- Main
Sequential perturbations to mouse corticogenesis following in utero maternal immune activation
- Canales, Cesar P;
- Estes, Myka L;
- Cichewicz, Karol;
- Angara, Kartik;
- Aboubechara, John Paul;
- Cameron, Scott;
- Prendergast, Kathryn;
- Su-Feher, Linda;
- Zdilar, Iva;
- Kreun, Ellie J;
- Connolly, Emma C;
- Seo, Jin Myeong;
- Goon, Jack B;
- Farrelly, Kathleen;
- Stradleigh, Tyler W;
- van der List, Deborah;
- Haapanen, Lori;
- Van de Water, Judy;
- Vogt, Daniel;
- McAllister, A Kimberley;
- Nord, Alex S
- et al.
Abstract
In utero exposure to maternal immune activation (MIA) is an environmental risk factor for neurodevelopmental and neuropsychiatric disorders. Animal models provide an opportunity to identify mechanisms driving neuropathology associated with MIA. We performed time-course transcriptional profiling of mouse cortical development following induced MIA via poly(I:C) injection at E12.5. MIA-driven transcriptional changes were validated via protein analysis, and parallel perturbations to cortical neuroanatomy were identified via imaging. MIA-induced acute upregulation of genes associated with hypoxia, immune signaling, and angiogenesis, by 6 hr following exposure. This acute response was followed by changes in proliferation, neuronal and glial specification, and cortical lamination that emerged at E14.5 and peaked at E17.5. Decreased numbers of proliferative cells in germinal zones and alterations in neuronal and glial populations were identified in the MIA-exposed cortex. Overall, paired transcriptomic and neuroanatomical characterization revealed a sequence of perturbations to corticogenesis driven by mid-gestational MIA.
Many UC-authored scholarly publications are freely available on this site because of the UC's open access policies. Let us know how this access is important for you.
Main Content
Enter the password to open this PDF file:
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-