Dads matter, too: The behavioural and neurogenomic effects of receiving paternal care
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ABSTRACT: Offspring are often influenced by the care they receive from their parents. However, we know little about the underlying neurogenomic mechanisms. Using a half-sib design, threespine stickleback fish were either raised by their fathers or hand-reared (“orphaned”). As offspring developed, they were tested in one of three behavioural assays: an open field assay with a simulated predator attack, a social behaviour assay with a simulated predator attack, and a scototaxis assay. Offspring that received parental care were bolder, more social, and less anxious. Fish in the open field assay had their brains sampled one hour following the simulated attack; brains were sampled at the same time from full-sib controls. These brains were processed for gene expression (via Tag-seq) and chromatin accessibility (via ATAC-seq). Experiencing paternal care affected brain gene expression, but sex was also a major factor, despite the fish being reproductively immature. The predator attack in the open field assay affected expression of fewer genes. Sex, and to lesser extent, paternal care, also influenced chromatin accessibility at a whole genome scale. Our findings further our understanding of the mechanistic basis for offspring response to variation in the care they receive from their parents.
ORGANISM(S): Gasterosteus aculeatus
PROVIDER: GSE305202 | GEO | 2025/08/13
REPOSITORIES: GEO
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