Genetic Influences on Response to Novel Objects and Dimensions of Personality in Papio Baboons

被引:0
|
作者
Zachary Johnson
Linda Brent
Juan Carlos Alvarenga
Anthony G. Comuzzie
Wendy Shelledy
Stephanie Ramirez
Laura Cox
Michael C. Mahaney
Yung-Yu Huang
J. John Mann
Jay R. Kaplan
Jeffrey Rogers
机构
[1] Emory University,Yerkes National Primate Research Center
[2] Texas Biomedical Research Institute,Department of Comparative Medicine
[3] Texas Biomedical Research Institute,Department of Genetics
[4] University of Texas,Department of Anthropology
[5] Columbia University Medical Center,Department of Psychiatry
[6] Wake Forest School of Medicine,Department of Pathology (Comparative Medicine)
[7] Baylor College of Medicine,Human Genome Sequencing Center
来源
Behavior Genetics | 2015年 / 45卷
关键词
Baboon; Hertibility; Temperament; Novelty; SNAP25;
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学科分类号
摘要
Behavioral variation within and between populations and species of the genus Papio has been studied extensively, but little is known about the genetic causes of individual- or population-level differences. This study investigates the influence of genetic variation on personality (sometimes referred to as temperament) in baboons and identifies a candidate gene partially responsible for the variation in that phenotype. To accomplish these goals, we examined individual variation in response to both novel objects and an apparent novel social partner (using a mirror test) among pedigreed baboons (n = 578) from the Southwest National Primate Research Center. We investigated the frequency and duration of individual behaviors in response to novel objects and used multivariate factor analysis to identify trait-like dimensions of personality. Exploratory factor analysis identified two distinct dimensions of personality within this population. Factor 1 accounts for 46.8 % of the variance within the behavioral matrix, and consists primarily of behaviors related to the “boldness” of the subject. Factor 2 accounts for 18.8 % of the variation, and contains several “anxiety” like behaviors. Several specific behaviors, and the two personality factors, were significantly heritable, with the factors showing higher heritability than most individual behaviors. Subsequent analyses show that the behavioral reactions observed in the test protocol are associated with animals’ social behavior observed later in their home social groups. Finally we used linkage analysis to map quantitative trait loci for the measured phenotypes. Single nucleotide polymorphisms in a positional candidate gene (SNAP25) are associated with variation in one of the personality factors, and CSF levels of homovanillic acid and 3-methoxy-4-hydroxyphenylglycol. This study documents heritable variation in personality among baboons and suggests that sequence variation in SNAP25 may influence differences in behavior and neurochemistry in these nonhuman primates.
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页码:215 / 227
页数:12
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