4.4 Article

Differential effects of progesterone on social recognition and the avoidance of pathogen threat by female mice

期刊

HORMONES AND BEHAVIOR
卷 127, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.yhbeh.2020.104873

关键词

Mate choice; Social information; Social avoidance; Infection; Disgust; Pathogen; Neurosteroid; Allopregnanolone

资金

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
  2. NSERC doctoral scholarship

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Despite previous speculation on the involvement of progesterone in mediating pathogen disgust in women, a study on female mice found that acute progesterone did not significantly affect their disgust-like avoidance responses to pathogen threat. Instead, progesterone appeared to influence social recognition and preferences in the mice.
Although pathogen threat affects social and sexual responses across species, relatively little is known about the underlying neuroendocrine mechanisms. Progesterone has been speculated to be involved in the mediation of pathogen disgust in women, though with mixed experimental support. Here we considered the effects of acute progesterone on the disgust-like avoidance responses of female mice to pathogen threat. Estrous female mice discriminated and avoided the urinary and associated odors of males subclinically infected with the murine nematode parasite, Heligmosomoides polygyrus. These avoidance responses were not significantly affected by pretreatment with progesterone. Likewise, brief (1 min) exposure to the odors of infected males attenuated the subsequent responses of females to the odors of the normally preferred unfamiliar males and enhanced their preferences for familiar males. Neither progesterone nor allopregnanolone, a central neurosteroid metabolite of progesterone, had any significant effects on the avoidance of unfamiliar males elicited by pre-exposure to a parasitized male. Progesterone and allopregnanolone, did, however, significantly attenuate the typical preferences of estrous females for unfamiliar uninfected males, suggestive of effects on social recognition. These findings with mice indicate that progesterone may have minimal effects on the responses to specific parasite threat and the expression of pathogen disgust but may influence more general social recognition and preferences.

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