2 resultados para Rat Week

em Doria (National Library of Finland DSpace Services) - National Library of Finland, Finland


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Neurofilament proteins (NFs) are the major components of the intermediate filaments of the neuronal cytoskeleton. The three different NF proteins; the low (NF-L), medium (NF-M),and dendrites.NF proteins play an important role in neuronal development, and plasticity,and seem to contribute to the pathophysiology of several diseases. However, the detailed expression patterns of NF proteins in the course of postnatal aturation, and in response to seizures in the rat have remained unknown. In this work, I have studied the developmental expression and cellular distribution of the three NF proteins in the rat hippocampus during the postnatal development. The reactivity of NF proteins in response to kainic acid (KA)-induced status epilepticus (SE)was studied in the hippocampus of 9-day-old rats, and using in vitro organotypic hippocampal slices cultures prepared from P6-7 rats. The results showed that NF-L and NF-M proteins are expressed already at the postnatal day 1, while the expression of NF-H mainly occurred during the second postnatal week. The immunoreactivity of NF proteins varied depending on the cell type and sub-cellular location in the hippocampus. In adult rats, KA-induced SE typically results in severe and permanent NF degradation. However, in our P9 rats KA-induced SE resulted in a transient increase in the expression of NF proteins during the first few hours but not degradation. No neuronal death or mossy fiber sprouting was observed at any time after SE. The in vitro studies with OHCs, which mimick the in vivo developing models where a local injection of KA is applied(e.g. intrahippocampal), indicated that NF proteins were rapidly degraded in response to KA treatment, this effect being effectively inhibited by the treatment with the AMPA receptor antagonist CNQX, and calpain inhibitor MDL-28170. These compounds also significantly ameliorated the KA-induced region-specific neuronal damage. The NMDA receptor antagonist and the L-type Ca2+ channel blocker did not have any significant effect. In conclusion, the results indicate that the developmental expression of NF in the rat hippocampus is differentially regulated and targeted in the different hippocampal cell types during the postnatal development. Furthermore, despite SE, the mechanisms leading to NF degradation and neuronal death are not activated in P9 rats unlike in adults. The reason for this remains unknown. The results in organotypic hippocampal cultures confirm the validity of this in vitro model to study development processes, and to perform pharmacological studies. The results also suggest that calpain proteases as interesting pharmacological targets to reduce neuronal damage after acute excitotoxic insults.

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Background: Maternal diabetes affects many fetal organ systems, including the vasculature and the lungs. The offspring of diabetic mothers have respiratory adaptation problems after birth. The mechanisms are multifactorial and the effects are prolonged during the postnatal period. An increasing incidence of diabetic pregnancies accentuates the importance of identifying the pathological mechanisms, which cause the metabolic and genetic changes that occur in offspring, born to diabetic mothers. Aims and methods: The aim of this thesis was to determine changes both in human umbilical cord exposed to maternal type 1 diabetes and in neonatal rat lungs after streptozotocin-induced maternal hyperglycemia, during pregnancy. Rat lungs were used as a model for the potential disease mechanisms. Gene expression alterations were determined in human umbilical cords at birth and in rat pup lungs at two week of age. During the first two postnatal weeks, rat lung development was studied morphologically and histologically. Further, the effect of postnatal hyperoxia on hyperglycemia-primed rat lungs was investigated at one week of age to mimic the clinical situation of supplemental oxygen treatment. Results: In the umbilical cord, maternal diabetes had a major negative effect on the expression of genes involved in blood vessel development. The genes regulating vascular tone were also affected. In neonatal rat lungs, intrauterine hyperglycemia had a prolonged effect on gene expression during late alveolarization. The most affected pathway was the upregulation of extracellular matrix proteins. Newborn rat lungs exposed to intrauterine hyperglycemia had thinner saccular walls without changes in airspace size, a smaller relative lung weight and lung total tissue area, and increased cellular apoptosis and proliferation compared to control lungs, possibly reflecting an aberrant maturational adaptation. At one and two weeks of age, cell proliferation and secondary crest formation were accelerated in hyperglycemia-exposed lungs. Postnatal hyperoxic exposure, alone caused arrested alveolarization with thin-walled and enlarged alveoli. In contrast, the dual exposure of intrauterine hyperglycemia and postnatal hyperoxia resulted in the phenotype of thick septa together with arrested alveolarization and decreased number of small pulmonary arteries. Conclusions: Maternal diabetic environment seems to alter the umbilical cord gene expression profile of the regulation of vascular development and function. Fetal hyperglycemia may additionally affect the genetic regulation of the postnatal lung development and may actually induce prolonged structural alterations in neonatal lungs together with a modifying effect on the deleterious pulmonary exposure of postnatal hyperoxia. This, combined with the novel human umbilical cord gene data could serve as stepping stones for future therapies to curb developmental aberrations.