Maternal choline supplementation lessens the behavioral dysfunction produced by developmental manganese exposure in a rodent model of ADHD

IF 2.6 3区 医学 Q3 NEUROSCIENCES
Shanna L. Howard , Stephane A. Beaudin , Barbara J. Strupp , Donald R. Smith
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Studies in children have reported associations between elevated manganese (Mn) exposure and ADHD-related symptoms of inattention, impulsivity/hyperactivity, and psychomotor impairment. Maternal choline supplementation (MCS) during pregnancy/lactation may hold promise as a protective strategy because it has been shown to lessen cognitive dysfunction caused by numerous early insults. Our objectives were to determine whether (1) developmental Mn exposure alters behavioral reactivity/emotion regulation, in addition to impairing learning, attention, impulse control, and sensorimotor function, and (2) MCS protects against these Mn-induced impairments. Pregnant Long-Evans rats were given standard diet, or a diet supplemented with additional choline throughout gestation and lactation (GD 3 - PND 21). Male offspring were exposed orally to 0 or 50 mg Mn/kg/day over PND 1–21. In adulthood, animals were tested in a series of learning, attention, impulse control, and sensorimotor tasks. Mn exposure caused lasting dysfunction in attention, reactivity to errors and reward omission, learning, and sensorimotor function, recapitulating the constellation of symptoms seen in ADHD children. MCS lessened Mn-induced attentional dysfunction and partially normalized reactivity to committing an error or not receiving an expected reward but provided no protection against Mn-induced learning or sensorimotor dysfunction. In the absence of Mn exposure, MCS produces lasting offspring benefits in learning, attention, and reactivity to errors. To conclude, developmental Mn exposure produces a constellation of deficits consistent with ADHD symptomology, and MCS offered some protection against the adverse Mn effects, adding to the evidence that maternal choline supplementation is neuroprotective for offspring and improves offspring cognitive functioning.

在啮齿动物多动症模型中,补充母体胆碱可减轻发育期锰暴露造成的行为功能障碍。
对儿童的研究报告显示,锰(Mn)暴露量升高与注意力不集中、冲动/多动和精神运动障碍等多动症相关症状之间存在关联。孕期/哺乳期母体胆碱补充剂(MCS)可能是一种有希望的保护性策略,因为它已被证明可减轻许多早期损伤造成的认知功能障碍。我们的目的是确定:(1)发育期锰暴露是否会改变行为反应性/情绪调节,以及是否会损害学习、注意力、冲动控制和感觉运动功能;(2)MCS 是否能防止这些锰引起的损害。在整个妊娠期和哺乳期(GD 3 - PND 21),给怀孕的 Long-Evans 大鼠食用标准食物或补充额外胆碱的食物。雄性后代在 PND 1-21 期间口服 0 或 50 毫克锰/千克/天。成年后,对动物进行了一系列学习、注意力、冲动控制和感觉运动任务测试。锰暴露会导致注意力、对错误的反应性和奖励遗漏、学习和感觉运动功能的持久障碍,再现了多动症儿童的症状群。MCS减轻了锰诱导的注意力功能障碍,并使犯错或未获得预期奖励的反应性部分恢复正常,但对锰诱导的学习或感觉运动功能障碍没有保护作用。在不接触锰的情况下,MCS 可使后代在学习、注意力和对错误的反应方面产生持久的益处。总之,发育期锰暴露会产生与多动症症状一致的一系列缺陷,而母体补充胆碱能在一定程度上防止锰的不良影响,这进一步证明了母体补充胆碱对后代具有神经保护作用,并能改善后代的认知功能。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.60
自引率
10.30%
发文量
48
审稿时长
58 days
期刊介绍: Neurotoxicology and Teratology provides a forum for publishing new information regarding the effects of chemical and physical agents on the developing, adult or aging nervous system. In this context, the fields of neurotoxicology and teratology include studies of agent-induced alterations of nervous system function, with a focus on behavioral outcomes and their underlying physiological and neurochemical mechanisms. The Journal publishes original, peer-reviewed Research Reports of experimental, clinical, and epidemiological studies that address the neurotoxicity and/or functional teratology of pesticides, solvents, heavy metals, nanomaterials, organometals, industrial compounds, mixtures, drugs of abuse, pharmaceuticals, animal and plant toxins, atmospheric reaction products, and physical agents such as radiation and noise. These reports include traditional mammalian neurotoxicology experiments, human studies, studies using non-mammalian animal models, and mechanistic studies in vivo or in vitro. Special Issues, Reviews, Commentaries, Meeting Reports, and Symposium Papers provide timely updates on areas that have reached a critical point of synthesis, on aspects of a scientific field undergoing rapid change, or on areas that present special methodological or interpretive problems. Theoretical Articles address concepts and potential mechanisms underlying actions of agents of interest in the nervous system. The Journal also publishes Brief Communications that concisely describe a new method, technique, apparatus, or experimental result.
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