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				 “With more information about maternal illness, 
				what we call maternal immune activation, we can make better 
				decisions about how to handle these types of immune challenges 
				within animal production settings,” says Marissa Keever-Keigher, 
				doctoral student in the Department of Animal Sciences at 
				Illinois and lead researcher on the study. 
				 
				Studying brain development in the domestic pig is relevant on 
				the farm, of course, but pig studies can also inform human 
				neurodevelopmental research. That’s because the pig’s 
				development, genetics, brain structure, and more are very 
				similar to our own. 
				 
				In previous pig studies looking at the effects of maternal 
				immune activation, Keever-Keigher and her colleagues showed 
				important genetic changes occur in the piglet amygdala, a brain 
				structure that plays an important role in learning, social 
				behavior, and stress response in both humans and pigs. 
              
                
				  
              
                The researchers also knew from primate and rodent studies that a 
				second immune challenge, known as a double hit, can further 
				disrupt typical brain development in young animals. To test the 
				double hit hypothesis in pigs, the team chose weaning as the 
				second challenge. 
				 
				“While weaning is not itself an immune challenge, it is an 
				extremely stressful time during a piglet’s life and can elicit 
				an immune response,” says Haley Rymut, doctoral student in 
				animal sciences and co-author on the study. “Piglets have to 
				deal with a broad array of stressors, including physical 
				stressors from being handled and moved, and emotional stressors 
				from being taken away from the mom and placed with their peers. 
				Any of those physical or emotional stressors can kick off an 
				immune response.” 
				 
				The researchers looked at a combination of factors for piglets 
				in the study: whether or not their moms were infected with 
				porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus (PRRSV) 
				during gestation, and whether or not they were weaned at 21 days 
				of age, the typical age in production settings. They also noted 
				the sex of the piglets, as their earlier research indicated male 
				piglets showed more changes in the amygdala as a result of 
				maternal illness. 
				 
				“Using high throughput sequencing technologies, we were able to 
				monitor the levels of more than 16,000 genes in the pigs. We 
				uncovered more than 100 genes and molecular pathways affected by 
				either maternal immune activation, weaning, sex, or a 
				combination of factors in the amygdala on day 22 for all 
				piglets. The effect of pre- and postnatal stressors on 
				neuropeptide genes confirms the plasticity of the infant brain 
				during development to respond and adapt to challenges,” says 
				Sandra Rodriguez-Zas, professor in animal sciences and faculty 
				advisor to Keever-Keigher and Rymut. Rodriguez-Zas is principal 
				investigator of the U.S. Department of Agriculture-funded study. 
              
                Many of the genes expressed at higher or 
				lower-than-typical rates in weaned piglets from virus-infected 
				mothers have been associated with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) 
				and schizophrenia spectrum disorder (SSD) in previous studies. 
				But genes relevant to other neurological disorders were affected 
				too. 
              
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			“We also found changes in expression of genes 
			associated with neurodegenerative diseases like Huntington's and 
			Alzheimer's disease,” Keever-Keigher says. 
			 
			As in the scientists’ previous work, the double hit affected male 
			piglets more than females, with greater dysregulation of genes in 
			the amygdala. The researchers found evidence of more protective 
			pathways in female brains, giving them an advantage in handling 
			stressful events. 
			 
			The study provides valuable clues for researchers studying ASD, SSD, 
			and neurodegenerative disorders in humans, even though some aspects 
			might not translate directly. 
			 
			Rymut says, “For most children, weaning isn’t nearly as stressful as 
			it is for pigs in a production setting. But many other traumatic 
			events early in childhood could set up that double hit.” 
			 
			On the farm, pigs from virus-infected mothers often show anti-social 
			behaviors. Because pigs are typically group-housed and fed via 
			communal feeders, pigs that don’t like being around their peers are 
			often last to feed and generally more stressed, leading to slower 
			growth rates and lower overall body condition scores. 
			 
			“The lesson for swine producers, I think, is to be really mindful of 
			stressful conditions in the production cycle, and try to mitigate 
			those as much as we can in order to create the most productive and 
			healthy livestock animals and benefit producers’ bottom lines,” 
			Keever-Keigher says. 
			 
			Rymut adds, “Also, knowing how the different sexes respond could 
			help producers manage animals that are less likely to be productive 
			as a result of maternal immune activation.” 
			  
			The article, “Interacting impact of maternal inflammatory response 
			and stress on the amygdala transcriptome of pigs,” is published in 
			G3 Genes|Genomes|Genetics [DOI: 10.1093/g3journal/jkab113]. The 
			research was supported by the National Institutes of Health and the 
			U.S. Department of Agriculture’s “Dual Purpose for Dual Benefit” 
			program (grant number 2018-67015-27413). Rod Johnson, professor and 
			head of the Department of Animal Sciences is co-investigator on the 
			grant and co-author on the G3 paper. 
			 
			The Department of Animal Sciences is in the College of Agricultural, 
			Consumer and Environmental Sciences at the University of Illinois. 
			[Sources: Marissa Keever-Keigher, 
			Haley Rymut, Sandra Rodriguez-Zas,  
			News writer: Lauren Quinn]  |