4.2 Article

Orexin deficiency modulates cognitive flexibility in a sex-dependent manner

期刊

GENES BRAIN AND BEHAVIOR
卷 20, 期 3, 页码 -

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/gbb.12707

关键词

animal models of schizophrenia; attentional set shifting; anxiety; cognitive flexibility; food consumption; learning and memory; narcolepsy; neuropeptides; orexin; transgenic mice

资金

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [SFB779/B13, FE 483/10-1]

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Cognitive flexibility is a crucial executive function regulated by various neurotransmitter systems, with recent studies highlighting the role of the neuropeptide orexin in sex-specific modulation of cognitive flexibility.
Cognitive flexibility is an important executive function and refers to the ability to adapt behaviors in response to changes in the environment. Of note, many brain disorders are associated with impairments in cognitive flexibility. Several classical neurotransmitter systems including dopamine, acetylcholine and noradrenaline are shown to be important for cognitive flexibility, however, there is not much known about the role of neuropeptides. The neuropeptide orexin, which is brain-widely released by neurons in the lateral hypothalamus, is a major player in maintaining sleep/wake cycle, feeding behavior, arousal, and motivational behavior. Recent studies showed a role of orexin in attention, cognition and stress-induced attenuation of cognitive flexibility by disrupting orexin signaling locally or systemically. However, it is not known so far whether brain-wide reduction or loss of orexin affects cognitive flexibility. We investigated this question by testing male and female orexin-deficient mice in the attentional set shifting task (ASST), an established paradigm of cognitive flexibility. We found that orexin deficiency impaired the intra-dimensional shift phase of the ASST selectively in female homozygous orexin-deficient mice and improved the first reversal learning phase selectively in male homozygous orexin-deficient mice. We also found that these orexin-mediated sex-based modulations of cognitive flexibility were not correlated with trait anxiety, narcoleptic episodes, and reward consumption. Our findings highlight a sexually dimorphic role of orexin in regulating cognitive flexibility and the need for further investigations of sex-specific functions of the orexin circuitry.

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