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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Prenatal nicotine exposure increases apnoea and reduces nicotinic potentiation of hypoglossal inspiratory output in mice

TLDR
Increased apnoea following nicotine exposure does not appear to reflect changes in basal activity of rhythm or pattern‐generating networks, but may result, in part, from reduced nicotinic modulation of XII motoneurons.
Abstract
We examined the effects of in utero nicotine exposure on postnatal development of breathing pattern and ventilatory responses to hypoxia (7.4 % O2) using whole-body plethysmography in mice at postnatal day 0 (P0), P3, P9, P19 and P42. Nicotine delayed early postnatal changes in breathing pattern. During normoxia, control and nicotine-exposed P0 mice exhibited a high frequency of apnoea (fA) which declined by P3 in control animals (from 6.7 ± 0.7 to 2.2 ± 0.7 min−1) but persisted in P3 nicotine-exposed animals (5.4 ± 1.3 min−1). Hypoxia induced a rapid and sustained reduction in fA except in P0 nicotine-exposed animals where it fell initially and then increased throughout the hypoxic period. During recovery, fA increased above control levels in both groups at P0. By P3 this increase was reduced in control but persisted in nicotine-exposed animals. To examine the origin of differences in respiratory behaviour, we compared the activity of hypoglossal (XII) nerves and motoneurons in medullary slice preparations. The frequency and variability of the respiratory rhythm and the envelope of inspiratory activity in XII nerves and motoneurons were indistinguishable between control and nicotine-exposed animals. Activation of postsynaptic nicotine receptors caused an inward current in XII motoneurons that potentiated XII nerve burst amplitude by 25 ± 5 % in control but only 14 ± 3 % in nicotine-exposed animals. Increased apnoea following nicotine exposure does not appear to reflect changes in basal activity of rhythm or pattern-generating networks, but may result, in part, from reduced nicotinic modulation of XII motoneurons.

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Citations
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Invited Review: Neuroplasticity in respiratory motor control

TL;DR: The goals in this review are to define plasticity as a concept and to demonstrate neuroplasticity in the respiratory control system.
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Comparative distribution of nicotinic receptor subtypes during development, adulthood and aging: an autoradiographic study in the rat brain.

TL;DR: The distribution in the rat brain of high affinity nicotinic heteromeric acetylcholine receptors and of low affinity alpha7-containing, homomeric receptors was studied using in vitro light microscopic autoradiography as discussed by the authors.
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Developmental plasticity in respiratory control.

TL;DR: Past concepts of respiratory control system maturation as rigidly predetermined by a genetic blueprint have now yielded to a different view in which extremely complex interactions between genes, transcriptional factors, growth factors, and other gene products shape the respiratory Control system, and experience plays a key role in guiding normal respiratory control development.
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Effects of nicotine during pregnancy: human and experimental evidence.

TL;DR: A total abstinence from all forms of nicotine should be advised to pregnant women for the entirety of gestation as findings indicate that functional nAChRs are present very early in neuronal development, and that activation at this stage leads to apoptosis and mitotic abnormalities.
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Prenatal nicotine exposure blunts the cardiorespiratory response to hypoxia in lambs.

TL;DR: Prenatal nicotine exposure, at a dose comparable with moderate smoking, blunts major elements of the cardiorespiratory defense to hypoxia, i.e., the heart rate and ventilatory and arousal responses, and abolishes the normal decrease in ventilation during sleep compared with W.
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