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Maternal separation in early life impairs tumor immunity in adulthood in the F344 rat

journal contribution
posted on 2011-05-01, 00:00 authored by T Nakamura, A K Walker, Luba SominskyLuba Sominsky, T Allen, S Rosengren, D M Hodgson
Neonatal stress alters the hypothalami-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis in rodents, such that, when these animals are exposed to stress as adults they hypersecrete corticosterone. Given that glucocorticoids are immunosuppressive, we examined the impact of maternal separation on HPA axis reactivity, natural killer (NK) cytotoxicity, and tumor growth in Fischer 344 rats following chronic restraint stress in adulthood. Pups underwent a chronic stress protocol whereby they were separated from their dams for 3 h on postnatal days 1-21. In adulthood, corticosterone responses were assessed following exposure to chronic (6 days for 10 h) restraint stress. Rats allocated to the chronic stress condition were inoculated with MADB106 tumor cells on day 4 of the restraint protocol. Blood was assessed for NK cytotoxicity on the final day of the chronic restraint protocol, and tumor colonization was assessed 3 weeks thereafter. Maternal separation impaired developmental weight gain (P < 0.05), depressed NK cytotoxicity (P < 0.05), and increased tumor colonization in the presence of chronic restraint stress in adulthood (P < 0.00 l). These findings occurred independently of circulating plasma corticosterone as only adult stress exposure potentiated corticosterone responses (P < 0.05). Our findings indicate that maternal separation and chronic stress can impair NK cytotoxicity and hence tumor immunity, but these effects are not directly mediated by perturbations in HPA axis function. © 2011 Informa Healthcare USA, Inc.

History

Journal

Stress

Volume

14

Issue

3

Pagination

335 - 343

ISSN

1025-3890

eISSN

1607-8888

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal