妊娠中の大麻曝露が次世代の生殖発達を遅らせる(Prenatal cannabis exposure delays reproductive development in offspring)

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2025-09-04 ワシントン州立大学(WSU)

Web要約 の発言:
ワシントン州立大学の研究で、妊娠中および授乳期に母マウスが大麻蒸気に曝露されると、子世代(F1)に生殖発達の遅れが生じることが示された。具体的には、体格の小型化、初経(思春期)の遅延、発情周期の乱れが確認された。ただし、第2世代(F2)と第3世代(F3)では影響が弱まり、妊娠や出産自体に深刻な障害は見られなかった。研究者は、妊娠・授乳期の大麻使用が子や孫の発達に影響する可能性を警告しており、米国産科婦人科学会も大麻使用を控えるよう勧告している。近年、妊娠中の大麻使用率が増加しており、公衆衛生上の懸念が高まっている。本研究は世代間影響の理解を深め、妊娠期の大麻使用に対する注意喚起につながる重要な知見を提供する。

妊娠中の大麻曝露が次世代の生殖発達を遅らせる(Prenatal cannabis exposure delays reproductive development in offspring)
Kanako Hayashi, a professor in the WSU College of Veterinary Medicine’s Center for Reproductive Biology, led a new study that shows prenatal cannabis use may disrupt and slow the reproductive development of offspring (photo by Ted S. Warren, College of Veterinary Medicine).

<関連情報>

周産期カンナビス曝露が雌マウスの生殖パラメータに及ぼす世代間効果 Transgenerational effects of perinatal cannabis exposure on female reproductive parameters in mice

Mingxin Shi, Yeongseok Oh, Debra A Mitchell, James A MacLean, II, Ryan J McLaughlin, Kanako Hayashi
Toxicological Sciences  Published:01 April 2025
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1093/toxsci/kfaf043

Abstract

The use of cannabis during pregnancy and nursing is a growing public health concern, and the multigenerational impacts of perinatal cannabis exposure remain largely unknown. To address this knowledge gap, we sought to examine the long-term consequences of perinatal cannabis use on reproductive function and how it might impact subsequent generations. Pregnant female mice were exposed to control vehicle or cannabis extract [25, 100, or 200 mg/ml Δ9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) in the cannabis extract] from gestational day 1 to postnatal day 21 (twice/day), encompassing the duration of pregnancy through weaning. Based on plasma THC concentrations in F0 females, we chose 100 and 200 mg/ml THC in the cannabis extract for subsequent studies. The selected doses and exposure conditions did not disrupt pregnancy or nursing in F0 females. Pregnancy and neonatal outcomes, including gestational length, litter size, and sexual ratio, were not affected by cannabis exposure. However, cannabis-exposed neonatal F1 pups were smaller. Cannabis exposure delayed vaginal opening as a sign of puberty onset and disrupted estrous cyclicity in F1 females. However, its effects were minor in F2 and F3 females. F1–F3 females showed no abnormal ovarian and uterine histology or plasma estradiol-17β levels and could produce normal offspring without pregnancy issues. These results suggest that the developmental stages of the hypothalamus and pituitary are likely perturbed by gestational and nursing cannabis exposure in F1 females. However, they are not sufficient to compromise adult reproductive function. The present results indicate limited transgenerational effects of perinatal cannabis exposure on female reproductive parameters.

医療・健康
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