Experiencing stressful events during early life has been considered as a risk factor for development of functional gastrointestinal disorders in adulthood. This study aimed to investigate the sex-related differences in… Click to show full abstract
Experiencing stressful events during early life has been considered as a risk factor for development of functional gastrointestinal disorders in adulthood. This study aimed to investigate the sex-related differences in stress-induced gastrointestinal (GI) dysmotility in rats exposed to neonatal maternal separation (MS). Newborn pups were removed from mothers for 180 min from postnatal day-1 to day-14. Experiments were performed in male and female offsprings at adulthood. Elevated plus maze (EPM) test was used to assess MS-induced anxiety-like behaviors. Ninety minute of restraint stress was applied for once or 5 consecutive days for acute stress (AS) or repeated homotypic stress (RHS), respectively. Measurement of fecal output (FO) and gastric emptying (GE), and hypothalamic microdialysis were performed. Both in males and females, MS produced anxiety-like behaviors. AS delayed GE and increased FO in all groups. In RHS-loaded MS females, AS-induced alterations in GE and FO were restored, however, no adaptation was observed in male counterparts. Regardless of sex and neonatal stress experience, AS significantly increased corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) release from paraventricular nucleus of hypothalamus, whereas females were found more susceptible than males. Following RHS, AS-induced elevations in CRF release were attenuated only in MS females, but not in males. Both females and males seem to be prone to AS-induced alterations in hypothalamic CRF system and in GI motor functions. Neonatal MS disturbs chronic stress coping mechanisms in males. Conversely, females are likely to circumvent the deleterious effects of neonatal MS on GI functions through developing a habituation to prolonged stressed conditions.
               
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