Abstract

Ethanol is a teratogen, inducing a variety of structural defects in developing humans and animals that are exposed in utero. Mechanisms of ethanol teratogenicity in specific defects are not well understood. Oxidative metabolism of ethanol by alcohol dehydrogenase or cytochrome P450 2E1 has been implicated in some of ethanol’s teratogenic effects, either via production of acetaldehyde or competitive inhibition of retinoic acid synthesis. Generalized oxidative stress in response to ethanol may also play a role in its teratogenicity. Among the developmental defects that ethanol has been implicated in is holoprosencephaly, a failure to define the midline of the forebrain and midface that is associated with a deficiency in Sonic hedgehog pathway function. Etiologically, holoprosencephaly is thought to arise from a complex combination of genetic and environmental factors. We have developed a gene-environment interaction model of holoprosencephaly in mice, in which mutation of the Sonic hedgehog coreceptor, Cdon, synergizes with transient in utero exposure to ethanol. This system was used to address whether oxidative metabolism is required for ethanol’s teratogenic activity in holoprosencephaly. We report here that t-butyl alcohol, which is neither a substrate nor an inhibitor of alcohol dehydrogenases or Cyp2E1, is a potent inducer of holoprosencephaly in Cdon mutant mice. Additionally, antioxidant treatment did not prevent ethanol- or t-butyl alcohol-induced HPE in these mice. These findings are consistent with the conclusion that ethanol itself, rather than a consequence of its metabolism, is a holoprosencephaly-inducing teratogen.

Highlights

  • (HPE) is a common congenital disorder in which the midline of the forebrain and/or midface is lacking [1]

  • To test whether oxidative catabolism is a critical feature of EtOH-induced HPE, we asked whether an alcohol congener not subject to such metabolism induces HPE in 129S6 Cdon mutant mice. t-BuOH is not effectively metabolized by alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH) or Cyp2E1 [37,38,39], so it was used in place of EtOH in our standard protocol [25]

  • The range of effects in individuals exposed in utero to EtOH is broad and referred to under the umbrella term, fetal alcohol spectrum disorders (FASD)

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Summary

Introduction

(HPE) is a common congenital disorder in which the midline of the forebrain and/or midface is lacking [1]. Presentation of HPE is extremely variable, with a spectrum of phenotypes ranging from failure to partition the forebrain into hemispheres to deficits in the midfacial midline [4, 5]. The most severe cases are not compatible with survival. Cases with mild forebrain involvement are associated with mental deficiency [6, 7]. Both genetic and environmental factors are implicated in the etiology of HPE [5, 6, 8,9,10].

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