New peptides capable of inducing attraction of the axonal growth, particularly in presence of the semaphorin, and their use for treating neurodegenerative diseases.
The present invention is directed to peptides comprising the sequence ASNKL (SEQ ID No. 1), inducing attraction of the axonal growth in presence of the semaphorin (Sema3A), L1 and NP-1 proteins and their use for the manufacture of a drug for neuronal/axonal regeneration or for treating neurodegenerative diseases. The present invention also includes a method for identifying a compound able to bind the NP-1, a method for identifying a compound able to revert the repulsory effect of Sema3A on the axonal growth from a suited cell, or methods to screen for molecules capable of blocking Sema3A-induced endocytosis.
Axon pathfinding is regulated by a number of chemotropic and cell-contact guidance cues that act as attractants or repellents for developing neuronal projections. At choice points along the pathways, a complex series of events may take place to ensure appropriate decisions made by the growth cone (Cook et al., Curr Opin Neurobiol., 8:64-72, 1998). In particular, this has been documented for commissural projections where a highly dynamic mechanism of up- and down-regulation of axonal responses to guidance cues occurs to sequentially orientate the axons towards, across, or away from the midline. These events were found to involve cell adhesion molecules of the immunoglobulin (Ig) superfamily as well as secreted factors of the netrin, slit and semaphorin families (Stoeckli and Landmesser, Opin Neurobiol, 8:73-79, 1998). In rodents, loss of function of the Ig superfamily cell adhesion molecule (IgCAM) L1 has implicated this protein in axonal guidance at the pyramidal decussation (Cohen et al., Curr Biol, 8:26-33, 1998). This particular stage in corticospinal pathfinding has been characterized by two major events: axon growth across the midline followed by a switch from a ventral to a dorsal trajectory in the spinal cord. L1 is likely to be important for each of these steps as it may be required as a cell-contact cue for crossing the midline (Cohen et al., 1998). In addition, L1 has also been shown in vitro to be required for axons to respond to a ventrally-secreted semaphorin, Sema3A, that triggers the dorsalization of the pathway (Castellani et al., Curr Biol., 8:26-33, 2000).
Recent studies suggest that semaphorins signal through multi-molecular receptor complexes, containing neuropilin-1 (NP-1) and/or neuropilin-2 (NP-2) as specific ligand binding subunits (Raper, Curr Opin Neurobiol., 10:88-94, 2000), and plexins as signal transducers (Tamagnone and Comoglio, Trends Cell Biol., 10:377-383, 2000). L1 has also been shown to associate with NP-1 and is required as part of the Sema3A receptor complex for axon guidance responses (Castellani et al., 2000). A functional link between L1 and NP-1/Sema3A signaling is supported by the finding that a soluble L1Fc chimera switches Sema3A-induced chemorepulsion to attraction (Castellani et al., 2000). Previously it has been suggested that growth cones can switch between attraction and repulsion via a modulation of internal cyclic nucleotide levels (Song et al., Science, 281:1515-1518, 1998). How binding of soluble L1 on the cell surface can induce such a switch is largely unclear. L1 displays a highly complex pattern of homophilic and heterophilic interactions. In addition to L1 and NP-1, as components of the Sema3A receptor complex, axons express a number of other binding partners that could potentially be the receptor for L1Fc in the Sema3A reversion. These include other Ig CAMs such as F3/contactin, and TAG-1/axonin-1, α3-β5 integrins as well as several ECM proteins, such as laminin and some chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans (Brümmendorf and Rathjen, Curr Opin Neurobiol, 6:584-593, 1996). Furthermore, L1 expression on the growth cone is highly dynamically regulated. Following ligand activation, L1 is internalized, transported into vesicles to be recycled on the cell surface (Kamiguchi and Lemmon, J. Neurosci., 20:3676-3686, 2000).
A clear requirement for L1 in axon development is reflected by the variety of neurological abnormalities associated with L1 mutations in the human disorder referred to as X-linked hydrocephalus, MASA syndrome or SPG type 1 (hydrocephalus, enlarged ventricles, corpus callosum agenesis, corticospinal tract hypoplasia, Rosenthal et al., Nat Genet. 2:107-112, 1992; Vits et al., Nat Genet., 7:408-413, 1994; Jouet et al., Nat Genet., 7:402-407, 1994). Mutations in L1 that give rise to these disorders include many that would truncate the mature protein and eliminate cell surface expression. More subtle missense mutations within L1 have been shown to have multiple effects on L1 function disrupting intracellular protein trafficking or ligand binding or both (De Angelis et al., EMBO J., 18:4744-4753, 1999). The possibility that these mutations affect axonal responses to Sema3A has hitherto not been examined.
Surprisingly, the inventors, after having dissected the molecular mechanisms underlying the switch of axonal responses to Sema3A by soluble L1, using L1Fcs that contain pathological missense mutations, have demonstrated that binding of L1Fc (also noted L1-Fc in the present description) to NP-1 but not to L1 or to two other Ig CAMs expressed on growth cones is crucial for L1Fc to activate the conversion process. They have also demonstrated that binding and co-immunoprecipitation studies implicate the region containing mutation L120V in Ig domain 1 of L1 in both trans and cis L1/NP-1 complex formation. Moreover, they have demonstrated that a peptide composed of the (F)ASNKL120 amino-acid sequence was sufficient to reverse Sema3A-mediated repulsion.
