The emotional power of environmental sounds affects our sensory experiences

This 2015 Chinese/Australian study found:

“Human emotions systematically track changes in the acoustic environment, affecting not only how we experience those sounds but also how we perceive facial expressions in other people.

Three changes in acoustic attributes known to signal emotional states in speech and music [frequency spectrum, intensity, and rate] were imposed upon 24 environmental sounds.

Evolution promotes development in the direction toward selective advantage. Thus, it is reasonable to suggest that the capacity to track changes in the acoustic environment evolved before the development of a vocalization system for emotional communication.

Regardless of the evolutionary implications of the effect, the findings illustrate the emotional power of environmental sounds on both our experience of sounds and our evaluations of accompanying visual stimuli.”

Here are the sounds used in the study:

“Human actions (breathing, chatting, chewing, clapping, stepping, typing), animal sounds (bird, cat, cricket, horse, mosquito, rooster), machine noise (car engine, electrical drill, helicopter, jet plane, screeching tires, train), and sounds in nature (dripping water, rain, river, thunder, waves, wind)”


Does this emotional communication’s frequency spectrum, intensity, and rate affect your perception of her face?

http://www.pnas.org/content/112/47/14563.full “Human emotions track changes in the acoustic environment”

Mitochondria interface genetic/epigenetic responses to psychological stress

This 2015 Pennsylvania rodent study found:

Mitochondria can regulate complex whole-body physiological responses, impacting stress perception at the cellular and organismal levels.

Mitochondrial dysfunctions altered the

  1. hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal [HPA] axis, sympathetic adrenal–medullary activation and catecholamine levels,
  2. the inflammatory cytokine IL-6,
  3. circulating metabolites, and
  4. hippocampal gene expression

responses to stress.

Stress-induced

  1. neuroendocrine,
  2. inflammatory,
  3. metabolic, and
  4. transcriptional responses

coalesced into unique signatures that distinguish groups based on their mitochondrial genotype.”

The study’s design was comprehensive for the subject of mitochondrial function and stress response categories. It interrelated elements that had a common cause of stress, such as:

  • Hyperglycemia
  • Increased lipids
  • Corticosterone sensitivity
  • Epigenetic changes within the brain

The study’s Figure 6E was a hierarchical “heat map” of the correlations among the 77 stress-induced changes that were measured. Figure 6G presented these variables per the five mitochondrial genotypes (a control wild-type and four genetic dysfunctions). Many of the lines forming the hierarchy needed careful reading of the study’s interpretations.


I downgraded the study’s rating because the authors inappropriately forced the “allostatic load” buzzword into the Significance statement and otherwise informative Discussion section. The term refers to a hypothetical long-term situation, but the study’s experiments lasted 2 hours at most before the subjects were killed.

www.pnas.org/content/112/48/E6614.full “Mitochondrial functions modulate neuroendocrine, metabolic, inflammatory, and transcriptional responses to acute psychological stress”

Telomere dynamics, stress, and aging across generations

This 2015 Pennsylvania/North Dakota animal and human review noted:

“The mechanisms linking stress exposure to disease progression and ageing either within individuals or across generations are still unclear, but recent work suggests that telomere dynamics (length and loss rate) may play an important role.

Parental stress may directly influence the parental germline telomeres pre-fertilization, affecting the telomere length inherited by offspring. Alternatively, parental stress may affect telomere dynamics indirectly either pre- or post-natally. The physiological mechanisms by which stress elicits changes in telomere length are also diverse.

We need more information about how these effects vary between developmental stages, among individuals, and within tissues of individuals..to mitigate the effects of early life adversity on human health.”

I was disappointed that the reviewers chose Problematic research with telomere length as a reference. Then again, maybe their statement:

“how these traits are related to one another clearly deserves more study”

is a polite way of saying that study’s methodology was flawed?

Regarding evolutionary biology:

“While most evidence suggests that the effect of parental stress exposure on offspring telomeres is negative, it is important to remember that this is just one trait that can contribute to parental and offspring fitness.

Investment in traits that increase fitness is expected to be favoured, even if they come at a cost to traits associated with longevity, such as telomere length.”

A similar point was made in a reference of A study of DNA methylation and age that:

“Aging has no purpose (neither for individuals nor for group), no intention. Nature does not select for quasi-programs. It selects for robust developmental growth.”

