Abstract
Although the accumulation of the neurotoxic peptide β amyloid (βA) in the CNS is a hallmark of Alzheimer's disease, the mechanism of βA neurotoxicity remains controversial. In cultures of mixed neurons and astrocytes, we found that both the full-length peptide βA (1–42) and the neurotoxic fragment (25–35) caused sporadic cytoplasmic calcium [intracellular calcium ([Ca2+]c)] signals in astrocytes that continued for hours, whereas adjacent neurons were completely unaffected. Nevertheless, after 24 hr, although astrocyte cell death was marginally increased, ∼50% of the neurons had died. The [Ca2+]c signal was entirely dependent on Ca2+ influx and was blocked by zinc and by clioquinol, a heavy-metal chelator that is neuroprotective in models of Alzheimer's disease. Neuronal death was associated with Ca2+-dependent glutathione depletion in both astrocytes and neurons. Thus, astrocytes appear to be the primary target of βA, whereas the neurotoxicity reflects the neuronal dependence on astrocytes for antioxidant support.
Introduction
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a neurodegenerative disorder characterized by a progressive cognitive decline resulting from selective neuronal dysfunction, synaptic loss, and neuronal cell death. It is accompanied by the deposition of the β-amyloid peptide (βA), a polypeptide of 39–43 aa that is thought to play a major role in the pathogenesis of the disorder (Small and McLean, 1999). Aggregated βA is neurotoxic. Although βA neurotoxicity has been associated with oxidative stress and the reduction of endogenous antioxidants (Behl et al., 1994; Casley et al., 2002a), with mitochondrial damage (Casley et al., 2002b) and with the destabilization of intracellular calcium ([Ca2+]c) homeostasis, both in neurons (Mattson et al., 1992) and in glial cells (Stix and Reiser,1998), the mechanism of βA-induced neurotoxicity remains uncertain.
Amyloid β peptides have been shown recently to form pores in artificial membranes; it has been suggested that they may also act as pore formers in intact neuronal membranes, in which they appear to form Ca2+-permeable channels (Arispe et al., 1993; Lin et al., 2001). βA has also been shown to have effects on a variety of types of ion-selective channels, including voltage-gated Ca2+-permeant channels (Blanchard et al., 1997; Ueda et al., 1997; Rovira et al., 2002). More subtle changes in [Ca2+]c signaling have also been demonstrated after long-term exposure to βA (Mattson and Chan, 2001), suggesting a disturbance of [Ca2+]c homeostatic mechanisms that may reflect changes in cellular metabolism.
Reports on the effects of βAon[Ca2+]c in astrocytes are controversial. With exposure to βA, some authors have found that astrocyte [Ca2+]c increases (Stix and Reiser, 1998), whereas in the hands of others, astrocyte [Ca2+]c decreases (Meske et al., 1998). The effect of βA on [Ca2+]c homeostasis in astrocytes is potentially very important, considering the interplay between neuronal and glial signals revealed recently (Haydon, 2001) and the proposed glia-related pathomechanisms in AD (Harkany et al., 2000; Schubert et al., 2001). Glial cells play a major supportive role toward neurons, which includes supplying metabolic substrates and the precursors of the antioxidant glutathione (GSH) (Dringen, 2000) and removing excitatory amino acids such as glutamate from the extracellular space (Takahashi et al., 1997), processes that play a critical role in neuroprotection. These roles may be undermined by the βA-induced generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and the inhibition of glutamate uptake (Markesbery, 1997; Harkany et al., 2000), resulting in neuronal damage as a consequence of impaired astrocytic support function.
Materials and Methods
Cell culture. Mixed cultures of hippocampal neurons and glial cells were prepared as described previously (Vergun et al., 2001), with modifications, from Sprague Dawley rat pups 2–4 d postpartum [University College London (UCL) breeding colony]. Hippocampi were removed into ice-cold Gey's salt solution (Invitrogen, Paisley, UK) with 20 μg/ml of gentamicin. The tissue was minced and trypsinized (0.1% for 15 min at 37°C), triturated, and plated on poly-d-lysine-coated coverslips and cultured in Neurobasal medium (Invitrogen) supplemented with B27 (Invitrogen) and 2 mm l-glutamine. Cultures were maintained at 37°C in a humidified atmosphere of 5% CO2 and 95% air, fed twice a week, and maintained for a minimum of 10 d before experimental use to ensure the expression of glutamate and other receptors. Neurons were easily distinguishable from glia: they appeared phase-bright, had smooth, rounded somata and distinct processes, and lay just above the focal plane of the glial layer. Cells were used at 10–20 d in vitro (DIV) unless stated otherwise.
