| Literature DB >> 24376405 |
Elizabeth A D Hammock1, Pat Levitt2.
Abstract
UNLABELLED: Oxytocin (OXT) has drawn increasing attention as a developmentally relevant neuropeptide given its role in the brain regulation of social behavior. It has been suggested that OXT plays an important role in the infant brain during caregiver attachment in nurturing familial contexts, but there is incomplete experimental evidence. Mouse models of OXT system genes have been particularly informative for the role of the OXT system in social behavior, however, the developing brain areas that could respond to ligand activation of the OXT receptor (OXTR) have yet to be identified in this species. Here we report new data revealing dynamic ligand-binding distribution of OXTR in the developing mouse brain. Using male and female C57BL/6J mice at postnatal days (P) 0, 7, 14, 21, 35, and 60 we quantified OXTR ligand binding in several brain areas which changed across development. Further, we describe OXTR ligand binding in select tissues of the near-term whole embryo at E18.5. Together, these data aid in the interpretation of findings in mouse models of the OXT system and generate new testable hypotheses for developmental roles for OXT in mammalian systems. We discuss our findings in the context of developmental disorders (including autism), attachment biology, and infant physiological regulation.Entities:
Keywords: adrenal gland; autism; autoradiography; experience-dependent plasticity; kidney; neocortex; oronasal cavity; oxytocin
Year: 2013 PMID: 24376405 PMCID: PMC3858721 DOI: 10.3389/fnbeh.2013.00195
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Behav Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5153 Impact factor: 3.558
Mouse models of oxytocin system function.
| OXT KO (OT KO); | Congenital knockout on mixed 129/B6; *also available on C57Bl/6j | Nishimori et al., | |
| OXT KO; | Congenital knockout on mixed 129/B6 | Young et al., | |
| Oxt/EGFP | EGFP labeled OXT-neurophysin pre-prohormone; backcrossed for many generations to C57BL/6 | Zhang et al., | |
| OXTR KO; | Congenital knockout on mixed 129/B6; *also available on C57Bl/6j | Takayanagi et al., | |
| Congenital knockout on C57BL/6 | Velocigene; | ||
| Floxed OXTR for use with Cre recombinase for selective excision | Lee et al., | ||
| Venus reporter in place of | Yoshida et al., | ||
| BAC transgenic with OXTR promoter driven expression of EGFP; theoretically does not interfere with native OXTR | GENSAT, | ||
| OXTR-cre; Tg(Oxtr-cre)ON66Gsat | Cre recombinase driven by the OXTR promoter | GENSAT, | |
| tetOXTR | Tetracycline responsive OXTR promoter for selective regional and/or temporal over-expression; backcrossed to C57Bl/6j | L. J. Muglia pers. comm | |
| OTR-LacZ | Gould and Zingg, | ||
| CD38-/- | Congenital loss of CD38 which regulates secretion of OXT; On ICR x B6 X DBA | Kato et al., |
Figure 1Receptor autoradiography in C57BL/6J mice at several post-natal ages and coronal levels reveals brain areas of OXTR ligand binding, and the lack of specific OXTR ligand binding in OXTR KO brain assessed at P60.(A) accessory (a) and main (b) olfactory bulbs (B) neocortex (c), septum (d), claustrum (e), endopiriform cortex (f), piriform cortex (g), diagonal band of Broca (h), (C) bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (i), ventral caudatoputamen (j), (D) periventricular thalamus (k), CA3 hippocampus (l), central amygdala (m), medial amygdala (n), hypothalamus (o). Scale bar = 1 cm.
Figure 2Quantification of receptor autoradiography for OXTR in C57BL/6J mice demonstrates transient developmental profiles. OXTR binding with highly selective OXTR ligand is evident in (A) the CA3 of the dorsal hippocampus, (B) the septum, and (C) the neocortex sampled at S1. For all three brain regions, there was a main effect of age. In the septum and the hippocampus, this was driven by the difference in binding between P0 and P14–P21. In the neocortex, the main effect of age was stronger and driven substantially by the peak at P14. *p < 0.05.
Figure 3OXTR ligand binding in the neocortex is prominent in layer II/III. (A) OXTR is abundant in neocortical layers II/III at P14. (B) Nissl counterstain of section in (A). (C) OXTR is pseudo-colored red in a composite image of panels (A) and (B), which indicates that OXTR is prominent in layers II/III but not in layer IV or VI. OXTR is present in upper layer V. There is significantly reduced neocortical OXTR in P60 mice (D) which are only slightly above tissue background compared to OXTR KO P60 neocortex (E). (F) Quantification of OXTR binding demonstrates the transient ligand binding of OXTR in upper layers across post-natal development.
Figure 4OXTR ligand binding (A) followed by post-processing with Nissl staining (B) reveals tissue specificity of OXTR in E18.5 embryos. Pseudocolor (OXTR in red) composite (C). Olfactory turbinates/nasal epithelium (a and b), mandible (c), tongue (d), genitourinary tract (e), dermis (f), kidney (g), adrenal gland (h), brown adipose tissue (i).