1. Maternal immune activation leads to defective brain-blood vessels and intracerebral hemorrhages in male offspring.
- Author
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Rasile M, Lauranzano E, Faggiani E, Ravanelli MM, Colombo FS, Mirabella F, Corradini I, Malosio ML, Borreca A, Focchi E, Pozzi D, Giorgino T, Barajon I, and Matteoli M
- Subjects
- Animals, Female, Male, Mice, Pregnancy, Behavior, Animal, Brain blood supply, Brain pathology, Disease Models, Animal, Endothelial Cells metabolism, Poly I-C adverse effects, Transforming Growth Factor beta1 metabolism, Cerebral Hemorrhage pathology, Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects pathology
- Abstract
Intracerebral hemorrhages are recognized risk factors for neurodevelopmental disorders and represent early biomarkers for cognitive dysfunction and mental disability, but the pathways leading to their occurrence are not well defined. We report that a single intrauterine exposure of the immunostimulant Poly I:C to pregnant mice at gestational day 9, which models a prenatal viral infection and the consequent maternal immune activation, induces the defective formation of brain vessels and causes intracerebral hemorrhagic events, specifically in male offspring. We demonstrate that maternal immune activation promotes the production of the TGF-β1 active form and the consequent enhancement of pSMAD1-5 in males' brain endothelial cells. TGF-β1, in combination with IL-1β, reduces the endothelial expression of CD146 and claudin-5, alters the endothelium-pericyte interplay resulting in low pericyte coverage, and increases hemorrhagic events in the adult offspring. By showing that exposure to Poly I:C at the beginning of fetal cerebral angiogenesis results in sex-specific alterations of brain vessels, we provide a mechanistic framework for the association between intragravidic infections and anomalies of the neural vasculature, which may contribute to neuropsychiatric disorders., (© 2022 The Authors. Published under the terms of the CC BY NC ND 4.0 license.)
- Published
- 2022
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