Threshold effects of prenatal stress on striatal microglia and relevant behaviors

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Abstract

Prenatal stress, a risk factor for neurodevelopmental disorders (NDDs), leads to immune alterations, including offspring neuroimmune cells. Differences in offspring outcomes may arise from whether the extent of prenatal stress crosses “thresholds” for effects on specific outcomes. Therefore, we sought to determine offspring outcomes using models with different extents of prenatal stress. We focused on striatal outcomes, because of their relevance for NDDs. Pregnant CD1 mice were assigned to four groups (each: N=6): no stress (“NoS”) or one of the following stressors administered three times daily: i.p. saline injections (low prenatal stress, LoS), Interleukin-6 injections as a component of prenatal stress (immune prenatal stress; ImS), or restraint stress + saline injections (high prenatal stress, HiS), embryonic day 12-18. In adult offspring, HiS altered striatal-dependent behavior across males and females, while ImS induced fewer behavioral changes, and LoS did not affect behavior. Adult striatal microglia morphologies were mostly unchanged across groups, with only HiS leading to altered striatal density of minimally ramified cells. However, embryonic striatal microglia were affected by all models of stress, albeit in distinct ways. The HiS model, and to a lesser extent LoS, also influenced immune components of the maternal-fetal interface: placental macrophages. In conclusion, high and immune stress affected adult striatal-dependent behavior, exceeding the threshold necessary for persistent impacts, but all stress models affected embryonic microglia, suggesting that early neuroimmune outcomes had a lower threshold for impacts. Distinct severities and aspects of prenatal stress may therefore underlie different outcomes relevant to NDDs.

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