Isolated cortical astrocytes were prepared as described previously (Boitier et al., 1999). Cerebra taken from adult Sprague Dawley rats (UCL breeding colony) were chopped and triturated until homogeneous, passed through a 297 μm mesh, and trypsinized (50,000 U/ml of porcine pancreas; Sigma, Gillingham, UK) with 336 U/ml of DNase 1 (bovine pancreas, Sigma), and 1.033 U/ml of collagenase (Sigma) at 37°C for 15 min. After the addition of fetal bovine serum (10% of final volume) and filtering through 140 μm mesh, the tissue was centrifuged through 0.4 m sucrose (400 gm, 10 min), and the resulting pellet was transferred to Minimal Essential Medium supplemented with 5% fetal bovine serum, 2 mm glutamine, and 1 mm malate in tissue culture flasks precoated with 0.01% poly-d-lysine. The cells reached confluence at 12–14 DIV; they were harvested and reseeded onto 24 mm diameter glass coverslips (BDH Chemicals, Poole, UK) precoated with 0.01% poly-d-lysine for fluorescence measurements, and used over 2–4 d.
Peptides and treatments. βA25–35, βA1–42, and βA35–25 (Bachem, St. Helens, UK) were dissolved at 1 mm in sterile ultrapure water (Milli-Q standard; Millipore, Watford, UK) and kept frozen until use. The peptides were added under the microscope, except for GSH and neurotoxicity measurements, where they were added 24 hr before the experiment. βA25–35 was used at concentrations of up to 50 μm to ensure that it was present in molar excess compared with inhibitors and so to exclude any direct interaction.
Microscopy. Fluorescence measurements were obtained using a Nikon (Tokyo, Japan) epifluorescence inverted microscope with a 20× fluorite objective. Excitation light from a Xenon arc lamp is selected using 10 nm bandpass filters centered at 340, 360, and 380 nm housed in a computer-controlled filter wheel (Cairn Research, Faversham, UK). Emitted light passed through a long-pass filter to a cooled CCD camera (Orca ER; Hamamatsu, Welwyn Garden City, UK). All imaging data were collected at intervals of 10–15 sec, digitized, and analyzed using Kinetic Imaging (Wirral, UK) software. Cells were protected from phototoxicity by interposing a shutter in the light path to limit exposure between the acquisition of successive images.
Confocal images were obtained using a Zeiss (Oberkochen, Germany) 510 confocal laser scanning microscope and a 40× oil immersion objective. The 488 nm argon laser line was used to excite fluo-4 fluorescence, which was measured using a bandpass filter from 505 to 550 nm. Illumination intensity was kept to a minimum (at 0.1% of laser output) to avoid phototoxicity, and the pinhole was set to give an optical slice of ∼2 μm.
[Ca2+]cmeasurements. Cells were loaded for 30 min at room temperature with 5 μm fura-2 AM (Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR) and 0.005% Pluronic in a HEPES-buffered salt solution composed of (in mm): 156 NaCl, 3 KCl, 2 MgSO4, 1.25 KH2PO4, 2 CaCl2, 10 glucose, and 10 HEPES, pH 7.35. Traces, obtained using the cooled CCD imaging system, are presented as ratios of excitation at 340 and 380 nm, both with emission at >515 nm. For some measurements, [Ca2+]i was calculated using the equation (Grynkiewicz et al., 1985): [Ca2+]c = K(R - Rmin)/(Rmax - R), where R is the fluorescence ratio (340/380 nm) and K is the effective dissociation constant of fura-2. Rmax and Rmin were determined by the application of 50 μm digitonin followed by 1 mm MnCl2.
All data presented were obtained from at least five coverslips and two to three different cell preparations.
For confocal imaging, cells were loaded with fluo-4 AM (5 μm; Molecular Probes) for 20 min, followed by washing. Data are presented normalized with respect to the first image of the sequence.