 

http://rsbl.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/11/11/20150396 “Telomere dynamics may link stress exposure and ageing across generations”

Psychological therapy and DNA methylation

This 2015 worldwide human study was:

“The largest study to date investigating the role of HPA [hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal] axis related genes in response to a psychological therapy. Furthermore, this is the first study to demonstrate that DNA methylation changes may be associated with response to psychological therapies in a genotype-dependent manner.

In this study, we tested the association between polymorphisms of FKBP5 [a gene that produces a protein that dampens glucocorticoid receptor sensitivity primarily in areas of the limbic system such as the hippocampus and amygdala] and GR [glucocorticoid receptor gene] and response to CBT [cognitive behavior therapy] in children with anxiety disorders (N = 1,152), and examined change in DNA methylation at specific regions of these genes during the course of CBT in a subset of the sample (n = 98).

No significant association was found between GR methylation and response. Allele-specific change in FKBP5 methylation was associated with treatment response.”

Regarding “treatment response:”

“Subjects aged 5–18 (mean: 9.8 years) met DSM-IV criteria for primary diagnosis of an anxiety disorder.

Clinical severity ratings (CSRs) were usually based on composite parent and child reports, and were assigned on a scale of 0–8. [36] [linked below]

Treatment response was defined as the change in primary anxiety disorder severity from pretreatment to follow-up. A diagnosis was made when the child met diagnostic criteria and received a CSR of 4 or more. Remission was regarded as the absence of the primary anxiety according to diagnostic criteria, as determined by the clinicians at the follow-up interview.”


Scenarios where nine-year-olds and their parents may have benefited from skewing their “composite parent and child reports” either way:

  1. Parents benefited from an anxious-child report (financial support provided, social services provided, avoided undesirable activities like going to work, continued psychological dependence, provided victim celebrity, enabled their own problems)
  2. Parents benefited from a well-child report (freed up time to pursue desirable activities, financial relief, relief from court-ordered or social-services-required activities, covered up their own contributions to the child’s problems)
  3. Nine-year-olds benefited from an anxious report (relief from undesirable activities like school attendance, continued psychological dependence, provided victim celebrity, activities structured around their condition, enabled the parents’ problems)
  4. Nine-year-olds benefited from a well report (symptom reduction, met parental expectations, freed up time to pursue desirable activities, covered up the parents’ contributions to the child’s problems).

I wonder what “treatment response” criteria were available other than self-serving reports and “diagnostic criteria, as determined by the clinicians.” Every day medical personnel hear patients self-report conditions where biological measurements may confirm or indicate something different. Did the “diagnostic criteria, as determined by the clinicians” include comparisons to relevant biological measurements?


The related study linked below points out:

“Although CBT has been established as an efficacious treatment, roughly 40% of children retain their disorder after treatment.”

Its focus was also on predictors (other than genetic) of CBT outcomes.

Neither study provided evidence of attempts to find originating causes for the children’s conditions. Were the international CBT approaches only interested in treating symptoms?


http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/da.22430/full “HPA AXIS RELATED GENES AND RESPONSE TO PSYCHOLOGICAL THERAPIES: GENETICS AND EPIGENETICS”

Related 2015 study: http://www.jaacap.com/article/S0890-8567%2815%2900191-4/pdf “Clinical Predictors of Response to Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy in Pediatric Anxiety Disorders: The Genes for Treatment (GxT) Study”

Fetal exposure to sex hormones and female anxiety

This 2015 Swedish rodent study found:

“Women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) display high circulating androgen levels that may affect the fetus and increase the risk of mood disorders in offspring.

Although clinical data are inconsistent, there are indications that androgens play a crucial role in behavior and mood regulation in females.

Studies on the link between testosterone and anxiety behavior in males have generated inconsistent results.

Higher circulating testosterone has previously been reported in female rat PNA [prenatal androgen] offspring. This discrepancy may be a result of the higher doses of maternal testosterone (5 mg) used in the previous study compared with the present study (0.5 mg).

Although the anxiety-like behavior observed in the female PNA offspring in the present study cannot be directly explained by high circulating androgens, the reduced AR [androgen receptor] expression in the amygdala suggests a compensatory response to the high prenatal testosterone exposure, a result implicating the amygdala as the CNS site underlying the changes in anxiety in the PNA offspring. This idea is further strengthened by our experiment showing that subchronic testosterone exposure into amygdala is sufficient to produce anxiety-like behavior in adult females.

