Department of Biology and Center for the Integrative Study of Animal Behavior, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana, USA.
J Exp Zool A Ecol Integr Physiol. 2022 Dec;337(9-10):873-889. doi: 10.1002/jez.2601. Epub 2022 Apr 22.
Individuals of virtually all vertebrate species are exposed to annual fluctuations in the deterioration and renewal of their environments. As such, organisms have evolved to restrict energetically expensive processes and activities to a specific time of the year. Thus, the precise timing of physiology and behavior is critical for individual reproductive success and subsequent fitness. Although the majority of research on seasonality has focused on seasonal reproduction, pronounced fluctuations in other non-reproductive social behaviors, including agonistic behaviors (e.g., aggression), also occur. To date, most studies that have investigated the neuroendocrine mechanisms underlying seasonal aggression have focused on the role of photoperiod (i.e., day length); prior findings have demonstrated that some seasonally breeding species housed in short "winter-like" photoperiods display increased aggression compared with those housed in long "summer-like" photoperiods, despite inhibited reproduction and low gonadal steroid levels. While fewer studies have examined how the hormonal correlates of environmental cues regulate seasonal aggression, our previous work suggests that the pineal hormone melatonin acts to increase non-breeding aggression in Siberian hamsters (Phodopus sungorus) by altering steroid hormone secretion. This review addresses the physiological and cellular mechanisms underlying seasonal plasticity in aggressive and non-aggressive social behaviors, including a key role for melatonin in facilitating a "neuroendocrine switch" to alternative physiological mechanisms of aggression across the annual cycle. Collectively, these studies highlight novel and important mechanisms by which melatonin regulates aggressive behavior in vertebrates and provide a more comprehensive understanding of the neuroendocrine bases of seasonal social behaviors broadly.
实际上,所有脊椎动物物种的个体都面临着其环境恶化和更新的年度波动。因此,生物体已经进化到将能量密集型的过程和活动限制在一年中的特定时间。因此,生理和行为的精确时间对于个体的生殖成功和随后的适应度至关重要。尽管大多数关于季节性的研究都集中在季节性繁殖上,但其他非生殖社交行为(如攻击行为)也会出现明显的波动。迄今为止,大多数研究季节性攻击的神经内分泌机制的研究都集中在光周期(即日照长度)的作用上;先前的研究结果表明,一些在短“冬季样”光周期下饲养的季节性繁殖物种与在长“夏季样”光周期下饲养的物种相比,表现出更高的攻击性,尽管繁殖受到抑制且性腺类固醇水平较低。虽然较少的研究检查了环境线索的激素相关性如何调节季节性攻击,但我们之前的工作表明,松果腺激素褪黑素通过改变类固醇激素分泌来增加非繁殖攻击。本综述探讨了攻击性和非攻击性社交行为季节性可塑性的生理和细胞机制,包括褪黑素在促进全年替代生理攻击机制的“神经内分泌转换”中的关键作用。总的来说,这些研究强调了褪黑素调节脊椎动物攻击行为的新的和重要机制,并更全面地了解了季节性社会行为的神经内分泌基础。