Maternal stress and vulnerability to depression: coping and maternal care strategies and its consequences on adolescent offspring

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Abstract

Depressive mothers often find mother-child interaction to be challenging. Maternal stress may further impair mother-child attachment, which may increase the risk of negative developmental consequences. We used rats with different vulnerability to depressive-like behavior (Wistar and Kyoto) to investigate the impact of stress (maternal separation-MS) on maternal behavior and adolescent offspring cognition. MS in Kyoto dams increased pup-contact, resulting in higher oxytocin levels and lower anxiety-like behavior after weaning, while worsening their adolescent offspring cognitive behavior. Whereas MS in Wistar dams elicited higher quality of pup-directed behavior, increasing brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) in the offspring, which seems to have prevented a negative impact on cognition. Hypothalamic oxytocin seems to affect the salience of the social environment cues (negatively for Kyoto) leading to different coping strategies. Our findings highlight the importance of contextual and individual factors in the understanding of the oxytocin role in modulating maternal behavior and stress regulatory processes. [Figure not available: see fulltext.].

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Alves, R. L., Portugal, C. C., Lopes, I. M., Oliveira, P., Alves, C. J., Barbosa, F., … Magalhães, A. (2022). Maternal stress and vulnerability to depression: coping and maternal care strategies and its consequences on adolescent offspring. Translational Psychiatry, 12(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41398-022-02220-5

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