Correlation Engine 2.0
Clear Search sequence regions


  • brain (1)
  • CA3 (3)
  • female (1)
  • hippocampus (4)
  • infant mortality (1)
  • memories (1)
  • neuron (1)
  • phases (1)
  • pregnancy (1)
  • rat (4)
  • region (1)
  • snap25 proteins (1)
  • Sizes of these terms reflect their relevance to your search.

    The brain is highly susceptible to adverse effects of drugs of abuse during early phases of life. Prenatal nicotine exposure (PNE), a preventable cause of gestational and infant mortality, can alter neuron wiring and induce sustained deficits in attention and learning. Here, a rat model of PNE (embryonic days 7-21) was used to examine the maturing hippocampus, which encodes new memories and processes emotional memory. Components of synaptic signaling were evaluated at postnatal day 14 (P14), a period of prolific synaptogenesis in rats, to determine if glutamatergic transmission-associated molecules are regulated in subregions of hippocampus as early as P14. PNE resulted in reduced expression of GluN2B, GluA2 and CaMKIIα, but elevated SNAP25 proteins specifically in the CA3 but not CA1. Only CaMKIIα was regulated in dentate gyrus at this age. These results suggest that glutamatergic and synaptic dysregulation of learning and memory may occur in hippocampus in a temporally and subregionally specific manner.

    Citation

    O O Kalejaiye, M C Gondré-Lewis. Enhanced susceptibility of CA3 hippocampus to prenatal nicotine exposure. Journal of developmental origins of health and disease. 2017 Apr;8(2):155-160

    Expand section icon Mesh Tags

    Expand section icon Substances


    PMID: 28029335

    View Full Text