5-HT Neurons Integrate GABA and Dopamine Inputs to Regulate Meal Initiation.
Kristine Marie CondeHueyZhong WongShuzheng FangYongxiang LiMeng YuYue DengQingzhuo LiuXing FangMengjie WangYuhan ShiOlivia Z GinnardYuxue YangLonglong TuHesong LiuHailan LiuNa YinJonathan C BeanJunying HanMegan E BurtSanika V JossyYongjie YangQingchun TongBenjamin R ArenkielChunmei WangYang HeYong XuPublished in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2024)
Obesity is a growing global health epidemic with limited effective therapeutics. Serotonin (5-HT) is one major neurotransmitter which remains an excellent target for new weight-loss therapies, but there remains a gap in knowledge on the mechanisms involved in 5-HT produced in the dorsal Raphe nucleus (DRN) and its involvement in meal initiation. Using a closed-loop optogenetic feeding paradigm, we showed that the 5-HT DRN ◊arcuate nucleus (ARH) circuit plays an important role in regulating meal initiation. Incorporating electrophysiology and ChannelRhodopsin-2-Assisted Circuit Mapping, we demonstrated that 5-HT DRN neurons receive inhibitory input partially from GABAergic neurons in the DRN, and the 5-HT response to GABAergic inputs can be enhanced by hunger. Additionally, deletion of the GABA A receptor subunit in 5-HT neurons inhibits meal initiation with no effect on the satiation process. Finally, we identified the instrumental role of dopaminergic inputs via dopamine receptor D2 in 5-HT DRN neurons in enhancing the response to GABA-induced feeding. Thus, our results indicate that 5-HT DRN neurons are inhibited by synergistic inhibitory actions of GABA and dopamine, which allows for the initiation of a meal.