AI Article Synopsis

  • Parent-of-origin effects (POE), which come from maternal influences or genetic imprinting, can impact behaviors linked to psychiatric disorders, but their role in complex traits needs more research.
  • This study used reciprocal F1 hybrids of mice to examine how different diets during the perinatal period affect behavior and the associated changes in gene expression related to POE.
  • Results highlighted a set of 15 genes influenced by POE, with some behaviors showing significant effects from both diet and genetic factors, suggesting the need for more extensive studies on these interactions across various genetic backgrounds.

Article Abstract

Parent-of-origin effects (POE) in mammals typically arise from maternal effects or imprinting. In some instances, such POE have been associated with psychiatric disorders, as well as with changes in a handful of animal behaviors. However, POE on complex traits such as behavior remain largely uncharacterized. Moreover, although both behavior and epigenetic effects are known to be modified by perinatal environmental exposures such as nutrient deficiency, the architecture of such environment-by-POE is mostly unexplored. To study POE and environment-by-POE, we employ a relatively neglected but especially powerful experimental system for POE-detection: reciprocal F1 hybrids (RF1s). We exposed female NOD/ShiLtJ×C57Bl/6J and C57Bl/6J×NOD/ShiLtJ mice, perinatally, to one of four different diets, then after weaning recorded a set of behaviors that model psychiatric disease. Whole-brain microarray expression data revealed an imprinting-enriched set of 15 genes subject to POE. The most-significant expression POE, on the non-imprinted gene (a.k.a. ), was validated using qPCR in the same and in a new set of mice. Several behaviors, especially locomotor behaviors, also showed POE. Bayesian mediation analysis suggested expression suppresses behavioral POE, and that the imprinted gene suppresses POE on expression. A suggestive diet-by-POE was observed on percent center time in the open field test, and a significant diet-by-POE was observed on one imprinted gene, , and on 16 non-imprinted genes. The relatively small, tractable set of POE and diet-by-POE detected on behavior and expression here motivates further studies examining such effects across RF1s on multiple genetic backgrounds.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6222572PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1534/g3.118.200135DOI Listing

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