Neonatal Immune Challenge with Lipopolysaccharide Triggers Long-lasting Sex- and Age-related Behavioral and Immune/Neurotrophic Alterations in Mice: Relevance to Autism Spectrum Disorders.
Charllyany Sabino CustódioBruna Stefânia Ferreira MelloAdriano José Maia Chaves FilhoCamila Nayane de Carvalho LimaRafaela Carneiro CordeiroFábio MiyajimaGislaine Z RéusSilvânia Maria Mendes VasconcelosTatiana BarichelloJoão QuevedoAntônio Carlos de OliveiraDavid Freitas de LucenaDanielle Silveira MacêdoPublished in: Molecular neurobiology (2017)
Early-life challenges, particularly infections and stress, are related to neuropsychiatric disorders such as autism and schizophrenia. Here, we conducted a wide range of behavioral tests in periadolescent (postnatal day (PN) 35) and adult (PN70) Swiss mice neonatally challenged with LPS on PN5 and -7, to unveil behavioral alterations triggered by LPS exposure. Immune and neurotrophic (brain-derived neurotrophic factor-BDNF) alterations were determined in the prefrontal cortex (PFC), hippocampus (HC), and hypothalamus (HT). Since the incidence and clinical manifestations of neurodevelopmental disorders present significant sex-related differences, we sought to distinctly evaluate male and female mice. While on PN35, LPS-challenged male mice presented depressive, anxiety-like, repetitive behavior, and working memory deficits; on PN70, only depressive- and anxiety-like behaviors were observed. Conversely, females presented prepulse inhibition (PPI) deficits in both ages studied. Behavioral changes in periadolescence and adulthood were accompanied, in both sexes, by increased levels of interleukin (IL-4) (PFC, HC, and HT) and decreased levels of IL-6 (PFC, HC, and HT). BDNF levels increased in both sexes on PN70. LPS-challenged male mice presented, in both ages evaluated, increased HC myeloperoxidase activity (MPO); while when adult increased levels of interferon gamma (IFNγ), nitrite and decreased parvalbumin were observed. Alterations in innate immunity and parvalbumin were the main LPS-induced remarks between males and females in our study. We concluded that neonatal LPS challenge triggers sex-specific behavioral and neurochemical alterations that resemble autism spectrum disorder, constituting in a relevant model for the mechanistic investigation of sex bias associated with the development of this disorder.
Keyphrases
- inflammatory response
- autism spectrum disorder
- lps induced
- working memory
- early life
- anti inflammatory
- prefrontal cortex
- bipolar disorder
- stress induced
- traumatic brain injury
- intellectual disability
- attention deficit hyperactivity disorder
- high fat diet induced
- toll like receptor
- depressive symptoms
- preterm infants
- adipose tissue
- high frequency
- small molecule
- brain injury
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- drug induced
- solid state