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1.
Anim Cogn ; 25(2): 297-306, 2022 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34417921

RESUMO

Social animals likely recognize emotional expressions in other animals. Recent studies suggest that mice can visually perceive emotional expressions of other mice. In the first experiment, we measured the preference of mice for two different facial expressions (a normal facial expression and an expression of negative emotion such as pain) of rats, mice, and humans. Results revealed that mice showed a slight preference for the normal expression over the face expressing pain in the case of rats, but no preference in the case of others. In the second experiment, we trained mice to discriminate between the two facial expressions in an operant chamber with a touch screen. They could discriminate facial expressions of mice and rats, but they did not show discrimination of human facial expressions. Principal component analysis of the images of stimuli reveals negative correlation between pixel-based dissimilarity of training stimuli and the number of sessions to criterion. The mice showed generalization to novel images of the mouse faces with and without pain but did not maintain their discriminative behavior when new rat faces were shown. These results suggest that mice display category discrimination of conspecific facial expressions but not of other species.


Assuntos
Discriminação Psicológica , Expressão Facial , Animais , Emoções , Camundongos
2.
Anim Cogn ; 25(1): 33-41, 2022 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34156548

RESUMO

Phobia against spiders or snakes is common in humans, and similar phobia-like behaviors have been observed in non-human animals. Visual images of snakes elicit phobia in humans, but sensory modalities that cause snake aversion in non-human animals are not well examined. In this study, we examined visually induced snake aversion in two rodent species. Using a three-compartment experimental chamber, reactions to images of snakes were compared between the diurnal precocious rodent Octodon degus and nocturnal laboratory mice. The snakes whose images were presented do not live in the original habitats of degus or mice. Snake aversion was assessed by presenting snake vs. no-image, snake vs. flower, snake vs. degu, and snake vs. mouse images. The time spent in a compartment with the snake image and with the non-snake images were measured. Degus avoided images of snakes in every tests. In contrast, mice did not display snake aversion. Degus are diurnal animals, i.e., visual information is important for their survival. Since mice are nocturnal, visual information is less important for survival. Such behavioral differences in the two species may explain the difference in visually induced aversion to snakes. A principal component analysis of the stimulus images suggests that elementary cues, such as color, do not explain the differences in the species' aversion to snakes. Finally, snake aversion in degus suggests that aversion is innate, since the animals were born and raised in a laboratory.


Assuntos
Aprendizagem da Esquiva , Octodon , Animais , Ritmo Circadiano , Camundongos , Camundongos Endogâmicos C57BL , Serpentes
3.
Anim Cogn ; 23(1): 233-236, 2020 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31650291

RESUMO

Japanese eels (Anguilla japonica) were trained on a Morris-type spatial learning task. There were four tubes in a pool, but the eels could hide in only one of these. The eels learned the position of the open tube, and maintained their performance when the pool was rotated to remove possible intra-maze cues. The eels could not maintain their performance in a dark room, suggesting that spatial learning involved extra-maze visual cues. When the position of the open tube was randomly changed every day, the performance of the eels in finding the open tube did not improve.


Assuntos
Anguilla , Animais , Sinais (Psicologia) , Japão , Aprendizagem Espacial
4.
Psychiatry Clin Neurosci ; 74(10): 516-526, 2020 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32592505

RESUMO

Behaviors comparable to human child maltreatment are observed widely among mammals, in which parental care is mandatory for offspring survival. This article first reviews the recent findings on the neurobiological mechanisms for nurturing (infant caregiving) behaviors in mammals. Then the major causes of attack/desertion toward infants (conspecific young) in nonhuman mammals are classified into five categories. Three of the categories are 'adaptive' in terms of reproductive fitness: (i) attack/desertion toward non-offspring; (ii) attack/desertion toward biological offspring with low reproductive value; and (iii) attack/desertion toward biological offspring under unfavorable environments. The other two are nonadaptive failures of nurturing motivation, induced by: (iv) caregivers' inexperience; or (v) dysfunction in caregivers' brain mechanisms required for nurturing behavior. The proposed framework covering both adaptive and nonadaptive factors comprehensively classifies the varieties of mammalian infant maltreatment cases and will support the future development of tailored preventive measures for each human case. Also included are remarks that are relevant to interpretation of available animal data to humans: (1) any kind of child abuse/neglect is not justified in modern human societies, even if it is widely observed and regarded as adaptive in nonhuman animals from the viewpoint of evolutionary biology; (2) group-level characteristics cannot be generalized to individuals; and (3) risk factors are neither deterministic nor irreversible.


