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Publication : VTA Glutamatergic Neurons Mediate Innate Defensive Behaviors.

First Author  Barbano MF Year  2020
Journal  Neuron Volume  107
Issue  2 Pages  368-382.e8
PubMed ID  32442399 Mgi Jnum  J:292732
Mgi Id  MGI:6449339 Doi  10.1016/j.neuron.2020.04.024
Citation  Barbano MF, et al. (2020) VTA Glutamatergic Neurons Mediate Innate Defensive Behaviors. Neuron 107(2):368-382.e8
abstractText  The ventral tegmental area (VTA) has dopamine, GABA, and glutamate neurons, which have been implicated in reward and aversion. Here, we determined whether VTA-glutamate or -GABA neurons play a role in innate defensive behavior. By VTA cell-type-specific genetic ablation, we found that ablation of glutamate, but not GABA, neurons abolishes escape behavior in response to threatening stimuli. We found that escape behavior is also decreased by chemogenetic inhibition of VTA-glutamate neurons and detected increases in activity in VTA-glutamate neurons in response to the threatening stimuli. By ultrastructural and electrophysiological analysis, we established that VTA-glutamate neurons receive a major monosynaptic glutamatergic input from the lateral hypothalamic area (LHA) and found that photoinhibition of this input decreases escape responses to threatening stimuli. These findings indicate that VTA-glutamate neurons are activated by and required for innate defensive responses and that information on threatening stimuli to VTA-glutamate neurons is relayed by LHA-glutamate neurons.
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