International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Feb 2020)

Serotonin in Animal Cognition and Behavior

  • Julien Bacqué-Cazenave,
  • Rahul Bharatiya,
  • Grégory Barrière,
  • Jean-Paul Delbecque,
  • Nouhaila Bouguiyoud,
  • Giuseppe Di Giovanni,
  • Daniel Cattaert,
  • Philippe De Deurwaerdère

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms21051649
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 5
p. 1649

Abstract

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Serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine, 5-HT) is acknowledged as a major neuromodulator of nervous systems in both invertebrates and vertebrates. It has been proposed for several decades that it impacts animal cognition and behavior. In spite of a completely distinct organization of the 5-HT systems across the animal kingdom, several lines of evidence suggest that the influences of 5-HT on behavior and cognition are evolutionary conserved. In this review, we have selected some behaviors classically evoked when addressing the roles of 5-HT on nervous system functions. In particular, we focus on the motor activity, arousal, sleep and circadian rhythm, feeding, social interactions and aggressiveness, anxiety, mood, learning and memory, or impulsive/compulsive dimension and behavioral flexibility. The roles of 5-HT, illustrated in both invertebrates and vertebrates, show that it is more able to potentiate or mitigate the neuronal responses necessary for the fine-tuning of most behaviors, rather than to trigger or halt a specific behavior. 5-HT is, therefore, the prototypical neuromodulator fundamentally involved in the adaptation of all organisms across the animal kingdom.

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