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Publication : A Cortical Circuit for Sexually Dimorphic Oxytocin-Dependent Anxiety Behaviors.

First Author  Li K Year  2016
Journal  Cell Volume  167
Issue  1 Pages  60-72.e11
PubMed ID  27641503 Mgi Jnum  J:236525
Mgi Id  MGI:5806344 Doi  10.1016/j.cell.2016.08.067
Citation  Li K, et al. (2016) A Cortical Circuit for Sexually Dimorphic Oxytocin-Dependent Anxiety Behaviors. Cell 167(1):60-72.e11
abstractText  The frequency of human social and emotional disorders varies significantly between males and females. We have recently reported that oxytocin receptor interneurons (OxtrINs) modulate female sociosexual behavior. Here, we show that, in male mice, OxtrINs regulate anxiety-related behaviors. We demonstrate that corticotropin-releasing-hormone-binding protein (CRHBP), an antagonist of the stress hormone CRH, is specifically expressed in OxtrINs. Production of CRHBP blocks the CRH-induced potentiation of postsynaptic layer 2/3 pyramidal cell activity of male, but not female, mice, thus producing an anxiolytic effect. Our data identify OxtrINs as critical for modulation of social and emotional behaviors in both females and males and reveal a molecular mechanism that acts on local medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) circuits to coordinate responses to OXT and CRH. They suggest that additional studies of the impact of the OXT/OXTR and CRHBP/CRH pathways in males and females will be important in development of gender-specific therapies.
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