4.4 Article

Aggressive but not reproductive boldness in male green anole lizards correlates with baseline vasopressin activity

Journal

HORMONES AND BEHAVIOR
Volume 140, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.yhbeh.2022.105109

Keywords

Vasotocin; Reptile; Lizard; Steroid hormones

Funding

  1. Rhodes College
  2. James T. and Valeria B. Robertson Chair in Biological Sciences
  3. National Institutes of Health [DP2HD102042]

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Individuals within a population differ in their level of boldness in social encounters. These differences are often stable across time and social context, and may be influenced by neural and hormonal mechanisms. This study suggests that baseline vasopressin release plays a role in regulating individuals' aggression towards conspecifics.
Across species, individuals within a population differ in their level of boldness in social encounters with conspecifics. This boldness phenotype is often stable across both time and social context (e.g., reproductive versus agonistic encounters). Various neural and hormonal mechanisms have been suggested as underlying these stable phenotypic differences, which are often also described as syndromes, personalities, and coping styles. Most studies examining the neuroendocrine mechanisms associated with boldness examine subjects after they have engaged in a social interaction, whereas baseline neural activity that may predispose behavioral variation is understudied. The present study tests the hypotheses that physical characteristics, steroid hormone levels, and baseline variation in Ile(3)-vasopressin (VP, a.k.a., Arg(8)-vasotocin) signaling predispose boldness during social encounters. Boldness in agonistic and reproductive contexts was extensively quantified in male green anole lizards (Anolis carolinensis), an established research organism for social behavior research that provides a crucial comparison group to investigations of birds and mammals. We found high stability of boldness across time, and between agonistic and reproductive contexts. Next, immunofluorescence was used to colocalize VP neurons with phosphorylated ribosomal protein S6 (pS6), a proxy marker of neural activity. Vasopressin-p56 colocalization within the paraventricular and supraoptic nuclei of the hypothalamus was inversely correlated with boldness of aggressive behaviors, but not of reproductive behaviors. Our findings suggest that baseline vasopressin release, rather than solely context-dependent release, plays a role in predisposing individuals toward stable levels of displayed aggression toward conspecifics by inhibiting behavioral output in these contexts.

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