4.7 Article

Increased anxiety-like behavior following circuit-specific catecholamine denervation in mice

Journal

NEUROBIOLOGY OF DISEASE
Volume 125, Issue -, Pages 55-66

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.nbd.2019.01.009

Keywords

Anxiety; Fear learning; Amygdala; Parkinson's disease; Dopamine; Noradrenaline; 6-hydroxydopamine

Categories

Funding

  1. Land Tirol
  2. Austrian Science Fund (Fonds zur Forderung der Wissenschaftlichen Forschung) grant [W12060-B10]
  3. Sonderforschungsbereich grant [F44-17, F44-14]
  4. NIAAA
  5. Austrian Science Fund (FWF) [W1206] Funding Source: Austrian Science Fund (FWF)
  6. NATIONAL INSTITUTE ON ALCOHOL ABUSE AND ALCOHOLISM [ZIAAA000411] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER

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Parkinson's disease (PD) presents with a constellation of non-motor symptoms, notably increased anxiety, which are currently poorly treated and underrepresented in animal models of the disease. Human post-mortem studies report loss of catecholaminergic neurons in the pre-symptomatic phases of PD when anxiety symptoms emerge, and a large literature from rodent and human studies indicate that catecholamines are important mediators of anxiety via their modulatory effects on limbic regions such as the amygdala. On the basis of these observations, we hypothesized that anxiety in PD could result from an early loss of catecholaminergic inputs to the amygdala and/or other limbic structures. To interrogate this hypothesis, we bilaterally injected the neurotoxin 6-OHDA in the mouse basolateral amygdala (BL). This produced a restricted pattern of catecholaminergic (tyrosine-hydroxylase-labeled) denervation in the BL, intercalated cell masses and ventral hippocampus, but not the central amygdala or prefrontal cortex. We found that this circuit-specific lesion did not compromise performance on multiple measures of motor function (home cage, accelerating rotarod, beam balance, pole climbing), but did increase anxiety-like behavior in the elevated plus-maze and light-dark exploration tests. Fear behavior in the pavlovian cued conditioning and passive avoidance assays was, by contrast, unaffected; possibly due to preservation of catecholamine innervation of the central amygdala from the periaqueductal gray. These data provide some of the first evidence implicating loss of catecholaminergic neurotransmission in midbrain-amygdala circuits to increased anxiety-like behavior. Our findings offer an initial step towards identifying the neural substrates for pre-motor anxiety symptoms in PD.

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