Institute for Biogenesis Research, John A. Burns School of Medicine, University of Hawaii, Honolulu, HI 96822, USA.
Psychoneuroendocrinology. 2012 Mar;37(3):383-95. doi: 10.1016/j.psyneuen.2011.07.009. Epub 2011 Jul 30.
Many sex differences can be found in the expression of aggression and parental nurturing behaviors. It is important to determine if these are modulated by prenatal conditions. Here, using assisted reproduction technologies, we generated females that were (mixed-sex) or were not (same-sex) exposed to males during fetal development, raised them by cross fostering among fosters' own female only pups to control for effects of postnatal environment, and compared their reproductive abilities and behavior. There were no differences between females from the two prenatal conditions in estrus cycle length and length of time spent at individual estrus cycle stages. Both types of females had similar ovulation efficiency and bred equally well yielding comparable litter size and progeny sex ratio. Females from the two prenatal conditions were also indistinguishable in social behavior and exhibited normal social responses towards unfamiliar females in the three-chamber social approach and social proximity tests. When urine was collected from both types of females and used as a point source in a scent-marking paradigm, exposed males showed a similar distribution and extent of urinary scent marking in response to urine from each type of female but tended to engage in higher durations of sniffing the urine from same-sex females. When females were tested in a resident-intruder paradigm 3 days after giving birth, same-sex females exhibited enhancement of pup grooming and an overall decrease of non-pup activity prior to male intruder introduction, and after introduction were more defensive as evidenced by higher rates of burying, open-mouth threat/lunges, and attacks towards the male, and decreased latencies to display these defensive behaviors. Our results suggest that females devoid of male exposure during fetal development have reproductive abilities similar to those of females from mixed-sex pregnancies, and have normal social interactions with other females. However, they exhibit hyper-maternal behavior both in terms of the care and defense of pups in front of a male intruder, and potentially produce a pheromonal milieu that renders them more attractive to males during olfactory investigations.
许多性别差异可以在攻击和父母养育行为的表达中找到。重要的是要确定这些差异是否受到产前条件的调节。在这里,我们使用辅助生殖技术,产生了在胎儿发育过程中(混合性别)或未(同性)暴露于雄性的雌性,通过跨寄养在寄养者自己的雌性幼崽中抚养它们,以控制产后环境的影响,并比较它们的生殖能力和行为。在发情周期长度和处于个体发情周期阶段的时间方面,来自两种产前条件的雌性之间没有差异。两种类型的雌性都具有相似的排卵效率,并且繁殖能力相同,产生相似的产仔数和后代性别比。来自两种产前条件的雌性在社会行为方面也没有区别,在三腔社会接近和社会接近测试中对陌生雌性表现出正常的社会反应。当从两种类型的雌性收集尿液并将其用作气味标记范式中的点状源时,暴露的雄性对来自每种类型雌性的尿液表现出相似的分布和尿液气味标记程度,但倾向于对来自同性雌性的尿液进行更长时间的嗅探。当雌性在分娩后 3 天进行居民-入侵者测试时,同性雌性在雄性入侵者介绍之前表现出增强的幼崽梳理行为,以及总体上减少非幼崽活动,并且在介绍之后表现出更高的防御性,表现为更高的掩埋率、张口威胁/猛扑率,以及对雄性的攻击率,并且降低了表现出这些防御行为的潜伏期。我们的结果表明,在胎儿发育过程中缺乏雄性暴露的雌性具有与来自混合性别妊娠的雌性相似的生殖能力,并且与其他雌性进行正常的社交互动。然而,它们在面对雄性入侵者时表现出过度的母性行为,无论是在对幼崽的照顾和防御方面,还是在潜在地产生一种使它们在嗅觉调查中对雄性更具吸引力的信息素环境方面。