Abstract
Neuroadapted Sindbis virus (NSV) is a neurotropic virus capable of inducing the death of spinal motor neurons in mice and rats. In this study we investigated the mechanisms that underlie NSV-induced motor neuron death. We found that many degenerating spinal motor neurons were not infected directly with NSV, suggesting that bystander cell death occurs. An excitotoxic mechanism was confirmed when blockade of calcium-permeable AMPA receptors attenuated motor neuron death both in vitro and in vivo. Blockade of astroglial glutamate reuptake potentiated NSV-induced motor neuron loss in vivo, suggesting that astrocyte-mediated removal of perisynaptic glutamate is important in limiting NSV-induced excitotoxic injury. Astroglial glutamate transport was reduced markedly in the spinal cord during NSV infection, in advance of motor neuron injury in susceptible mice. In contrast, we found 5.6-fold elevated glutamate uptake in the spinal cords of mice resistant to NSV-induced paralysis. Likewise, minocycline markedly increased spinal cord glutamate transport and protected mice from NSV-induced motor neuron death. These studies suggest that NSV infection triggers a cascade of events in the spinal cord resulting in impaired astrocytic glutamate transport and excitotoxic injury of motor neurons mediated via calciumpermeable AMPA receptors. Similar changes may occur in other motor neuron disorders such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis or West Nile Virus-induced poliomyelitis, suggesting a common tissue injury pathway.
Introduction
Excess glutamate in the motor neuron synapse produces hyper-excitation of both NMDA and AMPA-type glutamate receptors. Motor neurons are particularly sensitive to AMPA-mediated glutamate toxicity (Rothstein et al., 1993; Carriedo et al., 2000). Some studies suggest that AMPA receptors present on motor neurons mainly exclude the GluR2 subunit, thus rendering them more Ca2+-permeable (Van den Bosch and Robberecht, 2000; Krampfl et al., 2001; Van den Bosch et al., 2002a). Insufficient clearance of glutamate by astrocytes via their excitatory amino acid transporters contributes to increased susceptibility of postsynaptic neurons even to normal levels of glutamate (Rothstein et al., 1993, 1996; Ginsberg et al., 1995, 1996; Rao et al., 2001b; Heath and Shaw, 2002; Howland et al., 2002; Dunlop et al., 2003).
Glutamate transporter-1 (GLT-1) is the dominant glutamate transporter in most regions of the CNS, accounting for up to 95% of glutamate transport (Rothstein et al., 1996; Tanaka et al., 1997). The primary role of astroglial glutamate transporters is to maintain a homeostatic level of extracellular glutamate (<1 μm) by binding and reabsorbing glutamate from the synaptic cleft (Ventura and Harris, 1999; Anderson and Swanson, 2000; Chretien et al., 2002; Heath and Shaw, 2002; Nedergaard et al., 2002). In several disease states decreased astrocyte-mediated glutamate transport contributes to neural injury (Rothstein et al., 1995; Masliah et al., 1996; Belin et al., 1997; Dawson et al., 2000; Pitt et al., 2000; Rao et al., 2001a,b; Howland et al., 2002; Ikematsu et al., 2002; Namura et al., 2002; Warita et al., 2002; Dunlop et al., 2003).
Sindbis virus (SV) is a prototype member of the alphavirus family that replicates in neurons of infected animals. Intracranial infection of susceptible adult mice with a neuroadapted strain (NSV) of Sindbis results in high rates of motor neuron death as well as flaccid hindlimb paralysis or death (Jackson et al., 1987, 1988). Dying motor neurons assume a morphology characterized by pale swollen cytoplasm and swollen organelles, and they do not exhibit caspase-3 activation (Havert et al., 2000; Nargi-Aizenman and Griffin, 2001). We recently demonstrated that NSV-induced neuronal death in adult animals may occur via bystander mechanisms and may be mediated via the activation of AMPA receptors (Nargi-Aizenman et al., 2004).
There are likely two mechanisms by which motor neurons die in response to Sindbis virus: an intrinsic pathway in which infected neurons die via direct infection and an extrinsic pathway in which neurons die as a result of changes in the local environment. In the current study we extend previous observations that propose the presence of bystander neuronal death (Nargi-Aizenman et al., 2004), and we find that excitotoxic motor neuron injury is a critical determinant of NSV pathogenesis. It is interesting that related RNA viruses, most notably West Nile virus, have been shown to induce a flaccid paralysis characterized by spinal motor neuron death in animals (Kelley et al., 2003) and in a proportion of human cases (Leis et al., 2002). It is possible, therefore, that non-cell-autonomous excitotoxic death of motor neurons may be triggered by a variety of infectious agents and that strategies that target this process may be of therapeutic value.
