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Transient uterine hypercontractility causes fetal cerebral oxidative stress and enduring mitochondrial and behavioral abnormalities in adolescent male rat offspring

Authors :
Arvind Palanisamy
Tusar Giri
Jia Jiang
Annie Bice
James D. Quirk
Sara B. Conyers
Susan E. Maloney
Nandini Raghuraman
Adam Q. Bauer
Joel R. Garbow
David F. Wozniak
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2019.

Abstract

The impact of transient ischemic-hypoxemic insults on the developing fetal brain is poorly understood despite evidence suggesting an association with neurodevelopmental disorders such as schizophrenia and autism. To address this, we designed an aberrant uterine hypercontractility paradigm with oxytocin to better assess the consequences of acute, but transient, placental ischemia-hypoxemia in term pregnant rats. Using MRI imaging, we confirmed that oxytocin-induced aberrant uterine hypercontractility significantly compromised uteroplacental perfusion. This was supported by the observation of oxidative stress and increased lactate concentration in the fetal brain. Genes related to oxidative stress pathways were significantly upregulated in male, but not female, offspring 1 h after oxytocin-induced placental ischemia-hypoxemia. Persistent upregulation of select mitochondrial electron transport chain complex proteins in the anterior cingulate cortex of adolescent male offspring suggested that this sex-specific effect was enduring. Functionally, offspring exposed to oxytocin-induced uterine hypercontractility showed male-specific abnormalities in social behavior with associated region-specific changes in gene expression and functional cortical connectivity. Our findings, therefore, indicate that even transient but severe placental ischemia-hypoxemia could be detrimental to the developing brain and point to a possible mitochondrial link between intrauterine asphyxia and neurodevelopmental disorders.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........0967cb2c810dd41c25395361fde949b1
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/689927