Hammock Elizabeth A D
Vanderbilt Kennedy Center and Department of Pediatrics, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, USA.
Neuropsychopharmacology. 2015 Jan;40(1):24-42. doi: 10.1038/npp.2014.120. Epub 2014 May 27.
The related neuropeptides oxytocin and vasopressin are involved in species-typical behavior, including social recognition behavior, maternal behavior, social bonding, communication, and aggression. A wealth of evidence from animal models demonstrates significant modulation of adult social behavior by both of these neuropeptides and their receptors. Over the last decade, there has been a flood of studies in humans also implicating a role for these neuropeptides in human social behavior. Despite popular assumptions that oxytocin is a molecule of social bonding in the infant brain, less mechanistic research emphasis has been placed on the potential role of these neuropeptides in the developmental emergence of the neural substrates of behavior. This review summarizes what is known and assumed about the developmental influence of these neuropeptides and outlines the important unanswered questions and testable hypotheses. There is tremendous translational need to understand the functions of these neuropeptides in mammalian experience-dependent development of the social brain. The activity of oxytocin and vasopressin during development should inform our understanding of individual, sex, and species differences in social behavior later in life.
相关神经肽催产素和加压素参与物种典型行为,包括社会识别行为、母性行为、社会联结、交流和攻击行为。来自动物模型的大量证据表明,这两种神经肽及其受体对成年社会行为有显著调节作用。在过去十年中,针对人类的大量研究也表明这些神经肽在人类社会行为中发挥作用。尽管人们普遍认为催产素是婴儿大脑中社会联结的分子,但对这些神经肽在行为神经基质发育出现过程中的潜在作用,较少有侧重于机制的研究。本综述总结了关于这些神经肽发育影响的已知和假设内容,并概述了重要的未解决问题和可检验假设。在理解这些神经肽在哺乳动物社会大脑经验依赖性发育中的功能方面,存在巨大的转化需求。发育过程中催产素和加压素的活性应有助于我们理解个体、性别和物种在生命后期社会行为上的差异。