Molecular Physiology and Genetics Section, Gerontology Research
Center, National Institute on Aging, Baltimore, Maryland (Y.L., A.H.,
J.M., G.S.R.); and Experimental Therapeutic Branch, National Institute
of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, Bethesda, Maryland (Z.-H.Q.)
More
and
more evidence suggests that increases in dopamine (DA) in striata may
participate in neurodegenerative processes during acute ischemia,
hypoxia, and excitotoxicity. With a rat model of intrastriatal
DA injection, we studied the molecular events involved in DA toxicity.
Intrastriatal injections of DA in amounts from 1 to 2 µmol result in
apoptotic cell death, as indicated by terminal deoxynucleotidyl
transferase labeling of DNA strand breaks and Klenow
polymerase-catalyzed [32P]deoxycytidine
triphosphate-labeled DNA laddering. Injections of DA produce a strong
and prolonged activated protein 1 (AP-1) activity that contains c-fos,
c-jun, and phosphorylated c-jun protein. DA injections also stimulate
the activity of nuclear factor-
B (NF-
B), an oxidative
stress-responsive transcription factor. Injection of curcumin at a dose
that selectively inhibits AP-1 activation without affecting NF-
B
activity attenuates DNA laddering induced by DA. Preinjection with
SN50, a specific permeable recombinant NF-
B translocation inhibitor
peptide, reduces DA-induced NF-
B activation and apoptosis. Moreover,
preinjection of the antioxidant GSH significantly inhibits both
DA-induced activation of transcription factors AP-1 and NF-
B and
subsequent apoptosis. Thus, our data suggest that DA-oxidative
stress-induced apoptosis in vivo is mediated by activation of
transcription factors AP-1 and NF-
B.
 |
Introduction |
Accumulating evidence suggests that a high availability of
dopamine (DA) in striata may participate in neurodegenerative
processes. These include ischemia, hypoxia (Akiyama et al., 1991
;
Buisson et al., 1992
), local exposure to neurotoxins such as high
concentrations of excitatory amino acids (Filloux and Wamsley, 1991
),
and methamphetamine (Schmidt et al., 1985
). For example, the local
striatal extracellular DA concentration can reach as high as 0.2 mM in
the gerbil ischemic model (Slivka et al., 1988
). Depletion of
endogenous DA by destruction of the nigrostriatal pathway reduces
ischemic damage to the striatum (Globus et al., 1987
; Buisson et al.,
1992
). However, the molecular events for this in vivo DA toxicity are unknown.
The in vitro cell culture studies suggest that DA toxicity is
linked to DA-oxidative stress-induced apoptosis. Chemically, DA
contains a catechol structure that can spontaneously oxidize in vitro
or via an enzyme-catalyzed reaction in vivo to form reactive oxygen
species (ROS) and quinones (Graham, 1978
). ROS can damage cellular
components such as lipids, proteins, and DNA. DA quinones can bind to
cysteine or cysteinyl residues on proteins, thereby interfering with
protein functions. Both free and protein-bound cysteinyl DA can
be detected in the DA-enriched areas in the brain (Fornstedt et al.,
1989
) or increased by direct intrastriatal DA injections (Hastings et
al., 1996
). In addition, quinones can further polymerize to form
another neurotoxin, neuromelanin, which occurs in the DA-containing
neurons of the substantia nigra. Apoptosis is a controlled form of cell
death and has been suggested to participate in the cascade of some
neurodegenerative diseases, e.g., stroke, Alzheimer's disease, and
Parkinson's disease (PD; Mochizuki et al., 1997
). The ability of DA to
induce apoptosis has been demonstrated both in in vitro cell cultures
(Ziv et al., 1994
; Luo et al., 1998b
) and after in vivo intrastriatal
DA injections in rats (Hattori et al., 1998
). The apoptotic cells
induced by DA are characterized by condensed chromatin, DNA
fragmentation, and shrinkage in cell shape. The in vitro studies show
that DA (0.01-1.00 mM)-induced apoptosis is associated with ROS
because it can be effectively inhibited by application of antioxidants,
such as N-acetylcysteine, catalase, GSH, and dithiothreitol
(DTT; Ziv et al., 1994
; Gabbay et al., 1996
; Shinkai et al., 1997
; Luo
et al., 1998b
). Moreover, our recent in vitro cell culture studies have
demonstrated that the stress-activated protein kinase (SAPK/JNK)-c-jun
pathway contributes to DA-oxidation-induced apoptosis (Luo et al.,
1998b
). However, the molecular events relevant to the processes of
DA-oxidative stress-induced apoptosis in vivo are unknown.
Recent evidence suggests that prolonged activation of activated protein
1 (AP-1) and nuclear factor-
B (NF-
B) in the CNS may play an
important role in determining the cell death in response to oxidative
stress, ischemia, and neurotoxins. The AP-1 proteins consist of a
homodimer of c-jun or heterodimer of c-fos/c-jun family members
(Johnson and McKnight, 1989
). AP-1 gene transcription activity is
strongly potentiated by phosphorylation of c-jun (Smeal et al., 1991
).
Recently, the phosphorylation of c-jun has been shown to be tightly
associated with induction of apoptosis in several systems. These
include the cerebral ischemia-reperfusion model in rats (Herdegen et
al., 1998
), a kainate excitotoxicity in mice (Yang et al., 1997
),
survival signal withdrawal in both cerebellar granule and sympathetic
neurons (Eilers et al., 1998
; Watson et al., 1998
), and DA toxicity in
cell cultures (Luo et al., 1998b
). NF-
B is also an oxidative
stress-responsive transcription factor. Unlike c-jun, NF-
B is
normally present in the cytosol, where it is bound to an inhibitory
protein component I
B (Liou and Baltimore, 1993
). On activation,
I
B undergoes phosphorylation, ubiquination and degradation, thus
releasing active NF-
B and allowing it to translocate into the
nucleus. Like the phosphorylation of c-jun, the activation of NF-
B
is also linked to the triggering of apoptosis in some systems. These
include the apoptotic hippocampal CA1 neurons in the rat global
ischemic model (Clemens et al., 1998
) and striatal neuronal apoptosis
induced by quinolinic acid (Qin et al., 1998
). In nonneuronal cells,
activation of AP-1 and NF-
B stimulates production of
Fas ligand (Kasibhatla et al., 1998
), a known
apoptotic death gene acting through the caspase cascade (reviewed by
Nagata, 1997
). In this article, we report that intrastriatal DA
injection does activate both AP-1 and NF-
B oxidative stress-response
transcription factors in rats. DA also induces production of c-fos,
c-jun, and the phosphorylated active form of c-jun, which contribute to
the AP-1 activity. Both AP-1 activity and NF-
B activation are
associated with DA-induced apoptosis. Moreover, the DA-induced
transcription activity and the following apoptosis, can be inhibited by
administration of the antioxidant GSH.
