Neurotoxicology Division, National Health and Environmental
Effects Research Laboratory, Office of Research and Development, U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina
 |
Introduction |
Polychlorinated
biphenyls (PCBs) are a class of persistent pollutants that are
prevalent in the environment, and there is increasing evidence from
both human epidemiological studies and animal models that developmental
exposure to low levels of PCBs can result in subtle changes in behavior
and cognition (see review by Brouwer et al., 1999
). Because there is an
absence of overt pathological alterations in the human as well as in
animal models (Brouwer et al., 1999
), it presently appears that subtle
rather than gross macroscopic changes in human and animal nervous
systems underlie the altered neurologic function and/or impaired
cognition that occur following developmental PCB exposure. The cellular and molecular basis for PCB-induced developmental neurotoxicity is
unclear; but in vitro, PCBs have been shown to disrupt
Ca2+ homeostasis and processes involved in
Ca2+-mediated signal transduction (reviewed in
Tilson and Kodavanti, 1997
).
Because Ca2+ signaling in developing and mature
neurons can initiate and regulate a number of cellular responses,
perturbations in temporal cellular Ca2+
signals may have important effects. Changes in intracellular Ca2+ concentration
([Ca2+]i) can lead to
subtle or profound changes in neuronal function by regulating diverse
processes, such as cell survival and death, or changes in cellular
phenotype and synaptic plasticity (Curtis and Finkbeiner, 1999
). Thus,
the impact of Ca2+ signals in developing cells is
far-reaching. Ca2+ signals in neurons may be
stimulated by many factors, and sources of these signals include influx
through plasma membrane bound ion channels and release from
intracellular stores operated by inositol 1,4,5-triphosphate
(IP3) receptors or ryanodine receptors (Berridge,
1998
). In order to test the hypothesis that PCBs can affect
Ca2+ signals in developing neurons, we have used
an in vitro model system of developing neocortical cells that
recapitulates many aspects of normal cortical neuron development,
including transmitter pharmacology (Dichter, 1978
; Inglefield and
Shafer, 2000a
). This model is appropriate to study the mechanisms of
action of developmental neurotoxicants in view of the cognitive
deficits, as well as functional changes in cortical (Altmann et al.,
1998
) and hippocampal (Gilbert and Crofton, 1999
) long-term
potentiation following PCB exposure. In previous studies, we reported
that exposure to Aroclor 1254 (A1254), an environmentally relevant PCB
mixture, results in temporal alterations in
[Ca2+]i and reductions in
GABAA receptor-mediated responses (Inglefield and
Shafer, 2000a
,b
). The present study expands on our earlier work and
investigates the initial mechanism of PCBs to perturb [Ca2+]i, as well as the
role of the initial mechanism of PCB action in the subsequent
prolonged Ca2+ disturbances reported
previously. Finally, because perturbations in temporal cellular
Ca2+ signals may have important effects, two
potential downstream consequences of altered Ca2+
signaling, cell viability, and transcription factor activation were
examined in this model system.
 |
Materials and Methods |
Chemicals and Solutions.
Fura-2 acetoxymethyl ester
(fura-2-AM) and fura-2 free acid were obtained from Molecular Probes
(Eugene, OR). Nifedipine, ionomycin, and EGTA were purchased from Sigma
(St. Louis, MO). Thapsigargin, used to inhibit endoplasmic reticulum
Ca2+-ATPases, was obtained from Sigma.
IP3 receptors were stimulated with carbachol
(Sigma) and blocked with xestospongin C (Calbiochem, San Diego, CA).
Ryanodine receptors were probed with caffeine (Sigma) and ryanodine
(Research Biochemicals International, Natick MA). A1254 (technical
grade purity; lot no. NTO1022) was obtained from UltraScientific (North
Kingston, RI). Molarity of the A1254 solutions was based on the average
molecular weight of the congeners usually present in A1254, i.e., 326.4 g/mol. PCB congeners 2,2'-dichlorobiphenyl (DCB) (IUPAC PCB 4),
4,4'-DCB (PCB 15), 3,3',4,4',5-pentachlorobiphenyl (PCB 126), and
2,2',3,4,4',5'-hexachlorobiphenyl (PCB 138) (all
99% purity) were
purchased from AccuStandard (New Haven, CT). All chemicals were diluted
in HEPES buffer, and for those stock chemicals requiring dilution in
dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO), the final DMSO concentration was
0.1%.
Rat Neocortical Primary Cell Cultures.
Rat neocortical cells
were grown in primary culture as described previously (Inglefield and
Shafer, 2000a
). Cultures were prepared from 1-day-old Long-Evans rat
pups (Charles River, Portage, MI) euthanized via approved protocols
(U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's National Health and
Environmental Effects Research Laboratory Animal Care and Usage
Committee). Neocortices were dissected, minced, then trypsinized
(0.25%) in a culture buffer solution containing 137 mM NaCl, 5 mM KCl,
0.17 mM NaH2PO4, 0.21 mM
KH2PO4, 59 mM sucrose, 5 mM
glucose, 100 IU/ml penicillin, and 0.1 mg/ml streptomycin; pH 7.4. After a 5-min 0.016% DNase I digestion, the supernatant was removed
and the tissue resuspended in cortical medium [Dulbecco's
modified Eagle's medium (no. 10313, Life Technologies, Grand Island,
NY), including 25 mM glucose, 2 mM glutamine, 100 IU/ml
penicillin, 0.1 mg/ml streptomycin, and 10% horse serum]. The
tissue was dissociated into single cells by trituration and gravity
filtration through a 100-µm Nitex screen. Dissociated cells then were
plated at a density of 3 × 106 cells/well
onto 25-mm round-glass coverslips that had been freshly coated with
poly(L-lysine) and washed with distilled
H2O. Cells were grown in fresh cortical medium in
a humidified incubator at 37°C with 5%
CO2/95% air (pH 7.4) for 3 days in vitro (DIV 1-3) and were treated for the next 2 days with 5 µM
-cytosine arabinoside (to limit replication of non-neuronal cells) in fresh cortical medium. Cultures were maintained for up to DIV 7, receiving fresh cortical medium upon removing cytosine arabinoside. All reagents
were of the highest available grade from commercial sources. Cultures
produced with these methods are enriched in neurons that have elaborate
neurite processes, and culture wells at DIV 7 contain 70%
neuron-specific enolase immunoreactive cells (neurons) that reside on a
bed of glial fibrillary acidic protein-immunopositive glia (30%).
Controls for PCB Specificity.
A1254 is a PCB mixture
that consists primarily of ortho-substituted (>99%), as
well as non-ortho-substituted (dioxin-like), PCB congeners.
