In a groundbreaking advancement in neuroscience and behavioral biology, an international consortium of researchers has been awarded a prestigious European Research Council (ERC) Synergy Grant totaling 10 million Euros, approximately $11.5 million. This funding empowers a collaborative team led by Dr. Yong Xu of the University of South Florida (USF) Health, alongside Dr. Sadaf Farooqi from the University of Cambridge and Dr. Tiago Branco from University College London, to delve deeply into the neurobiological underpinnings of instinctive behavior. Their ambitious project aims to unravel the intricacies of how genetic and neural mechanisms within the hypothalamus orchestrate fundamental behaviors essential for survival and development across species.
The scientific focus of the consortium pivots on the hypothalamus, a central brain structure integral to homeostasis, behavioral regulation, and endocrine function. Prior research has recognized the hypothalamus’s role in regulating innate behaviors, including feeding, mating, defensive responses, and social interactions. However, the pathway-specific molecular and circuit-based mechanisms remain largely enigmatic. By leveraging advanced neuroimaging technologies capable of super high-resolution brain scans, Dr. Xu and his colleagues intend to visualize dynamic brain activity in humans harboring specific genetic mutations affecting hypothalamic pathways. These mutations have been implicated in a spectrum of behavioral anomalies in children, from hyperphagia and obesity to manifestations of autism spectrum disorders, aggression, and severe anxiety.
Dr. Xu’s recent appointment as the director of USF Health’s newly inaugurated Center for Molecular Psychiatry, complemented by his professorship in Psychiatry and Behavioral Neurosciences, positions him uniquely at the nexus of translational neuroscience, genetics, and metabolic research. His prior work, notably funded by the U.S. National Institutes of Health, emphasized the complex interplay between metabolic disorders such as obesity and diabetes and neurobiological dysfunctions. The current ERC-funded project builds naturally upon this foundation, linking metabolic phenotypes with neurogenetic substrates driving instinctual behavioral patterns.
The ERC Synergy Grant mechanism is designed to support exceptionally ambitious and collaborative projects that transcend single laboratories’ capabilities. The award to the INSTINCT consortium is a testament to the exceptional scientific merit and innovative potential of their proposal. Less than 10% of proposals received funding, highlighting the fiercely competitive nature of this program. The team’s integrative approach, combining human genomic data, state-of-the-art neuroimaging, and comparative behavioral studies in animal models within naturalistic social environments, promises unparalleled insights into the neural architecture governing innate behaviors.
Dr. Sadaf Farooqi’s extensive expertise in human genetics of obesity complements the team’s capacity to translate clinical genomic data into mechanistic understanding. Her prior studies have identified numerous genetic mutations that lead to severe and early-onset obesity in pediatric cohorts. By characterizing these mutations’ impact on hypothalamic circuits, the consortium aims to uncover causal pathways by which genetic aberrations precipitate complex behavioral and metabolic phenotypes. Such cross-disciplinary insights could pave the way for novel therapeutic strategies addressing multifactorial disorders rooted in neurogenetic dysfunction.
Similarly, Dr. Tiago Branco’s work at the Sainsbury Wellcome Centre brings to the table a sophisticated understanding of neural circuits and behavioral neuroscience. His research utilizes cutting-edge techniques to dissect neural substrates underlying behaviors in animal models, providing the consortium with a powerful framework to bridge findings from animal systems to human clinical contexts. This triangulation between genetics, neuroimaging, and ethologically valid behavioral assays could redefine our comprehension of how biological factors shape behavior, a longstanding question at the heart of the nature versus nurture debate.
Crucially, the project emphasizes the biological basis of behaviors traditionally viewed as voluntary or learned in humans—such as eating habits, social engagement, and emotional responses. The consortium challenges the prevailing notion that behaviors like aggression or anxiety are entirely under volitional control, instead proposing that these behaviors are deeply rooted in genetically wired brain pathways. The research aims to map how perturbations in hypothalamic function disrupt behavioral homeostasis, thereby contributing to neuropsychiatric disorders and metabolic disease comorbidities.
The methodological innovation central to the consortium’s work includes deploying super-resolution imaging to visualize hypothalamic activity patterns in vivo during various states such as hunger, satiety, and stress exposure. These data will be integrated with genetic profiles and behavioral phenotyping to construct a multidimensional model of instinctive behavior regulation. Furthermore, parallel studies on animals interacting in natural social milieus will shed light on how similar genetic alterations influence behavior in ecological contexts, thereby providing a powerful cross-species perspective.
The consortium’s journey culminated recently in Brussels, where the team underwent an intensive final round of review comprising a detailed presentation of their research program. To their delight and testament to the strength of their collaborative vision, they secured funding amidst a field of formidable competitors. Dr. Xu described the moment as both unexpected and exhilarating, underscoring the transformative potential this support offers for their inquiry into the neural control of innate behaviors.
The implications of this research extend far beyond basic science. By elucidating the neural circuitry and genetic factors driving instinctive behaviors, the team’s findings are poised to influence clinical approaches to a range of complex disorders, including obesity, anxiety disorders, autism spectrum conditions, and other neurodevelopmental abnormalities. This project represents a bold stride towards understanding human behavior’s biological roots, challenging existing paradigms, and offering hope for targeted interventions that address the underlying neurogenetic causes rather than solely managing symptoms.
As Dr. Charles J. Lockwood, executive vice president of USF Health, highlighted, this milestone reflects the increasing global visibility and impact of USF’s research enterprise. The synergy of international expertise embodied by the INSTINCT consortium demonstrates the profound value of collaborative science in tackling some of the most intricate and pressing questions in neurobiology and behavior. Dr. Xu’s gratitude for the institutional support from USF Health leadership speaks to the importance of fostering environments that enable rapid scientific progress.
Looking ahead, the INSTINCT consortium’s program promises to catalyze a paradigm shift in understanding the brain’s orchestration of behavior. Their multifaceted approach, encompassing genetics, neuroimaging, and ethological analyses, sets a new standard for integrative neuroscience research. The knowledge generated will illuminate the fundamental biological architectures that govern instinctive actions, enhancing our ability to decode human and animal behavior in health and disease with unprecedented precision.
Subject of Research:
The neurobiological and genetic mechanisms underlying instinctive behaviors, with a focus on hypothalamic pathways impacting obesity, autism, anxiety, and metabolism.
Article Title:
International Consortium Secures €10M ERC Grant to Decode the Neural Circuits of Instinctive Behavior
News Publication Date:
November 6, 2025
Web References:
https://healthscholars.usf.edu/center-for-molecular-psychiatry
References:
European Research Council Synergy Grant Program Documentation
Image Credits:
USF Health
Keywords:
Research funding, Genetic disorders, Obesity, Autism, Hypothalamus
Tags: advanced neuroimaging technologiesbehavioral biology research fundingEuropean Research Council Synergy Grantgenetic influences on behaviorhypothalamus and behavior regulationinstinctive behavior researchinterdisciplinary research in neuroscienceinternational research collaborationmolecular mechanisms of hypothalamusneurobiological mechanisms of behaviorneurodevelopmental disorders in childrenUSF Health neuroscience research



