Ehrhardt Annette, Wang Bin, Leung Marie J, Schrader John W
The Biomedical Research Centre, University of British Columbia, 2222 Health Sciences Mall, Vancouver, V6T 1Z3, Canada.
BMC Neurosci. 2015 Oct 21;16:68. doi: 10.1186/s12868-015-0209-8.
The molecular mechanisms that determine social behavior are poorly understood. Pheromones play a critical role in social recognition in most animals, including mice, but how these are converted into behavioral responses is largely unknown. Here, we report that the absence of the small GTPase M-Ras affects social behavior in mice.
In their interactions with other males, Mras(-/-) males exhibited high levels of territorial aggression and social investigations, and increased fear-related behavior. They also showed increased mating behavior with females. Curiously, increased aggression and mating behaviors were only observed when Mras(-/-) males were paired with Mras(-/-) partners, but were significantly reduced when paired with wild-type (WT) mice. Since mice use pheromonal cues to identify other individuals, we explored the possibility that pheromone detection may be altered in Mras(-/-) mice. Unlike WT mice, Mras(-/-) did not show a preference for exploring unfamiliar urinary pheromones or unfamiliar isogenic mice. Although this could indicate that vomeronasal function and/or olfactory learning may be compromised in Mras(-/-) mice, these observations were not fully consistent with the differential behavioral responses to WT and Mras(-/-) interaction partners by Mras(-/-) males. In addition, induction of c-fos upon pheromone exposure or in response to mating was similar in WT and Mras (-/-) mice, as was the ex vivo expansion of neural progenitors with EGF. This indicated that acute pheromone detection and processing was likely intact. However, urinary metabolite profiles differed between Mras(-/-) and WT males.
The changes in behaviors displayed by Mras(-/-) mice are likely due to a complex combination of factors that may include an inherent predisposition to increased aggression and sexual behavior, and the production of distinct pheromones that could override the preference for unfamiliar social odors. Olfactory and/or social learning processes may thus be compromised in Mras(-/-) mice.
决定社会行为的分子机制尚不清楚。信息素在包括小鼠在内的大多数动物的社会识别中起着关键作用,但它们如何转化为行为反应在很大程度上仍不为人知。在此,我们报告小GTP酶M-Ras的缺失会影响小鼠的社会行为。
在与其他雄性小鼠的互动中,Mras(-/-)雄性小鼠表现出高度的领地攻击性和社会探究行为,以及与恐惧相关行为的增加。它们与雌性小鼠的交配行为也有所增加。奇怪的是,只有当Mras(-/-)雄性小鼠与Mras(-/-)伙伴配对时,才会观察到攻击性和交配行为的增加,而与野生型(WT)小鼠配对时则显著减少。由于小鼠利用信息素线索来识别其他个体,我们探讨了Mras(-/-)小鼠中信息素检测可能发生改变的可能性。与WT小鼠不同,Mras(-/-)小鼠对探索陌生尿液信息素或陌生同基因小鼠没有偏好。虽然这可能表明犁鼻器功能和/或嗅觉学习在Mras(-/-)小鼠中可能受损,但这些观察结果与Mras(-/-)雄性小鼠对WT和Mras(-/-)互动伙伴的不同行为反应并不完全一致。此外,WT和Mras(-/-)小鼠在接触信息素或交配时c-fos的诱导情况相似,用表皮生长因子(EGF)进行神经祖细胞的体外扩增也是如此。这表明急性信息素检测和处理可能是完整的。然而,Mras(-/-)和WT雄性小鼠的尿液代谢物谱不同。
Mras(-/-)小鼠表现出的行为变化可能归因于多种因素的复杂组合,这些因素可能包括增加攻击性和性行为的内在倾向,以及产生独特的信息素,这些信息素可能会超越对陌生社会气味的偏好。因此,Mras(-/-)小鼠的嗅觉和/或社会学习过程可能受损。