Oral Exposure to Lead Acetate for 28 Days Reduces the Number of Neural Progenitor Cells but Increases the Number and Synaptic Plasticity of Newborn Granule Cells in Adult Hippocampal Neurogenesis of Young-Adult Rats.
Natsuno MaedaSaori ShimizuYasunori TakahashiReiji KubotaSuzuka UomotoKeisuke TakesueKazumi TakashimaHiromu OkanoRyota OjiroShunsuke OzawaQian TangMeilan JinYoshiaki IkarashiToshinori YoshidaMakoto ShibutaniPublished in: Neurotoxicity research (2022)
Lead (Pb) causes developmental neurotoxicity. Developmental exposure to Pb acetate (PbAc) induces aberrant hippocampal neurogenesis by increasing or decreasing neural progenitor cell (NPC) subpopulations in the dentate gyrus (DG) of rats. To investigate whether hippocampal neurogenesis is similarly affected by PbAc exposure in a general toxicity study, 5-week-old Sprague-Dawley rats were orally administered PbAc at 0, 4000, and 8000 ppm (w/v) in drinking water for 28 days. After exposure to 4000 or 8000 ppm PbAc, Pb had accumulated in the brains. Neurogenesis was suppressed by 8000 ppm PbAc, which was related to decreased number of type-2b NPCs, although number of mature granule cells were increased by both PbAc doses. Gene expression in the 8000 ppm PbAc group suggested suppressed NPC proliferation and increased apoptosis resulting in suppressed neurogenesis. PbAc exposure increased numbers of metallothionein-I/II + cells and GFAP + astrocytes in the DG hilus, and upregulated Mt1, antioxidant genes (Hmox1 and Gsta5), and Il6 in the DG, suggesting the induction of oxidative stress and neuroinflammation related to Pb accumulation resulting in suppressed neurogenesis. PbAc at 8000 ppm also upregulated Ntrk2 and increased the number of CALB2 + interneurons, suggesting the activation of BDNF-TrkB signaling and CALB2 + interneuron-mediated signals to ameliorate suppressed neurogenesis resulting in increased number of newborn granule cells. PbAc at both doses increased the number of ARC + granule cells, suggesting the facilitation of synaptic plasticity of newborn granule cells through the activation of BDNF-TrkB signaling. These results suggest that PbAc exposure during the young-adult stage disrupted hippocampal neurogenesis, which had a different pattern from developmental exposure to PbAc. However, the induction of oxidative stress/neuroinflammation and activation of identical cellular signals occurred irrespective of the life stage at PbAc exposure.
Keyphrases
- induced apoptosis
- oxidative stress
- cell cycle arrest
- cerebral ischemia
- gene expression
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- drinking water
- young adults
- cell death
- neural stem cells
- randomized controlled trial
- clinical trial
- brain injury
- transcription factor
- lipopolysaccharide induced
- dna damage
- inflammatory response
- blood brain barrier
- diabetic rats
- childhood cancer