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Volume 17, Number 12,
Issue of June 15, 1997
pp. 4849-4855
Copyright ©1997 Society for Neuroscience
Dynamic Changes in Nucleus Accumbens Dopamine Efflux During the
Coolidge Effect in Male Rats
Dennis F. Fiorino,
Ariane Coury, and
Anthony G. Phillips
Psychology Department, University of British Columbia, Vancouver,
British Columbia, Canada V6T 1Z4
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
FOOTNOTES
REFERENCES
ABSTRACT
The Coolidge effect describes the reinitiation of sexual
behavior in a "sexually satiated" animal in response to a novel
receptive mate. Given the role of the mesolimbic dopamine (DA) system
in the initiation and maintenance of motivated behavior, microdialysis was used to monitor nucleus accumbens (NAC) DA transmission during copulation, sexual satiety, and the reinitiation of sexual behavior. In
agreement with earlier reports, the presentation of an estrous female
behind a screen and copulation were associated with significant increases in NAC DA efflux. Return of NAC DA concentrations to baseline
values coincided with a period of sexual satiety, although concentrations of the DA metabolites, dihydroxyphenylacetic acid and
homovanillic acid, remained elevated. The presentation of a novel
receptive female behind a screen resulted in a slight increase in NAC
DA, which was augmented significantly during renewed copulation with
the novel female. The present data suggest that the stimulus properties
of a novel receptive female may serve to increase NAC DA transmission
in a sexually satiated male rat, and this, in turn, may be related to
the reinitiation of sexual behavior.
Key words:
sexual behavior;
nucleus accumbens;
microdialysis;
dopamine (DA);
dihydroxyphenylacetic acid (DOPAC);
homovanillic acid
(HVA);
rat;
sexual satiation;
Coolidge effect;
incentive motivation;
copulation;
reward;
appetitive;
consummatory;
mesolimbic;
exhaustion;
novelty
INTRODUCTION
A male rat that has copulated to satiety can
be induced to mate again if the initial female is replaced with a novel
receptive female. This has come to be known as the Coolidge effect and
has been observed in a number of mammalian species (Wilson et al., 1963 ). General factors such as fatigue or motoric depression are not
sufficient to explain the apparent state of sexual satiation, because
stimuli from a novel female can still induce copulation. Sexual satiety
can also be "reversed" pharmacologically, to a significant degree,
by the administration of a variety of drugs that can act on different
neurotransmitter systems. These drugs include yohimbine, 8-OH-DPAT
(Rodriguez-Manzo and Fernandez-Guasti, 1994 , 1995a ), nalaxone (Pfaus
and Gorzalka, 1987 ; Rodriguez-Manzo and Fernandez-Guasti, 1995a ,b ), and
apomorphine (Mas et al., 1995c ). Although the peripheral action of
these drugs cannot be ruled out (e.g., adrenergic effects on erectile
function), effects on central mechanisms underlying sexual satiety have
been proposed on the basis of selective central noradrenergic lesion
experiments (Rodriguez-Manzo and Fernandez-Guasti, 1995a ) and
microdialysis experiments that monitored dopaminergic metabolism in the
medial preoptic area (Mas et al., 1995a ,b ).
Given that central mechanisms may mediate the reinitiation of
sexual behavior characteristic of the Coolidge effect, a likely candidate is the mesolimbic dopamine (DA) system, projecting from the
ventral tegmental area to the NAC. Mesolimbic DA seems to act as a
primary modulator in complex integrative processes that involve the
evaluation of environmental stimuli, such as cues from a sexually
receptive female, and the organization of goal-directed behaviors,
including copulation (Fibiger and Phillips, 1986 ; Blackburn et al.,
1992 ; Phillips et al., 1992 ; LeMoal, 1995 ; Salamone, 1996 ).
