Johnson Zachary V, Walum Hasse, Jamal Yaseen A, Xiao Yao, Keebaugh Alaine C, Inoue Kiyoshi, Young Larry J
Center for Translational Social Neuroscience, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Yerkes National Primate Research Center, Emory University, Atlanta, GA 30329, USA; Silvio O. Conte Center for Oxytocin and Social Cognition, Emory University, Atlanta, GA 30329, USA.
Center for Translational Social Neuroscience, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Yerkes National Primate Research Center, Emory University, Atlanta, GA 30329, USA.
Horm Behav. 2016 Mar;79:8-17. doi: 10.1016/j.yhbeh.2015.11.011. Epub 2015 Nov 28.
Oxytocin (OT) is a deeply conserved nonapeptide that acts both peripherally and centrally to modulate reproductive physiology and sociosexual behavior across divergent taxa, including humans. In vertebrates, the distribution of the oxytocin receptor (OTR) in the brain is variable within and across species, and OTR signaling is critical for a variety of species-typical social and reproductive behaviors, including affiliative and pair bonding behaviors in multiple socially monogamous lineages of fishes, birds, and mammals. Early work in prairie voles suggested that the endogenous OT system modulates mating-induced partner preference formation in females but not males; however, there is significant evidence that central OTRs may modulate pair bonding behavior in both sexes. In addition, it remains unclear how transient windows of central OTR signaling during sociosexual interaction modulate neural activity to produce enduring shifts in sociobehavioral phenotypes, including the formation of selective social bonds. Here we re-examine the role of the central OT system in partner preference formation in male prairie voles using a selective OTR antagonist delivered intracranially. We then use the same antagonist to examine how central OTRs modulate behavior and immediate early gene (Fos) expression, a metric of neuronal activation, in males during brief sociosexual interaction with a female. Our results suggest that, as in females, OTR signaling is critical for partner preference formation in males and enhances correlated activation across sensory and reward processing brain areas during sociosexual interaction. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that central OTR signaling facilitates social bond formation by coordinating activity across a pair bonding neural network.
催产素(OT)是一种高度保守的九肽,在包括人类在内的不同分类群中,它在周围和中枢发挥作用,调节生殖生理和社会性行为。在脊椎动物中,催产素受体(OTR)在大脑中的分布在物种内部和物种之间存在差异,并且OTR信号传导对于多种物种典型的社会和生殖行为至关重要,包括鱼类、鸟类和哺乳动物的多个社会一夫一妻制谱系中的亲和行为和配对结合行为。早期对草原田鼠的研究表明,内源性OT系统调节雌性而非雄性的交配诱导的伴侣偏好形成;然而,有大量证据表明,中枢OTR可能调节两性的配对结合行为。此外,尚不清楚在社会性行为相互作用期间,中枢OTR信号传导的短暂窗口如何调节神经活动,以在社会行为表型中产生持久变化,包括选择性社会纽带的形成。在这里,我们使用颅内注射的选择性OTR拮抗剂,重新审视中枢OT系统在雄性草原田鼠伴侣偏好形成中的作用。然后,我们使用相同的拮抗剂来研究中枢OTR如何在雄性与雌性短暂的社会性行为相互作用期间调节行为和即时早期基因(Fos)表达(一种神经元激活指标)。我们的结果表明,与雌性一样,OTR信号传导对于雄性伴侣偏好的形成至关重要,并在社会性行为相互作用期间增强了感觉和奖励处理脑区的相关激活。这些结果与以下假设一致,即中枢OTR信号传导通过协调配对结合神经网络中的活动来促进社会纽带的形成。