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Published in final edited form as:
Neuromolecular Med. 2008 ; 10(1): 24. doi:10.1007/s12017-007-8020-z.
Chronic Exposure to Dietary Sterol Glucosides is Neurotoxic to
Motor Neurons and Induces an ALS-PDC Phenotype
R. C. Tabata,
Department of Experimental Medicine, University of British Columbia, Rm 386, 828 W.10th Ave,
Vancouver, BC, Canada V5Z1L8
J. M. B. Wilson,
Program in Neuroscience, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada
P. Ly,
Department of Experimental Medicine, University of British Columbia, Rm 386, 828 W.10th Ave,
Vancouver, BC, Canada V5Z1L8
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P. Zwiegers,
Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC,
Canada
D. Kwok,
Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC,
Canada
J. M. Van Kampen,
Department of Neuroscience, Mayo Clinic, Jacksonville, Fl, USA
N. Cashman, and
Department of Medicine, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada
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C. A. Shaw
Department of Experimental Medicine, University of British Columbia, Rm 386, 828 W.10th Ave,
Vancouver, BC, Canada V5Z1L8 & Program in Neuroscience, University of British Columbia,
Vancouver, BC, Canada & Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences, University of British
Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada & Department of Physiology, University of British Columbia,
Vancouver, BC, Canada
Abstract
Epidemiological studies of the Guamanian variants of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and
parkinsonism, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis-parkinsonism dementia complex (ALS-PDC), have
shown a positive correlation between consumption of washed cycad seed flour and disease
occurrence. Previous in vivo studies by our group have shown that the same seed flour induces ALS
and PDC phenotypes in out bred adult male mice. In vitro studies using isolated cycad compounds
have also demonstrated that several of these are neurotoxic, specifically, a number of water insoluble
phytosterol glucosides of which β-sitosterol β-D-glucoside (BSSG) forms the largest fraction. BSSG
is neurotoxic to motor neurons and other neuronal populations in culture. The present study shows
that an in vitro hybrid motor neuron (NSC-34) culture treated with BSSG undergoes a dose-dependent
cell loss. Surviving cells show increased expression of HSP70, decreased cytosolic heavy
neurofilament expression, and have various morphological abnormalities. CD-1 mice fed mouse
© Humana Press Inc. 2008
e-mail: cashawlab@gmail.com.
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chow pellets containing BSSG for 15 weeks showed motor deficits and motor neuron loss in the
lumbar and thoracic spinal cord, along with decreased glutamate transporter labelling, and increased
glial fibrillary acid protein reactivity. Other pathological outcomes included increased caspase-3
labelling in the striatum and decreased tyrosine-hydroxylase labelling in the striatum and substantia
nigra. C57BL/6 mice fed BSSG-treated pellets for 10 weeks exhibited progressive loss of motor
neurons in the lumbar spinal cord that continued to worsen even after the BSSG exposure ended.
These results provide further support implicating sterol glucosides as one potential causal factor in
the motor neuron pathology previously associated with cycad consumption and ALS-PDC.
Keywords
ALS; Parkinsonism; BSSG; Guam; Environmental toxicity; Etiology; ALS-PDC
Introduction
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The primary causal factor(s) for the neurodegenerative disease amyotrophic lateral sclerosisparkinsonism dementia complex (ALS-PDC) has eluded investigators since the disease was
first characterized by Kurland and colleagues in the 1950s (see Kurland and Molgaard 1982,
for a summary). Then, as now, the strongest epidemiological link was to local consumption by
the native Chamorro people of the starchy gametophyte of the indigenous cycad tree (Cycas
micronesica) (Whiting 1963; Kurland 1988; Borenstein et al. 2007; Galasko et al. 2007).
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Based on the epidemiological evidence for cycad neurotoxity leading to ALS-PDC, we
conducted a series of in vivo studies demonstrating that washed cycad flour prepared in a
manner consistent with native Chamorro practice produces behavioral deficits and CNS
pathologies in mice mimicking many aspects of the human disease (Wilson et al. 2002,
2004a, b, 2005b; Schulz et al. 2003). The cycad flour used had been ‘washed’ numerous times
and contained nil-to-trace amounts of the previously suspected cycad toxins, notably the free
amino acids β-N-methylamino-L-alanine (BMAA) and β-N-oxalylamino-L-alanine (BOAA),
or the amino sugar cycasin and its aglycone, methylazoxymethanol (MAM) (Wilson et al.
2002). Earlier studies by Spencer et al. (1987) had demonstrated some neurotoxic effects of
BMAA in vivo in macaque monkeys following exposure to BMAA by gavage at extremely
high concentrations. These outcomes, however, did not resemble the pathology of ALS-PDC.
In addition, the results in monkeys were not confirmed either by us (Cruz-Aguado et al.
2006) or others (Perry et al. 1989) in mice. Recently, Murch et al. (2004) have suggested that
BMAA may exist in a protein-associated “bound” form that is magnified up the food chain.
Evidence for either BMAA incorporation into protein or its actual toxic impact, however, is
lacking: In the first case, apart from the claims of these investigators, there is no evidence that
such bound forms of BMAA or other plant free amino acids exist. In regard to BMAA toxicity,
recent studies have shown that even direct injection of high concentrations of BMAA into brain
had no effects on the target neuron populations (Buenz and Howe 2007).
In contrast to BMAA, BOAA ingestion in animals and humans could induce neurodegeneration
in a condition called neurolathyrism, but this disorder does not resemble ALS-PDC (Ross et
al. 1989). Similarly, neither cycasin nor MAM give ALS-PDC-like phenotypes (for a review,
see Kurland 1972).
Based on all of the above studies, our working hypothesis has been that a previously
uncharacterized water-insoluble neurotoxin(s) in washed cycad flour is responsible for the
human disease and for the similar outcomes in our cycad-treated mice. In a series of parallel
in vitro assays, we isolated the neurotoxic fractions from washed cycad seed
“chips” (Khabazian et al. 2002). The most toxic fraction was found to contain a water insoluble
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mixture of phytosterol β-D-glucosides, including β-sitosterol β-D-glucoside (abbreviated here
as BSSG, the largest fraction, MW = 576 g/mol), stigmasterol β-D-glucoside, and campesterol
β-D-glucoside. HPLC analyses had shown that BSSG concentrations range from about 20 μg/
g to 1,340 μg/g (Marler et al. 2005).
The variation in the concentration of BSSG appears to depend on several factors, including the
region harvested and season. Seed maturity appears to be the most crucial factor with younger
seeds having higher concentrations by up to several orders of magnitude (Marler et al. 2006).
