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Division of Neuroscience, Oregon National Regional Primate Research Center, Oregon Health & Science University (S.H., M.B., A.M., S.R.O.), Beaverton, Oregon 97006; and The Shriver Center, University of Massachusetts Medical School (M.S., E.B., G.A.S., S.A.T.), Waltham, Massachusetts 02452
Address all correspondence and requests for reprints to: Stuart A. Tobet, Ph.D., Colorado State University, Department of Biomedical Sciences, 1680 Campus Delivery, Fort Collins, Colorado 80523. E-mail: stuart.tobet{at}colostate.edu; or Sergio R. Ojeda, D.V.M., Division of Neuroscience, Oregon National Regional Primate Research Center, Oregon Health & Science University, 505 NW 185th Avenue, Beaverton, Oregon 97006. E-mail: ojedas{at}ohsu.edu.
| Abstract |
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-Aminobutyric acid (GABA) inhibits the embryonic migration of GnRH neurons and regulates hypothalamic GnRH release. A subset of GnRH neurons expresses GABA along their migratory route in the nasal compartment before entering the brain, suggesting that GABA produced by GnRH neurons may help regulate the migratory process. To examine this hypothesis and the possibility that persistence of GABA production by GnRH neurons may affect subsequent reproductive function, we generated transgenic mice in which the expression of glutamic acid decarboxylase-67 (GAD-67), a key enzyme in GABA synthesis, is targeted to GnRH neurons under the control of the GnRH gene promoter. On embryonic d 15, when GnRH neurons are still migrating, the transgenic animals had more GnRH neurons in aberrant locations in the cerebral cortex and fewer neurons reaching the hypothalamic-preoptic region, whereas migration into the brain was not affected. Hypothalamic GnRH content in mutant mice was low during the first week of postnatal life, increasing to normal values during infantile development (second week after birth) in the presence of increased pulsatile GnRH release. Consistent with these changes, serum LH and FSH levels were also elevated. Gonadotropin release returned to normal values by the time steroid negative feedback became established (fourth week of life). Ovariectomy at this time demonstrated an enhanced gonadotropin response in transgenic animals. Although the onset of puberty, as assessed by the age at vaginal opening and first ovulation, was not affected in the mutant mice, estrous cyclicity and adult reproductive capacity were disrupted. Mutant mice had reduced litter sizes, increased time intervals between deliveries of litters, and a shorter reproductive life span. Thus, GABA produced within GnRH neurons does not delay GnRH neuronal migration, but instead serves as a developmental cue that increases the positional diversity of these neurons within the basal forebrain. In addition, the results suggest that the timely termination of GABA production within the GnRH neuronal network is a prerequisite for normal reproductive function. The possibility arises that similar abnormalities in GABA homeostasis may contribute to syndromes of hypothalamic amenorrhea/oligomenorrhea in humans. | Introduction |
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-amino butyric acid (GABA). Almost 50% of all synaptic contacts in the hypothalamus are GABAergic (9). GABA exerts its actions on GnRH secretion via two membrane-anchored receptors, the GABAA receptor, a ligand-gated chloride channel, and the GABAB receptor, a seven-transmembrane domain receptor coupled to a G protein. Most of the known actions of GABA on GnRH neurons appear to involve activation of GABAA receptors and have been shown to either inhibit or stimulate GnRH neuronal function. Experiments in nonhuman primates have best demonstrated that GABA, acting via these receptors, restrains GnRH release during female sexual development (10) and that the removal of this restraining influence results in increased GnRH secretion (11, 12, 13), thereby advancing the onset of puberty (13). In vivo studies in rats are, in general, consistent with this concept. For instance, GABA release in the preoptic area (POA) decreases before the LH discharge (14), and blockage of GABAA receptors during the afternoon of proestrus advances the time of the preovulatory LH surge (15). In contrast, intrahypothalamic infusion of GABA during this time abolishes the LH surge (16, 17). In both male and female rats, this inhibitory effect of the GABAergic system on GnRH secretion becomes established during sexual maturation (18, 19). The relevance of a GABA-dependent inhibitory control to the transsynaptic regulation of GnRH in humans was suggested by the ability of a GABA agonist to arrest the progression of puberty in a patient with central sexual precocity (20) associated with nonketonic hyperglycemia. This metabolic defect prevents the metabolism of glycine, an amino acid that cooperates with glutamate in the activation of N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors.
