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Journal of Virology, December 2003, p. 13161-13170, Vol. 77, No. 24
0022-538X/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JVI.77.24.13161-13170.2003
Copyright © 2003, American
Society for
Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Protection against Murine Leukemia Virus-Induced Spongiform Myeloencephalopathy in Mice Overexpressing Bcl-2 but Not in Mice Deficient for Interleukin-6, Inducible Nitric Oxide Synthetase, ICE, Fas, Fas Ligand, or TNF-R1 Genes
Paul Jolicoeur,1,2,3* Chunyan Hu,1 Tak W. Mak,4 Jean-Claude Martinou,5 and Denis G. Kay1
Laboratory
of Molecular Biology, Clinical Research Institute of Montreal,
Montreal, Quebec H2W 1R7,1
Department of
Microbiology and Immunology, Université de Montréal,
Montreal, Quebec H3C 3J7,2
Division of
Experimental Medicine, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec H3G
1A4,3
Amgen Institute,
Toronto, Ontario M5G 2C1, Canada,4
Glaxo Institute and
Department of Cell Biology, University of Geneva, Geneva,
Switzerland5
Received 6 June 2003/
Accepted 18 August 2003
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ABSTRACT
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Some
murine leukemia viruses (MuLVs), among them Cas-Br-E and ts-1
MuLVs, are neurovirulent, inducing spongiform myeloencephalopathy and
hind limb paralysis in susceptible mice. It has been shown that the
env gene of these viruses harbors the determinant of
neurovirulence. It appears that neuronal loss occurs by an indirect
mechanism, since the target motor neurons have not been found to be
infected. However, the pathogenesis of the disease remains unclear.
Several lymphokines, cytokines, and other cellular effectors have been
found to be aberrantly expressed in the brains of infected mice, but
whether these are required for the development of the neurodegenerative
lesions is not known. In an effort to identify the specific effectors
which are indeed required for the initiation and/or development of
spongiform myeloencephalopathy, we inoculated gene-deficient (knockout
[KO]) mice with ts-1 MuLV. We show here that
interleukin-6 (IL-6), inducible nitric oxide synthetase (iNOS), ICE,
Fas, Fas ligand (FasL), and TNF-R1 KO mice still develop signs of
disease. However, transgenic mice overexpressing Bcl-2 in neurons
(NSE/Bcl-2) were largely protected from hind limb paralysis and had
less-severe spongiform lesions. These results indicate that motor
neuron death occurs in this disease at least in part by a
Bcl-2-inhibitable pathway not requiring the ICE, iNOS, Fas/FasL,
TNF-R1, and IL-6 gene
products.
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INTRODUCTION
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A few murine leukemia viruses (MuLVs) (e.g., Cas-Br-E and ts-1)
are neurovirulent and induce spongiform myeloencephalopathy, leading to
hind limb paralysis in susceptible mice
(32-34,
91,
106,
109). Results with
chimeric MuLV constructed with genes from parental virulent and
avirulent MuLVs have established that the envelope (env) gene
of these viruses harbors the major determinant of neurovirulence
(23,
39,
75,
77,
85,
89,
90,
92,
98) (reviewed in
reference 91). In the
case of ts-1 MuLV, a single point mutation (Val
Ile)
at amino acid position 25 of the coding sequence of the env
gene distinguishes it from the parental Moloney MuLV strain from which
this ts mutant was derived
(98). The important role
of the env gene in inducing this disease was also confirmed by
expressing the env gene of Cas-Br-E
(59) and subsequently of
ts-1 (110) MuLV
in transgenic (Tg) mice. These env Tg mice developed typical
spongiform lesions. ts-1 and Cas-Br-E MuLVs replicate
preferentially in microglial cells and to a certain extent in
endothelial cells (8,
9,
18,
36,
58,
72,
73,
93), while a third
neurovirulent MuLV, PVC-211, replicates mainly in the brain capillary
endothelial cells (42,
75). Although replication
has been reported by one study to occur in motor neurons
(95), this observation
has not been confirmed by other studies
(36,
58,
72). Therefore, the motor
neurons which degenerate in these diseases do not appear to be infected
by the virus and are most likely affected indirectly
(43,
49,
50,
52,
55).
