Data from: Light-at-night exposure affects brain development through pineal allopregnanolone-dependent mechanisms

  • Shogo Haraguchi (寄稿者)
  • Masaki Kamata (寄稿者)
  • Takuma Tokita (寄稿者)
  • Kei Ichiro Tashiro (寄稿者)
  • Miku Sato (寄稿者)
  • Mitsuki Nozaki (寄稿者)
  • Mayumi Okamoto-Katsuyama (寄稿者)
  • Isao Shimizu (寄稿者)
  • Guofeng Han (寄稿者)
  • Vishwajit S. Chowdhury (寄稿者)
  • Xiao Feng Lei (寄稿者)
  • Takuro Miyazaki (寄稿者)
  • Joo Ri Kim-Kaneyama (寄稿者)
  • Tomoya Nakamachi (寄稿者)
  • Kouhei Matsuda (寄稿者)
  • Hirokazu Ohtaki (寄稿者)
  • Toshinobu Tokumoto (寄稿者)
  • Tetsuya Tachibana (寄稿者)
  • Akira Miyazaki (寄稿者)
  • Kazuyoshi Tsutsui (寄稿者)

データセット

説明

The molecular mechanisms by which environmental light conditions affect cerebellar development are incompletely understood. We showed that circadian disruption by light-at-night induced Purkinje cell death through pineal allopregnanolone (ALLO) activity during early life in chicks. Light-at-night caused the loss of diurnal variation of pineal ALLO synthesis during early life and led to cerebellar Purkinje cell death, which was suppressed by a daily injection of ALLO. The loss of diurnal variation of pineal ALLO synthesis induced not only reduction in pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide (PACAP), a neuroprotective hormone, but also transcriptional repression of the cerebellar Adcyap1 gene that produces PACAP, with subsequent Purkinje cell death. Taken together, pineal ALLO mediated the effect of light on early cerebellar development in chicks.
利用可能になった日2019/10/14
出版社Dryad
地理的範囲Tokyo

引用スタイル