So, in a first aspect, the present invention is directed to a peptide comprising the sequence ASNKL (SEQ ID No. 1), preferably, inducing attraction of the axonal growth, in particular in presence of the semaphorin (Sema3A), L1 and NP-1 proteins.
In a preferred embodiment of this first aspect, the present invention includes the peptides comprising the sequence SEQ ID No. 1 having no more than 10 amino acids residues.
The peptide consisting of SEQ ID No. 1 and a peptide comprising or consisting of the sequence of FASNKL (SEQ ID No. 2) or FASNKLGTAM (SEQ ID No. 3) are particularly preferred.
An inducer of axonal growth comprising one of the peptide of the present invention forms also part of the first aspect of the present invention.
In a second aspect, the present invention is directed to a method for identifying a compound able to bind the NP-1 protein, comprising the steps of:
In a preferred embodiment of this second aspect, the present invention is related to the method for identifying a compound able to bind the NP-1 protein according to the present invention, wherein said sample also comprises the L1 protein.
In a further preferred embodiment of this second aspect, the present invention is related to the method for identifying a compound able to bind the NP-1 protein according to the present invention, wherein said NP-1 protein is a recombinant protein.
In a further preferred embodiment of this second aspect, the present invention is related to the method for identifying a compound able to bind the NP-1 protein according to the present invention, wherein said sample comprises a cell expressing the NP-1 protein at its surface.
In a further preferred embodiment of this second aspect, the present invention is related to the method for identifying a compound able to bind the NP-1 protein according to the present invention, wherein said sample comprises a cell expressing the NP-1 and L1 proteins at its surface.
In a further preferred embodiment of this second aspect, the present invention is related to the method for identifying a compound able to bind the NP-1 protein according to the present invention, wherein said L1-Fc protein or said peptide according to the invention is labeled and said binding of NP-1 protein with said L1-Fc protein or said peptide according to the invention is assayed by level of signal associated with said NP-1 protein.
The inventors have shown that L1/NP-1 cis interaction is necessary to the endocytosis of the Sema3A receptor complex associated with a repulsive response whereas L1/NP-1 trans interaction prevents it. This later interaction activates nitric oxide (NO) synthase and cGMP guanylyl cyclase. As indicated in the following examples, it has been identified molecular mechanisms involved in switching Sema3A repulsion to attraction and points to endocytosis as critical in determining the nature of axonal responses to guidance cues. Also it is provided a new explanation for the effects of human pathological mutations in the X-linked L1 gene.
So, in a particularly preferred embodiment of this second aspect, the present invention is related to the method for identifying a compound able to bind the NP-1 protein according to the present invention, wherein said alteration of binding of NP-1 with L1-Fc or said peptide according to the invention is assayed by measuring a secondary signal appearing in the presence of said binding.
In this particularly preferred embodiment of this second aspect, it is preferred that said secondary signal is induced in the presence of Sema3A.
In this particularly preferred embodiment of this second aspect, it is further preferred that said secondary signal is the reversion of the repulsory effect of Sema3A on axonal growth.
In this particularly preferred embodiment of this second aspect, it is also preferred that said secondary signal is the activation of NO synthesis.
In this particularly preferred embodiment of this second aspect, it is also preferred that said secondary signal is an increased production of cGMP.
In a third aspect, the present invention is directed to a method for attracting/modulating the direction of axonal growth by a cell suited to promote axonal growth, submitted to a Sema3A flow, comprising the step of contacting said cell with the peptide or the inducer according to the present invention.
In a fourth aspect, the present invention is directed to a method for identifying a compound able to revert the repulsory effect of Sema3A on the axonal growth from a suited cell, comprising the steps of contacting said cell expressing L1 and NP-1 at its surface with said compound in the presence of Sema3A, and studying the increase in NO synthesis in said cell.
In a fifth aspect, the present invention is directed to a method to screen for molecules that prevent the internalization of the dextran induced by the Sema3A treatment or to screen for molecules capable of blocking Sema3A-induced endocytosis by cells expressing L1 and NP-1 proteins at their surface characterized in that said method comprises the following steps of:
In a preferred embodiment, said cells in step a) are recombinant cell lines transfected with expression vectors capable of expressing the L1 and NP-1 proteins at their surface or neuronal cells which naturally co-express the L1 and NP-1 proteins.
Such vectors will be prepared according to the methods commonly used by persons skilled in the art, and the clones resulting therefrom may be introduced into an appropriate host by standard methods such as, for example, lipofection, electroporation or heat shock.
In a further preferred embodiment, said labelled dextran in step a) is selected from the group consisting of rhodamine-dextran, FITC-dextran or dextran coupled to fluorescent molecules.
