Literature DB >> 10593193

The maternal separation paradigm and adult emotionality and cognition in male and female Wistar rats.

J Lehmann1, C R Pryce, D Bettschen, J Feldon.   

Abstract

A single 24-h maternal separation (MS) in the rat during the stress hyporesponsive period alters adult behavior and neuroendocrine stress response. The age of the animal at MS might be a crucial factor for effects in adulthood. We report here on adult behavioral effects of MS performed on postnatal day 4 (MS4), 9 (MS9), or 18 (MS18) in male and female Wistar rats. Unrelated subjects were used to avoid confounding litter effects. Subjects were tested on paradigms of unconditioned fear/anxiety, i.e., open field and elevated plus-maze, and on paradigms involving learning in an aversive situation, i.e., conditioned freezing, active avoidance, and water maze. In line with our predictions we obtained (a) sex differences that were consistent with enhanced fear/anxiety in males relative to females, (b) evidence that MS4 yielded deficits in active avoidance learning and conditioned freezing (trend level), whereas MS9 yielded enhanced active avoidance and water maze learning, (c) evidence (at trend level) that these effects of MS are greater in males than in females. There was no evidence for an effect of MS on paradigms of unconditioned fear/anxiety. We conclude that MS, irrespective of the age at separation, does not provide a robust environmental model of modified behavior in aversive situations.

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Mesh:

Year:  1999        PMID: 10593193     DOI: 10.1016/s0091-3057(99)00150-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pharmacol Biochem Behav        ISSN: 0091-3057            Impact factor:   3.533


  55 in total

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Review 4.  Stressful experience and learning across the lifespan.

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Review 6.  Early life experience shapes the functional organization of stress-responsive visceral circuits.

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Review 8.  Neurobiology of resilience in depression: immune and vascular insights from human and animal studies.

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Review 9.  Mother to infant or infant to mother? Reciprocal regulation of responsiveness to stress in rodents and the implications for humans.

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10.  The impact of maternal separation on adult mouse behaviour and on the total neuron number in the mouse hippocampus.

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