Materials and Methods
Mice. C57BL/6 and BALB/cBy mice were purchased from The Jackson Laboratory (Bar Harbor, ME). Male animals between 5 and 6 weeks of age were used in all of these studies. Mice were injected intracranially with 1000 plaque-forming units (PFUs) of NSV. Hindlimb grip strength was measured with a Chatillon CE digital force gauge (model DFIS 2). Readings were taken in T-peak mode and measured in pounds of force. Animals were supported by the examiner under their forelimbs, and their hindlimbs were lowered to the grip bar until the animals attempted to grasp the device. Animals then were moved away from the bar slowly, and the force was measured as each animal exerted active force against this movement. Each animal was given three trials per examining period and was trained for 3 d before infection to minimize a learning effect. Readings are expressed as an average of the percentage of the day 0 score for each animal. Animals in the minocycline study were given daily intraperitoneal injections of either 50 mg/kg minocycline (M-9511; Sigma, St. Louis, MO) or saline, beginning at the start of infection and continuing through the time course.
Rats. Male Lewis and Sprague Dawley rats (Charles River, Wilmington, MA) were used in these studies at 5-7 weeks of age. Cannulated Sprague Dawley rats were obtained from Zivic Miller (SCA04.00; Zelienople, PA). NSV was passaged into 3- to 4-week-old Lewis rats via serial intracranial inoculation to generate a Sindbis strain (rat-adapted NSV, raNSV) that causes paralysis in rats (Kerr et al., 2003). With the use of raNSV virtually all rats develop some degree of paralysis, with <5% mortality from the encephalomyelitis. Viral titer in the spinal cord reached a peak at 3-4 d after infection (average titers, 1-2 × 106 PFU/gm tissue) and was cleared in large part from these animals within 8-9 d.
Surgery. Cannulated Sprague Dawley rats were anesthetized with Avertin, an incision was made behind the head, and the subarachnoid cannula was connected to an Alzet pump (1007D; 0.5 μl/hr for 7 d; Alza Scientific Products, Mountain View, CA). Pumps were filled with 100 μl of dl-threo-β-hydroxy-aspartate (THA; 1.5 μg/μl; H-2775; Sigma), 1-naphthyl acetyl spermine (NASPM; 10 μg/μl; N-193; Sigma), or saline. Animals were coded and housed individually. Then each rat was scored for hindlimb grip strength by a blinded examiner on a daily basis.
Tissue preparation. At indicated time points the animals were anesthetized and perfused transcardially with chilled PBS, followed by cold 4% paraformaldehyde (PFA). Each lumbar spinal cord and associated nerve roots were dissected en bloc. The sciatic nerve then was traced back to the spinal cord to identify the L3-L5 spinal cord segments. Spinal columns were postfixed in 4% PFA overnight; next the spinal cords were removed and placed in either 1× PBS or 30% sucrose before being frozen. Paraffin and frozen sections were cut as 10-μm-thick sections and mounted onto glass slides. For protein assays the animals were perfused with chilled PBS, and spinal cords were snap frozen on dry ice until further use.
Motor neuron culture. Motor neurons were cultured as previously described (Vandenberghe et al., 1998). In brief, ventral spinal cords were dissected from 14-d-old Wistar rat embryos in HBSS, cut into 1 mm pieces, and digested in 0.05% trypsin in HBSS for 15 min at 37°C. A motor neuron-enriched neuronal population was purified from ventral spinal cord by centrifugation on a 6.5% metrizamide cushion, followed by immunopanning, using the 192 mouse IgG attached to an anti-mouse antibody-coated dish. These motor neuron-enriched suspensions were cultured on a glial feeder layer that had been preestablished on 18-mm-round glass coverslips coated with poly-l-ornithine and laminin. L15 culture medium was supplemented with 0.2% sodium bicarbonate, 3.6 mg/ml glucose, 20 nm progesterone, 5 μg/ml insulin, 0.1 mm putrescine, 0.1 mg/ml conalbumin, 30 nm sodium selenite, 100 IU/ml penicillin, 100 μg/ml streptomycin, and 2% horse serum. Cultures were kept in a 7% CO2-humidified incubator at 37°C. Live-Dead kits (Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR) were purchased and used per the manufacturer's instructions.
Glia culture. Primary rat astrocytes were isolated from 2-4 d postnatal rat pups. Cells were derived from the cortical region between bregma and the occipital lobe, and tissues were treated similarly to the spinal tissue described above. Glia were suspended in DMEM supplemented with 10% heat-inactivated horse serum, 4% glucose, 100 IU/ml penicillin, 100 μg/ml streptomycin. Cells were plated as follows: 200,000 cells on a 60 mm dish, 50,000 cells on a six-well plate, and 20,000 cells on a 12-well plate. All plates were coated with collagen before being seeded with cells.