Depending on the system and responses under study, a structure-activity
relationship for the differing Cl
substitution
patterns on the biphenyl ring has been demonstrated that distinguishes
effects of ortho- and non-ortho substituted PCBs
(reviewed in Tilson and Kodavanti, 1997
). In this regard and to
characterize the response, individual PCB congeners (5-10 µM) that
are ortho-substituted (PCB 4 and PCB 138) or
non-ortho-substituted (PCB 15, PCB 77, and PCB 126) were
applied to the cortical cells, and
[Ca2+]i responses were
monitored. There are no detectable levels of polychlorinated
dibenzodioxins (PCDDs) and only very low abundance (0.0001%)
dibenzofuran contaminants in the A1254 mixture (Kodavanti et al.,
1999
). Also, to control for the effects of DMSO on membrane integrity,
0.1% DMSO was the comparator (baseline) for the A1254 concentration-response studies.
Cytoplasmic Free [Ca2+] Concentration
Measurements.
[Ca2+]i was measured with
the Ca2+-sensitive fluorescent dye, fura-2-AM as
described previously (Inglefield and Shafer, 2000a
). Cells cultured on
coverslips were incubated in cell-permeable fura 2-AM (5 µM) for 40 min at 30°C diluted in 2 ml of HEPES-buffered Hanks' balanced salt
solution (referred to herein as HEPES buffer) consisting of: 135 mM
NaCl, 4.2 mM KCl, 1.5 mM CaCl2, 0.5 mM
MgCl2, 0.34 mM
Na2PO4, 0.44 mM
KH2PO4, 10 mM glucose, 20 mM sucrose, and 10 mM HEPES (pH 7.4; 290-300 mOsm). Cells were washed
twice with fresh HEPES buffer then equilibrated >30 min in the dark at
room temperature to remove extracellular dye and to complete the
de-esterification process (thereby converting the fura-2-AM to its
Ca2+-sensitive form, fura-2). Coverslips
containing fura-2-loaded cells were placed in a Leiden coverslip dish
situated in a PDMI-2 microscope open incubator (23°C; Medical
MicroSystems Corp., Greenvale, NY) that was mounted on the stage of a
Nikon Diaphot inverted microscope with a Nikon Fluor40 objective
(numerical aperture 1.3).
Cellular fura-2 fluorescence was obtained every 5 s using 340 and
380 nm excitation wavelengths with a DeltaScan dual excitation fluorescence imaging system from Photon Technology International (South
Brunswick, NJ), and fluorescence emission at 510 nm was detected with a
Hamamatsu C2400 SIT videocamera (Hamamatsu, Bridgewater, NJ). Images
were stored on a Dell Pentium II Dimension personal computer (Austin,
TX) and the intracellular 340/380 ratio was determined off-line from
stored images using Imagemaster 1.4 software (Photon Technology
International). Ratio values were converted to the approximate
free [Ca2+]i using the
equation (Grynkiewicz et al., 1985
):
|
(1)
|
in which R is the 340/380 ratio and
Kd = 272 nM, the dissociation constant
we determined for fura-2. Maximum ratio
(Rmax, 5.9), minimum ratio
(Rmin, 0.7), and
Fo/Fs
[ratio of the fura-2 intensities at 380 nm in the
Ca2+-free (with 5 mM EGTA) and
Ca2+ saturated buffers (with 10 µM
ionomycin), respectively, 4.7] were determined from intracellular
calibration because in vitro calibration may cause mis-estimation of
Ca2+ values due to the difference in fura-2
properties in aqueous solution versus that of the cytoplasm. Estimated
[Ca2+] in the Ca2+-free
solution that was applied to cells was estimated to be 20 nM from a
separate calibration in a cell-free system using fura-2 free acid and
calcium standards obtained from Molecular Probes.
Following baseline recording, PCB exposures were initiated by
pipetting manually an equal volume that contained two times the final
PCB concentration into the chamber. Control experiments indicated that
these volume changes did not alter
[Ca2+]i. In some
experiments, after collecting baseline measurements, the contributions
of specific receptors to intracellular Ca2+
increases were determined by pre-exposing the cultures to
receptor/store antagonists (typically 5-20 min) before A1254 exposure.
After the pretreatment and when fura-2 fluorescence levels were stable, PCB was administered to the bath (in a solution containing the same
modulator). Ca2+ responses were typically
measured for 10 min after addition of toxicant, although extended
Ca2+ recordings also were performed to monitor
latent changes in [Ca2+]i
in those studies where a pharmacologic inhibitor was effective at
inhibiting/attenuating the initial transient. In all experiments, the
final volume of the bathing solution was 2 ml. The absolute amplitude
of Ca2+ transients and in some cases the time to
decay to 10% peak amplitude were determined using specialized software
(Mini Analysis, Synaptosoft Software, Leonia, NJ). The peak
[Ca2+]i obtained
following agonist, A1254 or PCB congener application was determined for
each "responding" neuronal-appearing cell in a group.
Cell Viability, Caspase 3 Activity, and Apoptosis.
Cell
viability was assessed by determining the ability of cortical cells to
exclude Trypan Blue following exposure to A1254. Following a 24-h
exposure to control (0.1% DMSO) or A1254-containing buffer (2, 10, or
20 µM), 0.4% Trypan blue was added to wells of cortical cultures
that had been maintained in the incubator at 37°C (in 95%
O2/5% CO2). Trypan blue
excluding cells were counted using bright field microscopy (Olympus
IMT2, 300×); in each of two identically treated wells, two randomly
selected microscopic fields of at least 100 cells were examined for
each concentration.
The experimenter was blind with respect to the treatment.
Neuronal cells were identified visually by their characteristic shape;
but because examination was conducted in the absence of a specific
stain for neurons, cell survival (as opposed to neuronal survival) is presented.
Activation of the cysteine protease, caspase 3, was assessed in
DIV 6 cells to determine whether the A1254-induced
Ca2+ disturbances were activating an apoptotic
pathway. After 6 and 8 h of exposure, cells in 24-well plates were
lysed and incubated at 37°C with 10 µM of the fluorogenic substrate
zDEVD-AFC (Calbiochem, La Jolla, CA) in a buffer of 25 mM HEPES, 1 mM
EDTA, 3 mM dithiothreitol, 0.1% CHAPS
(3-[(3-cholamidopropyl)dimethylammonio]-1-propanesulfonic acid), and
10% sucrose (pH 7.5). After 45 min, the fluorescent product AFC
was measured using a fluorescent plate reader with excitation set at
395 nm and emission set at 508 nm (Armstrong et al., 1997
).
Separate DIV 6 cells cultured on 12-mm
poly(L-lysine)-coated coverslips were exposed for 24 h
with A1254 or other reagents for determination of apoptotic cells using
in situ terminal-deoxynucleotidyl-transferase-mediated dATP biotin
nick-end labeling (TUNEL) (DeadEnd apoptosis assay kit, Promega,
Madison, WI). Coverslips, fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde, were
pretreated with 2% H2O2 to
quench endogenous peroxidase before the addition of the
terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase. Positively stained
(apoptotic) and negatively stained neurons were scored by cell counting
under bright field microscopy in the same manner as for Trypan blue
counting described above. However, for the TUNEL stain procedure,
neuronal nuclei were clearly discerned from the larger astrocyte
nuclei, thereby allowing the determination of apoptotic neurons.
