Literature DB >> 20518017

Neuroplasticity of the central hypercapnic ventilatory response: teratogen-induced impairment and subsequent recovery during development.

Cord M Brundage1, Barbara E Taylor.   

Abstract

Neuroventilation is highly plastic and exposure to either of two distinct teratogens, nicotine or ethanol, during development results in a similar loss of the neuroventilatory response to hypercapnia in bullfrog tadpoles. Whether this functional deficit is permanent or transient following nicotine or ethanol exposure was unknown. Here, we tested the persistence of hypercapnic neuroventilatory response impairments in tadpoles exposed to either 30 microg/L nicotine or 0.12-0.06 g/dL ethanol for 10 weeks. Brainstem breathing-related neural activity was assessed in tadpoles allowed to develop teratogen-free after either nicotine or ethanol exposure. Nicotine-exposed animals responded normally to hypercapnia after a 3-week teratogen-free period but the hypercapnic response in ethanol-exposed tadpoles remained impaired. Tadpoles allowed to develop for only 1 week nicotine free after chronic exposure were unable to respond to hypercapnia. The hypercapnic response of ethanol-exposed tadpoles returned by 6 weeks following chronic ethanol exposure. These findings suggest that some nicotine- and ethanol-induced impairments can be resolved during early development. Understanding both the disruptive effects of nicotine and ethanol exposure and how impaired responses return when teratogen exposure stops may offer insight on the function and plasticity of respiratory control.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20518017      PMCID: PMC2967397          DOI: 10.1002/dneu.20806

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Dev Neurobiol        ISSN: 1932-8451            Impact factor:   3.964


  40 in total

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10.  Lung respiratory rhythm and pattern generation in the bullfrog: role of neurokinin-1 and mu-opioid receptors.

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  3 in total

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