Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
A Rat Model of Human Behavior Provides Evidence of Natural Selection Against Underexpression of Aggressiveness-Related Genes in Humans. / Oshchepkov, Dmitry; Ponomarenko, Mikhail; Klimova, Natalya et al.
In: Frontiers in Genetics, Vol. 10, 1267, 13.12.2019.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - A Rat Model of Human Behavior Provides Evidence of Natural Selection Against Underexpression of Aggressiveness-Related Genes in Humans
AU - Oshchepkov, Dmitry
AU - Ponomarenko, Mikhail
AU - Klimova, Natalya
AU - Chadaeva, Irina
AU - Bragin, Anatoly
AU - Sharypova, Ekaterina
AU - Shikhevich, Svetlana
AU - Kozhemyakina, Rimma
N1 - Publisher Copyright: © Copyright © 2019 Oshchepkov, Ponomarenko, Klimova, Chadaeva, Bragin, Sharypova, Shikhevich and Kozhemyakina. Copyright: Copyright 2020 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
PY - 2019/12/13
Y1 - 2019/12/13
N2 - Aggressiveness is a hereditary behavioral pattern that forms a social hierarchy and affects the individual social rank and accordingly quality and duration of life. Thus, genome-wide studies of human aggressiveness are important. Nonetheless, the aggressiveness-related genome-wide studies have been conducted on animals rather than humans. Recently, in our genome-wide study, we uncovered natural selection against underexpression of human aggressiveness-related genes and proved it using F1 hybrid mice. Simultaneously, this natural selection equally supports two opposing traits in humans (dominance and subordination) as if self-domestication could have happened with its disruptive natural selection. Because there is still not enough scientific evidence that this could happen, here, we verified this natural selection pattern using quantitative PCR and two outbred rat lines (70 generations of artificial selection for aggressiveness or tameness, hereinafter: domestication). We chose seven genes—Cacna2d3, Gad2, Gria2, Mapk1, Nos1, Pomc, and Syn1—over- or underexpression of which corresponds to aggressive or domesticated behavior (in humans or mice) that has the same direction as natural selection. Comparing aggressive male rats with domesticated ones, we found that these genes are overexpressed statistically significantly in the hypothalamus (as a universal behavior regulator), not in the periaqueductal gray, where there was no aggressiveness-related expression of the genes in males. Database STRING showed statistically significant associations of the human genes homologous to these rat genes with long-term depression, circadian entrainment, Alzheimer’s disease, and the central nervous system disorders during chronic IL-6 overexpression. This finding more likely supports positive perspectives of further studies on self-domestication syndromes.
AB - Aggressiveness is a hereditary behavioral pattern that forms a social hierarchy and affects the individual social rank and accordingly quality and duration of life. Thus, genome-wide studies of human aggressiveness are important. Nonetheless, the aggressiveness-related genome-wide studies have been conducted on animals rather than humans. Recently, in our genome-wide study, we uncovered natural selection against underexpression of human aggressiveness-related genes and proved it using F1 hybrid mice. Simultaneously, this natural selection equally supports two opposing traits in humans (dominance and subordination) as if self-domestication could have happened with its disruptive natural selection. Because there is still not enough scientific evidence that this could happen, here, we verified this natural selection pattern using quantitative PCR and two outbred rat lines (70 generations of artificial selection for aggressiveness or tameness, hereinafter: domestication). We chose seven genes—Cacna2d3, Gad2, Gria2, Mapk1, Nos1, Pomc, and Syn1—over- or underexpression of which corresponds to aggressive or domesticated behavior (in humans or mice) that has the same direction as natural selection. Comparing aggressive male rats with domesticated ones, we found that these genes are overexpressed statistically significantly in the hypothalamus (as a universal behavior regulator), not in the periaqueductal gray, where there was no aggressiveness-related expression of the genes in males. Database STRING showed statistically significant associations of the human genes homologous to these rat genes with long-term depression, circadian entrainment, Alzheimer’s disease, and the central nervous system disorders during chronic IL-6 overexpression. This finding more likely supports positive perspectives of further studies on self-domestication syndromes.
KW - aggressiveness
KW - behavior
KW - differentially expressed gene
KW - domestication
KW - hypothalamus
KW - periaqueductal gray
KW - rat model
KW - DOMESTICATION
KW - IRON-DEFICIENCY
KW - SUPPRESSION
KW - RESPONSES
KW - REDUCED AGGRESSIVENESS
KW - STRESS
KW - ALTERS
KW - ASSOCIATION
KW - EXPRESSION
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85077314483&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.3389/fgene.2019.01267
DO - 10.3389/fgene.2019.01267
M3 - Article
C2 - 31921305
AN - SCOPUS:85077314483
VL - 10
JO - Frontiers in Genetics
JF - Frontiers in Genetics
SN - 1664-8021
M1 - 1267
ER -
ID: 22870798