Neurobiology of Disease (Apr 2007)

Moderate growth restriction: Deleterious and protective effects on white matter damage

  • Paul Olivier,
  • Olivier Baud,
  • Myriam Bouslama,
  • Philippe Evrard,
  • Pierre Gressens,
  • Catherine Verney

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 26, no. 1
pp. 253 – 263

Abstract

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The role for growth restriction in the multifactorial pathophysiology of developing white-matter damage remains debated. We studied rat pups with prenatal growth restriction (GR) induced by unilateral ligation of the uterine artery. Pups with severe GR exhibited white-matter damage that persisted to adulthood [Olivier, P., Baud, O., Evrard, P., Gressens, P.,Verney, C., 2005. Prenatal ischemia and white matter damage in rats. J. Neuropathol. Exp. Neurol. 64, 998–1006]. Moderate GR was associated with diffuse white-matter lesions, microglial activation, and astrogliosis. Loss of pre-oligodendrocytes on postnatal day 7 was followed by a delay in myelination. Following a cortical excitotoxic insult on postnatal day 5, the size of the induced white-matter lesion was smaller in pups with moderate GR and larger in pups with severe GR, compared to normal pups. The increased pre-oligodendrocyte proliferation seen in the white matter of pups with moderate GR subjected to this “double-hit” injury may constitute a heretofore-undescribed neuroprotective mechanism of immature white matter.

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