Author:
Goode Travis D.,Alipio Jason Bondoc,Besnard Antoine,Pathak Devesh,Kritzer-Cheren Michael D.,Chung Ain,Duan Xin,Sahay Amar
Abstract
SUMMARYAdaptive regulation of feeding depends on linkage of internal states and food outcomes with contextual cues. Human brain imaging has identified dysregulation of a hippocampal-lateral hypothalamic area (LHA) network in binge eating, but mechanistic instantiation of underlying cell-types and circuitry is lacking. Here, we identify an evolutionary conserved and discrete Prodynorphin (Pdyn)-expressing subpopulation of Somatostatin (Sst)-expressing inhibitory neurons in the dorsolateral septum (DLS) that receives primarily dorsal, but not ventral, hippocampal inputs. DLS(Pdyn) neurons inhibit LHA GABAergic neurons and confer context- and internal state-dependent calibration of feeding. Viral deletion ofPdynin the DLS mimicked effects seen with optogenetic silencing of DLSPdynINs, suggesting a potential role for DYNORPHIN-KAPPA OPIOID RECEPTOR signaling in contextual regulation of food-seeking. Together, our findings illustrate how the dorsal hippocampus has evolved to recruit an ancient LHA feeding circuit module throughPdynDLS inhibitory neurons to link contextual information with regulation of food consumption.HIGHLIGHTSDLS(Pdyn) neurons receive dense input from the dorsal but not ventral hippocampusDLS(Pdyn) neurons inhibit GABAergic neurons in the LHASilencing dorsal hippocampus-DLS(Pdyn)-LHA circuit nodes abolishes context-conditioned feedingPdynin the DLS is necessary for context-conditioned feeding
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory