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1 Department of Developmental Neurobiology, St. Jude Childrens Research Hospital, Memphis, Tennessee; 2 Center for Developmental Biology, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center of Dallas, Dallas, Texas; and 3 Department of Neurology, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri
| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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PTEN is a lipid phosphatase that dephosphorylates the 3' position of both phosphatidylinositol 3,4,5-triphosphate and phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate. This activity directly reverses the phosphorylation catalyzed by phosphatidylinositol 3'-kinase (PI3k), thereby placing PTEN as a central negative regulator of the phosphatidylinositol 3'-kinase pathway (3) . PTEN is believed to exert its tumor suppressor activity predominantly through negative regulation of the growth, proliferative, and survival signals transduced through phosphatidylinositol 3'-kinase pathway signaling. Consistent with this hypothesis, the vast majority of PTEN mutations observed in human tumors ablate PTEN lipid phosphatase activity (4) . Intriguingly, there are additional PTEN functions, which may be independent of its lipid phosphatase activity, including negative regulation of p53 and inhibition of glioma cell migration (5 , 6) .
The critical role of Pten in development is underscored by the embryonic lethality observed in Pten-null mice at approximately day E7.5 (7, 8, 9) . These Pten-deficient embryos exhibit abnormal placental formation and patterning defects in the cephalic and caudal regions. To gain insights into the role of Pten in specific tissues and to circumvent the embryonic lethality observed in conventional knockout mice, Cre/loxP-mediated Pten inactivation has been used to dissect the complex and context-dependent roles performed by Pten in development, homeostasis, and tumor suppression (4) . These studies indicate several fundamental cellular processes for which Pten is required, including cell migration during development, regulation of cell size, proliferation, and apoptosis. Loss of Pten, however, does not interfere with cell fate determination.
In the nervous system, deletion of Pten in neural progenitor cells during embryogenesis disrupts migration and proper formation of the laminar structure of the brain (10 , 11) . Depending on the specific population of cells targeted for Pten deletion, Pten loss is associated with both increases and decreases in proliferation and apoptosis. Postnatal deletion of Pten in selective neuronal populations resulted in dramatic increases in neuronal soma size without alterations in proliferation (12 , 13) . Taken together, these studies with conditional knockout mice have shown that Pten loss results in disrupted regulation of cell size or cell number in the brain and underscore the importance of Pten in normal central nervous system development and maintenance.
Tumorigenesis resulting from Pten loss has been shown in a number of diverse tissues in mouse. For example, Pten loss is associated with increased proliferation of T-cells, B-cells, keratinocytes, prostate epithelium, and mammary epithelium. Tumorigenesis is observed in both Pten+/ mice and Pten conditional knockout models, in which mice develop endometrial, lymphoid, thyroid, liver, testicular, breast, skin, and prostate cancers (7, 8, 9 , 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19) . In contrast, less is known about the function of Pten in astrocytic tumorigenesis. In glioblastomas, PTEN mutations are found in combination with mutations in other genes including p53, INK4A/ARF, and EGFR (20) , and it is unclear which aspects of PTEN dysfunction contribute to glioblastoma formation. Because glioblastomas are believed to arise from an astrocyte or astrocyte precursor cell, we generated mice in which Pten was conditionally deleted in astrocytes. Here we show that Pten loss causes hypertrophy and hyperproliferation of cortical astrocytes. These results suggest that Pten plays a central role in modulating cell size and growth relevant to astroglial cell tumorigenesis in the nervous system.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Immunohistochemistry.
Mice were transcardially perfused with 2% paraformaldehyde in PBS. All tissues were postfixed in 2% paraformaldehyde overnight. For X-gal staining, tissues were equilibrated in 25% sucrose in PBS for an additional 24 hours, then cryosectioned at a thickness of 12 µm, and stained with X-gal. For paraffin sections, tissues were postfixed for an additional 24 hours in 4% paraformaldehyde, embedded in paraffin, and cut into 5-µm sections. Littermate controls were perfused and processed at the same time as the matched conditional knockout animals and were of the genotypes Pten+/+;GFAP-cre or Pten+/+ or PtenloxP/loxP without cre. We performed immunohistochemistry with primary antibodies to BrdU (10 µg/mL; Biodesign), Gfap (1:1000 for immunohistochemistry, 1:200 for immunofluorescence; Sigma, St. Louis, MO), Mac1 (1:50; PharMingen, San Diego, CA), Nestin (1:50; Chemicon, Temecula, CA), NeuN (1:500; Chemicon), Phospho-ser 473-Akt (1:50; Cell Signaling, Beverly, MA), Pten (1:50; NeoMarkers, Freemont, CA), S100ß (1:1,000 for immunohistochemistry, 1:200 for immunofluorescence; Sigma), S100 (1:100; Dako, Carpinteria, CA), and Map-2 (1:5,000; Sternberger Monoclonals, Inc., Lutherville, MD). We used microwave antigen retrieval for all of the antibodies except S100ß. We used fluorescein isothiocyanate or cyanine 3-conjugated secondary antibodies (Jackson ImmunoResearch, West Grove, PA) for immunofluorescence. For immunohistochemistry, we used biotin-labeled secondary antibody detected by peroxidase-conjugated avidin (Elite ABC, Vector Laboratories, Burlingame, CA) treated with 3,3'-diaminobenzidine substrate, and counterstained with hematoxylin (Vector Laboratories). Coimmunodetection of BrdU with other proteins was performed sequentially as described previously (24)
. Cresyl violet staining was carried out per standard protocol with 0.02% working solution of cresyl violet. Levels of apoptosis were analyzed by terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated nick end labeling (TUNEL) staining with the ApopTag fluorescein in situ apoptosis detection kit (Chemicon) per the manufacturers protocol. The 4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole stain was performed with Vectashield mounting media (Vector Laboratories).
Cell Counts and Measurements.
The Bioquant system (Bioquant Image Analysis Corp., Nashville, TN) was used to determine the number of BrdU-positive, S100-positive, and NeuN-positive cells in the cerebral cortex of the animals. Three sets of matched sagittal sections were obtained, and immunodetection with BrdU (Biodesign), NeuN (Chemicon), or S100 (Dako) was used to detect proliferating cells, neurons, or glia, respectively. Using Bioquant, the area of the cerebral cortex that lies dorsal to the hippocampal formation was outlined, and the cells within this area that were positive for BrdU, NeuN, or S100 were counted. For each antibody, positive cells were counted from 3 sections from each brain, and 3 control and 3 PtenloxP/loxP;GFAP-Cre brains were analyzed for each age. The Bioquant system was also used to estimate astrocyte soma size by outlining individual astrocyte soma in the corpus callosum from cells that contained a nucleus in the plane of section. Greater than 100 cells were measured from Gfap immunostained slides from control (n = 3) or PtenloxP/loxP;GFAP-Cre (n = 3) mice.
Primary Astrocyte Cultures and Analysis of Growth.
Cortical astrocyte cultures were established from postnatal day 2 mice. Tissue from the cerebral cortex was cut into small pieces, and either digested in a 1:1 mixture of DMEM and trypsin/EDTA solution for 15 minutes at 37°C or mechanically disaggregated without trypsin. Tail DNA was used to determine the genotype of each animal. Astrocytes were seeded as separate cultures (passage 0) in Primaria T25 flasks in DMEM supplemented with 10% FCS, 20 ng/mL mouse epidermal growth factor (E-4127, Sigma), 50 mg/mL penicillin, and 50 mg/mL streptomycin until subconfluent (day 5), then trypsinized and replated in Primaria (Falcon, San Jose, CA) T75 flasks (passage 1). On day 8, 4 x 104 cells were seeded in 35-mm dishes (passage 2). Triplicate dishes were seeded and counted for cultures established from each mouse. Cells were trypsinized, and the number of trypan blue-excluding cells was determined by direct counting in a hemocytometer in triplicate on days 9 to 14. Numbers were plotted as cells per square centimeter growth area.
Southern Blot Analysis.
Genomic DNA was extracted from mouse tails, and primary astrocyte cultures, digested with HindIII, were separated by electrophoresis in a 1% agarose gel and transferred to Hybond-N+ nylon filter by alkaline transfer. A 380-bp fragment of Pten intron 3 (13)
was used to detect the wild-type, floxed, and cre-mediated deletion of the floxed Pten locus.
Western Blot Analysis.
Protein was extracted from primary cerebral cortical astrocyte cultures with Cell Lysis Buffer (Cell Signaling) containing 10 mmol/L sodium fluoride, 1 mmol/L sodium orthovanadate, and protease inhibitor cocktail (Roche, Indianapolis, IN). Protein samples (15 µg) were resolved on a 4 to 12% gradient Bis-Tris gel and transferred to nitrocellulose. Proteins were detected with antibodies against Pten (1:500; NeoMarkers), P-Akt (1:1,000; P-Ser 473, Cell Signaling), or ß-actin (1:2,500; Sigma) and visualized with peroxidase-conjugated secondary antibodies and Super Signal chemiluminescent detection (Pierce, Rockford, IL).
| RESULTS |
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20% of mutant mice, with an average onset at 10 weeks of age. The difference in survival between the two cohorts of PtenloxP/loxP;GFAP-Cre mice may reflect the influence of different genetic backgrounds within the mouse colony (FVB/C57Bl/129).
Enlarged Neurons and Astrocytes Contribute to the Brain Hypertrophy Seen in PtenloxP/loxP;GFAP-Cre Mice.
Previous Pten conditional knockout models have shown disrupted neuronal migration during development with varying severity, which reflects the developmental timing of Pten inactivation and the particular cell populations affected (10, 11, 12, 13)
. Similarly, we observed developmental abnormalities in the laminar organization of neurons because of incomplete neuronal migration in the hippocampus and cerebellum (Supplemental Fig. 2
). In addition, we observed abnormalities acquired in aging animals after normal brain development was complete. Gross examination showed an overall enlargement of the entire brain of adult PtenloxP/loxP;GFAP-Cre mice compared with Pten+/loxP;GFAP-cre or wild-type controls (Fig. 4A)
. Macrocephaly of Pten conditional knockout mice increased progressively with age (Supplemental Fig. 3A
). Previous studies in which Pten was selectively deleted in specific neuronal populations showed hypertrophy caused by a cell autonomous increase in nuclear and soma size of Pten-deficient neurons (12
, 13)
. Consistent with these earlier studies, Pten-expressing neurons in control or PtenloxP/loxP;GFAP-Cre mice maintained a similar size, whereas Pten-deficient neurons in PtenloxP/loxP;GFAP-Cre mice showed a substantial increase in both nuclear and soma size (Fig. 4B)
. This cell-autonomous hypertrophy was observed in Pten-deficient neurons throughout the brain including the cerebral cortex, hippocampal region, and cerebellum. To assess the effect of Pten loss on astrocytes, we visualized astrocytes by immunohistochemistry for Gfap, an astrocyte marker. Compared with controls, there was a dramatic increase in the number of cells expressing Gfap throughout the enlarged PtenloxP/loxP;GFAP-Cre brains (Fig. 4C
, sagittal sections). Such an increase in Gfap immunoreactivity could indicate an increase in the number of astrocytes or reactive astrocytosis, a process that occurs after insult or injury, characterized by hypertrophic astrocytes and enhanced Gfap immunoreactivity with or without proliferation (26)
. A higher magnification view of Gfap immunofluorescence clearly demonstrates dramatic enlargement of astrocytes in PtenloxP/loxP;GFAP-Cre mice compared with control mice (Fig. 4C
, bottom panels; Supplemental Fig. 3B
). Astrocyte hypertrophy was detectable by 4 weeks of age and increased progressively with age. An additional feature of reactive astrocytes is coexpression of nestin, a marker normally expressed in neural progenitor cells, along with Gfap (27)
. The vast majority of Gfap-expressing cells in PtenloxP/loxP;GFAP-Cre brains did not express nestin (data not shown). However, there were focal areas in some adult PtenloxP/loxP;GFAP-Cre brains that contained reactive astrocytes. These cells were hypertrophic, coexpressed nestin and Gfap (Fig. 4D)
and, in some cases, showed proliferation as well as occasional binucleated cells (data not shown). Reactive astrocytes were limited to damaged regions, including the hippocampal formation of an animal that had frequent seizures, and showed substantial neuronal death in this region, as well as in areas of the cerebellum immediately adjacent to the skull, in which brain enlargement was likely to cause parenchymal compression. Reactive astrocytosis is also sometimes accompanied by microgliosis, an immune response by microglia within the brain. However, microglia, identified by Mac-1 immunopositivity, were only rarely observed in the hippocampal region in a few animals that had experienced seizures (data not shown). Thus, Pten-deficiency caused a substantial enlargement in both neurons and astrocytes. The massive hypertrophy of astrocytes in Ptenloxp/loxp;GFAP-cre mice was distinct from areas of reactive astrocytosis that included coexpression of nestin and Gfap, and in some cases, the presence of infiltrating microglia.
