Rationale: Sepsis is a severe inflammatory response to infection that leads to long-lasting cognitive impairment and depression after resolution. The lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced endotoxaemia model is a well-established model of gram-negative bacterial infection and recapitulates the clinical characteristics of sepsis. However, whether LPS-induced endotoxaemia during adolescence can modulate depressive and anxiety-like behaviours in adulthood remains unclear.
Objectives: To determine whether LPS-induced endotoxaemia in adolescence can modulate the stress vulnerability to depressive and anxiety-like behaviours in adulthood and explore the underlying molecular mechanisms.
Methods: Quantitative real-time PCR was used to measure inflammatory cytokine expression in the brain. A stress vulnerability model was established by exposure to subthreshold social defeat stress (SSDS), and depressive- and anxiety-like behaviours were evaluated by the social interaction test (SIT), sucrose preference test (SPT), tail suspension test (TST), force swimming test (FST), elevated plus-maze (EPM) test, and open field test (OFT). Western blotting was used to measure Nrf2 and BDNF expression levels in the brain.
Results: Our results showed that inflammation occurred in the brain 24 h after the induction of LPS-induced endotoxaemia at P21 but resolved in adulthood. Furthermore, LPS-induced endotoxaemia during adolescence promoted the inflammatory response and the stress vulnerability after SSDS during adulthood. Notably, the expression levels of nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2 (Nrf2) and BDNF in the mPFC were decreased after SSDS exposure in mice treated with LPS during adolescence. Activation of the Nrf2-BDNF signalling pathway by sulforaphane (SFN), an Nrf2 activator, ameliorated the effect of LPS-induced endotoxaemia during adolescence on stress vulnerability after SSDS during adulthood.
Conclusions: Our study identified adolescence as a critical period during which LPS-induced endotoxaemia can promote stress vulnerability during adulthood and showed that this effect is mediated by impairment of Nrf2-BDNF signalling in the mPFC.
Keywords: Adolescent; Adulthood; BDNF; Depressive- and anxiety-like behaviours; Endotoxaemia; Inflammation; Nrf2; Sepsis.
© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.