Heinsbroek JA1, Bobadilla AC2, Dereschewitz E2, Assali A2, Chalhoub RM2, Cowan CW2, Kalivas PW3.
PMID: 32049028 | DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2020.01.023
Projections from the nucleus accumbens to the ventral pallidum (VP) regulate relapse in animal models of addiction. The VP contains GABAergic (VPGABA) and glutamatergic (VPGlu) neurons, and a subpopulation of GABAergic neurons co-express enkephalin (VPPenk). Rabies tracing reveals that VPGlu and VPPenk neurons receive preferential innervation from upstream D1- relative to D2-expressing accumbens neurons. Chemogenetic stimulation of VPGlu neurons inhibits, whereas stimulation of VPGABA and VPPenk neurons potentiates cocaine seeking in mice withdrawn from intravenous cocaine self-administration. Calcium imaging reveals cell type-specific activity patterns when animals learn to suppress drug seeking during extinction training versus engaging in cue-induced cocaine seeking. During cued seeking, VPGABA neurons increase their overall activity, and VPPenk neurons are selectively activated around nose pokes for cocaine. In contrast, VPGlu neurons increase their spike rate following extinction training. These data show that VP subpopulations differentially encode and regulate cocaine seeking, with VPPenk and VPGABA neurons facilitating and VPGlu neurons inhibiting cocaine seeking
Flexible scaling and persistence of social vocal communication
Chen, J;Markowitz, JE;Lilascharoen, V;Taylor, S;Sheurpukdi, P;Keller, JA;Jensen, JR;Lim, BK;Datta, SR;Stowers, L;
PMID: 33790464 | DOI: 10.1038/s41586-021-03403-8
Innate vocal sounds such as laughing, screaming or crying convey one's feelings to others. In many species, including humans, scaling the amplitude and duration of vocalizations is essential for effective social communication1-3. In mice, female scent triggers male mice to emit innate courtship ultrasonic vocalizations (USVs)4,5. However, whether mice flexibly scale their vocalizations and how neural circuits are structured to generate flexibility remain largely unknown. Here we identify mouse neurons from the lateral preoptic area (LPOA) that express oestrogen receptor 1 (LPOAESR1 neurons) and, when activated, elicit the complete repertoire of USV syllables emitted during natural courtship. Neural anatomy and functional data reveal a two-step, di-synaptic circuit motif in which primary long-range inhibitory LPOAESR1 neurons relieve a clamp of local periaqueductal grey (PAG) inhibition, enabling excitatory PAG USV-gating neurons to trigger vocalizations. We find that social context shapes a wide range of USV amplitudes and bout durations. This variability is absent when PAG neurons are stimulated directly; PAG-evoked vocalizations are time-locked to neural activity and stereotypically loud. By contrast, increasing the activity of LPOAESR1 neurons scales the amplitude of vocalizations, and delaying the recovery of the inhibition clamp prolongs USV bouts. Thus, the LPOA disinhibition motif contributes to flexible loudness and the duration and persistence of bouts, which are key aspects of effective vocal social communication.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Zhong, W;Barde, S;Mitsios, N;Adori, C;Oksvold, P;Feilitzen, KV;O'Leary, L;Csiba, L;Hortobágyi, T;Szocsics, P;Mechawar, N;Maglóczky, Z;Renner, É;Palkovits, M;Uhlén, M;Mulder, J;Hökfelt, T;
PMID: 35947618 | DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2123146119
Human prefrontal cortex (hPFC) is a complex brain region involved in cognitive and emotional processes and several psychiatric disorders. Here, we present an overview of the distribution of the peptidergic systems in 17 subregions of hPFC and three reference cortices obtained by microdissection and based on RNA sequencing and RNAscope methods integrated with published single-cell transcriptomics data. We detected expression of 60 neuropeptides and 60 neuropeptide receptors in at least one of the hPFC subregions. The results reveal that the peptidergic landscape in PFC consists of closely located and functionally different subregions with unique peptide/transmitter-related profiles. Neuropeptide-rich PFC subregions were identified, encompassing regions from anterior cingulate cortex/orbitofrontal gyrus. Furthermore, marked differences in gene expression exist between different PFC regions (>5-fold; cocaine and amphetamine-regulated transcript peptide) as well as between PFC regions and reference regions, for example, for somatostatin and several receptors. We suggest that the present approach allows definition of, still hypothetical, microcircuits exemplified by glutamatergic neurons expressing a peptide cotransmitter either as an agonist (hypocretin/orexin) or antagonist (galanin). Specific neuropeptide receptors have been identified as possible targets for neuronal afferents and, interestingly, peripheral blood-borne peptide hormones (leptin, adiponectin, gastric inhibitory peptide, glucagon-like peptides, and peptide YY). Together with other recent publications, our results support the view that neuropeptide systems may play an important role in hPFC and underpin the concept that neuropeptide signaling helps stabilize circuit connectivity and fine-tune/modulate PFC functions executed during health and disease.
Cannabidiol produces distinct U-shaped dose-response effects on cocaine conditioned place preference and associated recruitment of prelimbic neurons in male rats
Biological Psychiatry Global Open Science
Nedelescu, H;Wagner, G;De Ness, G;Carrol, A;Kerr, T;Wang, J;Zhang, S;Chang, S;Than, A;Emerson, N;Suto, N;Weiss, F;
| DOI: 10.1016/j.bpsgos.2021.06.014
Background Cannabidiol (CBD) has received attention for the treatment of Substance Use Disorders. In preclinical models of relapse, CBD attenuates drug seeking across several drugs of abuse, including cocaine. However, in these models, CBD has not been consistently effective. This inconsistency in CBD effects may be related to presently insufficient information on the full spectrum of CBD dose effects on drug-related behaviors. Methods We address this issue by establishing a full dose-response profile of CBD’s actions using expression of cocaine-induced conditioned place preference (CPP) as a model for drug motivated behavior in male rats, and by concurrently identifying dose-dependent effects of CBD on underlying neuronal activation as well as distinct neuronal phenotypes showing dose-dependent activation changes. Additionally, CBD levels in plasma and brain were established. Results CBD produced linear increases in CBD brain/plasma concentrations but suppressed CPP in a distinct U-shaped manner. In parallel with its behavioral effects, CBD produced U-shaped suppressant effects on neuronal activation in the prelimbic but not infralimbic cortex or nucleus accumbens core and shell. RNAscope in situ hybridization identified suppression of glutamatergic and GABAergic signaling in the prelimbic cortex as a possible cellular mechanism for the attenuation of cocaine CPP by CBD. Conclusions The findings extend previous evidence on the potential of CBD in preventing drug motivated behavior. However, CBD’s dose-response profile may have important dosing implications for future clinical applications and may contribute to the understanding of discrepant CBD effects on drug seeking in the literature.