![]() |
|
|
Vol. 280, Issue 3, 1489-1498, 1997
From the Departments of Medicine and Pharmacology (J.A.C., N.B., R.-d.Z., and L.L.S.), Obstetrics-Gynecology (J.C.) and Urology (L.G.G.), Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
| |
Abstract |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Human exposure to botulinum toxin typically occurs in two settings: 1)
as an etiologic agent in the disease botulism and 2) as a therapeutic
agent for the treatment of dystonia. Epidemiologic studies on botulism
suggest that the human nervous system is susceptible to five toxin
serotypes (A, B, E, F and G) and resistant to two (C and D). In the
past, these epidemiologic findings have been used as the basis for
selecting serotypes that should be tested as therapeutic agents for
dystonia. Epidemiologic data have been utilized because there are no
studies of botulinum neurotoxin action on isolated human nerves. In the
present study, electrophysiologic techniques were used to monitor toxin
effects on neuromuscular transmission in surgically excised human
pyramidalis muscles, ligand binding studies were done to detect and
characterize toxin receptors in human nerve membrane preparations, and
molecular biologic techniques were used to isolate and sequence a human gene that encodes a substrate for botulinum neurotoxin. The results demonstrated that stable resting membrane potentials (
61.5 mV; S.E.M. ± 0.7) were maintained in individual fibers of pyramidalis muscle for
up to 6 hr at 33°C. The rate of spontaneous miniature endplate
potentials was low in physiologic solution (0.14 sec
1)
but increased in response to elevations in extracellular potassium concentration. In keeping with epidemiologic findings, botulinum toxin
type A (10
8 M) paralyzed transmission in human
preparations (ca. 90 min). In contrast to epidemiologic
findings, serotype C (10
8 M) also paralyzed human tissues
(ca. 65 min). Iodinated botulinum toxin displayed
high-affinity binding to receptors in human nerve membrane preparations
(serotype A high-affinity site: Kd = 0.3 nM,
Bmax = 0.78 pmol/mg protein; serotype C
high-affinity site: Kd = 1.96 nM,
Bmax = 8.9 pmol/mg protein). In addition, the
human nervous system was found to encode polypeptides that are
substrates for botulinum neurotoxin types A (synaptosomal-associated protein of Mr 25,000) and C (syntaxin 1A). These data have
important implications bearing on: 1) the development and
administration of vaccines against botulism and 2) the testing of toxin
serotypes for the treatment of dystonia.
| |
Introduction |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Botulinum neurotoxin exists in
seven different serotypes, designated A, B, C, D, E, F and G. All seven
serotypes are large proteins that act on cholinergic neuromuscular
junctions to block transmitter release. Research on laboratory animal
preparations has shown that the toxins produce this effect by
proceeding through a sequence of four steps: 1) binding to receptors on
the plasma membrane, 2) penetration of the plasma membrane by
receptor-mediated endocytosis, 3) penetration of the endosome membrane
by pH-induced translocation and 4) intracellular expression of an
enzymatic action that culminates in blockade of exocytosis (Simpson,
1980
; Simpson, 1981
; Habermann and Dreyer, 1986
; Simpson, 1989
; Schiavo et al., 1994b
).
A great deal of attention has recently been focused on botulinum
neurotoxin. This is due in part to the discovery that the various
serotypes are zinc-dependent endoproteases that cleave synaptic
proteins implicated in docking and fusion of vesicles (Schiavo et
al., 1994b
). Serotypes A and E cleave SNAP-25 (Blasi et
al., 1993a
; Schiavo et al., 1993a
; Binz et
al., 1994
); serotype C acts on syntaxin (Blasi et al.,
1993b
); serotypes B, D, F and G act on synaptobrevin (Schiavo et
al., 1993a
; Schiavo et al., 1992
; Yamasaki et
al., 1994a
; Schiavo et al., 1993b
; Yamasaki et
al., 1994b
; Schiavo et al., 1994a
). SNAP-25, syntaxin
and synaptobrevin, along with several other polypeptides, are thought
to be essential for exocytosis (Söllner et al., 1993b
;
Südhof et al., 1993
; Söllner et al.,
1993a
; Pevsner et al., 1994
).
