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Aggressive Behavior. Neuroendocrinology Kevin Kelliher. Aggression. Aggressive Behavior - An Overt behavior with the intention of inflicting damage or other unpleasantness on an other individual (Moyer 1971) (Brain 1979) Self defense (defensive rage and fear mediated attack)
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Aggressive Behavior Neuroendocrinology Kevin Kelliher
Aggression • Aggressive Behavior - An Overt behavior with the intention of inflicting damage or other unpleasantness on an other individual (Moyer 1971) (Brain 1979) • Self defense (defensive rage and fear mediated attack) • Maternal Aggression • Predatory aggression • Pup Killing • Social Aggression
Aggression • Agonistic Behaviors - interrelated behaviors related to physical conflict between adult members of the same species (social aggression) • Fighting • Escape • Defensive postures • Dominance and Subordination • Patrol and marking behaviors
Aggression and Testosterone • In a number of species increases in aggression have been correlated with rises in testosterone • Seasonal changes • Puberty
Testosterone levels don’t always correlate with aggression • High T and aggression in females are not correlated • Male hamsters that are no longer in breeding condition will not increase aggressive bouts when injected with T • Changes in(or the presence of) Androgen receptors are required for aggression
Organization and Activation of Aggression in Mice • In mice T is required both during development and in adulthood for the display of aggressive behavior. • Females treated with T shortly after birth will display high levels of aggression in adulthood
The 5-HT Hypothesis • In general reduced levels of 5-HT are correlated with increased aggression • 5-HT or its metabolites collected from CSF are found to be lower in more aggressive males • Microdialysis can measure changes in 5-HT in specific brain areas at specific times surrounding aggressive episodes
5-HT and Fighting • 5-HT is decreased in the Prefrontal cortex after fighting • Correlates with decreases in 5-HT in the CSF in more aggressive individuals • 5-HT increases slightly in the NA after fighting • In some instances when 5-HT agonists increase or antagonists decease instances of aggression this is believed to take place in the striatum • 5-HT
Caveat to Pharmacology • Most drugs are not as specific as we would like (act on various receptors) • Effects may be secondary to other effects (sedation, motor control)
5-HT1B • Most direct link between 5-HT and Aggression • Agonists with a high affinity for anpirtoline 5-HT1B (anpirtoline, CP-94,253 and zomitritan) reduce aggression. • 5-HT1B Knockout mice have an aggressive phenotype
Dopamine • By contrast dopamine exerts permissive effects on aggressive behavior • Changes in mesocorticolimbic can DA occurs before during and after aggressive episodes • Changes in dopamine may reflect motivational aspects • Acts via mesocorticolimbic pathway but not striatal • Changes in DA are not found in striatum in response to aggressive episodes
GABA • GABA is believed to tonically inhibit aggressive behavior • Acting via the GABAA receptor complex • GABA levels are inversely correlated with levels of aggression • However GABA agonists have bitionic effects on aggression • Low doses increase aggression • High doses decease aggression • GABA likely mediates alcohol induced aggression • Alcohol at low concentrations appears to specifically effect GABAA receptors • Alcohols effects on aggression mimic the effects of benzodiazepines • Low doses tend to increase aggressive behavior whereas high doses decrease aggression (and have sedative effects
Vasopressin and Social Aggression • Vasopressin has been implicated in a number of agonistic behaviors • Scent-marking • Patrolling • Social fighting • There are three known types of vasopressin receptors • V2R - in the periphery • V1aR and V1bR - Brain receptors (also located in the periphery as well)
V1bR and Social Aggression • Male V1bR-KO mice have significantly reduced instances of aggressive behavior • Both Latency and number of attacks during a resident intruder test are decreased
Social Preferences in V1bR-KOs • Social preferences are also altered in V1bRKO mice • Male KOs fail to exhibit normal social preferences • KOs appear to have reduced motivation for social interaction
Olfactory Discrimination in V1bRKOs • Decreased aggression in V1bRKOs is not due to a deficit in Olfactory Discrimination • Mice have no apparent olfactory defects • KOs can still discriminate between male and female urine
Olfactory influences on Aggression • In general an intact olfactory system is needed for full expression of social aggression • One caveat about bulbectomy studies is that removal of olfactory bulbs have many non olfactory related consequences • Is social aggression mediated by the VNO? • Lets check….
Vomeronasal influences on aggression • It appears that aggressive behavior is inhibited in TRPc2-KO mice based on number of fighting episodes vs number of mounting episodes • Things to think about • Fighting is not eliminated (if intruder is not submissive fighting occurs) • Is mounting behavior always sexual? • If sex discrimination is not altered what other agonistic behaviors may overall mediate so social aggression in these mice.?
