4.6 Article Proceedings Paper

Maternal N-acetylcysteine suppresses fetal inflammatory cytokine responses to maternal lipopolysaccharide

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY
Volume 195, Issue 4, Pages 1053-1057

Publisher

MOSBY, INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.ajog.2006.06.081

Keywords

N-acetylcysteine; maternal infection; inflammation; fetus; rat

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Objective: Evidence suggests that maternal infections may induce fetal inflammatory responses. Because cytokine actions may be mediated by oxidative stress, we determined whether N-acetylcysteine, an antioxidant, can blunt fetal inflammatory responses to maternal lipopolysaccharide. Study design: Sprague Dawley near-term rats (n = 16) received intraperitoneal lipopolysaccharide (100 mu g/kg) at 30 minutes and saline solution or N-acetylcysteine (300 mg/kg) at 150 minutes. An additional group received N-acetylcysteine before and after lipopolysaccharide administration. At 6 hours, rats were killed, and fetal and maternal blood cytokines were determined. Results: After maternal lipopolysaccharide administration, fetal blood interleukin-6 markedly increased (3 +/- 2 to 1265 +/- 574 pg/mL); N-acetylcysteine that was given before or before and after lipopolysaccharide administration reduced fetal interleukin-6 response to control levels. A similar trend was observed for interleukin-1 beta. No effect of N-acetyleysteine on fetal interleukin-10 levels was observed. Conclusion: Maternal N-acetyleysteine inhibits fetal cytokine responses to maternal lipopolysaccharide, even when given 2 hours after lipopolysaccharide injection. These results suggest that N-acetylcysteine may protect the fetus from sequelae of maternal inflammation. (c) 2006 Mosby, Inc. All rights reserved.

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