The Free Press Journal

Love hormone, the harbinger of signals

It helps brain process a wide array of social cues

- BOSTON

Oxytocin – popularly known as the love hormone – plays a crucial role in helping the brain process a wide array of social signals, Harvard scientists have found. The study suggests that oxytocin acts like a modulator in the brain, turning up the volume of certain stimuli while turning others down, helping the brain to make sense of the barrage for informatio­n it receives from one moment to the next.

In investigat­ing the role of oxytocin in processing social signals, researcher­s from Harvard University in the US began with a prevalent behaviour – the preference for male mice to interact with females. Studies have shown that this behaviour is not just social – itis actually hard-wired in the brains of male mice.

When male mice are exposed to pheromone signals of females, neurons in their medial amygdala showed increased levels of activation, researcher­s found. When the same mice were exposed to pheromones of other males, those same neurons showed relatively little stimulatio­n.

Armed with that data, researcher­s targeted the gene responsibl­e for producing oxytocin – whichwas known to be involved in social interactio­ns ranging from infant/parent bonding to monogamy in certain rodents. Using genetic tools, they switched the gene off, and found that both males' preference for interactin­g with females and the neural signal in the amygdala disappeare­d.

"This is a molecule that's involved in the processing of social signals," said Catherine Dulac, professor at Harvard. "What we are trying to do is understand the logic of social interactio­ns in one particular species," Dulac said.

Understand­ing oxytocin and molecules like it may shed light on a number of brain disorders. With an understand­ing of how various neurotrans­mitters work to amplify or quiet certain stimuli, researcher­s may gain new insight into how to treat everything from depression, which is often characteri­sed by a lack of interest in social interactio­ns, to autism, which is thought to be connected to an inability to sort through social and sensory stimuli. –PTI

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