Literature DB >> 24107964

Neonatal E. coli infection causes neuro-behavioral deficits associated with hypomyelination and neuronal sequestration of iron.

Jacqueline C Lieblein-Boff1, Daniel B McKim, Daniel T Shea, Ping Wei, Zhen Deng, Caroline Sawicki, Ning Quan, Staci D Bilbo, Michael T Bailey, Dana M McTigue, Jonathan P Godbout.   

Abstract

Recent evidence indicates that inflammatory insults in neonates significantly influenced white matter development and caused behavioral deficits that manifest in young adulthood. The mechanisms underlying these developmental and behavioral complications, however, are not well understood. We hypothesize that acute brain inflammation caused by neonatal infection reduces the bioavailability of iron required for oligodendrocyte maturation and white matter development. Here, we confirm that peripheral Escherichia coli infection in neonates at postnatal day 3 (P3) caused acute brain inflammation that was resolved within 72 h. Nonetheless, transient early life infection (ELI) profoundly influenced behavior, white matter development, and iron homeostasis in the brain. For instance, mice exposed to E. coli as neonates had increased locomotor activity and impaired motor coordination as juveniles (P35) and young adults (P60). In addition, these behavioral deficits were associated with marked hypomyelination and a reduction of oligodendrocytes in subcortical white matter and motor cortex. Moreover, ELI altered transcripts related to cellular sequestration of iron in the brain including hepcidin, ferroportin, and L-ferritin. For example, ELI increased hepcidin mRNA and decreased ferroportin mRNA and protein in the brain at P4, which preceded increased L-ferritin mRNA at P12. Consistent with the mRNA results, L-ferritin protein was robustly increased at P12 specifically in neurons of E. coli infected mice. We interpret these data to indicate that neonatal infection causes significant neuronal sequestration of iron at a time point before myelination. Together, these data indicate a possible role for aberrant neuronal iron storage in neonatal infection-induced disturbances in myelination and behavior.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 24107964      PMCID: PMC3792468          DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0708-13.2013

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurosci        ISSN: 0270-6474            Impact factor:   6.167


  57 in total

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4.  Microglia and memory: modulation by early-life infection.

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5.  Inflammation-initiating illnesses, inflammation-related proteins, and cognitive impairment in extremely preterm infants.

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6.  Ferroportin in the postnatal rat brain: implications for axonal transport and neuronal export of iron.

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7.  Ferroportin-mediated mobilization of ferritin iron precedes ferritin degradation by the proteasome.

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8.  Neonatal inflammation produces selective behavioural deficits and alters N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor subunit mRNA in the adult rat brain.

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Authors:  Vann Chau; Rollin Brant; Kenneth J Poskitt; Emily W Y Tam; Anne Synnes; Steven P Miller
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1.  Ropivacaine and Bupivacaine prevent increased pain sensitivity without altering neuroimmune activation following repeated social defeat stress.

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2.  Mouse model of intrauterine inflammation: sex-specific differences in long-term neurologic and immune sequelae.

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Review 7.  Early-life enteric infections: relation between chronic systemic inflammation and poor cognition in children.

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