Another reason for the recent focus on botulinum neurotoxin is its
introduction as a therapeutic agent for the treatment of dystonia
(Jankovic and Brin, 1991
; Jankovic and Hallett, 1994
). Medically
supervised administration of toxin is used to produce local blockade of
transmission at sites of excessive efferent activity. Botulinum
neurotoxin is now regarded as the treatment of choice for disorders
such as blepharospasm, strabismus and hemifacial spasm, and it is
likely to be accepted as the treatment of choice for many other
neurological disorders (American Academy of Neurology, 1990
; NIH
Consensus Statement, 1991
).
In spite of the fact that botulinum neurotoxin is both an agent that
causes disease and a drug that has been approved for medicinal use, its
actions have never been systematically studied on viable human tissues,
such as the neuromuscular junction. As a result, there is a profound
lack of knowledge about many of the most fundamental properties of the
toxin. For example, there exist no data on the comparative
dose-response characteristics of the seven toxin serotypes. Indeed,
there are no convincing data to demonstrate whether the human
neuromuscular junction is actually sensitive to all seven serotypes. As
a consequence, epidemiologic findings on the occurrence of botulism
have been used as the basis for deciding which serotypes should be
tested as therapeutic agents. To date, epidemiologic data suggest that
serotypes A, B, E, F and G cause adult botulism, whereas serotypes C
and D do not (Gangarosa et al., 1971
; Dowell, Jr. 1984).
The goal of the present study was to undertake the first systematic analysis of botulinum toxin action on isolated and viable human neuromuscular junctions. Serotype A, which has often been implicated in naturally occurring botulism, and serotypes C and D, which have rarely if ever been implicated, were selected for evaluation. Because this is the first study to undertake a detailed examination of toxin action on living human tissues, the work was divided into two phases: 1) identification and characterization of a human preparation that is suitable for analyzing neuromuscular transmission and 2) examination of the action of botulinum toxin types A, C, and D on this preparation.
| |
Materials and Methods |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Human tissues. Institutional Review Board approval was obtained for protocols in which striated muscle was removed during surgical procedures (e.g., removal of pyramidalis muscle from patients undergoing laparotomies). Informed consent was obtained whenever removal of tissue was not an essential part of the surgical procedure.
Excised tissues were immersed in chilled physiologic solution of the following composition (mM): NaCl, 138.8; KCl, 4.0; KH2PO4, 1.0; NaHCO3, 12.0; CaCl2, 2.0; MgCl2, 1.0; D-glucose, 11.0. Depending on size, each preparation was divided into smaller but intact fascicles approximately 5 mm wide and 1 mm thick. Individual fascicles were pinned in a 35-mm Sylgard-coated Petri dish and continuously perfused (3 ml/min) with fresh physiologic solution equilibrated with 95% O2 and 5% CO2. The bath temperature was maintained at 33°C unless otherwise stated.Electrophysiology.
Standard electrophysiologic techniques
were used to record endplate activity. Glass microelectrodes filled
with 3 M KCl (tip resistance 20-40 M
) were connected to a
high-input impedance amplifier. The output from the amplifier was
further amplified, filtered through a low-pass filter and digitized
through an A/D converter interfaced with a computer. Data were
acquired, stored and analyzed with AXOTAPE and PCLAMP software (Axon
Instruments, Inc., Foster City, CA).
Receptor binding studies.
Institutional Review Board
approval was obtained for a protocol to acquire human brain tissue at
autopsy. Binding of toxin to human brain membrane preparations was
measured as previously described (Bakry et al., 1991
).
Membrane preparations were obtained by homogenizing tissue in iced
Tris · HCl buffer (50 mM, pH 7.4). The homogenate was centrifuged for
10 min at 1000 × g, and the resulting homogenate was
resuspended in fresh buffer and recentrifuged for 45 min at 40,000 × g. The final pellet was resuspended in Tris · HCl
buffer, as described above.