 |
Experimental Procedures |
Materials.
Polyclonal anti-c-jun IgG was obtained from
Calbiochem (San Diego, CA). Antibody against phospho-specific c-jun
(Ser63) II was obtained from New England Biolabs Inc. (Beverly, MA).
Monoclonal anti-c-fos was obtained from Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Inc.
(Santa Cruz, CA). DA was obtained from Research Biochemicals
International (Natick, MA). Curcumin and GSH were obtained from Sigma
Chemical Co. (St. Louis, MO). SN50 and SN50M were obtained from BIOMOL Research Laboratories, Inc. (Plymouth Meeting, PA).
Intrastriatal Injections.
The procedures were described
previously (Hattori et al., 1998
). All surgeries were performed with
adult male Wistar rats (6 months old; 360-543 g). The rats were
anesthetized with ketamine (100 mg/kg i.p.) and placed into a
stereotaxic instrument (David Kopf Instruments, Tajunga, CA). The
stereotaxic coordinates were 0.2 mm anterior from bregma, 3 mm from
midline, and 7 mm from the skull surface. The chemicals were injected
with a Hamilton syringe in a volume of 2 µl. The period for injection
was at least 2 min. The animals were sacrificed at the indicated times.
Striata were removed and frozen immediately at
80°C.
All solutions were freshly prepared. DA and GSH solutions were prepared
with sterile distilled water (pH 7.0-7.5). SN50 was dissolved in 0.9%
NaCl solution. Curcumin was dissolved in dimethyl sulfoxide. For
control purposes, the same vehicles used for the reagents were prepared
and injected on the opposite side of the striatum of the same brain.
For inhibitory studies, all inhibitory reagents except GSH were
injected 15 min before DA. GSH was injected 1 h before
administration of DA.
Genomic DNA Isolation and 3'-OH End Labeling.
The genomic
DNA was isolated by following a method described elsewhere (Hattori et
al., 1998
). Briefly, rats were sacrificed at the indicated time.
Striata were dissected and homogenized individually in 0.6 ml of lysis
buffer containing 10 mM Tris-HCl, 100 mM EDTA, and 0.5% SDS. Samples
were first incubated with DNase-free RNase (10 mg/ml) for 3 h and
then treated with proteinase K (100 µg/ml) overnight at 55°C. After
that, samples were extracted with equal volumes of a mixture of
phenol/chloroform/isoamyl alcohol (25:24:1) three times. DNA was
precipitated with 0.25 volume of 10 M ammonium acetate and 2 volumes of
ethanol for 4 h at 4°C. DNA pellets were washed with 70%
ethanol, air dried, and dissolved with TE buffer (5 mN Tris-HCl,
pH 8.0; 20 mM EDTA). DNA concentration was determined via a UV-visible
spectrophotometer (Pharmacia Biotech, Inc., Piscataway, NJ).
The 3'-OH end of DNA was labeled with the procedures described by Rosl
(1992)
with a minor modification. Briefly, genomic DNA was incubated
with 1 U/µg of Klenow polymerase (5000 U/ml; Promega, Madison, WI)
and 0.5 µCi/µg [32P]deoxycytidine
triphosphate (dCTP; 3000 Ci/mol; Amersham, Arlington Heights, IL) in a
buffer containing 50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.2, 10 mM
MgSO4, and 1 mM DTT for 10 min at 30°C. The
reaction was terminated with 10 mM EDTA. The labeled DNA was
precipitated with 2.5 M ammonium acetate and 2.5 volumes of ethanol in
the presence of 50 µM tRNA carrier for 1 h at 4°C. The DNA was
collected by centrifugation for 30 min at 4°C. This DNA pellet was
then washed twice with ice-cold 70% ethanol and dissolved in 20 µl
of TE buffer. The samples were electrophoresed on 1.8% agarose gels.
The gels were first stained with ethidium bromide to visualize the
molecular-weight standards (Research Genetics, Inc., Huntsville, AL)
and photographed for later reference. The gels were then dried and
exposed to autoradiography film for visualization of labeled DNA ladders.
Nuclear Extract Preparation.
Nuclear extracts were prepared
via procedures described elsewhere (Qin et al., 1998
). In brief,
striatal tissue was homogenized with a Dounce homogenizer in 4 volumes
of buffer containing 10 mM HEPES-NaOH, pH 7.9, 0.25 M sucrose,
15 mM KCl, 5 mM EDTA, 0.15 mM spermine, 0.5 mM spermidine, 1 mM DTT,
and 1 µg/ml protease inhibitor cocktail (a mixture of
phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, benzamidine, leupeptin, and antipain,
each at 1 µg/ml). The nuclei-containing homogenates were obtained by
centrifugation at 1000g for 10 min and washed twice in 4 volumes of buffer containing 10 mM HEPES-NaOH (pH 7.9), 1.5 mM
MgCl2, 10 mM KCl, 1 mM EDTA, 1 mM DTT, and 1 µg/ml of the aforementioned protease inhibitor cocktail. These washed
nuclear pellets were then resuspended with 4 volumes of buffer
containing 10 mM HEPES-NaOH (pH 7.9), 1.5 mM
MgCl2, 1 M KCl, 1 mM EDTA, 1 mM DTT, and 1 µg/ml protease inhibitor cocktail and incubated on ice for 30 min.
