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Acute prenatal exposure to a moderate dose of valproic acid increases social behavior and alters gene expression in rats
Authors:Ori S. Cohen  Elena I. Varlinskaya  Carey A. Wilson  Stephen J. Glatt  Sandra M. Mooney
Affiliation:1. Psychiatric Genetic Epidemiology & Neurobiology Laboratory (PsychGENe Lab), Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, SUNY Upstate Medical University, Syracuse, NY 13210, United States;2. Department of Psychology, Center for Development and Behavioral Neuroscience, Binghamton University, Binghamton, NY 13902, United States;3. Developmental Exposure Alcohol Research Center, Baltimore, MD 21201; Binghamton, NY 13902; Cortland, NY 13054, Syracuse, NY 13210, United States;4. Department of Pediatrics, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD 21201, United States
Abstract:Prenatal exposure to moderate doses of valproic acid (VPA) produces brainstem abnormalities, while higher doses of this teratogen elicit social deficits in the rat. In this pilot study, we examined effects of prenatal exposure to a moderate dose of VPA on behavior and on transcriptomic expression in three brain regions that mediate social behavior. Pregnant Long Evans rats were injected with 350 mg/kg VPA or saline on gestational day 13. A modified social interaction test was used to assess social behavior and social preference/avoidance during early and late adolescence and in adulthood. VPA-exposed animals demonstrated more social investigation and play fighting than control animals. Social investigation, play fighting, and contact behavior also differed as a function of age; the frequency of these behaviors increased in late adolescence. Social preference and locomotor activity under social circumstances were unaffected by treatment or age. Thus, a moderate prenatal dose of VPA produces behavioral alterations that are substantially different from the outcomes that occur following exposure to a higher dose. At adulthood, VPA-exposed subjects exhibited transcriptomic abnormalities in three brain regions: anterior amygdala, cerebellar vermis, and orbitofrontal cortex. A common feature among the proteins encoded by the dysregulated genes was their ability to be modulated by acetylation. Analysis of the expression of individual exons also revealed that genes involved in post-translational modification and epigenetic regulation had particular isoforms that were ubiquitously dysregulated across brain regions. The vulnerability of these genes to the epigenetic effects of VPA may highlight potential mechanisms by which prenatal VPA exposure alters the development of social behavior.
Keywords:aa, amino acid   AA, anterior amygdala   ANCOVA, analysis of covariance   ANOVA, analysis of variance   CREB, cAMP response element binding protein   CREBBP, CREB binding protein   CV, cerebellar vermis   DNA, deoxyribose nucleic acid   G, gestational day   GABA, gamma-aminobutyric acid   HDAC, histone deacetylase   HDACi, histone deacetylase inhibitor   ID, identity   i.p., intraperitoneal   IUTs, intersection/union tests   mg/kg, milligrams per kilogram body weight   mRNA, messenger RNA   OFC, orbitofrontal cortex   P, postnatal day   P. C., principal component   RNA, ribonucleic acid   RTS, Rubinstein&ndash  Taybi syndrome   VPA, valproic acid
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