Hardwired to attack: Transcriptionally defined amygdala subpopulations play distinct roles in innate social behaviors

天生攻击性:转录定义的杏仁核亚群在先天社会行为中发挥着不同的作用

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作者:Julieta E Lischinsky, Luping Yin, Chenxi Shi, Nandkishore Prakash, Jared Burke, Govind Shekaran, Maria Grba, Joshua G Corbin, Dayu Lin

Abstract

Social behaviors are innate and supported by dedicated neural circuits, but it remains unclear whether these circuits are developmentally hardwired or established through social experience. Here, we revealed distinct response patterns and functions in social behavior of medial amygdala (MeA) cells originating from two embryonically parcellated developmental lineages. MeA cells in male mice that express the transcription factor Foxp2 (MeAFoxp2) are specialized for processing male conspecific cues even before puberty and are essential for adult inter-male aggression. In contrast, MeA cells derived from the Dbx1-lineage (MeADbx1) respond broadly to social cues and are non-essential for male aggression. Furthermore, MeAFoxp2 and MeADbx1 cells show differential anatomical and functional connectivity. Altogether, our results support a developmentally hardwired aggression circuit at the level of the MeA and we propose a lineage-based circuit organization by which a cell's embryonic transcription factor profile determines its social information representation and behavior relevance during adulthood.

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