Literature DB >> 30213592

Intranasal oxytocin administration promotes emotional contagion and reduces aggression in a mouse model of callousness.

Francesca Zoratto1, Marco Sbriccoli2, Andrea Martinelli3, Jeffrey C Glennon4, Simone Macrì5, Giovanni Laviola6.   

Abstract

Deficits in empathy, the ability to share an emotion of another individual, constitute a hallmark of several psychopathological conditions, including conduct disorder. The co-occurrence of excess rates of aggression, general violation of societal norms and callous-unemotional traits confers specific risk for adult psychopathy. In the present study, we relied on a recently devised experimental model of conduct disorder in mice to test the potential efficacy of intranasal oxytocin administration. Two subgroups of BALB/cJ male mice exhibiting opposite profiles in emotional contagion (i.e. socially transmitted adoption of another's emotional states) underwent a series of tests mapping onto reactive aggression, information processing, perseverative behaviour, punishment-related emotional memory, physiological arousal and hormonal stress reactivity, with or without intranasal oxytocin administration (5.0 or 20.0 μg/kg). Collectively, our data indicate that a trait of markedly reduced emotional contagion is associated with a behavioural syndrome of sensorimotor gating deficits, impaired emotional memory, increased aggression and stereotyped behaviours, dysregulations in the circadian rhythms of activity and body temperature and dampened physiological reactivity to external stressors. Moreover, in the absence of changes in oxytocin receptor density in the neural network involved in empathy-like behaviour, we showed that oxytocin administration normalised emotional contagion, aggression and behavioural stereotypies, thereby ameliorating the phenotype of mice characterised by deficient empathy-like behaviour. Besides, oxytocin led to a lower, more prolonged neuroendocrine response of the HPA-axis to stress in all mice. Ultimately, current data support the notion that oxytocin may constitute a valid therapeutic approach in disturbances characterised by abnormal aggression and excess callousness.
Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Callous-unemotional traits; Conduct disorder; Empathy for pain; Oxytocin; Psychopathy

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2018        PMID: 30213592     DOI: 10.1016/j.neuropharm.2018.09.010

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neuropharmacology        ISSN: 0028-3908            Impact factor:   5.250


  10 in total

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Authors:  Stewart S Cox; Carmela M Reichel
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Review 3.  Emotional Transfer in Human-Horse Interaction: New Perspectives on Equine Assisted Interventions.

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4.  Reduced Consolation Behaviors in Physically Stressed Mandarin Voles: Involvement of Oxytocin, Dopamine D2, and Serotonin 1A Receptors Within the Anterior Cingulate Cortex.

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5.  Oxytocin receptor disruption in Avil-expressing cells results in blunted sociability and increased inter-male aggression.

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6.  Aberrant Early in Life Stimulation of the Stress-Response System Affects Emotional Contagion and Oxytocin Regulation in Adult Male Mice.

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8.  Oxytocin Differentiated Effects According to the Administration Route in a Prenatal Valproic Acid-Induced Rat Model of Autism.

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10.  Sialylated human milk oligosaccharides program cognitive development through a non-genomic transmission mode.

Authors:  Jonas Hauser; Edoardo Pisa; Alejandro Arias Vásquez; Flavio Tomasi; Alice Traversa; Valentina Chiodi; Francois-Pierre Martin; Norbert Sprenger; Oksana Lukjancenko; Alix Zollinger; Sylviane Metairon; Nora Schneider; Pascal Steiner; Alberto Martire; Viviana Caputo; Simone Macrì
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  10 in total

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