Akther Shirin, Huang Zhiqi, Liang Mingkun, Zhong Jing, Fakhrul Azam A K M, Yuhi Teruko, Lopatina Olga, Salmina Alla B, Yokoyama Shigeru, Higashida Chiharu, Tsuji Takahiro, Matsuo Mie, Higashida Haruhiro
Department of Basic Research on Social Recognition, Kanazawa University Research Center for Child Mental Development Kanazawa, Japan.
Department of Basic Research on Social Recognition, Kanazawa University Research Center for Child Mental Development Kanazawa, Japan ; Department of Biochemistry, Medical Pharmaceutical and Toxicological Chemistry, Krasnoyarsk State Medical University Krasnoyarsk, Russia.
Front Neurosci. 2015 Dec 15;9:450. doi: 10.3389/fnins.2015.00450. eCollection 2015.
Parental behaviors involve complex social recognition and memory processes and interactive behavior with children that can greatly facilitate healthy human family life. Fathers play a substantial role in child care in a small but significant number of mammals, including humans. However, the brain mechanism that controls male parental behavior is much less understood than that controlling female parental behavior. Fathers of non-monogamous laboratory ICR mice are an interesting model for examining the factors that influence paternal responsiveness because sires can exhibit maternal-like parental care (retrieval of pups) when separated from their pups along with their pairmates because of olfactory and auditory signals from the dams. Here we tested whether paternal behavior is related to femininity by the aromatization of testosterone. For this purpose, we measured the immunoreactivity of aromatase [cytochrome P450 family 19 (CYP19)], which synthesizes estrogen from androgen, in nine brain regions of the sire. We observed higher levels of aromatase expression in these areas of the sire brain when they engaged in communicative interactions with dams in separate cages. Interestingly, the number of nuclei with aromatase immunoreactivity in sires left together with maternal mates in the home cage after pup-removing was significantly larger than that in sires housed with a whole family. The capacity of sires to retrieve pups was increased following a period of 5 days spent with the pups as a whole family after parturition, whereas the acquisition of this ability was suppressed in sires treated daily with an aromatase inhibitor. The results demonstrate that the dam significantly stimulates aromatase in the male brain and that the presence of the pups has an inhibitory effect on this increase. These results also suggest that brain aromatization regulates the initiation, development, and maintenance of paternal behavior in the ICR male mice.
父母行为涉及复杂的社会认知和记忆过程以及与孩子的互动行为,这些行为能够极大地促进健康的人类家庭生活。在包括人类在内的少数哺乳动物中,父亲在育儿方面发挥着重要作用。然而,与控制雌性父母行为的大脑机制相比,控制雄性父母行为的大脑机制却鲜为人知。非一夫一妻制的实验用ICR小鼠的父亲是研究影响父性反应因素的有趣模型,因为当雄鼠与其配偶因来自母鼠的嗅觉和听觉信号而与幼崽分离时,雄鼠会表现出类似母性的育儿行为(找回幼崽)。在这里,我们通过睾酮的芳香化作用来测试父性行为是否与雌性特征有关。为此,我们测量了雄鼠九个脑区中芳香化酶[细胞色素P450家族19(CYP19)]的免疫反应性,该酶可将雄激素合成雌激素。当雄鼠在单独的笼子里与母鼠进行交流互动时,我们观察到雄鼠大脑这些区域的芳香化酶表达水平更高。有趣的是,在移除幼崽后,与母性配偶一起留在饲养笼中的雄鼠中,具有芳香化酶免疫反应性的细胞核数量明显多于与整个家庭一起饲养的雄鼠。分娩后,雄鼠与幼崽作为一个整体家庭相处5天后,找回幼崽的能力增强,而每天用芳香化酶抑制剂处理的雄鼠,这种能力的获得受到抑制。结果表明,母鼠能显著刺激雄性大脑中的芳香化酶,而幼崽的存在对这种增加有抑制作用。这些结果还表明,大脑芳香化作用调节了ICR雄性小鼠父性行为的启动、发展和维持。