GSH measurements. To measure GSH, cells were incubated with 50 μm monochlorobimane (MCB; Molecular Probes) in HEPES-buffered salt solution at room temperature for 40 min, or until a steady state had been reached before images were acquired for quantitation (Keelan et al., 2001). The cells were then washed with HEPES-buffered salt solution, and images of the fluorescence of the MCB-GSH adduct were acquired using the cooled CCD imaging system as described using excitation at 380 nm and emission at >400 nm.
Toxicity experiments. For toxicity assays we loaded cells simultaneously with 20 μm propidium iodide (PI), which is excluded from viable cells but exhibits a red fluorescence after a loss of membrane integrity, and 4.5 μm Hoechst 33342 (Molecular Probes), which gives a blue stain to chromatin, to count the total number of cells. Using phase-contrast optics, a bright-field image allowed the identification of neurons, which look quite different from the flatter glial component and also lie in a different focal plane, above the glial layer. A total of 600–800 neurons or glial cells were counted in 20–25 fields of each coverslip. Each experiment was repeated five or more times using separate cultures.
Statistical analysis. Statistical analysis and exponential curve fitting were performed using Origin 7 (Microcal Software Inc., Northampton, MA) software. Results are expressed as means ± SEM.
Results
We have used digital imaging techniques to explore the effects of βA on [Ca2+]c signals, antioxidant status, and cell viability in cultures of mixed hippocampal neurons and astrocytes in cultures ranging from 10 to 45 DIV. Application of either the full-length peptide (1–42; 100 nm to 10 μm) or the 25–35 aa fragment (1–50 μm) of βA had no effect on [Ca2+]c signals in neurons, which remained quiescent over periods of up to 6 hr (n = 456 cells) (Fig. 1Aa,C). After 30–40 min of incubation with βA the cells showed robust and reversible responses to the application of glutamate (100 μm) (Fig. 1Aa) or to depolarization with 50 mm KCl, confirming both their viability and their neuronal identity. Moreover, the presence of βA25–35 or βA1–42 did not change the amplitude of the [Ca2+]c response to glutamate or to 50 mm KCl; the response to the latter was 726 ± 89 nm (n = 59 cells) in control and 759 ± 97 nm (n = 96 cells) in βA-incubated neurons.
Remarkably, astrocytes in the same cultures showed dramatic [Ca2+]c signals after exposure to βA, often occurring in cells surrounding quiescent neurons (Fig. 1Ab,B,C) Similar [Ca2+]c signals were seen in response to both the 25–35 peptide and the full-length 1–42 peptide, but no responses were seen to the reverse peptide 35–25 (n = 135 cells). All [Ca2+]c signals started after a delay of ∼5–15 min and showed three patterns of response: (1) sporadic increases in [Ca2+]c, seen as low-amplitude (100–200 nm) [Ca2+]c oscillations or fluctuations; (2) larger spikes, followed by sustained elevated [Ca2+]c (1–2 μm), and (3) very large increases in [Ca2+]c, usually followed by loss of cell viability. After washing the cells with βA-free saline, the responses persisted for up to 6 hr (data not shown).
Because responses like these have not been described previously, we were concerned that the properties of the cells might be dictated by our culture conditions. Therefore, we repeated the experiments using other culture systems. Experiments using cultures of cortical astrocytes prepared in the same way gave results identical to those from the hippocampus (data not shown). We also used hippocampal explant cultures, in which the properties of the tissue in vivo are well retained. Confocal imaging of explant cultures loaded with fluo-4 again showed that exposure to βA25–35 (50 μm) provoked a selective increase in activity in glial cells in the culture (Fig. 1Db). Neurons were identified as the only cells in the culture to show a rise in [Ca2+]c with 50 mm KCl and by their larger and more sustained response to glutamate (100 μm) (Fig. 1Da). The astrocytes showed transient and oscillatory activity with βA, showed no response to 50 mm KCl, and their response to glutamate was a small transient response that reflects activation of metabotropic glutamate receptors (n = 5 cultures). Because the responses in dissociated cultures and explants appeared similar, the dissociated cultures were used for the remainder of the experiments described.