Seemingly contradicting these findings, other studies showed that infusion of GABA into the third ventricle elicited LH release (21, 22) and that exposure of rat median eminence fragments to GABA evokes GnRH secretion (23, 24). Subsequent studies using the GnRH cell line GT1-7 demonstrated that GABA acting via GABAA receptors excites these neurons (25) and stimulates GnRH release (26). Like GT1-7 cells and most brain neurons during fetal and early postnatal development (27), embryonic GnRH neurons respond with excitation to GABAA receptor activation (28). This property does not appear to be restricted to immature neurons, as electrophysiological evidence has been recently presented demonstrating that the majority of adult GnRH neurons in situ also respond to GABAA receptor activation with excitation (29). It would thus appear that throughout their natural history GnRH neurons are subjected to both GABA inhibitory and excitatory influences mediated by GABAA receptors. Although the former influences may require neuronal circuits functionally connected to the GnRH neuronal network, the latter is directly exerted on GnRH neurons.
GnRH neurons originate outside the CNS, in the olfactory placode, and migrate during embryogenesis across the nasal septum and cribriform plate until they reach their final destination within the forebrain (30, 31). During early development, a subset of embryonic GnRH neurons has the intrinsic capacity to produce GABA (32), raising the possibility that GABA produced within the GnRH neuronal network may contribute to regulating specific aspects of GnRH neuronal migration. Because GABAA receptor agonists delay GnRH neuronal migration (33, 34), it is possible that at least part of this regulatory influence reflects the existence of an internal, GABA-dependent regulatory loop used by GnRH neurons to coordinate their migratory behavior. Once GnRH neurons enter the brain, GABA production ceases, suggesting that this endogenous source of GABA is no longer required for the migration of GnRH neurons within the brain and/or that termination of GABA synthesis within the GnRH neuronal network is required for the normal secretion of GnRH postnatally.
The purpose of this study was to investigate the importance that GABA produced within the GnRH neuronal network may have in the control of GnRH neuronal migration and to understand the impact that persistence of GABA production within the GnRH neuronal network may have on GnRH neuronal function during postnatal life. To address these issues, we used a gain of function approach by which we targeted the gene encoding glutamic acid decarboxylase-67 (GAD-67), a key enzyme in GABA synthesis, to GnRH neurons using a promoter recently shown to accurately target reporter genes to these cells (35). The results show that GABA overproduction by GnRH neurons increases neuronal mistargeting within the brain, disrupts adult reproductive cyclicity, and results in premature central reproductive aging, probably because of alterations in pulsatile GnRH secretion. Preliminary reports of these findings have appeared (36, 37).
| Materials and Methods |
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The GnRH enh/prom cloned into the expression vector pGL-3 (provided by P. Mellon, University of California-San Diego, La Jolla, CA) was removed from pGL-3 by MluI and BglII digestion, blunted, and cloned 5' to the ß-globin intron fragment of pBA-GAD-67 into the blunted EagI site (Fig. 1
). The resulting construct of approximately 4530 bp was excised with BciVI and AgeI (Fig. 1
), releasing a fragment consisting of the GnRH enh/prom gene, the ß-globin intron, the rat GAD-67 cDNA, and the hGH poly A fragment. This DNA was then used for the production of transgenic mice. Transgenic mice were generated in a B6D2 background by the Oregon Health & Science University Transgenic Animal Facility, using standard procedures (45). Animals carrying the transgene were identified by PCR analysis of genomic DNA. The DNA was extracted (46) from tail or toe clips and amplified in a 25-µl PCR with the sense primer 5'-ACAGATAGACCAGCAGGTGTT-3' corresponding to the region -62 and -42 in the short GnRH promoter and the antisense primer 5'-GTCCATGGTGATACAAGGGACA-3' complementary to nt 819845 in the original ß-globin intron sequence (41) (GenBank accession no. V00882), generating a PCR product of 355 bp (primers purchased from Invitrogen/Life Technologies, Inc., Carlsbad, CA). After analysis of the PCR products by agarose electrophoresis, two founders were identified. They were crossed with B6D2 wild-type mice to determine their ability to transmit the transgene to their progenies in a Mendelian fashion, and two transgenic lines (2210 and 2369) were selected for further study. Both lines were independently bred to homozygocity. The homozygous condition was confirmed by genotyping the progeny of presumptive homozygote mice backcrossed to B6D2 wild-type mice. Animals producing at least three consecutive litters in which all pups proved positive for the transgene were considered to be homozygous.