Cyclic AMP Responsive Element Binding Protein (CREB)
Phosphorylation/Immunoblotting.
DIV 6 cultures were washed free of
serum by incubation in HEPES buffer with 0.1% bovine serum albumin
(Sigma) for 2 h at 37°C before stimulation with the specified
agent. The exposure was terminated by washing with ice-cold
phosphate-buffered saline and addition of lysis buffer [1% Triton
X-100, 20 mM Tris (pH 7.5), 150 mM NaCl, 1 mM EDTA, 10% glycerol, 1 mM
NaF, 1 mM Na3VO4, and 0.5%
protease inhibitor cocktail (Calbiochem, San Diego, CA)]. Cells were
removed from the wells, vortexed gently, and allowed to sit on ice for
10 min. The lysed cells were then centrifuged at 10,000g for
10 min at 4°C. An aliquot of the supernatant was taken for protein
determination, and the remaining supernatant was added to an equal
volume of sample buffer [62.5 mM Tris (pH 6.8), 25% glycerol, 2%
sodium dodecyl sulfate, 0.01% bromophenol blue, and 5%
-mercaptoethanol] and stored at
80°C.
Cell lysates in sample buffer (15 µg) were separated by sodium
dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (10%
polyacrylamide) before electrophoretic transfer onto a nitrocellulose
membrane (Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA). The blots were blocked for 1 h
with 5% nonfat dried milk at room temperature. The blots were then
incubated overnight at 4°C with commercially available polyclonal
primary antibodies derived from rabbit
[antiphospho-Ser133-CREB (diluted 1:1000) or
anti-CREB (diluted 1:2000); Upstate Biotechnology, Inc., Lake Placid,
NY]. After three short washes, the blots were subsequently incubated
for 1 h at room temperature with horseradish peroxidase-conjugated
goat anti-rabbit IgG (1:20,000; Kirkegaard & Perry Laboratories, Inc.,
Gaithersburg, MD). The blots were then exposed to ECL substrate
(Pierce, Rockford, IL), and chemiluminescence images were collected and
analyzed using a Fluor-S MultiImager (Bio-Rad). Phospho-CREB (pCREB)
and CREB bands were detected at the 43 kDa standard. Relative
activation was determined by normalization of the band density from the
phosphorylated protein with that of the total (phosphorylated and
nonphosphorylated) CREB protein from the same sample.
Data Analysis.
Data are presented as means ± S.E.M.
For the Ca2+ responses, the percentage of
responding cells in treatment groups are also noted. For comparisons of
peak Ca2+ responses, statistical significance was
ascertained using one- or two-way ANOVAs followed by suitable post hoc
tests. To determine whether pharmacological pretreatments were
effective at preventing A1254-induced responses, the proportion of
cellular Ca2+ responses among groups in an
experiment was compared using the
2 test and
Bonferroni-corrected p values for multiple comparisons. For
the cell counts, a decrease in the cell density of control wells occurs
with increasing DIV; thus, the experimental and statistical design took
this into account, and data were analyzed with two-way ANOVA, followed
by one-way ANOVA and Dunnett's t tests. Caspase 3 activity,
TUNEL staining, and pCREB activation were assessed with one-way ANOVA
and Dunnett's test.
 |
Results |
A1254-Initiated Changes in Cytoplasmic Free [Ca2+]:
Concentration Response.
Figure 1A
illustrates the typical response observed during 1 h of imaging of
Ca2+ in a cortical cell exposed continuously to
10 µM (3 ppm) A1254. In the continued presence of A1254, a
Ca2+ transient is followed 3 to 16 min later by
disturbances in the basal Ca2+ level that often
includes Ca2+ oscillations of ~200 to 700 nM in
amplitude each (Fig. 1A). In a previous series of experiments,
we have described the mode of action of PCBs on the latent
Ca2+ oscillations in cortical neurons (Inglefield
and Shafer, 2000b
). The initial Ca2+ transient,
the focus of this paper, comprises a rapid increase in
[Ca2+]i and a slow decay
to basal levels (721 ± 98 s to return to 10% of peak). The
latency to onset of the initial Ca2+ transient
from the time of exposure to A1254 was always <30 s. In characterizing
the initial Ca2+ transient, there was an A1254
concentration-dependent increase in the peak amplitude of
[Ca2+]i stimulated upon
A1254 (1-25 µM, 0.3-7.5 ppm) exposure (Fig. 1B and Table
1). In addition to the effects on peak
Ca2+ amplitude, there were also
concentration-dependent increases in the proportion of cells responding
(Table 1).

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Fig. 1.
A, effect of A1254 (10 µM) to stimulate
intracellular Ca2+ in an intact P0 cortical cell maintained
in culture for 5 days. Cells were loaded with the
Ca2+-sensitive fluorescent indicator, fura-2, as described
under Materials and Methods. The arrow indicates when
the PCB mixture was bath-applied; the PCB mixture remained in the
chamber for the duration of the experiment. The Ca2+
response obtained in the first 10 min (denoted by a box), when PCB
addition occurred, is the focus of the data presented in B, as well as
in Figs. 2 through 4 and Tables 1 through 3. B, representative examples
of initial Ca2+ responses that occur following addition of
A1254 from 1 to 25 µM. Each concentration was repeated in at least
two different cultures with 27 to 60 cells per concentration.
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TABLE 1
Amplitude and percentage of cells responding to Aroclor 1254 with
initial intracellular Ca2+ transients: concentration
responsea
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Specificity of Ca2+ Responses.
Addition of control
buffer (0.1% DMSO) to cells from DIV 4 to 6 cortical cultures did not
produce a [Ca2+]i change
(not shown) indicating that neither mechanical manipulation of the
cells nor vehicle were responsible for the Ca2+
disturbance. Moreover, separate exposures of cells to two main classes
of PCB congeners that are dibenzofuran- and dioxin-free (personal
communication, Michael Bolger, AccuStandard) elicited distinct
responses. Initial Ca2+ transients were
consistently stimulated by ortho-substituted PCB congeners
(PCB 4 and PCB 138), but such responses were rare with
non-ortho-substituted PCB congeners (PCB 15, PCB 77, and PCB
126) (Fig. 2 and Table
2), which are aryl hydrocarbon receptor agonists like the dioxins. Both of the ortho-substituted
congeners (PCB 4 and PCB 138; 10 µM) stimulated at least a 7-fold
increase of [Ca2+]i from
baseline levels of 72 ± 5 nM in >70% of the cells. The characteristics of the initial Ca2+ transients
stimulated by PCB 4 and PCB 138 were indistinguishable from that
elicited by A1254 in that Ca2+ levels recovered
toward basal levels over several minutes. Responses to the
non-ortho-substituted PCBs occurred infrequently, although in those rare instances (in <10% of cells), the peak amplitude could
be marked, reaching levels as high as 400 nM (Table 2).

