Literature DB >> 23436319

Transgenerational effects of variable foraging demand stress in female bonnet macaques.

Erin L Kinnally1, Caroline Feinberg, David Kim, Kerel Ferguson, Jeremy D Coplan, J John Mann.   

Abstract

Stress coping is an important part of mammalian life, influencing somatic and mental health, social integration, and reproductive success. The experience of early psychological stress helps shape lifelong stress coping strategies. Recent studies have shown that the effects of early stress may not be restricted to the affected generation, but may also be transmitted to offspring. Understanding whether early stress influences development in subsequent generations may help us understand somewhat why many stress-related traits and diseases, for which little genetic basis has been discovered, run in families. Experimental early life "variable foraging demand" (VFD) stress has been associated with behavioral hypo-responsiveness to stress in infant and adolescent bonnet macaques. The present study examined the behavioral effects of experimental early VFD stress in adult bonnet macaques, and further investigated whether non-exposed adolescent offspring of VFD macaques were also affected. Thirty female bonnet macaques from four rearing histories were observed for behavioral response during stress: adults which had been VFD reared as infants (n = 11), adults which had been Control reared as infants (n = 9), and foraging demand naïve adolescents whose mothers were VFD (n = 4) or Control reared (n = 6). Subjects were observed for behavioral response during two experimental stressor conditions, including: (1) relocation to a novel environment; and (2) relocation with exposure to a "human intruder" making eye contact. Factor analysis yielded five factors that described categories of behavior across stress conditions. While adult VFD and Control reared females unexpectedly did not differ significantly, non-exposed adolescent offspring of VFD reared mothers displayed significant hypo-responsiveness in all behavioral categories compared with non-exposed adolescent offspring of Control females. We suggest that stress hypo-responsiveness previously observed in adolescent VFD reared animals may abate with age, but is nonetheless observed in the next generation. We conclude that VFD stress affects behavioral development of subsequent generations in non-human primates.
© 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23436319      PMCID: PMC4686142          DOI: 10.1002/ajp.22130

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Primatol        ISSN: 0275-2565            Impact factor:   2.371


  40 in total

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8.  Maternal Cerebrospinal Fluid Glutamate in Response to Variable Foraging Demand: Relationship to Cerebrospinal Fluid Serotonin Metabolites in Grown Offspring.

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