|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Publication : Mitophagy in the basolateral amygdala mediates increased anxiety induced by aversive social experience.

First Author  Duan K Year  2021
Journal  Neuron Volume  109
Issue  23 Pages  3793-3809.e8
PubMed ID  34614419 Mgi Jnum  J:325341
Mgi Id  MGI:6877235 Doi  10.1016/j.neuron.2021.09.008
Citation  Duan K, et al. (2021) Mitophagy in the basolateral amygdala mediates increased anxiety induced by aversive social experience. Neuron 109(23):3793-3809.e8
abstractText  Psychosocial stress is a common risk factor for anxiety disorders. The cellular mechanism for the anxiogenic effect of psychosocial stress is largely unclear. Here, we show that chronic social defeat (CSD) stress in mice causes mitochondrial impairment, which triggers the PINK1-Parkin mitophagy pathway selectively in the amygdala. This mitophagy elevation causes excessive mitochondrial elimination and consequent mitochondrial deficiency. Mitochondrial deficiency in the basolateral amygdalae (BLA) causes weakening of synaptic transmission in the BLA-BNST (bed nucleus of the stria terminalis) anxiolytic pathway and increased anxiety. The CSD-induced increase in anxiety-like behaviors is abolished in Pink1(-/-) and Park2(-/-) mice and alleviated by optogenetic activation of the BLA-BNST synapse. This study identifies an unsuspected role of mitophagy in psychogenetic-stress-induced anxiety elevation and reveals that mitochondrial deficiency is sufficient to increase anxiety and underlies the psychosocial-stress-induced anxiety increase. Mitochondria and mitophagy, therefore, can be potentially targeted to ameliorate anxiety.
Quick Links:
 
Quick Links:
 

Expression

Publication --> Expression annotations

 

Other

17 Bio Entities

Trail: Publication

0 Expression