In a sixth aspect, the present invention is directed to a method to screen for molecules capable of blocking Sema3A-induced co-internalization of L1 and NP-1 proteins, to screen molecules capable of maintaining cell surface expression of L1 and NP-1 proteins or to screen molecules capable of blocking Sema3A-induced endocytosis characterized in that said method comprises the following steps of:
In a preferred embodiment, said cells in step a) of the method of that sixth aspect according to the present invention, are recombinant cell lines transfected with expression vectors capable of expressing the L1 and NP-1 proteins at their surface or neuronal cells which naturally co-express the L1 and NP-1 proteins.
By immunocytochemical methods, it is intended to mean any immunocytochemical methods known by the skilled person which are capable of specifically detecting the presence of L1 and NP-1 at the surface of a cell using antibodies directed specifically against these L1 and NP-1 proteins.
Specific polyclonal antibodies may be obtained from a serum of an animal immunized against these L1 and NP-1 proteins. The specific monoclonal antibodies may be obtained according to the conventional hybridoma culture method described by Köhler and Milstein, 1975.
Said anti L1 and/or NP-1 antibodies, or Fab or F(ab′)2 fragments thereof, may also be in the form of immunoconjugates or of labelled antibodies so as to obtain a detectable and/or quantifiable signal and so constitute a means for the immunocytochemical analysis of the expression of the L1 and NP-1 proteins at the surface of cells, for example by immunofluorescence, gold labelling, enzymatic immunoconjugates.
In a seventh aspect, the present invention is directed to use of the peptides or the inducer according to the present invention, or the molecules capable of blocking Sema3A-induced endocytosis selected by the method according to the present invention, for the manufacture of a drug for neuronal/axonal regeneration or for treating neurodegenerative diseases.
Finally, the present invention is directed to use of the peptides or the inducer according to the present invention, as a targeting agent, in the manufacture of a composition to be used in cell therapy.
The peptides or inducers according to the present invention as active ingredients of a medicament will be preferably in soluble form, combined with a pharmaceutically acceptable vehicle.
Such peptides, inducers or selected molecules capable of blocking Sema3A-induced endocytosis according to the present invention and which can be used as a medicament offer a new approach of treatment requiring or linked to neuronal/axonal regeneration, such as medicament for preventing and/or treating neurodegenerative diseases.
Preferably, these peptides, inducers or selected molecules capable of blocking Sema3A-induced endocytosis according to the present invention will be administered by the systemic route, in particular by the intravenous route, by the intramuscular or intradermal route or by the oral route.
Their modes of administration, optimum dosages and galenic forms can be determined according to the criteria generally taken into account in establishing a treatment suited to a patient, such as for example the age or body weight of the patient, the seriousness of his general condition, the tolerance to treatment and the side effects observed, and the like.
Other characteristics and advantages of the invention appear in the remainder of the description with the examples and figures whose legends are represented below.
FIGS. 1E and 1F: The histograms represent the number of axons growing towards (open bars) and away (filled bars) from the spinal cord explants (
FIGS. 2A and 2B: Homophilic binding of mutant L1 chimeras to wild-type L1
Cell surface expression of L1, Plexin-A1 and NP-1 was detected using Texas red-conjugated secondary antibodies. Mutant L1Fc chimeras were visualized using FITC-conjugated secondary antibodies. Wild-type L1 Fc bound to L1 but not Plexin-A 1-expressing cells. A426D and G121S L1Fc chimeras bound to NP-1 expressing cells, whereas the L120V chimera did not. Scale bar: 5 μm.
FIGS. 4A and 4B: Switching Sema3A repulsion by a mimetic peptide of L1
FIGS. 5A and 5B: Effects of pathological L1 mutations on the formation of L1-NP-1 receptor complex
FIGS. 6A and 6B: Peptide mimetic of soluble L1 blocks Sema3A-induced endocytosis
FIGS. 7B and 7C: In contrast, L1/NP-1 cell surface expression was observed in control condition (
FIGS. 7D and 7E: When cells were treated with Sema3A in combination with the peptide, L1 and NP-1 were detected on the cell membrane, as illustrated in with these two panels.
Pharmacological blockade of soluble guanylyl cyclase (with ODQ) and nNOS (with 7NI) in the co-culture of cortical slices and ventral spinal cord explants. In the presence of ODQ and 7NI alone, axons were repelled by the Sema3A source however, in the presence of L1 Fc alone, axons switched from repulsion (negative guidance index) to attraction for the Sema3A source (positive guidance index). After addition of ODQ and 7NI in combination with L1 Fc, axons no longer switched from repulsive to attractive responses. The number and length of cortical axons growing away from and towards the spinal cord explant were quantified for each condition. The number and length of axons were significantly reduced on the side facing the spinal cord explants, compared to the opposite side in ODQ, 7NI, ODQ+L1Fc, 7NI+L1Fc and control conditions. In the presence of L1Fc alone, axons were attracted, as indicated by the higher number and length of axons growing towards the spinal cord explant. Thus, ODQ and 7NI prevented the L1 Fc induced switching of Sema3A from repulsion to attraction. Statistical analysis was conducted using the ANOVA test. * p<0.0001. Bars in the histograms: growth directed away (black bars) and towards (white bars) the spinal cord explant.
