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Oxytocin

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oxytocin

Discover seminars, jobs, and research tagged with oxytocin across World Wide.
31 curated items19 ePosters12 Seminars
Updated almost 3 years ago
31 items · oxytocin
31 results
SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Private oxytocin supply and its receptors in the hypothalamus for social avoidance learning

Takuya Osakada
NYU
Jan 30, 2023

Many animals live in complex social groups. To survive, it is essential to know who to avoid and who to interact. Although naïve mice are naturally attracted to any adult conspecifics, a single defeat experience could elicit social avoidance towards the aggressor for days. The neural mechanisms underlying the behavior switch from social approach to social avoidance remains incompletely understood. Here, we identify oxytocin neurons in the retrochiasmatic supraoptic nucleus (SOROXT) and oxytocin receptor (OXTR) expressing cells in the anterior subdivision of ventromedial hypothalamus, ventrolateral part (aVMHvlOXTR) as a key circuit motif for defeat-induced social avoidance learning. After defeat, aVMHvlOXTR cells drastically increase their responses to aggressor cues. This response change is functionally important as optogenetic activation of aVMHvlOXTR cells elicits time-locked social avoidance towards a benign social target whereas inactivating the cells suppresses defeat-induced social avoidance. Furthermore, OXTR in the aVMHvl is itself essential for the behavior change. Knocking out OXTR in the aVMHvl or antagonizing the receptor during defeat, but not during post-defeat social interaction, impairs defeat-induced social avoidance. aVMHvlOXTR receives its private supply of oxytocin from SOROXT cells. SOROXT is highly activated by the noxious somatosensory inputs associated with defeat. Oxytocin released from SOROXT depolarizes aVMHvlOXTR cells and facilitates their synaptic potentiation, and hence, increases aVMHvlOXTR cell responses to aggressor cues. Ablating SOROXT cells impairs defeat-induced social avoidance learning whereas activating the cells promotes social avoidance after a subthreshold defeat experience. Altogether, our study reveals an essential role of SOROXT-aVMHvlOXTR circuit in defeat-induced social learning and highlights the importance of hypothalamic oxytocin system in social ranking and its plasticity.

SeminarNeuroscience

Love, death, and oxytocin: the challenges of mouse maternal care

Robert C. Froemke
Departments of Otolaryngology, Neuroscience & Physiology, Neuroscience Institute, Pain Research Center, NYU Grossman School of Medicine, USA
Jan 25, 2023
SeminarNeuroscience

Brain oxytocin as a modulator of social approach versus avoidance

Inga Neumann
Universität Regensburg
Mar 22, 2022
SeminarNeuroscience

Neurobiology of Narcolepsy: effects of the oxytocin system on cataplexy

Carrie Mahoney
Harvard Medical School
Dec 12, 2021
SeminarNeuroscience

Astrocytes and oxytocin interaction regulates amygdala neuronal network activity and related behaviors”

Alexandre Charlet
Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, University of Strasbourg and Institute of Cellular and Integrative Neuroscience, Strasbourg, France
Dec 8, 2021

Oxytocin orchestrates social and emotional behaviors through modulation of neural circuits in brain structures such as the central amygdala (CeA). In this structure, the release of oxytocin modulates inhibitory circuits and subsequently suppresses fear responses and decreases anxiety levels. Using astrocyte-specific gain and loss of function approaches and pharmacology, we demonstrate that oxytocin signaling in the central amygdala relies on a subpopulation of astrocytes that represent a prerequisite for proper function of CeA circuits and adequate behavioral responses, both in rats and mice. Our work identifies astrocytes as crucial cellular intermediaries of oxytocinergic modulation in emotional behaviors related to anxiety or positive reinforcement. To our knowledge, this is the first demonstration of a direct role of astrocytes in oxytocin signaling and challenges the long-held dogma that oxytocin signaling occurs exclusively via direct action on neurons in the central nervous system.

