Maternal high-fat or low-protein diets promote autism-related behavior and altered social behavior within groups in offspring male mice.
Noga ZilkhaSilvia Gabriela ChuartzmanRuth FishmanShifra Ben-DorTali KimchiPublished in: Scientific reports (2024)
Maternal malnutrition has been associated with neurodevelopmental deficits and long-term implications on the offspring's health and behavior. Here, we investigated the effects of maternal low-protein diet (LPD) or obesity-inducing maternal high-fat diet (HFD) on dyadic social interactions, group organization and autism-related behaviors in mice. We found that maternal HFD induced an autism-related behavioral phenotype in the male offspring, including a robust decrease in sociability, increased aggression, cognitive rigidity and repetitive behaviors. Maternal LPD led to a milder yet significant effect on autism-related symptoms, with no effects on olfactory-mediated social behavior. Under naturalistic conditions in a group setting, this manifested in altered behavioral repertoires, increased magnitude in dominance relations, and reduced interactions with novel social stimuli in the HFD male offspring, but not in the LPD offspring. Finally, we found HFD-induced transcriptomic changes in the olfactory bulbs of the male offspring. Together, our findings show that maternal malnutrition induces long-lasting effects on aggression and autism-related behaviors in male offspring, and potential impairments in brain regions processing chemosensory signals.
Keyphrases
- high fat diet
- insulin resistance
- adipose tissue
- birth weight
- autism spectrum disorder
- pregnancy outcomes
- healthcare
- intellectual disability
- mental health
- high fat diet induced
- skeletal muscle
- type diabetes
- drug induced
- weight gain
- physical activity
- traumatic brain injury
- multiple sclerosis
- diabetic rats
- sleep quality
- binding protein
- congenital heart disease
- health promotion
- single molecule
- preterm birth