Astrocyte [Ca2+]c responses to βA are dependent on extracellular Ca2+ and independent of intracellular Ca2+ stores
The [Ca2+]c responses to βA were never observed in Ca2+-free saline (n = 231 cells) (Fig. 2A). However, if cells were exposed to βA in a Ca2+-free saline and were then washed with βA-free, Ca2+-containing buffer, [Ca2+]c responses were then seen in the astrocytes (n = 69 cells) (Fig. 2B, bottom) whereas neuronal [Ca2+]c did not change beyond the small increase associated with the restoration of basal Ca2+ influx (n = 64 cells) (Fig. 2B, top). These data show that (1) the changes in [Ca2+]c in astrocytes are initiated through Ca2+ influx from external sources, (2) the initiation of the action of βA does not require the presence of Ca2+, and (3) the effect persists despite removal of βA from the saline.
The oscillatory [Ca2+]c signals appeared typical of IP3-mediated [Ca2+]c release from endoplasmic reticulum (ER) seen in astrocytes in response to a range of agonists (Peuchen et al., 1996) and to mechanical stimulation (Charles et al., 1991). Therefore, we considered whether external Ca2+ acts as a trigger to activate phospholipase C (PLC), which would generate IP3 and so mobilize ER Ca2+. However, the experiments illustrated in Figure 3 suggest that PLC- and IP3-mediated signaling do not play a significant role in the βA-induced [Ca2+]c signals. Thus, U73122 (5 μm), an inhibitor of phospholipase C (Fig. 3A) did not significantly impair the [Ca2+]c astrocyte responses to βA (n = 89 cells). Similarly, 2-APB, (40 μm) an inhibitor of IP3-dependent Ca2+ release, failed to reduce βA-induced [Ca2+]c signals in astrocytes (n = 35 cells) (Fig. 3B), whereas it completely blocked the [Ca2+]c increase induced by ATP (100 μm; data not shown), which acts at purinergic receptors (P2U) to promote IP3-dependent ER Ca2+ release (Peuchen et al., 1996).
Although the expression and role of ryanodine receptors (RyRs) in astrocytes is debatable (Matyash et al., 2002), we also tested the effect of the RyR inhibitor dantrolene (10 μm), which again had no significant effect on the βA-induced [Ca2+]c signal (n = 46 cells) (Fig. 3C). The incubation of astrocytes with 0.1–1 μm thapsigargin (an inhibitor of ER Ca2+ pumps) completely depleted Ca2+ from the ER, demonstrated by the absence of a [Ca2+]c response to ATP (100 μm) (Fig. 3D). The addition of βA again then induced a [Ca2+]c response that was not significantly different from the control responses (Fig. 3D). In this instance, values of peak [Ca2+]c after thapsigargin were 390 ± 54 nm, compared with control responses to βA with peak values of 456 ± 57 nm (n = 301 cells; p > 0.05). We also noted that the resting Ca2+ level, which was usually slightly elevated after exposure to thapsigargin because of the activation of store-operated Ca2+ influx, was slightly depressed by βA, suggesting that, if anything, βA suppresses store-operated Ca2+ influx. Taken together, these data strongly suggest that ER-stored Ca2+ does not play a significant role in βA-induced [Ca2+]c signals.
Mitochondria may have a high Ca2+ content in astrocytes (Boitier et al., 1999), and we cannot overlook the possibility of the participation of mitochondria in βA-induced [Ca2+]c signals, especially because Aβ causes mitochondrial damage (Casley et al., 2002b). After the depolarization of mitochondria with the uncoupler carbonyl cyanide p-trifluoromethoxyphenylhydrazone (FCCP; 1 μm), βA25–35 or βA1–42 still increased [Ca2+]c (n = 84 cells). In the presence of FCCP, the [Ca2+]c signals were significantly increased (789 ± 36 vs 456 ± 58 nm; p < 0.005). This could result from a fall in ATP or through the loss of mitochondrial Ca2+ uptake. Nevertheless, FCCP did not reduce the βA-induced Ca2+ signal, showing that mitochondria cannot represent a significant source of Ca2+.
Thus, taken together, these data strongly suggest that βA causes [Ca2+]c signals in astrocytes, but not in neurons, by inducing a pathway for Ca2+ influx across the plasma membrane.
