Generation of a CRF1-Cre transgenic rat and the role of central amygdala CRF1 cells in nociception and anxiety-like behavior

Author:

Weera Marcus M1ORCID,Agoglia Abigail E2,Douglass Eliza2,Jiang Zhiying3,Rajamanickam Shivakumar3,Shackett Rosetta S1,Herman Melissa A24,Justice Nicholas J35,Gilpin Nicholas W1678ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physiology, Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center

2. Department of Pharmacology, University of North Carolina

3. Institute of Molecular Medicine, University of Texas Health Sciences Center

4. Bowles Center for Alcohol Studies, University of North Carolina

5. Department of Integrative Biology and Pharmacology, McGovern Medical School at UT Health

6. Neuroscience Center of Excellence, Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center

7. Alcohol & Drug Abuse Center of Excellence, Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center

8. Southeast Louisiana VA Healthcare System (SLVHCS)

Abstract

Corticotropin-releasing factor type-1 (CRF1) receptors are critical to stress responses because they allow neurons to respond to CRF released in response to stress. Our understanding of the role of CRF1-expressing neurons in CRF-mediated behaviors has been largely limited to mouse experiments due to the lack of genetic tools available to selectively visualize and manipulate CRF1+ cells in rats. Here, we describe the generation and validation of a transgenic CRF1-Cre-tdTomato rat. We report that Crhr1 and Cre mRNA expression are highly colocalized in both the central amygdala (CeA), composed of mostly GABAergic neurons, and in the basolateral amygdala (BLA), composed of mostly glutamatergic neurons. In the CeA, membrane properties, inhibitory synaptic transmission, and responses to CRF bath application in tdTomato+ neurons are similar to those previously reported in GFP+ cells in CRFR1-GFP mice. We show that stimulatory DREADD receptors can be targeted to CeA CRF1+ cells via virally delivered Cre-dependent transgenes, that transfected Cre/tdTomato+ cells are activated by clozapine-n-oxide in vitro and in vivo, and that activation of these cells in vivo increases anxiety-like and nocifensive behaviors. Outside the amygdala, we show that Cre-tdTomato is expressed in several brain areas across the brain, and that the expression pattern of Cre-tdTomato cells is similar to the known expression pattern of CRF1 cells. Given the accuracy of expression in the CRF1-Cre rat, modern genetic techniques used to investigate the anatomy, physiology, and behavioral function of CRF1+ neurons can now be performed in assays that require the use of rats as the model organism.

Funder

National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism

United States Department of Veterans Affairs

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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