Sex-specific impact of early life stress on adult lung inflammatory response after LPS and Poly I:C exposures
Karine Bouchard, Dany Patoine, Joanny Roy, Stéphanie Fournier, David Marsolais, Richard Kinkead, Jean-François Lauzon-Joset

TL;DR
Early life stress affects adult lung inflammation differently in males and females, increasing infection risk later in life.
Contribution
The study reveals sex-specific immune changes in adulthood due to early life stress, highlighting increased infection risk in males.
Findings
NMS increased broncho-alveolar lavage neutrophilia after Poly I:C and LPS exposure in males.
NMS modulated macrophage, neutrophil, and NK cell accumulation in airways in a sex- and stimulus-specific manner.
NMS induced systemic immune changes, with increased spleen NK cells in males.
Abstract
Biological sex influences the development and function of the immune system, shaping responses to infection through both innate and adaptive mechanisms. Early life stress can disrupt immune development through long-term changes in the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis. Neonatal maternal separation (NMS) is an established model of early life adversity that mimics theses effects with sex-specific effects on physiological outcomes. To study how NMS alters immune responses to infection, newborn rats were separated from their mother for 3 h per day from post-natal day 3 to 12, whereas controls were undisturbed. Lung immune response was evaluated at 8 weeks old using LPS, which models gram-negative bacteria infection, and Poly I: C mimicking viral infection; both inducing activation of innate immune cells that play a role in the activation of adaptive immune response. Immune cell…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDelphi Technique in Research · Health, Environment, Cognitive Aging · Neonatal Respiratory Health Research
