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1.
Two experiments were undertaken to examine the stimulation of home-cage and/or maternal aggressiveness by a hormonal treatment stimulating short-latency maternal behavior. Nonpregnant ovariectomized rats were treated with a 16-day regimen providing pregnancy levels of estrogen (E, 5-mm Silastic capsule) and progesterone (P, daily injection of 4 mg) followed by E and P withdrawal, with or without a terminal injection of estradiol benzoate (EB, 5 micrograms/kg). In Experiment 1, hormonally treated and control females were exposed continuously to pups and tested for aggression toward male intruders on the fifth day of pup exposure. Females receiving E/P/Oil and E/P/EB were highly aggressive whether or not they had yet shown maternal behavior, whereas vehicle-treated females were nonaggressive. In Experiment 2, hypophysectomized (HYPX) and Sham-HYPX females received either E/P/EB or a control treatment and were tested with male intruders (a) immediately preceding and (b) on the fifth day of continuous pup exposure. HYPX and Sham-HYPX females treated with E/P/EB were almost equally aggressive both preceding and following pup exposure (during which they initiated maternal care), whereas HYPX and Sham-HYPX vehicle-treated females were nonaggressive at both tests. In contrast, maternal behavior latencies were reduced by E/P/EB only among Sham-HYPX females. The results establish that an E/P/EB-treatment which elicits short-latency maternal responses also increases aggressiveness toward intruders. Pituitary products, although involved in the mediation of maternal responsiveness, do not contribute significantly to the stimulation of female aggressiveness by ovarian hormones.  相似文献   

2.
In mice, tactile stimulation of the nipples appears to be critical for the onset of postpartum maternal aggression. Surgical removal of the nipples (thelectomy) blocks aggression if performed prior to parturition. In rats, indirect evidence suggests a similar role for nipple stimulation in maternal aggression. Two experiments were undertaken to determine whether thelectomy prior to mating reduces pregnancy-induced and/or postpartum aggression in this species. In the first, thelectomized and sham-thelectomized females were subjected to home cage tests (pups, if any, present) with unfamiliar male intruders on Gestation Days 18 and 21 and Lactation Days 3 and 5. Additional groups of thelectomized females were tested one time only on either Lactation Day 5 or 12. Thelectomized and control females were equally aggressive; postpartum, nearly all females in both groups attacked. Experiment 2 used females that were hysterectomized-ovariectomized (HO) on Gestation Day 16. Such females are not aggressive prior to initiating maternal behavior, but become highly aggressive (over 80% attacking) after commencing maternal care. Females again were thelectomized or sham-thelectomized prior to mating. On Day 16 HO was performed, and 48 hr later continuous exposure to pups was begun. After the females had displayed maternal behavior for 1.5-2 days, intruder tests were conducted. All females attacked at least once, with no differences between treatment groups. Thus thelectomy does not reduce maternal aggression in the rat. This finding, however, does not preclude a role for tactile ventral stimulation in mediating maternal aggression.  相似文献   

3.
The role of the adrenal gland in suppressing the onset of maternal behavior in virgin female rats was investigated. Virgin female rats were either ovariectomized, adrenalectomized, or subjected to the combined operation and tested for the induction of maternal behavior by being exposed to young pups. Females that were both ovariectomized and adrenalectomized 4 weeks prior to testing exhibited significantly shorter latencies to the onset of maternal behavior than that of females subjected to either ovariectomy or adrenalectomy alone. Replacement of either estrogen or progesterone in the group that was both adrenalectomized and ovariectomized resulted in a prolongation of the average latency to become maternal. The results indicated that both estrogen and progesterone can act to inhibit the onset of maternal behavior and that the adrenal gland may act to suppress the onset of such behavior by supplying an extra-ovarian source of endogenous progesterone and estrogen.  相似文献   

4.
A 16-day treatment of nonpregnant, ovariectomized rats using 5-mm Silastic implants of estradiol (E), daily injections of 4 mg of progesterone (P), and terminal injections of 5 micrograms/kg of estradiol benzoate (EB) to provide a pregnancy-like pattern of hormone exposure, stimulates (a) home-cage aggression toward unfamiliar intruder rats, (b) short-latency maternal behavior when the females are exposed continuously to pups, and (c) maternal aggression after maternal care has been initiated. Preliminary experiments examined the persistence of stimulation of aggression by the 16-day treatment in the absence of exposure to pups eliciting maternal care, and whether an abbreviated, 1-week treatment stimulates aggression equally. Subsequent experiments examined the importance of the elements of the treatment (E implants, P injections, EB injection), and whether prolonging exposure to P or E would alter its behavioral effects. The full 16-day E/P/EB treatment stimulated higher levels of home-cage and maternal aggression, and shorter maternal behavior latencies than abbreviated and partial treatments. E in combination with P or EB significantly raised home-cage aggression, whereas P alone was without effect. Administering P for 2 additional days attenuated reductions in maternal behavior latencies by E/P/EB, but did not reduce home-cage or maternal aggressiveness. Continuous exposure to E throughout testing did not affect any dependent variable. Comparing these findings to earlier data and reports suggests that hormone exposure for 2 weeks or more, and provision of P levels approaching those of pregnancy are important to the effects of the E/P/EB treatment on aggression.  相似文献   