Transgenic and control B6D2 mice (The Jackson Laboratory, Bar Harbor, ME) were housed under controlled photoperiod (12 h of light, 12 h of darkness; lights on at 0700) and temperature (2325 C), and were given free access to tap water and rodent chow. They were used in accordance with the NIH Guidelines for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals. The experimental protocols were approved by the Oregon National Regional Primate Research Center institutional research animal committee.
Assessment of transgene expression
To verify that the GAD-67 transgene is indeed functionally expressed in GnRH neurons, we performed double-immunolabeling experiments to detect GABA in embryonic GnRH neurons. Three developmental windows were selected for study: early in the process of neuronal migration [embryonic d 13 (E13)], at the three quarter point of the migratory process across the cribriform plate (E15), and at the end of the migratory process [postnatal d 0 (P0)]. Because these experiments revealed that mice of line 2210, but not those of line 2369, had an increased number of GnRH neurons containing GABA immunoreactivity, we performed a real-time RT-PCR (47) study in juvenile mice to verify that after GnRH neurons have settled into their final destination in the basal forebrain, transgene expression remains higher in the POA of line 2210 mice compared with line 2369.
Immunohistochemistry
Fetuses on E13 and E15 (plug on d 0) were delivered via cesarean section from isoflurane-anesthetized, timed pregnant mice. The embryos or newborns (P0) were anesthetized by keeping them on ice for 35 min and then they were transcardially perfused with either 4% paraformaldehyde-0.2% glutaraldehyde in 0.1 M phosphate buffer (PB; pH 7.4) or with 2% acrolein (Sigma-Aldrich Corp., St. Louis, MO) in 0.1 M PB (48, 49) using a hand-held syringe with a 30-gauge needle under a dissecting microscope. Heads and brains were postfixed in the same fixative for 624 h at 4 C and then transferred to 0.1 M PB.
Heads from wild-type or transgenic mouse embryos and newborns were embedded in 5% agarose and cut at 60 µm in a parasagittal plane using a vibrating microtome (VT1000S, Leica Corp., Deerfield, IL). Immunocytochemical procedures were similar to those previously reported (34). The GnRH decapeptide was detected using two different rabbit antisera: GF-6 (provided by N. Sherwood) or LR-1 (provided by Dr. R. Benoit). Immunoreactive GABA was detected in cells using a rabbit antiserum obtained from DiaSorin, Inc. (Stillwater, MN). To detect GABA in immunofluorescent double-labeling experiments, a guinea pig antiserum (Chemicon, Temecula, CA) was used at 1:200 dilution in conjunction with LR-1 (1:2,500 in paraformaldehyde/glutaraldehyde-fixed tissue) or at 1:500 dilution in conjunction with GF-6 (1:2,500 in acrolein-fixed tissue). For brightfield analyses, LR-1 was used in paraformaldehyde/glutaraldehyde-fixed tissue at 1:10,000 dilution, and GF-6 was used in acrolein-fixed tissue at 1:10,000 dilution, whereas GABA was detected using the DiaSorin, Inc., antiserum at 1:10,000 dilution in acrolein-fixed tissue. Antisera were diluted in 1.0% BSA in 0.05 M PBS with 0.3% Triton X-100 (pH 7.5). Tissue sections were pretreated with 0.1 M glycine in PBS (30 min)/0.5% sodium borohydride in PBS (15 min) and for at least 30 min in 5% normal goat serum (NGS) with 1% H2O2 and 0.3% Triton X-100 in PBS. Tissue sections were incubated with primary antisera over 2 or 3 nights with shaking at 4 C. After this incubation, sections for brightfield analyses were washed with PBS containing 1.0% NGS and 0.02% Triton X-100 at room temperature and then incubated with goat antirabbit IgG biotinylated secondary antibodies (Vector Laboratories, Inc., Burlingame, CA; 1:250) in NGS/PBS for 2 h. After secondary antisera, sections were washed with 0.05 M PBS and 0.02% Triton X-100 before incubation with Vectastain avidin-biotin peroxidase complex reagent for 1 h (Vector Laboratories, Inc.). Finally, sections were washed with 0.05 M Tris-buffered saline (TBS) before a dark gray/black reaction product was produced by horseradish peroxidase using 0.025% 3,3'-diaminobenzidine with 0.2% nickel ammonium sulfate in TBS as substrate with 0.02% hydrogen peroxide for 5 min. Sections were then washed with TBS, mounted on slides, and coverslipped using Permount (Fisher Scientific, Pittsburgh, PA). For fluorescent double labeling, a goat antirabbit conjugated with fluorescein isothiocyanate (Jackson ImmunoResearch Laboratories, Inc., West Grove, PA) was used to detect anti-GnRH primary antisera, and a donkey antiguinea pig conjugated with biotin (Jackson ImmunoResearch Laboratories, Inc.), followed by avidin Cy3 (Jackson ImmunoResearch Laboratories, Inc.), was used to detect the anti-GABA primary antiserum.
