| Literature DB >> 19765555 |
Stephanie Baker1, Stephanie Rees, Mark Chebli, Nathalie Lemarec, Roger Godbout, Veronika Huta, Catherine Bielajew.
Abstract
Physical restraint applied during gestation is a commonly employed animal model of human pregnancy stress. The consequences of such a paradigm have been extensively investigated in adult male rats using a variety of physiological and behavioral measures. The behavioral repertoire of female offspring, however, has been largely ignored. The current study examines adult offspring-male and female Long Evans rats (55-90 days of age) and is a follow-up report to the consequences of maternal restraint (gestation days 10 through 19) in mother rats and their juvenile offspring. Physiological measures included weight and estrous cycle regularity. Elevated plus maze and emergence tests were used to measure anxiety, and the T-maze test, cognition. Data were analyzed via hierarchical linear modeling to account for the nesting of offspring within litters. Compared to same-sex controls, males from stressed mothers displayed a progressive attenuated weight gain over experimental weeks while females from stressed mothers maintained a stable, lower weight throughout. Twenty-five percent of females in the stressed group and none in the control group displayed irregular cycles in the first week of testing; on subsequent weeks, this group discrepancy ranged from 1% to 11%. Subtle effects were observed in anxiety measures: an interaction between sex and stress group in the analysis of head dip behavior in the elevated plus maze and decreased emergence latencies in stress groups. Results demonstrate the importance of examining the effects of maternal stress in offspring of both sexes at various developmental stages.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19765555 DOI: 10.1016/j.brainres.2009.09.023
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Res ISSN: 0006-8993 Impact factor: 3.252