Children form a strong attachment to their caregiver-even when that caretaker is abusive. Paradoxically, despite the trauma experienced within this relationship, the child develops a preference for trauma-linked cues-a phenomenon known as trauma bonding. Although infant trauma compromises neurobehavioral development, the mechanisms underlying the interaction between infant trauma bonding (i.e., learned preference for trauma cues) and the long-term effects of trauma (i.e., depressive-like behavior, amygdala dysfunction) are unknown. We modeled infant trauma bonding by using odor-shock conditioning in rat pups, which engages the attachment system and produces a life-long preference for the odor that was paired with shock. In adulthood, this trauma-linked odor rescues depressive-like behavior and amygdala dysfunction, reduces corticosterone (CORT) levels, and exerts repair-related changes at the molecular level. Amygdala microarray after rescue implicates serotonin (5-HT) and glucocorticoids (GCs), and a causal role was verified through microinfusions. Blocking amygdala 5-HT eliminates the rescue effect; increasing amygdala 5-HT and blocking systemic CORT mimics it. Our findings suggest that infant trauma cues share properties with antidepressants and safety signals and provide insight into mechanisms by which infant trauma memories remain powerful throughout life.E arly-life trauma is associated with compromised neurobehavioral development and vulnerability to later-life psychiatric disorders like depression (1-5). Long-lasting effects of infant trauma relevant to depression include disruptions in social behavior, alterations in the serotonin (5-HT) system, and amygdala dysfunction (2, 5-8), which have been replicated by animal models (9-15). Paradoxically, trauma-linked cues-even those associated with abusive attachment-can elicit strong attraction and feelings of comfort in humans (16,17). Furthermore, a lifelong attraction to trauma-linked cues has also been demonstrated in rodent models of infant trauma, which suggests that sensory cues learned during infancy alter adult behaviors and amygdala activity (12,18,19).To explore the enduring effects of infant trauma and the mechanisms underlying their modulation by infant trauma-linked cues, we used an odor-learning paradigm during the sensitive period for attachment learning in rat pups, postnatal (PN) days 8-12, which is characterized by rapid and robust odor-preference learning that extends to aversive stimuli (14,(20)(21)(22). Specifically, we used infant olfactory classical conditioning in which a novel peppermint odor is paired with a mild shock (0.5 mA, 1s) to produce a preferred odor that functions behaviorally as a maternal odor and results in neural activation comparable with that induced by natural maternal odor (20,(23)(24)(25). During the sensitive period, low endogenous levels of corticosterone (CORT) and attenuated shock-induced CORT release prevent the infant amygdala from exhibiting the learning-induced plasticity required for avoidance learning (1...