The spongiform
myeloencephalopathy induced by these viruses is most evident in the
brain stem and in the lumbar spinal cord. The lesions are characterized
by vacuolation, neuronal loss, astrogliosis, activation of microglial
cells, and mild demyelination in the absence of an inflammatory
reaction (4,
35,
81,
108,
112).
The
pathogenesis of this MuLV-induced neurodegenerative disease is not
understood. The lesions are very similar to the spongiform lesions
induced by the prion agent in mice, but the prion gene itself is
dispensable for the development of spongiform lesions, as shown in mice
deficient for the prion gene inoculated with neurotropic MuLV
(53). In addition,
spongiform lesions have been observed in other neurodegenerative
diseases, such as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease,
suggesting that these spongiform neurodegenerative processes may share
common effectors.
We have postulated that the MuLV-induced
central nervous system (CNS) disease is receptor mediated because of
the important role of the env gene in inducing disease
(49,
50,
52,
55,
85). Neurotoxins produced
by infected microglial cells have also been postulated to represent
important mediators of neurovirulence. In particular, MIP-1
,
MIP-1ß (5,
86), tumor necrosis
factor alpha (TNF-
)
(5,
14,
78,
86), interleukin-6 (IL-6)
(78), Fas/Fas ligand
(FasL) (14), and, to a
lesser extent, IL-1
(86) and gamma interferon
(86) have all been found
to be upregulated in the CNS of mice infected with neurovirulent MuLV,
although the upregulation of gamma interferon
(5,
14) and IL-6
(5,
14,
86) has not been
confirmed by other studies. Whether these changes in gene expression
are causal in disease development or whether they mainly represent the
consequences of the disease process remains unknown. To determine
whether some of these molecules are indeed required for the initiation
and development of spongiform myeloencephalopathy, we used an
alternative genetic approach involving the inoculation with
neurovirulent MuLV of mice deficient (knockout [KO]) for a
selected gene (TNFR-1, IL-6, inducible nitric oxide synthetase (iNOS),
Fas, FasL, or ICE) or mice overexpressing the antiapoptotic gene Bcl-2
in neurons through transgenesis. We report here our results on the
inoculation of ts-1 MuLV into these mutant
mice.
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MATERIALS AND
METHODS
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Virus.
The ts-1 MuLV
(76) was produced in NIH
3T3 cells. Tissue-culture medium containing viruses was filtered
through a 0.4-µm-pore-size nitrocellulose filter (Millipore
Corporation, Bedford, Mass.) prior to use. The virus was titered at
33°C on NIH 3T3 by using the XC assay, essentially as described
previously (51). The
virus (
1 x 105 infectious units/ml) was
inoculated intraperitoneally to newborn (<48-h-old) mice. The
mice were observed twice a week for signs of disease (abduction reflex,
tremulousness, and spastic paralysis of the hind limbs). The infectious
virus load in serum and tissues was measured. For the determination of
virus load in tissues, spleen, brain, or thymus was homogenized in 2 ml
of tissue culture medium and centrifuged at low speed (10,000 x
g) and the supernatant was used for an XC assay on NIH 3T3
cells, essentially as described previously
(24,
51). Titers were
expressed as numbers of PFU per mg of tissue
proteins.
Mice.
Mice deficient for the IL-6
(61), Fas
(102), or FasL
(71,
99) gene were purchased
from the Jackson Laboratory (Bar Harbor, Maine). Mice deficient for the
iNOS (103), ICE
(64), or TNF-R1
(87) gene were obtained,
respectively, from Foo Y. Liew (Department of Immunology, University of
Glasgow), Tara Sesbadri (BASF Bioresearch Corp.), and Tak Mak (Amgen,
University of Toronto, Canada). The NSE/Bcl2 (line 71) Tg mice
(26,
74) were obtained from
Jean-Claude Martinou (Glaxo Institute for Molecular Biology, Geneva,
Switzerland). All KO and Tg mice, except the Fas and FasL mutants
(already on the C3H background), were bred as heterozygotes on the
C3H/HeN (Harland) background for at least five generations before being
inoculated. Heterozygote KO males were bred with homozygote female mice
to generate hetero- and homozygote littermates. NSE/Bcl-2 Tg mice,
heterozygote for the transgene, were bred with normal CH3/HeN mice to
generate Tg heterozygote mice and non-Tg littermates, which were used
as controls.
