Abstract

Treatment of pregnant Long Evans rats with benzodiazepines was found to cause alterations in cellular immune responses in their offspring. We now report on changes in interleukin-1 (IL-1) and IL-2 secretion which were analyzed in rats from birth until 12 weeks. Time-pregnant rats were treated with diazepam (1.25 mg/kg/day subcutaneously) from gestational day 14 to 20. Lipopolysaccharide-stimulated release of macrophage-derived IL-1 by spleen cells, determined on D10.G4.1 cells, remained in the control range during the preweaning period (postnatal day 6-28), then decreased in prenatally diazepam-exposed offspring, significantly in males during the postweaning period (postnatal day 34-61) and in both sexes in adults (postnatal day 62-83). Concanavalin A-stimulated release of T lymphocyte-derived IL-2 from spleen cells, determined on CTLL-2 cells, was reduced in male and female offspring during preweaning (postnatal day 3-28) and postweaning (postnatal day 33-55) periods and normalized in adulthood (postnatal day 60-84). The percentage of IL-2 receptor expressing (CD25+) cells was unaffected. From these and our earlier data it is evident that prenatal exposure to low doses of benzodiazepines can result in long-lasting alterations of the cytokine network, as indicated by reduced release of TNF-alpha, IL-1, IL-6, IL-2 and interferon-gamma. The concomitant reduction of peripheral type benzodiazepine receptors on macrophages is discussed as a possible link between prenatal treatment and disturbed function.

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