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Developmental pyrethroid exposure causes a neurodevelopmental disorder phenotype in mice

Authors :
Melissa A Curtis
Rohan K Dhamsania
Rachel C Branco
Ji-Dong Guo
Justin Creeden
Kari L Neifer
Carlie A Black
Emily J Winokur
Elissar Andari
Brian G Dias
Robert C Liu
Shannon L Gourley
Gary W Miller
James P Burkett
Source :
PNAS Nexus. 2
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2023.

Abstract

Neurodevelopmental disorders (NDDs) are a widespread and growing public health challenge, affecting as many as 17% of children in the United States. Recent epidemiological studies have implicated ambient exposure to pyrethroid pesticides during pregnancy in the risk for NDDs in the unborn child. Using a litter-based, independent discovery–replication cohort design, we exposed mouse dams orally during pregnancy and lactation to the Environmental Protection Agency's reference pyrethroid, deltamethrin, at 3 mg/kg, a concentration well below the benchmark dose used for regulatory guidance. The resulting offspring were tested using behavioral and molecular methods targeting behavioral phenotypes relevant to autism and NDD, as well as changes to the striatal dopamine system. Low-dose developmental exposure to the pyrethroid deltamethrin (DPE) decreased pup vocalizations, increased repetitive behaviors, and impaired both fear conditioning and operant conditioning. Compared with control mice, DPE mice had greater total striatal dopamine, dopamine metabolites, and stimulated dopamine release, but no difference in vesicular dopamine capacity or protein markers of dopamine vesicles. Dopamine transporter protein levels were increased in DPE mice, but not temporal dopamine reuptake. Striatal medium spiny neurons showed changes in electrophysiological properties consistent with a compensatory decrease in neuronal excitability. Combined with previous findings, these results implicate DPE as a direct cause of an NDD-relevant behavioral phenotype and striatal dopamine dysfunction in mice and implicate the cytosolic compartment as the location of excess striatal dopamine.

Details

ISSN :
27526542
Volume :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
PNAS Nexus
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........8defab1f61656af65e468b3967c5b6ff