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Creators/Authors contains: "Patisaul, Heather B."

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  1. Aggression and its neurochemical modulators are typically studied in males, leaving the mechanisms of female competitive aggression or dominance largely unexplored. To better understand how competitive aggression is regulated in the primate brain, we used receptor autoradiography to compare the neural distributions of oxytocin and vasopressin receptors in male and female members of female-dominant versus egalitarian/codominant species within theEulemurgenus, wherein dominance structure is a reliable proxy of aggression in both sexes. We found that oxytocin receptor binding in the central amygdala (CeA) was predicted by dominance structure, with the members of three codominant species showing more oxytocin receptor binding in this region than their peers in four female-dominant species. Thus, both sexes in female-dominantEulemurshow a pattern consistent with the regulation of aggression in male rodents. We suggest that derived pacifism inEulemurstems from selective suppression of ancestral female aggression over evolutionary time via a mechanism of increased oxytocin receptor binding in the CeA, rather than from augmented male aggression. This interpretation implies fitness costs to female aggression and/or benefits to its inhibition. These data establishEulemuras a robust model for examining neural correlates of male and female competitive aggression, potentially providing novel insights into female dominance. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available March 1, 2026
  2. Abstract Contemporary theory that emphasizes the roles of oxytocin and vasopressin in mammalian sociality has been shaped by seminal vole research that revealed interspecific variation in neuroendocrine circuitry by mating system. However, substantial challenges exist in interpreting and translating these rodent findings to other mammalian groups, including humans, making research on nonhuman primates crucial. Both monogamous and non-monogamous species exist withinEulemur, a genus of strepsirrhine primate, offering a rare opportunity to broaden a comparative perspective on oxytocin and vasopressin neurocircuitry with increased evolutionary relevance to humans. We performed oxytocin and arginine vasopressin 1a receptor autoradiography on 12Eulemurbrains from seven closely related species to (1) characterize receptor distributions across the genus, and (2) examine differences between monogamous and non-monogamous species in regions part of putative “pair-bonding circuits”. We find some binding patterns acrossEulemurreminiscent of olfactory-guided rodents, but others congruent with more visually oriented anthropoids, consistent with lemurs occupying an ‘intermediary’ evolutionary niche between haplorhine primates and other mammalian groups. We find little evidence of a “pair-bonding circuit” inEulemurakin to those proposed in previous rodent or primate research. Mapping neuropeptide receptors in these nontraditional species questions existing assumptions and informs proposed evolutionary explanations about the biological bases of monogamy. 
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