Buhidma, Y;Hobbs, C;Malcangio, M;Duty, S;
PMID: 37100804 | DOI: 10.1038/s41531-023-00510-3
Pain is a key non-motor feature of Parkinson's disease (PD) that significantly impacts on life quality. The mechanisms underlying chronic pain in PD are poorly understood, hence the lack of effective treatments. Using the 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA) lesioned rat model of PD, we identified reductions in dopaminergic neurons in the periaqueductal grey (PAG) and Met-enkephalin in the dorsal horn of the spinal cord that were validated in human PD tissue samples. Pharmacological activation of D1-like receptors in the PAG, identified as the DRD5+ phenotype located on glutamatergic neurons, alleviated the mechanical hypersensitivity seen in the Parkinsonian model. Downstream activity in serotonergic neurons in the Raphé magnus (RMg) was also reduced in 6-OHDA lesioned rats, as detected by diminished c-FOS positivity. Furthermore, we identified increased pre-aggregate α-synuclein, coupled with elevated activated microglia in the dorsal horn of the spinal cord in those people that experienced PD-related pain in life. Our findings have outlined pathological pathways involved in the manifestation of pain in PD that may present targets for improved analgesia in people with PD.
Studtmann, C;Ladislav, M;Topolski, MA;Safari, M;Swanger, SA;
PMID: 35219855 | DOI: 10.1016/j.nbd.2022.105672
Thalamocortical network dysfunction contributes to seizures and sleep deficits in Dravet syndrome (DS), an infantile epileptic encephalopathy, but the underlying molecular and cellular mechanisms remain elusive. DS is primarily caused by mutations in the SCN1A gene encoding the voltage-gated sodium channel NaV1.1, which is highly expressed in GABAergic reticular thalamus (nRT) neurons as well as glutamatergic thalamocortical neurons. We hypothesized that NaV1.1 haploinsufficiency alters somatosensory corticothalamic circuit function through both intrinsic and synaptic mechanisms in nRT and thalamocortical neurons. Using Scn1a heterozygous mice of both sexes aged P25-P30, we discovered reduced excitability of nRT neurons and thalamocortical neurons in the ventral posterolateral (VPL) thalamus, while thalamocortical ventral posteromedial (VPM) neurons exhibited enhanced excitability. NaV1.1 haploinsufficiency enhanced GABAergic synaptic input and reduced glutamatergic input to VPL neurons, but not VPM neurons. In addition, glutamatergic input to nRT neurons was reduced in Scn1a heterozygous mice. These findings introduce alterations in glutamatergic synapse function and aberrant glutamatergic neuron excitability in the thalamus as disease mechanisms in DS, which has been widely considered a disease of GABAergic neurons. This work reveals additional complexity that expands current models of thalamic dysfunction in DS and identifies new components of corticothalamic circuitry as potential therapeutic targets.
Chao, YS;Parrilla-Carrero, J;Eid, M;Culver, OP;Jackson, TB;Lipat, R;Taniguchi, M;Jhou, TC;
PMID: 37083325 | DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2023.112404
Cocaine blocks dopamine reuptake, thereby producing rewarding effects that are widely studied. However, cocaine also blocks serotonin uptake, which we show drives, in rats, individually variable aversive effects that depend on serotonin 2C receptors (5-HT2CRs) in the rostromedial tegmental nucleus (RMTg), a major GABAergic afferent to midbrain dopamine neurons. 5-HT2CRs produce depolarizing effects in RMTg neurons that are particularly strong in some rats, leading to aversive effects that reduce acquisition of and relapse to cocaine seeking. In contrast, 5-HT2CR signaling is largely lost after cocaine exposure in other rats, leading to reduced aversive effects and increased cocaine seeking. These results suggest a serotonergic biological marker of cocaine-seeking vulnerability that can be targeted to modulate drug seeking.
Pharmaceuticals (Basel, Switzerland)
Konkoly, J;Kormos, V;Gaszner, B;Sándor, Z;Kecskés, A;Alomari, A;Szilágyi, A;Szilágyi, B;Zelena, D;Pintér, E;
PMID: 34959735 | DOI: 10.3390/ph14121336
Transient receptor potential ankyrin 1 (TRPA1), a nonselective cation channel, contributes to several (patho)physiological processes. Smell loss is an early sign in several neurodegenerative disorders, such as multiple sclerosis, Parkinson's and Alzheimer's diseases; therefore, we focused on its role in olfaction and social behaviour with the aim to reveal its potential therapeutic use. The presence of Trpa1 mRNA was studied along the olfactory tract of mice by combined RNAscope in situ hybridisation and immunohistochemistry. The aversive effects of fox and cat odour were examined in parallel with stress hormone levels. In vitro calcium imaging was applied to test if these substances can directly activate TRPA1 receptors. The role of TRPA1 in social behaviour was investigated by comparing Trpa1 wild-type and knockout mice (KO). Trpa1 mRNA was detected in the olfactory bulb and piriform cortex, while its expression was weak in the olfactory epithelium. Fox, but not cat odour directly activated TRPA1 channels in TRPA1-overexpressing Chinese Hamster Ovary cell lines. Accordingly, KO animals showed less aversion against fox, but not cat odour. The social interest of KO mice was reduced during social habituation-dishabituation and social interaction, but not during resident-intruder tests. TRPA1 may contribute to odour processing at several points of the olfactory tract and may play an important role in shaping the social behaviour of mice. Thus, TRPA1 may influence the development of certain social disorders, serving as a potential drug target in the future.
