Early life conditions reduce similarity between reproductive partners in HPA axis response to stress

ElsevierVolume 162, June 2024, 105508Hormones and BehaviorAuthor links open overlay panel, , , Highlights•

Stress contagion is not thought to affect HPA axis responses to future stressors

We test whether stress contagion is long-lasting & affected by early life conditions

Individual stress-induced GCs were unaffected by breeding partners

Partners became more similar in stress-induced GC levels after breeding

Postnatal GC elevation in females reduced similarity between partners after breeding

Abstract

Social environments modulate endocrine function, yet it is unclear whether individuals can become like their social partners in how they physiologically respond to stressors. This social transmission of hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis reactivity could have long-term consequences for health and lifespan of individuals if their social partners react to stressors with an exaggerated HPA axis response. We tested whether glucocorticoid levels in response to stress of breeding partners changes after breeding depending on whether partners had similar or dissimilar postnatal conditions. We manipulated postnatal conditions by mimicking early life stress in zebra finch chicks (Taeniopygia guttata) via postnatal corticosterone exposure. When they reached adulthood, we created breeding pairs where the female and male had experienced either the same or different early life hormonal treatment (corticosterone or control). Before and after breeding, we obtained blood samples within 3 min and after 10 min or 30 min of restraint stress (baseline, cort10, cort30). We found that corticosterone levels of individuals in response to restraint were affected by their own and their partner's early life conditions, but did not change after breeding. However, across all pairs, partners became more similar in cort30 levels after breeding, although differences between partners in cort10 remained greater in pairs with a corticosterone-treated female. Thus, we show that HPA axis response to stressors in adulthood can be modulated by reproductive partners and that similarity between partners is reduced when females are postnatally exposed to elevated glucocorticoids.

Keywords

Corticosterone

Early life stress

Glucocorticoids

HPA axis

Physiological resonance

Social transmission

Stress contagion

Stress reactivity

© 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc.

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