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Publication : Transient cAMP production drives rapid and sustained spiking in brainstem parabrachial neurons to suppress feeding.

First Author  Singh Alvarado J Year  2024
Journal  Neuron PubMed ID  38417435
Mgi Jnum  J:346693 Mgi Id  MGI:7616063
Doi  10.1016/j.neuron.2024.02.002 Citation  Singh Alvarado J, et al. (2024) Transient cAMP production drives rapid and sustained spiking in brainstem parabrachial neurons to suppress feeding. Neuron
abstractText  Brief stimuli can trigger longer-lasting brain states. G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) could help sustain such states by coupling slow-timescale molecular signals to neuronal excitability. Brainstem parabrachial nucleus glutamatergic (PBN(Glut)) neurons regulate sustained brain states such as pain and express G(s)-coupled GPCRs that increase cAMP signaling. We asked whether cAMP in PBN(Glut) neurons directly influences their excitability and effects on behavior. Both brief tail shocks and brief optogenetic stimulation of cAMP production in PBN(Glut) neurons drove minutes-long suppression of feeding. This suppression matched the duration of prolonged elevations in cAMP, protein kinase A (PKA) activity, and calcium activity in vivo and ex vivo, as well as sustained, PKA-dependent increases in action potential firing ex vivo. Shortening this elevation in cAMP reduced the duration of feeding suppression following tail shocks. Thus, molecular signaling in PBN(Glut) neurons helps prolong neural activity and behavioral states evoked by brief, salient bodily stimuli.
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