4.7 Article

Early-life nicotine or cotinine exposure produces long-lasting sleep alterations and downregulation of hippocampal corticosteroid receptors in adult mice

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SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
卷 11, 期 1, 页码 -

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NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-03468-5

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  1. Marta och Gunnar V. Philipsons Stiftelse Stockholm
  2. Gosta Fraenckel Foundation for Medical Research, Stockholm
  3. Stiftelsen Samariten, Stockholm
  4. Stiftelsen Frimurare Barnhuset i Stockholm
  5. Sallskapet Barnavard, Stockholm
  6. University of Bologna [RFO2015, RFO2016, RFO2019, RFO2020]

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Early-life exposure to nicotine and its metabolite cotinine can lead to long-lasting reprogramming of hippocampal activity and sleep phenotype in adult mice. Nicotine and cotinine exposure resulted in increased wakefulness at the transition between rest and activity period, along with downregulation of hippocampal glucocorticoid receptor expression. These findings suggest that events during early life critical period may modulate adult sleep phenotype.
Early-life exposure to environmental toxins like tobacco can permanently re-program body structure and function. Here, we investigated the long-term effects on mouse adult sleep phenotype exerted by early-life exposure to nicotine or to its principal metabolite, cotinine. Moreover, we investigated whether these effects occurred together with a reprogramming of the activity of the hippocampus, a key structure to coordinate the hormonal stress response. Adult male mice born from dams subjected to nicotine (NIC), cotinine (COT) or vehicle (CTRL) treatment in drinking water were implanted with electrodes for sleep recordings. NIC and COT mice spent significantly more time awake than CTRL mice at the transition between the rest (light) and the activity (dark) period. NIC and COT mice showed hippocampal glucocorticoid receptor (GR) downregulation compared to CTRL mice, and NIC mice also showed hippocampal mineralocorticoid receptor downregulation. Hippocampal GR expression significantly and inversely correlated with the amount of wakefulness at the light-to-dark transition, while no changes in DNA methylation were found. We demonstrated that early-life exposure to nicotine (and cotinine) concomitantly entails long-lasting reprogramming of hippocampal activity and sleep phenotype suggesting that the adult sleep phenotype may be modulated by events that occurred during that critical period of life.

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