发育中的拟除虫菊酯暴露会破坏小鼠大脑中MAP激酶的分子通路和昼夜节律。

IF 2.5 4区 生物学 Q3 CELL BIOLOGY
Physiological genomics Pub Date : 2025-04-01 Epub Date: 2025-02-17 DOI:10.1152/physiolgenomics.00033.2024
Jennifer H Nguyen, Melissa A Curtis, Ali S Imami, William G Ryan, Khaled Alganem, Kari L Neifer, Nilanjana Saferin, Charlotte N Nawor, Brian P Kistler, Gary W Miller, Rammohan Shukla, Robert E McCullumsmith, James P Burkett
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引用次数: 0

摘要

神经发育障碍(ndd)是一类普遍存在的发育中的神经系统疾病,很少或没有公认的生物标志物。NDD的很大一部分风险,包括注意缺陷多动障碍(ADHD),是由环境造成的,怀孕期间接触拟除虫菊酯农药已被确定为未出生婴儿NDD的潜在风险因素。我们最近发现,小鼠在发育过程中低剂量暴露于拟除虫菊酯杀虫剂溴氰菊酯会导致ADHD和ndd相关行为以及纹状体多巴胺系统的雄性偏向性变化。在这里,我们使用综合多组学方法来确定由发育性拟除虫菊酯暴露(DPE)引起的小鼠大脑中最广泛的生物学变化。采用基于凋落物的分裂样本设计,我们在怀孕和哺乳期间将小鼠暴露于溴氰菊酯(3mg /kg或每3天1次),其浓度远低于epa确定的用于监管指导的基准剂量。我们将雄性后代抚养到成年,对它们实施安乐死,并对全脑样本进行粉碎和分离,以进行分裂样本转录组学、基因组学和多组学整合。转录组分析揭示了多个标准时钟基因的改变,而激酶组分析揭示了参与突触可塑性的多个激酶活性的变化,包括丝裂原活化蛋白(MAP)激酶ERK。多组学整合揭示了一个失调的蛋白质相互作用网络,其中包含MAP激酶级联、细胞凋亡调节和突触功能的初级簇。这些结果表明,DPE在大脑中引起与ADHD相关的多模态生物表型,并确定了新的潜在作用机制。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Developmental pyrethroid exposure disrupts molecular pathways for MAP kinase and circadian rhythms in mouse brain.

Neurodevelopmental disorders (NDDs) are a category of pervasive disorders of the developing nervous system with few or no recognized biomarkers. A significant portion of the risk for NDDs, including attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), is contributed by the environment, and exposure to pyrethroid pesticides during pregnancy has been identified as a potential risk factor for NDD in the unborn child. We recently showed that low-dose developmental exposure to the pyrethroid pesticide deltamethrin in mice causes male-biased changes to ADHD- and NDD-relevant behaviors as well as the striatal dopamine system. Here, we used an integrated multiomics approach to determine the broadest possible set of biological changes in the mouse brain caused by developmental pyrethroid exposure (DPE). Using a litter-based, split-sample design, we exposed mouse dams during pregnancy and lactation to deltamethrin (3 mg/kg or vehicle every 3 days) at a concentration well below the EPA-determined benchmark dose used for regulatory guidance. We raised male offspring to adulthood, euthanized them, and pulverized and divided whole brain samples for split-sample transcriptomics, kinomics, and multiomics integration. Transcriptome analysis revealed alterations to multiple canonical clock genes, and kinome analysis revealed changes in the activity of multiple kinases involved in synaptic plasticity, including the mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase ERK. Multiomics integration revealed a dysregulated protein-protein interaction network containing primary clusters for MAP kinase cascades, regulation of apoptosis, and synaptic function. These results demonstrate that DPE causes a multimodal biophenotype in the brain relevant to ADHD and identifies new potential mechanisms of action.NEW & NOTEWORTHY Here, we provide the first evidence that low-dose developmental exposure to a pyrethroid pesticide, deltamethrin, results in molecular disruptions in the adult mouse brain in pathways regulating circadian rhythms and neuronal growth (MAP kinase). This same exposure causes a neurodevelopmental disorder (NDD)-relevant behavioral change in adult mice, making these findings relevant to the prevention of NDDs.

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来源期刊
Physiological genomics
Physiological genomics 生物-生理学
CiteScore
6.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
46
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: The Physiological Genomics publishes original papers, reviews and rapid reports in a wide area of research focused on uncovering the links between genes and physiology at all levels of biological organization. Articles on topics ranging from single genes to the whole genome and their links to the physiology of humans, any model organism, organ, tissue or cell are welcome. Areas of interest include complex polygenic traits preferably of importance to human health and gene-function relationships of disease processes. Specifically, the Journal has dedicated Sections focused on genome-wide association studies (GWAS) to function, cardiovascular, renal, metabolic and neurological systems, exercise physiology, pharmacogenomics, clinical, translational and genomics for precision medicine, comparative and statistical genomics and databases. For further details on research themes covered within these Sections, please refer to the descriptions given under each Section.
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