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Wiley InterScience

Journal of Neurochemistry

Journal of Neurochemistry

Volume 104 Issue 1, Pages 38 - 49

Published Online: 26 Sep 2007

Journal compilation © 2010 International Society for Neurochemistry



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Reversal of heroin neurobehavioral teratogenicity by grafting of neural progenitors
Sophia Katz*, Tamir Ben-hur, Tamar L. Ben-Shaanan* and Joseph Yanai*,
  *The Ross Laboratory for Studies in Neural Birth Defects, Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, The Hebrew University-Hadassah Medical School, Jerusalem, Israel
  Department of Neurology, The Agnes Ginges Center for Human Neurogenetics, Hadassah-Hebrew University Hospital, Jerusalem, Israel
  Department of Pharmacology and Cancer Biology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina, USA
Address correspondence and reprint requests to Prof. Joseph Yanai, Department of Pharmacology and Cancer Biology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC 27710, USA. E-mail: yanai@md.huji.ac.il
Copyright 2007 The Authors Journal Compilation 2007 International Society for Neurochemistry
KEYWORDS
heroin • Morris water maze • neural progenitors grafting • pre-natal exposure • protein kinase C isoforms • septohippocampal cholinergic innervation

ABSTRACT

A major objective in identifying the mechanisms underlying neurobehavioral teratogenicity in an animal model is the possibility of designing therapies that reverse or offset teratogen-induced neural damage. In our previous studies, we identified deficits in hippocampal muscarinic cholinergic receptor-induced translocation of protein kinase C (PKC) γ as the likely central factor responsible for the adverse behavioral effects of pre-natal heroin exposure. Neural progenitors (NP) have the ability to recover behavioral deficits after focal hippocampal damage. Therefore, we explored whether behavioral and synaptic defects could be reversed in adulthood by neural progenitor grafting. Pregnant mice were injected daily with 10 mg/kg of heroin on gestational days 9–18. In adulthood, offspring showed deficits in the Morris maze, a behavior dependent on the integrity of septohippocampal cholinergic synaptic function, along with the loss of the PKCγ and PKCβII responses to cholinergic stimulation. Mice that were exposed pre-natally to heroin and vehicle control mice were then grafted in adulthood with NP. Importantly, most grafted cells differentiated to astrocytes. NP reversed the behavioral deficits (= 0.0043) and restored the normal response of hippocampal PKCγ and PKCβII (= 0.0337 and = 0.0265 respectively) to cholinergic receptor stimulation. The effects were specific as the PKCα isoform, which is unrelated to the behavioral deficits, showed almost no changes. Neural progenitor grafting thus offers an animal model for reversing neurobehavioral deficits originating in septohippocampal cholinergic defects elicited by pre-natal exposure to insults.


Received April 11, 2006; revised manuscript received August 31, 2006; accepted October 3, 2006.

DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1471-4159.2007.05004.x About DOI

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