The suspension was centrifuged at 14,000g for 30 min at
4°C. The supernatant was collected and dialyzed against 100 volumes
of buffer containing 10 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5), 10 mM
MgCl2, 100 mM KCl, 1 mM EDTA, 1 mM DTT, and the protease inhibitors. The supernatant was then collected, aliquotted, and stored at
80°C. Protein concentrations of the nuclear extracts were determined by a MicroBCA kit from Pierce (Rockford, IL).
Electrophoretic Mobility Shift Assays (EMSAs).
EMSAs were
performed by use of 32P-labeled double-stranded
oligonucleotide containing a specific consensus sequence recognized by
each transcription factor. Human metallothionein
IIA AP-1 consensus and mutant oligonucleotides
were purchased from Santa Cruz Biotechnology. NF
B consensus
oligonucleotide was purchased from Promega. Probes were labeled with T4
polynucleotide kinase (New England Biolabs) and
[
-32P]ATP and purified with G-25 spin
columns (Boehringer Mannheim, Indianapolis, IN). The specific activity
of the labeled oligonucleotides was about 50,000 to 100,000 cpm/ng.
Binding reactions were performed for 30 min at room temperature. The
binding reaction contained 5 µg of nuclear extract, 1 µg of
poly(dI.dC), 1 ng of 32P-labeled
oligonucleotide, 10 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5), 10 mM
MgCl2, 100 mM KCl, 1 mM EDTA, 1 mM DTT, 10%
glycerol, and protease inhibitors. The reaction volume was 20 µl. For
supershift assays, 0.5 to 1.0 µg of antibody was incubated with the
nuclear extract in binding buffer for 30 min at room temperature before
the binding reaction. For competition studies, a 1- to 25-fold excess
of unlabeled oligonucleotides or AP-1 mutant oligonucleotides was added
in the binding assay. After the reaction, bound and free probes were
separated by electrophoresis on 6% polyacrylamide gels in 0.5 times
Tris-Boric acid-EDTA buffer. The gels were dried and exposed to
autoradiography film overnight at
80°C.
Lysate Preparation and Western Immunoblotting.
Striatal
tissue was homogenated with 200 µl of ice-cold lysis buffer
containing 25 mM HEPES, pH 7.5, 300 mM NaCl, 1.5 mM
MgCl2, 0.2 mM EDTA, 0.1% Triton X-100, 20 mM
-glycerophosphate, 0.1 mM sodium orthovanadate, 0.5 mM DTT, 100 µg/ml phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, and 2 µg/ml leupeptin,
followed by sonication for 10 s on ice. The cellular extract was
then centrifuged for 30 min at 14,000 rpm to remove debris. The
supernatant was used immediately or aliquotted and stored at
70°C
for further use. Protein concentration was determined by a Bio-Rad
protein reagent kit (Bio-Rad, Richmond, CA).
For Western immunoblotting, equal amounts of lysate protein (40 µg/lane) were run on 8 to 16% SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and electrophoretically transferred to nitrocellulose. Nitrocellulose blots were first blocked with 10% nonfat dry milk in TBST buffer (20 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.4, 500 mM NaCl, and 0.01% Tween-20) and then
incubated with primary antibodies (phospho-Ser63-specific c-jun,
1:1000; Biolab; polyclonal c-jun, 1:1000; Calbiochem; monoclonal c-fos,
1:500; Santa Cruz) in TBST containing 5% BSA overnight at 4°C.
Immunoreactivity was detected by sequential incubation with horseradish
peroxidase-conjugated secondary antibody (1:5000; Jackson
ImmunoResearch Laboratories, Inc., West Grove, PA) and Renaissance substrate (DuPont, Wilmington, DE).
Quantification.
All the bands of interest were
semiquantified by the National Institutes of Health Image 1.55 program.
 |
Results |
Intrastriatal DA Injections and Apoptosis.
As we reported
previously, intrastriatal DA injections in rats resulted in typical
apoptotic cell death (Hattori et al., 1998
). The DA-induced dead cells
can be labeled easily by the terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase
(tdt)-mediated dUTP-biotin nick-end labeling (TUNEL) technique
and show characteristic morphology of apoptosis. The TUNEL-positive
cells exhibited condensed granulated and marginated labeling and DNA
fragmentation and were shrunken and irregular in shape. Although DNA
fragmentation could not be detected by conventional ethidium bromide
staining after agarose electrophoresis, it could easily be found with
high-sensitivity Klenow polymerase-catalyzed
[
-32P]dCTP labeling. The genomic DNA
isolated from DA-injected striatum showed a characteristic
oligonucleosome-length (about 200-base pairs addition)
fragmentation pattern. In contrast to that from DA-injected striatum,
the DNA from control striatum (contralateral NaCl injection sites) did
not show an obvious [32P]DNA ladder (Fig.
1). Thus, we used the sensitive Klenow
polymerase-catalyzed [32P]DNA ladder labeling
as a parameter to determine apoptotic processes in our subsequent
studies.

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Fig. 1.
DA-induced DNA fragmentation in rat striatum. Equal
amounts of either DA or NaCl were injected into each side of the
striatum of the same rat. Genomic DNA was isolated. The 3'-OH end of
the DNA (3 µg/lane) was labeled with [ -32P]dCTP in
the presence of Klenow polymerase. A, time course of DNA laddering
induced by injections of either 1 µmol of DA (+) or 1 µmol of NaCl
( ). B, concentration-dependent studies of DA-induced DNA
fragmentation. The rat striatum received injections of DA (+) at the
indicated amount for 24 h. ( ), injection of NaCl. All
experiments were repeated at least three times, and similar results
were obtained.
|
|
DA-induced DNA fragmentation is dependent on time after intrastriatal
injection. As shown in Fig. 1A, DNA fragmentation occurred at 24 h
and significantly increased at 48 h after injection of 1 µmol of
DA. By using the TUNEL technique, we could see apoptotic cells 8 h
after intrastriatal injection of 2 µmol of DA (Hattori et al., 1998
).
