Abstract

Introduction: Polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs) are thyroid disrupting chemicals with adverse neurodevelopmental effects in children. Our group has previously shown that PBDEs produce autism (ASD)-like traits (Kozlova et al. 2022 Arch Tox; PMID: 34687351) in combination with reduced hypothalamic oxytocin expression in developmentally exposed female mice offspring. Limosilactobacillus reuteri (LR) is a beneficial probiotic that can increase oxytocin and thyroid hormones (THs) in other ASD mouse models. Therefore, we hypothesized that LR would ameliorate PBDE-induced deficits in social behavior, oxytocin and thyroid status. Methods: C57BL/6N dams (n=8/group) were dosed with a commercial mixture of PBDE congeners, DE-71, at 0.1 mg/kg/d (DE-71), or corn oil vehicle control (VEH/CON) during preconception, gestation and lactation). Dams were gavaged with L. reuteri (LR) ATCC-PTA-6475 at 107-108 CFU/mL (gift of Biogaia, Sweden). Cohort 1 pups (C1) received LR via dam until weaning (PND 21). Cohort 2 pups (C2) continued to receive gavage of LR post-weaning, daily, through 6 mo of age. Results: Fecal microbiome analysis confirmed colonization of LR in dams after 25 doses and their offspring at postnatal day 22 and 40. Beta diversity PCoA using unweighted Unifrac revealed differences in microbial communities in 6 month old female (p<.05-.01) and male offspring (apparent) between DE-71 and VEH/CON (C2). LR treatment normalized DE-71-induced abnormal social novelty preference (30 min retention) in adult male (p<.01) and females (p<.05) and long-term social recognition memory (24 h retention) in adult C2 females (p<.001). Using an emotional recognition task DE-71-exposed C2 male and female offspring were unable to distinguish between emotional state of stimulus mice but LR supplementation normalized the DE-71-induced deficits in C2 males (p<.01) and females (p<.05). On a marble burying test DE-71 exposed offspring showed abnormally elevated scores compared to VEH/CON, which were normalized by LR treatment only in C1 females (p<.05). In females, maternal LR treatment ameliorated DE-71-induced locomotor hyperactivity in C1. Since social behavior involves discrimination between social odors we also investigated the effects of DE-71 and LR treatment on olfactory discrimination ability. LR treatment ameliorated DE-71 effects compared to VEH/CON, i.e., reduced dishabituation from social odor 1 to 2 in males and female (p<.0001). Single molecule in situ hybridization performed on paraventricular hypothalamic nucleus (PVN) sections revealed upregulation of thyroid hormone transporter monocarboxylate transporter 8 (Mct8) and downregulation of iodothyronine deiodinase 3 (Dio3) on oxytocin-positive neurons in DE-71 vs VEH/CON in C2 females. Dio3 expression was normalized in DE-71+LR. Conclusions: These results indicate that early life exposure to PBDEs alters thyroid hormone system genes in PVN neurons that express oxytocin, suggesting that PBDEs may alter ASD-relevant behavior via brain thyroid signaling. In addition, maternal LR supplementation provides normalization in a sex-dependent manner. This work is supported by a Danone North America Gut Microbiome, Yogurt and Probiotics Fellowship Grant and a University of California President's Pre-Professoriate Fellowship to E.V.K and an NIH/NIGMS R35GM124724 to A.H. This is the full abstract presented at the American Physiology Summit 2024 meeting and is only available in HTML format. There are no additional versions or additional content available for this abstract. Physiology was not involved in the peer review process.

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