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DEVELOPMENTAL PHYSIOLOGY AND PREGNANCY
1Department of Veterinary Physiology and Pharmacology and Michael E. DeBakey Institute, College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences and 2Department of Neuroscience and Experimental Therapeutics, Texas A&M Health Science Center, College Station, Texas
Submitted 28 March 2008 ; accepted in final form 22 May 2008
| ABSTRACT |
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ethanol; sheep; granule cells; teratogenesis
Efforts to successfully prevent or ameliorate the teratogenic effects of ethanol have been impeded, at least in part, by a limited understanding of the mechanisms by which ethanol damages the developing brain (9). A series of reports from our laboratory have established in an ovine model system that maternal ethanol consumption results in a decrease in maternal and fetal arterial pH (11, 33, 39). Acidemia was hypothesized to be a mechanism underlying the teratogenic effects of ethanol (16), even before fetal alcohol syndrome was described by Jones et al. (17). Clinically, in humans, ethanol consumption causes a reduction in blood pH that is directly proportionate to the blood ethanol concentration (20, 21, 44, 57). Therefore, we hypothesized that a pH-sensitive pathway is involved in ethanol teratogenesis and that interference with this pathway may prevent fetal cerebellar neuronal loss, a brain structure that is extremely sensitive to ethanol (33, 38, 53). Abnormal cerebellar development is reported to be the most sensitive morphological indicator of prenatal ethanol exposure in humans (1), and the developing cerebellum and the differentiating cerebellar Purkinje neurons have been established as the most vulnerable brain region and cell type, respectively, in animal model systems (24, 25).
To test the hypothesis that pH is mechanistically important in mediating the fetal cerebellar damage in response to prenatal ethanol exposure, we included in this study an ethanol exposure group, a group in which the ethanol-mediated pattern of pH alteration was created independent of ethanol exposure and a group where ethanol-induced alterations in pH were prevented by the controlled infusion of a nonselective blocker of the newly identified TWIK-related acid-sensitive potassium channels (TASK 1 and TASK 3). The TASK 1 isoform is an exquisitely pH-sensitive channel with a pK of 7.3–7.4 (13, 15) and is responsible for chemoreceptor responses to extracellular pH (28). These channels are expressed in chemoreceptors, as well as throughout the central nervous system, in both respiratory and nonrespiratory areas, and they exhibit a standing outwardly rectifying potassium current that is inhibited principally by decreases in extracellular pH (13, 30). The TASK 3 isoform has a pK of 6.0–6.7 and, in humans, is only expressed in the cerebellum (28, 42). Finally, although TASK channels are principally inhibited by pH, their activity is reported to be modulated by decreases in oxygen levels, and because ethanol induces both a fall in pH as well as a mild transient decrease in the maternal arterial partial pressure of oxygen (PaO2), we also tested the role of oxygen on the differentiating fetal cerebellar Purkinje cells (11).
These experiments were performed in a sheep model system, where the brain growth spurt occurs in utero as in humans (12, 41), using a 3 days/wk binge drinking pattern (a common drinking pattern among women who drink during pregnancy) (6, 14, 25) throughout the third trimester equivalent of human brain development.
