| Literature DB >> 24818543 |
Daniel J Curtis1, Aman Sood1, Tom J Phillips1, Veronica H L Leinster1, Akihiro Nishiguchi2, Christopher Coyle1, Lizeth Lacharme-Lora1, Oliver Beaumont1, Helena Kemp3, Roberta Goodall3, Leila Cornes3, Michele Giugliano4, Rocco A Barone4, Michiya Matsusaki2, Mitsuru Akashi2, Hiroyoshi Y Tanaka5, Mitsunobu Kano5, Jennifer McGarvey6, Nagaraj D Halemani6, Katja Simon7, Robert Keehan1, William Ind1, Tracey Masters8, Simon Grant8, Sharan Athwal8, Gavin Collett9, Dionne Tannetta9, Ian L Sargent9, Emma Scull-Brown10, Xun Liu10, Kristian Aquilina11, Nicki Cohen12, Jon D Lane6, Marianne Thoresen10, Jon Hanley6, Andrew Randall13, C Patrick Case14.
Abstract
Some psychiatric diseases in children and young adults are thought to originate from adverse exposures during foetal life, including hypoxia and hypoxia/reoxygenation. The mechanism is not understood. Several authors have emphasised that the placenta is likely to play an important role as the key interface between mother and foetus. Here we have explored whether a first trimester human placenta or model barrier of primary human cytotrophoblasts might secrete factors, in response to hypoxia or hypoxia/reoxygenation, that could damage neurones. We find that the secretions in conditioned media caused an increase of [Ca(2+)]i and mitochondrial free radicals and a decrease of dendritic lengths, branching complexity, spine density and synaptic activity in dissociated neurones from embryonic rat cerebral cortex. There was altered staining of glutamate and GABA receptors. We identify glutamate as an active factor within the conditioned media and demonstrate a specific release of glutamate from the placenta/cytotrophoblast barriers invitro after hypoxia or hypoxia/reoxygenation. Injection of conditioned media into developing brains of P4 rats reduced the numerical density of parvalbumin-containing neurones in cortex, hippocampus and reticular nucleus, reduced immunostaining of glutamate receptors and altered cellular turnover. These results show that the placenta is able to release factors, in response to altered oxygen, that can damage developing neurones under experimental conditions.Entities:
Keywords: Cerebral cortex; Dendrite; Development; Hypoxia; Neurodevelopmental disorder; Neurone; Parvalbumin; Placenta; Reoxygenation; Schizophrenia
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24818543 DOI: 10.1016/j.expneurol.2014.05.003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Exp Neurol ISSN: 0014-4886 Impact factor: 5.330