Source Paper
Maternal Influenza Infection Causes Marked Behavioral and Pharmacological Changes in the Offspring
Limin Shi, S. Hossein Fatemi, Robert W. Sidwell, Paul H. Patterson
Journal of Neuroscience • 2003
View Abstract
Maternal viral infection is known to increase the risk for schizophrenia and autism in the offspring. Using this observation in an animal model, we find that respiratory infection of pregnant mice (both BALB/c and C57BL/6 strains) with the human influenza virus yields offspring that display highly abnormal behavioral responses as adults. As in schizophrenia and autism, these offspring display deficits in prepulse inhibition (PPI) in the acoustic startle response. Compared with control mice, the infected mice also display striking responses to the acute administration of antipsychotic (clozapine and chlorpromazine) and psychomimetic (ketamine) drugs. Moreover, these mice are deficient in exploratory behavior in both open-field and novel-object tests, and they are deficient in social interaction. At least some of these behavioral changes likely are attributable to the maternal immune response itself. That is, maternal injection of the synthetic double-stranded RNA polyinosinic-polycytidylic acid causes a PPI deficit in the offspring in the absence of virus. Therefore, maternal viral infection has a profound effect on the behavior of adult offspring, probably via an effect of the maternal immune response on the fetus.
Novel Object Test
Objective: Assessment of exploratory behavior in response to novel objects in mice
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Equipment1
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Protocol Steps
Novel object test
Mice are tested for exploratory behavior in response to novel objects
Note: Test measures deficits in exploratory behavior as a behavioral outcome
View evidence from paper
“these mice are deficient in exploratory behavior in both open-field and novel-object tests”