Molecular biology studies.
A human brain library (Human
Brain 5
-stretch plus cDNA, Clonetech) was screened twice with an
800-base pair fragment of open reading frame obtained from an initial
screening with rat syntaxin 1A cDNA (kindly provided by Dr. R. Scheller, Stanford University). A cDNA clone, designated pcDNA.HS.2,
was selected and analyzed by primer walking of both strands and was
found to have 2088 base pairs. Dideoxyterminator reaction chemistry was
used for automated Taq cycle sequencing, and the results were confirmed
by manual dideoxynucleotide sequencing (Sanger et al.,
1977
). Additionally, the 5
end sequencing was confirmed by polymerase
chain reaction applied to library cDNAs with sets of primers designed
to overlap the cloning sites. A putative start codon was located at
nucleotide 2, and the open reading frame (nucleotide positions 2-868)
suggested a coding region containing 288 translated amino acids
(GenBank accession No. U12918).
20°C). The molecular
weight of the expression product was deduced by comparison with a set
of molecular weight standards.
Neurotoxins and antibodies.
Botulinum neurotoxin types A, C
and D were isolated as previously described (Simpson et al.,
1988
). Samples of botulinum neurotoxin type C were also provided by Dr.
Y. Kamata (University of Osaka Prefecture). Human pentavalent (ABCDE)
immune globulin against botulinum neurotoxin was obtained from
Connaught Laboratories (Swiftwater, PA).
Expression of human substrates and proteolysis by botulinum toxin. Human syntaxin 1A was cloned and sequenced (see above and "Results"), and 1 µg of DNA for the gene was added to 25 µl of TNT Coupled Reticulocyte Lysate (Promega, Madison, WI), 1 µl of T7 RNA polymerase (per kit instructions), and 20 µCi 35S-labeled methionine. The reaction mixture was incubated for 90 min at 30°C, after which it was centrifuged (~12,000 × g) for 15 min. The pellet was washed twice and then resuspended in proteolysis buffer (25 mM HEPES, pH 7.4; 50 mM NaCl; 10 µM ZnCl2).
Human SNAP-25 was obtained by polymerase chain reaction, using template DNA from a human brain cDNA library (Human brain 5
-stretch plus cDNA;
Clonetech). The primers were 5
-ATGGCCGAAGACGCAGAC-3
and
5
-GCACACTTAACCACTTCC-3
, which cover the entire open reading frame
(nucleotides 89-805; Bark and Wilson, 1994
(Stratagene, La
Jolla, CA). Human SNAP-25 was transcribed and translated in
vitro with the TNT System and T3 RNA polymerase. The product was
centrifuged, washed and suspended in proteolysis buffer, as described
above.
In proteolysis experiments, botulinum neurotoxin types A and C were
prereduced with 10 mM DTT (45 min at 37°C). Toxin was then incubated
with substrate for 60 min at 37°C. The reaction was terminated by
boiling in sodium dodecylsulfate sample buffer for 3 min and then run
on a polyacrylamide gel (12%). Dried gels were exposed to X-ray film
for 16 hr. The molecular weights of substrates and reaction products
were determined by comparison with standards.
| |
Results |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Selection of tissues. A variety of innervated muscle preparations were evaluated, including tissues from the head and neck, trunk and upper and lower limbs. Of the many preparations tested, the only one that proved suitable was the pyramidalis muscle (see "Discussion"). This tissue, which is located along the lower abdominal wall at the base of the rectus abdominus, is relatively small, surgically accessible and reasonably available (see "Discussion").
Characteristics of the human pyramidalis muscle preparation.
Each muscle was probed with microelectrodes in an effort to localize
endplate regions. Intracellular recordings in a large series of
endplates (n = 107) revealed an average resting
membrane potential of
61.5 ± 0.7 mV. Resting potentials were
well maintained for periods of 4 to 6 hr when tissues were kept at
33°C. Membrane potential and tissue responsiveness tended to diminish
when experiments were done for comparable lengths of time at 37°C.