Similar variations for stigmasterol glucoside and other phytosterol glucosides have also been
measured (Marler et al. 2005).
In all higher plants, sterols occur free as esters, as β-D-glucosides, and as their 6-O’-esters in
small, but readily identifiable amounts (Grunwald 1980). Phytosterols such as sitosterol and
stigmasterol occupy the exofacial leaflet of the cell membrane. In contrast, cholesterol and its
esters in plant and animal cells readily partition into the cytofacial leaflet and are important
membrane components (Grunwald 1980). The cellular localization of these sterols in bilamellar
cell membranes of both plants and animals may thus have important implications for membrane
conformation and permeability.
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The roles of the various phytosterol glucosides are not well understood. To some extent they
may generally share with sterols a role in the maintenance of cell membrane structure (Pegel
1997). Due to the hydrophilicity of the glucose moiety, these molecules may have surfaceactive binding sites and properties (Folmer 2003), similar to better-known phytosterol
glucosides such as ouabain and digitalin (Nesher et al. 2007). For most phytosterol glucosides
binding sites have not been identified.
In support of our preliminary data suggesting neurotoxic actions of cycad’s sterol glucosides,
other sterols and sterol glucosides have been shown to exhibit toxic properties in animal cells
(see Ly et al. 2007 for references). In contrast, cholesterol glucoside has been implicated as
playing a primary role in the early stages of stress-induced signal transduction in various animal
cells, including cultured human fibroblasts (Murakami-Murofushi et al. 1997; Kunimoto et al.
2000, 2002). The cumulative data thus clearly demonstrate that sterol glucosides from plants
or animal cells are not uniform in their actions and may span the range of actions from protective
to toxic.
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Our preliminary in vitro studies had shown that cycad-derived BSSG and other phytosterol
glucosides, as well as synthetic BSSG and cholesterol glucoside (CG), were acutely toxic to
cortical slices and primary cortical cultures in micromolar concentrations with at least part of
their action due to glutamate release prior to cell death. Exposure of neural cells to these sterol
glucosides also induced a significant up-regulation of protein kinases including PKC and
CDK2 and CDK5 (Khabazian et al. 2002). Significantly, in regard to a possible link to ALSPDC and the neurofibrillary tangles which are a ubiquitous feature of the disease, BSSG also
induced increased hyperphosphorylated tau expression in neurons (Khabazian et al. 2002) and
in NSC-34 motor neuron hybrids (Ly et al. 2007). Chronic treatment of organotypic slice
preparations at nanomolar concentrations showed that BSSG induced cell death in a dosedependant manner in the spinal cord, hippocampus, and substantia nigra (SN) slice preparations
(Wilson et al. 2005c; K. Andreassen, C. Mathews; S. Jafri, personal communications,
respectively).
The identification of BSSG as one cycad compound potentially causal to the forms of neural
degeneration leads to a testable hypothesis: BSSG alone or in combination with other cycad
sterol glucosides will produce essentially the same neuropathological outcomes as cycad seed
flour. The following studies were designed to test this hypothesis: We fed BSSG (incorporated
into mouse chow pellets) to two strains of adult male mice over a prolonged period of time
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ranging from 10 to 15 weeks. Detailed analyses of behavioral, morphological, and biochemical
outcomes were followed temporally with an emphasis on the emergence of ALS-PDC-like
features in two CNS regions associated with the disease, specifically motor neurons of the
lumbar and thoracic spinal cord and dopamine containing neurons of the nigro-striatal system.
Materials and Methods
In vitro Experiments
Cell Culture Preparation—The mouse-derived motor neuron-like cell line, NSC-34, was
cultured in a Dulbecco’s modified Eagle’s medium (DMEM) supplemented with 10% fetal
bovine serum and 2 mM L-glutamine. NSC-34 cells were maintained in a humidified 5%
CO2 atmosphere at 37°C. For each experiment, cells were seeded at 2 × 104 cells/mm2.
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β-Sitosterol β-D-glucoside (BSSG) Treatment and Cell Death Assay—The NSC-34
cells were grown on 24-well collagen-coated plates (Corning Transwell-col membrane, 6.5
mm diameter, 0.4 μm pore, PTFE, sterile, from Sigma-Aldrich, UK) and treated with increasing
doses of pure synthetic BSSG (0.1-100 μM). BSSG was dissolved in pure DMSO and diluted
in DMEM. The maximum percentage of DMSO used in the experiments was 0.5%. Cell
viability of the NSC-34 cells after BSSG treatment was determined by the trypan blue exclusion
assay after 3 days of BSSG treatment. Cell death was expressed as the number of dead cells
divided by the total number of cells counted.
Cell Lysate Preparation and Western Blot Analysis—At the end of each treatment,
cells were washed once with ice-cold phosphate-buffered saline (PBS; Sigma-Aldrich) and
lysed in a homogenizing buffer containing 20 mM MOPS, 5 mM EDTA, 2 mM EGTA, 30
mM NaF, 1 mM PMSF, 1 mM NaVO3, 20 mM beta-glycerophosphate, 0.5% Triton X-100
(polyethylene glycol p-tert-octylphenyl ether, Fisher BioReagents, Fisher Scientific,
Pittsburgh, PA), and protease inhibitor cocktail tablet (Roche Molecular Biochemicals,
Indianapolis, IN). Cell lysates were sonicated 15 times and centrifuged at 12,000 rpm for 30
min at 4°C. Protein concentration was determined using a commercial bicinchoninic acid
(BCA) protein concentration kit (Peirce, Rockford, IL).
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About 10 μg of cell lysates were boiled in sample buffer and resolved on a 10% sodium dodecyl
sulfate polyacrylamide gel, followed by transferring the resolved proteins onto a nitrocellulose
membrane. The membranes were blocked for 1 h with 1% bovine serum albumin in 0.1% TBSTween 20 (Sigma-Aldrich) at room temperature and incubated with specific antibodies at 4°
C for up to 18 h. Primary antibodies recognizing HSP70 (1:2,000) and the heavy subunit of
neurofilament (1:1,000) were used. Secondary HRP-conjugated antibodies were used to detect
specific bands followed by enhance chemiluminescence light reaction (Amersham).
In vivo Experiments
Experiment 1: Is BSSG Neurotoxic In vivo?
