Bonthius D J, West J R
Department of Pediatrics, University of Virginia, Charlottesville 22908.
Teratology. 1991 Aug;44(2):147-63. doi: 10.1002/tera.1420440203.
The purpose of this study was to determine whether developmental alcohol exposure could induce permanent neuronal deficits, whether the peak blood alcohol concentration (BAC) influences the severity of the effects, and whether the effects are gender related. Rat pups were reared artificially over postnatal days (PD) 4 through 11 (a period of rapid brain growth, comparable to part of the human third trimester). Alcohol treatments were administered on PD 4 through 9. Patterns of alcohol exposure that produce different peak BACs have been shown to affect differentially the amount of brain weight deficits and neuron loss shortly after the exposure period, so this study investigated whether the pattern of alcohol exposure was also effective in producing permanent deficits. Two groups received a daily alcohol dose of 4.5 g/kg, condensed into either four or two feedings. A third group received a higher daily alcohol dose of 6.6 g/kg administered in 12 uniformly spaced daily feedings. Pups were fostered back to dams on PD 11 and perfused on PD 90. Brain weights were measured, and Purkinje cells and granule cells were counted in each of the 10 lobules of the cerebellar vermis. In the hippocampal formation, cell counts were made of the pyramidal cells of fields CA1 and CA2/3, the multiple cell types of CA4 and the granule cells of the dentate gyrus. The groups receiving the lower daily dose (4.5 g/kg) condensed into either four or two feedings were exposed to higher peak BACs and suffered significant permanent brain weight deficits and neuronal losses, relative to controls. The group receiving the higher daily dose (6.6 g/kg) in continuous fractions had no significant brain weight reductions or neuronal loss. Vulnerability to alcohol-induced neuronal loss varied among regions and cell populations and as a function of peak BAC. In the hippocampus, only the CA1 pyramidal cells were significantly reduced in number and only in group receiving the most condensed alcohol treatment. In the cerebellum, the severity of Purkinje cell and granule cell losses varied among lobules, and Purkinje cell vulnerability appeared to depend on the maturational state of the neuron at the time of the alcohol exposure, with the more mature Purkinje cells being the more vulnerable.
本研究的目的是确定发育期酒精暴露是否会导致永久性神经元缺陷,血液酒精浓度峰值(BAC)是否会影响效应的严重程度,以及这些效应是否与性别相关。在出生后第4天至第11天(这是一个脑快速生长的时期,相当于人类孕晚期的一部分)对幼鼠进行人工饲养。在出生后第4天至第9天给予酒精处理。已证明产生不同BAC峰值的酒精暴露模式会在暴露期后不久对脑重量缺陷和神经元损失的程度产生不同影响,因此本研究调查了酒精暴露模式在产生永久性缺陷方面是否也有效。两组每天接受4.5 g/kg的酒精剂量,分别浓缩为四次或两次喂食。第三组每天接受更高剂量6.6 g/kg的酒精,分12次均匀间隔喂食。幼鼠在出生后第11天寄养回母鼠身边,并在出生后第90天进行灌注。测量脑重量,并对小脑蚓部10个小叶中的浦肯野细胞和颗粒细胞进行计数。在海马结构中,对CA1区和CA2/3区的锥体细胞、CA4区的多种细胞类型以及齿状回的颗粒细胞进行细胞计数。相对于对照组,接受较低每日剂量(4.5 g/kg)且分别浓缩为四次或两次喂食的组暴露于更高的BAC峰值,出现了显著的永久性脑重量缺陷和神经元损失。连续分次接受较高每日剂量(6.6 g/kg)的组没有明显的脑重量减轻或神经元损失。酒精诱导的神经元损失的易感性在不同区域和细胞群体中有所不同,并与BAC峰值有关。在海马中,只有CA1区的锥体细胞数量显著减少,且仅在接受最浓缩酒精处理的组中出现。在小脑中,浦肯野细胞和颗粒细胞损失的严重程度在不同小叶中有所不同,浦肯野细胞的易感性似乎取决于酒精暴露时神经元的成熟状态,成熟度越高的浦肯野细胞越易受损。