Preparation of CNS tissues
and immunohistochemistry.
The mice were immersion fixed in
4% paraformaldehyde for 7 days with their skulls open. The
brains were then dissected and embedded in paraffin, as described
previously (36,
58). The spinal columns
were decalcified in 0.5 M EDTA for 20 to 30 days before being embedded
in paraffin. Immunocytochemistry with antibodies directed against glial
fibrillary acidic protein was performed as previously described
(36,
58). Paraffin sections (5
µm) were cut and stained by the conventional hematoxylin and
eosin staining method.
Probe preparation
and in situ hybridization.
Preparation of 35S-labeled
sense and antisense riboprobes specific for the Moloney U3 long
terminal repeat (LTR) and glyceraldehyde phosphate dehydrogenase
(GAPDH) was carried out as previously described
(46). In situ
hybridization was carried out as described previously for
paraffin-embedded tissues
(58).
Image
analysis.
Quantification of
spongiform lesions was performed on digital images of
haematoxylin-and-eosin-stained sections of spinal cord and brain by
using Northern Eclipse 6.0 software (Empix Imaging). The sections were
scanned and color images were captured by using Zeiss Axiophot
supported with Northern Eclipse. For each sagittal brain section, three
images were acquired at 10x: one from the anterior pons and two
from the central brain stem (see Fig.
3C). For each spinal cord,
one section from the lumbar cord was evaluated. The cord area anterior
to the central canal was assessed at 10x quantification (2 to 8
images/cord) for spongiform lesions and at 20x quantification
(4 to 14 images/cord) for neuron counts.

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FIG. 3. Incidence
and extent of paralysis in NSE/Bcl-2 Tg mice. (A and B) Newborn Tg and
non-Tg control littermates were inoculated with ts-1 MuLV and
observed for the development of paralysis. In Experiment 1 (A), the
mice were observed for up to 6 months. Data are presented as cumulative
incidence (left) and Kaplan-Meir analysis (with log-rank posttest)
(right) (P < 0.00001). (B) A second
experiment (Experiment 2) was carried out but was terminated at 2.5
months. For comparison, the data from Experiment 1 at 3 months were
replotted. The numbers below the groups represent the numbers of
paralyzed mice out of the total numbers of mice under experimentation.
(C through E) Quantitation of spongiform lesions in the brain stems of
ts-1 MuLV-inoculated NSE/Bcl-2 Tg and non-Tg mice. Three
separate brain stem areas (C) exhibiting spongiform changes
were assessed for the total number of vacuoles per mm2 of
tissue surface area (D) and the percentage of tissue area
occupied by vacuoles (E). Note that both indices of disease
demonstrated a statistically significant reduction in the extent of
lesions in Tg mice: (D) non-Tg (n = 7),
218.8 ± 17.6; Tg (n = 12), 131.8 ±
15.4; (E) non-Tg (n = 7), 4.72 ±
0.37; Tg (n = 12), 3.01 ± 0.40 (means
±
SEMs).
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Spongiform
lesions were quantitated in a semiautomated format in sagittal sections
of brain stem (three images per mouse; see Fig.
3C) and in the anterior
half of the white matter of spinal cord transections (anterior and
lateral funiculi to the level of the central canal; 2 to 8 images per
mouse). Only vacuoles with diameters of >10 µm and
having a round to oblong shape [a shape factor of >0.4,
where shape factor =
(4 ·
· area)÷(perimeter2)]
(Northern Eclipse version 6.0 Empix software) were counted. Use of
these criteria minimized the inclusion of tissue-processing artifacts
(e.g., fine vacuolation caused by solvent extraction of lipids and
tissue tears) and of small blood vessels in the analysis. Large blood
vessels were manually deleted from the images. Using the thresholding
capability of the Northern Eclipse software, the number of
vacuoles/mm2, the average diameter per vacuole
{obtained by determining the equivalent circle diameter,
2 · [
(area ÷
)]}, the average area per vacuole, and the
percent of the total area assessed that was occupied by vacuoles were
calculated. All quantitation was performed by an investigator who was
blinded as to the transgene status of the animals.
