Uranium chronic contamination effects on the cholinergic system: in vivo and in vitro approaches
Thesis: Uranium (U) is a heavy metal which occurs naturally in the environment. It is both a chemical and a radiological toxicant. The aim of this work was: (i) to assess the effects of U chronic exposure on the cholinergic system (biosynthesis and breakdown enzymes, receptors …) and on behaviour of adult, young or predisposed to neurodegenerative illness (ApoE KO) rodents; (ii) to grasp the neurotoxic effects of U on human neuronal cells. In vivo, this work shows a structure- (cortex more sensitive than hippocampus), rodent model- (young more sensitive than adults), time- (sub-chronic exposure more harmful than chronic exposure), exposure level- and isotope-dependent effect of U. In vitro, the study underlined the neurocytotoxic U potential and the presence of uranium precipitates in cells. These results show the deleterious impact of U on neuronal cells, and demonstrate that U induces impairments on the cholinergic system and the behaviour of rodents.
Author(s)
Hélène Bensoussan
Date of publication
- 2009
Keywords
- Uraniu
- Heavy metal
- Chronic exposure
- Neurotoxicity
- Cholinergic system
- Behaviour
- Hippocampus
- Cortex
- Cytotoxicity
- Human neuroblastoma cell line
Issuing body(s)
- Université Paris-Sud 12
Date of defense
- 28/09/2009
Thesis director(s)
- Mohammed Taouis
URL of the HAL notice
Version
- 1