Food restriction dissociates sexual motivation, sexual performance, and the rewarding consequences of copulation in female Syrian hamsters

Candice M. Klingerman, Anand Patel, Valerie L. Hedges, Robert L. Meisel, Jill E. Schneider

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

15 Scopus citations

Abstract

Animals can switch their behavioral priorities from ingestive to sex behaviors to optimize reproductive success in environments where energy fluctuates. We hypothesized that energy availability differentially affects the appetitive (motivation), consummatory (performance), and learned (rewarding) components of behavior. In Experiment 1, appetitive and consummatory aspects of sex behavior were dissociated in the majority of female Syrian hamsters restricted to 75% of their ad libitum food intake for between 8 and 11 days. Food restriction significantly inhibited vaginal scent marking, decreased the preference for spending time with male hamsters vs. spending time with food, and increased food hoarding with no significant effect on consummatory behaviors such as the incidence of lordosis or food intake. In Experiments 2 and 3, we attempted to use a similar level of food restriction to dissociate sexual appetite from sexual reward. In hamsters, formation of a conditioned place preference (CPP) for copulatory reward is reflected in increased nucleus accumbens (NAc) neural activation, measured as immunocytochemical staining for c-Fos, the protein product of the immediate-early gene, c-fos. In Experiment 2, neural activation increased 1. h after copulation in the NAc, and did not differ significantly between 10-day food-restricted and ad libitum-fed females in any brain area examined. In Experiment 3, females were either food-restricted or fed ad libitum over 8-30 days of conditioning with copulatory stimuli. Food-restricted females showed significantly fewer appetitive behaviors, but no difference in formation of a CPP compared to females fed ad libitum. Together these data are consistent with the idea that mild levels of food restriction that inhibit appetitive behaviors fail to attenuate consummatory behaviors and the rewarding consequences of copulation. Thus, appetitive sex behaviors are, at least partially, neuroanatomically and behaviorally distinct from both consummatory behaviors and copulatory reward.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)356-370
Number of pages15
JournalBehavioural Brain Research
Volume223
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 1 2011

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
These experiments were supported by IBN0645882 from the National Science Foundation , R01DA13680 (RLM) and F31DA026255 (VLH) and R01DK069981 from the National Institute of Health , and Grants-in-aid of Research from Sigma Xi . The authors would like to thank Balaji Sridhar for his histological expertise, Timothy Garelick for statistical advice, Jenifer Golley for technical assistance, Jess Kohlert for use of the CPP apparatus, and Jeremy Brozek, Murray Itzkowitz, Kimberly Little, Joseph Leese, Jennifer Dautrich and Noah Benton for their helpful discussion and comments on the manuscript.

Keywords

  • Conditioned place preference
  • Energy availability
  • Hoarding
  • Lordosis
  • Sexual reward
  • Vaginal marking

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Food restriction dissociates sexual motivation, sexual performance, and the rewarding consequences of copulation in female Syrian hamsters'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this