PLoS ONE (Jan 2017)

GnRH-mediated olfactory and visual inputs promote mating-like behaviors in male zebrafish.

  • Lei Li,
  • Jennifer L Wojtowicz,
  • John H Malin,
  • Tao Huang,
  • Eric B Lee,
  • Zijiang Chen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0174143
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 3
p. e0174143

Abstract

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The engagement of sexual behaviors is regulated by a number of factors which include gene expression, hormone circulation, and multi-sensory information integration. In zebrafish, when a male and a female are placed in the same container, they show mating-like behaviors regardless of whether they are kept together or separated by a net. No mating-like behaviors are observed when same-sex animals are put together. Through the olfacto-visual centrifugal pathway, activation of the terminalis nerve in the olfactory bulb increases GnRH signaling in the brain and triggers mating-like behaviors between males. In zebrafish mutants or wild-type fish in which the olfacto-visual centrifugal pathway is impaired or chemically ablated, in response to odor stimulation the mating-like behaviors between males are no longer evident. Together, the data suggest that the combination of olfactory and visual signals alter male zebrafish's mating-like behaviors via GnRH signaling.