Sex-dependent and ontogenetic effects of low dose ethanol on social behavioral deficits induced by mouse maternal separation
Autor: | Gabrielle Etem, Lindsay R. Halladay, Bryce Rosellini, Hannah J. M. Henderson, Max Bjorni, Malia A. Belnap |
---|---|
Rok vydání: | 2021 |
Předmět: |
Male
Ontogeny Early life stress Male mice Physiology Anxiety Mice 03 medical and health sciences Behavioral Neuroscience chemistry.chemical_compound 0302 clinical medicine Animals Medicine Habituation Social Behavior 030304 developmental biology Sex Characteristics 0303 health sciences Ethanol Behavior Animal business.industry Maternal Deprivation Low dose Age Factors Novelty seeking Central Nervous System Depressants Mice Inbred C57BL Disease Models Animal chemistry Female Septal Nuclei business Stress Psychological 030217 neurology & neurosurgery Social behavior |
Zdroj: | Behavioural Brain Research. 406:113241 |
ISSN: | 0166-4328 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.bbr.2021.113241 |
Popis: | Early life stress can induce lifelong emotional and social behavioral deficits that may in some cases be alleviated by drugs or alcohol. A model for early life stress, rodent maternal separation, recapitulates these behavioral sequelae, which are not limited to potentiated anxiety-like behavior, attenuated social motivation, and altered reward-seeking. Here we employed mouse maternal separation with early weaning (MSEW), consisting of pup-dam separation lasting 4-8 hours on postnatal days (PD) 2-16, with early weaning on PD 17. Prior MSEW studies have limited subjects by age or sex, so we more comprehensively investigated MSEW effects in both sexes, during adolescence and adulthood. We found universal effects of MSEW to include lifelong enhancement of anxiety-like and despair behavior, as well as deficits in social motivation. We also observed some sex-dependent effects of MSEW, namely that female MSEW mice exhibited social habituation to a greater degree than their male counterparts. Low dose ethanol administration had no major effects on the social behavior of non-stressed mice. But interestingly, MSEW-induced social habituation was counteracted by low dose ethanol in adolescent female mice, and potentiated in adolescent male mice. These effects were absent in adult animals, suggesting that ethanol may exert differential effects on the developing brain in such a manner to produce age-, sex-, and stress-dependent effects upon social behavior. Together, results indicate that MSEW reliably produces long-lasting impairments in emotional and social behaviors in both sexes and across the lifespan, but may exert more salient social behavioral effects on female animals. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
Externí odkaz: |