The circadian phase of antenatal glucocorticoid treatment affects the risk of behavioral disorders.
Mariana AstizIsabel HeydeMats Ingmar FortmannVerena BossungClaudia RollAnja SteinBerthold GrüttnerWolfgang GöpelChristoph HärtelJonas ObleserHenrik OsterPublished in: Nature communications (2020)
During pregnancy, maternal endocrine signals drive fetal development and program the offspring's physiology. A disruption of maternal glucocorticoid (GC) homeostasis increases the child's risk of developing psychiatric disorders later in life. We here show in mice, that the time of day of antenatal GC exposure predicts the behavioral phenotype of the adult offspring. Offspring of mothers receiving GCs out-of-phase compared to their endogenous circadian GC rhythm show elevated anxiety, impaired stress coping, and dysfunctional stress-axis regulation. The fetal circadian clock determines the vulnerability of the stress axis to GC treatment by controlling GC receptor (GR) availability in the hypothalamus. Similarly, a retrospective observational study indicates poorer stress compensatory capacity in 5-year old preterm infants whose mothers received antenatal GCs towards the evening. Our findings offer insights into the circadian physiology of feto-maternal crosstalk and assign a role to the fetal clock as a temporal gatekeeper of GC sensitivity.
Keyphrases
- pregnant women
- gas chromatography
- preterm infants
- high fat diet
- preterm birth
- birth weight
- pregnancy outcomes
- stress induced
- climate change
- mental health
- mass spectrometry
- low birth weight
- quality improvement
- type diabetes
- blood pressure
- metabolic syndrome
- atrial fibrillation
- high resolution
- heart rate
- sleep quality
- body mass index
- weight loss
- young adults
- tandem mass spectrometry
- replacement therapy
- childhood cancer