Zhao, M;Su, HZ;Zeng, YH;Sun, Y;Guo, XX;Li, YL;Wang, C;Zhao, ZY;Huang, XJ;Lin, KJ;Ye, ZL;Lin, BW;Hong, S;Zheng, J;Liu, YB;Yao, XP;Yang, D;Lu, YQ;Chen, HZ;Zuo, E;Yang, G;Wang, HT;Huang, CW;Lin, XH;Cen, Z;Lai, LL;Zhang, YK;Li, X;Lai, T;Lin, J;Zuo, DD;Lin, MT;Liou, CW;Kong, QX;Yan, CZ;Xiong, ZQ;Wang, N;Luo, W;Zhao, CP;Cheng, X;Chen, WJ;
PMID: 36443312 | DOI: 10.1038/s41421-022-00475-2
Brain calcification is a critical aging-associated pathology and can cause multifaceted neurological symptoms. Cerebral phosphate homeostasis dysregulation, blood-brain barrier defects, and immune dysregulation have been implicated as major pathological processes in familial brain calcification (FBC). Here, we analyzed two brain calcification families and identified calcification co-segregated biallelic variants in the CMPK2 gene that disrupt mitochondrial functions. Transcriptome analysis of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) isolated from these patients showed impaired mitochondria-associated metabolism pathways. In situ hybridization and single-cell RNA sequencing revealed robust Cmpk2 expression in neurons and vascular endothelial cells (vECs), two cell types with high energy expenditure in the brain. The neurons in Cmpk2-knockout (KO) mice have fewer mitochondrial DNA copies, down-regulated mitochondrial proteins, reduced ATP production, and elevated intracellular inorganic phosphate (Pi) level, recapitulating the mitochondrial dysfunction observed in the PBMCs isolated from the FBC patients. Morphologically, the cristae architecture of the Cmpk2-KO murine neurons was also impaired. Notably, calcification developed in a progressive manner in the homozygous Cmpk2-KO mice thalamus region as well as in the Cmpk2-knock-in mice bearing the patient mutation, thus phenocopying the calcification pathology observed in the patients. Together, our study identifies biallelic variants of CMPK2 as novel genetic factors for FBC; and demonstrates how CMPK2 deficiency alters mitochondrial structures and functions, thereby highlighting the mitochondria dysregulation as a critical pathogenic mechanism underlying brain calcification.
International journal of molecular sciences
Miranda, CO;Hegedüs, K;Kis, G;Antal, M;
PMID: 37108107 | DOI: 10.3390/ijms24086943
A great deal of evidence supports the inevitable importance of spinal glycinergic inhibition in the development of chronic pain conditions. However, it remains unclear how glycinergic neurons contribute to the formation of spinal neural circuits underlying pain-related information processing. Thus, we intended to explore the synaptic targets of spinal glycinergic neurons in the pain processing region (laminae I-III) of the spinal dorsal horn by combining transgenic technology with immunocytochemistry and in situ hybridization accompanied by light and electron microscopy. First, our results suggest that, in addition to neurons in laminae I-III, glycinergic neurons with cell bodies in lamina IV may contribute substantially to spinal pain processing. On the one hand, we show that glycine transporter 2 immunostained glycinergic axon terminals target almost all types of excitatory and inhibitory interneurons identified by their neuronal markers in laminae I-III. Thus, glycinergic postsynaptic inhibition, including glycinergic inhibition of inhibitory interneurons, must be a common functional mechanism of spinal pain processing. On the other hand, our results demonstrate that glycine transporter 2 containing axon terminals target only specific subsets of axon terminals in laminae I-III, including nonpeptidergic nociceptive C fibers binding IB4 and nonnociceptive myelinated A fibers immunoreactive for type 1 vesicular glutamate transporter, indicating that glycinergic presynaptic inhibition may be important for targeting functionally specific subpopulations of primary afferent inputs.
Yaeger, J;Krupp, K;Jacobs, B;Onserio, B;Meyerink, B;Cain, J;Ronan, P;Renner, K;DiLeone, R;Summers, C;
| DOI: 10.1016/j.biopsych.2021.12.019
BACKGROUND Stress produces differential behavioral responses through select molecular modifications to specific neurocircuitry elements. The orexin system targets key components of this neurocircuitry in the basolateral amygdala (BLA). METHODS We assessed the contribution of intra-BLA Orexin 1 receptors (Orx1R) in the expression of stress-induced phenotypes of mice. Using the Stress Alternatives Model (SAM), a social stress paradigm that produces two behavioral phenotypes, we characterized the role of intra-BLA Orx1R using acute pharmacological inhibition (SB-674042) and genetic knockdown (AAV-U6-Orx1R-shRNA) strategies. RESULTS In the BLA, we observed that Orx1R (HCRTR1) mRNA is predominantly expressed in CamKIIα+ glutamatergic neurons and rarely in GABAergic cells. While there is a slight overlap in HCRTR1 and Orexin 2 receptor (Orx2R; HCRTR2) mRNA expression in the BLA, we find that these receptors are most often expressed in separate cells. Antagonism of intra-BLA Orx1R after phenotype formation shifted behavioral expression from stress sensitive (Stay) to resilient (Escape) responses, an effect that was mimicked by genetic knockdown. Acute inhibition of Orx1R in the BLA also reduced contextual and cued fear freezing responses in Stay animals. This phenotype-specific behavioral change was accompanied by biased molecular transcription favoring HCRTR2 over HCRTR1, and MAPK3 over PLCB1 cell signaling cascades and enhanced BDNF mRNA. CONCLUSIONS Functional reorganization of intra-BLA gene expression is produced by antagonism of Orx1R, which promotes elevated HCRTR2, greater MAPK3, and increased BDNF expression. Together, these results provide evidence for a receptor-driven mechanism that balances pro- and anti-stress responses within the BLA.
Quina LA1, Walker A1, Morton G1, Han V1, Turner EE2,3
PMID: 32332079 | DOI: 10.1523/ENEURO.0527-19.2020
The lateral habenula (LHb) sends complex projections to several areas of the mesopontine tegmentum, the raphe, and the hypothalamus. However, few markers have been available to distinguish subsets of LHb neurons that may serve these pathways. In order to address this complexity, we examined the mouse and rat LHb for neurons that express the GABA biosynthesis enzymes glutamate decarboxylase 1 and 2 (GAD1, GAD2), and the vesicular GABA transporter (VGAT). The mouse LHb contains a population of neurons that express GAD2, while the rat LHb contains discrete populations of neurons that express GAD1 and VGAT. However, we could not detect single neurons in either species that co-express a GABA synthetic enzyme and VGAT, suggesting that these LHb neurons do not use GABA for conventional synaptic transmission. Instead, all of the neuronal types expressing a GABAergic marker in both species showed co-expression of the glutamate transporter VGluT2. Anterograde tract-tracing of the projections of GAD2-expressing LHb neurons in Gad2Cre mice, combined with retrograde tracing from selected downstream nuclei, show that LHb-GAD2 neurons project selectively to the midline structures in the mesopontine tegmentum, including the median raphe and nucleus incertus, and only sparsely innervate the hypothalamus, rostromedial tegmental nucleus, and ventral tegmental area. Postsynaptic recording of LHb-GAD2 neuronal input to tegmental neurons confirms that glutamate, not GABA, is the fast neurotransmitter in this circuit. Thus GAD2 expression can serve as a marker for functional studies of excitatory neurons serving specific LHb output pathways in mice.SIGNFICANCE STATEMENT The lateral habenula provides a major link between subcortical forebrain areas and the dopamine (DA) and serotonin (5HT) systems of the midbrain and pons, and it has been implicated in reward mechanisms and the regulation of mood states. Few markers have been available for the specific cell types and complex output pathways of the lateral habenula. Here we examined the expression of genes mediating GABAergic and glutamatergic transmission in the mouse and rat LHb, where no neurons in either species expressed a full complement of GABAergic markers, and all expressed the glutamatergic marker VGluT2. Consistent with this, in mice the LHb GAD2 neurons are excitatory and appear to use only glutamate for fast synaptic transmission.
