| Literature DB >> 30872090 |
Marion Rincel1, Philippe Aubert2, Julien Chevalier2, Pierre-Antoine Grohard2, Lilian Basso3, Camille Monchaux de Oliveira1, Jean Christophe Helbling1, Élodie Lévy1, Grégoire Chevalier4, Marion Leboyer5, Gérard Eberl4, Sophie Layé1, Lucile Capuron1, Nathalie Vergnolle3, Michel Neunlist2, Hélène Boudin2, Patricia Lepage6, Muriel Darnaudéry7.
Abstract
The accumulation of adverse events in utero and during childhood differentially increases the vulnerability to psychiatric diseases in men and women. Gut microbiota is highly sensitive to the early environment and has been recently hypothesized to affect brain development. However, the impact of early-life adversity on gut microbiota, notably with regards to sex differences, remains to be explored. We examined the effects of multifactorial early-life adversity on behavior and microbiota composition in C3H/HeN mice of both sexes exposed to a combination of maternal immune activation (lipopolysaccharide injection on embryonic day 17, 120 µg/kg, i.p.), maternal separation (3hr per day from postnatal day (PND)2 to PND14) and maternal unpredictable chronic mild stress. At adulthood, offspring exposed to multi-hit early adversity showed sex-specific behavioral phenotypes with males exhibiting deficits in social behavior and females showing increased anxiety in the elevated plus maze and increased compulsive behavior in the marble burying test. Early adversity also differentially regulated gene expression in the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) according to sex. Interestingly, several genes such as Arc, Btg2, Fosb, Egr4 or Klf2 were oppositely regulated by early adversity in males versus females. Finally, 16S-based microbiota profiling revealed sex-dependent gut dysbiosis. In males, abundance of taxa belonging to Lachnospiraceae and Porphyromonadaceae families or other unclassified Firmicutes, but also Bacteroides, Lactobacillus and Alloprevotella genera was regulated by early adversity. In females, the effects of early adversity were limited and mainly restricted to Lactobacillus and Mucispirillum genera. Our work reveals marked sex differences in a multifactorial model of early-life adversity, both on emotional behaviors and gut microbiota, suggesting that sex should systematically be considered in preclinical studies both in neurogastroenterology and psychiatric research.Entities:
Keywords: Early-life stress; Emotional behavior; Gut-brain axis; HPA axis; Intestinal permeability; Lipopolysaccharides; Medial prefrontal cortex; Ultrasonic vocalizations
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30872090 DOI: 10.1016/j.bbi.2019.03.006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Behav Immun ISSN: 0889-1591 Impact factor: 7.217