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Lateralized Feeding Behavior is Associated with Asymmetrical Neuroanatomy and Lateralized Gene Expressions in the Brain in Scale-Eating Cichlid Fish

Authors
Lee, Hyuk JeSchneider, Ralf F.Manousaki, TerezaKang, Ji HyounLein, EtienneFranchini, PaoloMeyer, Axel
Issue Date
11월-2017
Publisher
OXFORD UNIV PRESS
Keywords
behavioral genetics/genomics; left-right asymmetry; neural structures; Perissodus microlepis; tectum opticum; telencephalon
Citation
GENOME BIOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, v.9, no.11, pp.3122 - 3136
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
GENOME BIOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume
9
Number
11
Start Page
3122
End Page
3136
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/81742
DOI
10.1093/gbe/evx218
ISSN
1759-6653
Abstract
Lateralized behavior ("handedness") is unusual, but consistently found across diverse animal lineages, including humans. It is thought to reflect brain anatomical and/or functional asymmetries, but its neuro-molecular mechanisms remain largely unknown. Lake Tanganyika scale-eating cichlid fish, Perissodus microlepis show pronounced asymmetry in their jaw morphology as well as handedness in feeding behavior-biting scales preferentially only from one or the other side of their victims. This makes them an ideal model in which to investigate potential laterality in neuroanatomy and transcription in the brain in relation to behavioral handedness. After determining behavioral handedness in P. microlepis (preferred attack side), we estimated the volume of the hemispheres of brain regions and captured their gene expression profiles. Our analyses revealed that the degree of behavioral handedness is mirrored at the level of neuroanatomical asymmetry, particularly in the tectum opticum. Transcriptome analyses showed that different brain regions (tectum opticum, telencephalon, hypothalamus, and cerebellum) display distinct expression patterns, potentially reflecting their developmental interrelationships. For numerous genes in each brain region, their extent of expression differences between hemispheres was found to be correlated with the degree of behavioral lateralization. Interestingly, the tectum opticum and telencephalon showed divergent biases on the direction of up-or down-regulation of the laterality candidate genes (e.g., grm2) in the hemispheres, highlighting the connection of handedness with gene expression profiles and the different roles of these brain regions. Hence, handedness in predation behavior may be caused by asymmetric size of brain hemispheres and also by lateralized gene expressions in the brain.
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