Institute of Integrative Biology and Centre for Genomic Research, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2011 Apr 5;6(4):e18181. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0018181.
Theoretical and empirical studies have sought to explain the formation and maintenance of social relationships within groups. The resulting dominance hierarchies have significant fitness and survival consequences dependent upon social status. We hypothesised that each position or rank within a group has a distinctive brain gene expression profile that correlates with behavioural phenotype. Furthermore, transitions in rank position should determine which genes shift in expression concurrent with the new dominance status. We used a custom cDNA microarray to profile brain transcript expression in a model species, the rainbow trout, which forms tractable linear hierarchies. Dominant, subdominant and submissive individuals had distinctive transcript profiles with 110 gene probes identified using conservative statistical analyses. By removing the dominant, we characterised the changes in transcript expression in sub-dominant individuals that became dominant demonstrating that the molecular transition occurred within 48 hours. A strong, novel candidate gene, ependymin, which was highly expressed in both the transcript and protein in subdominants relative to dominants, was tested further. Using antibody injection to inactivate ependymin in pairs of dominant and subdominant zebrafish, the subdominant fish exhibited a substantial increase in aggression in parallel with an enhanced competitive ability. This is the first study to characterise the molecular signatures of dominance status within groups and the first to implicate ependymin in control of aggressive behaviour. It also provides evidence for indirect genetic effect models in which genotype/phenotype of an individual is influenced by conspecific interactions within a group. The variation in the molecular profile of each individual within a group may offer a new explanation of intraspecific variation in gene expression within undefined groups of animals and provides new candidates for empirical study.
理论和实证研究试图解释群体内社会关系的形成和维持。由此产生的支配等级制度对社会地位有重大的适应度和生存后果。我们假设群体中的每个位置或等级都有独特的大脑基因表达谱,与行为表型相关。此外,等级位置的转变应该决定哪些基因随着新的支配地位而改变表达。我们使用定制的 cDNA 微阵列来分析模型物种虹鳟鱼的大脑转录表达,虹鳟鱼形成可处理的线性等级制度。优势、次优势和次劣势个体具有独特的转录谱,使用保守的统计分析确定了 110 个基因探针。通过去除优势个体,我们描述了在成为优势个体的次优势个体中转录表达的变化,证明分子转变发生在 48 小时内。一种强烈的、新颖的候选基因——ependymin,在次优势个体中的转录和蛋白质中都高度表达,相对于优势个体,它进一步得到了测试。使用抗体注射使成对的优势和次优势斑马鱼中的ependymin 失活,次优势鱼的攻击性显著增强,同时竞争能力增强。这是首次在群体中描述支配地位的分子特征的研究,也是首次将ependymin 与控制攻击性行为联系起来的研究。它还为间接遗传效应模型提供了证据,即在该模型中,个体的基因型/表型受到群体内同种个体相互作用的影响。群体中每个个体的分子谱的变化可能为动物未定义群体中基因表达的种内变异提供了新的解释,并为实证研究提供了新的候选基因。