optogenetic activation
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Development of a multi-modal mouse model of cluster headache
PROJECT SUMMARY / ABSTRACT Cluster headache (CH), which affects about 1 in 1,000 people, is a severe and debilitating primary headache disorder characterized by repeated attacks occurring in clusters over weeks or months. CH has clearly defined features: severe pain (worse than childbirth), facial autonomic changes (such as a watery eye), restlessness, and a striking circadian pattern of attacks (at the same time each day like clockwork in approximately 70.5% of patients). CH also has a well-defined pathophysiology of 3 systems: the trigeminovascular pain system, the autonomic nervous system, and the hypothalamic system (in particular the posterior hypothalamus, the first brain area activated during an attack). Despite the well-known features and systems involved in CH, no disease- specific treatments are available: all CH treatments are repurposed medications from other diseases. This lack of CH-specific treatments is due in large part to the lack of a viable animal model that faithfully recapitulates the aforementioned CH features. To develop a specific animal model for CH, we previously studied a trigeminovascular headache model (repeated nitroglycerin injections), and discovered a circadian pattern of pain responses that reflects the clockwork-like pattern of attacks in CH patients. Furthermore, our analysis also identified a recently discovered CH modifier gene Mertk (MER proto-oncogene, tyrosine receptor kinase) to be highly rhythmically expressed in the trigeminal ganglion. Deletion of Mertk (Mertk-KO) altered the normal circadian rhythm of pain sensitivity by increasing pain sensitivity over 24 hours. Finally, activation of the posterior hypothalamus (via c-Fos staining) was observed after NTG administration in wild-type mice. Based on these exciting preliminary findings, we hypothesize that a combination of trigeminovascular (nitroglycerin), genetic (Mertk-KO), and hypothalamic (direct optogenetic activation of the posterior hypothalamus) manipulations will generate the first multi-modal animal model of CH. In Aim 1 (the R61 phase), we will determine the contributions of each aspect of our combined model, alone or in combination (a 4x2 grid of NTG or control, Mertk KO mouse or wild-type control, and optogenetic injection or control). Our milestone for progression to the R33 phase will be significant differences in at least two pain behaviors in our model compared to controls. In Aims 2 and 3 (the R33 phase), we will validate our model through face validity (lacrimation and restlessness), construct validity (CGRP, PACAP, and VIP in the trigeminal ganglion and hypothalamus), and predictive validity (ability of first-line and new treatments to ameliorate the pain behaviors of our model). This project is highly significant and innovative, addressing a profound need for a specific and comprehensive animal model for this devastating yet understudied disease. With the unique combination of complementary expertise in CH (laboratory and clinical), circadian biology, pharmacology, optogenetics and pain, we are ideally suited to generate this combined CH model with the goal of providing insights into CH pathophysiology and developing novel therapeutics.
Private oxytocin supply and its receptors in the hypothalamus for social avoidance learning
Many animals live in complex social groups. To survive, it is essential to know who to avoid and who to interact. Although naïve mice are naturally attracted to any adult conspecifics, a single defeat experience could elicit social avoidance towards the aggressor for days. The neural mechanisms underlying the behavior switch from social approach to social avoidance remains incompletely understood. Here, we identify oxytocin neurons in the retrochiasmatic supraoptic nucleus (SOROXT) and oxytocin receptor (OXTR) expressing cells in the anterior subdivision of ventromedial hypothalamus, ventrolateral part (aVMHvlOXTR) as a key circuit motif for defeat-induced social avoidance learning. After defeat, aVMHvlOXTR cells drastically increase their responses to aggressor cues. This response change is functionally important as optogenetic activation of aVMHvlOXTR cells elicits time-locked social avoidance towards a benign social target whereas inactivating the cells suppresses defeat-induced social avoidance. Furthermore, OXTR in the aVMHvl is itself essential for the behavior change. Knocking out OXTR in the aVMHvl or antagonizing the receptor during defeat, but not during post-defeat social interaction, impairs defeat-induced social avoidance. aVMHvlOXTR receives its private supply of oxytocin from SOROXT cells. SOROXT is highly activated by the noxious somatosensory inputs associated with defeat. Oxytocin released from SOROXT depolarizes aVMHvlOXTR cells and facilitates their synaptic potentiation, and hence, increases aVMHvlOXTR cell responses to aggressor cues. Ablating SOROXT cells impairs defeat-induced social avoidance learning whereas activating the cells promotes social avoidance after a subthreshold defeat experience. Altogether, our study reveals an essential role of SOROXT-aVMHvlOXTR circuit in defeat-induced social learning and highlights the importance of hypothalamic oxytocin system in social ranking and its plasticity.
Dynamic dopaminergic signaling probabilistically controls the timing of self-timed movements
Human movement disorders and pharmacological studies have long suggested molecular dopamine modulates the pace of the internal clock. But how does the endogenous dopaminergic system influence the timing of our movements? We examined the relationship between dopaminergic signaling and the timing of reward-related, self-timed movements in mice. Animals were trained to initiate licking after a self-timed interval following a start cue; reward was delivered if the animal’s first lick fell within a rewarded window (3.3-7 s). The first-lick timing distributions exhibited the scalar property, and we leveraged the considerable variability in these distributions to determine how the activity of the dopaminergic system related to the animals’ timing. Surprisingly, dopaminergic signals ramped-up over seconds between the start-timing cue and the self-timed movement, with variable dynamics that predicted the movement/reward time, even on single trials. Steeply rising signals preceded early initiation, whereas slowly rising signals preceded later initiation. Higher baseline signals also predicted earlier self-timed movement. Optogenetic activation of dopamine neurons during self-timing did not trigger immediate movements, but rather caused systematic early-shifting of the timing distribution, whereas inhibition caused late-shifting, as if dopaminergic manipulation modulated the moment-to-moment probability of unleashing the planned movement. Consistent with this view, the dynamics of the endogenous dopaminergic signals quantitatively predicted the moment-by-moment probability of movement initiation. We conclude that ramping dopaminergic signals, potentially encoding dynamic reward expectation, probabilistically modulate the moment-by-moment decision of when to move. (Based on work from Hamilos et al., eLife, 2021).
