Extracellular adenosine 5′-triphosphate elicits the expression of brain-derived neurotrophic factor exon IV mRNA in rat astrocytes

Ichiro Takasaki*, Satoko Takarada, Saori Tatsumi, Aiko Azegami, Makoto Yasuda, Mamoru Fukuchi, Akiko Tabuchi, Takashi Kondo, Yoshiaki Tabuchi, Masaaki Tsuda

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

33 Scopus citations

Abstract

A growing body of recent evidence indicates that ATP plays an important role in neuronal-glial communications. In this study, the authors demonstrated that extracellular ATP elicits the gene expression of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), especially BDNF exon IV mRNA, in primary cultured rat cortical astrocytes but not in neurons. To investigate the mechanism by which ATP induces BDNF exon IV mRNA expression, the authors used immortalized astrocyte cell line RCG-12. ATP dose-dependently increased the expression of BDNF exon IV mRNA and activated BDNF promoter IV. P2Y receptor agonists (ADP and 2MeSADP) but not a P2X receptor agonist (αβMeATP) induced the expression of BDNF exon IV mRNA. MoreoVer ATP-induced BDNF exon IV mRNA upregulation was inhibited by a P2Y antagonist (MRS2179) but not by P2X antagonists (TNP-ATP and PPADS). These findings suggest the involvement of P2Y receptors in the ATP-induced transcription of the BDNF gene. Among the signal transduction inhibiters examined in this 2 study, intracellular Ca2+ chelator (BAPTA-AM) and Ca2+/ calmodulin-dependent kinase (CaM kinase) inhibitors (KN-93 and W-7) attenuated ATP-induced BDNF exon IV mRNA upregulation. ATP transiently induced the phosphorylation of cAMP-responsive element-binding protein (CREB). ATP-induced CREB phosphorylation was repressed by P2Y antagonists, BAPTA-AM, and CaM kinase inhibitors. Overexpression of dominant negative CREB mutants reduced the activation of BDNF promoter IV and attenuated the upregulation of BDNF exon IV mRNA expression. These results suggest that ATP induces BDNF expression through P2Y receptor followed by the activation of CaM kinase and CREB in astrocytes. These mechanisms are likely to contribute to the enhancement of neuronal-glial networks.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1369-1379
Number of pages11
JournalGLIA
Volume56
Issue number13
DOIs
StatePublished - 2008/10

Keywords

  • CREB
  • Calcium
  • Neuronal-glial networks
  • Purinergic receptors
  • RCG-12 cells

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Neurology
  • Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience

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