1 / 19

Drug and Chemical Exposures in Animal Models Related to ASD Theodore Slotkin, Ph.D.

Drug and Chemical Exposures in Animal Models Related to ASD Theodore Slotkin, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology & Cancer Biology Integrated Toxicology & Environmental Health Program Duke University Support: NIH ES10356. Main Points.

suzy
Download Presentation

Drug and Chemical Exposures in Animal Models Related to ASD Theodore Slotkin, Ph.D.

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Drug and Chemical Exposures in Animal Models Related to ASD Theodore Slotkin, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology & Cancer Biology Integrated Toxicology & Environmental Health Program Duke University Support: NIH ES10356

  2. Main Points • Why an increase in neurodevelopmental disorders including ASD? • Why do neuroactive agents produce permanent alterations with developmental exposures? • Why is there a critical period for these effects? • Why do apparently unrelated agents produce similar outcomes? • Example from environmental chemicals: organophosphate pesticides • Example from prenatal drug exposure: terbutaline

  3. Developmental Neurotoxicity from Environmental Chemical Exposures • 5000 new chemicals/year • EPA estimate: 25% neurotoxic • 67% of High Production Chemicals Not Tested for Neurotoxicity • High vulnerability of the developing brain • Increases in ADHD, learning/cognitive problems? • 17% of US schoolchildren suffer from neurobehavioral disabilities • Annual cost: $80-170 billion • 250% increase in ADHD diagnosis between 1990-1998 • 190% increase in children in special ed for learning disabilities between 1977-1994 • Increase in autistic spectrum disorders from 4/10,000 (1980s) to 30-60 (1990s)

  4. Developmental Neurotoxicants - The “Silent Pandemic” LDDI Initiative, 2007 Grandjean & Landrigan, Lancet 2006

  5. Why Neuroactive Agents Disrupt Brain Development — Neurotransmitter Signals Control Cell Fate Nerve Terminal Signaling Cascades Nucleus Receptors Gene Transcription Replicate Differentiate Grow Die Learn The same neurotransmitter may be used for multiple decisions

  6. Why there is a Critical Period Input After Critical Period Input During Critical Period Change in Cell Differentiation Short-Term Response Elicited Permanent Change in the Response to Stimulation Short-Term, Reversible, Compensatory Adjustments

  7. Apparently Unrelated Agents Can Produce Similar Outcomes —[maybe we shouldn’t focus on common mechanisms?] Correct Connection Damage or Loss of Input Damage or Loss of Target Miswired Connection Mismatched Phenotypes Corollary - exposure to multiple agents can produce additive or synergistic effects - worsened outcome

  8. Organophosphate Pesticides — Chlorpyrifos • Widely used - ubiquitous exposure • - OPs = 50% of all insecticide use • Not an endocrine disruptor • Replaced organochlorines • Superfund Site Disposal Problem • OPs: nerve gases in warfare/terrorism • Developmental neurotoxicity unrelated to mechanisms in adults • Effects are subtle but widespread • Originally modeled in animals, neurodevelopmental deficits now confirmed in children (inner-city, agricultural populations) • Developmental exposure increases autism risk

  9. Chlorpyrifos - Multiple Mechanisms Disrupt Neurodevelopment Direct Actions on Cholinergic Receptors Interaction with Signaling Intermediates Signaling Cascades Nerve Terminal Nucleus Transcription Factor Expression, Function Receptors Gene Transcription AChE Inhibition: CPF Oxon Replicate Differentiate Grow Die Learn Critical period in rats: late gestation to early neonatal stage [equivalent - 2nd trimester in human fetus]

  10. Chlorpyrifos - Impact on Serotonin Systems = Miswiring Male Female Enhanced neuronal impulse activity (serotonin turnover) Increases in serotonin receptors and transporter BUT….

  11. …Impaired Serotonergic Function aka: increased risk-taking, impulsive behavior

  12. Chlorpyrifos - Miswiring of Acetylcholine Systems -Serotonin Replaces Acetylcholine for Hippocampal Circuits and Behaviors

  13. Terbutaline Use in Preterm Labor • Stimulates BARs to inhibit uterine contraction • Crosses the placenta to stimulate fetal BARs • Effective for 48 hr max - NOT for maintenance use • Animal studies from our lab, 1980s-1990s • altered neural cell differentiation • receptor and signaling shifts • permanent changes in responsiveness • Hadders-Algra 1986 - impaired school performance • Pitzer 2001 - psychiatric, learning disorders

  14. Cerebellum Thinning of cerebellar lobules Thinning of hippocampal CA3 Reactive gliosis Somatosensory cortex - loss of pyramidal cells Critical Period Newborn Rat - PN2-5 = human 2nd trimester Control Terbutaline - 44% decrease in Purkinje cells

  15. Neuroinflammation in cerebral cortex and cerebellum - microglial activation • Morphological changes almost identical to those in postmortem autism samples • Critical period PN2-5 • Hyperreactive to novelty, aversive stimuli, sensory input Decompensation of CVS responses similar to those in autism (compare to Ming 2005)

  16. Continuous terbutaline exposure for 2 weeks: RR=2.0 • Male twins with no other affected siblings: RR=4.4 Further increase: BAR polymorphisms (16G, 27E) that prevent desensitization and therefore would enhance terbutaline effects

  17. Terbutaline - Impact on Serotonin Systems = Miswiring ≈ Chlorpyrifos Increases in serotonin receptors and transporter Enhanced neuronal impulse activity (serotonin turnover)

  18. Terbutaline Followed by Chlorpyrifos Enhanced Effect on Serotonin Turnover

  19. CONCLUSIONS • Developmental neurotoxicants likely to play an important role in the increased incidence of childhood behavioral disorders including ASD • Disparate mechanisms and effects converge on common final pathways • different agents may produce similar outcomes • different agents may produce additive/synergistic outcomes • Lasting effects only when exposure occurs in critical periods • Specific examples with relevance to ASD: • organophosphate pesticides (ubiquitous exposure) • terbutaline (use in preterm labor ≈10% US pregnancies) Neurodevelopmental disorders - CAUSES, not a single ‘cause’ Origins of autism and ASD may not be so distinct from other neurodevelopmental disorders

More Related