Abstract
Botulinum neurotoxin serotypes A (BoNT/A) and E (BoNT/E) inhibit neurotransmitter release from peripheral cholinergic nerve terminals by cleaving different sites on SNAP-25, a protein involved in synaptic vesicle docking and exocytosis. Since recovery from BoNT/A is protracted, but reversal of BoNT/E intoxication is relatively rapid, it was of interest to determine whether sequential exposure to BoNT/A and BoNT/E could provide insight into the factors responsible for persistence of BoNT action. Extensor digitorum longus (EDL) muscles from rats were injected locally with 5 mouse LD 50 units of BoNT/A or 20 mouse LD 50 units of BoNT/E; these doses were selected to produce total paralysis of EDL muscles within 48 hr. Additional groups of rats were injected sequentially with either BoNT/A followed 48 h later by BoNT/E or with BoNT/E followed 48 h later by BoNT/A. Muscle tensions were elicited in situ in response to supramaximal stimulation of the peroneal nerve to monitor recovery from BoNT intoxication. Tensions returned to 53% and 94% of control, respectively, 7 and 15 days after injection of BoNT/E. In contrast, tensions in muscles injected with BoNT/A returned to only 2% and 12% of control at these time points. Preparations injected sequentially with BoNT/A followed by BoNT/E or with BoNT/E followed by BoNT/A exhibited slow recovery times resembling those recorded in the presence of BoNT/A alone. Pronounced atrophy of the EDL muscle was observed in rats injected with BoNT/A or in those receiving serotype combinations in either sequence, whereas no loss of muscle mass was observed in animals treated with BoNT/E alone. Data suggesting that BoNT/E can enter BoNT/A-treated preparations was obtained by findings that 3,4-diaminopyridine, which readily reversed muscle paralysis after BoNT/A exposure, lost this ability within 1 h of BoNT/E addition. Evidence that BoNT/E was able to cleave SNAP-25 at its characteristic site during sequential neurotoxin exposure was demonstrated by western blot analysis of cultured primary cortical neurons. Since the sequential exposure studies indicate that recovery from BoNT intoxication is lengthened by exposure to serotype A, but not shortened by exposure to serotype E, the duration of BoNT/A intoxication appears to be determined predominantly by the intracellular stability of catalytically active BoNT/A light chain.
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