Oxytocin is a pleiotropic molecule which, in addition to its facilitating action during parturition and milk ejection, is involved in social and prosocial behaviors such as attachment. This article presents, after a brief historical review, the action of oxytocin during the milk ejection reflex. Oxytocin is indeed essential for this vital function in mammals. It is both a neurohormone released into the bloodstream by the axon terminals of the posterior pituitary and a neuromodulator released in the hypothalamus by the soma and dendrites of oxytocinergic magnocellular neurons. In addition, oxytocin is also released by the axon terminals of parvocellular neurons and axon collaterals of magnocellular neurons in the brain. Both maternal attachment in rats and ewes and attachment between sexual partners in the prairie vole, one of the few monogamous rodent species, are mediated by central oxytocin. However, neither administering oxytocin into the brain nor increasing expression of the oxytocin receptor in the nucleus accumbens using a gene transfer technique converts polygamous voles to monogamous ones. Unfortunately, translation of animal data to human remains problematic due to still unsolved difficulties in modifying the level of oxytocin in the brain.
[How oxytocin became overtime the attachment-mediating hormone].
Published 2022 in Biologie Aujourd hui
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- Publication year
2022
- Venue
Biologie Aujourd hui
- Publication date
Unknown publication date
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Biology, Medicine, Psychology
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Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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