Infection of cultures. All cultures in this study were infected with either NSV or NSV-green fluorescent protein (NSV-GFP) as indicated [at a multiplicity of infection (MOI) of 1 (1 PFU/cell)]. When treated with glutamate receptor-blocking agents, media were replenished daily to maintain a steady drug concentration. The following drugs were used in this study: 6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione (CNQX) used at a concentration of 25 μm (C-127; Sigma), Joro spider toxin (JST) used at 3 μm (J-100; Sigma), and 1-(4-aminophenyl)-4-methyl-7,8-methylenedioxy-5H-2,3-benzodiazapine (GYKI-52466) used at 25 μm (G-119; Sigma).
Glutamate uptake assay. Glutamate uptake assays were performed with slight modification to a previously published protocol (Sepkuty et al., 2002). Briefly, lumbar spinal cord tissues were homogenized in buffer (10 mm Tris, pH 7.4, 5 mm EDTA, 1 mini-protease inhibitor tab from Roche Diagnostics, Mannheim, Germany), clarified twice, resuspended in tissue buffer (0.05 m Tris, 0.32 m sucrose, pH 7.4), and spun down; the resulting pellet was resuspended in 250 μl of Na+-Krebs [containing (in mm) 120 NaCl, 25 NaHCO3, 5 KCl, 2 CaCl2, 1 KH2PO4, 1 MgSO4, pH 7.4] with and without 500 μm dihydrokainate (DHK). Duplicate samples were generated in which Na+-free Krebs [containing (in mm) 120 choline-Cl, 25 Tris, 5 KCl, 2 CaCl2, 1 KH2PO4, 1 MgSO4, pH 7.4] was used as the blanking control. Samples were incubated with 3H-glutamate for 4 min at 37°C and immediately transferred to ice. Samples were adsorbed to filter paper and incubated in scintillation fluid overnight; total counts per minute (cpm) were measured. The amount of labeled glutamate bound by each sample (pmol/mg protein/min) was calculated by using the total incorporated cpm and concentration of protein in each sample. Tissue samples were processed in duplicate, and at least three independent experiments were performed for each experimental condition. The amount of labeled glutamate present at each time point during infection was divided by the glutamate levels present in uninfected samples to determine normalized glutamate transport at baseline.
Histology. Cryosectioned tissues were used for immunohistochemical staining. Sections were blocked and stained in a solution of 1% normal goat serum and 5% BSA in 1× PBS. The following primary antibodies and stains were used at the following concentrations: Nissl red (1:100; N-21482; Molecular Probes), glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP; 1:400 for MAB360 or 1:2000 for AB5804; Chemicon, Temecula, CA), GLT-1 (1:100) (Rothstein et al., 1994), propidium iodide (1 μg/μl; Sigma), SMI-31 (1:10,000; Sternberger Monoclonal, Lutherville, MD), choline acetyltransferase (1:2000; ChAT; Ab5042P; Chemicon), and nitrotyrosine (1:1000; 05-233; Upstate Cell Signaling, Charlottesville, VA). Secondary antibodies were conjugated to Alexa Fluor 488 (green) or Alexa Fluor 594 (red) and were used at a 1:100 dilution (Molecular Probes).
Western blot analysis. Tissues were sonicated in lysis buffer (10 mm Tris, 1% SDS, 1 mm sodium orthovanadate, pH 7.6), and 5 μg of each sample was run out in 12% acrylamide gels (BioExpress, Kaysville, UT). Proteins were transferred to Immobilon-P transfer membranes (Millipore, Bedford, MA) in 10% methanol transfer buffer. Freshly transferred membranes were stained with Ponceau S solution (P-7170; Sigma) and imaged to ensure equal loading. Membranes were rinsed in 1× PBS to remove Ponceau stain and then blocked in 5% milk buffer and stained in 1% milk buffer by using primary antibodies. Blots were developed with the SuperSignal West Femto Maximum Sensitivity Substrate (35095; Pierce, Rockford, IL) and visualized with a Fuji Luminescent Image Analyzer (LAS-1000plus camera; Fuji, Tokyo, Japan). The intensity of each band was determined by Image Gauge software (version 3.4). Protein expression in infected tissue was normalized to levels in uninfected controls by dividing measured band intensities. Because viral infection variably alters the expression of several housekeeping genes, making control immunoblots [glyceraldehyde phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) or actin] unreliable, Ponceau S staining of immunoblots was performed to ensure equal loading of lanes.
