Social interaction promotes survival by helping animals to form stable and supportive groups. Additionally, maladaptive social behavior is a hallmark of disorders such as autism and schizophrenia. In many different animal species, including humans, social interaction can be inherently rewarding. Lately there has been growing interest in studying the neurobiological underpinnings of social interaction and learned social behavior in rodent behavioral models. One common procedure is conditioned place preference (CPP) to measure the rewarding effects of social interaction and social reward learning. Social CPP was originally used in rats but has been adapted recently for use in mice, enabling use of the vast array of genetic tools available in mice.Here we studied the role of age, sex, bedding cues, and prior social isolation on the expression of social CPP in male and female mice. We found that without social deprivation male but not female mice display moderate but temporary social CPP during early adolescence but not adulthood. Early life social isolation increased social CPP in female but not male mice. In contrast, cocaine CPP was robust and long-lasting in male and female mice. Our results demonstrate that social CPP in mice is variable, occurring only under specific conditions, and that social isolation promotes social reward in female but not male mice. We discuss potential methodological and interpretive issues of the mouse social CPP model.
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