Animals: Five to seven-month-old male CD-1 mice were purchased from Charles River
(Wilmington, MA). CD-1s were selected for the initial BSSG neurotoxicity experiment as our
laboratory has demonstrated the effects of cycad flour consumption on CNS pathology in this
same strain (Wilson et al. 2003, 2004a, b, 2005b). Thirty-one mice were randomly divided into
two groups (15 controls; 16 experimental). All animals were housed singly in a room
maintained at 22°C in a 12/12 h light cycle.
Feeding of BSSG: Gram quantities of BSSG were synthesized on a contract basis by the
Department of Chemistry, University of British Columbia. In short, a multi-step process
converted unglycosylated sterols (β-sitosterol or cholesterol) into BSSG or cholesterol β-DNeuromolecular Med. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2010 February 1.
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glucoside, respectively. Synthesized compounds were characterized using NMR (1H and 13C)
and high-resolution mass spectrometry (HRMS). A purity of at least 95% was verified by
HPLC. BSSG was mixed with ground up Purina Chow mouse pellets (Mouse Diet™, Purina)
to create the experimental pellet at the desired concentrations of BSSG/pellet. In the studies
using CD-1 mice, the dose in the experimental group was 1,000 μg of BSSG/day. Treated
pellets were placed in the feeding tray each morning before the addition of regular mouse chow
(ad libitum). Any uneaten experimental pellets were weighed and recorded. In general, all of
the mice in the BSSG group routinely ate the entire pellet. Control mice were fed only normal
mouse chow. BSSG feeding was conducted daily for 15 weeks and mice were behaviorally
monitored for an additional 17 weeks prior to sacrifice.
Experiment 2: Dose Dependence of BSSG-induced Neurodegeneration
Animals: The strain-dependency of possible BSSG effects was assessed using 3-month-old
male C57/BL6 mice purchased from Taconic (Germantown, NY). Forty-four mice were
randomly divided into four groups (14 controls; 10 for each of the experimental groups (see
below)). All animals were housed singly in a room maintained at 22°C in a 12/12 h light cycle.
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Feeding of BSSG: Daily doses of 10, 100, or 1,000 μg BSSG were fed to the separate
experimental groups starting at 5 months of age. These dosages were chosen to show the effect
of BSSG feeding at concentrations below, near, and above those previously described as extant
in cycad flour (Wilson et al. 2002). Feeding was conducted daily for 10 weeks. An additional
2 weeks of behavioral testing was conducted after BSSG feeding ended (total 12 weeks of
testing) to allow blood sterol content to become normalized (Sanders et al. 2000; Miettinen et
al. 1983). At this stage, half the mice were sacrificed. The remaining mice were sacrificed 5
months later in order to determine if BSSG had long-term progressive pathological effects
similar to the effects observed with cycad feeding (Wilson et al. 2002). Other aspects of this
study were as described in Experiment 1.
The following methods were common for both in vivo studies.
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Blood Collection and Preparation: Blood collection (via tail bleed) was completed in both in
vivo experiments. In Experiment 1, blood was taken before and during BSSG feeding (week
8); in Experiment 2, blood was collected before and during BSSG feeding (week 10). The tail
tip (2 mm) from each mouse was cut off with a sterile scalpel to sever the lateral vein. Serum
sterol glucoside levels, presumably including both exogenous phytosterol glucoside and
endogenous CG, in plasma samples were determined after thin layer chromatography (TLC).
About 100 μl aliquots of thawed plasma were transferred to microcentrifuge tubes with 250
μl of acetonitrile and centrifuged at 3,000 rpm for 3 min to precipitate the pellet. The
supernatant was transferred and extracted with 500 μl chloroform. The mixture was vortexed
(Vortex Genie-2, Scientific Industries, Inc., Bohemia, NY) and spun at 3,000 rpm for 3 min.
The upper aqueous layer was transferred and extracted for a second time with 500 μl chloroform
and for a third time with 500 μl chloroform/methanol (2:1 v/v). The combined chloroform and
chloroform/methanol extracts were transferred to a new vial and dried under a stream of
nitrogen. The sample residue was dissolved in 300 μl of reconstituting solvent (20 ml of
dichloromethane/methanol (1:1 v/v) + five drops of pyridine) before TLC application.
HPLC: About 10 μl of each of sample extract and a standard amount of BSSG was injected
into the HPLC system (Agilent HP 1050 equipped with an Agilent Zorbax Eclipse XDB-C18
column) and separated in isocratic mode during a run time of 30 min using methanol/
acetonitrile (80:20) (30°C; 0.5 ml/min). UV detection was at 205 nm. The relative retention
time and the peak response were calculated by the Agilent ChemStation Software (Version A.
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09.01) and used to identify and quantify the corresponding BSSG peak in the sample
chromatograms.
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Behavioral Tests of Motor Function: In all behavioral experiments, the mice were tested
singly between 10 a.m. and 5 p.m. The testing sequence of mice was randomized across groups.
The experimental group to which each animal belonged was unknown to the observer at the
time of behavioral recording.
Leg Extension: The leg extension reflex test was used as a measure of motor neuron
dysfunction (Barneoud and Curet 1999). We altered this test to discriminate more subtle
behaviors, employing a scale from 0 to 4 based on the response shown by the mouse. 4:
Complete extension of both legs (normal). 3: Two legs extended with some tremors and/or
punching of one leg. 2: One leg extended, 1 retracted, or tremors in both legs. 1: One leg
retracted and tremors in the other leg. 0: Both legs retracted. Leg extension was measured three
times per week. This scaled test was designed to show the progressive loss of function as the
normal reflex usually deteriorated progressively to tremor and then to total retraction.
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Open Field: Mice were placed in a round open field (2 m diameter) for 5 min and movements
were recorded using a video camera to measure exploratory behavior (spontaneous motor
activity) (Karl et al. 2003) as well as possible stress response (i.e., defensive burying or
thigmotaxis). Videos were viewed on a TV screen with a circular grid overlaid and grid
crossings were recorded. Three trials were conducted during weeks 24, 26 and 28.
Rotorod: The rotorod was used to test general motor function (Gerlai et al. 1996; Gerlai and
Roder 1996) and motor learning (Welsh et al. 2005). The time that a mouse could remain
walking on a rotating axle (3.6 cm diameter; speed of rotation: 16 rpm) without either falling
or clenching onto the axle was measured. Each mouse was tested for a maximum of 160 s
(Barneoud et al. 1997) twice per week.
Paw Print Analysis: In order to examine hind limb stepping patterns during forward
locomotion, mice were required to traverse a straight, walled runway. Stride length was
determined as per previously described protocols (Wilson et al. 2002, 2003, 2004a, b,
2005b).
