Abstract

Roman High- (RHA) and Low-Avoidance (RLA) outbred rats, which differ for a respectively rapid vs. poor acquisition of the active avoidance response in the shuttle-box, display differences in sexual activity when put in the presence of a sexually receptive female rat. Indeed RHA rats show higher levels of sexual motivation and copulatory performance than RLA rats, which persist also after repeated sexual activity. These differences have been correlated to a higher tone of the mesolimbic dopaminergic system of RHA rats vs. RLA rats, revealed by the higher increase of dopamine found in the dialysate obtained from the nucleus accumbens of RHA than RLA rats during sexual activity. This work shows that extracellular dopamine and noradrenaline (NA) also, increase in the dialysate from the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) of male RHA and RLA rats put in the presence of an inaccessible female rat and more markedly during direct sexual interaction. Such increases in dopamine (and its main metabolite 3,4-dihydroxyphenylacetic acid, DOPAC) and NA were found in both sexually naïve and experienced animals, but they were higher: (i) in RHA than in RLA rats; and (ii) in sexually experienced RHA and RLA rats than in their naïve counterparts. Finally, the differences in dopamine and NA in the mPFC occurred concomitantly to those in sexual activity, as RHA rats displayed higher levels of sexual motivation and copulatory performance than RLA rats in both the sexually naïve and experienced conditions. These results suggest that a higher dopaminergic tone also occurs in the mPFC, together with an increased noradrenergic tone, which may be involved in the different copulatory patterns found in RHA and RLA rats, as suggested for the mesolimbic dopaminergic system.

Highlights

  • The Roman High- (RHA) and Low-Avoidance (RLA) outbred rat lines, originally selected for respectively rapid vs. poor acquisition of the active avoidance response in the shuttle-box (Bignami, 1965; Broadhurst and Bignami, 1965; Driscoll and Bättig, 1982; Fernández-Teruel et al, 2002; Giorgi et al, 2007) exhibit significant differences in sexual activity when put in the presence of a sexually receptive female rat

  • These differences were found either when considering the data of all experimental animals of a given group, regardless they copulated to ejaculation or not or when considering the data of the animals that did show the behavior of a given group only

  • This study shows that sexually naïve RHA rats exhibited higher sexual motivation and better sexual performance compared to sexually naïve RLA rats, e.g., RHA rats show higher number of non contact penile erections and different pro-sexual changes in several copulatory parameters as found in previous studies (Sanna et al, 2014a,b, 2015)

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Summary

Introduction

The Roman High- (RHA) and Low-Avoidance (RLA) outbred rat lines, originally selected for respectively rapid vs. poor acquisition of the active avoidance response in the shuttle-box (Bignami, 1965; Broadhurst and Bignami, 1965; Driscoll and Bättig, 1982; Fernández-Teruel et al, 2002; Giorgi et al, 2007) exhibit significant differences in sexual activity when put in the presence of a sexually receptive female rat. The different copulatory patterns of RHA and RLA rats have been found to be differently modified by apomorphine, a mixed D1/D2 dopamine receptor agonist administered at doses that facilitate sexual behavior, and by haloperidol, a D2 dopamine receptor antagonist, administered at low doses that inhibit sexual behavior (Sanna et al, 2014b). RLA rats have been found to be more sensitive to the facilitation and inhibition of sexual behavior induced by apomorphine and haloperidol, respectively, as demonstrated by the greater modifications induced by the two drugs mainly when administered at the lower doses in different copulatory parameters in RLA rats with respect to RHA rats (Sanna et al, 2014b). The above differences were more marked between sexually naïve RHA and RLA rats, but persisted between sexually experienced RHA and RLA rats, tending to diminish in these rats, as found with the differences in sexual behavior (Sanna et al, 2015)

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