(Received for publication, November 4, 1996, and in revised form, January 9, 1997)
From the Section on Growth Factors, NICHD, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892
Human p140trk and p75NGFR were transfected separately into 3T3 cells. Nerve growth factor stimulates calcium uptake into both transfectants but not into untransfected 3T3 cells. p140trk cells were stimulated maximally by 25 ng/ml; 100 ng/ml was submaximal for p75NGFR cells. K-252a inhibits the effect of NGF on p140trk cells but not on p75NGFR cells; brain-derived neurotrophic factor stimulates calcium uptake in p75NGFR cells but not in p140trk cells. The data suggest that both nerve growth factor receptors could be involved in the nerve growth factor-mediated actions of calcium on its target cells: neuronal survival, neuronal protection, and synaptic plasticity.
Nerve growth factor (NGF),1 a member of the neurotrophin family, is required for the survival and development of sympathetic and sensory neurons in the peripheral nervous system (1, 2). It also acts on cholinergic neurons in the central nervous system (3-5), on chromaffin cells of the adrenal medulla (6, 7), and on a number of tumor cell lines as well (8, 9). The most dramatic and informative in vitro responses to NGF are observed in the pheochromocytoma cell line PC12, which has been used extensively as a model for investigations of NGF-induced neuronal differentiation (10, 11). Although there is substantial information about the mechanism by which NGF causes profound and global changes in cell phenotypes, the identification of specific second messengers responsible for specific biological actions of NGF has proven difficult. NGF-induced changes in a number of these second messengers, such as cAMP (12), cGMP (13), calcium (14), phosphoinositides (15), arachidonic acid (16, 17), and glycosylphosphatidylinositol metabolites (18), have been reported in PC12 cells and other NGF-responsive cells.
Perhaps the multiple roles of calcium in neurotrophin action are as well understood as any. Neuronal survival appears to depend upon the maintenance of sufficiently high levels of intracellular calcium (19), and when such levels are sufficient, neurons normally dependent on NGF for survival become NGF-independent (20), suggesting a role for NGF in keeping calcium levels from falling too low. On the other hand, when neurons sustain oxygen deprivation or hypoglycemia, the damage that ensues is due at least in part to extremely elevated intracellular calcium levels. Under such conditions, neurons can be protected by neurotrophins, which also keep calcium levels low (21), suggesting a role for neurotrophins in keeping calcium levels from rising too high. More recently, it has been shown that neurotrophins can mediate synaptic plasticity (22), the more or less permanent change in synaptic efficiency that appears to underlie long term potentiation, thought by some to be the biochemical cognate of learning and memory. Synaptic plasticity appears to depend on neurotransmitter release, dependent, in turn, upon neurotrophin-induced calcium influx (23). So both long and short term actions of the neurotrophins appear to involve regulation of intracellular calcium levels, at least in part through regulating calcium uptake.
Indeed, it has been shown directly that NGF can stimulate a small, rapid increase in intracellular calcium concentration in PC12 cells (24-26) and that this increase is accompanied by an NGF-induced increase in calcium uptake (27). Increased calcium uptake appears to be required for NGF-induced increases in neurotransmitter release (28). The molecular mechanism of NGF-induced calcium uptake is not well understood. The pharmacological profile of NGF-induced calcium uptake in PC12 cells suggests that a unique calcium channel may be involved (29) in this process and that phosphorylation of this channel may be required because introduction of phosphatase prevents increased calcium uptake (29). Beyond that, little information is available.
NGF binds to two separate receptors on its target cells, a site with tyrosine kinase activity, p140trk, termed by some the high affinity receptor, and p75NGFR, which appears to signal through the ceramide pathway, thought by some to have lower affinity for NGF. Most of the physiological actions of NGF are mediated by p140trk (30); p75NGFR has recently been associated with regulated cell death (31). To determine which receptor is responsible for NGF-induced calcium uptake, we stably transfected the human p140trk and p75NGFR separately into NIH3T3 fibroblast cells, which do not have endogenous NGF receptors, and examined the effects of NGF on the uptake of radioactive calcium into these transfectants.
