Literature DB >> 11964396

Suppression of death receptor signaling in cerebellar Purkinje neurons protects neighboring granule neurons from apoptosis via an insulin-like growth factor I-dependent mechanism.

Daniel A Linseman1, Maria L McClure, Ron J Bouchard, Tracey A Laessig, Ferogh A Ahmadi, Kim A Heidenreich.   

Abstract

Neuronal apoptosis contributes to the progression of neurodegenerative disease. Primary cerebellar granule neurons are an established in vitro model for investigating neuronal death. After removal of serum and depolarizing potassium, granule neurons undergo apoptosis via a mechanism that requires intrinsic (mitochondrial) death signals; however, the role of extrinsic (death receptor-mediated) signals is presently unclear. Here, we investigate involvement of death receptor signaling in granule neuron apoptosis by expressing adenoviral, AU1-tagged, dominant-negative Fas-associated death domain (Ad-AU1-deltaFADD). Ad-AU1-deltaFADD decreased apoptosis of granule neurons from 65 +/- 5 to 27 +/- 2% (n = 7, p < 0.01). Unexpectedly, immunocytochemical staining for AU1 revealed that <5% of granule neurons expressed deltaFADD. In contrast, deltaFADD was expressed in >95% of calbindin-positive Purkinje neurons ( approximately 2% of the cerebellar culture). Granule neurons in proximity to deltaFADD-expressing Purkinje cells demonstrated markedly increased survival. Both granule and Purkinje neurons expressed insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) receptors, and deltaFADD-mediated survival of granule neurons was inhibited by an IGF-I receptor blocking antibody. These results demonstrate that the selective suppression of death receptor signaling in Purkinje neurons is sufficient to rescue neighboring granule neurons that depend on Purkinje cell-derived IGF-I. Thus, the extrinsic death pathway has a profound but indirect effect on the survival of cerebellar granule neurons.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 11964396     DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M201098200

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biol Chem        ISSN: 0021-9258            Impact factor:   5.157


  11 in total

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7.  The p75 neurotrophin receptor can induce autophagy and death of cerebellar Purkinje neurons.

Authors:  Maria L Florez-McClure; Daniel A Linseman; Charleen T Chu; Phil A Barker; Ron J Bouchard; Shoshona S Le; Tracey A Laessig; Kim A Heidenreich
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8.  Insulin-like growth factor-I prevents the accumulation of autophagic vesicles and cell death in Purkinje neurons by increasing the rate of autophagosome-to-lysosome fusion and degradation.

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