Pheromone components affect motivation and induce persistent modulation of associative learning and memory in honey bees.
2020
Since their discovery in insects, pheromones are considered as ubiquitous and stereotyped chemical messengers acting in intraspecific animal communication. Here we studied the effect of pheromones in a different context as we investigated their capacity to induce persistent modulations of associative learning and memory. We used honey bees, Apis mellifera, and combined olfactory conditioning and pheromone preexposure with disruption of neural activity and two-photon imaging of olfactory brain circuits, to characterize the effect of pheromones on olfactory learning and memory. Geraniol, an attractive pheromone component, and 2-heptanone, an aversive pheromone, improved and impaired, respectively, olfactory learning and memory via a durable modulation of appetitive motivation, which left odor processing unaffected. Consistently, interfering with aminergic circuits mediating appetitive motivation rescued or diminished the cognitive effects induced by pheromone components. We thus show that these chemical messengers act as important modulators of motivational processes and influence thereby animal cognition. David Baracchi et al. show that honey bees exposed to geraniol, a component of an attractant pheromone, exhibit improved olfactory learning and memory while the opposite effect was seen in honey bees exposed to the aversive pheromone, 2- heptanone. These changes occurred through a modulation of appetitive motivation without affecting odor processing, suggesting an important role for pheromones as modulators of motivational and learning processes.
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