• Neuroscience · Feb 2025

    Repeated exposure to high-dose nicotine induces prefrontal gray matter atrophy in adolescent male rats.

    • Xi Chen, Kehong Long, Sijie Liu, Yue Cai, Linlin Cheng, Wei Chen, Fuchun Lin, and Hao Lei.
    • State Key Laboratory of Magnetic Resonance and Atomic and Molecular Physics, Innovation Academy for Precision Measurement Science and Technology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Wuhan, Hubei, PR China; Univer... more sity of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, PR China. less
    • Neuroscience. 2025 Feb 6; 566: 205217205-217.

    AbstractIncidences of seizure after e-cigarette use in adolescents and young adults have been reported, raising the concern about the risk of nicotine overconsumption. Few previous studies have investigated the effects of nicotine at high doses on brain and behavior in adolescent animals. In this study, the effects of a 15-day repeated nicotine treatment at a daily dose of 2 mg/kg body weight were investigated in adolescent and adult male rats. Nicotine treatment abolished body weight gain in the adults, but did not affect the body weight significantly in the adolescents. Only the nicotine-treated adolescents showed significant changes in brain anatomy 1 day post-treatment, which manifested as a significant reduction of whole-brain gray matter (GM) volume, a further reduction of regional GM volume in the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) and altered GM volume covariations between the mPFC and a number of brain regions. The mPFC of nicotine-treated adolescent rats did not exhibit evident signs of neuronal degeneration and reactive astrocytosis, but showed a significantly decreased expression of presynaptic marker synaptophysin (SYN), along with a significantly increased oxidative stress and a significantly elevated expressions of microglial marker ionized calcium binding adaptor molecule 1 (IBA1). Together, these results suggested that repeated nicotine overdosing may shift regional redox, modulate microglia-mediated pruning, and give rise to structural/connectivity deficits in the mPFC of adolescent male rats.Copyright © 2024 International Brain Research Organization (IBRO). Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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