Maternal testosterone exposure causes anxiety-like behavior in female, and to a lesser extent male offspring, an effect that seems to occur during fetal life and to be mediated via AR in the amygdala, together with changes in ER [estrogen receptor] and in the serotonergic and GABAergic pathways in the amygdala and hippocampus of female PNA rats.”

The news coverage – too much testosterone caused anxiety-like symptoms in females whether they are adults or fetuses – was NOT what the study found. The headlines disregarded its caveat:

“The anxiety-like behavior observed in the female PNA offspring in the present study cannot be directly explained by high circulating androgens.”

I look forward to research on floor levels of testosterone, below which there are also adverse effects on females. There is such evidence, but would it play well with popular memes?

See Sex hormone exposure to the developing female fetus causes infertility in adulthood for another study that used the PCOS phenotype.

http://www.pnas.org/content/112/46/14348.full “Maternal testosterone exposure increases anxiety-like behavior and impacts the limbic system in the offspring”

Transgenerational epigenetic programming with stress and microRNA

This 2015 Pennsylvania rodent study found:

“Sperm miRs [microRNAs, a small non-coding RNA that has a role in gene expression] function to reduce maternal mRNA [messenger RNA, a large RNA that carries codes for protein production] stores in early zygotes, ultimately reprogramming gene expression in the offspring hypothalamus and recapitulating the offspring stress dysregulation phenotype.”

These researchers caused stress-induced changes at an early stage of embryonic development with microRNA injections. Resultant adverse effects weren’t observed until subjects were adults!

Most news coverage focused on it being a male’s stress, not a female’s, that affected a developing embryo. Either or both sexes can epigenetically disadvantage a fetus – okay.

Demonstrating how a damaging influence can begin immediately after conception, but symptoms didn’t present until adulthood made this study newsworthy.


Although the term “transgenerational” was used in the study’s title, abstract, and elsewhere, studied epigenetic effects were intergenerational rather than transgenerational. Per A review of epigenetic transgenerational inheritance of reproductive disease, for the term to apply, researchers need to provide evidence in at least the next 2 male or non-gestating female generations and/or 3 gestating female generations of:

“Altered epigenetic information between generations in the absence of continued environmental exposure.”


From a press release, a study coauthor who also coauthored How to make a child less capable even before they are born: stress the pregnant mother-to-be stated:

“Bale suspects that when a male experiences stress it may trigger the release of miRs contained in exosomes from epithelial cells that line the epididymis, the storage and maturation site for sperm between the testes and the vas deferens. These miRs may be incorporated into maturing sperm and influence development at fertilization.”

Not all stress-related gene expression in pituitary and adrenal glands differed.

http://www.pnas.org/content/112/44/13699.full “Transgenerational epigenetic programming via sperm microRNA recapitulates effects of paternal stress”

RNA as a proxy signal for context-specific biological activity

This 2015 Harvard/MIT rodent study was of long (more than 200 nucleotides) noncoding (non-protein coding) RNAs (ribonucleic acids). These are of interest because:

“Within the mammalian body, the largest repertoire and diversity of lncRNA genes outside the germ line occurs in the brain, where lncRNAs exhibit regional and cell-specific localization.

The expression patterns of lncRNAs may serve as a proxy signal for important, context-specific biological activity.”

The researchers explained what they could and couldn’t determine with current techniques and technologies:

“The whole-gene ablation method used here is often a first approach to determine the functionality of a locus.

Although each of these loci contains a lncRNA, it is important to consider that any observation resulting from this strategy could reflect the loss of any regulatory element in the deleted region.

The rate of lncRNA gene discovery has significantly outpaced our ability to evaluate both the physiological significance and function of these genes. It is difficult to predict whether the loss of any particular lncRNA locus will present a phenotype, but crucial information on the spatiotemporal dynamics of expression from each locus can provide significant direction and focus to downstream mechanistic studies by highlighting those loci most likely to have a physiological impact.

It is important to stress that no single method exists that can account for all possible mechanisms of action of a noncoding locus. Within these limits, the phenotypes observed after ablation of specific lncRNA loci confirm that expression of this class of noncoding RNAs can serve as a proxy signal to identify functional genomic loci with physiological relevance to disease and development, independent of whether this activity is directly ascribed to a functional lncRNA molecule.”

http://www.pnas.org/content/112/22/6855.full “Spatiotemporal expression and transcriptional perturbations by long noncoding RNAs in the mouse brain”

A missed opportunity to research the oxytocin receptor gene and autism

This 2013 study:

“Examined whether genetic variants of the OXTR [oxytocin receptor] affect face recognition memory in families with an autistic child.

