Parental pre-conception stress status and risk for anxiety in rat offspring: specific and sexdependent maternal and paternal effects

Azizi, N and MahmoodKhani, M and Abdollahzadeh, N and Chodari, L and Roshan Milani, SH and Saboory, E and Gholinejad, Z and Sayyadi, H (2019) Parental pre-conception stress status and risk for anxiety in rat offspring: specific and sexdependent maternal and paternal effects. STRESS. pp. 1-13.

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Abstract

Prenatal stressful events have long-lasting consequences on behavioral responses of offspring. While the effects of gestational and maternal stress have been extensively studied on psychological alterations in the progeny, little is known about effects of each parent’s pre-conception life events on emotional responses in offspring. Here, the effect of maternal and/or paternal pre-conception stress was investigated on anxiogenic responses of offspring. Male and female adult rats were subjected to predatory stress (contactless exposure to a cat for 1þ1 h per day) for 50 (male, n: 12) and 15 (female, n: 24) consecutive days; controls were not exposed. After the stress procedure, the control and stressed rats were mated to create four types of breeding pairs: control female/control male, stressed female/control male, control female/stressed male, and stressed female/stressed male. On postnatal days 30–31, the offspring were tested on the elevated plus maze and plasma corticosterone concentration was measured. Half of the pups were exposed to acute predatory stress before the elevated plus maze test. In most subgroups, corticosterone and anxiety-like behaviors in the offspring with both or only one parent exposed to pre-gestational stress increased compared to their control counterparts. However, under acute stress conditions, a different sex-dependent pattern of anxiety responses emerged. The combined effects of maternal and paternal stress were not additive. Hence, individual offspring behaviors can be influenced by the former life stress experiences of either parent. Incorporation of genetic and epigenetic aspects in development of neurobehavioral abnormalities and reprograming of the hypothalamicpituitary- adrenal axis may contribute to this phenomenon. LAY SUMMARY Early life stress (including during pregnancy) is known to have long-lasting effects on offspring, including emotional behaviors. Whether individual anxiety behaviors can be influenced by stress experiences of each parent even before a pregnancy is less well-understood. Our findings from this study on rats exposed to predator stress before mating suggest that maternal or paternal adult life events prior to pregnancy can lead to maladaptive behavior in their offspring later in life.

Item Type: Article
Uncontrolled Keywords: Anxious behavior; corticosterone; elevated plus maze; maternal stress; paternal stress; pre-conception predator stress
Subjects: R Medicine > R Medicine (General)
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email gholipour.s@umsu.ac.ir
Date Deposited: 29 Jul 2019 06:21
Last Modified: 29 Jul 2019 06:21
URI: http://eprints.umsu.ac.ir/id/eprint/5576

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