Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5924527 Physiology & Behavior 2014 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

•The breastfeeding period has been shortening progressively.•Models of early weaning show that adult rats present several endocrine alterations.•Maternal deprivation and pharmacological early weaning affect behavior in adult rats.•Early weaning by wrapping dams with a bandage does not affect behavior at adulthood.•Hypercorticosteronemia at early weaning may be a relevant imprinting factor.

The most frequently used animal models of early weaning (EW) in rodents, maternal deprivation and pharmacological inhibition of lactation, present confounding factors, such as high stress or drug side effects, that can mask or interact with the effects of milk deprivation per se. Given these limitations, the development of new models of EW may provide useful information regarding the impact of a shortened period of breastfeeding on the endocrine and nervous systems, both during development and at adulthood. Using a model of EW in which lactating Wistar rat dams are wrapped with a bandage to block access to milk during the last three days of lactation, we have recently shown that the adult offspring presented higher body mass, hyperphagia, hyperleptinemia, leptin as well as insulin resistance, and higher adrenal catecholamine content at adulthood. Here, we used this EW model, which involves no pharmacological treatment or maternal separation, to analyze anxiety-like, novelty-seeking and memory/learning behavioral traits in the adult male offspring. To that end, animals were tested in the elevated plus maze, in the hole board arena and in the radial arm water maze. Except for an increased number of rearing events (a measure of vertical activity), no other behavioral differences were observed between EW and control animals. The contrasting behavioral results between the three EW models may be associated with differences in HPA axis function in the offspring at weaning, since it has been observed that bandaging does not affect corticosteronemia while maternal separation and pharmacological EW increase it.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology Physiology
Authors
, , , , , , , , , ,