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Acid Sensitive Channel Inhibition Prevents Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders Cerebellar Purkinje Cell Loss. American journal of physiology. Regulatory, integrative and comparative physiology [Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol] Journal article

 
TitleAcid Sensitive Channel Inhibition Prevents Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders Cerebellar Purkinje Cell Loss.
Author(s)Ramadoss J, Lunde ER, Ouyang N, Chen WJ, Cudd TA 
InstitutionTexas A&M University.
SourceAm J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol 2008 May 28.
AbstractEthanol is now considered the most common human teratogen. Educational campaigns have not reduced the incidence of ethanol mediated teratogenesis leading to a growing interest in the development of therapeutic prevention or mitigation strategies. Based on the observation that maternal ethanol consumption reduces maternal and fetal pH, we hypothesized that a pH-sensitive pathway involving the TWIK-related acid sensitive potassium channels (TASKs) is implicated in ethanol-induced injury to the fetal cerebellum, one of the most sensitive targets of prenatal ethanol exposure. Pregnant ewes were intravenously infused with ethanol (258 +/- 10 mg/dl peak blood ethanol concentration) or saline in a "weekend binge" pattern throughout the third trimester. Quantitative stereological analysis demonstrated that ethanol resulted in a 45% reduction in the total number of fetal cerebellar Purkinje cells, the cell type most sensitive to developmental ethanol exposure. Extracellular pH manipulation to create the same degree and pattern of pH fall caused by ethanol (manipulations large enough to inhibit TASK 1 channels), resulted in a 24% decrease in Purkinje cell number. We determined immunohistochemically that TASK 1 channels are expressed in Purkinje cells and that the TASK 3 isoform is expressed in granule cells of the ovine fetal cerebellum. Pharmacological blockade of both TASK 1 and TASK 3 channels simultaneous with ethanol effectively prevented any reduction in fetal cerebellar Purkinje cell number. These results demonstrate for the first time functional significance of fetal cerebellar two pore domain pH-sensitive channels and establishes them as a potential therapeutic target for prevention of ethanol teratogenesis. Key words: ethanol, FAS, FASD, sheep.
LanguageENG
Pub Type(s)JOURNAL ARTICLE
PubMed ID18509098
  
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