1 (n = 11; temperature, 33°C).
This rate increased in a concentration-dependent manner with elevations
in extracellular potassium (fig. 1). The mean amplitude
of spontaneous MEPPs was 2.4 ± 0.08 mV (n = 27), and the amplitude distribution was Gaussian in nature (fig. 1). The
mean duration of spontaneous MEPPs was 3.4 ± 0.19 msec
(n = 24).
|
Characteristics of evoked responses.
Surgically excised
preparations of human pyramidalis muscle frequently did not have a
sufficient nerve stump to permit direct, microelectrode-induced
stimulation. Therefore, mild potassium-induced depolarization was used
as an alternative. In a typical experiment, tissues were maintained in
12.5 mM potassium for a base-line period of 30 to 60 min, and the
frequency of MEPPs was monitored. Under these conditions, the base-line
rate of MEPPs was 1.5 ± 0.12 sec
1
(n = 50). At the end of the base-line period, tissues
were transiently exposed to 25 mM potassium (1-3 min). This caused the
rate of MEPPs to increase by approximately one order of magnitude
(14.5 ± 2.7 sec
1). When tissues were returned to
12.5 mM potassium, the rate of MEPPs fell to base-line levels.
|
Botulinum neurotoxin type A action.
The addition of botulinum
neurotoxin type A to human pyramidalis muscle preparations produced
irreversible blockade of transmission (i.e., 90% or greater
reduction in MEPP frequency). This could be demonstrated by using two
different paradigms and two different measures of outcome. When toxin
(1 × 10
8 M) was added to tissues maintained at
33°C in 12.5 mM potassium solution, the base-line rate of MEPPs
remained constant for about 30 to 40 min and then began to decay.
Within 60 to 90 min, the base-line rate of MEPPs fell to levels that
were too low to measure (fig. 2B). This evidence of toxin-induced
blockade was confirmed by immersing tissues in 25 mM potassium
solution. The spike in MEPP frequency ordinarily associated with
potassium depolarization was almost completely abolished (fig. 2B).
8 M) for
an incubation period of 60 min. After incubation, tissues were washed
to remove unbound toxin, temperature was raised to 33°C, and MEPP
frequency was monitored in 12.5 mM potassium solution. As before, the
toxin produced an irreversible decay in the rate of MEPPs (not
illustrated). Also as before, the normal response to elevated potassium
(25 mM) was virtually abolished (not illustrated).
Botulinum neurotoxin type C action.
Experiments identical to
those done with botulinum toxin type A were done with botulinum toxin
type C (1 × 10
8 M). Quite unexpectedly, this
serotype also produced blockade of neuromuscular transmission.
Regardless of whether toxin was present continuously at 33°C or was
present for only 60 min at 7°C, the sequence of events was the same.
There was an initial lag period, after which the base-line rate of
MEPPs in 12.5 mM potassium decayed and eventually became almost
unmeasurable (fig. 3A).
|
Botulinum neurotoxin type D action.
At concentrations
equivalent to those tested with serotypes A and C, botulinum neurotoxin
type D (1 × 10
8 M) did not block human
neuromuscular transmission (n = 3). The rate of
spontaneous and evoked MEPPs remained stable in the presence of toxin
for periods up to 4 hr (not illustrated). Even when toxin concentration
was increased an order of magnitude, there was still no evidence of
paralysis. These results indicate that the human neuromuscular junction
is resistant to serotype D.
Binding of botulinum toxin to human nerve cell membranes. The fact that botulinum toxin types A and C blocked transmission implies that the human nervous system has cell surface receptors. Therefore, work was done to verify the existence of these receptors and to characterize toxin-receptor interactions.