With 24 h as a time point, we observed the concentration dependence of DNA laddering induced by DA. The DNA ladder was proportionally increased at DA amounts of 0.5 to 2 µmol (Fig. 1B).
DA-Stimulated AP-1 Activity.
By using in vitro neonatal rat
striatal cells and nonneuronal cell cultures, we have previously
found that DA induces apoptosis through the c-jun-
NH2-terminal kinase, also called SAPK pathway (Luo et al., 1998b
). In that study, we observed that a strong and
sustained activation of JNK and consequent phosphorylation of c-jun is
essential for DA-induced apoptosis. Recently, phosphorylation of c-jun
was also shown to be critical for apoptosis in some neuronal systems
(Eilers et al., 1998
; Herdegen et al., 1998
; Watson et al., 1998
).
Prolonged induction of c-fos is also an important factor to initiate
apoptosis in some systems (Smeyne et al., 1993
; Haffzi et al., 1997
).
Thus, we tested whether DA could induce c-jun, phospho-c-jun, and c-fos
containing AP-1 transcription activity in vivo.
We first examined AP-1 activity with EMSA. As shown in Fig.
2, intrastriatal DA injections in rats
significantly increased the binding of nuclear extracts to
[32P]-labeled AP-1 consensus sequences. The
increase in DA-induced AP-1 binding was dependent on the time after DA
injection (Fig. 2A). We used the National Institutes of Health Image
1.55 program to quantify these data. At 8 and 48 h after 2 µmol
DA administration, AP-1 activity was increased 2.2-fold (±0.2;
n = 4) and 3.0-fold (±0.2; n = 4)
compared with 2 µmol NaCl control injection at the 8-h time point
(Fig. 2A, bottom). Injection of the same amount of NaCl had little
effect on AP-1 binding within 8 to 24 h after injection (Fig. 2A).
Within 24 h, we also tested effect of DA dose on AP-1 activation.
DA proportionally increased AP-1 binding from 0.5 to 2.0 µmol (Fig.
2B). The [32P]-labeled AP-1 binding of nuclear
extract from DA-stimulated striatum could be completely competed by an
excess amount of unlabeled AP-1 consensus oligonucleotide but was not
affected by same excess of mutated AP-1 oligos (Fig. 2C). This
observation indicates a specificity of the nuclear protein to bind to
AP-1 consensus oligonucleotide.

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Fig. 2.
DA-stimulated AP-1 activity. Striatal nuclear
extracts (5 µg/lane) from the DA-injected side (+) and the
contralateral NaCl-injected side ( ) were used to perform EMSA to bind
radiolabeled AP-1 consensus oligonucleotide. A, time course of
DA-induced AP-1 activity. B, concentration dependence of DA-stimulated
AP-1 binding. In these experiments, the length of DA stimulation in rat
striata was 24 h. In both A and B, the top panels are
representative autoradiograms for AP-1 activity assays. The bottom
shows semiquantification of AP-1 activity from four independent
experiment determinations by use of the National Institutes of Health
Image 1.55 program. AP-1 activity is expressed as the fold of optical
density of [32P]-labeled AP-1-binding band compared with
that induced by either 2-µmol NaCl injections for 8 h (Control
in A) or 0.5-µmol NaCl injections for 24 h (Control in B). C,
specificity of AP-1 activity assay. Nuclear extracts from striata
receiving DA injection 24 h prior were prepared. The unlabeled
AP-1 consensus oligonucleotide (Oligo) or mutated unlabeled AP-1
oligonucleotide (Mut. Oligo) were first incubated with nuclear extract
in binding buffer for 30 min at room temperature. After that, the
[32P]-labeled AP-1 was added to perform the normal
binding assay. ( ), without addition of unlabeled nucleotide. The
figure represents at least three independent experiments.
|
|
Next, we examined whether the DA-induced AP-1 complex contains c-fos,
c-jun, and phosphorylated c-jun protein by a supershift assay. The rats
were injected with 2 µmol of DA, striata were collected at the
indicated times, and nuclear extracts were prepared. Treatment of
DA-stimulated extracts with antibodies against the DNA-binding region
of either c-fos or c-jun before the binding assay reduced the ability
to bind AP-1 consensus oligonucleotide by about 30 to 80% at all time
points (Fig. 3). Preincubation of the
extracts with anti-phospho-Ser63-specific c-jun increased the broad
AP-1-binding band, as shown in Fig. 3. These data suggest that
AP-1-binding complexes in DA-stimulated samples contain c-jun, phosphorylated c-jun, and c-fos as a heterodimer or in complex with
other AP-1-binding members. To further confirm these results, we also
conducted Western immunoblotting assays in whole striatal tissue
lysates. As shown in Fig. 4, DA did
stimulate phosphorylation of c-jun. The phosphorylated c-jun had a slow
migration with a molecular size of about 45 kDa (Fig. 4, top). The
molecular weight of c-jun per se was about 39,000. Treatment of the
blot with phosphatase (50 U/ml) could abolish the immunoreactivity of
the 45-kDa band to anti-phospho-c-jun IgG without effect on the 39-kDa
protein immunoreactivity to anti-c-jun IgG (data not shown), suggesting that the 45-kDa protein was in an active phosphorylated form. The
amount of phosphorylation of c-jun in whole lysates was gradually increased from 8 to 48 h after DA injection (Fig. 4, top and
middle). At 24 and 48 h, the 45-kDa protein migrated more slowly
than proteins at 8 h and their controls, suggesting that multiple
phosphorylation of c-jun occurred. This time course of formation of
phosphorylation of c-jun was parallel to the time course of DA-induced
AP-1 binding activity (Fig. 2A) and apoptosis (Fig. 1A; Hattori et al.,
1998
). Intrastriatal DA injection also increased the amount of
c-jun and c-fos (Fig. 4, top and bottom). Interestingly, this 39-kDa c-jun protein appeared to peak 8 h after DA injection, whereas the
62-kDa c-fos protein peaked 24 h after DA injection. Injections of
the same amount of NaCl on the opposite side of the same brain had
little effect on the expression of c-jun but slightly increased phosphorylated 45-kDa c-jun (without high phosphorylation; Fig. 4, top)
at 24 and 48 h. The amount of c-fos was also slightly increased
48 h after NaCl injection. Taken together, the results suggest
that c-fos, c-jun, and phosphorylated c-jun protein participate in
DA-induced AP-1 activation, during which apoptosis was observed.