Ovarian hormones and Maternal aggression • Ovarian hormones can modulate Maternal Aggression • Can differ depending on the species • Rats E Increases maternal aggression both before and especially after parturition • Mice E delays maternal aggression withdrawal facilitates it. • P increases aggression prior to parturition no effect after. • It is possible that the primary actions of these hormones are in the periphery facilitating sensory mechanisms
Sensory input • Olfactory • Pup odors are facilitory to maternal aggression • Intruder odors are required for maternal aggression • Somatosensory • Nipple stimulation is critical for the display of maternal aggression • Auditory • Questionable role however ultrasounds from male rats intruders can inhibit aggression (and facilitate mating)
Neural Correlates • Markers for neuronal activity label familiar neural circuits during maternal aggression
Neural Correlates • Lesions of various neural circuits alter the expression of maternal aggression
Neural Circuitry • Olfactory bulb -- Sensory (olfactory) cues from both pups and intruder • Amygdala -- Integration of sensory cues from both pups and intruder and central responses • Peripeduncular nucleus (PPN) -- Somatosensory cues from pups • Septum-- Maternal responsiveness in general (Motivation?) in decreased • mPOA-- Unknown exact extent but is known to decrease aggression in general • VMH-- thought to be critical site for critical site for transmitting to motor output regions • PAG-- Tonical inhibits maternal aggression however not part of output since lesions after removal of pups is not effective
Neurochemical Correlates • 5-HT - jury is still out hypothesized to decrease maternal aggression based on effects in males on general aggression • Some studies found this some did not • Equally interesting correlation between low 5-HT in CSF and aggression may be a male phenomena • Likely acting at PAG, Raphe Nuclei or Amygdala to inhibit aggression • Actions in the septum increase aggression
5-HT and Maternal Aggression • In general 5-HT reduces maternal aggression in rats • In mice results of 5-HT agonists and antagonists have been mixed • And while 5-HT decreases aggresssion in male praire voles (those that are highly paternal) it doesn’t effect maternal aggression
Neurochemical Correlates • GABA - • GABA receptor activity suppresses maternal aggression • Actions are likely in the VMH and MeA • Interestingly PAG activity inhibits maternal aggression but GABA not involved • Maternal Aggression could involve an inhibition of GABA transmission in the amygdala and VMH • Dopamine - • DA tonically inhibits Maternal aggression • Lesions of Dopamine Neurons in VTA results in increased maternal aggression • 6-OH-DA injected into striatum is unaffected thus likely not involved (in context of DA) • Site of action would thus be MH and VMH
Neurochemical Correlates • Oxytocin • Hypothesized that OT from PVN inhibits aggression but no real evidence. • By contrast OT in Central amygdala increases maternal aggression in hamsters • OTs importance for social recognition (olfactory) is most crucial factor • Vasopressin • Although no specific studies on maternal aggression believed to have similar functions as with male aggression • Vasopressin in lateral septum therefore should increase aggressive behavior • Unpublished data reports V1bR-KO mice have reduced maternal aggression (but reduced aggression in general)
Neurochemical Correlates • CRH • Peripheral infusions of ATCH or ICV injection of CRH reduce maternal aggression • Since CRH elevates fear and anxiety it is thought that decreases would be needed to express maternal aggression • Opioids • Opioids generally decrease maternal aggression • Likely mechanism is indirect altering animals general activity/pain sensation or olfactory ability
Neurochemical Correlates • Nitric Oxide • Male nNOS-KO mice are highly aggressive • By contrast knocking out nNOS in females eliminates attacks • Increases in citulline (the byproduct of NO synthesis is observed in the mPOA, SCN and subparaventricular zone in association with maternal aggression • How NO is acting is unknown (5-HT ? CRH? AVP?)
NO and Male Aggression • Male nNOS-KO mice are highly aggressive • There is a link between nNOS and 5-HT turnover • This may be related to a hypo functioning of the 5-HT1A and 5-HT1B receptors • 5-HT agonists can decrease aggression in nNOS mice but significantly higher doses are required • Reducing 5-HT turnover in the brain of WT mice mimics aggressive phenotype found in KO mice
Predatory Aggression • A simplified model of the neural circuitry the mediates predatory aggression in the cat • Electrophysiological studies suggest monosynaptic projections from the LH to the midbrain tegmentum are responsible for attack behavior • Projections from tegmentum connect to motor pathways, trigeminal and facial nerves
Modulatory Pathways • A number of sites modulate attack behavior • Amygdala (annoyingly abbreviated ME here) • BNST - often thought to be part of the “extended amygdala” • PAG feeds back to the lateral hypothalamus • Also Hippocampus, septum and just about any other limbic area you can think of
Defensive rage • The Medial Hypothalamus is the critical site for the initiation of defensive rage in cats • The primary circuit being MH to the PAG • PAG excites brain stem and spinal neurons causing autonomic and motor cascade resulting in behavior • Amygdala modulates activity but is not critical for initiation of behavior
VMH and AMH • Interestingly while the VMH has historically been the site for initiation of defensive rage the source of efferents is the AMH • The VMH stimulates the PAG via the AMH