Although midbrain DA neurons respond to primary rewards and cues
predictive of reward, novel or unpredictable environmental stimuli
induce neuronal activation most robustly over repeated training
sessions (Fabre et al., 1983 ; Schultz, 1992 ; Mirenowicz and Schultz,
1994 ). There is a great deal of evidence that supports an important
facilitatory role for mesolimbic DA in the initiation and maintenance
of rat sexual behavior (Pfaus and Everitt, 1995 ), and a number of
microdialysis studies report increases in NAC DA efflux during
appetitive and consummatory phases of male sexual behavior (Pfaus et
al., 1990 ; Pleim et al., 1990 ; Damsma et al., 1992 ; Wenkstern et al.,
1993 ; Fumero et al., 1994 ; Mas et al., 1995b ). There are, however,
relatively few data on the neurochemical correlates of sexual satiation
and the reinitiation of sexual behavior. The application of in
vivo microdialysis to monitor mesolimbic DA neurotransmission
during the Coolidge effect provides a unique opportunity to examine the
role of NAC DA in copulation, sexual satiety, and the reinitiation of
copulation.
A microdialysis experiment was conducted to determine the
following: (1) whether the onset of sexual satiety is accompanied by
the return of extracellular DA concentrations in the NAC to precopulation values or below, and (2) whether the reinstatement of
copulatory behavior in a "sexually satiated" male rat with a novel
receptive female is correlated with increases in NAC DA efflux.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Subjects. Male Sprague Dawley rats, obtained from the
Animal Care Centre (at the University of British Columbia), and female Long-Evans rats, obtained from Charles River Canada (St. Constant, Quebec, Canada), were housed in wire mesh cages (18 × 25 × 65 cm; five per cage) in separate colony rooms. Colony rooms were maintained at a temperature of ~20°C on a reverse 12 hr light/dark cycle. Rats had unlimited access to food (Purina Rat Chow) and water.
Surgery and behavioral testing before brain microdialysis.
Female rats were ovariectomized bilaterally under halothane gas anesthesia (Fluothane, Ayerst Laboratories) at least 4 weeks before testing. Sexual receptivity in the stimulus females was induced by
subcutaneous injections of estradiol benzoate (10 µg) and
progesterone (500 µg), 48 and 4 hr, respectively, before each test
session. Male rats were screened for sexual behavior on two occasions, 4 d apart, in Plexiglas chambers (35 × 35 × 40 cm)
with wire mesh floors. Only male rats that reached a performance
criterion, which included intromission within 5 min of the presentation
of the female and ejaculation within 15 min of the first intromission, during the two screening tests were implanted with microdialysis probe
guide cannulae.
Male rats (n = 5) were anesthetized with ketamine
hydrochloride (100 mg/kg, i.p.) and xylazine (10 mg/kg,
i.p.) before stereotaxic surgery. Microdialysis probe guide cannulae
(19 gauge) were implanted bilaterally over the NAC (coordinates from
bregma: anterior, +1.7 mm; medial, ± 1.1 mm; ventral, 1.0 mm; flat
skull) and were secured to the skull with dental acrylic and jeweler's
screws. Bilateral guide cannulae implants were used to maximize the
opportunity for a successful microdialysis experiment. Fortunately, in
the present experiment, only one cannula was needed for each rat. Male
rats were housed individually in large plastic cages with corncob
bedding for the remainder of the experiment. One week after surgery,
rats were tested for sexual behavior. During this portion of training,
the testing chamber was equipped with a sliding Plexiglas screen that
divided the chamber into large and small compartments. Male rats were
introduced into the large compartment and 15 min later, a female was
placed behind the screen. After a 15 min preparatory period, the screen
was removed, and the rats were allowed to copulate for 30 min. Three
training sessions were conducted, one every 4 d. All rats reached
the performance criterion during every session.
Coolidge effect experiment. Rats were implanted unilaterally
with microdialysis probes 12-18 hr before the Coolidge effect experiment and placed in the large compartment of the testing chamber
with free access to food and water. On the morning of the experiment,
microdialysis samples were collected every 15 min. The experiment
consisted of the following seven consecutive phases: (1) baseline (at
least 60 min); (2) female 1 behind the screen (15 min); (3) copulation
with female 1 until a 30 min period passed without a mount; (4)
reintroduction of female 1 behind the screen (15 min); (5) access to
female 1 for a 15 min period provided there was no mounting (if
mounting did occur, this phase was treated as phase 3); (6)
introduction of female 2 behind the screen (15 min); 7) copulation with
female 2 for 60 min.
Behavior was filmed under low illumination using a JVC video system and
observed on a video monitor located outside the testing room. Standard
measures of sexual behavior were recorded using a computer and
appropriate software (Holmes et al., 1987 ).
