Prenatal immune origins of brain aging differ by sex.

Mol Psychiatry

Department of Psychiatry, Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH), Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.

Published: November 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explores how exposure to maternal pro-inflammatory cytokines during pregnancy can lead to long-lasting effects on brain function and memory in offspring, with implications for both sexes.
  • It highlights that men and women develop differently, suggesting that understanding these sex differences is crucial for identifying early risk factors and interventions for brain aging and memory impairment.
  • Results showed that higher levels of maternal cytokines were linked to altered brain activity related to memory in midlife, and these effects persisted from childhood performance into early adulthood, emphasizing the importance of prenatal health on long-term cognitive outcomes.

Article Abstract

With an increasing aging population and Alzheimer's disease tsunami, it is critical to identify early antecedents of brain aging to target for intervention and prevention. Women and men develop and age differently, thus using a sex differences lens can contribute to identification of early risk biomarkers and resilience. There is growing evidence for fetal antecedents to adult memory impairments, potentially through disruption of maternal prenatal immune pathways. Here, we hypothesized that in utero exposure to maternal pro-inflammatory cytokines will have sex-dependent effects on specific brain circuitry regulating offspring's memory and immune function that will be retained across the lifespan. Using a unique prenatal cohort, we tested this in 204 adult offspring, equally divided by sex, who were exposed/unexposed to an adverse in utero maternal immune environment and followed into early midlife (~age 50). Functional magnetic resonance imaging results showed exposure to pro-inflammatory cytokines in utero (i.e., higher maternal IL-6 and TNF-α levels) was significantly associated with sex differences in brain activity and connectivity underlying memory circuitry and performance and with a hyperimmune state, 50 years later. In contrast, the anti-inflammatory cytokine, IL-10 alone, was not significantly associated with memory circuitry in midlife. Predictive validity of prenatal exposure was underscored by significant associations with age 7 academic achievement, also associated with age 50 memory performance. Results uniquely demonstrated that adverse levels of maternal in utero pro-inflammatory cytokines during a critical period of the sexual differentiation of the brain produced long-lasting effects on immune function and memory circuitry/function from childhood to midlife that were sex-dependent, brain region-specific, and, within women, reproductive stage-dependent.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41380-024-02798-wDOI Listing

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