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Gestational diabetes exacerbates maternal immune activation effects in the developing brain
by
Aronoff, D M
, Mirnics, K
, Garbett, K A
, Serezani, A
, Money, K M
, Barke, T L
, Gannon, M
in
Behavior disorders
/ Chemokines
/ Children
/ Cytokines
/ Diabetes
/ Diabetes mellitus
/ Dopamine
/ Fetuses
/ Gene expression
/ Gestational diabetes
/ Health risk assessment
/ Immune response
/ Inflammation
/ Innate immunity
/ Mental disorders
/ Risk factors
/ Transcription
2018
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Gestational diabetes exacerbates maternal immune activation effects in the developing brain
by
Aronoff, D M
, Mirnics, K
, Garbett, K A
, Serezani, A
, Money, K M
, Barke, T L
, Gannon, M
in
Behavior disorders
/ Chemokines
/ Children
/ Cytokines
/ Diabetes
/ Diabetes mellitus
/ Dopamine
/ Fetuses
/ Gene expression
/ Gestational diabetes
/ Health risk assessment
/ Immune response
/ Inflammation
/ Innate immunity
/ Mental disorders
/ Risk factors
/ Transcription
2018
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While trying to remove the title from your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
Do you wish to request the book?
Gestational diabetes exacerbates maternal immune activation effects in the developing brain
by
Aronoff, D M
, Mirnics, K
, Garbett, K A
, Serezani, A
, Money, K M
, Barke, T L
, Gannon, M
in
Behavior disorders
/ Chemokines
/ Children
/ Cytokines
/ Diabetes
/ Diabetes mellitus
/ Dopamine
/ Fetuses
/ Gene expression
/ Gestational diabetes
/ Health risk assessment
/ Immune response
/ Inflammation
/ Innate immunity
/ Mental disorders
/ Risk factors
/ Transcription
2018
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Gestational diabetes exacerbates maternal immune activation effects in the developing brain
Journal Article
Gestational diabetes exacerbates maternal immune activation effects in the developing brain
2018
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Overview
Maternal inflammation and diabetes increase the risk for psychiatric disorders in offspring. We hypothesized that these co-occurring risk factors may potentiate each other. To test this, we maternally exposed developing mice in utero to gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) and/or maternal immune activation (MIA). Fetal mouse brains were exposed to either vehicle, GDM, MIA or GDM+MIA. At gestational day (GD) 12.5, GDM produced a hyperglycemic, hyperleptinemic maternal state, whereas MIA produced significant increases in proinflammatory cytokines and chemokines. Each condition alone resulted in an altered, inflammatory and neurodevelopmental transcriptome profile. In addition, GDM+MIA heightened the maternal inflammatory state and gave rise to a new, specific transcriptional response. This exacerbated response was associated with pathways implicated in psychiatric disorders, including dopamine neuron differentiation and innate immune response. Based on these data, we hypothesize that children born to GDM mothers and exposed to midgestation infections have an increased vulnerability to psychiatric disorder later in life, and this should be tested in follow-up epidemiological studies.
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
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