Abstract

Virgin adult female mice display nearly spontaneous maternal care towards foster pups after a short period of sensitization. This indicates that maternal care is triggered by sensory stimulation provided by the pups and that its onset is largely independent on the physiological events related to gestation, parturition and lactation. Conversely, the factors influencing maternal aggression are poorly understood. In this study, we sought to characterize two models of maternal sensitization in the outbred CD1 strain. To do so, a group of virgin females (godmothers) were exposed to continuous cohabitation with a lactating dam and their pups from the moment of parturition, whereas a second group (pup-sensitized females), were exposed 2 h daily to foster pups. Both groups were tested for maternal behavior on postnatal days 2–4. Godmothers expressed full maternal care from the first test. Also, they expressed higher levels of crouching than dams. Pup-sensitized females differed from dams in all measures of pup-directed behavior in the first test, and expressed full maternal care after two sessions of contact with pups. However, both protocols failed to induce maternal aggression toward a male intruder after full onset of pup-directed maternal behavior, even in the presence of pups. Our study confirms that adult female mice need a short sensitization period before the onset of maternal care. Further, it shows that pup-oriented and non-pup-oriented components of maternal behavior are under different physiological control. We conclude that the godmother model might be useful to study the physiological and neural bases of the maternal behavior repertoire.

Highlights

  • IntroductionMaternal care has a deep impact in the development of newborns

  • In mammalian species, maternal care has a deep impact in the development of newborns

  • The analysis revealed that there were no significant differences between groups across test days (Day 1: χ 2 = 4.5, Day 2: χ 2 = 3.852 and Day 3: χ 2 = 0.095; p > 0.1 in all cases; data not shown). These data suggest that virgin females with no previous experience are not neophobic toward pups

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Summary

Introduction

Maternal care has a deep impact in the development of newborns. Low maternal care at infancy is associated with significantly increased risk of child neglect/abuse and depression during adulthood (Canetti et al, 1997; Repetti et al, 2002; Numan and Insel, 2003; Andersen et al, 2008). These findings evidence the importance of maternal care as a regulator of a healthy development of the infants. We need animal models in which to study the neural substrate of maternal behavior

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