βA induces Ca2+ influx into astrocytes
Extracellular Mn2+ enters cells via Ca2+-permeant channels and quenches the fluorescence of intracellular fura-2. This is most readily seen when the fura-2 is excited at ∼360 nm, the Ca2+-independent (isosbestic) point of the fura-2 excitation spectrum, whereas the Ca2+-dependent change of the 340/380 nm ratio is not altered. In the presence of βA (n = 154 cells), the signal excited at 360 nm was unaltered in the absence Mn2+, showing that this reliably reports a Ca2+-independent signal (Fig. 4A). However, in the presence of 40 μm Mn2+, the 360 nm fura-2 signal showed stepwise and irreversible decreases in the signal corresponding with each transient increase in [Ca2+]c (two examples are shown in Fig. 4B). This approach also allowed us to test whetherβA caused Ca2+ entry in neurons that was masked by Ca2+ buffering. However, βA had no effect on the 360 nm fura-2 signal in neurons (n = 120 cells) in the presence of Mn2+, or, as shown above, on the fura-2 ratio, confirming the selectivity of the action of βAon astrocytes. These observations suggest that each [Ca2+]c transient reflects a pulse of Ca2+ influx into the astrocytes.
Additional confocal imaging experiments showed that the βA-induced [Ca2+]c signal was initiated as a rapid focal increase in [Ca2+]c. These responses could sometimes be seen clearly originating from a point source (Fig. 5A,B), followed by slower diffusion into the cytosol (Fig. 5A). In the examples in Figure 5B, the rise in [Ca2+]c was restricted to a small part of the cell and failed to extend through the cytoplasm. This again is consistent with the activation of an influx pathway followed by Ca2+ buffering rather than the mobilization of ER stores, in which the amplitude and rate of rise of the signal are maintained by active propagation (Boitier et al., 1999).
Routes for Ca2+ influx
According to some authors (Ueda et al., 1997; He et al., 2002) βA may induce a [Ca2+]c signal in neurons by increasing Ca2+ influx through voltage-dependent calcium channels (VDCC). Because astrocytes in our cultures do not show a [Ca2+]c response to 50 mm KCl, it seems unlikely that they express VDCC. Nifedipine (1 μm), an inhibitor of L-type VDCCs, had no effect on the shape or amplitude of the βA-induced [Ca2+]c signals (1–42 or 25–35) in either cortical or hippocampal astrocytes (n = 56 cells), but it completely blocked the [Ca2+]c response to 150 mm KCl in hippocampal neurons. The responses were also not significantly affected by inhibitors of either ionotropic or metabotropic glutamate receptors, including 20 μm CNQX (n = 98 cells), 10 μm (+)-5-methyl-10,11-dihydro-5H-dibenzo [a,d] cyclohepten-5,10-imine maleate (n = 69 cells) or 50 μm (S)-(±)-amino-4-carboxy-methyl-phenylacetic acid (n = 178 cells) (data not shown), suggesting that the responses do not reflect glutamate release into the culture.
An additional Ca2+ influx pathway expressed by glial cells and probably not in neurons is the pathway for capacitative influx (capacitative Ca2+ entry, CCE). One possibility is that βA acts through altering the opening probability of this pathway. Therefore, we tested the action of lanthanum, which blocks CCE (Pizzo et al., 2001). However, La3+ (1 μm) had no effect on the responses (n = 67 cells) (data not shown).
It has been suggested that in some cell types, βA-induced increases in the generation of ROS serve as a trigger, which then raise [Ca2+]c (Varadarajan et al., 2000). The incubation of cortical and hippocampal astrocytes with the antioxidant trolox (750 μm) and ascorbate (1 mm, 45 min preincubation; n = 67 cells) or the superoxide scavenger 4-hydroxy-2,2,6,6-tetramethyl-piperadine-1-oxyl (500 μm) plus catalase (250 U/ml) (n = 69 cells), which we have shown previously to be effective scavengers of ROS (Vergun et al., 2001), did not have any significant impact on the [Ca2+]c response of the cells to βA (data not shown), suggesting that the production of ROS by βA is not responsible for the [Ca2+]c increases in astrocytes.
Zinc and clioquinol abolish the βA-induced [Ca2+]c response in astrocytes
βA peptides have been shown to form channels in artificial and biological membranes (Arispe et al., 1993; Lin et al., 2001; Kawahara et al., 1997). Such channels can be blocked by Zn2+ (Arispe et al., 1996). We found that the incubation of hippocampal or cortical astrocytes (n = 253 cells) with up to1mm ZnCl2 completely prevented the effect of βA on [Ca2+]c (Fig. 6A). However, the addition of Zn2+ had no effect on the βA-induced [Ca2+]c signals once they had already started (data not shown), suggesting that Zn2+ is not acting simply to block channels, but rather to prevent their formation.