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Fig. 3.
DA-stimulated AP-1 complex contained both c-jun and
c-fos protein. At the indicated times after intrastriatal injection,
striatal nuclear extract were prepared. Supershift AP-1 activity assays
were performed in the presence of various antibodies (c-fos, 1 µg;
c-jun, 0.5 µg; phospho-specific anti-c-jun, 0.5 µg). Autoradiograms
representative of striata from three independent injected rats at each
time point are shown. A semiquantitative analysis for AP-1 activity in
the presence of antibodies is discussed in the text. (+), 2-µmol DA
injection; ( ), 2-µmol NaCl injection.
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Fig. 4.
DA increased productions of c-jun, phosphorylation of
c-jun, and c-fos protein. Western immunoblotting of tissue
lysates was performed with anti-phospho-specific c-jun (80 µg of
lysate protein/lane) or c-jun and c-fos (both having 40 µg of
protein/lane). Note that phospho-c-jun has a slower migration than
unphosphorylated c-jun (molecular size about 45 versus 39 kDa,
respectively; top). At 24 and 48 h after DA injection, the
phospho-c-jun protein shows a slower migration than those at 8 h
and control sides, suggesting a high phosphorylation of c-jun. The last
lane on the top right shows a 46-kDa molecular size standard as a
reference. Molecular size for c-fos protein is 62 kDa. The
semiquantification of DA-stimulated phosphorylated c-jun, c-jun, and
c-fos production was made in comparison with that in the presence of 2 µmol of NaCl for 8 h (Control). These results represent the
average ± S.E. of four independent experiments.
|
|
DA-Stimulated NF-
B Activity.
NF-
B is an inducible
transcription factor and plays an essential role in response to
oxidative stress. It has been studied in more detail in tumor necrosis
factor-mediated signaling and is believed to have antideath
activity in nonneuronal cells (Wu et al., 1998
). In the central nervous
system, the role of NF-
B is controversial. With in vitro primary
hippocampal neuronal cell cultures and neuronal PC12 cells, the
activation of NF-
B is associated with neuronal survival (Lezoualc'h
et al., 1998
). However, in the rat ischemic model and excitotoxicity,
the long-term activation of NF-
B is linked with apoptosis (Clemens
et al., 1998
; Qin et al., 1998
). In our study, we examined DA-induced
NF-
B activity in vivo.
Intrastriatal injections of DA resulted in stimulation of NF-
B
activity. As shown in Fig. 5, NF-
B was
activated in a time- and concentration-dependent manner. After
administration of 2 µmol of DA, the binding of nuclear extract to
NF-
B consensus sequence appeared at 24 h and increased at
48 h (Fig. 5A). Unlike the kinetics of DA-induced AP-1 activation,
which was observed 8 h after administration of 2 µmol of DA
(Fig. 2A), the onset of NF-
B activation was delayed until 24 h.
The NF-
B binding activity was increased when rat striata received 1 to 2 µmol of DA (Fig. 5B). Injection of 0.5 µmol of DA had little
effect on NF-
B activation (Fig. 5B). This nuclear NF-
B binding
activity is specific because it could be completely competed by an
excess amount of unlabeled NF-
B consensus oligonucleotide (Fig. 5C).

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Fig. 5.
DA-stimulated NF- B activity. The procedures for
intrastriatal injections, nuclear extract preparation, and EMSAs were
identical with those in Fig. 2 except for the use of radiolabeled
NF- B consensus sequence. A, time course of DA-induced NF- B
activity. Note that NF- B activation occurred 24 h after DA
injection. AP-1 activation appeared 8 h after DA administration.
Bottom, a quantified result of three independent experiments. The
density value of a preparation injected with 2 µmol of NaCl for
8 h was chosen as a control. B, concentration-dependence of
DA-stimulated NF- B binding. In these experiments, the length of DA
stimulation in rat striata was 24 h. For quantification, the
density of preparation injected with 0.5 µmol of NaCl for 24 h
was used as a control. The data are means ± S.E. of three
independent experiments. C, specificity of NF- B activity assay.
Nuclear extracts from striata that received a DA injection 24 h
before sacrifice were prepared. The unlabeled NF- B consensus
oligonucleotide (Oligo) was preincubated with nuclear extract (5 µg/lane) in binding buffer for 30 min at room temperature. After
that, the [32P]-labeled NF- B consensus oligonucleotide
was added to perform gel shift assays. ( ), without addition of
unlabeled nucleotide. The figure is representative of at least three
independent experiments.
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|
DA-Induced Apoptosis and Activation of NF-
B and AP-1.
It
was important to determine whether activation of AP-1 and NF-
B might
contribute to the process for DA-induced apoptosis in vivo. We first
studied the effect of curcumin on DA-induced AP-1 activity and
subsequent apoptosis. Curcumin is a dietary pigment that has been shown
to inhibit c-jun/AP-1 activation (Huang et al., 1991
) and NF-
B in
nonneuronal cells (Singh and Aggarwal, 1995
). Recent evidence suggests
that the inhibition of c-jun/AP-1 activation is via inhibition of the
JNK pathway by curcumin (Chen and Tan, 1998
). As shown in Fig.
6A, preinjections of curcumin did indeed
inhibit DA-induced c-jun- and c-fos-associated AP-1 binding activity.
At injection amounts of 1 and 10 µmol, curcumin dramatically
inhibited AP-1 binding in a concentration-dependent manner (Fig. 6A).
