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Small
amounts of alcohol or anesthetics may damage the developing
brain
Seattle,
Feb. 14, 2004 — Brief exposure to small amounts of alcohol
or anesthetic drugs can trigger nerve cell death in
the developing brain, according to research reported
today at the annual meeting of the American Association
for the Advancement of Science (AAAS).
“Our
animal studies indicate that significant nerve cell
death occurs in the infant mouse brain following exposure
to blood alcohol levels equivalent to those a human
fetus would be exposed to by maternal ingestion of two
cocktails,” says investigator John W. Olney, M.D., the
John P. Feighner Professor of Neuropsychopharmacology
at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis.
“With anesthetic drugs, a dose required to lightly anesthetize
an infant mouse for about one hour is sufficient to
trigger nerve cell death.”
For
several years, Olney's research has suggested that exposure
to alcohol and anesthetic drugs can cause developing
brain cells to undergo neuroapoptosis — brain cell suicide
— but in those previous studies, he was observing damage
when laboratory animals were exposed to large amounts
of the drugs.
In
the most recent studies, alcohol was administered on
a one-time basis to infant mice in doses required to
produce various blood alcohol levels. When the animals'
brains were examined six hours later, the researchers
found that blood alcohol elevation in the range of 0.07
percent, lasting for one hour, was sufficient to cause
more nerve cell death than in mice not receiving alcohol.
The minimum legal blood alcohol concentration for driving
in most states is between 0.08 and 0.10 percent.
“Assessing
the significance of these findings is complicated by
the fact that brain cell suicide occurs naturally at
a low rate during development,” Olney says. “Transient
exposure to small amounts of alcohol or an anesthetic
drug causes a two- to four-fold increase in the rate
of brain cell suicide. Although more nerve cells die
than would have died naturally during that developmental
interval, we cannot be certain that those cells would
not have died at some later time.”
On
the other hand, Olney points out it is clear that large
doses of alcohol can trigger such extensive death of
nerve cells that it causes a permanent reduction in
the size of the brain and long-term cognitive impairment.
Olney and colleague David F. Wozniak, Ph.D., research
associate professor of psychiatry at Washington University,
have demonstrated these permanent deficits in mice and
rats, and they believe the same type of pathological
process can explain the harmful effects of alcohol on
the developing human brain, a condition known as fetal
alcohol syndrome.
“It's
the best explanation that has been developed so far
for the well-known, devastating effects of alcohol on
the human fetal brain,” Olney says.
Although
translating effects from rats and mice to humans is
difficult, Olney believes it is unlikely that a single
glass of wine would cause substantial damage, even if
expectant mothers consumed such small amounts of alcohol
regularly.
“A
single glass is not a problem, but if one glass leads
to another and then another on the same day, that is
a different matter,” Olney says. “Because then blood
alcohol levels remain above the toxic threshold for
too long, and nerve cells commit mass suicide.”
He
believes the most prudent advice is to completely avoid
alcoholic drinks during pregnancy because, he says,
it is not clear how rats, mice and humans compare in
sensitivity to alcohol.
Olney's
research has demonstrated that rat and mouse brains
are sensitive to this toxic effect during a development
stage known as the brain growth spurt. Called synaptogenesis
because it is the time when brain cells form most of
their synaptic interconnections, the brain growth spurt
in humans lasts from about the sixth month of pregnancy
to a child's third birthday. In rats and mice, synaptogenesis
occurs during the first few weeks after the animal is
born.
Nerve
cells are genetically programmed to commit suicide if
they fail to make synaptic connections on time. Alcohol
and anesthetic drugs interfere with the brain's neurotransmitter
systems and with the formation of those synaptic connections,
automatically activating a signal within the neuron
that directs it to commit suicide.
Olney
believes the phenomenon his team is studying can be
viewed as a “final common pathway” type of mechanism
that might explain a wide range of developmental neuropsychiatric
problems. Because different networks in the brain are
organized at different times during synaptogenesis,
different populations of cells will commit suicide in
response to exposure to alcohol or anesthetic drugs
depending on the timing of that exposure. Thus, exposure
at one developmental stage may produce one type of disturbance
while exposure at another period of development could
produce a very different effect.
