Neurobehavioral damage to cholinergic systems caused by prenatal exposure to heroin or phenobarbital: Cellular mechanisms and the reversal of deficits by neural grafts

被引:40
作者
Steingart, RA
Abu-Roumi, M
Newman, ME
Silverman, WF
Slotkin, TA
Yanai, J
机构
[1] Hebrew Univ Jerusalem, Hadassah Med Sch, Dept Anat & Cell Biol, Ross Lab Studies Neural Birth Defects, IL-91120 Jerusalem, Israel
[2] Hadassah Univ Hosp, Dept Psychiat, Biol Psychiat Lab, IL-91120 Jerusalem, Israel
[3] Ben Gurion Univ Negev, Zlotowski Ctr Neurosci, Dept Morphol, IL-84105 Beer Sheva, Israel
[4] Duke Univ, Med Ctr, Dept Pharmacol & Canc Biol, Durham, NC 27710 USA
来源
DEVELOPMENTAL BRAIN RESEARCH | 2000年 / 122卷 / 02期
关键词
correlation; early exposure; eight-arm maze; inositol phosphate formation; heroin; muscarinic receptors; neural grafting; phenobarbital;
D O I
10.1016/S0165-3806(00)00063-8
中图分类号
Q [生物科学];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Despite the basic differences in their underlying biological targets, prenatal exposure to heroin or phenobarbital produces similar syndromes of neurobehavioral deficits, involving defects in septohippocampal cholinergic innervation-related behaviors. At the cellular level, these deficits are associated with cholinergic hyperactivity, characterized by increased concentrations of muscarinic receptors and enhanced second messenger activity linked to the receptors. In the present study, we determined whether the cellular changes are mechanistically linked to altered behavior, using two different approaches: neural grafting and correlations between behavior and biochemistry within the same individual animals. Mice were exposed transplacentally to phenobarbital or heroin on gestation days 9-18 and, as adults, received fetal cholinergic grafts or were sham-operated. Prenatal drug exposure resulted in deficits in behavioral performance tested in the eight-arm radial maze, accompanied by increases in hippocampal M-1-muscarinic receptor expression and muscarinic receptor-mediated IP formation. Neural grafting reversed both the behavioral deficits and the muscarinic hyperactivity. In the drug-exposed offspring, there was a significant correlation between maze performance and carbachol-induced inositol phosphate (IP) formation. These studies indicate that deficits of cholinergic function underlie the neurobehavioral deficits seen in the hippocampus of animals exposed prenatally to heroin or phenobarbital, and consequently that the observed cholinergic hyperactivity is an unsuccessful attempt to compensate for the loss of cholinergic function. The fact that the damage can be reversed by neural grafting opens up novel approaches to the restoration of brain function after prenatal insults. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:125 / 133
页数:9
相关论文
共 51 条
[1]   Inositol phosphate formation in mice prenatally exposed to drugs: Relation to muscarinic receptors and postreceptor effects [J].
AbuRoumi, M ;
Newman, ME ;
Yanai, J .
BRAIN RESEARCH BULLETIN, 1996, 40 (03) :183-186
[2]   DEVELOPMENTAL REGULATION OF ADULT CORTICAL MORPHOLOGY AND BEHAVIOR - AN ANIMAL-MODEL FOR MENTAL-RETARDATION [J].
BACHMAN, ES ;
BERGERSWEENEY, J ;
COYLE, JT ;
HOHMANN, CF .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF DEVELOPMENTAL NEUROSCIENCE, 1994, 12 (04) :239-253
[3]   NEONATAL ALCOHOL EXPOSURE ALTERS SUCKLING BEHAVIOR IN NEONATAL RAT PUPS [J].
BARRON, S ;
KELLY, SJ ;
RILEY, EP .
PHARMACOLOGY BIOCHEMISTRY AND BEHAVIOR, 1991, 39 (02) :423-427
[4]   NEUROANATOMICAL BASES OF SPATIAL MEMORY [J].
BECKER, JT ;
WALKER, JA ;
OLTON, DS .
BRAIN RESEARCH, 1980, 200 (02) :307-320
[5]   QUANTITATIVE MODELING AND BIOLOGY - THE MULTIVARIATE APPROACH [J].
BENIGNI, R ;
GIULIANI, A .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY, 1994, 266 (05) :R1697-R1704
[6]   CHANGES IN THE LEVELS OF INOSITOL PHOSPHATES AFTER AGONIST-DEPENDENT HYDROLYSIS OF MEMBRANE PHOSPHOINOSITIDES [J].
BERRIDGE, MJ ;
DAWSON, RMC ;
DOWNES, CP ;
HESLOP, JP ;
IRVINE, RF .
BIOCHEMICAL JOURNAL, 1983, 212 (02) :473-482
[7]  
BJORKLUND A, 1977, CELL TISSUE RES, V185, P289
[8]   ADRENAL-MEDULLA GRAFTS ENHANCE RECOVERY OF STRIATAL DOPAMINERGIC FIBERS [J].
BOHN, MC ;
CUPIT, L ;
MARCIANO, F ;
GASH, DM .
SCIENCE, 1987, 237 (4817) :913-916
[9]  
Borms J., 1984, HUMAN GROWTH DEV, pv
[10]   MONITORING OF CELL VIABILITY IN SUSPENSIONS OF EMBRYONIC CNS TISSUE AND ITS USE AS A CRITERION FOR INTRACEREBRAL GRAFT-SURVIVAL [J].
BRUNDIN, P ;
ISACSON, O ;
BJORKLUND, A .
BRAIN RESEARCH, 1985, 331 (02) :251-259