| METHODS |
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Treatment groups. Eight treatment groups were used in this study: 1) an untreated normal control group, 2) a saline control group (received 0.9% saline at a rate and volume equivalent to that of the ethanol group on a per-kilogram basis) that served as a control for nutrition, instrumentation and the volume of infusion delivered, 3) an ethanol group that received ethanol at a dosage of 1.75 g/kg body wt, as a 40% wt/vol solution diluted in 0.9% saline, 4) an "ethanol-normal PaO2" group, where a transient decrease in the maternal arterial partial pressure of oxygen (PaO2) produced at the end of each ethanol infusion was abolished by providing increased inspired fractional concentration of oxygen, 5) a "low pHa-normal PaO2" group, where the arterial pH (pHa) pattern produced by ethanol was mimicked for the whole of the third-trimester equivalent, independent of ethanol (received saline), 6) a "low pHa-low PaO2" group, where the maternal fall in pHa and the transient decrease in maternal PaO2 were both mimicked, 7) an ethanol-TASK inhibitor (ethanol-TI) group, in which TASK channels were inhibited pharmacologically, and 8) a saline-TASK inhibitor (saline-TI) group that served as a control for the ethanol-TI group. A total of 56 pregnant ewes were enrolled in this study. The final number of fetal brains used for quantitative analysis was 40. Losses occurred due to loss of pregnancy, catheter failure, the elimination of subjects for minor ailments (inappetance, fever, or hoof ailments), or mechanical damage to the fetal brain during processing. In ewes with twin pregnancies, the fetus with the larger body weight was selected for neuronal counting. A group of pregnant ewes and fetuses, in addition to the eight treatment groups, were chronically instrumented on GD 113 to obtain fetal blood gas responses to acute administration of maternal treatments (saline, ethanol, low pHa-normal PaO2, or low pHa-low PaO2).
Maternal and fetal surgery. A week before the start of the experiment, on GD 102, the ewes underwent surgery (except the normal control and fetal instrumented groups) to chronically implant maternal femoral arterial and venous catheters (0.050-in. inner diameter, 0.090-in. outer diameter polyvinyl chloride). Details of the surgery protocol have been described earlier (11).
In the fetal instrumented group, surgery was performed on GD 113 to implant chronic indwelling catheters, as previously described (11). In brief, a ventral midline laparotomy was performed and the uterus and fetal membranes were incised. A catheter (0.030-in. inner diameter, 0.050-in. outer diameter polyvinyl chloride) was passed from the cranial tibial artery into the abdominal aorta. Catheters were passed through the flank of the ewe and were stored in a pouch attached to the skin.
Experiment protocol. The treatment conditions were created on three consecutive days beginning on GD 109 followed by 4 days without treatment with the weekly pattern being repeated until GD 132. In all treatment groups, the infusion solutions were delivered intravenously over an hour by peristaltic pump (Masterflex, model 7014-20, Cole Parmer, Niles IL) through a 0.2-µm bacteriostatic filter. Pumps were calibrated before each infusion.
On the day of an experiment, ewes in all treatment groups were placed in a modified metabolism cart, so that the animal's head was inside a Plexiglas chamber. A vinyl diaphragm attached to the open side of the chamber was drawn around the animal's neck to isolate the atmosphere in the chamber from ambient air. In the low pHa-normal PaO2 and low pHa-low PaO2 groups, subjects were exposed to increased inspired fractional concentrations of carbon dioxide for 6 h, to create a matching magnitude and pattern of reduction in the pHa compared with that produced by ethanol in previous studies (11) and in the present study (Fig. 1). The rate at which CO2 was introduced into the chamber in the low pHa groups was determined by monitoring maternal arterial pHa (ABL 5, Radiometer, Cleveland, OH); the CO2 inflow rate was adjusted so that maternal pHa in the low pHa and ethanol groups were matched over the duration of the 6-h experimental period on all 12 experimental days. The percentage of oxygen and carbon dioxide in the chamber was measured using a gas monitor (oxygen, model S-3A; carbon-dioxide, model CD-3A, Applied Technologies, Pittsburgh, PA). Normoxemic conditions were maintained throughout the experiment in the low pHa-normal PaO2 group. In the low pHa-low PaO2 group, in addition to replicating the low pHa, the mild transient reduction in the maternal PaO2 (
4 mmHg) observed at the 1st h in response to ethanol (the end of ethanol infusion) (11) was mimicked by increasing the inspired fractional concentration of nitrogen (FiN2). This increased FiN2 would not result in hypocapnea, as the inspired CO2 concentration was experimentally controlled. For instance, the PaCO2 values in the low pHa-normal PaO2 and the low pHa-low PaO2 groups were 34 ± 0 mmHg and 34 ± 1 mmHg at 0 h and 41 ± 0 mmHg and 42 ± 1 mmHg at 0.5 h, respectively. In the ethanol-normal PaO2 group, the transient reduction in maternal PaO2 was abolished by increased inspired fractional concentration of oxygen. Subjects in the ethanol and the saline control groups had their heads inside the Plexiglas chamber, but the chamber bottom was removed to allow breathing of room air. In the ethanol-TI and saline-TI groups, a TASK 1/3 channel blocker (doxapram hydrochloride, Dopram-V, Fort Dodge, IA) (56) was administered; the rate of administration was adjusted to 0.5 mg/min, 1 mg/min, 2 mg/min, 2.67 mg/min, 4 mg/min, 4.67 mg/min, 3.33 mg/min, 2.67 mg/min, 1 mg/min, and 0.5 mg/min at 0, 5, 10, 15, 30, 45, 75, 90, 120, and 135 min, respectively. The rates of TI administration were further fine-tuned in the ethanol-TI group to prevent any ethanol-induced decreases in pHa based on the immediate feedback data obtained from blood gas analyzer measurements.
