| Literature DB >> 25009457 |
Claudia Lieberwirth1, Zuoxin Wang2.
Abstract
Affiliative social relationships (e.g., among spouses, family members, and friends) play an essential role in human society. These relationships affect psychological, physiological, and behavioral functions. As positive and enduring bonds are critical for the overall well-being of humans, it is not surprising that considerable effort has been made to study the neurobiological mechanisms that underlie social bonding behaviors. The present review details the involvement of the nonapeptides, oxytocin (OT), and arginine vasopressin (AVP), in the regulation of social bonding in mammals including humans. In particular, we will discuss the role of OT and AVP in the formation of social bonds between partners of a mating pair as well as between parents and their offspring. Furthermore, the role of OT and AVP in the formation of interpersonal bonding involving trust is also discussed.Entities:
Keywords: affiliation; oxytocin; pair bond; social recognition; vasopressin
Year: 2014 PMID: 25009457 PMCID: PMC4067905 DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2014.00171
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurosci ISSN: 1662-453X Impact factor: 4.677
Effects of pharmacological manipulations of OT and AVP on bonding behavior.
| Social recognition | Peripheral OT | Rat | ↑ | Popik et al., |
| Central OT | OT KO mouse | ↑ | Ferguson et al., | |
| Site-specific OT (e.g., AMY, LS, MPOA, OB) | OT KO mouse, rat | ↑ | Popik and van Ree, | |
| Intranasal OT | Human | ↑ | Savaskan et al., | |
| Central OTR-A | Rat, mouse | ↓ | Engelmann et al., | |
| Site-specific OTR-A (e.g., MPOA, OB) | Rat | ↓ | Popik and van Ree, | |
| Peripheral AVP | Rat | ↑ | Dantzer et al., | |
| Central AVP | Rat | ↑ | Le Moal et al., | |
| Site-specific AVP (e.g., LS, OB) | Brattleboro rat, rat, V1aR KO mouse | ↑ | Dantzer et al., | |
| Central AVP-A | Rat | ↓ | Bluthe et al., | |
| Site-specific AVP antisense, AVP-A, or V1aR-A (e.g., hippocampus, LS, OB) | Mouse, rat | ↓ | Dantzer et al., | |
| Prosocial behavior | Peripheral OT | Rat, prairie vole | ↑ | Witt et al., |
| Central OT | Prairie vole, rat, marmoset, squirrel monkey | ↑ | Witt et al., | |
| Intranasal OT | Human | ↑ | Liu et al., | |
| Central OTR-A | Marmoset | ↓ | Smith et al., | |
| Intranasal AVP | Titi monkey | ↑ | Jarcho et al., | |
| Bond | Central OT | Prairie vole | ↑ | Williams et al., |
| Site-specifc OT (e.g., NAcc) | Prairie vole | ↑ | Liu and Wang, | |
| Central OTR-A | Prairie vole | ↓ | Insel and Hulihan, | |
| Central AVP | Prairie vole | ↑ | Winslow et al., | |
| Central AVPR-A or V1aR-A | Prairie vole | ↓ | Winslow et al., | |
| Site-specific V1aR-A (e.g., VP) | Prairie vole | ↓ | Lim and Young, | |
| Social recognition | OT or OTR-A | na | na | na |
| AVP or AVPR-A | na | na | na | |
| Prosocial behavior | Central OT | ♂ common marmoset, ♀ mice, ♀ rat, ♀ sheep | ↑ | Pedersen and Prange, |
| Site-specific OT (e.g., NAcc) | ♀♂ CD38KO mouse | ↑ | Akther et al., | |
| Central OTR-A | ♀ rats | ↓ | Fahrbach et al., | |
| Site-specific OTR-A (e.g., MPOA, NAcc, OB, and VTA) | ♀ prairie voles, ♀ rats | ↓ | Pedersen et al., | |
| Central AVP | ♂ meadow voles, ♀ rats | ↑ | Pedersen et al., | |
| Site-specific AVP (e.g., LS) | ♂ prairie vole | ↑ | Wang et al., | |
| Central AVPR-A | ♂ meadow voles, ♀ rats | ↓ | Pedersen et al., | |
| Site-specific AVPR-A or V1aR-A (e.g., MPOA and LS) | Rats, ♂ prairie vole | ↓ | Pedersen et al., | |
| Central AVP-A and OTR-A | ♂ prairie vole | ↓ | Bales et al., | |
| Bond | OT or OTR-A | na | na | na |
| AVP or AVPR-A | na | na | na | |
| Intranasal OT | Human | ↑ | Kosfeld et al., | |
Abbreviations used: AMY, amygdala; AVP, argenine vasopressin; AVP-A, non-selective AVP receptor antagonist; LS, lateral septum; MPOA, medial preoptic area; NAcc, nucleus accumbens; OB, olfacotry bulbs; OT, oxytocin, OTR-A, oxytocin receptor antagonist; VP, ventral pallidum; VTA, ventral tegmental area.