Author:
Wang Yuping,Song Xinli,Chen Xiangmao,Zhou Ying,Ma Jihao,Zhang Fang,Wei Liqiang,Qi Guoxu,Yadav Nakul,Miao Benjie,Yan Yiming,Yuan Guohua,Mi Da,Rajasethupathy Priyamvada,Ibañez-Tallon Ines,Jia Xiaoxuan,Heintz Nathaniel,Li Kun
Abstract
SUMMARYFemale sociosexual behaviors, essential for survival and reproduction, are adaptively modulated by ovarian hormones. However, the neural mechanisms integrating internal hormonal states with external social cues to guide these behaviors remain poorly understood. Here we identified primary estrous-sensitiveCacna1h-expressing medial prefrontal (mPFCCacna1h+) neurons that orchestrate adaptive sociosexual behaviors. Bidirectional manipulation of mPFCCacna1h+neurons drives opposite-sex-directed behavioral shifts between estrus and diestrus females. In males, these neurons serve opposite functions compared to estrus females, mediating sexually dimorphic effects via anterior hypothalamic outputs. Miniscope imaging reveals mixed-representation of self-estrous states and social target sex in distinct mPFCCacna1h+subpopulations, with biased-encoding of opposite-sex social cues in estrus females and males. Mechanistically, ovarian hormone-driven upregulation ofCacna1h-encoded T-type calcium channels underlies estrus-specific activity changes and sexual-dimorphic function of mPFCCacna1h+neurons. These findings uncover a prefrontal circuit that integrates internal hormonal states and target-sex information to exert sexually bivalent top-down control over adaptive social behaviors.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory