Melo Angel I, Hernández-Curiel Myrna, Hoffman Kurt L
Centro de Investigación en Reproducción Animal, CINVESTAV-Lab. Tlaxcala, Universidad Autónoma de Tlaxcala, Tlaxcala, Tlax, Mexico.
Behav Brain Res. 2009 Jul 19;201(1):14-21. doi: 10.1016/j.bbr.2009.01.023. Epub 2009 Jan 29.
In the rat, social isolation during the early postnatal period disrupts the adult function of certain neuroendocrine and neurobehavioral systems. In the present study, we assessed the effects of peer and maternal contact during this period on the adult expression of aggression, maternal behavior, and the behavioral response to novelty. Female rat pups of the Wistar strain were reared across postnatal days 3-19 in one of the following conditions: (1) by their mother and with littermates (MR, control); (2) artificially reared in complete social isolation (AR); or (3) artificially reared in the presence of two same-age conspecifics (AR-Soc). As adults, all females were administered a resident-intruder aggression test, first in a non-maternal context ("territorial" aggression) and then in the presence of their pups ("maternal" aggression). Additionally, their maternal behavior and response to a novel object placed in a familiar open field arena were quantified. We found that maternal isolation impaired maternal behavior, increased maternal aggression, and increased the olfactory investigation of a novel object. The presence of peers prevented the effect of artificial rearing on aggression, but not its effects on maternal behavior or response to novelty. In the maternal aggression test, AR-Soc females engaged in significantly more sniffing of the intruder compared to the other two groups. The present results confirm and extend those of previous studies in a different strain (Sprague-Dawley), and indicate that peer-derived stimuli impact on the development of neurobehavioral systems underlying aggressive and non-aggressive social interactions, whereas the normal development of maternal behavior and response to novelty requires maternally derived stimuli.
在大鼠中,出生后早期的社会隔离会扰乱某些神经内分泌和神经行为系统的成年期功能。在本研究中,我们评估了这一时期同伴和母鼠接触对成年期攻击行为、母性行为以及对新事物的行为反应表达的影响。将Wistar品系的雌性幼鼠在出生后第3至19天置于以下条件之一饲养:(1) 由其母亲抚养并与同窝幼崽一起(MR,对照组);(2) 在完全社会隔离状态下人工饲养(AR);或(3) 在有两只同龄同种个体的情况下人工饲养(AR-Soc)。成年后,对所有雌性大鼠进行了一次居主-入侵者攻击测试,首先在非母性环境中(“领地”攻击),然后在其幼崽在场的情况下(“母性”攻击)。此外,还对它们的母性行为以及对放置在熟悉的开阔场地中的新物体的反应进行了量化。我们发现,母鼠隔离会损害母性行为,增加母性攻击,并增加对新物体的嗅觉探究。同伴的存在可防止人工饲养对攻击行为的影响,但不能防止其对母性行为或对新事物反应的影响。在母性攻击测试中,与其他两组相比,AR-Soc组的雌性大鼠对入侵者的嗅闻明显更多。本研究结果证实并扩展了先前在不同品系(Sprague-Dawley)中所做研究的结果,表明同伴衍生的刺激会影响攻击性和非攻击性社会互动背后的神经行为系统的发育,而母性行为和对新事物反应的正常发育则需要母鼠衍生的刺激。