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Adversity before conception will affect adult progeny in rats. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study looked at how stress experienced by female rats before pregnancy affects their offspring's behavior.
  • Female rats were either left undisturbed or exposed to stress for a week, then mated right after or two weeks later.
  • Offspring of stressed females showed differences in social interaction and fearfulness, with males and females exhibiting distinct reactions based on the timing of stress relative to conception.
  • The longer interval before mating reduced some negative effects, but significant behavioral changes persisted in social behavior and fear responses.

Article Abstract

The authors investigated whether adversity in a female, before she conceives, will influence the affective and social behavior of her progeny. Virgin female rats were either undisturbed (controls) or exposed to varied, unpredictable, stressors for 7 days (preconceptual stress [PCS]) and then either mated immediately after the end of the stress (PCS0) or 2 weeks after the stress ended (PCS2). Their offspring were raised undisturbed until tested in adulthood. PCS offspring showed reduced social interaction; in the acoustic startle test, PCS males were less fearful, whereas PCS females were more fearful; in the shuttle task, PCS0 males avoided shock better; and in the elevated maze, PCS0 females were more active and anxious. The 2-week interval between stress and mating assuaged the effects on offspring activity and shock avoidance but not the changes in social behavior and fear in male and female offspring. Hence, PCS to the dam, even well before pregnancy, influences affective and social behavior in her adult offspring, depending on how long before conception it occurred, the behavior tested, and sex. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2009 APA, all rights reserved).

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/a0014030DOI Listing

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