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Publication : Modification of female and male social behaviors in estrogen receptor beta knockout mice by neonatal maternal separation.

First Author  Tsuda MC Year  2014
Journal  Front Neurosci Volume  8
Pages  274 PubMed ID  25228857
Mgi Jnum  J:273959 Mgi Id  MGI:6281206
Doi  10.3389/fnins.2014.00274 Citation  Tsuda MC, et al. (2014) Modification of female and male social behaviors in estrogen receptor beta knockout mice by neonatal maternal separation. Front Neurosci 8:274
abstractText  Maternal separation (MS) is an animal model mimicking the effects of early life stress on the development of emotional and social behaviors. Recent studies revealed that MS stress increased social anxiety levels in female mice and reduced peri-pubertal aggression in male mice. Estrogen receptor (ER) beta plays a pivotal role in the regulation of stress responses and anxiety-related and social behaviors. Behavioral studies using ERbeta knockout (betaERKO) mice reported increased social investigation and decreased social anxiety in betaERKO females, and elevated aggression levels in betaERKO males compared to wild-type (WT) mice. In the present study, using betaERKO and WT mice, we examined whether ERbeta contributes to MS effects on anxiety and social behaviors. betaERKO and WT mice were separated from their dam daily (4 h) from postnatal day 1-14 and control groups were left undisturbed. First, MS and ERbeta gene deletion individually increased anxiety-related behaviors in the open field test, but only in female mice. Anxiety levels were not further modified in betaERKO female mice subjected to MS stress. Second, betaERKO female mice showed higher levels of social investigation compared with WT in the social investigation test and long-term social preference test. However, MS greatly reduced social investigation duration and elevated number of stretched approaches in WT and betaERKO females in the social investigation test, suggesting elevated levels of social anxiety in both genotypes. Third, peri-pubertal and adult betaERKO male mice were more aggressive than WT mice as indicated by heightened aggression duration. On the other hand, MS significantly decreased aggression duration in both genotypes, but only in peri-pubertal male mice. Altogether, these results suggest that betaERKO mice are sensitive to the adverse effects of MS stress on subsequent female and male social behaviors, which could then have overrode the ERbeta effects on female social anxiety and male aggression.
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