Encoding of female mating dynamics by a hypothalamic line attractor.
Mengyu LiuAditya NairNestor CoriaScott W LindermanDavid J AndersonPublished in: Nature (2024)
Females exhibit complex, dynamic behaviors during mating with variable sexual receptivity depending on hormonal status 1-4 . However, how their brains encode the dynamics of mating and receptivity remains largely unknown. The ventromedial hypothalamus, ventro-lateral subdivision contains estrogen receptor type 1-positive neurons that control mating receptivity in female mice 5,6 . Unsupervised dynamical systems analysis of calcium imaging data from these neurons during mating uncovered a dimension with slow ramping activity, generating a line attractor in neural state space. Neural perturbations in behaving females demonstrated relaxation of population activity back into the attractor. During mating population activity integrated male cues to ramp up along this attractor, peaking just before ejaculation. Activity in the attractor dimension was positively correlated with the degree of receptivity. Longitudinal imaging revealed that attractor dynamics appear and disappear across the estrus cycle and are hormone-dependent. These observations suggest that a hypothalamic line attractor encodes a persistent, escalating state of female sexual arousal or drive during mating. They also demonstrate that attractors can be reversibly modulated by hormonal status, on a timescale of days.