Brain-wide genetic mapping identifies the indusium griseum as a prenatal target of pharmacologically unrelated psychostimulants.
Janos FuzikSabah RehmanFatima GirachAndras G MiklosiSolomiia KorchynskaGloria ArqueRoman A RomanovJános HanicsLudwig WagnerKonstantinos MeletisYuchio YanagawaGabor G KovacsAlán AlpárTomas G M HökfeltTibor HarkanyPublished in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2019)
Psychostimulant use is an ever-increasing socioeconomic burden, including a dramatic rise during pregnancy. Nevertheless, brain-wide effects of psychostimulant exposure are incompletely understood. Here, we performed Fos-CreERT2-based activity mapping, correlated for pregnant mouse dams and their fetuses with amphetamine, nicotine, and caffeine applied acutely during midgestation. While light-sheet microscopy-assisted intact tissue imaging revealed drug- and age-specific neuronal activation, the indusium griseum (IG) appeared indiscriminately affected. By using GAD67gfp/+ mice we subdivided the IG into a dorsolateral domain populated by γ-aminobutyric acidergic interneurons and a ventromedial segment containing glutamatergic neurons, many showing drug-induced activation and sequentially expressing Pou3f3/Brn1 and secretagogin (Scgn) during differentiation. We then combined Patch-seq and circuit mapping to show that the ventromedial IG is a quasi-continuum of glutamatergic neurons (IG-Vglut1 +) reminiscent of dentate granule cells in both rodents and humans, whose dendrites emanate perpendicularly toward while their axons course parallel with the superior longitudinal fissure. IG-Vglut1 + neurons receive VGLUT1+ and VGLUT2+ excitatory afferents that topologically segregate along their somatodendritic axis. In turn, their efferents terminate in the olfactory bulb, thus being integral to a multisynaptic circuit that could feed information antiparallel to the olfactory-cortical pathway. In IG-Vglut1 + neurons, prenatal psychostimulant exposure delayed the onset of Scgn expression. Genetic ablation of Scgn was then found to sensitize adult mice toward methamphetamine-induced epilepsy. Overall, our study identifies brain-wide targets of the most common psychostimulants, among which Scgn +/Vglut1 + neurons of the IG link limbic and olfactory circuits.
Keyphrases
- drug induced
- high resolution
- genome wide
- spinal cord
- liver injury
- pregnant women
- white matter
- prefrontal cortex
- resting state
- cerebral ischemia
- high density
- dna methylation
- functional connectivity
- smoking cessation
- high fat diet induced
- poor prognosis
- single cell
- emergency department
- type diabetes
- spinal cord injury
- induced apoptosis
- single molecule
- young adults
- working memory
- adverse drug
- gestational age
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- cell cycle arrest
- sensitive detection
- fluorescence imaging
- health information
- electronic health record
- blood brain barrier
- photodynamic therapy
- insulin resistance
- metabolic syndrome
- oxidative stress
- signaling pathway