ABC Efflux Transporters and Solute Carriers in the Early Developing Brain of a Marsupial Monodelphis domestica (South American Gray Short‐Tailed Opossum)

Author:

Huang Yifan1ORCID,Dziegielewska Katarzyna M.1,Habgood Mark D.1,Qiu Fiona1,Leandro Ana C. C.2,Callaghan Paul D.3,Curran Joanne E.2,VandeBerg John L.2,Saunders Norman R.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neuroscience Monash University Melbourne Victoria Australia

2. Division of Human Genetics and South Texas Diabetes and Obesity Institute, School of Medicine The University of Texas Rio Grande Valley Brownsville Texas USA

3. ANSTO—Australia's Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation Lucas Heights New South Wales Australia

Abstract

ABSTRACTThis study used a marsupial Monodelphis domestica, which is born very immature and most of its development is postnatal without placental protection. RNA‐sequencing (RNA‐Seq) was used to identify the expression of influx and efflux transporters (ATP‐binding cassettes [ABCs] and solute carriers [SLCs]) and metabolizing enzymes in brains of newborn to juvenile Monodelphis. Results were compared to published data in the developing eutherian rat. To test the functionality of these transporters at similar ages, the entry of paracetamol (acetaminophen) into the brain and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) was measured using liquid scintillation counting following a single administration of the drug along with its radiolabelled tracer [3H]. Drug permeability studies found that in Monodelphis, brain entry of paracetamol was already restricted at P5; it decreased further in the first week of life and then remained stable until the oldest age group tested (P110). Transcriptomic analysis of Monodelphis brain showed that expression of transporters and their metabolizing enzymes in early postnatal (P) pups (P0, P5, and P8) was relatively similar, but by P109, many more transcripts were identified. When transcriptomes of newborn Monodelphis brain and E19 rat brain and placenta were compared, several transporters present in the rat placenta were also found in the newborn Monodelphis brain. These were absent from E19 rat brain but were present in the adult rat brain. These data indicate that despite its extreme immaturity, the newborn Monodelphis brain may compensate for the lack of placental protection during early brain development by upregulating protective mechanisms, which in eutherian animals are instead present in the placenta.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Wiley

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