TopicNeuroscience

behavioural abnormalities

Content Overview
2Total items
1Seminar
1ePoster

Latest

SeminarNeuroscience

Gestational exposure to environmental toxins, infections, and stressors are epidemiologically linked to neurodevelopmental disorders

Staci D. Bilbo
Duke University
Sep 13, 2021

Gestational exposure to environmental toxins, infections, and stressors are epidemiologically linked to neurodevelopmental disorders with strong male-bias, such as autism spectrum disorder. We modeled some of these prenatal risk factors in mice, by co-exposing pregnant dams to an environmental pollutant and limited-resource stress, which robustly dysregulated the maternal immune system. Male but not female offspring displayed long-lasting behavioral abnormalities and alterations in the activity of brain networks encoding social interactions, along with disruptions of gut structure and microbiome composition. Cellularly, prenatal stressors impaired microglial synaptic pruning in males during early postnatal development. Precise inhibition of microglial phagocytosis during the same critical period mimicked the impact of prenatal stressors on the male-specific social deficits. Conversely, modifying the gut microbiome rescued the social and cellular deficits, indicating that environmental stressors alter neural circuit formation in males via impairing microglia function during development, perhaps via a gut-brain disruption.

ePosterNeuroscience

Behavioural abnormalities in DMSXL mice, a model of Myotonic Dystrophy type 1

Silvia Mandillo, Elisabetta Golini, Tiziana Orsini, Mara Rigamonti, Mariapaola Izzo, Jonathan Battistini, Beatrice Cardinali, Claudia Provenzano, Georgios Strimpakos, Ferdinando Scavizzi, Marcello Raspa, Genevieve Gourdon, Germana Falcone

behavioural abnormalities coverage

2 items

Seminar1
ePoster1

Share your knowledge

Know something about behavioural abnormalities? Help the community by contributing seminars, talks, or research.

Contribute content
Domain spotlight

Explore how behavioural abnormalities research is advancing inside Neuroscience.

Visit domain

Cookies

We use essential cookies to run the site. Analytics cookies are optional and help us improve World Wide. Learn more.