Heath_2010_Neuropsychopharmacology_35_2324

Reference

Title : Cortico-thalamic connectivity is vulnerable to nicotine exposure during early postnatal development through alpha4\/beta2\/alpha5 nicotinic acetylcholine receptors - Heath_2010_Neuropsychopharmacology_35_2324
Author(s) : Heath CJ , King SL , Gotti C , Marks MJ , Picciotto MR
Ref : Neuropsychopharmacology , 35 :2324 , 2010
Abstract :

Tobacco smoke exposure during development can result in lasting alterations in sensory processing and attention. This suggests that some constituent of smoke, such as the primary addictive component, nicotine, alters neurodevelopment. Although many effects of developmental nicotine exposure have been identified in humans and animal models, very few mechanistic studies have identified the molecular and anatomical basis for a defined behavioral consequence of developmental exposure. We show in this study that a mouse model of developmental nicotine exposure results in hypersensitive passive avoidance in adulthood. We have used transgenic mice in which beta2 subunit containing nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (beta2* nAChRs) are expressed exclusively on corticothalamic neurons (beta2 tr(CT) mice) to identify the receptor subtypes involved and also to define the circuit level site of action responsible for this persistent, nicotine-induced behavioral phenotype. Further characterization of the native nAChRs expressed in this circuit indicates that both (alpha4)(2)(beta2)(3) and (alpha4)(2)(beta2)(2)alpha5 nAChR subtypes are present in corticothalamic projections. Consistent with a role for (alpha4)(2)(beta2)(2)alpha5 nAChRs in mediating the effect of developmental nicotine exposure on adult passive avoidance behavior, constitutive deletion of the alpha5 nAChR subunit also alters this behavior. A critical period for this developmental consequence of nicotine exposure was defined by limiting exposure to the early post-natal period. Taken together, these studies identify a novel consequence of developmental nicotine exposure in the mouse, define the nAChR subtypes and neural circuit involved in this behavioral change and delimit the neurodevelopmental period critical for vulnerability to a behavioral alteration that persists into adulthood.

PubMedSearch : Heath_2010_Neuropsychopharmacology_35_2324
PubMedID: 20736992

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Citations formats

Heath CJ, King SL, Gotti C, Marks MJ, Picciotto MR (2010)
Cortico-thalamic connectivity is vulnerable to nicotine exposure during early postnatal development through alpha4\/beta2\/alpha5 nicotinic acetylcholine receptors
Neuropsychopharmacology 35 :2324

Heath CJ, King SL, Gotti C, Marks MJ, Picciotto MR (2010)
Neuropsychopharmacology 35 :2324