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Blood ethanol concentration was measured at 0 and 1 h. A 20-µl aliquot of blood was collected into microcapillary tubes and transferred into vials that contained 0.6 N perchloric acid and 4 mM N-propyl ethanol (internal standard) in distilled water. The vials were tightly capped with a septum-sealed lid and were stored at room temperature until analysis by headspace gas chromatography (Varian Associates, model 3900; Palo Alto, CA) at least 24 h after collection. The basic gas chromatographic parameters were similar to those reported by Penton (35), with the exception of the column (DB-wax, Megabore; J&W Scientific, Folsum, CA) and the carrier gas (helium) used (53).
Fetal cerebellar tissue processing. On GD 133, the ewes were euthanized using pentobarbital sodium (75 mg/kg iv), and the fetuses were removed from the uterus and perfused with saline followed by cold fixative solution containing 1.25% paraformaldehyde and 3% glutaraldehyde in phosphate buffer (pH 7.4). The brains were removed and stored in additional fixative until processed for stereological cell counting.
The cerebellum was dissected, embedded in 4% agar, and cut sagittally into five slabs. The slabs were dehydrated through increasing concentrations of ethanol (70, 95, 100%) and then infiltrated with increasing concentrations of infiltration solution (25, 50, 75, 100% methyl methacrylate; Technovit 7100 Embedding kit; Leica, Wetzlar, Germany). The tissue in each slab was embedded in a solution containing 1 ml DMSO (hardener) per 15 ml of 100% infiltration solution and allowed to harden. After hardening, the tissue was sectioned into 30-µm sagittal sections by microtome (model RM2255; Leica, Nussloch, Germany). Every twentieth section was saved, mounted on a glass slide, stained with cresyl violet, and coverslipped.
Stereological cell counting.
The total number of fetal cerebellar Purkinje cells was estimated using unbiased stereological cell-counting techniques, as described previously (39). In brief, the microscope (Nikon Optiphot; Garden City, NY) used in this study had a x40 objective lens with a 1.4 numerical aperture condenser. The microscope had a motor-driven stage to move within the x and y axes and an attached microcator to measure the z axis. The image was transferred to a personal computer (Millennium, Micron; Boise, ID) via a color video camera (model 2040; Jai, Copenhagen, Denmark). The reference volume (Vref) was estimated using the Cavalieri's Principle and was calculated by the equation Vref =
pi x A(pi) x t where
pi is the total number of points (pi) counted, A(pi) is the known area associated with each point, and t is the known distance between two serial sections counted. The GRID software (Medicosoft, Copenhagen, Denmark) provided templates of points in various arrays that were used in point counting for reference volume estimation. The Purkinje cell density was determined by following the optical disector method, which was calculated using the formula, Nv =
Q/[
disector x A(fr) x h], where
Q is the sum of the Purkinje cells counted from each disector frame,
disector is the sum of the number of disector frames counted, A(fr) is the known area associated with each disector frame, and h is the known distance between two disector planes. The placement of the disector frames was determined by the GRID software in a random manner. The estimated total number of Purkinje cells in the cerebellum was then calculated by multiplying the reference volume of the cerebellum and the numerical density of cells within this reference volume, as described before (53).
