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1.
Neurotoxicology ; 93: 9-21, 2022 12.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36055519

Early postnatal development in rodents is sensitive to neurotoxic effects of the environmental contaminant, methylmercury. While juvenile and adolescent exposure also produce long-term impairments in behavior, the outcome of neonatal exposure is less understood. Neural development during the neonatal period in rodents is akin to that seen in humans during the third trimester of pregnancy but methylmercury exposure occurring during the neonatal period has not been modeled, partly because breast milk is a poor source of bioavailable methylmercury. To examine this developmental period, male Long-Evans rats were exposed to 0, 80, or 350 µg/kg/day methylmercuric chloride from postnatal days 1-10, the rodent neonatal period. As adults, behavioral flexibility, attention, memory, and expression of the dopamine transporter in these rats was assessed. Rats exhibited changes in behavioral flexibility assessed in a spatial discrimination reversal procedure. Those rats exposed to the highest dose of methylmercury displayed subtly altered patterns of perseveration compared to control animals. During acquisition of the attention/memory procedure, rats exposed to this dose also had slower acquisition, and achieved lower overall accuracy during training, compared to controls despite neither attention nor memory being affected once the task was acquired. Finally, dopamine transporter expression in the striatum, prefrontal cortex, and hippocampus was unchanged in these adult rats. The results of this study replicate the trend of findings seen with exposure during gestation or during adolescence.


Methylmercury Compounds , Humans , Pregnancy , Female , Rats , Male , Animals , Adolescent , Methylmercury Compounds/toxicity , Rats, Long-Evans , Dopamine Plasma Membrane Transport Proteins , Learning , Hippocampus , Reversal Learning
2.
Pharmacol Biochem Behav ; 217: 173389, 2022 06.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35452710

Neurotoxicity resulting from the environmental contaminant, methylmercury (MeHg), is a source of concern for many human populations that rely heavily on the consumption of fish and rice as stable ingredients in the diet. The developmental period of exposure is important both to the qualitative effects of MeHg and to the dose required to produce those effects. MeHg exposure during the sensitive prenatal period causes deleterious and long-lasting changes in neurodevelopment at particularly low doses. The effects include a wide host of cognitive and behavioral outcomes expressed in adulthood and sometimes not until aging. However, neurotoxic outcomes of MeHg when exposure occurs during adolescence are only recently revealing impacts on human populations and animal models. This review examines the current body of work and showcases the sensitivity of adolescence, a period that straddles early development and adulthood, to MeHg neurotoxicity and the implications such toxicity has in our understanding of MeHg's effects in human populations and animal models.


Methylmercury Compounds , Neurotoxicity Syndromes , Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects , Adolescent , Adult , Animals , Diet , Female , Humans , Longevity , Methylmercury Compounds/toxicity , Models, Animal , Neurotoxicity Syndromes/etiology , Pregnancy
3.
Neurotoxicol Teratol ; 87: 107016, 2021.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34274440

Gestational exposure to methylmercury disrupts dopamine-mediated behavior and produces heightened sensitivity to monoamine agonists later in life. This has been reported and replicated following both pre- and post-natal exposure. Impacts of methylmercury when exposure occurs during the sensitive period of adolescence, a key period of dopaminergic development, remain underexplored. There have been variable results thus far in studies investigating links between adolescent exposure to methylmercury and alterations in executive function and altered sensitivity to monoamine agonists. The current study was designed to investigate adolescent exposure by exposing male mice to 0, 0.3, or 3 ppm methylmercury during adolescence and training them in a hybrid task to assess two executive functions, attention and memory, in adulthood. Behavior in these animals was probed with a range of doses of the dopamine agonist, d-amphetamine, and the norepinephrine agonist, desipramine. Attention and memory in these mice were sensitive to disruption by d-amphetamine and interacted with methylmercury exposure. Choice latencies were also longer in the MeHg-exposed mice. Desipramine did not affect behavior in these animals nor did it interact with methylmercury. It is concluded that methylmercury-related inhibition of behavior observed in this study were differentially sensitive to acute disruption in dopamine, but not norepinephrine, neurotransmission.


Attention/drug effects , Dopamine Agents/pharmacology , Dopamine Agonists/pharmacology , Memory/drug effects , Methylmercury Compounds/pharmacology , Animals , Behavior, Animal/drug effects , Conditioning, Operant/drug effects , Inhibition, Psychological , Male , Mice, Inbred C57BL
4.
Neurotoxicology ; 80: 130-139, 2020 09.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32726658

Methylmercury (MeHg) is an environmental neurotoxicant known to disrupt behavior related to dopamine neurotransmission in experimental models. Such disruptions are sensitive to dopamine agonists when administered acutely after exposure to MeHg has ended or when administered concurrently with MeHg exposure. Sustained attention and short-term remembering, components of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), are partially mediated by dopamine neurotransmission. In order to observe MeHg-related alterations in sustained attention and short-term memory, as well as determine sensitivity of MeHg exposed animals to dopamine agonists commonly used in the treatment of ADHD symptoms, rats were exposed to 0, 0.5, or 5 ppm MeHg throughout adolescence and trained in a hybrid sustained attention/short term memory visual signal detection task in adulthood. Behavior was then probed with acute i.p. injections of the dopamine agonist, d-amphetamine, which improves impaired attention and inhibits short-term memory in clinical syndromes like ADHD. Acute d-amphetamine dose-dependently decreased short-term memory as well as sustained attention. While MeHg alone did not impair accuracy or memory, it did interact with d-amphetamine to produce baseline-dependent inhibition of behavior. These findings further show that changes in behavior following low-level exposure to MeHg during adolescence are augmented by dopamine agonists. Observed impairments in memory following acute d-amphetamine are consistent with previous findings.


Amphetamine/toxicity , Attention/drug effects , Behavior, Animal/drug effects , Dopamine Agonists/toxicity , Memory/drug effects , Methylmercury Compounds/toxicity , Age Factors , Animals , Inhibition, Psychological , Male , Rats, Long-Evans , Signal Detection, Psychological/drug effects
5.
Neurotoxicology ; 78: 186-194, 2020 05.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32199988

Methylmercury is an environmental neurotoxicant found in fish that produces behavioral deficits following early developmental exposure. The impact of adolescent exposure to this developmental neurotoxicant is only recently being explored in animal models. Here, short-term memory and sustained attention were examined using a rodent model of adolescent methylmercury exposure. Rats were exposed to 0, 0.5, or 5 ppm methylmercury throughout the adolescent period and tested on a two-choice visual signal detection task in adulthood. Methylmercury improved short-term remembering in this procedure but the dose-effect curve was nonmonotonic, as has been reported previously: effects on memory were observed in animals exposed to 0.5 ppm methylmercury, but not 5 ppm. Methylmercury did not significantly alter sustained attention, which is in contrast to effects following gestational exposure in human populations. The results may suggest that attention is not involved with previously reported effects of methylmercury during adolescence, but certain procedural issues remain unresolved.


Attention/drug effects , Memory, Short-Term/drug effects , Methylmercury Compounds/toxicity , Animals , Conditioning, Operant/drug effects , Male , Rats, Long-Evans
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