Keesom Sarah M, Sloss Brooklyn G, Erbowor-Becksen Zita, Hurley Laura M
Department of Biology, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana.
Department of Biology, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana
J Neurophysiol. 2017 Dec 1;118(6):3230-3241. doi: 10.1152/jn.00431.2017. Epub 2017 Aug 30.
Past social experience and current social context shape the responses of animals to social signals. The serotonergic system is one potential mechanism by which both experiential and contextual factors could be conveyed to sensory systems, such as the auditory system, for multiple reasons. ) Many features of the serotonergic system are sensitive to social experience. ) Elevations in serotonergic activity are triggered by social partners, and variations in socially triggered serotonergic responses reflect behavioral differences among social encounters. ) Serotonin is an auditory neuromodulator, altering how auditory neurons respond to sounds including conspecific vocalizations. In this study, we tested how social experience influences the socially triggered serotonergic response in the inferior colliculus, an auditory midbrain region with an important role in vocalization processing. We used carbon fiber voltammetry to measure serotonin during social interactions of male mice () from different social backgrounds: 4 weeks of grouped or individual housing. When paired with an unfamiliar male, both group-housed and individually housed males demonstrated elevations in serotonin; however, individually housed males exhibited socially triggered serotonergic responses with delayed time courses compared with the group-housed males. Furthermore, group-housed males displayed previously described correlations between the socially triggered serotonergic response and behaviors such as social investigation. In contrast, individually housed males did not show these serotonin-behavior relationships. These results suggest that social experience gained via social housing may shape the ability of the central serotonergic system to encode social context in sensory regions. We demonstrate that past social experience influences the fidelity with which the serotonergic system represents social context in an auditory region. Social experience altered the time course of socially triggered serotonergic responses and changed how the serotonergic system reflects behavioral variations among social encounters of the same context. These findings are significant to the study of communication, suggesting that centralized neuromodulatory systems potentially convey integrated information regarding past experience and current context to primary sensory regions.
过去的社会经历和当前的社会环境塑造了动物对社会信号的反应。血清素能系统是一种潜在机制,通过它,经验因素和环境因素可以出于多种原因被传递到感觉系统,如听觉系统。血清素能系统的许多特征对社会经历敏感。社会伙伴会触发血清素能活性的升高,而社会触发的血清素能反应的变化反映了社会交往中的行为差异。血清素是一种听觉神经调节剂,会改变听觉神经元对包括同种发声在内的声音的反应方式。在本研究中,我们测试了社会经历如何影响下丘脑中社会触发的血清素能反应,下丘是一个在发声处理中起重要作用的听觉中脑区域。我们使用碳纤维伏安法在雄性小鼠的社会互动过程中测量血清素(这些雄性小鼠来自不同的社会背景:4周群居或独居)。当与陌生雄性配对时,群居和独居的雄性小鼠血清素均升高;然而,与群居雄性相比,独居雄性表现出社会触发的血清素能反应的时间进程延迟。此外,群居雄性表现出先前描述的社会触发的血清素能反应与社会探究等行为之间的相关性。相比之下,独居雄性没有表现出这些血清素与行为的关系。这些结果表明,通过群居获得的社会经历可能会塑造中枢血清素能系统在感觉区域编码社会环境的能力。我们证明,过去的社会经历会影响血清素能系统在听觉区域表征社会环境的保真度。社会经历改变了社会触发的血清素能反应的时间进程,并改变了血清素能系统反映相同背景下社会交往中行为差异的方式。这些发现对通讯研究具有重要意义,表明集中的神经调节系统可能将有关过去经历和当前环境的综合信息传递到初级感觉区域。