Immunohistochemistry. On GD 133, the ewes were euthanized using pentobarbital sodium (75 mg/kg iv), and the fetuses were removed from the uterus and perfused with saline followed by cold fixative solution containing 4% formalin (pH 7.4). The brains were removed and stored in additional fixative until processed for immunohistochemistry.
The fetal cerebellum was dissected, paraffin embedded, and cut by microtome (model RM2255; Leica, Nussloch, Germany) into 4-µm sagittal sections. Sections were deparaffinized and rehydrated, and antigen retrieval was achieved by microwave heating for 15 min on low power in 0.01 M citrate buffer (pH 6.0), as described previously (54). Endogenous peroxidase activity was blocked by applying 3% hydrogen peroxide. After 30 min of blocking with goat serum, rabbit anti-TASK 1, rabbit anti-TASK 3 antibodies (Sigma, St. Louis, MO) at dilution of 1:50, or the control isotype IgG was applied and incubated overnight at 4°C. Slides were washed 3 times with PBS for 5 min. The biotinylated secondary antibody and the streptavidin-biotin complex conjugated with HRP (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA) were applied, each for 30 min at room temperature with interval washings. After rinsing with PBS, the slides were immersed for 10 min in 3,3'-diaminobenzidine (Sigma) at 0.4 mg/ml, rinsed with distilled water, counterstained with hematoxylin, and dehydrated; a cover-slip was then applied. The results were visualized on an Olympus (AH-3; Olympus, Tokyo, Japan) microscope equipped with a Spot Insight Color digital camera (Diagnostic Instruments, Sterling Heights, MI), and images were obtained using Spot Digital Camera Systems software.
Data analysis. The stereology data, including the estimated total number of cells, cell density, and tissue volume for all eight treatment groups, were analyzed using a one-way ANOVA with "treatment" as the sole independent variable. When treatment significance was established by the initial analysis, pairwise comparisons were performed using Fisher's protected least significant difference test. Statistical significance was established a priori at P < 0.05.
| RESULTS |
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24%) in the number of fetal cerebellar Purkinje cells compared with that in the two control groups (Figs. 2, 4C). However, the estimated number of Purkinje cells in the low pHa-normal PaO2 group was significantly higher compared with the ethanol-infused subjects.
The effect of transient maternal decreases in oxygen on the fetal cerebellar Purkinje cell number.
In addition to the significant fall in pHa, a mild transient decrease in the maternal PaO2 (
4 mmHg) was observed at the end of each ethanol infusion. Because TASK channels respond to decreases in oxygen levels in addition to changes in extracellular pH, we tested the role played by these decreases in maternal PaO2 by supplementing the ethanol-infused ewes with increased inspired fractional concentration of oxygen (ethanol-normal PaO2 group) to abolish any decreases in maternal PaO2. However, supplementation with oxygen did not have an exclusive effect on the fetal cerebellar cell number (Fig. 2). Further, the density of Purkinje cells was not different between the ethanol-treated ewes and those with oxygen supplementation (Fig. 3). We also tested the role played by oxygen by introducing another group of ewes (low pHa-low PaO2 group), in which we mimicked the mild transient decrease in the maternal PaO2, as well as the pattern of pHa produced by ethanol. However, replicating both the pHa and the PaO2 pattern created by ethanol produced no further cell loss compared with mimicking the pattern of pHa alone (Fig. 2). Further, in a separate study, we chronically instrumented fetuses on GD 113 and measured fetal blood gas responses to ethanol, low maternal pHa, and low maternal PaO2 and found that there were no statistically significant differences in fetal PaO2 among time points or among treatment groups, nor was there an interaction between the two factors, as reported previously (11). However, decreases in maternal pHa were always accompanied by decreases in fetal pHa as reported in an earlier study (11).
