4.8 Article

Amygdala ensembles encode behavioral states

Journal

SCIENCE
Volume 364, Issue 6437, Pages 254-+

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/science.aav8736

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Funding

  1. Swiss National Science Foundation
  2. EMBO
  3. Marie Curie Actions
  4. Brain & Behavior Research Foundation (NARSAD Young Investigator awards)
  5. Swiss Data Science Center
  6. DARPA
  7. NIH
  8. ERC
  9. Novartis Research Foundation

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Internal states, including affective or homeostatic states, are important behavioral motivators. The amygdala regulates motivated behaviors, yet how distinct states are represented in amygdala circuits is unknown. By longitudinally imaging neural calcium dynamics in freely moving mice across different environments, we identified opponent changes in activity levels of two major, nonoverlapping populations of basal amygdala principal neurons. This population signature does not report global anxiety but predicts switches between exploratory and nonexploratory, defensive states. Moreover, the amygdala separately processes external stimuli and internal states and broadcasts state information via several output pathways to larger brain networks. Our findings extend the concept of thalamocortical brain-state coding to include affective and exploratory states and provide an entry point into the state dependency of brain function and behavior in defined circuits.

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