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GABAergic and inflammatory changes in the frontal cortex following neonatal PCP plus isolation rearing, as a dual-hit neurodevelopmental model for schizophrenia

Cale, Jennifer A.; Chauhan, Ethan J.; Cleaver, Joshua J.; Fusciardi, Anthoio R.; McCann, Sophie; Waters, Hannah C.; Žavbi, Juš; King, Madeleine V.

GABAergic and inflammatory changes in the frontal cortex following neonatal PCP plus isolation rearing, as a dual-hit neurodevelopmental model for schizophrenia Thumbnail


Authors

Jennifer A. Cale

Ethan J. Chauhan

Joshua J. Cleaver

Anthoio R. Fusciardi

Sophie McCann

Hannah C. Waters

Juš Žavbi



Abstract

The pathogenesis of schizophrenia begins in early neurodevelopment and leads to excitatory-inhibitory imbalance. It is therefore essential that preclinical models used to understand disease, select drug targets and evaluate novel therapeutics encompass similar neurochemical deficits. One approach to improved preclinical modelling incorporates dual-hit neurodevelopmental insults, like neonatal administration of phencyclidine (PCP, to disrupt development of glutamatergic circuitry) then post-weaning isolation (Iso, to mimic adolescent social stress). We recently showed that male Lister-hooded rats exposed to PCP-Iso exhibit reduced hippocampal expression of the GABA interneuron marker calbindin. The current study expanded on this by investigating changes to additional populations of GABAergic interneurons in frontal cortical and hippocampal tissue from the same animals (by immunohistochemistry) as well as levels of GABA itself (via ELISA). Because inflammatory changes are also implicated in schizophrenia, we performed additional immunohistochemical evaluations of Iba-1 positive microglia as well as ELISA analysis of IL-6 in the same brain regions. Single-hit isolation-reared and dual-hit PCP-Iso rats both showed reduced parvalbumin immunoreactivity in the prelimbic/infralimbic region of the frontal cortex. However, this was more widespread in PCP-Iso, extending to the medial/ventral and lateral/dorsolateral orbitofrontal cortices. Loss of GABAergic markers was accompanied by increased microglial activation in the medial/ventral orbitofrontal cortices of PCP-Iso, together with frontal cortical IL-6 elevations not seen following single-hit isolation rearing. These findings enhance the face validity of PCP-Iso, and we advocate the use of this preclinical model for future evaluation of novel therapeutics—especially those designed to normalise excitatory-inhibitory imbalance or reduce neuroinflammation.

Citation

Cale, J. A., Chauhan, E. J., Cleaver, J. J., Fusciardi, A. R., McCann, S., Waters, H. C., Žavbi, J., & King, M. V. (2024). GABAergic and inflammatory changes in the frontal cortex following neonatal PCP plus isolation rearing, as a dual-hit neurodevelopmental model for schizophrenia. Molecular Neurobiology, 61, 6968-6983. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12035-024-03987-y

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jan 24, 2024
Online Publication Date Feb 16, 2024
Publication Date 2024-09
Deposit Date Feb 27, 2024
Publicly Available Date Feb 29, 2024
Journal Molecular Neurobiology
Print ISSN 0893-7648
Electronic ISSN 1559-1182
Publisher Springer Verlag
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 61
Pages 6968-6983
DOI https://doi.org/10.1007/s12035-024-03987-y
Keywords IL-6, Inflammation, GABA, Parvalbumin, Neonatal PCP, Isolation rearing
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/31619149
Publisher URL https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s12035-024-03987-y