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Review
. 2016 Jan:77:204-10.
doi: 10.1016/j.yhbeh.2015.07.005. Epub 2015 Jul 11.

Hormonal and non-hormonal bases of maternal behavior: The role of experience and epigenetic mechanisms

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Review

Hormonal and non-hormonal bases of maternal behavior: The role of experience and epigenetic mechanisms

Danielle S Stolzenberg et al. Horm Behav. 2016 Jan.

Abstract

This article is part of a Special Issue "Parental Care". Though hormonal changes occurring throughout pregnancy and at the time of parturition have been demonstrated to prime the maternal brain and trigger the onset of mother-infant interactions, extended experience with neonates can induce similar behavioral interactions. Sensitization, a phenomenon in which rodents engage in parental responses to young following constant cohabitation with donor pups, was elegantly demonstrated by Rosenblatt (1967) to occur in females and males, independent of hormonal status. Study of the non-hormonal basis of maternal behavior has contributed significantly to our understanding of hormonal influences on the maternal brain and the cellular and molecular mechanisms that mediate maternal behavior. Here, we highlight our current understanding regarding both hormone-induced and experience-induced maternal responsivity and the mechanisms that may serve as a common pathway through which increases in maternal behavior are achieved. In particular, we describe the epigenetic changes that contribute to chromatin remodeling and how these molecular mechanisms may influence the neural substrates of the maternal brain. We also consider how individual differences in these systems emerge during development in response to maternal care. This research has broad implications for our understanding of the parental brain and the role of experience in the induction of neurobiological and behavior changes.

Keywords: Behavior; Chromatin; Dopamine; Epigenetic; Estrogen; Experience; Hormone; Maternal; Sensitization.

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