Changes in 300 genes could contribute to the maternal defense of the offspring behaviour in mice

A research team from the University of Valencia and the Jaume I University of Castellón shows an increase in the expression of 197 genes in mother mice, and a decrease of 99, when compared with virgin females in contact with offspring. These results demonstrate changes related to maternity that could be related to the maternal defense behaviour of the offspring against males. This work opens the doors to new research focused on the role of these gene expression changes in the brain during motherhood.

21 de september de 2021

Team of the University of Valencia. From left to right: Enrique Lanuza, Carmen Agustín, María Abellán and Guillermo Ayala.
Team of the University of Valencia. From left to right: Enrique Lanuza, Carmen Agustín, María Abellán and Guillermo Ayala.

The article, published in The FASEB Journal, has studied the differences in gene expression between lactating mice and virgin females that coexisted with them and their young – called co-mothers –, in the medial amygdala, a key brain area in the regulation of emotional responses and that it is involved in the recognition of congeners through pheromones.

“Our results open many questions about how the molecular changes that we have observed in the brain contribute to the physiological adaptations and behavioural changes that occur during such an important stage in the life of animals such as motherhood”, explains researcher Carmen Agustín Pavón, from the Joint Research Unit in Functional Neuroanatomy of the Department of Cell Biology, Functional Biology and Physical Anthropology of the University of Valencia.

Mice, a species with a very complex maternal behaviour, show in the case of females a radical change in behaviour with respect to males depending on the phase of the reproductive cycle in which they are. When they are looking for a mate, the males attract them through their pheromones. On the contrary, when the females are lactating their young, the male pheromones unleash in them very aggressive responses towards the intruding males, as previous work of the group has shown. This maternal aggression behaviour is an adaptive response in nature, as males are infanticidal.

The new research has compared, using the RNA-Seq technique, which allows a massive analysis of gene expression, the genes most expressed in the medial amygdala of lactating mothers with the genes most expressed in virgin females that had been in contact with the expectant mother and her offspring throughout the pregnancy and the beginning of lactation. The co-mothers show behaviours of caring for the young, but never of aggression towards males.

The research data show a significant increase in the expression of 197 genes in the mothers. Among the most overexpressed are genes that encode hormones such as prolactin – in charge, among other things, of preparing the body for lactation during childbirth –, growth hormone or follicle-stimulating hormone –which stimulates the growth and development of ovarian follicles, among other functions –. On the other hand, there are 99 genes that are expressed much more in co-mothers, such as inhibin hormones – regulating the release of the stimulating follicle, among other functions – or marker genes for neural activity. Finally, although no differences are shown between the two groups of females, it has been discovered that genes encoding olfactory receptors are expressed in the medial amygdala, a finding that suggests the participation of their neurons in the chemoreception of internal metabolites.

This research has been carried out by María Abellán Álvaro, Carmen Agustín Pavón and Enrique Lanuza from the Department of Cell Biology, Functional Biology and Physical Anthropology of the University of Valencia, by Manuela Barneo and Fernando Martínez from the Predepartmental Unit of Medicine of the Jaume I University, all of them from the Joint Unit for Research in Functional Neuroanatomy. Guillermo Ayala, from the Department of Statistics and Operations Research of the Faculty of Mathematics of the University of Valencia, is also the author of the work.

The work has been funded by the Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness-FEDER, the Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities, the Valencian Government and the Jaume I University.

Methodology

The work has been funded by the Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness-ERDF, the Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities, the Generalitat Valenciana and the Universitat Jaume I. To carry out the study, massive sequencing techniques (NGS) have been used that reveal the presence and quantity of RNA in a reduced biological sample at a specific moment (RNASeq). In addition, the results on prolactin and growth hormone have been validated by quantitative PCR.

Article:

Abellán-Álvaro, M., Ayala, G., Barneo-Muñoz, M., Martínez-García, F., Agustín-Pavón, C. & Lanuza, E. (2021). «Motherhood-induced gene expression in the mouse medial amygdala: Changes induced by pregnancy and lactation but not by pup stimuli». The FASEB Journal, 35(9), 1-21. https://doi.org/10.1096/fj.202100163RR

Annex photo caption:

UJI team: Manuela Barneo and Fernando Martínez García.

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