After the microdialysis experiment, animals were given an overdose of
chloral hydrate and perfused intracardially with saline and formalin
(4%). Brains were sliced and frozen, and, subsequently, coronal
sections were stained with cresyl violet to determine the placement of
microdialysis probes. Only rats with probe placements within the NAC
were used for behavioral and neurochemical analyses.
Microdialysis and HPLC-electrochemical detection.
Microdialysis probes were concentric in design with a semipermeable
hollow fiber membrane (2 mm membrane exposed, 340 µm outer diameter, 65000 molecular weight cutoff, Filtral 12, Hospal) at the distal end.
Probes were perfused at 1.0 µl/min with a modified Ringer's solution
(0.01 M sodium phosphate buffer, pH 7.4, 1.3 mM
CaCl2, 3.0 mM KCl, 1.0 mM
MgCl2, 147 mM NaCl) using a gastight syringe (Hamilton, Reno, NV) and a syringe pump (model 22, Harvard Apparatus, South Natick, MA). A microdialysis probe guide collar was used to
secure the microdialysis probe inside the guide cannula. A steel coil,
attached to a liquid swivel (Instech 375s) that was mounted on top of
the testing chamber, was used to protect the probe tubing (Fiorino et
al., 1993 ).
Microdialysate analytes, which included DA and its metabolites
dihyroxyphenylacetic acid (DOPAC) and homovanillic acid (HVA), were
separated by reverse-phase chromatography (Ultrasphere column; Beckman,
Fullerton, CA, ODS 5 µm, 15 cm, 4.6 mm, inner diameter) using a 0.083 M sodium acetate buffer, pH 3.5 (5% methanol). Analyte concentrations were quantified by electrochemical (EC) detection. The
apparatus consisted of a Bio-Rad (Richmond, CA) pump, a Valco Instruments (Houston, TX) EC10W two-position injector, an ESA (Bedford,
MA) Coulochem II EC detector, and a dual-channel chart recorder (Kipp
and Zonen, Bohemia, NY). Electrochemical detector parameters were the
following: electrode 1, +450 mV; electrode 2, 300 mV; and guard cell,
450 mV. Typical probe recoveries, conducted in vitro and
at room temperature, were 22% for DA, 18% for DOPAC, and 18% for
HVA.
RESULTS
Behavior
Behavioral measures from the Coolidge effect experiment are
presented in Table 1. Latencies to mount, intromit, and
ejaculate, as well as the postejaculatory interval after the first
ejaculation were similar to those in the previous training session
(data not shown). This suggests that the microdialysis procedure did
not alter normal sexual behavior. The development of sexual satiation, as indicated by the mean number of ejaculations before the criterion was met (7.8 ± 0.5), a progressive decrease in the number of
intromissions preceding each ejaculation, and a progressive increase in
the postejaculatory interval (data not shown), was similar to that reported in previous studies (Beach and Jordan, 1956 ; Fowler and Whalen, 1961 ; Fisher, 1962 ; Bermant et al., 1966 ; Rodriguez-Manzo and
Fernandez-Guasti, 1994 ; Mas et al., 1995d ). Individual variability was
observed with respect to the number of ejaculations achieved with
female 1, the time spent copulating with female 1, and the number of
presentations of female 1 required to reach the satiation criterion
(Table 1, bottom). Some rats required numerous reintroductions of
female 1 until phase 5 was complete (n = 3). The acts
of placing female 1 behind the screen and the removal of the partition
may have served as primary appetitive cues leading to copulation. It
should also be noted that a satiation criterion of 30 min without a
mount, although used previously (Beach and Jordan, 1965; Mas et al.,
1995b ), is arbitrary and does not guarantee that a rat would not have
mounted given more time. Even so, delays or removal and replacement
procedures did not result reliably in renewed copulation with female 1 (e.g., phases 4 and 5).
Table 1.
