4.8 Article

Coordination of escape and spatial navigation circuits orchestrates versatile flight from threats

Journal

NEURON
Volume 109, Issue 11, Pages 1848-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2021.03.033

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This study demonstrates that cholecystokinin-expressing cells in the hypothalamic dorsal premammillary nucleus play a crucial role in controlling context-specific escape behaviors in mice, unlike other nuclei implicated in flight. The dorsal premammillary nucleus is able to influence spatial navigation and escape circuits, leading to versatile flight behaviors.
Naturalistic escape requires versatile context-specific flight with rapid evaluation of local geometry to identify and use efficient escape routes. It is unknown how spatial navigation and escape circuits are recruited to produce context-specific flight. Using mice, we show that activity in cholecystokinin-expressing hypothalamic dorsal premammillary nucleus (PMd-cck) cells is sufficient and necessary for context-specific escape that adapts to each environment's layout. In contrast, numerous other nuclei implicated in flight only induced stereotyped panic-related escape. We reasoned the dorsal premammillary nucleus (PMd) can induce context-specific escape because it projects to escape and spatial navigation nuclei. Indeed, activity in PMd-cck projections to thalamic spatial navigation circuits is necessary for context-specific escape induced by moderate threats but not panic-related stereotyped escape caused by perceived asphyxiation. Conversely, the PMd projection to the escape-inducing dorsal periaqueductal gray projection is necessary for all tested escapes. Thus, PMd-cck cells control versatile flight, engaging spatial navigation and escape circuits.

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