Quantitation of neuronal death in tissue sections. Serial sections were generated by collection of every 20th section through spinal cord onto glass slides. One section in each series was used for histologic analysis after staining with hematoxylin and eosin. Motor neurons were defined as cells present within the gray matter, ventral to the central canal, and having a cell body >25 μm in diameter. Data are presented as the mean ± SE of the number of motor neurons per section of spinal cord. Adjacent sections were examined for GFP fluorescence in ventral gray neurons (indicative of infection with NSV-GFP), and colocalization to motor neurons was achieved by staining with ChAT antibodies.
For histologic correlation of various drug-treated animals (see Figs. 3, 4, 5), sections were prepared at day 7 after infection as above. Paraffin sections then were generated through the L3-L5 segments and stained with hematoxylin and eosin. Motor neurons again were counted if they were in the gray matter, ventral to the central canal, and had a cell body >25 μm in diameter. Data again are presented as the mean ± SE of the number of motor neurons per section. In total, three to five animals were analyzed per group, and motor neurons were counted by a blinded examiner.
Statistical analysis. SPSS 11.0 (SPSS Science, Chicago, IL) was used for all of the statistical analyses. Because of the nonparametric nature of the data (as determined by tests of normality), nonparametric equivalent tests of ANOVA and repeated measures ANOVA were used to increase the robustness of the results. The Kruskal-Wallis test was performed to analyze differences between groups at each time point, and Friedman's nonparametric repeated measures comparison was used to analyze differences across time within a group. The Mann-Whitney U test was used for the comparison of two independent samples. Significance was assessed at the 0.05 level. These tests were used because they make no assumptions about the distribution of the data, such as normality.
Results
To investigate mechanisms of spinal motor neuron death after NSV infection, we used a recombinant NSV virus encoding a GFP construct (NSV-GFP), as described previously (Kerr et al., 2002, 2003). At 2 d after intracranial infection of C57BL/6 mice, virus was detected by GFP fluorescence in large ventral neurons (costained with Nissl red) in the lumbosacral enlargement of the spinal cord (Fig. 1A,B). These infected cells exhibited a normal morphology. By 4 d after infection, however, most neurons within the ventral region of the spinal cord exhibited abnormal morphology, with swollen cytoplasmic and nuclear compartments and intracellular vacuoles (Fig. 1C,D). Electron micrographs of these motor neurons (Fig. 1E, long arrow denotes synapse onto cell body) exhibited pale cytoplasm and enlarged, disrupted mitochondria (small arrows). This morphology resembled excitotoxic injury in other studies (Ginsberg et al., 1999; Krampfl et al., 2001; Van den Bosch et al., 2002b). Furthermore, relatively few motor neurons in the lumbar spinal cord exhibited GFP fluorescence (Fig. 1C,D) or SV immunoreactivity (data not shown), suggesting either that these morphologically abnormal neurons were not infected directly or that the cell death process had catabolized proteins indicative of direct infection. Because NSV capsid immunoreactivity is maintained even in cellular remnants of infected cells (Jackson et al., 1987, 1988; Lewis et al., 1999), the failure to detect NSV immunoreactivity suggests that many of the dying motor neurons were not infected directly.
Quantitative examination of motor neuron infection within the lumbar enlargement further supports the conclusion that bystander motor neuron death is occurring in vivo. When sections simultaneously were examined histologically for the presence of ChAT+ immunoreactivity (red) and NSV infection (green), total and infected motor neurons could be measured over time (Fig. 1F, 2 d after infection). The total number of motor neurons remained constant at ∼30 cells per section through day 3 of infection but then began to decline thereafter (Fig. 1G, top line, right-sided y-axis). When the percentage of infected motor neurons was determined, the highest levels were found at days 2 and 3 after infection, followed by a decline thereafter. At no point were >20% of motor neurons directly infected (Fig. 1G), yet >75-90% of motor neurons are lost during disease (Kerr et al., 2003). To exclude the possibility that ChAT staining was lost within infected motor neurons, we performed a parallel study that used a fluorescent Nissl compound (Nissl red, Molecular Probes) and again found that only 20% of Nissl-stained cells also exhibited GFP fluorescence (data not shown). Therefore, the infrequency of direct infection of motor neurons and the morphologic appearance of noninfected motor neurons suggested that NSV causes bystander motor neuron death in the spinal cord.
We next examined whether NSV could induce excitotoxic death of motor neurons in vitro, using motor neuron-enriched cocultures on astrocytes. In this system 60-70% of neurons exhibited ChAT+ immunoreactivity (data not shown). We found that this coculture system recapitulated the in vivo tropism of NSV for neurons, with no infection of the underlying astrocytes (Fig. 2A). Although these infected motor neurons initially exhibited a normal morphology (Fig. 2A), all of these cells died over time (Fig. 2B-D). Furthermore, we could detect death of uninfected motor neurons, often adjacent to infected motor neurons, as defined by propidium iodide uptake (Fig. 2B). We did not find evidence of caspase-3 activation or cytochrome c translocation within these dying neurons (data not shown). We did, however, find that dying neurons as well as adjacent, noninfected astrocytes accumulated reactive oxygen species (ROS) as defined by nitrotyrosine immunoreactivity (Fig. 2C). Therefore, motor neuron death in our culture model occurred among both infected and noninfected cells and potentiated injury of cocultured astrocytes.