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Fig. 2.
Effect of A1254 and selected PCB congeners on
[Ca2+]i in developing cortical cells.
Ortho-substituted PCB congeners 138 (2,2',3,4,4',5'-hexachlorobiphenyl) and 4 (2,2'-dichlorobiphenyl) at 10 µM selectively induced an initial Ca2+ transient with
characteristics similar to that induced by the PCB mixture, A1254 (10 µM). Changes in intracellular Ca2+ were blunted or absent
when non-ortho-substituted congeners 15 (4,4'-dichlorobiphenyl), 77 (3,3',4,4'-tetrachlorobiphenyl), or 126 (3,3',4,4',5-pentachlorobiphenyl) were applied (all at 10 µM, except
PCB 126, which was added at 5 µM due to solubility issues). Arrows
denote the time of PCB addition, and the PCBs remained in the bath for
the rest of the experiment. # refers to the IUPAC number of the PCB
congener used.
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Release by A1254 of Intracellular Ca2+ Stores and
Stimulation of Store-Operated Entry of Ca2+.
PCB-induced disturbances in Ca2+ homeostasis have
been reported to be due to both a mobilization of
Ca2+ from an internal source(s) (Wong et al.,
1997
) and an influx of extracellular Ca2+ (Bae et
al., 1999b
; Mundy et al., 1999
; Inglefield and Shafer, 2000b
). Thus, we
sought to determine the source of Ca2+
responsible for the initial Ca2+ transient
induced by A1254. A rapid, initial Ca2+ transient
was still present in Ca2+-free extracellular
buffer solution (having an estimated total free
Ca2+ concentration of ~20 nM), compared with
Ca2+ replete solution. Although the peak
Ca2+ amplitude was not significantly attenuated
after the cells' exposure to a Ca2+-free buffer
(Fig. 3 and Table
3), there was an effect to shorten the
duration of Ca2+ responses stimulated by A1254 in
Ca2+-free buffer (i.e.,
[Ca2+]i exhibited a more
rapid recovery to basal levels; Fig. 3A, inset). The
Ca2+ responses stimulated by 20 µM A1254 in
buffer containing the L-type Ca2+ channel blocker
nifedipine (1 µM) also were not attenuated in terms of either the
peak amplitude, percentage of cells responding (Table 3), or the decay
to baseline (981 ± 187 s, N.S. p > 0.05 relative to A1254 + Ca2+). This indicates that
the Ca2+ transient is largely due to release from
intracellular Ca2+ stores, although
Ca2+ influx from the extracellular solution
contributes to and prolongs the decay. Interestingly, when
Ca2+-containing buffer was reintroduced to cells
exposed to A1254, the resting basal
[Ca2+]i became elevated
rapidly in 59% of cells (Fig. 3B), suggestive of
Ca2+ entry through plasma membrane-situated
store-operated channels (SOCs) to refill A1254-activated intracellular
Ca2+ stores (Fig. 3B). Figure 3C illustrates
SOC-mediated Ca2+ entry stimulated with 1 mM of
the muscarinic agonist, carbachol (79% of cells responded with
store-operated Ca2+ entry); this has been shown
to occur in developing neurons (Bouron, 2000
). Overall, these results
implicate the importance of intracellular Ca2+
pools in the peak initial Ca2+ transient
stimulated by A1254 and demonstrate that a trigger of store-operated
Ca2+ entry (also referred to as capacitative
Ca2+ entry) from extracellular sources extends
the period for return of intracellular Ca2+ to
baseline.

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Fig. 3.
Intracellular Ca2+ stores of developing
cortical cells are activated by A1254, and this results in
store-operated Ca2+ influx. A, relationship between
PCB-stimulated release of internal Ca2+ and subsequent
Ca2+ influx through transmembrane route(s). A1254 added to
the DIV 4 to 6 cells without or with 1.5 mM Ca2+ in the
extracellular buffer stimulated similar peak increases in the
Ca2+ transient, but note the presence of a rapid recovery
of intracellular Ca2+ to basal levels in
Ca2+-free external buffer. The inset shows the
significantly reduced time for [Ca2+]i to
return to 10% of peak amplitude in the continued presence of A1254 in
the Ca2+-free solution (n = 21-29
cells). *p < 0.05. Also different for the
A1254-stimulated responses in Ca2+-free solution was the
absence of Ca2+ responses previously referred to as a
"type 3" (see Inglefield and Shafer, 2000b ), which are rapid
Ca2+ responses to A1254 that failed to return to basal
levels when cells were incubated in a normal
Ca2+-containing solution. Following
[Ca2+]i stimulation by A1254 (20 µM; B) or
carbachol (1 mM; C) and return to baseline in Ca2+-free
solution, re-addition of Ca2+ (1.5 mM) produced a
Ca2+ entry in 10 of 17 A1254-treated and in 11 of 14 carbachol (CCh)-treated cells.
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TABLE 3
Pharmacologic agents active at IP3 receptors or IP3
releasable stores inhibit PCB-induced initial Ca2+
transientsa
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Block of the A1254-Induced Initial Ca2+ Transient by
Pharmacological Agents.
Figure 4
shows the results of studies to determine the source of intracellular
Ca2+ underlying the initial A1254-induced
[Ca2+]i transient. These
mechanistic studies were performed with 20 µM A1254 since this
concentration induced a nearly maximal response in the population of
cortical cells. To determine the pool released by A1254, the effects of
several pharmacological agents that alter Ca2+
release from intracellular Ca2+ stores were
examined. The intracellular Ca2+ source for the
majority of the A1254-induced initial Ca2+
transient was the endoplasmic reticulum because pretreatment with
thapsigargin (10 µM for 10 min), a specific inhibitor of the
endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase pump, prevented
detectable responses in 70% of the cells (Fig. 4). In those cells that
did respond, the amplitude of the A1254 response was significantly
attenuated (p < 0.05 following significant treatment
effect in the one-way ANOVA) (Table 3). The same thapsigargin
preincubation was sufficient to suppress completely the intracellular
Ca2+ responses to stimulation by carbachol (1 mM)
(response abolished in 16 of 18 cells). Further assessment of
endoplasmic reticulum-activated mobilization of intracellular
Ca2+ by A1254 was done using pharmacological
agents active at IP3 or ryanodine receptors. Both
types of intracellular stores were functioning in these cells because
applications of carbachol (1 mM), ryanodine (100 µM), or caffeine (20 mM) mobilized intracellular stores (Fig. 4). Although pretreatment with
ryanodine (100 µM for 10 or 20 min) completely blocked the increase
in [Ca2+]i induced by
caffeine, it was without effect on the A1254-induced increases in
[Ca2+]i (Fig. 4 and Table
3). In contrast, block of the Ca2+ transient
occurred with the specific IP3 receptor
antagonist, xestospongin C (1 µM, 10 min preincubation). Only 11% of
the 37 cells had a response to A1254 (p < 0.05 following significant treatment effect in the
2 analysis); for these remaining cells, the
peak amplitude of the response was significantly reduced (Fig. 4 and
Table 3). Xestospongin C was a potent inhibitor of carbachol-stimulated
[Ca2+]i increases (Fig.
