Abstract

SynopsisIngestive and sex behaviors are important for individual survival and reproductive success, but when environmental energy availability is limited, individuals of many different species make a trade-off, forfeiting sex for ingestive behavior. For example, food-deprived female Syrian hamsters (Mesocricetus auratus) forego vaginal scent marking and lordosis (sex behaviors) in favor of foraging, hoarding, and eating food (ingestive behavior). Reproductive processes tend to be energetically costly, and individual survival requires homeostasis in metabolic energy. Thus, during energetic challenges, the chances of survival are enhanced by decreasing the energy expended on reproductive processes. The entire hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal (HPG) system is inhibited by severe energetic challenges, but comparatively little is known about the effects of mild energetic challenges. We hypothesized that (1) a trade-off is made between sex and ingestive behavior even when the level of food restriction is insufficient to inhibit the HPG system; (2) mild energetic challenges force a trade-off between appetitive ingestive and sex behaviors, but not consummatory versions of the same behaviors; and (3) the trade-off is orchestrated by ovarian steroid modulation of RFamide-related peptide 3 (RFRP-3). In other species, RFRP-3, an ortholog of avian gonadotropin-inhibitory hormone, is implicated in control of behavior in response to energetic challenges and stressful stimuli. In support of our three hypotheses, there is a “dose-response” effect of food restriction and re-feeding on the activation of RFRP-3-immunoreactive cells in the dorsomedial hypothalamus and on appetitive behaviors (food hoarding and sexual motivation), but not on consummatory behaviors (food intake and lordosis), with no significant effect on circulating levels of estradiol or progesterone. The effect of food restriction on the activation of RFRP-3 cells is modulated at the time of estrus in gonadally-intact females and in ovariectomized females treated with progesterone alone or with estradiol plus progesterone. Intracerebral treatment with RFRP-3 results in significant decreases in sexual motivation and results in significant but small increases in food hoarding in hamsters fed ad libitum. These and other results are consistent with the idea that ovarian steroids and RFRP-3 are part of a system that orchestrates trade-offs in appetitive behaviors in environments where energy availability fluctuates.

Highlights

  • Individual survival requires cellular homeostasis in the availability of oxidizable metabolic fuels

  • In females housed at 22 C, high levels of sexual motivation and low levels of food hoarding were seen every day of the estrous cycle (Abdulhay et al 2014), similar to the pattern that emerged from the experiments of Klingerman et al (2010)

  • When energy availability is a limiting factor, animals trade-off their investment in reproductive output to engage in ingestive behaviors that are necessary for homeostasis in oxidizable metabolic fuels

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Summary

Introduction

Individual survival requires cellular homeostasis in the availability of oxidizable metabolic fuels. These changes in activation of RFRP-3-Ir cells and appetitive behavior occurred despite the fact that there was no significant effect of food restriction on plasma levels of estradiol, progesterone, food intake during the 90- When RFRP-3 is infused i.c.v. in both ad libitum-fed and mildly food-restricted female Syrian hamsters, in ad libitum-fed, estrous cycling females, RFRP-3 infusion significantly decreases the preference for males vs food and increases appetitive ingestive behavior (food hoarding), with no significant effect on consummatory aspects of ingestive behavior (food intake or body weight).

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