Metabotropic glutamate 2/3 receptors (mGluR2/3) have been implicated in depression, anxiety, learning, and memory. However, their causal role in reward-related behaviors remains unclear. Here, we examined the effects of intraperitoneal administration of LY341495, a selective mGluR2/3 antagonist, on reward-related behaviors in mice. In a head-fixed temporal conditioning task, mice received a 10% sucrose solution every 10 seconds. After training, mice exhibited anticipatory licking and pupil dilation aligned with expected reward delivery, indicating successful reward prediction. LY341495 dose-dependently reduced licking behavior without disrupting temporal prediction, as normalization analyses revealed reduced gain but preserved timing. LY341495 also induced overall pupil dilation and attenuated reward-proximity pupillary responses. To determine whether reduced licking reflected general motor impairment, we assessed spontaneous locomotion in a freely moving open-field task. LY341495 did not affect locomotor activity or excretion, suggesting intact general motor and autonomic function. To further evaluate orofacial motor function, we measured ultrasonic vocalizations (USVs) during a social interaction task. LY341495 did not significantly alter USVs, indicating preserved mouth-related motor function independent of licking. In contrast, LY341495 dose-dependently reduced food intake in a freely moving feeding task. Moreover, social preference testing revealed that LY341495 reduced social interaction, suggesting impaired processing of non-food rewards. Together, these findings demonstrate that mGluR2/3 signaling regulates reward-seeking behaviors independently of general locomotor or orofacial motor function. These results provide new insights into glutamatergic mechanisms underlying reward processing and may have clinical implications for obesity, eating disorders, and psychiatric conditions involving motivational dysfunction.
Adaptation to free-living drives loss of beneficial endosymbiosis through metabolic trade-offs
Symbioses are widespread (1) and underpin the function of diverse ecosystems (2-6), but their evolutionary stability is challenging to explain (7,8). Fitness trade-offs between con-trasting


