The pathology of fetal alcohol syndrome and the less severe fetal alcohol spectrum disorders includes brain dysmyelination.Recent studies have shed light on the molecular mechanisms underlying these white matter abnor...The pathology of fetal alcohol syndrome and the less severe fetal alcohol spectrum disorders includes brain dysmyelination.Recent studies have shed light on the molecular mechanisms underlying these white matter abnormalities.Rodent models of fetal alcohol syndrome and human studies have shown suppressed oligodendrocyte differentiation and apoptosis of oligodendrocyte precursor cells.Ethanol exposure led to reduced expression of myelin basic protein and delayed myelin basic protein expression in rat and mouse models of fetal alcohol syndrome and in human histopathological specimens.Several studies have reported increased expression of many chemokines in dysmyelinating disorders in central nervous system,including multiple sclerosis and fetal alcohol syndrome.Acute ethanol exposure reduced levels of the neuroprotective insulin-like growth factor-1 in fetal and maternal sheep and in human fetal brain tissues,while ethanol increased the expression of tumor necrosis factor α in mouse and human neurons.White matter lesions have been induced in the developing sheep brain by alcohol exposure in early gestation.Rat fetal alcohol syndrome models have shown reduced axon diameters,with thinner myelin sheaths,as well as reduced numbers of oligodendrocytes,which were also morphologically aberrant oligodendrocytes.Expressions of markers for mature myelination,including myelin basic protein,also were reduced.The accumulating knowledge concerning the mechanisms of ethanol-induced dysmyelination could lead to the development of strategies to prevent dysmyelination in children exposed to ethanol during fetal development.Future studies using fetal oligodendrocyte-and oligodendrocyte precursor cell-derived exosomes isolated from the mother's blood may identify biomarkers for fetal alcohol syndrome and even implicate epigenetic changes in early development that affect oligodendrocyte precursor cell and oligodendrocyte function in adulthood.By combining various imaging modalities with molecular studies,it may be possible to determine which fetuses are at risk and to intervene therapeutically early in the pregnancy.展开更多
Prenatal alcohol exposure, especially during early pregnancy, can lead to fetal alcohol syndrome. The pharmacological and toxicological mechanisms of ethanol are related to the effects of ceramide In this study, we es...Prenatal alcohol exposure, especially during early pregnancy, can lead to fetal alcohol syndrome. The pharmacological and toxicological mechanisms of ethanol are related to the effects of ceramide In this study, we established an alcohol exposure model in wild-type mice and in knockout mice for the key enzyme involved in ceramide metabolism, sphingomyelin synthase 2. This model received daily intragastric administration of 25% ethanol, and pups were used at postnatal days 0, 7, 14, 30 for experiments. Serology and immunofluorescence staining found that ethanol exposure dose-dependently reduced blood sphingomyelin levels in two genotypes of pups, and increased neural cell proliferation and the number of new neurons in the hippocampal dentate gyrus. Western blot analysis showed that the relative expression level of protein kinase C e increased in two genotypes of pups after ethanol exposure. Compared with witd-type pups, the expression level of the important activator protein of the ceramide/ceramide-l-phosphate pathway, protein kinase C a, was reduced in the hippocampus of sphingomyelin synthase 2 knockouts. Our findings illustrate that ceramide is involved in alcohol-induced neural proliferation in the hippocampal dentate gyrus of pups after prenatal ethanol exposure, and the mechanism may be associated with increased ex- pression of protein kinase C a activating the ceramide/ceramide-l-phosphate pathway.展开更多
基金supported by NIH grants R01NS97846,R01NS097846-02S1 and R01NS092876 awarded to MESShriners research grant SHC-85400 awarded to MESUSA Pennsylvania State Department grant Project 10:420491-04400-02 to ND。
文摘The pathology of fetal alcohol syndrome and the less severe fetal alcohol spectrum disorders includes brain dysmyelination.Recent studies have shed light on the molecular mechanisms underlying these white matter abnormalities.Rodent models of fetal alcohol syndrome and human studies have shown suppressed oligodendrocyte differentiation and apoptosis of oligodendrocyte precursor cells.Ethanol exposure led to reduced expression of myelin basic protein and delayed myelin basic protein expression in rat and mouse models of fetal alcohol syndrome and in human histopathological specimens.Several studies have reported increased expression of many chemokines in dysmyelinating disorders in central nervous system,including multiple sclerosis and fetal alcohol syndrome.Acute ethanol exposure reduced levels of the neuroprotective insulin-like growth factor-1 in fetal and maternal sheep and in human fetal brain tissues,while ethanol increased the expression of tumor necrosis factor α in mouse and human neurons.White matter lesions have been induced in the developing sheep brain by alcohol exposure in early gestation.Rat fetal alcohol syndrome models have shown reduced axon diameters,with thinner myelin sheaths,as well as reduced numbers of oligodendrocytes,which were also morphologically aberrant oligodendrocytes.Expressions of markers for mature myelination,including myelin basic protein,also were reduced.The accumulating knowledge concerning the mechanisms of ethanol-induced dysmyelination could lead to the development of strategies to prevent dysmyelination in children exposed to ethanol during fetal development.Future studies using fetal oligodendrocyte-and oligodendrocyte precursor cell-derived exosomes isolated from the mother's blood may identify biomarkers for fetal alcohol syndrome and even implicate epigenetic changes in early development that affect oligodendrocyte precursor cell and oligodendrocyte function in adulthood.By combining various imaging modalities with molecular studies,it may be possible to determine which fetuses are at risk and to intervene therapeutically early in the pregnancy.
基金supported by the Technological Project of Science and Technology Department of Henan Province in China,No.122102310205the National Natural Science Foundation of China,No.30771140,31070952,U1204311
文摘Prenatal alcohol exposure, especially during early pregnancy, can lead to fetal alcohol syndrome. The pharmacological and toxicological mechanisms of ethanol are related to the effects of ceramide In this study, we established an alcohol exposure model in wild-type mice and in knockout mice for the key enzyme involved in ceramide metabolism, sphingomyelin synthase 2. This model received daily intragastric administration of 25% ethanol, and pups were used at postnatal days 0, 7, 14, 30 for experiments. Serology and immunofluorescence staining found that ethanol exposure dose-dependently reduced blood sphingomyelin levels in two genotypes of pups, and increased neural cell proliferation and the number of new neurons in the hippocampal dentate gyrus. Western blot analysis showed that the relative expression level of protein kinase C e increased in two genotypes of pups after ethanol exposure. Compared with witd-type pups, the expression level of the important activator protein of the ceramide/ceramide-l-phosphate pathway, protein kinase C a, was reduced in the hippocampus of sphingomyelin synthase 2 knockouts. Our findings illustrate that ceramide is involved in alcohol-induced neural proliferation in the hippocampal dentate gyrus of pups after prenatal ethanol exposure, and the mechanism may be associated with increased ex- pression of protein kinase C a activating the ceramide/ceramide-l-phosphate pathway.