Full-length human p140trk cDNA sequence was kindly provided by Dr. Andrea Levi and inserted into the pRcCMV vector (Invitrogen). pCMV5-p75 plasmid containing human p75NGFR was kindly proved by Dr. M. V. Chao. The expression vectors containing either human p140trk or human p75NGFR were transfected into 3T3 fibroblasts using calcium phosphate, and stable clones were selected. Stable clones expressing p140trk or p75NGFR were screened by Western blot analysis using either anti-trk203 antibody, a gift from Dr. David Kaplan, or anti-p75NGFR antibody (Promega) and maintained in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum, 100 µg/ml of streptomycin, 100 units/ml of penicillin, and 200 µg/ml of G418 (Life Technologies, Inc.). The presence of RNA transcripts was further confirmed by reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction using specific human p140trk and p75NGFR primers.
Western Blot AnalysisThe cells were harvested by scraping on ice and were washed twice with ice-cold phosphate-buffered saline. The cell pellet was collected by centrifugation and lysed for 30 min on ice in 0.5-1 ml of lysis buffer (20 mM HEPES, pH 7.4, 100 mM NaCl, 1% Nonidet P-40, 0.1% SDS, 1% deoxycholate, 10% glycerol, 1 mM EDTA, 1 mM EGTA, 50 mM NaF, 1 mM sodium orthovanadate, 1 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, 10 µg/ml leupeptin, 1 µg/ml aprotinin). The total cell lysates were collected by centrifugation at 10,000 rpm for 10 min, and the protein concentration of each sample was determined by the Bio-Rad protein assay. Equal amounts of cell lysate (50 µg) were applied to 8% SDS-polyacrylamide gels. After gel electrophoresis, proteins were transferred to polynvinylidene difluoride membranes (Millipore), and the membranes were incubated with blocking buffer for 1 h and then with the appropriate antibody overnight at 4 °C. The Western blots were analyzed using an enhanced chemiluminescence protein detection kit (Tropix) according to the manufacturer's instructions.
Calcium UptakeThe transfectants were grown on collagen/poly-L-lysine (25:1)-coated 6-well plates in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum. After 24 h at 37 °C, the cells were washed once with calcium-free, serum-free, antibiotic-free medium and incubated in the same medium for 30 min. After incubation, [45Ca]calcium (1 µCi) was added to each well along with appropriate amounts of NGF, and the cells were incubated at 37 °C for another 4 min. The medium was rapidly removed by aspiration, and the cells were washed twice with 3 ml of washing buffer containing 20 mM HEPES, 50 mM choline chloride, and 2.5 mM EGTA (final pH, 7.2). The cells were lysed in 0.5 ml of NaOH for at least 2 h, a portion (0.4 ml) of the cell lysate was used for estimation of the radioactivity, and 0.05 ml was used for protein determination. The final counts were normalized by protein concentration.
In the course of experiments with PC12 cells (27, 29, 38), it became clear that the interaction of NGF with p140trk was not sufficient to explain all the observations. Small but persistent increases in calcium uptake were seen when PC12nnr5 cells, a PC12 variant with little or no p140trk receptors, were treated with NGF. In addition, tyrosine kinase inhibitors were not able to inhibit the NGF effect on calcium uptake completely. The significance of the p75NGFR was predicted by experiments with PC12 cells and BDNF, which interacts with p75NGFR but not with p140trk. A combined average of five such experiments, each done in triplicate, showed that BDNF produced an increase of 22 ± 9.8% in calcium uptake with a p value of <0.001; in another series of four experiments, each also done in triplicate, BDNF produced an increase of 19 ± 15.3% with a p value of <0.05, whereas NGF gave an increase of 27 ± 8.4% with a p value of <0.001.
