Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5855050 | NeuroToxicology | 2013 | 37 Pages |
Abstract
Adult-onset methylmercury (MeHg) exposure is thought to result primarily in sensory and motor deficits but effects on learning are poorly understood. One mechanism by which chronic MeHg may exert its neurotoxicity is via sustained disruption of intracellular calcium homeostasis, with a consequent increase of intracellular Ca2+ ions in vulnerable neurons. A biochemically heterogeneous group of compounds, calcium channel blockers, have been shown in vitro to attenuate MeHg's toxicity. To evaluate the role of calcium antagonism in MeHg toxicity in vivo, adult BALB/c mice were exposed chronically to 0 or 15Â ppm of Hg (as MeHg) via drinking water and to nimodipine, a dihydropryidine, L-type Ca2+ channel blocker with action in the CNS. Nimodipine was administered orally in diets (0, 20, or 200Â ppm, producing approximately 0, 2, or 20Â mg/kg/day of nimodipine). An incremental repeated acquisition (IRA) of response chains procedure was used to detect MeHg-induced deficits in learning or motoric function and to evaluate possible neuroprotection by nimodipine. MeHg impaired performance on the IRA task, and this was partially or completely blocked by dietary nimodipine, depending on dose. Measures of learning co-varied with measures of motoric function as indicated by overall response rate. Nimodipine delayed or prevented the behavioral toxicity of MeHg exposure as evidenced by IRA performance; effects on learning seemed secondary to response rate decreases.
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Authors
Jordan M. Bailey, Blake A. Hutsell, M. Christopher Newland,