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短暂的孕前捕食风险会影响子女和孙辈。

A short pre-conception bout of predation risk affects both children and grandchildren.

机构信息

Department of Psychology, Memorial University of Newfoundland, St. John's, NL, A1B 3X9, Canada.

Northwestern Polytechnic, Grande Prairie, AB, T8V 4C4, Canada.

出版信息

Sci Rep. 2023 Jul 5;13(1):10886. doi: 10.1038/s41598-023-37455-9.

Abstract

Traumatic events that affect physiology and behavior in the current generation may also impact future generations. We demonstrate that an ecologically realistic degree of predation risk prior to conception causes lasting changes in the first filial (F1) and second filial (F2) generations. We exposed male and female mice to a live rat (predator stress) or control (non-predator) condition for 5 min. Ten days later, stressed males and females were bred together as were control males and females. Adult F1 offspring from preconception-stressed parents responded to a mild stressor with more anxiety-like behavior and hyperarousal than offspring from control parents. Exposing these F1 offspring to the mild stressor increased neuronal activity (cFOS) in the hippocampus and altered glucocorticoid system function peripherally (plasma corticosterone levels). Even without the mild stressor, F1 offspring from preconception-stressed parents still exhibited more anxiety-like behaviors than controls. Cross-fostering studies confirmed that preconception stress, not maternal social environment, determined offspring behavioral phenotype. The effects of preconception parental stress were also unexpectedly persistent and produced similar behavioral phenotypes in the F2 offspring. Our data illustrate that a surprisingly small amount of preconception predator stress alters the brain, physiology, and behavior of future generations. A better understanding of the 'long shadow' cast by fearful events is critical for understanding the adaptive costs and benefits of transgenerational plasticity. It also suggests the intriguing possibility that similar risk-induced changes are the rule rather than the exception in free-living organisms, and that such multigenerational impacts are as ubiquitous as they are cryptic.

摘要

创伤性事件会影响当前代的生理和行为,也可能会影响后代。我们证明,在受孕前经历一定程度的生态现实捕食风险会导致第一代(F1)和第二代(F2)后代产生持久的变化。我们将雄性和雌性老鼠暴露于活老鼠(捕食者应激)或对照(非捕食者)条件下 5 分钟。10 天后,应激雄性和雌性与对照雄性和雌性交配。来自受孕前应激父母的成年 F1 后代对轻度应激源的反应表现出更多的焦虑样行为和过度唤醒,而来自对照父母的后代则没有。将这些 F1 后代暴露于轻度应激源会增加海马体中的神经元活动(cFOS)并改变外周糖皮质激素系统功能(血浆皮质酮水平)。即使没有轻度应激源,来自受孕前应激父母的 F1 后代仍表现出比对照更多的焦虑样行为。交叉寄养研究证实,受孕前的应激,而不是母体的社会环境,决定了后代的行为表型。受孕前父母应激的影响也出人意料地持久,并在 F2 后代中产生了类似的行为表型。我们的数据表明,一小部分令人惊讶的受孕前捕食者应激会改变大脑、生理和后代的行为。更好地理解可怕事件产生的“长期影响”对于理解跨代可塑性的适应性成本和收益至关重要。这也表明了一个有趣的可能性,即在自由生活的生物中,类似的风险诱导变化是普遍存在的,而不是例外,并且这种多代影响是普遍存在的,只是隐藏得很好。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/c093/10322924/74153325c518/41598_2023_37455_Fig1_HTML.jpg

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