Behavior during the Coolidge effect
experiment
| Measure of sexual
behavior |
Female 1 |
Female 2 |
|
| Mount latency |
31.2
± 10.3 sec |
54.4 ± 30.3 sec |
| Intromission latency |
31.2
± 10.3 sec |
156.4 ± 75.6 sec |
| Ejaculation
latency |
534.4 ± 111.4 sec |
512.0
± 195.9 sec, (n = 2) |
| Postejaculatory
interval |
414.8 ± 51.8 sec |
850.0
± 53.0 sec, (n = 2) |
| Number of mounts (1st
hr) |
16.0 ± 2.1 |
11.4 ± 4.5 |
| Number of intromissions (1st
hr) |
37.0 ± 3.3 |
11.2 ± 4.5* |
| Number of ejaculations (1st
hr) |
4.2 ± 0.5 |
0.6 ± 0.4** |
| Interaction with female
1: |
| Number of ejaculations
(total) |
7.8
± 0.5 (range, 6-11) |
| Time to sexual satiety |
144.0
± 14.7 min (range, 105-195) |
| Number of
presentations |
2.0 ± 0.5 (range, 1-4) |
|
|
Values are presented as means ± S.E.M. (n = 5, except
where indicated). The mount latency, intromission latency, ejaculation latency, and postejaculatory interval are derived from the first copulatory bout with each female.
*
p < 0.05;
**
p < 0.01.
|
|
All rats exhibited the Coolidge effect. The activity associated with
placement of female 2 behind the screen and, in particular, the removal
of the partition may have contributed to this result, but, again, these
events were not by themselves sufficient to renew copulation earlier in
the experiment. Comparisons between measures of sexual behavior with
female 1 and female 2 were made using t tests with a
Bonferroni correction. Although mount and intromission latencies in
response to female 2 were not different significantly from those in the
first copulatory bout with female 1, in general, sexual behavior with
female 2 was less robust, as indicated by significantly fewer
ejaculations (mean, 0.6 vs 4.2; F = 49.86;
p < 0.01) and intromissions (mean = 11.2 vs 37.0; F = 20.17; p < 0.05) during the first
hour. The numbers of mounts in the first hour with females 1 and 2 were
not different significantly.
It is important to note that females used during the satiation portion
of the experiment (i.e., female 1) still exhibited strong proceptive
(i.e., hopping and darting) and receptive (i.e., lordosis) behavior for
the complete duration of their contact with the male.
Neurochemistry
Basal nanomolar concentrations of DA and its metabolites in
microdialysates, presented as the mean ± SEM, of the first three baseline samples were: DA, 3.0 ± 0.7; DOPAC, 619.1 ± 77.7;
and HVA, 234.2 ± 49.0 (uncorrected for probe recovery;
n = 5). These values represented 100% baseline
scores.
Behaviorally defined data points, corresponding to each phase of the
experiment and common to every rat, were used for neurochemical analyses. These included the following: (1) seven samples after the
first introduction of female 1, (2) four samples accompanying the
absence of copulatory behavior with female 1, and (3) five samples
after presentation of female 2. Figure 1 illustrates
changes in concentrations of DA (line graph, middle) and DA
metabolites (line graph, top) paralleling copulatory
behavior (bar graph, bottom) during the test for the
Coolidge effect.
Fig. 1.
Nucleus accumbens neurochemical correlates of
sexual behavior during the Coolidge effect. The first eight samples
represent chronologically continuous data points from phases 1 to 3. Sample 1 is the fourth and last precopulation baseline samples
(Bas). Sample 2 represents introduction of female 1 behind the screen (Scr). After 15 min, the screen was
removed, and rats were allowed to copulate (samples 3-8). The
break on the x-axis corresponds to the
exclusion of data from three rats that copulated for extended periods
with the initial female. The last nine samples were also continuous
chronologically. Samples 9 and 10 correspond to the satiation period of
phase 3 (i.e., 30 min without a mount). Female 1 was then reinserted behind the screen (sample 11) and, 15 min later, the screen was removed (sample 12). After 15 min devoid of
copulation, female 2 was placed behind the screen (sample 13). Samples
14-17 correspond to copulation with female 2. The number of mounts,
intromissions, or ejaculations associated with each 15 min
microdialysis sample are shown in the bottom bar graph. Neurochemical data are expressed in terms of percentage of baseline concentrations. Changes in NAC DA (closed squares),
DOPAC (closed circles), and HVA (open
circles) efflux are presented as line graphs.
The following comparisons were made: baseline sample 1 versus samples
2-10; new baseline sample 10 versus samples 11 and 12; new baseline
sample 12 versus samples 13-17 (*p < 0.05; ** p < 0.01). Independent t tests
were made between baseline values (samples 1, 10, and 12). For
significant differences from the first baseline (sample 1), p < 0.05.
