Neurobiology of Aging, Vol. 19, No. 1, pp. 77– 82, 1998 Copyright © 1998 Elsevier Science Inc. Printed in the USA. All rights reserved 0197-4580/98 $19.00 ϩ .00 PII:S0197-4580(97)00166-8 Age-related Changes of Calbindin-D28k, Calretinin, and Parvalbumin mRNAs in the Hamster Brain J. KISHIMOTO,1* T. TSUCHIYA,* H. COX,† P. C. EMSON,† AND Y. NAKAYAMA* *Life Science Research Laboratories, Shiseido Research Center, 2–12-1 Fukuura, Kanazawa-ku, Yokohama 236, Japan †MRC Molecular Neuroscience Group, Department of Neurobiology, Babraham Institute, Babraham, Cambridge CB2 4AT, United Kindgom Received May 28, 1997; Revised October 20, 1997; Accepted November 11, 1997 KISHIMOTO, J., T. TSUCHIYA, H. COX, P. C. EMSON, AND Y. NAKAYAMA. Age-related changes of calbindin-D28k, calretinin, and parvalbumin mRNAs in the hamster brain. NEUROBIOL AGING 19(1) 77– 82, 1998.—Changes of three different cytosolic Ca2ϩ binding proteins, calbindin-D28k, calretinin, and parvalbumin mRNA expression in the brain of the hamster during aging were investigated by in situ hybridization using brains from hamsters aged 4, 9, 13, 19, to 24 months old. In cerebellum area, calbindin-D28k transcripts showed about 50% to 68% decrease in content in aged-hamster (19 and 24 months old) compared with young (4 months) and adult (9 months), whereas calretinin and parvalbumin mRNA expression remain unchanged throughout the ages examined. Calbindin-D28k gene expression was decreased during aging also in the hippocampus (approximately 60% reduction) and striatum (approximately 25%). In the same areas, striatum and hippocampus, calretinin and parvalbumin mRNA expression in the equivalent sections were not significantly changed with age. These data raise the possibility that CNS calbindin-D28k expression may be selectively down-regulated during aging. The statistically significant decrease of calbindin-D28k mRNA in the normal aging process also suggests and provides further support for the hypothesis that this calcium binding protein may have an important role in neuronal degeneration. © 1998 Elsevier Science Inc. In situ hybridization Calcium binding protein Calbindin-D28k IN neurons, impaired Ca2ϩ homeostasis may have a critical role in cellular aging process both in normal aging and in neurodegenerative conditions. Thus, a sustained increase of free intracellular Ca2ϩ concentration could affect fundamental aspects of neuronal function, such as synaptic transmission, maintenance of the cytoskelton, and calcium mediated enzymatic reactions, and could lead to ultimately to cell death (2). EF-hand type neuronal calcium binding proteins, such as calbindin-D28k, calretinin, and parvalbumin, have received much attention in the last 10 years or so, as one possible function of these proteins is to act as an intraneuronal calcium buffering proteins (3). Therefore, the loss of these proteins may result in the disturbance of intracellular Ca2ϩ concentration (2). Unlike other ubiquitous and trigger-type calcium binding proteins such as calmodulin, calbindin-D28k and parvalbumin are expressed in a distinct sub-set of neurons in the central nervous system (CNS) and several detailed distribution studies of these proteins have been carried out in the whole brain area (4). Calretinin, which is highly homologous at the amino acid sequence level with calbindin-D28k (18), nevertheless, also shows a distinct and specific distribution pattern in the brain entirely separate from calbindin-D28k (10,17). Of Calretinin Parvalbumin Aging Hamster these, detailed study of the age-related change has been carried out with calbindin-D28k, and the specific loss of this protein in the cerebellum during aging have been reported in the mouse (9) and rat (1). Also, a decrease of calbindin-D28k immunoreactivity has been reported in the aged rat retina, although no change in calretinin was reported (15). However, another group has reported no significant change in both calbindin-D28k and calretinin in the cerebellum but did show a decrease of these proteins in the hippocampus of the aging rat (19). Moreover, another group demonstrated no changes of calbindin-D28k immunoreactivity in cerebellum tissue and other brain regions in the aging rat using an immuno-assay system (13). These inconsistent results may be due to the use of different methods of detection, areas investigated in the brain, age points tested, and species differences. There has been so far no study of parvalbumin expression during the aging process. Thus, further careful studies are needed to obtain a consensus view as to whether these calcium binding proteins are regulated during aging. Thus, the aim of the present study was to investigate the expression of these three calcium binding proteins during aging, using in situ hybridization methods, sampling several brain areas, 1 Address correspondence to: Jiro Kishimoto, Life Science Research Laboratories, Shiseido Research Center, 2–12-1 Fukuura, Kanazawa-ku, Yokohama 236, Japan. 