Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10400.7/742
Title: Homeodomain protein Otp affects developmental neuropeptide switching in oxytocin neurons associated with a long-term effect on social behavior
Author: Wircer, Einav
Blechman, Janna
Borodovsky, Nataliya
Tsoory, Michael
Nunes, Ana Rita
Oliveira, Rui F
Levkowitz, Gil
Keywords: autism
developmental biology
hypothalamus
neurodevelopment disorders
neuropeptides
neuroscience
oxytocin
social behavior
stem cells
zebrafish
Issue Date: 17-Jan-2017
Publisher: eLife Sciences Publications
Citation: eLife 2017;6:e22170
Abstract: Proper response to stress and social stimuli depends on orchestrated development of hypothalamic neuronal circuits. Here we address the effects of the developmental transcription factor orthopedia (Otp) on hypothalamic development and function. We show that developmental mutations in the zebrafish paralogous gene otpa but not otpb affect both stress response and social preference. These behavioral phenotypes were associated with developmental alterations in oxytocinergic (OXT) neurons. Thus, otpa and otpb differentially regulate neuropeptide switching in a newly identified subset of OXT neurons that co-express the corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH). Single-cell analysis revealed that these neurons project mostly to the hindbrain and spinal cord. Ablation of this neuronal subset specifically reduced adult social preference without affecting stress behavior, thereby uncoupling the contribution of a specific OXT cluster to social behavior from the general otpa(-/-) deficits. Our findings reveal a new role for Otp in controlling developmental neuropeptide balance in a discrete OXT circuit whose disrupted development affects social behavior.
Description: No supplementary materials.
Peer review: yes
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10400.7/742
DOI: 10.7554/eLife.22170
Publisher Version: https://elifesciences.org/content/6/e22170
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