Department of Neuroscience, University of New Mexico School of Medicine, Albuquerque, New Mexico, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2013 Sep 3;8(9):e73720. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0073720. eCollection 2013.
Arsenic is a common and pervasive environmental contaminant found in drinking water in varying concentrations depending on region. Exposure to arsenic induces behavioral and cognitive deficits in both human populations and in rodent models. The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) standard for the allotment of arsenic in drinking water is in the parts-per-billion range, yet our lab has shown that 50 ppb arsenic exposure during development can have far-reaching consequences into adulthood, including deficits in learning and memory, which have been linked to altered adult neurogenesis. Given that the morphological impact of developmental arsenic exposure on the hippocampus is unknown, we sought to evaluate proliferation and differentiation of adult neural progenitor cells in the dentate gyrus after 50 ppb arsenic exposure throughout the perinatal period of development in mice (equivalent to all three trimesters in humans) using a BrdU pulse-chase assay. Proliferation of the neural progenitor population was decreased by 13% in arsenic-exposed mice, but was not significant. However, the number of differentiated cells was significantly decreased by 41% in arsenic-exposed mice compared to controls. Brief, daily exposure to environmental enrichment significantly increased proliferation and differentiation in both control and arsenic-exposed animals. Expression levels of 31% of neurogenesis-related genes including those involved in Alzheimer's disease, apoptosis, axonogenesis, growth, Notch signaling, and transcription factors were altered after arsenic exposure and restored after enrichment. Using a concentration previously considered safe by the EPA, perinatal arsenic exposure altered hippocampal morphology and gene expression, but did not inhibit the cellular neurogenic response to enrichment. It is possible that behavioral deficits observed during adulthood in animals exposed to arsenic during development derive from the lack of differentiated neural progenitor cells necessary for hippocampal-dependent learning. This study is the first to determine the impact of arsenic exposure during development on adult hippocampal neurogenesis and related gene expression.
砷是一种常见且普遍存在的环境污染物,其在饮用水中的浓度因地区而异。暴露于砷会导致人类和啮齿动物模型的行为和认知缺陷。美国环保署(EPA)规定的饮用水中砷的分配标准为十亿分之几,但我们的实验室已经表明,发育过程中接触 50 微克/升的砷会产生深远的成年后后果,包括学习和记忆缺陷,这些缺陷与成年神经发生改变有关。鉴于发育性砷暴露对海马体的形态影响尚不清楚,我们试图通过 BrdU 脉冲追踪试验评估在整个围产期(相当于人类的三个孕期)暴露于 50 微克/升砷对小鼠海马齿状回中成年神经祖细胞的增殖和分化的影响。暴露于砷的小鼠神经祖细胞的增殖减少了 13%,但无统计学意义。然而,与对照组相比,暴露于砷的小鼠分化细胞的数量显著减少了 41%。短暂的日常环境丰富暴露显著增加了对照组和暴露于砷的动物的增殖和分化。包括阿尔茨海默病、细胞凋亡、轴突生成、生长、Notch 信号和转录因子在内的 31%的神经发生相关基因的表达水平在暴露于砷后发生改变,在丰富后恢复。使用 EPA 先前认为安全的浓度,围产期砷暴露改变了海马体的形态和基因表达,但没有抑制丰富对细胞神经发生的反应。在发育过程中暴露于砷的动物在成年期观察到的行为缺陷可能源于缺乏海马体依赖学习所必需的分化神经祖细胞。这项研究首次确定了发育过程中暴露于砷对成年海马神经发生和相关基因表达的影响。