Wire Hang: Neuromuscular strength was tested by the wire hang (Wilson et al. 2003, 2004a,
b, 2005b) in which mice were placed on a wire-cage lid that was turned upside down (180°)
over a soft surface and the latency to fall recorded (maximum of 60 s).
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Histological/Morphological Measurements—At the various times of sacrifice, all
animals were anaesthetized with halothane and perfused via cardiac puncture with chilled PBS
and 4% paraformaldehyde (PFA). Spinal cord and brain samples were removed and immersed
in 4% PFA for 2 days, cryoprotected in 20% sucrose 0.5% sodium azide in 0.01 M PBS solution,
pH 7.4 for 1 day, and then stored frozen at -80°C until sectioning for immunohistology on a
Hacker-Bright motorized cryostat. Spinal cords and brains were serially sectioned at 20 and
30 μm, respectively. Spinal cord and mouse brain sections were sectioned in the coronal plane
(Wilson et al. 2002, 2003). Immunohistochemistry for any particular assay was performed at
the same time for sections for all animals in either of the two studies. Microscopy of the stained
sections and recording of the level of labelling was conducted by observers blind to the identity
of the mice.
Activated caspase-3 (Promega, Madison, WI; Iba-1 (ionized calcium-binding adaptor
molecule-1, Abcam, Cambridge, MA), glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP, rat monoclonal
antibody, Calbiochem, San Diego, CA), and choline acetyl transferase (ChAT), (Chemicon
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International; VES Labs, Inc., Tigard, OR) levels were identified by immunohistology (Schulz
et al. 2003; Wilson et al. 2005b). Slide-mounted sections were incubated in PBS-blocking
solution (1% BSA and 0.3% Triton X-100 in PBS) for 2 h and then with the primary antibody
(Casp-3 1:250, Iba-1 1:500, GFAP 1:100, and ChAT 1:100) overnight at 4°C. Sections were
rinsed and incubated with the corresponding fluorescent secondary antibodies (AlexaFluor 546
IgG 1:200; AlexaFluor 546 1:200; AlexaFluor 488 1:200; AlexaFluor 555 1:200 obtained from
Invitrogen Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR) for 2 h.
Proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) was used to assess neurogenesis. Sections were
pretreated with 50% formamide/280 mM, incubated in 2 M HCl at 37°C for 30 min, and rinsed
in 0.1 M boric acid (pH 8.5) for 10 min at room temperature. Sections were incubated in 1%
H2O2 in phosphate buffered saline for 15 min, in blocking solution (3% goat or donkey serum/
0.3% Triton X-100/Tris-buffered saline [TBS]) for 1 h at room temperature, followed by the
primary antibody, PCNA (1:1,000, Santa Cruz), at 4°C overnight. In between steps, sections
were washed for 3 × 10 min in TBS. Mounting medium containing DAPI (4′,6-diamidino-2phenylindole, Vector laboratories, Inc., Burlingame, CA) was used to stain cell nuclei, and
slide-mounted sections were examined by fluorescent microscopy.
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Labelling of dopaminergic neurons in brain sections was identified by antibodies for tyrosine
hydroxylase (Morrow et al. 2001). Sections were incubated in blocking serum for 2 h then with
the primary antibody (rabbit anti-tyrosine hydroxylase, 1:500) for 3 h at room temperature.
Sections were rinsed and incubated in biotinylated goat anti-rabbit IgG (1:100; Vector
laboratories Inc., Burlingame, USA) for 30 min at room temperature, then visualized using the
ABC method (Vectastain Elite ABC kit, Vector Laboratories Inc.). For quantification, images
of spinal cord sections, striatum, or SN were captured with a focal high performance CCD
camera and NIH Scion imaging software to measure density levels of antibody labelling.
Between 6 and 12 sections from each mouse were measured.
Astrocytic glutamate transporters (GLT) were identified using antibodies for GLT-1B (Reye
et al. 2002; Wilson et al. 2003). Sections were incubated in blocking solution for 2 h followed
by incubation with the primary antibody (GLT-1B raised in rabbit, 1:1,000) for 4 days at 4°C.
Sections were rinsed and incubated in biotinylated goat anti-rabbit IgG (1:100; Vector
laboratories Inc., Burlingame, USA) for 2 h, followed by visualization using the ABC method
(Vectastain Elite ABC kit, Vector Laboratories Inc.). For quantification, images of spinal cord
sections and other CNS regions were obtained with a focal high performance CCD camera
analyzed using NIH Scion imaging software to measure density levels of the antibody labelling.
Several sections (n = 5-6) from each mouse were used.
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Microscopy: Microscopy and all photomicrographs from mouse sections were captured using
a Motic B5 Professional Series 3.0 (Motic Instruments Inc., Richmond, ON) and Zeiss Axiovert
200 M (Carl Zeiss Canada Limited, Toronto, ON). DAPI labelling (blue fluorescence) was
visualized with a 359/461 nm absorption/emission filter. FITC was visualized using a
490,494/520 nm filter. Alexa Fluor 546™ (red fluorescence) and rabbit IgG DuoLuX™ (red
fluorescence) were visualized with a 556,557/572,573 nm filter. During quantitation at 40×
magnification, two images were captured per lumbar cord section (i.e., ventral left and ventral
right). All 40× images were 350 × 275 μm in dimension. Images were captured using
AxioVision 4.3 software. Data were analyzed using Motic B5 Professional, Motic Images
Advanced 3.0 and Zeiss Axiovert Zoom Axiovision 3.1 with AxioCam HRM.
To count spinal motor neurons, lumbar and thoracic spinal cord sections were stained with
cresyl violet. The ventral horn motor neurons were counted at 40× magnification with parallel
sweeps of the microscope stage. Count estimation was accomplished by quantifying nucleoli
in characteristic cells in every fifth spinal cord section (every 100 μm in the rostral-caudal
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plane) from the entire lumbar spinal cord (Tomlinson and Irving 1977), for a total of six sections
from each mouse. Counts included all apparent motor neurons including motor neurons that
appeared atrophic or damaged in the field of view. Only neurons with a diameter greater than
50 μm for lumbar cord, and greater than 25 μm for thoracic spinal cord were included in the
count (Cruz-Sanchez et al. 1998).
Statistical Analysis: For behavioral and histological experiments, individual measurements
for each mouse were calculated as mean ± SEM for each group. The means were compared
using an unpaired, two-tailed t-test or a one-way ANOVA. A post hoc Tukey’s test was used
to compare all means after ANOVA (GraphPad Prism, San Diego, CA).
