Literature DB >> 20016090

Early-life stress disrupts attachment learning: the role of amygdala corticosterone, locus ceruleus corticotropin releasing hormone, and olfactory bulb norepinephrine.

Stephanie Moriceau1, Kiseko Shionoya, Katherine Jakubs, Regina M Sullivan.   

Abstract

Infant rats require maternal odor learning to guide pups' proximity-seeking of the mother and nursing. Maternal odor learning occurs using a simple learning circuit including robust olfactory bulb norepinephrine (NE), release from the locus ceruleus (LC), and amygdala suppression by low corticosterone (CORT). Early-life stress increases NE but also CORT, and we questioned whether early-life stress disrupted attachment learning and its neural correlates [2-deoxyglucose (2-DG) autoradiography]. Neonatal rats were normally reared or stressed-reared during the first 6 d of life by providing the mother with insufficient bedding for nest building and were odor-0.5 mA shock conditioned at 7 d old. Normally reared paired pups exhibited typical odor approach learning and associated olfactory bulb enhanced 2-DG uptake. However, stressed-reared pups showed odor avoidance learning and both olfactory bulb and amygdala 2-DG uptake enhancement. Furthermore, stressed-reared pups had elevated CORT levels, and systemic CORT antagonist injection reestablished the age-appropriate odor-preference learning, enhanced olfactory bulb, and attenuated amygdala 2-DG. We also assessed the neural mechanism for stressed-reared pups' abnormal behavior in a more controlled environment by injecting normally reared pups with CORT. This was sufficient to produce odor aversion, as well as dual amygdala and olfactory bulb enhanced 2-DG uptake. Moreover, we assessed a unique cascade of neural events for the aberrant effects of stress rearing: the amygdala-LC-olfactory bulb pathway. Intra-amygdala CORT or intra-LC corticotropin releasing hormone (CRH) infusion supported aversion learning with intra-LC CRH infusion associated with increased olfactory bulb NE (microdialysis). These results suggest that early-life stress disturbs attachment behavior via a unique cascade of events (amygdala-LC-olfactory bulb).

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Year:  2009        PMID: 20016090      PMCID: PMC3345266          DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4106-09.2009

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurosci        ISSN: 0270-6474            Impact factor:   6.167


  115 in total

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Review 2.  The influence of stress hormones on fear circuitry.

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Review 3.  Effects of stress throughout the lifespan on the brain, behaviour and cognition.

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Review 4.  Early life stress as a risk factor for mental health: role of neurotrophins from rodents to non-human primates.

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5.  Do centrally administered neuropeptides access cognate receptors?: an analysis in the central corticotropin-releasing factor system.

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Review 6.  A role for corticotropin releasing factor and urocortin in behavioral responses to stressors.

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Review 9.  Child abuse and neglect and the brain--a review.

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  78 in total

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Review 3.  Bundling the haystack to find the needle: Challenges and opportunities in modeling risk and resilience following early life stress.

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Review 4.  The Neuro-Environmental Loop of Plasticity: A Cross-Species Analysis of Parental Effects on Emotion Circuitry Development Following Typical and Adverse Caregiving.

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Review 7.  Annual Research Review: Epigenetic mechanisms and environmental shaping of the brain during sensitive periods of development.

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9.  Access to a high resource environment protects against accelerated maturation following early life stress: A translational animal model of high, medium and low security settings.

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Review 10.  Transitions in sensitive period attachment learning in infancy: the role of corticosterone.

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