自闭症谱系障碍
癫痫发生
癫痫
自闭症
后代
医学
压力源
免疫学
心理学
精神科
怀孕
生物
遗传学
作者
Zachariah Z. Smith,Rebecca A. Kubiak,Mathew R. Arnold,Kelsey M. Loupy,Jeremy A Taylor,Taylor G. Crist,Allison E. Bernier,Heather D’Angelo,Jared D. Heinze,Christopher A. Lowry,Daniel S. Barth
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.bbi.2020.05.034
摘要
Autism spectrum disorders (ASDs) and epilepsy are often comorbid. The basis for this co-occurrence remains unknown; however, inflammatory stressors during development are a shared risk factor. To explore this association, we tested the effect of repeated immunizations using a heat-killed preparation of the stress-protective immunoregulatory microbe Mycobacterium vaccae NCTC 11,659 (M. vaccae) on the behavioral and epileptogenic consequences of the combined stress-terbutaline (ST) rat model of ASD-like behavior/epilepsy. Repeated immunization of the dam with M. vaccae during pregnancy, followed by immunization of the pups after terbutaline injections, prevented the expression of ASD-like behavior but did not appear to protect against, and may have even enhanced, the spontaneous epileptogenic effects of ST. Maternal M. vaccae injections transferred an anti-inflammatory immunophenotype to offspring, and repeated injections across development prevented ST-induced increases in microglial density at early developmental time points in a region-specific manner. Despite epidemiological comorbidity between ASD/epileptic conditions and shared environmental risk factors, our results suggest that the expression of ASD-like behaviors, but perhaps not epileptogenesis, is sensitive to early anti-inflammatory intervention. These data provide support for the exploration of immunoregulatory strategies to prevent the negative neurodevelopmental behavioral effects of stressors during early critical periods.
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