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Source: Cornell University (http://www.cornell.edu)
Date: Posted 2/17/2000
Brain Neurochemicals Tell A Female To Act Like A Female,
Not Her Gender, Cornell Biologists Discover
ITHACA, N.Y. -- Cornell University biologists have shown
how chemicals produced in a core region of the brain shared by all vertebrate
animals (including humans) make males act like males, females like females
-- and some males something like females.
James Goodson and Andrew Bass, who studied a fish species
that produces two types of males for their report in the Feb. 17, 2000,
issue of the journal Nature, say that brain processes responsible for
social behavior typical of females, for example, aren't necessarily
linked to the female's sex at all.
"This is a clear demonstration of how the action of
neurochemicals can modulate the electrical or neurophysiological output
of the brain as it establishes a social behavior," said Bass, professor
of neurobiology and behavior, in an interview.
"We have also shown that there can be a neurochemical
dissociation -- an uncoupling -- between an animal's gonadal sex and
the regulation of behaviors typical of a sex," said Goodson, a postdoctoral
fellow in Bass' neurobiology laboratory.
The part of the brain studied by Goodson and Bass is
the preoptic area-anterior hypothalamus, a section of the basal forebrain,
which neurobiologists say has been "conserved" throughout the evolution
of vertebrates. The functions and structure of this conserved brain
region are strikingly similar in fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds and
mammals, including humans. The neurochemicals credited with sex-related
social behaviors are isotocin and vasotocin in fish and are essentially
the equivalents of oxytocin and vasopressin, respectively, in mammals.
The fish that made the neurochemical finding possible
is the plainfin midshipman (Porichthys notatus), best known for its
singing in shallow salt water at mating time. Most of the noise comes
from male midshipman fish of the type I variety, which vocalize for
hours under rocks to attract females. When type I males' courtship songs
are successful, females briefly visit the nests to deposit eggs, then
leave the type I males to fertilize the eggs and raise the young.
Sometimes, however, the type I males' songs have an
unintended effect, attracting a different kind of male of the same species.
Called type II or "sneaker" males, the visitors are distinguished by
three things: Their inability to sing like a type I male (although type
II males can grunt, as can females, which is explained in the attached
fact sheet); their smaller body size but enlarged reproductive organs;
and the type II males' habit of sneakily fertilizing eggs left for the
type I males.
Also attracted to all the singing, grunting and sexual
shenanigans are opportunistic biologists, eager to analyze an animal
system with a third, intermediate gender -- the type II males -- and
with behaviors that are linked to gender. Watching this salt opera,
the Cornell biologists wondered: Are the gender-typical actions dictated
by the animal's sex, as embodied in the gonads? Or can a brain process
alone initiate gender-typical behavior?
Working in the laboratory with anesthetized type I males,
type II males and female midshipman fish, the Cornell biologists first
applied gentle electrical stimulation to nerve cells in the basal forebrain.
That caused type I males to produce versions of their courtship songs
and grunts, females to make their characteristic grunts and type II
males to make the same, female-like grunts -- all in "fictive" form.
(Fictive vocalizations are electrical impulses that are recorded from
nerves controlling the fish's vocal muscles, much like the nerves that
control vocal muscles of the human larynx. The fictive vocalizations
are displayed on a computer and heard through a speaker; despite their
electronic format, the recordings sound virtually identical to the natural
sounds of free-swimming males and females.)
Next the biologists tested the effects of the neurochemicals
by putting small amounts of each chemical into the basal forebrain,
or by treating the fish with a chemical called an antagonist that blocks
the animal's own neurochemicals from binding to nerve cells and influencing
behavior. By comparing the effects of isotocin, vasotocin and their
antagonists with the effects of a control substance similar to the fish's
brain fluid, the researchers demonstrated that the neurochemicals decrease
-- whereas the antagonists increase -- the amount of fictive vocalization
that is recorded when the basal forebrain is stimulated.
However, females and the different types of male midshipman
fish didn't all respond the same. The courting males (type I) were sensitive
to vasotocin but not isotocin, and in females, this pattern was reversed.
The sneaker males (type II), whose vocal behavior is more like females,
exhibited responses to the chemicals that were almost identical to females,
rather than other males.
The Cornell biologists have shown, for the first time
in any animal species, that the neurochemical regulation of gender-typical
behavior by the basal forebrain is not necessarily limited by an animal's
gonadal sex, even though sexual behavior and the gonads also are regulated
by this brain region. Writing in Nature, they offer "strong evidence
that gonadal sex and social/reproductive tactics may be uncoupled from
each other and regulated independently within the same brain region."
Goodson adds, "Apparently, the process of evolution
has modified reproductive and social behavior independent of the gonads.
This blending of characteristics should make more variation available
for natural selection to act upon and may help explain the extraordinary
range of social behaviors that we see across all of the vertebrate groups,
from sex role reversal to dynamic diversity in the sex differences found
for parental care and aggressive competition."
The study was supported, in part, by grants from the
National Science Foundation. Logistical support was provided by the
University of California Bodega Marine Laboratory.
Salt Opera Fish Facts: It's not over when the single
father sings
Source: Department of Neurobiology and Behavior, Cornell
University
-- Among the three kinds of plainfin midshipman (Porichthys
notatus) fish -- type I males, females and type II males -- only type
I males sing. They perform their droning song to attract females to
the rock nests where these soon-to-be single fathers hope to raise a
family. Eggs deposited by females in the nests are fertilized and tended
by type I males after the females depart.
-- But the eggs also might be fertilized by type II
males, a smaller male type that sneaks into nests to spawn.
-- After a furtive attempt at fertilizing females' eggs,
the type II males, like the females, depart and leave the nesting type
I males to protect the eggs and newly hatched young. The so-called sneaker
males and females don't produce the courtship song of type I males,
but like the type I males, they do give brief grunts.
--These grunts are aggressive, and are used in different
contexts by the different kinds of midshipman: Type I males grunt during
fights to obtain the best nests, and while defending the eggs and young
from usurpers; in contrast, type II males, like females, grunt mostly
in non-reproductive social contexts, when they are hassled or are agitated.
-- As a virtuoso single parent raising young that aren't
all his, the type I male midshipman is a boon to biologists. His elaborate
vocalizations are used much differently from the simple grunts of females
and type II males, and Cornell biologists suspected that his brain must
reflect the difference.
Editor's Note: The original news release can be found
at http://www.news.cornell.edu/releases/Feb00/neurochemical.hrs.html
Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by Cornell
University for journalists and other members of the public. If you wish
to quote from any part of this story, please credit Cornell University
as the original source. You may also wish to include the following link
in any citation:
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