Assuntos
Adaptação Fisiológica/fisiologia , Comportamento Animal/fisiologia , Evolução Biológica , Maus-Tratos Infantis , Comportamento Materno/fisiologia , Motivação/fisiologia , Comportamento Paterno/fisiologia , Área Pré-Óptica/fisiologia , Animais , Criança , Humanos
5.
EMBO J ; 34(21): 2652-70, 2015 Nov 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26423604

RESUMO

Paternal behavior is not innate but arises through social experience. After mating and becoming fathers, male mice change their behavior toward pups from infanticide to paternal care. However, the precise brain areas and circuit mechanisms connecting these social behaviors are largely unknown. Here we demonstrated that the c-Fos expression pattern in the four nuclei of the preoptic-bed nuclei of stria terminalis (BST) region could robustly discriminate five kinds of previous social behavior of male mice (parenting, infanticide, mating, inter-male aggression, solitary control). Specifically, neuronal activation in the central part of the medial preoptic area (cMPOA) and rhomboid nucleus of the BST (BSTrh) retroactively detected paternal and infanticidal motivation with more than 95% accuracy. Moreover, cMPOA lesions switched behavior in fathers from paternal to infanticidal, while BSTrh lesions inhibited infanticide in virgin males. The projections from cMPOA to BSTrh were largely GABAergic. Optogenetic or pharmacogenetic activation of cMPOA attenuated infanticide in virgin males. Taken together, this study identifies the preoptic-BST nuclei underlying social motivations in male mice and reveals unexpected complexity in the circuit connecting these nuclei.


Assuntos
Comportamento Paterno , Área Pré-Óptica/fisiologia , Animais , Comportamento Animal , Mapeamento Encefálico , Neurônios GABAérgicos/metabolismo , Masculino , Camundongos , Área Pré-Óptica/citologia , Proteínas Proto-Oncogênicas c-fos/metabolismo
6.
Anim Cogn ; 19(3): 523-31, 2016 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26801496

RESUMO

We showed mice videos of three conspecific social behaviors, namely sniffing, copulation, and fighting, in pairwise combinations using iPods and evaluated preference as determined by time spent in front of each iPod. Mice preferred the copulation video to the sniffing video, the fighting video to the sniffing video, and the fighting video to the copulation video. In Experiment 1a, we used a single video clip for each social behavior but used multiple video clips for each social behavior in Experiment 2a. Next, we trained mice to discriminate between the fighting and copulation videos using a conditioned-place-preference-like task in which one video was associated with injection of morphine and the other was not. For half of the subjects, the fighting video was associated with morphine injection, and for the other half, the copulation video was associated with morphine injection. After conditioning, the mice stayed longer in the compartment with the morphine-associated video. When tested with still images obtained from the videos, mice stayed longer in the compartment with still images from the video associated with morphine injection (Experiment 1b). When we trained mice with multiple exemplars, the subjects showed generalization of preference for new video clips never shown during conditioning (Experiment 2b). These results demonstrate that mice had a preference among videos of particular behavior patterns and that they could discriminate these videos as visual category. Although relationship between real social behaviors and their videos is still open question, the preference tests suggest that the mice perceived the videos as meaningful stimuli.


