Noschang_2020_Int.J.Dev.Neurosci_80_547

Reference

Title : Early-life stress affects behavioral and neurochemical parameters differently in male and female juvenile Wistar rats - Noschang_2020_Int.J.Dev.Neurosci_80_547
Author(s) : Noschang C , Krolow R , Arcego DM , Marcolin M , Ferreira AG , da Cunha AA , Wyse ATS , Dalmaz C
Ref : Int J Developmental Neuroscience , 80 :547 , 2020
Abstract :

Neonatal handling is an early life stressor that leads to behavioral and neurochemical changes in adult rats in a sex-specific manner and possibly affects earlier stages of development. Here, we investigated the effects of neonatal handling (days 1-10 after birth) on juvenile rats focusing on biochemical parameters and olfactory memory after weaning. Male neonatal handled rats performed more crossings on the hole-board task, increased Na(+) /K(+) -ATPase activity in the olfactory bulb, and decreased acetylcholinesterase activity in the hippocampus versus non-handled males. Female neonatal handled animals increased the number of rearing and nose-pokes on the hole-board task, decreased glutathione peroxidase activity, and total thiol content in the hippocampus versus non-handled females. This study reinforces that early life stress affects behavioral and neurochemical parameters in a sex-specific manner even before the puberty onset.

PubMedSearch : Noschang_2020_Int.J.Dev.Neurosci_80_547
PubMedID: 32683715

Related information

Citations formats

Noschang C, Krolow R, Arcego DM, Marcolin M, Ferreira AG, da Cunha AA, Wyse ATS, Dalmaz C (2020)
Early-life stress affects behavioral and neurochemical parameters differently in male and female juvenile Wistar rats
Int J Developmental Neuroscience 80 :547

Noschang C, Krolow R, Arcego DM, Marcolin M, Ferreira AG, da Cunha AA, Wyse ATS, Dalmaz C (2020)
Int J Developmental Neuroscience 80 :547