4.7 Article

Role of the rostral dorsomedial column of the periaqueductal gray during social defeat in rats

Journal

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/nyas.15073

Keywords

defensive behavior; hypothalamus; mesencephalon; social fear; social stress

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This study reveals the neural mechanisms involved in mediating social defensive responses. The dorsal pre-mammillary nucleus projects to the rostral dorsomedial PAG, and through ascending paths mediated by the cuneiform nucleus, it influences prosencephalic circuits to mediate passive social defensive responses. This study provides further support for the role of the PAG in the modulation of behavioral responses.
Previous studies showed that the dorsal premammillary nucleus of the hypothalamus (PMD) is involved in social passive defensive behaviors likely to be meditated by descending projections to the periaqueductal gray (PAG). We focused on the rostral dorsomedial PAG (rPAGdm) to reveal its putative neural mechanisms involved in mediating social defensive responses. By combining retrograde tracing and FOS expression analysis, we showed that in addition to the PMD, the rPAGdm is influenced by several brain sites active during social defeat. Next, we found that cytotoxic lesions of the rPAGdm drastically reduced passive defense and did not affect active defensive responses. We then examined the rPAGdm's projection pattern and found that the PAGdm projections are mostly restricted to midbrain sites, including the precommissural nucleus, different columns of the PAG, and the cuneiform nucleus (CUN). Also, we found decreased FOS expression in the caudal PAGdm, CUN, and PMD after the rPAGdm was lesioned. The results support that the rPAGdm mediates passive social defensive responses through ascending paths to prosencephalic circuits likely mediated by the CUN. This study provides further support for the role of the PAG in the modulation of behavioral responses by working as a unique hub for influencing prosencephalic sites during the mediation of aversive responses. Previous studies showed that the dorsal pre-mammillary nucleus of the hypothalamus is involved in social passive defensive behaviors likely to be meditated by descending projections to the periaqueductal gray (PAG). We focused on the rostral dorsomedial PAG to reveal its putative neural mechanisms involved in mediating social defensive responses. #image

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