Assuntos
Comportamento Animal/efeitos dos fármacos , Discriminação Psicológica/efeitos dos fármacos , Morfina/farmacologia , Comportamento Social , Agressão , Animais , Condicionamento Operante/efeitos dos fármacos , Copulação , Camundongos , Camundongos Endogâmicos C57BL , Entorpecentes/farmacologia , Gravação em Vídeo
7.
J Neurosci ; 34(1): 313-26, 2014 Jan 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24381292

RESUMO

Traumatic brain injury (TBI) survivors exhibit motor and cognitive symptoms from the primary injury that can become aggravated over time because of secondary cell death. In the present in vivo study, we examined the beneficial effects of human adipose-derived stem cells (hADSCs) in a controlled cortical impact model of mild TBI using young (6 months) and aged (20 months) F344 rats. Animals were transplanted intravenously with 4 × 10(6) hADSCs (Tx), conditioned media (CM), or vehicle (unconditioned media) at 3 h after TBI. Significant amelioration of motor and cognitive functions was revealed in young, but not aged, Tx and CM groups. Fluorescent imaging in vivo and ex vivo revealed 1,1' dioactadecyl-3-3-3',3'-tetramethylindotricarbocyanine iodide-labeled hADSCs in peripheral organs and brain after TBI. Spatiotemporal deposition of hADSCs differed between young and aged rats, most notably reduced migration to the aged spleen. Significant reduction in cortical damage and hippocampal cell loss was observed in both Tx and CM groups in young rats, whereas less neuroprotection was detected in the aged rats and mainly in the Tx group but not the CM group. CM harvested from hADSCs with silencing of either NEAT1 (nuclear enriched abundant transcript 1) or MALAT1 (metastasis associated lung adenocarcinoma transcript 1), long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) known to play a role in gene expression, lost the efficacy in our model. Altogether, hADSCs are promising therapeutic cells for TBI, and lncRNAs in the secretome is an important mechanism of cell therapy. Furthermore, hADSCs showed reduced efficacy in aged rats, which may in part result from decreased homing of the cells to the spleen.


Assuntos
Tecido Adiposo/transplante , Lesões Encefálicas/cirurgia , Transtornos Cognitivos/cirurgia , Transtornos das Habilidades Motoras/cirurgia , Degeneração Neural/cirurgia , Transplante de Células-Tronco/métodos , Tecido Adiposo/citologia , Fatores Etários , Animais , Encéfalo/metabolismo , Encéfalo/patologia , Encéfalo/cirurgia , Lesões Encefálicas/metabolismo , Lesões Encefálicas/patologia , Células Cultivadas , Transtornos Cognitivos/metabolismo , Transtornos Cognitivos/patologia , Humanos , Infusões Intravenosas , Masculino , Transtornos das Habilidades Motoras/metabolismo , Transtornos das Habilidades Motoras/patologia , Degeneração Neural/metabolismo , Degeneração Neural/patologia , Ratos , Ratos Endogâmicos F344 , Distribuição Tecidual/fisiologia
8.
Commun Biol ; 7(1): 212, 2024 Feb 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38378797

RESUMO

Children's secure attachment with their primary caregivers is crucial for physical, cognitive, and emotional maturation. Yet, the causal links between specific parenting behaviors and infant attachment patterns are not fully understood. Here we report infant attachment in New World monkeys common marmosets, characterized by shared infant care among parents and older siblings and complex vocal communications. By integrating natural variations in parenting styles and subsecond-scale microanalyses of dyadic vocal and physical interactions, we demonstrate that marmoset infants signal their needs through context-dependent call use and selective approaches toward familiar caregivers. The infant attachment behaviors are tuned to each caregiver's parenting style; infants use negative calls when carried by rejecting caregivers and selectively avoid neglectful and rejecting caregivers. Family-deprived infants fail to develop such adaptive uses of attachment behaviors. With these similarities with humans, marmosets offer a promising model for investigating the biological mechanisms of attachment security.