5.
It is known that the home-cage maternal behavior of rats which become maternal after daily pup exposure (sensitization) is almost indistinguishable from that of lactating mothers, but that sensitized and lactating rats can be distinguished by their pup-retrieval performance in a T-maze extension of the home cage. The present study explored this difference further. Postpartum mothers which could not suckle due to prior nipple removal (thelectomy) retrieved as well, if not better, than intact controls in the T-maze. Hormonal induction of maternal behavior (in ? 3 days) was carried out by hysterectomy-ovariectomy plus 100 μg/kg estradiol benzoate; the performance of these females was similar to that of the postpartum groups. In contrast, only a small percentage of the sensitized mothers retrieved in the T-maze, whether the latency to onset of their maternal behavior was long (4–10 days) or short (? 3 days). Thus, hormonal factors associated with pregnancy and/or parturition, but not suckling stimulation, may facilitate T-maze retrieval of pups. The possible ethological significance of the T-maze test as a measure of maternal responsiveness is discussed.  相似文献   

6.
Treatment with PGF resulted in the termination of pregnancy in 16- and 19-day pregnant rats, but not in 10- or 13-day pregnant rats. Rats that aborted displayed a rapid onset of maternal behavior when tested with foster pups. Aborted rats also displayed sexual receptivity and ovulation: these phenomena resemble the sequence of events following hysterectomy on the same days of pregnancy. Both can be related to the events surrounding normal parturition in the rat. The results are interpreted as due to a pregnancy-induced deactivation of the factor in the uterus that prevents estrogen from stimulating maternal behavior in nonpregnant females. In the absence of this factor, the PGF-induced rise in estrogen secretion facilitates maternal behavior and sexual behavior and induces ovulation.  相似文献   

7.
8.
Estrogen implanted directly into the medial preoptic region of pregnant Charles River Sprague-Dawley rats hysterectomized and ovariectomized on Day 16 of gestation mimics the effects of systemic estrogen treatment at this time by reducing the latency to respond to foster pups with maternal behavior (Numan, Rosenblatt, and Komisaruk, 1977). The present report describes the pup-directed responses of ovariectomized, nulliparous Zivic-Miller Sprague-Dawley rats that received bilateral medial preoptic implants of either cholesterol (n = 11) or estradiol diluted 1:10 with cholesterol (n = 11). Two days after treatment these animals were housed with three foster pups: their responsivity to pups and quality of nests built were then assessed, at first hourly and then daily. Rats receiving intracranial estradiol required significantly shorter exposures to pups than did cholesterol-treated animals before initiating carrying and grouping of 3 dispersed pups in a maternal nest during a 15-min test. On other measures, however, the groups did not differ (e.g., proportion grouping pups overnight, time required to complete retrieval of pups to the nest, time required to rebuild a disrupted nest). Animals treated with cholesterol and animals with estradiol implants did not differ in uterine weight at the time of sacrifice, suggesting that estrogen did not leak, even from this well-vascularized implant site, into the circulation. Thus, as in the pregnant animal, the facilitating effects of estrogen on maternal behavior can be mediated through the medial preoptic region; however, the effects were evident only when a test requiring retrieval of several pups within an arbitrarily short interval was given.  相似文献   

