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Timed Maternal Melatonin Treatment Reverses Circadian Disruption of the Fetal Adrenal Clock Imposed by Exposure to Constant Light

Surprisingly, in our modern 24/7 society, there is scant information on the impact of developmental chronodisruption like the one experienced by shift worker pregnant women on fetal and postnatal physiology. There are important differences between the maternal and fetal circadian systems; for instan...

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Autores principales: Mendez, Natalia, Abarzua-Catalan, Lorena, Vilches, Nelson, Galdames, Hugo A., Spichiger, Carlos, Richter, Hans G., Valenzuela, Guillermo J., Seron-Ferre, Maria, Torres-Farfan, Claudia
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3418288/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22912724
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0042713
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author Mendez, Natalia
Abarzua-Catalan, Lorena
Vilches, Nelson
Galdames, Hugo A.
Spichiger, Carlos
Richter, Hans G.
Valenzuela, Guillermo J.
Seron-Ferre, Maria
Torres-Farfan, Claudia
author_facet Mendez, Natalia
Abarzua-Catalan, Lorena
Vilches, Nelson
Galdames, Hugo A.
Spichiger, Carlos
Richter, Hans G.
Valenzuela, Guillermo J.
Seron-Ferre, Maria
Torres-Farfan, Claudia
author_sort Mendez, Natalia
collection PubMed
description Surprisingly, in our modern 24/7 society, there is scant information on the impact of developmental chronodisruption like the one experienced by shift worker pregnant women on fetal and postnatal physiology. There are important differences between the maternal and fetal circadian systems; for instance, the suprachiasmatic nucleus is the master clock in the mother but not in the fetus. Despite this, several tissues/organs display circadian oscillations in the fetus. Our hypothesis is that the maternal plasma melatonin rhythm drives the fetal circadian system, which in turn relies this information to other fetal tissues through corticosterone rhythmic signaling. The present data show that suppression of the maternal plasma melatonin circadian rhythm, secondary to exposure of pregnant rats to constant light along the second half of gestation, had several effects on fetal development. First, it induced intrauterine growth retardation. Second, in the fetal adrenal in vivo it markedly affected the mRNA expression level of clock genes and clock-controlled genes as well as it lowered the content and precluded the rhythm of corticosterone. Third, an altered in vitro fetal adrenal response to ACTH of both, corticosterone production and relative expression of clock genes and steroidogenic genes was observed. All these changes were reversed when the mother received a daily dose of melatonin during the subjective night; supporting a role of melatonin on overall fetal development and pointing to it as a ‘time giver’ for the fetal adrenal gland. Thus, the present results collectively support that the maternal circadian rhythm of melatonin is a key signal for the generation and/or synchronization of the circadian rhythms in the fetal adrenal gland. In turn, low levels and lack of a circadian rhythm of fetal corticosterone may be responsible of fetal growth restriction; potentially inducing long term effects in the offspring, possibility that warrants further research.
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spelling pubmed-34182882012-08-21 Timed Maternal Melatonin Treatment Reverses Circadian Disruption of the Fetal Adrenal Clock Imposed by Exposure to Constant Light Mendez, Natalia Abarzua-Catalan, Lorena Vilches, Nelson Galdames, Hugo A. Spichiger, Carlos Richter, Hans G. Valenzuela, Guillermo J. Seron-Ferre, Maria Torres-Farfan, Claudia PLoS One Research Article Surprisingly, in our modern 24/7 society, there is scant information on the impact of developmental chronodisruption like the one experienced by shift worker pregnant women on fetal and postnatal physiology. There are important differences between the maternal and fetal circadian systems; for instance, the suprachiasmatic nucleus is the master clock in the mother but not in the fetus. Despite this, several tissues/organs display circadian oscillations in the fetus. Our hypothesis is that the maternal plasma melatonin rhythm drives the fetal circadian system, which in turn relies this information to other fetal tissues through corticosterone rhythmic signaling. The present data show that suppression of the maternal plasma melatonin circadian rhythm, secondary to exposure of pregnant rats to constant light along the second half of gestation, had several effects on fetal development. First, it induced intrauterine growth retardation. Second, in the fetal adrenal in vivo it markedly affected the mRNA expression level of clock genes and clock-controlled genes as well as it lowered the content and precluded the rhythm of corticosterone. Third, an altered in vitro fetal adrenal response to ACTH of both, corticosterone production and relative expression of clock genes and steroidogenic genes was observed. All these changes were reversed when the mother received a daily dose of melatonin during the subjective night; supporting a role of melatonin on overall fetal development and pointing to it as a ‘time giver’ for the fetal adrenal gland. Thus, the present results collectively support that the maternal circadian rhythm of melatonin is a key signal for the generation and/or synchronization of the circadian rhythms in the fetal adrenal gland. In turn, low levels and lack of a circadian rhythm of fetal corticosterone may be responsible of fetal growth restriction; potentially inducing long term effects in the offspring, possibility that warrants further research. Public Library of Science 2012-08-13 /pmc/articles/PMC3418288/ /pubmed/22912724 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0042713 Text en © 2012 Mendez et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Mendez, Natalia
Abarzua-Catalan, Lorena
Vilches, Nelson
Galdames, Hugo A.
Spichiger, Carlos
Richter, Hans G.
Valenzuela, Guillermo J.
Seron-Ferre, Maria
Torres-Farfan, Claudia
Timed Maternal Melatonin Treatment Reverses Circadian Disruption of the Fetal Adrenal Clock Imposed by Exposure to Constant Light
title Timed Maternal Melatonin Treatment Reverses Circadian Disruption of the Fetal Adrenal Clock Imposed by Exposure to Constant Light
title_full Timed Maternal Melatonin Treatment Reverses Circadian Disruption of the Fetal Adrenal Clock Imposed by Exposure to Constant Light
title_fullStr Timed Maternal Melatonin Treatment Reverses Circadian Disruption of the Fetal Adrenal Clock Imposed by Exposure to Constant Light
title_full_unstemmed Timed Maternal Melatonin Treatment Reverses Circadian Disruption of the Fetal Adrenal Clock Imposed by Exposure to Constant Light
title_short Timed Maternal Melatonin Treatment Reverses Circadian Disruption of the Fetal Adrenal Clock Imposed by Exposure to Constant Light
title_sort timed maternal melatonin treatment reverses circadian disruption of the fetal adrenal clock imposed by exposure to constant light
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3418288/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22912724
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0042713
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