Neonatal corticosterone administration in rodents as a tool to investigate the maternal programming of emotional and immune domains

Neonatal experiences exert persistent influences on individual development. These influences encompass numerous domains including emotion, cognition, reactivity to external stressors and immunity. The comprehensive nature of the neonatal programming of individual phenotype is reverberated in the lar...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Simone Macrì
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2017-02-01
Series:Neurobiology of Stress
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352289516300388
id doaj-a89f442cf12f4a3e837c826707407282
record_format Article
spelling doaj-a89f442cf12f4a3e837c8267074072822020-11-24T23:13:06ZengElsevierNeurobiology of Stress2352-28952017-02-016C223010.1016/j.ynstr.2016.12.001Neonatal corticosterone administration in rodents as a tool to investigate the maternal programming of emotional and immune domainsSimone MacrìNeonatal experiences exert persistent influences on individual development. These influences encompass numerous domains including emotion, cognition, reactivity to external stressors and immunity. The comprehensive nature of the neonatal programming of individual phenotype is reverberated in the large amount of experimental data collected by many authors in several scientific fields: biomedicine, evolutionary and molecular biology. These data support the view that variations in precocious environmental conditions may calibrate the individual phenotype at many different levels. Environmental influences have been traditionally addressed through experimental paradigms entailing the modification of the neonatal environment and the multifactorial (e.g. behaviour, endocrinology, cellular and molecular biology) analysis of the developing individual's phenotype. These protocols suggested that the role of the mother in mediating the offspring's phenotype is often associated with the short-term effects of environmental manipulations on dam's physiology. Specifically, environmental manipulations may induce fluctuations in maternal corticosteroids (corticosterone in rodents) which, in turn, are translated to the offspring through lactation. Herein, I propose that this mother-offspring transfer mechanism can be leveraged to devise experimental protocols based on the exogenous administration of corticosterone during lactation. To support this proposition, I refer to a series of studies in which these protocols have been adopted to investigate the neonatal programming of individual phenotype at the level of emotional and immune regulations. While these paradigms cannot replace traditional studies, I suggest that they can be considered a valid complement.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352289516300388Neonatal experiencesCorticosteroneMaternal programmingExperimental models
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Simone Macrì
spellingShingle Simone Macrì
Neonatal corticosterone administration in rodents as a tool to investigate the maternal programming of emotional and immune domains
Neurobiology of Stress
Neonatal experiences
Corticosterone
Maternal programming
Experimental models
author_facet Simone Macrì
author_sort Simone Macrì
title Neonatal corticosterone administration in rodents as a tool to investigate the maternal programming of emotional and immune domains
title_short Neonatal corticosterone administration in rodents as a tool to investigate the maternal programming of emotional and immune domains
title_full Neonatal corticosterone administration in rodents as a tool to investigate the maternal programming of emotional and immune domains
title_fullStr Neonatal corticosterone administration in rodents as a tool to investigate the maternal programming of emotional and immune domains
title_full_unstemmed Neonatal corticosterone administration in rodents as a tool to investigate the maternal programming of emotional and immune domains
title_sort neonatal corticosterone administration in rodents as a tool to investigate the maternal programming of emotional and immune domains
publisher Elsevier
series Neurobiology of Stress
issn 2352-2895
publishDate 2017-02-01
description Neonatal experiences exert persistent influences on individual development. These influences encompass numerous domains including emotion, cognition, reactivity to external stressors and immunity. The comprehensive nature of the neonatal programming of individual phenotype is reverberated in the large amount of experimental data collected by many authors in several scientific fields: biomedicine, evolutionary and molecular biology. These data support the view that variations in precocious environmental conditions may calibrate the individual phenotype at many different levels. Environmental influences have been traditionally addressed through experimental paradigms entailing the modification of the neonatal environment and the multifactorial (e.g. behaviour, endocrinology, cellular and molecular biology) analysis of the developing individual's phenotype. These protocols suggested that the role of the mother in mediating the offspring's phenotype is often associated with the short-term effects of environmental manipulations on dam's physiology. Specifically, environmental manipulations may induce fluctuations in maternal corticosteroids (corticosterone in rodents) which, in turn, are translated to the offspring through lactation. Herein, I propose that this mother-offspring transfer mechanism can be leveraged to devise experimental protocols based on the exogenous administration of corticosterone during lactation. To support this proposition, I refer to a series of studies in which these protocols have been adopted to investigate the neonatal programming of individual phenotype at the level of emotional and immune regulations. While these paradigms cannot replace traditional studies, I suggest that they can be considered a valid complement.
topic Neonatal experiences
Corticosterone
Maternal programming
Experimental models
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352289516300388
work_keys_str_mv AT simonemacri neonatalcorticosteroneadministrationinrodentsasatooltoinvestigatethematernalprogrammingofemotionalandimmunedomains
_version_ 1725599355373617152