Hurst Jane L
Mammalian Behaviour & Evolution Group, Department of Veterinary Preclinical Science, University of Liverpool, Neston, UK.
Behav Brain Res. 2009 Jun 25;200(2):295-303. doi: 10.1016/j.bbr.2008.12.020. Epub 2008 Dec 25.
Scents play key roles in mediating sexual behaviour in many vertebrates, both in the recognition of opposite sex conspecifics and in assessing the suitability of different individuals as potential mates. The recognition and assessment that underlies female attraction to male scents involves an important interaction between the main and accessory (vomeronasal) olfactory systems. Female mice gain information through the vomeronasal system on nasal contact with a scent source that is essential to stimulate attraction to an individual male's scent. Three highly polymorphic multigene families contribute involatile proteins and peptides to mouse scents that are detected through specific vomeronasal receptors during contact with scent. Major urinary proteins (MUPs) provide an individual genetic identity signature that underlies individual recognition and assessment of male competitive ability, kin recognition to avoid inbreeding, and genetic heterozygosity assessment. Familiar mates are recognised in the context of pregnancy block using MHC peptides, while exocrine-gland secreting peptides (ESPs) are likely to play additional roles in sexual assessment. By associating this involatile information in individual male scents, gained on initial scent contact, with the individual male's airborne volatile signature detected simultaneously through the main olfactory system, females subsequently recognise and are attracted by the individual male's airborne volatile signature alone. This allows much more rapid recognition of scents from familiar animals without requiring physical contact or processing through the vomeronasal system. Nonetheless, key information that induces attraction to a male's scent is held in involatile components detected through the vomeronasal system, allowing assessment of the genetic identity and attractiveness of each individual male.
气味在许多脊椎动物的性行为调节中起着关键作用,既体现在对异性同类的识别上,也体现在评估不同个体作为潜在配偶的适宜性方面。雌性对雄性气味产生吸引力的识别和评估过程涉及主嗅觉系统和辅助(犁鼻)嗅觉系统之间的重要相互作用。雌性小鼠通过犁鼻系统在鼻腔接触气味源时获取信息,这对于激发对单个雄性气味的吸引力至关重要。三个高度多态的多基因家族为小鼠气味贡献了不挥发的蛋白质和肽,在与气味接触时通过特定的犁鼻受体被检测到。主要尿蛋白(MUPs)提供了个体遗传身份特征,它是个体识别、雄性竞争能力评估、避免近亲繁殖的亲缘识别以及遗传杂合性评估的基础。在妊娠阻断的情况下,通过主要组织相容性复合体(MHC)肽识别熟悉的配偶,而外分泌腺分泌肽(ESPs)可能在性评估中发挥额外作用。通过将在初次气味接触时从单个雄性气味中获得的这种不挥发信息与同时通过主嗅觉系统检测到的单个雄性的空气传播挥发性特征联系起来,雌性随后仅通过单个雄性的空气传播挥发性特征就能识别并被其吸引。这使得在无需身体接触或通过犁鼻系统处理的情况下,能够更快地识别来自熟悉动物的气味。尽管如此,诱导对雄性气味产生吸引力的关键信息存在于通过犁鼻系统检测到的不挥发成分中,从而能够评估每个雄性个体的遗传身份和吸引力。