Consistent
with that concept, at the same AAAS symposium, Columbia
University psychiatrist Ezra Susser, M.D., and his colleagues
reported new findings, soon to be published in the journal
Environmental Health Perspectives, suggesting that young
adults diagnosed with schizophrenia were significantly
more likely to have been exposed to lead in the womb.
Susser believes lead exposure also might cause damage
through the cell suicide mechanism, with schizophrenia
being the long-term consequence.
“The
results of our study suggest that lead-induced prenatal
damage to the developing brain may show itself decades
following initial exposure to the substance,” Susser
says.
The
idea that damage from exposure to substances such as
alcohol, anesthetics and lead can contribute to a wide
range of psychiatric illnesses also is supported by
work from another speaker on the panel, Ann P. Streissguth,
M.D., of the University of Washington School of Medicine
in Seattle. She has followed the impact of maternal
alcohol use on the children of women who were pregnant
in 1974, looking at the secondary disabilities encountered
by people with fetal alcohol syndrome and fetal alcohol
effects. She found that 90 percent of those exposed
to excessive alcohol in the womb reported mental health
problems.
“Many
had attention deficit problems,” Streissguth says. “But
there also were high rates of psychosis and suicide
attempts and almost half suffered from major depression.”
More
basic work from Charles F. Zorumski, M.D., the Samuel
B. Guze Professor and head of the Department of Psychiatry
at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis,
another presenter at the AAAS symposium, might help
explain why.
“Previous
studies in patients with fetal alcohol syndrome suggest
that they have increased risk of major psychiatric disorders,”
Zorumski says. “In our work with laboratory rats exposed
to alcohol and anesthetic drugs during synaptogenesis,
we have observed that they catch up and seem to develop
normally, but during adolescence they develop problems.”
Zorumski
has found that animals exposed to alcohol and anesthetic
drugs have difficulty performing maze tests that are
used help to measure spatial learning and spatial working
memory in rats. Their brains also exhibit defects in
neuronal processes that occur in the hippocampus, a
brain structure known to be important in learning and
memory.
Zorumski's
team ran electrical currents through neuronal slices
taken from the hippocampus to induce a process known
as long-term potentiation (LTP), which enhances communication
between neurons by promoting the movement of the chemical
messenger glutamate between brain cells. In normal rats,
the stimulus Zorumski used usually produces a lasting
40 to 50 percent enhancement of glutamate transmission.
But rats exposed to alcohol and anesthetics had decreases
in LTP ranging from 75 to 100 percent. In other words,
some of the exposed animals had a complete loss of LTP.
His
team also tested a related process called long-term
depression (LTD). When treated with an LTD stimulus,
normal slices of the rat hippocampus experience a 30
to 40 percent decrease in synaptic transmission. But
those rats treated with alcohol or anesthetics experienced
a complete elimination of LTD. What LTD does is not
well understood, but there is evidence suggesting it
is important in spatial working memory and adaptation
to new environments.
The
rats appeared to behave normally in most other ways,
and there were no outward signs of brain damage.
“If
similar brain damage had occurred in a human infant,
it appears there would not be any overt signs that would
alert you to it,” Zorumski says.
This
area of research has repeatedly identified a relationship
between certain classes of drugs that inhibit nerve
cell activity and damage to the developing brain. Anesthetic
drugs tend to work in one of two ways, both of which
inhibit nerve cell activity: Either they inhibit excitatory
neurotransmission in the brain, or they enhance inhibitory
neurotransmission.
The
excitatory system that stimulates nerve cells is what
scientists call the NMDA glutamate transmitter system.
In 1998, Olney and colleague Vesna Jevtovic-Todorovic,
M.D., Ph.D., associate professor of anesthesiology at
the University of Virginia, discovered that the drug
nitrous oxide (laughing gas) works by inhibiting the
NMDA glutamate system. Another anesthetic drug known
as Ketamine also works by inhibiting the NMDA glutamate
system.
