Effects of maternal separation on punishment-driven risky decision making in adolescence and adulthood

•Maternal separation increased risk-taking in adolescence.•Latency to make a risky choice was also reduced after maternal separation.•Enhanced risk-taking did not persist into adulthood.•Sex differences in risk-taking first manifest in adulthood.•Risk-taking is comparable between adolescence and adu...

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Veröffentlicht in:Neurobiology of learning and memory 2024-12, Vol.217, p.108016, Article 108016
Hauptverfasser: Minnes, Grace L., Wiener, Anna J., Pisahl, Audrey S., Duecker, Elizabeth A., Baskhairoun, Boula A., Lowe, Sharoderick C., Simon, Nicholas W.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Maternal separation increased risk-taking in adolescence.•Latency to make a risky choice was also reduced after maternal separation.•Enhanced risk-taking did not persist into adulthood.•Sex differences in risk-taking first manifest in adulthood.•Risk-taking is comparable between adolescence and adulthood in control subjects. Early life adversity (ELA) is associated with a multitude of neural and behavioral aberrations. To develop treatments to mitigate the effects of ELA, it is critical to determine which aspects of cognition are affected and when these disturbances manifest across the lifespan. Here, we tested the effects of maternal separation, an established rodent model of ELA, on punishment-driven risky decision-making longitudinally in both adolescence (25–55 days old) and adulthood (80–100 days old). Risk-taking was assessed with the Risky Decision-making Task, wherein rats choose between a small, safe reward and a large reward accompanied by an escalating risk of punishment (foot shock). We observed that rats exposed to maternal separation were more prone to risk-taking than controls during adolescence, and demonstrated reduced latency to make both risky and safe decisions. Interestingly, this augmented risk-taking was no longer evident in adulthood. Males and females displayed comparable levels of risk-taking during adolescence then diverged in adulthood, with adult males displaying a sharp increase in risk-taking. Finally, we observed that risk-taking changed across the lifespan in rats exposed to maternal separation, but not in control rats. Collectively, these data reveal that ELA engenders risk-taking in adolescence but not adulthood, and that sex differences in risky decision-making are not evident until adulthood. This has important implications for the development of both behavioral and biological treatments to improve decision-making during the vulnerable adolescent period.
ISSN:1074-7427
1095-9564
1095-9564
DOI:10.1016/j.nlm.2024.108016