SeminarNeuroscience

Behavioral and neurobiological mechanisms of social cooperation

Yina Ma
Beijing Normal University
Jun 29, 2021

Human society operates on large-scale cooperation and shared norms of fairness. However, individual differences in cooperation and incentives to free-riding on others’ cooperation make large-scale cooperation fragile and can lead to reduced social-welfare. Deciphering the neural codes representing potential rewards/costs for self and others is crucial for understanding social decision-making and cooperation. I will first talk about how we integrate computational modeling with functional magnetic resonance imaging to investigate the neural representation of social value and the modulation by oxytocin, a nine-amino acid neuropeptide, in participants evaluating monetary allocations to self and other (self-other allocations). Then I will introduce our recent studies examining the neurobiological mechanisms underlying intergroup decision-making using hyper-scanning, and share with you how we alter intergroup decisions using psychological manipulations and pharmacological challenge. Finally, I will share with you our on-going project that reveals how individual cooperation spreads through human social networks. Our results help to better understand the neurocomputational mechanism underlying interpersonal and intergroup decision-making.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Fish Feelings: Emotional states in larval zebrafish

Florian Engert
Harvard University
Apr 7, 2021

I’ll give an overview of internal - or motivational - states in larval zebrafish. Specifically we will focus on the role of the Oxytocin system in regulating the detection of, and behavioral responses to, conspecifics. The appeal here is that Oxytocin has likely conserved roles across all vertebrates, including humans, and that the larval zebrafish allows us to study some of the general principles across the brain but nonetheless at cellular resolution. This allows us to propose mechanistic models of emotional states.

SeminarNeuroscience

Role of Oxytocin in regulating microglia functions to prevent brain damage of the developing brain

Olivier Baud
Division of Neonatology, Department of Pediatrics, Development and growth laboratory, University of Geneva, Switzerland
Feb 1, 2021

Every year, 30 million infants worldwide are delivered after intra-uterine growth restriction (IUGR) and 15 million are born preterm. These two conditions are the leading causes of ante/perinatal stress and brain injury responsible for neurocognitive and behavioral disorders in more than 9 million children each year. Both prematurity and IUGR are associated with perinatal systemic inflammation, a key factor associated with neuroinflammation and identified to be the best predictor of subsequent neurological impairments. Most of pharmacological candidates have failed to demonstrate any beneficial effect to prevent perinatal brain damage. In contrast, environmental enrichment based on developmental care, skin-to-skin contact and vocal/music intervention appears to confer positive effects on brain structure and function. However, mechanisms underlying these effects remain unknown. There is strong evidence that an adverse environment during pregnancy and the perinatal period can influence hormonal responses of the newborn with long-lasting neurobehavioral consequences in infancy and adulthood. Excessive cortisol release in response to perinatal stress induces pro-inflammatory and brain-programming effects. These deleterious effects are known to be balanced by Oxytocin (OT), a neuropeptide playing a key role during the perinatal period and parturition, in social behavior and regulating the central inflammatory response to injury in the adult brain. Using a rodent model of IUGR associated with perinatal brain damage, we recently reported that Carbetocin, a brain permeable long-lasting OT receptor (OTR) agonist, was associated with a significant reduction of activated microglia, the primary immune cells of the brain. Moreover this reduced microglia reactivity was associated to a long-term neuroprotection. These findings make OT a promising candidate for neonatal neuroprotection through neuroinflammation regulation. However, the causality between the endogenous OT and central inflammation response to injury has not been established and will be further studied by the lab.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Social transmission of maternal behavior

