Bowles Center for Alcohol Studies, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
Department of Cell Biology and Physiology, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
Birth Defects Res. 2017 Jul 3;109(11):860-865. doi: 10.1002/bdr2.1026. Epub 2017 May 15.
Genetic factors influence the physical and neurobehavioral manifestations of prenatal alcohol exposure (PAE). Animal models allow the investigation of specific genes that confer vulnerability to, or protection from, birth defects associated with fetal alcohol spectrum disorders (FASDs). The objective of the present experiments was to determine if genetic alterations in the Sonic Hedgehog (Shh) signaling pathways affect the vulnerability to PAE-induced skeletal defects involving the forelimbs and/or hindlimbs.
Wild-type C57BL/6J female mice were bred with males in which one copy of the Shh or Gli2 genes had been knocked out, to produce litters with both wild-type (+/+) and heterozygous (+/-) embryos. Alcohol doses (two injections of 2.9 g/kg, 4 hours apart) or vehicles were administered starting at gestational day (GD) 9.25, 9.5, or 9.75, a critical exposure time for inducing limb defects. Limb defects were examined at GD 17 using a dysmorphology scale based on abnormalities ranging from increased interdigital spacing to the deletion of multiple fingers and the ulna.
Alcohol treatment caused a high incidence of forelimb defects, particularly on the right side, that was higher in Shh and Gli2 fetuses compared to wild-type fetuses. Dysmorphology scores were also significantly higher in the Shh and Gli2 mice.
These results extend previous findings demonstrating enhanced sensitivity to PAE-induced craniofacial dysmorphology and support the hypothesis that genetic alterations in the Shh signaling pathway influences the vulnerability to alcohol-induced birth defects. Moreover, these results emphasize the importance of understanding the interactions between genes and prenatal exposure to alcohol or other teratogens. Birth Defects Research 109:860-865, 2017. © 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
遗传因素影响产前酒精暴露(PAE)的身体和神经行为表现。动物模型允许研究特定基因,这些基因易患与胎儿酒精谱系障碍(FASD)相关的出生缺陷,或对其具有保护作用。本实验的目的是确定 Sonic Hedgehog(Shh)信号通路的遗传改变是否影响对 PAE 诱导的涉及前肢和/或后肢的骨骼缺陷的易感性。
将野生型 C57BL/6J 雌性小鼠与 Shh 或 Gli2 基因的一个拷贝被敲除的雄性小鼠交配,产生具有野生型(+/+)和杂合型(+/ -)胚胎的后代。酒精剂量(两次 2.9 g/kg 注射,间隔 4 小时)或载体从妊娠第 9.25、9.5 或 9.75 天开始给药,这是诱导肢体缺陷的关键暴露时间。使用基于从指间间距增加到多个手指和尺骨缺失的异常的畸形学量表,在 GD 17 检查肢体缺陷。
酒精处理导致高发生率的前肢缺陷,特别是在右侧,在 Shh 和 Gli2 胎儿中比野生型胎儿更高。Shh 和 Gli2 小鼠的畸形学评分也明显更高。
这些结果扩展了先前的研究结果,表明对 PAE 诱导的颅面畸形的敏感性增强,并支持 Shh 信号通路的遗传改变影响对酒精诱导的出生缺陷的易感性的假说。此外,这些结果强调了理解基因与产前暴露于酒精或其他致畸剂之间相互作用的重要性。出生缺陷研究 109:860-865,2017。©2017 Wiley Periodicals,Inc.