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1.
Anticancer Res ; 42(10): 5091-5094, 2022 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36191977

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND/AIM: This study aimed to determine whether mosquitoes exposed to natural sunlight are able to produce vitamin D3 Materials and Methods: Mosquito eggs obtained from adult Aedes aegypti mosquitoes were raised to adulthood. Approximately 1,200 male and female mosquitoes were divided among six cages. Four cages were placed on the roof on sunny days, 10-Sep-2021 and 12-Oct-2021. Two of the cages were exposed to sunlight from 8:30-18:00 and brought inside during rainstorms in the midday that lasted approximately 2 hours, while the other two cages were placed in deep shade and served as a control. After the exposure, the mosquitoes were collected and frozen at -80°C. The mosquitoes were thawed and then extracted in methanol followed by high-performance liquid chromatography analysis. RESULTS: The mosquitoes that were exposed to sunlight produced vitamin D3 whereas the mosquitoes kept in deep shade and not exposed to any sunlight did not produce significant vitamin D3 Conclusion: Mosquitoes exposed to sunlight have the ability to produce vitamin D3 Therefore, mosquitoes exposed to sunlight provide an excellent dietary source of vitamin D3 for insect eating vertebrates including birds and especially bats that avoid sun exposure and require vitamin D for their skeletal health.


Subject(s)
Culicidae , Sunlight , Adult , Animals , Cholecalciferol , Female , Florida , Humans , Male , Methanol , Vitamin D
2.
Acta Trop ; 187: 108-118, 2018 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30075097

ABSTRACT

The African Zika virus swept across the Pacific, reaching the New World in 2014. In July, 2016, Miami-Dade County, Florida became the locus of the first mosquito-borne Zika transmission zones in the continental United States. Control efforts were guided by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, including aerial and truck sprays of adulticides and larvicides. To improve our understanding of how best to fight Zika transmission in an urban environment in the developed world, trap counts of adult Aedes (Stegomyia) aegypti (L.) mosquitoes from the treatment zones were analyzed to determine efficacy of the different insecticide treatments. Analysis revealed that application of four different ester pyrethroid and one non-ester pyrethroid had no statistically significant effect on mosquito counts. Aerial application of naled, a potent organophosphate adulticide, produced significant but short-lived drops in Ae. aegypti counts in the first two applications in the first active transmission zone (Wynwood), then lost some efficacy with subsequent application. In the other active transmission zone (Miami Beach), naled produced no measurable effect in the first three applications, and only a small, transient, and marginally significant reduction in the fourth application. Repeated application of the larvicidal bacterium Bti was accompanied by steady declines of Ae. aegypti populations in both sites. Zika transmission ceased in the first transmission zone, but expanded in the second transmission zone during this period. Specific recommendations are proposed for future treatments of urban mosquitoes.


Subject(s)
Aedes/virology , Disease Vectors , Insecticides , Mosquito Control/methods , Zika Virus Infection/prevention & control , Zika Virus Infection/transmission , Zika Virus/isolation & purification , Animals , Florida , Humans
3.
J Exp Biol ; 216(Pt 13): 2412-20, 2013 Jul 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23761466

ABSTRACT

Agonistic behavior has shaped sociality across evolution. Though extremely diverse in types of displays and timing, agonistic encounters always follow the same conserved phases (evaluation, contest and post-resolution) and depend on homologous neural circuits modulated by the same neuroendocrine mediators across vertebrates. Among neuromodulators, serotonin (5-HT) is the main inhibitor of aggression, and arginine vasotocin (AVT) underlies sexual, individual and social context differences in behavior across vertebrate taxa. We aim to demonstrate that a distinct spatio-temporal pattern of activation of the social behavior network characterizes each type of aggression by exploring its modulation by both the 5-HT and AVT systems. We analyze the neuromodulation of aggression between the intermale reproduction-related aggression displayed by the gregarious Brachyhypopomus gauderio and the non-breeding intrasexual and intersexual territorial aggression displayed by the solitary Gymnotus omarorum. Differences in the telencephalic activity of 5-HT between species were paralleled by a differential serotonergic modulation through 1A receptors that inhibited aggression in the territorial aggression of G. omarorum but not in the reproduction-related aggression of B. gauderio. AVT injection increased the motivation towards aggression in the territorial aggression of G. omarorum but not in the reproduction-related aggression of B. gauderio, whereas the electric submission and dominance observed in G. omarorum and B. gauderio, respectively, were both AVT-dependent in a distinctive way. The advantages of our model species allowed us to identify precise target areas and mechanisms of the neuromodulation of two types of aggression that may represent more general and conserved strategies of the control of social behavior among vertebrates.


