1. Neurogenomic insights into paternal care and its relation to territorial aggression
- Author
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Noelle James, Miles K. Bensky, Laura R. Stein, Alison M. Bell, Rebecca Trapp, Syed Abbas Bukhari, and Michael C. Saul
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Male ,Behavioural ecology ,Science ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Genetics, Behavioral ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Article ,Evolution, Molecular ,03 medical and health sciences ,Fathers ,Mice ,0302 clinical medicine ,Genetics ,Animals ,14. Life underwater ,Comparative genomic analysis ,lcsh:Science ,Social Behavior ,skin and connective tissue diseases ,Gene ,Paternal Behavior ,Social evolution ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,Behavior, Animal ,Reproduction ,Stickleback ,Brain ,General Chemistry ,Genomics ,biology.organism_classification ,Smegmamorpha ,Aggression ,030104 developmental biology ,Territorial aggression ,Evolutionary biology ,%22">Fish ,lcsh:Q ,sense organs ,Territoriality ,Paternal care ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Social behavior ,Transcription Factors - Abstract
Motherhood is characterized by dramatic changes in brain and behavior, but less is known about fatherhood. Here we report that male sticklebacks—a small fish in which fathers provide care—experience dramatic changes in neurogenomic state as they become fathers. Some genes are unique to different stages of paternal care, some genes are shared across stages, and some genes are added to the previously acquired neurogenomic state. Comparative genomic analysis suggests that some of these neurogenomic dynamics resemble changes associated with pregnancy and reproduction in mammalian mothers. Moreover, gene regulatory analysis identifies transcription factors that are regulated in opposite directions in response to a territorial challenge versus during paternal care. Altogether these results show that some of the molecular mechanisms of parental care might be deeply conserved and might not be sex-specific, and suggest that tradeoffs between opposing social behaviors are managed at the gene regulatory level., Compared to motherhood, the molecular changes associated with fatherhood are less understood. Here, the authors investigate gene expression changes associated with paternal care in male stickleback fish, and compare them with patterns in territorial aggression.
- Published
- 2019