Early adversity is a key risk factor for the development of adult psychopathology, including anxiety, depression and schizophrenia. Rodent models of early adversity program persistent behavioral, molecular, metabolic, and neurophysiological changes. Perturbed signaling via forebrain Gq-coupled neurotransmitter receptors is a common feature across multiple models of early adversity. We addressed whether enhanced Gq-mediated signaling in forebrain excitatory neurons during postnatal life can evoke long-lasting mood-related behavioral changes. Excitatory hM3Dq DREADD-mediated chemogenetic activation of CamKIIα-positive forebrain excitatory neurons during postnatal life (P2-14) increased anxietyand despair-like behavior, and evoked sensorimotor gating deficits in adulthood. In contrast, chronic chemogenetic hM3Dq DREADD activation of forebrain excitatory neurons in the juvenile or adult window did not evoke any mood-related behavioral alterations, highlighting the criticality of the postnatal temporal window. The enhanced anxiety-, despair-and schizophrenia-like behavioral changes evoked by chronic chemogenetic activation of forebrain excitatory neurons in postnatal life, was accompanied by an increased cortical and hippocampal metabolic rate of glutamatergic and GABAergic neurons in adulthood. Furthermore, animals with a history of postnatal hM3Dq activation exhibited a decline in the expression of activitydependent and plasticity-associated markers within the hippocampus, along with perturbed hippocampal excitatory and inhibitory currents in adulthood. These results indicate that Gq signaling mediated activation of forebrain excitatory neurons during the critical postnatal window is sufficient to program altered mood-related behavior, as well as metabolic and neurophysiological changes in forebrain glutamate and GABA systems, recapitulating specific aspects of the consequences of early adversity.
BACKGROUND:Paraoxonase (PON1) can hydrolyze organophosphate pesticides (OP) and has a key role in the susceptibility of human in OP toxicity. The human-enzyme shows polymorphism and variations in the distribution profile of its phenotypes among different ethnic groups have been observed.AIMS:To see the distribution pattern of total PON1 activity in 45 healthy attendants of poisoning cases; 121 healthy unrelated farm-labours and 59 normal subjects of trauma.MATERIALS AND METHODS:The PON1 activities from serum/plasma samples of these healthy normal individuals were estimated with/without addition of 1M NaCl in order to determine salt-stimulated and basal activity. The PON 1 phenotypes were determined on the basis of percent activation of enzyme activity.RESULTS:Tri-modal distribution of basal PON1 activity was observed among all these individuals. 52.0% of the individuals belonged to Phenotype A, 46.6% to phenotype AB while 1.4% to Phenotype B with gene frequency of allele-A and allele-B being 0.753 and 0.247 respectively in excellent agreement with Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium.CONCLUSION:Maximum number of individuals belonged to phenotype-A (low PON1 activity) showing potential vulnerability towards Op-poisoning.
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