Other
anesthetic drugs work by enhancing the inhibitory activity
of GABA (Gamma Amino Butyric Acid), which is the primary
inhibitory transmitter in the brain.
Olney
and his colleagues have demonstrated that when the developing
brain is exposed to drugs that block NMDA glutamate
activity, nerve cells in the brain commit suicide. They
also found that drugs that enhance GABA activity can
cause nerve cells in the developing brain to self-destruct.
Those
findings prompted them to study alcohol, which is known
both to block NMDA glutamate activity and also to enhance
GABA activity. They found that alcohol powerfully triggers
nerve cell suicide in the developing brain, providing
a likely explanation for the learning and memory disturbances
associated with the human fetal alcohol syndrome.
“In
all of these studies, we have found that drugs that
enhance GABA inhibition or that inhibit glutamate excitation
can trigger massive cell suicide in the developing brain,”
Olney says.
Olney
believes by better understanding the mechanism through
which alcohol and drugs cause brain cell suicide, it
might be possible to prevent it. He compares the process
to a line-up of dominoes in which one step triggers
the next, but by understanding that cascade, he hopes
it might be possible to intervene.
“We're
going to see if there are some steps in that line-up
of dominoes that we can interfere with to prevent the
suicide signal from being activated,” he says.
###
The
American Association for the Advancement of Science
(AAAS) is the world's largest general scientific society
and publisher of the journal, Science (www.sciencemag.org).
AAAS was founded in 1848 and serves some 265 affiliated
societies and academies of science, serving 10 million
individuals. Science has the largest paid circulation
of any peer-reviewed general science journal in the
world, with an estimated total readership of one million.
The non-profit AAAS (www.aaas.org) is open to all and
fulfills its mission to “advance science and serve society”
through initiatives in science policy, international
programs, science education and more. For the latest
research news, log onto EurekAlert!, www.eurekalert.org,
the premier science-news Web site, a service of AAAS.
*
* *
Additional
news from the AAAS Annual Meeting may be found online
at www.eurekalert.org.
MEDIA
NOTE: A news briefing on this research will take place
at 3 p.m. Pacific Time, Friday, Feb. 13, during the
AAAS Annual Meeting in Seattle, in the Eliza Anderson
Amphitheater, Grand Hyatt Hotel. Further, these and
other speakers will take part in a symposium titled,
“Pediatric Medicines and Alcohol Cause Developing Neurons
to Commit Suicide,” at 9 a.m. Saturday, Feb. 14, in
the second floor of the Sheraton Hotel, West Ballroom
A.
For
more information on neuroapoptosis in the developing
brain, refer to:
Jevtovic-Todorovic
V, Hartman RE, Izumi Y, Benshoff ND, Dikranian K, Zorumski
CF, Olney JW, Wozniak DF. Early exposure to common anesthetic
agents causes widespread neurodegeneration in the developing
rat brain and persistent learning deficits. Journal
of Neuroscience, vol. 23:3, pp. 876-882, Feb. 1, 2003.
C
Ikonomidou, et al. Ethanol-Induced Apoptotic Neurodegeneration
and the Fetal Alcohol Syndrome. Science, vol. 287 pp.
1056-1060, Feb. 11, 2000.
Jevtovic-Todorovic
V, Todorovic SM, Mennerick S, Powell S, Dikranian K,
Benshoff N, Zorumski CF, Olney JW, “Nitrous Oxide (Laughing
Gas) Is an NMDA Antagonist, Neuroprotectant and Neurotoxin,”
Nature Medicine 4, 460-463, April 1998.
The
full-time and volunteer faculty of Washington University
School of Medicine are the physicians and surgeons of
Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis Children's hospitals. The
School of Medicine is one of the leading medical research,
teaching and patient-care institutions in the nation.
Through its affiliations with Barnes-Jewish and St.
Louis Children's hospitals, the School of Medicine is
linked to BJC HealthCare.
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