The Sea Urchin Embryo as a Model for Mammalian Developmental Neurotoxicity: Ontogenesis of the High-Affinity Choline Transporter and Its Role in Cholinergic Trophic Activity

  • Qiao, Dan
  • Nikitina, Lyudmila A.
  • Buznikov, Gennady A.
  • Lauder, Jean M.
  • Seidler, Frederic J.
  • Slotkin, Theodore A.
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Publication date
January 2003

Abstract

Embryonic development in the sea urchin requires trophic actions of the same neurotransmitters that participate in mammalian brain assembly. We evaluated the development of the high-affinity choline transporter, which controls acetylcholine synthesis. A variety of developmental neurotoxicants affect this transporter in mammalian brain. [3H]Hemicholinium-3 binding to the transporter was found in the cell membrane fraction at stages from the unfertilized egg to pluteus, with a binding affinity comparable with that seen in mammalian brain. Over the course of development, the concentration of transporter sites rose more than 3-fold, achieving concentrations comparable with those of cholinergically enriched mammalian brain regions. Dimethylamino...

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