77 78 KISHIMOTO ET AL. and at sequential time points during aging, to build up a clear picture as to whether expression of these important calcium buffering proteins is regulated with age. tial amount of 14-Carbon standard (American Radiolabeled Chemicals, St. Louis, MO), ranged from 8 to 1223 nCi/g weight, were put on each film at the same time to adjust the different exposure condition between the films. METHODS General Male Syrian hamsters were obtained at 8 –9 weeks of age and bred in our animal quarters until they reach the desired age. They were housed in a 12 h light/12 h dark environment, with lights on at 0700 h. The temperature was maintained at 23 Ϯ 3°C and animal food and water were available ad lib. The animals were assigned to five different age groups as 4, 9, 13, 19, or 24 month old. Each group was obtained from a breeder at different times of the year so that the experiments could be performed simultaneously. Each group consisted of at least ten animals at the beginning of the experiment, although there was some attrition due to natural causes in the older groups. Animals were decapitated and the brains were carefully dissected and kept at Ϫ80°C until use. The study was approved by the Animal Research Committee of the Shiseido Research Center. Oligonucleotide Labeling Antisense oligonucleotides were synthesized for the three calcium binding protein. These were complementary to the amino acids 31– 41, 71– 81, 186 –196, 241–250 of calbindin D-28k (14), and 24 –34, 54 – 63, 79 – 88 of parvalbumin (6). For the calretinin, the bases 239 –271 of the calretinin cDNA (16) were chosen, which have no significant homology with calbindin-D28k. Oligonucleotides were 3Ј end-labeled with [35S]dATP using terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (Pharmacia, UK) to a specific activity of Ͼ1 ϫ 107 d.p.m./␮g. The labeled oligonucleotides were purified by G-50 gel filtration column. The specific radioactivity of the fraction was monitored by a scintillation counting before use. In Situ Hybridization Radioactive in situ hybridization with 3Ј end labeled oligonucleotide probes was carried out as described previously (12) Briefly, frozen-blocks of hamster brains were cut into 20-␮m sections coronally on a cryostat. Three consecutive sets of sequential sections of the striatum, hippocampus, and cerebellum levels in each hamster brain were hybridized with the probe for calbindinD28k, calretinin, and parvalbumin (i.e., three sections per each probe by every third section). These are thaw-mounted onto Vectabond (Vector Lab., Burlingame, USA) coated slides. Sections were fixed with 4% PFA for 30 min, acetylated in 0.25% acetic anhydride in 0.1 M triethanolamine/0.9% NaCl for 10 min at room temperature, and dehydrated through graded series of ethanol. Approximately 5 fmoles/␮L of labeled oligonucleotides were added in hybridization buffer (50% deionized formamide, 4 ϫ SSC (1ϫ SSC ϭ 0.15 M NaCl/0.015 M sodium citrate), 10% dextran sulfate, 1 ϫ Denhardt’s solution, 400 ␮g/mL sonicated salmon sperm DNA, 3% mercaptoethanol). In this hybridization mixture, Each of three consecutive sections were incubated at 37°C for 16 –18 h with the probe for calbindin-D28k, calretinin, and parvalbumin, respectively. The hybridized sections were washed in 1 ϫ SSC three times at 55°C and once at room temperature, then dehydrated sequentially in 70 and 95% ethanol. To assess the amount of each calcium binding protein mRNA as a radioactivity unit, slides were exposed to large Hyperfilm-␤max autoradiography film (Amersham, Arlington Heights, USA) for 1 week (for calbindin-D28K) or 4 weeks (for calretinin and parvalbumin). Brain paste sections (20 ␮m), including series of sequen- Control Experiments Some sections were hybridized with labeled oligonucleotides in the presence of excess unlabelled same oligonucleotides at a concentration of 1000 fmoles/␮L (200 times higher than [a-35S] labeled