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1.
Accessory planta retractor (APR) motoneurons of the hawk moth, Manduca sexta, undergo a segment-specific pattern of programmed cell death (PCD) 24 to 48 h after pupal ecdysis (PE). Cell culture experiments show that the PCD of APRs in abdominal segment 6 [APR(6)s] is a cell-autonomous response to the steroid hormone 20-hydroxyecdysone (20E) and involves mitochondrial demise and cell shrinkage. Twenty-four hours before PE, at stage W3-noon, APR(6)s require further 20E exposure and protein synthesis (as tested with cycloheximide) to undergo PCD, and death can be blocked by a broad-spectrum caspase inhibitor. By PE, death is 20E- and protein synthesis-independent and the caspase inhibitor blocks cell shrinkage but not loss of mitochondrial function. Thus, the commitment to mitochondrial demise precedes the commitment to execution events. The phenotype of necrotic cell death induced by a mitochondrial electron transfer inhibitor differs unambiguously from 20E-induced PCD. By inducing PCD pharmacologically, the readiness of APR(6)s to execute PCD was found to increase during the final larval instar. These data suggest that the 20E-induced PCD of APR(6)s includes a premitochondrial phase which includes 20E-induced synthetic events and apical caspase activity, a mitochondrial phase which culminates in loss of mitochondrial function, and a postmitochondrial phase during which effector caspases are activated and APR(6) is destroyed.  相似文献   

2.
This study demonstrates that a 30K protein was gradually synthesized in primary-cultured motoneurons from the accessory planta retractor (APR) of the 6th abdominal ganglion (APR6) in silkworm ventral ganglia through stimulation of hemolymph. An increase in 30K protein synthesis resulted in an inhibition of programmed cell death (PCD) of APR6 motoneurons. The 30K protein was gradually synthesized from the 30Kc6 gene of identified APR6s in day-6 4th instars to day-9 5th instar larvae, but synthesis of the 30K protein ceased in isolated APR6s of day-1 pupa, which normally begin to undergo PCD. When pupal APR6s were treated with larval hemolymph, however, the 30K protein was synthesized suggesting the existence of an anti-PCD factor in the larval hemolymph. An increase of 30K protein within the APR6s was confirmed by antiserum made against the recombinant 30K protein that originated from the APR 30Kc6 gene. Larval APR6, in which PCD was induced with 20-hydroxyecdysone (20E) added to the primary culture, exhibited some PCD characteristics of shrinkage of cell bodies, axonal fragmentation and loss of mitochondrial function. These results provide new insights on the survival or PCD of insect motoneurons through stimulation of hemolymph.  相似文献   

3.
Ecdysteroid hormones trigger the programmed cell death (PCD) of a segmental subset of accessory planta retractor (APR) motoneurons at pupation in the moth, Manduca sexta. APRs from abdominal segment four [APR(4)s] survive through the pupal stage, whereas homologous APR(6)s die 24–48 h after pupal ecdysis (PE) (the shedding of the larval cuticle), in response to the prepupal peak of ecdysteroids. Following retrograde labeling with the vital fluorescent dye, DiI, the morphology of APR(4)s and APR(6)s in vivo was examined at PE and 24–48 h later. During this period, APR(4) somata remained large and ovoid while APR(6)s somata became shrunken and rounded. Similar phenotypes were observed when DiI-labeled APRs were cultured at PE and examined 24 h to 1 week later. During initial shrinkage and rounding of APR(6)s, the plasma membrane remained intact but DNA condensation occurred and mitochondrial activity was lost. The requirements for ecdysteroids and new protein synthesis for APR(6) death were tested by culturing cells with ecdysteroids and cycloheximide (CHX). When cultured at PE, the death of APR(6)s was independent of further exposure to ecdysteroids and could not be blocked by CHX. In contrast, APR(6)s cultured ∼24 h earlier required additional exposure to ecdysteroids to die and their death was inhibited by CHX. Thus, the final 24 h of larval life represents an important transition period in the commitment of APR(6)s to undergo PCD, and is of interest for pursuing underlying mechanisms of steroid-induced PCD. © 1998 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Neurobiol 35: 300–322, 1998  相似文献   

