Hormone study gives scientists a sense of how animals bond
Roslin in the News
- InSciences 25 February 10
Hormone Study Gives Scientists a Sense of How Animals Bond - The Scotsman 25 February 10
Autism may be caused by breakdown of sense of smell, say Scots scientists - eScienceNews 24 February 10
Hormone study gives scientists a sense of how animals bond - BBC News 24 February 10
Scent research could help autism understanding - Caledonian Mercury 24 February 10
Scientists sniff out clue to forming deep and meaningful relationships - The Roslin Institute is not responsible for the content of external internet sites
Published on 18 March 2010
Scientists have pinpointed how a key hormone helps animals to recognise others by their smell.
Scientists have pinpointed how a key hormone helps animals to recognise others by their smell.
Researchers at the University of Edinburgh have shown that the hormone vasopressin helps the brain differentiate between familiar and new scents.
The study, published in the journal Nature, suggests that when the hormone fails to function, animals are unable to recognise other individuals from their scent.
The ability to recognise others by smell is crucial in helping animals to establish strong bonds with other animals.
The research, funded by the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC), may offer clues about the way people make emotional connections with others through smell and deepen our understanding of the role scent plays in memory.
Many scientists think a failure in this recognition system in humans may prevent them from forming deep emotional bonds with others.
It is thought that it may be at the root of conditions such as some forms of autism and social phobia.
Researchers, including Dr Simone Meddle of The Roslin Institute and scientists in Germany and Japan, reached their conclusion by studying the way rats familiarise themselves with other rats through smell. They placed an adult rat in an enclosure with a juvenile rat and left them to sniff and interact with each other. After a short separation, they placed the juvenile back in the adult’s enclosure, together with an unknown juvenile. Adult rats whose vasopressin had been blocked in part of the brain involved in olfactory processing information failed to recognise the juvenile they had already met.
Dr Meddle said of the group's findings "this study has revealed that the hormone vasopressin plays a significant role in regulating part of the brain that encodes olfactory information. Vasopressin is vital for recognition of individuals by their smell and is important for social interactions between animals”.
Professor Janet Allen, BBSRC Director of Research said, “Research that helps us to gain a fundamental understanding of how our brains work is vital if we are to know what is happening when something has gone wrong. The biological basis of psychological responses can often be extremely complicated, so finding this direct relationship between a hormone and a psycho-social phenomenon could open up a whole wealth of knowledge in this area.”