6533b86dfe1ef96bd12ca6f0

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Les comportements préalables à la prise lactée chez le souriceau : caractérisation de sécrétions maternelles réactogènes et implication de l'expérience néonatale

Syrina Al Aïn

subject

[SDV.SA]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Agricultural sciencesAmniotic fluidSouris (Mus musculus)[SHS.PSY]Humanities and Social Sciences/PsychologyNursingDéveloppement des préférencesInteractions mère-jeune[SHS.PSY] Humanities and Social Sciences/Psychology[ SHS.PSY ] Humanities and Social Sciences/PsychologyMouse (Mus musculus)[ SDV.MHEP ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Human health and pathologyAllaitementMother-infant interactionSalivaLiquide amniotique[ SDV.SA ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Agricultural sciencesSalive[SDV.SA] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Agricultural sciences[SDV.MHEP] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Human health and pathologyColostrumOlfactionMilkDevelopment of preferencesComportement de tétée[SDV.MHEP]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Human health and pathologySucking behaviorLait

description

Birth is one of the most delicate periods mammalian infants have to deal with. Newborns have then to adapt physiologically and behaviorally to the aerial environment, and one of their first challenges is to ingest colostrum and milk. It is paradoxical that the survival of pups is conditioned by the success of this first suckling, and that we have so little understanding of the stimuli that underlie and promote it. Thus, the present work aims to contribute to answer how immature and naïve newborns do manage to orient to a nipple, to grasp it, and to suckle efficiently? This general issue will be addressed in the mouse in focusing on: i) the nature of the chemical substrates that newborn mice use to reach nipples; ii) whether the attractive potency of these substrates changes as a function of development; and iii) whether exposure effects underly the establishment of early adaptive responses? The results highlight that mammary odors of lactating females are more behaviorally active for newly born pups than those of non-lactating females. Secondly, amniotic and milk odors provoke the first nipple grasping in newborns right at birth, while maternal and pup salivary odors induce this behavior after short sucking experience. Thirdly, younger pups on postnatal day (P) 0, 2 and 6 (with sucking experience), display a selective orientation toward the odor of milk collected during early-lactation rather than to the odor of late-lactation milk, whereas older pups P15 do not exhibit any selective attraction to these odors. To summarize, some of the biological substrates which are present on a nursing mouse nipples are attractive immediately after birth, while some others need to be postnatally learned to be active. Thus, the initial nipple search response of mouse pups is controlled by processes involving postnatal learning. At this stage, the involvement of prenatal learning and of predisposed processes that do not depend on previous exposure effect are not conclusive, although not excluded. These results show highly sophisticated learning abilities in a newborn mammal

https://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00920664/document