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Disruption of Interneuron Neurogenesis in Premature Newborns and Reversal with Estrogen Treatment

Overview
Journal J Neurosci
Specialty Neurology
Date 2017 Dec 17
PMID 29246927
Citations 21
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Abstract

Many Preterm-born children suffer from neurobehavioral disorders. Premature birth terminates the hypoxic environment and supply of maternal hormones. As the production of interneurons continues until the end of pregnancy, we hypothesized that premature birth would disrupt interneuron production and that restoration of the hypoxic milieu or estrogen treatment might reverse interneuron generation. To test these hypotheses, we compared interneuronal progenitors in the medial ganglionic eminences (MGEs), lateral ganglionic eminences (LGEs), and caudal ganglionic eminences (CGEs) between preterm-born [born on embryonic day (E) 29; examined on postnatal day (D) 3 and D7] and term-born (born on E32; examined on D0 and D4) rabbits at equivalent postconceptional ages. We found that both total and cycling Nkx2.1, Dlx2, and Sox2 cells were more abundant in the MGEs of preterm rabbits at D3 compared with term rabbits at D0, but not in D7 preterm relative to D4 term pups. Total Nkx2.1 progenitors were also more numerous in the LGEs of preterm pups at D3 compared with term rabbits at D0. Dlx2 cells in CGEs were comparable between preterm and term pups. Simulation of hypoxia by dimethyloxalylglycine treatment did not affect the number of interneuronal progenitors. However, estrogen treatment reduced the density of total and proliferating Nkx2.1 and Dlx2 cells in the MGEs and enhanced Ascl1 transcription factor. Estrogen treatment also reduced Ki67, c-Myc, and phosphorylation of retinoblastoma protein, suggesting inhibition of the G1-to-S phase transition. Hence, preterm birth disrupts interneuron neurogenesis in the MGE and estrogen treatment reverses interneuron neurogenesis in preterm newborns by cell-cycle inhibition and elevation of Ascl1. We speculate that estrogen replacement might partially restore neurogenesis in human premature infants. Prematurity results in developmental delays and neurobehavioral disorders, which might be ascribed to disturbances in the development of cortical interneurons. Here, we show that preterm birth disrupts interneuron neurogenesis in the medial ganglionic eminence (MGE) and, more importantly, that estrogen treatment reverses this perturbation in the population of interneuron progenitors in the MGE. The estrogen seems to restore neurogenesis by inhibiting the cell cycle and elevating Ascl1 expression. As preterm birth causes plasma estrogen level to drop 100-fold, the estrogen replacement in preterm infants is physiological. We speculate that estrogen replacement might ameliorate disruption in production of interneurons in human premature infants.

Citing Articles

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Postnatal Dysregulation of Androgens in Extremely Preterm Male Infants.

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Timed fetal inflammation and postnatal hypoxia cause cortical white matter injury, interneuron imbalances, and behavioral deficits in a double-hit rat model of encephalopathy of prematurity.

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Oestrogen treatment restores dentate gyrus development in premature newborns by IGF1 regulation.

Sharma D, Cheng B, Sahu R, Zhang X, Mehdizadeh R, Singh D J Cell Mol Med. 2023; 27(17):2467-2481.

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Preterm birth accelerates the maturation of spontaneous and resting activity in the visual cortex.

Witteveen I, McCoy E, Holsworth T, Shen C, Chang W, Nance M Front Integr Neurosci. 2023; 17:1149159.

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