oligonucleotides) to check the specificity of the in situ signal. Image Analysis To obtain reliable and comparable in situ signals on the autoradiography image, we chose relatively uniform areas or nuclei in the sections for analysis. Gray scale autoradiographic images of mRNA signals on the section were obtained by scanning films with an Image Scanner (Epson, Nagano, Japan), and the radioactivity per 1.0 mm2 of each section on autoradiographic film was calculated by NIH Image 1.55 analysis program using threshold option with radioactive standard. Thus, firstly the appropriate threshold value was chose in order to distinguish specific signals from background, and measure the “positive” area of 1.0 mm2 at five points at random per area (e.g., cerebellum) in each section, then analyze to obtain the mean value. Integrated density was then obtained after background level was subtracted from mean value. Averaged values pooled from three sections (i.e., fifteen points) were used for the value for that animal. The amount of radioactivity was then interpreted from the value of the brain paste section containing carbon-14 standard put on the same film. Statistical Analysis The amount of radioactivity in all experiments were analyzed statistically. Multiple comparison between the different age groups were analyzed by one-way analysis of variance (one-way ANOVA) followed by Scheffe’s test. Values represent means Ϯ SD. All probabilities presented are 2-tailed. Differences were considered significant when p Ͻ 0.05. RESULTS Changes of mRNA Expression for Calcium Binding Proteins in the Cerebellum with Aging Of sections we tested in this study, the cerebellum was the only area which exhibited measurable in situ signals for all three calcium binding proteins. Figure 1 shows the autoradiographic film image of in situ signals for calbindin-D28k, calretinin, and parvalbumin in the cerebellum at different age. The film image for calbindin indicated the expression was limited only in Purkinje cells and the broader signal for calretinin indicated this was localized in the granule cell layer. Parvalbumin was expressed both in the Purkinje cells and in the molecular cell layer, but not in the granule cell layer. The amount of radioactivity per area on the sections for these protein transcripts is also shown in Figure 2 and was calculated from the radio-isotope standards as described in Methods. In the cerebellum, a significant (F (4, 27) ϭ 9.96, p Ͻ 0.001) decrease of calbindin D-28k mRNA expression with aging was observed. Thus, there was no change between young (4 months; 33.1 Ϯ 10.6 nCi/g tissue) and adult (9 months; 32.0 Ϯ 6.0 nCi/g tissue). The 13-month-old group (18.4 Ϯ 8.3 nCi/g tissue) showed a decline, but it was not significant. This difference reached a significance (p Ͻ 0.05) at 19 months (17.5 Ϯ 7.9 nCi/g tissue), approximately a 50% reduction as compared with young and adult Ca2ϩ BINDING PROTEINS IN AGED BRAIN 79 FIG. 1. Autoradiography film images of calbindin-D28k, calretinin, and parvalbumin in situ signals in cerebellum sections with different ages indicated. age groups (Fig. 2). The expression was further decreased at 24 months (10.5 Ϯ 5.4 nCi/g tissue; approximately a 68% reduction from young and adult age groups) with significance (p Ͻ 0.01). On the other hand, parvalbumin mRNA expression in the cerebellum were entirely unchanged (F (4, 27) ϭ 1.77, p ϭ 0.16) throughout aging from 4 to 24 months (Fig. 2). Regarding calretinin mRNA expression, although the overall change in the cerebellum with aging was significant (F (4, 27) ϭ 2.92, p ϭ 0.04), none of the individual comparisons reached significance; particularly, values at old age groups (19 and 24 months) failed to show a clear decrease compared with young and adult age groups (Fig. 2). Control experiments with excess unlabelled probe abolished all specific in situ signals on the films. Changes of mRNA Expression for Calcium Binding Proteins in Other Brain Areas with Aging Other than the cerebellum area,, strong signals were obtained from the hippocampus and caudate-putamen (striatum) for calbindin-D28k, some nuclei of the thalamus for calretinin, and the reticular thalamic nucleus for parvalbumin. Thus, further analysis was focused on these areas for each of the respective calcium binding protein transcripts. The area of the dentate gyrus in the hippocampus showed a significant (F (4, 28) ϭ 19.86, p Ͻ 0.001) age-related decrease