| Literature DB >> 26962947 |
Jessica Humann1, Beth Mann1, Geli Gao1, Philip Moresco1, Joseph Ramahi1, Lip Nam Loh1, Arden Farr1, Yunming Hu1, Kelly Durick-Eder1, Sophie A Fillon1, Richard J Smeyne2, Elaine I Tuomanen3.
Abstract
Maternal infection during pregnancy is associated with adverse outcomes for the fetus, including postnatal cognitive disorders. However, the underlying mechanisms are obscure. We find that bacterial cell wall peptidoglycan (CW), a universal PAMP for TLR2, traverses the murine placenta into the developing fetal brain. In contrast to adults, CW-exposed fetal brains did not show any signs of inflammation or neuronal death. Instead, the neuronal transcription factor FoxG1 was induced, and neuroproliferation leading to a 50% greater density of neurons in the cortical plate was observed. Bacterial infection of pregnant dams, followed by antibiotic treatment, which releases CW, yielded the same result. Neuroproliferation required TLR2 and was recapitulated in vitro with fetal neuronal precursor cells and TLR2/6, but not TLR2/1, ligands. The fetal neuroproliferative response correlated with abnormal cognitive behavior in CW-exposed pups following birth. Thus, the bacterial CW-TLR2 signaling axis affects fetal neurodevelopment and may underlie postnatal cognitive disorders.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26962947 PMCID: PMC4787272 DOI: 10.1016/j.chom.2016.02.009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Host Microbe ISSN: 1931-3128 Impact factor: 21.023