Suppr超能文献

非此即彼的激素作用:南美洲灶鸟的攻击性对孕激素和睾酮产生差异影响。

Not one hormone or another: Aggression differentially affects progesterone and testosterone in a South American ovenbird.

机构信息

Department of Behavioural Neurobiology, Max Planck Institute for Ornithology, Seewiesen, Germany.

Department of Behavioural Neurobiology, Max Planck Institute for Ornithology, Seewiesen, Germany.

出版信息

Horm Behav. 2018 Sep;105:104-109. doi: 10.1016/j.yhbeh.2018.08.003. Epub 2018 Aug 11.

Abstract

Behaviors such as territorial interactions among individuals can modulate vertebrate physiology and vice versa. Testosterone has been pointed out as a key hormone that can be rapidly affected by aggressive interactions. However, experimental evidence for such a link is mixed. In addition, behaviors can elicit changes in multiple hormones, which in turn have the potential to synergistically feedback to behavior. For example testosterone and progesterone can act interdependently in modulating male behavior. However, if aggression can affect progesterone levels in males remain unknown and - to the best of our knowledge - no one has yet tackled if and how aggressive behavior simultaneously affects testosterone and progesterone in free-living animals. We addressed these questions by performing simulated territorial intrusion experiments measuring both hormones and their ratio in male rufous horneros (Aves, Furnarius rufus) during the mating and parental care periods. Aggression affected testosterone and progesterone differentially depending on the period of testing: challenged birds had higher levels of progesterone during the mating period and lower levels of testosterone during parental care compared to controls. Challenged individuals had similar progesterone to testosterone ratios during both periods and these ratios were higher than those of control birds. In summary, territorial aggression triggered hormonal pathways differentially depending on the stage of the breeding cycle, but equally altered their ratio independent of it. Our results indicate that multiple related hormones could be playing a role rather than each hormone alone in response to social interactions.

摘要

个体间的领地互动等行为可以调节脊椎动物的生理机能,反之亦然。睾酮已被指出是一种关键激素,它可以被攻击性行为迅速影响。然而,这种联系的实验证据是混杂的。此外,行为可以引发多种激素的变化,而这些激素反过来又有可能协同作用于行为。例如,睾酮和孕酮可以相互依赖地调节雄性行为。然而,如果攻击行为可以影响雄性的孕酮水平,目前尚不清楚——据我们所知——还没有人研究过攻击性行为是否以及如何同时影响自由生活动物的睾酮和孕酮。我们通过在交配和育雏期间对雄性红喉灶鸟(Aves, Furnarius rufus)进行模拟领地入侵实验来解决这些问题,测量了这两种激素及其比值。攻击性行为根据测试的时期而对睾酮和孕酮产生不同的影响:与对照组相比,受到挑战的鸟类在交配期的孕酮水平更高,在育雏期的睾酮水平更低。受挑战的个体在两个时期的孕酮与睾酮比值相似,且这些比值高于对照组。总之,领地攻击性根据繁殖周期的阶段触发了不同的激素途径,但同样独立于其改变了它们的比值。我们的结果表明,可能有多种相关激素在对社会互动做出反应,而不仅仅是每种激素单独作用。

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验