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Social touch promotes interfemale communication via activation of parvocellular oxytocin neurons.

Yan TangDiego BenusiglioArthur LefevreLouis HilfigerFerdinand AlthammerAnna BludauDaisuke HagiwaraAngel BaudonPascal DarbonJonas SchimmerMatthew K KirchnerRanjan K RoyShiyi WangMarina EliavaShlomo WagnerMartina OberhuberKarl Klaus ConzelmannMartin SchwarzJavier E SternGareth LengInga D NeumannAlexandre CharletValery Grinevich
Published in: Nature neuroscience (2020)
Oxytocin (OT) is a great facilitator of social life but, although its effects on socially relevant brain regions have been extensively studied, OT neuron activity during actual social interactions remains unexplored. Most OT neurons are magnocellular neurons, which simultaneously project to the pituitary and forebrain regions involved in social behaviors. In the present study, we show that a much smaller population of OT neurons, parvocellular neurons that do not project to the pituitary but synapse onto magnocellular neurons, is preferentially activated by somatosensory stimuli. This activation is transmitted to the larger population of magnocellular neurons, which consequently show coordinated increases in their activity during social interactions between virgin female rats. Selectively activating these parvocellular neurons promotes social motivation, whereas inhibiting them reduces social interactions. Thus, parvocellular OT neurons receive particular inputs to control social behavior by coordinating the responses of the much larger population of magnocellular OT neurons.
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