| Literature DB >> 27132477 |
Jeremy D Bailoo1, Justin A Varholick1, Xavier J Garza2, Richard L Jordan2, Sara Hintze1.
Abstract
Exposure to chronic stress is associated with an increased incidence of neuropsychiatric dysfunction. The current study evaluated two competing hypotheses, the cumulative stress and the match/mismatch hypothesis of neuropsychiatric dysfunction, using two paradigms relating to exposure to "stress": pre-weaning maternal separation and post-weaning isolation-housing. C57BL/6 offspring were reared under four conditions: typical animal facility rearing (AFR, control), early handling (EH, daily 15 min separation from dam), maternal separation (MS, daily 4 hr separation from dam), and maternal and peer separation (MPS, daily 4 hr separation from dam and from littermates). After weaning, mice were either housed socially (2-3/cage) or in isolation (1/cage) and then tested for prepulse inhibition in adulthood. Isolation-housed MPS subjects displayed greater deficits in prepulse inhibition relative to socially-housed MPS subjects while socially-housed AFR subjects displayed greater deficits in prepulse inhibition relative to isolation-housed AFR subjects. The results indicate that these treatment conditions represent a potentially valuable model for evaluating the match/mismatch hypothesis in regards to neuropsychiatric dysfunction.Entities:
Keywords: early handling; isolation-housing; match/mismatch hypothesis; maternal separation; prepulse inhibition
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27132477 DOI: 10.1002/dev.21422
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dev Psychobiol ISSN: 0012-1630 Impact factor: 3.038