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Publication : Disruption of the fifth melanocortin receptor alters the urinary excretion of aggression-modifying pheromones in male house mice.

First Author  Caldwell HK Year  2002
Journal  Chem Senses Volume  27
Issue  1 Pages  91-4
PubMed ID  11751473 Mgi Jnum  J:306477
Mgi Id  MGI:6711420 Doi  10.1093/chemse/27.1.91
Citation  Caldwell HK, et al. (2002) Disruption of the fifth melanocortin receptor alters the urinary excretion of aggression-modifying pheromones in male house mice. Chem Senses 27(1):91-4
abstractText  The preputial glands of house mice express the gene for the fifth melanocortin receptor (MC5-R) and are a primary source of urinary pheromones involved in inter-male aggression. A 'resident-intruder' behavioral model was used to compare the responses of resident males to urine from mice with an engineered disruption of the fifth melanocortin receptor (MC5-RKO) with residents' responses to urine from wild-type mice (WT). Each type of urine was presented in combination with a castrated intruder male to provide the appropriate biological context. Resident males responded with a longer latency to bite when the urine was from gonadally intact WT males compared with urine from MC5-RKO mice. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that activation of the fifth melanocortin receptor in the preputial glands of male house mice causes excretion of urinary pheromones that delay aggressive responses by other males.
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