IL-1 modulation preserves biomolecular, structural and functional integrity of the somatosensory cortex after fetal inflammation

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Abstract

Perinatal inflammation, often caused by infection, is strongly linked with lifelong disability. Human and experimental studies identify interleukin-1 (IL-1), a pro-inflammatory cytokine, as a key mediator. We tested the hypothesis that systemic administration of IL-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1Ra) could attenuate cortical inflammation and improve neuronal development in late gestation fetal sheep exposed to lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced inflammation. Fetal sheep, instrumented for continuous EEG, were randomised to: (1) saline infusion, (2) repeated intravenous LPS + vehicle infusions or (3) the same LPS regimen plus intravenous IL-1Ra infusions one hour after each LPS dose. Four-days later, brains were examined using RNAseq, Golgi staining and immunohistochemistry. On EEG, LPS-exposure reduced beta power compared to control, particularly in REM sleep. In the somatosensory cortex, LPS-exposure decreased expression of genes involved in dendritogenesis and synaptogenesis, and increased genes involved in immune activation via LPS and IL-1 signalling. LPS-exposed fetuses had increased microglial activation and reduced neuronal arborisation. IL-1Ra treatment improved EEG band power, normalised expression of genes involved in synaptogenesis, dendritogenesis and immune activation, reduced microglial activation, and restored neuronal arborisation. In summary, IL-1Ra reduced LPS-induced inflammation and improved biomolecular, structural and functional markers of neurodevelopment. Thus, IL-1Ra may improve neurodevelopmental outcomes following perinatal infection/inflammation.

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