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Maternal weaning modulates emotional behavior and regulates the gut-brain axis

Maternal weaning modulates emotional behavior and regulates the gut-brain axis
Maternal weaning modulates emotional behavior and regulates the gut-brain axis

Evidence shows that nutritional and environmental stress stimuli during postnatal period influence brain development and interactions between gut and brain. In this study we show that in rats, prevention of weaning from maternal milk results in depressive-like behavior, which is accompanied by changes in the gut bacteria and host metabolism. Depressive-like behavior was studied using the forced-swim test on postnatal day (PND) 25 in rats either weaned on PND 21, or left with their mother until PND 25 (non-weaned). Non-weaned rats showed an increased immobility time consistent with a depressive phenotype. Fluorescence in situ hybridization showed non-weaned rats to harbor significantly lowered Clostridium histolyticum bacterial groups but exhibit marked stress-induced increases. Metabonomic analysis of urine from these animals revealed significant differences in the metabolic profiles, with biochemical phenotypes indicative of depression in the non-weaned animals. In addition, non-weaned rats showed resistance to stress-induced modulation of oxytocin receptors in amygdala nuclei, which is indicative of passive stress-coping mechanism. We conclude that delaying weaning results in alterations to the gut microbiota and global metabolic profiles which may contribute to a depressive phenotype and raise the issue that mood disorders at early developmental ages may reflect interplay between mammalian host and resident bacteria.

2045-2322
Farshim, Pamela
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Walton, Gemma
125c73be-123b-46eb-88e1-9d125851beb2
Chakrabarti, Bhismadev
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Givens, Ian
0213aa45-b3b4-4e48-9ed4-22e8e081ec49
Saddy, Doug
bf5958b6-f1ea-4583-bc5d-42c39fb4a57b
Kitchen, Ian
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R. Swann, Jonathan
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Bailey, Alexis
d09ba6bc-ba4e-46ac-bd3b-26589d33e7bd
Farshim, Pamela
c7fd17df-308c-4f46-8cd8-edbaa3cef2d1
Walton, Gemma
125c73be-123b-46eb-88e1-9d125851beb2
Chakrabarti, Bhismadev
c308a2d8-29d6-4e24-86f6-3ec0f742214f
Givens, Ian
0213aa45-b3b4-4e48-9ed4-22e8e081ec49
Saddy, Doug
bf5958b6-f1ea-4583-bc5d-42c39fb4a57b
Kitchen, Ian
8888ceff-411d-4f4d-90a8-d3e84b97d30a
R. Swann, Jonathan
7c11a66b-f4b8-4dbf-aa17-ad8b0561b85c
Bailey, Alexis
d09ba6bc-ba4e-46ac-bd3b-26589d33e7bd

Farshim, Pamela, Walton, Gemma, Chakrabarti, Bhismadev, Givens, Ian, Saddy, Doug, Kitchen, Ian, R. Swann, Jonathan and Bailey, Alexis (2016) Maternal weaning modulates emotional behavior and regulates the gut-brain axis. Scientific Reports, 6, [21958]. (doi:10.1038/srep21958).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Evidence shows that nutritional and environmental stress stimuli during postnatal period influence brain development and interactions between gut and brain. In this study we show that in rats, prevention of weaning from maternal milk results in depressive-like behavior, which is accompanied by changes in the gut bacteria and host metabolism. Depressive-like behavior was studied using the forced-swim test on postnatal day (PND) 25 in rats either weaned on PND 21, or left with their mother until PND 25 (non-weaned). Non-weaned rats showed an increased immobility time consistent with a depressive phenotype. Fluorescence in situ hybridization showed non-weaned rats to harbor significantly lowered Clostridium histolyticum bacterial groups but exhibit marked stress-induced increases. Metabonomic analysis of urine from these animals revealed significant differences in the metabolic profiles, with biochemical phenotypes indicative of depression in the non-weaned animals. In addition, non-weaned rats showed resistance to stress-induced modulation of oxytocin receptors in amygdala nuclei, which is indicative of passive stress-coping mechanism. We conclude that delaying weaning results in alterations to the gut microbiota and global metabolic profiles which may contribute to a depressive phenotype and raise the issue that mood disorders at early developmental ages may reflect interplay between mammalian host and resident bacteria.

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More information

Published date: 23 February 2016
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © 2016, Nature Publishing Group. All rights reserved.

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 507487
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/507487
ISSN: 2045-2322
PURE UUID: 174977ab-f2f3-4fb6-afad-834f6f566d25
ORCID for Jonathan R. Swann: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6485-4529

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Date deposited: 10 Dec 2025 17:49
Last modified: 11 Dec 2025 02:59

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Contributors

Author: Pamela Farshim
Author: Gemma Walton
Author: Bhismadev Chakrabarti
Author: Ian Givens
Author: Doug Saddy
Author: Ian Kitchen
Author: Alexis Bailey

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