Maternal hyperglycemia disturbs neocortical neurogenesis via epigenetic regulation in C57BL/6J mice.

Cell Death Dis

Key Laboratory of the Ministry of Education for Experimental Teratology, Shandong Provincial Key Laboratory of Mental Disorders, Department of Human Anatomy and Histoembryology, School of Basic Medical Sciences, Shandong University, Jinan, Shandong, China.

Published: March 2019

AI Article Synopsis

  • Offspring of mothers with high blood sugar during pregnancy are more likely to develop long-term neuropsychiatric disorders, suggesting that maternal hyperglycemia disrupts the brain's development.
  • The study examined a mouse model of hyperglycemia during pregnancy to observe its impact on the differentiation of neural stem cells and overall neocortical structure.
  • Findings indicate that high glucose levels change how neural stem cells develop, leading to earlier differentiation and altered neuron placement in the neocortex, likely influenced by epigenetic factors.

Article Abstract

Offspring of mothers with hyperglycemia during pregnancy have a higher incidence of long-term neuropsychiatric disorders than offspring from a normal pregnancy, indicating that neocortical neurogenesis might be affected by maternal hyperglycemia. A paucity of study evaluating the effects of hyperglycemia on neocortical neurogenetic differentiation of neural stem cells, and the mechanism remains unclear. We sought to investigate the the roles and possible molecular mechanism of maternal hyperglycemia on neocortical neurogenetic differentiation of neural stem cells. We established a mouse model of a hyperglycemic pregnancy to study effects of intrauterine exposure to maternal hyperglycemia on neocortical neurogenesis. We observed morphological changes in the neocortex and detected the neurogenetic differentiation of neural stem cells in offspring affected by high glucose levels. We investigated the regulatory network between epigenetic modification and transcription factors in differentiated neural stem cells under hyperglycemic conditions. Maternal hyperglycemia disturbs neocortical lamination in some non-malformed offspring. Our results suggested that hyperglycemia altered the early-born neuron fate and the distribution of newborn neurons in deep layers by promoting the earlier differentiation of neural stem cells. Altered histone acetylation and its regulation on the transcription of proneural genes might be correlated to the disrupted differentiation of neural stem cells and altered distribution of newborn projection neurons in the neocortex. Our data raised the possibility that maternal hyperglycemia in pregnancy disturbs the laminar distribution of neocortical projection neurons in some non-malformed offspring via epigenetic regulation on neural stem cell differentiation and the birthdate of neocortical neurons.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6397163PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41419-019-1438-zDOI Listing

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