Real-time PCR
Details of the procedure in our hands have been published previously (50). The primers used for amplification were a sense forward primer (5'-CATCTCACGTAAGCTTGACTGACT-3') corresponding to a region that comprises the 3' end of GAD-67 cDNA (nt 21042119 in rat GAD-67 mRNA; GenBank accession no. M3445) plus an additional 8 bp of the pBSK backbone vector from which the pBA vector is derived (40), and a reverse primer (5'-GGGCCAGGAGAGGCACT-3'), complementary to a region located between nt 38 and 54 upstream from the consensus polyadenylation signal AATAA in hGH poly A. The internal fluorescent oligonucleotide probe used (5'-TGGCATCCCTGTGACCCCTCC-3'; PE Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA) corresponds to a sequence located between nt 5777 upstream of AATAA in hGH poly A. All three primers were selected with the assistance of the program Primers Express (PE Applied Biosystems) provided by Integrated DNA Technology Co. (Santa Clara, CA). A set of 18S ribosomal primers and an 18S fluorescent probe were used as an internal control to correct for procedural variability. These primers were purchased as a kit (TaqMan ribosomal RNA control reagents kit) from PE Applied Biosystems.
Measurement of hypothalamic GnRH content
To measure hypothalamic GnRH content, the POA and medial basal hypothalamus (MBH) of 4-, 8-, 12-, 16-, 20-, 24-, and 28-d-old transgenic mice and wild-type animals were dissected as described previously (51). The fragments were homogenized in 100 µl ice-cold 0.1 N HCl using a glass microhomogenizer, followed by trituration through long flat loading pipette tips. The homogenate was centrifuged for 15 min at 13,000 x g at 4 C, the supernatant was recovered, and the procedure was repeated to extract GnRH remaining in the pellet. Samples were stored at -20 C until assayed for GnRH. GnRH was assayed by an RIA procedure previously described (52) using [125I]GnRH as tracer and a rabbit polyclonal antiserum (HU60) that recognizes the fully processed, mature decapeptide (53). The antiserum was used at a 1:25,000 dilution; the assay had a sensitivity of 0.4 pg/tube.
Measurement of pulsatile hypothalamic GnRH release
To examine potential changes in pulsatile GnRH release that may occur in the transgenic mice, we used an in vitro system similar to that described by Bourguignon et al. (54). Because LH secretion was increased in transgenic mice by the end of the second week of postnatal life, we used hypothalamic fragments from 10- to 12-d-old wild-type and GAD-67 transgenic female mice. The fragments were dissected to include both the MBH and POA, and were incubated in individual flasks containing 250 µl Krebs-Ringer bicarbonate buffer at 37 C for 6 h under an atmosphere of 95 O2 and 5% CO2, as previously described (52), except that D-dextrose was used at 4.5 mg/ml instead of 1 mg/ml. After a preincubation period of 30 min, the medium from each flask was collected at 7.5-min intervals (54) and replaced with fresh medium. GnRH was measured in 150-µl aliquots. All samples were measured in a single assay to avoid interassay variability.
Measurement of serum gonadotropin levels
To measure LH and FSH serum levels, trunk blood was collected from the same animals used to determine hypothalamic GnRH content. LH and FSH levels were measured by RIAs as previously reported (55).
Evaluation of estrous cyclicity and reproductive competence
Female transgenic and wild-type animals were weaned on d 22 and housed as groups of four animals per cage. They were inspected daily for vaginal opening, and vaginal lavages were performed daily once vaginal opening had occurred. At 50 d of age, the transgenic females were mated with transgenic males of the same age (10 cages total, 1 male/1 female), and the occurrence of the first litter, litter size, and litter weights were recorded. To determine the effect of GAD-67 expression in GnRH neurons on the reproductive life span of mice, five transgenic and five wild-type breeding pairs were bred until the transgenic mice were no longer able to reproduce. In other experiments five transgenic females were individually bred to wild-type males to determine whether the lengthened mating-delivery interval (MDI), reduced number of pups per litter, and shortened reproductive life span previously observed in the transgenic females result from a female-specific deficiency or are due to a male defect.
