4.5 Article

Sex-dependent effects of an early life treatment in rats that increases maternal care: vulnerability or resilience?

Journal

FRONTIERS IN BEHAVIORAL NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 8, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS RESEARCH FOUNDATION
DOI: 10.3389/fnbeh.2014.00056

Keywords

stress; maternal behavior; HPA axis; impulsivity; anxiety; novelty-seeking; sex

Funding

  1. Spanish grants to Antonio Armario and/or Roser Nadal from Plan Nacional sobre Drogas [2011/021]
  2. Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad [SAF2011-28313]
  3. Instituto de Salud Carlos III [RD12/0028/0014]
  4. Generalitat de Catalunya [SGR2009-16]
  5. Acciones Integradas de Colaboracion con Hungria [HH2008-0027]
  6. PTA-MICINN [PTA2010-34724]

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Early life stress (ELS) in rodents has profound long-term effects that are partially mediated by changes in maternal care. ELS not only induces detrimental effects in adulthood, increasing psychopathology, but also promotes resilience to further stressors. In Long-Evans rats, we evaluated a combination of two procedures as a model of ELS: restriction of bedding during the first post-natal days and exposure to a substitute mother. The maternal care of biological and substitute mothers was measured. The male and female offspring were evaluated during adulthood in several contexts. Anxiety was measured by the elevated plus-maze (EPM), acoustic startle response (ASR) and forced swim test (EST). In other group of animals, novelty-seeking was measured (activity in an inescapable novel environment, preference for novel environments and exploration of novel objects). Plasmatic ACTH and corticosterone in basal conditions and in response to stress were also measured. Cognitive impulsivity was assessed by a delay-discounting paradigm, and impulsive action, attention and compulsive-like behavior by a five choice serial reaction time task (5CSRTT). ELS decreased pup body weight and increased the care of the biological mother; however, the substitute mother did not exhibit overt maltreatment. A mixture of detrimental and beneficial effects was shown. In the 5CSRTT, attention was impaired in both genders, and in females, ELS increased compulsive-like behavior. Novel object exploration was only increased by ELS in males, but the preference for novel spaces decreased in both genders. Baseline anxiety (EPM and ASR) and recognition memory were not affected. Unexpectedly, ELS decreased the ACTH response to novelty and swim stress and increased active coping in the EST in both genders. Cognitive impulsivity was decreased only in females, but impulsive action was not affected. The enhancement in maternal care may buffer the effects of ELS in a context-dependent manner.

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