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The ongoing proliferation of glia and absence of extensive apoptosis suggested that there would be an increased number of glia in PtenloxP/loxP;GFAP-Cre brains. The substantial hypertrophy of Pten-deficient cells resulted in a decreased cell density in PtenloxP/loxP;GFAP-Cre mice, compared with controls (Fig. 6, A and B)
, that was progressive and much more pronounced in adult compared with juvenile mutant mice (data not shown). The decrease in cell density could result in a substantial underestimate of cell number if counting was performed in an area of defined size, a common approach to assess cell number. Therefore, to estimate variation in cell number, we counted cells within a defined anatomic region, which comprised a greatly enlarged area in PtenloxP/loxP;GFAP-Cre mice. To estimate differences in the number of glia and neurons, we counted the number of cells that were immunopositive for S100, a glial marker, or NeuN, a neuronal marker. There was a significant increase in the number of S100-positive cells in the cerebral cortex of PtenloxP/loxP;GFAP-Cre mice at P14 and in adults (P < 0.0001 for both age groups; Fig. 6C
). In contrast, there was no increase in the number of NeuN-positive cells in the 2-week or adult animals (Fig. 6D)
, consistent with the absence of detectable proliferation of neurons. In fact, there was a decrease in NeuN-positive cells in adult mutant mice (P < 0.01), which may be accounted for by the low levels of apoptosis observed in mutant mice. Thus, increases in cell number involved glia, but not neurons.
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| DISCUSSION |
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To gain insights into the role of Pten in astroglial cell growth control and tumorigenesis, we generated mice in which Pten inactivation occurred in astrocytes. In this study, we show that selective deletion of Pten in the brain caused a dramatic hypertrophy attributed to cellular hypertrophy of astrocytes and neuronal soma, as well as enhanced and ongoing glial cell proliferation, even in the adult brain. This ongoing glial cell proliferation was seen in the adult cerebral cortex, far removed from regions where the proliferation of progenitor cells is found normally in the mature brain. In contrast, previous studies of selective neuronal Pten inactivation showed substantial cellular hypertrophy without ongoing proliferation in the adult brain (12 , 13) . This suggests that Pten inactivation in astroglial cells results in the generation of cell populations that continue to proliferate throughout the life of the animal and could contribute to tumor formation.
Although the primary target of Cre-mediated deletion directed by GFAP-cre mice was astroglia, we also observed Cre-mediated deletion in a subpopulation of neurons. We hypothesize that the neuronal Pten inactivation seen in our GFAP-cre mice reflected transient Cre expression in neuroglial progenitor cells, including radial glia. Support for the expression of GFAP in radial glial progenitor cells capable of giving rise to both neurons and astrocytes derives from studies of subventricular zone progenitor cells in the developing and adult mouse (28) . Consistent with this hypothesis, several independently generated Gfap-cre transgenic mouse lines have exhibited various levels of Cre-mediated deletion within neuronal populations, despite the absence of ongoing Cre expression in these cells (13 , 29, 30, 31) . The varied extent of neuronal involvement is likely a reflection of the pool of neuroglial progenitors expressing Cre in each transgenic line. Importantly, the GFAP-cre transgenic line used in the present study allows analysis of Pten-deficient astrocytes in the adult cerebral hemispheres, the most common site of glioblastoma formation.
Although some of the effects observed in Pten-deficient astrocytes could be a secondary response to abnormalities within Pten-deficient neurons, three lines of evidence argue to the contrary. First, areas with reactive astrocytes and microglial invasion were distinct from the astrocytic hypertrophy observed throughout the brain. Second, proliferating astrocytes in these mice did not express protein markers (e.g., nestin) associated with reactive astrocytosis. Finally, primary astrocyte cultures from these mice displayed accelerated proliferation, consistent with a cell-intrinsic defect in Pten-deficient astrocytes.
In addition to increased cell proliferation, we also observed a slight increase in apoptosis in adult PtenloxP/loxP;GFAP-Cre brains, consistent with decreased numbers of cerebral cortical neurons in adult mutant mice. Previous studies examining the effect of Pten deletion in Purkinje neurons also showed progressive loss of these cells in adult mice (11) . Lastly, with antisense oligonucleotide Pten suppression, loss of Pten expression in cultured central nervous system stem cells leads to the death of resulting immature neurons (32) . Collectively, these observations indicate that the outcome of Pten deficiency is different between neurons and astrocytes. In this regard, the ability to promote proliferation in astrocytes, but not in neurons, likely reflects the inherent susceptibility of these two cell populations to tumorigenesis in the adult brain.
