4.7 Article

Cell-type and fetal-sex-specific targets of prenatal alcohol exposure in developing mouse cerebral cortex

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ISCIENCE
卷 24, 期 5, 页码 -

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CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.isci.2021.102439

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  1. National Institutes of Health [R01AA024659, R01AA028406, F99NS113423]

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Prenatal alcohol exposure leads to persistent alterations in the developing neural transcriptome, affecting neural maturation, cell cycle, and gene co-expression networks. Females show more pronounced effects, including neural loss of X-inactivation and activation of autosomal genes, indicating cell- and sex-specific teratogenic effects.
Prenatal alcohol exposure (PAE) results in cerebral cortical dysgenesis. Single-cell RNA sequencing was performed on murine fetal cerebral cortical cells from six timed pregnancies, to decipher persistent cell- and sex-specific effects of an episode of PAE during early neurogenesis. We found, in an analysis of 38 distinct neural subpopulations across 8 lineage subtypes, that PAE altered neural maturation and cell cycle and disrupted gene co-expression networks. Whereas most differentially regulated genes were inhibited, particularly in females, PAE also induced sex-independent neural expression of fetal hemoglobin, a presumptive epigenetic stress adaptation. PAE inhibited Bcl11a, Htt, Ctnnb1, and other upstream regulators of differentially expressed genes and inhibited several autism-linked genes, suggesting that neurodevelopmental disorders share underlyingmechanisms. PAE females exhibited neural loss of X-inactivation, with correlated activation of autosomal genes and evidence for spliceosome dysfunction. Thus, episodic PAE persistently alters the developing neural transcriptome, contributing to sex- and cell-type-specific teratology.

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