The Mina & Everard Goodman Faculty of Life Sciences, The Leslie and Susan Gonda Multidisciplinary Brain Research Center and the Nanotechnology Institute, Bar-Ilan University, Ramat Gan, Israel.
Janelia Research Campus, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Ashburn, Virginia, United States of America.
PLoS Genet. 2024 Jan 18;20(1):e1011054. doi: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1011054. eCollection 2024 Jan.
Living in dynamic environments such as the social domain, where interaction with others determines the reproductive success of individuals, requires the ability to recognize opportunities to obtain natural rewards and cope with challenges that are associated with achieving them. As such, actions that promote survival and reproduction are reinforced by the brain reward system, whereas coping with the challenges associated with obtaining these rewards is mediated by stress-response pathways, the activation of which can impair health and shorten lifespan. While much research has been devoted to understanding mechanisms underlying the way by which natural rewards are processed by the reward system, less attention has been given to the consequences of failure to obtain a desirable reward. As a model system to study the impact of failure to obtain a natural reward, we used the well-established courtship suppression paradigm in Drosophila melanogaster as means to induce repeated failures to obtain sexual reward in male flies. We discovered that beyond the known reduction in courtship actions caused by interaction with non-receptive females, repeated failures to mate induce a stress response characterized by persistent motivation to obtain the sexual reward, reduced male-male social interaction, and enhanced aggression. This frustrative-like state caused by the conflict between high motivation to obtain sexual reward and the inability to fulfill their mating drive impairs the capacity of rejected males to tolerate stressors such as starvation and oxidative stress. We further show that sensitivity to starvation and enhanced social arousal is mediated by the disinhibition of a small population of neurons that express receptors for the fly homologue of neuropeptide Y. Our findings demonstrate for the first time the existence of social stress in flies and offers a framework to study mechanisms underlying the crosstalk between reward, stress, and reproduction in a simple nervous system that is highly amenable to genetic manipulation.
生活在动态环境中,如社交领域,与他人的互动决定了个体的生殖成功,这需要识别获得自然奖励的机会并应对实现这些奖励所带来的挑战的能力。因此,促进生存和繁殖的行为会受到大脑奖励系统的强化,而应对获得这些奖励所带来的挑战则是由应激反应途径介导的,其激活会损害健康并缩短寿命。虽然已经有大量研究致力于理解奖励系统处理自然奖励的方式的机制,但对于未能获得理想奖励的后果关注较少。作为研究未能获得自然奖励的后果的模型系统,我们使用了在果蝇中建立良好的求爱抑制范式,作为诱导雄性果蝇反复未能获得性奖励的手段。我们发现,除了与不接受的雌性互动导致的求爱行为明显减少之外,反复未能交配还会引起应激反应,其特征是持续获得性奖励的动机、雄性间社交互动减少以及攻击性增强。这种由于获得性奖励的强烈动机与无法满足交配欲望之间的冲突而产生的挫折感状态,会损害被拒绝雄性承受饥饿和氧化应激等压力源的能力。我们进一步表明,对饥饿的敏感性和增强的社交唤醒是由表达果蝇同源神经肽 Y 受体的一小群神经元的去抑制介导的。我们的研究结果首次证明了苍蝇中存在社会压力,并提供了一个框架来研究在一个简单的神经系统中奖励、应激和生殖之间相互作用的机制,该系统非常适合遗传操作。