Back to Search Start Over

DHA suppresses chronic apoptosis in the lung caused by perinatal inflammation

Authors :
Kathryn M. Heyob
Mehboob Ali
Trent E. Tipple
Markus Velten
Lynette K. Rogers
Source :
American Journal of Physiology-Lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology. 309:L441-L448
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
American Physiological Society, 2015.

Abstract

We have previously shown that an adverse perinatal environment significantly alters lung growth and development and results in persistently altered cardiopulmonary physiology in adulthood. Our model of maternal LPS treatment followed by 14 days of neonatal hyperoxia exposure causes severe pulmonary disease characterized by permanent decreases in alveolarization and diffuse interstitial fibrosis. The current investigations tested the hypothesis that dysregulation of Notch signaling pathways contributes to the permanently altered lung phenotype in our model and that the improvements we have observed previously with maternal docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) supplementation are mediated through normalization of Notch-related protein expression. Results indicated that inflammation (IL-6 levels) and oxidation (F2a-isoprostanes) persisted through 8 wk of life in mice exposed to LPS/O2 perinatally. These changes were attenuated by maternal DHA supplementation. Modest but inconsistent differences were observed in Notch-pathway proteins Jagged 1, DLL 1, PEN2, and presenilin-2. We detected substantial increases in markers of apoptosis including PARP-1, APAF-1, caspase-9, BCL2, and HMGB1, and these increases were attenuated in mice that were nursed by DHA-supplemented dams during the perinatal period. Although Notch signaling is not significantly altered at 8 wk of age in mice with perinatal exposure to LPS/O2, our findings indicate that persistent apoptosis continues to occur at 8 wk of age. We speculate that ongoing apoptosis may contribute to persistently altered lung development and may further enhance susceptibility to additional pulmonary disease. Finally, we found that maternal DHA supplementation prevented sustained inflammation, oxidation, and apoptosis in our model.

Details

ISSN :
15221504 and 10400605
Volume :
309
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American Journal of Physiology-Lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6fbfbde44112ebfb01863df72532387a