ePoster

DISTINCT NEURONAL CELL POPULATIONS IN THE LATERAL HYPOTHALAMUS PROCESSING ANXIETY-RELATED BEHAVIOR

Marla Yasmin Wittand 7 co-authors

Institute for Systems Physiology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Cologne and University Clinic Cologne

FENS Forum 2026 (2026)
Barcelona, Spain
Board PS05-09AM-509

Presentation

Date TBA

Board: PS05-09AM-509

Poster preview

DISTINCT NEURONAL CELL POPULATIONS IN THE LATERAL HYPOTHALAMUS PROCESSING ANXIETY-RELATED BEHAVIOR poster preview

Event Information

Poster Board

PS05-09AM-509

Abstract

Animals must continuously assess environmental risk to flexibly regulate feeding and other essential behaviors. The lateral hypothalamus (LH) is a key integrative center for motivated behavior, yet the specific neuronal populations that contribute to anxiety-related behavioral adaptation remain incompletely understood.
Here, we investigated the role of leptin receptor–expressing neurons in the LH (LepRLH) in the regulation of anxiety-related behavior. Using cell-type-specific knockdown, as well as opto- and chemogenetic manipulation in freely behaving mice, we examined how activity of LepRLH neurons relate to anxiogenic conditions across different behavioral contexts. Anxiety levels were associated with expression of anorexia nervosa risk genes in LepRLH neurons. In parallel, we assessed the contribution of neurotensin-expressing LH neurons (NtsLH) to anxiety processing.
Our findings support a role for LepRLH neurons in anxiety-related behavioral regulation, whereas NtsLH neurons appear not to be directly involved in this process. Together, these data suggest that distinct LH neuronal populations make dissociable contributions to behavioral adaptation under conditions of perceived threat, highlighting functional specialization within hypothalamic circuits that support flexible responses to environmental challenges.

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