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Publication : Aberrant maternal behaviour in mice treated with a progesterone receptor antagonist during pregnancy.

First Author  Wang MW Year  1995
Journal  J Endocrinol Volume  145
Issue  2 Pages  371-7
PubMed ID  7616171 Mgi Jnum  J:25654
Mgi Id  MGI:73368 Doi  10.1677/joe.0.1450371
Citation  Wang MW, et al. (1995) Aberrant maternal behaviour in mice treated with a progesterone receptor antagonist during pregnancy. J Endocrinol 145(2):371-7
abstractText  The rapid onset of normal maternal behaviour after parturition in mice, consisting of cleaning, warming, feeding and protection of offspring, is primed by oestrogen, progesterone and oxytocin. Previous studies showed that passive transfer of monoclonal antibodies against progesterone significantly increases the incidence of maternal rejection of pups. To test the hypothesis that aberrant maternal behaviour is due to partial progesterone withdrawal leading to hormonal imbalance during late pregnancy, maternal rejection was assessed following treatment with a progesterone receptor antagonist. Mifepristone (RU486) was given subcutaneously on either day 2 (100 micrograms) or day 17 (50 micrograms) of pregnancy, or on the first day of lactation (100 micrograms). Maternal behaviour was monitored twice daily for the first 6 days of lactation and pup rejection recorded for a further 15 days. Maternal rejection was significantly greater after mifepristone administration on either day 2 or day 17 (28.6% and 38.3%) compared with controls (11.1% and 5.2% respectively). Rejection was negligible in both treated and control groups if mifepristone was given after parturition. When mothers were treated at day 17, the length of the latent period before pups were retrieved and returned to the nest was markedly increased in mifepristone-treated mothers (46.3 s) compared with controls (4.4 s) though the effect was transient. The results indicate that mifepristone interferes with the hormonal priming mechanism(s) necessary for the onset of normal maternal behaviour by a receptor-mediated effect. The similarity of the present results and those obtained with anti-progesterone antibodies implies that receptor antagonism or antibody scavenging of progesterone influence a common central nervous mechanism that is essential for the normal priming process.
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