Mitochondria-Related Nuclear Gene Expression in the Nucleus Accumbens and Blood Mitochondrial Copy Number After Developmental Fentanyl Exposure in Adolescent Male and Female C57BL/6 Mice
Author
Calarco, Cali AFox, Megan E
van Terheyden, Saskia
Turner, Makeda D
Alipio, Jason B
Chandra, Ramesh
Lobo, Mary Kay
Date
2021-11-18Journal
Frontiers in PsychiatryPublisher
Frontiers Media S.A.Type
Article
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Show full item recordAbstract
The potency of the synthetic opioid fentanyl and its increased clinical availability has led to the rapid escalation of use in the general population, increased recreational exposure, and subsequently opioid-related overdoses. The wide-spread use of fentanyl has, consequently, increased the incidence of in utero exposure to the drug, but the long-term effects of this type of developmental exposure are not yet understood. Opioid use has also been linked to reduced mitochondrial copy number in blood in clinical populations, but the link between this peripheral biomarker and genetic or functional changes in reward-related brain circuitry is still unclear. Additionally, mitochondrial-related gene expression in reward-related brain regions has not been examined in the context of fentanyl exposure, despite the growing literature demonstrating drugs of abuse impact mitochondrial function, which subsequently impacts neuronal signaling. The current study uses exposure to fentanyl via dam access to fentanyl drinking water during gestation and lactation as a model for developmental drug exposure. This perinatal drug-exposure is sufficient to impact mitochondrial copy number in circulating blood leukocytes, as well as mitochondrial-related gene expression in the nucleus accumbens (NAc), a reward-related brain structure, in a sex-dependent manner in adolescent offspring. Specific NAc gene expression is correlated with both blood mitochondrial copy number and with anxiety related behaviors dependent on developmental exposure to fentanyl and sex. These data indicate that developmental fentanyl exposure impacts mitochondrial function in both the brain and body in ways that can impact neuronal signaling and may prime the brain for altered reward-related behavior in adolescence and later into adulthood.Rights/Terms
Copyright © 2021 Calarco, Fox, Van Terheyden, Turner, Alipio, Chandra and Lobo.Keyword
developmental drug exposurefentanyl
gene expression
mitochondria
mitochondrial copy number
nucleus accumbens
Identifier to cite or link to this item
http://hdl.handle.net/10713/17344ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.3389/fpsyt.2021.737389
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