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Lateral Septum

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lateral septum

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9 curated items7 ePosters2 Seminars
Updated over 4 years ago
9 items · lateral septum
9 results
SeminarNeuroscience

Blood is thicker than water

Michael Brecht
Bernstein Center for Computational Neuroscience Humboldt University Berlin, Germany
Nov 18, 2020

According to Hamilton’s inclusive fitness hypothesis, kinship is an organizing principle of social behavior. Behavioral evidence supporting this hypothesis includes the ability to recognize kin and the adjustment of behavior based on kin preference with respect to altruism, attachment and care for offspring in insect societies. Despite the fundamental importance of kinship behavior, the underlying neural mechanisms are poorly understood. We repeated behavioral experiments by Hepper on behavioral preference of rats for their kin. Consistent with Hepper’s work, we find a developmental time course for kinship behavior, where rats prefer sibling interactions at young ages and express non-sibling preferences at older ages. In probing the brain areas responsible for this behavior, we find that aspiration lesions of the lateral septum but not control lesions of cingulate cortices eliminate the behavioral preference in young animals for their siblings and in older rats for non-siblings. We then presented awake and anaesthetized rats with odors and calls of age- and status-matched kin (siblings and mothers) and non-kin (non-siblings and non-mothers) conspecifics, while performing in vivo juxta-cellular and whole-cell patch-clamp recordings in the lateral septum. We find multisensory (olfactory and auditory) neuronal responses, whereby neurons typically responded preferentially but not exclusively to individual social stimuli. Non-kin-odor responsive neurons were found dorsally, while kin-odor responsive neurons were located in ventrally in the lateral septum. To our knowledge such an ordered representation of response preferences according to kinship has not been previously observed and we refer this organization as nepotopy. Nepotopy could be instrumental in reading out kinship from preferential but not exclusive responses and in the generation of differential behavior according to kinship. Thus, our results are consistent with a role of the lateral septum in organizing mammalian kinship behavior.

ePoster

Dysregulation of parvalbumin- and calretinin-expressing neurons in the lateral septum of the Df(16)A+/- mouse model of schizophrenia

Paula Sierra Diaz, Antonia Ruiz, Olivia Lofaro, Felix Leroy

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Dysregulation of vasopressin release from the bed nucleus of stria terminalis to the lateral septum promotes social deficits in Shank3B+/- mice

Maria Helena Bortolozzo Gleich, Guillaume Bouisset, Antonia Ruiz-Pino, Félix Leroy

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Exposure to a high-fat diet during adolescence affects the mu opioid receptor gene expression in the lateral septum of adult rats

Victoria Velásquez, Ramón Sotomayor-Zárate

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Maternally activated connections of the ventral lateral septum reveal input from the posterior intralaminar thalamus

Gina Puska, Vivien Szendi, Máté Egyed, Diána Dimén, Melinda Cservenák, Árpád Dobolyi

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Neurotensin and somatostatin cells of lateral septum are involved in the complementary regulation of social and feeding behaviors

Dávid Keller, Francisco J. de los Santos, Robson Scheffer Teixeira, Letizia Moscato, Hanna E. van den Munkhof, Haena Choi, Tatiana Korotkova

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Role of CRF signalling in the lateral septum system in the regulation of social fear extinction

Atefeh Akbari, Rohit Menon, Inga Neumann

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

TRPM8+ neurons in the mouse lateral septum support motivated responses to thermal discomfort

Lucía Illescas, Félix Leroy

FENS Forum 2024