Maternal Vaccination Against Nicotine Reduces Nicotine Distribution to
Fetal Brain in Rats
D. E. Keyler , D. Shoeman, M. G. LeSage, A. D.
Calvin and P. R. Pentel
Minneapolis Medical Research Foundation (D.E.K., D.S., M.G.L., P.R.P.);
Hennepin County Medical Center (D.E.K., P.R.P.); Department of Pharmacology,
University of Minnesota Medical School (P.R.P.); College of Pharmacy, University
of Minnesota (D.E.K.); and School of Public Health, University of Minnesota
(A.D.C.) Minneapolis, Minnesota
Cigarette smoking during pregnancy is associated with a variety of adverse
fetal outcomes. Nicotine is a likely contributorto these adverse
effects, with fetal brain as one target organ.Vaccination of adult
male rats against nicotine has been shownto reduce nicotine
distribution to the brain. The current studyexamined whether
vaccination of female rats before pregnancy wouldreduce the
distribution to fetal brain of a single nicotine doseadministered
during gestation. Female rats immunized with a nicotineconjugate
vaccine received a single dose of nicotine 0.03 mg/kgi.v. on
gestational day 16 to 22. Five minutes later, vaccinatedrats had
substantially higher bound and lower unbound serum nicotine
concentration and lower brain nicotine concentration than controls.
Fetal brain nicotine concentration was reduced by 43% in vaccinated
rats, comparable to the reduction in the maternal brain nicotine
concentration. The whole-fetus nicotine concentration was notaltered
by vaccination. A similar experiment was performed inwhich pregnant
rats were passively immunized with rabbit nicotine-specificIgG 7 or
21 mg/kg just before nicotine dosing. The effects ofpassive
immunization on nicotine distribution in the mother wereIgG
dose-related and the higher dose reduced nicotine distributionto
fetal brain by 60%. These data suggest that vaccine effectson
nicotine distribution to serum and brain are similar in pregnant
female rats to those previously reported in adult males. Vaccination
of female rats before pregnancy, or passive immunization during
pregnancy, can reduce the exposure of fetal brain to a singledose of
maternally administerednicotine.
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