Ovariectomy
Ovariectomy was performed on postnatal d 24. The animals were anesthetized with isoflurane, and the ovaries were aseptically removed via a single, dorsal skin incision, followed by blunt separation of the underlying muscle-aponeurosis interface. Different groups of animals were killed 1, 2, and 4 d later, and trunk blood was collected for gonadotropin assay.
Data analysis
Embryonic GnRH neurons.
Neurons containing immunoreactive GnRH in GAD-67 transgenic mice (E13, n = 8; E15, n = 9; P0, n = 7) and wild-type mice (E13, n = 9; E15, n = 7; P0, n = 6) were counted manually in three main compartments (nasal compartment, dorsal forebrain, and ventral forebrain) at x400 using an BH-2 microscope (Olympus Corp., New Hyde Park, NY). Cells were considered to be GnRH positive if they contained dense immunoreaction product, a standard size (1015 µm diameter), and fusiform morphology. All GnRH counts were taken from sets of alternate sections, such that all numbers represent approximately one half of the GnRH cell population. The boundaries for the three main compartments were the same as previously reported (49). The cribriform plate provided the boundary between the nasal compartment and the dorsal forebrain. A line connecting the caudal-most point of the cortex and the rhinencephalic sulcus, found below the olfactory bulb, designated the boundary between dorsal and ventral forebrain. As a subgrouping of the dorsal forebrain, the number of GnRH neurons in cortical regions was also counted. Cells in the cortex were designated as those cells not found within or ventral to the olfactory bulb. Within the ventral forebrain, a subpopulation of cells caudal to the optic chiasm was also counted for a further delineation of those cells that should have migrated the farthest. Data are presented as the mean ± SEM. P < 0.05 was considered statistically significant.
Hormone content and reproductive parameters.
The differences between several groups were analyzed by ANOVA, followed by a Student-Newman-Keuls multiple comparison test for unequal replications. In those cases where the data showed a significant deviation from a normal distribution, Kruskal-Wallis one-way ANOVA on ranks was performed as a nonparametric test. The differences between two groups were analyzed by t test. In cases where the data did not show normal distribution, a Mann-Whitney rank-sum test was performed. Data are presented as the mean ± SEM. P < 0.05 was considered statistically significant.
Pulsatile GnRH release.
In vitro GnRH secretory profiles were analyzed using the PULSAR program (56). The depth criterion for splitting peaks was set at 2.5, and the cut-off parameters (Gn) for pulse identification, G1 to G5, were 4.01, 3.01, 2.0, 1.50, and 1.01, respectively. These parameters are similar to those providing a false positive error rate of 1% (56). Differences in the number of peaks, pulse amplitude, and pulse frequency between wild-type and transgenic mice were analyzed by t test. Differences in the frequency of pulses at various interpeak intervals were analyzed using the
2 test for frequency distributions.
| Results |
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GABA overexpression in GnRH neurons accelerates pulsatile GnRH release in infantile mice
To determine whether the increased circulating LH levels seen in infantile mice are related to alterations in pulsatile GnRH release, we measured GnRH release from explants of hypothalamic tissue containing the POA and MBH regions. Detection of GnRH in medium samples collected every 7.5 min revealed that the POA-MBH of transgenic mice generated a significantly greater (P < 0.05) number of GnRH pulses in the 6-h period studied than wild-type controls (Fig. 8G1
), resulting in a greater pulse frequency, as expressed in pulses per hour (Fig. 8H
). In contrast, pulse amplitude was similar in both groups (Fig. 8G2
). To determine whether there were differences in the length of the interpulse interval, we grouped the pulses into 3 categories: occurring at intervals of less than 30 min, between 31 and 60 min, or more than 60 min. Analysis of these data revealed that 21 of 36 pulses (56.76%) generated by transgenic POA-MBH fragments occurred at intervals shorter than 30 min, whereas only 6 of 19 pulses (31.58%) in wild-type mice occurred at this interval (P < 0.01, by
2 test; Fig. 8I
). The frequency of pulses occurring at intervals of 3160 min was similar in both groups. In contrast, the POA-MBH of wild-type mice generated a significantly greater (P < 0.01) fraction of GnRH pulses occurring at intervals longer than 60 min than in transgenic animals [6 of 19 (31.57%) vs. 6 of 37 (16.22%) in transgenic mice]. Figure 8
, AC, depicts representative profiles of pulsatile GnRH release generated by the POA-MBH of wild-type mice. Figure 8
, DF, shows representative GnRH profiles of GAD-67 mutant mice.
