The effects of vascular intrauterine growth retardation on cortical astrocytes

Author: Bassan Haim   Kidron Debora   Bassan Merav   Rotstein Michael   Kariv Naam   Giladi Eliezer   Davidson Ariane   Gozes Illana   Harel Shaul  

Publisher: Informa Healthcare

ISSN: 1476-4954

Source: Journal of Maternal-Fetal and Neonatal Medicine, Vol.23, Iss.7, 2010-07, pp. : 595-600

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Abstract

Objective. We sought to determine the pathogenesis of neurodevelopmental impairments in survivors of intrauterine growth retardation (IUGR).Methods. We used an experimental rabbit vascular IUGR model. We ligated 25% of uteroplacental vessels (partial ischemia) of one-half of the fetuses on day 25 at the end of the third trimester. We then determined hemispheral DNA and protein levels, and used glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) staining to count the labeled astrocytes at the superficial cortical layers.Results. Ischemic fetuses were significantly smaller than control fetuses and presented a disproportionately small body and a relatively larger head compared with the normal body/head ratio, confirming the study model as that of asymmetric IUGR. Hemispheral DNA was unchanged in IUGR fetuses, but they had decreased brain weight, hemispheral protein content, and a reduced number of mature (GFAP-positive) cortical astrocytes compared with control fetuses.Conclusion. Vascular IUGR, as demonstrated in our asymmetric IUGR model, adversely affected brain growth, cell size, and cortical astrocytes maturation. In view of the neurotrophic and neuroprotective functions of astrocytes, a reduced number of mature astrocytes during this critical period of development may be implicated in the pathogenesis of the neurodevelopmental impairments observed in IUGR.

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