「愛情ホルモン」オキシトシンは友情ホルモンでもあるのか?(Is the ‘love hormone,’ oxytocin, also the ‘friendship hormone’?)

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2025-08-11 カリフォルニア大学バークレー校(UCB)

カリフォルニア大学バークレー校の研究によれば、愛情ホルモンとして知られるオキシトシンが友情形成にも重要な役割を果たしていることが示されました。プロイーリス(prairie voles)という社会性の高いげっ歯類を対象にした実験では、オキシトシン受容体を欠いた個体は友情形成が遅れ、仲間に近づく動機も低く、見知らぬ相手には攻撃性を示さず距離を置く傾向がありました。これは、オキシトシンが友情維持に必要な「近づく」「遠ざける」の選択的バランスにも作用していることを示唆しています。

<関連情報>

オキシトシン受容体は、草原ネズミの同種個体間の関係における社会的選択性を仲介する Oxytocin receptors mediate social selectivity in prairie vole peer relationships

Alexis M. Black ∙ Natsumi Komatsu ∙ Jiaxuan Zhao ∙ … ∙ Devanand S. Manoli ∙ Markita P. Landry ∙ Annaliese K. Beery
Current Biology  Published:August 8, 2025
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2025.07.042

Graphical abstract

「愛情ホルモン」オキシトシンは友情ホルモンでもあるのか?(Is the ‘love hormone,’ oxytocin, also the ‘friendship hormone’?)

Highlights

  • Female Oxtr1-/- prairie voles are slow to form new selective peer relationships
  • Females lacking OXTR have reduced partner-specific and general social motivation
  • Females lacking OXTR exhibit less stranger avoidance and aggression
  • Development without OXTR reduces nucleus accumbens oxytocin release

Summary

Friendships, or selective peer relationships, are a vital component of healthy social functioning in humans, and deficits in these relationships are associated with negative physical and mental health consequences. Like humans, prairie voles are among the few mammalian species that form selective social bonds with both peers and mates, making them an excellent model for the mechanistic investigation of selective social attachment. Here, we explored the role of oxytocin receptors in selective peer attachment using female prairie voles lacking a functional oxytocin receptor gene (Oxtr1-/-). We found that Oxtr1-/- animals exhibited significant delays in peer relationship formation compared with wild-type animals. Oxytocin receptor function also contributed to the maintenance of peer bonds, as Oxtr1-/- voles displayed reduced relationship stability and lost selective attachments rapidly in a multi-chamber, group-living habitat. Oxtr1-/- voles also showed deficits in general social reward as well as selective social reward for a peer partner over an unfamiliar conspecific. Evoked oxytocin release in the nucleus accumbens was reduced in male and female Oxtr1-/- animals compared with their wild-type counterparts, indicating that these voles do not have a compensatory increase in oxytocinergic signaling. Together, these data indicate that oxytocin receptors influence the formation, persistence, and reward value of peer relationships.

生物化学工学
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