Early life social complexity shapes adult neural processing in the communal spiny mouse Acomys cahirinus.

IF 3.5 3区 医学 Q2 NEUROSCIENCES
Psychopharmacology Pub Date : 2025-05-01 Epub Date: 2023-12-06 DOI:10.1007/s00213-023-06513-5
Kelly J Wallace, Solanch Dupeyron, Mutian Li, Aubrey M Kelly
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Rationale: Early life social rearing has profound consequences on offspring behavior and resilience. Yet, most studies examining early life development in rodents use species whose young are born immobile and do not produce complex social behavior until later in development. Furthermore, models of rearing under increased social complexity, rather than deprivation, are needed to provide alternative insight into the development of social neural circuitry.

Objectives: To understand precocial offspring social development, we manipulated early life social complexity in the communal spiny mouse Acomys cahirinus and assessed long-term consequences on offspring social behavior, exploration, and neural responses to novel social stimuli.

Methods: Spiny mouse pups were raised in the presence or absence of a non-kin breeding group. Upon adulthood, subjects underwent social interaction tests, an open field test, and a novel object test. Subjects were then exposed to a novel conspecific and novel group and neural responses were quantified via immunohistochemical staining in brain regions associated with social behavior.

Results: Early life social experience did not influence behavior in the test battery, but it did influence social processing. In animals exposed to non-kin during development, adult lateral septal neural responses toward a novel conspecific were weaker and hypothalamic neural responses toward a mixed-sex group were stronger.

Conclusions: Communal species may exhibit robust behavioral resilience to the early life social environment. But the early life environment can affect how novel social information is processed in the brain during adulthood, with long-term consequences that are likely to shape their behavioral trajectory.

Abstract Image

生活早期的社会复杂性塑造了群居棘鼠成年后的神经处理过程。
理由:生命早期的社会抚养对后代的行为和适应能力有着深远的影响。然而,大多数研究在考察啮齿类动物生命早期发育时,使用的物种的幼鼠出生时无法移动,直到发育后期才会产生复杂的社会行为。此外,还需要在社会复杂性增加而非剥夺的条件下建立饲养模型,从而为社会神经回路的发展提供新的视角:为了了解前社会性后代的社会性发展,我们操纵了群居刺鼠(Acomys cahirinus)生命早期的社会复杂性,并评估了对后代社会行为、探索和对新社会刺激的神经反应的长期影响:方法:刺鼠幼崽在有或没有非亲缘繁殖群体的情况下饲养。成年后,受试者接受社会互动测试、空地测试和新物体测试。然后,受试者接触新的同类和新的群体,并通过免疫组化染色对与社会行为相关的脑区的神经反应进行量化:结果:早年的社会经历并不影响测试中的行为,但会影响社会处理。在发育过程中暴露于非亲缘关系的动物中,成年侧隔膜神经对新的同种动物的反应较弱,而下丘脑神经对混性群体的反应较强:结论:群居物种可能对早期社会环境表现出强大的行为适应能力。结论:群居物种可能对生命早期的社会环境表现出很强的行为适应能力,但生命早期的环境会影响成年期大脑对新的社会信息的处理,其长期后果很可能会影响它们的行为轨迹。
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来源期刊
Psychopharmacology
Psychopharmacology 医学-精神病学
CiteScore
7.10
自引率
5.90%
发文量
257
审稿时长
2-4 weeks
期刊介绍: Official Journal of the European Behavioural Pharmacology Society (EBPS) Psychopharmacology is an international journal that covers the broad topic of elucidating mechanisms by which drugs affect behavior. The scope of the journal encompasses the following fields: Human Psychopharmacology: Experimental This section includes manuscripts describing the effects of drugs on mood, behavior, cognition and physiology in humans. The journal encourages submissions that involve brain imaging, genetics, neuroendocrinology, and developmental topics. Usually manuscripts in this section describe studies conducted under controlled conditions, but occasionally descriptive or observational studies are also considered. Human Psychopharmacology: Clinical and Translational This section comprises studies addressing the broad intersection of drugs and psychiatric illness. This includes not only clinical trials and studies of drug usage and metabolism, drug surveillance, and pharmacoepidemiology, but also work utilizing the entire range of clinically relevant methodologies, including neuroimaging, pharmacogenetics, cognitive science, biomarkers, and others. Work directed toward the translation of preclinical to clinical knowledge is especially encouraged. The key feature of submissions to this section is that they involve a focus on clinical aspects. Preclinical psychopharmacology: Behavioral and Neural This section considers reports on the effects of compounds with defined chemical structures on any aspect of behavior, in particular when correlated with neurochemical effects, in species other than humans. Manuscripts containing neuroscientific techniques in combination with behavior are welcome. We encourage reports of studies that provide insight into the mechanisms of drug action, at the behavioral and molecular levels. Preclinical Psychopharmacology: Translational This section considers manuscripts that enhance the confidence in a central mechanism that could be of therapeutic value for psychiatric or neurological patients, using disease-relevant preclinical models and tests, or that report on preclinical manipulations and challenges that have the potential to be translated to the clinic. Studies aiming at the refinement of preclinical models based upon clinical findings (back-translation) will also be considered. The journal particularly encourages submissions that integrate measures of target tissue exposure, activity on the molecular target and/or modulation of the targeted biochemical pathways. Preclinical Psychopharmacology: Molecular, Genetic and Epigenetic This section focuses on the molecular and cellular actions of neuropharmacological agents / drugs, and the identification / validation of drug targets affecting the CNS in health and disease. We particularly encourage studies that provide insight into the mechanisms of drug action at the molecular level. Manuscripts containing evidence for genetic or epigenetic effects on neurochemistry or behavior are welcome.
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