Abstract

Exposure to antibiotic treatment has been associated with increased vulnerability to various psychiatric disorders. However, a research gap exists in understanding how adolescent antibiotic therapy affects behavior and cognition. Many antibiotics that target bacterial translation may also affect mitochondrial translation resulting in impaired mitochondrial function. The brain is one of the most metabolically active organs, and hence is the most vulnerable to impaired mitochondrial function. We hypothesized that exposure to antibiotics during early adolescence would directly affect brain mitochondrial function, and result in altered behavior and cognition. We administered amoxicillin, chloramphenicol, or gentamicin in the drinking water to young adolescent male wild-type mice. Next, we assayed mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation complex activities in the cerebral cortex, performed behavioral screening and targeted mass spectrometry-based acylcarnitine profiling in the cerebral cortex. We found that mice exposed to chloramphenicol showed increased repetitive and compulsive-like behavior in the marble burying test, an accurate and sensitive assay of anxiety, concomitant with decreased mitochondrial complex IV activity. Our results suggest that only adolescent chloramphenicol exposure leads to impaired brain mitochondrial complex IV function, and could therefore be a candidate driver event for increased anxiety-like and repetitive, compulsive-like behaviors.

Highlights

  • Exposure to antibiotic treatment has been associated with increased vulnerability to various psychiatric disorders

  • We found that adolescent chloramphenicol, but not gentamicin or amoxicillin exposure, without concomitant infection(s), led to impaired brain mitochondrial complex IV function, signs of slower fatty acid metabolism, accompanied by increased anxiety-like and repetitive, compulsive-like behaviors

  • Despite the high occurrence of exposure to antibiotics during adolescence and its association with increased risk for developing ­psychopathology[25,44,45], an important research gap exists in understanding how antibiotic therapy during adolescence could lead to increased vulnerability to developing psychopathology

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Summary

Introduction

Exposure to antibiotic treatment has been associated with increased vulnerability to various psychiatric disorders. Many antibiotics that target bacterial translation may affect mitochondrial translation resulting in impaired mitochondrial function. We hypothesized that exposure to antibiotics during early adolescence would directly affect brain mitochondrial function, and result in altered behavior and cognition. We found that mice exposed to chloramphenicol showed increased repetitive and compulsive-like behavior in the marble burying test, an accurate and sensitive assay of anxiety, concomitant with decreased mitochondrial complex IV activity. Our results suggest that only adolescent chloramphenicol exposure leads to impaired brain mitochondrial complex IV function, and could be a candidate driver event for increased anxiety-like and repetitive, compulsive-like behaviors. Due to the close ribosomal similarities between prokaryotes and mitochondria, mitochondrial ribosome activity might be affected by these antibiotics, possibly leading to inhibition of mitochondrial ­biogenesis[9,16,17,18]. These infections often require long-term treatment with ­antibiotics[26,27]

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