Multisensory Stimulation Improves Cognition and Behavior in Adult Male Rats Born to LT4-treated Thyroidectomized Dams

Alice Batistuzzo, Guilherme G. De Almeida, Tayna S. Brás, Victoria P. Zucato, Alexandre J.T. Arnold, Gisele Giannocco, Juliana M. Sato, Laís M. Yamanouchi, Eduardo Dias, Fernanda B. Lorena, Bruna P.P. Do Nascimento, Antonio C. Bianco, Miriam O. Ribeiro

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

4 Scopus citations

Abstract

Gestational hypothyroidism can impair development, cognition, and mood. Here, we tested whether multisensory stimulation (MS) improves the phenotype of rats born to surgically thyroidectomized (Tx) dams suboptimally treated with LT4. 8-week-old female Tx Wistar rats were kept on daily LT4 (0.7 μg/100 g body weight) dosed by gavage (serum TSH and T4 levels indicated moderate hypothyroidism) and 3 weeks later placed for breeding. MS of the litter started at age 60 days and lasted for 8 weeks. It consisted of twice per week of physical, cognitive, sensorial, and food stimuli. The offspring were assessed before and after MS for standardized tests of locomotor activity, cognition, and mood. Gestational hypothyroidism resulted in reduced litter size and increased offspring mortality. The pups exhibited delayed physical development, impairment of short- A nd long-term memory, and anxiety- A nd depressive-like behaviors. Nonetheless, ambulatory activity, social memory, and social preference were not affected by gestational hypothyroidism. MS restored short-term memory and anxiety while improving depressive like-behaviors. MS did not improve long-term memory. MS also did not modify the performance of control litter born to intact dams. We conclude that cognition and mood impairments caused by moderate gestational hypothyroidism were reversed or minimized in rats through MS. Further studies should define the molecular mechanisms involved.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article numberbqac105
JournalEndocrinology
Volume163
Issue number9
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 1 2022
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • behavior
  • gestational hypothyroidism
  • memory
  • multisensory stimulation

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Endocrinology

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