Treatment of pregnant rats with low doses of classical benzodiazepines
(BDZ, e.g. 1.25 mg diazepam/kg body weight) or a peripheral type BDZ
receptor (PBR) agonist between gestational days 14 and 20 has been sho
wn to result in a long-lasting depression of cellular and humoral immu
ne responses in the offspring. Considerable alterations in mitogen-sti
mulated cytokine production in rats exposed to diazepam prenatally hav
e now been observed: TNF-alpha liberation by splenocytes of diazepam-e
xposed rats was reduced at 2 wk of age and increased above control val
ues at 8 wk, and interleukin (IL)-6 was depressed in the offspring at
2 and 8 wk of age. IL-1 was diminished during post-weaning and adult p
eriods in male offspring but only in adult life in female offspring. I
n contrast, T-cell derived IL-2 was decreased during the postnatal per
iod and normalized in adulthood. Prostaglandin E(2) (PGE(2)), which is
known to down-regulate tumour necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) was i
ncreased and interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma), which stimulates TNF-alpha
release, was depressed in 2-wk-old offspring that had been treated pre
natally. Release of PGE(2) and IFN-gamma was still altered in young ad
ulthood. While the initial action on the foetal immune system remains
unknown, an interaction of the drugs with the PBR is suggested by the
effectiveness of the PBR agonist and by altered characteristics of PBR
(i.e. a decreased B-max of [H-3]PK 11195 binding to macrophage membra
nes of 8-wk-old offspring and an increased Kd of spleen cell membranes
of 2-wk-old offspring).