Preliminary experiments with serotypes A and C and membrane preparations from several areas of human brain (prefrontal cortex, anterior temporal cortex, superior parietal cortex, putamen, globus pallidus and cerebellum) revealed that the cerebellum typically had the highest density of toxin binding sites. Therefore, this region of the human nervous system was examined in some detail. The binding of 125I-botulinum neurotoxin type A to human cerebellar membranes increased as a function of protein; an apparent plateau was reached at 100 to 200 µg/assay (100 µl/assay). Binding also increased as a function of time, an apparent equilibrium being reached at 15 to 20 min (fig. 4).
|
|
|
Human substrates for botulinum neurotoxin.
The principal
substrate for serotype A is SNAP-25 (Blasi et al., 1993a
;
Schiavo et al., 1993a
), which has previously been cloned and
sequenced (Bark and Wilson, 1994
). The substrates for serotype C are
syntaxin (Blasi et al., 1993b
), for which the human gene has
not been cloned and sequenced, and SNAP-25 (Williamson et
al., 1996
; Foran et al., 1996
).
|
Cleavage of human substrates.
SNAP-25 and syntaxin 1A were
expressed in vitro, as described in "Materials and
Methods." Serotypes A and C, each at 1 × 10
7 M,
were reduced with dithiothreitol (10 mM; 37°C; 45 min) and then
incubated with substrates (37°C; 60 min). The reaction mixtures were
submitted to polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (12%), and the dried
gels were subsequently exposed to X-ray film for 16 hr.
|
| |
Discussion |
|---|
|
|
|---|
The literature describing electrophysiologic properties of excised
human neuromuscular junctions is very limited. This is due in large
measure to ethical constraints, which properly restrict the
circumstances under which normal tissue can be removed from patients.
One possible remedy that respects the ethical constraints is to harvest
tissue that would ordinarily be removed or be damaged in
situ during routine surgical procedures. However, this raises a
host of experimental concerns. To be acceptable as an experimental preparation, a human tissue should possess the following
characteristics: 1) reasonable availability, based on accessibility of
muscle during various surgical procedures, 2) reasonable consistency in
size, 3) ease of orientation after removal from patients, 4) ease of localization of endplate regions and 5) ability to survive and respond
for substantial periods of time. These criteria were best satisfied by
the pyramidalis muscle, which has one additional advantage (Chouke,
1935
; Beaton and Anson, 1939
; Monkhouse and Khalique, 1986
). The muscle
is generally regarded as nonessential, so partial or complete removal
does not impair the donor.
Electrophysiologic studies of the pyramidalis muscle revealed that the
endplate region was localized to discrete areas. Intracellular recordings at the endplate region demonstrated a resting membrane potential of
61.5 mV. This was well maintained over 4 to 6 hr at a
constant temperature of 33°C. The rate of MEPPs in physiologic solution was 0.14 sec
1, and this value is in keeping with
that previously reported for other human neuromuscular junctions
(Elmqvist and Quastel, 1965
; Lambert and Elmqvist, 1971
; Haynes, 1971
;
Maselli et al., 1991
; Maselli et al., 1992
;
Slater et al., 1992
). The amplitude distribution of
spontaneous MEPPs was consistent with a Gaussian distribution.
Elevations in extracellular potassium produced concentration-dependent increases in the rate of MEPPs. These evoked increases in MEPP rate, like spontaneous MEPP rate, were well maintained over time. This gave us the opportunity to examine the action of botulinum neurotoxin.
Mechanism of toxin action.
Botulinum toxin proceeds through a
series of steps to produce its effects on cholinergic nerve endings.
This series includes binding, productive internalization and eventual
expression of an intracellular effect (see the Introduction for
references). This general scheme for describing toxin action arose from
studies on the murine phrenic nerve-hemidiaphragm preparation (Simpson, 1980
), and with few exceptions (e.g., Apylsia; Poulain
et al., 1989
; Poulain et al., 1991
), it has
proved useful for describing toxin action on other cholinergic
junctions. However, there is no way to know whether this model applies
to the human neuromuscular junction, because there have been no studies
on isolated human tissues. Therefore, one of the goals of this work was
to analyze toxin action on excised human neuromuscular junctions.
