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Maternal oral intake mouse model for fetal alcohol spectrum disorders: ocular defects as a measure of effect.
- Source :
-
Alcoholism, clinical and experimental research [Alcohol Clin Exp Res] 2006 Oct; Vol. 30 (10), pp. 1791-8. - Publication Year :
- 2006
-
Abstract
- Background: This work was conducted in an effort to establish an oral intake model system in which the effects of ethanol insult that occur during early stages of embryogenesis can be easily examined and in which agents that may modulate ethanol's teratogenicity can be readily tested in vivo. The model system described utilizes the alcohol deprivation effect to obtain teratogenic levels of maternal ethanol intake on days 7 and 8 of pregnancy in C57Bl/6J mice. Ocular defects including microphthalmia and uveal coloboma, which have previously been shown to result from ethanol administered by gavage or via intraperitoneal injection on these days, served as the developmental end point for this study. The ocular defects are readily identifiable and their degree of severity is expected to correlate with concurrently developing defects of the central nervous system (CNS).<br />Methods: Female C57Bl/6J mice were maintained on an ethanol-containing (4.8% v/v) liquid diet for 14 days and then mated during a subsequent abstinence period. Mice were then reexposed to ethanol on days 7 and 8 of pregnancy only. Control as well as ethanol-exposed dams were killed on their 14th day of pregnancy. Fetuses were then weighed, measured for crown rump length, photographed, and analyzed for ocular abnormalities. Globe size, palpebral fissure length, and pupil size and shape were noted for both the right and left eyes of all fetuses and informative comparisons were made.<br />Results: This exposure paradigm resulted in peak maternal blood alcohol concentrations that ranged from 170 to 220 mg/dL on gestational day (GD) 8. Compared with the GD 14 fetuses from the normal control group, the pair-fed, acquisition controls, as well as the ethanol-exposed fetuses, were developmentally delayed and had reduced weights. Confirming previous studies, comparison of similarly staged control and treated GD 8 embryos illustrated reductions in the size of the forebrain in the latter. Subsequent ocular malformations were noted in 33% of the right eyes and 25% of the left eyes of the 103 GD 14 ethanol-exposed fetuses examined. This incidence of defects is twice that observed in the control groups. Additionally, it was found that the palpebral fissure length is directly correlated with globe size.<br />Conclusions: The high incidence of readily identifiable ocular malformations produced by oral ethanol intake in this model and their relevance to human fetal alcohol spectrum disorders (FASD) makes this an excellent system for utilization in experiments involving factors administered to the embryo that might alter ethanol's teratogenic effects. Additionally, the fact that early ethanol insult yields ocular and forebrain abnormalities that are developmentally associated allows efficient specimen selection for subsequent detailed analyses of CNS effects in this in vivo mammalian FASD model.
- Subjects :
- Abnormalities, Drug-Induced
Animals
Central Nervous System abnormalities
Central Nervous System Depressants blood
Disease Models, Animal
Embryonic Development drug effects
Ethanol blood
Eye drug effects
Eye embryology
Eye Abnormalities physiopathology
Female
Fetal Development drug effects
Gastrula drug effects
Incidence
Mice
Mice, Inbred C57BL
Pregnancy
Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects pathology
Central Nervous System Depressants adverse effects
Ethanol adverse effects
Eye Abnormalities chemically induced
Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders physiopathology
Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects etiology
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 0145-6008
- Volume :
- 30
- Issue :
- 10
- Database :
- MEDLINE
- Journal :
- Alcoholism, clinical and experimental research
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 17010146
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1530-0277.2006.00212.x