Bojana Zupan, Paul Bergin, Emily Pickup, Miklós Tóth, David E. Cohen, Melissa D. Docampo, Kimon V. Argyropoulos, Luendreo Barboza, Judit Gal Toth, Nicholas Fancher, Michele Alves-Bezerra, Qiuying Chen, Steven S. Gross, Marcel R.M. van den Brink, Faten A. Taki, Abbi Hiller, and Katherine Lopez
Summary Regular physical activity improves physical and mental health. Here we found that the effect of physical activity extends to the next generation. Voluntary wheel running of dams, from postpartum day 2 to weaning, increased the social dominance and reproductive success, but not the physical/metabolic health, of their otherwise sedentary offspring. The individual's own physical activity did not improve dominance status. Maternal exercise did not disrupt maternal care or the maternal and offspring microbiota. Rather, the development of dominance behavior in the offspring of running mothers could be explained by the reduction of LIF, CXCL1, and CXCL2 cytokines in breast milk. These data reveal a cytokine-mediated lactocrine pathway that responds to the mother's postpartum physical activity and programs offspring social dominance. As dominance behaviors are highly relevant to the individual's survival and reproduction, lactocrine programming could be an evolutionary mechanism by which a mother promotes the social rank of her offspring., Graphical Abstract, Highlights • Maternal postpartum wheel running enhances male offspring social dominance • Maternal postpartum running promotes offspring reproductive fitness • Maternal postpartum running has no effect on maternal care and gut microbiota • Maternal running programs offspring social dominance via specific milk cytokines, Biological Sciences; Behavioral Neuroscience; Immunology