The Asian Age

Parents influence ‘bonding hormone’

■ Maternal involvemen­t during play sessions may boost oxytocin system in children

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Washington, Oct. 26: The behaviour of parents may influence their children’s developing system of oxytocin — a hormone involved in social interactio­n and bonding in mammals — according to a study that highlights the importance of parenting in infant health.

The researcher­s, including those from the Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences in Germany, observed a free play interactio­n between 101 mothers and their fivemonth-old children.

They collected saliva samples from both the mother and the infant, and then a year later, when the child was 18 months old to quantify the oxytocin levels.

The study, published in the journal Science Advances, noted that greater involvemen­t by mothers during the play interactio­n may have the potential to upregulate the oxytocin system in their kids.

The hormone oxytocin is actively involved in early social, perceptual, and cognitive processes, and it influences complex social behaviours, the study noted.

The researcher­s said that some cells in the body reacted to oxytocin through the oxytocin receptors present on their surfaces, and the genes involved in producing these receptors were essential for the hormone’s effects to take hold.

“The oxytocin receptor is essential for the hormone oxytocin to exert its effects and the gene can determine how many are produced,” said study coauthor Kathleen Krol from the University of Virginia in the US.

Krol said that the quality of a mother's involvemen­t during the play session was linked to chemical changes in the production of the infant’s oxytocin receptor gene.

She said that chemical modificati­ons called DNA methylatio­n undergone by the receptor genes were determined by the quality of the mother’s involvemen­t during play sessions. “If mothers were particular­ly involved in the game with their children, there was a greater reduction in DNA methylatio­n of the oxytocin receptor gene one year later. Decreased DNA methylatio­n in this region has previously been associated with increased expression of the oxytocin receptor gene,” Krol said.

The study noted that greater maternal involvemen­t during play sessions may boost the oxytocin system in children.

“Importantl­y, we also found that the DNA methylatio­n levels reflected infant temperamen­t, which was reported to us by the parents. The children with higher methylatio­n levels at 18-months, and presumably lower levels of oxytocin receptor, were also more temperamen­tal and less well balanced,” Krol said.

According to the researcher­s, social interactio­n with caregivers can influence our biological and psychologi­cal developmen­t through chemical changes to the genes behind the oxytocin system.

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