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Publication : Life-long impairment of glucose homeostasis upon prenatal exposure to psychostimulants.

First Author  Korchynska S Year  2020
Journal  EMBO J Volume  39
Issue  1 Pages  e100882
PubMed ID  31750562 Mgi Jnum  J:313608
Mgi Id  MGI:6791406 Doi  10.15252/embj.2018100882
Citation  Korchynska S, et al. (2020) Life-long impairment of glucose homeostasis upon prenatal exposure to psychostimulants. EMBO J 39(1):e100882
abstractText  Maternal drug abuse during pregnancy is a rapidly escalating societal problem. Psychostimulants, including amphetamine, cocaine, and methamphetamine, are amongst the illicit drugs most commonly consumed by pregnant women. Neuropharmacology concepts posit that psychostimulants affect monoamine signaling in the nervous system by their affinities to neurotransmitter reuptake and vesicular transporters to heighten neurotransmitter availability extracellularly. Exacerbated dopamine signaling is particularly considered as a key determinant of psychostimulant action. Much less is known about possible adverse effects of these drugs on peripheral organs, and if in utero exposure induces lifelong pathologies. Here, we addressed this question by combining human RNA-seq data with cellular and mouse models of neuroendocrine development. We show that episodic maternal exposure to psychostimulants during pregnancy coincident with the intrauterine specification of pancreatic beta cells permanently impairs their ability of insulin production, leading to glucose intolerance in adult female but not male offspring. We link psychostimulant action specifically to serotonin signaling and implicate the sex-specific epigenetic reprogramming of serotonin-related gene regulatory networks upstream from the transcription factor Pet1/Fev as determinants of reduced insulin production.
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