4.8 Article

Distinct physiological and behavioural functions for parental alleles of imprinted Grb10

Journal

NATURE
Volume 469, Issue 7331, Pages 534-U101

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature09651

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council
  2. Medical Research Council
  3. Wellcome Trust
  4. Medical Research Council [G0001354B, G0300415, G0001354, G0801418B, G1000183B] Funding Source: researchfish
  5. MRC [G0300415] Funding Source: UKRI

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Imprinted genes, defined by their preferential expression of a single parental allele, represent a subset of the mammalian genome and often have key roles in embryonic development(1), but also postnatal functions including energy homeostasis(2) and behaviour(3,4). When the two parental alleles are unequally represented within a social group (when there is sex bias in dispersal and/or variance in reproductive success)(5,6), imprinted genes may evolve to modulate social behaviour, although so far no such instance is known. Predominantly expressed from the maternal allele during embryogenesis, Grb10 encodes an intracellular adaptor protein that can interact with several receptor tyrosine kinases and downstream signalling molecules(7). Here we demonstrate that within the brain Grb10 is expressed from the paternal allele from fetal life into adulthood and that ablation of this expression engenders increased social dominance specifically among other aspects of social behaviour, a finding supported by the observed increase in allogrooming by paternal Grb10-deficient animals. Grb10 is, therefore, the first example of an imprinted gene that regulates social behaviour. It is also currently alone in exhibiting imprinted expression from each of the parental alleles in a tissue-specific manner, as loss of the peripherally expressed maternal allele leads to significant fetal and placental overgrowth. Thus Grb10 is, so far, a unique imprinted gene, able to influence distinct physiological processes, fetal growth and adult behaviour, owing to actions of the two parental alleles in different tissues.

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