Perinatal Distress Leads to Lateralized Medial Prefrontal Cortical Dopamine Hypofunction in Adult Rats release_cih6hkhm7bdhbjhytcos45zp4q

by Wayne G. Brake, Ron M. Sullivan, Alain Gratton

Published in Journal of Neuroscience by Society for Neuroscience.

2000   Volume 20, Issue 14, p5538-5543

Abstract

Obstetric complications involving anoxia or prolonged hypoxia are suspected to increase the risk for such mental disorders as schizophrenia and attention deficit-hyperactivity disorder. In previous studies, we reported evidence of enhanced nucleus accumbens (NAcc) dopamine (DA) function in adult rats subjected to intrauterine anoxia during cesarean (C) section birth. In the present study, we used voltammetry and monoamine-sensitive electrodes to investigate the possibility that this functional hyperactivity of the meso-NAcc system is attributable to a loss of inhibitory control from the medial prefrontal cortex (PFC). We monitored the DA responses to repeated once-daily stress in the right or left PFC of adult male rats born vaginally (VAG) or by C-section, either with (C + 15) or without (C + 0) an additional 15 min of intrauterine anoxia. In C + 15 animals, we observed a pronounced and persistent blunting of stress-induced DA release in the right PFC but not in the left; with repeated testing, a similar pattern of dampened right PFC DA stress responses emerged in C + 0 animals. In addition, C + 15 animals were spontaneously more active than VAG and C + 0 animals and displayed an increase in PFC DA transporter density that was also lateralized to the right hemisphere. There was no evidence, however, that PFC D(1) and D(2) receptor levels differed between birth groups or hemisphere. These findings suggest a mechanism by which perinatal complications involving anoxia might contribute to the etiology of mental disorders that have been linked to disturbances in central DA transmission and lateralized PFC dysfunction.
In text/plain format

Archived Files and Locations

application/pdf   148.5 kB
file_o7yyi5wbpvg7lnmq5k5oxra6ue
application/pdf   148.0 kB
file_rwxkq2ssbjhwdo3viwu2ueo6q4
web.archive.org (webarchive)
www.responsemodulation.net:80 (web)
Read Archived PDF
Preserved and Accessible
Type  article-journal
Stage   published
Date   2000-07-15
Language   en ?
Journal Metadata
Not in DOAJ
In Keepers Registry
ISSN-L:  0270-6474
Work Entity
access all versions, variants, and formats of this works (eg, pre-prints)
Catalog Record
Revision: a05aabd5-7961-4f61-af65-04c64c863bd3
API URL: JSON