Taylor Anna N, Tritt Susan H, Tio Delia L, Romeo Horacio E, Yirmiya Raz
Department of Neurobiology and Brain Research Institute, School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles, Calif 90095-1763, USA.
Neuroendocrinology. 2002 Sep;76(3):185-92. doi: 10.1159/000064524.
Fetal alcohol exposure (FAE) has been shown to blunt the febrile component of the primary host-defense response to infection induced experimentally by systemic administration of interleukin (IL)-1beta. Given that maternal adrenalectomy (ADX) can prevent various postnatal effects of FAE, the present experiments were designed to determine whether maternal ADX would prevent the blunted IL-1beta-induced febrile response of fetal alcohol-exposed offspring and whether the effects of maternal ADX would be gender related. Timed-pregnant rats underwent ADX or were sham-operated on gestation day (GD) 7, or remained intact (without any surgery), and were fed ethanol-containing (E) or pair-fed (PF) liquid diets or normal (N) rat chow and water from GD 8 to GD 21. As adults, male and female E, PF and N offspring were injected with saline on day 1 and with IL-1beta (2 microg/kg, i.p.) on day 2 at 09.00 h and the body temperature was recorded biotelemetrically for 8.5 h. IL-1beta produced significantly lower febrile responses in female than in male offspring of intact dams, irrespective of prenatal diet. Furthermore, prenatal surgical stress differentially affected the IL-1beta-induced febrile response of male and female normally fed offspring. Additionally, in both male and female offspring of intact dams, FAE significantly attenuated the IL-1beta-induced febrile response. In males, FAE also attenuated the febrile response in the offspring of maternal sham-operated dams, and this effect was completely reversed by maternal ADX. In females, both maternal sham surgery and ADX reversed the effect of FAE on the febrile response. These findings suggest that maternal adrenal mediators are essential for the long-term effect of FAE on the febrile response in male offspring. In females, early prenatal surgical stress is sufficient to reverse the effects of FAE, possibly via adrenal-independent mechanisms that affect the thermoregulatory system.
胎儿酒精暴露(FAE)已被证明会削弱通过全身注射白细胞介素(IL)-1β实验诱导感染时的主要宿主防御反应的发热成分。鉴于母体肾上腺切除术(ADX)可以预防FAE的各种产后影响,本实验旨在确定母体ADX是否能预防胎儿酒精暴露后代对IL-1β诱导的发热反应减弱,以及母体ADX的影响是否与性别有关。定时怀孕的大鼠在妊娠第7天接受ADX或假手术,或保持完整(未进行任何手术),并从妊娠第8天到第21天喂食含乙醇(E)或配对喂食(PF)的液体饮食或正常(N)大鼠饲料和水。成年后,在第1天给雄性和雌性E、PF和N后代注射生理盐水,在第2天09:00 h注射IL-1β(2μg/kg,腹腔注射),并通过生物遥测记录体温8.5小时。无论产前饮食如何,IL-1β在完整母鼠的雌性后代中引起的发热反应明显低于雄性后代。此外,产前手术应激对正常喂养的雄性和雌性后代的IL-1β诱导的发热反应有不同影响。此外,在完整母鼠的雄性和雌性后代中,FAE均显著减弱了IL-1β诱导的发热反应。在雄性中,FAE也减弱了母体假手术母鼠后代的发热反应,而母体ADX完全逆转了这种效应。在雌性中,母体假手术和ADX均逆转了FAE对发热反应的影响。这些发现表明,母体肾上腺介质对于FAE对雄性后代发热反应的长期影响至关重要。在雌性中,早期产前手术应激足以逆转FAE的影响,可能是通过影响体温调节系统的肾上腺非依赖机制。