The neuropeptides arginine vasotocin (AVT) and arginine vasopressin are key modulators of affiliation and aggression among non-mammalian and mammalian vertebrates, respectively. Here, we explored AVT's effect on aggression in a wild population of beaugregory damselfish, Stegastes leucostictus, a highly territorial species. Aggression by territorial males towards 'intruders' (bottled fishes) was assessed before and after each male received intramuscular injections of either AVT, Manning compound (an AVT V1a receptor antagonist), isotocin (the teleost homologue of mammalian oxytocin differing from AVT by two amino acids) or saline (vehicle control). Compared to saline controls, AVTand Manning increased and decreased aggression, respectively, while isotocin had no effect. Response selectivity was further established in a dose-response study that revealed an inverted U-shaped function. Compared to saline controls, aggression levels for low and high AVT doses were similar, while medium dose treatments were significantly greater. This type of behavioural response, the first that we know of for a vertebrate neuropeptide, could depend on the binding of AVT to both V1-type and other AVTor non-AVT receptors. The pattern revealed here for damselfish may be symptomatic of species-and context-dependent specificity of AVT's modulation of aggression across teleosts, as is currently proposed for tetrapods.
The neuropeptide arginine vasotocin (AVT) is well known to modulate both aggression and affiliation, yet few studies relate individual behavioral state to a quantitative assessment of AVT distribution in the brain. Here, using a wild population of beaugregory damselfish, Stegastes leucostictus, we assess: (1) the effect of AVT on courtship, and (2) with reference to our previous study on AVT modulation of aggression in this species, the relationship between AVT-like immunoreactive (ir) fiber distribution in the forebrain’s preoptic area and individual courtship and aggression levels. Exogenous AVT did not affect courtship, yet Manning compound, an arginine vasopressin (AVP) V1a receptor antagonist, significantly lowered but did not eradicate courtship. Consistent with AVT’s known facilitation of aggression in this species, the density of AVT-ir fibers in the preoptic area was significantly negatively correlated to aggression. Our findings match similar behavioral and immunoreactive patterns of neuropeptide secretion in other taxa. Unlike aggression, preoptic AVT-ir fiber density was not significantly correlated to individual courtship levels. The results suggest a differential involvement of preoptic AVT neurons and/or their receptors in supporting the expression of aggression and courtship.
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