Assuntos
Callithrix , Poder Familiar , Criança , Lactente , Animais , Humanos , Poder Familiar/psicologia , Cuidadores/psicologia , Ansiedade , Pais/psicologia
9.
Stroke ; 44(12): 3473-81, 2013 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24130140

RESUMO

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Despite the reported functional recovery in transplanted stroke models and patients, the mechanism of action underlying stem cell therapy remains not well understood. Here, we examined the role of stem cell-mediated vascular repair in stroke. METHODS: Adult rats were exposed to transient occlusion of the middle cerebral artery and 3 hours later randomly stereotaxically transplantated with 100K, 200K, or 400K human cerebral endothelial cell 6 viable cells or vehicle. Animals underwent neurological examination and motor test up to day 7 after transplantation then euthanized for immunostaining against neuronal, vascular, and specific human antigens. A parallel in vitro study cocultured rat primary neuronal cells with human cerebral endothelial cell 6 under oxygen-glucose deprivation and treated with vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and anti-VEGF. RESULTS: Stroke animals that received vehicle infusion displayed typical occlusion of the middle cerebral artery-induced behavioral impairments that were dose-dependently reduced in transplanted stroke animals at days 3 and 7 after transplantation and accompanied by increased expression of host neuronal and vascular markers adjacent to the transplanted cells. Some transplanted cells showed a microvascular phenotype and juxtaposed to the host vasculature. Infarct volume in transplanted stroke animals was significantly smaller than vehicle-infused stroke animals. Moreover, rat neurons cocultured with human cerebral endothelial cell 6 or treated with VEGF exhibited significantly less oxygen-glucose deprivation-induced cell death that was blocked by anti-VEGF treatment. CONCLUSIONS: We found attenuation of behavioral and histological deficits coupled with robust vasculogenesis and neurogenesis in endothelial cell-transplanted stroke animals, suggesting that targeting vascular repair sets in motion a regenerative process in experimental stroke possibly via the VEGF pathway.


Assuntos
Células Endoteliais/transplante , Infarto da Artéria Cerebral Média/fisiopatologia , Neovascularização Fisiológica/fisiologia , Neurônios/fisiologia , Acidente Vascular Cerebral/fisiopatologia , Animais , Transplante de Células , Infarto da Artéria Cerebral Média/patologia , Infarto da Artéria Cerebral Média/cirurgia , Neurogênese , Neurônios/patologia , Ratos , Ratos Sprague-Dawley , Recuperação de Função Fisiológica , Acidente Vascular Cerebral/patologia , Acidente Vascular Cerebral/cirurgia
10.
Anim Cogn ; 16(4): 685-90, 2013 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23525707

RESUMO

Domestic cats have had a 10,000-year history of cohabitation with humans and seem to have the ability to communicate with humans. However, this has not been widely examined. We studied 20 domestic cats to investigate whether they could recognize their owners by using voices that called out the subjects' names, with a habituation-dishabituation method. While the owner was out of the cat's sight, we played three different strangers' voices serially, followed by the owner's voice. We recorded the cat's reactions to the voices and categorized them into six behavioral categories. In addition, ten naive raters rated the cats' response magnitudes. The cats responded to human voices not by communicative behavior (vocalization and tail movement), but by orienting behavior (ear movement and head movement). This tendency did not change even when they were called by their owners. Of the 20 cats, 15 demonstrated a lower response magnitude to the third voice than to the first voice. These habituated cats showed a significant rebound in response to the subsequent presentation of their owners' voices. This result indicates that cats are able to use vocal cues alone to distinguish between humans.


Assuntos
Gatos/psicologia , Reconhecimento Psicológico , Voz , Comunicação Animal , Animais , Sinais (Psicologia) , Discriminação Psicológica , Feminino , Vínculo Humano-Animal , Humanos , Masculino , Vocalização Animal
11.
Int J Mol Sci ; 14(5): 8924-47, 2013 Apr 25.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23698756

RESUMO

The present review paper supports the approach to deliver melatonin and to target melatonin receptors for neuroprotection in stroke. We discuss laboratory evidence demonstrating neuroprotective effects of exogenous melatonin treatment and transplantation of melatonin-secreting cells in stroke. In addition, we describe a novel mechanism of action underlying the therapeutic benefits of stem cell therapy in stroke, implicating the role of melatonin receptors. As we envision the clinical entry of melatonin-based therapeutics, we discuss translational experiments that warrant consideration to reveal an optimal melatonin treatment strategy that is safe and effective for human application.


