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Publication : Sensory Detection by the Vomeronasal Organ Modulates Experience-Dependent Social Behaviors in Female Mice.

First Author  Trouillet AC Year  2021
Journal  Front Cell Neurosci Volume  15
Pages  638800 PubMed ID  33679330
Mgi Jnum  J:316694 Mgi Id  MGI:6806505
Doi  10.3389/fncel.2021.638800 Citation  Trouillet AC, et al. (2021) Sensory Detection by the Vomeronasal Organ Modulates Experience-Dependent Social Behaviors in Female Mice. Front Cell Neurosci 15:638800
abstractText  In mice, social behaviors are largely controlled by the olfactory system. Pheromone detection induces naive virgin females to retrieve isolated pups to the nest and to be sexually receptive to males, but social experience increases the performance of both types of innate behaviors. Whether animals are intrinsically sensitive to the smell of conspecifics, or the detection of olfactory cues modulates experience for the display of social responses is currently unclear. Here, we employed mice with an olfactory-specific deletion of the G protein Galphai2, which partially eliminates sensory function in the vomeronasal organ (VNO), to show that social behavior in female mice results from interactions between intrinsic mechanisms in the vomeronasal system and experience-dependent plasticity. In pup- and sexually-naive females, Galphai2 deletion elicited a reduction in pup retrieval behavior, but not in sexual receptivity. By contrast, experienced animals showed normal maternal behavior, but the experience-dependent increase in sexual receptivity was incomplete. Further, lower receptivity was accompanied by reduced neuronal activity in the anterior accessory olfactory bulb and the rostral periventricular area of the third ventricle. Therefore, neural mechanisms utilize intrinsic sensitivity in the mouse vomeronasal system and enable plasticity to display consistent social behavior.
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