Neonatal experience interacts with adult social stress to alter acute and chronic Theiler's virus infection

  • R. R. Johnson
  • , S. Maldonado Bouchard
  • , T. W. Prentice
  • , P. Bridegam
  • , F. Rassu
  • , C. R. Young
  • , A. J. Steelman
  • , T. H. Welsh
  • , C. J. Welsh
  • , M. W. Meagher

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Previous research has shown that neonatal handling has prolonged protective effects associated with stress resilience and aging, yet little is known about its effect on stress-induced modulation of infectious disease. We have previously demonstrated that social disruption stress exacerbates the acute and chronic phases of the disease when applied prior to Theiler's virus infection (PRE-SDR) whereas it attenuates disease severity when applied concurrently with infection (CON-SDR). Here, we asked whether neonatal handling would protect adult mice from the detrimental effects of PRE-SDR and attenuate the protective effects of CON-SDR on Theiler's virus infection. As expected, handling alone decreased IL-6 and corticosterone levels, protected the non-stressed adult mice from motor impairment throughout infection and reduced antibodies to myelin components (PLP, MBP) during the autoimmune phase of disease. In contrast, neonatal handling X PRE/CON-SDR elevated IL-6 and reduced corticosterone as well as increased motor impairment during the acute phase of the infection. Neonatal handling X PRE/CON-SDR continued to exacerbate motor impairment during the chronic phase, whereas only neonatal handling X PRE-SDR increased in antibodies to PLP, MOG, MBP and TMEV. Together, these results imply that while handling reduced the severity of later Theiler's virus infection in non-stressed mice, brief handling may not be protective when paired with later social stress.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)110-120
Number of pages11
JournalBrain, Behavior, and Immunity
Volume40
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 2014
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Handling
  • IL-6
  • Maternal separation
  • Multiple sclerosis
  • Resilience
  • Social disruption
  • Stress
  • Theiler's virus

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Immunology
  • Endocrine and Autonomic Systems
  • Behavioral Neuroscience

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