For
quantitation of neurons, the total neurons in the gray matter of spinal
cord were counted manually. At the same time, the same gray matter area
was cropped and measured by Northern Eclipse. Then the total number of
neurons in each section and the number of total neurons per
mm2 were calculated. All quantitation was performed blindly,
with the examiner having no information about the transgenic status of
the mice.
Statistical
analysis.
All data,
including the number of vacuoles per mm2, the percentage of
the total area occupied by vacuoles, the area per vacuole, the diameter
per vacuole, the total number of neurons from each section, and the
number of neurons per mm2 from Tg and non-Tg groups were
tabulated as means ± standard errors of the means (SEMs).
Comparison between Tg and non-Tg groups was performed by using an
unpaired two-tailed Student's t test or the Kaplan-Meir
analysis with the log-rank posttest. Differences were considered
significant if P was <0.05. Except for the Kaplan-Meir
analysis, statistical analysis was done using SPSS 7.5 for Windows
(SPSS Inc., Chicago,
Ill.).
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RESULTS
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Design
of the experiment.
The mutant
mice were first put on a genetic background susceptible to
ts-1 MuLV. We chose the C3H/HeN background, since previous
work has shown this background to be suitable for studies of
ts-1 MuLV-induced neurodegenerative disease
(76). Except for Fas and
FasL mice, all the mutant mice were backcrossed to C3H mice as
heterozygotes for at least five generations. At the fifth generation,
heterozygote (+/-) and homozygote (-/-)
mutant KO mice were crossed together to generate two groups of
heterozygote and homozygote mutant mice which were inoculated
intraperitoneally as newborns (<48-h-old) with ts-1
MuLV, essentially as described previously
(23,
54). The mice were
monitored by blinded observers for clinical signs of disease
(tremulousness, spasticity, and paralysis). They were sacrificed when
they showed clinical signs of paralysis or after 6 months for those
showing only minimal or no signs of disease. The majority (75 to
100%) of the inoculated heterozygote or non-Tg control
littermates of each mutant (IL-6, iNOS, ICE, TNF-R1, and NSE/Bcl2)
strain (n = 63) developed the characteristic hind limb
paralysis induced by this virus in normal C3H mice and in other strains
(107; Gravel, Kay, and
Jolicoeur, unpublished data), as expected. This was also the case for
the inoculated heterozygote Fas and FasL mutant mice (n
= 24), but the percentage of paralyzed mice was lower, possibly
reflecting a slightly different C3H
background.
IL-6 appears to be dispensable
for the development of spongiform lesions and hind limb paralysis
induced by ts-1 MuLV.
Upregulation of IL-6 in the CNS has
been documented in several neurologic diseases, including experimental
autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE)(84), multiple sclerosis
(44), AIDS dementia
complex (31), and
Alzheimer's disease
(10). Moreover, mice
deficient in IL-6 are resistant to EAE
(27). Overexpression of
IL-6 in the CNS of Tg mice was also reported to induce severe
neuropathological changes, such as neurodegeneration and astrocytosis
and vacuolation (13). In
addition, upregulation of IL-6 was found by some
(78), but not by all
(5,
14,
86), investigators in the
CNS of mice developing spongiform disease following inoculation of the
neurovirulent MuLVs. In view of this controversy, we used the
IL-6-deficient mice to determine the role of this cytokine in the
development of MuLV-induced spongiform lesions. Both groups of
IL-6+/- and
IL-6-/- mice inoculated with ts-1
MuLV developed hind limb paralysis with the same latency (Fig.
1A) and spongiform lesions (Fig.
1B) to the same extent.
These results indicate that IL-6 is not necessary for the initiation
and development of this disease and that IL-6 deficiency is not
protective against the disease.


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FIG. 1. Incidence
of paralysis in IL-6 KO mice. (A) Newborn
IL-6+/- or
IL-6-/- littermate mice were inoculated with
ts-1 MuLV and observed for the development of paralysis.
