Effects of prenatal administration of nicotine on amino acid pools, protein metabolism, and nicotine binding in the brain

Abstract
The effects of nicotine on brain protein metabolism and on the properties of the nicotine binding site were investigated in newborn animals exposed to nicotine during gestation. Brain protein synthesis rates measured in vivo were lower by 18% in newborn of treated animals. Protein degradation rates measured in vitro in the presence of nicotine were lower by 13%. The effect was specific forl-(-) nicotine, sinced-(+)nicotine, nicotinic acid, or nicotinamide had no effect on degradation rates. Newborn brain amino acid levels, mainly nonessential amino acids and amino acids of putative neurotrans nitter function, were changed some-what; an increase in the level of taurine (13%), threonine (21%), serine (35%) and glycine (35%), and a decrease in lysine (14%) was observed in the offspring of nicotine treated animals (0.5 mg/kg, s.c., 2×daily throughout gestation). These changes could not account for the decrease in protein metabolism. Nicotine binding was higher by 25% in the offspring of animals exposed to nicotine during gestation. No such increase was found after treatment of adult rats with nicotine, indicating that the properties of the nicotine binding site change with age.