Cameron Nicole, Del Corpo Adina, Diorio Josie, McAllister Kelli, Sharma Shakti, Meaney Michael J
Sackler Program for Epigenetics & Psychobiology, McGill University, Montréal, Canada.
PLoS One. 2008 May 21;3(5):e2210. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0002210.
Variations in parental care predict the age of puberty, sexual activity in adolescence and the age at first pregnancy in humans. These findings parallel descriptions of maternal effects on phenotypic variation in reproductive function in other species. Despite the prevalence of such reports, little is known about potential biological mechanisms and this especially true for effects on female reproductive development. We examined the hypothesis that parental care might alter hypothalamic-pituitary-ovarian function and thus reproductive function in the female offspring of rat mothers that vary pup licking/grooming (LG) over the first week postpartum. As adults, the female offspring of Low LG mothers showed 1) increased sexual receptivity; 2) increased plasma levels of luteinizing hormone (LH) and progesterone at proestrus; 3) an increased positive-feedback effect of estradiol on both plasma LH levels and gonadotropin releasing-hormone (GnRH) expression in the medial preoptic region; and 4) increased estrogen receptor alpha (ERalpha) expression in the anterioventral paraventricular nucleus, a system that regulates GnRH. The results of a cross-fostering study provide evidence for a direct effect of postnatal maternal care as well as a possible prenatal influence. Indeed, we found evidence for increased fetal testosterone levels at embryonic day 20 in the female fetuses of High compared to Low LG mothers. Finally, the female offspring of Low LG mothers showed accelerated puberty compared to those of High LG mothers. These data suggest maternal effects in the rat on the development of neuroendocrine systems that regulate female sexual behaviour. Together with studies revealing a maternal effect on the maternal behavior of the female offspring, these findings suggest that maternal care can program alternative reproductive phenotypes in the rat through regionally-specific effects on ERalpha expression.
父母养育方式的差异可预测人类青春期的年龄、青少年的性行为及首次怀孕的年龄。这些发现与其他物种中母体效应影响生殖功能表型变异的描述相似。尽管此类报道很普遍,但对于潜在的生物学机制却知之甚少,尤其是对雌性生殖发育的影响。我们检验了这样一个假设:产后第一周内母鼠舔舐/梳理幼崽(LG)行为不同,其养育方式可能会改变下丘脑-垂体-卵巢功能,进而影响雌性后代的生殖功能。成年后,低LG母鼠的雌性后代表现出:1)性接受能力增强;2)动情前期血浆促黄体生成素(LH)和孕酮水平升高;3)雌二醇对血浆LH水平和视前内侧区促性腺激素释放激素(GnRH)表达的正反馈作用增强;4)调节GnRH的腹内侧室旁核中雌激素受体α(ERα)表达增加。一项交叉养育研究的结果为产后母体养育的直接影响以及可能的产前影响提供了证据。事实上,我们发现,与低LG母鼠相比,高LG母鼠的雌性胎儿在胚胎第20天时,其胎儿睾酮水平升高。最后,与高LG母鼠的雌性后代相比,低LG母鼠的雌性后代青春期提前。这些数据表明,大鼠中母体效应会影响调节雌性性行为的神经内分泌系统的发育。连同揭示母体效应影响雌性后代母性行为的研究一起,这些发现表明,母体养育可通过对ERα表达的区域特异性影响,在大鼠中设定不同的生殖表型。