[View Larger Version of this Image (37K GIF file)]
Separate one-way, repeated-measures ANOVAs were performed on
neurochemical data associated with female 1 (samples 1-12) and female
2 (samples 12-17). A priori comparisons were made using Dunn's multiple comparison test (Bonferroni t). The
following three main comparisons were made: (1) initial baseline
(sample 1) versus samples 2-10 (first exposure to female 1), (2)
second baseline (sample 10) versus samples 11 and 12 (reexposure to
female 1), and (3) third baseline (sample 12) versus samples 13-17
(exposure to female 2).
There was a significant overall change in DA efflux in response to
female 1 [F(11,44) = 8.48; p < 0.001] and female 2 [F(5,20) = 2.83;
p < 0.05]. A significant increase in DA efflux was
found when female 1 was present behind the screen (+44%,
p < 0.05; sample 2). During copulation, DA
concentrations increased further, reaching a maximum value (+95%;
p < 0.01) during the first copulatory bout (sample 3).
DA remained elevated throughout copulation and only returned to
baseline concentrations in the 30 min period in which no mounting
occurred (samples 9 and 10). Neither reintroduction of female 1 behind
the screen (sample 11) nor the opportunity to interact physically, but
without mounting (sample 12), elevated DA concentrations relative to
the second baseline value (sample 10). The presence of female 2 behind
the screen (sample 13) resulted in a small increase in DA efflux (12%)
from the third baseline value (sample 12) that did not reach
statistical significance. Renewed copulation with female 2 resulted in
a significant (34%) increase (p < 0.05) in DA
efflux during the first copulation sample (sample 14). Although weak
copulatory behavior continued over the next three samples, DA
concentrations decreased to baseline values (samples 15-17).
Independent t tests conducted among "baseline" samples
(i.e., 1, 10, and 12) demonstrated that these values were not
significantly different.
In the three rats that resumed copulation when female 1 was
reintroduced, NAC DA concentrations increased when female 1 was present
behind the screen (range, 25-47%) and during copulation (range,
13-37%), relative to the sample just before the reintroduction of the
female. These increases, however, only occurred when sexual behavior
was vigorous and led to ejaculation.
Significant overall changes in DOPAC
[F(11,44) = 9.57; p < 0.001]
and HVA [F(11,44) = 12.47; p < 0. 001] concentrations were found in response to female 1, but not
female 2. Metabolite concentrations increased slightly (+15% in both
cases) during the presentation of female 1 behind the screen (sample
2), but this was not significant statistically. There were, however,
significant increases in the concentrations of DOPAC and HVA during
copulation (samples 3-8), reaching maximum values (+80 and +86%,
respectively; p < 0.01) after 60 min (sample 6 in both
cases). Although metabolite concentrations decreased during the period
of sexual inactivity at the end of contact with female 1 (samples 9 and
10), concentrations still remained elevated with respect to baseline
(p < 0.05 in both cases). Reintroduction of
female 1 behind the screen (sample 11), access to female 1 after
removal of the screen (sample 12), and the introduction of female 2 (sample 13) did not result in any changes in metabolite concentrations.
Slight, but statistically insignificant, increases in DOPAC and HVA
concentrations (+23% in both cases) relative to baseline (sample 12)
corresponded to the first bout of copulation with female 2 (sample 14).
This increase was short-lived, however, and declined to baseline values
for the remaining three samples (15-17). Independent t
tests conducted among "baseline" samples (i.e., 1, 10, and 12)
indicated that the second and third baseline values (samples 10 and 12, respectively), although not different from each other, remained
elevated significantly compared with the first baseline sample for
DOPAC and HVA (p < 0.05 in both cases).
Histology
Microdialysis probes were located in the NAC (Fig.
2) in a range extending +1.20 to +1.70 mm from bregma
(flat skull). There was variability also in the mediolateral plane;
data reflect sampling from the shell and core subregions of the
NAC.
Fig. 2.
Location of microdialysis probes within the NAC of
male rats used in the Coolidge effect experiment. Shaded
rectangles correspond to the exposed membrane area of the
microdialysis probes. Serial coronal brain sections were redrawn from
Paxinos and Watson (1986) .
