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Children's Hospital, DCRI specialize
in adolescence
by
Heather Woolwine
Public
Relations
As many of us remember, adolescence spans years marked by uncertainty,
peer pressure, major hormonal changes, and feelings of insecurity
linked to the voyage from child to adult.
Because of so many major changes, including physical maturity and
sexuality, cognitive processes, emotional feelings, and relationships
with others, this age group represents a distinct challenge for health
professionals in the MUSC Children’s Hospital.
These changes often intersect with developmental modifications of
health care needs, effectiveness of treatment, health education, and
health promotion.
“These patients are halfway between being an adult and a child,” said
Janice Key, M.D., Adolescent Medicine director. “You have to treat them
uniquely. They often look like adults… but they’re not.”
In keeping with the combined mission of the Children’s Hospital and the
Darby Children’s Research Institute (DCRI), both groups realize that
adolescents face challenges during this developmental stage
unparalleled to almost any other stage in life.
“Adolescence is a key period. It’s when many of us first initiate
behaviors that will affect the rest of our lives,” Key said. “For
instance, many people start smoking in their preteen or teen years, or
begin having sex. We call these risk-taking behaviors, and it’s
critical to prevent or intervene and address these behaviors at this
point in a patient’s life. We are determined to help adolescents get
through this challenging transition.”
Genetic and environmental factors each contribute to occurrence of
stress and various disorders, with life stress paramount to other
outside influences. Life stress means everything from an infection
while still in the womb and its implications, to child abuse and
malnutrition.
But as the age old argument of nature versus nurture suggests, you
simply can’t have one without the other; so, researchers at the DCRI
and those involved with Key’s research in school-based settings remain
determined to study the interplay among genetic factors and life
stress.
Key’s projects include teen pregnancy and primary and secondary
intervention, abstinence education, smoking cessation, and pregnancy
prevention. The division also initiated a community intervention in the
Sea Island area of rural southern Charleston County funded through the
New Morning Foundation.
While Key and her collaborators study the challenge of life stress for
adolescents, DCRI scientists strive to understand the delicate balance
between genetics and this stress to better understand adolescent
addiction and development of disorders.
With that in mind, the need to study disorders such as depression,
bipolar disorder, generalized stress disorder, drug addiction,
obsessive compulsive disorder and attention deficit hyperactivity
disorder (ADHD) in relation to adolescence has become a priority
for basic scientists in the lab.
In studies conducted in the DCRI, rodents are exposed to either
enriched or impoverished environments beginning as soon as the animals
are weaned at 21 days after birth, and continue until sexual maturity
at 60 days after birth. In the enriched environment, animals live in
groups of eight to10 in a large environment where objects (toys) are
traded in and out everyday. An investigator handles the subjects for 20
minutes each day. On the other end of the spectrum, the impoverished
rats live alone in a relatively small environment with no interesting
objects and are never handled by the investigator. Roberto Melendez,
Ph.D., Neurosciences / Neuroscience Research, and graduate student Mary
Lee Gregory showed that animals reared in the impoverished environment
show a number of deficits in the development of their brains, ranging
from molecular changes in cell signaling to poor performance in memory
tasks.
Peter Kalivas, Ph.D., and his team focus on changes produced in the
prefrontal cortex, a brain region implicated in a number of
neuropsychiatric disorders. Their work indicates that signaling through
glutamate receptors in this area is defective in the impoverished
animals, and thus reduces the ability to perform memory tasks. Poor
attention to the task, similar to ADHD in humans, may cause this
behavior.
Another graduate student, Jamie Peters, Neurosciences/Neuroscience
Research, demonstrated that rats reared in an impoverished environment
also show greater sensitivity to psycho stimulant drugs of abuse, such
as cocaine.
While at MUSC, Karen Szumlinski, Ph.D., University of California- Santa
Barbara, used genetic mouse models of deficits in glutamate
transmission in the prefrontal cortex. In these studies, a family of
genes called the Homers, which encode proteins critical for glutamate
receptor signaling, were deleted. These mice showed deficits in cell
signaling and behavior akin to the rats reared in an impoverished
environment, including memory deficits and increased addiction to
cocaine. Research also suggests a mutation in the Homer gene is
associated with the development of schizophrenia, a disease with
typical onset in late adolescence.
Finally, Alejandra Pacchioni, M.D., College of
Medicine-Physiology/Neuroscience, and collaborators at the University
of Pennsylvania showed that a mutant mouse deficient in a gene called
Nac-1 is unresponsive to an acute injection of cocaine in both behavior
and neurotransmission. Haowei Shen, Ph.D., and Ryan LaLumiere, Ph.D.,
both of Neurosciences/Neuroscience Research, discovered it possible for
Nac-1 to transport protein degrading machinery in response to cellular
activation.
Given the ability of the Homer and Nac-1 genes to regulate
psychostimulant effects or learning and memory, the next step decides
if rearing environments can intensify or improve these genetic
vulnerabilities.
Friday, Jan. 13, 2006
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