Abstract

Deprivation of maternal care via lack of somatosensory input causes offspring to experience adverse consequences, especially in the central nervous system. However, little is known about the developmental effect of maternal care on peripheral tissues such as the skin, which includes cutaneous sensory neurons. In the present study, we examined the involvement of maternal care in the development of the skin. We investigated offspring reared by early-weaned mother mice who spontaneously showed lower frequency of licking/grooming on nursing. Offspring of early-weaned mothers showed higher resistance against skin barrier disruption than did offspring of normally-weaned mothers, and had normal skin barrier function in the intact trunk skin. In the dorsal root ganglion of early-weaned mother offspring, we also found up-regulation of mRNA levels of the Mas-related G-protein coupled receptor B4 (MrgprB4), which is a marker of sensory neurons that detect gentle stroking. We further found that levels of MrgprB4 mRNA were correlated with the enhancement of skin resistance. The present findings suggest that maternal somatosensory inputs have a developmental impact on the cutaneous sensory neurons of the skin in offspring. Interestingly, the present results suggest that lower maternal care has a benefit on the skin resistance. This provides important information for understanding the development of peripheral tissues in offspring reared under severe conditions such as lower maternal care in the wild.

Highlights

  • Maternal care is essential for appropriate development in the early stages of life

  • We investigated the effects of maternal care in the development of peripheral tissues by analyzing offspring of early-weaned mother mice, which show low LG on nursing

  • We found that these offspring showed normal skin barrier function in the intact trunk skin, and higher resistance against the AE treatment than offspring from normally-weaned mothers

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Summary

Introduction

Maternal care is essential for appropriate development in the early stages of life. Adverse childhood experiences including neglect and abuse have been found to reduce cognitive performance, impair social development, and increase prevalence of personality disorder [1, 2]. In support of these clinical findings, animal studies have shown that daily maternal separation throughout the pre-weaning period induces dysfunction of the central nervous system (CNS) [3,4,5,6,7,8,9]. The deprivation of maternal care has been shown to induce significant negative consequences on development

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