An Integrated Systems Approach to Decode the Impact of Adolescent Nicotine Exposure in Utero and Postnatally Oxycodone Exposed Offspring

Author:

Flores Adrian1,Gowen Austin1,Schaal Victoria L.1,Koul Sneh1,Hernandez Jordan B.1,Yelamanchili Sowmya V.1,Pendyala Gurudutt1

Affiliation:

1. University of Nebraska Medical Center (UNMC)

Abstract

Abstract Perinatal exposure to prescription opioids pose a critical public health risk. Notably, research has found significant neurodevelopmental and behavioral deficits between in utero (IUO) and postnatal (PNO) oxycodone-exposed offspring but there is a notable gap in knowledge regarding the interaction of these groups to other drug exposure, particularly nicotine exposure. Nicotine's widespread use represents a ubiquitous clinical interaction that current research does not address. Children often experiment with drugs and risky behavior; therefore, adolescence is a key timepoint to characterize. This study employed an integrated systems approach to investigate escalating nicotine exposure in adolescence and subsequent nicotine withdrawal in the IUO- and PNO-offspring. Western blot analysis found alterations of the blood-brain barrier (B.B.B.) and synaptic proteins. RT-qPCR further validated immune dysfunction in the central nervous system (CNS) consistent with compromised B.B.B. Peripheral nicotine metabolism was consistent with increased catabolism of nicotine concerning PNO & IUO, a predictor of greater addiction risk. Lastly, behavioral assays found subtle deficits to withdrawal in nociception and anxiety-like behavior. This study showed, for the first time, the vulnerabilities of PNO- and IUO-exposed groups concerning nicotine use during early adolescence and withdrawal.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

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1. Developmental outcomes with perinatal exposure (DOPE) to prescription opioids;NeuroImmune Pharmacology and Therapeutics;2023-11-27

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