Ilari D'Aprile , Giulia Petrillo , Valentina Zonca , Monica Mazzelli , Floriana De Cillis , Maria Grazia Di Benedetto , Marco Andrea Riva , Annamaria Cattaneo
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Early life stress (ELS) is a significant risk factor for the development of mood and metabolic disorders later in life, which are often in comorbidity. Although it is well known that not all the exposed individuals develop these conditions, the mechanisms leading to a vulnerable or a resilient phenotype for mood and metabolic disorders, as consequences of ELS exposure, are still not fully understood. In this study, we used a prenatal stress (PNS) model, mimicking perinatal adversities, to investigate the impact of ELS on metabolic function, stress-related and inflammatory markers in adult male and female offspring, with a particular focus on vulnerable or resilient phenotypes. PNS exposure was associated with a dysregulation of stress-related and metabolic markers both in the liver and also in the ventral hippocampus, with vulnerable males exhibiting increased insulin receptor levels and dysregulated expression of adipokine receptors (such as leptin and adiponectin). In contrast, female animals did not exhibit these changes. Additionally, PNS induced a pronounced neuroinflammatory response in the ventral hippocampus of vulnerable male rats, characterized by an upregulation of microglial activation markers. Interestingly, a similar pro-inflammatory status was observed in the liver of PNS-exposed males regardless of the pathologic phenotype; however, anti-inflammatory markers were upregulated only in resilient animals, suggesting an active mechanism of resilience. These findings suggest that specific metabolic and inflammatory changes underlie, with a sex-specific effect, the onset of a vulnerable phenotype to PNS and highlight the importance of targeting these pathways in the treatment of mood disorders and metabolic comorbidities.
期刊介绍:
Progress in Neuro-Psychopharmacology & Biological Psychiatry is an international and multidisciplinary journal which aims to ensure the rapid publication of authoritative reviews and research papers dealing with experimental and clinical aspects of neuro-psychopharmacology and biological psychiatry. Issues of the journal are regularly devoted wholly in or in part to a topical subject.
Progress in Neuro-Psychopharmacology & Biological Psychiatry does not publish work on the actions of biological extracts unless the pharmacological active molecular substrate and/or specific receptor binding properties of the extract compounds are elucidated.