Xiang H, Hochman D W, Saya H, Fujiwara T, Schwartzkroin P A, Morrison R S
Department of Neurological Surgery, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, Washington 98195-6470, USA.
J Neurosci. 1996 Nov 1;16(21):6753-65. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.16-21-06753.1996.
A role for p53-related modulation of neuronal viability has been suggested by the finding that p53 expression is increased in damaged neurons in models of ischemia and epilepsy. These findings were recently extended with the demonstration that mice deficient in p53 ("knock-out" mice) exhibit almost complete protection from seizure-induced brain injury, whereas wild-type mice display significant neuronal cell loss in the hippocampus and other brain regions. Because the p53 knock-out mice used in the latter study expressed a global p53 deficiency in all cell types, it was not possible to conclude that protection was conferred by the exclusive absence of p53 in neurons. Therefore, in the present study, we determined whether p53 expression in isolated neurons is directly coupled to a loss of viability associated with excitotoxic challenge. Primary cultures of hippocampal or cortical neurons were derived from animals containing p53 (+/+, +/-) or those deficient in p53 (-/-). p53-Deficient neurons appeared identical to wild-type neurons with respect to morphology, neurofilament expression, and resting levels of intracellular calcium. Neurons containing at least one copy of p53 were severely damaged by exposure to kainic acid or glutamate. Cell damage was assessed by direct cell counting and by nuclear morphology after propidium iodide staining of DNA. In contrast, neurons deficient in p53 (-/-) exhibited little or no damage in response to excitotoxin treatment. Despite their divergent outcomes, p53 (+/+) and p53 (-/-) neurons demonstrated similar sustained elevations in intracellular calcium levels triggered by glutamate exposure. Restoring p53 expression to p53-deficient neurons, using adenovirus-mediated transduction, was sufficient to promote neuronal cell death even in the absence of excitotoxin. These results demonstrate a direct relationship between p53 expression and loss of viability in CNS neurons.
缺血和癫痫模型中受损神经元的p53表达增加,这表明p53相关调节对神经元生存能力具有一定作用。最近这些发现得到了进一步扩展,研究表明缺乏p53的小鼠(“基因敲除”小鼠)几乎完全免受癫痫诱导的脑损伤,而野生型小鼠在海马体和其他脑区则出现明显的神经元细胞丢失。由于后一项研究中使用的p53基因敲除小鼠在所有细胞类型中均表现出整体p53缺陷,因此无法得出神经元中单独缺乏p53就能提供保护的结论。因此,在本研究中,我们确定了分离神经元中的p53表达是否与兴奋性毒性刺激相关的生存能力丧失直接相关。海马或皮质神经元的原代培养物来自含有p53(+/+、+/-)的动物或缺乏p53(-/-)的动物。就形态、神经丝表达和细胞内钙的静息水平而言,缺乏p53的神经元与野生型神经元并无差异。暴露于海藻酸或谷氨酸后,含有至少一个p53拷贝的神经元受到严重损伤。通过直接细胞计数和碘化丙啶染色DNA后的核形态来评估细胞损伤。相比之下,缺乏p53(-/-)的神经元在接受兴奋性毒素处理后几乎没有损伤。尽管结果不同,但p53(+/+)和p53(-/-)神经元在谷氨酸暴露后细胞内钙水平均呈现相似的持续升高。使用腺病毒介导的转导将p53表达恢复到缺乏p53的神经元中,即使在没有兴奋性毒素的情况下也足以促进神经元细胞死亡。这些结果证明了p53表达与中枢神经系统神经元生存能力丧失之间的直接关系。