Preinjection of 1 µmol of curcumin also inhibited production of c-jun
and phosphorylation of c-jun induced by DA (data not shown). Although a
small inhibition of DA-induced NF-
B activity was observed by
curcumin at 10 µmol, no inhibitory effect was seen at 1 µmol (Fig.
6A), suggesting a specificity to inhibit AP-1 activation by 1 µmol of
curcumin in neuronal tissue. Based on these data, we chose 1 µmol of
curcumin to examine the effect on DA-induced DNA laddering. As shown in
Fig. 6B, the DA-induced DNA ladder was greatly reduced in the presence
of 1 µmol of curcumin. However, the injection of same amount of
curcumin showed some cytotoxicity, as indicated by the appearance of a
DNA ladder (Fig. 6B). This may be caused by the interruption of normal
c-jun physiological functions (see Discussion). Thus, the
AP-1 activation may contribute to DA-induced apoptosis in vivo.

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Fig. 6.
Curcumin (Cur) reduced both DA-induced AP-1
activity and apoptosis. Curcumin was injected into rat striatum 15 min
before DA administration. Twenty-four hours after DA injection, the
rats were sacrificed, and striata were removed. A, effects of curcumin
on DA-induced AP-1 and NF- B activity. Assays for AP-1 and NF- B
activity were performed. Top, a representative autoradiograph of
assays. Bottom, semiquantification of above assays. Data are
averages ± S.E. of three independent experiments. The optical
density in the condition of 2-µmol NaCl injection for 24 h was
chosen as a control. Note that curcumin at 1 to 10 µmol
preferentially inhibited AP-1 activity with little or no effect on
NF- B binding induced by DA. B, DNA ladder analysis. Genomic DNA from
each striatum was isolated and labeled with [ -32P]dCTP
in the presence of Klenow polymerase. All the above experiments had
been independently repeated three times, and similar results were
obtained.
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We examined the role of NF-
B activation in DA-induced apoptosis by
using SN50. SN50 is a cell-permeable inhibitory peptide and has been
shown to block translocation of the NF-
B active complex into the
nucleus both in in vitro cell cultures (Lin et al., 1995
) and after in
vivo brain injections (Qin et al., 1998
). SN50 is a specific NF-
B
translocation inhibitor. In cell cultures, SN50 specifically inhibits
NF-
B activation by various agonists, whereas mutated peptide analog
SN50M, which has the same peptide sequence as SN50 except for Lys363 to
Asn and Arg364 to Gly in the region of nuclear localization signal of
NF-
B, have no ability to prevent NF-
B translocation (Lin et al.,
1995
). In in vivo studies, SN50 has also been shown to specifically
inhibit NF-
B activity without affecting activation of AP-1 and a
helix-turn-helix transcription factor, OCT-1 induced by
intrastriatal injections of quinolinic acid (Qin et al., 1998
).
Preinjection of SN50 (20 µg) into striata greatly reduced DA-induced
NF-
B activity (Fig. 7A). SN50M (20 µg), an inactive peptide serving as a control, has no effect on
DA-stimulated NF-
B binding activity (Fig. 7A). We made use of 20 µg of SN50 to examine its role in DA-induced apoptosis. As shown in
Fig. 7B, blocking of NF-
B translocation greatly reduced DNA
laddering induced by DA (Fig. 7B). However, injections of SN50 alone,
like curcumin, showed a cytotoxic effect, as indicated by a weak DNA
ladder, suggesting that SN50 interrupts the physiological NF-
B
function (see Discussion). Taken together, this delayed but
sustained NF-
B activation may also contribute to DA-induced
apoptosis.

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Fig. 7.
SN50 reduced both DA-induced NF-kB activation and
apoptosis. Identical amounts of either SN50 or SN50M (serving as a
peptide control) were injected into rat striata 15 min before DA
administration. Forty-eight hours after DA injection, the rats were
sacrificed and striata were removed. Striatal nuclear extracts were
prepared. The samples (5 µg/lane) were assayed to determine the
ability to bind 32P-labeled NF- B consensus sequence. A,
autoradiographs representative of striata (top) or quantified results
(bottom) from at least three independent experiments. For studies of
the effects of SN50 on DA-induced DNA laddering, the above identical
protocol for drug treatments was used. Forty-eight hours after DA
injection, genomic DNA was isolated. DNA ladder was detected by the
Klenow polymerase-catalyzed [ -32P]dCTP-incorporation
technique. B, a representative autoradiograph of three
determinations.
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Antioxidant GSH, DA-Induced AP-1 and NF-
B Activation, and
Apoptosis.
As we mentioned in the Introduction, DA-induced
apoptosis is thought to be mediated by oxidative stress (Ziv et al.,
1994
; Luo et al., 1998b
). Because of the inherent instability of the catechol moiety of DA, DA is easily oxidized to form ROS and quinones through either autoxidation or enzyme-catalyzed reactions (Graham, 1978
). In striatum, the DA-oxidative products are easily detected by
formation of free and protein-bound cysteinyl DA, by which the
endogenous GSH is greatly exhausted (Hastings et al., 1996
). In our
study, we examined the effect of exogenous GSH on DA-induced activation
of transcription factors AP-1 and NF-
B and subsequent apoptosis in vivo.
As expected, preinjections of GSH (0.2 µmol) prevented both 1-µmol
DA-induced AP-1 and NF-
B activation and apoptosis (Fig. 8). Administration of 0.2 µmol of GSH
also greatly reduced DNA fragmentation by 2 µmol of DA. Thus,
DA-induced apoptosis is mediated by an oxidation-associated activation
of AP-1 and NF-
B.

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Fig. 8.
Antioxidant GSH prevented both DA-induced AP-1
and NF- B activation and subsequent apoptosis. GSH (0.2 µmol) was
injected into rat striatum 1 h before DA administration.