9.
Virgin female rats display maternal behaviors after continuous exposure to pups (sensitization) that are in some respects similar to those of postpartum females. We herein provide a detailed comparison of the "nursing" and other parental behaviors of maternally sensitized virgin females and postpartum lactating dams. Ovariectomized and intact virgin females were exposed to pups until displaying maternal behavior. On the females' fourth day of maternal responsiveness, the pups were removed for 3 h and then returned, and subject-litter interactions were observed for 45 min. Behavior of maternal virgins was compared with that of lactating dams observed on day 4 postpartum interacting with either suckling pups or pups unable to suckle due to perioral anesthesia. Ovariectomy had no effect on behavior of virgins. Retrieval and licking of pups were deficient in virgins compared with lactating dams. Suckled dams showed prolonged kyphosis (upright crouched nursing), whereas nonsuckled dams displayed little kyphosis but rather were often in a hunched position over pups. Some aspects of quiescent "nursing" behaviors of virgins were surprisingly similar to those of suckled dams, including the latency to and duration of quiescence. Nonsuckling pup stimulation elicited more kyphosis in virgins than in lactating dams, which was still much less than in suckled dams. Virgins also "nursed" pups in hunched and prone postures. Differences between sensitized and postpartum females in their maternal behaviors likely reflect differences in motivation as well as sensory inputs they receive from pups. In particular, sensory regulation of "nursing" behaviors is influenced by reproductive state because nonsuckling pups elicit different postural responses in sensitized and lactating mothers.  相似文献   

10.
In prairie voles (Microtus ochrogaster), most virgin females are infanticidal. To determine the onset of maternal responsiveness, female prairie voles were tested for maternal behavior as virgins and at different times throughout pregnancy. Female voles that were infanticidal as virgins by and large remained infanticidal throughout pregnancy. In contrast, about 30% of voles that were maternal as virgins became infanticidal during pregnancy. To test whether events associated with parturition facilitate the onset of maternal behavior, females had their litters delivered by Caesarean section within a day of expected delivery or were allowed to give birth naturally with sham surgery occurring shortly before or after birth. Females that gave birth naturally were fully maternal and did not attack unrelated pups, but females subjected to artificial delivery remained infanticidal. This suggests that events closely related to parturition are crucial for full development of maternal behavior in female prairie voles.  相似文献   

11.
This work assessed the changes in both social interactions and estrogen metabolite excreted in feces in eight group-living Japanese macaques (Macaca fuscata). We tested the hypothesis that the social behavior of pregnant females shows significant changes during the late prepartum and early postpartum period. We also tested the hypothesis that the marked fluctuation in estrogen levels during the perinatal period is associated with the changes in social behavior. We found that pregnant females withdrew from the social life of their group in preparation for parturition and only slowly regained their normal social activity after delivery. These changes were correlated with the fluctuation in estrogen conjugate excreted in feces, giving further evidence that hormones can enhance responsiveness to the infant and may predict maternal competence in macaques. We also found that the high frequency of self-grooming by pregnant females during the perinatal period may be a functional way to improve the quality of care toward an infant by a simple shifting from the care for oneself to the care for the infant after parturition.  相似文献   

12.
The onset of maternal behavior in pregnant hamsters was measured by presenting foster pups at 0900 and 2100 hr on Day 15 and at 0300, 0500, and 0700 hr on Day 16 and then at hourly intervals until parturition began. The occurrence of parturition was determined at each maternal test and at 0.5 hr intervals beginning at 0700 hr on Day 16. Nulliparous and primiparous animals became maternal at approximately the same time on Day 16, 2 and 6 hr prepartum, respectively, demonstrating that parturition is not essential for maternal behavior. The second experiment showed that nulliparous females injected with either 1 μg or 10 μgm estradiol-17β (E2), 0.1 mgm progesterone (P), 10 μgm E2 plus 0.1 mgm P, or oil at 1200 hr on Day 15 became maternal at the same time of day (0800–1000 hr) while parturition was delayed 8 hr in females receiving P. The results suggest a dissociation between the regulation of parturition and maternal care and are compared to previous research into the hormonal basis of maternal behavior in rats.  相似文献   

13.
Maternal behavior and serum prolactin were measured in pregnant and virgin female rats. Pregnant rats were either ovariectomized or shamovariectomized on Day 17 of pregnancy, while virgin females were ovariectomized at the same age. Two days after surgery nests were rated and the three treatment groups were tested for responsiveness to rat pups. Both pregnant treatment groups built superior nests compared to the virgin group and also responded more frequently to rat pups within a 1 hr test period than the virgin controls. In addition, significantly more ovariectomized pregnant subjects responded to pups than did intact pregnant females. Serum prolactin levels did not differ among the three treatments nor did exposure to pups affect serum prolactin levels. In each treatment group serum prolactin was less than 15 ng/ml, well below the 139.7 ng/ml mean found on Day 23 of pregnancy. These data suggest that high levels of serum prolactin during late pregnancy are not essential for the initiation of maternal behavior in the rat.  相似文献   