βA peptide binds to metal ions with a selectivity Cu2+ > Fe 3+> Zn2+ (Atwood et al., 1998), all of which promote aggregation. The addition of Cu2+ (1 μm to 1 mm) did not change the amplitude (456 ± 58 to 490 ± 56 nm; n = 81 cells) or shape of the [Ca2+]c signals in either cortical or hippocampal astrocytes (Fig. 6B), suggesting that endogenous heavy-metal ions present in the culture are sufficient to promote the aggregation of βA.
Cu2+ can undergo redox cycling and generate ROS, whereas Zn2+ is not redoxactive but competes with Cu2+ for binding, and therefore inhibits the oxidant properties of metal-bound βA (Cuajungco et al., 2000). The inhibition of [Ca2+]c signals by Zn2+ does not appear to be dependent on these redox properties, because: (1) we see identical effects with both the full-length peptide and the 25–35 fragment, which does not have the metal-binding coordination site, and (2) we see no effect of antioxidants on the responses (above). Trace amounts of metals may promote aggregation in an α-helix conformation, whereas a high concentration of Zn2+ (and to a lesser extent, Cu2+) promote β-sheet fibrillar aggregation, which is classically associated with βA toxicity. The channels blocked by Zn2+ have an α-helical structure, whereas the mechanism described here seems more likely to involve β-sheet formation because (1) Zn2+ prevents but does not reverse the response and (2) βA25–35 cannot form α-helical channels but can form β-sheets. Four types of conductances have been observed with βA1–42 in lipid bilayers (Kourie et al., 2001).
Clioquinol, a chelator of Cu2+, Zn2+, and Fe2+, prevents aggregation and resolubilizes βA; it has also been shown to have a beneficial effect in mouse models of AD (Cherny et al., 2001; Melov, 2002). The preincubation of cells with 1–2 μm clioquinol for 30 min dramatically prevented the effect of βAon[Ca2+]c of cortical astrocytes (n = 207 cells) (Fig. 6C).
βA25–35 and βA1–42 deplete GSH in hippocampal neurons and astrocytes
We then explored the consequences of βA exposure for GSH, using fluorescence imaging of the indicator MCB to identify changes in GSH in different cell types within the same culture (Keelan et al., 2001). In agreement with previous reports (Casley et al., 2002a; Muller et al., 1997; White et al., 1999), we found that βA significantly decreased GSH in cortical astrocyte monocultures (by 54.7 ± 4.9%; n = 798 cells; p < 0.001) (Fig. 7C) and in hippocampal astrocytes in coculture (by 44.32 ± 4.9%; control = 100%) (Fig. 7A) (n = 831 cells; p < 0.005) after a 24 hr incubation.
In contrast to the lack of effect of βA on neuronal [Ca2+]c, βA also significantly (p < 0.01) reduced GSH in hippocampal neurons (33.5 ± 6.3%; n = 345 cells) (Fig. 7B). Because astrocytes supply neighboring neurons with GSH precursors (Sagara et al., 1993) the GSH decline in the neurons is likely to be a secondary consequence of the decrease of astrocyte GSH.
The removal of external Ca2+ alone had no effect on GSH levels in hippocampal neurons (n = 420 cells) or astrocytes (n = 905 cells) in control experiments (Fig. 7A–C). However, the effect of βA1–42 and βA25–35 on GSH was abolished in the absence of Ca2+ in both hippocampal or cortical astrocytes and in hippocampal neurons (Fig. 7A–C). Thus, given the dependence of βA-induced [Ca2+]c fluctuations on external Ca2+, it seems likely that the GSH changes are a direct consequence of the changes in astrocyte [Ca2+]c.
In the presence of 1–2 μm clioquinol, a concentration that abolished βA-induced [Ca2+]c fluctuations in astrocytes, βA25–35 (and βA1–42, data not shown) no longer caused a significant fall of GSH in cortical astrocytes (n = 619 cells) (Fig. 7C).
