Maternal buffering beyond glucocorticoids: impact of early life stress on corticolimbic circuits that control infant responses to novelty

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: Maternal buffering beyond glucocorticoids: impact of early life stress on corticolimbic circuits that control infant responses to novelty
المؤلفون: Dora Guzman, Govind Nair, Xiaoping Hu, Mar M. Sanchez, Matthew S. McMurray, Yundi Shi, Martin Styner, Kai M. McCormack, Brittany R. Howell
بيانات النشر: The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill University Libraries, 2017.
سنة النشر: 2017
مصطلحات موضوعية: Male, Child abuse, Permissiveness, Social Psychology, Early life stress, Mothers, Prefrontal Cortex, Physiology, Motor Activity, Development, Amygdala, Article, 050105 experimental psychology, Developmental psychology, Random Allocation, 03 medical and health sciences, Behavioral Neuroscience, 0302 clinical medicine, medicine, Animals, Humans, Weaning, 0501 psychology and cognitive sciences, Child Abuse, Maternal Behavior, Prefrontal cortex, Analysis of Variance, Psychological Tests, 05 social sciences, Novelty, Infant, Macaca mulatta, Disease Models, Animal, Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Diffusion Tensor Imaging, medicine.anatomical_structure, Female, Analysis of variance, Psychology, Stress, Psychological, 030217 neurology & neurosurgery
الوصف: Maternal presence has a potent buffering effect on infant fear and stress responses in primates. We previously reported that maternal presence is not effective in buffering the endocrine stress response in infant rhesus monkeys reared by maltreating mothers. We have also reported that maltreating mothers show low maternal responsiveness and permissiveness/secure-base behavior. Although still not understood, it is possible that this maternal buffering effect is mediated, at least partially, through deactivation of amygdala response circuits when mothers are present. Here, we studied rhesus monkey infants that differed in the quality of early maternal care to investigate how this early experience modulated maternal buffering effects on behavioral responses to novelty during the weaning period. We also examined the relationship between these behavioral responses and structural connectivity in one of the underlying regulatory neural circuits: amygdala-prefrontal pathways. Our findings suggest that infant exploration in a novel situation is predicted by maternal responsiveness and structural integrity of amygdala-prefrontal white matter depending on maternal presence (positive relationships when mother is absent). These results provide evidence that maternal buffering of infant behavioral inhibition is dependent on the quality of maternal care and structural connectivity of neural pathways that are sensitive to early life stress.
اللغة: English
DOI: 10.17615/z2hj-w897
URL الوصول: https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::33ba35fb2c421bae60597e4500697dc7
حقوق: OPEN
رقم الأكسشن: edsair.doi.dedup.....33ba35fb2c421bae60597e4500697dc7
قاعدة البيانات: OpenAIRE