We investigated whether common polymorphisms in the genes encoding the oxytocin and vasopressin 1a receptors influence social memory for faces.”

I feel that the researchers missed an opportunity to improve their assessment of the autism-related genetic contribution to the study’s findings by separating the degree of environmental influence on the oxytocin receptor gene expression, as did the How epigenetic DNA methylation of the oxytocin receptor gene affects the perception of anger and fear study.

An assessment of epigenetic DNA methylation of the oxytocin receptor gene may have been even more compelling because the researchers genetically sampled one non-autistic sibling in each of the autistic children’s families. I hope the study’s samples are still available, because they may offer the possibility of evaluating the contribution of the autistic children’s historical environment with potential confirmation from their siblings.

Both studies gave their subjects similar facial emotion recognition tests, with the current one deriving from findings about autism, and the second from findings about the amygdala. The studies also had common references, such as a 2010 study, A common allele in the oxytocin receptor gene (OXTR) impacts prosocial temperament and human hypothalamic-limbic structure and function.

http://www.pnas.org/content/111/5/1987.full “Common polymorphism in the oxytocin receptor gene (OXTR) is associated with human social recognition skills”

Can a Romanian orphan give informed consent to be an experimental subject?

This 2015 study used Romanian orphans as lab rats for findings of which I failed to see the value. The world didn’t really need any further research to demonstrate that foster care would be better for a child than staying in an orphanage.

The researchers placed the orphans in five separate stressful situations, and measured their cortisol and DHEA-S levels, along with their electrocardiograph and impedance cardiograph activity. The findings were:

“Children who were removed from the Romanian institutions and placed with foster parents before the age of 24 months had stress system responses similar to those of children being raised by families in the community.

The children raised in institutions showed blunted responses in the sympathetic nervous system, associated with the flight or fight response, and in the HPA axis, which regulates cortisol.”

One unsupported assertion from the researchers was:

“We provide evidence for a causal link between the early caregiving environment and stress response system reactivity in humans with effects that differ markedly from those observed in rodent models.”

The researchers stated that rodent studies have converged to find:

“Early-life adversity results in hyperreactivity of the sympathetic nervous system (SNS) and hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal (HPA) axis.”

It’s baloney that the same results from early life adversity in rodents haven’t also been present in humans. Even the lead researcher herself said in a news article:

“More significantly, McLaughlin said, their [the orphans] stress response systems might have been initially hyperactive at earlier points in development, then adapted to high levels of stress hormones.”

The difference was that the rodents were monitored 24/7 until researchers killed and dissected them. The children’s periods of adversity likely started while in the womb, and their lives had been monitored for research purposes sporadically after their births.

Everybody knows that just because adverse events and effects in these children’s lives weren’t recorded by researchers didn’t mean these effects weren’t present at some point.

Particularly irksome was another unsupported assertion from the lead reviewer:

“The children involved in the study are now about 16 years old, and researchers next plan to investigate whether puberty has an impact on their stress responses. It could have a positive effect, McLaughlin said, since puberty might represent another sensitive period when stress response systems are particularly tuned to environmental inputs. “It’s possible that the environment during that period could reverse the impacts of early adversity on the system,” she said.”

No, this is NOT possible. We may as well expect an apple to fall upward.

The impacts of early adversity persist with enduring physiological changes as shown in experimental studies. Studies have NOT provided evidence that the subjects’ environment can cause the effects of complete reversal of all these changes, no matter the stage of life of the subjects.

This point was addressed in The effects of early-life stress are permanent alterations in the child’s brain circuitry and function rodent study:

The current study manipulates the type and timing of a stressor and the specific task and age of testing to parallel early-life stress in humans reared in orphanages.

The results provide evidence of both early and persistent alterations in amygdala circuitry and function following early-life stress.

These effects are not reversed when the stressor is removed nor diminished with the development of prefrontal regulation regions.

That study had the same reviewer as the current study. The current study’s lead researcher knew or should have known of this and other relevant research. She knew or should have known of the irreversibility of critical periods, during which developments either occurred or were forever missed.

