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1School of Women's and Infants' Health, The University of Western Australia and 2Women and Infants Research Foundation of Western Australia, Perth, Australia; 3Canadian Institutes and Health Research Group in Fetal and Neonatal Health and Development and 4Departments of Physiology and Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada
Submitted 6 June 2006 ; accepted in final form 26 July 2006
Fetal exposure to synthetic glucocorticoids in sheep results in increased fetal hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) activity persisting to one year of age. We aimed to determine the effects of single or repeated maternal or fetal betamethasone injections on offspring HPA activity at 2 and 3 yr of age and whether changes in adrenal mediators of steroidogenesis contribute to changes in pituitary-adrenal function. Pregnant ewes or their fetuses received either repeated intramuscular saline or betamethasone injections (0.5 mg/kg) at 104, 111, 118, and 124 days of gestation (dG) or a single betamethasone injection at 104 dG followed by saline at 111, 118, and 124 dG. Offspring were catheterized at 2 and 3 yr of age and given corticotrophin-releasing hormone + arginine vasopressin challenges. Adrenal tissue was collected for quantitative RT-PCR mRNA determination at 3.5 yr of age. In 2-yr-old offspring, maternal betamethasone injections did not alter basal ACTH or cortisol levels, but repeated injections elevated ACTH responses. At 3 yr of age, basal ACTH was elevated, and both basal and stimulated cortisol levels were suppressed by repeated maternal injections. Basal and stimulated cortisol-to-ACTH ratios and basal cortisol-to-cytochrome P-450 17
-hydroxylase (P450c17) mRNA ratios were suppressed by repeated injections. Repeated fetal betamethasone injections attenuated basal ACTH and cortisol levels in offspring at 2 but not 3 yr of age. Plasma changes were not associated with altered adrenal P450c17, ACTH receptor,
-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase, or glucocorticoid receptor mRNA levels. These data suggest that maternal, but not fetal, betamethasone administration results in adrenal suppression in adulthood.
hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal; glucocorticoid programming; adrenal; steroidogenic enzymes
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