FIGS. 9A and 9B: Models for L1-NP-1 interaction and modulation of the Sema3A signal
A. Co-Culture Experiments
Blocks of cortex were dissected from P0 (postnatal day 0) to P2 mice and cut into 250 μm thick slices with a McIlwain tissue chopper. The ventral part of the cervical spinal cord was dissected and cut into 250 μm thick slices. Co-culture of cortical slices and ventral spinal cord explants were performed in a three-dimensional plasma clot, as described previously (Castellani et al., 2000). Cortical slices were oriented in the plasma clot as indicated in
B. Binding Assays
The mutant L1Fc chimeras were produced and purified as described previously (De Angelis et al., 1999). Briefly, COS-7 cells were transiently transfected with 10 μg DNA per 150 mm culture dish, the soluble Fc chimeric protein was allowed to accumulate in the media for 6 days and was recovered and purified by protein A-Sepharose affinity chromatography. In the binding experiments, L1Fcs were cross-linked to anti-human Fc antibodies (50 μg/ml, Jackson Immunoresearch) for 1 hr at 37° C. Binding detection to NP-1 requested concentrations of L1Fcs 10 folds higher than L1. Antibody conjugated L1-Fc protein was then incubated with monolayers of COS7 cells transiently transfected with expression vectors encoding full length human L1 or myc-tagged NP-1 where the cytoplasmic domain is deleted (gift of J. Raper, 2000 and Renzi et al., 1999). Following incubation, the cells were fixed with 4% PFA, and processed for double-immunofluorescence detection. NP-1 was detected using a mouse anti-c myc antibody (clone 9E10, Sigma) and L1 using a rat monoclonal anti-L1 antibody. Secondary antibody anti-c-myc (Texas-red conjugated anti-mouse antibodies) was used to detect NP-1, anti-L1 (Texas red conjugated anti-rat antibodies) to detect L1, and anti-Fc (FITC conjugated anti-rabbit antibodies) to detect bound L1Fc chimeras. After secondary antibody incubation, the cells were washed with PBS and mounted in Mowiol (Calbiochem).
C. Two Color Aggregation Assay
A two-color aggregation assay was developed, modified from the homophilic binding assay described by De Angelis et al. (1999). For the two-color assay, red and green fluorescent microsphere beads (0.6 um, Duke Scientific Corps.) were coated with anti-human IgG antibody (Fc specific; Sigma, 1-2136). 2.5 μg of wild type (red beads) or mutant (green beads) L1Fc-proteins were conjugated to 10 μl of antibody-coated beads by incubating for 2 hrs at 37° C. Excess unbound protein was removed by washing with PBS/5% FCS. For each mutant, a 1:1 mixture of wild-type L1 and mutant L1 coated beads was prepared, dissaggregated to produce a single bead suspension and allowed to form mixed aggregates at 37° C. with samples removed in duplicate over a 30-minute time course. Samples were diluted 1:5000 into ice cold PBS and the proportion of 2 colour aggregates was assessed using a fluorescence activated cell sorter (Becton Dickenson FACSort). Ten thousand particles were counted per sample and categorised as red only (WT-L1: WT-L1), green only (Mutant L1: Mutant L1) or mixed aggregates. Every mutant protein was assayed at least 3 separate times and standardised to a wild-type control conducted in parallel.
D. Coimmunoprecipitation Experiments
COS cells were transfected with various expression vectors coding for full-length HA-tagged NP-1, myc-tagged cyt-deleted NP-1, wild-type L1, and L1 mutant constructs (G121S, A426D, L120V) using a lipofection transfection method (lipofectamine). After 2 DIV, cells were lysed with immunoprecipitation buffer (IP buffer: Hepes 25 mM, EDTA 5 mM, MgCl2 1 mM, PMSF 2 mM, glycerol 10% and triton X100 1%, pH 7). The lysate was incubated at 4° C. for 30 min, centrifuged for 5 min and pre-cleared with protein A-Sepharose for 2 hrs at 4° C. Samples were immunoprecipitated with mouse anti-HA (3μl, clone 12CA5, Roche), rabbit anti-L1 antibodies (3 μl), mouse anti-myc antibodies (3 μl, 9E 10, Sigma) coupled to rabbit anti-mouse antibodies on protein A preformed complexes for 16 hrs at 4° C. The beads were washed, and the precipitates analyzed by immunoblot using anti-HA (1:1000) and anti-L1 (1:1000) antibodies.
E. Rhodamine-Dextran Uptake
Neonatal cortical cells or COS7 cells transfected with expression vectors for L1 and NP-1 were incubated for 15 min with Rhodamine-Dextran (2 mg/ml) mixed to a solution of Sema3A-AP supernatant, Sema3A and peptide (10−5M), peptide alone (10−5M) or control supernatant. Cells were fixed with PFA 4% and processed for immunocytochemistry as described in the above sections. To detect intracellular proteins, cells were permeabilized with methanol for 2 min.
