Transcriptional regulatory dynamics drive coordinated metabolic and neural response to social challenge in mice
- Michael Saul1,
- Christopher H Seward1,
- Joseph M Troy1,
- Huimin Zhang1,
- Laura G Sloofman1,
- Xiaochen Lu1,
- Patricia A Weisner1,
- Derek Caetano-Anolles1,
- Hao Sun1,
- Sihai D Zhao1,
- Sriram Chandrasekaran2,
- Saurabh Sinha1 and
- Lisa Stubbs1,3
- ↵* Corresponding author; email: ljstubbs{at}illinois.edu
Abstract
Agonistic encounters are powerful effectors of future behavior, and the ability to learn from this type of social challenge is an essential adaptive trait. We recently identified a conserved transcriptional program defining the response to social challenge across animal species, highly enriched in transcription factor (TF), energy metabolism, and developmental signaling genes. To understand the trajectory of this program and to uncover the most important regulatory influences controlling this response, we integrated gene expression data with the chromatin landscape in hypothalamus, frontal cortex, and amygdala of socially challenged mice over time. The expression data revealed a complex spatiotemporal patterning of events starting with neural signaling molecules in the frontal cortex and ending in the modulation of developmental factors in the amygdala and hypothalamus, underpinned by a systems-wide shift in expression of energy metabolism-related genes. The transcriptional signals were correlated with significant shifts in chromatin accessibility and a network of challenge-associated TFs. Among these, the conserved metabolic and developmental regulator ESRRA was highlighted for an especially early and important regulatory role. Cell-type deconvolution analysis attributed the differential metabolic and developmental signals in this social context primarily to oligodendrocytes and neurons respectively, and we show that ESRRA is expressed in both cell types. Localizing ESRRA binding sites in cortical chromatin, we show that this nuclear receptor binds both differentially expressed energy-related and neurodevelopmental TF genes. These data link metabolic and neurodevelopmental signaling to social challenge, and identify key regulatory drivers of this process with unprecedented tissue and temporal resolution.
- Received August 3, 2016.
- Accepted March 24, 2017.
- Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
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