4). Similar to results with A1254, xestospongin C and thapsigargin also
reduced Ca2+ transients initiated by 10 µM
2,2'-dichlorobiphenyl (PCB 4), although the percentage of responding
cells was not attenuated (Table 3). As a final demonstration that A1254
was causing release of Ca2+ from an
IP3-sensitive Ca2+ pool,
pretreatment of cells with 1 mM carbachol in
Ca2+-free buffer (to prevent replenishment of the
IP3-sensitive stores as they were emptied) led to
a complete inhibition of the Ca2+ transient when
A1254 was subsequently applied (Fig. 4 and Table 3). Overall, these
results indicated that the initial Ca2+ signals
stimulated by ortho-substituted PCBs in A1254 in DIV 4 to 6 cortical cells were due to release of
IP3-sensitive Ca2+ stores.
These findings also distinguish the mechanism for this early
Ca2+ disturbance induced by PCBs from that of the
latent Ca2+ disturbance/oscillations identified
previously where Ca2+ entry through L-type
channels and excitatory glutamate receptors occurred (Inglefield and
Shafer, 2000b
).

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Fig. 4.
A1254 induces release of Ca2+ from
IP3-sensitive intracellular stores. The ability of A1254 to
release Ca2+ from endoplasmic reticulum, IP3-,
and ryanodine-sensitive stores was examined using specific
pharmacologic antagonists. In the top row, thapsigargin (10 µM) was
used to deplete the endoplasmic reticulum of Ca2+ before
addition of 20 µM A1254 (left, top row) or the positive control,
carbachol (CCh; 1 mM; center, top row). In the middle row, the
IP3 receptor antagonist, xestospongin C (Xes C;1 µM) was
used to block the release of IP3-sensitive Ca2+
stores from the endoplasmic reticulum before addition of 20 µM A1254
(left, middle row) or 1 mM carbachol (center, middle row). In the
bottom row, ryanodine (100 µM) pretreatment was used to block the
release of ryanodine-sensitive Ca2+ stores in the
endoplasmic reticulum before addition of 20 µM A1254 (left, bottom
row) or 20 mM caffeine (center, bottom row). The right panel in all
three rows illustrates the response of cells to positive controls for
each condition in the absence of antagonist (thapsigargin, xestospongin
C, or ryanodine). The middle row, right panel also shows the effect of
depleting carbachol-sensitive stores and preventing their refilling in
Ca2+-free buffer before the addition of A1254. Thapsigargin
and xestospongin C, but not ryanodine, treatments were effective at
inhibiting the A1254-induced Ca2+ transient. Each panel
illustrates the typical response to the indicated treatment(s) in an
individual cell. All responses are taken from separate coverslips.
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Association of the Initial Release of Intracellular
Ca2+ Stores Caused by PCBs with Latent Ca2+
Disturbances.
Previous work has shown a significant increase in
basal Ca2+ levels arising over the course of a
1 h exposure to 10 or 20 µM A1254 [often with recurring
Ca2+ oscillations (see Fig. 1A)] (Inglefield and
Shafer, 2000a
). Following the initial Ca2+
transient in the cortical cells with A1254, ~70% of cells later exhibited disturbances of Ca2+ homeostasis, i.e.,
increases in basal Ca2+. The dependence of latent
Ca2+ disturbances on the initial
Ca2+ transient was investigated by pretreating
cells with thapsigargin (10 µM) or xestospongin C (1 µM) and
assessing changes in basal [Ca2+]i after a 30-min
exposure to 20 µM A1254. As shown in Ca2+
traces (Fig. 5, A and B) and the bar
graph (Fig. 5C), pretreatment with either thapsigargin or xestospongin
before A1254 was effective at blocking the A1254-induced
Ca2+ transient; both also significantly reduced
the elevations in basal Ca2+ after a 0.5-h of
A1254 exposure. These results suggested that the
Ca2+ transient caused by A1254 is associated with
later dysregulation of Ca2+ levels in the same
cells.

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Fig. 5.
Selected pretreatments (pre-tx) that attenuate the
initial release of intracellular Ca2+ stores induced by
A1254 also inhibit latent Ca2+ disturbances. Traces
illustrate Ca2+ levels during the first 0.5 h in
representative cells upon exposure to 20 µM A1254 alone (top) or with
xestospongin C (Xesto.; 1 µM) (middle), which was added to the bath
10 min before the exposure. Values in the graph represent the increase
in basal [Ca2+]i, measured 30 min into A1254
exposure. The pretreatments were 10 min, and the agents remained in the
bathing buffer during the A1254 exposure. For the thapsigargin
pretreatment, n = 24 cells. *p < 0.05 relative to no pretreatment. Thapsi., thapsigargin.
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Consequences of PCB Actions: I. Delayed Cytotoxicity That Is Not
Apoptotic.
In previous studies, exposure (1-4 h) to PCBs in the
range of 20 µM (Inglefield and Shafer, 2000a
) to 50 µM (reviewed in
Tilson and Kodavanti, 1997
) have not been reported to cause acute
cytotoxicity, with one notable exception (Carpenter et al., 1997
).
However, data on the status of cell viability after prolonged in vitro exposure to PCBs are lacking, yet important, based on the ability of
identified alterations in Ca2+ homeostasis in the
endoplasmic reticulum to contribute to neuronal apoptosis and
excitotoxicity (Mattson et al., 2000
). The present study, conducted
using Trypan blue staining after 24 h of A1254 exposure, found a
decrease in cell viability by A1254 that was maturation-sensitive;
cytotoxicity became prevalent as the A1254 concentration and in vitro
age of the culture increased (Fig. 6A).
Compared with DMSO-containing controls, concentrations of A1254 up to
20 µM (24 h) were not associated with significant cytotoxicity when
assessed on DIV 4, and on DIV 6 only the highest concentration of A1254
caused moderate (approximately 21%), but significant cytotoxicity. By
contrast, significant cytotoxicity was observed in DIV 7 cultures
treated with the 10 and 20 µM A1254 for the previous 24 h (~20
and ~50% for these concentrations, respectively).

