Buttigieg Josef, Brown Stephen, Holloway Alison C, Nurse Colin A
Department of Biology, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario L8S 4K1, Canada.
J Neurosci. 2009 Jun 3;29(22):7137-47. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0544-09.2009.
Fetal nicotine exposure blunts hypoxia-induced catecholamine secretion from neonatal adrenomedullary chromaffin cells (AMCs), providing a link between maternal smoking, abnormal arousal responses, and risk of sudden infant death syndrome. Here, we show that the mechanism is attributable to upregulation of K(ATP) channels via stimulation of alpha7 nicotinic ACh receptors (AChRs). These K(ATP) channels open during hypoxia, thereby suppressing membrane excitability. After in utero exposure to chronic nicotine, neonatal AMCs show a blunted hypoxic sensitivity as determined by inhibition of outward K(+) current, membrane depolarization, rise in cytosolic Ca(2+), and catecholamine secretion. However, hypoxic sensitivity could be unmasked in nicotine-exposed AMCs when glibenclamide, a blocker of K(ATP) channels, was present. Both K(ATP) current density and K(ATP) channel subunit (Kir 6.2) expression were significantly enhanced in nicotine-exposed cells relative to controls. The entire sequence could be reproduced in culture by exposing neonatal rat AMCs or immortalized fetal chromaffin (MAH) cells to nicotine for approximately 1 week, and was prevented by coincubation with selective blockers of alpha7 nicotinic AChRs. Additionally, coincubation with inhibitors of protein kinase C and CaM kinase, but not protein kinase A, prevented the effects of chronic nicotine in vitro. Interestingly, chronic nicotine failed to blunt hypoxia-evoked responses in MAH cells bearing short hairpin knockdown (>90%) of the transcription factor, hypoxia-inducible factor-2alpha (HIF-2alpha), suggesting involvement of the HIF pathway. The therapeutic potential of K(ATP) channel blockers was validated in experiments in which hypoxia-induced neonatal mortality in nicotine-exposed pups was significantly reduced after pretreatment with glibenclamide.
胎儿暴露于尼古丁会减弱新生儿肾上腺髓质嗜铬细胞(AMCs)对缺氧诱导的儿茶酚胺分泌,这为母亲吸烟、异常觉醒反应和婴儿猝死综合征风险之间提供了一种联系。在此,我们表明该机制归因于通过刺激α7烟碱型乙酰胆碱受体(AChRs)上调ATP敏感性钾通道(K(ATP)通道)。这些K(ATP)通道在缺氧时开放,从而抑制膜兴奋性。子宫内长期暴露于尼古丁后,通过抑制外向钾电流、膜去极化、胞质钙升高和儿茶酚胺分泌来确定,新生儿AMCs对缺氧的敏感性降低。然而,当存在K(ATP)通道阻滞剂格列本脲时,尼古丁暴露的AMCs中的缺氧敏感性可以显现出来。与对照组相比,尼古丁暴露细胞中的K(ATP)电流密度和K(ATP)通道亚基(Kir 6.2)表达均显著增强。通过将新生大鼠AMCs或永生化胎儿嗜铬细胞(MAH细胞)暴露于尼古丁约1周,可在培养中重现整个过程,并且通过与α7烟碱型AChRs的选择性阻滞剂共同孵育可防止这种情况发生。此外,与蛋白激酶C和钙调蛋白激酶的抑制剂共同孵育可防止慢性尼古丁在体外的作用,但蛋白激酶A的抑制剂则不能。有趣的是,慢性尼古丁未能减弱转录因子缺氧诱导因子-2α(HIF-2α)短发夹敲低(>90%)的MAH细胞中缺氧诱发的反应,这表明HIF途径参与其中。在实验中,用格列本脲预处理后,尼古丁暴露幼崽中缺氧诱导的新生儿死亡率显著降低,这验证了K(ATP)通道阻滞剂的治疗潜力。