Literature DB >> 8451331

Pathways linking the olfactory bulbs with the medial preoptic anterior hypothalamus are important for intermale aggression in mice.

D A Edwards1, F R Nahai, P Wright.   

Abstract

Manipulations affecting olfaction, as well as bilateral lesions of the medial preoptic anterior hypothalamic (MPAH) continuum, decrease intermale aggression in mice. In the present study, unilateral removal of an olfactory bulb was combined with a contralateral lesion of the MPAH. This surgery, like bulbectomy and bilateral lesions of the MPAH, substantially decreased aggressive behavior. This surgery bilaterally destroys the ipsilateral links between the olfactory bulbs and the MPAH, and it is this disruption that presumably causes the decrease in aggression. The effect is not due to removal of an olfactory bulb combined with hypothalamic damage per se, because ipsilaterally lesioned/bulbectomized males continued to fight without decrement after surgery. These results provide compelling evidence that multisynaptic neural pathways linking the chemosensory systems of the olfactory bulbs with the rostral hypothalamus are involved in the regulation of intermale aggression in mice.

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Year:  1993        PMID: 8451331     DOI: 10.1016/0031-9384(93)90162-9

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Physiol Behav        ISSN: 0031-9384


  6 in total

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Review 2.  Olfaction, GABAergic neurotransmission in the olfactory bulb, and intermale aggression in mice: modulation by steroids.

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4.  Sociality and oxytocin and vasopressin in the brain of male and female dominant and subordinate mandarin voles.

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Review 5.  Regulation of Metabolic Health by an "Olfactory-Hypothalamic Axis" and Its Possible Implications for the Development of Therapeutic Approaches for Obesity and T2D.

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6.  Chronic Blockade of Brain Endothelin Receptor Type-A (ETA) Reduces Blood Pressure and Prevents Catecholaminergic Overactivity in the Right Olfactory Bulb of DOCA-Salt Hypertensive Rats.

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  6 in total

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