Subject(s)
Aggression , Electric Fish/physiology , Neurotransmitter Agents/metabolism , Serotonin/metabolism , Vasotocin/metabolism , Animals , Behavior, Animal , Female , Male , Sexual Behavior, Animal , Territoriality
4.
J Exp Biol ; 216(Pt 13): 2403-11, 2013 Jul 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23761465

ABSTRACT

The balance between the costs and benefits of conspicuous animal communication signals ensures that signal expression relates to the quality of the bearer. Signal plasticity enables males to enhance conspicuous signals to impress mates and competitors and to reduce signal expression to lower energetic and predation-related signaling costs when competition is low. While signal plasticity may benefit the signaler, it can compromise the reliability of the information conveyed by the signals. In this paper we review the effect of signal plasticity on the reliability of the electrocommunication signal of the gymnotiform fish Brachyhypopomus gauderio. We (1) summarize the endocrine regulation of signal plasticity, (2) explore the regulation of signal plasticity in females, (3) examine the information conveyed by the signal, (4) show how that information changes when the signal changes, and (5) consider the energetic strategies used to sustain expensive signaling. The electric organ discharge (EOD) of B. gauderio changes in response to social environment on two time scales. Two hormone classes, melanocortins and androgens, underlie the short-term and long-term modulation of signal amplitude and duration observed during social interaction. Population density drives signal amplitude enhancement, unexpectedly improving the reliability with which the signal predicts the signaler's size. The signal's second phase elongation predicts androgen levels and male reproductive condition. Males sustain signal enhancement with dietary intake, but when food is limited, they 'go for broke' and put extra energy into electric signals. Cortisol diminishes EOD parameters, but energy-limited males offset cortisol effects by boosting androgen levels. While physiological constraints are sufficient to maintain signal amplitude reliability, phenotypic integration and signaling costs maintain reliability of signal duration, consistent with theory of honest signaling.


Subject(s)
Animal Communication , Gymnotiformes/physiology , Androgens/metabolism , Animals , Electric Organ/physiology , Energy Metabolism , Female , Hydrocortisone/metabolism , Male , Melanocortins/metabolism , Sexual Behavior, Animal
5.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23579464

ABSTRACT

In animal communication, the social context that elicits particular dynamic changes in the signal can provide indirect clues to signal function. Female presence should increase the expression of male signal traits relevant for mate-choice, while male presence should promote the enhancement of traits involved in male-male competition. The electric fish Brachyhypopomus gauderio produces a biphasic electric pulse for electrolocation and communication. Pulse amplitude predicts the signaler's body size while pulse duration predicts circulating androgen levels. Males enhance pulse amplitude and duration when the numbers of males and females increase simultaneously. Here we tested the relative effects of female presence and male presence on male signal enhancement, and whether the size of the male competitor affected this enhancement. We found that male presence drives the enhancement of both pulse amplitude and second phase duration, independently of the size of the male competitor. Female presence induces the enhancement of pulse duration, but not pulse amplitude. These data suggest that males probably attend to information about a competitor's body size coded by pulse amplitude and attend to aggressiveness coded by a competitor's pulse duration, both potential predictors of fight outcome. Females may be primarily concerned about information on reproductive condition coded by pulse duration.