14.
To assess the effects of varying the time interval between surgical pregnancy termination and onset of behavioral testing on the expression of maternal behavior, both responsiveness to foster young and nest building-were measured in rats ovariectomized (O), hysterectomized (H), ovariectomized and hysterectomized (OH), or sham-operated (I) on Day 17 of pregnancy at 10:00 and first tested for maternal responsiveness 6, 24, or 48 hr after surgery. When behavioral testing was started 6 hr after surgery O and OH groups responded maternally to foster pups faster than H or I groups, and H females responded maternally faster than I animals (O = OH < H < I). In animals first tested 24 hr after surgery shorter latencies to retrieve and group foster young and nest build were found in the three pregnancy-terminated groups than in I animals, while the three pregnancy-terminated groups did not differ from one another with respect to either behavioral measure (O = OH = H < I). In contrast, when testing was initiated 48 hr after surgery, hysterectomized (H) animals responded maternally faster than did ovariectomized (O and OH) or intact pregnant (I) groups (H < OH < I, H < O = I). These data demonstrate that varying the time of onset of behavioral testing after surgical pregnancy termination affects elicitation of responsiveness to foster young and also affects nest building behavior in pregnancy-terminated animals. The differences in onset of maternal behaviors among pregnancy-terminated animals are discussed in relation to progesterone and estrogen secretion after surgery.  相似文献   

15.
Maternal behavior is flexible and programs offspring development. Using a novel manipulation, we demonstrate that rat maternal behavior is sensitive to ecologically relevant stimuli. Long-Evans hooded rat dams (F0) and pups were exposed to a predator condition (cat odor) or a control condition (no odor) for 1 h on the day of parturition. Predator-exposed F0 dams displayed significantly more maternal behavior (licking/grooming, arched-back nursing) relative to control-exposed dams across five subsequent observation days. Female offspring (F1) were raised to adulthood, bred and maternal behavior was observed. F1 dams reared by a predator-exposed F0 dam displayed significantly higher maternal behavior relative to F1 dams reared by a control-exposed F0 dam across 5 days of observation. Increased levels of maternal behavior in predator-reared (PR) F1 dams were evident even in F1 females that had been cross-fostered (CF) from a control-exposed F0 dam, suggesting a non-genomic transmission of increased levels of maternal behavior. Lactating PR F1 dams had significantly elevated estrogen receptor alpha and beta mRNA in the medial preoptic area relative to control-reared (CR) F1 dams. Furthermore, among CR F1 dams, there was no significant difference between those dams that had been CF from predator-exposed F0 dams and those that had been sham CF. These results support the hypothesis that flexible rat maternal behavior can shape offspring development according to current environmental conditions. The results also suggest that estrogen signaling may be part of an epigenetic mechanism by which changes in maternal behavior are passed from F0 to F1 dams.  相似文献   

16.
In biparental mammals, the factors facilitating the onset of male parental behavior are not well understood. While hormonal changes in fathers may play a role, prior experience with pups has also been implicated. We evaluated effects of prior exposure to pups on paternal responsiveness in the biparental California mouse (Peromyscus californicus). We analyzed behavioral, neural, and corticosterone responses to pups in adult virgin males that were interacting with a pup for the first time, adult virgin males that had been exposed to pups 3 times for 20 min each in the previous week, and new fathers. Control groups of virgins were similarly tested with a novel object (marble). Previous exposure to pups decreased virgins' latency to approach pups and initiate paternal care, and increased time spent in paternal care. Responses to pups did not differ between virgins with repeated exposure to pups and new fathers. In contrast, repeated exposure to a marble had no effects. Neither basal corticosterone levels nor corticosterone levels following acute pup or marble exposure differed among groups. Finally, Fos expression in the medial preoptic area, ventral and dorsal bed nucleus of the stria terminalis was higher following exposure to a pup than to a marble. Fos expression was not, however, affected by previous exposure to these stimuli. These results suggest that previous experience with pups can facilitate the onset of parental behavior in male California mice, similar to findings in female rodents, and that this effect is not associated with a general reduction in neophobia.  相似文献   