To clarify the role of glutamate in NSV-induced motor neuron death, we added glutamate receptor antagonists to motor neuron cultures. Infection of cultured motor neurons in the presence of NMDA receptor blockers did not alter cell survival substantially, whereas AMPA receptor blockade caused significant protection from NSV-induced cell death (Fig. 2D,E). Both CNQX and JST, a specific blocker of GluR2-negative (Ca2+-permeable) AMPA receptors, produced enhanced motor neuron survival in our system. Photomicrographs taken at 36 hr after infection showed preservation of normal neuronal morphology in the presence of AMPA receptor blockers (Fig. 2D). Quantitation of neuronal survival after NSV infection revealed significant protection by CNQX, JST, or GYKI-52466 (Fig. 2E). With each of the three AMPA receptor blockers the neuron survival was ∼50% at 72 hr after infection, compared with 21% in infected control cultures (p < 0.01 at 48 and 72 hr after infection). Virus titration assays confirmed that AMPA blockade did not alter viral titers in culture supernatants (data not shown). We conclude that NSV-induced motor neuron death in vitro occurs in part by glutamate excitotoxicity mediated via calcium-permeable AMPA receptors.
To confirm whether NSV-induced motor neuron death involves glutamate excitotoxicity in vivo, we modulated extracellular glutamate levels in infected animals by blocking astrocyte-mediated glutamate transport. We used 5- to 7-week-old rats surgically implanted with cannulas extending into the lumbar CSF space at approximately the T9 vertebral level. A pump delivery system was used to continually administer THA, a nonspecific inhibitor of glutamate transporters, or a vehicle control at the time of viral challenge. In each group of 7-10 animals the hindlimb grip strength was measured daily in each animal by a blinded examiner. Consistent with previous studies (Hirata et al., 1997), we confirmed that THA administration alone did not induce paralysis or motor neuron loss (Fig. 3A), probably because it is transported like glutamate and acts in part to exchange with intracellular glutamate. However, THA administration potentiated NSV-induced hindlimb weakness (Fig. 3A) (p < 0.05 on days 6-9), and histologic analyses confirmed that this effect was associated with enhanced death of spinal motor neurons (Fig. 3B). Quantitation of motor neurons in the lumbar enlargement at 1 week after infection showed ∼50% motor neuron loss, consistent with our previous studies (Kerr et al., 2003). There were significantly fewer motor neurons present in NSV/THA-treated animals, compared with NSV/vehicle-treated animals (12.34 ± 1.92 vs 21.30 ± 0.97 motor neurons per section; p < 0.05). We then determined whether glutamate activation of calcium-permeable AMPA receptors is important in NSV-induced motor neuron death. Animals were treated with NASPM, an inhibitor of calcium-permeable AMPA receptors, given intrathecally as in previous experiments. As before, 7-10 animals were studied per group in a blinded manner. The administration of NASPM virtually eliminated NSV-induced paralysis (Fig. 3C) (p < 0.05 at day 6) without altering viral replication or spread within the spinal cord (data not shown). Histologic examination confirmed that NASPM prevented motor neuron death that was induced by NSV (Fig. 3D) (20.93 ± 1.84 vs 28.37 ± 0.79; p < 0.05). Together, we conclude that NSV-induced motor neuron death is potentiated by glutamate excitotoxicity and is mediated via calcium-permeable AMPA receptors in vivo.
Because blockage of glutamate transporter with the nonspecific inhibitor THA exacerbated the outcome of NSV infection, we investigated expression of the dominant astroglial glutamate transporter GLT-1 during NSV infection. Infected C57BL/6 adult mice developed a rapid and complete loss of hindlimb grip strength beginning at 4 d after viral challenge (Fig. 4A). Immunohistochemical analysis of spinal cord tissue at 2, 6, and 21 d after infection revealed patchy loss of GLT-1 expression within the lumbar gray matter by 4 d after infection (brown staining corresponds to GLT-1 or GFAP immunoreactivity with blue hematoxylin counterstain) (Fig. 4B). This focal reduction often was associated with inflammatory infiltrates (Fig. 4B, middle) or areas of prominent microglial activation (data not shown). Glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) expression was altered minimally in response to NSV infection (Fig. 4B, right), suggesting that GLT-1 decline was a selective process and was not attributable to astrocyte death. Indeed, by day 21 after infection no areas of focal GLT-1 loss could be detected, suggesting that the earlier loss of GLT-1 staining was attributable to a transient downregulation. Immunoblots of spinal cord lysates confirmed the rapid decline in GLT-1 expression within the lumbar enlargement (Fig. 4C). Quantitation of triplicate immunoblots revealed a significant loss of expression at 3 d after challenge and a continued decline over the 7 d course of the experiment compared with either neurofilament or GFAP as a control (Fig. 4D) (p ≤ 0.05 at days 3-7). Ponceau S staining of the membranes confirmed equal loading of sample in all lanes (loading control, LC).
