Qiao_2003_Brain.Res.Dev.Brain.Res_147_183

Reference

Title : Nicotine is a developmental neurotoxicant and neuroprotectant: stage-selective inhibition of DNA synthesis coincident with shielding from effects of chlorpyrifos - Qiao_2003_Brain.Res.Dev.Brain.Res_147_183
Author(s) : Qiao D , Seidler FJ , Violin JD , Slotkin TA
Ref : Brain Research Developmental Brain Research , 147 :183 , 2003
Abstract :

Although nicotine is now well recognized as a developmental neurotoxicant, it also may have neuroprotectant properties. In the current study, we used PC12 cells to characterize the specific developmental phases in which these effects are expressed. In undifferentiated cells, nicotine had a modest effect on DNA synthesis (10% reduction), which was nevertheless selective, as no significant reductions were seen for RNA or protein synthesis. The effects were blocked by mecamylamine, indicating mediation by nicotinic acetylcholine receptors. Initiation of differentiation with nerve growth factor, which greatly increases the receptor concentration, produced a commensurate increase in the sensitivity of DNA synthesis to nicotine, while RNA and protein synthesis again remained unaffected. The organophosphate insecticide, chlorpyrifos, also interferes with DNA synthesis in undifferentiated PC12 cells, but by mechanisms independent of nicotinic receptors. Accordingly, the effects of a combination of nicotine and chlorpyrifos should be additive. However, simultaneous exposure of undifferentiated cells to both agents produced less-than-additive effects at low concentrations of chlorpyrifos, and at high chlorpyrifos concentrations, nicotine produced outright protection: the combination of nicotine and chlorpyrifos had lesser effects than chlorpyrifos alone. The same neuroprotection was seen when cells were exposed to nicotine for 24 h, washed free of the drug for 24 h, and then exposed to chlorpyrifos. The results indicate that nicotine interferes with neural cell replication, with peak effects in early stages of differentiation. At the same time, nicotine promotes trophic actions that protect against neurotoxicants that work through other mechanisms.

PubMedSearch : Qiao_2003_Brain.Res.Dev.Brain.Res_147_183
PubMedID: 14741763

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Citations formats

Qiao D, Seidler FJ, Violin JD, Slotkin TA (2003)
Nicotine is a developmental neurotoxicant and neuroprotectant: stage-selective inhibition of DNA synthesis coincident with shielding from effects of chlorpyrifos
Brain Research Developmental Brain Research 147 :183

Qiao D, Seidler FJ, Violin JD, Slotkin TA (2003)
Brain Research Developmental Brain Research 147 :183