4.7 Article

Maternal Chronic Ultrasound Stress Provokes Immune Activation and Behavioral Deficits in the Offspring: A Mouse Model of Neurodevelopmental Pathology

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Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms241411712

Keywords

ultrasound radiation; systemic inflammation; pro-inflammatory cytokines; depression; memory; offspring; mice

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Maternal immune activation can have significant effects on a child's life, and the scarcity of valid animal models for studying these disorders has been a major limitation in pre-clinical studies. In this study, the researchers investigated whether a model of 'emotional stress', involving ultrasound exposure, could be a suitable paradigm for maternal stress and promote neurodevelopmental abnormalities in the offspring. The results showed that both the ultrasound-exposed adult females and their female offspring displayed depressive-like behavior and cognitive deficits, comparable to those induced by administration of lipopolysaccharide.
Neurodevelopmental disorders stemming from maternal immune activation can significantly affect a child's life. A major limitation in pre-clinical studies is the scarcity of valid animal models that accurately mimic these challenges. Among the available models, administration of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) to pregnant females is a widely used paradigm. Previous studies have reported that a model of 'emotional stress', involving chronic exposure of rodents to ultrasonic frequencies, induces neuroinflammation, aberrant neuroplasticity, and behavioral deficits. In this study, we explored whether this model is a suitable paradigm for maternal stress and promotes neurodevelopmental abnormalities in the offspring of stressed females. Pregnant dams were exposed to ultrasound stress for 21 days. A separate group was injected with LPS on embryonic days E11.5 and E12.5 to mimic prenatal infection. The behavior of the dams and their female offspring was assessed using the sucrose test, open field test, and elevated plus maze. Additionally, the three-chamber sociability test and Barnes maze were used in the offspring groups. ELISA and qPCR were used to examine pro-inflammatory changes in the blood and hippocampus of adult females. Ultrasound-exposed adult females developed a depressive-like syndrome, hippocampal overexpression of GSK-3 & beta;, IL-1 & beta;, and IL-6 and increased serum concentrations of IL-1 & beta;, IL-6, IL-17, RANTES, and TNF & alpha;. The female offspring also displayed depressive-like behavior, as well as cognitive deficits. These abnormalities were comparable to the behavioral changes induced by LPS. The ultrasound stress model can be a promising animal paradigm of neurodevelopmental pathology associated with prenatal 'emotional stress'.

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