4.7 Article

Maternal Inflammation Disrupts Fetal Neurodevelopment via Increased Placental Output of Serotonin to the Fetal Brain

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 36, Issue 22, Pages 6041-6049

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2534-15.2016

Keywords

inflammation/infection; neurodevelopment; placenta; prenatal programming; serotonin; tryptophan

Categories

Funding

  1. US Department of Defense [AR120066]
  2. Conte Center [P50 MH096972, P50 MH103222]
  3. Autism Science Foundation
  4. Rose Hills Foundation

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Maternal inflammation during pregnancy affects placental function and is associated with increased risk of neurodevelopmental disorders in the offspring. The molecular mechanisms linking placental dysfunction to abnormal fetal neurodevelopment remain unclear. During typical development, serotonin (5-HT) synthesized in the placenta from maternal L-tryptophan (TRP) reaches the fetal brain. There, 5-HT modulates critical neurodevelopmental processes. We investigated the effects of maternal inflammation triggered in mid-pregnancy in mice by the immunostimulant polyriboinosinic-polyribocytidylic acid [poly(I:C)] on TRP metabolism in the placenta and its impact on fetal neurodevelopment. We show that a moderate maternal immune challenge upregulates placental TRP conversion rapidly to 5-HT through successively transient increases in substrate availability and TRP hydroxylase (TPH) enzymatic activity, leading to accumulation of exogenous 5-HT and blunting of endogenous 5-HT axonal outgrowth specifically within the fetal forebrain. The pharmacological inhibition of TPH activity blocked these effects. These results establish altered placental TRP conversion to 5-HT as a new mechanism by which maternal inflammation disrupts 5-HT-dependent neurogenic processes during fetal neurodevelopment.

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