Literature DB >> 18955060

Effects of maternal corticosterone and stress on behavioral and hormonal indices of formalin pain in male and female offspring of different ages.

Irina Butkevich1, Victor Mikhailenko, Pavel Semionov, Tatyana Bagaeva, Vladimir Otellin, Anna Maria Aloisi.   

Abstract

In previous studies, we showed for the first time that prenatal stress in rats produces long-term alterations of formalin-induced pain behavior that are dependent on age and sex, and we demonstrated an important role of the serotonergic system in mechanisms of prenatal stress (Butkevich, I.P. and Vershinina, E.A., 2001; Butkevich, I.P. and Vershinina, E.A., 2003; Butkevich, I.P., Mikhailenko, V.A., Vershinina, E.A., Khozhai, L.I., Grigorev, I.P., Otellin, V.A., 2005; Butkevich, I.P., Mikhailenko, V.A., Khozhai, L.I., Otellin, V.A., 2006). In the present study, we focus on the influence of the maternal corticosterone milieu and its role in the effects of stress during pregnancy on formalin-induced pain and the corticosterone response to it in male and female offspring of different ages. For this purpose, we used adrenalectomy (AD) in female rats 3-4 weeks before mating (as distinct from AD typically performed at the beginning of pregnancy). Since AD is considered a reliable method to treat hypercortisolism, researches on the effects of long-term AD in dams on the systems responsible for adaptive behavior in offspring are important (such studies are not described in the literature). The results demonstrate that the differences in the corticosterone response to injection of formalin and saline are obvious in 90-day-old (adult) female offspring but masked in 25-day-old ones. AD promoted the corticosterone response to formalin-induced pain but not to injection of saline in prenatally non-stressed female offspring of both ages. Prenatal stress canceled the differences in corticosterone response to injection of formalin and saline in 25-day-old offspring of AD dams and in adult offspring of sham-operated (SH) dams but caused similar differences in adult offspring of AD dams. Sex differences were found in basal corticosterone levels in AD prenatally stressed rats of both age groups, with a higher level in females, and in the corticosterone response to formalin-induced pain in the adult rats of all groups investigated, with higher corticosterone levels in females. In regard to pain behavior, AD induced significant changes in flexing+shaking in prenatally non-stressed adult offspring and canceled the differences in this behavior between non-stressed and stressed 25-day-old offspring. There were sex differences in pain behavior of the adult rats: greater flexing+shaking in AD non-stressed males but in SH non-stressed females; greater licking in prenatally-stressed AD and SH females. These results indicate that the long-term influences of maternal corticosterone on formalin-induced pain and the corticosterone response to it are determined by the sex and age of the offspring and suggest that other mechanisms, including serotonergic ones revealed in our previous studies, are involved in the effects of prenatal stress on inflammatory pain behavior.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18955060     DOI: 10.1016/j.yhbeh.2008.09.008

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Horm Behav        ISSN: 0018-506X            Impact factor:   3.587


  3 in total

1.  The α7 nicotinic acetylcholine receptor and the acute stress response: maternal genotype determines offspring phenotype.

Authors:  Melissa L Sinkus; Marianne Z Wamboldt; Amanda Barton; Tasha E Fingerlin; Mark L Laudenslager; Sherry Leonard
Journal:  Physiol Behav       Date:  2010-11-10

2.  Sexual Dimorphism in the Effect of Neonatal Inflammatory Pain on Stress Reactivity of Hormonal Response and Cognitive Functions in Adult Rats.

Authors:  I P Butkevich; V A Mikhailenko; E A Vershinina
Journal:  J Evol Biochem Physiol       Date:  2022-05-16       Impact factor: 1.621

3.  Differential Expression of Brain Cannabinoid Receptors between Repeatedly Stressed Males and Females may Play a Role in Age and Gender-Related Difference in Traumatic Brain Injury: Implications from Animal Studies.

Authors:  Guoqiang Xing; Janis Carlton; Xiaolong Jiang; Jillian Wen; Min Jia; He Li
Journal:  Front Neurol       Date:  2014-08-28       Impact factor: 4.003

  3 in total

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