4.
The insect steroid hormone, 20-hydroxyecdysone (20E) triggers the programmed cell death (PCD) of the anterior silk glands (ASGs) of the silkworm, Bombyx mori. We tried to determine the time of commitment to die (death commitment) by examining ASG responses to 20E and juvenile hormone analogue (JHA) in vivo as well as in vitro. The ASGs obtained late on day 6 of the fifth instar completed PCD when cultured with 20E, while the ASGs obtained on day 4 and cultured with 20E did not undergo PCD. The ASGs became competent to respond to 20E at mid-day 5. The ASGs with responsiveness to 20E were not sensitive to JHA, indicating that the ASGs were committed to die before becoming capable of responding to 20E. Topical application of JHA on day 4 suppressed 20E-induced PCD, but that on day 5 failed to do so, indicating that the death commitment might occur between day 4 and 5. We also determined the time of death commitment after allatectomy of the fourth instar larvae, a procedure that induced the precocious PCD. Timed application of JHA and culture of ASGs with 20E in the presence of JHA showed that the ASGs had lost their sensitivity to JHA between 72 and 96 h after allatectomy, i.e. 24-48 h before precocious gut purge in the allatectomized larvae. This result is similar to that obtained in the fifth instar. We conclude that the cellular commitment to die takes place one day before the ASGs become competent to respond to 20E.  相似文献   

5.
During metamorphosis of the hawkmoth, Manduca sexta, some larval muscles degenerate while others are respecified for new functions. In larvae, accessory planta retractor muscles (APRMs) are present in abdominal segments 1 to 6 (A1 to A6). APRMs serve as proleg retractors in A3 to A6 and body wall muscles in A1 and A2. At pupation, all APRMs degenerate except those in A2 and A3, which are respecified to circulate hemolymph in pupae. The motoneurons that innervate APRMs, the APRs, likewise undergo segment-specific programmed cell death (PCD), as a direct, cell-autonomous response to the prepupal peak of ecdysteroids. The segment-specific patterns of APR and APRM death differ. The present study tested the hypothesis that APRM death is a direct, cell-autonomous response to the prepupal peak of ecdysteroids. Prevention of the prepupal peak prevented APRM degeneration, and replacement of the peak by infusion of 20-hydroxyecdysone restored the correct segment-specific pattern of APRM degeneration. Surgical denervation of APRMs did not perturb their segment-specific degeneration at pupation, indicating that signals from APRs are not required for the muscles' segment-specific responses to ecdysteroids. The possibility that instructive signals originate from APRMs' epidermal attachment points was tested by treating the epidermis with a juvenile hormone analog to prevent pupal development. This manipulation likewise did not alter APRM fate. We conclude that both the muscles and motoneurons in this motor system respond directly and cell-autonomously to prepupal ecdysteroids to produce a segment-specific pattern of PCD that is matched to the functional requirements of the pupal body.  相似文献   

6.
About 50% of spinal motoneurons undergo programmed cell death (PCD) after target contact, but little is known about how this process is initiated. Embryonic motoneurons coexpress the death receptor Fas and its ligand FasL at the stage at which PCD is about to begin. In the absence of trophic factors, many motoneurons die in culture within 2 d. Most (75%) of these were saved by Fas-Fc receptor body, which blocks interactions between Fas and FasL, or by the caspase-8 inhibitor tetrapeptide IETD. Therefore, activation of Fas by endogenous FasL underlies cell death induced by trophic deprivation. In the presence of neurotrophic factors, exogenous Fas activators such as soluble FasL or anti-Fas antibodies triggered PCD of 40-50% of purified motoneurons over the following 3-5 d; this treatment led to activation of caspase-3, and was blocked by IETD. Sensitivity to Fas activation is regulated: motoneurons cultured for 3 d with neurotrophic factors became completely resistant. Levels of Fas expressed by motoneurons varied little, but FasL was upregulated in the absence of neurotrophic factors. Motoneurons resistant to Fas activation expressed high levels of FLICE-inhibitory protein (FLIP), an endogenous inhibitor of caspase-8 activation. Our results suggest that Fas can act as a driving force for motoneuron PCD, and raise the possibility that active triggering of PCD may contribute to motoneuron loss during normal development and/or in pathological situations.  相似文献   

