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Sex Differences in Biophysical Signatures across Molecularly Defined Medial Amygdala Neuronal Subpopulations
- Source :
- eNeuro
- Publication Year :
- 2020
- Publisher :
- Society for Neuroscience, 2020.
-
Abstract
- The medial amygdala (MeA) is essential for processing innate social and non-social behaviors, such as territorial aggression and mating, which display in a sex-specific manner. While sex differences in cell numbers and neuronal morphology in the MeA are well established, if and how these differences extend to the biophysical level remain unknown. Our previous studies revealed that expression of the transcription factors, Dbx1 and Foxp2, during embryogenesis defines separate progenitor pools destined to generate different subclasses of MEA inhibitory output neurons. We have also previously shown thatDbx1-lineage andFoxp2-lineage neurons display different responses to innate olfactory cues and in a sex-specific manner. To examine whether these neurons also possess sex-specific biophysical signatures, we conducted a multidimensional analysis of the intrinsic electrophysiological profiles of these transcription factor defined neurons in the male and female MeA. We observed striking differences in the action potential (AP) spiking patterns across lineages, and across sex within each lineage, properties known to be modified by different voltage-gated ion channels. To identify the potential mechanism underlying the observed lineage-specific and sex-specific differences in spiking adaptation, we conducted a phase plot analysis to narrow down putative ion channel candidates. Of these candidates, we found a subset expressed in a lineage-biased and/or sex-biased manner. Thus, our results uncover neuronal subpopulation and sex differences in the biophysical signatures of developmentally defined MeA output neurons, providing a potential physiological substrate for how the male and female MeA may process social and non-social cues that trigger innate behavioral responses.
- Subjects :
- Male
Action Potentials
Development
Biology
Inhibitory postsynaptic potential
Amygdala
medicine
Humans
spike frequency
medial amygdala
Transcription factor
Progenitor
Neurons
Sex Characteristics
Corticomedial Nuclear Complex
General Neuroscience
ion channels
FOXP2
General Medicine
spike adaptation
Sexual dimorphism
Electrophysiology
medicine.anatomical_structure
intrinsic properties
sexual dimorphism
Female
DBX1
Neuroscience
Research Article: New Research
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 23732822
- Volume :
- 7
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- eneuro
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....694116a5ddd3e571218e13ca7fd0c162