Leinster Veronica H L, Phillips Thomas J, Jones Nicola, Sanderson Sharon, Simon Katja, Hanley Jon, Case Charles Patrick
School of Clinical Sciences, University of Bristol, Southmead Hospital, Bristol, U.K.
Dementia Research Institute, Cardiff University, Cardiff, U.K.
Neuronal Signal. 2020 Apr 9;4(1):NS20190148. doi: 10.1042/NS20190148. eCollection 2020 Apr.
Episodes of hypoxia and hypoxia/reoxygenation during foetal development have been associated with increased risk of neurodevelopmental conditions presenting in later life. The mechanism for this is not understood; however, several authors have suggested that the placenta plays an important role. Previously we found both placentas from a maternal hypoxia model and pre-eclamptic placentas from patients release factors lead to a loss of dendrite complexity in rodent neurons. Here to further explore the nature and origin of these secretions we exposed a simple model of the placental barrier, consisting of a barrier of human cytotrophoblasts, to hypoxia or hypoxia/reoxygenation. We then exposed cortical cultures from embryonic rat brains to the conditioned media (CM) from below these exposed barriers and examined changes in cell morphology, number, and receptor presentation. The barriers released factors that reduced dendrite and astrocyte process lengths, decreased GABAB1 staining, and increased astrocyte number. The changes in astrocytes required the presence of neurons and were prevented by inhibition of the SMAD pathway and by neutralising Bone Morphogenetic Proteins (BMPs) 2/4. Barriers exposed to hypoxia/reoxygenation also released factors that reduced dendrite lengths but increased GABAB1 staining. Both oxygen changes caused barriers to release factors that decreased GluN1, GABAAα1 staining and increased GluN3a staining. We find that hypoxia in particular will elicit the release of factors that increase astrocyte number and decrease process length as well as causing changes in the intensity of glutamate and GABA receptor staining. There is some evidence that BMPs are released and contribute to these changes.
胎儿发育过程中的缺氧和缺氧/复氧发作与日后出现神经发育疾病的风险增加有关。其机制尚不清楚;然而,几位作者认为胎盘起着重要作用。此前我们发现,来自母体缺氧模型的胎盘和子痫前期患者的胎盘都会释放导致啮齿动物神经元树突复杂性丧失的因子。在此,为了进一步探究这些分泌物的性质和来源,我们将由人细胞滋养层屏障构成的胎盘屏障简单模型暴露于缺氧或缺氧/复氧环境中。然后,我们将来自胚胎大鼠大脑的皮质培养物暴露于这些暴露屏障下方的条件培养基(CM)中,并检查细胞形态、数量和受体表达的变化。这些屏障释放的因子会缩短树突和星形胶质细胞突起的长度,减少GABAB1染色,并增加星形胶质细胞数量。星形胶质细胞的变化需要神经元的存在,并且通过抑制SMAD信号通路和中和骨形态发生蛋白(BMP)2/4来阻止。暴露于缺氧/复氧环境的屏障还释放出缩短树突长度但增加GABAB1染色的因子。两种氧气变化都会导致屏障释放降低GluN1、GABAAα1染色并增加GluN3a染色的因子。我们发现,特别是缺氧会引发增加星形胶质细胞数量、缩短突起长度的因子的释放,同时还会导致谷氨酸和GABA受体染色强度的变化。有证据表明BMP被释放并促成了这些变化。