Babies born to mothers who have battled with a virus infection such as flu may have a higher risk of developmental disorders.
Even a slight flu attack during pregnancy can pose a risk for brain and central nervous system abnormalities in babies, said a new study. A USC-led team of researchers examined how the immune systems of pregnant mice (roughly equivalent to human mothers in their first trimester) reacted to a chemical that mimics a viral infection akin to the flu. Levels of tryptophan, an amino acid that activates the immune system, increased, causing the placenta to produce more serotonin, which led to higher concentrations of serotonin in the fetal brain.
‘Viral infections and inflammation during pregnancy may increase the risk for central nervous system malfunctions in children.’
Previous studies have linked viral-based inflammation during pregnancy and the risk for developmental disorders such as autism, cognitive delay and schizophrenia in offspring, according to the study. "Serotonin is very important for fetal brain development and can modulate the way the fetal brain is wired," said Alexandre Bonnin, senior author and an assistant professor of cell and neurobiology at the Keck School of Medicine of USC. "In response to boosted serotonin levels coming from the placenta, the fetal brain stunted its own genesis of serotonin neurons, probably because receptors sensed there was too much serotonin in there. That can be a problem, especially when it leads to the front of the brain being not developed as much as it should be."
The study was published in The Journal of Neuroscience. It looked at fetal axon development, that is the growth of "wires" that are necessary for communication between neurons. The mice in the control group received a saline solution instead of the chemical viral-mimic.
Viral attacks
The study provides a new molecular pathway to understanding how prenatal insults could program a baby to eventually develop mental diseases. Even mild viral attacks such as the flu or Zika virus, which generally does not require a mother to visit to the doctor’s office, might affect the development of a baby’s central nervous system, said Bonnin, who is based at USCs Zilkha Neurogenetic Institute.
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In this study, scientists administered a drug to inhibit the activity of an enzyme that produces serotonin via increased tryptophan levels. They blocked excess serotonin production in the placenta, which appeared to normalize fetal forebrain development.
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"In the first trimester of pregnancy, if the mom gets an infection such as the flu, the risk of the baby developing schizophrenia 15 years later is increased by approximately threefold," he said. "It doesn’t mean that if the mom has the flu, the kid will systematically have schizophrenia, but the risk is increased by threefold."
Source-Eurekalert