It has been previously developed an assay system using explants of ventral spinal cord co-cultured with cortical axons in order to determine the factors involved in axonal repulsion and attraction (Castellani et al., 2000). Using this system we have shown that Sema3A secreted from the ventral spinal cord repels cortical axons. In the presence of soluble wild-type L1Fc chimeric protein however, repulsion is switched to attraction (Castellani et al., 0.2000). In the present study, we aimed to identify the L1 interactions underlying the switching process. As Ig domains have been implicated in binding of Ig CAMs to many of their ligands (Brümmendorf and Rathjen, 1996) we hypothesized that they would also be required for L1 Fc-mediated switching. $ix L1 Fc chimeras containing pathological missense mutations affecting specific Ig domains (De Angelis et al., 1999 and
For each mutant, soluble Fc-chimeric protein was produced in mammalian cells and purified by protein A-Sepharose affinity chromatography. The purified L1Fc chimeras were subjected to SDS PAGE and immunoblotted with anti-Fc antibodies to verify their integrity. In the co-culture assay, five out of six L1-Fc proteins containing a single point mutation in Ig domains 1, 2, 3, 5 or 6 (G121S, H210Q, E309K, A426D and D598N, respectively) were found to efficiently induce switching of Sema3A repulsion to attraction (
It has been aimed to identify the receptor on the cortical axons that binds L1Fc and initiates the reversal of Sema3A repulsion to attraction. L1 and/or NP-1 could fulfill this function, as they are both components of the Sema3A receptor complex and both interact in trans with L1 (Castellani et al, 2000). Plexin-A1 may also mediate the reversion of Sema3A as it associates with NP-1 in the Sema3A receptor. Other known L1 ligands, including Ig CAMs F3/contactin and TAG-1/axonin are also candidate receptors for L1Fc. Previous work has indicated that the mutations described above can selectively affect either homophilic binding or heterophilic binding to F3 or axonin-1 (De Angelis et al, 1999). Two of these mutations G121S and A426D reduce homophilic binding and heterophilic binding to F3, axonin-1 and the human homologue of axonin-1, TAX-1. H210Q and E309K affect homophilic or heterophilic binding respectively. D598N has a very modest effect on homophilic binding but significantly reduces heterophilic binding to F3 and axonin-1, though not to TAX-1. L120V does not affect homophilic or heterophilic binding. Therefore we were able to compare the ability of the mutated chimeras to reverse the Sema3A repulsion with their binding capabilities.
Four mutations (E309K, D598N, A426D and G121S) that were found to alter L1Fc binding to the Ig CAMs F3 and axonin-1switched Sema3A from repulsion to attraction to the same extent as wild type L1Fc. Thus, Ig CAMs F3 and TAG-1 (the rodent homologue of axonin-1) ate unlikely to be axonal receptors for L1Fc in the reversion process. Mutations A426D, H210Q and G121S were previously found to reduce homophilic binding when individual mutant L1Fc proteins were bound to themselves (De Angelis et al.,. 1999). In the present study however, mutated L1Fc proteins were required to interact with wild-type L1 expressed on growth cones. To formally exclude a role for homophilic binding of L1 in the initiation of the reversion process, it was therefore necessary to examine whether homophilic binding of the mutated L1Fc chimeras to wild-type L1 was also disrupted. Mutated L1Fcs were therefore incubated with COS7 cells transfected with full-length wild-type L1 cDNA and binding was assessed by immunofluorescence. In parallel, homophilic binding of mutant/mutant and mutant/wild-type L1Fcs was compared in a two-color FACS aggregation assay, allowing a quantitative assessment to be made (see Methods). Interestingly, the immunofluorescence studies showed that the A426D and H210Q L1Fc chimeras bound to wild-type L1 (
To determine whether soluble L1Fc binds plexin-A1, COS7 cells were transiently transfected with a vector encoding Plexin-A1 fused to a VSV-tag (Rohm et al., Mech Dev., 93:95-104, 2000) and incubated with wild-type L1Fc protein. As a positive control, chimeric protein was also incubated with COS7 cells transiently transfected with full-length wild-type L1. Immunodetection of L1Fc with anti-Fc antibodies showed clear binding of the chimera on L1 expressing cells but no binding to Plexin-A1 expressing cells (
Next, we examined the ability of the mutant L1 Fc chimeras to bind NP-1. COS7 cells were transfected with a vector encoding the extracellular and transmembrane domains of NP-1 fused to a myc tag (ANP-1, Renzi et al., J. Neurosci., 15:7870-7880, 1999), and incubated with the mutant L1Fc chimeras. Binding was detected by immunofluorescence. The assays showed that mutant chimeras containing G121S, H210Q, E309K, D598N and A426D bound NP-1 expressing cells. In contrast, L120V-L1Fc did not bind NP-1. Binding of L120V, G121S and A426D L1Fcs to NP-1 is illustrated in
It has been postulated that only a restricted sequence within Ig1 domain of L1 is involved in the interaction with NP-1. G121S, a mutation that is likely to disrupt Ig domain 1 conformation (Bateman et al, EMBO J., 15:6050-6059, 1996) modified neither NP-1 binding nor the switching process, whereas the neighboring mutation L120V, affecting a surface residue, abrogated both. According to this hypothesis, isolated peptides should mimic L1Fc in reversing Sema3A repulsion to attraction. Since the G121S mutation did not abrogate L1Fc switching, this amino-acid should be dispensable for peptidic bio-activity. Based on these criteria, a six amino-acid peptide, FASNKL120 (SEQ ID No. 2), with free NH2 and COOH terminals (Schafer-N, Copenhagen DK), was designed and tested in the co-culture assay (
The inventors have also demonstrated that the five amino-acid peptide ASNKL120 and the ten amino-acid peptide FASNKLGTAM (SEQ ID No. 3) successfully converted Sema3A-induced chemorepulsion into attraction in the same conditions as tested for the six amino-acids peptide FASNKL120 and so also mimic the L1Fc reversing bioactivity (data not shown).
