Bosch Oliver J, Nair Hemanth P, Ahern Todd H, Neumann Inga D, Young Larry J
Department of Behavioural Neuroendocrinology, University of Regensburg, Universitätsstr. 31, Regensburg 93040, Germany.
Neuropsychopharmacology. 2009 May;34(6):1406-15. doi: 10.1038/npp.2008.154. Epub 2008 Oct 15.
Social relationships significantly influence physiology and behavior, including the hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal axis, anxiety, and mental health. Disruption of social bonds through separation or death often results in profound grieving, depression, and physical illness. As the monogamous prairie vole forms enduring, selective pair bonds with the mating partner, they provide an animal model to study the physiological consequences of pair bonding and, thus, the loss of the bonded partner. Male prairie voles were paired with a novel female or male sibling. After 5 days, half of the males of each group were separated from the partner. Elevated plus-maze, forced swim, and tail suspension tests were used to assess anxiety-like and passive stress-coping behaviors indicative of depressive-like behavior. Following 4 days of separation from the female but not the male partner, experimental males displayed increased passive stress-coping. This effect was abolished by long-term intracerebroventricular infusion of a nonselective corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) receptor antagonist without disrupting the bond itself. Both CRF type 1 and 2 receptors were involved in the emergence of passive stress-coping behavior. Furthermore, pairing with a female was associated with elevated CRF mRNA in the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis, and partner loss elicited a pronounced increase in circulating corticosteroid and adrenal weight. We speculate that the CRF system may mediate an aversive affect following separation from the female partner, which may facilitate proximity seeking between the pair-bonded individuals. Hence, the prairie vole model may provide insights into brain mechanisms involved in the psychopathological consequences of partner loss.
社会关系对生理和行为有显著影响,包括下丘脑 - 垂体 - 肾上腺轴、焦虑和心理健康。通过分离或死亡破坏社会纽带往往会导致深刻的悲伤、抑郁和身体疾病。由于一夫一妻制的草原田鼠会与交配伴侣形成持久、选择性的配对关系,它们为研究配对关系的生理后果以及配对伴侣丧失的生理后果提供了一个动物模型。雄性草原田鼠与一只陌生的雌性或雄性同胞配对。5天后,每组中的一半雄性与伴侣分离。使用高架十字迷宫、强迫游泳和悬尾试验来评估类似焦虑和被动应激应对行为,这些行为表明存在类似抑郁的行为。在与雌性但不是雄性伴侣分离4天后,实验雄性表现出被动应激应对增加。长期脑室内注射非选择性促肾上腺皮质激素释放因子(CRF)受体拮抗剂可消除这种效应,且不会破坏配对关系本身。CRF 1型和2型受体均参与了被动应激应对行为的出现。此外,与雌性配对与终纹床核中CRF mRNA升高有关,伴侣丧失会导致循环皮质类固醇和肾上腺重量显著增加。我们推测,CRF系统可能介导了与雌性伴侣分离后的厌恶情绪,这可能促进配对个体之间的亲近寻求。因此,草原田鼠模型可能为研究伴侣丧失的心理病理后果所涉及的脑机制提供见解。