Kim, S;Oh, H;Choi, SH;Yoo, YE;Noh, YW;Cho, Y;Im, GH;Lee, C;Oh, Y;Yang, E;Kim, G;Chung, WS;Kim, H;Kang, H;Bae, Y;Kim, SG;Kim, E;
PMID: 36130507 | DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2022.111398
Myelin transcription factor 1 like (Myt1l), a zinc-finger transcription factor, promotes neuronal differentiation and is implicated in autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and intellectual disability. However, it remains unclear whether Myt1l promotes neuronal differentiation in vivo and its deficiency in mice leads to disease-related phenotypes. Here, we report that Myt1l-heterozygous mutant (Myt1l-HT) mice display postnatal age-differential ASD-related phenotypes: newborn Myt1l-HT mice, with strong Myt1l expression, show ASD-like transcriptomic changes involving decreased synaptic gene expression and prefrontal excitatory synaptic transmission and altered righting reflex. Juvenile Myt1l-HT mice, with markedly decreased Myt1l expression, display reverse ASD-like transcriptomes, increased prefrontal excitatory transmission, and largely normal behaviors. Adult Myt1l-HT mice show ASD-like transcriptomes involving astrocytic and microglial gene upregulation, increased prefrontal inhibitory transmission, and behavioral deficits. Therefore, Myt1l haploinsufficiency leads to ASD-related phenotypes in newborn mice, which are temporarily normalized in juveniles but re-appear in adults, pointing to continuing phenotypic changes long after a marked decrease of Myt1l expression in juveniles.
Cheng, S;Butrus, S;Tan, L;Xu, R;Sagireddy, S;Trachtenberg, JT;Shekhar, K;Zipursky, SL;
PMID: 35063073 | DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2021.12.022
The role of postnatal experience in sculpting cortical circuitry, while long appreciated, is poorly understood at the level of cell types. We explore this in the mouse primary visual cortex (V1) using single-nucleus RNA sequencing, visual deprivation, genetics, and functional imaging. We find that vision selectively drives the specification of glutamatergic cell types in upper layers (L) (L2/3/4), while deeper-layer glutamatergic, GABAergic, and non-neuronal cell types are established prior to eye opening. L2/3 cell types form an experience-dependent spatial continuum defined by the graded expression of ∼200 genes, including regulators of cell adhesion and synapse formation. One of these genes, Igsf9b, a vision-dependent gene encoding an inhibitory synaptic cell adhesion molecule, is required for the normal development of binocular responses in L2/3. In summary, vision preferentially regulates the development of upper-layer glutamatergic cell types through the regulation of cell-type-specific gene expression programs.
Edwards CM, Strother J, Zheng H, Rinaman L.
PMID: - | DOI: 10.1016/j.physbeh.2019.02.040
Despite generally being a reinforcing drug of abuse, amphetamine (amph) also produces effects such as hypophagia and conditioned taste avoidance (CTA), which may indicate that amph acts as an aversive homeostatic stressor. Stress-responsive prolactin-releasing peptide (PrRP)-positive noradrenergic and glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1)-positive neurons in the caudal nucleus of the solitary tract (cNTS) are modulated by metabolic state, and are prime candidates for mediating amph-induced hypophagia and CTA. The present study used dual immunolabeling and fluorescent in situ hybridization (RNAscope) to examine acute amph-induced activation of cFos expression in phenotypically-identified cNTS neurons in ad lib-fed vs. overnight-fasted male Sprague Dawley rats. We also examined the impact of food deprivation on amph-induced CTA. Compared to control saline treatment, amph activated significantly more cNTS neurons, including PrRP-negative noradrenergic (NA) neurons, GABAergic neurons, and glutamatergic neurons, but not PrRP or GLP-1 neurons. Amph also increased neural activation within a subset of central cNTS projection targets, including the lateral parabrachial nucleus and central amygdala, but not the paraventricular hypothalamus. Food deprivation did not alter amph-induced neural activation or impact the ability of amph to support CTA. These findings indicate that PrRP-negative NA and other cNTS neurons are recruited by acute amph treatment regardless of metabolic state, and may participate in amph-induced hypophagia and CTA.
Advanced science (Weinheim, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany)
Yi, T;Wang, N;Huang, J;Wang, Y;Ren, S;Hu, Y;Xia, J;Liao, Y;Li, X;Luo, F;Ouyang, Q;Li, Y;Zheng, Z;Xiao, Q;Ren, R;Yao, Z;Tang, X;Wang, Y;Chen, X;He, C;Li, H;Hu, Z;
PMID: 36961096 | DOI: 10.1002/advs.202300189
Sevoflurane has been the most widely used inhaled anesthetics with a favorable recovery profile; however, the precise mechanisms underlying its anesthetic action are still not completely understood. Here the authors show that sevoflurane activates a cluster of urocortin 1 (UCN1+ )/cocaine- and amphetamine-regulated transcript (CART+ ) neurons in the midbrain involved in its anesthesia. Furthermore, growth hormone secretagogue receptor (GHSR) is highly enriched in sevoflurane-activated UCN1+ /CART+ cells and is necessary for sleep induction. Blockade of GHSR abolishes the excitatory effect of sevoflurane on UCN1+ /CART+ neurons and attenuates its anesthetic effect. Collectively, their data suggest that anesthetic action of sevoflurane necessitates the GHSR activation in midbrain UCN1+ /CART+ neurons, which provides a novel target including the nucleus and receptor in the field of anesthesia.