Ling-Sha Ju , Timothy Morey , Nikolaus Gravenstein , Barry Setlow , Christoph N. Seubert , Anatoly E. Martynyuk
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background
Having a sibling with autism spectrum disorder is a risk factor for autism spectrum disorder. We used a rat model in which the general anesthetic sevoflurane (SEVO) induces autism spectrum disorder–like neurodevelopmental abnormalities to test whether they can be transmitted via cohabitation.
Methods
Male rat pups from several litters were mixed and randomized to 3 new litter types: SEVO-exposed (SEVO), SEVO-unexposed (control), and equal numbers of SEVO-exposed and SEVO-unexposed (MIXED). After weaning, rats in experiment 1 were housed with littermates in SEVO, control, and MIXED (MIXED-exposed and MIXED-unexposed) pairs. In experiment 2, MIXED-exposed and MIXED-unexposed rats were paired with an unfamiliar naïve cagemate. Corticosterone levels, gene expression, central inflammatory markers (experiment 1), and behavior and corticosterone levels (experiment 2) were assessed in adulthood.
Results
In experiment 1, compared with control rats, SEVO rats exhibited abnormalities in the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, inflammatory markers, oxytocin, arginine vasopressin, and DNA methylation systems. Almost all these measures in MIXED-exposed and MIXED-unexposed rats were statistically indistinguishable from and similar to those in SEVO or control rats, with most measures in MIXED rats being similar to those in SEVO rats. Experiment 2 showed that pairing with unfamiliar, naïve rats after weaning caused MIXED-unexposed and MIXED-exposed rats’ behavior to be no different from that of control and SEVO rats, respectively; however, the 2 groups of MIXED rats also did not differ from each other.
Conclusions
These findings suggest that neurodevelopmental abnormalities can be transmitted to otherwise healthy individuals through interactions during cohabitation; however, subsequent pairing with unfamiliar, naïve cohabitants may weaken this interaction effect.