Critical developmental periods for effects of low-level tobacco smoke exposure on behavioral performance
Autor: | Marty Cauley, Edward D. Levin, Hannah White, Shaqif Junaid, Brandon J. Hall, Yael Abreu-Villaça, Theodore A. Slotkin, Abtin Kiany |
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Rok vydání: | 2018 |
Předmět: |
Male
0301 basic medicine Offspring Physiology Motor Activity Toxicology Choice Behavior Article Tobacco smoke Rats Sprague-Dawley Nicotine 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Pregnancy Tobacco Animals Medicine Cognitive impairment Behavior Animal business.industry General Neuroscience Tobacco smoke exposure Hypervigilance medicine.disease 030104 developmental biology Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects Exploratory Behavior Gestation Female Tobacco Smoke Pollution medicine.symptom business 030217 neurology & neurosurgery medicine.drug |
Zdroj: | NeuroToxicology. 68:81-87 |
ISSN: | 0161-813X |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.neuro.2018.07.012 |
Popis: | Tobacco exposure during development leads to neurobehavioral dysfunction in children, even when exposure is limited to secondhand smoke. We have previously shown in rats that developmental exposure to tobacco smoke extract (TSE), at levels mimicking secondhand smoke, starting preconception and extending throughout gestation, evoked subsequent locomotor hyperactivity and cognitive impairment. These effects were greater than those caused by equivalent exposures to nicotine alone, implying that other agents in tobacco smoke contributed to the adverse behavioral effects. In the present study, we examined the critical developmental windows of vulnerability for these effects, restricting TSE administration (0.2 mg/kg/day nicotine equivalent, or DMSO vehicle, delivered by subcutaneously-implanted pumps) to three distinct 10 day periods: the 10 days preceding mating, the first 10 days of gestation (early gestation), or the second 10 days of gestation (late gestation). The principal behavioral effects revealed a critical developmental window of vulnerability, as well as sex selectivity. Late gestational TSE exposure significantly increased errors in the initial training on the radial-arm maze in female offspring, whereas no effects were seen in males exposed during late gestation, or with either sex in the other exposure windows. In attentional testing with the visual signal detection test, male offspring exposed to TSE during early or late gestation showed hypervigilance during low-motivating conditions. These results demonstrate that gestational TSE exposure causes persistent behavioral effects that are dependent on the developmental window in which exposure occurs. The fact that effects were seen at TSE levels modeling secondhand smoke, emphasizes the need for decreasing involuntary tobacco smoke exposure, particularly during pregnancy. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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