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Cortical ensembles orchestrate social competition through hypothalamic outputs

Authors :
Padilla-Coreano, Nancy
Batra, Kanha
Patarino, Makenzie
Chen, Zexin
Rock, Rachel R.
Zhang, Ruihan
Hausmann, Sébastien B.
Weddington, Javier C.
Patel, Reesha
Zhang, Yu E.
Fang, Hao-Shu
Mishra, Srishti
LeDuke, Deryn O.
Revanna, Jasmin
Li, Hao
Borio, Matilde
Pamintuan, Rachelle
Bal, Aneesh
Keyes, Laurel R.
Libster, Avraham
Wichmann, Romy
Mills, Fergil
Taschbach, Felix H.
Matthews, Gillian A.
Curley, James P.
Fiete, Ila R.
Lu, Cewu
Tye, Kay M.
Source :
Nature; March 2022, Vol. 603 Issue: 7902 p667-671, 5p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Most social species self-organize into dominance hierarchies1,2, which decreases aggression and conserves energy3,4, but it is not clear how individuals know their social rank. We have only begun to learn how the brain represents social rank5–9and guides behaviour on the basis of this representation. The medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) is involved in social dominance in rodents7,8and humans10,11. Yet, precisely how the mPFC encodes relative social rank and which circuits mediate this computation is not known. We developed a social competition assay in which mice compete for rewards, as well as a computer vision tool (AlphaTracker) to track multiple, unmarked animals. A hidden Markov model combined with generalized linear models was able to decode social competition behaviour from mPFC ensemble activity. Population dynamics in the mPFC predicted social rank and competitive success. Finally, we demonstrate that mPFC cells that project to the lateral hypothalamus promote dominance behaviour during reward competition. Thus, we reveal a cortico-hypothalamic circuit by which the mPFC exerts top-down modulation of social dominance.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00280836 and 14764687
Volume :
603
Issue :
7902
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs59181288
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-022-04507-5