AI Article Synopsis

  • Astrocytes play a crucial role in regulating glutamatergic signaling, and their shape can change based on environmental factors, but the impact of early life experiences on their morphology is still not well understood.
  • In a study using a postnatal resource scarcity model in rats, it was found that limited bedding and nesting (LBN) can enhance maternal behaviors and lead to greater resilience against addiction behaviors in adulthood, which involves changes in the medial orbitofrontal and medial prefrontal cortices.
  • The research indicated that LBN exposure results in increased size of astrocytes in these brain regions for both male and female rats, with sex-specific transcriptional changes impacting glutamatergic signaling, suggesting

Article Abstract

Astrocyte morphology affects function, including the regulation of glutamatergic signaling. This morphology changes dynamically in response to the environment. However, how early life manipulations alter adult cortical astrocyte morphology is underexplored. Our lab uses brief postnatal resource scarcity, the limited bedding and nesting (LBN) manipulation, in rats. We previously found that LBN augments maternal behaviors and promotes later resilience to adult addiction-related behaviors, reducing impulsivity, risky decision-making, and morphine self-administration. These behaviors rely on glutamatergic transmission in the medial orbitofrontal (mOFC) and medial prefrontal (mPFC) cortex. Here we tested whether LBN changed astrocyte morphology in the mOFC and mPFC of adult rats using a novel viral approach that, unlike traditional markers, fully labels astrocytes. Prior exposure to LBN causes an increase in the surface area and volume of astrocytes in the mOFC and mPFC of adult males and females relative to control-raised rats. We next used bulk RNA sequencing of OFC tissue to assess transcriptional changes that could increase astrocyte size in LBN rats. LBN caused mainly sex-specific changes in differentially expressed genes. Pathway analysis revealed that OFC glutamatergic signaling is altered by LBN in males and females, but the gene changes in that pathway differed across sex. This may represent a convergent sex difference where glutamatergic signaling, which affects astrocyte morphology, is altered by LBN via sex-specific mechanisms. Collectively, these studies highlight that astrocytes may be an important cell type that mediates the effect of early resource scarcity on adult brain function.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10831308PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ynstr.2024.100607DOI Listing

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