To determine whether reduced GLT-1 expression correlated with reduced functional glial glutamate transport, we generated membrane preparations from freshly isolated lumbar spinal cords of mice at various points after NSV infection. We then assessed the ability of these membrane preparations to transport radioactive glutamate, using an assay that principally reflects GLT-1 activity (Sepkuty et al., 2002). We confirmed the contribution of GLT-1 in these assays by incubating parallel samples with DHK, a specific antagonist of GLT-1. Relative glutamate transport over the time course of the experiment is shown relative to transport levels in uninfected control samples. In Figure 4E and all subsequent figures, relative total glutamate transport is depicted with black bars, whereas GLT-1-mediated transport (transport sensitive to DHK) is depicted in gray bars. Absolute values for total and DHK-sensitive transport are indicated above the day 0 bars. Consistent with previous studies, ∼65% of glutamate transport was eliminated in the presence of DHK (Rothstein et al., 1994). GLT-1-mediated glutamate transport was reduced significantly by 2 d after NSV infection and continued to decline thereafter (p < 0.05). By day 6 after infection GLT-1-mediated glutamate transport was only 25% that of baseline (Fig. 4E). This reduction was even more pronounced than the downregulation of GLT-1 protein levels, suggesting that mechanisms such as blockade of GLT-1 trafficking to the membrane surface might contribute to the reduction. Interestingly, because non-GLT-1-mediated transport remains constant during infection (data not shown), it is likely that other glutamate transporters present in the membrane fraction (such as GLAST) are not altered significantly in response to NSV infection. Therefore, GLT-1 protein levels and GLT-1-mediated glutamate transport are reduced in the spinal cord during NSV infection, and this reduction immediately precedes the onset of motor neuron death.
BALB/cBy mice are uniquely resistant to NSV-induced hindlimb paralysis (Thach et al., 2000). We investigated whether this resistance might be related either to increased basal glutamate transport or to sustained glutamate transport in response to NSV infection. We found that hindlimb grip strength did not decline over the time course of infection in these animals (Fig. 5A) and that there was no detectable loss of motor neurons in the spinal cord after infection (Fig. 5B). When GLT-1 expression in lumbar spinal cord lysates of NSV-infected BALB/c mice was examined, protein levels did not decline over the course of infection (5C,D, NSV). Additionally, baseline glutamate transport function was approximately fivefold greater in uninfected BALB/cBy mice compared with C57BL/6 mice (Fig. 5E)(p < 0.05). Interestingly, we did find that functional glutamate transport declined by day 6 d after infection in NSV-infected BALB/cBy mice (Fig. 5F), suggesting that the elevated baseline transport provided a buffer against excitotoxic motor neuron death and is one factor that renders these mice resistant to NSV.
Finally, because several studies have demonstrated the ability of minocycline to protect motor neurons in rodent models of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) (Van Den Bosch et al., 2002c; Zhu et al., 2002; Kriz et al., 2003; Zhang et al., 2003), we examined whether minocycline could prevent NSV-induced motor neuron death and whether protection correlated with preserved GLT-1 expression. Minocycline has been demonstrated to have neuroprotective capacities that may relate to its inhibition of microglial activation (Yrjanheikki et al., 1998; Tikka and Koistinaho, 2001), immune effector cell activation (Brundula et al., 2002), or intracellular mitochondrial cytochrome c release (Zhu et al., 2002). When it was administered to C57BL/6 mice at the time of NSV challenge, minocycline potently protected animals from the development of hindlimb weakness (Fig. 6A) (p < 0.05 at days 2-10). Viral titration assays on spinal cord homogenates showed that minocycline had no effect on the ability of NSV to replicate or spread. Motor neurons were preserved in minocycline-treated, NSV-infected C57BL/6 mice, compared with NSV-infected mice treated with a vehicle control (Fig. 6B) (p < 0.05).