The effect of TASK channel inhibition on the fetal cerebellar Purkinje cell number. The nonspecific TASK 1/3 channel inhibitor (TI) doxapram hydrochloride (56) was infused into a group of ewes receiving ethanol. The infusion rate was controlled to eliminate the ethanol-mediated alteration in maternal pHa (by acting on TASK 1 channels expressed on chemoreceptors to increase maternal ventilation) over a period of 6 h (Fig. 1). TI effectively prevented the ethanol-induced cell losses in the fetal cerebellum (Fig. 2). No differences in Purkinje cell number and density were noted between the ethanol-TI, saline-TI (a group of pregnant ewes that controlled for the TI infusion), saline control, and normal control groups (Figs. 3, 4D). An overall difference in the cerebellar volume was not observed among these treatment groups. The volumes (x103 mm3) were 1.98 ± 0.11, 2.34 ± 0.07, 2.30 ± 0.24, 2.44 ± 0.24, 2.25 ± 0.26, 2.24 ± 0.13, 1.80 ± 0.16, and 1.86 ± 0.09 in the normal control, saline control, ethanol-TI, saline-TI, low pHa-normal PaO2, low pHa-low PaO2, ethanol, and ethanol-normal PaO2 groups, respectively.
TASK channel expression in fetal sheep cerebellum. Immunohistochemistry was used to establish TASK 1 and TASK 3 channel cerebellar expression in normal untreated fetal sheep (GD 133). We found that TASK 1 channels were expressed in the Purkinje cells and were not detected in the cerebellar granule neurons (Fig. 5, A and B). In contrast, TASK 3 channels were expressed in the granule cells and were not found in the ovine fetal Purkinje cells (Fig. 5, C and D).
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| DISCUSSION |
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Role of pHa. Alteration in fetal pH was suggested as a mechanism underlying the teratogenic effects of ethanol even before fetal alcohol syndrome was described by Horiguchi et al. (16) and Jones et al. (17). In humans, ethanol consumption results in acidosis, and the change in blood pH is directly proportional to the blood ethanol concentration (20, 21, 57). In this study, we found that mimicking the pHa pattern created by ethanol throughout the third-trimester equivalent of gestation resulted in fetal cerebellar Purkinje cell loss. These changes in pHa are comparable to fetal cerebellar interstitial pH (19, 45, 48). Multiple explanations might account for the role of ethanol-induced fall in pHa in fetal brain injury. Alterations in pH like those created in this study decrease the TASK 1 channel rectifying current, resulting in Purkinje cell depolarization (13, 36, 56). In adult humans, TASK 1 channels are expressed in the central nervous system, including the cerebellum and some peripheral tissues, whereas significant expression of TASK 3 channels occurs only in the cerebellum (29, 43). In fetal sheep, we found that TASK 1 channels are expressed predominantly in the Purkinje neurons within the cerebellum. While it is possible that repeated decreases in pH and consequent TASK channel-mediated Purkinje cell depolarization during fetal brain growth spurt may be responsible for reduced Purkinje cell numbers in response to prenatal ethanol, the finding that the nonspecific TASK 1/3 channel inhibitor prevented the ethanol-induced reduction in Purkinje cell number argues against this conclusion. Therefore, mechanisms not involving TASK channel manipulations that include pH-mediated inhibition of granule cell NMDA receptors (EC50 = 7.3) (50), decreases in maternal glutamine levels (18, 27), increases in ACTH and cortisol (2, 10), decreases in growth factors (4, 5), increases in oxidative stress (55), and actions on ultrasensitive protein switches (47) could have played a role in the observed fetal brain injury.
