Abstract
IntroductionPrenatal alcohol exposure can contribute to fetal alcohol spectrum disorders (FASD), characterized by a myriad of developmental impairments affecting behavior and cognition. Studies show that many of these functional impairments are associated with the hippocampus, a structure exhibiting exquisite vulnerability to developmental alcohol exposure and critically implicated in learning and memory; however, mechanisms underlying alcohol‐induced hippocampal deficits remain poorly understood. By utilizing a high‐throughput RNA‐sequencing (RNA‐seq) approach to address the neurobiological and molecular basis of prenatal alcohol‐induced hippocampal functional deficits, we hypothesized that chronic binge prenatal alcohol exposure alters gene expression and global molecular pathways in the fetal hippocampus.MethodsTimed‐pregnant Sprague–Dawley rats were randomly assigned to a pair‐fed control (PF) or binge alcohol (ALC) treatment group on gestational day (GD) 4. ALC dams acclimatized from GDs 5–10 with a daily treatment of 4.5 g/kg alcohol and subsequently received 6 g/kg on GDs 11–20. PF dams received a once daily maltose dextrin gavage on GDs 5–20, isocalorically matching ALC counterparts. On GD 21, bilateral hippocampi were dissected, flash frozen, and stored at −80°C. Total RNA was then isolated from homogenized tissues. Samples were normalized to ~4nM and pooled equally. Sequencing was performed by Illumina NextSeq 500 on a 75 cycle, single‐end sequencing run.ResultsRNA‐seq identified 13,388 genes, of these, 76 genes showed a significant difference (p < 0.05, log2 fold change ≥2) in expression between the PF and ALC groups. Forty‐nine genes showed sex‐dependent dysregulation; IPA analysis showed among female offspring, dysregulated pathways included proline and citrulline biosynthesis, whereas in males, xenobiotic metabolism signaling and alaninine biosynthesis etc. were altered.ConclusionWe conclude that chronic binge alcohol exposure during pregnancy dysregulates fetal hippocampal gene expression in a sex‐specific manner. Identification of subtle, transcriptome‐level dysregulation in hippocampal molecular pathways offers potential mechanistic insights underlying FASD pathogenesis.
Highlights
Prenatal alcohol exposure can contribute to fetal alcohol spectrum disorders (FASD), characterized by a myriad of developmental impairments affect‐ ing behavior and cognition
LUNDE‐YOUNG et al Conclusion: We conclude that chronic binge alcohol exposure during pregnancy dys‐ regulates fetal hippocampal gene expression in a sex‐specific manner
FASD stud‐ ies have shown altered hippocampal DNA methylation and gene expression on postnatal day (PND) 28 corresponding with asymmet‐ rical hippocampal volume on PND 60 in offspring exposed to alco‐ hol during early neurulation (GDs 0.5–8) (Marjonen et al, 2015), and that alcohol exposure on gestational day (GD) 8–21 dysregulates several candidate genes (Gabrb3, Ube3a, Mecp2, and SLC25a12) that overlap with autism spectrum disorders and concurrently produces adverse hippocampal learning outcomes in adult offspring (Tunc‐Ozcan, Ullmann, Shukla, & Redei, 2013; Tunc‐Ozcan, Wert, Lim, Ferreira, & Redei, 2018)
Summary
We conclude that chronic binge alcohol exposure during pregnancy dys‐ regulates fetal hippocampal gene expression in a sex‐specific manner. Identification of subtle, transcriptome‐level dysregulation in hippocampal molecular pathways of‐ fers potential mechanistic insights underlying FASD pathogenesis
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