Björklund Olga, Kahlström Johan, Salmi Peter, Ogren Sven Ove, Vahter Marie, Chen Jiang-Fan, Fredholm Bertil B, Daré Elisabetta
Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, Karolinska Institutet, S-171 77 Stockholm, Sweden.
Toxicology. 2007 Nov 30;241(3):119-33. doi: 10.1016/j.tox.2007.08.092. Epub 2007 Aug 31.
Adenosine and its receptors are, as part of the brain stress response, potential targets for neuroprotective drugs. We have investigated if the adenosine receptor system affects the developmental neurotoxicity caused by the fish pollutant methylmercury (MeHg). Behavioral outcomes of low dose perinatal MeHg exposure were studied in mice where the A(1) and A(2A) adenosine receptors were either partially blocked by caffeine treatment or eliminated by genetic modification (A(1)R and A(2A)R knock-out mice). From gestational day 7 to day 7 of lactation dams were administered doses that mimic human intake via normal diet, i.e. 1microM MeHg and/or 0.3g/l caffeine in the drinking water. This exposure to MeHg resulted in a doubling of brain Hg levels in wild type females and males at postnatal day 21 (PND21). Open field analysis was performed at PND21 and 2 months of age. MeHg caused time-dependent behavioral alterations preferentially in male mice. A decreased response to amphetamine in 2-month-old males pointed to disturbances in dopaminergic functions. Maternal caffeine intake induced long-lasting changes in the offspring evidenced by an increased motor activity and a modified response to psychostimulants in adult age, irrespectively of sex. Similar alterations were observed in A(1)R knock-out mice, suggesting that adenosine A(1) receptors are involved in the alterations triggered by caffeine exposure during development. Perinatal caffeine treatment and, to some extent, genetic elimination of adenosine A(1) receptors, attenuated the behavioral consequences of MeHg in males. Importantly, also deletion of the A(2A) adenosine receptor reduced the vulnerability to MeHg, consistent with the neuroprotective effects of adenosine A(2A) receptor inactivation observed in hypoxia and Parkinson's disease. Thus, the consequences of MeHg toxicity during gestation and lactation can be reduced by adenosine A(1) and A(2A) receptor inactivation, either via their genetic deletion or by treatment with their antagonist caffeine.
作为大脑应激反应的一部分,腺苷及其受体是神经保护药物的潜在靶点。我们研究了腺苷受体系统是否会影响鱼类污染物甲基汞(MeHg)所致的发育性神经毒性。在A(1)和A(2A)腺苷受体被咖啡因处理部分阻断或通过基因改造消除(A(1)R和A(2A)R基因敲除小鼠)的小鼠中,研究了围产期低剂量MeHg暴露的行为结果。从妊娠第7天到哺乳期第7天,给母鼠给予模拟人类通过正常饮食摄入的剂量,即饮水中1μM MeHg和/或0.3g/l咖啡因。这种MeHg暴露导致出生后第21天(PND21)野生型雌性和雄性小鼠脑汞水平加倍。在PND21和2月龄时进行旷场分析。MeHg优先在雄性小鼠中引起时间依赖性行为改变。2月龄雄性小鼠对苯丙胺的反应降低表明多巴胺能功能受到干扰。母体摄入咖啡因会导致后代出现持久变化,表现为成年后运动活动增加和对精神兴奋剂的反应改变,与性别无关。在A(1)R基因敲除小鼠中观察到类似变化,表明腺苷A(1)受体参与了发育过程中咖啡因暴露引发的改变。围产期咖啡因处理以及在一定程度上腺苷A(1)受体的基因消除减轻了MeHg对雄性小鼠的行为影响。重要的是,A(2A)腺苷受体的缺失也降低了对MeHg的易感性,这与在缺氧和帕金森病中观察到的腺苷A(2A)受体失活的神经保护作用一致。因此,通过腺苷A(1)和A(2A)受体失活,无论是通过基因缺失还是用其拮抗剂咖啡因治疗,都可以降低妊娠和哺乳期MeHg毒性的后果。