Cavieres M F, Smith S M
Department of Nutritional Sciences, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 53706, USA.
Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 2000 Jan;24(1):102-9.
Increasing evidence demonstrates that genetic background is an important modulator of alcohol's effects on the developing fetus. Such effects are separable from maternal ethanol metabolism. Here, we study ethanol's effects on cardiogenesis in an avian model that shows strong cell death within neuronal and neural crest precursors following ethanol exposure.
The study design tested the hypothesis that ethanol-induced losses of cardiac neural crest populations would disrupt outflow tract development and thus contribute to the valvuloseptal deficits observed in prenatal alcohol exposure. Three chick strains were exposed to alcohol at gestational windows between gastrulation and early heart septation (day 3 incubation), and then hearts were examined at the completion of morphogenesis (day 10 incubation).
Ethanol's impact on cardiac development was influenced by fetal genetics. The B300 x Hampshire Red cross exhibited pronounced cell death within cardiac neural crest populations but had normal development of the heart and aortic arches. Neural crest migration and differentiation into the distal outflow tract were also normal in these embryos, which suggested a capacity to repair earlier losses. The DeKalb White x Hampshire Red cross also did not exhibit cardiac defects. Hearts of the B300 strain had a unique phenotype with respect to ethanol exposure and exhibited a thin ventricular compact layer, dilatation, and reduced myosin/deoxyribonucleic acid and myosin/protein content, a phenotype that indicates disrupted myocardial maturation and inductive cues. The deficit was only observed when ethanol exposure occurred at stages 15 or 18 and apparently was independent of neural crest cell death. Such ventricular thinning might go undetected in the absence of extensive screening.
Results add to the increasing evidence that genetic background strongly modulates the effects of prenatal alcohol exposure. The results also suggest that embryos have a varying capacity to repair and recover from earlier neural crest losses.
越来越多的证据表明,遗传背景是酒精对发育中胎儿影响的重要调节因素。这种影响与母体乙醇代谢无关。在此,我们在一个禽类模型中研究乙醇对心脏发生的影响,该模型显示乙醇暴露后神经元和神经嵴前体细胞内有强烈的细胞死亡。
本研究设计检验了以下假设,即乙醇诱导的心脏神经嵴群体损失会破坏流出道发育,从而导致产前酒精暴露中观察到的瓣膜间隔缺损。在原肠胚形成至心脏早期分隔(孵化第3天)的妊娠窗口期间,将三种鸡品系暴露于酒精中,然后在形态发生完成时(孵化第10天)检查心脏。
乙醇对心脏发育的影响受胎儿遗传学影响。B300×汉普郡红杂交种在心脏神经嵴群体中表现出明显的细胞死亡,但心脏和主动脉弓发育正常。这些胚胎中神经嵴向远端流出道的迁移和分化也正常,这表明它们有修复早期损失的能力。迪卡布白×汉普郡红杂交种也未表现出心脏缺陷。B300品系的心脏在乙醇暴露方面具有独特的表型,表现为心室致密层变薄、扩张,肌球蛋白/脱氧核糖核酸和肌球蛋白/蛋白质含量降低,这种表型表明心肌成熟和诱导信号受到破坏。仅在第15或18阶段发生乙醇暴露时才观察到这种缺陷,并且显然与神经嵴细胞死亡无关。在没有广泛筛查的情况下,这种心室变薄可能无法被检测到。
结果进一步证明了遗传背景强烈调节产前酒精暴露的影响。结果还表明,胚胎从早期神经嵴损失中修复和恢复的能力各不相同。