Lumbar spinal cord homogenates from minocycline-treated and minocyclinetreated/NSV-infected C57BL/6 mice were examined for GLT-1 expression by Western blot, and no decline in GLT-1 immunoreactivity was found (Fig. 6C,D). Quantitation of triplicate immunoblots revealed that minocycline-treated animals had maintained a consistent GLT-1 expression pattern from days 2 to 6 after NSV infection (p ≤ 0.05 at days 2-6, comparing NSV with NSV/mino). Finally, glutamate uptake assays were performed on spinal cord lysates from animals treated with minocycline alone (Fig. 6E) or minocycline with NSV challenge (Fig. 6F). We found a significant increase in both total and GLT-1-mediated glutamate transport in minocycline-treated animals such that there was 10-fold greater transport by day 6 after treatment (p < 0.05). Interestingly, in minocycline-treated, NSV-infected animals (Fig. 6F) there was no significant change in glutamate transport over time, indicating that the viral infection and minocycline had opposite effects that canceled each other. We suggest, therefore, that the protective effects of minocycline in preventing NSV-induced paralysis may be attributable to its ability to enhance glial glutamate transport and to provide a buffer against excitotoxic motor neuron death.
Discussion
We investigated the mechanisms underlying spinal motor neuron death occurring as a result of infection with a neuronotropic alphavirus. Studies over a number of years have confirmed that Sindbis virus can induce intrinsic neuronal death (Jackson et al., 1987, 1988; Levine and Griffin, 1993; Griffin et al., 1994; Cheng et al., 1996; Levine et al., 1996; J. Lewis et al., 1996; Nava et al., 1998; Jan and Griffin, 1999; D. Lewis et al., 1999; Liang et al., 1999; Kerr et al., 2002). Most of these studies were completed in newborn or suckling mice and showed that SV induces apoptosis of infected neurons. Indeed, the use of recombinant SV constructs expressing modulators of apoptotic cell death has clarified this intrinsic neuronal apoptosis pathway (Cheng et al., 1996; Lewis et al., 1996; Nava et al., 1998; Kerr et al., 2002). However, most strains of SV are incapable of inducing neuronal apoptosis in adult animals and cause little or no morbidity. This may be attributable to the fact that postmitotic neurons are less susceptible to apoptotic triggers in adult animals after the developmental apoptotic machinery has been downregulated.
NSV, a highly neurovirulent derivative of SV, is capable of inducing significant morbidity and mortality in adult mice and rats and, unlike other SV strains, causes hindlimb paralysis with widespread spinal motor neuron destruction. Because there is evidence to suggest that excitotoxicity occurs in the Sindbis model (Nargi-Aizenman and Griffin, 2001; Nargi-Aizenman et al., 2004), we investigated the mechanisms by which NSV infection triggers excitotoxicity in motor neurons. Our findings suggest that direct NSV destruction of motor neurons may be separable from other, simultaneously active motor neuron death pathways. Specifically, we propose that NSV activates extrinsic, non-cell-autonomous bystander death in addition to its direct destruction of infected cells.
In support of such a bystander mechanism, we found that relatively few motor neurons are infected directly by NSV and that astroglial glutamate transport is a critical mediator of motor neuron death. We found that inhibition of GLT-1-mediated transport potentiated motor neuron death in response to NSV infection. Additionally, blockage of calcium-permeable AMPA receptors protected NSV-infected animals from motor neuron death. The motor neuron loss observed with NASPM-treated, NSV-infected animals is likely attributable either to persistent excitotoxic death of motor neurons via activation of AMPA or NMDA glutamate receptors or to intrinsic death of infected motor neurons. We propose, therefore, that virus-induced dysregulation of astrocyte-mediated glutamate transport mediated by GLT-1 allows excess glutamate to accumulate extracellularly in the CNS. This excess synaptic glutamate is bound by calcium-permeable glutamate receptors on postsynaptic motor neurons, causing the excitotoxic destruction of that cell whether it harbors the virus or not.
Several lines of evidence suggest that GLT-1-mediated glutamate transport is important in protecting neurons from excitotoxic death and that downregulation of its function increases extracellular glutamate and predisposes susceptible neurons to excitotoxic injury (Rosenberg and Aizenman, 1989; Bridges et al., 1991; Rosenberg et al., 1992; Robinson et al., 1993; Rothstein et al., 1993, 1996; Dugan et al., 1995; Tanaka et al., 1997). To investigate further the role of the GLT-1 transporter in the NSV model, we examined GLT-1 expression longitudinally over time. We found a transient decrease in GLT-1 expression that recovered by 3 weeks after infection, which did not correlate with a loss of GFAP staining, implying that the loss of GLT-1 was not attributable to a loss of astrocytes. Western blot analysis of spinal cord lysates from days 0 to 7 showed that GLT-1 expression began to decline by day 3 after infection and continued to decline over the study time course. The immunohistochemical staining and the Western blot analysis lead us to believe that there was a reduction in the amount of GLT-1 protein present. Furthermore, downregulation of GLT-1 protein expression correlated with loss of glutamate transport function, which diminished immediately before the development of motor neuron injury.
