4.7 Article

Baseline immunoreactivity before pregnancy and poly(I:C) dose combine to dictate susceptibility and resilience of offspring to maternal immune activation

期刊

BRAIN BEHAVIOR AND IMMUNITY
卷 88, 期 -, 页码 619-630

出版社

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.bbi.2020.04.061

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资金

  1. Stanley & Jacqueline Schilling Neuroscience Postdoctoral Research Fellowship, University of California, Davis, CA United States
  2. Dennis Weatherstone Predoctoral Fellowships from Autism Speaks, United States [7825]
  3. ARCS Foundation, United States
  4. University of California Office of the President, United States
  5. Eugene Cota-Robles Fellowship, University of California, Davis, United States [T32MH112507]
  6. National Institute of Mental Health, NIH, Unites States
  7. National Institute of Mental Health, NIH, Unites States [P50-MH106438-01]
  8. University of California Davis Research Investments in Science and Engineering Program, University of California, Davis, United States
  9. University of California, Davis MIND Institute IDDRC grant [U54HD079125]
  10. National Institutes of Health, United States [U54HD079125]
  11. Simons Foundation, United States (SFARI) [321998]
  12. Daniel T. O'Connor, MD Memorial Research Grant Scholar Award, University of California, Davis, United States

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Despite the potential of rodent models of maternal immune activation (MIA) to identify new biomarkers and therapeutic interventions for a range of psychiatric disorders, current approaches using these models ignore two of the most important aspects of this risk factor for human disease: (i) most pregnancies are resilient to maternal viral infection and (ii) susceptible pregnancies can lead to different combinations of phenotypes in offspring. Here, we report two new sources of variability-the baseline immunoreactivity (BIR) of isogenic females prior to pregnancy and differences in immune responses in C57BL/6 dams across vendors-that contribute to resilience and susceptibility to distinct combinations of behavioral and biological outcomes in offspring. Similar to the variable effects of human maternal infection, MIA in mice does not cause disease-related phenotypes in all pregnancies and a combination of poly(I:C) dose and BIR predicts susceptibility and resilience of pregnancies to aberrant repetitive behaviors and alterations in striatal protein levels in offspring. Even more surprising is that the intermediate levels of BIR and poly(I:C) dose are most detrimental to offspring, with higher BIR and poly(I:C) doses conferring resilience to measured phenotypes in offspring. Importantly, we identify the BIR of female mice as a biomarker before pregnancy that predicts which dams will be most at risk as well as biomarkers in the brains of newborn offspring that correlate with changes in repetitive behaviors. Together, our results highlight considerations for optimizing MIA protocols to enhance rigor and reproducibility and reveal new factors that drive susceptibility of some pregnancies and resilience of others to MIA-induced abnormalities in offspring.

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