Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of California, Davis, Davis; California National Primate Research Center, University of California, Davis, Davis; The M.I.N.D. Institute, University of California, Davis, Sacramento.
Department of Public Health Sciences, Division of Biostatistics, University of California, Davis, Davis.
Biol Psychiatry. 2014 Feb 15;75(4):332-41. doi: 10.1016/j.biopsych.2013.06.025. Epub 2013 Sep 5.
Maternal infection during pregnancy is associated with an increased risk of schizophrenia and autism in the offspring. Supporting this correlation, experimentally activating the maternal immune system during pregnancy in rodents produces offspring with abnormal brain and behavioral development. We have developed a nonhuman primate model to bridge the gap between clinical populations and rodent models of maternal immune activation (MIA).
A modified form of the viral mimic, synthetic double-stranded RNA (polyinosinic:polycytidylic acid stabilized with poly-L-lysine) was delivered to two separate groups of pregnant rhesus monkeys to induce MIA: 1) late first trimester MIA (n = 6), and 2) late second trimester MIA (n = 7). Control animals (n = 11) received saline injections at the same first or second trimester time points or were untreated. Sickness behavior, temperature, and cytokine profiles of the pregnant monkeys confirmed a strong inflammatory response to MIA.
Behavioral development of the offspring was studied for 24 months. Following weaning at 6 months of age, MIA offspring exhibited abnormal responses to separation from their mothers. As the animals matured, MIA offspring displayed increased repetitive behaviors and decreased affiliative vocalizations. When evaluated with unfamiliar conspecifics, first trimester MIA offspring deviated from species-typical macaque social behavior by inappropriately approaching and remaining in immediate proximity of an unfamiliar animal.
In this rhesus monkey model, MIA yields offspring with abnormal repetitive behaviors, communication, and social interactions. These results extended the findings in rodent MIA models to more human-like behaviors resembling those in both autism and schizophrenia.
孕妇感染与后代精神分裂症和自闭症风险增加有关。支持这一相关性,在啮齿动物怀孕期间激活母体免疫系统会产生具有异常大脑和行为发育的后代。我们已经开发出一种非人类灵长类动物模型,以弥合临床人群和母体免疫激活(MIA)啮齿动物模型之间的差距。
一种改良形式的病毒模拟物,即合成双链 RNA(聚肌苷:聚胞苷酸用聚-L-赖氨酸稳定)被递送至两组怀孕的恒河猴以诱导 MIA:1)第一孕期晚期 MIA(n=6),和 2)第二孕期晚期 MIA(n=7)。对照动物(n=11)在相同的第一或第二孕期时间点接受生理盐水注射或未接受治疗。怀孕猴子的疾病行为、体温和细胞因子谱证实了对 MIA 的强烈炎症反应。
对后代的行为发育进行了 24 个月的研究。在 6 个月龄断奶后,MIA 后代表现出与母亲分离的异常反应。随着动物的成熟,MIA 后代表现出过度的重复行为和减少的亲和发声。当与不熟悉的同种动物进行评估时,第一孕期 MIA 后代表现出不适当的接近和留在不熟悉动物的附近,从而偏离了典型的猕猴社会行为。
在这种恒河猴模型中,MIA 产生具有异常重复行为、沟通和社交互动的后代。这些结果将啮齿动物 MIA 模型中的发现扩展到更类似于自闭症和精神分裂症的人类样行为。