Results
In vitro Studies
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We treated the NSC-34 cell line with BSSG for 3 days and observed a dose-dependent increase
in cell death (Fig. 1a) as measured by the trypan blue exclusion test. BSSG treatment doubled
the loss of cells up to about 10% (Fig. 1a). Some of these cells stained positively for activated
caspase-3, indicating apoptosis as a mechanism of cell death. Surviving cells were observed
to extend long processes with many “beaded” segments along their length (Ly et al. 2007).
Treatment with 50 μM of BSSG for 3 days followed by Western blots showed a significant
up-regulation of HSP 70, indicative of a cell stress response (Fig. 1b-c). Under the same
conditions, the cells showed a significant loss of the heavy neurofilament subunit in the soluble
fraction of the cell lysate (Fig. 1d-e) accompanied by an increase in expression in the beaded
processes (Ly et al. 2007).
In vivo Experiment Studies
Experiment 1
BSSG Blood Levels: The blood of BSSG-fed animals had significantly increased sterol
glucoside serum levels (66%; Student’s t-test) compared to controls with the control group
showing more variability in total values (Fig. 2).
Behavioral Tests: Mice were tested for open field exploratory behavior a few weeks prior to
sacrifice. Both groups showed a tendency for a decrease in open field activity during the testing
period, but inter group differences were not statistically significant. BSSG-fed mice showed a
significant decrease (-40%; Student’s t-test) in overall movement as measured by grid crossing
at week 28 (from start of feeding) (Fig. 3a).
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BSSG-fed mice showed a progressive decrease on the leg extension test that became significant
after week 30 compared to controls (Fig. 3b). As in our previous studies using cycad, the decline
in leg extension was not a simple monotonic decline, but rather showed periods of increasing
deficit followed by short-term recovery toward control values (Wilson et al. 2002). In contrast
to the leg extension test which is the most sensitive for α-motor neuron loss or dysfunction, no
significant motor deficits were observed for the rotorod, paw print, or wire hang tests.
CNS Pathology: Motor neurons: Nissl staining of BSSG-fed mice spinal cord showed a
significant decrease in the number of large α-motor neurons in both the lumbar (-35%;
Student’s t-test) and thoracic (-19%; Student’s t-test) spinal cord compared to controls (Fig.
4a). Further, some surviving motor neurons of BSSG-fed mice at both levels showed abnormal
morphological features with surviving motor neurons showing shrunken somata with intense
Nissl labelling (Fig. 4b-f), indiscrete nuclei (pyknotic) (dotted arrows). Other cells had large
and disrupted membranes (solid arrows) indicative of chromatolysis. The appearances and the
numbers of motor neurons were the same on both sides of the cord.
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Anti-ChAT labelling of cholinergic neurons in lumbar spinal cord sections (Fig 5a-c) served
as a complementary measurement to Nissl motor neuron counts with the numbers of large
ChAT-positive cells with a distinct nucleus in the lateroventral horns of L2-L5 segments of
the spinal cord being determined. ChAT labelling of motor neurons was significantly decreased
in BSSG-fed mice compared to controls (-58%, Student’s t-test). As shown above in Fig. 4,
ChAT-positive labelled cells of BSSG-fed mice also showed abnormal morphological features
compared to controls (Fig. 5c). Nissl motor neuron counts and ChAT positive labelling
correlated remarkably well (-35%, -40%, respectively), strongly suggesting that most of thecell
loss measured by the Nissl stain reflected the loss of motor neurons.
To determine the mechanism of cell death, we measured apoptosis with anti-active caspase-3
labelling. Examination of the lateroventral horns of L2-L5 (Fig. 5d-f) showed increased
labelling in the ventral horn of the lumbar spinal cord (+200%) and in the striatum (+48%) of
BSSG-fed mice compared to controls. In the cord, the morphology of the cells undergoing
apoptosis confirmed that these were motor neurons (Fig. 5e).
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Glial Response: The number of astrocytes was determined by counting GFAP-positive cells
with star-shaped cell bodies in the lateroventral horns of L2-L5 segments of the spinal cord
(Fig. 6a). BSSG-fed mice had significantly increased levels of activated astrocytes (+82%) that
had characteristically larger and more ramified morphology (Fig. 6b-c). When the level of
microglial infiltration was examined with Iba-1 labelling, BSSG-fed mice were found to have
a greater number of microglia (+89%), although these data did not achieve statistical
significance.
Glutamate Transporter: GLT-1B labelling (equivalent to the EAAT2 transporter) in the
ventral horn of the lumbar spinal cord (Fig. 8a-d) of BSSG-fed mice showed a significant
decrease in overall labelling (-18%). Several examples illustrating the range of the decrease in
labelling in BSSG-fed mice are shown (Tzingounis et al. 1998).
Cell Proliferation: PCNA labelling of the subventricular zone (Fig. 7a-c). PCNA labelling
was significantly decreased (-40%) in BSSG-fed animals (Fig. 8).
Nigo-striatal Pathway: Mouse anti-tyrosine hydroxylase labelling of dopaminergic neurons
in the striatum and SN (Fig. 9e-f) showed that BSSG-fed mice had significantly decreased TH
labelling in the striatum (-13%) and in the SNpc (-12%) compared to controls.
Experiment 2
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Motor Tests: No significant motor deficits were observed throughout this experiment in any
of the groups fed BSSG compared to controls as determined by tests of leg extension, open
field behavior, rotorod, paw print, or wire hang tests (data not shown).
CNS Pathology: Motor neuron counts in lumbar spinal cord using Nissl staining at time point
1 (10 weeks of feeding; 2 weeks post feeding) showed that mice fed BSSG had significantly
fewer motor neurons (-34%) compared to controls in the treatment group receiving the highest
dose (1,000 μg/day) (Fig. 10a, b). Counts from the second time point (22 weeks after last dose)
showed that all three BSSG dosage groups had significantly decreased motor neurons counts
compared to controls (10 μg: -33%; 100 μg: -31%; 1,000 μg: -44%) (Fig. 10a, b). Analysis of
apoptosis, GLT-1B loss, and GFAP and Iba-1 labelling did not reveal significant differences
in BSSG-fed mice, unlike in Experiment 1.
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Discussion
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The results of the present study confirm that BSSG can be neurotoxic in vitro and further
suggest a novel in vivo pathology. In NSC-34 cells, BSSG treatment induced some cell death
by apoptosis and was accompanied by up-regulated HSP70 expression and decreased cytosolic
heavy neurofilament expression. These in vitro data reported here are consistent with our
previous studies using mouse and human primary cortical cell cultures (Khabazian et al.
