Chronic social stress during early development elicits unique behavioral changes in adulthood
- PMID: 37469652
- PMCID: PMC10295912
- DOI: 10.47936/encephalitis.2021.00178
Chronic social stress during early development elicits unique behavioral changes in adulthood
Abstract
Purpose: Chronic social stress is known to induce inflammation in the brain, and early-life stress affects the brain and social behavior in adulthood. To study the relationship between social stress in childhood development and social behavior in adulthood, we subjected mice to a sequential early-life social stresses and characterized their adult behavioral phenotypes.
Methods: C57BL/6 mice were sequentially subjected to maternal separation (MS), social defeat (SD), and social isolation (SI) in that order. The body weights of the MS/SD/SI mice were measured. Behavioral tasks related to anxiety, depression, locomotion, learning/memory, and repetitive/compulsive-like behavior were conducted. Social behaviors suggesting sociability, social interaction, aggression, and social fear were investigated.
Results: MS/SD/SI mice weighed less than the control mice. At 7 and 8 weeks of age. These mice displayed normal behaviors in anxiety-, depression-, and learning/memory-related tasks, but they exhibited increased locomotor activity and a low level of repetitive/compulsive-like behavior. Notably, they exhibited increased social interaction, impaired empathy-related fear, reduced predator fear, and increased defensive aggressiveness.
Conclusion: Social stress during childhood development resulted in behavioral alterations, and MS/SD/SI mice generated by mimicking child abuse or maltreatment showed unique abnormalities in social behaviors. MS/SD/SI mice might be useful not only to study the relationship between social stress and brain inflammation but also psychosocial behaviors observed in individuals with brain disorders, such as psychopaths.
Keywords: Abuse; Childhood development; Mice; Social behavior; Social stress.
Copyright © 2022 Korean Encephalitis and Neuroinflammation Society.
Conflict of interest statement
Conflicts of Interest Daejong Jeon has been an associate editor of encephalitis since October 2020. Kon Chu and Sang Kun Lee also have served as editorial boards of encephalitis since October 2020. They were not involved in the review process of this original article. No other potential conflict of interest relevant to this article was reported.
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