Furthermore, mimicking the human mutation by replacing the C-terminal leucine120 by valine in the peptide induced a 100-fold decrease in its converting activity. A residual effect was only observed at 10−4M (
It has been showed previously that on the cell membrane, L1 and NP-1 associate in a common molecular complex that serves as a receptor for Sema3A (Castellani et al., 2000). We investigated the effects of L1 mutations on this complex formation. First, we determined whether L1 and NP-1 extra-cellular domains are required for the cis-interaction. COS7 cells were co-transfected with vectors encoding NP-1 lacking its cytoplasmic domain (ΔNP-1, Renzi et al., 1999) and full-length wild-type L1. The cells were lysed and proteins immunoprecipitated by protein A-Sepharose coupled to rabbit anti-mouse and mouse anti-myc antibodies. Immunoprecipitated proteins were identified by western blot analysis using anti-L1 and anti-NP-1 antibodies. Co-immunoprecipitation of both ΔNP-1 and L1 indicated that cis association of the extracellular domains is required for the formation of the L1/NP-1 complex (
A possible molecular mechanism by which soluble L1 and its mimetic peptide could exert their modulatory effect on Sema3A signaling is that they compete with transmembrane L1 in the L1/NP-1 complex. To address this issue we examined in immunoprecipitation experiments the L1/NP-1 complex in conditions mimicking either a repulsive (Sema3A alone) or an attractive (Sema3A combined to the peptide) environment. We observed that the presence of the peptide did not abrogate the cis interaction between L1 and NP-1 (
Endocytosis and re-organization of the Sema3A receptor complex within axon terminals were shown to accompany Sema3A-induced growth cone collapse (Fournier et al., 2000). It has been found that soluble L1 prevents growth cone collapse in response to Sema3A (Castellani et al., 2000). Therefore it has been tested whether L1 mimetic peptide was able to block endocytosis. To visualize endocytosis we examined the uptake of Rhodamine-Dextran applied on live cortical cultures in various conditions. Cells were treated for 15 min with Rhodamine-Dextran together with Sema3A alone, Sema3A combined with the L1 mimetic peptide, peptide alone or untreated as control conditions. Strikingly, uptake of Rhodamine-Dextran was exclusively observed when cells were treated with Sema3A alone. Under this condition, spots of internalized fluorescence were observed along axon shafts and surrounding the cell bodies. In contrast, no uptake of Rhodamine-Dextran could be detected following all other treatments (
In parallel, cells submitted to the same treatments were processed for immunocytochemical detection of L1 and NP-1. Interestingly, we observed that the cell-surface expression of both L1 and NP-1 was abolished by the Sema3A treatment (
This finding strongly suggested that L1 function could be to ensure the appropriate endocytosis of NP1 associated to Sema3A-induced axonal repulsion In support, we verified that Sema3A is unable to induce endocytosis and internalization of NP-1 in the absence of L1. COS7 cells were transfected to express NP-1 alone and the uptake of Rhodamine-Dextran was examined following Sema3A treatment. As expected, NP-1 endocytosis did not occur in the absence of L1 since immunochemical labeling confirmed that NP-1 remains on the surface of cells treated with Sema3A and that Sema3A-induced endocytosis did not occur in the absence of L1 (data non shown).
Previous studies have shown that Sema3A chemorepulsion is converted into attraction by an increase in the internal level of cGMP (Song et al., 1998). In order to explore the possibility that L1/NP-1 trans interaction activates the cGMP pathway to specify a Sema3A attractive effect, we used a pharmacological approach. 1H-(1,2,4)oxadiazolo(4,3-a)quinoxalin-1-one (ODQ) prevents cGMP synthesis by specifically blocking soluble guanylyl cyclase. ODQ was added to co-cultures of spinal cord and cortical explants either alone or in combination with L1Fc (
Endocytosis and re-organization of the Sema3A receptor complex within axon terminals were shown to accompany Sema3A-induced growth cone collapse (Fournier et al., 2000).
It has been found that soluble L1 prevents growth cone collapse in response to Sema3A (Castellani et al., 2000).
Experiments:
Therefore, it has been tested whether L1 mimetic peptide was able to block endocytosis. To visualize endocytosis the uptake of Rhodamine-Dextran applied on live cortical cultures has been examined in various conditions. Cells were treated for 15 min with Rhodamine-Dextran together with Sema3A alone, Sema3A combined with the L1 mimetic peptide, peptide alone or untreated as control conditions. Strikingly, uptake of Rhodamine-Dextran was exclusively observed when cells were treated with Sema3A alone. Under this condition, spots of internalized fluorescence were observed along axon shafts and surrounding the cell bodies. In contrast, no uptake of Rhodamine-Dextran could be detected following all other treatments.