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Fig. 6.
Concentration-dependent effects of subacute exposure
to A1254 on cellular viability in mixed cortical culture: lack of
apoptosis. A, the counts of Trypan blue excluding (viable) cells (from
six different cultures) exposed to A1254 (2-20 µM, 24 h) on
several DIV. Because a decrease in the cell density of control wells
occurs with increasing DIV, the experimental and statistical design
took this into account and data were analyzed with a two-way ANOVA, and
the interaction of DIV and [A1254] was followed with one-way ANOVA
and Dunnett's t tests *p < 0.05, relative to 0 µM A1254 for respective DIV). B, activity of caspase 3 in DIV 7 cells was assessed after 6 and 8 h of exposure to A1254
(0-20 µM) or the proapoptotic agent, staurosporine (StSp; 1 µM).
Because there was no time-associated effect of the A1254-induced
activity, data from these exposures were combined. C, differential
labeling of TUNEL-stained DIV 7 neurons following 24 h exposure to
A1254 (20 µM) or staurosporine (1 µM), also on DIV 7. Note
TUNEL-negative cells among a single-positive cell following A1254 (20 µM) treatment, whereas the majority of StSp-treated cells are
TUNEL-stained, indicative of apoptotic death. Bar = 50 µm. D,
normal and apoptotic (TUNEL-positive) cells were scored in at least
three separate coverslips from two different cultures by counting the
cells in two distinct areas comprising >100 neurons. In marked
contrast to ~40% of TUNEL-positive cells produced by staurosporine,
the numbers of TUNEL-positive cells in the A1254-treated were
equivalent to that in control cultures exposed to the diluent, 0.1%
DMSO, also for 24 h. *p < 0.05 following
one-way ANOVA and Dunnett's t test.
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Because dysregulation of Ca2+ homeostasis has
been associated with activation of apoptotic pathways in neurons
(Mattson et al., 2000
), we examined whether A1254 cytotoxicity observed
above was the result of apoptosis using two methods. No induction of
caspase 3 activity occurred after a 6- to 8-h exposure to 2 to 20 µM
A1254 (Fig. 6B). Moreover, TUNEL staining on DIV 7 (the day in vitro with greatest sensitivity to A1254 cytotoxicity) revealed no evidence for greater amounts of apoptotic cells after a 24-h A1254 exposure relative either to control cells that had been serum-depleted (24 h;
Fig. 6, C and D) or control cells maintained in serum (not shown).
These results are in contrast to that obtained with the positive-control staurosporine (1 µM). Therefore, in DIV 6/7 cortical cultures subacute exposure to the highest concentration, 20 µM A1254,
causes significant cytotoxicity that occurs not via apoptosis, but
probably via necrotic mechanisms.
Consequences of PCB Actions: II. CREB Phosphorylation.
Because cell viability is not compromised in the majority (
80% with
<20 µM A1254) of the population under the exposure conditions examined in these studies, ramifications other than cytotoxicity were
also examined. CREB is an important transcription factor that is
sensitive to Ca2+ signals (reviewed in Silva et
al., 1998
and Curtis and Finkbeiner, 1999
). Given the perturbations of
Ca2+ homeostasis induced by A1254, studies were
conducted to determine whether or not CREB phosphorylation (activation)
was induced following A1254 exposure. Immunoblots using antibodies
selective for the phosphorylated form of CREB (pCREB) and CREB (total
expression) in DIV 6 cultures, demonstrated that pCREB was increased
within 20 min of A1254 addition (Fig.
7A). Levels of pCREB reached maximal levels by 40 to 60 min of exposure to 10 µM A1254. A1254 did not induce de novo synthesis of CREB because the total amount of CREB did
not increase as a result of the exposures (Fig. 7A). A1254 also led to
concentration-dependent increases in pCREB activation, reaching a
2-fold induction with 10 and 20 µM (Fig. 7B). In comparison, glutamate (100 µM for 40 min) maximally stimulated pCREB ~6-fold, whereas the ortho-substituted PCB congener 4 (2,2'-DCB, 10 µM) stimulated pCREB 1.3 ± 0.1-fold (data not shown). In
experiments conducted using DIV 4 cultures, A1254 induced CREB
phosphorylation to levels similar to those observed using DIV 6 cultures (data not shown). These data demonstrate that CREB
phosphorylation is not specifically linked to cytotoxicity because no
cytotoxicity was observed in DIV 4 cultures.

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Fig. 7.
Activation of CREB by A1254 in developing cortical
cells. A, increased levels of phosphorylated CREB follow stimulation
with A1254 (10 µM; 3 ppm) for the times shown (in min). CREB
phosphorylation on serine-133 was assessed by Western blotting using
antibodies selective for the phosphorylated form (top gel) or total
CREB (bottom gel) from the same samples as described under
Materials and Methods. B, quantitation of
the selective increase in phosphorylation of serine-133 of CREB in
response to different concentrations (2,10, and 20 µM) following
40-min exposure to A1254. For each A1254 concentration, values were
normalized to the total amount of pCREB or CREB in the respective
control. The pCREB/CREB ratio indicates a relative increase in
phosphorylation of CREB normalized to that for control.
n = 4 separate experiments. *p < 0.05 following one-way ANOVA and Dunnett's t test.
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Discussion |
We have identified several novel actions of individual
ortho-substituted PCBs and a PCB mixture, A1254, in intact
cells cultured from neonatal rat cerebral cortex. The results,
including immediate Ca2+ release from
IP3-sensitive stores with subsequent activation of store-operated Ca2+ influx (also referred to
as capacitative Ca2+ entry), further perturbation
of Ca2+ homeostasis, and activation of a nuclear
transcription factor (Fig. 8), may aid
understanding the mode of cellular action of persistent,
bioaccumulating toxicants such as PCBs. These findings are consistent
with other known cellular actions of PCBs, wherein changes in
intracellular Ca2+ homeostasis is a recurring
finding in a variety of intact cell types (Carpenter et al., 1997
; Voie
and Fonnum, 1998
; Bae et al., 1999b
; Fischer et al., 1999
). However,
further consequences as in the status of cell viability after subacute
exposure has received less attention. The concentrations of 10 µM and
lower used here for the subacute exposure of cortical culture to A1254
are not unrealistic because rats dosed perinatally with A1254 (with 6 mg/kg via the dam) achieved levels in the frontal cortex on postnatal day 21 of 2.4 ppm (~7.2 µM) (Crofton et al., 2000
). Previous in vitro investigations have used PCB concentrations higher than 20 µM.
The demonstration of Ca2+ transients at PCB
concentrations as low as 1 µM is among the lowest reported effects in
intact cells. Future mechanistic studies exploring subacute exposure
should take into account the present findings of decreased cell
viability in the continuous presence of 20 µM PCBs.