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In addition to these deficiencies, the reproductive life span of the mutant female mice was shortened (Fig. 9G
). The fraction of mutant females able to deliver litters persistently decreased with time, so that after delivering the ninth litter, 80% (four of five) of the transgenic animals were no longer able to reproduce (Fig. 9G
). In contrast, wild-type mice remained fertile, delivering 12 or more litters before the experiment was discontinued (Fig. 9G
). The premature reproductive aging observed in the mutant mice was also demonstrated by an increased time interval between delivery of litters (Fig. 9H
). Wild-type mice delivered litters every 1934 d, with an average MDI of 23 d. This interval remained constant regardless of whether the mice had delivered 13 or 912 litters (Fig. 9H
). In contrast, the transgenic females delivered their litters at much more variable intervals (1875 d) and showed a lengthening of these intervals as they grew older, so that after they produced their seventh litter, the interlitter interval had almost doubled (P < 0.05; Fig. 9H
).
| Discussion |
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GABA is synthesized from glutamate via a decarboxylation reaction mediated by GAD enzymes. In the CNS of vertebrates, these enzymes occur as two forms encoded by separate genes: a cytosolic product of 67 kDa and a membrane-targeted form of 65 kDa (60, 61). We chose to constitutively express the 67-kDa isoenzyme in GnRH neurons for several reasons: 1) GAD-67 is expressed earlier than GAD-65 in the developing brain (62); 2) it is expressed in neurons as an active holoenzyme, which allows it to rapidly catalyze GABA synthesis in the presence of glutamate (38); 3) gene targeting studies have demonstrated that GAD-67 is the most critical enzyme for GABA synthesis, as deletion of GAD-67 gene leads to more than 90% loss of brain GABA content (63), in contrast to the absence of GAD-65, which does not result in GABA depletion (64); 4) cells expressing the same GAD-67 cDNA used in the present study under the control of the tetracycline-dependent gene expression system respond with a rapid increase (within 1 h) in GABA synthesis when challenged with glutamate (65); and 5) when these genetically engineered cells are grafted near GnRH neurons, they increase GnRH secretion (as indicated by changes in gonadotropin output), indicating that endogenous glutamate is present at sufficiently elevated levels to be used as a substrate for GABA synthesis in cells expressing the GAD-67 enzyme.
In the present study, we show the presence of GABA in GnRH neurons of mice carrying the GnRH enh/prom-GAD-67 transgene and thus demonstrate that, as predicted by the observations mentioned above, the transgene was functional and resulted in high intracellular levels of GABA in these cells. In agreement with Lawson et al. (35), who reported no ectopic expression of a reporter gene under the transcriptional control of the GnRH enh/prom used in our study, we did not detect GABA overexpression outside the GnRH neuronal network. Although GnRH enh/prom has been demonstrated to specifically direct high levels of reporter gene expression to GnRH neurons in transgenic mice, it targets only about 25% of these cells (35) compared with more than 85% reported for the full 3 kb of the mouse 5'-regulatory region (66, 67, 68). Our results are consistent with these observations, as we detected GABA in a comparable fraction of GnRH neurons. Importantly, our results also demonstrate that targeting only a subpopulation of GnRH neurons is sufficient to alter the migratory fate of a subset of cells and has a significant impact on reproductive physiology.
Previous studies have shown that GABA inhibits GnRH neuronal migration via activation of GABAA receptors (33, 34). GABA is available to migrating GnRH neurons from two sources: one provided by fibers from cells in the ventral aspect of the olfactory pit and ventral olfactory epithelium (69), and a subset of embryonic GnRH neurons, which themselves have the capability to produce GABA (32). Our study shows that when GABA is produced by GnRH neurons, a subset of these cells migrates into aberrant locations in the cortex, and fewer neurons find their way to appropriate sites in the hypothalamus during embryonic development. At birth, few GnRH neurons are found in the cortex any longer, but the number of neurons in the hypothalamus is still reduced. This suggests that GnRH neurons in inappropriate locations are functionless and may either stop expressing GnRH (rendering them unidentifiable) or undergo apoptosis (70).
