Return to search

Caracteriza??o comportamental e distribui??o de neur?nios inibit?rios em um modelo animal de autismo induzido por ?cido valpr?ico

Made available in DSpace on 2014-12-17T15:28:53Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1
JulianaABMS_DISSERT.pdf: 2223845 bytes, checksum: 223f33020eca4ef9f2713bc27ef300ca (MD5)
Previous issue date: 2013-08-23 / Coordena??o de Aperfei?oamento de Pessoal de N?vel Superior / Autism comprises a heterogeneous group of neurodevelopmental disorders that affects the brain maturation and produces sensorial, motor, language and social interaction deficits in early childhood. Several studies have shown a major involvement of genetic factors leading to a predisposition to autism, which are possibly affected by environmental modulators during embryonic and post-natal life. Recent studies in animal models indicate that alterations in epigenetic control during development can generate neuronal maturation disturbances and produce a hyper-excitable circuit, resulting in typical symptoms of autism. In the animal model of autism induced by valproic acid (VPA) during rat pregnancy, behavioral, electrophysiological and cellular alterations have been reported which can also be observed in patients with autism. However, only a few studies have correlated behavioral alterations with the supposed neuronal hyper-excitability in this model. The aim of this project was to generate an animal model of autism by pre-natal exposure to VPA and evaluate the early post-natal development and pre-puberal (PND30) behavior in the offspring. Furthermore, we quantified the parvalbumin-positive neuronal distribution in the medial prefrontal cortex and Purkinje cells in the cerebellum of VPA animals. Our results show that VPA treatment induced developmental alterations, which were observed in behavioral changes as compared to vehicle-treated controls. VPA animals showed clear behavioral abnormalities such as hyperlocomotion, prolonged stereotipies and reduced social interaction with an unfamiliar mate. Cellular quantification revealed a decrease in the number of parvalbumin-positive interneurons in the anterior cingulate cortex and in the prelimbic cortex of the mPFC, suggesting an excitatory/inhibitory unbalance in this animal model of autism. Moreover, we also observed that the neuronal reduction occurred mainly in the cortical layers II/III and V/VI. We did not detect any change in the density of Purkinje neurons in the Crus I region of the cerebellar cortex. Together, our results strengthens the face validity of the VPA model in rats and shed light on specific changes in the inhibitory circuitry of the prefrontal cortex in this autism model. Further studies should address the challenges to clarify particular electrophysiological correlates of the cellular alterations in order to better understand the behavioral dysfunctions / O autismo compreende um grupo heterog?neo de desordens do neurodesenvolvimento que afetam a matura??o cerebral e produzem d?ficits sensoriais, motores, de linguagem e de intera??o social no in?cio da inf?ncia. Diversos estudos tem demonstrado um importante envolvimento de fatores gen?ticos que levam ? predisposi??o ao autismo, que s?o possivelmente afetados por modula??es ambientais durante a vida embrion?ria e p?s-natal. Estudos recentes em modelos animais indicam que altera??es no controle epigen?tico durante o desenvolvimento podem gerar dist?rbios na matura??o neuronal e produzir um circuito hiper-excit?vel, resultando em sintomas t?picos do autismo. No modelo animal de autismo induzido por ?cido valpr?ico (VPA) durante a gesta??o de ratas, foram observadas altera??es comportamentais, eletrofisiol?gicas e celulares semelhantes ?s observadas nos pacientes com autismo. Entretanto, ainda s?o poucos os estudos que correlacionam altera??es comportamentais com a suposta hiper-excitabilidade neuronal desse modelo. O objetivo desse estudo foi de gerar o modelo animal de autismo por exposi??o pr?-natal ao VPA e avaliar o desenvolvimento e comportamento p?s-natal e pr?-p?bere (PND 30). Al?m disso, quantificamos a distribui??o neuronal de interneur?nios parvalbumina-positivos no c?rtex pr?-frontal medial (CPFm) e de c?lulas de Purkinje no cerebelo de animais VPA. Nossos resultados mostraram que o tratamento com VPA induziu altera??es no desenvolvimento, que foram observadas em altera??es comportamentais quando comparadas com os animais controle. Animais VPA mostraram claras altera??es comportamentais, como hiperlocomo??o, estereotipia prolongada e redu??o na intera??o social com animal n?o-familiar. A quantifica??o celular revelou uma diminui??o no n?mero de interneur?nios parvalbumina-positivos no c?rtex cingulado anterior e no c?rtex pr?-l?mbico, sugerindo um desbalan?o na excita??o/inibi??o nesse modelo animal de autismo. Tamb?m observamos que essa redu??o ocorreu principalmente nas camadas corticais II/III e V/VI. N?o observamos modifica??o na densidade de c?lulas de Purkinje na regi?o Crus I do c?rtex cerebelar. Em conjunto, nossos resultados fortalecem a validade de face do modelo VPA em ratos e relatam modifica??es espec?ficas na circuitaria inibit?ria do CPFm nesse modelo de autismo. Novos estudos devem abordar correlatos eletrofisiol?gicos particulares com altera??es celulares, de forma a esclarecer as disfun??es comportamentais encontradas nesse modelo animal

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:IBICT/oai:repositorio.ufrn.br:123456789/17029
Date23 August 2013
CreatorsSousa, Juliana Alves Brand?o Medeiros de
ContributorsCPF:52408493153, http://lattes.cnpq.br/9209418339421588, Gottfried, Carmem Juracy Silveira, CPF:66413435020, http://lattes.cnpq.br/3658669547742426, Costa, Marcos Romualdo, CPF:05278916737, http://lattes.cnpq.br/6118493598074445, Pereira, Rodrigo Neves Romcy
PublisherUniversidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte, Programa de P?s-Gradua??o em Neurociencias, UFRN, BR, Neurobiologia Celular e Molecular; Neurobiologia de Sistemas e Cogni??o; Neurocomputa??o Neuroengen
Source SetsIBICT Brazilian ETDs
LanguagePortuguese
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typeinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion, info:eu-repo/semantics/masterThesis
Formatapplication/pdf
Sourcereponame:Repositório Institucional da UFRN, instname:Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte, instacron:UFRN
Rightsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess

Page generated in 0.0019 seconds