Research in Affective and Translational Neuroscience Laboratory, Department of Psychology and Program in Neuroscience, Bowdoin College, Brunswick, ME 04011 USA, USA.
Research in Affective and Translational Neuroscience Laboratory, Department of Psychology and Program in Neuroscience, Bowdoin College, Brunswick, ME 04011 USA, USA.
Behav Brain Res. 2025 Feb 26;478:115326. doi: 10.1016/j.bbr.2024.115326. Epub 2024 Nov 8.
Adult rats communicate using ultrasonic vocalization (USV) frequencies indicating negative (22 kHz) or positive (50 kHz) affective states. Playback of USVs can serve as an ethologically translational method to study affective processing in response to socially communicated states. However, few studies have examined behavioral and neural effects of USV playback in both male and female rats. Here, adult male and female Sprague-Dawley rats experienced a 20-min open field test (OFT) with either silence, 22 kHz, or 50 kHz recorded USV playback. Center exploration and locomotor activity were analyzed to characterize sex differences in playback effects. Results suggest that females display greater sensitivity to frequency-specific effects of USV playback in this paradigm compared to males. 50 kHz USV playback evoked an immediate increase in center exploration and locomotor activity in females, indicating the appetitive nature of 50 kHz USVs. Initially, 22 kHz playback inhibited center exploration in the OFT compared to 50 kHz. However, females exhibited a switch in behavioral strategy in response to 22 kHz following prolonged playback. Following OFT, neural activity was quantified via the immediate early gene cFos. Results from cFos quantification showed sex- and region-specific differences in neural recruitment in areas of the brain associated with affective processing, including the prefrontal cortex, amygdala, bed nucleus of the stria terminalis, and nucleus accumbens. Taken together, this work provides a normative baseline for understanding how sex influences behavioral and neural responses to USV playback, which can be leveraged to study anxiety, communication, and affect in an ethologically relevant assay.
成年大鼠通过发出超声波(USV)来进行交流,这些超声波的频率可以指示出它们的消极(22 kHz)或积极(50 kHz)情绪状态。播放 USV 可以作为一种行为学上可转化的方法,用于研究对社交传达状态的情感处理。然而,很少有研究同时检查了雄性和雌性大鼠对 USV 播放的行为和神经效应。在这里,成年雄性和雌性 Sprague-Dawley 大鼠经历了 20 分钟的旷场测试(OFT),其中包括沉默、22 kHz 或 50 kHz 的记录 USV 播放。分析中心探索和运动活动,以描述播放效应中的性别差异。结果表明,与雄性相比,雌性在该范式中对 USV 播放的频率特异性效应表现出更大的敏感性。50 kHz 的 USV 播放会立即增加雌性动物的中心探索和运动活动,表明 50 kHz 的 USV 具有食欲性质。最初,与 50 kHz 相比,22 kHz 的播放会抑制 OFT 中的中心探索。然而,雌性在长时间播放后,对 22 kHz 表现出行为策略的转变。在 OFT 之后,通过即时早期基因 cFos 来量化神经活动。cFos 定量的结果显示,在与情感处理相关的大脑区域中,存在性别和区域特异性的神经募集差异,包括前额叶皮层、杏仁核、终纹床核和伏隔核。总之,这项工作为理解性别如何影响对 USV 播放的行为和神经反应提供了一个规范的基线,这可以用于研究焦虑、沟通和影响在一种行为相关的测定中。