1. Region-specific associations between sex, social status, and oxytocin receptor density in the brains of eusocial rodents
- Author
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Clive W. Coen, Melissa M. Holmes, Annaliese K. Beery, and Skyler J. Mooney
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adaptation, Biological ,Nucleus accumbens ,Oxytocin ,Social Environment ,Amygdala ,Vasotocin ,Iodine Isotopes ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Vasoconstrictor Agents ,Interpersonal Relations ,Naked mole-rat ,Sex Characteristics ,biology ,Mole Rats ,General Neuroscience ,Brain ,biology.organism_classification ,Oxytocin receptor ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,Social Dominance ,Receptors, Oxytocin ,Forebrain ,Autoradiography ,Female ,Psychology ,Social status ,medicine.drug ,Social behavior - Abstract
Naturally occurring variations in neuropeptide receptor distributions in the brain contribute to numerous mammalian social behaviors. In naked mole-rats, which live in large social groups and exhibit remarkable reproductive skew, colony-related social behaviors vary with reproductive status. Here we examined whether variation in social status is associated with variations in the location and/or density of oxytocin binding in this species. Autoradiography was performed to assess forebrain oxytocin receptor (OTR) densities in breeding and non-breeding naked mole-rats of both sexes. Overall, males exhibited higher OTR binding in the medial amygdala in comparison to females. While there were no main effects of reproductive status in any region, a sex difference in OTR binding in the nucleus accumbens was mediated by status. Specifically, breeding males tended to have more OTR binding than breeding females in the nucleus accumbens, while no sex difference was observed in subordinates. These effects suggest that oxytocin may act in a sex- and region-specific way that corresponds to reproductive status and associated social behaviors.
- Published
- 2015
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