4.1 Article

Increased aggressive and affiliative display behavior in intrauterine growth restricted baboons

Journal

JOURNAL OF MEDICAL PRIMATOLOGY
Volume 44, Issue 3, Pages 143-157

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jmp.12172

Keywords

behavioral phenotype; developmental programming; dominance; maternal nutrition; nonhuman primate; nutrient restriction; Papio; social behavior

Funding

  1. NIH/NICHD [2P01HD021350, 5R24 RR021367, R21HD057480]

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BackgroundWe hypothesized intrauterine growth restricted offspring (IUGR) demonstrate higher rates of aggression and higher dominance ranks than control (CTR) offspring with normal weight at term; if aggressive behavior is advantageous during resource scarcity, developmental programming may lead to an association between aggression and IUGR. MethodsWe studied 22 group-housed baboons (ages 3-5years). CTR (male n=8, female n=5) mothers ate adlibitum. IUGR (male n=4, female n=5) mothers were fed 70% feed eaten by CTR mothers during pregnancy and lactation. ResultsIUGR showed higher rates of aggressive displays (P<0.01) and friendly displays (P<0.02). Dominance ranks and physical aggression rates did not differ between groups. ConclusionsHigh rates of IUGR aggressive display might reflect developmental programming of behavioral phenotypes enhancing fitness. Friendly displays may reflect reconciliation. Potential mechanisms include neurodevelopment and learning. Exploration of IUGR as a risk factor for behavioral patterns is important for developing diagnostic and therapeutic strategies.

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