4.4 Article

Motherhood and DREADD manipulation of the nucleus accumbens weaken established pair bonds in female prairie voles

Journal

HORMONES AND BEHAVIOR
Volume 151, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.yhbeh.2023.105351

Keywords

Prairie vole; Nucleus accumbens; Pair bond formation and maintenance; Parturition; Social context; Designer receptors exclusively activated by; designer drugs

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Monogamous pair bonding has evolved to enhance reproductive success and ensure offspring survival. The maintenance of these relationships across an individual's lifetime remains relatively unexplored. In this study, researchers investigated the neural mechanisms and social contexts that regulate and maintain pair bond strength in the socially monogamous prairie vole. They found that neural activity in the nucleus accumbens (NAc) modulates affiliative behavior towards mating partners and strangers, and that the birth of offspring weakens pair bond strength. These findings shed light on the neural basis of pair bonding and the impact of motherhood on social relationships.
Monogamous pair bonding has evolved to enhance reproductive success and ensure offspring survival. Although the behavioral and neural mechanisms regulating the formation of pair bonds have been relatively well outlined, how these relationships are regulated and maintained across the lifetime of an individual remains relatively unexplored. One way to explore this is to study the maintenance of a social bond across a major life-history transition. The transition to motherhood is among the most poignant moments in the life history of a female, and is associated with significant neural and behavioral changes and shifting priorities. The nucleus accumbens (NAc) is known to modulate social valence and is central to mammalian pair bonding. In this study, we inves-tigated two mechanisms driving variation in bond strength in the socially monogamous prairie vole (Microtus ochrogaster). We manipulated neural activity of the NAc at two distinct stages of life-history, before and after the birth of offspring, to assess how neural activity and social contexts modulate female pair bond strength. Our results showed DREADD (Designer Receptor Exclusively Activated by Designer Drugs) inhibition of the NAc decreases affiliative behavior towards the mating partner, whereas DREADD activation of the NAc increases affiliative behavior of strangers, thereby decreasing social selectivity. We also found a robust birth effect on pair bond strength, such that bonds with partners were weakened after the birth of offspring, an effect not attributable to the amount of cohabitation time with a partner. Overall, our data support the hypotheses that NAc activity modulates reward/saliency within the social brain in different ways, and that motherhood comes with a cost for the bond strength between mating partners.

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