Abstract

BackgroundClinical studies show that prenatal alcohol exposure (PAE) results in effects that persist into adulthood. Experimental animal models of moderate PAE demonstrate that young adults with PAE display potentiated sensitivity to light touch, clinically termed allodynia, following sciatic nerve chronic constriction injury (CCI) that coincides with heightened spinal glial, spinal macrophage, and peripheral immune responses. However, basal touch sensitivity and corresponding glial and leukocyte activation are unaltered. Therefore, the current study explored whether the enduring pathological consequences of moderate PAE on sensory processing are unmasked only following secondary neural insult.MethodsIn middle-aged (1 year) Long Evans rats that underwent either prenatal saccharin exposure (control) or moderate PAE, we modified the well-characterized model of sciatic neuropathy, CCI, to study the effects of PAE on neuro-immune responses in adult offspring. Standard CCI manipulation required 4 chromic gut sutures, while a mild version applied a single suture loosely ligated around one sciatic nerve. Spinal glial immunoreactivity was examined using immunohistochemistry. The characterization and functional responses of leukocyte populations were studied using flow cytometry and cell stimulation assays followed by quantification of the proinflammatory cytokines interleukin-1beta (IL-1β) and tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α). Data were statistically analyzed by ANOVA and unpaired t tests.ResultsThe current report demonstrates that mild CCI generates robust allodynia only in PAE rats, while the pathological effects of PAE following the application of a standard CCI are revealed by enhanced allodynia and elevated spinal glial activation. Additionally, mild CCI increases spinal astrocyte activation but not microglia, suggesting astrocytes play a larger role in PAE-induced susceptibility to aberrant sensory processing. Leukocyte populations from PAE are altered under basal conditions (i.e., prior to secondary insult), as the distribution of leukocyte populations in lymphoid organs and other regions are different from those of controls. Lastly, following in vitro leukocyte stimulation, only PAE augments the immune response to antigen stimulation as assessed by heightened production of TNF-α and IL-1β.ConclusionsThese studies demonstrate PAE may prime spinal astrocytes and peripheral leukocytes that contribute to enduring susceptibility to adult-onset neuropathic pain that is not apparent until a secondary insult later in life.

Highlights

  • Clinical studies show that prenatal alcohol exposure (PAE) results in effects that persist into adulthood

  • PAE induces long-lasting susceptibility to allodynia from even minor peripheral nerve damage Under basal conditions, light touch sensory thresholds appear similar in both PAE and Sac offspring with hindpaw responses occurring at approximately 10 g of touch stimuli

  • Following minor sciatic nerve 1-suture constriction injury (CCI) in Sac rats, ipsilateral hindpaw responses remained close to their BL values on day 3, with sensory thresholds measured on day 10 that completely overlapped Sham-treated rats

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Summary

Introduction

Clinical studies show that prenatal alcohol exposure (PAE) results in effects that persist into adulthood. Experimental animal models of moderate PAE demonstrate that young adults with PAE display potentiated sensitivity to light touch, clinically termed allodynia, following sciatic nerve chronic constriction injury (CCI) that coincides with heightened spinal glial, spinal macrophage, and peripheral immune responses. Associated disabilities that occur across the lifespan as a result of moderate exposure to alcohol during CNS development include behavioral and cognitive deficits [4,5,6], and sensory touch abnormalities in individuals with FASD [7] In support of these clinical observations, preclinical experiments in adult rhesus monkeys reveal touch abnormalities such as tactile hypersensitivity are observed in monkeys exposed prenatally to low/moderate levels of alcohol [8]. A number of reports accumulating for several decades show that animal models of chronic peripheral neuropathy develop pathological pain through aberrant neuroimmune mechanisms (i.e., activated glia and proinflammatory cytokines) [10, 14]

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