Did the lead researcher make assertions not supported by the study or relevant research – assertions made counter to her scientific knowledge – show her unease about treating the orphans as lab rats? Was there was some other agenda in play?

The larger problem was the study’s informed consent with this group of Romanian orphans. If you were in contact with a damaged person, and implicitly gave them hope that you would improve their life, then who are you as a feeling human being when you don’t personally carry through? Does the legal documentation matter?


Also, I’ve noticed problems with several studies that had this particular reviewer:

Add the current study to the list.

http://www.pnas.org/content/112/18/5637.full “Causal effects of the early caregiving environment on development of stress response systems in children”


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Genetic programming of hypothalamic neurons regulates food intake and body weight

These 2015 Michigan/Argentinian fish and rodent studies were of the genetic programming of specific neurons in the hypothalamus. The study linked below found:

“Food intake and body weight regulation depend on proper expression of the gene” in these neurons.

In a second study released at the same time from the same researchers:

“The researchers found that the two enhancers act in ways that complement one another, both encouraging the expression of the Pomc gene at key times. One of the two is found in the same form among all mammals, the other among all placental mammals – suggesting that they’ve been kept intact throughout the evolutionary process.”

Genetic programming of these neurons begins during early brain development. One of the researchers said:

“This work represents the first example of a neuron-specific gene in vertebrates where we have found both the enhancers and a shared transcription factor that control gene expression in the developing brain and then throughout the life span of the adult.”

The first study showed that if the genetic expression of these hypothalamic neurons was disrupted, the individual lost control of their eating (hyperphagia) and the usual result was severe obesity:

“We don’t know, but we think it likely, that it [regulation of these specific hypothalamic neurons in humans] may be similar to the mouse model, where its role is like a dial, with a linear relationship between the amount of Pomc [the gene] expression and the degree of obesity.”

I hope that when extending this research to humans, the researchers don’t exclude emotional content like most studies involving areas of the limbic system have done. Everyone has feelings intermixed with eating and foods. It’s a great disservice to have publicly funded studies not include aspects of emotion that could potentially help people.

http://www.pnas.org/content/112/15/E1861.full “Islet 1 specifies the identity of hypothalamic melanocortin neurons and is critical for normal food intake and adiposity in adulthood”

The hypothalamus’ role in how calorie restriction delays aging

This 2015 Portuguese rodent study showed the underlying mechanism to explain why restricting calories delays aging.

A calorie reduction of 20 to 40% increased production of a normally occurring molecule (neuropeptide Y) in the hypothalamus part of the limbic system. The increased amounts of the molecule stimulated autophagy (the breakdown and recycling of cellular components) in hypothalamic neurons.

“Because both hypothalamic autophagy and neuropeptide Y levels decrease with age..modulation of hypothalamic neuropeptide Y levels may be considered a potential strategy to produce protective effects against hypothalamic impairments associated with age and to delay aging.”

http://www.pnas.org/content/112/13/E1642.full “Neuropeptide Y stimulates autophagy in hypothalamic neurons”

Epigenetic DNA methylation and demethylation with the developing fetus

This extremely dense and informative 2014 UK summary study provided details about genomic imprinting:

“An unusual epigenetic process in that it is heritable and results in autosomal gene expression according to parent of origin.”

Several notes of interest:

  • Figure 3 had a fascinating sketch of how the fetus caused the mother’s hypothalamus to:

    “Determine forward maternal planning by directing/orchestrating maternal physiology and postnatal maternalism to synchronize with development of the fetus.”

  • Figure 4 followed up with a flowchart of how – with a female fetus – coexistence of three matrilineal generations in the pregnant female (her, the fetus, and the grandmother’s influence on the developing fetus’ ovarian oocytes) enabled intergenerational forward planning.
  • The study briefly noted significance of genomic imprinting on male sexual behavior, where, if processes didn’t proceed normally at this early stage of a male fetus’ development, could result in suboptimal adult behavior that didn’t change with experience.

F4.large

I’ll quote a few other unrelated passages that caught my eye.

“Reproductive success of mammals also places a considerable burden on matrilineal time and energy, with some 95% of mammalian female adult life committed to pregnancy, lactation, and maternal care.

Offspring that receive optimal nourishment and improved maternal care will be predisposed to develop a hypothalamus that is both genetically and epigenetically predisposed to this same type of good mothering.

