(Press-News.org)
The brain does not only communicate through fast electrical impulses; it also relies on slower, more diffuse chemical signals that modulate our emotional and social states over time. A study led by the Institute for Neurosciences (IN), a joint center of the Spanish National Research Council (CSIC) and the Miguel Hernández University of Elche (UMH), has identified a key molecular mechanism that regulates the release of oxytocin within the brain. Published in the journal Communications Biology, the work sheds light on how this hormone maintains a “social tone” and how its release contributes to the quality of social interactions.
Oxytocin is a hormone widely recognized for its role in emotional bonding, sociability, and emotional regulation. Unlike classical neurotransmitters such as glutamate or GABA, which are released quickly and locally from neuronal axons, oxytocin belongs to the group of neuropeptides and can also be released from the cell body (soma) and dendrites. This slower, more diffuse type of release affects broad regions of the brain, yet its underlying molecular mechanisms have remained largely unknown—until now.
“We knew that oxytocin is released within the brain from compartments other than the axon, but we had limited understanding of how this process is regulated”, explains researcher Sandra Jurado, who leads the Synaptic Neuromodulation Laboratory at the IN CSIC-UMH and headed the study. “Our work focuses precisely on understanding the mechanisms that enable this slow and sustained release, which likely prepares the brain for social interaction”, she adds.
A Key Protein for Unconventional Release
In this study, the team identified the protein SNAP-47 as an essential component of the machinery that enables the transport and release of oxytocin from the soma and dendrites of hypothalamic neurons—the brain region where this hormone is produced. SNAP-47 belongs to the SNARE family of proteins, which are involved in vesicle fusion and the release of chemical signals, but it displays distinctive properties: “While other proteins in this family mediate fast and highly efficient release, SNAP-47 operates more slowly”, explains Beatriz Aznar, first author of the study. “This fits well with the type of release we observe for oxytocin within the brain, which does not occur in rapid pulses but rather in a more sustained manner”, she adds.
This difference is key to understanding oxytocin’s function in the central nervous system. Oxytocinergic neurons in the hypothalamus send their axons outside the brain to release the hormone into the bloodstream. However, within the brain, the oxytocin that modulates social behavior is largely released from the soma and dendrites of these neurons through a mechanism that is independent of axonal release.
Experiments in Cell Culture and Animal Models
To unravel this process, the team combined experiments in neuronal cultures with studies in mice. In an initial phase, they examined how reducing SNAP-47 affected vesicular trafficking and oxytocin release in cultured cells. They then extended these findings to animal models using genetic manipulations specifically targeted to oxytocin-producing neurons.
The results showed that reducing SNAP-47 expression disrupts oxytocin release from the soma and dendrites, without affecting the classical mechanism of axonal release. This alteration had functional consequences for the animals’ social behavior: although the mice still displayed sociability, their interactions were shorter and less robust.
“The effects are subtle, but highly revealing”, explains Jurado. “This is not a complete loss of sociability, but rather a fine-tuning of the quality of interactions. This suggests that this release pathway maintains a basal level of oxytocin that primes the brain to respond appropriately to social stimuli”.
The authors suggest that this mechanism may function as a background system that regulates the brain’s social state, maintaining a steady flow of oxytocin that modulates processes such as social anxiety, motivation, and the propensity to interact. “It represents a basal tone that does not trigger strong responses on its own, but that shapes how we react when a relevant social stimulus appears”, Aznar explains.
This finding broadens our understanding of how hormonal signaling is regulated in the brain and opens new avenues of research into how subtle alterations in these mechanisms could contribute to neuropsychiatric disorders in which oxytocin plays a significant role. “The next step will be to identify the remaining components of this molecular machinery and understand how the different modes of oxytocin release are coordinated to produce a coherent response”, Jurado concludes.
This study was made possible thanks to funding from the Spanish State Research Agency–Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities, the Prometeo Programme of the Valencian Regional Government (Generalitat Valenciana), and the Severo Ochoa Programme for Centres of Excellence.
END
Public and patient engagement is becoming an established part of academic research, and funders increasingly require that citizens and patients are seen as research partners rather than merely as research subjects. Yet many researchers question what this means in everyday research practice.
An interview-based study conducted at the University of Eastern Finland examined this question from the researchers’ perspective. Researchers from two Finnish universities described their experiences of, and expectations of, public and patient involvement.
The findings focus on power relations between researchers and patients as something that ...
