Development of social recognition ability in female rats: Effect of pubertal ovarian hormones

ElsevierVolume 151, May 2023, 105347Hormones and BehaviorAuthor links open overlay panel, , , Highlights•

Juvenile females do not show adult-typical patterns of social recognition in the social discrimination (SD) test

Females begin to show SD ability using a 30-minute interval at adolescence

The development of 30-minute interval SD depends on pubertal ovarian hormones

Estradiol given to pre-pubertally ovariectomized adult females does not restore 30-minute interval SD

Abstract

The ability to recognize previously encountered conspecifics is crucial for social interaction. This social recognition ability is well characterized in adult rodents of both sexes but remains largely unexplored in juveniles. Using the social discrimination test of social recognition with short intervals (30 min and 1 h), we first found that juvenile female rats do not display a difference in investigation directed toward a novel vs. familiar stimulus rat. Using the social discrimination test with a 30-minute interval, we then showed that social recognition is established by the time of adolescence in female rats. Based on these findings, we hypothesized that social recognition is dependent on the initiation of ovarian hormone release during puberty. To test this, we ovariectomized females prior to puberty and found that prepubertal ovariectomy prevented the development of social recognition ability in adulthood. Administration of estradiol benzoate, 48 h prior to testing, to juvenile females or prepubertally ovariectomized adult females did not restore social recognition, suggesting that ovarian hormones organize the neural circuitry regulating this behavior during adolescence. These findings provide the first evidence of an effect of pubertal development on social recognition ability in female rats and highlight the importance of considering sex and age when interpreting results from behavioral paradigms initially designed for use in adult males.

Keywords

Social behavior

Development

Social recognition

Sex differences

Estradiol

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