Twenty-four hours after DA injection, the rats were sacrificed, and the
striata were removed. A, effects of GSH on DA-induced AP-1 and NF- B
activity. Striatal nuclear extracts were prepared, and the AP-1 and
NF- B activities were determined. Top, representative autoradiograph
of assays. Bottom, semiquantification (mean ± S.E.) of the above
assays from three independent experimental determinations. The samples
from 1-µmol NaCl injection sites were used as control. B, DNA ladder
analysis. Genomic DNA from each striatum was isolated. The 3'-OH end
was labeled with [ -32P]dCTP in the presence of Klenow
polymerase. The figure is a representative of at least three
determinations.
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Discussion |
In this study, we have confirmed that intrastriatal DA injections
induce apoptosis in rats (Hattori et al., 1998
). As we reported earlier
(Hattori et al., 1998
), DA-induced apoptosis is restricted to the
injected area. Morphologically, the apoptotic cells show typical
chromatin condensation, DNA fragmentation, shrinkage, and irregular
cell shape. DNA ladders can be detected only by highly sensitive Klenow
polymerase-catalyzed [32P]dCTP labeling but not
by conventional ethidium bromide staining. This may be because of the
small portion of apoptotic cells in vivo. Both TUNEL staining and DNA
laddering can readily be detected at 24 h after 2 µmol DA injection.
As in the in vitro cell culture studies (Luo et al., 1998b
), DA in vivo
stimulates a strong and sustained AP-1 activity. Consistent with this
activity, the AP-1 components, including c-fos, c-jun, and
phosphorylated c-jun, are also persistently increased (Figs. 3 and 4).
Because the AP-1 binding is decreased in the presence of antibody
against either c-fos or c-jun, it appears that AP-1 activation may be
caused by a c-fos/c-jun heterodimer. Phosphorylation of c-jun enhanced
the AP-1 activity. By using immunoblotting, we demonstrated that
phosphorylated c-jun occurs, and the extent of phosphorylation of c-jun
appears to be higher (Fig. 4A) after 24 h than 8 h after DA
injection. Our results appear to differ from those of Schwarzschild et
al. (1997)
, who report that DA at a concentration of 100 µM has no
effect on phosphorylation of c-jun in E18 rat striatal cells. Although
we used adult rats and injected a different concentration of DA, note
that the E18 rat striatal cells in the Schwarzschild et al. article
were cultured in a medium with B-27 supplement that contained
free-radical scavengers including catalase, superoxide dismutase,
DL-
-tocopherol, and GSH. The presence of these
antioxidants in the medium may attenuate DA-oxidation-induced JNK
activation and subsequent phosphorylation of c-jun. In our in vitro
studies, we demonstrated that antioxidants, such as
N-acetyl-cysteine and catalase, can effectively inhibit the
DA-induced JNK-c-jun pathway (Luo et al., 1998b
). We also show that
preinjection of GSH inhibited phosphorylated c-jun-associated AP-1
activity (Fig. 8). In addition, D1 receptors have been shown to
stimulate both JNK and p38 MAPK through a protein kinase A-dependent mechanism in SK-N-MC human neuroblastoma cells (Chen et al., 1998
). We
have recently shown that D2 receptors can stimulate both the MAPK and
the JNK-c-jun pathway through a pertussis toxin-sensitive G protein
coupling in C6-D2L cells (Luo et al., 1998a
). However, the roles of DA
receptors in regulating phosphorylation of c-jun in adult rat striatum
have not been examined herein.
Our results suggest that the AP-1 activity is required for DA-induced
apoptosis. This is supported by the following evidence. First, the
time-course studies show that the AP-1 activation occurs by 8 h
(Figs. 2A, 3, and 4), whereas apoptosis is obvious 24 h after DA
injection (Fig. 1A; Hattori et al., 1998
). The time lag of DNA
laddering behind AP-1 activity may be required for expression of a new
gene or a set of genes causing apoptosis. Second, both AP-1 activation
and apoptosis can be inhibited by preinjection of the JNK pathway
inhibitor curcumin at 1 µmol, at which it did not inhibit DA-induced
NF-
B activation (Fig. 6). Third, transfection of Sek1(K
R),
a dominant-negative mutant, which prevents phosphorylation of c-jun,
inhibits apoptosis induced by DA in 293 cells (Luo et al., 1998b
).
Fourth, transfection of Flag
169, a dominant-negative c-jun in which
the NH2-terminal phosphorylation sites including both Ser63 and Ser73 are deleted, prevents DA-induced apoptosis in both
293 cells and primary neonatal striatal cell cultures (Luo et al.,
1998b
). Thus, our observations support a positive role of phospho-c-jun
and c-fos-contained AP-1 activation in apoptosis that occurs in some
neurological models. The phospho-c-jun-involved apoptosis has been
demonstrated in the cerebral ischemia-reperfusion model in rats
(Herdegen et al., 1998
), kainate excitotoxicity in mice (Yang et al.,
1997
), and survival signal withdrawal in both cerebellar granule and
sympathetic neurons (Eilers et al., 1998
; Watson et al., 1998
). The
link of c-fos to apoptosis is also demonstrated in light-induced
apoptotic cell death of photoreceptors (Haffzi et al., 1997
).
Injection of DA also stimulates NF-
B activity. To the best of our
knowledge, this is the first report on DA regulation of nuclear
transcription factor NF-
B in vivo. The kinetics of stimulation of
NF-
B differ from that of activation of AP-1 by DA. DA-induced NF-
B activation appears at 24 h, whereas AP-1 activation is
observed at 8 h. This kinetic difference suggests that activation
of NF-
B may require a different signaling pathway from that
stimulating AP-1. Although the molecular events involved in
DA-stimulated AP-1 and NF-
B activation remain elusive, both can be
suppressed by preinjection of the antioxidant GSH, suggesting that
oxidative stress is involved. Recently, DA oxidation has been reported
to inhibit glutamate transport in rat striatal synaptosomes (Berman and
Hastings, 1997
). If a similar effect occurs in vivo, it would be
expected that the glutamate concentration might be significantly increased in striatum, resulting in a delayed activation of NF-
B (Qin et al., 1998
).
