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A short period of early life oxytocin treatment rescues social behavior dysfunction via suppression of hippocampal hyperactivity in male mice

Authors :
Libiao Pan
Lu Zheng
Xiaotong Wu
Zhenggang Zhu
Siyu Wang
Yi Lu
Yang He
Qian Yang
Xiaolin Ma
Xiaomeng Wang
Hongbin Yang
Li Zhan
Yujian Luo
Xiangyao Li
Yudong Zhou
Xiaodong Wang
Jianhong Luo
Lang Wang
Shumin Duan
Hao Wang
Source :
Molecular psychiatry. 27(10)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Early sensory experiences interact with genes to shape precise neural circuits during development. This process is vital for proper brain function in adulthood. Neurological dysfunctions caused by environmental alterations and/or genetic mutation may share the same molecular or cellular mechanisms. Here, we show that early life bilateral whisker trimming (BWT) subsequently affects social discrimination in adult male mice. Enhanced activation of the hippocampal dorsal CA3 (dCA3) in BWT mice was observed during social preference tests. Optogenetic activation of dCA3 in naive mice impaired social discrimination, whereas chemogenetic silencing of dCA3 rescued social discrimination deficit in BWT mice. Hippocampal oxytocin (OXT) is reduced after whisker trimming. Neonatal intraventricular compensation of OXT relieved dCA3 over-activation and prevented social dysfunction. Neonatal knockdown of OXT receptor in dCA3 mimics the effects of BWT, and cannot be rescued by OXT treatment. Social behavior deficits in a fragile X syndrome mouse model (Fmr1 KO mice) could also be recovered by early life OXT treatment, through negating dCA3 over-activation. Here, a possible avenue to prevent social dysfunction is uncovered.

Details

ISSN :
14765578
Volume :
27
Issue :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Molecular psychiatry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0278d316f2d0fe5b2af7f376681d3172