Effect of βA on cell viability
We then examined the effect of a 24 hr exposure of cultures to βA25–35 on cell viability and found that, remarkably, 49.9 ± 8.5% of neurons (Fig. 8A) but only 23.2 ± 4.2% of astrocytes (n = 9 experiments) (Fig. 8B) died during this period in hippocampal cocultures. Preincubation with 1 μm clioquinol reduced cell death of hippocampal neurons and of cocultured hippocampal astrocytes by ∼50% (21.2 ± 6.8% dead cells, p < 0.05, and 15.2 ± 3.2%, respectively, n = 5 experiments) (Fig. 8).
The removal of Ca2+ from the medium also significantly (p < 0.001) protected the hippocampal neurons (cell death fell from 49.9 ± 8.5 to 16.45 ± 4.1%; n = 6 experiments) and in cocultured hippocampal astrocytes (from 23.2 ± 4.2 to 17.5%; n = 7 experiments; p > 0.05). The presence or absence of Ca2+ in the medium did not change the percentage of dead cells in untreated cells or in cells treated with the reverse peptide 35–25 (Fig. 8A,B).
Discussion
We have found that βA induces calcium signals selectively in astrocytes causing sporadic fluctuations of [Ca2+]c, while having no apparent effect at all on [Ca2+]c in nearby neurons. The [Ca2+]c signals are dependent on calcium influx from the extracellular space and are inhibited by Zn2+ or by the heavy-metal chelator clioquinol. Our data are most readily consistent with a model in which βA inserts into the plasma membrane, in which it either forms channels or influences the properties of an existent Ca2+-permeant channel. Several features of the responses are remarkable in this respect: most notably, the selectivity of the response for the astrocytes and the oscillatory, transient nature of the [Ca2+]c signals. One might anticipate that insertion of Ca2+-permeant channels into a cell membrane would generate a monotonic increase in [Ca2+]c, and the appearance of the transient fluctuations were surprising. However, the Mn2+ quench and confocal imaging data strongly argue that the transients do indeed result from transient episodic Ca2+ influx and so presumably reflect either the sporadic openings of a channel with a low opening probability or the transient formation of channels that then dissociate.
The other major original findings reported here are that βA affects [Ca2+]c signals in astrocytes but not in neurons and that the ensuing neurotoxicity appears to be secondary to impaired astrocytic function in the support of neuronal viability, although we cannot exclude a direct toxic effect of the βA on neurons. In most published studies of βA neurotoxicity, either neuronal cell lines were used (Blanchard et al., 1997), or, in studies of neurons in primary culture, the presence and contribution of glial cells was not excluded (Mattson et al., 1992; Pike et al., 1993). The selectivity of the effects on [Ca2+]c for astrocytes is remarkable and may reflect some difference in the plasma membrane lipid composition of the two cell types, because even small differences in the lipid environment affect βA binding to membranes and pore formation (Curtain et al., 2003). The stability of βA aggregates in membranes is very delicately balanced (McLaurin and Chakrabarty, 1996). For example, increased membrane cholesterol, such as is found in AD brain and aging, favors a β-sheet over an α-helix conformation of βA (Curtain et al., 2003). To our knowledge, very little information is available on the membrane composition in different brain-cell types. Alternatively, the selectivity may reflect the selective effects of βA on an existing channel, which is expressed in astrocytes but not in neurons, although our pharmacological search has failed to reveal such a process.
In conclusion, our experimental conditions have allowed us to uncover a novel toxic mechanism of βA, probably overlapping in vivo with other known effects. This involves β-aggregation of βA and the selective insertion into the astrocyte plasma membrane, initiating sporadic [Ca2+]c signals, which can persist over long periods. These signals, although not causing astrocyte cell death, nevertheless promote GSH depletion in both cell populations; they ultimately impair neuronal viability because GSH depletion leaves the neurons vulnerable to damage by oxidative stress. Thus, the resulting neurotoxicity reflects the central role of astrocytes in supporting neuronal function by supplying GSH precursors and other metabolic intermediates and by removing excess glutamate from the extracellular medium.
Footnotes
This work was supported by the Wellcome Trust, the Royal Society, and the Miriam Marks Foundation. We thank Drs. Frances Edwards and Anna de Simoni for providing hippocampal explant cultures and Profs. S. Bolsover and J. B. Clark and Drs. R. Dumollard and J. Jacobson for their invaluable discussion and suggestions.
Correspondence should be addressed to Michael R. Duchen, Department of Physiology, University College London, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT, UK. E-mail: m.duchen{at}ucl.ac.uk.
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