in mRNA expression for calbindin-D28k as similarly with the cerebellum (Figs. 3A, 4A). The magnitude of decline was also similar to that in the cerebellum; an approximately 55 and 65% decline was observed at 19 months (18.4 Ϯ 8.3 nCi/g tissue) and 24 months (14.1 Ϯ 2.4 nCi/g tissue; Fig. 4A) respectively, as compared with 4 months (40.9 Ϯ 5.9 nCi/g tissue). FIG. 2. Expression levels of mRNA for three calcium binding proteins, calbindin-D28k (Ⅺ), calretinin (‚), and parvalbumin (F) in the cerebellum. The results shown are calculated from the radioactivity standard described in Methods. Multiple comparisons between the different age groups were statistically analyzed by Scheffe’s test; values that are significantly different are denoted with the same letter designation (capital letter: p Ͻ 0.01, small letter: p Ͻ 0.05). Each value indicates mean Ϯ SD for 5– 8 animals. 80 KISHIMOTO ET AL. FIG. 3. Autoradiography film images of three calcium binding proteins in situ signals in the: (A) calbindin-D28k in the hippocampus; (B) calbindin-D28k in the striatum; (C), calretinin in the nucleus of the thalamus; and (D), parvalbumin in the reticular thalamic nucleus. In each figure, the left image shows a representative section of a 4-month-old, and the right shows that of a 24-month-old. The striatum region also showed a significant (F (4, 28) ϭ 9.31, p Ͻ 0.01) age-related decrease of calbindin-D28k mRNA expression, but the decrease showed significance only when aged groups (13 months (26.9 Ϯ 5.0 nCi/g tissue), 19 months (27.4 Ϯ 2.2 nCi/g tissue), and 24 months (26.9 Ϯ 3.1 nCi/g tissue)) were compared with the 4-month-old group (36.9 Ϯ 4.3 nCi/g tissue), and the reduction rates were only 25%, which is less than that observed in hippocampus (Figs. 3B, 4B). Although overall changes of expression of calretinin mRNA in the thalamus with aging was significant (F (4, 28) ϭ 3.17, p ϭ 0.03) similar to the case in cerebellum, any comparison between individual groups failed to show a significance, indicating no obvious relation between the aging process and the change of calretinin mRNA expression in this area (Figs. 3C and 4C). Parvalbumin mRNA expression in the reticular thalamic nucleus, which is one of the strongest sites for parvalbumin expression in the brain, was entirely unchanged (F (4, 27) ϭ 1.42, p ϭ 0.25) throughout the age groups examined in the present study (Figs. 3D and 4D). DISCUSSION In the present study, we analyzed the age-related changes of in situ mRNA signals for three neuronal calcium binding proteins, calbindin-D28k, calretinin, and parvalbumin, in the brain of the hamster. We used the hamster because this study was done as a part of an ongoing aging study using this rodent species. Although detailed distribution studies of these calcium binding proteins for rodent species have been performed in the rat (4,17), a striking conservation in the distribution of most positive cell types has been reported among rodents, monkeys, and humans in the hippocampus, striatum, and cerebellum (2). In the present study, the distribution pattern of these proteins in the cerebellum in the hamster is basically identical to that of reported in the rat using the same in situ hybridization technique (11), that is; strong and specific expression of calbindin-D28k in Purkinje cells, calretinin in granule cells, and parvalbumin in the Purkinje cells and the molecular layer. Furthermore strong expression of calbindin-D28k in the dentate gyrus of hippocampus, calretinin in the some nuclei of the thalamus, and parvalbumin in the reticular thalamic nucleus are all consistent with previous observations in the rat (4,10,17), implying a well conserved distribution pattern for these calcium binding proteins between rats and hamsters and among rodent species. As our analytical tool, we chose to use radioactive in situ hybridization technique and film autoradiography. This technique has a number of advantages over other immunochemical/histochemical methods. Thus there is direct relationship between the strength of the film signal and the tissue mRNA content because there is no peroxidase or avidin biotin amplification step during the reaction. Further, the use of radioactive standard on each film makes it possible to compare absolute amount of radioactivity between the sections. One disadvantage of the film analysis used here is that it is not always easy to see which cell type is affected. However the cerebellum