It has been previously shown that the GABAA receptor agonist muscimol inhibits GnRH neuronal migration in olfactory explants (33) and mice (34). More GnRH neurons remained in the nasal compartment in muscimol-treated animals, whereas bicuculline (a GABAA receptor antagonist) treatment led to disorganized GnRH cell distribution in the forebrain (34). A delay in neuronal migration similar to that caused by muscimol would have been expected in our experiments if GABA produced within GnRH neurons had been engaged in significant autocrine control. This was clearly not the case, as only the final destination of GnRH neurons was affected in GAD-67 mice. One possible explanation for this lack of effect on migration is that GABAA receptors on GnRH neurons that produce GABA are desensitized due to prolonged stimulation (29). Another possibility is that excess GABA may also be stimulating GABAB receptors on GnRH neurons (71). Although we have detected GABAB receptor expression in migrating GnRH neurons, we found no evidence that their activation could influence the migration of these cells (72). A third, and perhaps more tenable, explanation is that, in contrast to GABA produced by non-GnRH cells in the olfactory pit, synthesis of GABA within GnRH neurons is not a factor that influences the timely exit of these neurons from the nasal compartment.
Instead of delayed neuronal migration, GAD-67 mice had an increased number of GnRH neurons taking up residence in aberrant positions in the cerebral cortex and a loss of neurons reaching appropriate destinations in the basal forebrain. Because the migration of GnRH neurons is axophilic, these results suggest that overexpression of GABA by GnRH neurons interferes with some of the guiding mechanisms that target the neurons to specific locations in the brain. Although our study does not identify such mechanisms, some possible explanations can be entertained. GnRH neurons migrate in contact with the vomeronasal nerve (34, 73), and this relationship requires the guidance molecule netrin-1 and its receptor DCC (deleted in colorectal cancer). In the absence of DCC GnRH neurons migrate to inappropriate destinations (49), so that more GnRH neurons migrate to the cortex on E13 and E15 as they follow their aberrantly targeted vomeronasal guidance fibers (49). The migratory pattern in our transgenic animals could be viewed as a milder version of the defect observed in DCC-/- mice and may reflect the existence of hitherto unknown regulatory interactions between GABA and the netrin/DDC guidance system. Alternatively, an excess of GABA may have affected the migratory fate of some GnRH neurons by virtue of its ability to stimulate neuronal chemotaxis and chemokinesis during embryonic development (74) and to direct, via these mechanisms, the migration of neurons toward cortical regions of the brain (62). If, on the other hand, excess GABAergic stimulation generated by expression within GnRH neurons causes desensitization, as discussed above, then one mechanisms of aberrant migration in the current study may be the inappropriate dissociation of GnRH neurons from their guiding fibers. Although previous studies have already indicated that GABA may play a role in maintaining the relationship of GnRH neurons to their vomeronasal guidance fibers (34), a preliminary examination of peripherin immunoreactive fibers in the GAD-67 transgenic animals showed no evidence of fiber disruption (data not shown). Furthermore, we did not observe the same degree of disorganization of GnRH neurons as they entered the forebrain as we had observed after bicuculline treatment (34), indicating that desensitization is not the likely mechanism underlying the disruption of GnRH neuronal homing observed in GAD-67 animals. Further experimentation is required to clarify this issue.
In addition to the aforementioned targeting defects, GAD-67 mice exhibited significant alterations in adult reproductive function. They did not, however, show alterations in the time of puberty, as previously seen in rats in which GABA production was increased near GnRH nerve terminals after the grafting of cells genetically modified to produce GABA from endogenous glutamate (65). Although on their own, these findings suggest that GABA acting on or produced by GnRH neurons does not inhibit GnRH secretion in rodents, they also parenthetically argue once more against the possibility that the defects in neuronal targeting observed in GAD-67 mice are due to GABAA receptor desensitization. Should this have occurred, a delay in puberty would have been expected, because mice treated prenatally with bicuculline show a delay in vaginal opening in conjunction with a disruption in the location of GnRH neurons in the region of the organum vasculosum of the lamina terminalis (75).