Ioana Carcea
Rutgers University
Dec 10, 2020

Maternal care is profoundly important for mammalian survival, and in many species requires the contribution of non-biological parents, or alloparents. In the absence of partum and post-partum related hormonal changes, alloparents acquire maternal skills from experience, by yet unknown mechanisms. One critical molecular signal for maternal behavior is oxytocin, a hormone centrally released by hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus (PVN). Do experiences that induce maternal behavior act by engaging PVN oxytocin neurons? To answer this, we used virgin female mice, animals that in the wild live in colonies with experienced mothers and their pups, helping with pup care. We replicated this setup in the lab, and we continuously monitored homecage behavior of virgin mice co-housed for days with a mother and litter, synchronized with recordings from virgin PVN cells, including from oxytocin neurons. Mothers engaged virgins in maternal care in part by shepherding virgins towards the nest, ensuring their proximity to pups, and in part by self-generating pup retrieval episodes, demonstrating maternal behavior to virgins. The frequency of shepherding and of dam retrievals correlates with virgin's subsequent ability to retrieve pups, a quintessential mouse maternal skill. These social interactions activated virgin PVN and gated behaviorally-relevant cortical plasticity for pup vocalizations. Thus, rodents can acquire maternal behavior by social transmission, and our results describe a mechanism for adapting brains of adult caregivers to infant needs via endogenous oxytocin.

SeminarNeuroscience

Sensory modalities driving social behavior via the central oxytocin system

Valery Grinevich
Zentralinstitut für Seelische Gesundheit, University of Heidelberg, Germany
Nov 8, 2020
SeminarNeuroscience

The oxytocin system in the embodied brain: Social touch and communicative behaviours

Valery Grinevich
University of Heidelberg, Germany
Nov 4, 2020
SeminarNeuroscience

Plasticity in hypothalamic circuits for oxytocin release

Silvana Valtcheva
NYU
Oct 20, 2020

Mammalian babies are “sensory traps” for parents. Various sensory cues from the newborn are tremendously efficient in triggering parental responses in caregivers. We recently showed that core aspects of maternal behavior such as pup retrieval in response to infant vocalizations rely on active learning of auditory cues from pups facilitated by the neurohormone oxytocin (OT). Release of OT from the hypothalamus might thus help induce recognition of different infant cues but it is unknown what sensory stimuli can activate OT neurons. I performed unprecedented in vivo whole-cell and cell-attached recordings from optically-identified OT neurons in awake dams. I found that OT neurons, but not other hypothalamic cells, increased their firing rate after playback of pup distress vocalizations. Using anatomical tracing approaches and channelrhodopsin-assisted circuit mapping, I identified the projections and brain areas (including inferior colliculus, auditory cortex, and posterior intralaminar thalamus) relaying auditory information about social sounds to OT neurons. In hypothalamic brain slices, when optogenetically stimulating thalamic afferences to mimic high-frequency thalamic discharge, observed in vivo during pup calls playback, I found that thalamic activity led to long-term depression of synaptic inhibition in OT neurons. This was mediated by postsynaptic NMDARs-induced internalization of GABAARs. Therefore, persistent activation of OT neurons following pup calls in vivo is likely mediated by disinhibition. This gain modulation of OT neurons by infant cries, may be important for sustaining motivation. Using a genetically-encoded OT sensor, I demonstrated that pup calls were efficient in triggering OT release in downstream motivational areas. When thalamus projections to hypothalamus were inhibited with chemogenetics, dams exhibited longer latencies to retrieve crying pups, suggesting that the thalamus-hypothalamus noncanonical auditory pathway may be a specific circuit for the detection of social sounds, important for disinhibiting OT neurons, gating OT release in downstream brain areas, and speeding up maternal behavior.

ePoster

Airborne oxytocin affects navigation preference and social behavior in young but not old mice

Li-Han Sun, Lung Yu

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Deciphering lactation dynamics: The anisotropic synchronization of oxytocin neurons in rats

Yan Tang, Ruifang Niu, Ron Stoop

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Sex dimorphisms during juvenility in novelty-based spatial memory: Possible role of hippocampal oxytocin

Evleen Shehadeh

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Does volized mouse become more romantic? Transcriptional lability of brain oxytocin receptor (Oxtr) generates diversity in brain Oxtr distribution and social behaviors

Qi Zhang

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Exploring dynamic interaction of oxytocin and relaxin-3 in modulating ventral CA3 neuronal activity in rats – insights from molecular and neurophysiological studies

