Paternal Deprivation and Female Biparental Family Rearing Induce Dendritic and Synaptic Changes in Octodon degus: II. Nucleus Accumbens.

IF 2.3 4区 医学 Q2 DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY Developmental Neuroscience Pub Date : 2023-01-01 DOI:10.1159/000530050
Tony de Schultz, Katharina Braun, Joerg Bock
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

While the majority of studies on the importance of parental caregiving on offspring behavioral and brain development focus on the role of the mother, the paternal contribution is still an understudied topic. We investigated if growing up without paternal care affects dendritic and synaptic development in the nucleus accumbens of male and female offspring and if replacement of the father by a female caregiver "compensates" the impact of paternal deprivation. We compared (a) biparental rearing by father and mother, (b) monoparental care by a single mother, and (c) biparental rearing by two female caregivers. Quantitative analysis of medium-sized neurons in the nucleus accumbens revealed that growing up without father resulted in reduced spine number in both male and female offspring in the core region, whereas spine frequency was only reduced in females. In the shell region, reduced spine frequency was only found in males growing up in a monoparental environment. Replacement of the father by a female caregiver did not "protect" against the effects of paternal deprivation, indicating a critical impact of paternal care behavior on the development and maturation of neuronal networks in the nucleus accumbens.

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父系剥夺和双亲母系养育诱导章鱼树突和突触的变化:II。伏隔核。
虽然大多数关于父母照顾对后代行为和大脑发育的重要性的研究都集中在母亲的角色上,但父亲的贡献仍然是一个未被充分研究的话题。我们研究了在没有父亲照顾的情况下长大是否会影响雄性和雌性后代伏隔核的树突和突触发育,以及由女性照顾者代替父亲是否“补偿”了父亲剥夺的影响。我们比较了(a)父亲和母亲的双亲抚养,(b)单亲母亲的单亲抚养,以及(c)两名女性照顾者的双亲抚养。对伏隔核中等大小神经元的定量分析显示,在没有父亲的情况下,雄性和雌性后代在核心区域的脊椎数量减少,而脊椎频率仅在雌性中减少。在壳区,脊椎频率减少只在单亲环境中长大的雄性中发现。女性照顾者代替父亲并不能“保护”不受父权剥夺的影响,这表明父权照顾行为对伏隔核神经元网络的发育和成熟有重要影响。
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来源期刊
Developmental Neuroscience
Developmental Neuroscience 医学-发育生物学
CiteScore
4.00
自引率
3.40%
发文量
49
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: ''Developmental Neuroscience'' is a multidisciplinary journal publishing papers covering all stages of invertebrate, vertebrate and human brain development. Emphasis is placed on publishing fundamental as well as translational studies that contribute to our understanding of mechanisms of normal development as well as genetic and environmental causes of abnormal brain development. The journal thus provides valuable information for both physicians and biologists. To meet the rapidly expanding information needs of its readers, the journal combines original papers that report on progress and advances in developmental neuroscience with concise mini-reviews that provide a timely overview of key topics, new insights and ongoing controversies. The editorial standards of ''Developmental Neuroscience'' are high. We are committed to publishing only high quality, complete papers that make significant contributions to the field.
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