Damien Huzard, PhD

Neuro-Behaviorist

Low empathy-like behaviour in male mice associates with impaired sociability, emotional memory, physiological stress reactivity and variations in neurobiological regulations


Journal article


G. Laviola, F. Zoratto, Danilo Ingiosi, V. Carito, Damien Huzard, M. Fiore, S. Macrì
PloS one, 2017

Semantic Scholar DOI PubMedCentral PubMed
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APA   Click to copy
Laviola, G., Zoratto, F., Ingiosi, D., Carito, V., Huzard, D., Fiore, M., & Macrì, S. (2017). Low empathy-like behaviour in male mice associates with impaired sociability, emotional memory, physiological stress reactivity and variations in neurobiological regulations. PloS One.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Laviola, G., F. Zoratto, Danilo Ingiosi, V. Carito, Damien Huzard, M. Fiore, and S. Macrì. “Low Empathy-like Behaviour in Male Mice Associates with Impaired Sociability, Emotional Memory, Physiological Stress Reactivity and Variations in Neurobiological Regulations.” PloS one (2017).


MLA   Click to copy
Laviola, G., et al. “Low Empathy-like Behaviour in Male Mice Associates with Impaired Sociability, Emotional Memory, Physiological Stress Reactivity and Variations in Neurobiological Regulations.” PloS One, 2017.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{g2017a,
  title = {Low empathy-like behaviour in male mice associates with impaired sociability, emotional memory, physiological stress reactivity and variations in neurobiological regulations},
  year = {2017},
  journal = {PloS one},
  author = {Laviola, G. and Zoratto, F. and Ingiosi, Danilo and Carito, V. and Huzard, Damien and Fiore, M. and Macrì, S.}
}

Abstract

Deficits in empathy have been proposed to constitute a hallmark of several psychiatric disturbances like conduct disorder, antisocial and narcissistic personality disorders. Limited sensitivity to punishment, shallow or deficient affect and reduced physiological reactivity to environmental stressors have been often reported to co-occur with limited empathy and contribute to the onset of antisocial phenotypes. Empathy in its simplest form (i.e. emotional contagion) is addressed in preclinical models through the evaluation of the social transmission of emotional states: mice exposed to a painful stimulus display a higher response if in the presence of a familiar individual experiencing a higher degree of discomfort, than in isolation. In the present study, we investigated whether a reduction of emotional contagion can be considered a predictor of reduced sociality, sensitivity to punishment and physiological stress reactivity. To this aim, we first evaluated emotional contagion in a group of Balb/cJ mice and then discretised their values in four quartiles. The upper (i.e. Emotional Contagion Prone, ECP) and the lower (i.e. Emotional Contagion Resistant, ECR) quartiles constituted the experimental groups. Our results indicate that mice in the lower quartile are characterized by reduced sociability, impaired memory of negative events and dampened hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical reactivity to external stressors. Furthermore, in the absence of changes in oxytocin receptor density, we show that these mice exhibit elevated concentrations of oxytocin and vasopressin and reduced density of BDNF receptors in behaviourally-relevant brain areas. Thus, not only do present results translate to the preclinical investigation of psychiatric disturbances, but also they can contribute to the study of emotional contagion in terms of its adaptive significance.


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