In transgenic mice, the hypothalamic GnRH content was reduced during the first week of life. This might be related to the reduced number of GnRH neurons migrating into the caudal hypothalamus during development. The fact that the hypothalamic GnRH content returned to normal values after the first week of life indicates that the remaining GnRH neurons were able to compensate for the deficiency by increasing GnRH production. We also observed that at the time when GnRH content was increasing to normal values, circulating LH and FSH were elevated as well. These two observations and the unexpected finding that the frequency of pulsatile GnRH release was increased in transgenic mice by the end of the second week of life (when plasma gonadotropin levels were maximally elevated) indicate that GABA production within the GnRH network actually stimulates GnRH neurons to secrete more GnRH. Although such a stimulatory effect had been previously shown by both in vivo and in vitro studies (21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26), it is only recently that a direct GABAA receptor-mediated excitatory effect of GABA on GnRH neurons was unambiguously shown to be a prevailing mode of GABA action on these cells throughout postnatal life (29).
Although both GnRH and gonadotropin output were increased in the mutant animals during infantile development, circulating gonadotropin levels returned to control values by the third week of life, coinciding with the establishment of a functional steroid negative feedback mechanism (1). This finding suggests that the stimulatory effect of GABA overproduction within the GnRH neuronal network, detected in the absence of steroid feedback inhibition, is efficiently counteracted by the negative feedback ovarian steroids and explains the normal timing of puberty observed in transgenic animals. The existence of such a feedback inhibition opposing the stimulatory effect of GABA was most clearly shown by the enhanced release of LH and FSH observed in transgenic mice ovariectomized at the end of juvenile development, i.e. at the time when negative steroid feedback inhibition is fully operative.
Although changes in prepubertal hormone release were well defined, the most striking alterations in reproductive function observed in GAD-67 mice occurred after puberty. Adult female mice showed a disrupted estrous cyclicity and an overall reduction in reproductive capacity, manifested as the generation of litters of reduced size, a lengthening of the intervals between deliveries, and the premature termination of reproductive competence. These alterations were remarkably similar to those previously described in rats carrying GABA-producing cells near GnRH nerve terminals (65) and were tantalizingly consistent with the recent observation that patients suffering from oligomenorrhea associated to polycystic ovarian syndrome and showing an abnormal pattern of pulsatile LH secretion also have increased GABA levels in cerebrospinal fluid (76). These observations and the peculiar pattern of GnRH/gonadotropin release observed in GAD-67 mice during prepubertal development suggest that the persistence of GABA production in GnRH neurons after they reach their final destination disrupts the normal interplay of central and peripheral regulatory inputs affecting GnRH secretion. According to this concept, GnRH neurons producing GABA would not only be subjected to a greater central excitatory input, but they would also escape more rapidly to small decreases in steroid negative feedback tone. As a result of this state of hyperexcitability, their overall responsiveness to modulatory influences would be compromised, resulting in undesirable increases in GnRH output. Such increases would, in turn, cause subtle, but destabilizing, increases in gonadotropin secretion able to disrupt the normal homeostasis of the estrous cycle. GABA produced in GnRH neurons can enhance GnRH secretion by at least three different mechanisms: 1) inhibiting inhibitory neuronal circuitries synaptically connected to GnRH neurons, 2) activating astrocytes in contact with GnRH neurons (77), and 3) directly activating GnRH secretion (29) via autocrine/paracrine mechanisms.
In summary, our results indicate that GABA produced by GnRH neurons influences the migratory fate of these cells by increasing their positional diversity at the end of the migratory process. In addition, the results suggest that the timely termination of GABA production within the GnRH neuronal network (as seen in normal animals when GnRH neurons enter the brain) is a prerequisite for normal reproductive function. Based on these findings, the possibility needs to be considered that an inappropriately increased GABA production by and/or near GnRH neurons may be a factor contributing to syndromes of hypothalamic amenorrhea/oligomenorrhea in humans.
| Acknowledgments |
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| Footnotes |
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Abbreviations: CNS, Central nervous system; DCC, deleted in colorectal cancer; E, embryonic day; GABA,
-aminobutyric acid; GAD-67, glutamic acid decarboxylase-67; MBH, medial basal hypothalamus; MDI, mating-delivery interval; NGS, normal goat serum; nt, nucleotide; p, postnatal day; PB, phosphate buffer; POA, preoptic area; TBS, Tris-buffered saline.
Received October 25, 2002.
Accepted for publication February 6, 2003.
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