Shpigler H Y, Saul M C, Murdoch E E, Cash-Ahmed A C, Seward C H, Sloofman L, Chandrasekaran S, Sinha S, Stubbs L J, Robinson G E
Carl R. Woese Institute for Genomic Biology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (UIUC), Urbana, IL, USA.
Department of Cell and Developmental Biology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (UIUC), Urbana, IL, USA.
Genes Brain Behav. 2017 Jul;16(6):579-591. doi: 10.1111/gbb.12379. Epub 2017 Apr 21.
Understanding how social experiences are represented in the brain and shape future responses is a major challenge in the study of behavior. We addressed this problem by studying behavioral, transcriptomic and epigenetic responses to intrusion in honey bees. Previous research showed that initial exposure to an intruder provokes an immediate attack; we now show that this also leads to longer-term changes in behavior in the response to a second intruder, with increases in the probability of responding aggressively and the intensity of aggression lasting 2 and 1 h, respectively. Previous research also documented the whole-brain transcriptomic response; we now show that in the mushroom bodies (MBs) there are 2 waves of gene expression, the first highlighted by genes related to cytoskeleton remodeling, and the second highlighted by genes related to hormones, stress response and transcription factors (TFs). Overall, 16 of 37 (43%) of the TFs whose cis-motifs were enriched in the promoters of the differentially expressed genes (DEGs) were also predicted from transcriptional regulatory network analysis to regulate the MB transcriptional response, highlighting the strong role played by a relatively small subset of TFs in the MB's transcriptomic response to social challenge. Whole brain histone profiling showed few changes in chromatin accessibility in response to social challenge; most DEGs were 'ready' to be activated. These results show how biological embedding of a social challenge involves temporally dynamic changes in the neurogenomic state of a prominent region of the insect brain that are likely to influence future behavior.
了解社会经历如何在大脑中呈现并塑造未来反应是行为研究中的一项重大挑战。我们通过研究蜜蜂对入侵行为的行为、转录组和表观遗传反应来解决这个问题。先前的研究表明,初次接触入侵者会引发立即攻击;我们现在表明,这也会导致对第二个入侵者反应的行为发生长期变化,积极反应的概率增加,攻击强度分别持续2小时和1小时。先前的研究还记录了全脑转录组反应;我们现在表明,在蘑菇体(MBs)中有两波基因表达,第一波以与细胞骨架重塑相关的基因为突出,第二波以与激素、应激反应和转录因子(TFs)相关的基因为突出。总体而言,在差异表达基因(DEGs)启动子中顺式基序富集的37个TFs中有16个(43%)也从转录调控网络分析中预测可调节MB转录反应,突出了相对较小的TFs子集在MB对社会挑战的转录组反应中所起的重要作用。全脑组蛋白分析显示,对社会挑战的染色质可及性变化很少;大多数DEGs“准备好”被激活。这些结果表明,社会挑战的生物学嵌入如何涉及昆虫大脑一个突出区域的神经基因组状态的时间动态变化,而这些变化可能会影响未来行为。