The fetus controls its own destiny in times of acute starvation, especially in the last trimester of pregnancy, by short-term sacrifice of its placenta to preserve resources critical for brain development.”

http://www.pnas.org/content/112/22/6834.full “Genomic imprinting, action, and interaction of maternal and fetal genomes”


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What is the purpose of music? A review of evolutionary and pleasurable research findings

Ever wonder what happens in your brain and body when you get chills from a musical performance?

This 2013 summary review of 126 studies provided details of brain areas that contribute to our enjoyment of music.

Much of the review addressed Darwin’s observation that music had no readily apparent functional consequence and no clear-cut adaptive function. The researchers noted that:

“There is scant evidence that other species possess the mental machinery to decode music in the way humans do, or to derive enjoyment from it.”


The reasons why different types of music affect us differently are similar to the findings of the Reciprocity behaviors differ as to whether we seek cerebral vs. limbic system rewards study.

Here are the “We seek limbic system rewards” similarities:

“The nucleus accumbens played an important role with both familiar and novel music. In the case of familiar music, hemodynamic activity in the nucleus accumbens was associated with increasing pleasure, and maximally expressed during the experience of chills, which represent the peak emotional response; these were the same regions that showed dopamine release. The nucleus accumbens is tightly connected with subcortical limbic areas of the brain, implicated in processing, detecting, and expressing emotions, including the amygdala and hippocampus. It is also connected to the hypothalamus, insula, and anterior cingulate cortex, all of which are implicated in controlling the autonomic nervous system, and may be responsible for the psychophysiological phenomena associated with listening to music and emotional arousal.”

Here is the “We seek cerebral rewards” part.

“Finally, the nucleus accumbens is tightly integrated with cortical areas implicated in “high-level” processing of emotions that integrate information from various sources, including the orbital and ventromedial frontal lobe. These areas are largely implicated in assigning and maintaining reward value to stimuli and may be critical in evaluating the significance of abstract stimuli that we consider pleasurable.”

http://www.pnas.org/content/110/Supplement_2/10430.full “From perception to pleasure: Music and its neural substrates”

If research provides evidence for the causes of stress-related disorders, why only focus on treating the symptoms?

This 2014 rodent research reliably induced many disorders common to humans. Here are some post-birth problems the researchers caused, primarily by applying different types of stress, as detailed in the study’s supplementary material:

Yet the researchers’ goal was to identify a brain receptor for:

“Novel therapeutic targets for stress-related disorders.”

In other words, develop new drugs to treat the symptoms.


Where are the studies that have goals to prevent these common problems being caused in humans by humans?

Where is the research on treatments to reverse the enduring physiological impacts to stress by treating the causes?


What do you think of this excerpt?

“Accumulating evidence suggests that traumatic events particularly during early life (e.g., parental loss or neglect) coupled with genetic factors are important risk factors for the development of depression and anxiety disorders.

Moreover, the brain is particularly vulnerable to the effects of stress during this period.

Maternal separation in rodents is a useful model of early-life stress that results in enduring physiological and behavioral changes that persist into adulthood, including increased hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal (HPA)–axis sensitivity, increased anxiety, and visceral hypersensitivity.”

http://www.pnas.org/content/111/42/15232.fullGABAB(1) receptor subunit isoforms differentially regulate stress resilience”

How to make a child less capable even before they are born: stress the pregnant mother-to-be

This 2014 rodent study showed how to make a less-capable pup by stressing the mother early in gestation. The study centered on a placental enzyme (OGT) that translates a mother’s stress into neuroprogramming of her developing fetus.

One finding was that this enzyme was less plentiful when the fetus was male compared with female.

Another finding was that the enzyme was less plentiful when the mother was stressed early in gestation, compared with unstressed mothers.

Informed by the first two findings, the researchers studied the placentae of male pups where the mother was stressed early in gestation. They found that these placentae had lower levels of an enzyme (Hsd17b3) that converts the precursor androstenedione into testosterone.

The resultant finding was that the male pups of stressed mothers had lower levels of testosterone than the control group of male pups.

A fourth finding was that offspring of both sexes born with a placenta where the OGT enzyme was less plentiful had 10-20% less body weight, a condition that developed after weaning. The researchers attributed this finding to reduced mitochondrial function in the hypothalamus compared with normal mice.

http://www.pnas.org/content/111/26/9639.full “Targeted placental deletion of OGT recapitulates the prenatal stress phenotype including hypothalamic mitochondrial dysfunction”