Subject(s)
Animal Communication , Cues , Electric Fish/physiology , Electric Organ/physiology , Neuronal Plasticity , Social Behavior , Androgens/metabolism , Animals , Competitive Behavior , Electric Fish/metabolism , Electric Organ/drug effects , Electric Organ/metabolism , Female , Hormone Antagonists/pharmacology , Male , Mating Preference, Animal , Melanocortins/metabolism , Membrane Potentials , Neuronal Plasticity/drug effects , Receptors, Melanocortin/antagonists & inhibitors , Receptors, Melanocortin/metabolism , Sex Factors , Signal Detection, Psychological , Time Factors
6.
Horm Behav ; 63(4): 586-97, 2013 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23434622

ABSTRACT

Some gymnotiform electric fish species rapidly modify their electric signal waveforms by altering the action potential (AP) waveforms of their electrocytes, the excitable cells that produce the electric organ discharge (EOD). The fish Brachyhypopomus gauderio alters EOD amplitude and pulse duration as a social signal in accordance with the prevailing social conditions, under the dual regulation of melanocortins and androgens. We show here that B. gauderio uses two distinct cellular mechanisms to change signal amplitude, and its use of these two mechanisms varies with age and sex of the signaler. EOD amplitude and waveform are regulated by the coordinated timing and shaping of two APs generated from two opposing excitable membranes in each electrocyte. The two membranes fire in sequence within 100 µs of each other with the second AP being broader than the first. We have shown previously that mature males increase EOD amplitude and duration when melanocortin peptide hormones act directly on electrocytes to selectively broaden the second AP and increase the delay between the two APs by approximately 25 µs. Here we show that females selectively broaden only the second AP as males do, but increase amplitude of both APs with no change in delay between them, a previously unreported second mechanism of EOD amplitude change in B. gauderio. Juvenile fish broaden both APs and increase the delay between the APs. Cellular mechanisms of EOD plasticity are therefore shaped during development, presumably by sex steroids, becoming sexually dimorphic at maturity.


Subject(s)
Aging/psychology , Animal Communication , Electric Fish/physiology , Hormones/physiology , Social Behavior , Action Potentials/physiology , Analysis of Variance , Animals , Circadian Rhythm , Electric Organ/physiology , Electrolytes , Electrophysiological Phenomena , Female , Larva , Male , Sex Characteristics , Sex Differentiation/drug effects
7.
Front Behav Neurosci ; 6: 77, 2012.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23181014

ABSTRACT

Agonistic aggression has provided an excellent framework to study how conserved circuits and neurochemical mediators control species-specific and context-dependent behavior. The principal inhibitory control upon aggression is serotonin (5-HT) dependent, and the activation of 5-HT(1A) receptors is involved in its action. To address whether the serotonergic system differentially regulates different types of aggression, we used two species of weakly electric fish: the solitary Gymnotus omarorum and the gregarious Brachyhypopomus gauderio, which display distinctive types of aggression as part of each species' natural behavioral repertoire. We found that in the reproduction-related aggression displayed by B. gauderio after conflict resolution, the serotonergic activity follows the classic pattern in which subordinates exhibit higher 5-HT levels than controls. After the territorial aggression displayed by G. omarorum, however, both dominants and subordinates show lower 5-HT levels than controls, indicating a different response of the serotonergic system. Further, we found interspecific differences in basal serotonin turnover and in the dynamic profile of the changes in 5-HT levels from pre-contest to post-contest. Finally, we found the expected reduction of aggression and outcome shift in the territorial aggression of G. omarorum after 8-OH-DPAT (5-HT(1A) receptor agonist) administration, but no effect in the reproduction-related aggression of B. gauderio. Our results demonstrate the differential participation of the serotonergic system in the modulation of two types of aggression that we speculate may be a general strategy of the neuroendocrine control of aggression across vertebrates.

8.
Horm Behav ; 62(4): 381-8, 2012 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22801246

ABSTRACT

Vertebrates exposed to stressful conditions release glucocorticoids to sustain energy expenditure. In most species elevated glucocorticoids inhibit reproduction. However individuals with limited remaining reproductive opportunities cannot afford to forgo reproduction and should resist glucocorticoid-mediated inhibition of reproductive behavior. The electric fish Brachyhypopomus gauderio has a single breeding season in its lifetime, thus we expect males to resist glucocorticoid-mediated inhibition of their sexual advertisement signals. We studied stress resistance in male B. gauderio (i) by examining the effect of exogenous cortisol administration on the signal waveform and (ii) by investigating the effect of food limitation on androgen and cortisol levels, the amplitude of the electric signal waveform, the responsiveness of the electric signal waveform to social challenge, and the amount of feeding activity. Exogenous cortisol administration did reduce signal amplitude and pulse duration, but endogenous cortisol levels did not rise with food limitation or social challenge. Despite food limitation, males responded to social challenges by further increasing androgen levels and enhancing the amplitude and duration of their electric signal waveforms. Food-restricted males increased androgen levels and signal pulse duration more than males fed ad libitum. Socially challenged fish increased food consumption, probably to compensate for their elevated energy expenditure. Previous studies showed that socially challenged males of this species simultaneously elevate testosterone and cortisol in proportion to signal amplitude. Thus, B. gauderio appears to protect its cortisol-sensitive electric advertisement signal by increasing food intake, limiting cortisol release, and offsetting signal reduction from cortisol with signal-enhancing androgens.