To provide definitive information on which NGF receptor was involved in
calcium uptake, the two NGF receptors were transfected separately into
3T3 cells, which have no endogenous NGF receptors. Two stable clones
were used for the present studies. One of these clones, 3T3-trkA-WT.11,
has 3-4-fold more p140trk receptors than do PC12 cells. NGF
can stimulate both p140trk autophosphorylation and Erk
phosphorylation in 3T3-trkA cells (data not shown). The presence of
p140trk receptors on the cell surface was also confirmed by
[125I]NGF binding and immunoblotting using the membrane
fraction from 3T3-trkA cells. The other clone, 3T3-p75-L2, has about
50% less p75NGFR receptors than do PC12 cells but many
more than in PC12nnr5 cells (Fig. 1).
Using the conditions under which NGF stimulates calcium uptake in PC12
cells, we estimated dose-dependent NGF-induced calcium uptake in both 3T3-trkA and 3T3-p75 cells. In both transfectants, but
not in untransfected 3T3 cells, NGF can induce increased calcium uptake
(Fig. 2) to a level similar to that observed in PC12
cells (27), although the stimulation in replicate cultures was somewhat variable, usually between 25 and 50% but sometimes as high as 100%.
At low concentrations, NGF seems to induce calcium uptake more
effectively in 3T3-trk cells than in 3T3-p75 cells, perhaps reflecting
the different binding affinities of NGF for the p140trk and the
p75NGFR receptors.
K-252a, an alkaloid-like kinase inhibitor isolated from the
culture broth of Nocardiopsis (32-34), has been shown to
specifically inhibit many of the actions of NGF in PC12 cells,
including NGF-induced neurite outgrowth (35, 36) and the tyrosine
kinase activity of p140trk (37). Pretreatment of 3T3-trkA cells
with 200 nM K-252a for 30 min can specifically block
NGF-induced calcium uptake (Fig. 3). However, a similar
pretreatment of 3T3-p75 cells has no effect on NGF-induced calcium
uptake.
In PC12 cells, K-252a treatment produces a small increase in the uptake
of radioactive calcium within 3-4 min (27), and this increased uptake
appears to involve p140trk (38). Consistent with these previous
data, K-252a treatment of 3T3-trkA cells stimulated a small increase in
the uptake of radioactive calcium but had no effect in 3T3-p75 cells
(Fig. 4). K-252a-induced calcium uptake is smaller than
NGF-induced calcium uptake in 3T3-trkA cells as it is in PC12 cells
(27).
BDNF is another member of the neurotrophin family, which, as stated
above, can bind to p75NGFR but not to p140trk.
Because NGF can induce calcium influx in 3T3-p75 cells, we examined the
effect of BDNF on calcium influx in both 3T3-trk and 3T3-p75 cells.
BDNF can increase calcium influx into 3T3-p75 cells, as does NGF, but
has no effect on calcium influx into 3T3-trkA cells (Fig.
5).
The data presented here clearly show that NGF can increase calcium uptake through both NGF receptors. These data are consistent with those in a recent report suggesting that NGF can increase neurotransmitter release from striatal neurons through the p75NGFR receptor (39). Clearly, the NGF-induced increases in calcium uptake in 3T3 cells have no biological relevance, the NGF receptors being introduced artificially. But increases of comparable magnitude in PC12 cells are absolutely required for the NGF-induced release of catecholamine neurotransmitters (28). Also there is a growing awareness that capacitative calcium entry plays a central role in many aspects of cell signaling (40), and the amounts of calcium entering the cells by this route appear to be very small indeed.
It is important to determine the mechanism(s) by which these receptors act on calcium uptake, because there is evidence that the mechanisms by which calcium enters the cell determines its actions in those cells (41). In any case, the present data suggest that both high and low affinity NGF receptors can participate in the calcium-mediated actions of the neurotrophins.