(B) Pathological assessment of the CNS of
IL-6+/- and
IL-6-/- mice. Spongiosis developed
comparably in both heterozygote (left) and homozygote (right)
mice.
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iNOS is
not required for the development of spongiform lesions and hind limb
paralysis induced by ts-1 MuLV.
Three isoforms of nitric oxide
synthetase, endothelial, constitutive, and inducible, are responsible
for the production of nitric oxide
(79). Nitric oxide
appears to have a dual role in the CNS, being both neuroprotective and
neurotoxic (15,
57,
94). It may play a role
in EAE or in rabies and Borna virus infection, where its levels were
reported to be elevated
(45). It also appears to
mediate human immunodeficiency virus type 1 env
(22) and glutamate
(21) neurotoxicity. The
iNOS isoform is not highly expressed in normal brain
(60,
70) but can be activated
in response to pathological conditions
(47,
96,
101), including multiple
sclerosis in humans (6)
and 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine-induced
Parkinson's disease in mice
(65). This latter disease
was prevented in mice deficient for the iNOS gene
(65). Interestingly, the
spongiform lesions induced by the neuropathogenic PVC-211 MuLV have
been reported to be associated with oxidative damage, reflected by
elevated levels of 3-nitrotyrosine immunoreactivity
(105) and enhanced
expression of iNOS in brain capillary endothelial cells
(48a), the major CNS
target cells infected by this virus.
To determine whether the
iNOS gene is involved in the development of the spongiform
encephalopathy induced by ts-1 MuLV,
iNOS+/- and
iNOS-/- mutant mice were inoculated with
ts-1 MuLV and monitored for signs of disease. In both groups,
hind limb paralysis developed after a period of comparative latency
(Fig.
2A) and spongiform lesions of comparative severity were formed (data not
shown). These results suggest that iNOS is dispensable for the
initiation and development of this disease and that iNOS deficiency is
not protective against the disease.

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FIG. 2. Incidence
of paralysis in iNOS, ICE, Fas, FasL, and TNF-R1 KO mice. Heterozygote
and homozygote newborn littermate mice from each strain were inoculated
with ts-1 MuLV and observed for the development of paralysis.
(A) iNOS; (B) ICE; (C) Fas; (D)
FasL; and (E)
TNF-R1.
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The
neuronal cell death induced by ts-1 MuLV is not mediated by
ICE, Fas/FasL, or TNF-R1.
The
spongiform myeloencephalopathy induced by the neurovirulent MuLVs
involves motor neuron loss
(4,
12,
82,
88,
97). As in many other
neurodegenerative diseases
(111), this neuronal
cell death has been reported to occur by apoptosis
(14,
106). In addition, the
expression of TNF-
(5,
14,
78), Fas, and FasL
(14) has been reported to
be upregulated in mice exhibiting MuLV-induced CNS lesions. Similarly,
the levels of IL-1
(86), but not those of
IL-1ß (5,
14), were found to be
elevated in the CNS of these inoculated mice.
The two known
receptors for TNF-
, TNF-R1 (p55) and TNF-R2 (p75), are
expressed in the CNS, but the function of TNF-R2 in the brain is not
well understood (100).
TNF-R1 appears to be the major receptor regulating the apoptotic action
of TNF-
in various tissues as, in contrast to TNF-R2, it
contains an intracellular death domain involved in binding the
effectors required for this pathway
(7,
16,
68).
Several
experimental data point to the involvement of TNF-
in neuronal cell death following various insults
(69,
84,
100), including human
immunodeficiency virus type 1 infection
(104). TNF-
itself, expressed in the CNS of Tg mice, leads to oligodendrocyte
apoptosis and myelin vacuolation in the absence of early immune cell
infiltration (2), a
process similar to the noninflammatory spongiform disease induced by
the neurovirulent MuLVs. Interestingly, this TNF-
-induced CNS
disease of Tg mice was prevented in mice genetically
deficient for the TNF-R1 (p55) gene
(2).
