Login / Signup

Aversive stimuli drive hypothalamus-to-habenula excitation to promote escape behavior.

Salvatore LeccaFrank Julius MeyeMassimo TruselAnna TchenioJulia HarrisMartin Karl SchwarzDenis BurdakovFrancois GeorgesManuel Mameli
Published in: eLife (2017)
A sudden aversive event produces escape behaviors, an innate response essential for survival in virtually all-animal species. Nuclei including the lateral habenula (LHb), the lateral hypothalamus (LH), and the midbrain are not only reciprocally connected, but also respond to negative events contributing to goal-directed behaviors. However, whether aversion encoding requires these neural circuits to ultimately prompt escape behaviors remains unclear. We observe that aversive stimuli, including foot-shocks, excite LHb neurons and promote escape behaviors in mice. The foot-shock-driven excitation within the LHb requires glutamatergic signaling from the LH, but not from the midbrain. This hypothalamic excitatory projection predominates over LHb neurons monosynaptically innervating aversion-encoding midbrain GABA cells. Finally, the selective chemogenetic silencing of the LH-to-LHb pathway impairs aversion-driven escape behaviors. These findings unveil a habenular neurocircuitry devoted to encode external threats and the consequent escape; a process that, if disrupted, may compromise the animal's survival.
Keyphrases
  • immune response
  • spinal cord
  • minimally invasive
  • type diabetes
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • spinal cord injury
  • computed tomography
  • free survival
  • endoplasmic reticulum stress
  • wild type