# Maternal immune activation remodeling of offspring glycosaminoglycan sulfation patterns during neurodevelopment

> **NIH NIH DP2** · UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON · 2024 · $69,428

## Abstract

ABSTRACT
Maternal immune activation (MIA) during prenatal or postnatal development significantly increases the risk for
offspring neurodevelopmental disorders (NDDs) later in life. Growing evidence suggest that regardless of the
MIA stimuli (infectious or environmental), offspring exhibit an enhanced risk for lifelong neuropathology defects
ranging from reduced brain volume to alterations in neurocircuit organization. The brain extracellular matrix-
containing chondroitin and dermatan sulfate-glycosaminoglycans (CS/DS-GAGs) are key regulators of brain
development and can be biochemically altered by neuroimmune responses. Defects in CS/DS-GAG abundance
and/or sulfation patterning (4S (CS-A), 2S4S (CS-B/DS), 6S (CS-C), 2S6S (CS-D), 4S6S (CS-E), 0S (CS-O))
result in the manifestation of similar neuropsychiatric behaviors as reported in offspring affected by MIA, but
whether and how MIA affects offspring brain matrix is unknown. By employing a novel laser capture
microdissection coupled mass spectrometry methodology (LMD-LC-MS/MS), our Preliminary Data provide the
first evidence for inter- and intra-regional differences in CS/DS-GAG sulfation pattern differences throughout the
developing mouse and non-human primate (NHP) brain. Specifically, the hippocampus exhibits a significant
increase in both developmental 6S (CS-C) and 2S6S (CS-D) isomers compared to the cortex, implying that the
hippocampus remains developmentally plastic long after the maturation of adjacent regions. Moreover, we show
that infectious Zika virus MIA during gestation in NHPs decreases the abundance of the developmental 2S6S
(CS-D) axonal growth factor attractant isomer in the hippocampus, suggesting stunted neurocircuit formation
after infectious MIA, while the non-infectious maternal high fat diet (mHFD) MIA during lactation in mice
decreases the abundance of the developmental 6S (CS-C) plasticity isomer in the hippocampus, suggested
accelerated early maturation of hippocampal neurocircuits in response to non-infectious MIA. The implication
that both infectious and non-infectious MIA insults influence the spatiotemporal regulation of brain CS/DS-GAG
sulfation patterns fits a global interconnecting theory linking a range of MIA insults with changes in offspring brain
neurodevelopment through re-coding of CS/DS-GAGs. From these results, we propose to 1) determine how MIA
exposure affects spatiotemporal expression of offspring CS/DS-GAGs and link these changes to NDDs later in
life, 2) mechanistically investigate how these MIA-induced changes in offspring CS/DS-GAGs influence glycan-
protein interactions involved in neurodevelopment, and 3) engineer a state-of-the-art nanopore sequencing
technology capable of single-molecule sequencing of biological CS/DS-GAGs to discover glycan-protein binding
elements. This multidisciplinary proposal has important translational potential to clarify how MIA exposure leads
to neuropsychiatric illness through changes in CS/DS-GAG sulfation patterni...

## Key facts

- **NIH application ID:** 11117496
- **Project number:** 3DP2AI171150-02S1
- **Recipient organization:** UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON
- **Principal Investigator:** Kimberly Michele Alonge
- **Activity code:** DP2 (R01, R21, SBIR, etc.)
- **Funding institute:** NIH
- **Fiscal year:** 2024
- **Award amount:** $69,428
- **Award type:** 3
- **Project period:** 2023-08-01 → 2028-07-31

## Primary source

NIH RePORTER: https://reporter.nih.gov/project-details/11117496

## Citation

> US National Institutes of Health, RePORTER application 11117496, Maternal immune activation remodeling of offspring glycosaminoglycan sulfation patterns during neurodevelopment (3DP2AI171150-02S1). Retrieved via AI Analytics 2026-05-26 from https://api.ai-analytics.org/grant/nih/11117496. Licensed CC0.

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