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Fig. 8.
Diagram of the temporal order of activation of the
intracellular Ca2+ changes influenced by A1254 or
ortho-substituted PCBs in cortical culture. A1254/PCBs
release Ca2+ from IP3-releasable endoplasmic
reticular (ER) stores (1). This results in Ca2+ entry via
SOC channels (2) to refill the endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+
stores. These initial events appear to sensitize the postsynaptic cell
to released excitatory amino acid neurotransmitters, resulting in
latent perturbation of Ca2+ homeostasis (3).
[Participation of the L-type VGCC and ionotropic glutamate receptor
(GluR) was identified in Inglefield and Shafer (2000b) .] Putative
consequences of this heightened Ca2+ signaling include
phosphorylation of nuclear CREB and inhibition of GABAA
receptor responses (Inglefield and Shafer, 2000a , not shown). Whether
PCBs directly activate IP3 production by a phospholipase C
pathway or act on IP3-releasable Ca2+ stores
themselves is not known (question marks). AP, action potential; P,
phosphorylated.
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A1254-Mediated Release of IP3 Receptor-Linked
Intracellular Ca2+ Stores and Interaction with IP
Signaling.
The initial Ca2+ transient
induced by A1254 or ortho-substituted PCB congeners (PCB 4 and PCB 138) in cortical cells is analogous to that induced shortly
after ortho-substituted PCB addition in granulocytes where a
single transient and slow decay to baseline also is seen (Voie and
Fonnum, 1998
). However, the findings of an early, transient change in
basal [Ca2+]i is not
universal in investigations with intact cells and exposure to
ortho-substituted PCBs. The early-onset
Ca2+ disturbances we observed for PCB 4 and PCB
138 in >70% of cortical cells occurred more rapidly than occurs in
cultured cerebellar granule cells upon exposure to PCB 4 (reviewed in
Tilson and Kodavanti, 1997
; Mundy et al., 1999
). In contrast to our
finding that non-ortho-substituted PCBs (15, 77, and 126)
failed to induce an initial Ca2+ transient, a
rapid Ca2+ increase has been reported in intact
hippocampal cells given dioxin (Hanneman et al., 1996
), which is
structurally similar to non-ortho-substituted PCBs. A number
of factors could contribute to these differences, including different
cell types used, maturity of the cells at time of testing, or different
concentrations of the compound under examination.
Inhibition of the initial A1254-induced
[Ca2+]i increases by
pretreatment with compounds (thapsigargin and xestospongin C) affecting select intracellular Ca2+ stores was observed in
the present study. This reduction likely occurred as a consequence of
either depletion of endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+
stores in the case of thapsigargin or prevention of release of the
IP3-mediated Ca2+ stores in
the case of xestospongin, based on the site of action of these
pharmacons and demonstration of their efficacy against appropriate
agonists (Fig. 4). In contrast to thapsigargin's efficacy against the
A1254-induced Ca2+ disturbance, the transient
persisted following depletion of ryanodine-sensitive Ca2+ stores with a 20-min pre-exposure to a high
concentration of ryanodine. This strongly suggests that the
Ca2+-ATPase associated with
IP3 receptor stores was operative in the effect
produced by thapsigargin. The finding of nifedipine's inability to
attenuate the A1254-induced Ca2+ transient agrees
with the failure by ryanodine to block the transient because the L-type
voltage-sensitive Ca2+ channels are functionally
coupled to ryanodine receptors (Chavis et al., 1996
). Thus, the absence
of effect of two different modulators in the L-type voltage-gated
Ca2+ channel (VGCC)/ryanodine receptor complex is
internally consistent, but at odds with the earlier finding that A1254
enhances the binding of ryanodine to the ryanodine receptor subtype,
RyR1 (Wong and Pessah, 1996
).
Additional evidence that IP3-releasable
Ca2+ stores in intact cells are functionally
important for the actions of this class of toxicant comes from the
induction of store-operated Ca2+ entry, as
indicated by the rebound increase of
[Ca2+]i following the
return of Ca2+-containing buffer to those cells
whose internal stores were mobilized by A1254 in
Ca2+-free buffer. Ca2+
release from IP3 stores activates store-operated
Ca2+ channels (also known as
Ca2+ release-activated Ca2+
channels, CRAC) on the plasma membrane (Hofer et al., 1998
). A very
recent study convincingly showed the physical and functional coupling
of IP3 receptor-mediated
Ca2+ stores and SOCs (Ma et al., 2000
).
Store-operated Ca2+ entry is present in
developing neurons (Bouron, 2000
), and the preceding evidence is in
accordance with store-operated Ca2+ entry in the
A1254-induced stimulation of IP3 receptors.
For some time (Kodavanti et al., 1994
; Tithof et al., 1995
; Shafer et
al., 1996
; Voie and Fonnum, 1998
), an effect of PCBs on immune cells or
neurons to elevate inositol phosphate levels or activate inositol
phosphate signaling has been known to occur, but no direct functional
interaction with IP3 releasable
Ca2+ stores has been demonstrated. The present
study confirms what those earlier investigators had proposed: that
elevation of [Ca2+ ]i
induced by ortho-substituted PCBs (also the mixture A1254 that consists primarily of ortho-substituted congeners), can
be mediated by IP3 receptor-sensitive stores
probably via an increase in IP3 levels [of note,
activation of IP3-releasable
Ca2+ stores has also been demonstrated for
another chlorinated hydrocarbon,
-hexachlorocyclohexane (lindane),
in smooth muscle cells (Criswell et al., 1994
)]. Although Mundy et al.
(1999)
did report a significantly increased
[3H] IP3 receptor binding
in cerebellar microsomes following a short exposure to PCB 4, a
functional effect of PCB 4 on the IP3-releasable stores was not identified. In cortical microsomes from adult animals, there was a stimulatory action on ryanodine receptors to release Ca2+ by the ortho-substituted PCB 95, but no Ca2+ effect occurred in the larger
population of vesicles harboring IP3-sensitive
efflux pathways (Wong et al., 1997
). Others have shown that a PCB
mixture similar to A1254 does not stimulate release of inositol
phosphate in smooth muscle cells (Bae et al., 1999a
). Therefore, the
phenotype of the cells (which tissue or even which cellular phenotype),
as well as the age of the cells, may be important factors for the
participation of IP3 receptors in
Ca2+ responses induced by PCBs.
On the Consequences of A1254-Induced Disturbances in Endoplasmic
Reticulum Ca2+ Homeostasis.