Subject(s)
Animal Communication , Caloric Restriction/psychology , Electric Fish/physiology , Social Isolation , Stress, Psychological/physiopathology , Adaptation, Psychological/physiology , Animals , Caloric Restriction/veterinary , Electric Fish/blood , Electric Organ/physiopathology , Electrophysiological Phenomena/physiology , Female , Hydrocortisone/blood , Hydrocortisone/pharmacology , Longevity/physiology , Male , Malnutrition/psychology , Malnutrition/veterinary , Physical Exertion/physiology , Social Isolation/psychology , Stress, Psychological/blood
9.
Anim Behav ; 83(4): 935-944, 2012 Apr 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22665940

ABSTRACT

Signal honesty may be compromised when heightened competition provides incentive for signal exaggeration. Some degree of honesty might be maintained by intrinsic handicap costs on signalling or through imposition of extrinsic costs, such as social punishment of low quality cheaters. Thus, theory predicts a delicate balance between signal enhancement and signal reliability that varies with degree of social competition, handicap cost, and social cost. We investigated whether male sexual signals of the electric fish Brachyhypopomus gauderio would become less reliable predictors of body length when competition provides incentives for males to boost electric signal amplitude. As expected, social competition under natural field conditions and in controlled lab experiments drove males to enhance their signals. However, signal enhancement improved the reliability of the information conveyed by the signal, as revealed in the tightening of the relationship between signal amplitude and body length. Signal augmentation in male B. gauderio was independent of body length, and thus appeared not to be curtailed through punishment of low quality (small) individuals. Rather, all individuals boosted their signals under high competition, but those whose signals were farthest from the predicted value under low competition boosted signal amplitude the most. By elimination, intrinsic handicap cost of signal production, rather than extrinsic social cost, appears to be the basis for the unexpected reinforcement of electric signal honesty under social competition. Signal modulation may provide its greatest advantage to the signaller as a mechanism for handicap disposal under low competition rather than as a mechanism for exaggeration of quality under high competition.

10.
Horm Behav ; 60(4): 420-6, 2011 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21802421

ABSTRACT

Hormones mediate sexually selected traits including advertisement signals. Hormonal co-regulation links the signal to other hormonally-mediated traits such that the tighter the integration, the more reliable the signal is as a predictor of those other traits. Androgen administration increases the duration of the communication signal pulse in both sexes of the electric fish Brachyhypopomus gauderio. To determine whether the duration of the signal pulse could function as an honest indicator of androgen levels and other androgen-mediated traits, we measured the variation in sex steroids, signal pulse duration, and sexual development throughout the breeding season of B. gauderio in marshes in Uruguay. Although the sexes had different hormone titres and signal characteristics, in both sexes circulating levels of the androgens testosterone (T) and 11-ketotestosterone (11-KT) were strongly related to signal pulse duration. Consequently, signal pulse duration can serve as an honest indicator of circulating androgens in males and females alike. Additionally, through phenotypic integration, signal pulse duration also predicts other sexual traits directly related to androgen production: gonad size in males and estradiol (E2) levels in females. Our findings show that tight hormonal phenotypic integration between advertisement signal and other sex steroid-mediated traits renders the advertisement signal an honest indicator of a suite of reproductive traits.


