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Hypothalamic neuronal outputs transmit sensorimotor signals at the onset of locomotor initiation

Ekaterina Martianova, Renata Sadretdinova, Alicia Pageau, Nikola Pausic, Tommy Doucet Gentiletti, Danahé Leblanc, Arturo Marroquín-Rivera, Benoît Labonté, Christophe D. Proulx

2023iScience10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The lateral hypothalamus (LH) plays a critical role in sensory integration to organize behavior responses. However, how projection-defined LH neuronal outputs dynamically transmit sensorimotor signals to major downstream targets to organize behavior is unknown. Here, using multi-fiber photometry, we show that three major LH neuronal outputs projecting to the dorsal raphe nucleus (DRN), ventral tegmental area (VTA), and lateral habenula (LHb) exhibit significant coherent activity in mice engaging sensory-evoked or self-initiated motor responses. Increased activity at LH axon terminals precedes movement initiation during active coping responses and the activity of serotonin neurons and dopamine neurons. The optogenetic activation of LH axon terminals in either of the DRN, VTA, or LHb was sufficient to increase motor initiation but had different effects on passive avoidance and sucrose consumption. Our findings support the complementary role of three projection-defined LH neuronal outputs in the transmission of sensorimotor signals to major downstream regions at movement onset.

Topics & Concepts

OptogeneticsNeuroscienceVentral tegmental areaDorsal raphe nucleusPremovement neuronal activityDopamineAxonRaphe nucleiPeriaqueductal graySensory systemMidbrainPsychologyBiologyDopaminergicSerotoninSerotonergicCentral nervous systemReceptorBiochemistryZebrafish Biomedical Research ApplicationsSleep and Wakefulness ResearchCircadian rhythm and melatonin
Hypothalamic neuronal outputs transmit sensorimotor signals at the onset of locomotor initiation | Litcius