Aleksandra Nogaj, Aleksandra Trenk, Kinga Przybylska, Andrew L. Gundlach, Anna Blasiak

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Fast and (sometimes) furious: Oxytocinergic modulation of fast-spiking interneurons in hippocampal CA1 region and caudoputamen of mice

Antonio Nicolas Castagno, Paolo Spaiardi, Arianna Trucco, Jessica Cazzola, Francesca Raffin, Matilda Pedrinazzi, Giorgia Faravelli, Maria Mancini, Antonio Pisani, Francesca Talpo, Gerardo Rosario Biella

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Light modulates central oxytocin and social memory via a retina-to-supraoptic nucleus circuit

Yu-Fan Huang, Po-Yu Liao, Jo-Hsien Yu, Shih-Kuo Chen

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Maternal Fmr1 deficiency dysregulates offspring sociability and oxytocinergic signaling in the VTA

Bojana Zupan, Daniel Dunn, Emily Tincher, Mara Russell, Benjamin Kheyfets, Sloane Boukobza, Gaby Coste, Bibi Sulaman, John Kee, Kevin Newhall

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Modulation of mouse cerebellar Purkinje cell activity by oxytocin

Muriel Amar, Francois David, Pascale Le Blanc, Francesca Barbieri, Carole Levenes

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Oxytocin ameliorates aggression in a mouse model of autism spectrum disorder (ASD)

Zhuoni Li, Alexandra Hertz, Eilidh MacNicol, Davide Di Censo, Eugene Kim, Declan Murphy, Michael Craig, Diana Cash, Marija M. Petrinovic

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Oxytocin decreases neuroinflammation after neonatal hypoxia-ischemia

Gabriel Schirmbeck, Eduardo Farias Sanches, Stéphane Sizonenko, Olivier Baud

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Oxytocin and leptin crosstalk in the regulation of the energy balance

Chiara Galli, Georgia Colleluori, Simone Moretti, Valentina Cinquina, Roman A. Romanov, Jessica Perugini, Ilenia Severi, Gabriele Cruciani, Tibor Harkany, Antonio Giordano

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Oxytocin mediates social collaboration in a cortical-amygdala network

Romain Tomà, Jack van Honk, Erwin van den Burg, Chengyu Tony Li, Ron Stoop

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Oxytocin as a novel therapeutic target to reduce neuroinflammation and protect brain development following pediatric traumatic brain injury

Marit Knoop, Marie-Laure Possovre, Ece Trak, Kelly Ceyzériat, Yohan Van de Looij, Alice Jacquens, Olivier Baud

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Oxytocin and its receptors in the developing and adult mouse cerebellum

Pascale Le Blanc, Sylvie Dumas, Carole Levenes

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Oxytocin signaling regulates maternally-directed behavior during early life

Daniel Zelmanoff, Menachem Kaufman, Julien Dine, Jonas Wietek, Anna Litvin, Shaked Abraham, Savanna Cohen, Ofer Yizhar

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Oxytocin's role in behavioural prioritization: Examining competing social and food needs in mice

Niranjan Biju, Paraskevi Samara, Inga Neumann, Virginie Rappeneau

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Translational regulation of oxytocin receptor expression in the context of social behavior

Julia Odermatt, Dietmar Schreiner, Raul Ortiz, Peter Scheiffele

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Unveiling a novel neuropeptide interplay: Opposing actions of oxytocin and relaxin-3 on ventral hippocampal dentate gyrus neuronal activity – Rat and human studies

Aleksandra Trenk, Kinga Przybylska, Anna Gugula, Aleksandra Nogaj, Agus Hartoyo, Camila de Ávila, Mohammed Akhter Hossain, Anthony J. Intorcia, Geidy E. Serrano, Thomas G. Beach, Alessandro Crimi, Diego F. Mastroeni, Andrew L. Gundlach, Anna Blasiak

FENS Forum 2024