Brain-Wide Subnetworks within and between Naturally Socializing Typical and Autism Model Mice

Read the full article See related articles

Discuss this preprint

Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

Social interaction is inherently asymmetric, requiring coordinated activity between non-homologous brain regions across individuals. However, the brain-wide dynamics underlying such inter-brain coordination remain poorly understood. We used multi-fiber photometry to simultaneously record from 24 brain regions in pairs of freely interacting mice, including a model of autism. Social interactions evoked widespread, dynamic activity across brains, with inter-brain synchrony, especially between non-homologous areas, exceeding intra-brain synchrony, particularly in dominant mice. Network analysis revealed three subnetworks: (1) Emotional, intra-brain enhanced in subordinates; (2) Sensory, spanning both mice; (3) Decision/consolidation, linking dominant prefrontal cortex to subordinate hippocampus. These subnetworks encoded dominance, identity, and interaction roles, and followed a clear temporal sequence around social events. In an autism model, socially evoked activity was hyperactive displaying mostly within brain synchrony but lacked inter-brain synchrony. Our results uncover dynamic inter-brain circuits as a hallmark of social behavior and reveal their disruption in autism.

Article activity feed