Literature DB >> 18077099

Prenatal stress does not alter innate novelty-seeking behavioral traits, but differentially affects individual differences in neuroendocrine stress responsivity.

Sarah Clinton1, Sue Miller, Stanley J Watson, Huda Akil.   

Abstract

Exposure to stress during prenatal or early postnatal life can dramatically impact adult behavior and neuroendocrine function. We recently began to selectively breed Sprague-Dawley rats for high (high responder, HR) and low (low responder, LR) novelty-seeking behavior, a trait that predicts a variety of differences in emotional reactivity, including differences in neuroendocrine stress response, fear- and anxiety-like behavior, aggression, and propensity to self-administer drugs of abuse. We evaluated genetic-early environment interactions by exposing HR- and LR-bred animals to prenatal stress (PS) from pregnancy day 3-20, hypothesizing that PS exposure would differentially impact HR versus LR behavior and neuroendocrine reactivity. We evaluated novelty-induced locomotion, anxiety-like behavior, and corticosterone stress response in weanling (25-day-old) and adult HR-LR stressed and control males. Exposure to PS did not alter HR-LR differences in locomotion, but did impact anxiety-like behavior, specifically in LR animals. Surprisingly, LR animals exposed to PS exhibited less anxiety than LR controls. HR rats were not affected by PS, with both stress and control groups showing low levels of anxiety. PS differentially impacted neuroendocrine stress reactivity in young versus adult HR-LR animals, leading to an exaggerated corticosterone response in LR pups compared to LR controls, while HRs pups were unaffected. In contrast, exposure to PS produced an exaggerated stress response in HR adults, compared to HR controls, while LR animals were not significantly affected. These findings highlight how genetic predisposition may shape individual's response to early life stressors, and furthermore, show that a history of early life stress may differentially impact an organism at different points in life. Future work will explore neural mechanisms which underlie the different behavioral and neuroendocrine consequences of PS in HR versus LR animals.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18077099      PMCID: PMC2430412          DOI: 10.1016/j.psyneuen.2007.10.012

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychoneuroendocrinology        ISSN: 0306-4530            Impact factor:   4.905


  71 in total

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5.  Effects of prenatal stress on anxiety and social interactions in adult rats.

Authors:  V Patin; B Lordi; A Vincent; J Caston
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6.  Effect of chronic treatment with ladostigil (TV-3326) on anxiogenic and depressive-like behaviour and on activity of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis in male and female prenatally stressed rats.

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Authors:  Oliver J Bosch; Simone A Krömer; Inga D Neumann
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  32 in total

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4.  Prenatal stress and stress coping style interact to predict metabolic risk in male rats.

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6.  The melanin-concentrating hormone (MCH) system in an animal model of depression-like behavior.

Authors:  M J García-Fuster; G S Parks; S M Clinton; S J Watson; H Akil; O Civelli
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7.  Developmental underpinnings of differences in rodent novelty-seeking and emotional reactivity.

Authors:  Sarah M Clinton; John D H Stead; Sue Miller; Stanley J Watson; Huda Akil
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8.  Differential effects of social defeat in rats with high and low locomotor response to novelty.

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