4.8 Article

Delineation of an insula-BNST circuit engaged by struggling behavior that regulates avoidance in mice

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NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
卷 12, 期 1, 页码 -

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NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-23674-z

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资金

  1. NIH [CA68485, DK20593, DK58404, DK59637, EY08126]
  2. NIAAA of the National Institutes of Health
  3. NIDA of the National Institutes of Health
  4. NIDDK of the National Institutes of Health
  5. NIGMS of the National Institutes of Health
  6. Brain and Behavior Research Foundation [NIAAA K99 AA027774, BBRF NARSAD 27172, NIAAA R37 AA019455, NIDA R01 DA042475, NIDDK R01 DK106476, NIGMS T32GM007347, NIAAA F30 AA 027126]

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This study demonstrates the role of the insula(-> BNST) pathway in monitoring struggling activity and regulating affective behavior during active responses to stressors. The research reveals that struggling events are closely associated with neural activity in the insular cortex, indicating the involvement of a larger neural circuit.
Active responses to stressors involve motor planning, execution, and feedback. Here we identify an insular cortex to BNST (insula(-> BNST)) circuit recruited during restraint stress-induced active struggling that modulates affective behavior. We demonstrate that activity in this circuit tightly follows struggling behavioral events and that the size of the fluorescent sensor transient reports the duration of the struggle event, an effect that fades with repeated exposure to the homotypic stressor. Struggle events are associated with enhanced glutamatergic- and decreased GABAergic signaling in the insular cortex, indicating the involvement of a larger circuit. We delineate the afferent network for this pathway, identifying substantial input from motor- and premotor cortex, somatosensory cortex, and the amygdala. To begin to dissect these incoming signals, we examine the motor cortex input, and show that the cells projecting from motor regions to insular cortex are engaged shortly before struggle event onset. This study thus demonstrates a role for the insula(-> BNST) pathway in monitoring struggling activity and regulating affective behavior. Active responses to stressors involve motor planning, execution, and feedback. The authors identify a neuronal projection from the insular cortex to the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis that is activated during motor struggling in response to restraint stress as a potential active coping response.

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