A limbic circuitry involved in emotional stress-induced grooming

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作者
Ming-Dao Mu
Hong-Yan Geng
Kang-Lin Rong
Rong-Chao Peng
Shu-Ting Wang
Lin-Ting Geng
Zhong-Ming Qian
Wing-Ho Yung
Ya Ke
机构
[1] The Chinese University of Hong Kong,School of Biomedical Sciences, Faculty of Medicine
[2] Shatin,Laboratory of Neuropharmacology, School of Pharmacy
[3] NT,Gerald Choa Neuroscience Centre
[4] Fudan University,undefined
[5] The Chinese University of Hong Kong,undefined
[6] Shatin,undefined
[7] NT,undefined
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Prolonged exposure to negative stressors could be harmful if a subject cannot respond appropriately. Strategies evolved to respond to stress, including repetitive displacement behaviours, are important in maintaining behavioural homoeostasis. In rodents, self-grooming is a frequently observed repetitive behaviour believed to contribute to post-stress de-arousal with adaptive value. Here we identified a rat limbic di-synaptic circuit that regulates stress-induced self-grooming with positive affective valence. This circuit links hippocampal ventral subiculum to ventral lateral septum (LSv) and then lateral hypothalamus tuberal nucleus. Optogenetic activation of this circuit triggers delayed but robust excessive grooming with patterns closely resembling those evoked by emotional stress. Consistently, the neural activity of LSv reaches a peak before emotional stress-induced grooming while inhibition of this circuit significantly suppresses grooming triggered by emotional stress. Our results uncover a previously unknown limbic circuitry involved in regulating stress-induced self-grooming and pinpoint a critical role of LSv in this ethologically important behaviour.
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