Keesom Sarah M, Finton Caitlyn J, Sell Gabrielle L, Hurley Laura M
Department of Biology, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2017 Jan 5;12(1):e0169705. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0169705. eCollection 2017.
Early-life social isolation has profound effects on adult social competence. This is often expressed as increased aggression or inappropriate displays of courtship-related behaviors. The social incompetence exhibited by isolated animals could be in part due to an altered ability to participate in communicatory exchanges. House mice (Mus musculus) present an excellent model for exploring this idea, because social isolation has a well-established influence on their social behavior, and mice engage in communication via multiple sensory modalities. Here, we tested the prediction that social isolation during early life would influence ultrasonic vocalizations (USVs) emitted by adult male mice during same-sex social encounters. Starting at three weeks of age, male mice were housed individually or in social groups of four males for five weeks, after which they were placed in one of three types of paired social encounters. Pair types consisted of: two individually housed males, two socially housed males, or an individually housed and a socially housed male ("mixed" pairs). Vocal behavior (USVs) and non-vocal behaviors were recorded from these 15-minute social interactions. Pairs of mice consisting of at least one individually housed male emitted more and longer USVs, with a greater proportional use of USVs containing frequency jumps and 50-kHz components. Individually housed males in the mixed social pairs exhibited increased levels of mounting behavior towards the socially housed males. Mounting in these pairs was positively correlated with increased number and duration of USVs as well as increased proportional use of spectrally more complex USVs. These findings demonstrate that USVs are part of the suite of social behaviors influenced by early-life social isolation, and suggest that altered vocal communication following isolation reflects reduced social competence.
早期生活中的社会隔离对成年后的社交能力有深远影响。这通常表现为攻击性增强或求偶相关行为的不适当展示。隔离动物表现出的社交无能可能部分归因于参与交流互动的能力改变。家鼠(小家鼠)是探索这一观点的绝佳模型,因为社会隔离对其社交行为有既定影响,且小鼠通过多种感官方式进行交流。在此,我们测试了这样一个预测:早期生活中的社会隔离会影响成年雄性小鼠在同性社交互动中发出的超声波发声(USV)。从三周龄开始,雄性小鼠被单独饲养或与四只雄性小鼠组成的社会群体一起饲养五周,之后它们被置于三种类型的配对社交互动之一中。配对类型包括:两只单独饲养的雄性小鼠、两只群居的雄性小鼠,或一只单独饲养的雄性小鼠和一只群居的雄性小鼠(“混合”对)。在这15分钟的社交互动中记录发声行为(USV)和非发声行为。由至少一只单独饲养的雄性小鼠组成的小鼠对发出的USV更多、更长,且包含频率跳跃和50千赫成分的USV使用比例更高。混合社交对中单独饲养的雄性小鼠对群居雄性小鼠表现出更高水平的骑跨行为。这些对中的骑跨行为与USV数量和持续时间的增加以及频谱上更复杂的USV使用比例的增加呈正相关。这些发现表明,USV是受早期生活社会隔离影响的一系列社交行为的一部分,并表明隔离后发声交流的改变反映了社交能力的下降。