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Maternal immune activation and peripubertal stress differentially disrupt glutamatergic, endocannabinoid, and neuromodulatory signalling in the adult rat dorsal hippocampus: implications for excitatory-inhibitory balance

Preprint Created on 16 Jun 2026 bioRxiv

Disruptions in excitatory-inhibitory (E/I) balance during neurodevelopment have been implicated in a range of psychiatric conditions, yet the neurochemical alterations associated to early-life insults and their potential contribution to E/I imbalance remain poorly understood. Using a "two-hit" rat model combining maternal immune activation (MIA; lipopolysaccharide -LPS- on gestational days 15-16) and peripubertal unpredictable stress (PUS; postnatal days 28-38), we examined the long-term effects of these insults, alone and in combination, on the adult dorsal hippocampus. Assessments included gene and/or protein expression of glutamatergic and GABAergic markers, endocannabinoid system enzymes, neuromodulatory amino acid level and prepulse inhibition (PPI) of the acoustic startle response. MIA increased GluN1 protein expression, while PUS reduced the Grin2a/Grin2b mRNA ratio, indicating incomplete NMDA receptor subunit maturation. GABA levels and GABA- {gamma}2 expression were unchanged, suggesting deficient inhibitory compensation in the face of heightened excitatory tone. PUS increased Mgll gene expression, whereas a trend towards reduced Dagla expression was observed exclusively in non-stressed LPS-exposed animals, suggesting that MIA may suppress 2-AG synthesis only in the absence of subsequent stress. MIA and PUS displayed interactive effects on taurine levels, with elevation observed only in the double-hit condition; glycine was elevated by MIA independently of PUS. These findings support a model in which MIA and PUS converge on hippocampal E/I balance through complementary adaptations - excitatory upregulation, incomplete synaptic maturation, and reduced endocannabinoid tone - inadequately counterbalanced by inhibitory systems. Taurine and glycine emerge as potential markers of homeostatic compensation in response to early neurochemical dysregulation.

Del Olmo, P. C., Nowotny, C., Moreno-Fernandez, M., Capellan, R., Orihuel, J., Marcos, A., Ambrosio, E., Ucha, M., Higuera-Matas, A.

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