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Oligodendrocyte pathology in fetal alcohol spectrum disorders

期刊

NEURAL REGENERATION RESEARCH
卷 17, 期 3, 页码 497-502

出版社

WOLTERS KLUWER MEDKNOW PUBLICATIONS
DOI: 10.4103/1673-5374.314294

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资金

  1. NIH [R01NS97846, R01NS097846-02S1, R01NS092876]
  2. Shriners research grant [SHC-85400]
  3. USA Pennsylvania State Department grant [10: 420491-04400-02]

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The pathology of fetal alcohol syndrome and related disorders includes brain dysmyelination. Recent studies have revealed the molecular mechanisms behind these white matter abnormalities, such as suppressed oligodendrocyte differentiation and cell apoptosis. Ethanol exposure reduces the expression of myelin basic protein and delays its expression. Increased chemokine expression has been observed in dysmyelinating disorders of the central nervous system. Ethanol exposure also affects neuroprotective factors and increases inflammatory cytokine expression. Animal models have shown reduced axon diameters, thinner myelin sheaths, and aberrant oligodendrocytes in fetal alcohol syndrome. Understanding the mechanisms of ethanol-induced dysmyelination could help prevent these abnormalities in children exposed to alcohol during fetal development.
The pathology of fetal alcohol syndrome and the less severe fetal alcohol spectrum disorders includes brain dysmyelination. Recent studies have shed light on the molecular mechanisms underlying these white matter abnormalities. Rodent models of fetal alcohol syndrome and human studies have shown suppressed oligodendrocyte differentiation and apoptosis of oligodendrocyte precursor cells. Ethanol exposure led to reduced expression of myelin basic protein and delayed myelin basic protein expression in rat and mouse models of fetal alcohol syndrome and in human histopathological specimens. Several studies have reported increased expression of many chemokines in dysmyelinating disorders in central nervous system, including multiple sclerosis and fetal alcohol syndrome. Acute ethanol exposure reduced levels of the neuroprotective insulin-like growth factor-1 in fetal and maternal sheep and in human fetal brain tissues, while ethanol increased the expression of tumor necrosis factor alpha in mouse and human neurons. White matter lesions have been induced in the developing sheep brain by alcohol exposure in early gestation. Rat fetal alcohol syndrome models have shown reduced axon diameters, with thinner myelin sheaths, as well as reduced numbers of oligodendrocytes, which were also morphologically aberrant oligodendrocytes. Expressions of markers for mature myelination, including myelin basic protein, also were reduced. The accumulating knowledge concerning the mechanisms of ethanol-induced dysmyelination could lead to the development of strategies to prevent dysmyelination in children exposed to ethanol during fetal development. Future studies using fetal oligodendrocyte- and oligodendrocyte precursor cell-derived exosomes isolated from the mother's blood may identify biomarkers for fetal alcohol syndrome and even implicate epigenetic changes in early development that affect oligodendrocyte precursor cell and oligodendrocyte function in adulthood. By combining various imaging modalities with molecular studies, it may be possible to determine which fetuses are at risk and to intervene therapeutically early in the pregnancy.

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