Both TNF-R1 and
Fas are receptors of the large TNF death receptor family
(7,
11,
68). However, the role of
the Fas/FasL pathway in apoptosis associated with CNS diseases has not
been extensively studied. Enhanced Fas/FasL expression has been
reported in the CNS of patients with Alzheimer's-type dementia
(80) or multiple
sclerosis
(25).
IL-1 has been
shown to regulate the synthesis of nerve growth factor in glial cells
(66). In addition, the
processing and release of mature IL-1ß is dependent on the
activity of caspase-1/ICE
(64). Moreover,
FasL-induced apoptosis is prevented in caspase-1-deficient mice
(62). Caspase-1 is
involved in apoptosis in the CNS
(112). Mice in which
caspase-1 is deficient or inhibited are resistant to hypoxic-ischemic
brain damage (38,
67) and to EAE
(30) and show a slower
disease progression in mouse models of Huntington's disease
(83) and amyotrophic
lateral sclerosis (29,
63).
In view of
previously published results on the perturbation of TNF-
,
IL-1, and Fas/FasL in MuLV-induced spongiform myeloencephalopathy and
their roles in other CNS diseases, it is conceivable that some of these
pathways may be essential for the appearance of MuLV-induced spongiform
lesions. Therefore, mice deficient in some of the genes involved in
apoptosis were inoculated with ts-1 MuLV.
The majority
of ICE -/- (Fig.
2B),
Fas-/- (Fig.
2C),
FasL-/- (Fig.
2D), and
TNF-R1-/- (Fig.
2E) mutant mice and their
respective control heterozygote littermates developed hind limb
paralysis with comparable latencies and spongiform lesions of
comparable severity (data not shown) after inoculation of ts-1
MuLV. The slightly longer latency of paralysis observed in
TNF-R1-/- mice and the somewhat higher
percentage and slightly shorter latency of paralysis among the
ICE-/- mutant mice may or may not be of
biological significance. Together, these results suggest that none of
these gene products is required for, nor is their absence highly
protective against, disease
development.
Overexpression of Bcl-2 in
neurons protects mice from ts-1 MuLV-induced hind limb
paralysis.
The Bcl-2 gene has
been shown to protect various cell types, including neurons, from
apoptosis induced by very distinct stimuli
(3,
20,
26,
28,
56,
74,
113). Overexpression of
Bcl-2 in neurons of NSE/Bcl-2 Tg mice has indeed been shown to protect
motor neurons from naturally occurring cell death and from experimental
ischemia (26,
74). Since motor neurons
are the major neural cell population lost in MuLV-induced spongiform
disease (4,
12,
82,
88,
97), we used these
NSE/Bcl-2 Tg mice (line 71) to determine whether this antiapoptotic
molecule would affect the course of the MuLV-induced spongiform
encephalopathy.
Groups of NSE/Bcl-2 Tg mice and their non-Tg
littermates were inoculated with ts-1 MuLV and monitored for
signs of disease. As shown in Fig.
3A, most (15 out of 16) non-Tg C3H littermates developed hind limb
paralysis of a severity and after a latency comparable to that of
heterozygote C3H mice from the other mutant groups. In contrast, hind
limb paralysis was observed in only 1 out of 16 Tg mice, and mild signs
of neurological disease (tremulousness and spasticity) were detected in
7 out of 16 Tg mice. In all Tg mice where signs of mild (7 out of 16)
or more severe (1 out of 16) clinical disease occurred, the signs
developed after a longer period of latency than in non-Tg mice (Fig.
3A). Therefore, frank hind
limb paralysis was prevented in the majority (15 out of 16)
of NSE/Bcl-2 Tg mice challenged with the virus. A second experiment
conducted in a similar group of Tg and non-Tg mice but terminated
earlier showed essentially the same results (Fig.
3B). These results clearly
established a protective role for Bcl-2 against the clinical
manifestations of the disease.
Consistent with this clinical
picture, histopathological assessment of the CNS of these mice revealed
a reduction in both the extent and the severity of the spongiform
lesions (Fig. 3C through
E) and of astrogliosis (data not shown) in the brain
stem.
