Saltzman Wendy, Abbott David H
Department of Biology, University of California, Riverside, CA 92521, USA.
Psychoneuroendocrinology. 2009 Sep;34(8):1222-34. doi: 10.1016/j.psyneuen.2009.03.012. Epub 2009 Apr 11.
Both acute and chronic stress can impair maternal behavior and increase rates of infant abuse in several species. The mechanisms inducing these effects are unknown, but experimental manipulation of circulating corticosterone levels alters maternal behavior in rats, and circulating or excreted cortisol concentrations have been found to correlate either positively or negatively with maternal behavior in humans and nonhuman primates. In this study, therefore, we experimentally tested the hypothesis that both acute and chronic treatment with exogenous glucocorticoids would alter maternal behavior in a primate, the common marmoset (Callithrix jacchus). Multiparous females, approximately 3-5 weeks postpartum, received daily injections of either cortisol (hydrocortisone sodium succinate and hydrocortisone acetate; N=7) or vehicle (N=7) for 8 days, and maternal behavior was characterized under baseline conditions as well as during exposure to a noise stressor. Cortisol treatment successfully elevated both morning and afternoon plasma cortisol concentrations and suppressed circulating levels of adrenocorticotropic hormone. In home-cage observations, cortisol-treated females carried their infants significantly less than control mothers, and in noise-stressor tests, several hours after the first cortisol or vehicle treatment, cortisol-treated mothers inspected their infants significantly more often than controls. Aggression towards infants was infrequent and mild, and did not differ between treatment groups. These findings provide the first experimental evidence that cortisol elevations can alter maternal behavior in primates. As these effects were limited in scope, however, they suggest that other stress-responsive hormones or neuropeptides may additionally play a role in mediating the effects of stress on maternal behavior.
急性和慢性应激均可损害多种物种的母性行为,并增加虐待幼崽的发生率。引发这些效应的机制尚不清楚,但对循环皮质酮水平进行实验性调控会改变大鼠的母性行为,而且在人类和非人灵长类动物中,已发现循环或排泄的皮质醇浓度与母性行为呈正相关或负相关。因此,在本研究中,我们通过实验检验了以下假设:用外源性糖皮质激素进行急性和慢性处理均会改变灵长类动物普通狨猴(Callithrix jacchus)的母性行为。产后约3 - 5周的经产雌性每天注射皮质醇(氢化可的松琥珀酸钠和醋酸氢化可的松;N = 7)或赋形剂(N = 7),持续8天,并在基线条件以及暴露于噪声应激源期间对母性行为进行表征。皮质醇处理成功提高了上午和下午的血浆皮质醇浓度,并抑制了促肾上腺皮质激素的循环水平。在笼内观察中,接受皮质醇处理的雌性携带幼崽的时间明显少于对照母亲,而在噪声应激源测试中,在首次注射皮质醇或赋形剂数小时后,接受皮质醇处理的母亲检查幼崽的频率明显高于对照母亲。对幼崽的攻击行为很少且轻微,处理组之间没有差异。这些发现提供了首个实验证据,表明皮质醇水平升高可改变灵长类动物的母性行为。然而,由于这些效应在范围上有限,它们表明其他应激反应激素或神经肽可能在介导应激对母性行为的影响中也发挥作用。