Assuntos
Melatonina/uso terapêutico , Fármacos Neuroprotetores/uso terapêutico , Acidente Vascular Cerebral/tratamento farmacológico , Animais , Ensaios Clínicos como Assunto , Humanos , Melatonina/farmacologia , Fármacos Neuroprotetores/farmacologia , Glândula Pineal/transplante , Células-Tronco/efeitos dos fármacos
12.
Int J Mol Sci ; 14(6): 11692-712, 2013 May 31.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23727936

RESUMO

Wharton's jelly (WJ) is a gelatinous tissue within the umbilical cord that contains myofibroblast-like stromal cells. A unique cell population of WJ that has been suggested as displaying the stemness phenotype is the mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs). Because MSCs' stemness and immune properties appear to be more robustly expressed and functional which are more comparable with fetal than adult-derived MSCs, MSCs harvested from the "young" WJ are considered much more proliferative, immunosuppressive, and even therapeutically active stem cells than those isolated from older, adult tissue sources such as the bone marrow or adipose. The present review discusses the phenotypic characteristics, therapeutic applications, and optimization of experimental protocols for WJ-derived stem cells. MSCs derived from WJ display promising transplantable features, including ease of sourcing, in vitro expandability, differentiation abilities, immune-evasion and immune-regulation capacities. Accumulating evidence demonstrates that WJ-derived stem cells possess many potential advantages as transplantable cells for treatment of various diseases (e.g., cancer, chronic liver disease, cardiovascular diseases, nerve, cartilage and tendon injury). Additional studies are warranted to translate the use of WJ-derived stem cells for clinical applications.


Assuntos
Transplante de Células-Tronco Mesenquimais , Células-Tronco Mesenquimais/citologia , Geleia de Wharton/citologia , Animais , Pesquisa Biomédica , Ensaios Clínicos como Assunto , Humanos , Fenótipo
13.
Commun Biol ; 6(1): 1231, 2023 12 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38052969

RESUMO

Calcitonin receptor (Calcr) and its brain ligand amylin in the medial preoptic area (MPOA) are found to be critically involved in infant care and social contact behaviors in mice. In primates, however, the evidence is limited to an excitotoxic lesion study of the Calcr-expressing MPOA subregion (cMPOA) in a family-living primate species, the common marmoset. The present study utilized pharmacological manipulations of the cMPOA and shows that reversible inactivation of the cMPOA abolishes infant-care behaviors in sibling marmosets without affecting other social or non-social behaviors. Amylin-expressing neurons in the marmoset MPOA are distributed in the vicinity of oxytocin neurons in the anterior paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus. While amylin infusion facilitates infant carrying selectively, an oxytocin's inverse agonist, atosiban, reduces physical contact with non-infant family members without grossly affecting infant care. These data suggest that the amylin and oxytocin signaling mediate intrafamilial social interactions in a complementary manner in marmosets.


Assuntos
Ocitocina , Área Pré-Óptica , Humanos , Camundongos , Animais , Ocitocina/farmacologia , Callithrix , Polipeptídeo Amiloide das Ilhotas Pancreáticas , Agonismo Inverso de Drogas , Comportamento Social
14.
Curr Biol ; 32(20): 4521-4529.e4, 2022 10 24.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36103877

RESUMO

Approximately 20%-30% of infants cry excessively and exhibit sleep difficulties for no apparent reason, causing parental stress and even triggering impulsive child maltreatment in a small number of cases.1-8 While several sleep training methods or parental education programs may provide long-term improvement of infant cry and sleep problems, there is yet to be a conclusive recommendation for on-site behavioral interventions.9-13 Previously we have reported that brief carrying of infants transiently reduces infant cry via the transport response, a coordinated set of vagal activation and behavioral calming conserved in altricial mammals.14-18 In this study, we disentangled complex infant responses to maternal holding and transport by combining subsecond-scale, event-locked physiological analyses with dynamic mother-infant interactions. Infant cry was attenuated either by maternal carrying or by reciprocal motion provided by a moving cot, but not by maternal holding. Five-minute carrying promoted sleep for crying infants even in the daytime when these infants were usually awake, but not for non-crying infants. Maternal laydown of sleeping infants into a cot exerted bimodal effects, either interrupting or deepening the infants' sleep. During laydown, sleeping infants were alerted most consistently by the initiation of maternal detachment, then calmed after the completion of maternal detachment in a successful laydown. Finally, the sleep outcome after laydown was associated with the sleep duration before the laydown onset. These data propose a "5-min carrying, 5- to 8- min sitting" scheme for attending to infant cry and sleep difficulties, which should be further substantiated in future studies. VIDEO ABSTRACT.


