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Stickleback embryos use ATP-binding cassette transporters as a buffer against exposure to maternally derived cortisol.

Ryan T PaitzSyed Abbas BukhariAlison M Bell
Published in: Proceedings. Biological sciences (2016)
Offspring from females that experience stressful conditions during reproduction often exhibit altered phenotypes and many of these effects are thought to arise owing to increased exposure to maternal glucocorticoids. While embryos of placental vertebrates are known to regulate exposure to maternal glucocorticoids via placental steroid metabolism, much less is known about how and whether egg-laying vertebrates can control their steroid environment during embryonic development. We tested the hypothesis that threespine stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus) embryos can regulate exposure to maternal steroids via active efflux of maternal steroids from the egg. Embryos rapidly (within 72 h) cleared intact steroids, but blocking ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters inhibited cortisol clearance. Remarkably, this efflux of cortisol was sufficient to prevent a transcriptional response of embryos to exogenous cortisol. Taken together, these findings suggest that, much like their placental counterparts, developing fish embryos can actively regulate their exposure to maternal cortisol. These findings highlight the fact that even in egg-laying vertebrates, the realized exposure to maternal steroids is mediated by both maternal and embryonic processes and this has important implications for understanding how maternal stress influences offspring development.
Keyphrases
  • birth weight
  • pregnancy outcomes
  • high fat diet
  • gene expression
  • oxidative stress
  • gestational age
  • metabolic syndrome
  • physical activity
  • pregnant women
  • heat stress
  • insulin resistance
  • weight loss
  • heat shock protein