Because the BALB/cBy mouse is relatively resistant to NSV infection, we investigated GLT-1 expression in these animals over the course of infection. Interestingly, we found that baseline glutamate transport correlated well with host susceptibility to NSV. Specifically, C57BL/6 mice (baseline spinal glutamate transport, 77 pmol · mg-1 · min-1) were more susceptible than Lewis rats (200 pmol · mg-1 · min-1) that were more susceptible than BALB/cBy mice (434 pmol · mg-1 · min-1). We hypothesize that these marked differences prevent glutamate transport from dropping below a critical limit in more resistant hosts, reducing or preventing motor neuron injury. It is therefore possible that the maintenance of a significantly higher level of GLT-1-mediated glutamate transport in the BALB/cBy mouse contributes to the resistance of that strain to NSV-mediated motor neuron loss.
The GLT-1 promoter region recently has been found to have a nuclear factor-κB (NF-κB) binding site, suggesting that the expression of GLT-1 can be controlled at a transcriptional level by secreted factors (Su et al., 2003). Indeed, some inflammatory cytokines are known to have a downregulatory effect on glutamate transport (Huang and O'Banion, 1998; Hensley et al., 2003). Sindbis virus elicits a significant inflammatory cytokine response in the CNS (Mokhtarian et al., 1989; Wesselingh et al., 1994; Rowell and Griffin, 1999; Binder and Griffin, 2001), many of which are known to activate the NF-κB pathway. Therefore, a possible mechanism to explain the GLT-1 downregulation in the lumbar spinal cords of NSV-infected animals may be that inflammatory factors, secreted either by endogenous microglial cells or influxing leukocytes, alter astrocyte function. Currently, we are investigating whether the immune response is regionally specific and, therefore, may modulate glutamate transport differentially in the brain and spinal cord.
The finding that minocycline protects mice from NSV-induced motor neuron death and prevents the loss of GLT-1 expression and function is consistent with the hypothesis that GLT-1 transport is an important mediator of motor neuron injury. Most studies examining the neuroprotective effects of minocycline have demonstrated diminished microglial activation and often reduced leukocyte recruitment (Tikka et al., 2001; Brundula et al., 2002). Both peripheral leukocytes and endogenous microglial cells migrate to the site of injury and function in damage control and initiation of the immune response by the secretion of factors such as chemokines, cytokines, and nitric oxide (for review, see Ransohoff and Tani, 1998; Biber et al., 2002). In the CNS the effect that these molecules have on neighboring astrocytes may be to cause them to alter their glutamate-regulating capacity. Our data, using minocycline, suggest that inhibition of microglial activation may prevent this loss of astrocyte function, resulting in the enhanced protection of motor neurons from excitotoxic death.
Dysregulation of glutamate transporters is likely to play an important role in both acute and chronic neurological processes via altered synaptic transmission and via the facilitation of glutamate-mediated excitotoxicity. In ALS the loss of glutamate transport, specifically excitatory amino acid transporter-2 (EAAT2; the human homolog of GLT-1), may contribute to motor neuron degeneration (Rothstein et al., 1992, 1995; Lin et al., 1998). Antisense knockdown or functional blockade of glutamate transporters produces neurotoxicity and can model the loss of motor neurons in ALS (Rothstein et al., 1993, 1996). In other neurologic disorders, such as Alzheimer's disease, Huntington's disease, stroke, traumatic brain injury, and multiple sclerosis, loss of excitatory synapses and disruption of glutamate transport are an early common finding (Masliah et al., 1996; Pitt et al., 2000) (for review, see (Gegelashvili et al., 2001). Finally, West Nile virus causes a syndrome in humans that is pathologically identical to Sindbis in rodents. Our study of the mechanisms involved in motor neuron loss during NSV infection likely will shed light on therapeutic targets for such diseases.
Footnotes
We acknowledge the Robert Packard Center for Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis Research, the Muscular Dystrophy Association, and the National Institutes of Health [Grants NS34175 (J.D.), NS02130 (D.A.K.), and NS33958 (J.D.R.)] for supporting this work. We also acknowledge Diane Griffin and Marie Hardwick for scientific input and Irina Shats, James Harper, and Deepa Deshpande for technical assistance.
Correspondence should be addressed to either of the following: Dr. Douglas Kerr, Johns Hopkins Hospital, Pathology 627 C, Baltimore, MD 21287, E-mail: dkerr{at}jhmi.edu; or Dr. David N. Irani, Johns Hopkins Hospital, JHOPC 5073A, Baltimore, MD 21287, E-mail: dirani{at}jhmi.edu.
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