[View Larger Version of this Image (23K GIF file)]
DISCUSSION
In agreement with earlier reports, the present results demonstrate
enhanced mesolimbic DA transmission associated with appetitive and
consummatory components of male rat sexual behavior as assessed by
in vivo microdialysis (Mas et al., 1990 ; Pfaus et al., 1990 ; Pleim et al., 1990 ; Damsma et al., 1992 ; Wenkstern et al., 1993 ; Fumero
et al., 1994 ; Mas et al., 1995a ,b ,d ). In addition, these results
provide a neurochemical correlate for sexual satiation and the
subsequent reinitiation of copulation in response to a novel receptive
female (the Coolidge effect). The present data suggest that the
stimulus properties of a novel receptive female may serve to increase
NAC DA transmission in a sexually satiated male rat that may, in turn,
be related to the reinitiation of sexual behavior. This is first
evident in the slight increase in NAC DA during the presentation of a
novel female behind the screen and occurs most convincingly as a more
pronounced increase during renewed copulation with female 2 (Fig.
1).
The presence of the first receptive female behind the screen
resulted in a robust appetitive increase in NAC DA efflux (44% from
baseline) similar in magnitude to what was reported in previous experiments using a similar design (30%, Pfaus et al., 1990 ; 35%, Damsma et al., 1992 ). Also in agreement with these studies was the
observation that NAC DA efflux was enhanced further during copulation
(to >95% above baseline in the present experiment). Although we can
view consummatory behaviors as being associated with enhanced NAC DA
release (Wenkstern et al., 1993 ; Wilson et al., 1995 ), it is important
to examine the terms "appetitive" and "consummatory" in the
context of sexual behavior. Whereas the phase in which the female is
present behind the screen is exclusively appetitive or preparatory, the
behavior during the copulation phase cannot be considered purely
consummatory. Because "appetitive" can be used to describe all
behaviors leading to the consummation of a motivated behavior
(copulation), the primary behavior the male exhibits while active in
the "consummatory" phase is best described as appetitive; the male
spends most of his time and effort pursuing the female to copulate. In
this regard, we can correlate maximal NAC DA transmission with
consummatory as well as intense appetitive components of
male rat sexual behavior.
Access to the second, novel female resulted in renewed copulation in
every subject. Previous studies have shown that the majority of rats
allowed to copulate to satiety, using a similar behavioral protocol to
the one used in the present experiment, did not resume mating when
tested 24 hr later (Beach and Jordan, 1956 ). It is likely that the
presence of the novel stimulus properties of female 2, which may have
included olfactory as well as visual and auditory cues, resulted in
renewed copulation. An interesting question, which remains to be
answered, is by what mechanism a male rat distinguishes a novel female
from a female with which he has mated recently. A site for that
mechanism may lie in the main olfactory system. It has been reported
that the integrity of this system is essential for the Coolidge effect
in hamsters (Johnston and Rasmussen, 1984 ). The vomeronasal-accessory
olfactory system, however, in which a pheromonal memory process was
described recently in mice (Kaba et al., 1994 ), is also a prime
candidate. In this regard, it is noteworthy that increases in NAC DA
transmission were measured using in vivo voltammetry in male
rats presented with bedding that was exposed to female rats in estrus
(Louillot et al., 1991 ; Mitchell and Gratton, 1992 ). Furthermore, the
application of K+ directly to the vomeronasal nerve layer
of the accessory olfactory bulb, as well as to the accessory olfactory
bulb itself, was sufficient to increase NAC DA transmission (Mitchell
and Gratton, 1992 ).
The first 15 min bout of copulation with female 2 was associated with a
significant increase in NAC DA. In contrast to female 1, interaction
with female 2 did not produce increases in NAC DA of the same magnitude
during either the appetitive (12%) or consummatory (34%) phases.
These small increases in NAC DA, however, correlate well with the
reduced level of sexual behavior displayed with female 2 compared with
female 1. Metabolite concentrations remained elevated during the
satiety phase, resulting in new baseline concentrations (samples 10 and
12) that were elevated significantly from the initial baseline value
(sample 1).
