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KMID : 0894520080120020117
Development & Reproduction
2008 Volume.12 No. 2 p.117 ~ p.124
Epigenetic Responses Programmed by Prenatal Stress : F©û Male Rat Model
Lee Sung-Ho

Abstract
The efficient strategies to cope with unpredictable and/or harmful environmental changes have been developed by every organism in order to ensure its survival and continuity of it¡¯s own species. As a results, all living things on earth maintain dynamically internal stability via a process termed ¡¯homeostasis¡¯ among physiological parameters despite of external environment changes. Stress is an emotional and physical response to threat homeostasis. Stress may have not only transient but rather permanent effect on the organism; recent evidence clearly show that prenatal stress could organize or imprint permanently physiological systems without any change in genetic codes, a process known as ¡¯epigenetic programming¡¯. In this review, a series of reproduction-associated events occurred in prenatally stressed male rats such as alteration in the structure of sexually dimorphic brain regions, modification of neurotransmitter metabolism, changes in reproductive endocrine status, and finally, disorders of sexual behavior will be introduced. The fetal brain is highly sensitive to prenatal programming and glucocorticoids in particular have powerful brain-programming properties. The chronic hyperactivation of fetal brain by maternal stress-induced glucocorticoid input will provide new program via increasing the neuroplasticities. This ¡®increased neuroplasticities¡¯ will be the basis for the ¡®increased phenotypic plasticities¡¯ rendering the organism¡¯s better adaptation to environmental challenges. In conclusion, organism who experienced ¡¯harsh¡¯ environment in his fetal life seems to give up a certain portion of reproductive competence to make good chance of survival in his future life by epigenetic (re)programming.
KEYWORD
Homeostasis, Prenatal stress, Epigenetic programming, Reproduction-associated events, Neuroplasticity
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