iScience (Feb 2024)

Behavioral, physiological, and genetic drivers of coping in a non-human primate

  • Debottam Bhattacharjee,
  • Aníta Rut Guðjónsdóttir,
  • Paula Escriche Chova,
  • Esmee Middelburg,
  • Jana Jäckels,
  • Natasja G. de Groot,
  • Bernard Wallner,
  • Jorg J.M. Massen,
  • Lena S. Pflüger

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 27, no. 2
p. 108890

Abstract

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Summary: Animals experience stressful situations, from predation to social conflicts, but mostly deal with them successfully. This adaptive mechanism, coping, reduces the adverse effects of stressors, and its failure may result in reduced fitness. Substantial inter-individual variation in coping is observed, yet little is known about how behavioral, physiological and genetic drivers regulate coping holistically and contribute to such variations. We assessed behavioral coping styles (n=30), emotional arousal (n=12), and personalities (n=32) of long-tailed macaques (Macaca fascicularis) and also investigated the association of coping with a valine/methionine polymorphism encoded by a critical human stress regulatory gene, catechol-O-methyltransferase (COMT) (n=26). Personality and the human equivalent COMT Val/Met polymorphism were associated with “nonaggression-based” and “aggression-based” coping styles. Compared to nonaggression-based, aggression-based copers maintained higher average facial temperatures, indicating potentially lower emotional arousal, as measured using infrared thermography. These findings demonstrate a complex interplay of various proximate mechanisms governing coping in a non-human primate.

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