The temporal lag in the increase in DOPAC and HVA concentrations during
copulation is consistent with their formation as metabolites of the
parent compound, DA. It has been suggested that microdialysis metabolite concentrations, at least during a natural behavior that is
not pharmacologically driven, provide a useful index of neural activity
(Damsma et al., 1992 ; Fumero et al., 1994 ). The fact that metabolite
concentrations remained elevated even during periods of sexual
inactivity in this experiment, when DA concentrations had returned to
pretest baseline values, casts doubt on this suggestion.
The persistent elevation of DA metabolite concentrations seen in this
experiment mirrors the medial preoptic area (mPOA) profile of DA
metabolites observed in rats the first day after they had copulated to
satiation (Mas et al., 1995a ,b ). Sustained elevations of DOPAC and HVA
concentrations in the NAC or mPOA are not always observed when the
mating period is of a fixed duration, much shorter than the time
required to reach satiation. For example, many studies have shown that
DOPAC concentrations were increased and remained elevated during
copulation but declined to baseline values soon after the female was
removed (Pfaus et al., 1990 ; Pleim et al., 1990 ; Damsma et al., 1992 ;
Hull et al., 1993 ; Wenkstern et al., 1993 ; Hull et al., 1995 ). In the
study by Mas et al. (1995b) , basal extracellular concentrations of
DOPAC and HVA in the mPOA remained elevated over 4 consecutive days
corresponding to a period of sexual inactivity. By the fourth day, just
before animals resumed copulation, the basal concentrations of the
metabolites were close to presatiation values. The authors likened the
pattern of neurochemical changes to those seen after the administration
of DA receptor blockers (Zetterström et al., 1984 ; Imperato and
DiChiara, 1985 ) and have suggested that the state of sexual inactivity
may be mediated via prolactin release, which may act as an
"endogenous neuroleptic" (Mas et al., 1995a ,b ,d ). It is clear that
neuroleptic administration is accompanied by increases in extracellular
metabolite concentrations and DA efflux (Zetterström et al.,
1984 ; Imperato and DiChiara, 1985 ). Unfortunately, Mas et al. (1995a ,b )
were not able to detect mPOA DA concentrations. In the present study, DA concentrations in the NAC returned to precopulation values, whereas
DOPAC and HVA concentrations remained elevated. This pattern is
inconsistent with a role for an endogenous neuroleptic acting in the
NAC to induce sexual satiety.
Given the involvement of mesolimbic DA neurons in motivated
behavior (Fibiger and Phillips, 1986 ; Blackburn et al., 1992 ; Kalivas
et al., 1993 ; LeMoal, 1995 ) and their sensitivity to novel environmental stimuli (Fabre et al., 1983 ; Schultz, 1992 ; Mirenowicz and Schultz, 1994 ), the observed increases in extracellular
concentrations of NAC DA in response to the novel female are consistent
with the hypothesis that activity in this DA system is important for the reinitiation of sexual behavior. In addition, reports of appetitive and consummatory increases in DA transmission (Hull et al., 1993 , 1995 ;
Mas et al., 1995b ; Sato et al., 1995 ) and neuronal activity (Shimura et
al., 1994 ) in the mPOA of male rats during sexual behavior suggest that
this structure may also contribute to renewed copulation characteristic
of the Coolidge effect.
In keeping with a general role for the mesolimbic DA system in
motivated behavior, it is well established that extracellular concentrations of DA also are elevated before, during, and immediately after consumption of a meal, with a return to baseline values ~30 min
later (Wilson et al., 1995 ). It is well known that satiety induced by
food is influenced by its sensory properties. Humans and animals reject
the food on which they were fed to satiety and ingest other foods that
had not been eaten (Rolls, 1986 ). This raises the question as to
whether extracellular DA efflux in the NAC would be increased
selectively by the presentation of a novel type of food, but not by
food consumed recently to satiety in a manner analogous to that
reported in the present study in the context of sexual motivation. If
confirmed, this general relationship between the sensory properties of
natural rewards, satiety, and mesolimbic DA transmission would imply a critical role for this neural system in the regulation of motivational processes, the disruption of which may lead to serious disorders of
eating and sexual function.
FOOTNOTES
Received Jan. 27, 1997; revised March 28, 1997; accepted April 2, 1997.
This work was supported by Group Program Grant PG-12808 from the
Medical Research Council of Canada.
Correspondence should be addressed to Anthony G. Phillips, Department
of Psychology, 2136 West Mall, University of British Columbia,
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada V6T 1Z4.
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