4.8 Article

Natural Neural Projection Dynamics Underlying Social Behavior

Journal

CELL
Volume 157, Issue 7, Pages 1535-1551

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2014.05.017

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Stanford Bio-X Fellowship
  2. NSF [0801700]
  3. Stanford Medical Scientist Training Program
  4. Simons Foundation Autism Research Initiative
  5. NIMH
  6. NIDA
  7. DARPA
  8. Gatsby Charitable Foundation
  9. James Doty
  10. CCARE center at Stanford
  11. Stanford Institute for Neuroinnovation and Translational Neurosciences
  12. Wiegers Family Fund

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Social interaction is a complex behavior essential for many species and is impaired in major neuropsychiatric disorders. Pharmacological studies have implicated certain neurotransmitter systems in social behavior, but circuit-level understanding of endogenous neural activity during social interaction is lacking. We therefore developed and applied a new methodology, termed fiber photometry, to optically record natural neural activity in genetically and connectivity-defined projections to elucidate the realtime role of specified pathways in mammalian behavior. Fiber photometry revealed that activity dynamics of a ventral tegmental area (VTA)-to-nucleus accumbens (NAc) projection could encode and predict key features of social, but not novel object, interaction. Consistent with this observation, optogenetic control of cells specifically contributing to this projection was sufficient to modulate social behavior, which was mediated by type 1 dopamine receptor signaling downstream in the NAc. Direct observation of deep projection-specific activity in this way captures a fundamental and previously inaccessible dimension of mammalian circuit dynamics.

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