Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2035543 Cell 2014 13 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Detected MUP repertoire signals “self” and “other” to promote countermarking behavior•VNO neurons use combinatorial coding to resolve MUP identity and concentration•A single MUP promotes innate aggression regardless of MUP repertoire•MUP repertoire, context, and experience promote different behavioral outputs

SummaryDuring social interactions, an individual’s behavior is largely governed by the subset of signals emitted by others. Discrimination of “self” from “other” regulates the territorial urine countermarking behavior of mice. To identify the cues for this social discrimination and understand how they are interpreted, we designed an olfactory-dependent countermarking assay. We find major urinary proteins (MUPs) sufficient to elicit countermarking, and unlike other vomeronasal ligands that are detected by specifically tuned sensory neurons, MUPs are detected by a combinatorial strategy. A chemosensory signature of “self” that modulates behavior is developed via experience through exposure to a repertoire of MUPs. In contrast, aggression can be elicited by MUPs in an experience-independent but context-dependent manner. These findings reveal that individually emitted chemical cues can be interpreted based on their combinatorial permutation and relative ratios, and they can transmit both fixed and learned information to promote multiple behaviors.

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