Genetic imprinting, or the preferential expression of a single parental allele, has typically been implicated as an influential factor during development, but whether unequal representation of one allele can influence social behaviour has not been studied. Here, it is demonstrated that the adaptor protein Grb10 is predominantly expressed from the paternal allele in brain and that ablating this allelic bias induces behavioural modifications of a social nature. At this time, Grb10 is unique in the sense that tissue-specific actions of each parental allele can influence distinct physiological or behavioural processes.
- Alastair S. Garfield
- Michael Cowley
- Andrew Ward