Development Programming Of Non Mammalian Flashcards

1
Q

What are predictive adaptive responses?

A

induced by environmental factors in early life; act via developmental
plasticity to modify the phenotype so that it is matched to the
predicted environment in later life

E.g. in locust: Overcrowding induces offspring to have long wings and
melanised body – Not a “genetic” adaptation

E.g. in alligator: Temperature-dependent sex determination (TSD) with male-promoting t at 33oC during a thermosensitive period of gonadogenesis

E.g. in honeybee: Nurse bees limit the amount of food and its sugar content delivered to larvae, which limits adult body mass and the ovariole number through cell death

E.g. in Sea turtle: TSD, with males produced at 26-27oC and
females at 32-33oC.

E.g. Zebrafish: Remarkable resistance to hypoxia - low cardiac activity and cellular proliferation to minimise O2 consumption

E.g. Japanese quail: Pre-hatching stress and post-hatching unpredictable food availability leads to more risk-taking, explorative behaviour in adulthood – increases the chances of food acquisition in suboptimal environment

E.g. Chicken: Eggs at high altitude decrease their shell porosity to limit water loss (porosity ∝ decreasing Pa)

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2
Q

Why do we use non-mammalian species rather than mammalian when studying developmental programming?

A

Animals have different critical windows of development. Non mammalian often match human critical windows more.

E.g. in chicks:
• Timing of heart development similar to human
• Effects of environment and drug independent of maternal /placental physiology
• Large embryo
• Large numbers in short time
• Cost-effective
• Anatomical difference

E.g in zebrafish:
• Gene map established
• Transparent embryo to monitor blood flow in vivo
• Large numbers in short time
• Single vs. double circulation system
• Regenerative heart – like human fetus

Sheep are expensive and difficult to assess.
Mice are useful but have diff critical windows.

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3
Q

Effects of fetal hypoxia?

A

Caused by placental insuff, abruption, gestational diabetes, maternal obesity, hypertension, high altitide preggo, maternal smoking—>

Leads to vascular constriction in placenta resulting in reduced blood flow and less o2 to fetus—>

Chronic fetal hypoxia and intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR)—>

Developmental programming of cardiovascular and metabolic disease in adulthood.

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4
Q

Treatment for reduced blood flow in placenta and fetus by ROS production during preggo?

A

Antioxidants: Melatonin, Statin, Sildenafil, Vitamin-C, polyphenol, omega 3 etc

Act on the placenta → vasodilation → increase blood flow → more
O2 and nutrient delivery to the fetus → improve fetal development?

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5
Q

Effect of antioxidants in study using chick embryos?

A
  • Melatonin, sildenafil, statin, and other antioxidants have no effect on haematocrit, body weight or brain sparing in the chick embryo
  • Antioxidants do not make embryos “less hypoxic”
  • But…antioxidants improved fetal growth in mammals
  • Antioxidants act at the placenta in mammals
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6
Q

Effects of hypoxia on cardiac function in chick study? How do antioxidants effect the results?

A

• Left ventricular developed pressure (LVDP): → How well the heart is contracting
→ Reduced in Hypoxia. Weak heart.
—> Melatonin restored normal LVDP in the hypoxic embryo

• Left ventricular end diastolic pressure (LVEDP): → How well the heart is relaxing
→ Increased in Hypoxia. Impaired relaxability.
—> Statin restored LVEDP in the hypoxic embryo

Antioxidants may have direct effects on the fetus

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