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Early IGF-1 receptor inhibition in mice mimics preterm human brain disorders and reveals a therapeutic target.

Alberto PotenzieriSara UccellaDeborah PreitiMatteo PisoniSilvia RosatiChiara LavarelloMartina BartolucciDoriana DebellisFederico CatalanoAndrea PetrettoLino NobiliTommaso FellinValter TucciLuca A RamenghiAnnalisa SavardiLaura Cancedda
Published in: Science advances (2024)
Besides recent advances in neonatal care, preterm newborns still develop sex-biased behavioral alterations. Preterms fail to receive placental insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1), a major fetal growth hormone in utero, and low IGF-1 serum levels correlate with preterm poor neurodevelopmental outcomes. Here, we mimicked IGF-1 deficiency of preterm newborns in mice by perinatal administration of an IGF-1 receptor antagonist. This resulted in sex-biased brain microstructural, functional, and behavioral alterations, resembling those of ex-preterm children, which we characterized performing parallel mouse/human behavioral tests. Pharmacological enhancement of GABAergic tonic inhibition by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration-approved drug ganaxolone rescued functional/behavioral alterations in mice. Establishing an unprecedented mouse model of prematurity, our work dissects the mechanisms at the core of abnormal behaviors and identifies a readily translatable therapeutic strategy for preterm brain disorders.
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