Subject(s)
Electricity , Gymnotiformes/physiology , Hormones/pharmacology , Animals , Behavior, Animal/drug effects , Behavior, Animal/physiology , Estradiol/blood , Female , Gymnotiformes/blood , Gymnotiformes/metabolism , Hormones/blood , Male , Models, Biological , Phenotype , Sex Characteristics , Signal Transduction/drug effects , Signal Transduction/physiology , Testosterone/analogs & derivatives , Testosterone/blood
11.
Horm Behav ; 60(2): 139-47, 2011 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21596047

ABSTRACT

The communication signals of electric fish can be dynamic, varying between the sexes on a circadian rhythm and in response to social and environmental cues. In the gymnotiform fish Brachyhypopomus gauderio waveform shape of the electric organ discharge (EOD) is regulated by steroid and peptide hormones. Furthermore, EOD amplitude and duration change on different timescales and in response to different social stimuli, suggesting that they are regulated by different mechanisms. Little is known about how androgen and peptide hormone systems interact to regulate signal waveform. We investigated the relationship between the androgens testosterone (T) and 11-ketotestosterone (11-KT), the melanocortin peptide hormone α-MSH, and their roles in regulating EOD waveform of male B. gauderio. Males were implanted with androgen (T, 11-KT, or blank), and injected with α-MSH before and at the peak of androgen effect. We compared the effects of androgen implants and social interactions by giving males a size-matched male stimulus with which they could interact electrically. Social stimuli and both androgens increased EOD duration, but only social stimuli and 11-KT elevated amplitude. However, no androgen enhanced EOD amplitude to the extent of a social stimulus, suggesting that a yet unidentified hormonal pathway regulates this signal parameter. Additionally, both androgens increased response of EOD duration to α-MSH, but only 11-KT increased response of EOD amplitude to α-MSH. Social stimuli had no effect on EOD response to α-MSH. The finding that EOD amplitude is preferentially regulated by 11-KT in B. gauderio may provide the basis for independent control of amplitude and duration.


Subject(s)
Androgens/pharmacology , Animal Communication , Electric Organ/drug effects , Gymnotiformes/physiology , Testosterone/analogs & derivatives , Testosterone/pharmacology , alpha-MSH/pharmacology , Animals , Behavior, Animal/drug effects , Behavior, Animal/physiology , Electric Organ/physiology , Male
12.
J Exp Biol ; 214(Pt 2): 200-5, 2011 Jan 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21177941

ABSTRACT

Communication signals may be energetically expensive or inexpensive to produce, depending on the function of the signal and the competitive nature of the communication system. Males of sexually selected species may produce high-energy advertisement signals, both to enhance detectability and to signal their size and body condition. Accordingly, the proportion of the energy budget allocated to signal production ranges from almost nothing for many signals to somewhere in excess of 50% for acoustic signals in short-lived sexually selected species. Recent data from gymnotiform electric fish reveal mechanisms that regulate energy allocated to sexual advertisement signals through dynamical remodeling of the excitable membranes in the electric organ. Further, males of the short-lived sexually selected species, Brachyhypopomus gauderio, trade off among different metabolic compartments, allocating energy to signal production while reducing energy used in other metabolic functions. Female B. gauderio, by contrast, do not trade off energy between signaling and other functions. To fuel energetically expensive signal production, we expect a continuum of strategies to be adopted by animals of different life history strategies. Future studies should explore the relation between life history and energy allocation trade-offs.


Subject(s)
Animal Communication , Electric Fish/metabolism , Energy Metabolism , Animals , Electric Fish/physiology , Female , Gymnotiformes/metabolism , Gymnotiformes/physiology , Male , Sex Characteristics
13.
PLoS Biol ; 7(9): e1000203, 2009 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19787026

ABSTRACT

Electric fish generate and sense electric fields for navigation and communication. These signals can be energetically costly to produce and can attract electroreceptive predators. To minimize costs, some nocturnally active electric fish rapidly boost the power of their signals only at times of high social activity, either as night approaches or in response to social encounters. Here we show that the gymnotiform electric fish Sternopygus macrurus rapidly boosts signal amplitude by 40% at night and during social encounters. S. macrurus increases signal magnitude through the rapid and selective trafficking of voltage-gated sodium channels into the excitable membranes of its electrogenic cells, a process under the control of pituitary peptide hormones and intracellular second-messenger pathways. S. macrurus thus maintains a circadian rhythm in signal amplitude and adapts within minutes to environmental events by increasing signal amplitude through the rapid trafficking of ion channels, a process that directly modifies an ongoing behavior in real time.