2002) and the ongoing studies of organotypic slices of SN, striatum, hippocampus, and spinal
cord (Wilson and Shaw 2006). More detailed studies of the overall effects of BSSG and other
sterol glucosides and the time course of events are in progress. The data presented here
demonstrate that an HSP response is involved as a relatively early event, mirroring a previous
study showing that CG was involved in the HSP signaling pathway in response to cellular stress
(Kunimoto et al. 2000). Whether HSP expression in the present experiments is a cellular
attempt to provide protection, or if it reflects a part of the pathological process leading to cell
death, or both, remains unresolved.
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BSSG-treated animals showed significant increases in serum sterol glucoside levels at the
various time points tested (Fig. 2). However, how these molecules might be transported into
and out of the CNS remains unknown. In mammals greater than 95% of the total cholesterol
in the brain is synthesized in situ with little uptake of cholesterol from plasma (Edmond et al.
1991;Jurevics and Morell 1995). Our detection of sterol glucosides in plasma accompanied by
the resulting neuropathology may suggest that the glucose moiety confers greater transport
capability into CNS. Alternatively, a metabolite of BSSG may be the toxic factor.
The crucial step in excreting excess cholesterol synthesized in the brain is by conversion to 24
(S)-hydroxycholesterol, which, unlike cholesterol, can easily cross the blood-brain barrier
(Lutjohann et al. 1996). Roughly two-thirds of excess cholesterol is removed from the brain
in this manner; the fate of the remainder is uncertain. We note that given the rapidity with
which cholesterol is excreted (Quan et al. 2003), the levels of sterol glucoside in the serum of
our treated mice may not reflect the overall chronic levels achieved in these experiments. It is
also of interest that increased hydroxycholesterol has been described for Alzheimer’s disease
(Lutjohann et al. 2000; Papassotiropoulos et al. 2000; Heverin et al. 2004; Bjorkhem 2006).
Whether the same is true in mice treated with sterol glucosides needs to be determined.
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The initial in vivo experiments performed in this study (Experiment 1) were designed to test
the hypothesis that BSSG in vivo will induce the same pathological events as those we have
previously observed with cycad seed flour. The results show that at the single dose of 1,000
μg/day for 15 weeks CD-1 mice exhibit leg extension deficits beginning at week 28. In the
lumbar spinal cord, motor neuron loss was accompanied by the loss of ChAT with both
decreased to a similar extent (Figs. 4a; 5a). The ventral horn of the thoracic spinal cord also
exhibited significant motor neuron loss, but to a lesser degree compared to the lumbar portion
(Fig. 4a-f). Other pathological markers included an increase in active caspase-3 labelling
indicative of increased apoptosis. The increase in apoptotic cell number (Fig. 5d, e) of BSSGfed mice was greater than the level of loss of ChAT-labelled motor neurons (Fig. 5a-c),
suggesting that dietary consumption of BSSG induces the degeneration of cell types other than
motor neurons. This interpretation finds further support in the observation of increased
caspase-3 labelling in the striatum (Fig. 5f).
The increased GFAP labelling of reactive astrocytes (Fig. 6a-c) confirms results previously
reported with cycad flour feeding (Wilson et al. 2002, 2003, 2005b). Activated astrocytes were
observed near both morphologically normal and abnormal motor neurons. In addition, the
astrocytic processes in treated mice were longer and formed more complex networks. In human
and mouse models of ALS, abundant gliosis is readily discernible in affected CNS regions
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(Kawamata et al. 1992; Hall et al. 1998; Sasaki and Iwata 1999; Anderson and Swanson
2000; Barbeito et al. 2004; Rao and Weiss 2004). The current data suggest a role for astrocytes
in BSSG-induced neurotoxicity.
The increased microglial labelling observed in the present study also supports a role for a more
general neuroinflammatory process in BSSG-induced neurotoxicity. This interpretation is
supported by our ongoing studies using cycad flour that clearly demonstrate an increased
microglial activation as one of the earliest pathological events in spinal cord (Lee et al.
2007).
It thus seems clear that both forms of glial activation can occur following exposure to cycad
neurotoxins. Whether such events occur in sequence, in tandem, or transiently are not yet
known. Indeed, there is considerable controversy in the experimental literature about the
relative roles of astrocytes and microglia in neurodegeneration (Sargsyan et al. 2005).
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Other pathological changes in the CNS of BSSG-treated mice included a decrease in GLT-1B
labelling, suggestive of involvement of the glutamatergic system in the overall pathological
processes underlying neurodegeneration (Fig. 7a-d). Again, this outcome mirrors results
obtained in cycad fed mice and offers further evidence that BSSG recapitulates many of the
overall pathological outcomes previously observed. Finally, the TH loss in striatum and SNpc,
decreased cellular proliferation (PCNA) labelling in the subventricular zone, along with the
increased caspase-3 labelling in striatum (Figs. 5f; 7a-c; 9e, f) are indicative of the involvement
of the nigro-striatal system as is the case with cycad-fed mice (Wilson et al. 2002) and rats
(Valentino et al. 2006).
Cumulatively, all of the observed changes in the lumbar spinal cord and the basal ganglia are
consistent with many aspects of our cycad model of ALS-PDC, as well as with the disease
itself (see Table 1). Work in progress is designed to examine other CNS regions involved in
ALS-PDC in order to evaluate the extent of BSSG-induced neuropathology.
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The second in vivo experiment conducted with C57/BL6 mice was designed to determine if
the effects seen in Experiment 1 were strain specific and to provide a preliminary determination
of the dose response relationship. The results demonstrated that strain specific outcomes occur
following BSSG exposure that is similar to that following cycad feeding (Wilson et al.
2005a). Strain-dependent outcomes have also been noted for streptozotocin treatment
(Sugimoto et al. 2007), hypoxia (Ward et al. 2007), exposure to cannabinoid receptor agonist
(Hoffman et al. 2005), rinderpest virus (RPV), peste des petits ruminants virus (PPRV)
(Galbraith et al. 2002), and naloxone (Navarro et al. 1991). Although no behavioral deficits
were observed in our second in vivo study, there was significant motor neuron loss that was
progressive with increasing survival times. Initial results (time point 1) showed that only the
highest dose group (1,000 μg/day) gave significant outcomes. However, 5 months later (time
point 2), all three dosage-groups showed significantly decreased motor neuron counts (Fig.
4f). Since no additional BSSG ingestion occurred during this time, these results suggest that
BSSG-feeding induced a self-perpetuating neurodegenerative cascade that took longer to
develop in the lower dosage groups. Another possibility is that BSSG was retained in the CNS
and continued to exert a neurotoxic effect over time. Studies now in progress are designed to
determine if such retention occurs.
