Published: May 28, 2020

dan barthCU Psychology and Neuroscience Professor Dan Barth (Behavioral Neuroscience) and postdoctoral researcher (and CU PhD) Zach Smith were in the news, getting interviewed for an article in CU ÐßÐßÊÓƵ Today about some recent research demonstrating that prenatal exposure to good bacteria might prevent the development of an autism-like disorder in rats. Using a rat model, they had previously shown that administration of a drug (terbutaline) commonly used to delay preterm labor in humans resulted in rat offspring exibiting signs of an autism-like disorder. In the present research they were able to block this effect by giving the rat mothers the "good" bacterium M. vaccae. Read more about this research in the CU ÐßÐßÊÓƵ Today article, or read the published in Brain, Behavior, and Immunity.