Subject(s)
Circadian Rhythm/physiology , Cues , Gymnotiformes/physiology , Ion Channel Gating/physiology , Ion Channels/metabolism , Social Behavior , Action Potentials/drug effects , Action Potentials/physiology , Adrenocorticotropic Hormone/pharmacology , Animals , Circadian Rhythm/drug effects , Cnidarian Venoms/pharmacology , Cyclic AMP/metabolism , Cyclic AMP-Dependent Protein Kinases/metabolism , Electric Organ/cytology , Electric Organ/drug effects , Electric Organ/physiology , Ion Channel Gating/drug effects , Melanocortins/pharmacology , Models, Biological , Peptides/pharmacology , Potassium Channels, Inwardly Rectifying/metabolism , Protein Transport/drug effects , Sodium/metabolism , Transport Vesicles/drug effects , Transport Vesicles/metabolism
14.
Horm Behav ; 56(4): 399-409, 2009 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19647742

ABSTRACT

Sexually-selected communication signals can be used by competing males to settle contests without incurring the costs of fighting. Steroid regulation of these signals can render them as reliable indicators of a male's physiological state. We investigated how plasticity in electrocommunication signals is driven by social competition for mates, mediated by steroid hormones, and subject to the effects of past social experience. We measured the electric waveform's amplitude and duration and steroid hormone levels of male gymnotiform electric fish (Brachyhypopomus gauderio) following week-long periods of social isolation, and low or high social competition. To quantify the effect of social history on the modulation of the electric signal, six groups of six males experienced all three social conditions but in different order. We found that males differentially modulate their electric signals depending on the order they experienced these conditions. Thus, past social interactions affect both present and future social electric signals. Cortisol levels and the amplitude of the electric signal appeared to track the intensity of competition, while androgen levels and the duration of the electric signal only responded to the presence (low and high competition) or absence (isolation) of a social environment (low and high androgens respectively). In addition, cortisol levels were related to the body size of the males at high social competition. Taken together, these findings suggest that the capacity of males to modulate their signals in response to social competition is regulated by steroids.


Subject(s)
Behavior, Animal/physiology , Competitive Behavior/physiology , Electric Organ/physiology , Gymnotiformes/physiology , Steroids/metabolism , Analysis of Variance , Androgens/blood , Androgens/metabolism , Animals , Body Size/physiology , Circadian Rhythm/physiology , Electricity , Hydrocortisone/blood , Hydrocortisone/metabolism , Male , Random Allocation , Regression Analysis , Social Isolation , Steroids/blood , Testosterone/analogs & derivatives , Testosterone/blood , Testosterone/metabolism
15.
Horm Behav ; 56(2): 264-73, 2009 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19450600

ABSTRACT

Sex steroids were initially defined by their actions shaping sexually dimorphic behavioral patterns. More recently scientists have begun exploring the role of steroids in determining sex differences in behavioral plasticity. We investigated the role of androgens in potentiating circadian, pharmacological, and socially-induced plasticity in the amplitude and duration of electric organ discharges (EODs) of female gymnotiform fish. We first challenged female fish with injections of serotonin (5-HT) and adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH), and with social encounters with female and male conspecifics to characterize females' pre-implant responses to each treatment. Each individual was then implanted with a pellet containing dihydrotestosterone (DHT) concentrations of 0.0, 0.03, 0.1, 0.3, or 1.0 mg 10 g(-1) body weight. We then repeated all challenges and compared each female's pre- and post-implant responses. The highest implant dose enhanced EOD duration modulations in response to all challenge types, responses to male challenge were also greater at the second highest dose, and responses to ACTH challenge were enhanced in females receiving all but the smallest dose (and blank) implants. Alternatively, amplitude modulations were enhanced only during female challenges and only when females received the highest DHT dose. Our results highlight the differential regulation of EOD duration and amplitude, and suggest that DHT enhanced the intrinsic plasticity of the electrogenic cells that produce the EOD rather than modifying behavioral phenotypes. The relative failure of DHT to enhance EOD amplitude plasticity also implies that factors other than androgens are involved in regulating/promoting male-typical EOD circadian rhythms and waveform modulations displayed in social contexts.


