Journal
BRAIN RESEARCH
Volume 1527, Issue -, Pages 57-66Publisher
ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.brainres.2013.06.025
Keywords
Prenatal stress; Duration; Hippocampus; Myelination; Synaptophysin
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Funding
- National key basic research and developmental program (973 Program) [2012CB525001]
- National Natural Science Foundation of China [30901205]
- Shanghai Rising-Star Program [10QA1405700]
- New Hundred Talents Program of Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine
- Shanghai Science and Technology Committee [124119a1400]
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The relationship between prenatal stress (PS) exposure and neurodevelopmental deficits remains inconclusive, especially when assessing the role of PS duration and timing and sex-dependent effects. This study explored a sex-specific association between the duration and timing of exposure and the outcomes of PS-induced neurotoxicity in hippocampal microstructure, synaptophysin expression, and neurobehavioral performance in rats. Pregnant rats were randomly assigned to control, PS-ML (exposed to prenatal restraint stress in the mid-to-late period of pregnancy), or PS-L (exposed in the late period of pregnancy) groups, and offspring in each group were divided into two subgroups by sex. Surface-righting reflex test, cliff avoidance test and Moths water maze test showed that neurodevelopmental levels were reduced in PS-treated pups but without significant sex differences. On postnatal day 22, hippocampal microstructure was examined by electron microscopy, and the expression of hippocampal synaptophysin was assessed by western blot. Abnormal ultrastructural appearance of hippocampal neurons and myelin sheaths, more degenerating neurons and higher G-ratios were found in young PS-ML and PS-L rats as well as reduced expression of hippocampal synaptophysin, although PS-ML pups were more greatly affected than PS-L, with males showing slightly greater impairments than females. These findings suggest that hippocampal hypomyelination and decreased synaptophysin expression in neurodevelopment may be a duration and time-dependent effect of prenatal stress exposure, modified slightly by sex. (C) 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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