Cross-fostering alleviates depression-like behavior mediated by EAAT2 and SNARE complex in prenatal stress offspring rat

2021 ◽  
Vol 210 ◽  
pp. 173269
Author(s):  
Caixia Feng ◽  
Yating Ren ◽  
Jiahao Zhou ◽  
Yankai Dong ◽  
Xing Xue ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
Yan Jun Cao ◽  
Kai Yuan Zhang ◽  
Xing Xing Zheng ◽  
Jia Hui Liu ◽  
Ying Cheng

2018 ◽  
Vol 235 ◽  
pp. 374-383 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yan Jun Cao ◽  
Qiong Wang ◽  
Xing Xing Zheng ◽  
Ying Cheng ◽  
Yan Zhang

2009 ◽  
Vol 40 (2) ◽  
pp. 335-345 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. Rice ◽  
G. T. Harold ◽  
J. Boivin ◽  
M. van den Bree ◽  
D. F. Hay ◽  
...  

BackgroundExposure to prenatal stress is associated with later adverse health and adjustment outcomes. This is generally presumed to arise through early environmentally mediated programming effects on the foetus. However, associations could arise through factors that influence mothers' characteristics and behaviour during pregnancy which are inherited by offspring.MethodA ‘prenatal cross-fostering’ design where pregnant mothers are related or unrelated to their child as a result of in vitro fertilization (IVF) was used to disentangle maternally inherited and environmental influences. If links between prenatal stress and offspring outcome are environmental, association should be observed in unrelated as well as related mother–child pairs. Offspring birth weight and gestational age as well as mental health were the outcomes assessed.ResultsAssociations between prenatal stress and offspring birth weight, gestational age and antisocial behaviour were seen in both related and unrelated mother–offspring pairs, consistent with there being environmental links. The association between prenatal stress and offspring anxiety in related and unrelated groups appeared to be due to current maternal anxiety/depression rather than prenatal stress. In contrast, the link between prenatal stress and offspring attention deficit hyperactivity disorder was only present in related mother–offspring pairs and therefore was attributable to inherited factors.ConclusionsGenetically informative designs can be helpful in testing whether inherited factors contribute to the association between environmental risk factors and health outcomes. These results suggest that associations between prenatal stress and offspring outcomes could arise from inherited factors and post-natal environmental factors in addition to causal prenatal risk effects.


BJPsych Open ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (S1) ◽  
pp. S22-S22
Author(s):  
Mohamed Essam Gamil Abdelrazek ◽  
Frances Rice

AimsPrenatal adversity is hypothesized to increase risk of Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) via epigenetic changes. Maternal stress in late pregnancy may alter offspring neurodevelopmental outcomes by disrupting a unique period of rapid neurogenesis. Observational studies reporting an environmentally mediated programming pathway face challenges in drawing causal inferences including passive gene-environment correlation. This project aims to use a quasi-experimental genetically informed design to assess if reported correlations between maternal prenatal stress and offspring ASD traits were due to maternally inherited factors or consistent with a potentially causal prenatal exposure effect. No previous cross-fostering studies have assessed the effects of prenatal stress on childhood ASD.MethodThis study used an in-vitro fertilization cross-fostering sample with pregnant mothers related (n = 365) or unrelated (n = 111) to their offspring (mean age = 9.84 years). Prenatal stress was assessed using a subjective Likert scale during pregnancy. Questionnaires examined maternally rated offspring ASD traits using the Social and Communication Disorders Checklist. Birth weight and gestational age from medical records were used as comparison outcomes to validate the measure of stress as evidence suggests they are influenced by environmental factors. Correlations from multiple regression models were examined in relation to magnitude of effect size as well as significance. This is partly due to small sample size and that cross-fostering designs rely on comparing magnitudes of associations between related and unrelated groups. An interaction term was used to test the difference in the strength of association between related and unrelated mother-child groups.ResultSubjective assessment of prenatal maternal stress showed construct validity as it was associated with low birth weight (β = –0.297, p = 0.005) and reduced gestational age (β= –0.320, p = 0.001). Subjective late pregnancy stress was associated with increased offspring ASD traits in the whole sample (β = 0.089, p = 0.073) and in the related (β=0.045, p = 0.424) and unrelated mother-child (β=0.233, p = 0.029) subgroups. Non-significant interaction terms demonstrated that the mechanisms underlying the association between maternal stress and ASD and birth outcomes are likely to be similar and environmentally driven in the different conception groups.ConclusionFindings demonstrate the utility of genetically informed designs in disentangling inherited factors from environmental influences in the study of prenatal risk factors. Correlations between maternal prenatal stress and offspring ASD being present in both related and unrelated mother-child groups indicate an environmental link that is consistent with a potential causal effect. Associations detected are of imperative use for clinicians and policymakers, as they can guide the implementation of early psychosocial care for families at high liability.


2012 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. M. Dubrovskaya ◽  
D. S. Vasilev ◽  
N. L. Tumanova ◽  
N. N. Nalivaeva ◽  
O. S. Alexeeva ◽  
...  

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