The impact of early physical and social environments on life-long pathological phenotypes is well known and there is now compelling evidence that stressful experiences during gestation or early in life can lead to enhanced susceptibility to mental illness. Here, we discuss the data from preclinical studies aimed at investigating the molecular consequences of the exposure to stressful events during prenatal or early postnatal life that might contribute to later psychopathology. Particularly, we will discuss the existence of age windows of vulnerability to environmental conditions during brain maturation using as examples several studies performed with different animal models. Specifically, major deviations from normative neurobehavioural trajectories have been reported in animal models obtained following exposure to severe stress (maternal separation) ea rly in infancy or with rodent models of difficult and/or stressful pregnancies, including obstetric complications (e.g. prenatal restrain stress) and gestational exposure to infection (e.g prenatal immune challenge). These models have been associated with profound long-lasting deficits in the offspring's emotional and social behaviour, and with molecular changes associated with neuroplasticity.

The long-term impact of early adversities on psychiatric disorders : focus on neuronal plasticity / A. Luoni, J. Richetto, G. Racagni, R. Molteni. - In: CURRENT PHARMACEUTICAL DESIGN. - ISSN 1381-6128. - 21:11(2015), pp. 1388-1395.

The long-term impact of early adversities on psychiatric disorders : focus on neuronal plasticity

A. Luoni
Primo
;
J. Richetto
Secondo
;
G. Racagni
Penultimo
;
R. Molteni
Ultimo
2015

Abstract

The impact of early physical and social environments on life-long pathological phenotypes is well known and there is now compelling evidence that stressful experiences during gestation or early in life can lead to enhanced susceptibility to mental illness. Here, we discuss the data from preclinical studies aimed at investigating the molecular consequences of the exposure to stressful events during prenatal or early postnatal life that might contribute to later psychopathology. Particularly, we will discuss the existence of age windows of vulnerability to environmental conditions during brain maturation using as examples several studies performed with different animal models. Specifically, major deviations from normative neurobehavioural trajectories have been reported in animal models obtained following exposure to severe stress (maternal separation) ea rly in infancy or with rodent models of difficult and/or stressful pregnancies, including obstetric complications (e.g. prenatal restrain stress) and gestational exposure to infection (e.g prenatal immune challenge). These models have been associated with profound long-lasting deficits in the offspring's emotional and social behaviour, and with molecular changes associated with neuroplasticity.
No
English
perinatal stress; early life; neurogenesis; neuroplasticity; psychopathology
Settore BIO/14 - Farmacologia
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Ricerca di base
Pubblicazione scientifica
2015
Bentham
21
11
1388
1395
8
Pubblicato
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
pubmed
Aderisco
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
The long-term impact of early adversities on psychiatric disorders : focus on neuronal plasticity / A. Luoni, J. Richetto, G. Racagni, R. Molteni. - In: CURRENT PHARMACEUTICAL DESIGN. - ISSN 1381-6128. - 21:11(2015), pp. 1388-1395.
none
Prodotti della ricerca::01 - Articolo su periodico
4
262
Article (author)
si
A. Luoni, J. Richetto, G. Racagni, R. Molteni
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/343932
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