7.
During pupal metamorphosis, the anterior silk glands (ASGs) of the silkworm Bombyx mori degenerate through programmed cell death (PCD), which is triggered by 20-hydroxyecdysone (20E). 20E triggers the PCD of the ASGs of day 7 fifth instar (V7) larvae but not that of V5 larvae. When V7 ASGs were cocultured with V5 ASGs in the presence of 20E, neither culture of ASGs underwent PCD. The 20E-induced PCD of V7 ASGs was also inhibited when they were incubated in conditioned medium that was prepared by incubating V5 ASGs for 48 h, an indication that V5 ASGs released an inhibitor of 20E-induced PCD during incubation. The inhibitor was purified from conditioned medium and identified as glucose oxidase (GOD). GOD catalyzes the oxidation of glucose to gluconolactone, and generates hydrogen peroxide as a byproduct. We found that hydrogen peroxide is the molecule that directly inhibits the action of 20E and may act to protect the ASGs from early execution of PCD during the feeding stage. GOD was localized in the inner cavity of the gland, and was discharged to the outside of the ASGs with the silk thread at the onset of spinning. Thus, the spinning behavior, occurring at the beginning of the prepupal period, plays an important role in controlling the time at which ASGs undergo PCD in response to 20E.  相似文献   

8.
Programmed cell death plays a critical role in sculpting the nervous system during embryonic development. In holometabolous insects, cell death also plays an important role in the reorganization of the nervous system during metamorphosis. In Manduca sexta, cell death and the factors that regulate it can be studied at the level of individually identified neurons. The accessory planta retractor (APR) motoneurons undergo segment-specific death during the larval-pupal transformation. APRs in abdominal segments 1, 5, and 6 die at pupation; those in abdominal segments 2, 3, and 4 survive until adulthood. Juvenile hormone and ecdysteroids regulate the metamorphic restructuring of the nervous system, but the factors that determine which APRs will live and which will die are not known. The present study assessed the possible importance of cell-cell interactions in determining APR survival at pupation by removing APR's target muscle or mechanosensory input early in the final larval instar, prior to the hormonal cues that trigger the larval-pupal transformation. The motoneurons showed their normal, segment-specific pattern of death in nearly all cases. These results suggest that target muscles and sensory input play little or no role in determining the segment-specific pattern of APR survival at pupation. © 1996 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Programmed cell death (PCD) is a fundamental component of development in virtually all animals. Despite the ubiquity of this phenomenon, little is known about what tells a cell to die, and less still about the physiological and molecular mechanisms that bring about death. One system that has proven to be very amenable for the study of PCD is the intersegmental muscle (ISM) of the tobacco hawkmoth Manduca sexta. These giant muscle cells are used during the eclosion (emergence) behavior of the adult moth, and then die during the subsequent 30 h. This review uses the ISMs as a model system to address questions that are basic to any cell death system, including the following: (1) how do cells know when to die; (2) what physiological changes accompany death; (3) what are the molecular mechanisms that mediate death; and (4) do all cells die by the same process? For the ISMs, the trigger for PCD is a decline in the circulating titer of the insect molting hormone, 20-hydroxyecdysone (20-HE). During cell death there are rapid decreases in both the myofibrillar sensitivity to intracellular calcium and the resulting force of fiber contraction. The ability of the ISMs to undergo PCD requires the repression and activation of specific genes. Two of the repressed genes encode actin and myosin. One of the upregulated presumptive cell-death genes encodes polyubiquitin, which appears to play a critical role in the rapid proteolysis that accompanies ISM death.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
Programmed cell death (PCD) is a fundamental component of development in virtually all animals. Despite the ubiquity of this phenomenon, little is known about what tells a cell to die, and less still about the physiological and molecular mechanisms that bring about death. One system that has proven to be very amenable for the study of PCD is the intersegmental muscle (ISM) of the tobacco hawkmoth Manduca sexta. These giant muscle cells are used during the eclosion (emergence) behavior of the adult moth, and then die during the subsequent 30 h. This review uses the ISMs as a model system to address questions that are basic to any cell death system, including the following: (1) how do cells know when to die; (2) what physiological changes accompany death; (3) what are the molecular mechanisms that mediate death; and (4) do all cells die by the same process? For the ISMs, the trigger for PCD is a decline in the circulating titer of the insect molting hormone, 20-hydroxyecdysone (20-HE). During cell death there are rapid decreases in both the myofibrillar sensitivity to intracellular calcium and the resulting force of fiber contraction. The ability of the ISMs to under go PCD requires the repression and activation of specific genes. Two of the repressed genes encode actin and myosin. One of the upregulated presumptive cell-death genes encodes polyubiquitin, which appears to play a critical role in the rapid proteolysis that accompanies ISM death. One curious aspect of ISM death is that these cells display none of the features that are characteristic of apoptosis, suggesting that they may die by a fundamentally different mechanism. © 1992 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

