sible to dissociate the PTSD from the trauma.
Each of these studies has some weak-
nesses, but they are countered by comple-
mentary strengths in the other studies.
Are
GCs the damaging agents? Depres-
sion is accompanied by numerous physio-
logical abnormalities, and it has not been
demonstrated that the hippocampal atrophy
occurs only among depressives who overpro-
duce
GCs. Moreover, among individuals with
PTSD, there is no information as to the ex-
tent of the
GC
stress response during the
trauma (or what additional physiological
changes occur then). Thus, in these cases, it
is not clear whether
GCs mediate the atro-
phy. However, as noted, the defining abnor-
mality in Cushing syndrome is GC excess,
making it a likely culprit in causing atrophy.
How persistent are the changes? Although
the Cushingoid atrophy reverses with correc-
tion of the endocrine abnormality
(6), in the
PTSD and depression studies, the atrophy
occurred months to years after the trauma or
the last depressive episode, and at a time
when patients did not hypersecrete
GCs.
Thus, these long-standing changes could con-
ceivably represent irreversible neuron loss.
The PTSD and depression studies present
a problem of causality. Given the cognitive
role of the hippocampus, a smaller hippo-
campus might be more likely to lead to being
assigned frontline combat duty rather than
a skilled task at headquarters. Furthermore,
eiven the evidence of
de~ression as a disorder
-
of "learned helplessness," a smaller hippo-
campus might predispose toward depression
(that is, less cognitive capacity to detect effi-
cacious coping responses and thus greater
vulnerability to learned helplessness). Final-
ly, PTSD individuals, before joining the mili-
tary, had high rates of learning disorders
and delayed developmental landmarks that
could reflect cerebral atrophy (10). Thus, a
small hippocampus could be a cause, rather
than a consequence, of the trauma or
stressor
in these studies. However. there is no ~lau-
sible way in which a small hippocampus' pre-
disposes one toward the pituitary or adrenal
abnormalities of the Cushingoid patients, or
toward being a victim of childhood abuse.
Should this literature ultimatelv show
that sustained stress or GC excess
can dam-
age the human hippocampus, the implica-
tions are considerable. It would then become
STATs Find That Hanging Together
Can Be Stimulating
Stewart Leung, Xiaoxia Li, George
R.
Stark
Transcription factors~ctivate the synthesis
of
messenger RNAs from DNA, therebv
changing
;he function of cells. A few year;
ago, a new family of transcription
factors-
the STATs (signal transducers and activa-
tors of transcription)-was described that
mediates the action of a
large and vastlv im-
-
portant class of signaling molecules, the cyto-
kines and
growth factors. Each cvtokine or
growth
fac;or activates a distinct skt of genes
to produce very distinct effects on the cell,
yet there are only a limited number of
STATs to mediate these signals. How do
these few STATs generate a specific response
for each cytokine or growth factor? Part of
the answer to this puzzle is provided in a report
by Xu
et
al.
in this week's issue of
Science
(1
)
.
The STATs exist as latent transcription
factors in the cytoplasm. After binding of
the growth factor or cytokine to its receptor,
the STAT is activated by
tyrosine phospho-
The authors are n the Department of Molecular B-
oogy Research lnsttute, Cleveland Clinic Founda-
tlon, Cleveland,
OH
44195,
USA. E-mail. starkg@
cesmtp.ccf org
rylation
(24);
it then migrates to the nu-
cleus, binds to
s~ecific DNA elements. and
activates the transcription
ofnearby genes.
The six STAT family members form
homo-
or heterodimers in which the phosphotyr-
osine of one partner binds to the SH2 (SRC
homology 2) domain of the other
(5).
These dimers bind to palindromic GAS
sequences that have similar affinities for
different STATs.
The new work by Xu
et
al.
(1) describes
how each cytokine elicits a specific transcrip-
tional response when each must use a limited
number of factors and when the
target DNA
-
elements distinguish relatively poorly among
these factors. In investigating a region of the
human
interferon-y (IFN-y) gene that con-
tains clusters of GAS elements, these au-
thors found that homodimers of STATs
1,4,
5, and 6 all bind, but with different foot-
prints. Their observations suggest that STAT
dimers may cooperate in binding to clustered
GAS elements and that the details of this
cooperation may help to determine the cyto-
kine specificity of the response.
The STAT proteins share blocks of
ho-
relevant to question whether the high-dose
GC reeimes used to control manv autoim-
mune
akd inflammatory diseases have neuro-
pathological consequences. (Both therapeu-
tic and experimental administration of
GCs
to humans results in memory impairment.)
In addition, in the rodent the extent of life-
time GC exposure can influence the likeli-
hood of "successful" hippocampal and cogni-
tive aging (1
1
);
similar issues must be exam-
ined concerning our own dramatic differ-
ences in cognitive aging.
References
1
A Munck eta/. Endocr Rev
5,
25 (1984)
2
B. McEwen, Prog. Brain Res
93,
365 (1992),
R
Saoolskv. Semin Neurosci
6
323 11994)
Sapolsky et a/, ibid.
10,
2897 (1990);
A
Magar~nos eta/, ibid
16,
3534 (1996)
4
Y.
Sheline eta/., Proc. Natl Acad. Sci U.S.A
93,
3908 (1 996).
5
M Starkman el a/, Biol Psychiatry
32,
756 (1 992).
6.
M. Starkman, personal communlcaton
7
J,
Bremner eta/, Am
J
Psychiatry
152,
973 (1995)
8.
T. Gurvits eta/, Bin/ Psychiatry, in press
9
J
Bremner eta/., ibid in press.
10.
T Gurv~ts eta/,
J
Neuropsychiatry Ciin Neuroscl
5.
183 119931.
11.
M
J
~eaney el a/., Science
239,
766 (1988);
A.
ssa eta/.,
J
Neuroscl
10,
3247 (1990).
mology, arrayed over their entire 800-amino
acid length, and it is likely that similar do-
mains have similar functions: (i) The SH2
domain near residue 600 is highly conserved,
as is a
tyrosine near residue 700, which be-
comes phosphorylated upon activation. In
addition to binding the phosphotyrosine of
another STAT, the SH2 domain also medi-
ates the binding of STATs to specific
phos-
photyrosine residues of activated cytokine
receptors
(6-8).
(ii) The COOH-termini of
STATs mediate transcriptional activation,
and phosphorylation of a serine residue in
this region of STATs
la,
3,
4, and 5 en-
hances this activity (9). In contrast, the
acidic COOH-terminal region of STAT2 can
activate transcription without
phosphoryla-
tion (1 0). (iii) STATs contain a DNA bind-
ing domain near residues 400 to 500 (1 1).
(iv)
STAT2-STAT1 heterodimers bind to
an additional protein,
p48, to form the major
transcription factor generated in response to
IFN-a. The region comprising residues 150
to 250 of
STAT1 interacts with p48 (1
2).
Other STAT dimers may also interact with
p48 (or similar proteins) to form more com-
plex
oligomeric transcription factors.
Xu
et
al.
(1
)
have found a new function
for the
NH2-terminal domains of STATs
1
and 4: Mediating cooperative binding of
these STATs to tandem GAS sites. Deletion
of 90 amino acids from the
NH2-terminus of
STAT4 did not affect its binding to a single
GAS site but abolished the cooperative
binding of two STAT4 dimers to a double
site. Furthermore, a
peptide representing the
SCIENCE
VOL.
273
9
AUGUST
1996