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Maternal deprivation and milk replacement affect the integrity of gray and white matter in the developing lamb brain
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Maternal deprivation and milk replacement affect the integrity of gray and white matter in the developing lamb brain

Emmanuelle Haslin, Scott A. Love, Emmanuelle Haslin, Manon Bellardie, Frédéric Andersson, Laurent Barantin, Isabelle Filipiak, Hans Adriaensen, Csilla L. Fazekas, Laurène Leroy, …
Developmental neurobiology (Hoboken, N.J.), Vol.82(2), pp.214-232
2022
PMID: 35220679

Abstract

artificial rearing DTI mothering MRI sheep T1‐weighted white and gray matter
The psychoendocrine evaluation of lamb development has demonstrated that maternal deprivation and milk replacement alters health, behavior, and endocrine profiles. While lambs are able to discriminate familiar and non‐familiar conspecifics (mother or lamb), only lambs reared with their mother develop such clear social discrimination or preference. Lambs reared without mother display no preference for a specific lamb from its own group. Differences in exploratory and emotional behaviors between mother‐reared and mother‐deprived lambs have also been reported. As these behavioural abilities are supported by the brain, we hypothesize that rearing with maternal deprivation and milk replacement leads to altered brain development and maturation. To test this hypothesis, we examined brain morphometric and microstructural variables extracted from in vivo T1‐weighted and diffusion‐weighted magnetic resonance images acquired longitudinally (1 week, 1.5 months, and 4.5 months of age) in mother‐reared and mother‐deprived lambs. From the morphometric variables the caudate nuclei volume was found to be smaller for mother‐deprived than for mother‐reared lambs. T1‐weighted signal intensity and radial diffusivity were higher for mother‐deprived than for mother‐reared lambs in both the white and gray matters. The fractional anisotropy of the white matter was lower for mother‐deprived than for mother‐reared lambs. Based on these morphometric and microstructural characteristics we conclude that maternal deprivation delays and affects lamb brain growth and maturation.

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Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
International collaboration
Citation topics
1 Clinical & Life Sciences
1.113 Brain Imaging
1.113.460 Advanced Neuroimaging
Web Of Science research areas
Developmental Biology
Neurosciences
ESI research areas
Neuroscience & Behavior
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