Department of Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology, University of Colorado Boulder, Boulder, United States.
Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, University of Colorado Boulder, Boulder, United States.
Elife. 2023 Feb 28;12:e80517. doi: 10.7554/eLife.80517.
The loss of a spouse is often cited as the most traumatic event in a person's life. However, for most people, the severity of grief and its maladaptive effects subside over time via an understudied adaptive process. Like humans, socially monogamous prairie voles () form opposite-sex pair bonds, and upon partner separation, show stress phenotypes that diminish over time. We test the hypothesis that extended partner separation diminishes pair bond-associated behaviors and causes pair bond transcriptional signatures to erode. Opposite-sex or same-sex paired males were cohoused for 2 weeks and then either remained paired or were separated for 48 hours or 4 weeks before collecting fresh nucleus accumbens tissue for RNAseq. In a separate cohort, we assessed partner-directed affiliation at these time points. We found that these behaviors persist despite prolonged separation in both same-sex and opposite-sex paired voles. Opposite-sex pair bonding led to changes in accumbal transcription that were stably maintained while animals remained paired but eroded following prolonged partner separation. Eroded genes are associated with gliogenesis and myelination, suggesting a previously undescribed role for glia in pair bonding and loss. Further, we pioneered neuron-specific translating ribosomal affinity purification in voles. Neuronally enriched transcriptional changes revealed dopaminergic-, mitochondrial-, and steroid hormone signaling-associated gene clusters sensitive to acute pair bond disruption and loss adaptation. Our results suggest that partner separation erodes transcriptomic signatures of pair bonding despite core behavioral features of the bond remaining intact, revealing potential molecular processes priming a vole to be able to form a new bond.
丧偶通常被认为是一个人一生中最创伤性的事件。然而,对于大多数人来说,悲伤的严重程度及其适应不良的影响会随着时间的推移通过一个研究不足的适应过程而减轻。与人类一样,社会性一夫一妻制的草原田鼠()形成异性伴侣关系,在伴侣分离后,表现出应激表型,随着时间的推移而减轻。我们检验了这样一个假设,即延长伴侣分离会减弱伴侣结合相关行为,并导致伴侣结合的转录特征侵蚀。异性或同性配对的雄性被共同饲养 2 周,然后要么继续配对,要么分离 48 小时或 4 周,然后收集新鲜的伏隔核组织进行 RNAseq。在一个单独的队列中,我们在这些时间点评估了伴侣导向的联系。我们发现,这些行为在同性和异性配对的田鼠中,即使长时间分离也能持续存在。异性伴侣结合导致伏隔核转录发生变化,这些变化在动物保持配对时稳定维持,但在长时间分离后会侵蚀。侵蚀的基因与神经胶质发生和髓鞘形成有关,这表明胶质细胞在伴侣结合和丧失中的作用以前未被描述。此外,我们在田鼠中首创了神经元特异性翻译核糖体亲和力纯化。神经元丰富的转录变化揭示了多巴胺能、线粒体和类固醇激素信号相关的基因簇对急性伴侣结合破坏和适应丧失敏感。我们的研究结果表明,尽管伴侣关系的核心行为特征保持完整,但伴侣关系的转录特征仍会因伴侣分离而侵蚀,这揭示了潜在的分子过程,使田鼠能够形成新的伴侣关系。