Assuntos
Relações Mãe-Filho , Transtornos do Sono-Vigília , Lactente , Animais , Criança , Humanos , Sono/fisiologia , Ansiedade , Projetos de Pesquisa , Mamíferos
15.
Commun Biol ; 5(1): 1243, 2022 11 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36411342

RESUMO

Like humans, common marmoset monkeys utilize family cooperation for infant care, but the neural mechanisms underlying primate parental behaviors remain largely unknown. We investigated infant care behaviors of captive marmosets in family settings and caregiver-infant dyadic situations. Marmoset caregivers exhibited individual variations in parenting styles, comprised of sensitivity and tolerance toward infants, consistently across infants, social contexts and multiple births. Seeking the neural basis of these parenting styles, we demonstrated that the calcitonin receptor-expressing neurons in the marmoset medial preoptic area (MPOA) were transcriptionally activated during infant care, as in laboratory mice. Further, site-specific neurotoxic lesions of this MPOA subregion, termed the cMPOA, significantly reduced alloparental tolerance and total infant carrying, while sparing general health and other social or nonsocial behaviors. These results suggest that the molecularly-defined neural site cMPOA is responsible for mammalian parenting, thus provide an invaluable model to study the neural basis of parenting styles in primates.


Assuntos
Callithrix , Área Pré-Óptica , Humanos , Camundongos , Animais , Receptores da Calcitonina/genética , Neurônios , Mamíferos
16.
J Biomed Biotechnol ; 2011: 194720, 2011.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22162629

RESUMO

Cell therapy has been established as an important field of research with considerable progress in the last years. At the same time, the progressive aging of the population has highlighted the importance of discovering therapeutic alternatives for diseases of high incidence and disability, such as stroke. Menstrual blood is a recently discovered source of stem cells with potential relevance for the treatment of stroke. Migration to the infarct site, modulation of the inflammatory reaction, secretion of neurotrophic factors, and possible differentiation warrant these cells as therapeutic tools. We here propose the use of autologous menstrual blood cells in the restorative treatment of the subacute phase of stroke. We highlight the availability, proliferative capacity, pluripotency, and angiogenic features of these cells and explore their mechanistic pathways of repair. Practical aspects of clinical application of menstrual blood cells for stroke will be discussed, from cell harvesting and cryopreservation to administration to the patient.


Assuntos
Células Sanguíneas/citologia , Células Sanguíneas/transplante , Terapia Baseada em Transplante de Células e Tecidos , Menstruação/sangue , Transplante de Células-Tronco , Células-Tronco/citologia , Acidente Vascular Cerebral/terapia , Separação Celular/métodos , Feminino , Humanos , Inflamação , Transplante Autólogo
17.
Cell Rep ; 35(9): 109204, 2021 06 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34077719

RESUMO

Maternal mammals exhibit heightened motivation to care for offspring, but the underlying neuromolecular mechanisms have yet to be clarified. Here, we report that the calcitonin receptor (Calcr) and its ligand amylin are expressed in distinct neuronal populations in the medial preoptic area (MPOA) and are upregulated in mothers. Calcr+ MPOA neurons activated by parental care project to somatomotor and monoaminergic brainstem nuclei. Retrograde monosynaptic tracing reveals that significant modification of afferents to Calcr+ neurons occurs in mothers. Knockdown of either Calcr or amylin gene expression hampers risk-taking maternal care, and specific silencing of Calcr+ MPOA neurons inhibits nurturing behaviors, while pharmacogenetic activation prevents infanticide in virgin males. These data indicate that Calcr+ MPOA neurons are required for both maternal and allomaternal nurturing behaviors and that upregulation of amylin-Calcr signaling in the MPOA at least partially mediates risk-taking maternal care, possibly via modified connectomics of Calcr+ neurons postpartum.


