Neuropeptide B mediates female sexual receptivity in medaka fish, acting in a female-specific but reversible manner

Male and female animals display innate sex-specific mating behaviors. In teleost fish, altering the adult sex steroid milieu can effectively reverse sex-typical mating behaviors, suggesting remarkable sexual lability of their brains as adults. In the teleost medaka, neuropeptide B (NPB) is expressed...

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Veröffentlicht in:eLife 2019-08, Vol.8
Hauptverfasser: Hiraki-Kajiyama, Towako, Yamashita, Junpei, Yokoyama, Keiko, Kikuchi, Yukiko, Nakajo, Mikoto, Miyazoe, Daichi, Nishiike, Yuji, Ishikawa, Kaito, Hosono, Kohei, Kawabata-Sakata, Yukika, Ansai, Satoshi, Kinoshita, Masato, Nagahama, Yoshitaka, Okubo, Kataaki
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Male and female animals display innate sex-specific mating behaviors. In teleost fish, altering the adult sex steroid milieu can effectively reverse sex-typical mating behaviors, suggesting remarkable sexual lability of their brains as adults. In the teleost medaka, neuropeptide B (NPB) is expressed female-specifically in the brain nuclei implicated in mating behavior. Here, we demonstrate that NPB is a direct mediator of estrogen action on female mating behavior, acting in a female-specific but reversible manner. Analysis of regulatory mechanisms revealed that the female-specific expression of NPB is dependent on direct transcriptional activation by estrogen via an estrogen-responsive element and is reversed in response to changes in the adult sex steroid milieu. Behavioral studies of NPB knockouts revealed that female-specific NBP mediates female receptivity to male courtship. The female-specific NPB signaling identified herein is presumably a critical element of the neural circuitry underlying sexual dimorphism and lability of mating behaviors in teleosts.
ISSN:2050-084X
2050-084X
DOI:10.7554/eLife.39495