Nerve growth factor withdrawal-induced cell death in neuronal PC12 cells resembles that in sympathetic neurons.
Open Access
- 15 December 1992
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of cell biology
- Vol. 119 (6) , 1669-1680
- https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.119.6.1669
Abstract
Previous studies have shown that in neuronal cells the developmental phenomenon of programmed cell death is an active process, requiring synthesis of both RNA and protein. This presumably reflects a requirement for novel gene products to effect cell death. It is shown here that the death of nerve growth factor-deprived neuronal PC12 cells occurs at the same rate as that of rat sympathetic neurons and, like rat sympathetic neurons, involves new transcription and translation. In nerve growth factor-deprived neuronal PC12 cells, a decline in metabolic activity, assessed by uptake of [3H]2-deoxyglucose, precedes the decline in cell number, assessed by counts of trypan blue-excluding cells. Both declines are prevented by actinomycin D and anisomycin. In contrast, the death of nonneuronal (chromaffin-like) PC12 cells is not inhibited by transcription or translation inhibitors and thus does not require new protein synthesis. DNA fragmentation by internucleosomal cleavage does not appear to be a consistent or significant aspect of cell death in sympathetic neurons, neuronal PC12 cells, or nonneuronal PC12 cells, notwithstanding that the putative nuclease inhibitor aurintricarboxylic acid protects sympathetic neurons, as well as neuronal and nonneuronal PC12 cells, from death induced by trophic factor removal. Both phenotypic classes of PC12 cells respond to aurintricarboxylic acid with similar dose-response characteristics. Our results indicate that programmed cell death in neuronal PC12 cells, but not in nonneuronal PC12 cells, resembles programmed cell death in sympathetic neurons in significant mechanistic aspects: time course, role of new protein synthesis, and lack of a significant degree of DNA fragmentation.Keywords
This publication has 39 references indexed in Scilit:
- bcl-2 inhibits multiple forms of apoptosis but not negative selection in thymocytesCell, 1991
- Glutamate triggers internucleosomal DNA cleavage in neuronal cellsBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1991
- Programmed cell death: Apoptosis and oncogenesisCell, 1991
- Programmed cell death and extrathymic reduction of Vβ8+CD4+ T cells in mice tolerant to Staphylococcus aureus enterotoxin BNature, 1991
- Inhibition of protein synthesis prevents cell death in sensory and parasympathetic neurons deprived of neurotrophic factor in vitroJournal of Neurobiology, 1990
- Naturally occurring and induced neuronal death in the chick embryo in vivo requires protein and RNA synthesis: Evidence for the role of cell death genesDevelopmental Biology, 1990
- Stimulation of transcription and translation by aurin tricarboxylic acid in mitochondrial lysates from Ehrlich ascites cellsBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1987
- Glucocorticoid-induced thymocyte apoptosis is associated with endogenous endonuclease activationNature, 1980
- Nerve growth factor prevents the death and stimulates the neuronal differentiation of clonal PC12 pheochromocytoma cells in serum-free mediumThe Journal of cell biology, 1978
- The inhibition of nucleic acid-binding proteins by aurintricarboxylic acidBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1973