The contributions of parental lactation on offspring development: It's not udder nonsense

The Developmental Origins of Health and Disease (DOHaD) hypothesis describes how maternal stress exposures experienced during critical periods of perinatal life are linked to altered developmental trajectories in offspring. Perinatal stress also induces changes in lactogenesis, milk volume, maternal...

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Veröffentlicht in:Hormones and behavior 2023-07, Vol.153, p.105375-105375, Article 105375
Hauptverfasser: Wijenayake, Sanoji, Martz, Julia, Lapp, Hannah E., Storm, Jasmyne A., Champagne, Frances A., Kentner, Amanda C.
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container_start_page 105375
container_title Hormones and behavior
container_volume 153
creator Wijenayake, Sanoji
Martz, Julia
Lapp, Hannah E.
Storm, Jasmyne A.
Champagne, Frances A.
Kentner, Amanda C.
description The Developmental Origins of Health and Disease (DOHaD) hypothesis describes how maternal stress exposures experienced during critical periods of perinatal life are linked to altered developmental trajectories in offspring. Perinatal stress also induces changes in lactogenesis, milk volume, maternal care, and the nutritive and non-nutritive components of milk, affecting short and long-term developmental outcomes in offspring. For instance, selective early life stressors shape the contents of milk, including macro/micronutrients, immune components, microbiota, enzymes, hormones, milk-derived extracellular vesicles, and milk microRNAs. In this review, we highlight the contributions of parental lactation to offspring development by examining changes in the composition of breast milk in response to three well-characterized maternal stressors: nutritive stress, immune stress, and psychological stress. We discuss recent findings in human, animal, and in vitro models, their clinical relevance, study limitations, and potential therapeutic significance to improving human health and infant survival. We also discuss the benefits of enrichment methods and support tools that can be used to improve milk quality and volume as well as related developmental outcomes in offspring. Lastly, we use evidence-based primary literature to convey that even though select maternal stressors may modulate lactation biology (by influencing milk composition) depending on the severity and length of exposure, exclusive and/or prolonged milk feeding may attenuate the negative in utero effects of early life stressors and promote healthy developmental trajectories. Overall, scientific evidence supports lactation to be protective against nutritive and immune stressors, but the benefits of lactation in response to psychological stressors need further investigation. •We review the contributions of parental lactation to offspring development.•We examine changes occurring in the composition of breast milk in response to maternal stressors.•We discuss recent findings in human, animal and in vitro models, and their clinical relevance.
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subjects Animals
Breast Feeding
Breastfeeding
COVID-19
Early life stress
Enrichment
Female
Humans
Illness
Infant
Intervention
Lactation
Lactation - physiology
Maternal milk
Microbiome
Milk, Human - physiology
Milk-derived extracellular vesicles
Mothers - psychology
Nutrition
Parental care
Parents
Pregnancy
Psychogenic stress
title The contributions of parental lactation on offspring development: It's not udder nonsense
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