Diazinon And Parathion Diverge In Their Effects On Development Of Noradrenergic Systems.

Diazinon And Parathion Diverge In Their Effects On Development Of Noradrenergic Systems. Brain Res Bull. 2017 Feb 21;: Authors: Slotkin TA, Skavicus S, Seidler FJ Abstract Organophosphate pesticides elicit developmental neurotoxicity through mechanisms over and above their shared property as cholinesterase inhibitors. We compared the consequences of neonatal exposure (postnatal days PN1-4) to diazinon or parathion on development of norepinephrine systems in rat brain, using treatments designed to produce equivalent effects on cholinesterase, straddling the threshold for barely-detectable inhibition. Norepinephrine levels were measured throughout development from the immediate posttreatment period (PN5), to early adolescence (PN30), young adulthood (PN60) and full adulthood (PN100); we assessed multiple brain regions containing all the major noradrenergic synaptic projections. Diazinon elicited a significant overall deficit of norepinephrine, whereas parathion produced a net increase. The effects were not immediately apparent (PN5) but rather emerged over the course of development, indicating that the organophosphate effects represent alteration of the trajectory of development, not just continuance of an initial injury. There were no comparable effects on β-adrenergic receptors, indicating that the presynaptic changes were not an adaptation to an underlying, primary effect on postsynaptic receptor signaling. Because we used the chol...
Source: Brain Research Bulletin - Category: Neurology Authors: Tags: Brain Res Bull Source Type: research