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Influence of long-term social interaction on chirping behavior, steroid levels and neurogenesis in weakly electric fish

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY
Volume 216, Issue 13, Pages 2434-2441

Publisher

COMPANY OF BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/jeb.082875

Keywords

neurogenesis; communication; social behavior; cortisol; electric fish

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R15-MN080731-01, R03-MH066898-01]
  2. US Fulbright Scholar program
  3. Charles A. Dana Foundation

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Social interactions dramatically affect the brain and behavior of animals. Studies in birds and mammals indicate that socially induced changes in adult neurogenesis participate in the regulation of social behavior, but little is known about this relationship in fish. Here, we review studies in electric fish (Apteronotus leptorhychus) that link social stimulation, changes in electrocommunication behavior and adult neurogenesis in brain regions associated with electrocommunication. Compared with isolated fish, fish living in pairs have greater production of chirps, an electrocommunication signal, during dyadic interactions and in response to standardized artificial social stimuli. Social interaction also promotes neurogenesis in the periventricular zone, which contributes born cells to the prepacemaker nucleus, the brain region that regulates chirping. Both long-term chirp rate and periventricular cell addition depend on the signal dynamics (amplitude and waveform variation), modulations (chirps) and novelty of the stimuli from the partner fish. Socially elevated cortisol levels and cortisol binding to glucocorticoid receptors mediate, at least in part, the effect of social interaction on chirping behavior and brain cell addition. In a closely related electric fish (Brachyhypopomus gauderio), social interaction enhances cell proliferation specifically in brain regions for electrocommunication and only during the breeding season, when social signaling is most elaborate. Together, these studies demonstrate a consistent correlation between brain cell addition and environmentally regulated chirping behavior across many social and steroidal treatments and suggest a causal relationship.

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