Single-Cell Resolution of Individual Variation in Hypothalamic Neurons Allows Targeted Manipulation Affecting Social Motivation
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Despite decades of research, connecting molecular and cellular phenotypes to complex behavioral traits remains an elusive goal 1 . Social motivation exhibits individual trait variation 2 , which we hypothesize is mediated by molecular and cellular variability across hypothalamic neurons. To test this, we generated single-nucleus RNA-sequencing profiles 3,4 of >120,000 neurons from tuberal hypothalamus and adjacent thalamus in 36 mice, balanced across sex and autism-associated mutation 5 , with all mice assessed for social motivation 2 . First, we show that molecular activation patterns predict behavior across individuals: specifically, activation of paraventricular Agtr1a + (angiotensin receptor 1a) neurons predicted reduced social behavior. Subsequent inhibition of AGTR1A with telmisartan—an FDA-approved antihypertensive 6 —improved social orienting. Second, we show natural variation in neuronal proportions—likely arising from stochastic developmental events 7 —is sufficient to shape adult behavior even among genetically-identical individuals: we identified multiple neuronal populations whose relative abundance predicted social reward-seeking behavior. Chemogenetic inhibition of one such population, Nxph4 + neurons of the postero-lateral hypothalamus 8 , suppressed multiple aspects of social motivation. This work establishes proof-of-principle for an approach where single-cell genomics precisely maps neural substrates governing behavior. This approach revealed that stochastic variations in neuronal architecture deterministically influence social motivation, and enabled identification of therapeutically-actionable targets with immediate translational potential for disorders with social deficits.