Conclusion: the peptide mimicking soluble L1 blocks Sema3A-induced endocytosis.
To correlate this process with L1/NP-1 interactions, the experiments of Rhodamine-Dextran uptake were performed on COS7 cells transfected to co-express L1 and NP-1. As in cortical cells, Sema3A alone but not Sema3A combined with the mimetic peptide induced internalization of the Rhodamine-Dextran in co-transfected cells. No fluorescent labeling was detected following treatment with the peptide alone or in the control conditions.
In parallel, cells submitted to the same treatments were processed for immunocytochemical detection of L1 and NP-1. We observed that the cell-surface expression of both L1 and NP-1 was abolished by the Sema3A treatment (
Thus, Sema3A induces a co-internalization of L1 and NP-1. The endocytsis of the two proteins is blocked by the peptide.
On the basis of these results, two cellular tests for the screen of active peptides or molecules can be performed.
These results provide evidence that Sema3A repulsion is associated with L1-mediated NP-1 endocytosis. Switching of Sema3A repulsion into attraction is initiated via a specific trans interaction of L1 with NP-1 that blocks endocytosis. This is followed by downstream activation of the intracellular NO/cGMP pathway. One individual missense mutation L120V located in Ig domain 1 of L1, completely prevented the switch from repulsion to attraction and disrupted both the trans and cis L1/NP-1 interactions. In contrast, other mutant L1 proteins that had previously been shown to alter homophilic and heterophilic binding to other IgCAMs still effectively reversed Sema3A repulsion and bound NP-1 (
The L1/NP-1 Binding Site is Located in L1 Ig1 Domain
The Sema3A receptor complex has been shown to contain a binding subunit (NP-1) and a signal transducer (Plexin) (Tamagnone et al., 2000). Recently, we proposed that L1 is also a component of this receptor complex (Castellani et al., 2000). Previous studies have shown that several Ig domains of L1 are required for homophilic and heterophilic Ig CAM binding (Appel et al., Neurosci., 13:4764-4775, 1993; Su et al., Nat Genet., 7:408-413, 1998; Haspel et al., J Neurobiol., 15:287-302, 2000). This is highlighted by the number of pathological mutations in Ig domains that affect these interactions (De Angelis et al., 1999). In contrast, our finding that several of these mutations did not alter the L1/NP-1 interaction suggested that a restricted region of L1 might define the binding site for NP-1. This idea was confirmed by our results showing that a 6 amino-acid peptide could mimic the integral L1Fc in reversing Sema3A repulsion to attraction. As demonstrated by the experiments using L1Fc with the mutation L120V and the peptide, modifying residue leucine120 to valine completely disrupted both the L1-NP-1 interaction and the reversion process. Together, these findings indicate that the binding site for NP-1 is contained in the FASNKL sequence, with the leucine being a crucial residue.
Our previous finding suggested that L1Fc may act independently of the Sema3A signaling pathway, activating through homophilic binding, an intracellular cascade that results in increased cGMP levels and a subsequent switch from repulsion to attraction (Castellani et al., 2000; He, Neuron, 27:191-193, 2000). Although we found that L1Fc does indeed activate guanylyl cyclase, this is not dependent on homophilic interaction as shown by the experiments using G121S-L1Fc. We therefore propose that the switch occurs through a selective interaction with NP-1 in the receptor complex. Interestingly, civ and trans L1-NP-1 interactions were both found to use the same binding site. However, soluble and transmembrane L1 do not compete for the binding to NP-1. This is consistent with our previous finding that indicated that L1Fc did not enable L1-deficient axons to become susceptible to Sema3A-induced chemorepulsion. In addition, L1Fc was also unable to induce attraction of L1-deficient axons (Castellani et al., 2000). L1-NP-1 cis interaction is therefore a pre-requisite for the Sema3A receptor complex to transduce both repulsive and attractive signals. Thus, dimeric forms of L1 and NP-1 in the membrane might allow both trans and cis interaction to occur simultaneously.
Dual Function of L1/NP-1 Cis and Trans Interactions on Endocytosis and Control of Sema3A-Induced Repulsive and Attractive Behaviors
The present work demonstrates that transmembrane L1 mediates NP-1 endocytosis associated to Sema3A-induced repulsive responses (Fournier et al., 2000). Conversely, trans interaction of soluble L1 mimetic peptide blocks L1/NP-1 receptor complex endocytosis, switching Sema3A from repulsion to attraction. One can correlate endocytosis with the retraction of filopodial and lamellipodial structures that occurs during repulsive contacts. How blockade of endocytosis leads to the opposite effect remains presently unclear. One possibility is that persistence of the ligand/receptor interaction subsequently stabilizes the growth cone structures. Whatever the mechanisms at play they must ultimately result in intracellular signaling modifications. Our results are consistent with recent findings indicating that local protein synthesis and degradation are necessary for guidance cues to steer growth cone responses (Campbell and Holt, Neuron, 32:1013-1026, 2001). As evidenced in several recent works, receptor endocytosis controls levels of degradation by the proteasome, cell surface expression and intracellular downstream signaling (Lloyd et al., Cell., 25:261-269, 2002 Soubeyran et al., Nature, 14:183-187, 2002). Thus, control of endocytosis is likely to be instructive in the equilibrium between synthesis and proteolysis in the growth cone and determinant in the nature of the responses elicited by guidance cues.