Subject(s)
Adaptation, Physiological/physiology , Animal Communication , Dihydrotestosterone/metabolism , Electric Organ/physiology , Gymnotiformes/physiology , Social Behavior , Adrenocorticotropic Hormone/metabolism , Analysis of Variance , Animals , Circadian Rhythm , Female , Likelihood Functions , Male , Random Allocation , Regression Analysis , Serotonin/metabolism , Sex Characteristics
16.
Horm Behav ; 55(2): 306-13, 2009 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19063894

ABSTRACT

The hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal/interrenal axis couples serotonergic activity in the brain to the peripheral regulators of energy balance and response to stress. The regulation of peripheral systems occurs largely through the release of peptide hormones, especially the melanocortins (adrenocorticotropic hormone [ACTH] and alpha melanocyte stimulating hormone [alpha-MSH]), and beta-endorphin. Once in circulation, these peptides regulate a wide range of processes; alpha-MSH in particular regulates behaviors and physiologies with sexual and social functions. We investigated the role of the HPI and melanocortin peptides in regulation of electric social signals in the gymnotiform electric fish, Brachyhypopomus pinnicaudatus. We found that corticotropin releasing factor, thyrotropin-releasing hormone, and alpha-MSH, three peptide hormones of the HPI/HPA, increased electric signal waveform amplitude and duration when injected into free-swimming fish. A fourth peptide, a synthetic cyclic-alpha-MSH analog attenuated the normal circadian and socially-induced EOD enhancements in vivo. When applied to the electrogenic cells (electrocytes) in vitro, only alpha-MSH increased the amplitude and duration of the electrocyte discharge similar to the waveform enhancements seen in vivo. The cyclic-alpha-MSH analog had no effect on its own, but blocked or attenuated alpha-MSH-induced enhancements in the single-cell discharge parameters, demonstrating that this compound functions as a silent antagonist at the electrocyte. Overall, these results strongly suggest that the HPI regulates the EOD communication signal, and demonstrate that circulating melanocortin peptides enhance the electrocyte discharge waveform.


Subject(s)
Electric Fish/physiology , Electric Organ/physiology , Melanocortins/metabolism , Social Behavior , Action Potentials , Animals , Circadian Rhythm , Corticotropin-Releasing Hormone/metabolism , Electricity , Electrodes , Hypothalamo-Hypophyseal System/physiology , Interrenal Gland/physiology , Male , Pituitary-Adrenal System/physiology , Thyrotropin-Releasing Hormone/metabolism , alpha-MSH/metabolism
17.
J Exp Biol ; 211(Pt 6): 1012-20, 2008 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18310126

ABSTRACT

To understand the evolution of sexually dimorphic communication signals, we must quantify their costs, including their energetic costs, the regulation of these costs, and the difference between the costs for the sexes. Here, we provide the first direct measurements of the relative energy expended on electric signals and show for the focal species Brachyhypopomus pinnicaudatus that males spend a significantly greater proportion of their total energy budget on signal generation (11-22%) compared with females (3%). Both sexes significantly reduce the energy spent on electric signals during daylight hours through circadian modulation of the amplitude, duration and repetition rate of the electric signal, but this effect is more marked in males. Male body condition predicted the energy spent on electric signals (R(2)=0.75). The oxygen consumed by males for signal production closely paralleled the product of the electric signal's waveform area (R(2)=0.99) and the discharge rate (R(2)=0.59), two signal parameters that can be assessed directly by conspecifics. Thus the electric communication signal of males carries the information to reveal their body condition to prospective mates and competing males. Because the electric signal constitutes a significant fraction of the energy budget, energy savings, along with predation avoidance, provides an adaptive basis for the production of circadian rhythms in electric signals.


