Development programming: Stress during gestation alters offspring development in sheep

Author:

Wei Mingji12ORCID,Gao Qian2ORCID,Liu Junjun3,Yang Yan4,Yang Jinyan2,Fan Jingchang5,Lv Shenjin2ORCID,Yang Shengmei1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. College of Bioscience and Biotechnology Yangzhou University Yangzhou China

2. College of Agriculture and Forestry Science Linyi University Linyi China

3. Hebei Agriculture University Baoding China

4. Linyi Academy of Agricultural Sciences Linyi China

5. Jiaxiang County Sheep Breeding Farm Jiaxiang China

Abstract

AbstractInappropriate management practices of domestic animals during pregnancy can be potential stressors, resulting in complex behavioural, physiological and neurological consequences in the developing offspring. Some of these consequences can last into adulthood or propagate to subsequent generations. We systematically summarized the results of different experimental patterns using artificially increased maternal glucocorticoid levels or prenatal maternal physiological stress paradigms, mediators between prenatal maternal stress (PMS) and programming effects in the offspring and the effects of PMS on offspring phenotypes in sheep. PMS can impair birthweight, regulate the development of the hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal axis, modify behavioural patterns and cognitive abilities and alter gene expression and brain morphology in offspring. Further research should focus on the effects of programming on gene expression, immune function, gut microbiome, sex‐specific effects and maternal behaviour of offspring, especially comparative studies of gestational periods when PMS is applied, continual studies of programming effects on offspring and treatment strategies that effectively reverse the detrimental programming effects of prenatal stress.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Endocrinology,Animal Science and Zoology,Biotechnology

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