12.
During pupal metamorphosis, the anterior silk gland (ASG) of the silkworm, Bombyx mori, undergoes programmed cell death (PCD), which is triggered by 20-hydroxyecdysone (20E). Annexin IX (ANX IX) has been identified as a 20E-inducible gene in dying ASGs, and we show here that its expression is down-regulated in tissues destined to die but not in tissues that survive pupal metamorphosis. ANX IX expression was high in the ASGs during the feeding period, when the ecdysteroid titer was low, and decreased in response to the rising ecdysteroid titer that triggered pupal metamorphosis. Before gut purge, in vitro exposure of the ASGs to 20E levels corresponding to the ecdysteroid concentration present at the time of gut purge caused a decrease in ANX IX messenger RNA levels. Expression profiles of EcR and USP, and the 20E concentration-responses of these genes, indicate the importance of the relative abundance of EcR-A and EcR-B1 isoforms in ANX IX regulation. These results suggest an involvement of ANX IX in the determination of PCD timing by delaying or suppressing the response to the increase in hemolymph ecdysteroid concentration during the prepupal period.  相似文献   

13.
14.
The larval–pupal transformation of Manduca sexta is accompanied by the loss of the abdominal prolegs. The proleg muscles degenerate, the dendritic arbors of proleg motoneurons regress, and a subset of the proleg motoneurons dies. The regression and death of proleg motoneurons are triggered by the prepupal peak of ecdysteroids in the hemolymph. To investigate the possible involvement of protein synthesis in these events, we gave insects repeated injections of the protein synthesis inhibitor, cycloheximide (CHX), during the prepupal peak. Examination of insects 3–5 days following CHX treatment showed that CHX inhibited the death of proleg motoneurons and the production of pupal cuticle in a dose-dependent fashion. When insects were allowed to survive for 10 days after the final CHX injection, motoneuron death and pupal cuticle production sometimes occurred belatedly, apparently in response to the ecdysteroid rise that normally triggers adult development. CHX treatments that inhibited motoneuron death were less effective in inhibiting dendritic regression in the same neurons. In another set of experiments, abdomens were isolated from the ecdysteroid-secreting glands prior to the prepupal peak, and infused with 20-hydroxyecdysone (20-HE). Single injections of CHX delivered just prior to the start of the 20-HE infusion inhibited motoneuron death and pupal cuticle production, but in the range of doses tested, did not prevent dendritic regression. Our findings suggest that protein synthesis is a required step in the steroid-mediated death of proleg motoneurons, and that dendritic regression is less susceptible to inhibition by CHX than is motoneuron death. © 1993 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

15.
16.
The regulation of survival of spinal motoneurons (MNs) has been shown to depend during development and after injury on a variety of neurotrophic molecules produced by skeletal muscle target tissue. Increasing evidence also suggests that other sources of trophic support prevent MNs from undergoing naturally occurring or injury-induced death. We have examined the role of endogenous and exogenous androgens on the survival of developing avian lumbar spinal MNs during their period of programmed cell death (PCD) between embryonic day (E)6 and E11 or after axotomy on E12. We found that although treatment with testosterone, dihydrotestosterone (DHT), or the androgen receptor antagonist flutamide (FL) failed to affect the number of these MNs during PCD, administration of DHT from E12 to E15 following axotomy on E12 significantly attenuated injury-induced MN death. This effect was inhibited by cotreatment with FL, whereas treatment with FL alone did not affect MN survival. Finally, we examined the spinal cord at various times during development and following axotomy on E12 for the expression of androgen receptor using the polyclonal PG-21 antibody. Our results suggest that exogenously applied androgens are capable of rescuing MNs from injury-induced cell death and that they act directly on these cells via an androgen receptor-mediated mechanism. By contrast, endogenous androgens do not appear to be involved in the regulation of normal PCD of developing avian MNs.  相似文献   

17.
Embryonic lumbar spinal motoneurons (MNs) are characterized by a period of programmed cell death (PCD) that spans several days and occurs in a rostrocaudal gradient. The generation of these MNs also takes place in a temporal-spatial gradient, such that MNs within rostral lumbar segments exit the cell cycle earlier and MNs within progressively caudal regions are born later. In vitro studies have shown that the latest born spinal MNs, presumably through the possession of endogenous "survival properties," are also the last to acquire their trophic dependence. If the birth date and therefore spinal cord location of lumbar spinal MNs influence the spatial-temporal pattern of PCD, then earlier born MNs should die sooner and be located more rostrally than those generated later. Alternatively, if the time at which MNs die during development is unrelated to their prior exit from the cell cycle, those born at various phases should die throughout the period of PCD. We report here that lumbar MNs generated during the earliest part (embryonic day 2-3) of the proliferative period in the developing chick spinal cord tend to die during the earliest stages of the PCD period and that MNs born in successive 12-h intervals die at correspondingly later periods during PCD. Furthermore, the spatial progression of PCD of these subpopulations of MNs occurs in a rostrocaudal gradient. Finally, while MNs do appear to die in a mediolateral gradient during the period of MN PCD, this pattern is only partly accounted for by MNs born in consecutive intervals. These data support the notion that the timing and rostrocaudal location of MNs undergoing PCD reflect their time of exit from the cell cycle.  相似文献   

18.
During metamorphosis of the hawkmoth, Manduca sexta, some larval muscles degenerate while others are respecified for new functions. In larvae, accessory planta retractor muscles (APRMs) are present in abdominal segments 1 to 6 (A1 to A6). APRMs serve as proleg retractors in A3 to A6 and body wall muscles in A1 and A2. At pupation, all APRMs degenerate except those in A2 and A3, which are respecified to circulate hemolymph in pupae. The motoneurons that innervate APRMs, the APRs, likewise undergo segment‐specific programmed cell death (PCD), as a direct, cell‐autonomous response to the prepupal peak of ecdysteroids. The segment‐specific patterns of APR and APRM death differ. The present study tested the hypothesis that APRM death is a direct, cell‐autonomous response to the prepupal peak of ecdysteroids. Prevention of the prepupal peak prevented APRM degeneration, and replacement of the peak by infusion of 20‐hydroxyecdysone restored the correct segment‐specific pattern of APRM degeneration. Surgical denervation of APRMs did not perturb their segment‐specific degeneration at pupation, indicating that signals from APRs are not required for the muscles' segment‐specific responses to ecdysteroids. The possibility that instructive signals originate from APRMs' epidermal attachment points was tested by treating the epidermis with a juvenile hormone analog to prevent pupal development. This manipulation likewise did not alter APRM fate. We conclude that both the muscles and motoneurons in this motor system respond directly and cell‐autonomously to prepupal ecdysteroids to produce a segment‐specific pattern of PCD that is matched to the functional requirements of the pupal body. © 2004 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Neurobiol, 2005  相似文献   

19.
20.
Although programmed cell death (PCD) is extensively studied in multicellular organisms, in recent years it has been shown that a unicellular organism, yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, also possesses death program(s). In particular, we have found that a high doses of yeast pheromone is a natural stimulus inducing PCD. Here, we show that the death cascades triggered by pheromone and by a drug amiodarone are very similar. We focused on the role of mitochondria during the pheromone/amiodarone-induced PCD. For the first time, a functional chain of the mitochondria-related events required for a particular case of yeast PCD has been revealed: an enhancement of mitochondrial respiration and of its energy coupling, a strong increase of mitochondrial membrane potential, both events triggered by the rise of cytoplasmic [Ca2+], a burst in generation of reactive oxygen species in center o of the respiratory chain complex III, mitochondrial thread-grain transition, and cytochrome c release from mitochondria. A novel mitochondrial protein required for thread-grain transition is identified.  相似文献   

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