The lack of behavioral deficits in Experiment 2 may initially appear to be at variance with the
observed significant loss of motor neurons. However, the notion that a large percentage of
motor neurons must die before a behavioral deficit is apparent has been previously noted in
the human neurodegenerative disease literature (Whitehouse et al. 1982). For example, by the
time clinical diagnosis is achieved, major damage has been done to the most affected specific
region(s) of the nervous system in various disorders. Estimates of neuron loss vary, but may
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be extensive in ALS (e.g., 70% loss of functional spinal alpha motor neurons (Arasaki and
Tamaki 1998)); in Alzheimer’s disease, greater than 75% loss of neurons of the nucleus basalis
of Meynert may occur before disease onset (Whitehouse et al. 1982); similarly, in Parkinson’s
disease approximately 60-90% of dopamine-containing neurons in the SN are apparently lost
(Piggott et al. 1999) before clinical features become evident. In all of the above disorders,
redundant neuronal circuits and even compensatory mechanisms by surviving neurons may
sustain the pre-clinical status over prolonged periods, at least until a final threshold of
functional neuronal loss has occurred. If this interpretation is correct, behavioral deficits may
become detectable only after severe damage beyond this threshold has been reached. The
differential outcome in both overall pathology and behavioral deficits observed in the two in
vivo studies reported here may reflect different thresholds between the two murine strains.
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Overall, the data from the two in vivo experiments (Table 1) show that BSSG is neurotoxic to
motor neurons with fewer non-motor neuron neural populations affected than previously
observed in cycad-fed mice at equivalent time points with both mouse strains (Wilson et al.
2002,2003,2004a,b,2005b). This outcome may suggest that BSSG alone is not sufficient to
fully replicate the wide-spread behavioral deficits and pathology seen in cycad-fed mice or in
ALS-PDC. In regard to this point, we note that Khabazian et al. (2002) showed that cycad
contains three primary neurotoxic sterol glucoside variants: BSSG, campesterol β-D-glucoside,
and stigmasterol β-D-glucoside. Both of the latter molecules were also acutely toxic in vitro,
with the level of toxicity up to 100 times greater than that of BSSG (Khabazian et al. 2002).
Thus, in washed cycad flour, all three of these sterol glucoside molecules might synergistically
operate to generate the overall ALS-PDC phenotype. Another possibility is that the each of the
cycad sterol glucosides may have differential neurotoxic actions on the various neuronal
populations that depend on either access to the CNS and/or the still unknown type(s) of binding
site for these molecules. Evidence that access may be crucial comes from two observations.
First, as cited in the Introduction, all cells affected in ALS-PDC can be killed by BSSG in cell
culture preparations. Secondly, at the late time point in Experiment 1, early signs of nigrostriatal
damage were beginning to appear.
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How might identified cycad toxins be involved in neurodegenerative diseases other than ALSPDC? One answer is that other sources of the putative sterol glucoside neurotoxins must exist
in the environment. In relation to this point, the literature shows that phytosterol glucosides
and cholesterol glucoside can arise from various sources including diet (Ly et al. 2007). For
example, soy products containing phytosterols and phytosterol glucosides are major
components of the human diet for some populations (Sugiyama and Seki 1991; Kawano et al.
2002; Maitani et al. 1995; Shimizu et al. 1997). A second potential source is by autosynthesis
in which human cells may make sterol glucosides if the substrates of sterols and glucose are
present. The synthesis of such molecules presumably depends on enzymes similar in function
to sterol glucosyltransferase (Warnecke et al. 1997). Evidence that such synthesis of sterol
glucosides can occur in human cells has been demonstrated for human fibroblasts in culture
following heat shock (Kunimoto et al. 2000, 2002) and recently in our laboratory by serum
derprivation (Ly et al. in preparation). A third source may involve infectious agents. For
example, CG is a cell wall component of several forms of bacteria including Candida
bogoriensis (Kastelic-Suhadolc 1980) and Helicobacter pylori (Hirai et al. 1995; Nicolson et
al. 2002; Chapman et al. 2003) amongst others. H. pylori infections are positively correlated
with an increased risk for Parkinson’s disease (Dobbs et al. 2000).
Finally, we note that both in our cycad studies and now in our work with BSSG we have been
able to provide a preliminary time line of the pathological events. The ability to induce a clear
temporal sequence of behavioral and pathological changes in the CNS may provide important
clues to the overall process of neurodegeneration. If such data could be correlated to the still
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Tabata et al.
Page 13
unknown stages in human neurological disease, they might provide a wealth of
pharmacological targets for early therapeutic intervention.
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Acknowledgments
This work was supported by grants from the ALS Association, the Scottish Rite Charitable Foundation of Canada, the
Natural Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada, and the US Army Medical Research and Materiel
Command (#DAMD17-02-1-0678) to C.A.S and from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) and PrioNet
to N.C. The GLT-1B antibodies were kindly donated by Dr. D. Pow (University of Newcastle). Drs. R. Cruz-Aguado,
D.G. Kay and I.E.P. Taylor and M. Petrik provided helpful critiques of earlier drafts of the manuscript.
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Fig. 1.
In vitro dose-dependent toxicity and expression of HSP70 and heavy neurofilament (NF-H)
after BSSG treatment. (a) NSC-34 cells (a motor neuron-derived cell line) were treated with
increasing doses of BSSG. Cell death assays demonstrated BSSG dose-dependant toxicity.
One-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) (*** P < 0.001) indicated a significant increase in
cell death compared to controls. (b) Western blot analysis of HSP70 expression in NSC34 cells
after treatment with increasing doses of BSSG (0, 1, 10, 50 μM). (c) Quantified results from
the western blot show that the level of HSP70 expression increased after BSSG treatment, with
50 μM of BSSG inducing roughly a 50% over-expression (ANOVA, ** P < 0.01). (d) Western
blot analysis of NF-H expression in NSC-34 cells after treatment with increasing doses of
BSSG as in (b). (e) Quantified results from the Western blot show that the level of NF-H
expression significantly decreased in the soluble fraction after 50 μM of BSSG treatment
(ANOVA, * P < 0.05)
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Fig. 2. Serum Sterol Concentration, Experiment 1
Sterol serum concentrations, as TLC analysis cannot discern the variant sterols. TLC analysis
shows normalized (to control) sterol glucoside levels in blood collected at baseline and during
the feeding paradigm. BSSG-fed mice (Experiment 1) showed significantly increased serum
levels of sterol glucosides compared to controls (Student’s t-test, * P < 0.05)
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Fig. 3.
