Have you recently wondered how social-distancing and
self-isolation may be affecting your brain? An international research team led
by Erin Schuman from the Max Planck Institute for Brain Research discovered a
brain molecule that functions as a “thermometer” for the presence of others in
an animal’s environment. Zebrafish “feel” the presence of others via
mechanosensation and water movements – which turns the brain hormone on.
Varying social conditions can
cause long-lasting changes in animal behavior. Social isolation, for instance,
can have devastating effects on humans and other animals, including zebrafish.
The brain systems that sense the social environment, however, are not well
understood. To probe whether neuronal genes respond to dramatic changes in the
social environment, graduate student, Lukas Anneser, and colleagues raised
zebrafish either alone or with their kin for different periods of time. The
scientists used RNA sequencing to measure the expression levels of thousands of
neuronal genes.
Tracking
social density
“We found a consistent change
in expression for a handful of genes in fish that were raised in social
isolation. One of them was parathyroid hormone 2 (pth2), coding for a
relatively unknown peptide in the brain. Curiously, pth2 expression tracked not
just the presence of others, but also their density. Surprisingly, when
zebrafish were isolated, pth2 disappeared in the brain, but its expression
levels rapidly rose, like a thermometer reading, when other fish were added to
the tank,” explains Anneser.
Thrilled by this discovery,
the scientists tested if the effects of isolation could be reversed by putting
the previously isolated fish into a social setting. “After just 30 minutes
swimming with their kin, there was a significant recovery of the pth2 levels.
After 12 hours with kin the pth2 levels were indistinguishable from those seen
in socially-raised animals,” says Anneser. “This really strong and fast
regulation was unexpected and indicated a very tight link between gene
expression and the environment.”
So which sensory modality do
the animals use to detect others and drive changes in gene expression? “It
turned out that the sensory modality that controls pth2 expression was not
vision, taste or smell, but rather mechanosensation – they actually ‘felt’ the
physical movements of the swimming neighboring fish,” explains Schuman.
Sensing
water movements
Fish perceive movement
(“mechano-sense”) in their immediate vicinity via a sensory organ called the
lateral line. To test the role of mechanosensation in driving pth2 expression,
the team ablated the mechanosensitive cells within the fish’s lateral line. In
previously isolated animals, the ablation of the lateral line cells prevented
rescue of the neuro-hormone that was usually induced by the presence of other
fish.
Just as we humans are
sensitive to touch, zebrafish appear to be specifically tuned to swimming
motion of other fish. The scientists saw changes in pth2 levels caused by water
movements that is triggered by conspecifics in the tank. “Zebrafish larvae swim
in short bouts. We mimicked this water stimulation by programming a motor to
create artificial fish movements. Intriguingly, in previously isolated fish the
artificial movements rescued pth2 levels just like the real neighboring fish,”
explains Anneser.
“Our data indicate a
surprising role for a relatively unexplored neuropeptide, Pth2- it tracks and
responds to the population density of an animal’s social environment. It is
clear that the presence of others can have dramatic consequences on an animal’s
access to resources and ultimate survival – it is thus likely that this
neuro-hormone will regulate social brain and behavioral networks,” concludes
Schuman.
Source: https://www.mpg.de/16105035/1202-hirn-what-social-distancing-does-to-a-brain-151365
Journal article (under
paywall): https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-020-2988-z
Source: What
Social Distancing Does to a Brain – Scents of Science (myfusimotors.com)
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