Neonatal Maternal Separation Alters Immune, Endocrine, and Behavioral Responses to Acute Theiler’s Virus Infection in Adult Mice
Male
Mice, Inbred BALB C
Time Factors
Models, Genetic
Environment
Viral Load
3. Good health
Mice
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
Spinal Cord
Theilovirus
Immune System
Animals
Encephalitis
Female
Tissue Distribution
Corticosterone
DOI:
10.1007/s10519-010-9333-5
Publication Date:
2010-02-04T06:03:01Z
AUTHORS (9)
ABSTRACT
Previous studies have established a link between adverse early life events and subsequent disease vulnerability. The present study assessed the long-term effects of neonatal maternal separation on the response to Theiler's murine encephalomyelitis virus infection, a model of multiple sclerosis. Balb/cJ mouse pups were separated from their dam for 180-min/day (180-min MS), 15-min/day (15-min MS), or left undisturbed from postnatal days 2-14. During adolescence, mice were infected with Theiler's virus and sacrificed at days 14, 21, or 35 post-infection. Prolonged 180-min MS increased viral load and delayed viral clearance in the spinal cords of males and females, whereas brief 15-min MS increased the rate of viral clearance in females. The 15-min and 180-min MS mice exhibited blunted corticosterone responses during infection, suggesting that reduced HPA sensitivity may have altered the immune response to infection. These findings demonstrate that early life events alter vulnerability to CNS infection later in life. Therefore, this model could be used to study gene-environment interactions that contribute to individual differences in susceptibility to infectious and autoimmune diseases of the CNS.
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