Subject(s)
Animal Communication , Electric Organ/physiology , Gymnotiformes/physiology , Animals , Circadian Rhythm/physiology , Energy Metabolism , Female , Male , Models, Biological , Oxygen Consumption , Sex Characteristics , Signal Transduction
18.
Horm Behav ; 53(3): 481-8, 2008 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18206154

ABSTRACT

Serotonin (5-HT) is an indirect modulator of the electric organ discharge (EOD) in the weakly electric gymnotiform fish, Brachyhypopomus pinnicaudatus. Injections of 5-HT enhance EOD waveform "masculinity", increasing both waveform amplitude and the duration of the second phase. This study investigated the pharmacological identity of 5-HT receptors that regulate the electric waveform and their effects on EOD amplitude and duration. We present evidence that two sets of serotonin receptors modulate the EOD in opposite directions. We found that the 5HT1AR agonist 8-OH-DPAT diminishes EOD duration and amplitude while the 5HT1AR antagonist WAY100635 increases these parameters. In contrast, the 5HT2R agonist alpha-Me-5-HT increases EOD amplitude but not duration, yet 5-HT-induced increases in EOD duration can be inhibited by blocking 5HT2A/2C-like receptors with ketanserin. These results show that 5-HT exerts bi-directional control of EOD modulations in B. pinnicaudatus via action at receptors similar to mammalian 5HT1A and 5HT2 receptors. The discordant amplitude and duration response suggests separate mechanisms for modulating these waveform parameters.


Subject(s)
Animal Communication , Electric Fish/metabolism , Electric Organ/physiology , Receptor, Serotonin, 5-HT1A/metabolism , Receptors, Serotonin, 5-HT2/metabolism , Analysis of Variance , Animals , Electric Organ/drug effects , Male , Serotonin 5-HT1 Receptor Agonists , Serotonin 5-HT1 Receptor Antagonists , Serotonin 5-HT2 Receptor Agonists , Serotonin 5-HT2 Receptor Antagonists , Serotonin Agents/pharmacology , Sex Factors , Social Behavior , Social Dominance
19.
Bioscience ; 58(5): 415-425, 2008.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20209064

ABSTRACT

Electric fish produce weak electric fields to image their world in darkness and to communicate with potential mates and rivals. Eavesdropping by electroreceptive predators exerts selective pressure on electric fish to shift their signals into less-detectable high-frequency spectral ranges. Hypopomid electric fish evolved a signal-cloaking strategy that reduces their detectability by predators in the lab (and thus presumably their risk of predation in the field). These fish produce broad-frequency electric fields close to the body, but the heterogeneous local fields merge over space to cancel the low-frequency spectrum at a distance. Mature males dynamically regulate this cloaking mechanism to enhance or suppress low-frequency energy. The mechanism underlying electric-field cloaking involves electrogenic cells that produce two independent action potentials. In a unique twist, these cells orient sodium and potassium currents in the same direction, potentially boosting their capabilities for current generation. Exploration of such evolutionary inventions could aid the design of biogenerators to power implantable medical devices, an ambition that would benefit from the complete genome sequence of a gymnotiform fish.

20.
Physiol Behav ; 90(1): 11-20, 2007 Jan 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16996093

ABSTRACT

Weakly electric fish have long been known to express day-night oscillations in their discharge rates, and in the amplitude and duration of individual electric organ discharges (EODs). Because these oscillations are altered by social environment and neuroendocrine interactions, electric fish are excellent organisms for exploring the social and neuroendocrine regulation of circadian rhythm expression. Previous studies asserting that these oscillations are circadian rhythms have been criticized for failing to control temperature and randomize feeding regimes, or for running the fish under constant conditions for just 2-3 days. Here we show that the day-night oscillations in the EODs of the neotropical gymnotiform fish Brachyhypopomus pinnicaudatus free-run for over a week under constant photic and thermal conditions, and randomized food provisioning. Sex differences were apparent in strength and magnitude of the circadian oscillations; male oscillations were stronger and larger. All three parameters retain a common oscillation period while differing in the persistence of oscillation strength and magnitude, a difference consistent with proposals by others that declines of behavioral circadian rhythms may result from breakdowns downstream of the central oscillator.


Subject(s)
Animal Communication , Behavior, Animal/physiology , Circadian Rhythm/physiology , Electric Fish/physiology , Electric Organ/physiology , Analysis of Variance , Animals , Environment , Female , Light , Male , Periodicity , Photoperiod , Sex Factors , Statistics, Nonparametric , Temperature
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