Both excitotoxicity (which
can lead to necrosis) and apoptosis are possible outcomes of
alterations in neuronal Ca2+ homeostasis. Certain
proteins from central nervous system infections, such as Tat (a human
immunodeficiency virus type-1 protein), cause disturbances in
endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ homeostasis that are
considered central to later apoptotic cell death (New et al., 1997
;
Kruman et al., 1998
; Haughey et al., 1999
). Using calcium imaging of
cortical neurons that had either a thapsigargin or xestospongin C
pretreatment to attenuate the A1254-induced initial
Ca2+ transient, we identified a role of the
initial mechanism of PCB action in the subsequent prolonged
Ca2+ disturbances. This is in agreement with the
recognition of an association of the two phases of
Ca2+ disturbance induced by Tat in human
embryonic neurons maintained in culture (Haughey et al., 1999
). These
latent Ca2+ changes are mediated by heightened
Ca2+ influx across the plasma membrane, as seen
after stimulation with PCBs (Inglefield and Shafer, 2000b
) and with Tat
(Haughey et al., 1999
). From the relationship identified between the
Ca2+ mobilization from intracellular stores
induced by A1254 (or Tat) and the facilitation of later
Ca2+ dysregulation, it would appear that
mobilization of intracellular Ca2+ stores by a
"stressor" serves to change the "gain" of signaling proteins at
the plasma membrane. It is also possible that the replenishing of
depleted IP3-sensitive Ca2+
stores contributes in some way to latent increases in basal
[Ca2+]i or to the
activation of Ca2+-sensitive second messengers
that alter the responsiveness of plasma membrane receptors. In contrast
to the prevalent cell death that is produced by Tat in vitro, 24 h
of A1254 exposure led to cell death only in a subset of neurons under
specific conditions; survival of the youngest cells (DIV 3-4) across
all A1254 concentrations tested was not different from control
cultures, whereas cytotoxicity from A1254 occurred in a subset of
neurons as the neurons matured (i.e., DIV 7). However, despite the
noted similarities in the Ca2+ disturbing
mechanisms that occur with Tat and PCBs, under the conditions tested
here, we obtained no data to support an apoptotic cascade induced by
A1254.
CREB Phosphorylation in Cortical Cells by A1254 and
Implications.
CREB phosphorylation serves as a convergence of
Ca2+ signaling pathways in neurons and is
believed important for neuronal development, as well as learning and
memory processes (reviewed in Silva et al., 1998
and Curtis and
Finkbeiner, 1999
). These are processes negatively impacted by PCBs
(Altmann et al., 1998
; Niemi et al., 1998
; Gilbert and Crofton, 1999
).
Given the ability of A1254 to cause immediate (present data) and
prolonged (present data; Inglefield and Shafer, 2000a
,b
) perturbations
of intracellular Ca2+ homeostasis in cortical
neurons, we hypothesized that these perturbations may cause activation
of this transcription factor. The increase of pCREB levels in samples
exposed to A1254, at concentrations that did not induce apoptotic
activity nor appreciable cell death at 24 h, suggested that the
effect was not a cytotoxic response. In agreement with our findings
with DIV 6 cells on activation of pCREB by PCBs, CREB was also
phosphorylated to the same degree when cells were given A1254 on
earlier DIV (data not shown), when there was no cytotoxicity. At
present, it is not known whether this CREB phosphorylation by PCBs
necessarily leads to gene transcription.
The findings of CREB activation by A1254 are consistent with those
showing that IP3-depleted stores and subsequent
store-operated/capacitative Ca2+ entry are a
trigger of the signaling pathway leading to CREB activation (in
cortical glial cells) (Pende et al., 1997
). In addition to the
likelihood (discussed above) that store-operated Ca2+ influx may have primed the cells to undergo
a later Ca2+ disturbance, the activation of CREB
by A1254 may also depend on both the intracellular
Ca2+ release and ensuing transmembrane
Ca2+ influx. Specifically, it has been shown that
CREB activation following stimulation with carbachol (which mobilizes
IP3 stores) is prevented in
Ca2+-deficient buffer (Pende et al., 1997
). The
CREB activation seen with A1254 in a mixed cortical culture lasted
longer than the transient CREB activation (<30 min) that occurs from
carbachol-mediated Ca2+ influx (Pende et al.,
1997
), and this longer lasting CREB activation may be secondary to
A1254's additional actions on Ca2+ signaling
that include activation of excitatory amino acid receptors and L-type
VGCCs (Inglefield and Shafer, 2000b
). Transmembrane Ca2+ influx through these latter channels as a
consequence of the release of synaptic glutamate is also tightly linked
to CREB phosphorylation (reviewed in Silva et al., 1998
and Curtis and
Finkbeiner, 1999
). Thus, transmembrane Ca2+
influx may play an important role in the mechanistic link between PCB-induced Ca2+ dysregulation and the longer
lasting CREB activation.
Finally, intracellular activators upstream from CREB are also regulated
by PCBs because mitogen activated protein (MAP)/extracellular signal
regulated kinase (ERK) (MAP/ERK) is activated both by A1254 and
ortho-substituted PCBs in non-neuronal cells (Fischer et
al., 1999
). The MAP/ERK pathway, linked to the formation and storage of
memory, is regulated by carbachol-mediated increases in
Ca2+ in cultured hippocampal and cortical cells
(Rosenblum et al., 2000
). Other kinase pathways in the cytosol are also
altered as a consequence of PCB-mediated changes in
[Ca2+]i (reviewed in
Tilson and Kodavanti, 1997
; Tithof et al., 1997
).
Conclusion.
A release of IP3
receptor-linked intracellular Ca2+ stores in rat
cortical neuronal culture was found to precede latent
Ca2+ disturbances involving L-type
Ca2+ channels/glutamate receptors that arise in
the continued presence of this toxicant (Bae et al., 1999b
; Inglefield
and Shafer, 2000b
). It is clear from the present study that apoptosis
is not the message conveyed by this period of induced
Ca2+ signals, as opposed to the proapoptotic
effects of a neurotoxin (Tat) that elicits very similar
Ca2+ signals. Instead, alteration of a nuclear
transcription factor in cerebral cortical cultures occurs with this PCB
mixture. This may implicate phenotypic changes in developing nervous
system tissue in vivo as the net effect of certain PCBs. As for PCB
actions on signal transduction pathways leading to gene transcription, PCBs ultimately may regulate processes such as neurotransmitter phenotype or neuronal plasticity.
We thank Connie Meacham and Theresa Freudenrich for providing
the cortical cultures, as well as Drs. Patricia Ganey at Michigan State
University and Prasada Kodavanti at the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency for helpful discussions of an earlier version of the paper.
Accepted for publication December 19, 2000.
Received for publication October 11, 2000.
The research described in this article has been funded,
reviewed, and approved by the National Health and Environmental Effects Research Laboratory, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Approval does not signify that the contents necessarily reflect the views and
policies of the agency nor does mention of trade names or commercial
products constitute endorsement or recommendation for use.
Portions of this work were presented at the combined annual meeting of
the American Society of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology and the
American Society of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics, and
have been published in abstract form (Inglefield et al., 2000
).