17.
This article is part of a Special Issue “Parental Care”. The effects of differential maternal care received on offspring phenotype in rodents has been extensively studied between litters, but the consequences of differential mothering within litters on offspring neurobehavioral development have been rarely examined. We here investigated how variability in maternal care received among female rat siblings (measured four times daily on postnatal days 4, 6, 8, and 10) relates to the siblings' later emotional and maternal behaviors. As previously reported, we found that some female pups received up to three times more maternal licking bouts compared to their sisters; this difference was positively correlated with the pups' body weights. The number of maternal licking bouts that females received was negatively correlated with their later neophobic behaviors in an open field during periadolescence, but positively correlated with their anxiety-related behavior in an elevated plus maze during adulthood. Licking received was also positively correlated with females' later likelihood to retrieve pups in a maternal sensitization paradigm. In addition, females' neophobia during adolescence and anxiety-related behavior during adulthood predicted some aspects of both postpartum and sensitized maternal responsiveness. Medial prefrontal cortex expression of tryptophan hydroxylase-2 (TPH2; enzyme necessary for serotonin synthesis) was negatively associated with early maternal licking received. Interestingly, cortical TPH2 was positively associated with the maternal responsiveness of sensitized virgins but negatively associated with it in postpartum females. These results indicate that within-litter differences in maternal care received is an often neglected, but important, contributor to individual differences in offspring socioemotional behaviors as well as to the cortical serotonin neurochemistry that may influence these behaviors.  相似文献   

18.
The natural onset of maternal behavior in the rat is hormonally mediated. Estrogen, progesterone, and prolactin administered to ovariectomized females in amounts and sequences that produce circulating levels similar to those found during pregnancy stimulate the onset of maternal behavior. In fact, maternal behavior can be stimulated by estrogen alone, administered either peripherally or by implant in the central nervous system. The lateral habenula (Lhb), which is a necessary component in the neural circuit that supports maternal behavior, contains a subset of neurons with estrogen receptors. The present study investigated whether estradiol implants directly in the Lhb are sufficient to stimulate maternal behavior. Female rats, hysterectomized and ovariectomized on day 16 of pregnancy, received estrogen implants in the Lhb or, as a positive control, in the medial preoptic area (MPOA). An additional control group received cholesterol implants in the Lhb. All females were tested for pup retrieval, nest building, crouching behavior, locomotor activity, and carrying behavior. Estradiol implants into the Lhb did not stimulate the onset of maternal behavior. Females with estrogen implants in the Lhb scored significantly lower in pup retrieval and crouching behavior compared to females with implants in the MPOA and were not significantly different from females with cholesterol implants in the Lhb. There were also no significant differences in overall activity or carrying behavior among the groups.  相似文献   

19.
Maternal behavior of the sensitized virgin rat is affected by approach-avoidance systems as well as by hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, which is also activated during stress. The present experiments investigated the effects of adrenalectomy and of varying corticosterone concentrations on the onset and expression of maternal behavior in sensitized virgin rats. In the first experiment, latency to onset of maternal behavior and time spent licking once maternal were positively related to endogenous levels of corticosterone. However, few rats showed licking. In the second experiment, virgin rats were adrenalectomized or given sham surgeries before being sensitized and being given 0, 25, 100, 300, or 500 microg/mL of corticosterone in their drinking water. In the third experiment, virgin rats were adrenalectomized or given sham surgeries and given either control or corticosterone time-release pellets after being sensitized. Maternal behavior was then tested. Adrenalectomy increased licking in the second experiment and time over pups in the third experiment. Corticosterone replacement reduced licking in the second experiment and both licking and time over pups in the third experiment. In conclusion, exogenous corticosterone had an inhibitory effect on the expression of maternal behavior in the sensitized virgin rat, unlike the facilitatory effect previously found in the postpartum rat.  相似文献   

20.
Numerous studies have demonstrated that Sprague-Dawley rats exhibit a wide range of locomotor reactivity when placed in a novel environment. High Responder (HR) rats show exaggerated locomotor response to novelty, enhanced neuroendocrine stress reactivity, decreased anxiety-like behavior, and propensity to self-administer psychostimulants, compared to the less active Low Responder (LR) animals. Few studies have explored the early environmental factors which may underlie the HR-LR differences in emotional reactivity. Considering the enormous impact of maternal care on rodent neurodevelopment, we sought to examine maternal behavior in HR-LR dams to determine whether they exhibit differences which could contribute to their offspring's differential temperaments. Females, like males, can be classified as HR versus LR, showing marked differences in novelty-induced locomotor activity and anxiety-like behavior. HR-LR mothers behaved differently with their pups during the first two postpartum weeks. LR dams spent greater time licking and nursing their pups compared to HR dams, with the most prominent differences occurring during the second postpartum week. By contrast, when non-lactating HR-LR females were presented with orphaned pups, the pattern of maternal response was reversed. HR females were more responsive and showed greater maternal care of the novel pups compared to LR females, which were probably inhibited due to fear of the unfamiliar pups. This underscores the critical interplay between the female's emotional phenotype, her hormonal status and her familiarity with the pup as key factors in determining maternal behavior. Future work should explore neural and hormonal mechanisms which drive these HR-LR differences in maternal behavior and their impact on the development of the offspring.  相似文献   

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