Orexin neurons and inhibitory Agrp→orexin circuits guide spatial exploration in mice

Key points Photoinhibition of endogenous activity of lateral hypothalamic orexin neurons causes place preference and reduces innate avoidance Endogenous activity of orexin neurons correlates with place preference Mediobasal hypothalamic Agrp neurons inhibit orexin neurons via GABA, and chemogenetic...

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Published inThe Journal of physiology Vol. 598; no. 19; pp. 4371 - 4383
Main Authors Garau, Celia, Blomeley, Craig, Burdakov, Denis
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Wiley Subscription Services, Inc 01.10.2020
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ISSN0022-3751
1469-7793
1469-7793
DOI10.1113/JP280158

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Summary:Key points Photoinhibition of endogenous activity of lateral hypothalamic orexin neurons causes place preference and reduces innate avoidance Endogenous activity of orexin neurons correlates with place preference Mediobasal hypothalamic Agrp neurons inhibit orexin neurons via GABA, and chemogenetic suppression of Agrp neurons increases avoidance in an orexin receptor‐dependent manner. Hypothalamic orexin/hypocretin neurons integrate multiple sensory cues and project brain‐wide to orchestrate diverse innate behaviours. Their loss impairs many context‐appropriate actions, but the motivational characteristics of orexin cell activity remain unclear. We and others previously approached this question by artificial orexin stimulation, which could induce either rewarding (positive valence) or aversive (negative valence) brain activity. It is unknown to what extent such approaches replicate natural/endogenous orexin signals, which rapidly fluctuate during wakefulness. Here we took an alternative approach, focusing on observing and silencing natural orexin cell signals associated with a fundamental innate behaviour, self‐paced spatial exploration. We found that mice are more likely to stay in places paired with orexin cell optosilencing. The orexin cell optosilencing also reduced avoidance of places that mice find innately aversive. Correspondingly, calcium recordings revealed that orexin cell activity rapidly reduced upon exiting the innately aversive places. Furthermore, we provide optogenetic evidence for an inhibitory GABAergic Agrp→orexin hypothalamic neurocircuit, and find that Agrp cell suppression increases innate avoidance behaviour, consistent with orexin disinhibition. These results imply that exploration may be motivated and oriented by a need to reduce aversive orexin cell activity, and suggest a hypothalamic circuit for fine‐tuning orexin signals to changing ethological priorities. Key points Photoinhibition of endogenous activity of lateral hypothalamic orexin neurons causes place preference and reduces innate avoidance Endogenous activity of orexin neurons correlates with place preference Mediobasal hypothalamic Agrp neurons inhibit orexin neurons via GABA, and chemogenetic suppression of Agrp neurons increases avoidance in an orexin receptor‐dependent manner.
Bibliography:C. Garau was responsible for research governance.
Edited by: Ian Forsythe
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ISSN:0022-3751
1469-7793
1469-7793
DOI:10.1113/JP280158