Insights into the function of Pten in regulating organ and organism size have derived from studies of the insulin signaling pathway in Drosophila. The insulin signaling pathway in flies is critical for controlling both cell size and cell number. Effector proteins in this pathway include homologs of genes that are targeted by mutation in human cancers, including phosphatidylinositol 3'-kinase, AKT, PTEN, and the tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC) tumor suppressors, TSC1 and TSC2 (33) . Previously, Tsc1 was inactivated in mice with the same GFAP-cre transgenic lines used in the present study. In primary astrocyte cultures, Tsc1 deficiency showed dramatic effects on cell size but no substantial change in the proliferation of subconfluent cultures (34) . In contrast, Pten-deficient primary astrocyte cultures showed increased proliferation without substantial increase in size. In vivo, both the Pten and Tsc1 conditional knockout mice showed an overall hypertrophy of the brain and dramatic increases in Gfap-positive cells and proliferation. However, the hippocampal neuronal migration defects seen in PtenloxP/loxP;GFAP-Cre mice reported herein were not observed in Tsc1loxP/loxP;GFAP-Cre mice (35) . In this manner, these two related mouse models provide novel experimental systems to begin to dissect the critical effectors responsible for specific defects resulting from disruption in regulation of PI3k signaling. Furthermore, these observations are relevant to human disease, because in humans, hereditary mutation of PTEN or TSC1 results in the development of phenotypically distinct syndromes, in which affected patients develop multiple dysplastic hamartomatous growths (36) . In light of the common downstream effectors involved in the Pten and Tsc growth regulatory pathways, previous studies have shown that in vivo inhibition of mTor blocks hypertrophy of Pten-deficient neurons (37) and also inhibits proliferation of Pten-deficient and Tsc-deficient tumor cells (38, 39, 40) . Unique downstream effectors that discriminate between hypertrophy versus hyperproliferation have yet to be identified.
Although the precise relationship between cell size control and tumorigenesis remains undefined, it is interesting to note that some oncogenes that play prominent roles in cancer also influence cell size in Drosophila, including Myc, Ras, and Cyclin D (41) . In mammalian cells, there are context-dependent influences on cell size. For example, c-Myc deficiency caused decreased body mass because of hypoproliferation without influence on cell size (42) , whereas overexpression of c-Myc increased B-cell size independent of the cell cycle (43 , 44) . Levels of the cell cycle regulatory protein p27Kip1 are negatively regulated by Pten and Tsc1 and Tsc2 in some, but not all, of the contexts (35 , 45, 46, 47, 48, 49) . Interestingly, p27Kip1 regulates organ and organism size through the regulation of proliferation, but not cell size (50 , 51) . The regulation of cell size and cell proliferation is normally tightly coupled, with cells reaching a critical size before progressing through the cell cycle. When these processes remain coupled, increased cell growth may be instrumental in driving accelerated proliferation (33) , a relationship that would clearly provide a growth advantage contributing to the development of cancer.
The contribution of PTEN inactivation to glioblastoma formation likely occurs through multiple mechanisms. Notably, the absence of PTEN mutations in lower grade gliomas (26) indicates that PTEN loss does not confer a substantial selective growth advantage early in the tumorigenic progression within the glial cell lineage. Consistent with this observation, we did not detect tumors in PtenloxP/loxP;GFAP-Cre brains in which Pten inactivation occurs in the absence of other tumor-associated mutations. Using glioma cell lines, it has been shown that enforced expression of PTEN results in abnormalities in cell cycle regulation, apoptosis, cell motility, angiogenesis, and regulation of metalloproteases associated with tumor cell invasion (52) . However, it is unknown which of these effects of PTEN overexpression, revealed by in vitro manipulation of tumor cell lines, is important for glioblastoma formation in vivo. In a mouse model for astrocytomas, tumor development induced by inactivation of the pRb pathway in astrocytes was accelerated in Pten+/ mice, with an associated decrease in apoptosis (53) , suggesting that Pten loss contributes to tumorigenesis in vivo. It is unclear whether the wild-type Pten allele was retained in the resulting tumors or if other functions in addition to reduced apoptosis associated with Pten deficiency also contributed to astrocytoma formation. Further studies with the mice described in this study as well as other related Pten conditional knockout strains will be invaluable in dissecting the various functions of Pten relevant to brain tumor formation and progression.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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| FOOTNOTES |
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The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore be hereby marked advertisement in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Note: C.-H. Kwon is currently in the Center for Developmental Biology, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center of Dallas, Dallas, Texas. Supplementary data for this article may be found at Cancer Research Online at http://cancerres.aacrjournals.org.
Requests for reprints: Suzanne J. Baker, Department of Developmental Neurobiology, St. Jude Childrens Research Hospital, 332 North Lauderdale, Memphis, TN 38105. Phone: (901) 495-2254; Fax: (901) 495-2270; E-mail: Suzanne.Baker{at}stjude.org
Received 7/12/04. Revised 8/27/04. Accepted 9/13/04.
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