Behavioral motor tests during BSSG treatment. (a) Open field motor activity. BSSG-fed mice
showed significantly decreased movement as measured by grid crossing at week 28 compared
to controls. (b) Leg extension (LE) measurements indicate an increasing motor defect. BSSGfed mice showed a progressively decreasing score on the LE test that became significant after
week 30 compared to controls. (a-b) Student’s t-test, * P < 0.05
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Fig. 4.
Motor neuron counts following BSSG treatment. Experiment 1: CD-1 mice fed 1,000 μg of
BSSG/day for 15 weeks. Mice were sacrificed and lumbar and thoracic spinal cord motor
neuron counted 17 weeks later. (a) Lumbar and thoracic spinal cord motor neuron counts; ttest, * P < 0.05; (b-d). Normal (Control) and abnormal (BSSG-fed) motor neuron morphology
visualized with cresyl violet (nissl body) staining in the lumbar spinal cord. (e, f) Cresyl violet
staining in the thoracic spinal cord of a Control and BSSG-fed animal. Scale bars, all panels
= 10 μm
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Fig. 5.
ChAT and caspase-3 labelling in the brain and spinal cord of BSSG treated mice. (a)
Quantification of ChAT labelling in the ventral horn of the lumbar spinal cord (t-test, ** P <
0.01). (b-c). Photomicrographs of ChAT labelled cells (red) in control and BSSG-fed mice.
The blue label is DAPI. (d, e). Active caspase-3 labelling in the ventral horn of the lumbar
spinal cord of control and BSSG-fed mice, respectively. In (d) active caspase-3 labelling is
significantly increased in the ventral horn (t-test, * P < 0.05). (e) Photomicrograph of active
caspase-3 labelled cells (red) in the spinal cord of BSSG-fed mice. Several examples are
provided. Scale bars, all panels = 10 μm
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Fig. 6.
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Activated astrocytes in the ventral horn of the lumbar spinal cord of BSSG treated mice. (a)
Quantification of GFAP labelling in the ventral horn of the lumbar spinal cord in control and
BSSG-fed mice. BSSG-fed mice showed significantly increased GFAP labelled cells compared
to the controls (Student’s t-test, * P < 0.05). (b) Photomicrograph highlighting the lack of
GFAP labelled cells in the ventral horn of the spinal cord of control mice; the blue label is
DAPI. Scale bars, all panels = 10 μm. (c) Photomicrograph of GFAP labelled cells (red) in the
ventral horn of the spinal cord of BSSG-fed mice
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Fig. 7.
Proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) immunolabelling in control and BSSG treated mice.
(a, b) Representative fluorescent photomicrographs depicting immunolabeling of PCNA in the
subventricular zone (SVZ) of control (a) and BSSG-fed (b) animals. Asterisk depicts the lateral
ventricle. Scale bar = 100 μm. (c) Quantitative analysis of PCNA-positive cells in the SVZ.
The number of PCNA-positive cells in the SVZ was significantly reduced following BSSG
feeding. Each bar represents the mean (±SEM, n = 4) number of PCNA-positive cells counted
in the SVZ. * P < 0.05
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Fig. 8.
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Glutamate transporter 1B (GLT-1B) in the ventral horn of the lumbar spinal cord of BSSG
treated mice. (a) GLT-1B labelling density in the ventral horn of the lumbar spinal cord.
GLT-1B labelling is significantly decreased in BSSG-fed mice (Student t-test, * P < 0.05).
Photomicrographs of GLT-1B labelled spinal cord sections: (b) Control. (c-d). BSSG-fed mice.
BSSG-fed mice showed patchy loss of GLT-1B labelling primarily in the ventral horn of the
spinal cord. (b-d) Scale bars = 1 mm
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Fig. 9.
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Tyrosine hydroxylase labelling in the nigro-striatal region of BSSG treated mice. (a-b)
Tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) in the striatum and SNpc. (a) Quantification of tyrosine
hydroxylase labelling in the striatum. BSSG-fed mice (Experiment 1) showed significantly
decreased tyrosine hydroxylase compared to the controls (t-test, * P < 0.05). (b) Quantification
of tyrosine hydroxylase immunoreactive labelling in the SNpc. BSSG-fed mice showed
significantly decreased tyrosine hydroxylase labelling compared to controls (t-test, * P < 0.05)
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Fig. 10.
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Lumbar spinal cord motor neuron counts in BSSG treated mice. (a) Experiment 2, Time Point
1: C57/BL6 Mice fed 1000 μg of BSSG/day showed significantly decreased motor neuron
counts compared to controls. (b) Experiment 2, Time Point 2: All 3 BSSG-fed groups showed
significantly decreased motor neuron counts compared to controls. These results show that
BSSG feeding induced a progressive neurodegeneration that was dose-dependent (One-way
ANOVA, * P < 0.05)
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Table 1
Experiment 1
Tabata et al.
Summary of neurological outcomes following BSSG feeding in two in vivo experiments
Experiment 2
Timepoint 1
Neuromolecular Med. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2010 February 1.
Mouse strain
CD1
C57/BL6
Sex
Male
Male
Timepoint 2
Numbers (n)
Control = 15; BSSG-fed = 16
Control = 14; 10 μg/day = 10; 100 μg/day = 10; 1,000 μg/day = 10
BSSG feeding duration
15 weeks
10 weeks
Washout period duration
17 weeks
2 weeks
22 weeks
Experiment duration
32 weeks
12 weeks
32 weeks
Behavioural tests
Open field motor activity* Leg extension*
ns
ns
Motor neurons per lumbar cord section
-35%*
1,000 μg: -30%*
10 μg: -33%*
100 μg: 31%*
1000 μg: -44%*
Motor neurons per thoracic cord section
-19%*
ns
ns
Choline acetyltransferase (ChAT)
-58%* (lumbar VH)
ns
ns
Proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA)
-167%* (subventricular zone)
Active caspase-3
+300%* (lumbar VH) + 148%* (striatum)
ns
ns
Glutamate transporter 1B (GLT-1B)
-18%* (lumbar VH)
ns
ns
Glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP)
+175%* (lumbar VH)
-
-
Ionized calcium-binding adaptor molecule-1
(IBA-1)
ns
ns
ns
Tyrosine hydroxylase (TH)
-13%* (striatum), -12%* (substantia nigra)
ns
ns
*
P < 0.05; ns = not significant
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