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Title: Influence of ω3 fatty acids on maternal behavior and brain oxytocin in the murine perinatal period. Author: Harauma A, Nakamura S, Wakinaka N, Mogi K, Moriguchi T. Journal: Prostaglandins Leukot Essent Fatty Acids; 2022 Jan; 176():102386. PubMed ID: 34896909. Abstract: INTRODUCTION: Perinatal women often experience mood disorders and postpartum depression due to the physical load and the rapid changes in hormone levels caused by pregnancy, childbirth, and nursing. When the mother's emotions become unstable, their parental behavior (maternal behavior) may decline, the child's attachment may weaken, and the formation of mother-child bonding can become hindered. As a result, the growth of the child may be adversely affected. The objective of this study was to investigate the effect of ω3 fatty acid deficiency in the perinatal period on maternal behavior and the oxytocin concentration and fatty acid composition in brain tissue. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Virgin female C57BL/6 J mice fed a ω3 fatty acid-deficient (ω3-Def) or adequate (ω3-Adq) diet were mated for use in this study. To assess maternal behavior, nest shape was evaluated at a fixed time from gestational day (GD) 15 to postpartum day (PD) 13, and a retrieval test was conducted on PD 3. For neurochemical measurement, brains were removed from PD 1-6 dams and hippocampal fatty acids and hypothalamic oxytocin concentrations were assessed. RESULTS: Peripartum nest shape scores were similar to those reported previously (Harauma et al., 2016); nests in the ω3-Def group were small and of poor quality whereas those in the ω3-Adq group were large and elaborate. The inferiority of nest shape in the ω3-Def group continued from PD 0-7. In the retrieval test performed on PD 3, dams in the ω3-Def group took longer on several parameters compared with those in the ω3-Adq group, including time to make contact with pups (sniffing time), time to start retrieving the next pup (interval time), and time to retrieve the last pup to the nest (grouping time). Hypothalamic oxytocin concentrations on PD 1-6 were lower in the ω3-Def group than in the ω3-Adq group. DISCUSSION: Our data show that ω3 fatty acid deficiency reduces maternal behavior, a state that continued during pup rearing. This was supported by the observed decrease in hypothalamic oxytocin concentration in the ω3-Def group. These results suggest that ω3 fatty acid supplementation during the perinatal period is not only effective in delivering ω3 fatty acids to infants but is also necessary to activate high-quality parental behavior in mothers.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]