Shi Mingxin, Oh Yeongseok, Mitchell Debra A, MacLean James A, McLaughlin Ryan J, Hayashi Kanako
Center for Reproductive Biology, School of Molecular Biosciences, Washington State University, Pullman, WA 99164, United States.
Department of Integrative Physiology and Neuroscience, Washington State University, Pullman, WA 99164, United States.
Toxicol Sci. 2025 Jun 1;205(2):358-368. doi: 10.1093/toxsci/kfaf043.
The use of cannabis during pregnancy and nursing is a growing public health concern, and the multigenerational impacts of perinatal cannabis exposure remain largely unknown. To address this knowledge gap, we sought to examine the long-term consequences of perinatal cannabis use on reproductive function and how it might impact subsequent generations. Pregnant female mice were exposed to control vehicle or cannabis extract [25, 100, or 200 mg/ml Δ9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) in the cannabis extract] from gestational day 1 to postnatal day 21 (twice/day), encompassing the duration of pregnancy through weaning. Based on plasma THC concentrations in F0 females, we chose 100 and 200 mg/ml THC in the cannabis extract for subsequent studies. The selected doses and exposure conditions did not disrupt pregnancy or nursing in F0 females. Pregnancy and neonatal outcomes, including gestational length, litter size, and sexual ratio, were not affected by cannabis exposure. However, cannabis-exposed neonatal F1 pups were smaller. Cannabis exposure delayed vaginal opening as a sign of puberty onset and disrupted estrous cyclicity in F1 females. However, its effects were minor in F2 and F3 females. F1-F3 females showed no abnormal ovarian and uterine histology or plasma estradiol-17β levels and could produce normal offspring without pregnancy issues. These results suggest that the developmental stages of the hypothalamus and pituitary are likely perturbed by gestational and nursing cannabis exposure in F1 females. However, they are not sufficient to compromise adult reproductive function. The present results indicate limited transgenerational effects of perinatal cannabis exposure on female reproductive parameters.
孕期和哺乳期使用大麻是一个日益受到关注的公共卫生问题,围产期接触大麻对多代人的影响在很大程度上仍不清楚。为了填补这一知识空白,我们试图研究围产期使用大麻对生殖功能的长期影响以及它可能如何影响后代。将怀孕的雌性小鼠从妊娠第1天至出生后第21天(每天两次)暴露于对照载体或大麻提取物[大麻提取物中含25、100或200mg/ml的Δ9-四氢大麻酚(THC)],涵盖从怀孕到断奶的整个时期。根据F0雌性小鼠血浆中THC的浓度,我们选择大麻提取物中100和200mg/ml的THC用于后续研究。所选剂量和暴露条件并未干扰F0雌性小鼠的怀孕或哺乳。怀孕和新生儿结局,包括妊娠期长度、窝仔数和性别比例,均未受到大麻暴露的影响。然而,暴露于大麻的新生F1幼崽体型较小。大麻暴露延迟了阴道开口,这是青春期开始的标志,并扰乱了F1雌性小鼠的发情周期。然而,其对F2和F3雌性小鼠的影响较小。F1 - F3雌性小鼠的卵巢和子宫组织学以及血浆雌二醇-17β水平均无异常,并且能够正常繁殖后代,没有怀孕问题。这些结果表明,F1雌性小鼠在妊娠和哺乳期接触大麻可能会扰乱下丘脑和垂体的发育阶段。然而,这些影响不足以损害成年后的生殖功能。目前的结果表明围产期接触大麻对雌性生殖参数的跨代影响有限。