The switch of Sema3A Chemorepulsion to Attraction Requires an Activation of the NO/cGMP Pathway
Blocking soluble guanylyl cyclase in co-culture assays using a pharmacological inhibitor prevented L1Fc from reversing Sema3A repulsion to attraction. The requirement of cGMP is consistent with previous work (Song et al., 1998) that established increased levels of cGMP as pivotal to Sema3A signaling. In the developing cortex, Sema3A has been shown to exert a dual effect, repelling axons whilst attracting dendrites (Polleux et al., Nature, 6:567-573, 2000). Based on its asymmetric subcellular localization in the cell body, it was proposed that guanylyl cyclase was responsible for the specific attractive behaviour of the dendritic growth cones to Sema3A (Polleux et al., 2000). Our findings however indicate that cortical axons also express the appropriate molecular machinery to display attractive responses to Sema3A. This may be due to the different stages in development that the cortical neurons were examined in each study (postnatal neurons were used in the present work compared with embryonic cells in the Polleux study). Alternatively, changes in either the localization of the guanylyl cyclase during maturation or up or downstream events may account for the differences observed in the response of cortical axons and dendrites.
Furthermore, our findings also suggest that NO acts as a key messenger in the reversal of Sema3A chemorepulsion to attraction. Switching of Sema3A-induced responses may therefore depend closely upon the maturation of nNOS expression. In the mouse cerebral cortex, nNOS immunoreactivity is present from late embryonic stages, peaking during the first postnatal week, and then declining to adult levels (Oermann et al., Anat. Embryol. (Berl) 200:27-41, 1999). NO is thought to regulate the refinement of immature synaptic connections (Wu et al., Science, 265:1593-1596, 1994) and some forms of adult synaptic plasticity (reviewed by Kiss and Vizi, Trends Neurosci., 24:211-215, 2001). Our observations suggest a novel function of NO in patterning of neuronal projections by modulating axonal responses to guidance cues, particularly in postnatally developing cortical tracts.
Modulation of Sema3A Signaling and Axonal Pathfinding
It is likely that modification of Sema3A-mediated responses by soluble L1 also occurs in vivo. The dynamic changes within the Sema3A receptor complex may occur as a result of contact between the growth cone and either membrane-bound L1 or L1 released from the cell surface. In support, several studies reported proteolytic cleavage of L1 by plasmin(ogen) and by ADAM10, a member of the disintegrin metalloproteinase family (Nayeem et al., J. Cell. Sci., 112:4739-4749, 1999; Gutwein et al., J. Biol. Chem., 19:15490-15497, 2000; Mechtersheimer et al., J. Cell. Biol., 12:661-674, 2001). Furthermore, membrane-proximal cleavage of L1 is detected in the postnatal brain and might be required for L1-dependent migratory processes (Mechtersheimer et al., 2001). With respect to axon guidance, our data allow us to propose that soluble L1 may act in at least two non-exclusive ways. On the one hand soluble L1 can induce the conversion of Sema3A-induced responses from repulsion to attraction in neighboring growth cones. On the other hand, shedding of the L1 ectodomain may disrupt the Sema3A receptor complex, thereby desensitizing the growth cone to Sema3A. This is consistent with recent findings that revealed metalloprotease activity as the determining factor in axon responsiveness to other types of guidance cues (Galko et al., Science, 25:1365-1367, 2000; Hattori et al., Science, 25:1360-1365, 2000). Switched responses to a guidance cue of the Slit family have recently been shown to be operative in directing the migration of muscle pioneers (Kramer et al., Science, 292:737-740, 2001). It is therefore tempting to speculate that switching Sema3A responsiveness is important during the formation of neuronal projections.
Sema3A Signaling and the Human Disease Associated with L1 Mutations
Interestingly, our data may elucidate molecular events that could contribute to the human disease pathology. Several theories have been proposed to explain the pathological defects associated with the L120V mutation. The first proposal is that this mutation generates a nucleotide sequence with a potential donor splicing site (De Angelis et al., 1999). Secondly, it has been suggested that the L120V mutation affects extracellular matrix interactions as it was able to disrupt L1 binding to the chondroïtin sulfate proteoglycan Neurocan in in vitro assays (Oleszewski et al., J. Biol. Chem., 3:3478-3485, 2000). Our data would favor a third possibility whereby some aspects of the human pathology may be the result of a defective L1/NP-1 interaction affecting Sema3A signal transduction, thus leading to axon guidance defects during the development of cortical fiber tracts. Since we found that L1 mediates endocytosis of the Sema3A receptor complex, any type of mutations that affects L1 cell surface expression and trafficking can potentially alter the Sema3A signal transduction. This therefore increases the spectrum of mutations susceptible to disturb axonal responses to Sema3A during the development of neuronal projections.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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02076552.5 | Apr 2002 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB03/02076 | 4/18/2003 | WO | 3/29/2005 |