4.8 Article

Estimation of Current and Future Physiological States in Insular Cortex

Journal

NEURON
Volume 105, Issue 6, Pages 1094-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2019.12.027

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Funding

  1. Charles A. King Trust Postdoctoral Fellowship [2P30DK046200-26]
  2. Boston Nutrition Obesity Research Center PF [2P30DK046200-26]
  3. NIH [K99 HL144923, T32 DK007516, DP2 DK105570, R01 DK109930, DP1 AT010971, R01 DK075632, R01 DK096010, R01 DK089044, R01 DK111401, P30 DK046200, P30 DK057521]
  4. NSF [DGE1745303]
  5. The Klarman Family Foundation
  6. McKnight Foundation
  7. Smith Family Foundation
  8. Pew Scholars Program

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Interoception, the sense of internal bodily signals, is essential for physiological homeostasis, cognition, and emotions. While human insular cortex (InsCtx) is implicated in interoception, the cellular and circuit mechanisms remain unclear. We imaged mouse InsCtx neurons during two physiological deficiency states: hunger and thirst. InsCtx ongoing activity patterns reliably tracked the gradual return to homeostasis but not changes in behavior. Accordingly, while artificial induction of hunger or thirst in sated mice via activation of specific hypothalamic neurons (AgRP or SFOGLUT) restored cue-evoked food- or water-seeking, InsCtx ongoing activity continued to reflect physiological satiety. During natural hunger or thirst, food or water cues rapidly and transiently shifted InsCtx population activity to the future satiety-related pattern. During artificial hunger or thirst, food or water cues further shifted activity beyond the current satiety-related pattern. Together with circuit-mapping experiments, these findings suggest that InsCtx integrates visceral-sensory signals of current physiological state with hypothalamus-gated amygdala inputs that signal upcoming ingestion of food or water to compute a prediction of future physiological state.

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