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Publication : Hypothalamus-habenula potentiation encodes chronic stress experience and drives depression onset.

First Author  Zheng Z Year  2022
Journal  Neuron Volume  110
Issue  8 Pages  1400-1415.e6
PubMed ID  35114101 Mgi Jnum  J:325073
Mgi Id  MGI:7282333 Doi  10.1016/j.neuron.2022.01.011
Citation  Zheng Z, et al. (2022) Hypothalamus-habenula potentiation encodes chronic stress experience and drives depression onset. Neuron 110(8):1400-1415.e6
abstractText  Chronic stress is a major risk factor for depression onset. However, it remains unclear how repeated stress sculpts neural circuits and finally elicits depression. Given the essential role of lateral habenula (LHb) in depression, here, we attempt to clarify how LHb-centric neural circuitry integrates stress-related information. We identify lateral hypothalamus (LH) as the most physiologically relevant input to LHb under stress. LH neurons fire with a unique pattern that efficiently drives postsynaptic potential summation and a closely followed LHb bursting (EPSP-burst pairing) in response to various stressors. We found that LH-LHb synaptic potentiation is determinant in stress-induced depression. Mimicking this repeated EPSP-burst pairings at LH-LHb synapses by photostimulation, we artificially induced an "emotional status" merely by potentiating this pathway in mice. Collectively, these results delineate the spatiotemporal dynamics of chronic stress processing from forebrain onto LHb in a pathway-, cell-type-, and pattern-specific manner, shedding light on early interventions before depression onset.
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