Abstract

Cocaine has become a popular illicit drug in our society, and pregnant women are not immune from this epidemic. Recently, there have been several references in the literature describing an association between prenatal cocaine exposure and the subsequent development of necrotizing enterocolitis in the neonate, but the mechanism underlying this relationship remains speculative. Because α-2 adrenergic receptors are thought to play a role in the autoregulatory mechanism in the newborn intestine that responds to hypoxia and ischemia, we examined the expression of this receptor in the intestine of embryonic rats exposed to low- and high-dose cocaine in utero. Pregnant Sprague Dawley rats were injected daily with either saline, low-dose cocaine, or high-dose cocaine beginning on embryonic d 5 (E 5) and continuing to E 20. Mothers were killed on E 16, E 17, E 18, E 19, and E 20. Embryos were frozen and stored at −80°C. In situ hybridization was performed on 20-μm sections with 35S-labeled oligonucleotide probes specific for the α-2A adrenergic receptor subtype. Densitometric analysis revealed a significant decrease in the α-2A receptor expression in the intestine of both the low-dose and high-dose cocaine-exposed animals compared with controls. This down-regulation was demonstrated by E 17, and continued through the remainder of gestation. These changes may limit the normal adaptation to vasoconstriction, thus exacerbating the already insufficient compensatory mechanisms for responding to ischemic injury, and thus may be one of the important factors predisposing cocaine-exposed infants to necrotizing enterocolitis.

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