Assuntos
Comportamento Animal/fisiologia , Comportamento Materno/fisiologia , Área Pré-Óptica/metabolismo , Receptores da Calcitonina/metabolismo , Assunção de Riscos , Transdução de Sinais , Animais , Estrogênios/metabolismo , Feminino , Inativação Gênica , Marcação de Genes , Polipeptídeo Amiloide das Ilhotas Pancreáticas/metabolismo , Lactação , Ligantes , Masculino , Camundongos Endogâmicos C57BL , Neurônios/metabolismo , Período Pós-Parto , Prolactina/metabolismo , Sinapses/metabolismo , Regulação para Cima
18.
J Cereb Blood Flow Metab ; 40(6): 1182-1192, 2020 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31366299

RESUMO

Rodents display "empathy" defined as perceived physical pain or psychological stress by cagemates when co-experiencing socially distinct traumatic events. The present study tested the hypothesis that empathy occurs in adult rats subjected to an experimental neurological disorder, by allowing co-experience of stroke with cagemates. Psychological stress was measured by general locomotor activity, Rat Grimace Scale (RGS), and plasma corticosterone. Physiological correlates were measured by Western blot analysis of advanced glycation endproducts (AGE)-related proteins in the thymus. General locomotor activity was impaired in stroke animals and in non-stroke rats housed with stroke rats suggesting transfer of behavioral manifestation of psychological stress from an injured animal to a non-injured animal leading to social inhibition. RGS was higher in stroke rats regardless of social settings. Plasma corticosterone levels at day 3 after stroke were significantly higher in stroke animals housed with stroke rats, but not with non-stroke rats, indicating that empathy upregulated physiological stress level. The expression of five proteins related to AGE in the thymus reflected the observed pattern of general locomotor activity, RGS, and plasma corticosterone levels. These results indicate that stroke-induced psychological stress manifested on both the behavioral and physiological levels and appeared to be affected by empathy-associated social settings.


Assuntos
Empatia , Infarto da Artéria Cerebral Média/psicologia , Ratos/psicologia , Meio Social , Animais , Infarto da Artéria Cerebral Média/metabolismo , Infarto da Artéria Cerebral Média/fisiopatologia , Masculino , Ratos Sprague-Dawley , Receptor para Produtos Finais de Glicação Avançada/metabolismo , Estresse Psicológico/etiologia , Estresse Psicológico/metabolismo , Timo/metabolismo
19.
Sci Rep ; 9(1): 5394, 2019 04 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30948740

RESUMO

Two of the most common nonhuman animals that interact with humans are domestic dogs (Canis familiaris) and cats (Felis catus). In contrast to dogs, the ability of domestic cats to communicate with humans has not been explored thoroughly. We used a habituation-dishabituation method to investigate whether domestic cats could discriminate human utterances, which consisted of cats' own names, general nouns, and other cohabiting cats' names. Cats from ordinary households and from a 'cat café' participated in the experiments. Among cats from ordinary households, cats habituated to the serial presentation of four different general nouns or four names of cohabiting cats showed a significant rebound in response to the subsequent presentation of their own names; these cats discriminated their own names from general nouns even when unfamiliar persons uttered them. These results indicate that cats are able to discriminate their own names from other words. There was no difference in discrimination of their own names from general nouns between cats from the cat café and household cats, but café cats did not discriminate their own names from other cohabiting cats' names. We conclude that cats can discriminate the content of human utterances based on phonemic differences.


Assuntos
Nomes , Animais , Percepção Auditiva , Gatos , Cães , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino
20.
Sci Rep ; 9(1): 13265, 2019 Sep 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31501483

RESUMO

An amendment to this paper has been published and can be accessed via a link at the top of the paper.

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