To determine whether the milder form of neurodegenerative
disease observed in NSE/Bcl-2 Tg mice may be related to increased
survival of motor neurons in these Tg mice, we quantitated the motor
neurons in the gray matter of the spinal cord. This analysis revealed
that these neurons appeared to be more abundant in infected Tg (363
± 29 neurons/mm2) than in non-Tg (280 ± 45
neurons/mm2) (x ± SEM) spinal cords,
suggesting that Tg neurons are protected from death induced by this
virus.
Although the expression of the NSE/Bcl-2 transgene was not
expected to have an effect on early virus replication in the lymphoid
system and on its dissemination in the CNS, we felt it was important to
rule out such a detrimental effect of this transgene on virus
replication. It has indeed been shown that the kinetics of virus
replication in the periphery early after MuLV injection appears to
determine the level of CNS infection and consequently the extent and
severity of CNS spongiform lesions
(17,
19). We therefore
measured the extent of ts-1 MuLV infection in the blood,
spleen, and CNS of adult and young inoculated NSE/Bcl-2 Tg and non-Tg
mice.
Using in situ hybridization with the U3 LTR-specific probe
(Fig.
4A), we found no significant differences in the numbers of infected cells in
the CNS of ts-1 MuLV-inoculated NSE/Bcl-2 Tg and non-Tg mice
at the time of sacrifice (Fig.
4B). Neither did we
observe significant differences in the titers of the virus measured in
serum, spleen, thymus, and CNS of 6-day-old NSE/Bcl-2 Tg mice versus
the non-Tg littermate controls inoculated as newborns (Fig.
4C). Therefore, these
results suggested that the extent of early and late MuLV replication
was comparable in Tg and non-Tg
mice.
 |
DISCUSSION
|
|---|
The cellular and
molecular mechanisms by which the spongiform CNS lesions develop and
the lower motor neurons are lost after infection of mice by a group of
neuropathogenic MuLVs are of considerable interest. The present study
was designed to determine whether some specific effectors whose
dysregulated expression has previously been found to be associated with
the presence of neurodegenerative changes and more specifically of
MuLV-induced spongiform lesions were required for the development of
MuLV-induced myeloencephalopathy. We took a genetic approach and used
several gene-deficient (KO) mouse strains for this analysis. Our data
show that mice deficient in the IL-6, iNOS, ICE, Fas, FasL, or TNF-R1
gene were still susceptible to ts-1 MuLV-induced spongiform
myeloencephalopathy and hind limb paralysis. These results clearly
indicate that these effectors are not required for the initiation or
the development and maintenance of the disease. However, in view of
possible compensatory gene expression in KO mice, our results cannot
necessarily be interpreted as a lack of contribution of these genes to
the development of the disease when they are not deleted. The
dispensable role of genes representing excellent candidates for
involvement in the development of spongiform lesions may reflect their
participation in secondary reactive changes which are likely to occur
in many neurodegenerative diseases. In fact, our genetic data caution
about establishing pathways of neuropathogenesis based exclusively on
patterns of gene expression.
Interestingly, constitutive Bcl-2
overexpression in motor neurons of Tg mice was found to have a
protective effect against this spongiform ts-1 MuLV-induced
disease, leading to an improved clinical outcome (a lower incidence and
generally milder form of motor deficits). The brain stem and anterior
horn motor neurons have previously been reported to be lost in these
MuLV-induced neurodegenerative diseases
(4,
12,
82,
88,
97). Motor neurons were
targeted to express Bcl-2 in the NSE/Bcl-2 Tg mice
(26,
74) used in the present
study, and these neurons were previously found to be protected against
other insults (axotomy and ischemia) in these Tg mice
(26,
74). Therefore, it is
likely that the clinical and histological protection observed in
ts-1 MuLV-inoculated NSE/Bcl-2 Tg mice reflects protection by
Bcl-2 against motor neuron death. In fact, we have documented that loss
of anterior spinal cord motor neurons is lessened in these
MuLV-inoculated Tg mice compared to that for their non-Tg
littermates.
