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. 2022 Apr;2(2):45-53.
doi: 10.47936/encephalitis.2021.00178. Epub 2022 Mar 11.

Chronic social stress during early development elicits unique behavioral changes in adulthood

Affiliations

Chronic social stress during early development elicits unique behavioral changes in adulthood

Daejong Jeon et al. Encephalitis. 2022 Apr.

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.

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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.

Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.. Generation of the MS/SD/SI model
(A) Time schedule of early-life social stress paradigms (MS, SD, and SI). (B) Reduced body weight in MS/SD/SI mice. (C) Weight gain at 7 to 8 weeks of age. MS, maternal separation; SD, social defeat; SI, social isolation. **p < 0.01, Student t-test.
Figure 2.
Figure 2.. Behavioral phenotypes of MS/SD/SI mice in tasks assessing anxiety, locomotion, depression, and learning/memory
(A) Light/dark transition test. The control (n = 12) and MS/SD/SI model (n = 18) mice spent similar times in the light or dark compartment and demonstrated a similar number of crossings between the compartments. (B) Elevated plus maze task. Although the MS/SD/SI model mice (n = 9) displayed an increased number of crossings into the open arms compared to the control mice (n = 16), the groups spent a similar amount of time in the open and closed arms. (C) In the open-field test, an increase in distance moved was observed in the MD/SD/SI model group (n = 24) compared to the control group (n = 14). (D) Forced swim test. The MS/SD/SI model mice (n = 12) displayed a similar amount of immobility time to the control mice (n = 15). (E) Tail-suspension test. The MS/SD/SI model mice (n = 10) showed a similar immobility time to the control mice (n = 12). (F–H) Fear-conditioning. During training (F), the control (n = 13) and MS/SD/SI model (n = 12) mice exhibited similar freezing durations. The horizontal line indicates the duration of a tone (28 seconds), and the vertical arrow indicates the duration of foot-shock (2 seconds). There was no difference between the groups in 24-hour contextual memory (G). No difference was found between the groups in 24-hour cued memory (H). The horizontal line indicates the duration of a tone (3 minutes). MS, maternal separation; SD, social defeat; SI, social isolation. *p < 0.05, Student t-test. ##p < 0.01, two-way analysis of variance followed by Scheffé post hoc test.
Figure 3.
Figure 3.. Behavioral phenotypes of MS/SD/SI mice in tasks assessing repetitive/compulsive-like behavior
(A) In the marble-burying test, the MD/SD/SI model mice (n = 9) demonstrated a decrease in the number of buried marbles compared to the control mice (n = 11). (B) Considering nest-building behavior, a lower score was recorded for the MD/SD/SI model group (n = 10) compared to the control group (n = 13). MS, maternal separation; SD, social defeat; SI, social isolation. **p < 0.01, Student t-test.
Figure 4.
Figure 4.. Behavioral phenotypes of MS/SD/SI mice in tasks assessing social behaviors
(A) In the sociability test, the MS/SD/SI and control groups spent more time exploring a novel stranger than exploring the empty cage. (B) In the social interaction test, the MD/SD/SI model mice (n = 16) showed a significant increase in social interactions with an unfamiliar juvenile mouse than did the control mice (n = 20). (C–F) Resident-intruder task. The MD/SD/SI model (n = 12) mouse, when positioned as a resident, displayed a normal level of aggression (C, D). However, the MD/SD/SI model (n = 16) mice, when positioned as an intruder, exhibited a greater number of attacks (left) and a shorter latency to the first attack (right) than the control mice (n = 8) (E, F). (G) In observational fear-conditioning, the MD/SD/SI model mice (n = 12) exhibited a shorter freezing duration than the control mice (n = 12). (H) The MD/SD/SI model mice (n = 22) spent more time in a zone containing a rat in the predator target task compared to the control mice (n = 17). MS, maternal separation; SD, social defeat; SI, social isolation. *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01, Student t-test. #p < 0.05, ##p < 0.01, two-way analysis of variance followed by Scheffé post hoc test.

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