Response of cortical networks to optogenetic stimulation: Experiment vs. theory
Optogenetics is a powerful tool that allows experimentalists to perturb neural circuits. What can we learn about a network from observing its response to perturbations? I will first describe the results of optogenetic activation of inhibitory neurons in mice cortex, and show that the results are consistent with inhibition stabilization. I will then move to experiments in which excitatory neurons are activated optogenetically, with or without visual inputs, in mice and monkeys. In some conditions, these experiments show a surprising result that the distribution of firing rates is not significantly changed by stimulation, even though firing rates of individual neurons are strongly modified. I will show in which conditions a network model of excitatory and inhibitory neurons can reproduce this feature.
“Wasn’t there food around here?”: An Agent-based Model for Local Search in Drosophila
The ability to keep track of one’s location in space is a critical behavior for animals navigating to and from a salient location, and its computational basis is now beginning to be unraveled. Here, we tracked flies in a ring-shaped channel as they executed bouts of search triggered by optogenetic activation of sugar receptors. Unlike experiments in open field arenas, which produce highly tortuous search trajectories, our geometrically constrained paradigm enabled us to monitor flies’ decisions to move toward or away from the fictive food. Our results suggest that flies use path integration to remember the location of a food site even after it has disappeared, and flies can remember the location of a former food site even after walking around the arena one or more times. To determine the behavioral algorithms underlying Drosophila search, we developed multiple state transition models and found that flies likely accomplish path integration by combining odometry and compass navigation to keep track of their position relative to the fictive food. Our results indicate that whereas flies re-zero their path integrator at food when only one feeding site is present, they adjust their path integrator to a central location between sites when experiencing food at two or more locations. Together, this work provides a simple experimental paradigm and theoretical framework to advance investigations of the neural basis of path integration.
Medial Septal GABAergic Neurons Reduce Seizure Duration Upon Wireless Optogenetic Closed-Loop Stimulation
Seizures can emerge from multiple or large foci in temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE), complicating focally targeted strategies such as surgical resection or the modulation of the activity of specific hippocampal neuronal populations through genetic or optogenetic techniques. Here, we evaluate a strategy in which optogenetic activation of medial septal GABAergic neurons (MSGNs), which provide extensive projections throughout the hippocampus, is used to control seizures. We found that MSGNs were structurally and functionally resilient in the chronic intrahippocampal kainate mouse model of TLE, which as is often the case in human TLE patients, presents with hippocampal sclerosis. Optogenetic stimulation of MSGNs modulated oscillations across the rostral to caudal extent of the hippocampus in epileptic conditions. Chronic wireless optogenetic stimulation of MSGNs, upon electrographic detection of spontaneous hippocampal seizures, resulted in reduced seizure durations. We propose MSGNs as a novel target for optogenetic control of seizures in TLE.
Algorithms and circuits for olfactory navigation in walking Drosophila
Olfactory navigation provides a tractable model for studying the circuit basis of sensori-motor transformations and goal-directed behaviour. Macroscopic organisms typically navigate in odor plumes that provide a noisy and uncertain signal about the location of an odor source. Work in many species has suggested that animals accomplish this task by combining temporal processing of dynamic odor information with an estimate of wind direction. Our lab has been using adult walking Drosophila to understand both the computational algorithms and the neural circuits that support navigation in a plume of attractive food odor. We developed a high-throughput paradigm to study behavioural responses to temporally-controlled odor and wind stimuli. Using this paradigm we found that flies respond to a food odor (apple cider vinegar) with two behaviours: during the odor they run upwind, while after odor loss they perform a local search. A simple computational model based one these two responses is sufficient to replicate many aspects of fly behaviour in a natural turbulent plume. In on-going work, we are seeking to identify the neural circuits and biophysical mechanisms that perform the computations delineated by our model. Using electrophysiology, we have identified mechanosensory neurons that compute wind direction from movements of the two antennae and central mechanosensory neurons that encode wind direction are are involved in generating a stable downwind orientation. Using optogenetic activation, we have traced olfactory circuits capable of evoking upwind orientation and offset search from the periphery, through the mushroom body and lateral horn, to the central complex. Finally, we have used optogenetic activation, in combination with molecular manipulation of specific synapses, to localize temporal computations performed on the odor signal to olfactory transduction and transmission at specific synapses. Our work illustrates how the tools available in fruit fly can be applied to dissect the mechanisms underlying a complex goal-directed behaviour.
Behavioral responses evoked by optogenetic activation of Cacna1h-expressing low threshold mechanoreceptors in mice
Optogenetic activation of xenotransplanted human neurons in mouse visual cortex mimics visual perception
Regulation of feeding by optogenetic activation and inhibition of lilliputian gene in Drosophila melanogaster larvae
Inducing long-lasting hypometabolism in mice through optogenetic activation of hypothalamic Q neurons
FENS Forum 2024
optogenetic activation coverage
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