999).
We used a morphological assay (Matteoli et al., 1992) to follow SV dynamics after clostridial toxin treatment, independent from possible effects of these toxins on postsynaptic exocytosis and responsiveness (Lledo et al., 1998, Maletic-Savatic et al., 1998; Maletic-Savatic and Malinow, 1998; Nishimune et al., 1998; Osten et al., 1998; Song et al., 1998). Our results demonstrate that, different from SV exocytosis at mature synapses, SV recycling before synaptogenesis is not significantly inhibited by treatment with TeNT. The lack of TeNT effect on SV recycling before synaptogenesis is not because of a poor penetration of the toxin in immature neurons, because an efficient internalization of TeNT has been shown to occur in neurons already before synaptogenesis (Matteoli et al., 1996). On the other hand, the resistance of SV recycling to treatment with TeNT does not result from inaccessibility of the substrate synaptobrevin/VAMP2 to the toxin itself. Indeed, a substantial cleavage of synaptobrevin/VAMP2 is achieved by TeNT treatment in neurons before synaptogenesis, although a more prolonged exposure to the toxin with respect to neurons after formation of synaptic contacts is required. Because TeNT enters SVs before synaptogenesis with a high rate (Matteoli et al., 1996), the reduced efficacy of TeNT in cleaving synaptobrevin/VAMP2 in immature neurons may be attributable to a less efficient translocation of the toxin in the cytosol and/or to the higher turnover of the protein in neurons at early developmental stages (Daly and Ziff, 1997).
The persistence of SV exo-endocytotic recycling in hippocampal neurons before synaptogenesis after TeNT treatment raises at least three possibilities. The first is that SV recycling is supported by a fraction of synaptobrevin/VAMP2, which, being shielded by a tight complex with other proteins because of post-translational modifications, cannot be cleaved by the toxin. However, because the percentage of cleaved synaptobrevin/VAMP2 and the inhibition of SV recycling are unrelated, this possibility is unlikely. The second is that SV fusion may proceed in the absence of synaptobrevin/VAMP2. It has been shown in yeast that organelles endowed with syntaxin homologs, but not synaptobrevin/VAMP2 homologs, may fuse each other (Nichols et al., 1997). Although it has been demonstrated that pools of syntaxin I and SNAP-25 may be present on SV membranes (Walch-Solimena et al., 1995), the relatively low rate of fusion in the absence of synaptobrevin/VAMP2 (Nichols et al., 1997) does not fit with the high efficiency of SV recycling before synaptogenesis (Kraszewski et al., 1995; Coco et al., 1998). The third is that a TeNT-resistant isoform of synaptobrevin/VAMP2 may mediate SV exocytosis at early developmental stages. The finding that BoNT/F-induced cleavage of synaptobrevin/VAMP2 correlates with inhibition of SV recycling strongly supports this third hypothesis, suggesting the existence of a synaptobrevin/VAMP isoform, specifically lacking the cleavage or recognition site for TeNT and mostly supporting exocytosis before synaptogenesis. The involvement of the SNARE fusion complex proteins in SV exocytosis before synaptogenesis is further supported by the finding that SV recycling, although being not reduced by TeNT, is strongly inhibited by BoNT/A and BoNT/E, which cleave SNAP-25, the other protein component that, together with synaptobrevin/VAMP2 and syntaxin, mediates fusion of SVs at mature synapses.
When synapses form, SVs enter a regulated, synaptobrevin/VAMP2-dependent exocytotic pathway. However, the acquisition of a TeNT-sensitive exocytosis does not correlate with a complete elimination of the TeNT-insensitive mechanism of SV recycling. Indeed, a residual TeNT-resistent and action potential-independent SV recycling is maintained in the majority (85%) of the synapses. The existence of a TeNT-insensitive form of exocytosis at mature synapses has been already reported (Duchen and Tonge 1973; Dreyer and Schmitt 1981; Dreyer 1989; Herreros et al., 1995; Sweeney et al., 1995; Capogna et al., 1997). In some experimental models, TeNT-resistant exocytosis appears to entirely account for the spontaneous neurotransmitter release (Bevan and Wendon, 1984; Hua et al., 1998). In other systems, application of TeNT produces a relevant decrease but never a complete block of spontaneous events (with a single exception reported by Mellanby and Thompson, 1972). In our experimental model, although strongly reduced, miniature EPSC frequency was not completely blocked, whereas BoNT/E completely inhibited miniature spontaneous activity (our unpublished observations). This observation is in agreement with the results obtained with the Syt-ecto Ab presynaptic assay, which demonstrate that the majority of synaptic contacts that are able to recycle SVs after TeNT treatment do not recycle SVs after treatment with BoNT/A, E, and, F, suggesting the involvement of the same machinery operating before synaptogenesis. It is noteworthy that, in Drosophilasynaptobrevin mutants, the evoked release is entirely abolished, whereas only a fraction of spontaneous release is inhibited (Deitcher et al., 1998). On the other hand, both evoked and spontaneous release are disrupted by cleavage of syntaxin I (Schulze et al., 1995).
The mechanism responsible for altering the balance between the TeNT-insensitive and the TeNT-sensitive pathway during synaptogenesis is not clear yet. It is possible to hypothesize that the presence of a postsynaptic target plays a role in favoring exocytosis being predominantly controlled by high rises in the levels of calcium (Coco et al., 1998) and mostly relying on synaptobrevin/VAMP2. This possibility is supported by results obtained in single neurons growing in microislands. In this experimental model, the same neuron may be endowed with two distinct SV-containing compartments: the typical presynaptic terminals containing clustered vesicles, and the isolated axon characterized by diffusely distributed SVs. Strikingly, whereas SV recycling is sensitive to TeNT at sites of synaptic contacts, it is not inhibited in the isolated axon of the same cell, indicating that the same neuron may differently regulate exocytosis occurring in two different compartments, possibly in relation with the presence of a postsynaptic target. Several data, recently obtained in different experimental systems, suggest that indeed maturation of presynaptic structure and function is affected by signals from the postsynaptic cell (Fletcher et al., 1994; Haydon and Zoran, 1994; Campagna et al., 1995; Dechiara et al., 1996; Petersen et al., 1997; Davis et al., 1998;Fitzsimonds and Poo, 1998). Our data support the possibility that the postsynaptic cell may actively affect the presynaptic machinery controlling SV fusion during synaptogenesis between neurons in the mammalian CNS.
Footnotes
This work has been supported by Telethon Grants 1042 (to M.M.) and 1068 (to C.M.), by Human Frontier Science Program (to M.M. and P.D.C.), by the European Community Grants Biomed 2 BMH4 CT97 2410 (to C.M.) and BIO4–98-0408 (to M.M.), and by National Institutes of Health Grant NS36251 (to P.D.C.). We acknowledge Dr. R. Jahn (Gottingen, Germany) for gift of antibodies against synaptophysin, synaptobrevin/VAMP2, rab3a, and synaptotagmin.
Correspondence should be addressed to Michela Matteoli, Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche Cellular and Molecular Pharmacology, and B. Ceccarelli Centers, Department of Medical Pharmacology, University of Milano, via Vanvitelli 32, 20129 Milano, Italy.