distribution of calcium binding protein mRNAs is so characteristic and specific that the loss of calbindinD28k mRNA is clearly localized to the Purkinje cells. Of three proteins examined here, only calbindin-D28k showed a selective decrease in mRNA expression level in aging, whereas of the other two calcium binding proteins, parvalbumin mRNA was unchanged, and the levels of calretinin mRNA failed to show clear age-related changes in the area of hamster brains examined in the present study. Selective age related loss of calbindin-D28k in the cerebellum has been reported in the rat (1,8) and mouse (9). Also a decrease of this protein in the rat hippocampus was reported using immunohistochemical detection methods (19). Although this Ca2ϩ BINDING PROTEINS IN AGED BRAIN 81 FIG. 4. Expression levels of three calcium binding proteins in the: (A) calbindin-D28k in the hippocampus; (B) calbindin-D28k in the striatum; (C) calretinin in the nucleus of the thalamus; and (D) parvalbumin in the reticular thalamic nucleus. Multiple comparisons between the different age groups were statistically analyzed by Scheffe’s test; values that are significantly different are denoted with the same letter designation (capital letter: p Ͻ 0.01, small letter: p Ͻ 0.05). Each value indicates mean Ϯ SD for 5– 8 animals. group only measured calbindin-D28k immunoreactivity using whole hippocampus/cortex tissue by western blotting, a more recent study showed a marked decrease of calbindin-D28k protein in the dentate gyrus within the “aged” hippocampus both in rat and rabbit species (5), consistent with our present observations on the hippocampus. Selective loss of calbindin-D28k protein was also reported in the rat retina (15). There have been a few studies so far about the age-related changes of calretinin in the brain. Among them, no decrease of calretinin has been reported in the rat retina (15) and cerebellum (19). The latter group also examined calretinin immuno-reactivity in the hippocampal cortex homogenate and found a significant decrease. There has been only one recent report investigating age-related changes in parvalbumin, which showed no significant change of parvalbumin immunoreactivity in the hippocampus region of rat and rabbit (5) consistent with our results on parvalbumin expression in the cerebellum and reticular thalamic nucleus. 82 KISHIMOTO ET AL. Although there has been no clear consensus conclusion about age-related changes of these calcium binding proteins in the CNS, the majority of previous data and our present study suggests that calbindin-D28k is the most sensitive neuronal calcium binding protein among three calcium binding proteins examined in terms of aging, calretinin may show some regional sensitivity, and parvalbumin would seem to be relatively stable during the normal aging process. Down-regulation of calbindin-D28k gene expression or loss of the sub-population of neurons that express the gene for this protein seem to occur not only in the particular region or specific nucleus but throughout the most of the brain regions as we could see on the film image. For example, on sections examined for hippocampal expression, the calbindin-D28k mRNA signal was also clearly reduced due to aging not only in the dentate gyrus of the hippocampus, the area examined in detail, but also in most of the other areas on the film, including the cells of the basal nucleus of Meynert and stria medullaris of the thalamus (see Fig. 4A). Any possibility that this could be an artifact due to in situ procedure could be eliminated as the probes for other two calcium binding proteins that showed basically unchanged film images during aging were processed at the same time as the sections used to visualize the calbindin-D28k mRNAs The decrease of calbindin-D28K mRNA observed here in the aged hamster is consistent with an important role for this calcium binding protein as a buffering protein maintaining intracellular Ca2ϩ homeostasis in neuronal cells and a decline in expression contributing to aged related decline in neuronal function (2). This also raises the related question as to whether the gradually decrease of calbindin-D28k expression during the long-term aging process may be accelerated in neurodegenerative disease such as Alzheimer’s disease, or epilepsy and ischemia (7). This may be investigated using animal models of these neurodegenerative disease. 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