| Literature DB >> 22720171 |
David Hartmann1, Jana Drummond, Erik Handberg, Sharday Ewell, Lucas Pozzo-Miller.
Abstract
Studies utilizing genetic and pharmacological manipulations in rodent models and neuronal cultures have revealed myriad roles of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF). Currently, this knowledge of BDNF function is being translated into improvement strategies for several debilitating neurological disorders in which BDNF abnormalities play a prominent role. Common among the BDNF-related disorders are irregular trafficking and release of mature BDNF (mBDNF) and/or its prodomain predecessor, proBDNF. Thus, investigating the conditions required for proper trafficking and release of BDNF is an essential step toward understanding and potentially improving these neurological disorders. This paper will provide examples of disorders related to BDNF release and serve as a review of the techniques being used to study the trafficking and release of BDNF.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22720171 PMCID: PMC3375105 DOI: 10.1155/2012/203734
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neural Plast ISSN: 1687-5443 Impact factor: 3.599
Summary of advantages and disadvantages of using BDNF ELISA, BDNF-eGFP, BDNF-pHluorin.
| Method | Primary purpose | Advantages | Disadvantages | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BDNF ELISA | Quantify levels of BDNF in homogenized tissue, or levels of released BDNF if using ELISA | Genetic manipulations are unnecessary. Endogenous BDNF levels can be quantitatively measured with pg sensitivity. proBDNF-specific ELISA kits are available. If using ELISA | Cannot identify sites of BDNF release, and cannot observe trafficking of BDNF vesicles. ELISA is performed over the course of hours, and changes in BDNF cannot be observed in real time. ELISA | [ |
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| BDNF-eGFP | Visualize BDNF trafficking and release in real time | BDNF vesicle dynamics can be observed throughout the cell. Sustained vesicle release can be observed by a relative decline in fluorescence. Can be used in conjunction with western blot to determine relative levels of mBDNF and proBDNF. Downstream signaling of BDNF-eGFP release is similar to that of BDNF. | cDNA plasmids for BDNF-eGFP must be introduced by transfection or viral transduction, which can be harsh on cells, and/or can lead to artificial overexpression of BDNF. Cannot quantify absolute levels of released BDNF. | [ |
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| BDNF-pHluorin | Visualize BDNF vesicle release kinetics in real time | The pH sensitivity of pHluorin enables discrimination between sustained and transient vesicular fusion, which is indicative of how much BDNF is diffusing out of each vesicle. Downstream signaling of BDNF-pHluorin release is similar to that of BDNF. | Because fluorescence is quenched at low pH, BDNF-pHluorin is difficult to track while inside of acidified vesicles, making this tool unsuitable for BDNF trafficking studies. The same disadvantages as BDNF-eGFP also apply. | [ |
Figure 1A pyramidal neuron expressing BDNF-eGFP. Insert shows BDNF-eGFP puncta in dendrites, which colocalize with the secretory granule marker SG2 (red).
Figure 2Schematic illustration of how BDNF-pHluorin fluoresces, both inside the vesicle and upon axonal and dendritic vesicular fusion. Before stimulation, BDNF-pHluorin protein shows little fluorescence. If intracellular calcium increase occurs upon electrical stimulation, then BDNF-pHluorin vesicle may fuse, opening up to the pH 7.4 extracellular space, causing a transient spike in fluorescence that can be detected by TIRF microscopy. Different styles of fusion between axon and dendrite are shown, as explained in [10] and in the text. After sustained vesicular fusion as occurs in dendrites, fluorescence will decrease as a result of BDNF-pHluorin diffusion out of vesicles. Kiss-and-run fusion as occurs in stimulated axons will rather show an increase in fluorescence because minimal pHluorin diffuses out of the vesicle. The sticks represent synaptotagmin-4; see [85] for details. Modified from Figure 4(e) in [85].
Figure 3Left panel shows a BDNF-pH expressing hippocampal neuron in the presence of 50 mM NH4Cl. Right panel shows the same cell 80 sec after standard ACSF solution was applied. The graph shows the time course of the fractional change of BDNF-pH intensity (background-subtracted delta F/F0) from pixels within the color-coded regions of interest (ROIs) shown in the panels above. The change from NH4Cl-containing ACSF to control buffer quenches BDNF-pH within acidic secretory granules. Time-lapse was performed in an inverted microscope with a Hg-lamp and a cooled CCD camera. Neurons were imaged with a 60x 1.45 NA oil-immersion objective, exposure times ranged from 50–100 ms, and images were taken at 1 frame per second (fps).
Figure 4To confirm the viability of neurons transfected with BDNF-pH and their responsiveness to extracellular field stimulation, Ca2+ imaging was performed in neurons labeled with fura-2 AM. Upon electrical stimulation through field Pt wires, Ca2+ transiently increased in several dendrites. The graph shows the time course of background-subtracted delta F/F0 of 380 nm-excited fura-2 fluorescence intensity (510 nm emission) from the colored ROIs shown in the image. Images taken at 4 fps.
Figure 5Neuron expressing BDNF-pHluorin and loaded with the Ca2+ indicator fura-2 AM (image is of 488 nm-excited BDNF-pHluorin). This cell was sensitive to pH (as in Figure 4) and responded to electrical stimulation with Ca2+ transients (using 380 nm excitation, as in Figure 5). Consistent with activity-dependent BDNF release, dendritic BDNF-pHluorin puncta show decreases in intensity (~20% deltaF/F) as a result of BDNF-pHluorin discharge from vesicles following full fusion.