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Airborne fine particulate matter induces cognitive and emotional disorders in offspring mice exposed during pregnancy.

Authors :
Zhao, Chao
Xie, Peisi
Yong, Ting
Huang, Wei
Liu, Jianjun
Wu, Desheng
Ji, Fenfen
Li, Min
Zhang, Doudou
Li, Ruijin
Dong, Chuan
Ma, Juan
Dong, Zheng
Liu, Sijin
Cai, Zongwei
Source :
Science Bulletin. Mar2021, Vol. 66 Issue 6, p578-591. 14p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

[Display omitted] Gestational exposure to PM 2.5 is associated with adverse postnatal outcomes. PM 2.5 can enter alveoli by using intratracheal instillation, even penetrate through lung cells into the blood circulation. Subsequently, they are transferred across the placenta and fetal blood brain barrier, causing the adverse birth outcomes of offspring. This study demonstrated that the gestational exposure resulted in cognitive and emotional disorders in female offspring although the offspring were not exposed to PM 2.5. Placental metabolic pathways modulated fetal brain development and played a pivotal role for maternal-placental-fetal interactions in the fetal programming of adult behavioral and mental disorders. Samples of fetus, offspring hippocampus and placenta from the mice exposed to PM 2.5 were investigated using a comprehensive approach including mass spectrometry-based lipidomics and three-dimensional imaging. The exposure induced the neuro-degeneration in hippocampus, impairment of placental cytoarchitecture, and reprogramming of lipidome, which might affect the modulation of maternal-fetal cross-talk and result in the behavior disorders of offspring. The variation of spatial distribution of lipids was profoundly affected in dorsal pallium and hippocampal formation regions of fetal brain, offspring hippocampus, as well as labyrinth and junctional zones of placenta. The abundance alteration of lipid markers associated with neurodegenerative diseases was validated in transgenic mouse model with Alzheimer's disease and human cerebrospinal fluid from patients with Parkinson's disease. The finding could help with the selection of more suitable heterogeneous-related substructures targeting PM 2.5 exposure and the exploration of PM 2.5 -induced toxicological effects on neurodegenerative diseases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20959273
Volume :
66
Issue :
6
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Science Bulletin
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
149293208
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scib.2020.08.036