Scientists at Nagoya University in Japan have found two gut bacteria working together that contribute to chronic constipation. The duo, Akkermansia muciniphila and Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron, destroy the intestinal mucus coating essential for keeping the colon lubricated and feces hydrated. Their excess degradation leaves patients with dry, immobile stool. This discovery, published in Gut Microbes, finally explains why standard treatments often fail for millions of people with chronic constipation.
Notably, the study shows that Parkinson's disease patients, who suffer from constipation decades before developing tremors, ...
□ A research team led by Professor Su-Il In of the Department of Energy Science and Engineering at DGIST (President Kunwoo Lee) has uncovered the principle that the products and reaction pathways of carbon dioxide (CO₂) conversion to fuel via solar energy depend on the design of atomic-level interactions in the catalyst.
□ The technology of converting CO₂, a major greenhouse gas, into useful fuels or chemical feedstocks is a key challenge for achieving a carbon-neutral society. In particular, “artificial photosynthesis” technology, which utilizes solar energy to turn greenhouse gases into resources, is attracting attention. However, there ...
A new multinational study from the INTERCOVID Consortium, including Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago, has found that COVID-19 vaccination during pregnancy, particularly when combined with a booster dose, significantly reduces the risk of preeclampsia, a serious and potentially life-threatening pregnancy complication. The findings offer unprecedented insight into preeclampsia prevention, independent of the direct effects of COVID-19 infection.
The study, published in eClinicalMedicine, titled COVID-19 Vaccination Status During ...
Menopausal hormone therapy (commonly known as hormone replacement therapy or HRT) is not associated with an increased risk of death, finds a Danish study of over 800,000 women published by The BMJ today.
The findings support current guidelines that recommend hormone therapy for women who have recently begun menopause who have moderate to severe symptoms and no contraindications, say the researchers.
Menopausal hormone therapy can help relieve menopausal symptoms such as hot flashes, sleep disturbance, mood swings, and depression. But its use has steadily declined during the last two decades, mainly due to safety concerns, and real world evidence ...
Four fifths of England’s integrated care boards (ICBs) - responsible for planning health services for their local population - would need to at least double their number of general practitioners to meet staffing standards considered safe for patients, finds an analysis of NHS workforce data published by The BMJ today.
The British Medical Association (BMA) says that, by 2040, England should have one full time equivalent (FTE) GP for every 1,000 patients, to ensure manageable workloads and patient safety.
But new data released last month shows ...
Booster vaccines reduced the risk of COVID‑19–related hospitalisation and death, according to a new study of over 3 million adults who had the autumn 2022 vaccine in England. The research led by the universities of Bristol and Oxford, provides further evidence of the effectiveness of booster vaccination against COVID-19.
The study, published in Vaccine today [18 February], also found that this effectiveness was similar for Moderna (BA.1 mRNA-1273) and Pfizer-BioNTech (BA.1 BNT162b2) booster vaccines, but protection declined over time.
Previous work has shown the initial COVID-19 vaccination was effective in reducing the risk ...
Women with stage IV breast cancer detected through screening have a 60% chance of survival ten years after diagnosis.
This is in comparison to a survival rate of under 20% of those with stage IV breast cancer which was not detected through screening.
The study by King’s College London, Queen Mary University London, and the University of Southern Denmark, aimed to find out if the method by which breast cancer is detected impacts survival rates at different stages of the cancer.
These results, published in JNCI, suggest that even at the most ...
The American College of Cardiology will recognize Plicy Perez-Kersey, MD, as the first recipient of the Thad and Gerry Waites Rural Cardiovascular Research Fellowship Award. Perez-Kersey will be honored at American College of Cardiology’s Annual Scientific Session (ACC.26) taking place March 28 – 30, in New Orleans.
The Thad and Gerry Waites Rural Cardiovascular Research Fellowship was funded through Thad F. Waites, MD, MACC, in honor of his wife Gerry. It reflects their commitment to combating cardiovascular disparities and uplifting underserved populations through evidence-based clinical interventions and innovative research. ...
NORMAN, Okla. – Researchers at the University of Oklahoma have developed new hybrid materials that challenge conventional thinking about how light-emitting compounds work and could advance the field of fast radiation detection. The research, published in the Journal of the American Chemical Society, presents a novel approach to designing layered perovskite materials that combine the best of both organic and inorganic components.
Perovskites are crystalline materials with a specific atomic arrangement that has made them increasingly important ...