4.8 Article

A neural circuit for male sexual behavior and reward

Journal

CELL
Volume 186, Issue 18, Pages 3862-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2023.07.021

Keywords

sexual behavior; pheromones; recognizes mates; triggers

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This study has identified a neural circuit that governs key aspects of innate male sexual behavior, including motor displays, drive, and reward. This circuit connects chemosensory input to neurons that regulate motor output and reward centers.
Male sexual behavior is innate and rewarding. Despite its centrality to reproduction, a molecularly specified neural circuit governing innate male sexual behavior and reward remains to be characterized. We have discovered a developmentally wired neural circuit necessary and sufficient for male mating. This circuit connects chemosensory input to BNSTpr(Tac1) neurons, which innervate POA(Tacr1) neurons that project to centers regulating motor output and reward. Epistasis studies demonstrate that BNSTpr(Tac1) neurons are upstream of POA(Tacr1) neurons, and BNSTpr(Tac1)-released substance P following mate recognition potentiates activation of POA(Tacr1) neurons through Tacr1 to initiate mating. Experimental activation of POA(Tacr1) neurons triggers mating, even in sexually satiated males, and it is rewarding, eliciting dopamine release and self-stimulation of these cells. Together, we have uncovered a neural circuit that governs the key aspects of innate male sexual behavior: motor displays, drive, and reward.

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