The protection observed in MuLV-infected Tg mice
expressing Bcl-2 in motor neurons strongly suggests that these cells
are lost by a Bcl-2-inhibitable apoptotic pathway in this
neurodegenerative disease. Indeed, Bcl-2 is one of the principal
molecules able to protect cells against apoptosis
(3,
20,
26,
28,
56,
74,
113). One hypothesis
that could explain the beneficial role of Tg Bcl-2 in this disease is
downregulation of motor-neuron-endogenous Bcl-2 RNA in the CNS of
ts-1 MuLV-infected mice.
The functions of Bcl-2 in cells
are complex and not totally elucidated
(1,
37). Our data do not
establish by which mechanism Bcl-2 protects against neurodegeneration.
Since a major site of Bcl-2 action is known to be at the mitochondrial
membrane (1,
37), our data suggest
that mitochondrial damage may be involved in this MuLV-induced motor
neuron disease. Bcl-2 may decrease the generation or increase the
scavenging of reactive oxygen species
(41,
56) known to be increased
in a similar MuLV-induced neurodegenerative disease
(105). Alternatively,
Bcl-2 may act on other cell organelles. Indeed, Bcl-2 has been shown to
protect some cells against apoptosis in ways which are independent of
the inhibition of reactive oxygen species
(48). Whatever the
mechanism, our results with NSE/Bcl-2 mice confirm and extend earlier
reports claiming that motor neurons die by apoptosis in ts-1
MuLV-infected mice (14,
106). Our data also
indicate that this motor neuron apoptosis pathway does not require
signals from Fas or TNF-R1 (two receptors frequently implicated in
apoptosis induced in other cells by other stimuli)
(7,
11,
68), since mice deficient
in Fas, FasL, or TNF-R1 were not protected from development of
spongiform lesions. The dispensable role of Fas/FasL in this
MuLV-induced neuronal apoptosis is consistent with the protection
against apoptosis observed with Bcl-2, since it has been shown that the
major Fas/FasL-induced apoptosis pathway cannot be inhibited by Bcl-2,
at least in some cells
(1). ICE
(caspase-1), another effector of some apoptotic stimuli
(40), is also dispensable
for this motor neuron apoptosis, since ICE-deficient mice were not
protected from MuLV-induced neurodegeneration. These ICE (caspase-1)
results are also consistent with the dispensable role of Fas/FasL
observed, since FasL-induced apoptosis has been shown to be
eliminated in caspase-1-deficient mice
(62). The lack of
protection of MuLV-infected ICE KO mice contrasts with the protection
observed against hypoxic-ischemic brain damage in mice whose caspase-1
is deficient or inhibited
(38,
67), suggesting that
pathways of neuronal cell death induced by ts-1 MuLV and
hypoxia or ischemia are not identical.
The identity of the
effectors of apoptosis that lead to motor neuron death following
infection with neurovirulent MuLVs remains to be determined. An equally
important unresolved question is how the env gene of these
viruses, which harbors the major determinant of neurovirulence
(reviewed in reference
91), triggers this
neuronal apoptotic pathway by an indirect mechanism, i.e., without
infecting these neurons.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
|
|---|
This work was supported by
a grant to P.J. from the CIHR.
We thank Foo Y. Liew (University
of Glasgow) for providing the iNOS gene-deficient mice and Tara
Sesbadri and Tariq Ghayurt (formerly of BASF Bioresearch Corp. and now
of Abbott) for providing the ICE gene-deficient mice. We thank Ginette
Massé, Annie Vallée, Lin Jia, Viorica Lascau, and Eve-Lyne
Thivierge for excellent technical assistance, Rita Gingras for
preparing the manuscript, and Christian Charbonneau for help with image
analysis. We are most grateful to Jean-François Angers and Nadine
Ouellette (University of Montreal) for help with statistical
analysis.
 |
FOOTNOTES
|
|---|
* Corresponding
author. Mailing address: Clinical Research Institute of Montreal, 110
Pine Avenue West, Montreal, Quebec, Canada H2W 1R7. Phone: (514)
987-5569. Fax: (514) 987-5794. E-mail:
jolicop{at}ircm.qc.ca. 
 |
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Journal of Virology, December 2003, p. 13161-13170, Vol. 77, No. 24
0022-538X/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JVI.77.24.13161-13170.2003
Copyright © 2003, American
Society for
Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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