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Prolactin-sensitive olfactory sensory neurons regulate male preference in female mice by modulating responses to chemosensory cues.


ABSTRACT: Chemosensory cues detected in the nose need to be integrated with the hormonal status to trigger appropriate behaviors, but the neural circuits linking the olfactory and the endocrine system are insufficiently understood. Here, we characterize olfactory sensory neurons in the murine nose that respond to the pituitary hormone prolactin. Deletion of prolactin receptor in these cells results in impaired detection of social odors and blunts male preference in females. The prolactin-responsive olfactory sensory neurons exhibit a distinctive projection pattern to the brain that is similar across different individuals and express a limited subset of chemosensory receptors. Prolactin modulates the responses within these neurons to discrete chemosensory cues contained in male urine, providing a mechanism by which the hormonal status can be directly linked with distinct olfactory cues to generate appropriate behavioral responses.

SUBMITTER: Aoki M 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC8500514 | biostudies-literature | 2021 Oct

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Prolactin-sensitive olfactory sensory neurons regulate male preference in female mice by modulating responses to chemosensory cues.

Aoki Mari M   Gamayun Igor I   Wyatt Amanda A   Grünewald Ramona R   Simon-Thomas Martin M   Philipp Stephan E SE   Hummel Oliver O   Wagenpfeil Stefan S   Kattler Kathrin K   Gasparoni Gilles G   Walter Jörn J   Qiao Sen S   Grattan David R DR   Boehm Ulrich U  

Science advances 20211008 41


Chemosensory cues detected in the nose need to be integrated with the hormonal status to trigger appropriate behaviors, but the neural circuits linking the olfactory and the endocrine system are insufficiently understood. Here, we characterize olfactory sensory neurons in the murine nose that respond to the pituitary hormone prolactin. Deletion of prolactin receptor in these cells results in impaired detection of social odors and blunts male preference in females. The prolactin-responsive olfact  ...[more]

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