Serotypes A, C and D were selected for study.
Therapeutic issues. The data presented here bear on three interrelated issues of patient care: 1) the appropriateness of developing and administering a polyvalent vaccine against botulinum neurotoxin, 2) the inappropriateness of including serotype C in any vaccine formulation and 3) the need to evaluate serotype C as a therapeutic agent for dystonia.
There currently exist a number of experimental vaccines against botulinum toxin, including a pentavalent vaccine (A, B, C, D and E) distributed by the Centers for Disease Control. These vaccines were developed and were being administered long before it was realized that botulinum toxin has value as a therapeutic agent. As a result, there are vaccinated persons who, should they develop dystonia, would be unresponsive to botulinum toxin therapy. This is a serious matter given that 1) botulinum toxin is the only therapeutic intervention that gives satisfactory results for most patients with dystonia, and 2) vaccination can produce long-term resistance to toxin, i.e., a decade or longer. These facts argue strongly that one must be cautious and thoughtful about administering vaccine. This argument takes on added weight when viewed in the context of recent immunology work. The complete primary structures of the botulinum serotypes have been determined, and all possess similarity to tetanus toxin. Recombinant molecular biology techniques have been used to generate experimental vaccines to tetanus (Fairweather et al., 1987| |
Acknowledgment |
|---|
The authors wish to express their gratitude to Dr. Hee-Ok Park for suggesting the pyramidalis muscle as one of the human preparations that should be evaluated.
| |
Footnotes |
|---|
Accepted for publication November 8, 1996.
Received for publication June 17, 1996.
1 Supported in part by a grant (NS-22153) from NINCDS, a contract (DAMD17-90-C-0048) from USDOA and an NRSA Fellowship (1-F32-NS09472).
Send reprint requests to: Lance L. Simpson, Professor of Medicine, Room 314-JAH, Jefferson Medical College, 1020 Locust Street, Philadelphia, PA 19107.
| |
Abbreviations |
|---|
MEPP, miniature endplate potential; SNAP-25, synaptosomal-associated protein of Mr 25,000.
| |
References |
|---|
|
|
|---|
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
K. Tsukamoto, T. Kohda, M. Mukamoto, K. Takeuchi, H. Ihara, M. Saito, and S. Kozaki Binding of Clostridium botulinum Type C and D Neurotoxins to Ganglioside and Phospholipid: NOVEL INSIGHTS INTO THE RECEPTOR FOR CLOSTRIDIAL NEUROTOXINS J. Biol. Chem., October 21, 2005; 280(42): 35164 - 35171. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
A. B. Maksymowych and L. L. Simpson Structural Features of the Botulinum Neurotoxin Molecule That Govern Binding and Transcytosis across Polarized Human Intestinal Epithelial Cells J. Pharmacol. Exp. Ther., August 1, 2004; 310(2): 633 - 641. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
S. Kalandakanond and J. A. Coffield Cleavage of Intracellular Substrates of Botulinum Toxins A, C, and D in a Mammalian Target Tissue J. Pharmacol. Exp. Ther., March 1, 2001; 296(3): 749 - 755. [Abstract] [Full Text] |
||||
![]() |
J. A. Coffield, N. M. Bakry, A. B. Maksymowych, and L. L. Simpson Characterization of a Vertebrate Neuromuscular Junction That Demonstrates Selective Resistance to Botulinum Toxin J. Pharmacol. Exp. Ther., June 1, 1999; 289(3): 1509 - 1516. [Abstract] [Full Text] |
||||
![]() |
A. B. Maksymowych and L. L. Simpson Binding and Transcytosis of Botulinum Neurotoxin by Polarized Human Colon Carcinoma Cells J. Biol. Chem., August 21, 1998; 273(34): 21950 - 21957. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
L. L. Simpson, A. B. Maksymowych, and S. Hao The Role of Zinc Binding in the Biological Activity of Botulinum Toxin J. Biol. Chem., July 13, 2001; 276(29): 27034 - 27041. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
| ||||||||||||||||||