Chu Xun-Xun, Dominic Rizak Joshua, Yang Shang-Chuan, Wang Jian-Hong, Ma Yuan-Ye, Hu Xin-Tian
Laboratory of Primate Neuroscience Research and Key Laboratory of Animal Models and Human Disease Mechanisms of the Chinese Academy of Sciences & Yunnan Province, Kunming Institute of Zoology, Kunming 650223, China;University of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049, China.
Laboratory of Primate Neuroscience Research and Key Laboratory of Animal Models and Human Disease Mechanisms of the Chinese Academy of Sciences & Yunnan Province, Kunming Institute of Zoology, Kunming 650223, China; University of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049, China.
Dongwuxue Yanjiu. 2014 May;35(3):174-81. doi: 10.11813/j.issn.0254-5853.2014.3.174.
Postpartum depression (PPD) is a modified form of major depressive disorders (MDD) that can exert profound negative effects on both mothers and infants than MDD. Within the postpartum period, both mothers and infants are susceptible; but because PPD typically occurs for short durations and has moderate symptoms, there exists challenges in exploring and addressing the underlying cause of the depression. This fact highlights the need for relevant animal models. In the present study, postpartum adult female cynomolgus monkeys (Macaca fascicularis) living in breeding groups were observed for typical depressive behavior. The huddle posture behavior was utilized as an indicator of behavioral depression postpartum (BDP) as it has been established as the core depressive-like behavior in primates. Monkeys were divided into two groups: A BDP group (n=6), which were found to spend more time huddling over the first two weeks postpartum than other individuals that formed a non-depression control group (n=4). The two groups were then further analyzed for locomotive activity, stressful events, hair cortisol levels and for maternal interactive behaviors. No differences were found between the BDP and control groups in locomotive activity, in the frequencies of stressful events experienced and in hair cortisol levels. These findings suggested that the postpartum depression witnessed in the monkeys was not related to external factors other than puerperium period. Interestingly, the BDP monkeys displayed an abnormal maternal relationship consisting of increased infant grooming. Taken together, these findings suggest that the adult female cynomolgus monkeys provide a natural model of behavioral postpartum depression that holds a number of advantages over commonly used rodent systems in PPD modeling. The cynomolgus monkeys have a highly-organized social hierarchy and reproductive characteristics without seasonal restriction-similar to humans-as well as much greater homology to humans than rodents. As such, this model may provide a greater translational efficiency and research platform for systematically investigating the etiology, treatment, prevention of PPD.
产后抑郁症(PPD)是重度抑郁症(MDD)的一种变体形式,相较于MDD,它会对母亲和婴儿产生更为严重的负面影响。在产后阶段,母亲和婴儿都易受影响;但由于PPD通常持续时间较短且症状较轻,探索和解决抑郁症的潜在病因存在挑战。这一事实凸显了相关动物模型的必要性。在本研究中,观察了生活在繁殖群体中的成年雌性食蟹猴(猕猴)的典型抑郁行为。蜷缩姿势行为被用作产后行为抑郁(BDP)的指标,因为它已被确立为灵长类动物的核心类抑郁行为。猴子被分为两组:一个BDP组(n = 6),发现该组在产后的前两周比形成非抑郁对照组(n = 4)的其他个体花费更多时间蜷缩。然后对两组进一步分析其运动活动、应激事件、毛发皮质醇水平和母婴互动行为。BDP组和对照组在运动活动、经历的应激事件频率和毛发皮质醇水平方面未发现差异。这些发现表明,猴子中观察到的产后抑郁症与产褥期以外的外部因素无关。有趣的是,BDP组猴子表现出异常的母婴关系,包括增加对婴儿的梳理行为。综上所述,这些发现表明成年雌性食蟹猴提供了一个产后行为抑郁的自然模型,在PPD建模方面比常用的啮齿动物系统具有许多优势。食蟹猴具有高度组织化的社会等级制度和不受季节限制的繁殖特征——与人类相似——并且与人类的同源性比啮齿动物高得多。因此,该模型可能为系统研究PPD的病因、治疗和预防提供更高的转化效率和研究平台。