Sarro Emma C, Wilson Donald A, Sullivan Regina M
Emotional Brain Institute, Nathan S. Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research, Orangeburg, NY 10962, USA; Department of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, Langone School of Medicine, New York University, New York, NY 10016, USA.
Emotional Brain Institute, Nathan S. Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research, Orangeburg, NY 10962, USA; Department of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, Langone School of Medicine, New York University, New York, NY 10016, USA.
Curr Biol. 2014 Jul 21;24(14):1664-1669. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2014.06.017. Epub 2014 Jul 3.
Patterns of neural activity are critical for sculpting the immature brain, and disrupting this activity is believed to underlie neurodevelopmental disorders [1-3]. Neural circuits undergo extensive activity-dependent postnatal structural and functional changes [4-6]. The different forms of neural plasticity [7-9] underlying these changes have been linked to specific patterns of spatiotemporal activity. Since maternal behavior is the mammalian infant's major source of sensory-driven environmental stimulation and the quality of this care can dramatically affect neurobehavioral development [10], we explored, for the first time, whether infant cortical activity is influenced directly by interactions with the mother within the natural nest environment. We recorded spontaneous neocortical local field potentials in freely behaving infant rats during natural interactions with their mother on postnatal days ∼12-19. We showed that maternal absence from the nest increased cortical desynchrony. Further isolating the pup by removing littermates induced further desynchronization. The mother's return to the nest reduced this desynchrony, and nipple attachment induced a further reduction but increased slow-wave activity. However, maternal simulation of pups (e.g., grooming and milk ejection) consistently produced rapid, transient cortical desynchrony. The magnitude of these maternal effects decreased with age. Finally, systemic blockade of noradrenergic beta receptors led to reduced maternal regulation of infant cortical activity. Our results demonstrate that during early development, mother-infant interactions can immediately affect infant brain activity, in part via a noradrenergic mechanism, suggesting a powerful influence of the maternal behavior and presence on circuit development.
神经活动模式对于塑造未成熟大脑至关重要,而这种活动的中断被认为是神经发育障碍的基础[1-3]。神经回路在出生后会经历广泛的依赖活动的结构和功能变化[4-6]。这些变化背后的不同形式的神经可塑性[7-9]与特定的时空活动模式有关。由于母性行为是哺乳动物幼崽感觉驱动的环境刺激的主要来源,并且这种照顾的质量会极大地影响神经行为发育[10],我们首次探究了在自然巢穴环境中,幼崽的皮质活动是否直接受到与母亲互动的影响。我们在出生后约12-19天,记录了自由活动的幼鼠在与母亲自然互动期间自发的新皮质局部场电位。我们发现巢穴中母亲的缺失会增加皮质去同步化。通过移除同窝幼崽进一步隔离幼崽会导致进一步的去同步化。母亲回到巢穴会减少这种去同步化,而乳头附着会进一步减少但会增加慢波活动。然而,母亲对幼崽的模拟行为(如梳理毛发和喷乳)始终会产生快速、短暂的皮质去同步化。这些母亲效应的强度会随着年龄的增长而降低。最后,去甲肾上腺素能β受体的全身阻断导致母亲对幼崽皮质活动的调节减少。我们的结果表明,在早期发育过程中,母婴互动可以立即影响幼崽的大脑活动,部分是通过去甲肾上腺素能机制,这表明母性行为和在场对神经回路发育具有强大影响。