Bagley Jared R, Adams Julia, Bozadjian Rachel V, Bubalo Lana, Kippin Tod E
Department of Psychological & Brain Sciences, University of California Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA, 93106, United States.
Neuroscience Research Institute, University of California Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA, 93106, United States.
Int J Dev Neurosci. 2019 Nov;78:130-138. doi: 10.1016/j.ijdevneu.2019.06.009. Epub 2019 Jun 22.
Early life stress exposure, including prenatal stress (PNS), influences subsequent risk for many disorders, including substance abuse, and these effects interact with genetic factors to determine risk for disease. We previously demonstrated gene X environmental interactions across the BXD recombinant inbred mouse strain panel and their progenitor strains in PNS modulation of cocaine-induced reward and locomotion. Critical to dissecting genetic interactions with PNS is consideration of the modes of stress transmission to the offspring. Both maternal neuroendocrine responses during stress and subsequent maternal-offspring interactions following stress may serve as transmission modes for PNS-induced changes in cocaine responsiveness. Therefore, we characterized the maternal stress response by measuring restraint stress-induced plasma corticosterone (CORT) during gestation as well as effects of restraint stress on dam-pup contact in the first 10 postnatal days in BXD and progenitor mouse strains. Restraint stress interacted with strain to affect plasma CORT levels and dam-pup contact, indicating heritable variation of the maternal stress response. Furthermore, strain-level variance in maternal stress response correlated to the impact on cocaine response exhibited by adult offspring. These findings implicate multiple modes of maternal stress response in alterations of offspring drug responsiveness and indicate that assessment of maternal endocrine and behavioral responses during early life can be utilized to dissect the complex intersection of maternal factors, the response of the offspring and genetics.
早期生活应激暴露,包括产前应激(PNS),会影响包括药物滥用在内的多种疾病的后续患病风险,并且这些影响会与遗传因素相互作用来决定疾病风险。我们之前在BXD重组近交小鼠品系组及其祖系中证明了基因与环境在PNS调节可卡因诱导的奖赏和运动方面的相互作用。剖析与PNS的遗传相互作用的关键在于考虑应激向后代的传递方式。应激期间母体的神经内分泌反应以及应激后随后的母婴相互作用都可能作为PNS诱导的可卡因反应性变化的传递方式。因此,我们通过测量妊娠期间束缚应激诱导的血浆皮质酮(CORT)以及束缚应激对BXD和祖系小鼠品系出生后前10天母鼠与幼崽接触的影响来表征母体应激反应特性。束缚应激与品系相互作用,影响血浆CORT水平和母鼠与幼崽的接触,表明母体应激反应存在可遗传变异。此外, 母体应激反应的品系水平差异与成年后代对可卡因反应的影响相关。这些发现表明母体应激反应的多种模式参与了后代药物反应性的改变,并表明在生命早期对母体内分泌和行为反应的评估可用于剖析母体因素、后代反应和遗传学的复杂交叉点。