Data from: Sociosexual and communication deficits after traumatic injury to the developing murine brain
Despite the life-long implications of social and communication dysfunction after pediatric traumatic brain injury, there is a poor understanding of these deficits in terms of their developmental trajectory and underlying mechanisms. In a well-characterized murine model of pediatric brain injury, we...
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Zusammenfassung: | Despite the life-long implications of social and communication dysfunction
after pediatric traumatic brain injury, there is a poor understanding of
these deficits in terms of their developmental trajectory and underlying
mechanisms. In a well-characterized murine model of pediatric brain
injury, we recently demonstrated that pronounced deficits in social
interactions emerge across maturation to adulthood after injury at
postnatal day (p) 21, approximating a toddler-aged child. Extending these
findings, we here hypothesized that these social deficits are dependent
upon brain maturation at the time of injury, and coincide with abnormal
sociosexual behaviors and communication. Age-dependent vulnerability of
the developing brain to social deficits was addressed by comparing
behavioral and neuroanatomical outcomes in mice injured at either a
pediatric age (p21) or during adolescence (p35). Sociosexual behaviors
including social investigation and mounting were evaluated in a
resident-intruder paradigm at adulthood. These outcomes were complemented
by assays of urine scent marking and ultrasonic vocalizations as indices
of social communication. We provide evidence of sociosexual deficits after
brain injury at p21, which manifest as reduced mounting behavior and scent
marking towards an unfamiliar female at adulthood. In contrast, with the
exception of the loss of social recognition in a three-chamber social
approach task, mice that received TBI at adolescence were remarkably
resilient to social deficits at adulthood. Increased emission of
ultrasonic vocalizations (USVs) as well as preferential emission of high
frequency USVs after injury was dependent upon both the stimulus and prior
social experience. Contrary to the hypothesis that changes in white matter
volume may underlie social dysfunction, injury at both p21 and p35
resulted in a similar degree of atrophy of the corpus callosum by
adulthood. However, loss of hippocampal tissue was greater after p21
compared to p35 injury, suggesting that a longer period of lesion
progression or differences in the kinetics of secondary pathogenesis after
p21 injury may contribute to observed behavioral differences. Together,
these findings indicate vulnerability of the developing brain to social
dysfunction, and suggest that a younger age-at-insult results in poorer
social and sociosexual outcomes. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.2ds7p |