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Title: Cellular stress mechanisms of prenatal maternal stress: Heat shock factors and oxidative stress.

Authors: Dowell, Jonathan; Elser, Benjamin A; Schroeder, Rachel E; Stevens, Hanna E

Published In Neurosci Lett, (2019 09 14)

Abstract: Development of the brain prenatally is affected by maternal experience and exposure. Prenatal maternal psychological stress changes brain development and results in increased risk for neuropsychiatric disorders. In this review, multiple levels of prenatal stress mechanisms (offspring brain, placenta, and maternal physiology) are discussed and their intersection with cellular stress mechanisms explicated. Heat shock factors and oxidative stress are closely related to each other and converge with the inflammation, hormones, and cellular development that have been more deeply explored as the basis of prenatal stress risk. Increasing evidence implicates cellular stress mechanisms in neuropsychiatric disorders associated with prenatal stress including affective disorders, schizophrenia, and child-onset psychiatric disorders. Heat shock factors and oxidative stress also have links with the mechanisms involved in other kinds of prenatal stress including external exposures such as environmental toxicants and internal disruptions such as preeclampsia. Integrative understanding of developmental neurobiology with these cellular and physiological mechanisms is necessary to reduce risks and promote healthy brain development.

PubMed ID: 31299286 Exiting the NIEHS site

MeSH Terms: Animals; Brain/growth & development; Brain/metabolism*; Female; Heat-Shock Proteins/metabolism*; Heat-Shock Response/physiology*; Humans; Oxidative Stress/physiology*; Pregnancy; Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects/etiology; Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects/metabolism*; Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects/psychology; Stress, Psychological/complications; Stress, Psychological/metabolism*; Stress, Psychological/psychology

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