Late prenatal immune activation causes hippocampal deficits in the absence of persistent inflammation across aging

Abstract Background Prenatal exposure to infection and/or inflammation is increasingly recognized to play an important role in neurodevelopmental brain disorders. It has recently been postulated that prenatal immune activation, especially when occurring during late gestational stages, may also induce pathological brain aging via sustained effects on systemic and central inflammation. Here, we tested this hypothesis using an established mouse model of exposure to viral-like immune activation in late pregnancy. Methods Pregnant C57BL6/J mice on gestation day 17 were treated with the viral mimetic polyriboinosinic-polyribocytidilic acid (poly(I:C)) or control vehicle solution. The resulting offspring were first tested using cognitive and behavioral paradigms known to be sensitive to hippocampal damage, after which they were assigned to quantitative analyses of inflammatory cytokines, microglia density and morphology, astrocyte density, presynaptic markers, and neurotrophin expression in the hippocampus throughout aging (1, 5, and 22Â months of age). Results Maternal poly(I:C) treatment led to a robust increase in inflammatory cytokine levels in late gestation but did not cause persistent systemic or hippocampal inflammation in the offspring. The late prenatal manipulation also failed to cause long-term changes in microglia density, morphology, or activation, and did not induce signs of astrogliosis in pubescent, adult, or aged offspring. Despite the lack of persistent inflammatory or glial anomalies, offspring of poly(I:C)-exposed mothers showed marked and partly age-dependent deficits in hippocampus-regulated cognitive functions as well as impaired hippocampal synaptophysin and brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) expression. Conclusions Late prenatal exposure to viral-like immune activation in mice causes hippocampus-related cognitive and synaptic deficits in the absence of chronic inflammation across aging. These findings do not support the hypothesis that this form of prenatal immune activation may induce pathological brain aging via sustained effects on systemic and central inflammation. We further conclude that poly(I:C)-based prenatal immune activation models are reliable in their effectiveness to induce (hippocampal) neuropathology across aging, but they appear unsuited for studying the role of chronic systemic or central inflammation in brain aging.

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PID https://www.doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.3602657.v1
PID https://www.doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.3602657
URL https://dx.doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.3602657
URL https://dx.doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.3602657.v1
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Author Giovanoli, Sandra
Author Notter, Tina
Author Richetto, Juliet
Author Labouesse, Marie
Author StĂŠphanie Vuillermot
Author Riva, Marco
Author Meyer, Urs
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Publication Date 2016-12-14
Publisher Figshare
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keyword FOS: Biological sciences
keyword FOS: Clinical medicine
keyword FOS: Health sciences
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Source https://science-innovation-policy.openaire.eu/search/dataset?datasetId=dedup_wf_001::7e0feeb8181e858847697297e6ab9b4c
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Last Updated 12 January 2021, 12:20 (CET)
Created 12 January 2021, 12:20 (CET)