Protection offered by nonspecific TASK channel inhibition. The most salient finding in this study is that the pharmacological inhibition of the novel tandem two-pore domain acid-sensitive potassium channels (TASK 1 and TASK 3) effectively protects the fetal cerebellum from Purkinje cell loss in response to 3 days/wk ethanol binging throughout the third-trimester equivalent of human brain development. In this study, we found that TASK 1 channels are expressed in the fetal sheep cerebellar Purkinje neurons, whereas TASK 3 channels are expressed in the granule cells. Cerebellar granule cells (neurons that synapse on the Purkinje cells) are one of the most populous cell types in the mammalian brain, and they express a standing outwardly rectifying potassium current (TASK current) that does not inactivate and is responsible for the large negative resting membrane potential in these cells (15, 30, 52). These channels control the firing threshold and the firing frequency. They are insensitive to the classical broad-spectrum potassium channel blocking drugs 4-aminopyridine and tetraethylammonium ions (30, 52). Ethanol exposure in the perinatal period is known to induce arrest of cell differentiation through inhibition of granule cell NMDA receptors (32, 51). During brain development, modest NMDA receptor activation has trophic effects and has a permissive effect on the action of other neurotrophic factors (49). Therefore, TI-induced depolarization of the cerebellar granule cell, leading to increased excitability (30) and NMDA-elicited calcium signals (31) may act to prevent ethanol-induced cerebellar Purkinje cell death. It should also be noted that a similar protection could not have been offered by a fall in pH, as the magnitude of fall would have effectively inhibited only TASK 1 channels, which were not expressed in the granule cell. On the contrary, decreases in pH are known to inhibit granule cell NMDA receptors with an EC50 of 7.3 (50). Second, TASK channels are abundantly present in the peripheral and central chemoreceptors and, upon inhibition of these channels, they prevent maternal and fetal decreases in pHa by increasing maternal ventilation (56). In summary, these findings suggest that nonspecific TASK 1/3 pharmacological blockade may prevent the cerebellar injury seen in FASDs.
Hypoxia and neuronal damage. While ethanol causes a reduction in maternal PaO2, these decreases are small, of questionable biological significance, and do not result in changes in fetal PaO2 (11, 33, 40). Further, abolishing any mild decreases in maternal PaO2 with oxygen supplementation in ethanol-treated ewes produced no effect on cerebellar Purkinje cell number. Finally, these data support previous reports that ethanol does not result in fetal histotoxic, anemic, ischemic, or hypoxic hypoxia (33). Therefore, this study provides conclusive evidence that hypoxia is not responsible for the cerebellar damage in response to moderate doses of ethanol exposure during the third-trimester equivalent of human brain development.
Perspectives and Significance
In summary, the present findings demonstrate, in a whole animal model that effectively models human brain development during the third trimester, a selective, mechanism-based intervention that prevents the fetal cerebellar Purkinje cell loss mediated by prenatal ethanol exposure. This study demonstrates that direct pharmacological blockade of TASK 1 and TASK 3 channels protects the most sensitive target of fetal alcohol exposure, cerebellar Purkinje cells. In addition to these beneficial effects, it is suggested that pH and TASK channels may actually form the basis for a number of other therapeutic interventions that are currently being investigated to prevent and/or mitigate the effects of maternal drinking on the offspring. For example, investigators have proposed choline supplementation during pregnancy as a way to prevent or mitigate prenatal ethanol exposure injury (8, 49), but the mechanism is unknown. One possibility is that choline supplementation increases ACh, which blocks TASK channels through its action on M3 muscarinic receptors (30). Others have demonstrated that developmental ethanol exposure results in the arrest of cell differentiation through the inhibition of NMDA receptors (32); the underlying mechanisms are again unknown. We suggest that this effect of ethanol may be mediated by the action of pH (50). Therefore, we propose that pH-related mechanisms may form the basis for a number of therapeutic strategies that have been hypothesized to prevent specific damaging effects of prenatal ethanol exposure and that inhibition of the novel tandem two-pore domain potassium channels (TASK 1 and TASK 3) shows a promising direction for preventing the damaging consequences of maternal drinking during pregnancy.
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| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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| FOOTNOTES |
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The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
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B in human cancer cell lines and Min mice. Carcinogenesis 29: 390–397, 2008.This article has been cited by other articles:
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C. E. Wood Fetal stress. Focus on "Effects of acute acidemia on the fetal cardiovascular defense to acute hypoxemia" by Thakor and Giussani Am J Physiol Regulatory Integrative Comp Physiol, January 1, 2009; 296(1): R88 - R89. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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