Abstract

Levels of [ 14C]2-deoxyglucose (2-DG), measured autoradiographically, in the medial preoptic area (MPOA), were higher during natural parturition with concurrent maternal behavior than in non-pregnant non-maternal controls, whereas levels in the vomeronasal system were lower in virgin rats made maternal by cohabitation with young than in control and parturient rats. Previous studies have shown that lesions of MPOA disrupt maternal behavior, whereas lesions of vomeronasal structures stimulate it, and that an increase in 2-DG levels is indicative of an increase in firing activity in neuron terminals. Consequently, the present findings suggest that maternal behavior can be induced by: (a) an increase in parturition-generated sensory stimulatory input to the MPOA in response to mechanostimulation of the birth canal, and (b) a separate chemosensory vomeronasal pathway whose activity is reduced by cohabitation with young, thereby disinhibiting maternal behavior.

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