The Yin and Yang of the oxytocin and stress systems: opposites, yet interdependent and intertwined determinants of lifelong health trajectories

Front Endocrinol (Lausanne). 2024 Apr 16:15:1272270. doi: 10.3389/fendo.2024.1272270. eCollection 2024.

Abstract

During parturition and the immediate post-partum period there are two opposite, yet interdependent and intertwined systems that are highly active and play a role in determining lifelong health and behaviour in both the mother and her infant: the stress and the anti-stress (oxytocin) system. Before attempting to understand how the environment around birth determines long-term health trajectories, it is essential to understand how these two systems operate and how they interact. Here, we discuss together the hormonal and neuronal arms of both the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis and the oxytocinergic systems and how they interact. Although the HPA axis and glucocorticoid stress axis are well studied, the role of oxytocin as an extremely powerful anti-stress hormone deserves more attention. It is clear that these anti-stress effects depend on oxytocinergic nerves emanating from the supraoptic nucleus (SON) and paraventricular nucleus (PVN), and project to multiple sites at which the stress system is regulated. These, include projections to corticotropin releasing hormone (CRH) neurons within the PVN, to the anterior pituitary, to areas involved in sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous control, to NA neurons in the locus coeruleus (LC), and to CRH neurons in the amygdala. In the context of the interaction between the HPA axis and the oxytocin system birth is a particularly interesting period as, for both the mother and the infant, both systems are very strongly activated within the same narrow time window. Data suggest that the HPA axis and the oxytocin system appear to interact in this early-life period, with effects lasting many years. If mother-child skin-to-skin contact occurs almost immediately postpartum, the effects of the anti-stress (oxytocin) system become more prominent, moderating lifelong health trajectories. There is clear evidence that HPA axis activity during this time is dependent on the balance between the HPA axis and the oxytocin system, the latter being reinforced by specific somatosensory inputs, and this has long-term consequences for stress reactivity.

Keywords: HPA axis; developmental origins of health and disease; early life adversity; limbic system; oxytocin system; somatosensory nerves; stress.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Hypothalamo-Hypophyseal System* / metabolism
  • Hypothalamo-Hypophyseal System* / physiology
  • Oxytocin* / metabolism
  • Pituitary-Adrenal System* / metabolism
  • Pituitary-Adrenal System* / physiology
  • Pregnancy
  • Stress, Physiological / physiology
  • Stress, Psychological / metabolism
  • Yin-Yang

Substances

  • Oxytocin

Grants and funding

The author(s) declare financial support was received for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. The work of JT on the long-term consequences of ELA was funded by FNR-CORE (C20/BM/14766620 “ImmunoTwin”; C16/BM/11342695 “MetCOEPs”; C12/BM/3985792 “EpiPath”) and FNR-INTER (INTER/ANR/16/11568350 “MADAM”). MG, JC-A and JT are Management Committee members and KU-M is a member of the EU funded COST action CA18211 “Devotion” focused on early-life and birth-associated trauma.