This delayed NF-
B activation also appears to be involved in
DA-induced apoptosis in vivo. Preinjection of SN50, a specific NF-
B
translocation inhibitor, greatly reduces NF-kB activity and DNA
laddering induced by DA. Preinjection of SN50M, a mutated SN50 peptide
serving as a control, has no effect on DA-stimulated NF-
B
activation. Our observations support a positive role of NF-
B in
apoptosis in some neurodegeneration models. For example, Qin et al.
(1998)
reported that NF-
B activation contributes to the apoptosis
induced by intrastriatal quinolinic acid, a potential model for
Huntington's disease. Postmortem studies show that nuclear-active NF-
B is increased about 70-fold in the melanized dopaminergic neurons in PD brains over control groups (Hunot et al., 1997
). NF-
B
is also observed in degenerating hippocampal neurons after global
ischemia. Prevention of activation of NF-
B by pharmacological reagents protects neuron death in this ischemic model (Clemens et al.,
1998
). Also excitotoxic neuronal death can be blocked by reagents shown
to inhibit NF-
B activation (Grilli et al., 1996
). In acute traumatic
spinal cord injury, nuclear NF-
B is colocalized with inducible
nitric oxide synthase (iNOS), a putative NF-
B gene target, in
macrophages and neurons (Bethea et al., 1998
). In nonneurons,
activation of NF-
B is shown to encode the apoptotic death gene
Fas ligand (Kasibhatla et al., 1998
). Although the above
evidence favors the promoting role of NF-
B in cell death, the
NF-
B activation induced by tumor necrosis factor
has been shown
to have cell survival functions (Wu et al., 1998
). Thus, NF-
B may
play different functions depending on the cell types and environments.
Both AP-1 and NF-
B appear to play important roles in normal
physiological neurotransmitter or neuronal survival signal transduction because injections of curcumin and SN50 produces cytotoxic effects. This toxic action is assumed to result from the inhibition of normal
AP-1 and NF-
B functions. AP-1 physiologically transduces signals
from biological mediators such as cytokines, growth factors, and
neurotransmitters. It was also reported that a constitutively active
NF-kB occurs in a small population of cortical neurons, suggesting a
normal function (Kaltschmide et al., 1994
).
Our in vivo studies suggest that GSH plays an important role in
protecting against DA-oxidative stress-induced signaling and consequent
apoptosis. This is consistent with data from in vitro cell cultures.
Application of antioxidants, such as N-acetylcysteine and
catalase, attenuated DA-induced JNK-c-jun pathway activation and
protected against DA toxicity in both neuronal and nonneuronal cells
(Luo et al., 1998b
). In the human neuronal cell line NMB, the
antiapoptotic effect of GSH was selective, because other antioxidants, such as (+)-
-tocopherol (vitamin E) and ascorbic acid (vitamin C)
did not show an effect on DA-induced cell death (Gabbay et al., 1996
).
Inhibition of endogenous GSH synthesis by buthionine sulfoximine, an
irreversible inhibitor of
-glutamylcysteine synthetase, enhanced DA
toxicity (Gabbay et al., 1996
). Moreover, application of DA
significantly decreased intracellular GSH levels (Gabbay et al., 1996
).
The exhaustion of endogenous GSH is caused by DA oxidation, which
produces ROS and quinones. This reduction in GSH levels may trigger an
apoptotic program.
In summary, we have shown that intrastriatal DA injections can induce
apoptosis in rats. The DA-induced apoptosis is dependent on the time
and amounts injected and is detectable after 24 h with 1- to
2-µmol DA injections. Corresponding to its apoptotic action, DA
strongly activates AP-1 and NF-
B transcription activity. The
increased AP-1 activity is accompanied by an increase in c-fos, c-jun,
and phospho-c-jun protein. Preinjection of curcumin at a dosage that
selectively inhibits AP-1 activation without affecting NF-
B activity
attenuates DA-induced apoptosis. Administration of SN50, a specific
NF-
B translocation peptide inhibitor, also prevents DA-induced DNA
laddering. Exogenous administration of the antioxidant GSH also results
in protection against DA-oxidative stress signaling and toxicity. Thus,
our results suggest that DA triggers a death program via oxidative
stress-mediated activation of nuclear transcription factors AP-1 and
NF-
B (Fig. 9). These apoptotic
molecular events may explain the DA-related neurodegenerative processes, including chronic PD and acute ischemia and excitotoxicity. Considering the common features of ROS in apoptosis in neuronal cell
death, our intrastriatal DA oxidation/apoptosis may serve as an in vivo
model for studies of molecular mechanisms in ROS-linked apoptosis.

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Fig. 9.
Proposed model for DA-induced apoptosis in vivo. When
DA is injected into rat striatum, it is subject to oxidation, resulting
in formation of ROS and semiquinones (Cohen and Heikkila, 1974 ; Graham,
1978 ; Hastings et al., 1996 ). In addition to damage of DNA, these
DA-produced ROS strongly activate phospho-c-jun-containing AP-1 and
NF- B transcription factors. This inducible and sustained AP-1 and
NF- B activation seems to be critical for DA-induced apoptosis.
Curcumin and SN50, an inhibitor of c-jun/AP-1 activation and a blocker
of NF- B activation, respectively, can effectively prevent DA-induced
apoptosis. AP-1 and NF- B may induce death genes, such as
Fas ligand, to initiate the caspase activation cascade
(Kasibhatla et al., 1998 ), an executive apoptotic stage. Exogenous
antioxidant GSH inhibits both DA-induced AP-1 and NF- B activation
and subsequent apoptosis. Thus, our data suggest that DA-induced
apoptosis is mediated by activation of oxidative stress transcription
factors AP-1 and NF- B.
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We thank Dr. J. Kusiak for making useful suggestions regarding
the manuscript.
DA, dopamine;
DTT, dithiothreitol;
GSH, glutathione;
PD, Parkinson's disease;
AP-1, activated protein 1;
NF-
B, nuclear factor-
B;
ROS, reactive oxygen species;
EMSA, electrophoretic mobility shift assays.