The adaptor protein 2 (AP2) complex modulates habituation and behavioral selection across multiple pathways and time windows
The adaptor protein 2 (AP2) complex modulates habituation and behavioral selection across multiple pathways and time windows
Date
2024-03-08
Authors
Mouret, Rodrigo Zuniga
Greenbaum, Jordyn P.
Doll, Hannah M.
Brody, Eliza M.
Iacobucci, Emma L.
Roland, Nicholas C.
Simamora, Roy C.
Ruiz, Ivan
Seymour, Rory
Ludwick, Leanne T.
Krawitz, Jacob A.
Groneberg, Antonia H.
Marques, Joao C.
Laborde, Alexandre
Rajan, Gokul
Del Bene, Filippo
Orger, Michael B.
Jain, Roshan A.
Greenbaum, Jordyn P.
Doll, Hannah M.
Brody, Eliza M.
Iacobucci, Emma L.
Roland, Nicholas C.
Simamora, Roy C.
Ruiz, Ivan
Seymour, Rory
Ludwick, Leanne T.
Krawitz, Jacob A.
Groneberg, Antonia H.
Marques, Joao C.
Laborde, Alexandre
Rajan, Gokul
Del Bene, Filippo
Orger, Michael B.
Jain, Roshan A.
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DOI
10.1016/j.isci.2024.109455
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Keywords
Behavioral neuroscience
Molecular biology
Molecular neuroscience
Neuroscience
Molecular biology
Molecular neuroscience
Neuroscience
Abstract
Animals constantly integrate sensory information with prior experience to select behavioral responses appropriate to the current situation. Genetic factors supporting this behavioral flexibility are often disrupted in neuropsychiatric conditions, such as the autism-linked ap2s1 gene which supports acoustically evoked habituation learning. ap2s1 encodes an AP2 endocytosis adaptor complex subunit, although its behavioral mechanisms and importance have been unclear. Here, we show that multiple AP2 subunits regulate acoustically evoked behavior selection and habituation learning in zebrafish. Furthermore, ap2s1 biases escape behavior choice in sensory modality-specific manners, and broadly regulates action selection across sensory contexts. We demonstrate that the AP2 complex functions acutely in the nervous system to modulate acoustically evoked habituation, suggesting several spatially and/or temporally distinct mechanisms through which AP2 regulates escape behavior selection and performance. Altogether, we show the AP2 complex coordinates action selection across diverse contexts, providing a vertebrate model for ap2s1's role in human conditions including autism spectrum disorder.
Description
© The Author(s), 2024. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Mouret, R., Greenbaum, J., Doll, H., Brody, E., Iacobucci, E., Roland, N., Simamora, R., Ruiz, I., Seymour, R., Ludwick, L., Krawitz, J., Groneberg, A., Marques, J., Laborde, A., Rajan, G., Bene, F., Orger, M., & Jain, R. (2024). The adaptor protein 2 (AP2) complex modulates habituation and behavioral selection across multiple pathways and time windows. iScience, 27(4), 109455, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.isci.2024.109455.
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Mouret, R., Greenbaum, J., Doll, H., Brody, E., Iacobucci, E., Roland, N., Simamora, R., Ruiz, I., Seymour, R., Ludwick, L., Krawitz, J., Groneberg, A., Marques, J., Laborde, A., Rajan, G., Bene, F., Orger, M., & Jain, R. (2024). The adaptor protein 2 (AP2) complex modulates habituation and behavioral selection across multiple pathways and time windows. iScience, 27(4), 109455.