Strain differences in maternal neuroendocrine and behavioral responses to stress and the relation to offspring cocaine responsiveness

•The maternal HPA axis response to gestational stress is heritable in the BXD recombinant inbred strain panel.•Prenatal stress alters dam-pup contact in a strain dependent manner.•Heritable variation of maternal stress response associates with heritable variation of prenatal stress effects on offspr...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of developmental neuroscience 2019-11, Vol.78 (1), p.130-138
Hauptverfasser: Bagley, Jared R., Adams, Julia, Bozadjian, Rachel V., Bubalo, Lana, Kippin, Tod E.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•The maternal HPA axis response to gestational stress is heritable in the BXD recombinant inbred strain panel.•Prenatal stress alters dam-pup contact in a strain dependent manner.•Heritable variation of maternal stress response associates with heritable variation of prenatal stress effects on offspring cocaine response. Early life stress exposure, including prenatal stress (PNS), influences subsequent risk for many disorders, including substance abuse, and these effects interact with genetic factors to determine risk for disease. We previously demonstrated gene X environmental interactions across the BXD recombinant inbred mouse strain panel and their progenitor strains in PNS modulation of cocaine-induced reward and locomotion. Critical to dissecting genetic interactions with PNS is consideration of the modes of stress transmission to the offspring. Both maternal neuroendocrine responses during stress and subsequent maternal-offspring interactions following stress may serve as transmission modes for PNS-induced changes in cocaine responsiveness. Therefore, we characterized the maternal stress response by measuring restraint stress-induced plasma corticosterone (CORT) during gestation as well as effects of restraint stress on dam-pup contact in the first 10 postnatal days in BXD and progenitor mouse strains. Restraint stress interacted with strain to affect plasma CORT levels and dam-pup contact, indicating heritable variation of the maternal stress response. Furthermore, strain-level variance in maternal stress response correlated to the impact on cocaine response exhibited by adult offspring. These findings implicate multiple modes of maternal stress response in alterations of offspring drug responsiveness and indicate that assessment of maternal endocrine and behavioral responses during early life can be utilized to dissect the complex intersection of maternal factors, the response of the offspring and genetics.
ISSN:0736-5748
1873-474X
DOI:10.1016/j.ijdevneu.2019.06.009