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Impact of Prenatal LPS and Early-life Constant Light Exposure on Circadian Gene Expression Profiles in Various Rat Tissues.

Authors :
Spišská, Veronika
Kubištová, Aneta
Novotný, Jiří
Bendová, Zdeňka
Source :
Neuroscience. Jul2024, Vol. 551, p17-30. 14p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

• prenatal LPS and early-life LL affect the expression profiles of genes at P30. • impact of combined interventions is smaller than that of individual interventions. • combined interventions increase the amplitude of expression rhythms in some genes. Exposure to lipopolysaccharide (LPS) during prenatal development leads to various changes in neurobiological and behavioural patterns. Similarly, continuous exposure to constant light (LL) during the critical developmental period of the circadian system affects gene expression in various tissues in adulthood. Given the reciprocal nature of the interaction between the circadian and the immune systems, our study primarily investigated the individual effects of both interventions and, more importantly, their combined effect. We aimed to explore whether there might be a potential synergistic effect on circadian rhythms and their parameters, focussing on the expression of clock genes, immune-related genes, and specific genes in the hippocampus, pineal gland, spleen and adrenal gland of rats at postnatal day 30. Our results show a significant influence of prenatal LPS and postnatal LL on the expression profiles of all genes assessed. However, the combination of prenatal LPS and postnatal LL only revealed an enhanced negative effect in a minority of the comparisons. In most cases, it appeared to attenuate the changes induced by the individual interventions, restoring the measured parameters to values closer to those of the control group. In particular, genes such as Nr1d1 , Aanat and Tph1 showed increased amplitude in the pineal gland and spleen, while the kynurenine enzymes Kynu and KatII developed circadian rhythmicity in the adrenal glands only after the combined interventions. Our data suggest that a mild immunological challenge during prenatal development may play a critical role in triggering an adaptive response of the circadian clock later in life. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03064522
Volume :
551
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Neuroscience
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
178357995
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroscience.2024.05.014